DOCTRINE
OF SUPERVENING EVENT/ SUPERVENING FACT DOCTRINE
FACTS:
Petitioner
herein was charged with frustrated homicide, for having allegedly inflicted
upon Benjamin Obillo with a kitchen knife and with intent to kill, several
serious wounds on different part of the body, requiring medical attendance for
a period of more than 30 days, and incapacitating him from performing his
habitual labor for the same period of time.
During the
arraignment, the petitioner pleaded not guilty, but on the same day, during the
night, the victim died from his wounds.
Evidence of death of the victim was available to the prosecution and the
information was amended.
Petitioner
filed a motion to quash the amended information alleging double jeopardy, but
was denied. Hence this petition.
ISSUE:
Whether or not
the amended information constitutes double jeopardy.
HELD:
Rule 106,
section 13, 2nd paragraph provides:
If it appears
at may time before the judgment that a mistake has been made in charging the
proper offense, the court may dismiss the original complaint or information and
order the filing of a new one charging the proper offense, provided the
defendant would not be placed thereby in double jeopardy, and may also require
the witnesses to give the bail for their appearance at the trial.
“No person
shall be twice put in jeopardy of punishment for the same offense”. It meant
that when a person is charged with an offense and the case
is terminated either by acquittal or conviction or in any other manner without
the consent of the accused, the latter cannot again be charged with the same or
identical offense.
The protection
of the Constitution inhibition is against a second jeopardy for the same
offense, the only exception being, as stated in the same Constitution, that if
an act is punished by a law and an ordinance, conviction or acquittal under
either shall constitute a bar to another prosecution for the same act. “SAME
OFFENSE” under the general rule, has always been construed to mean not only the
second offense charged is exactly the same as the one alleged in the first
information, but also that the two offenses are identical.
There is
identity between two offenses when the evidence to support a conviction for one
offense would be sufficient to warrant a conviction for the other. This is
called SAME-EVIDENCE-TEST.
In this connection, an offense may be said to necessarily include another when
some of the ESSENTIAL INGREDIENTS of the former as alleged in the information
constitute the latter; vice versa.
This rule
however does not
apply when the second offense was not in existence at the time of the first
prosecution, for the simple reason that in such case there is no possibility
for the accused, during the first prosecution, to be convicted for an offense
that was then inexistent.Thus, where the accused was charged with physical
injuries and after conviction the injured person dies, the charge for homicide
against the same accused does not put him twice in jeopardy.
Where after the first prosecution
a new fact supervenes for which the defendant is responsible, which charges the
character of the offense and, together with the fact existing at the time,
constitutes a new and distinct offense.
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