G.R. No. 139465 January 18, 2000
SECRETARY OF JUSTICE, petitioner,
vs.
HON. RALPH C. LANTION, Presiding Judge, Regional Trial Court of Manila, Branch 25, and MARK B. JIMENEZ, respondents.
vs.
HON. RALPH C. LANTION, Presiding Judge, Regional Trial Court of Manila, Branch 25, and MARK B. JIMENEZ, respondents.
FACTS:
Department
of Justice received from the Department of Foreign Affairs U.S. Note
Verbale No. 0522 containing a request for the extradition of private
respondent Mark Jimenez to the United States pursuant to RP-US
extradition treaty and Presidential Decree No. 1069 "Prescribing the
Procedure for the Extradition of Persons Who Have Committed Crimes in a
Foreign Country" which was founded upon the doctrine of incorporation
under the Constitution. Attached to the Note Verbale were the Grand Jury
Indictment, the warrant of arrest issued by the U.S. District Court,
Southern District of Florida, and other supporting documents for said
extradition. Based on the papers submitted, private respondent appears
to be charged in the United States with violation of provisions of the
United States Code.
Private
respondent addressed to petitioner requesting copies of the official
extradition request from the U.S. Government, and that he be given ample
time to comment on the request after he shall have received copies of
the requested papers.
In response to private respondent, petitioner, denied the foregoing requests.
Respondent
then claims his procedural right to due notice and hearing of his case
which is indispensable of the right to due process.
ISSUE: Whethet
or not private respondent's entitlement to notice and hearing during
the evaluation stage of the proceedings constitute a breach of the legal
commitments and obligations of the Philippine Government under the
RP-US Extradition Treaty? And assuming that the result would indeed be a
breach, is there any conflict between the due process clause in the
Constitution and the RP-US Extradition Treaty?
HELD:
The Supreme Court ruled in favor of the respondent.
Categorically
say that this is not the proper time to pass upon the constitutionality
of the provisions of the RP-US Extradition Treaty nor the Extradition
Law implementing the same. We limit ourselves only to the effect of the
grant of the basic rights of notice and hearing to private respondent on
foreign relations. The rule of pacta sunt servanda, one of the
oldest and most fundamental maxims of international law, requires the
parties to a treaty to keep their agreement therein in good faith. The
observance of our country's legal duties under a treaty is also
compelled by Section 2, Article II of the Constitution which provides
that "[t]he Philippines renounces war as an instrument of national
policy, adopts the generally accepted principles of international law as
part of the law of the land, and adheres to the policy of peace,
equality, justice, freedom, cooperation and amity with all nations."
Under the doctrine of incorporation, rules of international law form
part of the law of the land and no further legislative action is needed
to make such rules applicable in the domestic sphere. The doctrine of
incorporation is applied whenever municipal tribunals are confronted
with situations in which there appears to be a conflict between a rule
of international law and the provisions of the constitution or statute
of the local state. Efforts should first be exerted to harmonize them,
so as to give effect to both since it is to be presumed that municipal
law was enacted with proper regard for the generally accepted principles
of international law in observance of the Incorporation Clause in the
above-cited constitutional provision. In a situation, however, where the
conflict is irreconcilable and a choice has to be made between a rule
of international law and municipal law, jurisprudence dictates that
municipal law should be upheld by the municipal courts for the reason
that such courts are organs of municipal law and are accordingly bound
by it in all circumstances. The fact that international law has been
made part of the law of the land does not pertain to or imply the
primacy of international law over national or municipal law in the
municipal sphere. The doctrine of incorporation, as applied in most
countries, decrees that rules of international law are given equal
standing with, but are not superior to, national legislative enactments.
Accordingly, the principle lex posterior derogat priori takes
effect — a treaty may repeal a statute and a statute may repeal a
treaty. In states where the constitution is the highest law of the land,
such as the Republic of the Philippines, both statutes and treaties may be invalidated if they are in conflict with the constitution.
These
two components law of the land, international law and municipal or
national law, are not pitted against each other. There is no occasion to
choose which of the two should be upheld. Instead, we see a void in the
provisions of the RP-US Extradition Treaty, as implemented by PD No.
1069, as regards the basic due process rights of a prospective
extraditee at the evaluation stage of extradition proceedings. From the
procedures earlier abstracted, after the filing of the extradition
petition and during the judicial determination of the propriety of
extradition, the rights of notice and hearing are clearly granted to the
prospective extraditee. However, prior thereto, the law is silent as to
these rights. Reference to the U.S.
extradition procedures also manifests this silence. In the absence of a
law or principle of law, we must apply the rules of fair play. An
application of the basic twin due process rights of notice and hearing
will not go against the treaty or the implementing law. Neither the
Treaty nor the Extradition Law precludes these rights from a prospective
extraditee. Similarly, American jurisprudence and procedures on
extradition pose no proscription. In fact, in interstate extradition
proceedings as explained above, the prospective extraditee may even
request for copies of the extradition documents from the governor of the
asylum state, and if he does, his right to be supplied the same becomes
a demandable right.
The
constitutional issue in the case at bar does not even call for "justice
outside legality," since private respondent's due process rights,
although not guaranteed by statute or by treaty, are protected by
constitutional guarantees. We would not be true to the organic law of
the land if we choose strict construction over guarantees against the
deprivation of liberty. That would not be in keeping with the principles
of democracy on which our Constitution is premised.
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