Macasaet Vs People
Macasaet Vs People
Macasaet Vs People
DECISION
CHICO-NAZARIO, J.:
That on or about the 13 th day of July, 1996 in Quezon City, Philippines, the said
accused ALFIE LORENZO, columnist, ALLEN MACASAET, publisher, NICOLAS
QUIJANO JR., managing editor, ROGER B. PARAJES, editor, respectively of Abante a
newspaper of general circulation in the Philippines, and JORDAN CASTILLO,
conspiring, confederating together and mutually helping one another, with evident
intent of exposing JOSELITO MAGALLANES TRINIDAD, a.k.a. JOEY TRINIDAD a.k.a.
TOTO TRINIDAD to public hatred, dishonor, discredit and contempt and ridicule,
did, then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously and maliciously write,
publish, exhibit and circulate and/or cause to be written, published, exhibited and
circulated in the aforesaid newspaper, in its issue of July 13, 1996 an article which
reads as follows:
Madalas ngang makikain sa amin yan noon. Galit na galit nga ang mayordoma
naming si Manang Hilda noon dahil nagkukulang ang rasyon namin dahil dagdag
pakainin nga yang si Joey. Tamang-tama nga lang sa amin ang kanin at ulam, pero
sinusugod pa niya ang kaldero para magkayod ng natitirang tutong sa kaldero.
Naaawa nga ako madalas diyan kaya sineshare ko na lang ang pagkain ko sa kanya.
Madalas nga itinatago ka na nga namin ni Tito Alfie para hindi mahighblood sa iyo,
ganyan pa ang gagawin mo. Napupuyat nga si Manang Hilda sa pagbabantay sa iyo
at hindi makatulog ang matanda hanggat hindi ka pa umuuwi, magsasalita ka pa ng
mga inimbento mo. Pati nga si Eruel ay madalas mabanas sa iyo, natatandaan mo pa
ba, dahil sa kakulitan mo! Pilit mo kaming binubuyo na sabihin kay Tito Alfie na
tulungan ka rin tulad ng tulong na ibinibigay ni Tito Alfie na pag-aalaga sa amin.
Pero hate na hate ka nga ni Tito Alfie dahil sa masamang ugali, natatandaan mo pa
ba yun? Kaya tiyak ko na imbento mo lang ang lahat ng pinagsasabi mo para
makaganti ka kay Tito Alfie, ani Jordan sa mga nag-interbyu sa kanyang legitimate
writers.
Hindi na siguro namin kailangan pang dagdagan ang mga sinabi ng sinasabi ni Toto
Trinidad na mga barkada niya at kapwa niya kuno Liberty Boys!
In an Order dated 16 July 1997, Judge Apolinario D. Bruselas, Jr., presiding judge
of RTC, Branch 93, Quezon City, set the arraignment of the petitioners on 27 August
1997.[3]
On 22 August 1997, petitioners filed before the court a quo an Urgent Motion to
Suspend Arraignment and/or Defer Proceedings dated 21 August 1997 claiming
that they intended to elevate the adverse Resolution of the Office of the City
Prosecutor of Quezon City to the Department of Justice (DOJ) for review. Despite
this motion, the scheduled arraignment of petitioners pushed through on 27 August
1997. During said proceeding, petitioners Lorenzo and Quijano, Jr., together with
their co-accused Parajes and Castillo, refused to enter any plea and so the trial court
ordered that a plea of not guilty be entered into the records on their behalf. [4] As for
petitioner Macasaet, his arraignment was rescheduled to 20 October 1997 due to his
failure to attend the previously calendared arraignment.
On 12 September 1997, petitioners filed a Motion to Dismiss the libel case on the
ground that the trial court did not have jurisdiction over the offense charged.
According to petitioners, as the information discloses that the residence of private
respondent was in Marikina, the RTC of Quezon City did not have jurisdiction over
the case pursuant to Article 360 of the Revised Penal Code, to wit:
The criminal and civil action for damages in cases of written defamations as
provided for in this chapter, shall be filed simultaneously or separately with the
Court of First Instance of the province or city where the libelous article is printed
and first published or where any of the offended parties actually resides at the time
of the commission of the offense[5](Emphasis supplied.)
