Ivler Vs Modesto San Pedro
Ivler Vs Modesto San Pedro
Ivler Vs Modesto San Pedro
JASON IVLER y AGUILAR, petitioner, vs. HON. MARIA ROWENA MODESTO-SAN PEDRO,
Judge of the Metropolitan Trial Court, Branch 71, Pasig City, and EVANGELINE PONCE,
respondents.
Criminal Procedure; Dismissals of appeals grounded on the appellant’s escape from custody or violation
of the terms of his bail bond are governed by the second paragraph of Section 8, Rule 124, in relation to
Section 1, Rule 125, of the Revised Rules on Criminal Procedure.—Dismissals of appeals grounded on the
appellant’s escape from custody or violation of the terms of his bail bond are governed by the second
paragraph of Section 8, Rule 124, in relation to Section 1, Rule 125, of the Revised Rules on Criminal
Procedure authorizing this Court or the Court of Appeals to “also, upon motion of the appellee or motu
proprio, dismiss the appeal if the appellant escapes from prison or confinement, jumps bail or flees to a
foreign country during the pendency of the appeal.” The “appeal” contemplated in Section 8 of Rule 124 is a
suit to review judgments of convictions.
Same; Arraignment; Under Section 21, Rule 114 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure, the
defendant’s absence merely renders his bondsman potentially liable on its bond.—The mischief in the RTC’s
treatment of petitioner’s non-appearance at his arraignment in Criminal Case No. 82366 as proof of his loss
of standing becomes more evident when one considers the Rules of Court’s treatment of a defendant who
absents himself from post-arraignment hearings. Under Section 21, Rule 114 of the Revised Rules of
Criminal Procedure, the defendant’s absence merely renders his bondsman potentially liable on its bond
(subject to cancellation should the bondsman fail to produce the accused within 30 days); the
defendant retains his standing and, should he fail to surrender, will be tried in absentia and could be
convicted or acquitted. Indeed, the 30-day period granted to the bondsman to produce the accused
underscores the fact that mere non-appearance does not ipso facto convert the accused’s status to that of a
fugitive without standing.
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* SECOND DIVISION.
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Same; Double Jeopardy; 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 the Court’s unbroken chain of jurisprudence on double jeopardy as applied to Article 365
starting with People v. Diaz, decided in 1954.—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, 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. Belga (promulgated in 1957
by the Court en banc, per Reyes, J.), Yap v. Lutero (promulgated in 1959, unreported, per
Concepcion, J.), People v. Narvas (promulgated in 1960 by the Court en banc, per Bengzon J.), People v.
Silva, 4 SCRA 95 (1962), (promulgated in 1962 by the Court en banc, per Paredes, J.), People v. Macabuhay,
16 SCRA 239 (1966), (promulgated in 1966 by the Court en banc, per Makalintal, J.), People v. Buan, 22
SCRA 1383 (1968), (promulgated in 1968 by the Court en banc, per Reyes, J.B.L., acting C. J.), Buerano v.
Court of Appeals, 115 SCRA 82 (1982), (promulgated in 1982 by the Court en banc, per Relova, J.),
and People v. City Court of Manila, 121 SCRA 637 (1983), (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.
Same; Same; 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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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, where, in
barring a subsequent prosecution for “serious physical injuries and damage to property thru reckless
imprudence” because of the accused’s prior acquittal of “slight physical injuries thru reckless imprudence,”
with both charges grounded on the same act, the Court explained: 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. x x x.
Criminal Law; Complex Crimes; Quasi-offenses; Article 48 is a procedural device allowing single
prosecution of multiple felonies falling under either of two categories: (1) when a single act constitutes two or
more grave or less grave felonies (thus excluding from its operation light felonies); and (2) when an offense is
a necessary means for committing the other; Article 365 is a substantive rule penalizing not an act, defined as
a felony but the mental attitude xxx behind the act, the dangerous recklessness, lack of care or foresight xxx, a
single mental attitude regardless of the resulting consequences.—The confusion bedeviling the question posed
in this petition, to which the MeTC succumbed, stems from persistent but awkward attempts to harmonize
conceptually incompatible substantive and procedural rules in criminal law, namely, Article 365 defining
and penalizing quasi-offenses and Article 48 on complexing of crimes, both under the Revised Penal Code.
