Penalties
Penalties
Penalties
Penalties in General
Penalty is the suffering that is inflicted upon a natural person by the State for the
transgression of a law or ordinance.
Penal laws shall have a retroactive effect insofar as they favor the persons guilty of a
felony, who is not a habitual delinquent, although at the time of the publication of such
laws a final sentence has been pronounced and the convict is serving the same. (Art. 22)
A pardon by the offended party does not extinguish criminal action except as provided in
Art. 344 ( when the injured party has pardoned the offender in crimes of adultery,
concubinage, and other private crimes; provided that such pardon is given before the
institution of the criminal action ); but civil liability with regard to the interest of the injured
party is extinguished by his express waiver. (Art. 23)
The following shall not be considered as penalties:
1. Arrest and temporary detention, as well as their detention by reason of insanity or
imbecility, or illness requiring their confinement in a hospital.
2. Commitment of a minor to any of the institution mentioned in Art. 80. (repealed by PD
603, as amended)
A minor who escaped from a correctional institution is not an escaped prisoner. (People v.
Halili, 58 Phil. 910)
3. Suspension from employment or public office during the trial or in order to institute
proceedings.
It is not a penalty because it is not imposed as a result of judicial proceedings. Those
mentioned in paragraphs 1, 3, and 4 of said article are merely preventive measures before
final judgment. (Bayot v. Sandiganbayan, 128 SCRA 383)
4. Fines and corrective measures which, in the exercise of their administrative disciplinary
powers, superior officials may impose upon their subordinates.
5. Deprivation of rights and the reparations which the civil law establishes in penal form.
(Art. 24)
Classification of Penalties
Principal Penalties are that provided by law for a felony and which is imposed by the court
expressly upon conviction.
Kinds of Principal Penalties:
1. Indivisible those which do not have fixed duration, like death, reclusion perpetua,
perpetual absolute or special disqualification, public censure.
2. Divisible those which have a fixed duration and are always divisible into three periods,
namely: maximum, medium and minimum, like prision mayor.
According to their gravity: (Art. 25)
CAPITAL PUNISHMENT
1. Death
It shall consist in putting the person under sentence to death by lethal injection. The
death sentence shall be executed under the authority of the Director of Prisons. The
death sentence shall be carried out not later than one (1) year after the judgment has
become final. (Art. 81, as amended by RA 7659) The court [of origin] shall designate a
working day for the execution but not the hour thereof; and such designation shall not be
communicated to the offender before sunrise of said day, and the execution shall not take
place until after the expiration of at least 8 hours following the notification but before
sunset. (Art. 82)
The death penalty shall be imposed in all cases in which it must be imposed under
existing laws, except:
a. When the guilty person is below 18 years of age at the time of the commission of the
crime.
b. When he is more than 70 years of age.
c. When upon appeal or automatic review of the case by the Supreme Court, the required
majority vote is not obtained for the imposition of the death penalty, in which cases the
penalty be reclusion perpetua. (Art. 47, as amended by RA 7659)
The death sentence shall not be inflicted upon a woman while she is pregnant or within
one (1) year after delivery, nor upon any person over 70 years of age. In this last case, the
death sentence shall be commuted to the penalty ofreclusion perpetua with the accessory
penalty provided in Art. 40. In all cases where the death sentence has become final, the
records of the case shall be forwarded immediately by the Supreme Court to the Office of
the President for possible exercise of the pardoning power. (Art. 83, as amended by RA
7659) The death penalty, when it is not executed by reason of commutation or pardon
shall carry with it that of perpetual absolute disqualification and that of civil interdiction
during 30 years following the date of sentence, unless such accessory penalties shall
have been expressly remitted in the pardon. (Art. 40)
AFFLICTIVE PENALTIES
1. Reclusion perpetua
The penalty of reclusion perpetua shall be from 20 years and one day to 40 years. (Art. 27,
as amended by RA 7659) The penalties of reclusion perpetua and reclusion temporal
shall carry with them that of civil interdiction for life or during the period of the sentence
as the case may be, and that of perpetual absolute disqualification which the offender
shall suffer even though pardoned as to the principal penalty, unless the same shall have
been expressly remitted in the pardon. (Art. 41)
If the penalty imposed is reclusion perpetua, the convict may be pardoned after serving the
penalty for 30 years. This is not mandatory. However, the longest term of imprisonment
cannot exceed 40 years. (Art. 70)
Although RA 7659 (Heinous Crime Law) in amending Article 27 thereof fixed the duration of
reclusion perpetua at 20 years and one day to 40 years imprisonment, said penalty remains
as an indivisible penalty as there is no clear legislative intent to alter its original
classification. At most, the amendment as to its duration is for the purpose of applying
Section 7, Rule 114 of the 2000 Rules on Criminal Procedure and Section 13, Article III of the
Constitution regarding the accuseds right to bail. (People v. Reyes, 101127, Aug. 7, 1992)
It is error for the trial court to sentence the accused to reclusion perpetua, whereas the
penalty prescribed is life imprisonment. The penalty of reclusion perpetua, a penalty
provided in the RPC with accessory penalties, is completely different from the penalty of life
imprisonment. (People v. Ruedas, 194 SCRA 553)
Distinction: (Q4, 1994 Bar; Q7, 1991 Bar)
