FACTS:
The petitioner Leonardo Almeda (alias Nardong
Paa) was charged, together with five others, with the crime of qualified theft
of a motor vehicle (criminal case 285-Pasay) in the Circuit Criminal Court of
Pasig, Rizal, presided by the respondent Judge Onofre Villauz. The amount of
the bond recommended for the provisional release of Almeda was P15,000, and
this was approved by the respondent judge with a direction that it be posted
entirely in cash.
At the hearing of February 18, 1970, Almeda
asked the trial court to allow him to post a surety bond in lieu of the cash
bond required of him. This request was denied, and so was an oral motion for
reconsideration, on the ground that the amended information imputed habitual
delinquency and recidivism on the part of Almeda. Hence, the present special
civil action for certiorari with preliminary injunction.
ISSUE:
Whether the respondent judge has the
authority to require a strictly cash bond and disallow the petitioner's attempt
to post a surety bond for his provisional liberty.
HELD:
As defined by section 1 of Rule 114 of the
Rules of Court, bail is "the security required and given for the release
of a person who is in the custody of the law, that he will appear before any
court in which his appearance may be required as stipulated in the bail bond or
recognizance." The purpose of requiring bail is to relieve an accused from
imprisonment until his conviction and yet secure his appearance at the trial.
Coming to the issue
at hand, the amount fixed for bail, while reasonable if considered in terms of
surety or property bonds, may be excessive if demanded in the form of cash. A
surety or property bond does not require an actual financial outlay on the part
of the bondsman or the property owner, and in the case of the bondsman the bond
may be obtained by the accused upon the payment of a relatively small premium.
Only the reputation or credit standing of the bondsman or the expectancy of the
price at which the property can be sold, is placed in the hands of the court to
guarantee the production of the body of the accused at the various proceedings
leading to his conviction or acquittal. Upon the other hand, the posting of a
cash bond would entail a transfer of assets into the possession of the court,
and its procurement could work untold hardship on the part of the accused as to
have the effect of altogether denying him his constitutional right to bail.
But while we
repudiate the particular measure adopted by the respondent judge, we cannot
fault the motive that caused him to demur to the petitioner's offer of a surety
bond. Based on the petitioner's past record, 7 the range of his career in crime
weighs heavily against letting him off easily on a middling amount of bail. The
likelihood of his jumping bail or committing other harm to the citizenry while
on provisional liberty is a consideration that simply cannot be ignored.
Fortunately, the
court is not without devices with which to meet the situation. First, it could
increase the amount of the bail bond to an appropriate level. Second, as part
of the power of the court over the person of the accused and for the purpose of
discouraging likely commission of other crimes by a notorious defendant while
on provisional liberty, the latter could be required, as one of the conditions
of his bail bond, to report in person periodically to the court and make an
accounting of his movements. And third, the accused might be warned, though
this warning is not essential to the requirements of due process, that under
the 1973 Constitution 8 "Trial may proceed notwithstanding his absence
provided that he has been duly notified and his failure to appear is
unjustified."
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