EN BANC
[G.R. Nos. 132875-76. February 3,
2000]
PEOPLE OF THE
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. ROMEO G. JALOSJOS, accused-appellant.
R E S O L U T I O N
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:
The accused-appellant, Romeo G. Jalosjos is
a full-fledged member of Congress who is now confined at the national
penitentiary while his conviction for statutory rape on two counts and acts of
lasciviousness on six counts[1] is pending appeal. The accused-appellant filed this
motion asking that he be allowed to fully discharge the duties of a
Congressman, including attendance at legislative sessions and committee
meetings despite his having been convicted in the first instance of a
non-bailable offense.
The issue raised is one of first impression.
Does membership in Congress exempt an
accused from statutes and rules which apply to validly incarcerated persons in
general? In answering the query, we are called upon to balance relevant and
conflicting factors in the judicial interpretation of legislative privilege in
the context of penal law.
The accused-appellant’s "Motion To Be
Allowed To Discharge Mandate As Member of House of Representatives" was
filed on the grounds that –
1.
Accused-appellant’s reelection being an expression of popular will cannot be
rendered inutile by any ruling, giving priority to any right or interest – not
even the police power of the State.
2. To deprive the
electorate of their elected representative amounts to taxation without
representation.
3. To bar
accused-appellant from performing his duties amounts to his suspension/removal
and mocks the renewed mandate entrusted to him by the people.
4. The electorate
of the First District of Zamboanga del Norte wants their voice to be heard.
5. A
precedent-setting U.S. ruling allowed a detained lawmaker to attend sessions of
the U.S. Congress.
6. The House
treats accused-appellant as a bona fide member thereof and urges a
co-equal branch of government to respect its mandate.
7. The concept of
temporary detention does not necessarily curtail the duty of accused-appellant
to discharge his mandate.
8.
Accused-appellant has always complied with the conditions/restrictions when
allowed to leave jail.
The primary argument of the movant is the
"mandate of sovereign will." He states that the sovereign electorate
of the First District of Zamboanga del Norte chose him as their representative
in Congress. Having been re-elected by his constituents, he has the duty to
perform the functions of a Congressman. He calls this a covenant with his
constituents made possible by the intervention of the State. He adds that it
cannot be defeated by insuperable procedural restraints arising from pending
criminal cases.
True, election is the expression of the
sovereign power of the people. In the exercise of suffrage, a free people
expects to achieve the continuity of government and the perpetuation of its
benefits. However, inspite of its importance, the privileges and rights arising
from having been elected may be enlarged or restricted by law. Our first task
is to ascertain the applicable law.
We start with the incontestable proposition
that all top officials of Government-executive, legislative, and judicial are
subject to the majesty of law. There is an unfortunate misimpression in the
public mind that election or appointment to high government office, by itself,
frees the official from the common restraints of general law. Privilege has to
be granted by law, not inferred from the duties of a position. In fact, the
higher the rank, the greater is the requirement of obedience rather than
exemption.
The immunity from arrest or detention of
Senators and members of the House of Representatives, the latter customarily
addressed as Congressmen, arises from a provision of the Constitution. The
history of the provision shows that the privilege has always been granted in a
restrictive sense. The provision granting an exemption as a special privilege
cannot be extended beyond the ordinary meaning of its terms. It may not be
extended by intendment, implication or equitable considerations.
The 1935 Constitution provided in its
Article VI on the Legislative Department:
Sec. 15. The
Senators and Members of the House of Representatives shall in all cases except
treason, felony, and breach of the peace be privileged from arrest during their
attendance at the sessions of Congress, and in going to and returning from the
same; xxx.
Because of the broad coverage of felony and
breach of the peace, the exemption applied only to civil arrests. A congressman
like the accused-appellant, convicted under Title Eleven of the Revised Penal
Code could not claim parliamentary immunity from arrest. He was subject to the
same general laws governing all persons still to be tried or whose convictions
were pending appeal.
The 1973 Constitution broadened the
privilege of immunity as follows:
Article VIII, Sec.
9. A Member of the Batasang Pambansa shall, in all offenses punishable by not
more than six years imprisonment, be privileged from arrest during his
attendance at its sessions and in going to and returning from the same.
For offenses punishable by more than six
years imprisonment, there was no immunity from arrest. The restrictive
interpretation of immunity and the intent to confine it within carefully
defined parameters is illustrated by the concluding portion of the provision,
to wit:
xxx but the
Batasang Pambansa shall surrender the member involved to the custody of the law
within twenty four hours after its adjournment for a recess or for its next
session, otherwise such privilege shall cease upon its failure to do so.
