Kuroda V Jalandoni Case Digest
Kuroda V Jalandoni Case Digest
Kuroda V Jalandoni Case Digest
2) Yes Commission has Jurisdiction to try petitioner for acts committed in violation of the
Hague Convention and the Geneva Convention despite the Ph not being a signatory to the
first and signed the second only in 1947.
The rules and regulation of the Hague and Geneva conventions form, part of and are wholly
based on the generally accepted principals of international law.
These rules and principles were accepted by the two belligerent nation the United State
and Japan who were signatories to the two Conventions, such rule and principles
therefore form part of the law of our nation even if the Philippines was not a signatory to the
conventions. Embodying them for our Constitution which has been deliberately general and
extensive in its scope and is not confined to the recognition of rule and principle of
international law as continued in treaties to which our government may have been or shall be
a signatory.
Furthermore the crimes charged against petitioner were allegedly committed against
Philippines while under the sovereignty of United States and thus were equally bound
together with the United States and with Japan to the right and obligation contained in the
treaties between the belligerent countries.
The rights and obligation acquired from the conventions were not erased by the Philippines’
assumption of full sovereignty.
The change of government form from Commonwealth to Republic does not affect the
prosecution of those charged with the crime of treason committed during then Commonwealth
because it is an offense against the same sovereign people and vice versa.
Held: Petition to declare the law null and void as being without basis and unconstitutional is
denied.