Article 48 is a procedural device allowing single prosecution of multiple felonies falling under either of two
categories: (1) when a single act constitutes two or more grave or less grave felonies (thus excluding from its
operation light felonies); and (2) when an offense is a necessary means for committing the other. The
legislature crafted this procedural tool to benefit the
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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.
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PETITION for review on certiorari of the orders of the Regional Trial Court of Pasig City.
The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.
Edwardson Ong for petitioner.
Jan Abegail Ponce and Terencio Angel De Dios Martija & Chipeco for private respondent.
CARPIO, J.:
The Case
The petition seeks the review1 of the Orders2 of the Regional Trial Court of Pasig City
affirming sub-silencio a lower court’s ruling finding inapplicable the Double Jeopardy Clause to
bar a second prosecution for Reckless Imprudence Resulting in Homicide and Damage to
Property. This, despite the accused’s previous conviction for Reckless Imprudence Resulting in
Slight Physical Injuries arising from the same incident grounding the second prosecution.
The Facts
Following a vehicular collision in August 2004, petitioner Jason Ivler (petitioner) was charged
before the Metropolitan Trial Court of Pasig City, Branch 71 (MeTC), with two separate offenses:
(1) Reckless Imprudence Resulting in Slight Physical Injuries (Criminal Case No. 82367) for
injuries sustained by respondent Evangeline L. Ponce (respondent Ponce); and (2) Reckless
Imprudence Resulting in Homicide and Damage to Property (Criminal Case No. 82366) for the
death of respondent Ponce’s husband Nestor C. Ponce and damage to the spouses Ponce’s vehicle.
Petitioner posted bail for his temporary release in both cases.
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On 7 September 2004, petitioner pleaded guilty to the charge in Criminal Case No. 82367 and
was meted out the penalty of public censure. Invoking this conviction, petitioner moved to quash
the Information in Criminal Case No. 82366 for placing him in jeopardy of second punishment for
the same offense of reckless imprudence.
The MeTC refused quashal, finding no identity of offenses in the two cases.3
After unsuccessfully seeking reconsideration, petitioner elevated the matter to the Regional
Trial Court of Pasig City, Branch 157 (RTC), in a petition for certiorari (S.C.A. No. 2803).
Meanwhile, petitioner sought from the MeTC the suspension of proceedings in Criminal Case No.
82366, including the arraignment on 17 May 2005, invoking S.C.A. No. 2803 as a prejudicial
question. Without acting on petitioner’s motion, the MeTC proceeded with the arraignment and,
because of petitioner’s absence, cancelled his bail and ordered his arrest.4 Seven days later, the
MeTC issued a resolution denying petitioner’s motion to suspend proceedings and postponing his
arraignment until after his arrest.5 Petitioner sought reconsideration but as of the filing of this
petition, the motion remained unresolved.
Relying on the arrest order against petitioner, respondent Ponce sought in the RTC the
dismissal of S.C.A. No. 2803 for petitioner’s loss of standing to maintain the suit. Petitioner
contested the motion.
In an Order dated 2 February 2006, the RTC dismissed S.C.A. No. 2803, narrowly grounding
its ruling on petitioner’s forfeiture of standing to maintain S.C.A. No. 2803 arising
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from the MeTC’s order to arrest petitioner for his non-appearance at the arraignment in Criminal
Case No. 82366. Thus, without reaching the merits of S.C.A. No. 2803, the RTC effectively
affirmed the MeTC. Petitioner sought reconsideration but this proved unavailing.6
Hence, this petition.
