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People v. Januario

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PEOPLE V.

JANUARIO

G.R. NO. 98252

FEBRUARY 7, 1997

FACTS:

Accused- appellants Rene Januario and Efren Canape, together with their co-accused were charged with
violation of Republic Act No. 6539 (Anti-Carnapping Law) for stealing one Isuzu passenger type jeepney,
after killing its driver and conductor. The NBI team took the statements of appellants one at a time with
the help of Atty. Carlos Saunar. In convicting accused-appellants, the trial court relied upon the
extrajudicial confessions of the latter, extracted and signed in the presence and with the assistance of a
lawyer, Atty. Saunar, who was applying for work in the NBI. Counsels for appellants allege that the extra-
judicial confessions of the appellants are inadmissible in evidence for having been extracted in violation
of their constitutional right to counsel.

ISSUE:
Whether or not Atty. Saunar was a competent and independent counsel of the appellants

RULING:
No. Proof of Saunar's presence during the custodial investigation of appellants is, however, not a
guarantee that appellants' respective confessions had been taken in accordance with Article 111,
Section 12(1) of the Constitution. This constitutional provision requires that a person under investigation
for the commission of an offense shall have no less than "competent and independent counsel
preferably of his own choice." Elucidating on this particular constitutional requirement, this Court has
taught:

It is noteworthy that the modifiers competent and independent were terms absent in all organic laws
previous to the 1987 Constitution. Their addition in the fundamental law of 1987 was meant to stress
the primacy accorded to the voluntariness of the choice, under the uniquely stressful conditions of a
custodial investigation, by according the accused, deprived of normal conditions guaranteeing individual
autonomy, an informed judgment based on the choices given to him by a competent and independent
lawyer.

Thus, the lawyer called to be present during such investigation should be as far as reasonably possible,
the choice of the individual undergoing questioning. If the lawyer were one furnished in the accused's
behalf, it is important that he should be competent and independent, i.e., that he Is willing to fully
safeguard the constitutional rights of the accused, as distinguished from one who would merely be
giving a routine, peremptory and meaningless recital of the individual's constitutional rights. In People v.
Basay, this Court stressed that an accused's right to be informed of the right to remain silent and to
counsel 'contemplates the transmission of meaningful information rather than just the ceremonial and
perfunctory recitation of an abstract constitutional principle.

Ideally, therefore, a lawyer engaged for an individual facing custodial investigation (if the latter could
not afford one) should be engaged by the accused (himself), or by the latter's relative or person
authorized by him to engage an attorney or by the court, upon proper petition of the accused or person
authorized by the accused to file such petition. Lawyers engaged by the police, whatever testimonials
are given as proof of their probity and supposed independence, are generally suspect, as in many areas,
the relationship between lawyers and law enforcement authorities can be symbiotic.

We find that Saunar was not the choice of appellant Januario as his custodial investigation counsel.

Saunar's competence as a lawyer is beyond question. Under the circumstances described by the
prosecution however, he could not have been the independent counsel solemnly spoken of by our
Constitution. He was an applicant for a position in the NBI and therefore it can never be said that his
loyalty was to the confessants. In fact, he was actually employed by the NBI a few months after. As
regards appellant Januario, Saunar might have really been around to properly apprise appellant of his
constitutional right as reflected in the written sworn statement itself.

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