10/13/2019                                                 PHILIPPINE REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 063
[No. 44988. October 31, 1936]
                        THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS, plaintiff and
                        appellee, vs. CANUTO BERNAL, defendant and appellant.
                               1. CRIMINAL LAW; HABITUAL DELINQUENCY.—The defense
                                  alleges that the conviction on October 19, 1935, for the crime of
                                  theft should not be counted against the accused because it took
                                  place after the commission of the offense at bar on the 11th of the
                                  said month and year. Held: That the third conviction, having taken
                                  place after the commission of the last offense with which the
                                  accused is now charged, should not be reckoned with in
                                  determining habitual delinquency and the additional penalty to be
                                  imposed, upon the authority of the decisions of this court in People
                                  vs. Santiago (65 Phil., 266), People vs. Ventura (56 Phil., 1, 5), and
                                  People vs. Reyes (G. R. Nos. 43904, 43905, Oct. 18, 1935 [62
                                  Phil., 966]).
                               2. ID. ; RECIDIVISM AS AN AGGRAVATING CIRCUMSTANCE;
                                  PENALTY.—The aggravating circumstance of recidivism should
                                  be taken into account in the commission of the crime of theft in
                                  view of the established fact that the accused was thrice convicted of
                                  the said crime prior to the trial of this case on November 4, 1935
                                  (article 14, par. 9, Revised Penal Code). For this reason, the penalty
                                  imposable should be six (6) months and one (1) day of prisión
                                  correccional. As an habitual delinquent, because he was twice
                                  convicted of the crime of theft prior to the commission of the
                                  offense at bar (art. 62, last paragraph of the Revised Penal Code),
                                  he should be sentenced to the additional penalty of three (3) years
                                  of prisión correccional pursuant to subsection (a) of paragraph 5 of
                                  the said article.
                               3. ID.; ID.; ID.; DEFINITION AND DISTINCTION.—Under the last
                                  subsection of paragraph 5 of article 62 of the Revised Penal Code, a
                                  person shall be deemed to be habitually delinquent, if within a
                                  period of ten years from the date of his release or last conviction of
                                  the crimes of robbery, theft, estafa, or falsification, he is found
                                  guilty of any of said crimes a third time or oftener.
                                                                                                     751
                                             VOL. 63, OCTOBER 31, 1936                               751
                                                           People vs. Bernal
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                                  Paragraph 9 of article 14 of the Revised Penal Code defines
                                  recidivism by stating that it is committed by a person who, at the
                                  time of his trial for one crime, shall have been previously convicted
                                  by final judgment of another crime embraced in the same title of
                                  the Code. Defining reiteration or habituality, paragraph 10 of the
                                  same article provides that it is committed when the offender has
                                  been previously punished for an offense to which the law attaches
                                  at an equal or greater penalty or for two or more crimes to which it
                                  attaches a lighter penalty. Reflecting on these definitions it will be
                                  seen that recidivism, viewed as an aggravating circumstance, is not
                                  a factor or element which necessarily forms an integral part of
                                  habitual delinquency. It will be noted that the elements as well as
                                  the basis of each of these circumstances are different. For
                                  recidivism to exist, it is sufficient that the accused, on the date of
                                  his trial, shall have been previously convicted by final judgment of
                                  another crime embraced in the same title. For the existence of
                                  habitual delinquency, it is not enough that the accused shall have
                                  been convicted of any of the crimes specified, and that the last
                                  conviction shall have taken place ten (10) years before the
                                  commission of the last offense. It is necessary that the crime
                                  previously committed be prior to the commission of the offense
                                  with which the accused is charged a third time or oftener.
                        APPEAL from a judgment of the Court of First Instance of
                          Batangas. Platon, J.
                        The facts are stated in the opinion of the court.
                          Juan M. Ladaw for appellant.
                          Acting Solicitor-General Melencio for appellee.
