Ivler
Ivler
Ivler
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* SECOND DIVISION.
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192
193
194
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accused who, in lieu of serving multiple penalties, will only serve the
maximum of the penalty for the most serious crime. In contrast, Article 365
is a substantive rule penalizing not an act defined as a felony but “the
mental attitude x x x behind the act, the dangerous recklessness, lack of care
or foresight x x x,” a single mental attitude regardless of the resulting
consequences. Thus, Article 365 was crafted as one quasi-crime resulting in
one or more consequences.
Same; Same; Same; Court holds that prosecutions under Article 365
should proceed from a single charge regardless of the number or severity of
the consequences; There shall be no splitting of charges under Article 365,
and only one information shall be filed in the same first level court.—We
hold that prosecutions under Article 365 should proceed from a single
charge regardless of the number or severity of the consequences. In
imposing penalties, the judge will do no more than apply the penalties under
Article 365 for each consequence alleged and proven. In short, there shall be
no splitting of charges under Article 365, and only one information shall be
filed in the same first level court.
Same; Same; Same; If it is so minded, Congress can re-craft Article
365 by extending to quasi-crimes the sentencing formula of Article 48 so
that only the most severe penalty shall be imposed under a single
prosecution of all resulting acts, whether penalized as grave, less grave or
light offenses.—Our ruling today secures for the accused facing an Article
365 charge a stronger and simpler protection of their constitutional right
under the Double Jeopardy Clause. True, they are thereby denied the
beneficent effect of the favorable sentencing formula under Article 48, but
any disadvantage thus caused is more than compensated by the certainty of
non-prosecution for quasi-crime effects qualifying as “light offenses” (or, as
here, for the more serious consequence prosecuted belatedly). If it is so
minded, Congress can re-craft Article 365 by extending to quasi-crimes the
sentencing formula of Article 48 so that only the most severe penalty shall
be imposed under a single prosecution of all resulting acts, whether
penalized as grave, less grave or light offenses. This will still keep intact the
distinct concept of quasi-offenses. Meanwhile, the lenient schedule of
penalties under Article 365, befitting crimes occupying a lower rung of
culpability, should cushion the effect of this ruling.
195
CARPIO, J.:
The Case
The Facts
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196
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197
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198
The Issues
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199
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or confinement, jumps bail or flees to a foreign country during the pendency of the
appeal.”
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ment should be rendered against them for the amount of their bail. Within the said
period, the bondsmen must:
(a) produce the body of their principal or give the reason for his non-production;
and
(b) explain why the accused did not appear before the court when first required
to do so.
Failing in these two requisites, a judgment shall be rendered against the
bondsmen, jointly and severally, for the amount of the bail. The court shall not reduce
or otherwise mitigate the liability of the bondsmen, unless the accused has been
surrendered or is acquitted.”
12 Rollo, p. 40.
201
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202
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have constituted a less grave felony, the penalty of arresto mayor in its
minimum and medium periods shall be imposed; if it would have
constituted a light felony, the penalty of arresto menor in its maximum
period shall be imposed.
Any person who, by simple imprudence or negligence, shall commit an
act which would otherwise constitute a grave felony, shall suffer the penalty
of arresto mayor in its medium and maximum periods; if it would have
constituted a less serious felony, the penalty of arresto mayor in its
minimum period shall be imposed.
When the execution of the act covered by this article shall have only
resulted in damage to the property of another, the offender shall be punished
by a fine ranging from an amount equal to the value of said damages to three
times such value, but which shall in no case be less than twenty-five pesos.
A fine not exceeding two hundred pesos and censure shall be imposed
upon any person who, by simple imprudence or negligence, shall cause
some wrong which, if done maliciously, would have constituted a light
felony.
In the imposition of these penalties, the court shall exercise their sound
discretion, without regard to the rules prescribed in Article sixty-four.
The provisions contained in this article shall not be applicable:
1. When the penalty provided for the offense is equal to or lower than
those provided in the first two paragraphs of this article, in which case the
court shall impose the penalty next lower in degree than that which should
be imposed in the period which they may deem proper to apply.
