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People Vs Cawaling

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[G.R. No. 117970.

July 28, 1998]

PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiffappellee, vs. ULYSSES M. CAWALING,


ERNESTO TUMBAGAHAN, RICARDO
DE LOS SANTOS, and HILARIO
CAJILO, accused-appellants.
DECISION
PANGANIBAN, J.:
It is axiomatic that once an accused-appellant
admits killing the victim, he bears the burden of
establishing the presence of any circumstance like
self-defense, performance of a lawful duty or, for that
matter, double jeopardy, which may relieve him of
responsibility, or which may mitigate his criminal
liability.[1] If he fails to discharge this burden, his
conviction becomes inevitable. In this Decision, we
also reiterate the following doctrines: (1) the regional
trial court, not the Sandiganbayan, has jurisdiction
over informations for murder committed by public
officers, including a town mayor; (2) the assessment
of trial courts on the credibility of witnesses and their
testimonies deserve great respect; (3) the equipoise
rule cannot be invoked where the evidence of the
prosecution is overwhelming; (4) alibi cannot be
believed in the face of credible testimony identifying
the appellants; and (5) conspiracy may be proven by
circumstantial evidence.

The Case
Before us is an appeal from the 34-page
Decision[2] dated October 21, 1994, promulgated by
the Regional Trial Court of Romblon in Criminal
Case No. OD-269. Convicted of murder were former
Mayor Ulysses M. Cawaling and Policemen Ernesto
Tumbagahan,[3] Ricardo De los Santos and Hilario
Cajilo.
Prior to the institution of the criminal case
against all the appellants, an administrative
case[4] had been filed before the National Police
Commission, in which Policemen Ernesto
Tumbagahan, Ricardo De los Santos, Hilario Cajilo
(three of herein appellants) and Andres Fontamillas

were charged by Nelson Ilisan[5] with the killing of


his brother Ronie[6] Ilisan. On April 6, 1986,
Adjudication Board No. 14[7] rendered its Decision
which found Tumbagahan, De los Santos, Cajilo and
Fontamillas guilty of grave misconduct and ordered
their dismissal from the service with prejudice.[8] On
June 26, 1986, the Board issued a resolution,
[9]
dismissing the respondents motion for
reconsideration for lack of merit.
Subsequently, on June 4, 1987, Second
Assistant Provincial Fiscal Alexander Mortel filed,
before the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Odiongan,
Romblon,[10] an Information for murder[11] against the
appellants and Andres Fontamillas. The accusatory
portion reads:
That on or about the 4th day of December 1982, at
around 9:00 oclock in the evening, in the Poblacion,
[M]unicipality of San Jose, [P]rovince of Romblon,
Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the said accused, with intent to kill,
conspiring, confederating and mutually helping one
another, did then and there, by means of treachery
and with evident premeditation and taking advantage
of their superior strenght [sic] willfully, unlawfully
and feloniously attack, assault and shoot RONIE
ILISAN, with the use of firearms, inflicting upon the
latter multiple mortal injuries in different parts of his
body which were the direct and immediate cause of
his death.
Accused Tumbagahan, De los Santos, Cajilo
and Fontamillas, with the assistance of their lawyers
Atty. Abelardo V. Calsado and Juanito Dimaano,
pleaded not guilty when arraigned on February 15,
1988;[12] while Accused Cawaling, assisted by
Counsel Jovencio Q. Mayor, entered a plea of not
guilty on March 16, 1988.[13]
After due trial,[14] the court a quo[15] rendered its
Decision dated October 21, 1994,[16] the decretal
portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE, this Court finds the accused (1)
ULYSSES M. CAWALING, (2) ERNESTO
TUMBAGAHAN, (3) RICARDO DELOS SANTOS,
(4) HILARIO CAJILO, AND (5) ANDRES
FONTAMILLAS GUILTY beyond reasonable doubt
of the crime of MURDER under the Information,
dated June 4, 1987, and sentences each of them to
suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua, with the
accessory penalties of the law.

