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PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

EN BANC

[G.R. No. L-1159. January 30, 1947. ]

CECILIO M. LINO, Petitioner, v. VALERIANO E. FUGOSO, LAMBERTO JAVALERA, and JOHN DOE, in their capacity as Mayor, Chief of Police and Officer in charge of municipal jail, all of the City of Manila, respectively, Respondents.

Emanuel Peldez, Francisco A. Rodrigo, Enrique M. Fernando, Manuel M. Crudo, Claudio Teehankee and Jose W. Diokno Fiscal Jose P. Bengzon, for Respondent.

City Fiscal Jose P. Bengzon, for Respondent.

SYLLABUS


1. HABEAS CORPUS; ARREST WITHOUT WARRANT; DETENTION AFTER SIX HOURS WITHOUT DELIVERY TO JUDICIAL AUTHORITIES; ILLEGALITY OF, NOT CURED BY FILING OF INFORMATION; CASE AT BAR. — Assuming that P. D. and P. M. were legally arrested without warrant, their continued detention became illegal upon the expiration of six hours without their having been delivered to the corresponding judicial authorities. The illegality of their detention was not cured by the filing of informations against them, since no warrants of arrest or orders of commitment have been issued by the municipal court up to the hearing of this case before this Court.

2. ID.; ARREST WHEN INFORMATION IS FOR LIGHT OFFENSE; ARREST WITHOUT WARRANT; DETENTION THEREUNDER. — The general rule is that when the offense charged is light the accused should not be arrested except in particular instances when the court expressly so orders in the exercise of its discretion. While an arrest may be made without warrant when there are reasonable grounds therefor (Rule 109 section 6 Rules of Court), the prisoner cannot be retained beyond the period provided by law unless a warrant is procured from a competent court.

3. ID.; ARREST; CITY FISCAL AUTHORITY OF, TO ISSUE WARRANT OF. — The City Fiscal has no authority to issue warrants of arrest, and is powerless to validate an illegal detention by merely filing informations or by any order of his own either express or implied.

4. ID.; CITY FISCAL; POWER OF, TO ORDER COMMITMENT OR RELEASE ON BAIL OF ACCUSED. — The City Fiscal has no power to order either the commitment or the release on bail of persons charged with penal offenses.

Per PERFECTO, J., concurring:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

5. EXPEDITING HABEAS CORPUS PROCEEDING. — Cases of habeas corpus, by their very nature if the remedy is to be effective and there is an earnest desire to avoid a failure of justice should be disposed of without any delay, as was done in Tañada v. Quirino (42 Off. Gaz., 934).

6. RESPONDENTS’ ACTIONS NEED BE COUNTERACTED. — Speedy action is necessary to squelch the tactics of respondents who are bent on exerting all the power and ability that they command to mock at the action of the courts as exemplified by the case of Villavicencio v. Lukban (39 Phil. 778-812).

7. OFFICIAL DISREGARD FOR FUNDAMENTAL HUMAN RIGHTS. — Twelve humble peaceful and law-abiding citizens while in the peaceful exercise of their constitutional rights of freedom of expression and to peaceably assemble, the right to enlist public support in the pursuit of their right to a decent living wage, and the right to petition their own government for the redress of their grievances are abruptly interrupted in the exercise of their rights and violently hauled into prison as dangerous criminals.

8. IGNORANCE OF THE CONSTITUTIONAL BILL OF RIGHTS. — Ignorance of the constitutional Bill of Rights by the erring officials is no justification. It only aggravates the situation. It shows unpardonable dereliction of duty and recklessness of responsible high authorities.

9. PEACE OFFICERS. — Peace officers are duty bound to know the law. They are also known as law officers, because it is their essential function to enforce the laws. At least, they ought to know the Constitution and learn by heart the Bill of Rights.

10. OFFER OF PROVISIONAL RELEASE OF BAIL. — That the twelve detainees were offered provisional release if they should post a bail of P12,000 each, does not make legal their illegal detention. The required bail only tends to show respondents stubbornness in the exercise of an illegal power, and the fact that the amount of P12,000 was required of persons who were not receiving even the miserable pittance, to secure the increase of which they went into strike, appears to be an unbearable sarcasm.

11. SEDITION. — The allegation that the arresting officers believe that the detainees, are guilty of sedition holds no water when respondents themselves confess that no such crime was committed. Sedition is the crime usually resorted to by tyrants as a pretext to silence or suppress those persons who have the firmness of character to oppose them and expose their abuses.

12. ONE-FOURTH OF A CENTURY PRONOUNCEMENTS. — The pronouncements made by the Supreme Court one-fourth of a century ago on fundamental civil rights are quoted in the opinion.

13. VIRUS OF THE JAPANESE FEUDALISTIC IDEOLOGY. — The wanton disregard by those responsible for the arrest of the twelve detainees of their fundamental rights as guaranteed by the Constitution, shows that the Japanese feudalistic ideology, as propagated during enemy occupation, has left its pernicious virus in our soil.

14. ARBITRARINESS AND ILLEGAL DETENTION. — These Government officers who are responsible for the detention and confinement of the twelve detainees are liable for prosecution under articles 124 and 125 of the Revised Penal Code.

15. POOR FACE-SAVING DEVICE. — The filing of information for insignificant misdemeanors against P. M. and P. D. appears to us as a poor face-saving device to justify, in some way, their further detention and should not be countenanced as a means to defeat the release of said two detainees.

16. PERILOUS PATH. — Those who under the pretext of subduing allegedly seditious persons, committed the arbitrariness complained of in the petition, trod a perilous path that, as shown by the experience of other countries, usually leads to the implantation of a dictatorship, whose whole philosophy is built upon the hateful slogan that everything, including the most cherished possessions and the most blessed ideals of the people, should be sacrificed for the sake of state supremacy.

17. PRICE OF HUMAN RIGHTS. — Eternal vigilance and constant willingness and readiness to fight for them are the price of human rights. The existence of liberal elements, always watchful and ready to defend victims of violations of the Bill of Rights, is necessary to vitalize democracy and to give tangible reality to the guarantees of the Constitution.

18. CONDITIONS AND QUALITIES REQUIRED. — The attainment of great ideals needs faith, passionate adherence to them, the militant attitude manifested in the inflicting readiness to fight and face hardships and sacrifices, unconquerable steadfastness and unbreakable perseverance in the face of obstacles and setbacks. These are the conditions and qualities needed by all liberal and progressive spirits to keep lighted the torch of liberty, to squelch the hydra of reaction, to conserve the moral heritage of advancement and conquests in the emporium of human rights bequeathed by the champions and martyrs who waged the heroic battles for real spiritual values and for the dignity if man as the image of God.