2. When, by imprudence or negligence and with violation of the
Automobile Law, to death of a person shall be caused, in which case the
defendant shall be punished by prision correccional in its medium and
maximum periods.
203
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16 Quizon v. Justice of the Peace of Pampanga, 97 Phil. 342, 345 (1955)
(emphasis in the original).
204
“The proposition (inferred from Art. 3 of the Revised Penal Code) that
“reckless imprudence” is not a crime in itself but simply a way of
committing it and merely determines a lower degree of criminal liability is
too broad to deserve unqualified assent. There are crimes that by their
structure cannot be committed through imprudence: murder, treason,
robbery, malicious mischief, etc. In truth, criminal negligence in our
Revised Penal Code is treated as a mere quasi offense, and dealt with
separately from willful offenses. It is not a mere question of classification or
terminology. In intentional crimes, the act itself is punished; in negligence
or imprudence, what is principally penalized is the mental attitude or
condition behind the act, the dangerous recklessness, lack of care or
foresight, the imprudencia punible. x x x x
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17 Id.
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[T]he quasi-offense of criminal negligence under article 365 of the Revised Penal
Code lies in the execution of an imprudent or negligent act that, if intentionally done,
would be punishable as a felony. The law penalizes thus the negligent or careless act,
not the result thereof. The gravity of the consequence is only taken into account to
determine the penalty, it does not qualify the substance of the offense. And, as the
careless act is single, whether the injurious result should affect one person or several
persons, the offense (criminal negligence) remains one and the same, and cannot be
split into different crimes and prosecutions. This has been the constant ruling of the
Spanish Supreme Court, and is also that of this Court in its most recent decisions on
the matter.
Thus, in People vs. Silva, L-15974, January 30, 1962, where as a result of the
same vehicular accident one man died, two persons were seriously injured while
another three suffered only slight physical injuries, we ruled that the acquittal on a
charge of slight physical
206
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injuries through reckless imprudence, was a bar to another prosecution for homicide
through reckless imprudence. In People vs. Diaz, L-6518, March 30, 1954, the ruling
was that the dismissal by the Municipal Court of a charge of reckless driving barred a
second information of damage to property through reckless imprudence based on the
same negligent act of the accused. In People vs, Belga, 100 Phil. 996, dismissal of an
information for physical injuries through needless imprudence as a result of a
collision between two automobiles was declared, to block two other prosecutions, one
for damage to property through reckless imprudence and another for multiple physical
injuries arising from the same collision. The same doctrine was reasserted in Yap vs.
Lutero, et al., L-12669, April 30, 1959. In none of the cases cited did the Supreme
Court regard as material that the various offenses charged for the same occurrence
were triable in Courts of differing category, or that the complainants were not the
individuals.
As for the Spanish jurisprudence, Cuello Calon, in his Derecho Penal (12th Ed.),
Vol. I, p. 439, has this to say:
Aun cuando de un solo hecho imprudente se originen males diversos, como el
hecho culposo es uno solo, existe un solo delito de imprudencia. Esta es
jurisprudencia constante del Tribunal Supremo. De acuerdo con esta doctrina el
automovilista imprudente que atropella y causa lesiones a dos personas y ademas
daños, no respondera de dos delitos de lesiones y uno de daños por imprudencia, sino
de un solo delito culposo.
The said author cites in support of the text the following decisions of the Supreme
Court of Spain (footnotes 2 and 3).
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x x x x
Si con el hecho imprudente se causa la muerte de una persona y ademas se
ocasionan daños, existe un solo hecho punible, pues uno solo fue el acto, aun cuando
deben apreciarse dos enorden a la responsabilidad civil, 14 diciembre 1931 si a
consecuencia de un solo acto imprudente se produjeron tres delitos, dos de homicidio
y uno de daños, como todos son consecuencia de un solo acto culposo, no cabe
penarlos por separado, 2 abril 1932. (Emphasis supplied)
207
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21 E.g. Samson v. Court of Appeals, 103 Phil. 277 (1958); People v. Cano, 123
Phil. 1086; 17 SCRA 237 (1966); Pabulario v. Palarca, 129 Phil. 1; 21 SCRA 769
(1967); Corpus v. Paje, 139 Phil. 429; 28 SCRA 1062 (1969).