The accused, jointly and severally, are ORDERED to


pay Nelson Elisan the sum of P6,000.00 as actual
damages and the heirs of the deceased Ronie Elisan
the sums of P116,666.66 by way of lost earnings
and P50,000.00 as indemnity for death, without
subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency, and to
pay the costs.
The bail bonds of all the accused are ORDERED
CANCELLED and all said accused are ORDERED
immediately confined in jail.
The slug (Exh. A); the .38 caliber revolver (with 3
empty shells and 3 live bullets) (Exh. G); and the slug
of bullet (Exh. H) are confiscated in favor of the
government.
After the judgment has become final, the Officer-inCharge, Office of the Clerk of Court, this Court, is
ordered to deliver and deposit the foregoing Exhibits
A, F, G and H, inclusive, to the Provincial Director,
PNP, of the Province of Romblon properly
receipted. Thereafter, the receipt must be attached to
the record of the case and shall form part of the
record.
The period of preventive imprisonment the accused
had undergone shall be credited in their favor to its
full extent pursuant to Article 29 of the Revised Penal
Code, as amended.
The case against co-accused ALEX BATUIGAS who
is at large is ORDERED ARCHIVED pending his
arrest.[17]
Hence, this appeal.[18]

The Facts
Version of the Prosecution
The trial court gives this summary of the facts
as viewed by the prosecution witnesses:
The killing occurred on December 4, 1982 at around
9:00 oclock in the evening at the ricefield of
Poblacion, San Jose, Romblon when the bright moon
was already above the sea at an angle of about 45
degrees, or if it was daytime, it was about 9:00
oclock in the morning (Imelda Elisan Tumbagahon,
on direct examination, tsn, Jan. 17, 1989, p. 5, and on
cross examination, tsn, April 18, 1989, p. 22).

On December 4, 1982, about 8:00 oclock or 8:30


oclock in the evening, Vicente Elisan and his elder
brother Ronie Elisan, the victim, were drinking tuba
at C & J-4 Kitchenette of co-accused Andres
Fontamillas in Poblacion, San Jose, Romblon. When
they stood up to go home, Luz Venus, the wife of
Diosdado Venus, told them not to go out because the
accused were watching them outside about three (3)
meters from the restaurant. Diosdado Venus
accompanied them upon their request and they went
out and walked towards home. About a hundred
meters from the restaurant, the six (6) accused, that
is, Mayor Cawaling, the four (4) policemen, namely,
Hilario Cajilo, Andres Fontamillas, Ernesto
Tumbagahan and Ricardo delos Santos, and civilian
Alex Batuigas, the mayors brother-in-law,
flashlighted them and Diosdado Venus ran going
back. The two (2) brothers also ran towards home to
the house of their elder sister Imelda Elisan
Tumbagahon. Co-accused Andres Fontamillas and
Hilario Cajilo blocked them on the gate of the fence
of their sisters house. Ronie Elisan ran towards the
ricefield. The accused were chasing them. Vicente
Elisan saw his brother Ronie f[a]ll down on the
ricefield while he ran towards the bushes and la[y] on
the ground. Ronie Elisan rose up by kneeling and
raising his two (2) hands. All the six (6) accused
approached him with their flashlights and shot
him. Ronie fell down about twenty (20) meters from
the bushes where Vicente Elisan hid behind the
coconut tree. Co-accused Cawaling said []you left
him, he is already dead.[] Mayor Cawaling was
armed with .45 caliber, policemen Andres
Fontamillas and Hilario Cajilo were both with
armalites, Ernesto Tumbagahan and Ricardo delos
Santos were both with .38 caliber and so with civilian
Alex Batuigas. They left towards the house of Mayor
Cawaling. After they were gone, Vicente Elisan ran
towards the house of his older brother Nelson
Elisan. Upon seeing him, Vicente told Nelson that
Ronie was already dead. Nelson said nothing. While
they were there, elder sister Imelda Elisan
Tumbagahon, who was crying came. She said:
Manong, patay ron si Ronie. (Brother, Ronie is
already dead). Nelson said []do not be noisy; they
might come back and kill all of us.[]Imelda stopped
crying.
After a while, brothers Nelson and Vicente Elisan
went to the house of barangay captain Aldolfo
Tumbagahon. The three (3) went to the townhall and
called the police but there was none there. Going to
the house of the Chief of Police Oscar Montero, they
were told by his wife that Commander Montero was
in the house of Mayor Cawaling. They proceeded to
the place where Ronie Elisan was shot. The cadaver

