THE PEOPLE OF THE
PHILIPPINES vs. ROGELIO MENGOTE
G.R. No. 87059 June 22,
1992
In arrests without a warrant under Section 6(b), however, it
is not enough that there is reasonable ground to believe that the person to be
arrested has committed a crime. A
crime must in fact or actually have been committed first. That a crime has
actually been committed is an essential precondition. It is not enough to
suspect that a crime may have been committed. The fact of the commission of the
offense must be undisputed. The test of reasonable ground applies
only to the identity of the perpetrator.
Western Police District received a
telephone call from an informer that there were three suspicious-looking
persons at the corner of Juan Luna and North Bay Boulevard in Tondo. A surveillance team of plainclothesmen was
forthwith dispatched to the place and saw two men "looking from side to
side," one of whom was holding his abdomen. Patrolmen Mercado and Juan
approached appellant and identified themselves as policemen. Appellant and his
companion tried to run away but was caught. The suspects were then searched.
One of them, who turned out to be the accused-appellant, was found with a .38
caliber Smith and Wesson revolver with six live bullets in the chamber. His
companion, later identified as Nicanor Morellos, had a fan knife secreted in
his front right pants pocket. The weapons were taken from them.
Appellant contend that the revolver should
not have been admitted in evidence because of its illegal seizure. no warrant
therefor having been previously obtained. Neither could it have been seized as
an incident of a lawful arrest because the arrest of Mengote was itself
unlawful, having been also effected without a warrant. The defense also
contends that the testimony regarding the alleged robbery in Danganan's house
was irrelevant and should also have been disregarded by the trial court.
ISSUE: Whether or not
the warrantless arrest is valid.
RULING: It is not valid.
Under Rule 113, Section 5, of the Rules of
Court reading as follows:
Sec. 5. Arrest
without warrant when lawful. — A peace officer or private person may,
without a warrant, arrest a person;
(a) When, in his
presence, the person to be arrested has committed, is actually committing, or
is attempting to commit an offense;
(b) When an offense
has in fact just been committed, and he has personal knowledge of facts
indicating that the person to be arrested has committed it; and
(c) When the person
to be arrested is a prisoner who has escaped from a penal establishment or
place where he is serving final judgment or temporarily confined while his case
is pending, or has escaped while being transferred from one confinement to
another.
In cases failing
under paragraphs (a) and (b) hereof, the person arrested without a warrant
shall be forthwith delivered to the nearest police station or jail, and he
shall be proceeded against in accordance with Rule 112, Section 7.
These requirements have not been
established in the case at bar. At the time of the arrest in question, the
accused-appellant was merely "looking from side to side" and
"holding his abdomen," according to the arresting officers
themselves. There was apparently no offense that had just been committed or was
being actually committed or at least being attempted by Mengote in their
presence.
In the recent case of People v. Malmstedt,
the Court sustained the warrantless arrest of the accused because there was a
bulge in his waist that excited the suspicion of the arresting officer and,
upon inspection, turned out to be a pouch containing hashish. In People v.
Claudio, the accused boarded a bus and placed the buri bag she was carrying
behind the seat of the arresting officer while she herself sat in the seat
before him. His suspicion aroused, be surreptitiously examined the bag, which
he found to contain marijuana. He then and there made the warrantless arrest
and seizure that we subsequently upheld on the ground that probable cause had
been sufficiently established.
The case before us is different because
there was nothing to support the arresting officers' suspicion other than
Mengote's darting eyes and his hand on his abdomen. By no stretch of the
imagination could it have been inferred from these acts that an offense had
just been committed, or was actually being committed, or was at least being
attempted in their presence.
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