The present Constitution adheres to the same
restrictive rule minus the obligation of Congress to surrender the subject
Congressman to the custody of the law. The requirement that he should be
attending sessions or committee meetings has also been removed. For relatively
minor offenses, it is enough that Congress is in session.
The accused-appellant argues that a member
of Congress’ function to attend sessions is underscored by Section 16 (2),
Article VI of the Constitution which states that–
(2) A majority of
each House shall constitute a quorum to do business, but a smaller number may
adjourn from day to day and may compel the attendance of absent Members in such
manner, and under such penalties, as such House may provide.
However, the accused-appellant has not given
any reason why he should be exempted from the operation of Section 11, Article
VI of the Constitution. The members of Congress cannot compel absent members to
attend sessions if the reason for the absence is a legitimate one. The
confinement of a Congressman charged with a crime punishable by imprisonment of
more than six months is not merely authorized by law, it has constitutional
foundations.
Accused-appellant’s reliance on the ruling
in Aguinaldo v. Santos[2], which states, inter alia, that –
The Court should
never remove a public officer for acts done prior to his present term of
office. To do otherwise would be to deprive the people of their right to elect
their officers. When a people have elected a man to office, it must be assumed
that they did this with the knowledge of his life and character, and that they
disregarded or forgave his fault or misconduct, if he had been guilty of any.
It is not for the Court, by reason of such fault or misconduct, to practically
overrule the will of the people.
will not extricate him from his predicament.
It can be readily seen in the above-quoted ruling that the Aguinaldo
case involves the administrative removal of a public officer for acts done prior
to his present term of office. It does not apply to imprisonment arising from
the enforcement of criminal law. Moreover, in the same way that preventive
suspension is not removal, confinement pending appeal is not removal. He
remains a congressman unless expelled by Congress or, otherwise, disqualified.
One rationale behind confinement, whether
pending appeal or after final conviction, is public self-defense. Society must
protect itself. It also serves as an example and warning to others.
A person charged with crime is taken into
custody for purposes of the administration of justice. As stated in United
States v. Gustilo,[3] it is the injury to the public which State action in
criminal law seeks to redress. It is not the injury to the complainant. After
conviction in the Regional Trial Court, the accused may be denied bail and thus
subjected to incarceration if there is risk of his absconding.[4]
The accused-appellant states that the plea
of the electorate which voted him into office cannot be supplanted by unfounded
fears that he might escape eventual punishment if permitted to perform
congressional duties outside his regular place of confinement.
It will be recalled that when a warrant for
accused-appellant’s arrest was issued, he fled and evaded capture despite a
call from his colleagues in the House of Representatives for him to attend the
sessions and to surrender voluntarily to the authorities. Ironically, it is now
the same body whose call he initially spurned which accused-appellant is
invoking to justify his present motion. This can not be countenanced because,
to reiterate, aside from its being contrary to well-defined Constitutional
restrains, it would be a mockery of the aims of the State’s penal system.
Accused-appellant argues that on several
occasions, the Regional Trial Court of Makati granted several motions to
temporarily leave his cell at the Makati City Jail, for official or medical
reasons, to wit:
a) to attend
hearings of the House Committee on Ethics held at the Batasan Complex, Quezon
City, on the issue of whether to expel/suspend him from the House of
Representatives;
b) to undergo
dental examination and treatment at the clinic of his dentist in Makati City;
c) to undergo a
thorough medical check-up at the Makati Medical Center, Makati City;
d) to register as
a voter at his hometown in Dapitan City. In this case, accused-appellant
commuted by chartered plane and private vehicle.
He also calls attention to various
instances, after his transfer at the New Bilibid Prison in Muntinlupa City,
when he was likewise allowed/permitted to leave the prison premises, to wit:
a) to join
"living-out" prisoners on "work-volunteer program" for the
purpose of 1) establishing a mahogany seedling bank and 2) planting mahogany
trees, at the NBP reservation. For this purpose, he was assigned one guard and
allowed to use his own vehicle and driver in going to and from the project area
and his place of confinement.
b) to continue
with his dental treatment at the clinic of his dentist in Makati City.
c) to be confined
at the Makati Medical Center in Makati City for his heart condition.
