Baylosis Digested
Baylosis Digested
Baylosis Digested
ISSUE:
1. Whether or not PD No. 1866, or at least par. 3 of Section 1 thereof, is unconstitutional.
HELD:
The issue of constitutionality of Presidential Decree No. 1866 has been laid to rest in the
case of Misolas v. Panga, G.R. No. 83341, January 30, 1990 (181 SCRA 648), where this Court held
that the declaration of unconstitutionality of the third paragraph of Section 1 of Presidential
Decree No. 1866 is wanting in legal basis since it is neither a bill of attainder nor does it provide a
possibility of a double jeopardy.
Petititoners argued that PD 1866 is unconstitutional because if inflicts on the convicted felon
a cruel or unusual punishment, considering that the Revised Code penalizes rebellion or subversion
only by prision mayor and that the penalty fixed in said challenged section is, it is contended,
flagrantly and plainly oppressive, greatly disproportionate to the offense, and shocking to the
people's sense of justice. It is well settled that as far as the constitutional prohibition goes, it is not so
much the extent as the nature of the punishment that determines whether it is, or is not, cruel and
unusual and that sentences of imprisonment, though perceived to be harsh, are not cruel or unusual
if within statutory limits. In People vs. Estoista (93 Phil. 674), it was declared that it takes more than
merely being harsh, excessive, out of proportion, or severe for a penalty to be obnoxious to the
Constitution ... to come under the ban, the punishment must be 'flagrantly and plainly oppressive'
'wholly disproportionate to the nature of the offense as to shock the moral sense of the community.'
As pointed out by a noted authority on Constitutional Law, that "a penalty not normally proportionate
to the offense may be imposed in some instances without violation of the Constitution. ... (as) for
example, where the offense has become so rampant as to require the adoption of a more effective
deterrent, like the stealing of jeeps or coconuts, which is punished by the Revised Penal Code as
qualified theft" or, it may be added, like such crimes as assassinations, bombings and robberies,
which are committed nowadays with frightening frequency and seeming impunity with the use of
high-powered weapons, explosives or similar devices, whether in connection with or in furtherance
or pursuance of, rebellion or subversion, or not.
The petitioners' invocation of the doctrine of double jeopardy as an argument against the
constitutionality of PD 1866 is equally futile. They maintain that a person held liable under PD 1866
can still be made to answer subsequently for rebellion. The argument is here disposed of by simply
adverting to the resolution of that self-same contention in Misola that: the right against double
jeopardy is a matter which the accused may raise in a motion to quash (Sec. 3[h], Rule 117). But,
precisely, petitioner's motion to quash filed in the trial court did not raise the issue of double jeopardy
because it had not arisen. The Court cannot anticipated that the opportunity for a second jeopardy
will still arise if he is acquitted or convicted as charged under P.D. 1866. Moreover, even if such a
subsequent or second jeopardy does arise, P.D. No. 1866 will not be rendered unconstitutional. That
an accused will be exposed to double jeopardy if he is prosecuted under another law is not a ground
to nullify that law. Double jeopardy is merely a defense that an accused may raise to defeat a
subsequent prosecution or conviction for the same offense.