Petitioner denies absconding. He explains that his petition in S.C.A. No. 2803 constrained him
to forego participation in the proceedings in Criminal Case No. 82366. Petitioner distinguishes
his case from the line of jurisprudence sanctioning dismissal of appeals for absconding appellants
because his appeal before the RTC was a special civil action seeking a pre-trial relief, not a post-
trial appeal of a judgment of conviction.7
Petitioner laments the RTC’s failure to reach the merits of his petition in S.C.A. 2803.
Invoking jurisprudence, petitioner argues that his constitutional right not to be placed twice in
jeopardy of punishment for the same offense bars his prosecution in Criminal Case No. 82366,
having been previously convicted in Criminal Case No. 82367 for the same offense of reckless
imprudence charged in Criminal Case No. 82366. Petitioner submits that the multiple
consequences of such crime are material only to determine his penalty.
Respondent Ponce finds no reason for the Court to disturb the RTC’s decision forfeiting
petitioner’s standing to maintain his petition in S.C.A. 2803. On the merits, respondent Ponce
calls the Court’s attention to jurisprudence holding that light offenses (e.g. slight physical
injuries) cannot be complexed under Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code with grave or less grave
felonies (e.g. homicide). Hence, the prosecution was obliged to separate the charge in Criminal
Case No. 82366 for the slight physical injuries from Criminal Case No. 82367 for the homicide
and damage to property.
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In the Resolution of 6 June 2007, we granted the Office of the Solicitor General’s motion not to
file a comment to the petition as the public respondent judge is merely a nominal party and
private respondent is represented by counsel.
The Issues
Two questions are presented for resolution: (1) whether petitioner forfeited his standing to
seek relief in S.C.A. 2803 when the MeTC ordered his arrest following his non-appearance at the
arraignment in Criminal Case No. 82366; and (2) if in the negative, whether petitioner’s
constitutional right under the Double Jeopardy Clause bars further proceedings in Criminal Case
No. 82366.
We hold that (1) petitioner’s non-appearance at the arraignment in Criminal Case No. 82366
did not divest him of personality to maintain the petition in S.C.A. 2803; and (2) the protection
afforded by the Constitution shielding petitioner from prosecutions placing him in jeopardy of
second punishment for the same offense bars further proceedings in Criminal Case No. 82366.
Dismissals of appeals grounded on the appellant’s escape from custody or violation of the
terms of his bail bond are governed by the second paragraph of Section 8, Rule 124,8 in
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relation to Section 1, Rule 125, of the Revised Rules on Criminal Procedure authorizing this
Court or the Court of Appeals to “also, upon motion of the appellee or motu proprio, dismiss the
appeal if the appellant escapes from prison or confinement, jumps bail or flees to a foreign
country during the pendency of the appeal.” The “appeal” contemplated in Section 8 of Rule 124 is
a suit to review judgments of convictions.
The RTC’s dismissal of petitioner’s special civil action for certiorari to review a pre-
arraignment ancillary question on the applicability of the Due Process Clause to bar proceedings
in Criminal Case No. 82366 finds no basis under procedural rules and jurisprudence. The RTC’s
reliance on People v. Esparas9 undercuts the cogency of its ruling because Esparas stands for a
proposition contrary to the RTC’s ruling. There, the Court granted review to an appeal by an
accused who was sentenced to death for importing prohibited drugs even though she jumped bail
pending trial and was thus tried and convicted in absentia. The Court in Esparas treated the
mandatory review of death sentences under Republic Act No. 7659 as an exception to Section 8 of
Rule 124.10
The mischief in the RTC’s treatment of petitioner’s non-appearance at his arraignment in
Criminal Case No. 82366 as proof of his loss of standing becomes more evident when one
considers the Rules of Court’s treatment of a defendant who absents himself from post-
arraignment hearings. Under Section 21, Rule 11411 of the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure,
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or confinement, jumps bail or flees to a foreign country during the pendency of the appeal.”
