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Criminal Law Book 1 Articles 91 - 100: What Interrupts Prescription?
Criminal Law Book 1 Articles 91 - 100: What Interrupts Prescription?
100
Art. 91. Computation of prescription of offenses. — The period of prescription shall
commence to run from the day on which the crime is discovered by the offended party, the
authorities, or their agents, and shall be interrupted by the filing of the complaint or
information, and shall commence to run again when such proceedings terminate without the
accused being convicted or acquitted, or are unjustifiably stopped for any reason not
imputable to him.
The term of prescription shall not run when the offender is absent from the Philippine
Archipelago.
If there is nothing concealed (appears in a public document), the crime commences to run on
the date of the commission
Period of prescription for crimes that is continuing never runs
Crime needs to be discovered by:
b) authorities
If a person witnesses the crime but only tells the authorities 25 years later, prescription
commences on the day the authorities were told.
What interrupts prescription?
b) filing the proper complaint w/ the fiscal’s office and the prosecutor. Police not included.
c) Filing complaint with the court that has proper jurisdiction
a) When the proceeding is terminated without the accused being convicted or acquitted
b) When the proceeding is unjustifiably stopped for a reason not imputable to the offender
Art. 92. When and how penalties prescribe. — The penalties imposed by final
sentence prescribe as follows:
1. Death and reclusion perpetua, in twenty years;
2. Other afflictive penalties, in fifteen years;
3. Correctional penalties, in ten years; with the exception of the penalty of arresto
mayor, which prescribes in five years;
4. Light penalties, in one year.
Note that final sentence must be imposed
If a convict can avail of mitigating circumstances and the penalty is lowered, it is still the
original penalty that is used as the basis for prescription. However, if the convict already serves
a portion of his sentence and escapes after, the penalty that was imposed (not the original) shall
be the basis for prescription
Fines less than 200 fall under light penalty. Those above are correccional.
Art. 93. Computation of the prescription of penalties. — The period of prescription
of penalties shall commence to run from the date when the culprit should evade the service
of his sentence, and it shall be interrupted if the defendant should give himself up, be
captured, should go to some foreign country with which this Government has no extradition
treaty, or should commit another crime before the expiration of the period of prescription.
Elements:
d) penalty has prescribed because of lapse of time from the date of the evasion of the service
of the sentence
Art. 94. Partial Extinction of criminal liability. — Criminal liability is extinguished
partially:
1. By conditional pardon;
2. By commutation of the sentence; and
3. For good conduct allowances which the culprit may earn while he is serving his
sentence.
Conditional pardon – contract between the sovereign power of the executive and the convict
Convict shall not violate any of the penal laws of the Philippines
Violation of conditions:
Offender is re-arrested and re-incarcerated
Prosecution under Art. 159
Commutation – change in the decision of the court by the chief regarding the
Given after final judgement Given after service of the minimum penalty
For violation, convict may not be prosecuted For violations, may be rearrested, convict
under 159 serves remaining sentence
Art. 96. Effect of commutation of sentence. — The commutation of the original
sentence for another of a different length and nature shall have the legal effect of
substituting the latter in the place of the former.
Art. 97. Allowance for good conduct. — The good conduct of any prisoner in any
penal institution shall entitle him to the following deductions from the period of his sentence:
1. During the first two years of his imprisonment, he shall be allowed a deduction of
five days for each month of good behavior;
2. During the third to the fifth year, inclusive, of his imprisonment, he shall be allowed
a deduction of eight days for each month of good behavior;
3. During the following years until the tenth year, inclusive, of his imprisonment, he
shall be allowed a deduction of ten days for each month of good behavior; and
4. During the eleventh and successive years of his imprisonment, he shall be allowed a
deduction of fifteen days for each month of good behavior.
Allowance for good conduct not applicable when prisoner released under conditional pardon.
Good conduct time allowance is given in consideration of good conduct of prisoner while he is
serving sentence.
Years Allowance
Art. 98. Special time allowance for loyalty. — A deduction of one-fifth of the period
of his sentence shall be granted to any prisoner who, having evaded the service of his
sentence under the circumstances mentioned in article 58 of this Code, gives himself up to
the authorities within 48 hours following the issuance of a proclamation announcing the
passing away of the calamity or catastrophe to in said article.
