[ G.R. No. L-200. March 28, 1946 ] 76 Phil. 372
EN BANC
[ G.R. No. L-200. March 28, 1946 ]
ANASTACIO LAUREL, PETITIONER, VS. ERIBERTO MISA, AS DIRECTOR OF PRISONS, RESPONDENT. D E C I S I O N
BENGZON, J.:
Anastasio Laurel demands his release from Bilibid Prison, mainly asserting that Commonwealth Act No. 682, creating the People’s Court, specially section 19, under which he is detained as a political prisoner, is unconstitutional and void. The Solicitor General, meeting the issue, sustains the validity of the whole law. According to the pleadings, the petitioner, a Filipino citizen, was arrested in Camarines Sur in May, 1945, by the United States Army, and was interned, under a commitment order “for his active collaboration with the Japanese during the Japanese occupation,” but in September, 1945, he was turned over to the Commonwealth Government, and since then has been under the custody of the respondent Director of Prisons. The legality of the petitioner’s arrest and detention by the military authorities of the United States is now beyond question.[1] His present incarceration, which is merely a continuation of his previous apprehension, has lasted “more than six hours” counted from his delivery to the respondent; but section 19 of Commonwealth Act No. 682 provides in part as follows:
“Upon delivery by the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the United States in the Philippines of the persons detained by him as political prisoners, to the Commonwealth Government, the Office of Special Prosecutors shall receive all records, documents, exhibits and such other things as the Government of the United States may have turned over in connection with and/or affecting said political prisoners, examine the aforesaid records, documents, exhibits, etc., and take, as speedily as possible, such action as may be proper: Provided, however, * * *. And, provided, further, That, in the interest of public security, the provisions of article one, hundred twenty-five of the Revised Penal Code, as amended, shall be deemed, as they are hereby, suspended, insofar as the aforesaid political prisoners are concerned, until the filing of the corresponding information with the People’s Court, but the period of suspension shall, not be more than six (6) months from the formal delivery of said political prisoners by the Commander-in-Chief of the Armed Forces of the United States in the Philippines to the Commonwealth Government.”
In view of this provision, and the statement of the Solicitor-General that even on the date the petition was presented his office had, ready for filing, an information charging herein petitioner with treason, we fail to see how petitioner’s release may now be decreed. However, he contends that the aforesaid section violates our Constitution, because it is (a) discriminatory in nature; (b) unlawful delegation of legislative powers; and (c) retroactive in operation. (a) It is first argued that the suspension is not general in application, it being made operative only to “the political prisoners concerned,” that other citizens are not denied the six-hour limitation in article 125 of the Revised Penal Code, that such discrimination is unexcusable and amounts to denial of the equal protection of the laws. It is accepted doctrine in constitutional law that the “equal protection” clause does not prevent the Legislature from establishing classes of individuals or objects upon which different rules shall operate—so long as the classification is not unreasonable.[2] Instances of valid classification are numerous. The point to be determined then, is whether the differentiation in the case of the political prisoner is unreasonable or arbitrary. One of the proclamations issued by General MacArthur upon his arrival in Leyte (December 29, 1944) referred to those Filipino citizens who had voluntarily given aid, comfort and sustenance to the Japanese. It announced his purpose to hold them in restraint for the duration of the war, “whereafter they shall be turned over to the Philippine Government for its judgment upon their respective cases.” When active hostilities with Japan terminated, General MacArthur ordered the delivery to the Commonwealth of all the prisoners theretofore taken under his said proclamation. There were 6,000 in round numbers. The problem was momentous and urgent. Criminal informations against all, or a majority, or even a substantial number of them could not be properly filed in the six-hour period. They could not obviously be turned loose, considering the conditions of peace and order, and the safety of the prisoners themselves. So the President, by virtue of his emergency powers, promulgated Executive Order No. 65 suspending article 125 of the Revised Penal Code, for not more than thirty days, with regard to said detainees or internees, having found such suspension necessary “to enable the Government to fulfill its responsibilities and to adopt temporary measures in relation with their custody and the investigation, prosecution and disposal of their respective cases.” The Order added that it shall be in force and effect until the Congress shall provide otherwise. Congress later