22 67 Phil. 529 (1939) (affirming a conviction for malicious mischief upon a
charge for “damage [to property] through reckless imprudence”). A logical
consequence of a Fallerian conceptualization of quasi-crimes is the sanctioning of the
split prosecution of the consequences of a single quasi offense such as those allowed
in El Pueblo de Filipinas v. Estipona, 70 Phil. 513 (1940) (finding the separate
prosecutions of damage to property and multiple physical injuries arising from the
same recklessness in the accused’s operation of a motor vehicle not violative of the
Double Jeopardy Clause).
23 67 Phil. 529 (1939).
24 E.g. Lontok v. Gorgonio, 178 Phil. 525, 528; 89 SCRA 632 (1979) (holding that
the “less grave offense” of “damage to property through reckless imprudence” (for
P2,340) cannot be complexed under Article 48 of the penal code with a prescribed “
slight offense” of “lesiones leves through reckless imprudence,” citing Faller);
Arcaya v. Teleron, 156 Phil. 354, 362; 57 SCRA 363 (1974) (noting, by way of dicta
in a ruling denying relief to an appeal against the splitting of two charges for “less
serious physical injuries and damage to property amounting to P10,000 though
reckless imprudence” and “slight physical injuries though reckless imprudence,” that
the Quizon doctrine, as cited in Corpus v. Paje, 139 Phil. 429; 28 SCRA 1062 (1969)
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and People v. Buan, 131 Phil. 498; 22 SCRA 1383 (1968), “may not yet be settled in
view of the contrary dictum” in Faller).
208
fusion of criminal law rules defining Article 365 crimes and the
complexing of intentional crimes under Article 48 of the Revised
Penal Code which, as will be shown shortly, rests on erroneous
conception of quasi-crimes. Indeed, the Quizonian conception of
quasi-crimes undergirded a related branch of jurisprudence applying
the Double Jeopardy Clause to quasi-offenses, barring second
prosecutions for a quasi-offense alleging one resulting act after a
prior conviction or acquittal of a quasi-offense alleging another
resulting act but arising from the same reckless act or omission upon
which the second prosecution was based.
Prior Conviction or Acquittal of Reckless
Imprudence Bars Subsequent Prosecution
for the Same Quasi-Offense
The doctrine that reckless imprudence under Article 365 is a
single quasi-offense by itself and not merely a means to commit
other crimes such that conviction or acquittal of such quasi-offense
bars subsequent prosecution for the same quasi-offense, regardless
of its various resulting acts, undergirded this Court’s unbroken chain
of jurisprudence on double jeopardy as applied to Article 365
starting with People v. Diaz,25 decided in 1954. There, a full Court,
speaking through Mr. Justice Montemayor, ordered the dismissal of
a case for “damage to property thru reckless imprudence” because a
prior case against the same accused for “reckless driving,” arising
from the same act upon which the first prosecution was based, had
been dismissed earlier. Since then, whenever the same legal question
was brought before the Court, that is, whether prior conviction or
acquittal of reckless imprudence bars subsequent prosecution for the
same quasi-offense, regardless of the consequences alleged for both
charges, the Court unfailingly and consistently answered in the
affirmative in People v.
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209
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26
Belga (promulgated in 1957 by the Court en banc, per Reyes,
J.), Yap v. Lutero27 (promulgated in 1959, unreported, per
Concepcion, J.), People v. Narvas28 (promulgated in 1960 by the
Court en banc, per Bengzon J.), People v. Silva29 (promulgated in
1962 by the Court en banc, per Paredes, J.), People v. Macabuhay30
(promulgated in 1966 by the Court en banc, per Makalintal, J.),
People v. Buan31 (promulgated in 1968 by the Court en banc, per
Reyes, J.B.L., acting C.J.), Buerano v. Court of Appeals32 (promul-
_______________
26 100 Phil. 996 (1957) (barring subsequent prosecutions for physical injuries thru
reckless imprudence and damage to property thru reckless imprudence following an
acquittal for “reckless imprudence with physical injury”).