Reclusion Perpetua
Life Imprisonment
2. No duration.
2. Reclusion temporal
The penalty shall be from 12 years and one day to 20 years. (Art. 27, as amended by RA
7659)
If the accused is acquitted, the court has no authority to censure him, because censure, no
matter how light a punishment it may be, is repugnant and essentially contrary to an
acquittal. (People v. Abellera, 69 Phil. 623)
PENALTIES COMMON TO THE 3 PRECEDING CLASSES:
1. Fine
A fine, whether imposed as a single or as an alternative penalty, shall be considered
an afflictive penalty, if it exceedsP 6,000; a correctional penalty, if it does not
exceed P 6,000 but it is not less than P 200; and a light penalty, if it be less than P 200. (Art.
26)
Under this Article, it the fine imposed is exactly P 200 it is correctional. However, under
Article 9, a fine imposed of exactly P 200 is a light felony. To resolve this seemingly
inconsistent provisions of the law, the learned authors has reconcile these in the following
manner: If the question at issue is the prescription of a felony, Article 9 will prevail over
Article 26. Thus, a fine imposed is exactly P 200, it is a light felony. On the other hand, if
the question at issue is theprescription of the penalty, then Article 29 will prevail over Article
9, as such fine of exactly P 200 imposed as a penalty will be considered a correctional fine.
2. Bond to keep the peace
The bond to keep peace shall be required to cover such period of time as the court may
determine. (Art. 27, as amended) It shall be the duty of any person to give bond to keep
the peace, to present two sufficient sureties who shall undertake that such person will not
commit the offense sought to be prevented, and that in case such offense is committed
they will pay the amount determined by the court in the judgment, or otherwise to
deposit such amount in the office of the clerk of the court to guarantee such undertaking.
The court shall determine, according to its discretion, the period of duration of the bond.
Should the person sentenced fail to give the bond as required, he shall be detained for a
period which shall in no case exceed 6 months, if he shall have been prosecuted for a
grave or less grave felony, and shall not exceed 30 days, if for a light felony. (Art. 35)
Accessory penalties are that deemed included in the imposition of the principal penalty.
1. Perpetual or temporary absolute disqualification
The penalties of disqualification for public office shall produce the following effects:
a. Deprivation of the public offices and employment which the offender may have held,
even if conferred by popular election.
b. The deprivation of the right to vote in any election for popular elective office or to be
elected to such office.
c. The disqualification for the offices or public employment and for the exercise of any of
the rights mentioned.
Civil interdiction shall deprive the offender during the time of his sentence of the rights of
parental authority, or guardianship, of marital authority, of the right to manage his property
and of the right to dispose of such property by any act or any conveyance inter vivos. (Art.
34)
5. Indemnification
Offender who have undergone preventive imprisonment shall be credited in the service of
their sentence consisting of deprivation of liberty, with the full time during which they have
undergone preventive imprisonment, if the detention prisoner agrees voluntarily in writing to
abide by the same disciplinary rules imposed upon convicted prisoners, except in the
following cases:
1. When they are recidivists, or have been convicted previously twice or more times of any
crime.