approved Commonwealth Act No. 682, establishing the People’s Court and the Office of Special Prosecutors for the prosecution and trial of crimes against national security committed during the second World War. It found the thirty-day period too short compared with the facilities available to the prosecution, and set the limit at six months. Considering the circumstances, we are not prepared to hold the extension of the period for the political detainees was unreasonable. The Legislature chose to give the prosecutor’s office sufficient time to investigate and to file the proper charge—or to discharge those whom it may find innocent. If time had not been granted, the prosecutor would perhaps have been forced to indict all the detainees indiscriminately; reserving, of course, its right subsequently to request the liberation of those it may think not guilty. But such wholesale indictment was obviously neither practical nor desirable. We will allow that there may be some dispute as to the wisdom or adequacy of the extension. Yet the point is primarily for the Legislature to decide. The only issue is the power to promulgate special rules for the custody and investigation of active collaborationists, and so long as reasons exist in support of the legislative action courts should be careful not to deny it. In this connection, it must be stated there can really be no substantial ground to assail the six-month extension, in view of the provisions authorizing the release under bail. Article 125 of the Revised Penal Code was intended to prevent any abuse resulting from confining a person without informing him of his offense and without permitting him to go on bail. Commonwealth Act No. 682 gives no occasion to such abuse. The political prisoners know, or ought to know, they are being kept for crimes against national security. And they are generally permitted to furnish bail bonds. (b) There is hardly any merit to the argument that as “the duration of the suspension of article 125 is placed in the hands of the Special Prosecutor’s Office,” the section constitutes an invalid delegation of legislative powers; for as explained by the Solicitor-General, the result—some informations filed before, others afterwards—is merely the “consequence of the fact that six thousand informations could not be filed simultaneously, and that some one had to be first or some one else, necessarily the last.” The law,. in effect, permitted the Solicitor-General to file the informations within six months. And statutes permitting officers to perform their duties within certain periods of time may not surely be declared invalid delegations of legislative power. (c) Nor is the position correct that section 19 is retro-active in its operation. It refers to detention after its passage—not before. Incidentally, there is no constitutional objection to retroactive statutes where they relate, to remidies or procedure.[3] The argument is advanced that when he was arrested, (May, 1945), article 125 of the Revised Penal Code was in force, and petitioner could have asked for release after six hours and, therefore, Commonwealth Act No. 682 that takes away that right is ex post facto, retroactive and fundamentally objectionable. The premises are incorrect. In May, 1945, he could not have asked for release after six hours. In other words, he would not have been discharged from custody. (Raquiza vs. Bradford, supra.) Article 125 of the Revised Penal Code was in force, it is true; but not as to him. The laws of the Commonwealth were revived in Camarines Sur by operation of General MacArthur’s proclamation of October 23, 1944, upon its liberation from enemy control; but subject to his reservation to hold active collaborationists in restraint “for the duration of the war.” So, persons apprehended under that directive, for treasonable collaboration, could not necessarily invoke the benefits of article 125 of the Revised Penal Code. Undoubtedly the Legislature could validly repeal section 125 of the Revised Penal Code. Had it done so, herein petitioner would have no ground to protest on constitutional principles, as he could claim no vested right to the continued enforcement of said section.[4] Therefore, a fortiori he may not complain, if, instead of repealing that section, our law-making body merely suspended its operation for a definite period of time. Should he counter that such repeal or suspension must be general to be valid, he will be referred to the preceding considerations regarding classification and the equal protection of the laws. Wherefore, we perceive no irreconcilable conflict between the Constitution and the challenged portions of section 19 of Commonwealth Act No. 682. The other features of the People’s Court Act which are the subject of denunciation by petitioner do not, in our opinion, require specific elucidation at this time, because he has not as yet been held into that court, and the issues appear to have no important or necessary connection with his current deprivation of liberty.[5] The petition for the writ of habeas corpus will be denied. With costs. Moran, C. J., Jaranilla, Feria, De Joya, Pablo, Hilado, and Briones, J.J., concur.