D E C I S I O N


MORAN, C.J. :


This is a petition for a writ of habeas corpus filed in behalf of twelve persons alleged to be unlawfully detained by respondents Valeriano E. Fugoso, Lamberto Javalera and John Doe in their capacity as mayor, chief of police and officer in charge of the municipal jail of the City of Manila, respectively. It is alleged in respondents’ return that ten of the petitioners had already been released, no sufficient evidence having been found to warrant their prosecution for inciting to sedition, but that the remaining two, Pascual Montaniel and Facifico Deoduco, are being held in custody because of charges filed against them in the municipal court unjust vexation and disobedience to police orders, respectively.

After hearing, by minute resolution we dismissed the case with respect to the petitioners already released and we ordered the release of the remaining two, Montaniel and Deoduco, without prejudice to a reasoned decision which we now proceed to render.

The case of the ten petitioners has become academic by their release. The purpose of a writ of habeas corpus is only to set them free. After they are freed, the writ is purposeless. If they have been the victims of illegal arrest or detention, they can have recourse to criminal actions in the proper courts.

As regards the remaining two petitioners, the pertinent facts as admitted at the hearing by respondents, are as follows: Pascual Montaniel was arrested without warrant by the police officers of Manila on November 8, 1946, for inciting to sedition, and Pacifico Deoduco, on November 7, 1946, for resisting arrest and disobedience to police orders. On November 11 when this petition for habeas corpus was filed, these two petitioners were still under arrest. They were thus held in confinement for three and four days, respectively, without warrants and without charges formally filed in court. The papers of their cases were not transmitted to the City Fiscal’s office until late in the afternoon of November 11. Upon investigation by that office, no sufficient evidence was found to warrant the prosecution of Pascual Montaniel for inciting to sedition and of Pacifico Deoduco for resisting arrest, but both remained under custody because of informations filed with minuet charging Montaniel with unjust vexation and Deoduco with disobedience to an agent of a person in authority under the second paragraph of article 151 of Revised Penal Code. These informations were filed on the same day when this case was heard before this Court, that is, on November 12, 1946. And so far, no warrants of arrest or orders of commitment are shown to have been issued by the municipal court pursuant to the informations thus filed.

Under these facts, the detention of Pacifico Deoduco and Pascual Montaniel is illegal. Even assuming that they were legally arrested without warrant on November 7 and 8, 1946, respectively, their continued detention became illegal upon the exploration of six hours without their having been delivered to the corresponding judicial authorities. (Article 125, Rev. Pen Code, as amended by Act No. 3940.) Their cases were referred to the City Fiscal late in the afternoon of November 11, 1946, that is, four and three days, respectively, after they were arrested. The illegally of their detention was not cured by the filing of information against them, since no warrants of arrest or orders of commitment have been issued by the municipal court to the hearing of this case before this Court.

It must be observed, in this connection, that in said informatons, the two petitioners are charged with light offenses punishable by law with arresto mayor or an fine ranging from 5 to 200 pesos or both, according to the second paragraphs of articles 151 and 287, respectively, of the Revised Penal Code. Under Rule 108, section 10, when the offense charged is of that character, "the judge with whom the complaint or information is filled, shall not issue any warrant for order for the arrest of the defendant, but shall order the letter to appear on the day and hour fixed in the order to answer to the complaint of information," although in particular instances he may also "order that a defendant charged with such offense be arrested and not released except upon furnishing bail." The general rule, therefore, is that when the offense charged is light the accused should not be arrested, except in particular instances when the court expressly so orders in the experience of its discretion. In the instant case, the municipal court has not yet acted on the informations nor exercised its discretion the arrest of the two petitioners and, therefore, they are still detained not because of the informations filed against them but as a continuance of their illegal detention by the police officers, While an arrest may be made without warrant there are reasonable grounds therefor (Rule 109, section 6 Rules of Court), the prisoner cannot be retained beyond the period provided by law, unless a warrant is procured from a competent court. (4 Am. Jur., p. 49; Diers v. Mallon, 46 Neb., 121; 50 Am. St. Rep., 598; Burk v. Howley, 179 Penn., 539; 57 Am. St. Rep., 607; Karner v. Stump, 12 Tex. Civ. App., 460; 34 S. W., 656; Johnson v. Americus, 46 Ga., 80; Leger v. Warren, L. R. A., 216-281 [Bk. 51. ] It is obvious in the instant case that the City Fiscal had no authority to issue warrants of arrest (vide authorities cited above, and Hashim v. Boncan and City of Manila, 71 Phil., 216) and was powerless to validate such illegal detention by merely filing informations or by any order of his own, either express or implied

It is not necessary now to determine whether the City Fiscal is a judicial authority within the purview of article 125 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by Act No. 3940, for even if he were, the petitioners’ case was referred to him long after the expiration of the six hours provided by law. And since the City Fiscal, unlike a judicial authority, has no power to order either the commitment or the release on bail of persons charged with penal offenses (Adm. Code, section 2460), the petitioners’ further their confinement after their case had been referred to the City Fiscal was but a mere continuation of their illegal detention by the police officers. In the eyes of the law, therefore, these prisoners should have been out of prison long before the informations were filed with the municipal court, and they should not be retained therein merely because of the filing of such informations it appearing particularly that the offenses charged are light and are not, as a general rule, grounds for arrest, under Rule 108, section 10. Under such circumstances, only an order of commitment could legalize the prisoner’s continued confinement, and no such order has ever been issued. Indeed, the municipal court could acquire jurisdiction over said prisoners only by the issuance of a warrant of arrest, an order of commitment or a writ of summons as provided in the aforementioned rule.

We reiterate the minute-resolution above mentioned.

Paras, Feria, Pablo and Hilado, JJ., concur.

Moran, C.J., I certify that Mr. Justice Padilla concurred in this decision.

Separate Opinions


PERFECTO, J., concurring:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

The facts in this case can better be gathered from the pleadings. Copies of the petition and of the return the latter with the annexes, accompany this opinion as appendices A and B. 1

At the hearing of this case, counsel of both parties disclosed the additional fact that the twelve detainees in whose behalf these proceedings have been initiated after their arrest, were required to post a bail bond for their provisional release of P12,000 each.

