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[JOAQUIN CELIS v. WARDEN OF BILIBID](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/ccd8?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. 6093, Feb 10, 1911 ]

JOAQUIN CELIS v. WARDEN OF BILIBID +

DECISION

18 Phil. 373

[ G. R. No. 6093, February 10, 1911 ]

JOAQUIN CELIS, PETITIONER AND APPELLANT, VS. THE WARDEN OF BILIBID, RESPONDENT AND APPELLEE.

D E C I S I O N

ARELLANO, C.J.:

The application for a writ  of habeas corpus which Joaquin Celis, a prisoner who was serving sentence in Bilibid Prison, had presented before the Court of  First Instance of the city of Manila, having been denied, he appealed from the ruling and, in his appeal, asks that "the ruling made by  that court be  revoked and that the warden of Bilibid Prison be  ordered to release  the appellant,  with  the costs de oficio."

The grounds of fact of this appeal are: (1) That in seven criminal causes, all prosecuted in  that Court of  First Instance for estafa,  Nos.  2482, 2485, 2486, 2661,  2662, 2663, and 2664, the applicant and prisoner was,  in each of them, sentenced to various terms of wresto, the longest of which was that imposed in cause No. 2662, and was for six months; (2) that in all of  said causes  he  was also  sentenced to the penalty of subsidiary imprisonment,  equivalent  to  the pecuniary penalty imposed upon him as civil liability;  (3) that all the penalties of arresto  aggregate  exactly thirty-three months, and the subsidiary imprisonments three hundred and thirty days; (4) that on the 8th of August, 1908, he entered Bilibid  Prison  and was, up to the time of his appeal,  still  incarcerated  therein  (5)  that on  April  29 of the said year, 1908, he appliedtfor a writ of habeas corpus; and (6) that on May 4 he was notified of the denial of his application, and appealed on the same date.

The legal grounds upon which this appeal is based are:

(1)  That rule 2 of article 88 of the Penal Code prescribes that "the maximum duration of the sentence of the culprit shall not exceed three  times the period of the most severe of the penalties imposed on him; and there shall not be imposed on him other penalties when those already imposed have covered the maximum of the aforementioned term;" (2)  that, in conformity  with this rule,  the severest of the  penalties imposed  being" that of  six months' arresto and  sixty days'  subsidiary imprisonment, the  maximum duration of the sentence which the appellant should suffer, that is, three times the period imposed by the  severest of the  penalties,  should be that  of eighteen  months' arresto and  one hundred and eighty days' subsidiary imprisonment, or exactly twenty-four months; (3) that,  pursuant to Acts Nos. 1533 and  1559  of the  Philippine Commission, the applicant and prisoner should  be  allowed a reduction, up to date, of five days for each month of the sentence already served;  (4) that,  as  he  was  incarcerated on August 8, 1908, he had,  up to May  9, 1910, the date of  his appeal, already undergone twenty months  and two days' imprisonment, while, deducting the days allowed  for good conduct from the  period of his sentence, he should have been imprisoned but twenty-one months in  all.

With respect  to  the facts  in the  case, the  warden of Bilibid Prison reported to the  Court of First Instance that the appellant was incarcerated in the said prison by virtue of judgments  rendered in seven  causes  for estafa prosecuted against him, wherein he was sentenced to a total of two  years ten  months and  three  days'  imprisonment, to pay  an indemnity  of  P2,774.84,  or  to  suffer subsidiary imprisonment of four  months, and, in case of insolvency, two hundred and twenty days.   "The said judgments," continues the informant, "are final, and the prisoner's sentence will  expire on. October  3, 1911, after reduction of the time allowed him for good  conduct."

With regard  to the  law, the Attorney-General classifies his reasons under two heads, one dealing with the legality of the remedy, and the other with its justice.

Under the first head he cites a number of reported cases for the purpose of demonstrating that the culprit who is sentenced to an excessive penalty, that is, to one greater than that specified  by law, may argue that the judgment is erroneous and appeal therefrom, but he may not exercise the remedy of habeas corpus or the special remedy of mandamus "which  would only be  proper on the ground of lack of jurisdiction of the sentencing judge"  (Graham, 74  Wis., 450.; 17 Am.  St. Rep.,  174/and Ex parte  Van Hagan, 25 Ohio St.,  426) - an opinion not  acceptable by this court.

His second reasons, respecting the justice of the remedy, is based on the Spanish jurisprudence which covers  the present case and according to which,  by the most recent decisions of the  supreme court of Spain, rule 2 of article 88 of the Penal  Code only applies to the several  penalties which  in one  and  the same cause are imposed  here, and are still imposed in Spain, for the various acts  or crimes included in the same action.

Rule 2 of article 88 reads:    
"Notwithstanding the provisions contained in the preceding rule, the  maximum duration  of  the sentence of  the culprit  shall not exceed three times  the  time which  the most severe of the penalties that he may have  incurred should have imposed on him; and there shall not be imposed on him other proper penalties, when those already imposed shall have covered the  maximum of the aforementioned term."
For  the true and safest construction of this provision, due account must  be taken of the form of  procedure in force  at the  time  of the publication  of the Penal Code, which  was that  of  prosecuting two or more crimes in a single cause in the cases specified by the law of procedure. The judge wlio had before him two or more crimes, jointly prosecuted in a lawful manner in  one cause, and whose duty it was to apply two or more penalties corresponding to the two or more crimes comprehended in  the prosecution, had to ascertain which was the severest of the several penalties, and when he had fixed the time which, of this severest penalty, should be imposed,  in accordance with the said provision of the Penal Code, for  the several crimes, he  could  impose upon  the culprit  but one  sentence, the duration of which  could not exceed three times the time which  the most severe of the penalties that he may have incurred should have imposed on him, etc.  The  legal text of the  provision cited apparently indicates the  propriety of a judge's trying and sentencing  an  accused for two or more crjmes in one prosecution.

With the exception of a few of the first decisions rendered by the  supreme court of Spain  in relation to this subject matter, the jurisprudence  established by it, in  the  sense aforesaid, has been constantly and repeatedly followed.
"The limitation established in  rule  2  of article 89 of the Penal Code [88 of that of the Philippines], for the imposition of penalties,  is  applicable only to the crimes which  are prosecuted in a single cause  wherein, by reason of their number or of the entity of the  penalties that must be applied, it may become necessary to impose more than three penalties or more than forty years' imprisonment, in which case not more than three times the period of the penalty which corresponds to the  most serious crime may be applied,  and in no  case may  a penalty exceed forty years.   This does not mean that a penalty which the accused has incurred should not be applied because in  other causes and for other crimes he was sentenced  to more than forty years."  (Decision of April 8, 1903.)
The  judgment appealed from  is affirmed with  the costs of this instance against the appellant.

Torres, Moreland, and Trent, JJ.,  concur.

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