                        IMPERIAL, J.;
                        The accused was charged with the crime of theft, the information
                        alleging that, aside from the presence of the aggravating
                        circumstance of nocturnity, the accused is an habitual delinquent
                        because he had been convicted, prior to the commission of the
                        offense at bar, thrice of the same crime of theft. The accused pleaded
                        not guilty, but the court, after trial, found him guilty as charged, and
                        sentenced him to four (4) months and one (1) day of arresto mayor,
                        to pay the accessories of the law, to return the three stolen roosters to
                        Mariano de Leon or to indemnify the
                                                                                                     752
                        752                      PHILIPPINE REPORTS ANNOTATED
                                                          People vs, Bernal
                        latter the value thereof in the sum of P3, and to pay the costs. As an
                        habitual delinquent, because previously convicted three times of the
                        same crime of theft, he was sentenced to an additional penalty of
                        seven (7) years of prisión mayor.
                            The facts are not disputed by the defense. It has been established
                        that late in the evening of October 11, 1935, the accused, without the
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                        owner's consent, took three gamecocks belonging to Elias Piamonte
                        valued at P50, and three other roosters belonging to Mariano de
                        Leon valued at P3. Only two of the gamecocks of Elias Piamonte,
                        valued at P30, were recovered. It has equally been established that
                        the accused had been thrice convicted of the crime of theft: The first
                        time on April 25, 1935 by the justice of the peace court of San
                        Pablo, Laguna; the second time on June 24, 1935, by the same
                        justice of the peace court, and the third time on October 19, 1935, by
                        the justice of the peace court of Tanauan, Batangas.
                            The defense assigns only one error of law in the judgment, to wit,
                        in finding the accused an habitual delinquent under subsection (b) of
                        paragraph 5 of article 62 of the Revised Penal Code, and in
                        imposing upon him the penalty therein provided. It contends that the
                        applicable provision is that found in subsection (a) of the aforesaid
                        codal paragraph and article, because in truth and according to the
                        decisions, the accused has no more than two prior convictions, the
                        third being the one at bar. Elaborating on this contention, the defense
                        alleges that the conviction on October 19, 1935, for the crime of
                        theft should not be counted against the accused because it took place
                        after the commission of the offense at bar on the 11th of the said
                        month and year. The Solicitor-General in his brief agrees with the
                        defense, and recommends that the penalty fixed in subsection (a) of
                        paragraph 5 of article 62 of the Revised Penal Code be imposed
                        upon the accused. We hold that the third conviction, having taken
                        place after the commis-
                                                                                                     753
                                          VOL. 63, OCTOBER 31, 1936                                  753
                                                          People vs. Bernal
                        sion of -the last offense with which the accused is now charged,
                        should not be reckoned with in determining habitual delinquency
                        and the additional penalty to be imposed, upon the authority of the
                        decisions of this court in People vs. Santiago (55 Phil., 266), People
                        vs. Ventura (56 Phil., 1, 5), and People vs. Reyes (G. R. Nos. 43904,
                        43905, October 18, 1935 [62 Phil., 966]).
                            The aggravating circumstance of recidivism should be taken into
                        account in the commission of the crime of theft in view of the
                        established fact that the accused was thrice convicted of the said
                        crime prior to the trial of this case on November 4, 1935 (art. 14,
                        par. 9, Revised Penal Code). For this reason, the penalty imposable
                        should be six (6) months and one (1) day of prisión correccional. As
                        an habitual delinquent, because he was twice convicted of the crime
                        of theft prior to the commission of the offense at bar (art. 62, last
                        paragraph of the Revised Penal Code), he should be sentenced to the
                        additional penalty of three (3) years of prisión correccional pursuant
                        to subsection (a) of paragraph 5 of the said article.
                            The question arose, in the course of our deliberation on this case,
                        of whether or not in instances where the accused turns out to be an
                        habitual delinquent the aggravating circumstance of recidivism,
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                        when alleged and proved, should be taken into account in fixing the
                        penalty applicable for the commission of the principal offense,
                        independently of the additional penalty provided by law for habitual
                        delinquency. It has been urged that said aggravating circumstance
                        should not be so considered, otherwise it would be twice held
                        against the accused inasmuch as it is necessarily taken into account
                        in ascertaining whether he is a habitual delinquent or not. The
                        majority of the court hold to the contrary view, namely, that
                        recidivism should be reckoned with; hence, the accused is sentenced
                        to the minimum of the maximum penalty fixed by law.
