Minucher v. CA Digest
Minucher v. CA Digest
Minucher v. CA Digest
CASE DIGEST
Facts: In May 1986, an Information for violation of Section 4 of Republic Act No. 6425,
otherwise also known as the "Dangerous Drugs Act of 1972," was filed against
petitioner Khosrow Minucher and one Abbas Torabian with the RTC, Branch 151, of
Pasig City. The criminal charge followed a "buy-bust operation" conducted by the
Philippine police narcotic agents in the house of Minucher, an Iranian national, where a
quantity of heroin, a prohibited drug, was said to have been seized. The narcotic agents
were accompanied by private respondent Arthur Scalzo who would, in due time,
become one of the principal witnesses for the prosecution. Presiding Judge Eutropio
Migrino rendered a decision acquitting the two accused.
On August 1988, Minucher filed Civil Case before the RTC, for damages on account of
what he claimed to have been trumped-up charges of drug trafficking made by Arthur
Scalzo.
Scalzo filed a motion to dismiss the complaint on the ground that, being a special agent
of the United States Drug Enforcement Administration, he was entitled to diplomatic
immunity. He attached to his motion Diplomatic Note of the United States Embassy
addressed to DOJ of the Philippines and a Certification of Vice Consul Donna
Woodward, certifying that the note is a true and faithful copy of its original. The Trial
court denied the motion to dismiss.
Scalzo filed a petition for certiorari and the Court of Appeals promulgated its decision
sustaining the diplomatic immunity of Scalzo and ordering the dismissal of the complaint
against him. This Court reversed the decision of the appellate court and remanded the
case to the lower court for further trial.
While the trial court gave credence to the claim of Scalzo and the evidence presented
by him that he was a diplomatic agent entitled to immunity as such, it ruled that he,
nevertheless, should be held accountable for the acts complained of committed outside
his official duties. On appeal, the Court of Appeals reversed the decision of the trial
court and sustained the defense of Scalzo that he was sufficiently clothed with
diplomatic immunity during his term of duty and thereby immune from the criminal and
civil jurisdiction of the "Receiving State" pursuant to the terms of the Vienna Convention.
Ruling: YES. Arthur Scalzo is entitled to the defense of state immunity from suit.
If the acts giving rise to a suit are those of a foreign government done by its foreign
agent, although not necessarily a diplomatic personage, but acting in his official
capacity, the complaint could be barred by the immunity of the foreign sovereign from
suit without its consent. Suing a representative of a state is believed to be, in effect,
suing the state itself. The proscription is not accorded for the benefit of an individual but
for the State, in whose service he is, under the maxim - par in parem, non habet
imperium - that all states are sovereign equals and cannot assert jurisdiction over one
another.