This is to certify that this office has no record on file nor with the list of registered
voters of this barangay regarding a certain person by the name of one MR. JOSELITO
TRINIDAD.
This further certifies that our BSDOs (have) been looking for said person seeking
information regarding his whereabouts but to no avail.
...
[Del Rosarios] affidavit appears to have been executed only on 19 January 1998 to
which fact the court can only chuckle and observe that evidently said affidavit is in
the nature of a curative evidence, the weight and sufficiency of which is highly
suspect.[17]
Undaunted, the public and the private prosecutors filed a notice of appeal before
the court a quo.[18] In the Decision now assailed before us, the Court of Appeals
reversed and set aside the trial courts conclusion and ordered the remand of the
case to the court a quo for further proceedings. The dispositive portion of the
appellate courts decision reads:
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the Order dated November 24, 1997 of the
Regional Trial Court, Branch 93, Quezon City, in Criminal Case No. Q-97-71903,
dismissing the case filed against herein accused-appellees on the ground of lack of
jurisdiction, is hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE, and a new one entered
remanding the case to the court a quo for further proceedings.[19]
The Court of Appeals held that jurisprudentially, it is settled that the residence of
a person must be his personal, actual or physical habitation or his actual residence
or abode and for the purpose of determining venue, actual residence is a persons
place of abode and not necessarily his legal residence or domicile. [20] In this case, the
defect appearing on the original complaint wherein the residence of private
respondent was indicated to be Marikina City was subsequently cured by his
supplemental-affidavit submitted during the preliminary investigation of the case.
Moreover, as the amendment was made during the preliminary investigation phase
of this case, the same could be done as a matter of right pursuant to the Revised
Rules of Court.[21]
As for the barangay certifications issued by the barangay chairmen
of Barangay Malaya and Barangay Sto. Nio, the Court of Appeals ruled that they had
no probative value ratiocinating in the following manner:
. . . With respect to the requirement of residence in the place where one is to vote,
residence can mean either domicile or temporary residence (Bernas, The 1987
Constitution A Primer, 3rd Ed., p. 209). Therefore, one who is a resident of Quezon
City can be a voter of Marikina if the latter is his domicile. Conversely, a person
domiciled in Marikina can vote in Quezon City if he resides in the latter. It is just a
matter of choice on the part of the voter. Thus, logic does not support the
supposition that one who is not a registered voter of a place is also not a resident
theref. Furthermore, the right to vote has the corollary right of not exercising it.
Therefore, one need not even be a registered voter at all. The same principle applies
to the certification issued by the barangay in Marikina.[22]
The appellate court likewise gave weight to the affidavit executed by Del Rosario
and observed that petitioners failed to controvert the same.
The petitioners thereafter filed a motion for reconsideration which was denied
by the Court of Appeals in a Resolution promulgated on 6 January 2003. [23]
While it is true that only the OSG can file an appeal representing the government in a
criminal proceeding, the private complainant nevertheless may appeal the civil
aspect of the criminal case. The case at bar was dismissed due to the alleged
improper laying of venue resulting in the alleged lack of jurisdiction of the trial
court and not based on the merits of the case. It cannot therefore be argued that
private complainants appeal pertains to the merits of the criminal case as what
happened in accused-appellees cited case in the motion to strike, VicentePalu-ay vs.
Court of Appeals (GR No. 112995, July 30, 1998). Needless to say, the private
complainant has an interest in the civil aspect of the dismissed criminal case which
he had the right to protect. In the interest of justice and fair play, therefore, the Brief
filed by private complainant in the present case should be treated as pertaining only
to the civil aspect of the case.[27]
The law, however, is more particular in libel cases. The possible venues for the
institution of the criminal and the civil aspects of said case are concisely outlined in
Article 360 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by Republic Act No. 4363. It
provides:
In the case at bar, private respondent was a private citizen at the time of the
publication of the alleged libelous article, hence, he could only file his libel suit in the
City of Manila where Abante was first published or in the province or city where he
actually resided at the time the purported libelous article was printed.