                                                                                                     754
                        754                      PHILIPPINE REPORTS ANNOTATED
                                                          People vs. Bernal
                        In resolving this question as above set out, the majority of the court
                        gave heed to the following considerations:
                            First: This is not the first time that the question has been
                        submitted to the consideration of the court. In People vs. Melendrez
                        (59 Phil., 154), and People vs. Espina 62 Phil., 607), we have
                        already held that in cases similar to the one at bar, the aggravating
                        circumstance of recidivism should be taken into consideration,
                        notwithstanding the allegation and proof that the accused were
                        habitual delinquents and should accordingly be sentenced to the
                        additional penalty provided by law; and
                            Second: It is not correct to assume that recidivism is twice taken
                        into account when the accused is declared an habitual delinquent and
                        when it is deemed to aggravate the crime in fixing the principal
                        penalty to be imposed, because recidivism as an aggravating
                        circumstance modifying criminal liability is not an inherent or
                        integral element of habitual delinquency which the Revised Penal
                        Code considers as an extraordinary and special aggravating
                        circumstance.
                            Under the last subsection of paragraph 5 of article 62 of the
                        Revised Penal Code, a person shall be deemed to be habitually
                        delinquent, if within a period of ten years from the date of his
                        release or last conviction of the crime of robbery, theft, estafa, or
                        falsification, he is found guilty of any of said crimes a third time or
                        oftener. Paragraph 9 of article 14 of the Revised Penal Code defines
                        recidivism by stating that it is committed by a person who, at the
                        time of his trial for one crime, shall have been previously convicted
                        by final judgment of another crime embraced in the same title of the
                        Code. Defining reiteration or habituality, paragraph 10 of the same
                        article provides that it is committed when the offender has been
                        previously punished for an offense to which the law attaches at an
                        equal or greater penalty or for two or more crimes to which it
                        attaches a lighter penalty. Reflecting on these definitions it will be
                        seen that recidivism,
                                                                                                     755
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                                          VOL. 63, OCTOBER 31, 1936                                  755
                                                          People vs. Bernal
                        viewed as an aggravating circumstance, is not a factor or element
                        which necessarily f orms an integral part of habitual delinquency. It
                        will be noted that the elements as well as the basis of each of these
                        circumstances are different. For recidivism to exist, it is sufficient
                        that the accused, on the date of his trial, shall have been previously
                        convicted by final judgment of another crime embraced in the same
                        title. For the existence of habitual delinquency, it is not enough that
                        the accused shall have been convicted of any of the crimes specified,
                        and that the last conviction shall have taken place ten (10) years
                        before the commission of the last offense. It is necessary that the
                        crimes previously committed be prior to the commission of the
                        offense with which the accused is charged a third time or oftener.
                            In view of the foregoing, the appealed judgment is modified, and
                        the accused-appellant is found guilty of the crime of theft charged in
                        the complaint and sentenced to six (6) months and one (1) day of
                        prisión correccional, to return to the offended parties the stolen and
                        unrecovered roosters, or in default thereof to indemnify Elias
                        Piamonte in the sum of P20 and, Mariano de Leon in the sum of P3,
                        with the corresponding subsidiary imprisonment in case of
                        insolvency, and to an additional penalty of three (3) years of prisión
                        correccional, with the costs in both instances. So ordered.
                               Avanceña, C. J., Villa-Real, Diaz, and Laurel, JJ., concur.
                        ABAD SANTOS, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part:
                        I agree that the' appellant is guilty of the crime of theft, but I am
                        constrained to dissent once more from the opinion of the majority in
                        so far as it holds that, in the imposition of the penalty prescribed by
                        law for the crime committed by the appellant, the aggravating
                        circumstance of recidivism should be taken into consideration. My
                        views on this point have already been set forth in my opinion filed in
                        the case of People vs. Melendrez (59 Phil., 154), but they will
                        perhaps bear further elaboration.
                                                                                                     756
                        756                      PHILIPPINE REPORTS ANNOTATED
                                                          People vs. Bernal
                        I maintain that, upon the facts of this case and the law applicable
                        thereto, the aggravating circumstance of recidivism should not be
                        taken into consideration in the imposition of the penalty prescribed
                        by law for the crime of which the appellant has been found guilty.
                           Article 14, paragraph 9, of the Revised Penal Code, defines a
                        recidivist as follows:
                        "A recidivist is one who, at the time of his trial for one crime, shall have
                        been previously convicted by final judgment of another crime embraced in
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                        the same title of this Code."