Special time allowance for loyalty of prisoners:
The article applies only to prisoners who escaped
deduction of 1/5 of the period of sentence of prisoner who having evaded the service
of his sentence during the calamity or catastrophe mentioned in Art 158, gives himself up
to the authorities w/in 48 hrs ff the issuance of the proclamation by the President
announcing the passing away of the calamity or catastrophe
deduction based on the original sentence and not on the unexpired portion
Art 158 provides for increased penalties:
– a convict who has evaded the service of his sentence by leaving the penal institution on the
occasion of disorder resulting from conflagration, earthquake or similar catastrophe or during
mutiny in which he did not participate is liable to an increased penalty (1/5 of the time still
remaining to be served – not to exceed 6 months), if he fails to give himself up to the authorities
w/in 48 hrs ff the issuance of a proclamation by the President announcing the passing away of the
calamity.
Art. 99. Who grants time allowances. — Whenever lawfully justified, the Director of
Prisons shall grant allowances for good conduct. Such allowances once granted shall not be
revoked.
a) authority to grant time allowance for good conduct is exclusively vested in the Dir (e.g.
provincial warden cannot usurp Director’s authority)
CIVIL LIABILITY
2 classes:
a) social injury – produced by disturbance and alarm w/c are the outcome of the offense
b) personal injury – caused by the victim who may have suffered damage, either to his person,
property, honor or chastity
Art. 100. Civil liability of a person guilty of felony. — Every person criminally liable
for a felony is also civilly liable.
Basis:
obligation to repair or to make whole the damage caused to another by reason of an act or
omission, whether done intentionally or negligently and whether or not punishable by law
b) the private person injured unless it involves the crime of treason, rebellion, espionage,
contempt and others where no civil liability arises on the part of the offender either because
there are no damages or there is no private person injured by the crime
a) If there is no damage caused by the commission of the crime, offender is not civilly liable
b) Dismissal of the info or the crime action does not affect the right of the offended party to
institute or continue the civil action already instituted arising from the offense, because such
dismissal does not carry with it the extinction of the civil one.
c) When accused is acquitted on ground that his guilt has not been proven beyond reasonable
doubt, a civil action for damages for the same act or omission may be instituted
d) Exemption from criminal liability in favor of an imbecile or insane person, and a person
under 9 yrs, or over 9 but under 15 who acted w/ discernment and those acting under the impulse
of irresistible force or under the impulse of an uncontrolable fear of an equal or greater injury
does not include exemption from civil liability.
e) Acquittal in the crim action for negligence does not preclude the offended party from filing
a civil action to recover damages, based on the theory that the act is quasi-delict
f) When the court found the accused guilty of crim negligence but failed to enter judgement
of civil liability, the private prosecutor has a right to appeal for the purposes of the civil liability
of the accused. The appellate court may remand the case to the trial court for the latter to
include in its judgement the civil liability of the accused
g) Before expiration of the 15-day of for appealing, the trial court can amend the judgement of
conviction by adding a provision for the civil liability of the accused, even if the convict has
started serving the sentence.
h) An independent civil action may be brought by the injured party during the pendency of the
criminal case provided the right is reserved. Reservation is necessary in the ff cases:
1. any of the cases referred to in Art 32 (perpetual or temporary disqualification for exercise of
the right of suffrage)
2. defamation, fraud and physical injury (bodily injury and not the crime of physical injury)
3. civil action is against a member of a city or municipal police force for refusing or failing to
render aid or protection to any person in case of danger to life or property
4. in an action for damage arising from fault or negligence and there is no pre-existing
contractual relation between the parties (quasi-delict)
i) Prejudicial Question – one w/c arises in a case, the resolution of which is a logical
antecedent of the issue involved in said case and the cognizance of which pertains to another
tribunal.
For the principle to apply, it is essential that there be 2 cases involved, a civil and a criminal
case. Prejudicial questions may be decided before any criminal prosecution may be instituted or
may proceed.
An independent civil action may be brought by the injured party during the pendency of the
criminal case, provided that the right is reserved
Extinction of the penal action does not carry with it the extinction of the civil, unless the
extinction proceeds from a declaration in a final judgement that the fact from which the civil
might arise did not exist