27 105 Phil. 1307 (1959) (Unrep.) (barring subsequent prosecution for “serious
physical injuries” following an acquittal for “reckless driving”).
28 107 Phil. 737 (1960) (barring subsequent prosecution for “damage to property
thru reckless imprudence” following a conviction for “multiple slight and serious
physical injuries thru reckless imprudence.”)
29 No. L-15974, 30 January 1962, 4 SCRA 95 (barring subsequent prosecution for
“homicide thru reckless imprudence” following an acquittal for “slight physical
injuries thru reckless imprudence”).
30 123 Phil. 48; 16 SCRA 239 (1966) (barring subsequent prosecution for
“damage to property thru reckless imprudence” following an acquittal for two counts
of “slight physical injuries thru reckless imprudence.”)
31 131 Phil. 498; 22 SCRA 1383 (1968) (barring subsequent prosecution for
“serious physical injuries and damage to property thru reckless imprudence”
following an acquittal for “slight physical injuries thru reckless imprudence”).
32 200 Phil. 486; 115 SCRA 82 (1982) (reversing a subsequent conviction for
“damage to property thru reckless imprudence” following a conviction for “slight and
serious physical injuries thru reckless imprudence”).
33 206 Phil. 555; 121 SCRA 637 (1983) (barring subsequent prosecution for
“homicide thru reckless imprudence” following a conviction for “serious physical
injuries thru reckless imprudence”).
210
gated in 1982 by the Court en banc, per Relova, J.), and People v.
City Court of Manila33 (promulgated in 1983 by the First Division,
per Relova, J.). These cases uniformly barred the second
prosecutions as constitutionally impermissible under the Double
Jeopardy Clause.
The reason for this consistent stance of extending the
constitutional protection under the Double Jeopardy Clause to quasi-
offenses was best articulated by Mr. Justice J.B.L. Reyes in Buan,
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“Th[e] view of the Court of Appeals was inspired by the ruling of this
Court in the pre-war case of People vs. Estipona decided on November 14,
1940. However, in the case of People vs. Buan, 22 SCRA 1383 (March
29, 1968), this Court, speaking thru Justice J. B. L. Reyes, held that—
Reason and precedent both coincide in that once convicted or
acquitted of a specific act of reckless imprudence, the accused may
not be prosecuted again for that same act. For the essence of the
quasi offense of criminal negligence under Article 365 of the Revised
Penal Code lies in the execution of an imprudent or negligent act
that, if intentionally done, would be punishable as a felony. The law
penalizes thus the negligent or careless act, not the result thereof. The
gravity of the consequence is only taken into account to determine
the penalty, it does not qualify the substance of the offense. And, as
the careless act is single, whether the injurious result should affect
one person or several persons, the offense (criminal negligence)
remains one and the same, and can not be split into different crimes
and prosecutions.
xxxx
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212
that the Court of Appeals erred in not sustaining petitioner’s plea of double
jeopardy and submits that “its affirmatory decision dated January 28, 1969,
in Criminal Case No. 05123-CR finding petitioner guilty of damage to
property through reckless imprudence should be set aside, without costs.”
He stressed that “if double jeopardy exists where the reckless act resulted
into homicide and physical injuries. then the same consequence must
perforce follow where the same reckless act caused merely damage to
property-not death-and physical injuries. Verily, the value of a human life
lost as a result of a vehicular collision cannot be equated with any amount of
damages caused to a motors vehicle arising from the same mishap.”40
(Emphasis supplied)