                        And article 62, paragraph 5 (c), of the same Code, defines a habitual
                        delinquent as follows:
                        "For the purposes of this article, a person shall be deemed to be habitual
                        delinquent, if within a period of ten years f rom the date .of his release or
                        last conviction of the crimes of robo, hurto, estafa, or falsificación, he is
                        found guilty of any of said crimes, a third time or oftener."
                        It seems clear from the provisions of law above quoted that if,
                        within a period of ten years from the date of his release or last
                        conviction of the crime of robo, hurto, estafa, or falsificación, a
                        person be found guilty of the same crime f or the second time, he
                        would be deemed a recidivist; and if he be found guilty for the third
                        time or oftener, he would be deemed a habitual delinquent. The law
                        determines the effect to be given to one previous conviction, and it
                        also determines the effect of two or more previous convictions. One
                        previous conviction merely constitutes the generic aggravating
                        circumstance prescribed by article 14, paragraph 9, while two or
                        more previous convictions qualify the crime. The previous
                        convictions enter into the third or subsequent offense to the extent of
                        aggravating it, and increasing the punishment, In other words, such
                        previous convictions constitute an essential element of the
                        aggravated offense. "The previous conviction enters into the second
                        or third offense to the extent of aggravating it, and increasing the
                        punishment; and, where it is sought
                                                                                                     757
                                          VOL. 63, OCTOBER 31, 1936                                  757
                                                          People vs. Bernal
                        to impose the greater penalty for a second or third offense, the
                        previous conviction or convictions, like every other material fact,
                        must be distinctly alleged in the indictment. 'When the statute
                        imposes a higher penalty upon a second and a third conviction,
                        respectively, it makes the prior conviction of a similar offense a part
                        of the description and character of the offense intended to be
                        punished; and therefore the fact of such prior conviction must be
                        charged as well as proved. It is essential to an indictment that the
                        facts constituting the offense intended to be punished should be
                        averred.' And in like manner, when a statute, besides imposing a
                        higher penalty upon a second or third conviction than upon the first,
                        provides that any person convicted of two or more offenses upon the
                        same indictment shall be subject to the same punishment as if he had
                        been successively convicted on two indictments, still the second and
                        third offenses must be alleged in the indictment to be second and
                        third offenses in order to warrant the increased punishment." (Clark's
                        Criminal Procedure, p. 204, cited with approval in People vs. Nayco,
                        45 Phil., 167.)
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                            The same view is expressed by Viada in commenting on article
                        533 of the Penal Code of Spain "Trátase aquí del hurto cualificado,
                        cuya criminalidad ha creído conveniente agravar el legislador, y, por
                        lo tanto, castigar con penas más severas, cuando por los objetos
                        sobre que recae, o por el lugar en que se comete, o por las
                        circunstancias personales del culpable o sus relaciones con el
                        perjudicado, se demuestra la mayor perversidad del primero en la
                        comisión de semejante delito. Algunas de éstas circunstancias, como
                        la de ejecutarse el delito en lugar sagrado, la de intervenir abuso de
                        confianza y la de ser el culpable reincidente, son ya de por sí
                        circunstancias agravantes genéricas de todo delito en que concurren
                        (núms. 19, 10 y 18 del artículo 10). Aquí son algo más; son
                        circunstancias constitutivas, esenciales de los delitos previstos en
                        este artículo y por lo tanto, con arreglo al 79, no cabe apreciarlas al
                        ef ecto de aumentar la pena en aquél señalada, la que deberá
                        imponerse
                                                                                                     758
                        758                      PHILIPPINE REPORTS ANNOTATED
                                                          People vs. Bernal
                        siempre en el grado medio, a no concurrir cualquiera otra de las
                        circunstancias generales de agravación del art. 10 que no sea de las
                        expresadas, en cuyo caso procedería la aplicación de la pena en el
                        grado máximo con arreglo al núm. 3.° del art. 82; o a no mediar
                        alguna circunstancia atenuante, pues entonces debería imponerse al
                        culpable la pena en el grado mínimo, en conformidad a lo dispuesto
                        en el núm. 2.° del precipitado art. 82." (Viada, 5th ed., vol. 6, p.
