G.R. No. L-9430 June 29, 1957
EMILIO SUNTAY Y AGUINALDO, petitioner,
vs.
THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, THE HONORABLE NICASIO YATCO, as Judge of the Court of First Instance of Rizal, Quezon City Branch V, and THE HONORABLE CARLOS P. GARCIA, as Secretary for Foreign Affairs, respondents.
Federico Agrava for petitioner.
Office of the Solicitor, General Ambrosio Padilla, First Assistant Solicitor General Guillermo E. Torres and Solicitor Florencio Villamor for respondents.
PADILLA, J.:
This is a petition for a writ of certiorari to annul an order of the Court of First Instance of Quezon City directing —
. . . the National Bureau of Investigation and the
Department of Foreign Affairs for them to take proper steps in order
that the accused, Emilio Suntay y Aguinaldo, who is alleged to be in the
United States, may be brought back to the Philippines, so that he may
be dealt with in accordance with law, (Exhibit D)
and of prohibition to enjoin the Secretary for
Foreign Affairs from cancelling the petitioner's passport without
previous hearing.
On 26 June 1954, Dr. Antonio Nubla, father of Alicia
Nubla, a minor of 16 years, filed a verified complaint against Emilio
Suntay in the Office of the City Attorney of Quezon City, as follows:
On or about June 21, 1954, the accused took Alicia
Nubla from St. Paul's Colleges in Quezon City with lewd design and took
her to somewhere near the U.P. compound in Diliman, Quezon City and was
then able to have carnal knowledge of her. Alicia Nubla is a minor of 16
years.
On 15 December 1954, after an investigation, an
Assistant City Attorney recommended to the City Attorney of Quezon City
that the complaint be dismissed for lack of merit. On 23 December 1954
attorney for the complainant addressed a letter to the City Attorney of
Quezon City wherein he took exception to the recommendation of the
Assistant City Attorney referred to and urged that a complaint for
seduction be filed against the herein petitioner.
On 10 January 1955 the petitioner applied for and was
granted a passport by the Department of Foreign Affairs (No. 5981
[A39184]). On 20 January 1955 the petitioner left the Philippines for
San Francisco, California, U.S.A., where he is at present enrolled in
school. On 31 January 1955 the offended girl subscribed and swore to a
complaint charging the petitioner with seduction which was filed in the
Court of First Instance of Quezon City after preliminary investigation
had been conducted (crim. case No. Q-1596, Exhibit B). On 9 February
1955 the private prosecutor filed a motion praying the Court to issue an
order "directing such government agencies as may be concerned,
particularly the National Bureau of Investigation and the Department of
Foreign Affairs, for the purpose of having the accused brought back to
the Philippines so that he may be dealt with in accordance with law."
(Exhibit C.) On 10 February 1955 the Court granted the motion (Exhibit
D). On 7 March 1955 the respondent Secretary cabled the Ambassador to
the United States instructing him to order the Consul General in San
Francisco to cancel the passport issued to the petitioner and to compel
him to return to the Philippines to answer the criminal charges against
him. "The Embassy was likewise directed to make representation with the
State Department that Emilio Suntay's presence outside the Philippines
is considered detrimental to the best interest of this Government, that
his passport has been withdrawn, and that he is not considered under the
protection of the Philippines while abroad." (Exhibit E.) However, this
order was not implemented or carried out in view of the commencement of
this proceedings in order that the issues raised may be judicially
resolved. On 5 July 1955 counsel for the petitioner wrote to the
respondent Secretary requesting that the action taken by him be
reconsidered (Exhibit F), and filed in the criminal case a motion
praying that the respondent Court reconsider its order of 10 February
1955 (Exhibit G). On 7 July 1955 the respondent Secretary denied
counsel's request (Exhibit H) and on 15 July 1955 the Court denied the
motion for reconsideration (Exhibit I). Hence this petition.
The petitioner contends that as the order of the
respondent Court directing the Department of Foreign Affairs "to take
proper steps in order that the" petitioner "may be brought back to the
Philippines, so that he may be brought back to the Philippines, so that
he may default with in accordance with law," may be carried out only
"through the cancellation of his passport," the said order is illegal
because "while a Court may review the action of the Secretary of Foreign
Affairs in cancelling a passport and grant relief when the Secretary's
discretion is abused, the court cannot, in the first instance, take the
discretionary power away from the Secretary and itself order a passport
to be cancelled."