2. When upon being summoned for the execution of their sentence they have failed to
surrender voluntarily. (Art. 29)
If the detention prisoner does not agree, the deduction shall be 4/5 of the time during which
he has undergone preventive imprisonment. (People v. Abanes, 73 SCRA 44) An accused
sentence to life imprisonment is entitled to the deduction. (US v. Ortencio, 38 Phil. 941)
There is preventive imprisonment when:
1. An offender is detained while the criminal case against him is being heard, either because
the crime committed is a capital offense and not bailable.
2. Even if the crime committed was bailable, the offender could not post the required bail for
his provisional liberty. (Q3, 1994 Bar)
Whenever an accused has undergone preventive imprisonment for a period equal to or more
than the possible maximum imprisonment of the offense charged to which he may be
sentenced and his case is not yet terminated, he shall be released immediately without
prejudice to the continuation of the trial thereof or the proceeding on appeal, if the same is
under review. In case the maximum penalty to which the accused may be sentenced
is destierro, he shall be released after 30 days of preventive imprisonment. (See Art. 29, as
amended by EO 214, July 10, 1987)
A pardon shall not work the restoration of the right to hold public office, or the right of
suffrage, unless such rights be expressly restored by the terms of the pardon. A pardon
shall in no case exempt the culprit from the payment of civil indemnity imposed upon him by
the sentence. (Art. 36)
Absolute pardon merely extinguished the criminal liability, removed disqualification to public
office if expressly restored by the terms of the pardon, but does not entitled the accused to
reinstatement to her former position inasmuch as her right thereto had been forfeited by
reason of her conviction. Moreover, the pardon does not extinguish the civil liability arising
from the crime. (Monsanto v. Factoran, Jr., 170 SCRA 191) (Q15, 1994 Bar)
If the convict has no property with which to meet the fine mentioned in (c) of Article 38, he
shall be subject to asubsidiary personal liability at the rate of P 8 for one day, subject
to the following rules:
1. Penalty imposed is prision correctional or arresto and fine his subsidiary imprisonment
shall not exceed 1/3 of the term of the sentence, and in no case shall it continue for more
than one year.
Illustration:
6. Accomplice of a frustrated felony one degree lower than that prescribed for a frustrated
felony. (Art. 54)
7. Accessory of a frustrated felony 2 degrees lower than that prescribed for a frustrated
felony. (Art. 55)
8. Accomplice of an attempted felony one degree lower than that prescribed for an
attempted felony. (Art. 56)
9. Accessory of an attempted felony 2 degrees lower than that prescribed for an attempted
felony. (Art. 57)
Application of the Rules provided in Arts. 50 57
Consummated
Principal
Frustrated
x
Attempted
1
Accomplice
Accessory
X represent the penalty provided by law, which is to be imposed upon the principal in a
consummated felony. (Art. 46) The figures represent the degrees to which the penalty is
lowered.
Degree of a penalty refers to the penalty imposable for a felony committed considering
the stage of execution and thedegree of participation of the offender. While, period of a
penalty refers to the duration of the penalty, consisting of the maximum, medium and
minimum, after considering the presence or absence of aggravating or mitigating
circumstances, and refers only to a divisible penalty.
Complex crimes is when a single act constitutes 2 or more grave or less grave felonies,
or when an offense is a necessary means for committing the other, the penalty for
the most serious crime shall be imposed, the same to be applied in
its maximum period. (Art. 48) The purpose of the imposition of the penalty is to prescribed
a penalty lower than the aggregate of the penalties for each offense, if impose separately.
The reason is when 2 or more crimes are the result of a single act, the offender is deemed
less perverse than when he commits said crimes thru separate and distinct act. (People v.
Cano, 17 SCRA 237) (Q2, 1996 Bar)
Article 48 does not apply when the law especially considers 2 or more crimes as single and
indivisible and provides a specific penalty therefor. Robbery with homicide is not a complex
crime but a single and indivisible felony by specific provision of law (Art. 294, par. 1) known
as special composite crime (special complex crime), when under one provision of law, a
crime which carries another crime as component thereof is penalized with one penalty.
Kinds of Complex Crimes:
1. Compound (delito compuesto) when a single act constitutes 2 or more grave or less
grave felonies.