_______________
39 Buerano v. Court of Appeals, 200 Phil. 486, 491; 115 SCRA 82, 85-86 (1982).
40 Id., at pp. 491-492; p. 86.
213
“On June 26, 1959, the lower court reconsidered its Order of May 2,
1959 and dismissed the case, holding:—
[T]he Court believes that the case falls squarely within the doctrine
of double jeopardy enunciated in People v. Belga, x x x In the case
cited, Ciriaco Belga and Jose Belga were charged in the Justice of the
Peace Court of Malilipot, Albay, with the crime of physical injuries
through reckless imprudence arising from a collision between the two
automobiles driven by them (Crim. Case No. 88). Without the
aforesaid complaint having been dismissed or otherwise disposed of,
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two other criminal complaints were filed in the same justice of the
peace court, in connection with the same collision one for damage to
property through reckless imprudence (Crim. Case No. 95) signed by
the owner of one of the vehicles involved in the collision, and
another for multiple physical injuries through reckless imprudence
(Crim. Case No. 96) signed by the passengers injured in the accident.
Both of these two complaints were filed against Jose Belga only.
After trial, both defendants were acquitted of the charge against them
in Crim. Case No. 88. Following his acquittal, Jose Belga moved to
quash the complaint for multiple physical injuries through reckless
imprudence filed
_______________
214
against him by the injured passengers, contending that the case was
just a duplication of the one filed by the Chief of Police wherein he
had just been acquitted. The motion to quash was denied and after
trial Jose Belga was convicted, whereupon he appealed to the Court
of First Instance of Albay. In the meantime, the case for damage to
property through reckless imprudence filed by one of the owners of
the vehicles involved in the collision had been remanded to the Court
of First Instance of Albay after Jose Belga had waived the second
stage of the preliminary investigation. After such remand, the
Provincial Fiscal filed in the Court of First Instance two informations
against Jose Belga, one for physical injuries through reckless
imprudence, and another for damage to property through reckless
imprudence. Both cases were dismissed by the Court of First
Instance, upon motion of the defendant Jose Belga who alleged
double jeopardy in a motion to quash. On appeal by the Prov. Fiscal,
the order of dismissal was affirmed by the Supreme Court in the
following language:
The question for determination is whether the acquittal of Jose
Belga in the case filed by the chief of police constitutes a bar
to his subsequent prosecution for multiple physical injuries
and damage to property through reckless imprudence.
In the case of Peo[ple] v. F. Diaz, G.R. No. L-6518, prom. March
30, 1954, the accused was charged in the municipal court of Pasay
City with reckless driving under sec. 52 of the Revised Motor
Vehicle Law, for having driven an automobile in a ῾fast and reckless
manner ... thereby causing an accident.’ After the accused had
pleaded not guilty the case was dismissed in that court ῾for failure of
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215
the ruling. Among other things we there said through Mr. Justice
Montemayor—
The next question to determine is the relation between the
first offense of violation of the Motor Vehicle Law prosecuted
before the Pasay City Municipal Court and the offense of
damage to property thru reckless imprudence charged in the
Rizal Court of First Instance. One of the tests of double
jeopardy is whether or not the second offense charged
necessarily includes or is necessarily included in the offense
charged in the former complaint or information (Rule 113,
Sec. 9). Another test is whether the evidence which proves
one would prove the other that is to say whether the facts
alleged in the first charge if proven, would have been
sufficient to support the second charge and vice versa; or
whether one crime is an ingredient of the other. x x x
x x x x
The foregoing language of the Supreme Court also disposes of the
contention of the prosecuting attorney that the charge for slight
physical injuries through reckless imprudence could not have been
joined with the charge for homicide with serious physical injuries
through reckless imprudence in this case, in view of the provisions of
Art. 48 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended. The prosecution’s
contention might be true. But neither was the prosecution obliged to
first prosecute the accused for slight physical injuries through
reckless imprudence before pressing the more serious charge of
homicide with serious physical injuries through reckless imprudence.
