Ambil JR V Sandiganbayan
Ambil JR V Sandiganbayan
Ambil JR V Sandiganbayan
--- recalls that SPO3 Felipe Balano fetched him at home to assist in the arrest of Mayor
Adalim; He Atty. White who informed him that he was under the governor, in the latter's
capacity as a provincial
Jailer; Thus he claims that it is for this reasons that he submitted to the governor's order to
relinquish custody of Adalim. Further, Apelado, Sr. described the physical condition of the
jail to be dilapidated and undermanned.
SANDIGANBAYAN:
Promulgated the assailed Decision finding petitioners (Gov. Ambil Jr and Provincial Warden)
guilty of violating Section 3 (e) of R.A. No. 3019 It stressed that under the Rules, no person
under detention by legal process shall be released or transferred except upon order of the
court or when he is admitted to bail.
Issue: Whether a provincial governor (Governor Ambil Jr.) has authority to take personal
custody of a detention prisoner
Summary of Arguments presented by parties before SC:
PETITIONER:
OFFICE OF THE SPECIAL PROSECUTOR
petitioner Ambil, Jr. argues that Section 3 (e), The OSP explains that it is enough to show
R.A. No. 3019 does not apply to his case that in performing their functions, petitioners
because
have accorded undue preference to Adalim
for liability to attach.
The provision contemplates only
transactions of a pecuniary nature. Further, the OSP maintains that Adalim is
Since the law punishes a public officer deemed
who extends unwarranted benefits to a private party for purposes of applying
a private person, petitioner avers that Section 3 (e), R.A. No. 3019 because the
he cannot be held liable for extending unwarranted benefit redounded, not to his
a favor to Mayor Adalim, a public person as a mayor, but to his person as a
detention prisoner accused of murder. It
officer
suggests further that petitioners were
Further, he claims good faith in taking motivated by bad faith as evidenced by their
custody of the mayor pursuant to his refusal to turn over Adalim despite
duty as a "Provincial Jailer" under the instruction
Administrative Code of 1917.
The OSP also reiterates petitioners' lack of
authority to take custody of a detention
prisoner without a court order. Hence, it
concludes that petitioners are not entitled to
the benefit of any justifying circumstance
Ruling:
There is no merit to petitioner Ambil, Jr.'s contention that he is authorized to transfer the
detention of prisoners by virtue of his power as the "Provincial Jailer" of Eastern Samar.
In particular, Section 61, Chapter 5 of R.A. No. 6975 32 on the Bureau of Jail Management
and Penology provides:
Sec. 61. Powers and Functions. The Jail Bureau shall exercise supervision and
control over all city and municipal jails. The provincial jails shall be supervised and
controlled by the provincial government within its jurisdiction, whose expenses shall
be subsidized by the National Government for not more than three (3) years after the
effectivity of this Act.
Significantly, it is the provincial government and not the governor alone which has authority
to exercise control and supervision over provincial jails.
In a desperate attempt to stretch the scope of his powers, petitioner Ambil, Jr. cites Section
1731, Article III of the Administrative Code of 1917 on Provincial jails in support:
SEC. 1731. Provincial governor as keeper of jail. The governor of the province shall
be charged with the keeping of the provincial jail, and it shall be his duty to
administer the same in accordance with law and the regulations prescribed for the
government of provincial prisons.
But again, nowhere did said provision designate the provincial governor as the "provincial
jailer," or even slightly suggest that he is empowered to take personal custody of prisoners.
What is clear from the cited provision is that the provincial governor's duty as a jail keeper is
confined to the administration of the jail and the procurement of food.
Besides, the only reference to a transfer of prisoners in said article is found in Section 1737
under which prisoners may be turned over to the jail of the neighboring province in case the
provincial jail be insecure or insufficient to accommodate all provincial prisoners.
However, this provision has been superseded by Section 3, Rule 114 of the Revised Rules of
Criminal Procedure, as amended. Section 3, Rule 114 provides:
SEC. 3. No release or transfer except on court order or bail. No person under
detention by legal process shall be released or transferred except upon order of the
court or when he is admitted to bail.
Without a court order, petitioners transferred Adalim and detained him in a place other than
the provincial jail. The latter was housed in much more comfortable quarters, provided
better nourishment, was free to move about the house and watch television. Petitioners
readily extended these benefits to Adalim on the mere representation of his lawyers that the
mayor's life would be put in danger inside the provincial jail. More importantly, even if
Adalim could have proven the presence of an imminent peril on his person to
petitioners, a court order was still indispensable for his transfer.
WHEREFORE, petition was denied and Decision of Sandiganbayan was affirmed.
Note: (Provincial Warden was considered as a principal by direct participation, court also said that
there was a violation of RA 3019- when petitioners transferred Mayor Adalim from the provincial jail
and detained him at petitioner Ambil, Jr.'s residence, they accorded such privilege to Adalim, not in his
official capacity as a mayor, but as a detainee charged with murder. Thus, for purposes of applying the
provisions of Section 3 (e), R.A. No. 3019, Adalim was a private party.)