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200 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Ivler vs. Modesto-San Pedro
the defendant’s absence merely renders his bondsman potentially liable on its bond (subject to
cancellation should the bondsman fail to produce the accused within 30 days); the
defendant retains his standing and, should he fail to surrender, will be tried in absentia and
could be convicted or acquitted. Indeed, the 30-day period granted to the bondsman to produce
the accused underscores the fact that mere non-appearance does not ipso facto convert the
accused’s status to that of a fugitive without standing.
Further, the RTC’s observation that petitioner provided “no explanation why he failed to
attend the scheduled proceeding”12 at the MeTC is belied by the records. Days before the
arraignment, petitioner sought the suspension of the MeTC’s proceedings in Criminal Case No.
82366 in light of his petition with the RTC in S.C.A. No. 2803. Following the MeTC’s refusal to
defer arraignment (the order for which was released days after the MeTC ordered petitioner’s
arrest), petitioner sought reconsideration. His motion remained unresolved as of the filing of this
petition.
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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.
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The accused’s negative constitutional right not to be “twice put in jeopardy of punishment for
the same offense”13 protects him from, among others, post-conviction prosecution for the same
offense, with the prior verdict rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction upon a valid
information.14 It is not disputed that petitioner’s conviction in Criminal Case No. 82367 was
rendered by a court of competent jurisdiction upon a valid charge. Thus, the case turns on the
question whether Criminal Case No. 82366 and Criminal Case No. 82367 involve the “same
offense.” Petitioner adopts the affirmative view, submitting that the two cases concern the same
offense of reckless imprudence. The MeTC ruled otherwise, finding that Reckless Imprudence
Resulting in Slight Physical Injuries is an entirely separate offense from Reckless Imprudence
Resulting in Homicide and Damage to Property “as the [latter] requires proof of an additional fact
which the other does not.”15
We find for petitioner.
Reckless Imprudence is a Single
Crime, its Consequences on Persons
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vised Penal Code, as amended, namely, Article 365 defining and penalizing quasi-offenses. The
text of the provision reads:
“Imprudence and negligence.—Any person who, by reckless imprudence, shall commit any act which, had
it been intentional, would constitute a grave felony, shall suffer the penalty of arresto mayor in its maximum
period to prision correccional in its medium period; if it would 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.
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Reckless imprudence consists in voluntary, but without malice, doing or failing to do an act from which
material damage results by reason of inexcusable lack of precaution on the part of the person performing or
failing to perform such act, taking into consideration his employment or occupation, degree of intelligence,
physical condition and other circumstances regarding persons, time and place.
Simple imprudence consists in the lack of precaution displayed in those cases in which the damage
impending to be caused is not immediate nor the danger clearly manifest.
The penalty next higher in degree to those provided for in this article shall be imposed upon the offender
who fails to lend on the spot to the injured parties such help as may be in this hand to give.”
Structurally, these nine paragraphs are collapsible into four sub-groupings relating to (1) the
penalties attached to the quasi-offenses of “imprudence” and “negligence” (paragraphs 1-2); (2) a
modified penalty scheme for either or both quasi-offenses (paragraphs 3-4, 6 and 9); (3) a generic
rule for trial courts in imposing penalties (paragraph 5); and (4) the definition of “reckless
imprudence” and “simple imprudence” (paragraphs 7-8). Conceptually, quasi-offenses penalize
“the mental attitude or condition behind the act, the dangerous recklessness, lack of care or
foresight, the imprudencia punible,”16 unlike willful offenses which punish the intentional
criminal act. These structural and conceptual features of quasi-offenses set them apart from the
mass of intentional crimes under the first 13 Titles of Book II of the Revised Penal Code, as
amended.
Indeed, the notion that quasi-offenses, whether reckless or simple, are distinct species of
crime, separately defined and penalized under the framework of our penal laws, is nothing new.
