United States V. Luis Toribio - Case Digest - Constitutional Law United States V. Luis Toribio G.R. No. L-5060 January 26, 1910

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UNITED STATES V.

LUIS TORIBIO - CASE DIGEST - CONSTITUTIONAL LAW

UNITED STATES V. LUIS TORIBIO                             G.R. No. L-5060  January 26, 1910

FACTS:

Toribio was found by the trial court of Bohol violating Sections 30 and 33 of Act No. 1147, an Act
regulating the registration, branding, and slaughter of Large Cattle. The act prohibits the slaughter of
large cattle fit for agricultural work or other draft purposes for human consumption.

Appellant Toribio slaughtered or caused to be slaughtered his carabao without a permit from the


municipal treasurer of the municipality.

It appears that in the town of Carmen, in the Province of Bohol, wherein the animal was slaughtered
there is no municipal slaughterhouse, and counsel for appellant contends that under such circumstances
the provisions of Act No. 1147 do not prohibit nor penalize the slaughter of large cattle without a permit
of the municipal treasure.

Appellant contends that he applied for a permit to slaughter the animal but was not given one because
the carabao was not found to be “unfit for agricultural work” which resulted to appellant to slaughter
said carabao in a place other than the municipal slaughterhouse.

Appellant then assails the validity of a provision under Act No. 1147 which states that only carabaos
unfit for agricultural work can be slaughtered.

Appellant also contended that the act constitutes a taking of property for public use in the exercise of
the right of eminent domain without providing for the compensation of owners, and it is an undue and
unauthorized exercise of police power of the state for it deprives them of the enjoyment of their private
property.

ISSUE(s):

WON the prohibition and the penalty imposed in Act No. 1147 is limited only to the slaughter of large
cattle at the municipal slaughterhouse.
WON Act. No. 1147, regulating the registration, branding and slaughter of large cattle, is an undue and
unauthorized exercise of police power.

HELD:

1. NO. The prohibition and penalty imposed in Act No. 1147 applies generally to the slaughter of large
cattle for human consumption, anywhere, without a permit  duly secured from the municipal treasurer,
and specifically to the killing for food of large cattle at a municipal slaughterhouse without such permit.

Where the language of a statute is fairly susceptible of two or more constructions, that construction
should be adopted which will most tend to give effect to the manifest intent of the lawmaker and
promote the object for which the statute was enacted, and a construction should be rejected which
would tend to render abortive other provisions of the statute and to defeat the object which the
legislator sought to attain by its enactment.

Therefore, sections 30 and 33 of the Act prohibit and penalize the slaughtering or causing to be
slaughtered for human consumption of large cattle at any place without the permit provided for in
section 30.

2. NO. Act no. 1147 is not a taking of the property for public use, within the meaning of the constitution,
but is a just and legitimate exercise of the power of the legislature to regulate and restrain such
particular use of the property as would be inconsistent with the rights of the publics. All property is
acquired and held under the tacit condition that it shall not be so used as to injure the equal rights of
others or greatly impair the public rights and interests of the community.

The Supreme Court cited events that happen in the Philippines like an epidemic that wiped 70-100% of
the population of carabaos.. The Supreme Court also said that these animals are vested with public
interest for they are fundamental use for the production of crops. These reasons satisfy the requisites of
a valid exercise of police power

Finally, SC said that article 1147 is not an exercise of the inherent power of eminent domain. The said
law does not constitute the taking of caraboes for public purpose; it just serve as a mere regulation for
the consumption of these private properties for the protection of general welfare and public interest.

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