was brought to the house of Nelson Elisan. Vicente


Elisan found an empty shell of a .45 caliber about
three (3) arms length from the body of the
victim. They surrendered it to the Napolcom.[19]
Dr. Blandino C. Flores described the gunshot
wounds of the victim as follows:
Gunshot Wounds:
1. Shoulder:
Gun shot wound x inch in diameter shoulder right 2
inches from the neck with contussion [sic] collar
s[u]rrounding the wound.
2. Right Axilla:
Gun shot wound x inch in diameter, 2 inches below
the right nipple with contussion [sic] collar
s[u]rrounding the wound.
3. Left Axilla:
Exit of the gun shot wound from the right axilla,
measuring x inch with edges everted, one inch below
the axilla and one inch below the level of the nipple.
4. Back:
Gun shot wound measuring x inch, along the
vertebral column, right at the level of the 10th ribs
with contussion [sic]collar.
5. Leg, Left:
Gun shot wound measuring x anterior aspect upper
third leg with contussion [sic] collar, with the exit x
posterior aspect upper third leg, left.[20]
Based on the death certificate (Exhibit E) issued
by Dr. Flores, Ronie Ilisan died of severe hemorrhage
and gun shot wo[unds].[21]

Version of the Defense


Appellant Cawaling, in his 47-page Brief,
presented his own narration of the incident as
follows:
[22]

At around 7:00 in the evening of December 4, 1982,


Ulysses Cawaling, then the mayor of the
[M]unicipality of San Jose in the [P]rovince of
Romblon, arrived aboard a hired motorized boat from
Manila in the seashore of San Jose. From the
seashore, he immediately proceeded to his home. At
around 7:30 in the evening, Cawaling went to the
municipal hall to check on administrative matters that
piled up in the course of his trip to Manila. He also
went inside the police station (located inside the
municipal building) to be apprised of
any developments, after which he went out and
joined Pfc. Tumbagahan and Pfc. Cajilo who were
standing near the flagpole in front of the municipal
building. The three engaged in a
conversation. Cawaling learned that the two police
officers were the ones assigned for patrol/alert for
that night. The three of them went inside the INP
office and there Cawaling informed the two
policemen that he received information from reliable
persons that certain persons were plotting to kill him
and a member of the towns police force. It is to be
noted that this occurred at the height of the
communist insurgency and political violence in the
countryside in the early 80s. Hence, such information
was taken very seriously, having been relayed by
sources independent of each other.
Cawaling, as town chief then empowered with
supervisory authority over the local police,
accompanied Pfc. Tumbagahan and Pfc. Cajilo in
conducting patrol and surveillance operations around
the small municipality. He usually did this as routine
since Romblon was then plagued with political
assassinations and armed conflict. On their way to the
seashore, they passed by C & J-4 Kitchenette, and
chanced upon Ronnie Ilisan and his brother Vicente
Ilisan drinking liquor and discussing in very loud
voices. They stopped right in the front of the
restaurant and there they heard Ronnie Ilisan state in
a every loud voice that he will kill a person that
night. Inside the restaurant, without the knowledge
then of Cawaling and the two police officers, witness
Gil Palacio, who was buying cigarettes and Luz
Venus, the cook/server of the restaurant, saw Ronnie
Ilisan, very drunk, brandishing in the air a .38 caliber
Smith and Wesson revolver with a protruding screw.
Initially dismissing Ronnie Ilisans statement as just
another hollow swagger of an intoxicated person
(salitang lasing), Cawaling and the two policemen
proceeded on their way. After the patrol, they
returned to the municipal building and stationed
themselves in front. At around 8:30 in the evening,
Ronnie Elisan passed by the municipal hall walking