The petition was filed in the morning of November 11, 1946. The case was heard the next morning, and in the evening of November 12, it was possible for this Court to obtain the necessary majority for the early disposal of this case, with the result that the two remaining detainees were then immediately released. The first ten were released by respondents in the very afternoon of the day when the petition was filed.

If we could ugly have our own way, we would have the case heard and disposed of in the very day the petition was filed, by expediting the procedure in the same way as we did when we ordered the release on habeas corpus of Special Prosecutor Liwag, in Tanada v. Quirino (42 Off. Gaz., 934). The Rules of Court, which provide that the writ of habeas corpus may be issued at any hour in the day or at night, and the very nature of the writ, make imperative the immediate disposal of cases like the present one, if the remedy is to be effective and there is an earnest desire to avoid a failure of justice, especially as respondents are bent on exerting all the power and ability at their command to mock at the action of the courts, as exemplified by the case of Villavicencio v. Lukban (39 Phil., 778-812).

At the hearing of this case, our attention was called at the significant fact that petitioner himself, the ten released detainees, and other persons who came to attend the hearing in this Court, were refused entrance in the Malacanan compound where the building of the Supreme Court is located. They were allowed to come in after we asserted that all the people are free to come to the Supreme Court which is an institution that belongs to them.

The present case offers one of the most shocking examples of official disregard for fundamental human rights, as guaranteed in our Constitution, and as is intended to be promoted and encouraged by the Charter of the United Nations.

While Carlos P. Romulo, the eloquent spokesman of the Republic of the Philippines in the General Assembly of the United Nations, is making world history with his courageous sponsorship of the independence of all subjugated peoples and countries and is making for our Republic the proud record as one of the staunchest champions of fundamental human rights, always placed in the forefront whenever there is a battle for freedom, it seems paradoxical that here, in Manila, in the very heart of our country, in the nucleus of our national culture, twelve humble, peaceful and law-abiding citizens, while in the peaceful exercise of their constitutional rights of freedom of expression and to peaceably assemble, the right to enlist public support in the pursuit of their right to a decent living wage, and the right to petition their own Government for the redress of their grievances, are abruptly interrupted in the exercise of their rights and violently hauled into prison as dangerous criminals.

Counsel for respondents tried to justify the unwarranted official invasion of private civil liberties by the ignorance of erring officials of the constitutional Bill of Rights. Such ignorance does not justify anything. It only aggravates the situation. It shows unpardonable dereliction of duty and recklessness of responsible high authorities.

It is a universal rule that ignorance of the law does not exempt anyone from any responsibility for violating it. Peace officers are duty bound to know the law. They are also known as law officers, because it is their essential function to enforce the laws. They form part of the Executive Department of our Government, the department whose primary function is to execute the laws. No peace officers should be allowed to enter in the actual performance of his functions without first acquiring the indispensable knowledge of the laws they are called upon to enforce. At least they ought to know the Constitution, a copy of which they should always carry in their pockets for immediate consultation, with the same fidelity as the priests stick to their breviary of prayers. They should be compelled to learn by heart the Bill of Rights, if possible, commit to memory all its provisions. Peace officers are supposed, not only to enforce the laws, but also to protect the citizens in their rights, and in order that they may perform this duty, they should first know what these rights are. Without that knowledge, they become a menace to social order. If it is dangerous to let a person drive an automobile when that person does not know how to drive it, it is no less dangerous to entrust the enforcement of laws to armed individuals who are ignorant of them.

It has been alleged that the twelve detainees were not deprived of their personal liberty absolutely, because they were allowed to enjoy provisional release upon a bail of P12,000 each. If they choose not to post said bail, they cannot complain for having to remain in prison.

If the detention was illegal, and there is no doubt about it, respondents themselves admitting the illegality as to the ten detainees they released before the hearing of this case, the fact that respondents required them to post bail does not legalize their illegal detention. The bail requirement tends only to show respondents’ stubbornness in insisting to enforce an illegal power to have the detainees under an involuntary control.

But even in the false hypothesis that respondents could require the detainees to post bail for their provisional release, the fact that respondents fixed the large amount of P12,000 for each, seems an unbelievable sarcasm.

It is a fact that the twelve detainees joined the workers’ strike in a desperate endeavor to secure a decent living wage. They went into strike because with what they were being paid for their daily labor they had not enough to make both ends meet. At the time of their arrest, they were not even earning the insufficient salary or wage against which they were protesting by means of strike. If those persons were not earning enough to live as decent human beings, and at the time of their detention they were not receiving even the miserable pittance they were complaining of, is it not an insulting joke to require them to raise each P12,000 for bail, an amount, which even we, the members of the Supreme Court, occupying the highest ranks in our judicial system, and receiving the highest salary allowed by law to a judicial officer, could not raise with the urgency required by the situation of a man who is deprived of his personal freedom?

It is also alleged that the officers who arrested the detainees believe that the latter committed sedition. Respondents themselves confess that the detainees did not commit such crime. Sedition is the crime usually resorted to by tyrants as a pretext to silence or suppress those persons who have the firmness of character to oppose them and expose their abuses. Socrates was sentenced to drink hemlock for the sedition of giving freedom and wings to the Greek thought in his painstaking philosophical search for truth. Because he preached the gospel of human brotherhood, Jesus was crucified for sedition.

The tyrants of one-fourth of a century ago, who controlled the situation in the Philippines — tyrants are wild animals that may appear in any country — following the foot-steps of their predecessors in other places, tried to smash the crusade for clean government, which was our lot to wage in one of the newspapers of Manila, by prosecuting us for the crime of sedition. (United States v. Perfecto and Mendoza, 43 Phil., 58, 62-64.) The following paragraphs in the decision of the Supreme Court in that case, seem to us to ring with trenchant actuality:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"When the citizens of a state become convinced that the administration of the affairs of their government is not carried on in accordance with the law, or is not conducted for the best interest of all concerned, they have not only a right but it is their duty to present the cause of their grievances to the public, and the free press of the state usual]y affords the best avenue for that purpose. To that end, the organic laws of all modern free states have wisely provided that no law shall be passed, abridging the freedom of the press and that no person shall be punished except for an abuse of that freedom. The interest of civilized society and the maintenance of good government demand a full and free discussion of all affairs of public interest. Complete liberty to comment upon the administration of the Government, as well as the conduct of public men, is necessary for free speech. The people are not obliged under modern civilized governments, to speak of the conduct of their officials, of their servants, in whispers or with bated breath. (United States v. Bustos, 37 Phil., 731.)

