[ G.R. No. L-2873. February 28, 1950 ] 85 Phil. 651
[ G.R. No. L-2873. February 28, 1950 ]
THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. EUGENIO GARCIA Y MADRIGAL, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT. D E C I S I O N
TUASON, J.:
The sole question presented on this appeal is whether the appellant, being 17 years of age at the time of the commission of the crime, was entitled to the privileged mitigating circumstance of Article 68, paragraph 2, of the Revised Penal Code. The lower court, ignoring defendant’s minority, sentenced him to an indeterminate penalty of from 4 years, 2 months and 1 day of prision correccional to 8 years of prision mayor for the crime of robbery of which he was found guilty. He was also sentenced to pay the offended party, jointly and severally with, the other accused, the sum of P85.00 as indemnity.
Republic Act No. 47, which amended Article 80 of the Revised Penal Code by reducing from 18 to 16 the age below which accused have to “be committed to the custody or care of a public or private, benevolent or charitable institution,” instead of being convicted and sentenced to prision, has given rise to the controversy. The Solicitor General believes that the amendment by implication has also amended paragraph 2 of Article 68 of the Revised Penal Code, which provides that when the offender is over fifteen and under eighteen years of age, “the penalty next lower than that prescribed by law shall be imposed, but always in the proper period.”
There are well recognized rules of statutory construction which are against the Government’s contention.
One of these rules is that all parts of a statute are to be harmonized and reconciled so that effect may be given to each and every part thereof, and that conflicting intentions in the name statute are never to be supposed or so regarded, unless forced upon the court by an unambiguous language. (59 C. J., 999.)
This rule applies in the construction of a statute and its amendment, both being read together as a whole. “An amended act is ordinarily to be construed as if the original statute has been repealed, and a new and independent act in. the amended form had been adopted in its stead; or, as frequently stated by the courts, so far as regards any action after the adoption of the amendment, as if the statute had been originally enacted in its amended form. The amendment becomes a, part of the original statute as if it had always been contained therein, unless such amendment involves the abrogation of contractual relations between the state and others. Where an amendment leaves certain portions of the original act unchanged, such portions are continued in force, with the same meaning and effect they had before the amendment. So where an amendatory act provides that an existing statute shall be amended to read as recited in the amendatory act, such portions of the existing law as are retained, either literally or substantially, are regarded as a continuation of the existing law, and not as a new enactment.” (59 C. J., 1096, 1097.)
We find, no irreconcilable conflict between Article 68, paragraph 2, as it now stands and Article 80 as amended, There is no incompatibility between granting accused of the ages of 15 to 18 a privileged mitigating circumstance and fixing at 16 the maximum age of persons who are to be placed in a reformatory institution. In other words, there is no inconsistency between sending defendants of certain ages to prison and giving them a penalty lower than the imposable one on adults under the same or similar circumstances. Let it be remembered that the privilege of Article 68, supra, is not by its nature inherent in age but purely statutory and conventional, and that this privilege is granted adult offenders under given conditions.
At least there is no clear intention on the part of the Congress to amend Article 68. Indeed the rational presumption is that if there had been such an intention the lawmakers should have said so expressly, instead of leaving the change to inference.
One other rule of interpretation that quarrels with the theory of implied repeal or amendment is that penal law is to be construed, in case of doubt, strictly against the state. “Criminal and penal statutes must be strictly construed, that is, they cannot be enlarged or extended by intendment, implication, or by any equitable considerations . In other words, the language cannot be enlarged beyond the ordinary meaning of its terns in order to carry into effect the general purpose for which the statute was enacted. Only those persons, offenses, and penalties, clearly included, beyond any reasonable doubt, will be considered within the statute’s operation. They must come clearly within both the spirit and the letter of the statute, and where there is any reasonable doubt, it must be resolved in. favor of the person accused of violating the statute; that is, all questions in doubt will be resolved in favor of those from whom the penalty is sought.” (Statutory Construction, Crawford, pp. 460-462.)
The offense charged in the information of which the appellant was found guilty is punishable under Article 294, case No. 5, of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by Sect:ion 6 of Republic Act No. 18, with prision correccional in its maximum period to prision mayor in its medium period. The penalty one degree lower than this is arresto mayor in its maximum period to prision correccional in its medium, period. There being no modifying circumstance, the appropriate penalty in the present case is from 6 months and 1 day of arresto mayor to 2 years and 4 months of prision correccional. Being entitled to an indeterminate penalty as provided in Section 1 of Act No. 4103 as amended, the accused should be, and he is hereby sentenced to imprisonment of not less than 4 months of arresto mayor, and not more than 2 years and 4 months of prision correccional. In all other respects the appealed judgment is affirmed., The appellant will pay the costs of this appeal.
Moran, C. J., Ozaeta, Pablo, Bengzon, Padilla, Montemayor, Reyes, and Torres, JJ., concur.