towards the direction of the house of Nelson Ilisan,


another brother, and shouted the challenge, gawas
ang maisog, meaning THOSE WHO ARE BRAVE,
COME OUT. Cawaling and the two police officers
again brushed aside [the] challenge as just another
foolish drunken revelry [o]n the part of Ronnie Ilisan,
a well-known troublemaker in the small municipality.
A few moments later, after Ronie Ilisan had passed
by, they distinctly heard a gunshot and hysterical
female voices shouting, pulis, tabangmeaning
POLICE! HELP! four times. Impelled by the call of
duty, Cawaling and the two policemen immediately
ran in the direction of the gunshot and the desperate
female voices until they reached the house of Nelson
Ilisan in San Jose Street. At this point, they saw
Ronnie Ilisan holding a .38 caliber revolver. They
also saw Vicente Ilisan, Francisco Tesnado, Fe Ilisan,
the wife of Nelson and Delma Ilisan, the wife of
Vicente, the latter two being the same persons who
cried pulis, tabang four times. Cawaling then told
Ronnie to surrender his gun but the latter responded
by pointing the gun at Cawaling and pulling the
trigger.
At the precise moment that the gun fired, Cawaling
warned the two policemen to drop to the ground by
shouting dapa. Fortunately, Cawaling was not
hit. Ronnie Ilisan then turned around and ran towards
the church. The two policemen gave
chase. Cawaling, still shaken and trembling after the
mischance was initially left behind but followed
shortly. When Ronnie Ilisan reached the church, he
turned around and again fired at the pursuing Pfc.
Cajilo. Fortunately, the gun misfired. When they
finally reached the ricefield, Pfc. Cajilo fired two (2)
warning shots in the air for Ronnie to
surrender. Ronnie responded by firing once again at
Pfc. Tumbagahan but failed to hit the latter. At that
instance, Pfc. Cajilo counter-fired at Ronnie Ilisan
hitting him. Pfc. Tumbagahan also fired his weapon
in the heat of exchange and also hit Ronnie Ilisan. As
a result of the gunshot wounds, Ronnie Ilisan later on
succumbed.
Pfc. Tumbagahan picked up the gun still in the hand
of the dead Ronnie Ilisan and gave it to Pfc.
Cajilo. The three, Cawaling, who subsequently
caught up with them after the incident, and the two
police officers, then proceeded to the police station
located in the municipal building to formally report
the incident in their station blotter.[23]
The Brief for All of the Accused-Appellants
filed by Atty.

Napoleon U. Galit and the Brief for Appellants Ernes


to Tumbagahan and Hilario Cajilo submitted by Atty.
Joselito R. Enriquez merely repeated the facts as
narrated by the trial court.

Ruling of the Trial Court


Finding the prosecution witnesses and their
testimonies credible, the court a quo convicted the
appellants. The killing was qualified to murder
because of the aggravating circumstances of abuse of
superior strength and treachery. The trial court ruled
that there was a notorious inequality of forces
between the victim and his assailants, as the latter
were greater in number and armed with guns. It
further ruled that abuse of superior strength absorbed
treachery, as it ratiocinated:
Certain cases, an authority wrote, involving the
killing of helpless victim by assailants superior to
them in arms or numbers, or victims who were
overpowered before being killed, were decided on the
theory that the killing was treacherous, when perhaps
the correct qualifying circumstance would be abuse
of superiority. In these cases the attack was not
sudden nor unexpected and the element of surprise
was lacking. (Id., I Aquino, pp. 423-424). In the
instant case, we earlier ruled that the qualifying
treachery should be considered as an exception to the
general rule on treachery because it was not present
at the inception of the attack. The killing was not
sudden nor unexpected and the element of surprise
was lacking. It is for this reason that we hold that
alevosia should be deemed absorbed or included in
abuse of superiority. Even assuming ex-gratia
argumenti that it should be the other way around, the
situation will not be of help, penaltywise, to the
accused.[24]
The defenses raised by the appellants were
dismissed and their witnesses declared unworthy of
belief for the following reasons:
1. It was highly improbable that Defense Witness
Tesnado would not tell his wife (Dory) and Bebelinia
Ilisan Sacapao about the incident he had allegedly
witnessed; more so when Sacapao was the victims
first cousin.
2. The spot report prepared by Station Commander
Oscar M. Montero, the testimonies of Cajilo and
Tumbagahan and the medical findings of Dr. Flores
contradicted one another on the following details: the

caliber of the gun used in shooting the victim, the


wounds inflicted and the whereabouts of Cawaling
during the shoot-out.