"The right to assemble and petition the Government, and to make requests and demands upon public officials, is a necessary consequence of republican and democratic institutions, and the complement of the right of free speech. (United States v. Bustos, supra.)

"The freedom of the press consists in the right to publish the truth, with good motives and for justifiable ends, although said publication may be offensive to the Government, to the courts, or to individuals.

"Chief Justice Marshall of the Supreme Court of the United States, in discussing the freedom of the press, said: The spirit of the constitution and the opinion of the people cannot be curbed by those who administer the Government. Among those principles which are held most sacred by the people of America, there is none more deeply rooted in the public mind than that of the liberty of the press.’

"Mr. Daniel Webster had occasion to discuss the same question. He said: It is important to safeguard to the utmost the right to free speech and the free press. It is the ancient and constitutional right of our people to judge public matters and public men. It is such a self-evident right as the right to breathe the air and to walk on the surface of the earth. I will defend this high constitutional prerogative in time of war, in time of peace, and all the time. Dead or alive I shall maintain it.

It is the particular duty of the people of the state to zealously maintain the right to express freely, either verbally or by publication, their honest convictions regarding the acts of public officials and the governing class. If the people of a free state should give up the right of free speech; if they are daunted by fear and threats, and abdicate their convictions; if the governing body of the state could silence all the voices except those that extol their acts; if nothing relating to the conduct of the governing class can reach the people except that which will uphold the men in power, then we may well say Good-bye to our liberties forever. While under such circumstances free governments may still be maintained, their life, their soul, and their essentials will be gone. If the publication of the conduct of public officials annoys them, let them examine their own act and determine the fundamental cause of the complaint. Even during the time of the illustrious Voltaire, he expressed the upon on that tolerance was never the cause of internal strife in the state, but, on the contrary, the pursuit of intolerance has covered the world with blood. The tyrants of our thoughts have caused the greater part of the misfortunes of the world.’

"Mr. Ralph Waldo Emerson in discussing the question before us, said: ’If there were a country where knowledge could not be spread without incurring the penalty of the law; where there is no free speech, where correspondence and publicity are violated, that country would not be civilized, but it would be barbarous.’

"Mr. Henry Ward Beecher on one occasion said: The term "free" is akin to the wind that blows over the regions infected with malaria and exposes to the light the germs of the disease. When the freedom of speech is curtailed, infection sets in and death quickly follows."cralaw virtua1aw library

Our schoolboys are no more compelled to count "Ichi, ni, san, si," to sing "Hamabe No Uta," to salute "ohayoo," or "kombanwa," or to intersperse their talk with "arigatoo" or "sayoonara." No more lecturer is teaching us the "tyu no yu" and flower arrangement as the highest expressions of culture. The political philosophy of "Daitoa Kyoeiken" (Greater East Asia Co-Prosperity Sphere, under the Japanese hegemony) has banished as unwanted nightmare. The voice of the Nippon geo-politicians preaching "Hakko Ichiu," the Emperor’s way, the universal brotherhood under the benevolent guidance of the direct descendant of Amaterasu Omikami, we do not hear any more. The bowlegged and be worded samurai successors, indoctrinated in the traditions of Bushido knighthood, ceased to plunder, to rape, and to cut throats in our midst. Our sleep is no more disturbed by the hobnailed terror stalking in our sidewalks at midnight. The public bowing to brutal sentries, and by high officials and employees of the government towards the Imperial Palace at Tokyo, are no more. But it seems, as exemplified in this case, that the feudalistic ideology behind all occupation facts and acts has left its pernicious virus in our soil.

The wanton disregard shown by those responsible for the arrest to the rights of the twelve detainees, those rights being among the fundamental ones guaranteed by the constitution, cannot be explained otherwise.

There was absolutely no legal ground to disturb or obstruct the twelve detainees in their absolutely lawful and peaceful activities, and much less to deprive them of their personal freedom and then keep them in jail for an indefinite period of time, only interrupted upon the filing of a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in this case.

It is our opinion that those government officers who are responsible for the detention and confinement of the twelve detainees, depriving them of personal liberty without due process of law, as guaranteed by the Constitution, are liable for prosecution under article 124 of the Revised Penal Code which provides as follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"Arbitrary detention. — Any public officer or employee who, without legal grounds, detains a person, shall suffer:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"1. The penalty of arresto mayor in its maximum period to prision correccional in its minimum period, if the detention has not exceeded three days;

"2. The penalty of prision correccional in its medium and maximum periods, if the detention has continued more than three but not more than fifteen days;

"3. The penalty of prision mayor, if the detention has continued for more than fifteen days but not more than six months; and

"4. That of reclusion temporal, if the detention shall have exceeded six months.

"The commission of a crime, or violent insanity or any other ailment requiring the compulsory confinement of the patient in a hospital, shall be considered legal grounds for the detention of any person."cralaw virtua1aw library

But even if the detention in question was made "for some legal ground,’’ a conjecture in support of which no sufficient ground appears in this case, still those who made the arrest are liable for prosecution under article 125 of the Revised Penal Code, because they failed to deliver the twelve detainees to the proper judicial authorities within the period of six hours after detention. Said article is as follows:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"Delay in the delivery of detained persons to the proper judicial authorities. — The penalties provided in the next preceding article shall be imposed upon the public officer or employee who shall detain any person for some legal ground and shall fail to deliver such person to the proper judicial authorities within the period of six hours." (As amended by Com. Act No. 3940.)

The idea of prosecuting them under the above cited articles of the Revised Penal Code may appear to be hard, but we must not forget that "dura lex, sed lex" and whatever may be the consequences the law must be given its way.

We can imagine how the erring officials will feel at the prospective prosecution and how they might consider unbearable the idea of being sent to jail, but was it sweet or delicious for the twelve detainees to be illegally deprived of their freedom and confined in prison for so many days and nights, without any fault on their part at all? If respondents are zealous in keeping their own personal freedom, they cannot deny the victims of their recklessness the same legitimate desire.