The petitioner contends that as the order of the
respondent Court directing the department of Foreign Affairs "to take
proper steps in order that the" petitioner "may be brought back to the
Philippines, so that he may be dealt with in accordance with law," may
be carried out only "through the cancellation of his passport," the said
order is illegal because 'while a Court may review the action of the
Secretary of Foreign Affairs in cancelling a passport and grant relief
when the Secretary's discretion is abused, the court cannot, in the
first instance, take the discretionary power away from the Secretary and
itself order a passport to be cancelled." The petitioner further
contends that while the Secretary for Foreign Affairs has discretion in
the cancellation of passports, "such discretion cannot be exercised
until after hearing," because the right to travel or stay abroad is a
personal liberty within the meaning and protection of the Constitution
and hence he cannot be deprived of such liberty without due process of
law.
The petitioner's contention cannot be sustained. The
petitioner is charged with seduction. And the order of the respondent
Court directing the Department of Foreign Affairs "to take proper steps
in order that the accused . . . may be brought back to the Philippines,
so that he may be dealt with in accordance with law," is not beyond or
in excess of its jurisdiction.
When by law jurisdiction is conferred on a court or
judicial officer, all auxiliary writs, processes and other means
necessary to carry it into effect may be employed by such court or
officer; and if the procedure to be followed in the exercise of such
jurisdiction is not specifically pointed out by these rules, any
suitable process or mode of proceeding may be adopted which appears most
conformable to the spirit of said rules. (Section 6, Rule 124.)
Moreover, the respondent Court did not specify what
step the respondent Secretary must take to compel the petitioner to
return to the Philippines to answer the criminal charge preferred
against him.
Section 25, Executive Order No. 1, series of 1946, 42
Off. Gaz, 1400, prescribing rules and regulations for the grant and
issuance of passports, provides that —
The Secretary of Foreign Affairs as well as ally diplomatic or consular officer duly authorized by him, is authorized, in his discretion, to refuse to issue a passport for use only in certain countries, to withdraw or cancel a passport already issued, and to withdraw a passport for the purpose its validity or use in certain countries. (Emphasis supplied.)
True, the discretion granted, to the Secretary for
Foreign Affairs to withdraw or cancel a passport already issued may not
be exercised at whim. But here the petitioner was hailed to Court to
answer a criminal charge for seduction and although at first all
Assistant City Attorney recommended the dismissal of the complaint
previously subscribed and sworn to by the father of the offended girl,
yet the petitioner knew that no final action had been taken by the City
Attorney of Quezon City as the case was still under study. And as the
Solicitor General puts it, "His suddenly leaving the country in such a
convenient time, can reasonably be interpreted to mean as a deliberate
attemption his part to flee from justice, and, therefore, he cannot now
be heard to complain if the strong arm of the law should join together
to bring him back to justice." In issuing the order in question, the
respondent Secretary was convinced that a miscarriage of justice would
result by his inaction and as he issued it in the exercise of his sound
discretion, he cannot be enjoined from carrying it out.
Counsel for the petitioner insists that his client
should have been granted a "quasi-judicial hearing" by the respondent
Secretary before withdrawing or cancelling the passport issued to him.
Hearing would have been proper and necessary if the reason for the
withdrawal or cancellation of the passport were not clear but doubtful.
But where the holder of a passport is facing a criminal a charge in our
courts and left the country to evade criminal prosecution, the Secretary
for Foreign Affairs, in the exercise of his discretion to revoke a
passport already issued, cannot be held to have acted whimsically or
capriciously in withdrawing and cancelling such passport. Due process
does not necessarily mean or require a hearing. When discretion is
exercised by an officer vested with it upon an undisputed fact, such as
the filing of a serious criminal charge against the passport holder,
hearing maybe dispensed with by such officer as a prerequisite to the
cancellation of his passport; lack of such hearing does not violate the
due process of law clause of the Constitution; and the exercise of the
discretion vested in him cannot be deemed whimsical and capricious of
because of the absence of such hearing. If hearing should always be held
in order to comply with the due process of clause of the Constitution,
then a writ of preliminary injunction issued ex parte would be violative of the said clause.
In the cases of Bauer vs. Acheson, 106 F. Supp. 445; Nathan, vs. Dulles, 129 F. Supp. 951; and Schachtman vs. Dulles
No. 12406, 23 June 1955, all decided by the States Court of Appeals for
the district of Columbia, cited by the petitioner, the revocation of a
passport already issued or refusal to issue a passport applied for, was
on the vague reason that the continued possession or the issuance
thereof would be contrary to the best interest of the United States.
The petition is denied, with costs against the petitioner.
Paras, C.J., Bengzon, Montemayor, Reyes, A., Bautista Angelo, Labrador, Reyes, J.B.L., Endencia and Felix, JJ., concur.
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