The appellants, through their common counsel,


Atty. Napoleon Galit, assign the following errors to
the lower court:

3. Cawaling and his men, armed with guns, could


have immediately disarmed the victim at the initial
encounter. The court could not understand why the
victim was able to fire his gun, run, then stop and
again fire his gun, without being caught.

1. The trial court gravely erred in sustaining


prosecutors theory of conspiracy and thus renders
nugatory or has totally forgotten that policemen when
in actual call of duty normally operate in group but
not necessarily in conspiracy.

4. The positive identification made by the


prosecution witnesses prevails over the alibi posed by
De los Santos and Fontamillas, a defense that was not
corroborated by any other witness.

2. The trial court gravely erred in believing the theory


of the prosecution that accused-appellant Ulysses
Cawaling was one of the alleged co-conspirators in
the killing of the deceased Ronnie Elisan.

5. The .38 caliber revolver, allegedly owned by the


victim, was in fact owned and used by Alex Batuigas.

3. The trial court gravely erred in not believing the


defense of accused-appellant Ulysses Cawaling that
he has nothing to do with the shooting incident
except to shout to arrest the accused[,] which
prompted his co-accused policemen to chase the
accused and sho[o]t him when he resisted, after he
fired at Mayor Cawaling.

6. The defense presented a photo and a sketch to


prove that Imelda Ilisan Tumabagahan had an
obstructed view of the killing. The trial court ruled
that such evidence was misleading, because the
window, from where said witness allegedly saw the
incident, was at the eastern side of her house, and
thus afforded a clear view of the incident, while the
window referred to by the defense was at the
southern portion.
7. The questioned testimonies of Dr. Flores, Nelson
Ilisan and Provincial Prosecutor Pedro Victoriano, Jr.,
though not formally offered as evidence, may be
admitted because of the failure of the defense to
object thereto at the time they were called to testify.
8. The defense failed to prove that the prosecution
witnesses had any ill motive to testify falsely against
the appellant.
9. Appellants had a motive to kill the victim. Nelson
Ilisan testified that his brother Ronie (the victim) had
witnessed Bonifacio Buenaventura (a former chief
commander of the San Jose Police Force) kill a
certain Ruben Ventura. Cawaling, who was
Buenaventuras first cousin, wanted Ronie dead,
because the latter had not followed his instruction to
leave town to prevent him from testifying in said
case.

Assignment of Errors

4. The trial court gravely erred in not giving weight


to accused-appellant policemen[s] testimonies which
carry the presumption of regularity.
5. The trial court gravely erred in not acquitting all
the accused-appellants by applying the equipoise rule
thereby resulting [i]n reasonable doubts on the guilt.
[25]

In their joint brief,[26] Appellants Tumbagahan


and Cajilo cite these other errors:
1. The trial court gravely erred in relying on the
theory of the prosecution that accused-appellants
Ernesto Tumbagahan and Hilario Cajilo were alleged
co-conspirators in the killing of the victim, Ronie
Ilisan.
2. The trial court gravely erred in not believing the
defense that herein accused-appellants merely did a
lawful duty when the shooting incident happened
which led to the death of Ronnie Ilisan.
3. The trial court gravely erred in not acquitting
herein accused-appellants by applying the equipoise
rule, thereby resulting in reasonable doubt on their
guilt.
4. Prescinding from the foregoing, herein accusedappellants do press and hold, that the lower court
committed grave, serious and reversible error in