A perusal, however, of the information involved in this case easily reveals that
the allegations contained therein are utterly insufficient to vest jurisdiction on the
RTC of Quezon City. Other than perfunctorily stating Quezon City at the beginning of
the information, the assistant city prosecutor who prepared the information did not
bother to indicate whether the jurisdiction of RTC Quezon City was invoked either
because Abante was printed in that place or private respondent was a resident of
said city at the time the claimed libelous article came out. As these matters deal with
the fundamental issue of the courts jurisdiction, Article 360 of the Revised Penal
Code, as amended, mandates that either one of these statements must be alleged in
the information itself and the absence of both from the very face of the information
renders the latter fatally defective. Sadly for private respondent, the information
filed before the trial court falls way short of this requirement. The assistant city
prosecutors failure to properly lay the basis for invoking the jurisdiction of the RTC,
Quezon City, effectively denied said court of the power to take cognizance of this
case.
For the guidance, therefore, of both the bench and the bar, this Court finds it
appropriate to reiterate our earlier pronouncement in the case of Agbayani, to wit:
In order to obviate controversies as to the venue of the criminal action for written
defamation, the complaint or information should contain allegations as to whether,
at the time the offense was committed, the offended party was a public officer or a
private individual and where he was actually residing at that time. Whenever
possible, the place where the written defamation was printed and first published
should likewise be alleged. That allegation would be a sine qua non if the
circumstance as to where the libel was printed and first published is used as the
basis of the venue of the action.[40]
Anent private respondent and OSGs contention that the supplemental affidavit
submitted during the preliminary investigation of this libel suit cured the defect of
the information, we find the same to be without merit. It is jurisprudentially settled
that jurisdiction of a court over a criminal case is determined by the allegations of
the complaint or information. [41] In resolving a motion to dismiss based on lack of
jurisdiction, the general rule is that the facts contained in the complaint or
information should be taken as they are.[42] The exception to this rule is where the
Rules of Court allow the investigation of facts alleged in a motion to quash [43] such as
when the ground invoked is the extinction of criminal liability, prescriptions, double
jeopardy, or insanity of the accused. [44] In these instances, it is incumbent upon the
trial court to conduct a preliminary trial to determine the merit of the motion to
dismiss. As the present case obviously does not fall within any of the recognized
exceptions, the trial court correctly dismissed this action.
In the assailed decision, the Court of Appeals likewise put premium on the
affidavit executed by Del Rosario which was attached to private respondents
supplemental motion for reconsideration. According to the appellate court, said
document supports private (respondents) claim that indeed, he was a resident of
Quezon City at the time the alleged libelous article was published. [45] The pertinent
provision of the Rules of Court, under Rule 10, Section 6 thereof, states:
Sec. 6. Supplemental Pleadings. - Upon motion of a party the court may, upon
reasonable notice and upon such terms as are just, permit him to serve a
supplemental pleading setting forth transactions, occurrences or events which have
happened since the date of the pleading sought to be supplemented. The adverse
party may plead thereto within ten (10) days from notice of the order admitting the
supplemental pleading.
. . . [I]n the meantime, the trial court still retains jurisdiction over the case. However,
where all the parties have either thus perfected their appeals, by filing their notices
of appeal in due time and the period to file such notice of appeal has lapsed for those
who did not do so, then the trial court loses jurisdiction over the case as of the filing of
the last notice of appeal or the expiration of the period to do so for all the parties. [51]
Applied to the case at bar, we deem it proper that the notice of appeal was filed
by the private and the public prosecutors before the trial court. The Rules cannot be
any clearer: until the filing of the last notice of appeal and the expiration of the
period to perfect an appeal by all the parties, the lower court still has jurisdiction
over the case. It is only after the occurrence of these two incidents when the
jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals begins and at which time the OSG is supposed to
take charge of the case on behalf of the government.
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The Decision dated 22 March 2002 and
Resolution dated 6 January 2003 of the Court of Appeals are hereby REVERSED and
SET ASIDE and the 24 November 1997 Decision of the Regional Trial Court, Branch
93, Quezon City, dismissing Criminal Case No. Q-97-71903 is hereby REINSTATED.
