You're currently signed in as:
User
Add TAGS to your cases to easily locate them or to build your SYLLABUS.
Please SIGN IN to use this feature.
https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/ccca?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09
[US v. MIGUEL VILLANO](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/ccca?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
{case:ccca}
Highlight text as FACTS, ISSUES, RULING, PRINCIPLES to generate case DIGESTS and REVIEWERS.
Please LOGIN use this feature.
Show printable version with highlights

[ GR No. 6302, Feb 07, 1911 ]

US v. MIGUEL VILLANO +

DECISION

18 Phil. 359

[ G. R. No. 6302, February 07, 1911 ]

THE UNITED STATES, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. MIGUEL VILLANO, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT.

D E C I S I O N

TRENT, J.:

The information filed  in this  case is as follows:
"That on or about the 31st of October, 1908, within the territory of the  municipality  of Cebu, in this province and judicial district, the said Miguel Villano, voluntarily, illegally, and criminally imported and knowingly introduced fraudulently into  the said municipality  merchandise  consisting of 190 tins of opium valued at 10 taels, ex steamship  Kaifong, which vessel  runs between Hongkong  and Cebu; that  the said Miguel Villano, knowing that the 190 tins of opium had  been illegally  imported received, secreted, purchased and sold the  same; all contrary to  law."
Upon this information the defendant Miguel Villano  was tried, convicted  and sentenced to one year and two months of imprisonment,  to pay a fine  of two thousand  five hundred  (P2,500) pesos, and to  pay the costs of the  cause.

The 190 tins of opium, alleged  in the complaint to have been imported into the Philippine  Islands by the defendant, were not all imported at the same time, but came  in on the steamer  Kaifong  on  the following voyages: Voyage  No. 121, 20 tins; No.  122, 20 tins;  No. 123, 50 tins; and  No. 124, 100 tins.  As the  importation of  these  190 tins of opium in this manner constituted four separate  and  distinct crimes, on  motion  of the defendant the court ordered the prosecution to confine itself to the last shipment.

About the time the steamer Kaifong  was in the port of Cebu on voyage No. 123 the defendant, a resident of Cebu, entered into a contract  with one  Lao Loc Hing,  the sobre-cargo of this steamer, in which contract or agreement Lao Loc Hing promised and agreed to purchase in Hongkong, and bring into the port of Cebu, 100 tins of opium and turn same over to the defendant,  for which the defendant promised to pay  him the sum of P3,000.   Lao Loc Hing complied with his part of this contract and upon the arrival of the steamer in the bay of Cebu on its one hundred and twenty- fourth  voyage,  he,  Lao Loc  Hing, notified  the  defendant that the opium was aboard.  The defendant, after having paid Lao Loc Hing the  sum of P2,500 proceeded alongside the steamer about 11 o'clock on  the night of October 31, 1908, and received the 100 tins of opium, which  he carried ashore and later disposed of by sale to  residents of Cebu. This opium was not manifested and was imported without the knowledge or consent  of either the customs authorities or the owners or managers of the steamer Kaifong.  The opium was not only imported into the  Philippine Islands in violation of  the Customs Administrative Act, but also in violation of  Act No. 1761, known as the Opium Law, which was then in full force and effect and which prohibits the importation of opium, in any  form,  into the  Philippine Islands  by persons not duly authorized to do so.

The foregoing facts have not only been established by the testimony of Lao Loc Hing, who gave a detailed  statement of everything which occurred with reference to the importation of this  opium, but also by the testimony of  one Apao, a stoker on the steamer Kaifong,  who testified that he assisted Lao Loc Hing, on the night the opium was delivered to the defendant, in letting same down over the ship's side into the defendant's baroto.  Other witnesses testified that they purchased from the defendant large quantities  of opium about that time.

The defendant attempted to establish an  alibi and testified  that he was not in  the town of Cebu on  the night of October 31,  1908; that he left Cebu  on  the morning of the 31st and did  not return until the afternoon  of  the 1st of November.  He  admitted that he was  at that time an employee of Smith, Bell & Co. and that his duty was to look after the discharging of merchandise from the steamer Kaifong, but that at  this particular time he had obtained permission from his employers to visit another town.  This alibi  was completely  destroyed by documentary  evidence. The prosecution showed by  a number  of receipts signed by the defendant himself, and bearing date  of October  31, 1908, that he was on  that particular date looking after  the discharge of  that cargo; that he was  on the steamer at the time and receipted  for the  merchandise as it left  the ship's side.

The sentence imposed by the learned trial  court, under all the facts and circumstances, is not excessive, especially when we take into consideration the gravity of the offense committed.   The judgment  appealed  from  is,  therefore, affirmed: Provided, That in case of insolvency the defendant shall  suffer  the corresponding  subsidiary  imprisonment. Costs against the defendant.   So ordered.

Arellano, C. J., Mapa, Carson, and Moreland, JJ., concur.

tags