Thus, a single act of throwing a hand grenade at a person, killing him and injuring others
murder with multiple attempted murders (People v. Guillen, 47 OG 3433), or when the same
shot and bulled which caused the death of A also hit and killed B double homicide. (People
v. Pama, 44 OG 3339) Also, the single act of the offender in hacking the Barangay Captain
to death, in the performance of his official duties, resulted in a complex crime of homicide
with assault upon a person in authority. But when a single act results in (a) a grave felony
and a light felony; or (b) a grave or less grave felony and an offense punished by a special
law, there is no complex crime. Two independent crimes are committed. Thus, where a
firearm was stolen with intent to own and use it, two crimes are committed: (a) Theft and (b)
Illegal possession of firearm. (Q6, 1995 Bar)
Where the resulting felonies are the result of separate acts no matter how closely related,
this results in separate liabilities. Thus, when various victims expire from separate shots,
such acts constitute separate and distinct crimes. In this case, where the offender made use
of a firearm, the number of acts is now determined by the number of bullets released by the
firearm. If 4 bullets are released and 4 persons are killed, it is not a complex crime.
However, if 2 or more persons are killed by one bullet, it is a complex crime. In the use of
automatic firearm, it is presumed that separate bullets killed separate persons, hence; no
complex crime, unless proven otherwise.
The rules on complex crimes apply to felonies committed thru negligence. Thus, an accused
accidentally discharged his revolver during a dance killing a girl and wounding another
homicide with less serious physical injuries through reckless imprudence. (People v. Castro.
40 OG 18)
2. Complex proper (delito complejo) when an offense is committed as a necessary means
to commit the other.
It is essential that two crimes must be under the same statute. (People v. Araneta, 49 Phil.
650) The phrase necessary means has been interpreted not to mean indispensable
means because if it did, then the offense as a necessary means to commit another would
be an element of the other crime. It is simply means such an offense is committed to
facilitate and insure the commission of the other. (People v. Hernandez, 50 OG 5506)
Necessarily, the first crime must be consummated while the second could be an
attempted, frustrated or consummated felony. There is no complex crime if a crime is
committed to conceal the other crime. For instance, a victim was killed. To conceal the
crime, accused burned the house, where the killing was committed. Two crimes were
committed. Homicide and arson. (People v. Bersabal, 48 Phil. 439)
The first crime must not be indispensable or be an element of the second crime,
otherwise, there is no complex crime. For example, in robbery with force upon things,
trespass to dwelling is an element of the other crime. Also, there is no complex crime of
estafa thru falsification of private document because the damage as an element of estafa is
the same damage as an element of the falsification. (People v. Dizon, 48 OG 168) Do not
complexed crimes, as in the latter example, where one crime is only the component of the
other crime.
Where a policeman forcibly took a 15-year-old girl inside a taxi and afterwards raped her in
an isolated place, forcible abduction with rape is committed. (People v. Famador, 113 SCRA
310) Abduction with rape is now considered a complex crime. Where the manifest intention
is to kill the victim and the kidnapping is merely incidental to the principal purpose, the
crime is only murder.
Common crimes like homicide, robbery and the like cannot be complexed with the crime
of rebellion. All crimes, whether punishable under a special law, which are components or
ingredients, or committed in furtherance thereof, become absorbed in the crime of rebellion
and cannot be isolated as separate crimes in themselves. (Enrile v. Amin, 189 SCRA 573)
Continued or continuous crime (delito continuado) is a single crime consisting of a
series of acts arising from one criminal resolution or intent, not susceptible of division,
carried out in the same place and at about the same time, and is therefore not a complex
crime. Each acts, although of a delictual character, merely constitutes a partial execution
of a single particular delict. Thus, taking of 6 roosters from one coop belonging to 2 different
owners is only one theft because the 2 acts of taking arose from one criminal resolution.
(People v. Jaranillo, 55 SCRA [1974]) Also, if the accused ran amok and killed several
persons, only one crime is committed because the killings were the result of a single
impulse. (People v. Emit, 13477, Jan. 31, 1956) (Q8, 1996 Bar)
This singularity of criminal intent has been applied to prison riot cases where although
acts of murder are perpetrated separately or on different occasions.
It was noted that the concept of delito continuado has been applied to crimes penalized
under special laws (People v. Sabbum, 10 SCRA 156) since, under Article 10 of the RPC, the
Code shall be supplementary to special laws, unless the latter provide the contrary. In
Santiago v. Justice Garchitorena, 109266, Dec. 2, 1993, the Court directed the prosecution to
consolidate the 32 amended information into one information, charging the petitioner with
performing a single criminal act that of her approving the application for legalization of
aliens not qualified under the law considering that the criminal acts (1) were in violations
of the same law (EO 324 dated April 13, 1988); (2) caused undue injury to one offended
party the Government, and (3) done on the same day on or about October 17, 1988.