There is no showing that the above
privileges are peculiar to him or to a member of Congress. Emergency or
compelling temporary leaves from imprisonment are allowed to all prisoners, at
the discretion of the authorities or upon court orders.
What the accused-appellant seeks is not of
an emergency nature. Allowing accused-appellant to attend congressional
sessions and committee meetings for five (5) days or more in a week will
virtually make him a free man with all the privileges appurtenant to his
position. Such an aberrant situation not only elevates accused-appellant’s
status to that of a special class, it also would be a mockery of the purposes
of the correction system. Of particular relevance in this regard are the
following observations of the Court in Martinez v. Morfe:[5]
The above
conclusion reached by this Court is bolstered and fortified by policy
considerations. There is, to be sure, a full recognition of the necessity to
have members of Congress, and likewise delegates to the Constitutional
Convention, entitled to the utmost freedom to enable them to discharge their
vital responsibilities, bowing to no other force except the dictates of their
conscience. Necessarily the utmost latitude in free speech should be accorded
them. When it comes to freedom from arrest, however, it would amount to the
creation of a privileged class, without justification in reason, if
notwithstanding their liability for a criminal offense, they would be
considered immune during their attendance in Congress and in going to and
returning from the same. There is likely to be no dissent from the proposition
that a legislator or a delegate can perform his functions efficiently and well,
without the need for any transgression of the criminal law. Should such an
unfortunate event come to pass, he is to be treated like any other citizen
considering that there is a strong public interest in seeing to it that crime
should not go unpunished. To the fear that may be expressed that the
prosecuting arm of the government might unjustly go after legislators belonging
to the minority, it suffices to answer that precisely all the safeguards thrown
around an accused by the Constitution, solicitous of the rights of an
individual, would constitute an obstacle to such an attempt at abuse of power.
The presumption of course is that the judiciary would remain independent. It is
trite to say that in each and every manifestation of judicial endeavor, such a
virtue is of the essence.
The accused-appellant avers that his
constituents in the First District of Zamboanga del Norte want their voices to
be heard and that since he is treated as bona fide member of the House
of Representatives, the latter urges a co-equal branch of government to respect
his mandate. He also claims that the concept of temporary detention does not
necessarily curtail his duty to discharge his mandate and that he has always
complied with the conditions/restrictions when he is allowed to leave jail.
We remain unpersuaded.
No less than accused-appellant himself
admits that like any other member of the House of Representatives "[h]e is
provided with a congressional office situated at Room N-214, North Wing
Building, House of Representatives Complex, Batasan Hills, Quezon City, manned
by a full complement of staff paid for by Congress. Through [an]
inter-department coordination, he is also provided with an office at the
Administration Building, New Bilibid Prison, Muntinlupa City, where he attends
to his constituents." Accused-appellant further admits that while
under detention, he has filed several bills and resolutions. It also appears
that he has been receiving his salaries and other monetary benefits. Succinctly
stated, accused-appellant has been discharging his mandate as a member of the
House of Representative consistent with the restraints upon one who is
presently under detention. Being a detainee, accused-appellant should not even
have been allowed by the prison authorities at the National Pentientiary to
perform these acts.
When the voters of his district elected the
accused-appellant to Congress, they did so with full awareness of the
limitations on his freedom of action. They did so with the knowledge that he
could achieve only such legislative results which he could accomplish within
the confines of prison. To give a more drastic illustration, if voters elect a
person with full knowledge that he is suffering from a terminal illness, they
do so knowing that at any time, he may no longer serve his full term in office.
In the ultimate analysis, the issue before
us boils down to a question of constitutional equal protection.
The Constitution guarantees: "x x x nor
shall any person be denied the equal protection of laws."[6] This simply means that all persons similarly
situated shall be treated alike both in rights enjoyed and responsibilities
imposed.[7] The organs of government may not show any undue
favoritism or hostility to any person. Neither partiality nor prejudice shall
be displayed.
Does being an elective official result in a
substantial distinction that allows different treatment? Is being a Congressman
a substantial differentiation which removes the accused-appellant as a prisoner
from the same class as all persons validly confined under law?