Having first prosecuted the defendant for the lesser offense in the
Justice of the Peace Court of Meycauayan, Bulacan, which acquitted
the defendant, the prosecuting attorney is not now in a position to
press in this case the more serious charge of homicide with serious
physical injuries through reckless imprudence which arose out of the
same alleged reckless imprudence
216
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Ivler vs. Modesto-San Pedro
“The State in its appeal claims that the lower court erred in dismissing
the case, on the ground of double jeopardy, upon the basis of the acquittal of
the accused in the JP court for Slight Physical Injuries, thru Reckless
Imprudence. In the same breath said State, thru the Solicitor General, admits
that the facts of the case at bar, fall squarely on the ruling of the Belga case
x x x, upon which the order of dismissal of the lower court was anchored.
The Solicitor General, however, urges a re-examination of said ruling, upon
certain considerations for the purpose of delimiting or clarifying its
application. We find, nevertheless, that further elucidation or disquisition on
the ruling in the Belga case, the facts of which are analogous or similar to
those in the present case, will yield no practical advantage to the
government. On one hand, there is nothing which would warrant a
delimitation or clarification of the applicability of the Belga case. It was
clear. On the other, this Court has reiterated the views expressed in the
Belga case, in the identical case of Yap v. Hon. Lutero, etc., L-12669, April
30, 1959.”45 (Emphasis supplied)
_______________
43 No. L-15974, 30 January 1962, 4 SCRA 95, 97-100 (internal citations omitted).
44 Id., at p. 100.
45 Id.
217
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218
acts amounting to light felonies and filing the charge with the first
level courts.49 Expectedly,
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48 E.g. People v. Lara, 75 Phil. 786 (1946) (involving “homicidio por
imprudencia temeraria” with several victims [or, roughly, “multiple homicide thru
reckless imprudence”]); People v. Agito, 103 Phil. 526 (1958) (involving “triple
homicide and serious physical injuries through reckless imprudence”).
49 E.g. People v. Turla, 50 Phil. 1001 (1927) (sustaining a dismissal on demurrer
of a criminal case for the prosecutor’s failure to amend a charge for “damage to
property and of lesions leves [slight physical injuries] through negligence and
imprudence” to remove the charge for the slight offense, under Article 89 of the penal
code, the precursor of Article 48); Arcaya v. Teleron, 156 Phil. 354; 57 SCRA 363
(1974) (finding no grave abuse of discretion in the filing of separate charges for “less
serious physical injuries and damage to property amounting to P10,000 though
reckless imprudence” and “slight physical injuries though reckless imprudence”
arising from the same facts); Lontok v. Gorgonio, 178 Phil. 525; 89 SCRA 632 (1979)
(granting a petition to split a single charge for “reckless imprudence resulting in
damage to property and multiple [slight] physical injuries” by limiting the petitioner’s
trial to “reckless imprudence resulting in damage to property”). See also Reodica v.
Court of Appeals, 354 Phil. 90; 292 SCRA 87 (1998) (holding that the “less grave
felony of reckless imprudence resulting in damage to property” (for P8,542) cannot
be complexed under Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code with “the light felony of
reckless imprudence resulting in physical injuries,” citing Lontok); People v. De Los
Santos, 407 Phil. 724; 355 SCRA 415 (2001) (applying Article 48 of the penal code
to hold the accused
219
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liable for the “complex crime of reckless imprudence resulting in multiple homicide
with serious physical injuries and less serious physical injuries” (upon an information
charging “multiple murder, multiple frustrated murder and multiple attempted
murder.”) In a dicta, the decision stated that separate informations should have been
filed for the slight physical injuries the victims sustained which cannot be complexed
with the more serious crimes under Article 48.)
220
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51 E.g. Angeles v. Jose, 96 Phil. 151 (1954) (reversing the ruling of the then Court of First
Instance of Manila which dismissed for lack of jurisdiction a complaint for “damage to
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property in the sum of P654.22, and with less serious physical injuries through reckless
negligence,” holding improper the splitting of the charge). We relied on Angeles for our ruling
in People v. Villanueva, 111 Phil. 897; 5 SCRA 672 (1962) resolving similar jurisdictional issue
and People v. Cano, 123 Phil. 1086, 1090; 17 SCRA 237, 240 (1966) (reversing a dismissal
order which found the complexing of “damage to property with multiple [slight] physical
injuries through reckless imprudence” improper, holding that the Information did not and could
not have complexed the effect of a single quasi-offense per Quizon. The Court noted that “it is
merely alleged in the information that, thru reckless negligence of the defendant, the bus driven
by him hit another bus causing upon some of its passengers serious physical injuries, upon
others less serious physical injuries and upon still others slight physical injuries, in addition to
damage to property”).