Two indivisible penalties Reclusion perpetua to death (Penalty for Parricide, Art. 248)
penalty next lower in degree isreclusion temporal, which follows reclusion perpetua, the
lesser of the two penalties.
3. ONE OR TWO INDIVISIBLE penalties and the MAXIMUM period of a DIVISIBLE penalty, the
penalty next lower in degree shall be composed of the medium and minimum periods of
the proper divisible penalty and the maximum period of that immediately following in said
respective graduated scale.
Illustration:
Reclusion temporal maximum period to death (Penalty for Murder, Art. 248). penalty next
lower in degree is prision mayor maximum to reclusion temporal medium period.
4. SEVERAL periods corresponding to different DIVISIBLE penalties, the penalty next lower in
degree shall be composed of the period immediately following the minimum prescribed and
of the two next following, which shall be taken from the penalty prescribed, if possible;
otherwise from the penalty immediately following in the respective graduated scale. (Art.
61)
Illustration:
Prision mayor maximum to reclusion temporal medium period (Penalty for frustrated
murder, Art. 248, par. 5) penalty next lower in degree is prision correccional maximum
to prision mayor medium.
In lowering the penalty by next lower in degree, aggravating or mitigating circumstances are
not considered because Article 61 refers to the penalty prescribed for the felony. After the
penalty next lower in degree is determined, aggravating or mitigating circumstances are
then considered to determine the proper period of said penalty.
The courts, in applying such lower or higher penalty, shall observe the following graduated
scales: (Art. 71)
Scale No. 1
Scale No. 2
4. Prision mayor
5. Prision correccional
6. Arresto mayor
7. Destierro
8. Arresto menor
4. Public censure
5. Fine
9. Public censure
10. Fine
minimum period. However, the total of the 2 penalties to be imposed upon the offender
shall in no case exceed 30 years.
In charging habitual delinquency, the information must allege:
a. The dates of the commission of the previous offenses;
b. The date of the last conviction or release.
c. The dates of other previous convictions or release.
The law does not require that the convictions should take place within a period of 10
years. What the law requires is that each conviction must take place within 10 years
from each conviction. The 10-year period is computed from the date of the last conviction
or release as the law expressly provides to the date of conviction of the subsequent
offense. (People v. Morales, 61 Phil. 222) Habitual delinquency applies to all stages of
commission. (People v. Abuyen, 52 Phil. 722) But in imposing the additional penalty,
recidivism is not aggravating because such is a qualifying or inherent circumstances in
habitual delinquency. (People v. De Jesus, 63 Phil. 760)
The imposition of the additional penalty on habitual delinquents is constitutional because
such law is neither an ex-post law nor an additional punishment for future crimes. It is
simply a punishment on future crimes the penalty being enhanced on account of the
criminal propensities of the accused. (People v. Montera, 55 Phil. 993)
5. When in the commission of the crime, advantage was taken by the offender of his public
position, the penalty to be imposed shall be in its maximum regardless of mitigating
circumstances.
The maximum penalty shall be imposed if the offense was committed by any person who
belongs to anorganized/syndicate crime group (a group of two or more persons
collaborating, confederating or mutually helping one another for purposes of gain in the
commission of any crime) (Art. 62)
Mitigating and aggravating circumstances are not considered in the imposition of
penalties:
included in the penalty prescribed, and forming one period of each of the 3 portions. (Art.
65)
In imposing fines, the courts may fix any amount within the limits established by law; in
fixing the amount in each case attention should be given, not only the mitigating or
aggravating, but more particularly to the wealth or means of the culprit. (Art. 66)
Whenever it may be necessary to increase or reduce the penalty of fine by one or more
degrees, it shall be increased or reduced, respectively, for each degree, by 1/4 of the
maximum amount prescribed by law, without however, changing the minimum. (Art. 75) If
the law only fixes the maximum, the court cannot impose a fine next higher.
