Hernandez v. CA (1993)
Hernandez v. CA (1993)
Hernandez v. CA (1993) Petition: Certiorari [Review of Decision of CA] Petitioner: Danilo Hernandez Respondent: The Court of Appeals and the People of the Philippines Ponente: J. Quiazon Date: 14 December 1993 Facts:
Danilo introducd by aunt to Remedios de Leon, who was in the business of buying and selling jewelry st o 1 transaction: paid in cash for jewelry o Subsequent transactions: paid in cash or post-dated checks Assailed transactions o 5 transactions, jewelry paid for using post-dated checks (except of 1, same date as transaction, but bank already closed at the time): 4 BPI checks signed by Danilo 1 ASB check signed by a certain Enrique Araneta o 3 BPI checks drawn against insufficient funds o 1 BPI check drawn against a closed account o 1 ASB check drawn against a closed account Danilo subsequently charged in 9 informations w/ the ESTAFA and for violations against BP Blg. 22 [Bouncing Check Law], with Cavite City RTC o Informations consolidated, heard in a joint trial o Danilo convicted of 9 charges in joint decision Danilo appealed to CA o CA affirmed 8 convictions o Reversed 1 Danilo elevated case to Supreme Court
Pertinent laws/provisions/concepts: Sec. 14, Art. VIII, 1987 Constitution Sec. 14. No decision shall be rendered by any court without expressing therein clearly and distinctly the facts and the law on which it is based. No petition for review or motion for reconsideration of a decision of the court shall be refused due course or denied without stating the legal basis therefor. Art. 315, RPC [Crime of Estafa]
Art. 315. Swindling (estafa). Any person who shall defraud another by any of the means mentioned hereinbelow xxx xxx xxx Issues: 1. 2. BP Blg. 22 [Bouncing Check Law]
Conviction of 9 distinct offenses, subject of 9 separate informations in a single judgment a reversible error? [NO] Did the CA err in not disclosing complete findings of fact, contrary to Sec. 14, Art VIII? [NO]
Ruling/Ratio Decidendi: 1. NO. a) Case different from United States v. Tanjuatco o Tanjuatco error: improperly rendered single judgment for two offenses in one of the two criminal cases,
in the absence of a consolidation of the two cases Accused right to trial in each of the two cases Proofs adduced in each individual case, upon allegations set forth in each information Not permissible to take into account or consider in one case the facts proved in the other o Case at bar: 9 criminal cases conducted jointly, w/o objection from petitioner Even if petitioner had protested, such opposition would have been unavailing Consolidation of trials allowed in charges for offenses founded on the same facts, or forming a series of offenses of similar character
2. NO.
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Decision: Petition DENIED. Decision of CA AFFIRMED. Dissenting Opinion: None. Principles: The Judicial Department The Supreme Court Requirement as to Decisions Sec. 14, Art. VIII requires that, for every decision, there must be a detailing of the facts and laws that formed the basis of such.