                        289.)
                            In United States vs. Campo (23 Phil., 368), this court held that
                        the existence of the generic aggravating circumstances need not be
                        alleged in a complaint or information, but if proven at the trial, they
                        must be taken into consideration in imposing the penalty. On the
                        other hand, a qualifying circumstance must be alleged and proved in
                        order that the same may be taken into consideration. It has also been
                        held that once a circumstance has been treated as a qualifying
                        circumstance, it may not again be taken into consideration as a
                        generic aggravating circumstance.
                        "In those cases wherein, under the provisions of the Penal Code, the legal
                        designation or characterization of an offense is modified by an allegation set
                        forth in the complaint or information showing that such offense had been
                        marked with one of the above-mentioned generic aggravating
                        circumstances, this aggravating circumstance when alleged and proven is
                        treated as a qualifying circumstance, and in that event, having once been
                        taken into consideration for the purpose of giving to the acts committed by
                        the convict a legal qualification or characterization higher than they would
                        otherwise have had, it should not be again taken into consideration as an
                        aggravating circumstance marking the commission of this higher offense."
                        (Italics ours.)
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                        In People vs. Nayco, supra, this court held that to convict the
                        accused as an habitual delinquent, the previous convictions, like any
                        qualifying circumstance, must be alleged and proved.
                                                                                                      759
                                          VOL. 63, OCTOBER 31, 1936                                   759
                                                          People vs. Bernal
                        Article 533 of the Penal Code of Spain provides:
                        "El hurto se castigará con las penas inmediatamente superiores en grado a
                        las respectivamente señaladas en los dos artículos anteriores:
                                                   *      *      *      *      *      *      *
                            "3.° Si fuere dos o más veces reincidente."
                        Commenting on this article Viada says:
                        "Cuestión 60. Comete uno un delito de hurto, y resulta haber sido penado
                        anteriormente tres veces por delito de la misma especie: ¿cabe en este caso
                        apreciar la circunstancia de esa triple reincidencia, primero como
                        qualificativa, para elevar la pena al grado inmediatamente superior, tomando
                        para ello dos de las tres reincidencias, y segregar la tercera como agravante
                        genérica, para imponer al culpable dicha pena superior en el grado máximo?
                        El Tribunal Supremo ha resuelto la negativa, fundándose en que con arreglo
                        a lo prescrito en el art. 533, número 3.° la pena del delito de hurto debe ser
                        la inmediatamente superior en grado a la respectiva del 531, cuando su autor
                        fuere dos o más veces reincidente; siendo evidente, por lo tanto, que las tres
                        expresadas reincidencias, y aún cualquiera otras que hubiese además, no
                        pueden constituir sino una sola circunstancia cualificativa, cuyo efecto es
                        únicamente el de elevar la pena al grado superior inmediato; y que la Sala
                        sentenciadora, al dividir y separar esas tres reincidencias, aplicando dos de
                        ellas, la una como circunstancia cualificativa y la otra como genérica o
                        común, infringe la disposición legal últimamente citada, a la vez que la
                        circunstancia 18.a del art. 10 y la regla 3.a del referido Código Penal." (S. de
                        21 de diciembre de 1872, Gaceta de 16 de febrero de 1873. Viada, 5th ed.,
                        vol. 6, 317.)
                        It will be observed that the reason f or not taking into consideration
                        the second conviction as a generic aggravating circumstance in the
                        imposition of the penalty prescribed under article 533 of the Penal
                        Code of Spain, is because the third or subsequent conviction,
                        together with the pre-
                                                                                                      760
                        760                      PHILIPPINE REPORTS ANNOTATED
                                                        People vs. De Jesus
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                        vious ones, constitutes but a single qualifying circumstance. The
                        same may be said in relation to article 62, paragraph 5, of the
                        Revised Penal Code. The third or subsequent conviction, combined
                        with the previous ones, constitutes but a single qualifying
                        circumstance. In other words, the second conviction—which
                        generally goes to make up the generic aggravating circumstance of
                        recidivism—is necessarily included in the number of convictions
                        required to establish habitual delinquency.
                        RECTO, J.:
                        I concur in the foregoing dissenting opinion of Justice Abad Santos.
                            Judgment modified.
                                                           _____________
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