As early as the middle of the last century, we already sought to bring clarity to this field
by rejecting in Quizon v. Justice of the Peace of Pampanga the proposition that “reck-
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16 Quizon v. Justice of the Peace of Pampanga, 97 Phil. 342, 345 (1955) (emphasis in the original).
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less imprudence is not a crime in itself but simply a way of committing it x x x”17 on three points
of analysis: (1) the object of punishment in quasi-crimes (as opposed to intentional crimes); (2) the
legislative intent to treat quasi-crimes as distinct offenses (as opposed to subsuming them under
the mitigating circumstance of minimal intent) and; (3) the different penalty structures for quasi-
crimes and intentional crimes:
“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
Were criminal negligence but a modality in the commission of felonies, operating only to reduce the penalty
therefor, then it would be absorbed in the mitigating circumstances of Art. 13, specially the lack of intent to
commit so grave a wrong as the one actually committed. Furthermore, the theory would require that the
corresponding penalty should be fixed in proportion to the penalty prescribed for each crime when
committed willfully. For each penalty for the willful offense, there would then be a corresponding penalty for
the negligent variety. But instead, our Revised Penal Code (Art. 365) fixes the penalty for reckless
imprudence at arresto mayor maximum, to prision correccional [medium], if the willful act would constitute
a grave felony, notwithstanding that the penalty for the latter could range all the way from prision mayor to
death, according to the case. It can be seen that the actual penalty for criminal negligence bears no relation
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17 Id.
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to the individual willful crime, but is set in relation to a whole class, or series, of crimes.”18 (Emphasis
supplied)
This explains why the technically correct way to allege quasi-crimes is to state that their
commission results in damage, either to person or property.19
Accordingly, we found the Justice of the Peace in Quizon without jurisdiction to hear a case for
“Damage to Property through Reckless Imprudence,” its jurisdiction being limited to trying
charges for Malicious Mischief, an intentional crime conceptually incompatible with the element
of imprudence obtaining in quasi-crimes.
Quizon, rooted in Spanish law20 (the normative ancestry
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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).
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)
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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) and People v. Buan, 131 Phil. 498; 22 SCRA 1383 (1968), “may not yet be settled in view of the
contrary dictum” in Faller).
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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
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
Belga26 (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, where, in barring a subsequent prosecution for “serious physical injuries and damage to
property thru reckless imprudence” because of the accused’s prior acquittal of “slight physical
injuries thru reckless imprudence,” with both charges grounded on the same act, the Court
explained:34
“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.”35 x x x (Emphasis supplied)
Evidently, the Diaz line of jurisprudence on double jeopardy merely extended to its logical
conclusion the reasoning of Quizon.
There is in our jurisprudence only one ruling going against this unbroken line of
authority. Preceding Diaz by more than a decade, El Pueblo de Filipinas v. Estipona,36 decided
by the pre-war colonial Court in November 1940,
_______________
211
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37 Supra note 32.
38 Supra note 31.
212
. . . the exoneration of this appellant, Jose Buan, by the Justice of the Peace (now Municipal) Court
of Guiguinto, Bulacan, 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, because the second accusation
places the appellant in second jeopardy for the same offense.”39 (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
more fitting jurisprudence could not be tailored to petitioner’s case than People v.
Silva,41 a Diaz progeny. There, the accused, who was also involved in a vehicular collision, was
charged in two separate Informations with “Slight Physical Injuries thru Reckless Imprudence”
and “Homicide with Serious Physical Injuries thru Reckless Imprudence.” Following his acquittal
of the former, the accused sought the quashal of the latter, invoking the Double Jeopardy Clause.
