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[PEOPLE v. DALMACIO SALAZAR](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c2eec?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. L-8570, Mar 23, 1956 ]

PEOPLE v. DALMACIO SALAZAR +

DECISION

98 Phil. 663

[ G.R. No. L-8570, March 23, 1956 ]

THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT, VS. DALMACIO SALAZAR, DEFENDANT AND APPELLEE.

D E C I S I O N

BENGZON, J.:

The fiscal of Bataan  has appealed from the order  of the  court  of first instance of that province dismissing the information, dated  July 28,1953, that charged Dalmacio Salazar  with a  violation  of  article  319  of  the Revised Penal Code, because 
"in  or about  the  periods  comprised  between  July 16,  1957  to February, 1948 *  *  * the herein defendant Dalmacio Salazar, having mortgaged 75 cavanes of palay under  the  terms  of the Chattel Bank, did then and  there wilfully,  unlawfully and fraudulently, sell and dispose of the said  property without the knowledge and consent of the Bataan Agency,  Philippine  National  Bank,  to  the damage  and prejudice of the  said bank in the  sum of P262.50 Philippine Currency."
According  to said  court, since  the  crime must have been discovered prior  to  February 1948, more than five years had elapsed and  therefore the crime had prescribed.  The applicable  provisions of the Revised  Penal  Code are the following:
"ART,  319. Removal, sale or pledge  of mortgaged of property. The penalty of arresto mayor or  a fine amounting to twice  the value of the property shall be imposed  upon: * * *

"2. Any  mortgagor who shall sell or  pledge personal  property already  pledged, or  any  part thereof,  under  the  terms  of  the Chattel Mortgage Law, without the  consent of the mortgagee * * *"

"Art.  90. Prescription  of crimes. * * *  Those  punishable by a correctional penalty shall prescribe  in ten years; with the  exception of those  punishable by  arresto mayor  which  shall prescribe  in five  years." * * *

."Art.  26. Fine When  afflictive,  correctional or light penalty, A fine, whether imposed as a single or as an  alternative penalty shall be considered an afflictive penalty,  if  it exceeds 6,000 pesos; a correctional  penalty,  if it  does  not  exceed 6,000 pesos  but is not less than 200 pesos;  and a light penalty,  if it be less than 200 pesos."

"ART.  39. Subsidiary  penalty. If  the  convict has no  property with  which  to  meet the  * *  *  (fine)  he  shall be  subject to a subsidiary  personal  liability at  the  rate of  one  day  for each 2 pesos and 50 centavos, subject to the following rules:  * * *

"2. 'When  the  principal penalty imposed  be only a  fine,  the subsidiary imprisonment shall not exceed six months  * * *"
His Honor explained that five years  was the  prescriptive period, inasmuch as the offense was punishable with arresto mayor.  Reminded,  on a motion to reconsider, that the penalty  could be  a fine  of  P525  (twice the amount of P262.50)  he  declined  to  change his  order pointing out that, anyway, the subsidiary imprisonment for  such fine, could not exceed  sis months  (Article  39 Revised  Penal Code).

The Government's appeal  rests  oil two propositions: (a)  the  offense prescribed in ten years because the fine could  be P525, which is a  correctional penalty,  tinder articles 90 and 26: (6) granting arguendo that the period was five years, such period began only from the discovery of defendant's misdeed, which occurred  in January 1953 as the prosecution  offered to  prove in the  court below.

We  find the first proposition to be in accordance with law and it  is unnecessary to consider the second.   The accused  could have been ordered to pay a fine of P525, which  is a correctional penalty.   Therefore, as the offense was punished with a correctional  penalty, it  prescribed in ten  years.  That his subsidiary imprisonment could not exceed six months  is immaterial.[1]   The rule  on prescription (as to fines) did  not refer  to subsidiary  imprisonment.  It took into account  the  nature of the penalty: afflictive, correctional, and light.  Arresto mayor was one exception.  Subsidiary imprisonment, is not arresto mayor, and there is no reason to classify it as such, considering especially that exceptions are restrictively applied.

To adopt the lower court's viewpoint would  mean that the heaviest fine, even exceeding P6.000, is never "afflictive," because the subsidiary  imprisonment could not go beyond six months.  That  would be  rewriting and amending article 26 of the Revised Penal Code.

The  appealed order is reversed, and the case remanded for further proceedings.  So ordered.

ParĂ¡s, C. J, Padilla, Montemayor,  Reyes,  A., Bautista Angelo, Labrador, Concepcion, Reyes, J. B. L. and Endencia, JJ., concur.



[1] Cf. People vs. Caldito, 40 Off. Gaz. 552.

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