Everybody can imagine the indescribable physical, mental, and moral sufferings endured by the twelve detainees and their respective families. The indignation felt by one who is the victim of an unjustifiable onslaught upon his individual dignity, the paralyzing anguish of the down-trodden who feels overwhelmed by brutal superior force against which his weakness cannot offer but the answer of futile despair, the excruciating thought of the alarm their absence will produce in their humble little homes, where their unprotected wives will try to drown their worries in bitter tears, while their little ones are trying to understand in infantile amazement the absence of their father and the tragedy entailed by that absence, are things that can hardly be attenuated by the thought that, after all, the Nippon kempei has already banished as an asphyxiating dream, and the unfortunate situation cannot be as bad as the sadistic and bestial horrors that the very mention of Fort Santiago conjure in our imagination, the linear memory of which produces thick sweat and blood consolation. There is no treasure in the world that can adequately compensate such sufferings. The only consolation that the situation may offer is the bereft hope that such sufferings may have the effect of awakening the conscience of our public officials so as to induce them to make the firm resolve to avoid the repetition of such abuses as the ones depicted in this case, that the guilty ones will earnestly repent of their misdeeds and will henceforth endeavor to accord the proper regard to the rights and liberties of their fellow human beings, thus contributing to diminish so many rampant manifestations of moral disorientation, including attempts to degrade the highest tribunal of the country, that now offend the good sense of the average citizen.

The provisions of law punishing arbitrary or illegal detention committed by government officers form part of our statute books even before the advent of American sovereignty in our country. Those provisions were already in effect during the Spanish regime; they remained in effect under American rule; continued in effect nuclear the Commonwealth. Even under the Japanese regime they were not repealed. The same provisions continue in the statute books of the free and sovereign Republic of the Philippines. This notwithstanding, and the complaints often heard of violations of said provisions, it is very seldom that prosecutions under them have been instituted due to the fact that the erring individuals happened to belong to the same government to which the prosecuting officers belong. It is high time that every one must do his duty, without fear or favor, and that prosecuting officers should not answer with cold shrugging of the shoulders the complaints of the victims of arbitrary or illegal detention.

Only by an earnest enforcement of the provisions of articles 124 and 125 of the Revised Penal Code will it be possible to reduce to its minimum such wanton trampling of personal freedom as depicted in this case. The responsible officials should be prosecuted, without prejudice to the detainees’ right to the indemnity to which they may be entitled for the unjustified violation of their fundamental rights.

The question of economic rehabilitation of our country is an everyday topic in the newspapers. We deem more important still the moral rehabilitation of our people; especially that of the officialdom. The Constitution requires (section 5, Article 14) that "All schools shall aim to develop moral character, personal discipline, civic conscience, and vocational efficiency and to teach the duties of citizenship," and it will be highly desirable that this mandate should be borne in mind by all officers of the government, and that the qualities the Constitution ordains to be developed in all citizens should be, with more emphasis, required from officials and employees of the government, thus correcting the negative tropism shown in this case in regard to fundamental civil liberties.

The filing of information for insignificant misdemeanors against Pascual Montaniel and Pacifico Deoduco appears to us as a poor face-saving device to justify, in some way, their further detention, and should not be countenanced as a means to defeat the release of said two detainees.

In explaining in this concurring opinion, our position in voting in favor of the resolution of November 12, 1946, we wish to make it clear that we do not interpret article 126 of the Revised Penal Code as legalizing detentions not exceeding six hours. Said article does not legalize an illegal detention. It only offers a justifying circumstance which exempts the erring official from criminal prosecution, provided that the detention is made upon legal grounds and do not last more than six hours, but it will, and cannot, defeat a petition for a writ of habeas corpus in behalf of a person illegally detained although the petition is filed before the termination of the six hours period mentioned in the article, as the constitutional guarantee of personal freedom is not subject to any time limit.

We wish to emphasize that it is highly dangerous to make of the fundamental rights of the citizens a kind of shuttlecock of passing moods or momentary whims of persons wielding some kind of government power. When the estrous of official intolerance and braggadocio employed to cow into submission the twelve detainees has subsided, everybody will recognize in the cool and serene recesses of their conscience, that those who, under the pretext of subduing allegedly seditious persons; committed the arbitrariness complained of in the petition, trod a perilous path that, as shown by the experience of other countries, usually lead to the implantation of a dictatorship, whose whole philosophy is built upon the hateful slogan that everything, including the most cherished possessions and the most blessed ideals of the people, should be sacrificed for the sale of the state supremacy.

We are glad that two civic-minded groups of citizens, the Philippine Civil Liberties Union and the Philippine Lawyers Guild, have taken pains to appear in this Court in behalf of the twelve detainees, and we congratulate them for the success of their endeavors.

By actual personal experience and upon conclusive evidence, we know that it is not enough that the civil liberties and fundamental] human rights be guaranteed in express constitutional provisions in order that they should effectively be protected. Eternal vigilance and constant willingness and readiness to fight for them are necessary.

When World War I was nearing its end, in the exercise of the freedom of the press, guaranteed by the Jones Law, as Editor of La Nacion, we made exposures of many unsatisfactory aspects of public affairs as they were then conducted. We made revelations regarding the scandals of the Philippine National Bank which caused many millions of losses to our Government. The powerful wanted us to be silenced. The Governor General, first through his Secretary, Mr. Irwin, and later through General Crime, Chief of the Philippine Constabulary, tried to intimidate us with drastic action by the Government if we should not stop the publication of the irregularities and illegalities we were denouncing then in the columns of our paper. They reminded us that the war justified any extraordinary measure by the Government, and that our denunciations, by tending to destroy public confidence in the authorities, were highly seditious. Our invariable answer to Mr. Irwin and General Crime was that the Governor General and they themselves were free to do what it would please them, but nothing shall deter us from doing what, according to our conscience, was our public duty. As we did not allow ourselves to be intimidated, a series of criminal prosecutions were instituted against us. Although the lower courts should invariably find us guilty, the Supreme Court had always acquitted us, by upholding the freedom of the press.

The existence of liberal elements, always watchful and ready to defend the victims of violations of the Bill of Rights, is necessary to vitalize democracy and to give tangible reality to the guarantees of the Constitution. The fight for personal freedom must go on, over and over again, as the forces of reaction are always ready to snatch any opportunity to set at naught the guarantees of the fundamental law, as happened in the bail incident in People v. Jalandoni (G.R. No. L-777), and all liberal forces must always be ready to answer the summons of endangered liberties.