The trial court initially denied relief, but, on reconsideration, found merit in the accused’s claim
and dismissed the second case. In affirming the trial court, we quoted with approval its analysis
of the issue following Diaz and its progeny People v. Belga:42
“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, 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 the
Government to prosecute’. But some time thereafter the city attorney filed an information in the Court
of First Instance of Rizal, charging the same accused with damage to property thru reckless
imprudence. The amount of the damage was alleged to be P249.50. Pleading double jeopardy, the
accused filed a motion, and on appeal by the Government we affirmed
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
of which the defendant have been previously cleared by the inferior court.43
The confusion bedeviling the question posed in this petition, to which the MeTC succumbed,
stems from persistent but awkward attempts to harmonize conceptually incompatible substantive
and procedural rules in criminal law, namely, Article 365 defining and penalizing quasi-offenses
and Article 48 on complexing of crimes, both under the Revised Penal
_______________
43 No. L-15974, 30 January 1962, 4 SCRA 95, 97-100 (internal citations omitted).
44 Id., at p. 100.
45 Id.
217
Code. Article 48 is a procedural device allowing single prosecution of multiple felonies falling
under either of two categories: (1) when a single act constitutes two or more grave or less grave
felonies (thus excluding from its operation light felonies46); and (2) when an offense is a necessary
means for committing the other. The legislature crafted this procedural tool to benefit the
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,”47 a single mental attitude regardless of the resulting consequences. Thus, Article 365 was
crafted as one quasi-crime resulting in one or more consequences.
Ordinarily, these two provisions will operate smoothly. Article 48 works to combine in a single
prosecution multiple intentional crimes falling under Titles 1-13, Book II of the Revised Penal
Code, when proper; Article 365 governs the prosecution of imprudent acts and their
consequences. However, the complexities of human interaction can produce a hybrid quasi-
offense not falling under either models—that of a single criminal negligence resulting in
multiple non-crime damages to persons and property with varying penalties corresponding to
light, less grave or grave offenses. The ensuing prosecutorial dilemma is obvious: how
should such a quasi-crime be prosecuted? Should Article 48’s framework apply to “complex”
the single quasi-offense with its multiple (non-criminal) consequences (excluding those
amounting to light offenses which will be tried separately)? Or should the prosecution proceed
_______________
46 Defined under Article 9, paragraph 3 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended, thus: “Light felonies are those
infractions of law for the commission of which a penalty of arresto menor or a fine not exceeding 200 pesos or both is
provided.”
47 Quizon v. Justice of the Peace of Pampanga, 97 Phil. 342, 345 (1955).
218
under a single charge, collectively alleging all the consequences of the single quasi-crime, to be
penalized separately following the scheme of penalties under Article 365?
Jurisprudence adopts both approaches. Thus, one line of rulings (none of which involved the
issue of double jeopardy) applied Article 48 by “complexing” one quasi-crime with its multiple
consequences48 unless one consequence amounts to a light felony, in which case charges were
split by grouping, on the one hand, resulting acts amounting to grave or less grave felonies and
filing the charge with the second level courts and, on the other hand, resulting 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
this is the approach the MeTC impliedly sanctioned (and respondent Ponce invokes), even though
under Republic Act No. 7691,50 the MeTC has now exclusive original jurisdiction to impose the
most serious penalty under Article 365 which is prision correccional in its medium period.
Under this approach, the issue of double jeopardy will not arise if the “complexing” of acts
penalized under Article 365 involves only resulting acts penalized as grave or less grave felonies
because there will be a single prosecution of all the resulting acts. The issue of double jeopardy
arises if one of the resulting acts is penalized as a light offense and the other acts are penalized
as grave or less grave offenses, in which case Article 48 is not deemed to apply and the act
penalized
_______________
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.)