No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Puno, (Chairman), Austria-Martinez, Callejo, Sr., and Tinga, JJ., concur.
[1]
Penned by Associate Justice Sergio L. Pestao, with Associate Justices Conchita
Carpio-Morales (now a member of this Court) and Martin S. Villarama, Jr.,
concurring.
[2]
Records, pp. 1-3.
[3]
Records, pp. 54, 58, 62, 66, and 70.
[4]
Records, p. 77.
[5]
Rollo, p. 68.
[6]
Records, pp. 98-101.
[7]
G.R. No. 113930, 05 March 1996, 254 SCRA 307.
[8]
Records, p. 105.
[9]
Records, p. 106.
[10]
Reply to Opposition dated 8 October 1997; Records, p. 114.
[11]
Records, pp. 109-111.
[12]
Annex A of the Supplemental Reply; Records, p. 112.
[13]
Annex B of the Supplemental Reply; Records, p. 113.
[14]
Dated 25 October 1997; Records, pp. 121-123.
[15]
Records, pp. 147-149.
[16]
Records, pp. 152-157.
[17]
Records, p. 214.
[18]
Records, pp. 201-202.
[19]
Rollo, p. 60.
[20]
Rollo, p. 58; citing Jose Baritua v. Court of Appeals, et al., G.R. No. 100748, 03
February 1997, 267 SCRA 331.
[21]
Rule 110, Section 14 of the Revised Rules of Court provides: Amendment. - The
information or complaint may be amended, in substance or form, without
leave of court, at any time before the accused pleads; and thereafter and
during the trial as to all matters of form, by leave and at the discretion of the
court, when the same can be done without prejudice to the rights of the
accused.
[22]
Rollo, p. 59.
[23]
Rollo, p. 63.
[24]
Rollo, p. 35.
[25]
Records, p. 15.
[26]
Records, p. 14.
[27]
Rollo, pp. 59-60.
[28]
Rollo, pp. 308-318.
[29]
G.R. No. L-57068, 15 March 1982, 112 SCRA 573.
[30]
Rollo, pp. 337-352.
[31]
United States v. Pagdayuman, et al., No. 2008, 11 November 1905, 5 Phil. 265.
[32]
People v. Mariano, et al., G.R. No. L-40527, 30 June 1976, 71 SCRA 600.
[33]
I Bouviers Law Dictionary, p. 1760 (3rd Revision).
[34]
20 Am Jur 2d 55.
[35]
Lopez, et al. v. The City Judge, et al., G.R. No. L-25795, 29 October 1966, 18 SCRA
616.
[36]
G.R. No. 119000, 28 July 1997, 276 SCRA 367.
[37]
Id. at 374-375.
[38]
G.R. No. L-47880, 30 April 1979, 89 SCRA 699.
[39]
Id. at 705.
[40]
Supra, note 38 at 706.
[41]
Supra, note 36 at 374.
[42]
People v. Alagao, et al., G.R. No. L-20721, 30 April 1966, 16 SCRA 879.
[43]
People v. Cadabis, G.R. No. L-7713, 31 October 1955, 97 Phil. 829.
[44]
Ibid.; See People v. Alagao, et al., supra, note 42 at 883 and Lopez, et al. v. The City
Judge, supra, note 35 at 621.
[45]
Rollo, p. 59.
[46]
British Traders Insurance Co., Ltd. v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, G.R. No.
L-20501, 30 April 1965, 13 SCRA 719; reiterated in Caoili v. Court of Appeals,
G.R. No. 128325, 14 September 1999, 314 SCRA 345.
[47]
Rollo, p. 48.
[48]
Urbano v. Chavez, G.R. No. 87977, 19 March 1990, 183 SCRA 347; emphasis
supplied.
[49]
Emphasis supplied.
[50]
Rule 41, Section 9, par. 1, Revised Rules of Court.
[51]
I Florenz Regalado, Remedial Law Compendium, p. 508 (6 th Revised Edition);
emphasis supplied.