Illustration:
Fine is from P 200 to P 1,000. Each degree will be equal to 1/4 of P 1,000 or P 250. P 250
added to P 1,000 to determine the fine next higher in degree without changing the minimum
of P 200, and will therefore, be P 200 to P 1,250. Fine next lower in degree will be to
deduct P 250 from P 1,000 without also changing the minimum which is P 200 to P750.
When the offender is a minor under 18 years, the rules are:
1. Over 9 years of age but less than 15 who acted with discernment penalty lower by 2
degrees than that prescribed by law.
2. Over 15 and under 18 years of age penalty next lower than that prescribed by law, but
always in the proper period. (Art. 68)
This article treats of two privileged mitigating circumstances.
When the culprit has to serve 2 or more penalties, he shall serve them simultaneously if
the nature of the penalties will so permit (like penalties of disqualification may be served
simultaneously with imprisonment): if not, the order of their respective severity shall be
followed so that they may be executed successively. However, the maximum duration of
the convicts sentence shall not be more than three-fold the length of time corresponding to
the most severe of the penalties imposed upon him. (Three-fold Rule) Such maximum
period shall in no case exceed 40 years. The duration of perpetual penalties is 30 years.
(See Art. 70)
The phrase most severe penalty includes equal penalties. (Aspra v. Director, 85 Phil. 737)
If in 6 estafas, accused was sentenced to 3 months and 11 days in each case and he should
serve 3 times 3 months and 11 days or 9 months and 33 days.
Where the accused was convicted of double murder and sentenced to 2 reclusion perpetua,
the 40 years limit shall be observed. (People v. Odencio, 88 SCRA 1) Material
accumulation system is where all the penalties for the crimes committed are imposed
even if they total beyond the natural span of human life. The juridical accumulation
systemrefers to the three-fold rule.
Multiple death penalties are not impossible to serve because they will have to be executed
simultaneously. The sentencing of an accused to several capital penalties is an indelible
badge of his extreme criminal perversity, which may not be accurately projected by the
imposition of only one death sentence. Granting, however, that the President deems it
proper to commute the multiple death penalties to multiple life imprisonments, then the
practical effect is that the convict has to serve the maximum 40 years of multiple life
sentences. In only one death penalty is imposed, and then is commuted to life
imprisonment, the convict will have to serve a maximum of only 30 years corresponding to a
single life sentence. (People v. Jose, 37 SCRA 450)
Complex penalty is a penalty prescribed by law composed of 3 distinct penalties each
forming a period, the lightest of which shall be the minimum, the next shall be the medium,
and the most severe, the maximum. (Art. 77)
The factors to consider to arrive at the correct penalty:
Youth Offender is a child, minor or youth, including one who is emancipated in accordance
with law, who is over 9 years but under 18 years of age at the time of the commission of
the offense.
In youthful offender, instead of pronouncing judgment of conviction, the court shall
suspend all further proceedings and shall commit such minor to the custody or care of the
DSWD, or any training institution operated by the government, or duly licensed agencies or
any other responsible person, until he shall have reached 21 years of age, or for a shorter
period as the court may deem proper. (Art. 192, PD 603, Child and Youth Welfare Code)
The application of Art. 192 is not automatic; the minor must apply to the court for the
benefit of suspension of judgment.
The benefits of this article shall not apply to a youthful offender who:
1. Has once enjoyed suspension of sentence.
2. One who is convicted of an offense punishable by death or life imprisonment. (Q7, 1995
Bar)
3. One who is convicted for an offense by the Military Tribunals. (Art. 192 of PD 603)
When ever the youthful offender has been found incorrigible or has willfully failed to comply
with the conditions of his rehabilitation programs, or should his continued stay in the
training institution be inadvisable, he shall be returned to the committing court for the
promulgation of judgment. (Art. 197, PD 603, as amended)
When the youthful offender has reached the age of 21 while in the commitment, the court
shall determine whether to dismiss the case or to pronounce the judgment of conviction.
In the latter case, the convicted offender may apply for probation.
In any case, the youthful offender shall be credited in the service of his sentence with the
full time spent in actual commitment and detention. (Art. 197 of PD 603)
A child 9 years of age or under at the time of the commission of the offense shall be
exempted from criminal liability and shall be committed to the care of his or her father
or mother or nearest relative or family friend in the discretion of the court and subject to its
supervision. (Art. 189, PD 603, as amended)
A minor 14 years old at the time of the commission of the crime but 23 years old when the
case was decided by the Supreme Court on appeal is not entitled to a suspended sentence
under PD 603. He is, however, entitled under Article 68 of the RPC to a two-degree
reduction of the penalty. (People v. Hermosilla, 122 SCRA 905)
offenses by the simple expedient of filing a graver offense which included a light offense.