The attainment of great ideals needs faith, passionate adherence to them, the militant attitude manifested in the unflinching readiness to fight and fact hardships and sacrifices, unconquerable steadfastness and unbreakable per severance in the face of obstacles and setbacks. These are the conditions and qualities with which thinkers and philosophers were able to discover the truth which have guided humanity as beacons in the path of progress; the founders of great religions, to transmit to millions their message of hope and the gospel of eternal moral principles: Columbus, to discover the New World, and Magellan to traverse the two largest oceans and encircle the globe; astronomers, to pierce the immensity of space to conquer new stars, parsecs away; bacteriologists, to scavenge dangerous micro-organisms; scientists, to for sick in the mysteries of matter to wrest new revelations which enhance the intellectual horizon of man and increase his means for enjoyment of life and happiness. The same conditions and qualities are among those needed by all liberal and progressive spirits to keep lighted the torch of liberty, to squelch the hydra of reaction, to conserve the moral heritage of advancement and conquests in the emporium of human rights bequeathed by the champions and martyrs who waged the heroic battles for real spiritual values and for the dignity of man as the image of God.

Appendix A

PETITION

Petitioner Cecilio M. Lino, through his undersigned counsel, respectfully alleges:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

1. That the petitioner is of legal age and a resident of the City of Manila, Philippines; the respondent Valeriano E. Fugoso is the Mayor of the City of Manila; the respondent Lamberto T. Javalera is the Chief of Police of the said City; and the respondent John Doe is the Officer in Charge of the Municipal Jail of the same City;

2. That the petitioner is the President of the City Employees’ and Workers’ Union, Congress of Labor Organization (CLO), duly registered as a labor organization under the provisions of Commonwealth Act No. 213; and he files this petition on behalf of the following persons, members of the said labor organization, who are imprisoned and deprived of their liberty, to wit:

1. Ricardo Suarez (Juarez)

2. Gregorio Santiago

3. Ismael de Jesus

4. Serafin Pascual

5. Amado Racanday

6. Antonio Bulagda (Burlagada)

7. Mauro Fernandez

8. Jose Badeo

9. Francisco Nevado (Lebado)

10. Pascual Montaniel

11. Pedro Martinez and

12. Pacifico Deoduco;

3. That, within the time comprised between November 5 and November 8, 1946, the persons above named were arrested without warrant and without lawful cause, upon order of the respondent Valeriano E. Fugoso, as Mayor of the City of Manila, by members of the Police Department of the said City, of which the respondent Lamberto T. Javalera is the Chief, and, immediately thereafter, were taken to, and detained at, the Municipal Jail of the aforementioned City, of which the respondent John Doe is the Officer in Charge;

4. That since their arrest all the persons mentioned in paragraph 2 heir of have been detained and deprived of their liberty by the respondents at the said Municipal Jail, although no charges have been filed against any of the above mentioned persons in any lawful court, nor has any judicial or other proper authority issued any order authorizing their continued detention, and notwithstanding the lapse of the period of six hours from the time of their arrest and/or commitment;

5. That the aforementioned persons were arrested while in the peaceful exercise of their constitutional rights of freedom of speech and of the press and peaceably to assemble and petition the Government for the redress of their grievances, specifically, while performing the following acts to enlist public support in the pursuit of their right to a living wage, to wit:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

(a) Ricardo Suarez (Juarez), Gregorio Santiago, Ismael de Jesus and Serafin Pascual — arrested on November 5, 1946 at Pinkian Street, Tondo, Manila, for no apparent reason, but for posting a distributing handbills explaining the plight of the city laborers on strike, and appealing to and for the sympathy and lawful support of the public;

(b) Amado Racanday, Antonio Bulgada (Burlagada) and Mauro Fernandez — arrested on November 6, 1946, while standing at the corner of Gral. Luna and California streets, Paco, Manila, for no apparent reason, except that they had joined the city laborers’ strike, and for having in their possession some copies of the handbills above mentioned;

(c) Jose Badeo and Francisso Nevado (Lebado) — arrested on November 6, 1946, while standing at the corner of Perez and California Streets, Paco, Manila, for no apparent reason except that they had joined the city laborers’ strike and had in their possession a notice of a meeting of their labor organization;

(d) Pascual Montaniel — arrested on November 8, 1946, at Cristobal Street, Paco, Manila, for no apparent reason, except that the made a friendly greeting to a non-striker;

(e) Pedro Martinez — arrested on November 8, 1946, at Juan Luna Street, Gagalangin, Manila, for no apparent reason, except that he had joined the city laborers’ strike and walked along the street with a paper band strung diagonally from his shoulder around his body bearing the following words: "Damayan Kami ! Huag Mageskirol" (Help us! Do not be a scab); and

(f) Pacifico Deoduco — arrested on November 7, 1946, at Cristobal Street, Manila, for no apparent reason except that he had joined the city laborers’ strike.

Wherefore, petitioner prays that a writ of habeas corpus be directed forthwith to the respondents commanding them, or any of them, to have the bodies of the above named persons who are restrained and deprived of their liberty before this Honorable Court at a time and place to be designated by this Court; and, after due hearing, forthwith to order their discharge from confinement, with costs against the respondents.

Manila, Philippines, November 11th, 1946.

Emmanuel Pelaez,

Francisco A. Rodrigo

Enrique M. Fernando

Manuel M. Crudo

Claudio Teehankee and

Jose W. Diokno

By: (Sgd.) Emmanuel By: (Sgd.) Claudio Tee

Pelaez Counsel for the Peti hankee Counsel for the Pe-

tioner C/o Philippine Civil titioner C/o Philippine Law-

Liberties Union 503 China yers’ Guild, 319 Lardizabal

Bank Building, Dasmarinas, Street, Manila

Manila

VERIFICATION

Cecilio M. Lino, of legal age, after being duly sworn in accordance with law, deposes and says:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

1. That he is the petitioner in the foregoing petition for a writ of habeas corpus;

2. That he caused the same to be prepared and presented; and

3. That all the facts therein alleged are true and correct.

Further affiant seethe naught.

Manila, November 11, 1946.

(Sgd.) Cecilio M. Lino

Affiant

Subscribed and sworn to before me this 11th day of November, 1946, at the City of Manila, Philippines. The affiant exhibited to me his Residence Certificate No. A-20721, issued at the City of Manila, on January 9, 1946.

(Sgd.) F. A. Rodrigo

Notary Public

Until December 31 1947

Doc. No. 36

Page No. 9

Book No. 1

Series of 1946.