52 Angeles v. Jose, 96 Phil. 151, 152 (1954).
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53 Thus, we were careful to label the crime in question as “what may be called a
complex crime of physical injuries and damage to property” (id., emphasis supplied),
because our prescription to impose “additional penalty” for the second consequence
of less serious physical injuries, defies the sentencing formula under Article 48
requiring imposition of “the penalty for the most serious crime x x x the same to be
applied in its maximum period.”
222
“The Solicitor General stresses in his brief that the charge for slight
physical injuries through reckless imprudence could not be joined with the
accusation for serious physical injuries through reckless imprudence,
because Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code allows only the complexing
of grave or less grave felonies. This same argument was considered and
rejected by this Court in the case of People vs. [Silva] x x x:
[T]he prosecution’s contention might be true. But neither was the
prosecution obliged to first prosecute the accused for slight physical
injuries through reckless imprudence before pressing the more
serious charge of homicide with serious physical injuries through
reckless imprudence. Having first prosecuted the defendant for the
lesser offense in the Justice of the Peace Court of Meycauayan,
Bulacan, which acquitted the defendant, the prosecuting attorney is
not now in a position to press in this case the more serious charge of
homicide with serious physical injuries through reckless imprudence
which arose out of the same alleged reckless imprudence of which the
defendant has been previously cleared by the inferior court.
[W]e must perforce rule that the exoneration of this appellant x x x by
the Justice of the Peace x x x of the charge of slight physical injuries
through reckless imprudence, prevents his being prosecuted for serious
physical injuries through reckless imprudence in the Court of First Instance
of the province, where both charges are derived from the consequences of
one and the same vehicular accident,
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Ivler vs. Modesto-San Pedro
because the second accusation places the appellant in second jeopardy for
the same offense.”54 (Emphasis supplied)
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54 Supra note 31 at p. 502 (internal citation omitted). This also explains why in
People v. Cano we described as “not altogether accurate” a trial court and a litigant’s
assumption that a charge for “damage to property with multiple [slight] physical
injuries through reckless imprudence” involved two crimes corresponding to the two
effects of the single quasi-crime albeit complexed as a single charge:
[A]ppellee and the lower court have seemingly assumed that said information
thereby charges two offenses, namely (1) slight physical injuries thru reckless
imprudence; and (2) damage to property, and serious and less serious physical
injuries, thru reckless negligence—which are sought to be complexed. This
assumption is, in turn, apparently premised upon the predicate that the effect or
consequence of defendants negligence, not the negligence itself, is the principal or
vital factor in said offenses. Such predicate is not altogether accurate.
As early as July 28, 1955 this Court, speaking thru Mr. Justice J.B.L. Reyes, had
the occasion to state, in Quizon vs. Justice of the Peace of Bacolor, Pampanga x x x,
that:
The proposition (inferred from Art. 3 of the Revised Penal Code) that
“reckless imprudence is not a crime in itself but simply a way of committing
it and merely determines a lower degree of criminal liability” is too broad to
deserve unqualified assent. There are crimes that by their structure can not be
committed through imprudence: murder, treason, robbery, malicious mischief,
etc. In truth, criminal negligence in our Revised Penal Code is treated as a
mere quasi-offense, and dealt separately from willful offenses. It is not a mere
question of classification or terminology. In intentional crimes, the act itself is
punished; in negligence or imprudence, what is principally penalized is the
mental attitude or condition behind the act, the dangerous recklessness, lack
of care or foresight, the “imprudencia punible.” Much of the confusion has
arisen from the common use of such descriptive phrases as “homicide through
reckless imprudence”, and the like; when the strict technical offense is more
accurately, “reckless imprudence resulting in homicide”, or
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