(Q12, 1997 Bar)
6. Prescription of the penalty.
It is the loss or forfeiture of the right of the government to execute the final sentence after
the lapse of a certain time fixed by law, viz:
a. Death and reclusion perpetua 20 years
b. Other afflictive penalties 15 years
c. Correctional penalties 10 years
d. Arresto mayor 5 years
e. Light penalties 1 year
The period of prescription of penalties shall commence to run from the date the culprit
should evade the service of his sentence, and it shall be interrupted if the defendant should:
a. Give himself up.
b. Be captured.
c. Go to some foreign country with which the government has no extradition treaty.
d. Commit another crime before the expiration of the period of prescription. (Art. 93)
e. Acceptance of conditional pardon. By acceptance of the pardon he eluded the service of
the penalty, in the same manner that a convict who goes to a foreign country with which the
government has no extradition treaty. (People v. Puntillas, G.R. 45269, June 15, 1938)
Prescription of the penalty presupposes that the culprit has been sentenced by final
judgment and evades the service of the penalty.
7. Marriage of the offended woman, as provided in Art. 344. (Art. 89)
Marriage of the offender with the offended party refers to private offenses only and must be
contracted in good faith. (People v. Santiago, 51 Phil. 68)
Partial Extinction of Criminal Liability
Criminal liability is extinguished partially:
1. Conditional pardon
It is in the nature of a contract, the conditions of which the convict, upon acceptance, must
not violate. Otherwise, the offender is rearrested and re-incarcerated by order of the
President.
2. Commutation of the sentence
It is the change in the sentence of the court made by the President which consists in
reducing the penalty imposed upon of the offender. The commutation of the original
sentence for another of a different length and nature shall have the effect of substituting the
latter on the place of the former. (Art. 96)
3. Good conduct allowances which the culprit may earn while he is serving his sentence.
The good conduct of any prisoner in any penal institution shall entitle him to the following
deduction from the period of his sentence:
a. First 2 years of imprisonment a deduction of 5 days for each month of good behavior.
b. 3rd to 5th year 8 days for each month of good behavior.
c. Following years to 10th year 10 days for each month of good behavior.
d. 11th and successive year 15 days for each month of good behavior. (Art. 97)
A deduction of 1/5 of the period of his sentence shall be granted to any prisoner who,
having evaded the service of his sentence, gives himself up to the authorities within 48
hours following the issuance of a proclamation announcing the passing away of the calamity
or catastrophe. (Art. 98)
Whenever lawfully justified, the Director of Prisons shall grant allowances for good conduct.
Such allowances once granted shall not be revoked. (Art. 99)
4. Parole under the Indeterminate Sentence Law. (See Indeterminate Sentence Law)
Parole consists in the suspension of the sentence of a convict after serving the minimum of
the sentence imposed without granting a pardon, prescribing the terms upon which the
sentence shall be suspended.
3. When the court finds and states in its judgment that there is only civil responsibility.
The acquittal of the accused in the criminal case does not extinguished his liability for quasidelict. (Elcano v. Hill, 24803, May 26, 1977)
In the absence of any reservation to institute a separate civil action for damages arising
from the commission of the offense charged, the injured party may avail himself of the
auxiliary remedy of attachment, since under the law when a criminal action is instituted the
civil action is presumed to have been instituted jointly with the criminal action. (Rule 127,
Rules of Court)
Subsidiary civil liability of the following:
1. In default of the persons criminally liable, INNKEEPERS, TAVERN-KEEPERS, and any
OTHER PERSONS or CORPORATIONS shall be civilly liable for crimes committed in their
establishments, in all cases were a violation of municipal ordinances or some general or
special police regulations shall have been committed by them or their employees.