Appendix B

RETURN OF WRIT

Come now the respondents in the above-entitled case, Valeriano E. Fugoso, Lamberto T. Javalera and John Doe, in their respective capacities as Mayor, Chief of Police and Officer in Charge of the Municipal Jail, all of the City of Manila, through their counsel, the undersigned City Fiscal, and in making their return to the petition filed herein, to this Honorable Court respectfully allege:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

1. That they admit the allegations contained in paragraphs 1 and 2 of said petition.

2. That they admit the fact, stated in paragraph 3 of said petition, regarding the arrest of the persons whose names are listed in paragraph 2 thereof, without warrant, by members of the Manila Police Department, and their detention until yesterday, November 11, 1946, at the Municipal Jail of the City of Manila; but they deny the rest of the allegations, especially that which states for a fact that said detained persons were arrested without lawful cause upon order of the respondent Valeriano E. Fugoso, as Mayor of the City of Manila, the truth of the matter being that the arrest was lawful, it having been made by members of the Manila Police Department duly appointed and qualified as such who acted in the performance of their official duties, and acting in the belief that the said detained persons, before or at the time of their arrest, were committing acts in violation of the laws of the land.

3. That they admit the fact, alleged in paragraph 4 of said petition, that all the arrested persons have been placed under detention until yesterday, November 11, 1946, at the Municipal Jail of the City of Manila; but they deny the rest of the allegations, specially that part which says that no charges have been filed against them notwithstanding the lapse of the period of six hours from the time of their arrest and commitment, the truth of the matter being that charges for inciting to sedition, disobedience to police orders and resisting arrest have been filed against them by the arresting police officers with the Office of the City Fiscal which has conducted the preliminary investigation of said cases in accordance with law.

4. That they deny the allegations contained in paragraph 5 of said petition, the same being merely conclusions of facts and/or of law.

As special defenses, respondents hereby allege:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

(a) That all of the twelve detained persons were arrested by police officers for acts which the arresting officers believed to constitute inciting to sedition, resisting arrest and disobedience to police orders, filing the corresponding cases against them with the Office of the City Fiscal immediately thereafter.

(b) That yesterday, November 11, 1946, before and after the receipt by them of their respective copies of the petition for habeas corpus herein filed, complaints had already been presented with the Municipal Court of Manila against Pascual Montaniel and Pacifico Deoduco not for inciting to sedition but for unjust vexation and for disobedience to police orders, respectively, the same being criminal cases Nos. 6765 and 7666 of the Municipal Court of Manila, copies of which complaints are being attached hereto and made a part hereof as Annexes 1 and 2.

(c) That likewise, before and after the receipt by them of their respective copies of the petition for habeas corpus, said respondents Valeriano E. Fugoso and Lamberto T. Javalera had already been notified of the dismissal by the Office of the City Fiscal of the cases for inciting to sedition against all the detained persons, for insufficiency of evidence, and of filing in the Municipal Court of Manila complaints against Pascual Montaniel and Pacifico Deoduco, as aforesaid.

(d) That, similarly, before and after his receipt of a copy of the petition for habeas corpus, the respondent John Doe, in his capacity as Officer in charge of the Municipal Jail, had received from the City Fiscal letters bearing date of November 11, 1946, copies of which are hereto attached as Annexes 3 and 4 of this Return, wherein he was advised that the cases against said detained persons for inciting to sedition have been dismissed for insufficiency of evidence, but that complaints were being filed against Pascual Montaniel and Pacifico Deoduco for unjust vexation and for disobedience to police orders, respectively, and wherein said respondent John Doe has been ordered by the City Fiscal to forthwith release all of said detained persons with the exception of Pascual Montaniel and Pacifico Diodoco, an order which has been complied with by said respondent John Doe as shown by the fact that said detained persons, with the exception of the latter two, had forthwith been released from custody.

(e) That Pascual Montaniel and Pacifico Deoduco continue to be detained and are being deprived of their liberty not without lawful cause, for the reason that there are at present pending against them criminal complaints with the Municipal Court of Manila for unjust vexation and disobedience to police orders as stated above.

Wherefore, respondents herein pray this Honorable Court to dismiss the petition, with costs against the petitioner.

Manila, November 12, 1946.

(Sgd.) JOSE P. BENGZON

City Fiscal

Annex 1

INFORMATION

The undersigned accuses Pascual Montaniel y Avelar of the crime unjust vexation, committed as follows:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

That on or about the 8th of November, 1946, in the City of Manila, Philippines, the said accused did then and there willfully, unlawfully, feloniously and on justly vex and annoy one Jesus Cambare, who was then a driver at the City Motor Pool assigned to the Department of En Fingering and Public Works of the Government of the City of Manila, while in the act of managing, driving and operating a jeep being used by the Assistant City Engineer of said City in the latter’s official capacity, by then and there stopping the jeep driven by said Jesus Cambare without any just cause therefor and telling him to stop driving for the City of Manila while the strike of city laborers was still going on, all in a threatening attitude, and to the great disgust and annoyance of the aforementioned Jesus Cambare. Contrary to law.

(Sgd.) JULIO VILLAMOR

Assistant Fiscal

Witnesses:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

Jesus Cambare — 615 Merced, Paco

Dets. Felix T. Pineda and

Victoriano Antonio — Det. Bureau

Chief Clerk — Dept. of Engineering and

Public Works, City Hall (bringing records re

appointment of Jesus Cambare as driver at the

City Motor Pool)

Annex 2

INFORMATION

The undersigned accuses Pacifico Deoduco of a violation of the second paragraph of Art. ell of the Revised Penal Code, committed as follows:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

That on or about the 7th day of November, 1946, in the City of Manila. Philippines, the said accused did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously disobey Vicente Cararidad, a duly appointed and qualified police officer of the City of Manila and, therefore, an agent of a person in authority, while the latter was acting in the performance of his official duties, to wit: while he was guarding the premises of the City Motor Pool on Cristobal St., in said City, which acts of disobedience was in the following manner: That said accused, having entered and was actually found in the aforesaid premises where he had no right to be, without the knowledge and consent of the authorities concerned, and having been ordered several times by the aforesaid police officer to go out of and leave the said premises, defiantly and persistently refused to do so, but instead he continued to remain therein. Contrary to law.

(Sgd.) JULIO VILLAMOR

Assistant City Fiscal

November 11, 1946

Witnesses:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

Pat. V. Cararidad, Precinct No. 3.

Pat. Pedro Camata, Precinct No. 3.

Chief Clerk, Manila Police Dept., to bring a certified

copy of the latest appointment of Pat. Vicente Cele-

ridad of the Manila Police Dept.

