Special Penal Laws Update Part 9

VIOLATION OF RA 6425,

A VALID CAUSE FOR DISMISSAL

IN SERVICE IN THE GOVERNMENT

DESPITE PROBATION

Drug-pushing, as a crime, has been variously condemned as “an especially vicious crime,”  “one of the most pernicious evils that has ever crept into our society.”  For those who become addicted to it “not only slide into the ranks of the living dead, what is worse, they become a grave menace to the safety of law-abiding members of society,” while “peddlers of drugs are actually agents of destruction. They deserve no less than the maximum penalty [of death].”

There is no doubt that drug-pushing is a crime which involves moral turpitude and implies “everything which is done contrary to justice, honesty, modesty or good morals” including “acts of baseness, vileness, or depravity in the private and social duties which a man owes to his fellowmen or to society in general, contrary to the accepted rule of right and duty between man and man.”  Indeed nothing is more depraved than for anyone to be a merchant of death by selling prohibited drugs, an act which, as this Court said in one case,” often breeds other crimes. It is not what we might call a ‘contained’ crime whose consequences are limited to that crime alone, like swindling and bigamy. Court and police records show that a significant number of murders, rapes, and similar offenses have been committed by persons under the influence of dangerous drugs, or while they are ‘high.’ While spreading such drugs, the drug-pusher is also abetting, through his agreed and irresponsibility, the commission of other crimes.” The image of the judiciary is tarnished by conduct, which involves moral turpitude. While indeed the purpose of the Probation Law (P.D. No. 968, as amended) is to save valuable human material, it must not be forgotten that unlike pardon probation does not obliterate the crime of which the person under probation has been convicted. The reform and rehabilitation of the probationer cannot justify his retention in the government service. He may seek to reenter government service, but only after he has shown that he is fit to serve once again. It cannot be repeated too often that a public office is a public trust, which demands of those in its service the highest degree of morality.  (OCA v. Librado 260 SCRA 624, 8/22/96)

 

PETITIONER MAY STILL EXHORT OFFENDER

TO PERFORM CERTAIN ACTS DESPITE

DISCHARGE FROM PROBATION IN

CERTAIN CASES

Petitioner Arthur M. Cuevas, Jr.’s discharge from probation without any infraction of the attendant conditions therefor and the various certifications attesting to his righteous, peaceful and civic-oriented character prove that he has taken decisive steps to purge himself of his deficiency in moral character and atone for the unfortunate death of Raul I. Camaligan. The Court is prepared to give him the benefit of the doubt, taking judicial notice of the general tendency of the youth to be rash, temerarious and uncalculating.  Let it be stressed to herein petitioner that the lawyer’s oath is not a mere formality recited for a few minutes in the glare of flashing cameras and before the presence of select witnesses. Petitioner is exhorted to conduct himself beyond reproach at all times and to live strictly according to his oath and the Code of Professional Responsibility. And, to paraphrase Mr. Justice Padilla’s comment in the sister case of Re: Petition of Al Argosino To Take The Lawyer’s Oath, Bar Matter No. 712, March 19, 1997, “[t]he Court sincerely hopes that” Mr. Cuevas, Jr., “will continue with the assistance he has been giving to his community. As a lawyer he will now be in a better position to render legal and other services to the more unfortunate members of society”.  (In Re:  Cuevas, Jr.; 1/27/98)

 

EXPIRATION OF PERIOD OF PROBATION IS NOT TERMINATION, ORDER OF COURT REQUIRED

 

Santos

VS

Cruz-Pano

1/17/83

 

The mere expiration of the period for probation does not, ipso facto, terminate the probation. Probation is not co-terminus with its period, there must be an order from the Court of final discharge, terminating the probation. If the accused violates the condition of the probation before the issuance of said order, the probation may be revoked by the Court (Manuel Bala v. Martinez, 181 SCRA  459).

 

          Probation is a mere privilege and its grant rests solely upon the discretion of the court.  As aptly noted in U.S. vs. Durkem, this discretion is to be exercised primarily for the benefit of organized society and only incidentally for the benefit of the accused.  (Tolentino v. Alconcel, G.R. No. 63400, 3/18/83).  Even if a convicted person is not included in the list of offenders disqualified from the benefits of a decree, the grant of probation is nevertheless not automatic or ministerial, (Pablo Bernardo v. Balagot, 215 SCRA 526) therefore a petition for probation may be denied by the Court.

          The main criterion laid down by the Probation law in determining who may be granted probation is based on the penalty imposed and not on the nature of the crime.  By the relative lightness of the offense, as measured by the penalty imposed, more than by its nature, as the law so ordains the offender is not such a serious menace to society as to be wrested away therefrom, as the more dangerous type of criminals should be.  Hence, in the case at bar, the first reason given by the respondent judge for his denial of the petition for probation that, “probation will depreciate the seriousness of the offense committed” would thus be writing into the law a new ground for disqualifying a first-offender from the benefits of probation.

 

 

IT IS NOT THE TOTALITY OF THE PENALTIES IMPOSED FOR ALL CASES THAT DETERMINES WHETHER THE CASE IS PROBATIONABLE OR NOT.

 

Francisco

VS.

CA

4/15/1995

 

          Evidently, the law does not intend to sum up the penalties imposed but to take each penalty, separately and distinctly with the others.  Consequently, even if petitioner was supposed to have served his prison term of one (1) year and one (1) day to one (1) year and eight (8) months of prision correccinal sixteen (16) times as he was sentenced to serve the prison term for “each crime committed on each date of each case, as alleged in the information(s),” and in each of the four (4) informations, he was charged with having defamed the four (4) private complainants on four (4) different, separate days, he was still eligible for probation, as each prison term imposed on petitioner was probationable.

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