Rodriguez vs. COMELEC GR 120099 1996 Digest
Rodriguez vs. COMELEC GR 120099 1996 Digest
Rodriguez vs. COMELEC GR 120099 1996 Digest
Juris Doctor I
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Del Rosario, Michael Prince N.
Juris Doctor I
After Rodriguez was proclaimed the winner, Marquez filed urgent motions to suspend the
proclamation which the COMELEC granted. The suspension of the proclamation gave rise to the
filing of this instant petition.
Issue/s:
Whether or not Rodriguez is a “fugitive from justice”.
Ruling:
The Supreme Court held that Rodriguez, not being a fugitive from justice under the
MARQUEZ definition, cannot be denied the Quezon Province gubernatorial post.
To reiterate from the MARQUEZ decision, a “fugitive from justice” includes not only
those who flee after conviction to avoid punishment but likewise who, after being charged, flee
to avoid prosecution. The definition thus indicates that the intent to evade is the compelling
factor that animates one’s flight from a particular jurisdiction. And obviously there can only be
an intent to evade when there is knowledge of an already instituted indictment, or of a
promulagated judgment of conviction. Rodriguez’ case does not fit in this concept. There is no
dispute that Rodriguez’ arrival in the Philippines preceded the filing of the felony complaint in
the LA court.
It is acknowledged that there was an attempt by Marquez to show Rodriguez’ intent to
evade the law by offering for admission a voluminous copy of an invesigation report on the
alleged crimes. Unfortunately, such conclusion misleads because investigations of this nature,
are shrouded with utmost secrecy to afford law enforcers the advantage of surprise and effect the
arrest of those who would be charged.
To re-define “fugitive from justice” would only foment instability in our jurisprudence
when hardly has the ink dried in the Marquez decision.
The petition was granted.
Doctrines/Principles:
The “law of the case” doctrine forbids the Court to craft an expanded redefinition of
“fugitive from justice”. The “law of the case” has been defined as the opinion delivered on a
former appeal. It means that whatever is once irrevocably established as the controlling legal rule
of decision between the same parties in the same continues to be the law of the case, whether
correct on a general principls or not, so long as the facts on which such decision was predicated
continue to be the facts of the case before the court.
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