appreciating the qualifying circumstance of treachery


(alevosia).
5. The lower court committed grave, serious and
reversible error in convicting both accused-appellants
of murder, instead merely of homicide, defined and
penalized under the Revised Penal Code.
6. The lower court committed grave, serious and
reversible error in appreciating the qualifying
circumstance of taking advantage of superior
strength.
7. The consummated crime being merely homicide,
the mitigating circumstance of voluntary surrender
should be considered to lower the penalty of
homicide.
8. The lower court committed error in not considering
double jeopardy.
9. The lower court committed error in not dismissing
the case for want of jurisdiction.[27]
Appellant Cawaling imputes these additional
errors to the court a quo:
1. The trial court gravely erred in not acquitting
herein accused-appellant, Ulysses M. Cawaling,
considering that he had no part in the killing and the
prosecution failed to prove his guilt beyond
reasonable doubt;
2. The trial court gravely erred in not finding the
shooting incident a result of hot pursuit and shoot-out
between the deceased Ronnie Ilisan and the police
officers in the performance of their duty and selfdefense, and in sustaining the prosecutions
conspiracy theory;
3. The trial court gravely erred in not acquitting
Accused-Appellant Ulysses M. Cawaling considering
that there was blatant absence of due process in the
proceedings tantamount to mistrial.[28]

lawful duty, (6) alibi, (7) conspiracy, (8) rule on


equipoise, (9) qualifying circumstances, (10)
damages and (11) attending circumstances as they
affect the penalty.
We shall address the first two issues as
important preliminary questions and discuss the
merits of the remaining ones, which we have culled
from the errors cited by the appellants in their
aforementioned briefs.

First Issue:
Jurisdiction of the Trial Court
Appellants Tumbagahan and Cajilo argue that
the trial court erred when it assumed jurisdiction over
the criminal case. They insist that the Sandiganbayan,
not the regular courts, had jurisdiction to try and hear
the case against the appellants, as they were public
officers at the time of the killing which was allegedly
committed by reason of or in relation to their office.
We do not agree.
The jurisdiction of a court to try a criminal case
is determined by the law in force at the time of the
institution of the action. Once the court acquires
jurisdiction, it may not be ousted from the case by
any subsequent events, such as a new legislation
placing such proceedings under the jurisdiction of
another tribunal. The only recognized exceptions to
the rule, which find no application in the case at bar,
arise when: (1) there is an express provision in the
statute, or (2) the statute is clearly intended to apply
to actions pending before its enactment.[29]
The statutes pertinent to the issue are PD 1606,
as amended;[30] and PD 1850, as amended by PD
1952 and BP 129.
Section 4 of PD 1606[31] reads:
Sec. 4. Jurisdiction. -- The Sandiganbayan shall
exercise:
(a) Exclusive original jurisdiction in all cases
involving:

This Courts Ruling


We affirm the conviction of the appellants. In so
ruling, we will resolve the following issues: (1)
jurisdiction of the trial court, (2) double jeopardy, (3)
credibility of prosecution witnesses and their
testimonies, (4) self-defense, (5) performance of

xxxxxxxxx
(2) Other offenses or felonies committed by public
officers and employees in relation to their office,
including those employed in government-owned or
controlled corporations, whether simple or

complexed with other crimes, where the penalty


prescribed by law is higher than prision correccional
or imprisonment for six (6) years, or a fine
of P6,000.00: PROVIDED, HOWEVER, that
offenses or felonies mentioned in this paragraph
where the penalty prescribed by law does not exceed
prision correccional or imprisonment for six (6) years
or a fine of P6,000.00 shall be tried by the proper
Regional Trial Court, Metropolitan Trial Court,
Municipal Trial Court and Municipal Circuit Trial
Court.
xxxxxxxxx
However, former President Ferdinand Marcos
issued two presidential decrees placing the members
of the Integrated National Police under the
jurisdiction of courts-martial. Section 1 of PD 1952,
[32]
amending Section 1 of PD 1850, reads:
SECTION 1. Court Martial Jurisdiction over
Integrated National Police and Members of the
Armed Forces. Any provision of law to the contrary
notwithstanding -- (a) uniformed members of the
Integrated National Police who commit any crime or
offense cognizable by the civil courts shall
henceforth be exclusively tried by courts-martial
pursuant to and in accordance with Commonwealth
Act No. 408, as amended, otherwise known as the
Articles of War; (b) all persons subjects to military
law under Article 2 of the aforecited Articles of War
who commit any crime or offense shall be
exclusively tried by courts-martial or their case
disposed of under the said Articles of War; Provided,
that, in either of the aforementioned situations, the
case shall be disposed of or tried by the proper civil
or judicial authorities when court-martial jurisdiction
over the offense has prescribed under Article 38 of
Commonwealth Act Numbered 408, as amended, or
court-martial jurisdiction over the person of the
accused military or Integrated National Police
personnel can no longer be exercised by virtue of
their separation from the active service without
jurisdiction having duly attached beforehand unless
otherwise provided by law:
PROVIDED FURTHER, THAT THE PRESIDENT
MAY, IN THE INTEREST OF JUSTICE, ORDER
OR DIRECT, AT ANY TIME BEFORE
ARRAIGNMENT, THAT A PARTICULAR CASE
BE TRIED BY THE APPROPRIATE CIVIL
COURT.