The performance of legitimate and even
essential duties by public officers has never been an excuse to free a person
validly in prison. The duties imposed by the "mandate of the people"
are multifarious. The accused-appellant asserts that the duty to legislate
ranks highest in the hierarchy of government. The accused-appellant is only one
of 250 members of the House of Representatives, not to mention the 24 members
of the Senate, charged with the duties of legislation. Congress continues to
function well in the physical absence of one or a few of its members. Depending
on the exigency of Government that has to be addressed, the President or the
Supreme Court can also be deemed the highest for that particular duty. The
importance of a function depends on the need for its exercise. The duty of a
mother to nurse her infant is most compelling under the law of nature. A doctor
with unique skills has the duty to save the lives of those with a particular
affliction. An elective governor has to serve provincial constituents. A police
officer must maintain peace and order. Never has the call of a particular duty
lifted a prisoner into a different classification from those others who are
validly restrained by law.
A strict scrutiny of classifications is
essential lest wittingly or otherwise, insidious discriminations are made in
favor of or against groups or types of individuals.[8]
The Court cannot validate badges of
inequality. The necessities imposed by public welfare may justify exercise of
government authority to regulate even if thereby certain groups may plausibly
assert that their interests are disregarded.[9]
We, therefore, find that election to the
position of Congressman is not a reasonable classification in criminal law
enforcement. The functions and duties of the office are not substantial
distinctions which lift him from the class of prisoners interrupted in their
freedom and restricted in liberty of movement. Lawful arrest and confinement
are germane to the purposes of the law and apply to all those belonging to the
same class.[10]
Imprisonment is the restraint of a man’s
personal liberty; coercion exercised upon a person to prevent the free exercise
of his power of locomotion.[11]
More explicitly, "imprisonment" in
its general sense, is the restraint of one’s liberty. As a punishment, it is
restraint by judgment of a court or lawful tribunal, and is personal to the
accused.[12] The term refers to the restraint on the personal
liberty of another; any prevention of his movements from place to place, or of
his free action according to his own pleasure and will.[13] Imprisonment is the detention of another
against his will depriving him of his power of locomotion[14] and it "[is] something more than mere loss of
freedom. It includes the notion of restraint within limits defined by wall
or any exterior barrier."[15]
It can be seen from the foregoing that
incarceration, by its nature, changes an individual’s status in society.[16] Prison officials have the difficult and often
thankless job of preserving the security in a potentially explosive setting, as
well as of attempting to provide rehabilitation that prepares inmates for
re-entry into the social mainstream. Necessarily, both these demands require
the curtailment and elimination of certain rights.[17]
Premises considered, we are constrained to
rule against the accused-appellant’s claim that re-election to public office
gives priority to any other right or interest, including the police power of
the State.
WHEREFORE, the instant motion is hereby DENIED.
SO ORDERED.
Kapunan, Panganiban, Quisumbing,
Purisima, Pardo, Buena, and De
Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.
Gonzaga-Reyes,
J., see separate concurring opinion.
Davide, Jr., C.J., Bellosillo, Melo,
Puno, Vitug, and Mendoza, JJ., concurs
in the main and separate opinion.
[1] RTC Decision, pp. 54-55.
[2] 212 SCRA 768, at 773 [1992].
[3] 19 Phil. 208, 212.
[4] Cubillo v. City Warden, 97 SCRA 771 [1980].
[5] 44 SCRA 37 [1972].
[6] Art. III, Sec. 1.
[7] Ichong v. Hernandez, 101 Phil. 1155.
[8] Skinuer v. Oklahoma, 315 US 535.
[9] See Fernando, Constitution of the Philippines, 2nd Edition, p. 548.
[10] See Felwa v. Salas, 18 SCRA 606 [1966]; Ichong v. Hernandez, 101 Phil. 1155; Dumlao v. Commission on Elections, 95 SCRA 392 [1980]; Ceniza v. Commission on Elections, 96 SCRA 763 (1980); People v. Cayat, 68 Phil. 12.
[11] Black’s Law Dictionary, Special Deluxe 5th Ed., p. 681.
[12] 20 Words And Phrases, Permanent Ed., p. 466, citing US v. Safeway Stores [Tex.] C.C.C.A. Kan. 140 F 2d 834, 839 and US v. Mitchell, 163 F. 1014, 1016 at p. 470.
[13] Ibid., p. 470, citing Pine v. Okzewski, 170 A. 825, 827, 112 N.J.L. 429.
[14] Id., p. 472, citing US v. Benner, 24 Fed. Cas. 1084, 1087.
[15] Id., citing Bird v. Jones, 4 N.Y. Leg. Obs. 158, 159.
[16] Sheldon, Krantz, 1988 Supplement. The Law of Correction and Prisoners’ Rights, 3rd Ed., p. 121.
[17] Ibid.