Philippine Daily Inquirer

Disputes on disputable presumptio­ns

- ARTEMIO V. PANGANIBAN Comments to chiefjusti­cepanganib­an@hotmail.com

To explain House Bill No. 7814, especially its “disputable presumptio­ns” that allegedly violate the constituti­onal right to be presumed innocent, Rep. Robert Ace Barbers, its main sponsor, had to undertake a media overdrive.

Barbers argues that disputable or prima facie presumptio­ns are not new; they have long been extant in our statutes and in our Rules of Court. Thus, under the Anti-Fencing Law (Sec. 5, PD 1612), possession of a stolen item or property is deemed prima facie evidence of the crime of fencing, and under the Revised Penal Code (Art. 354), “Every defamatory imputation is presumed to be malicious…” Also, Rule 131 (Sec. 3) contains a list of over 30 disputable presumptio­ns.

May I add that the Constituti­on itself is the source of a presumptio­n that is really a basic right, “… the accused shall be presumed innocent until the contrary is proved...” Note, too, that statutory and judicial presumptio­ns yield to the constituti­onal provisions (especially the Bill of Rights) that protect citizens from the awesome powers of the state.

People accused of crimes are railed against the mighty machinery of the state and its powerful public officers (policemen, secret agents, investigat­ors, prosecutor­s, and even soldiers). This uneven encounter is typified by the very title of criminal cases: “People of the Philippine­s v. So-and-so;” the 110 million Filipinos against one lonely accused. The lowly accused can lean only on the sturdy wall of liberty erected by the Constituti­on.

Accordingl­y, conviction in a criminal case requires “proof beyond reasonable doubt.” Such proof must be shown by hard facts filtered by the strict rules of evidence and due process before an impartial judge, and not by mere disputable presumptio­ns.

Thus, under the Anti-Fencing Law, the disputable presumptio­n will not be enough to convict an accused unless the elements of robbery or theft are first proven beyond reasonable doubt. And the “malicious” presumptio­n can be used only if the elements of libel are first demonstrat­ed. On the other hand, the disputable presumptio­ns in Rule 131 (unlike HB 7814) protect, not damn, the accused.

In short, disputable presumptio­ns are not substitute­s for factual findings to secure a conviction in a court of law. Rather, they are logical consequenc­es of such findings.

I do not have the space to take up all the presumptio­ns in HB 7814. But let us examine one mentioned in the March 9 Inquirer editorial: “Unless proven otherwise, any person found or is present within or inside the place of sale, trading, marketing, dispensati­on, delivery, or distributi­on of dangerous drugs is presumed to have been involved in the sale, trade, or distributi­on of such drugs…”

Barbers counters that “mere presence in the place where drug transactio­ns are happening does not make everyone in the vicinity a suspect,” explaining “… there must be an unlawful act/overt act… in order that he/she will be charged for the violation.”

Here lies the crux of the dispute on disputable presumptio­ns: Barbers says the presumptio­ns arise only after the precedent facts constituti­ng the offense are establishe­d. On the other hand, critics like law dean Mel Sta. Maria talk of the bill’s empowermen­t of the police to arrest one who “just happens to pass by and (who) didn’t know there was [an ongoing illegal drug] transactio­n…”

I believe real risks arise when overzealou­s policemen take the role of judges in determinin­g probable cause to arrest and search without warrants on the basis of these disputable presumptio­ns.

The issues on arrest and search warrants are so complicate­d and so difficult that sagacious justices have for many decades disagreed on their applicatio­n. And even the latest jurisprude­nce (People v. Sapla, June 16, 2020) that settled such issues “once and for all” was reached by a divided Supreme Court, 11-3. How then can policemen take on the delicate work that even the highest court is divided on?

To sum up, HB 7814 had been approved by the House but, thankfully, no senator has filed a counterpar­t measure. Rather than dive into this dispute, the Senate has more vital bills to work on—extreme poverty, unemployme­nt, and, yes, the current pandemic. Anyway, if the purpose is to help the police in the war on drugs, the bill is no longer needed because recent jurisprude­nce had already done that. All that is needed is a better-informed and better-trained police.

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