As used herein, the term uniformed members of the


Integrated National Police shall refer to police
officers, policemen, firemen, and jail guards.
On the other hand, the jurisdiction of regular
courts over civil and criminal cases was laid down in
BP 129, the relevant portion of which is quoted
hereunder:
Sec. 20. Jurisdiction in Criminal Cases. -- Trial
Courts shall exercise exclusive original jurisdiction in
all criminal cases not within the exclusive jurisdiction
of any court, tribunal or body, except those now
falling under the exclusive and concurrent
jurisdiction of the Sandiganbayan which shall
hereafter be exclusively taken cognizance of by the
latter.[33]
In relation to the above, Section 4-a-2 of PD
1606, as amended by PD 1861, quoted earlier, lists
two requisites that must concur before the
Sandiganbayan may exercise exclusive and original
jurisdiction over a case: (a) the offense was
committed by the accused public officer in relation to
his office; and (b) the penalty prescribed by law is
higher than prision correccional or imprisonment for
six (6) years, or higher than a fine of six thousand
pesos (P6,000).[34] Sanchez vs. Demetriou[35] clarified
that murder or homicide may be committed both by
public officers and by private citizens, and that public
office is not a constitutive element of said crime, viz.:
The relation between the crime and the office
contemplated by the Constitution is, in our opinion,
direct and not accidental. To fall into the intent of the
Constitution, the relation has to be such that, in the
legal sense, the offense cannot exist without the
office. In other words, the office must be a
constituent element of the crime as defined in the
statute, such as, for instance, the crimes defined and
punished in Chapter Two to Six, Title Seven, of the
Revised Penal Code.
Public office is not the essence of murder. The taking
of human life is either murder or homicide whether
done by a private citizen or public servant, and the
penalty is the same except when the perpetrator,
being a public functionary, took advantage of his
office, as alleged in this case, in which event the
penalty is increased.
But the use or abuse of office does not adhere to the
crime as an element; and even as an aggravating
circumstance, its materiality arises, not from the
allegations but on the proof, not from the fact that the

criminals are public officials but from the manner of


the commission of the crime.
Furthermore, the Information filed against the
appellants contains no allegation that appellants were
public officers who committed the crime in relation
to their office. The charge was for murder, a felony
punishable under Article 248 of the Revised Penal
Code. As clarified in Aguinaldo, et al. vs. Domagas,
et al.,[36] [I]n the absence of such essential allegation,
and since the present case does not involve charges of
violation of R.A. No. 3019 (the Anti-Graft etc. Act),
the Sandiganbayan does not have jurisdiction over
the present case. (Bartolome vs. People, 142 SCRA
459 [1986] Even before considering the penalty

prescribed by law for the offense charged, it is thus


essential to determine whether that offense was
committed or alleged to have been committed by the
public officers and employees in relation to their
offices.
Jurisdiction is determined by the allegations in
the complaint or information.[37] In the absence of any
allegation that the offense was committed in relation
to the office of appellants or was necessarily
connected with the discharge of their functions, the
regional trial court, not the Sandiganbayan, has
jurisdiction to hear and decide the case.[38]

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