2. INNKEEPERS are also subsidiarily liable for the restitution of goods taken by robbery or
theft within their houses from guests lodging therein, or for payment of the value thereof,
provided that such guests shall have notified in advance the innkeeper himself, or the
person representing him, of the deposit of such goods within the inn, and shall furthermore
have followed the direction which such innkeeper or his representative may have given
them with respect to the care of and vigilance over such goods. No liability shall attach in
case of robbery with violence or intimidation of persons unless committed by the
innkeepers employees. (Art. 102)
3. EMPLOYERS, TEACHERS, PERSONS, and CORPORATIONS engaged in any kind of industry,
for felonies committed by their servants, pupils, workmen, apprentices or employees in
the discharge of their duties. (Art. 103)
In the above case, the employee is insolvent and has not satisfied the civil liability. When a
person is subsidiarily liable, the defense that he acted with the diligence of a good father
of a family in choosing his employee is not available. (Arambulo v. Meralco, 55 Phil. 115)
The right to enforce the civil liability under Article 103 is necessarily predicated upon the
existence of employer-employee relationship. (Clarianes v. Sabinosa, 15817, Dec. 12,
1958) Industry means an enterprise for gain or profit.
The conviction of the employee primarily liable is a condition sine qua non for the
employers subsidiary liability. (Franco v. IAC, 178 SCRA 331)
What Civil Liability Includes
It includes the following:
1. Restitution is the return of the thing itself to the offended party, even though it be
found in the possession of a third party who has acquired it by lawful means, saving to the
latter his action against the proper person who may be liable to him; except, in cases,
when the things was acquired by the third person in the manner and under circumstances
that, by law, bar any action for recovery, such as when the thing was acquired in a
public auction. (Art. 105)
Restitution should not be ordered without a judgment of conviction in the criminal case. The
dismissal of the case at the instance of the offended party carries with it the dismissal of the
civil aspect accompanying the filing of the criminal case. What the complainant should do is
to file an entire new civil action to recover the properties she lost. (Munsayac v. Villasor,
44555, May 14, 1990)
2. Reparation of damage caused, in case of inability of the above, he must pay the value
of the article, taking into consideration the price, if possible, and its special
sentimental value to the injured party. (Art. 106)
3. Indemnification for consequential damages include not only those caused the
injured party, but also those suffered by his family or by a third person by reason of the
crime. (Art. 107)
The items of damages to be awarded in case of death arising from crime are:
a. Indemnity for the death of the victim.
Civil indemnity for the felonious destruction of human life, whether intentional or accidental,
is P 50,000. (Per SC Resolution adopted on Aug. 30, 1990)
b. Indemnity for loss of earning capacity of the deceased.
c. Moral damages and/or exemplary damages.
d. Attorneys fees and expenses of litigation.
e. Interest, in proper cases. (Brinas v. People, 125 SCRA 687)
Where the crime committed is not against property, no restitution nor reparation of the thing
damaged can be done, although the offended party is entitled to indemnification under
Article 107 which includes all consequential damages such as actual damages, attorneys
fees and moral damages. (De las Penas v. Royal Bus Co., 23115, Dec. 7, 1959)
Civil liability of persons guilty of rape, seduction, or abduction includes, inter alia, the
acknowledgment of the child born as a consequence of the crime. (Art. 345, RPC) The
acknowledgment required of the accused should be understood to be acknowledgment
merely of the filiation of the child. (People v. Rafanan, 182 SCRA 811)
The obligation to make restoration or reparation for damages and indemnification for
consequential damages devolves upon the heirs of the person liable. The action to
demand restoration, reparation, and indemnification likewise descends to the heirs of the
person injured. (Art. 108)
The principals, accomplices, and accessories, each within their respective class, shall be
liable severally (in solidum) among themselves for their quotas, and subsidiarily for those
of the other persons liable. The subsidiary liability shall be enforced, first against the
property of the principals; next, against that of the accomplices, and lastly against that of
the accessories. Whenever the liability in solidum or the subsidiary liability has been
enforced, the person by whom payment has been made shall have a right of action against
the others for the amount of their respective shares. (Art. 110)
The civil liability herein established shall be extinguished in the same manner as obligations,
in accordance with the provisions of the Civil Law. (Art. 112)
The causes under the Civil Code are: (1) payment or performance, (2) loss of the thing due,
(3) remission, (4) merger, (5) compensation, and (6) novation. (Art. 1161)
The offender shall remain obliged to satisfy his civil liability, even if the offender has
served his sentence or was not made to serve his sentence by reason of pardon, amnesty or
any other reason. (Art. 113)