Bail recommended: P200

Annex 3

November 11, 1946

The Prison Officer

City Jail, Manila

Sir:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

With reference to the case of inciting to sedition presented with this Office against (1) Ricardo Suarez, (2) Gregorio Santiago (3) Ismael de Jesus, (4) Serafin Pascual, (5) Amado Racanday, (6) Antonio Bulagua (Burlagua), (7) Mauro Fernandez, (8) Jose Radeo, (9) Francisco Navado (Levado), (10) Pascual Montaniel, and (11) Pedro Martinez, please be informed that after an investigation has been conducted in the premises, it was found out that there is no sufficient evidence to warrant the prosecution of said accused in court, it appearing that the leaflets, posters and other propaganda sheets which said accused distributed to the public and pasted or posted at different places within the city, did not contain any statement or phrases of seditious nature or of the nature to incite to the commission of sedition. This Office, however, is filing a complaint with the Municipal Court against Pascual Montaniel y Avelar for unjust vexation only, wherein a bail of P100 has been recommended for his temporary release.

In view of the foregoing, all of the said accused, except Pascual Montaniel y Avelar, should be released from custody or their bonds cancelled, if any have been put up for their temporary release unless they are held on other charges.

Respectfully,

(Sgd.) JOSE P. BENGZON

City Fiscal

ANNEX

November 11, 1946

Prison Officer

City Jail, Manila

Sir:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

With reference to the cases of disobedience to the Police and resisting arrest presented to this Office against Pacifico Deoduco y Docio, please be informed that after an investigation has been conducted in the premises, it was found out that there is no sufficient evidence to warrant his prosecution in court for the offense of resisting arrest. This Office, however, is filing today a complaint the Municipal Court against the said accused for disobedience to an agent of a person in authority, under the second paragraph of Art. 151 of the Revised Penal Code, wherein a bail of P200.00 has been recommended for his temporary release.

Very respectfully,

(Sgd.) Jose P. Bengzon

City Fiscal

BRIONES, M., conforme:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

El presente caso es un incidente de la famosa huelga decrada y efectuada en Noviembre del alio pasado (1946) por obreros organizados de la ciudad de Manila en el servicio municipal de limpieza de calles y en obras publicas tambien municipales. Como fondo historico del caso en general, y de esta opinion en particular, cabe incluir en la naracion de hechos el de que — como es acostumbrado en este genero de convulsiones sociales — despues de mucho apasionamiento por ambos lados, de no poca nerviosidad y de laboriosas negociaciones, la huelga que duro unas dos semanas quedo satisfactoriamente solucionada, aviniendose los huelguistas a volver a su trabajo a cambio de ciertas concesiones que hizo el Municipio de Manila, particularmen te en la cuestion de bonificaciones y salarios. Sin embargo esulta de autos y de la historia el dia reflejada princi palmente en la prensa (de lo cual podemos naturalmente tomar conocimiento judicial) que la exaltacion de los animos, la pasion al rojo vivo produjeron algunos incidentes, unos dramaticos, otros comicos, llegando la tension nerviosa de algunos a exagerar tremendamente las proporciones del movimiente hasta el estremo de imaginarse rebeliones y sediciones alli donde no habia sino un espiritu algun tanto militante de parte de los abreros en la defensa de sus derechos e intereses y en la propaganda de su causaa con la mira de ganarse la simpatia del publico. Uno de esos incidentes es la cogida o aprehension por la policia, sin previa orden de arresto, por el especioso pretexto de estaban incitanto y promoviendo nada menos que una sedicion contra el gobierno constituido, de doce obreros huelgistas, confinandoseles en la carcel por dicho motivo.

En no, bre de esos doce se ha presentado esta solicitud de mandamiento de habeas corpus por Cecilio M. Lino, presidente de la Union de Empleados y Obreros de la Ciudad, filial del "Congress of Labor Organizations" (CLO), defendiendoles como abogados Emmanuel Palaez, Francisco A. Rodrigo y Enrique M. Fernando, miembros y representantes de la sociedad civia "Philippine Civil Liberties Union," y Manuel M. Crudo, Claudio Teehankee y Jose W. Diokno, mienbros, y representantes del "Philippine Lawyers’ Guild." En nombre de los recurridos ha comparecido ante esta Corte el Fiscal auxiliar Julio Villamor, de la ciudad de Manila.

Alegase en la solicitud que doce obreros de que se trata fueron arretados mientras estaban ejerciendo pacificamente sus derechos constitucionales, a saber: la libertad de la palabra y de la prensa, y el de reunion pacifica para pedir del gobierno el alvio de sus agravios. Se detalla especificamente los actos en que estaban ocupados cuando fueron arretados, a saber:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

(a) Richard Suarez (Juarez), Gregorio Santiago, Ismael de Jesus y Serafin Pascual fueron arrestados el 5 de Noviembre, 1946, en la calle de Pinkian, arrabal de Tondo, Manila, Mientras estaban distribuyendo y pegando en las parades hojas voluntes en que se explicaban las miserias y tribulaciones de los obreros en huelga se apelaba a la simpatia y sentimientos humanitarios del publico para que apoyara la causa de los huelguistas.

(b) Amando Racanday, Antonio Bulagada (Burlagada) y Mauro Fernandez fueron arrestados el 6 de Noviembre, 1946, mientras estaban tranquilamente parados en la esquina de las calles de California y Gral. Luna, Paco, Manila, y sin ningun motivo aparente como no fuese el de que se habian adherido a la huelga y se hallaron en su posesion copias de las hojas volantes menciondas en el parrafo anterior.

(c) Jose Badeo y Francisco Nevado (Levado) fueron arrestados el 6 de Noviembre, 1946, mientras estaban tranquilamente parados en la esquina de las calles de Perez y California, Paco, Manila, y tambien sin ningun motivo manifiesto como no fuese el de que se habian adherido igualmente a la huelga y tenian en su poder el aviso de una reunion que la organizacion obrera a que estaban afiliados iba a celebrar.

(d) Pedro Martinez fue arrestado el 8 de Noviembre, 1946, en la calle de Juan Luna, Gagalangin, Manila, y sin ninguna razon aparente excepto que el mismo se habia adherido a la huelga y andaba paseandose a lo largo de dicha calle con una banda llamativa que llevaba diagonalmente alrededor de su cuerpo y en la cual estaban escritas las siguientes palabras en tagalo:

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