50 Section 2 of RA 7691 provides: “Section 2. Section 32 of [Batas Pambansa Blg. 129] is hereby amended to read as
follows:
‘Sec. 32. Jurisdiction of Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal Trial Courts and Municipal Circuit Trial Courts
in Criminal Cases.—Except in cases falling within the exclusive original jurisdiction of Regional Trial Courts and
of the Sandiganbayan, the Metropolitan Trial Courts, Municipal Trial Courts, and Municipal Circuit Trial Courts
shall exercise:
x x x x
(2) Exclusive original jurisdiction over all offenses punishable with imprisonment not exceeding six (6) years
irrespective of the amount of fine, and regardless of other imposable accessory or other penalties, including the civil
liability arising from such offenses or predicated thereon, irrespective of kind, nature, value or amount
thereof: Provided, however, That in offenses involving damage to property through criminal negligence, they shall
have exclusive original jurisdiction thereof.’” (Underlining supplied)
220
as a light offense is tried separately from the resulting acts penalized as grave or less grave
offenses.
The second jurisprudential path nixes Article 48 and sanctions a single prosecution of all the
effects of the quasi-crime collectively alleged in one charge, regardless of their number or
severity,51 penalizing each consequence separately. Thus, in Angeles v. Jose,52 we interpreted
paragraph three of Article 365, in relation to a charge alleging “reckless imprudence resulting in
damage to property and less serious physical injuries,” as follows:
“[T]he third paragraph of said article, x x x reads as follows:
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 damage to three times such value, but which shall in no case be less than 25 pesos.
_______________
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 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).
221
By “additional penalty,” the Court meant, logically, the penalty scheme under Article 365.
Evidently, these approaches, while parallel, are irreconcilable. Coherence in this field demands
choosing one framework over the other. Either (1) we allow the “complexing” of a single quasi-
crime by breaking its resulting acts into separate offenses (except for light felonies), thus re-
conceptualize a quasi-crime, abandon its present framing under Article 365, discard its
conception under the Quizon and Diaz lines of cases, and treat the multiple consequences of a
quasi-crime as separate intentional felonies defined under Titles 1-13, Book II under the penal
code; or (2) we forbid the application of Article 48 in the prosecution and sentencing of quasi-
crimes, require single prosecution of all the resulting acts regardless of their number and
severity, separately penalize each as provided in Article 365, and thus maintain the distinct
concept of quasi-crimes as crafted under Article 365, articulated in Quizon and applied to double
jeopardy adjudication in the Diaz line of cases.
A becoming regard of this Court’s place in our scheme of government denying it the power to
make laws constrains us to keep inviolate the conceptual distinction between quasi-crimes and
intentional felonies under our penal code. Article
_______________
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
48 is incongruent to the notion of quasi-crimes under Article 365. It is conceptually impossible for
a quasi-offense to stand for (1) a single act constituting two or more grave or less grave felonies; or
(2) an offense which is a necessary means for committing another. This is why, way back in 1968
in Buan, we rejected the Solicitor General’s argument that double jeopardy does not bar a second
prosecution for slight physical injuries through reckless imprudence allegedly because the charge
for that offense could not be joined with the other charge for serious physical injuries through
reckless imprudence following Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code:
“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,
223
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
224
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“simple imprudence causing damages to property.” (People v. Cano, 123 Phil. 1086, 1090; 17 SCRA 237, 240
(1966), (Emphasis supplied), reiterated in Pabulario v. Palarca, 129 Phil. 1; 21 SCRA 769 (1967) (reversing a lower
court which quashed a charge alleging reckless imprudence resulting in damage to property and multiple slight
physical injuries).
55 See Section 32(2), Batas Pambansa Blg. 129, as amended by Republic Act No. 7691.
225
Meanwhile, the lenient schedule of penalties under Article 365, befitting crimes occupying a
lower rung of culpability, should cushion the effect of this ruling.
WHEREFORE, we GRANT the petition. We REVERSE the Orders dated 2 February 2006 and
2 May 2006 of the Regional Trial Court of Pasig City, Branch 157. We DISMISS the Information
in Criminal Case No. 82366 against petitioner Jason Ivler y Aguilar pending with the
Metropolitan Trial Court of Pasig City, Branch 71 on the ground of double jeopardy.
Let a copy of this ruling be served on the President of the Senate and the Speaker of the House
of Representatives.
SO ORDERED.