Crim Law 2 Notes
Crim Law 2 Notes
Crim Law 2 Notes
Elements
Exception: The public officer must have a duty under the law to detain a person, such as a policeman or
constabulary soldier. If he has no such duty and he detains a person, he is liable for serious illegal
detention.
N.B. Intention to deprive the victim of his liberty for purposes of extorting ransom on the part of the
accused is ESSENTIAL in the crime of kidnapping.
The essential element or act which makes the offense of kidnapping is the deprivation of an offended
party’s liberty under any of the four instances enumerated in par 1.
While Illegal detention of the victim for more than 3 days being one of the instances.
However, if the kidnapping or detention was committed for the purpose of extorting ransom, it is not
necessary that one or any of such circumstances be present.
Note: Where the victim is taken from one place to another solely for the purpose of killing him, the
crime committed is murder.
Art. 268 – Slight Illegal Detention
Elements
Note: If the offender voluntarily releases the person so kidnapped or detained within 3 days from the
commencement of the detention without having attained the purpose intended, and before the
institution of criminal proceedings against him, his liability is mitigated.
Elements
Unlawful arrests by public officers should be punished as arbitrary detention under Art. 124, if the public
officer has the authority to arrest and detain a person, but the arrest is without legal ground.
However, if the public officer has no authority to arrest and detain a person, or if he did not act in his
official capacity, he should be punished for unlawful arrest under Article 269.
Elements
Elements
1. That the minor is living in the home of his parents or guardian or the person entrusted with his
custody
2. That the offender induces said minor to abandon such home
Note: The inducement must be actual, committed with criminal intent, and determined by a will to
cause damage.
What constitute the crime is the act of inducing a minor to abandon his home or the home of his
guardian and it is not necessary that the minor actually abandons the home.
Elements
Elements
Art. 275 – Abandonment of persons in danger and abandonment of one’s own victim
Acts punishable
1. By failing to render assistance to any person whom the offender finds in an uninhabited place
wounded or in danger of dying when he can render such assistance without detriment to
himself, unless such omission shall constitute a more serious offense.
2. By failing to help or render assistance to another whom the offender has accidentally wounded
or injured
3. By failing to deliver a child, under seven years of age whom the offender has found abandoned,
to the authorities or to his family, or by failing to take him to a safe place.
Elements
Note: When there is intent to kill, the article does not apply.
The intent to kill is presumed from the death of the victim of the crime is applicable only to crimes
against persons, and not to crimes against security, particularly the crime of abandoning a minor under
Art. 276
Elements
Note: If the offender is a public officer or employee, the entrance into the dwelling against the
will of the occupant is violation of domicile.
To commit trespass, the entrance by the accused should be against the presumed or express
prohibition
There is an implied prohibition when entrance is made through means not intended for ingress.
Punishable acts
1. By threatening another with the infliction upon his person, honor or property or that of his
family of any wrong amounting to a crime and demanding money or imposing any other
condition, even though not unlawful, and the offender attained his purpose.
2. By making such threat without the offender attaining his purpose
3. By threatening another with the infliction upon his person, honor, or property or that of his
family of any wrong amounting to a crime, the threat not being subject to a condition.
1. That the offender threatens another person with the infliction upon the latter’s person, honor,
or property, or upon that of the latter’s family, of any wrong.
2. That such wrong amounts to a crime
3. That there is a demand for money or that any other condition is imposed, even though not
unlawful
4. That the offender attains his purpose
Note: If the offender attained his purpose, the penalty one degree lower of the penalty for the crime
threatened to be committed shall be imposed.
If the offender does not attain his purpose, the penalty is two degrees lower than that provided
by law for the crime threatened to be committed.
The threats of the third forms are those made with the deliberate purpose of creating in the mind of the
person threatened the belief that the threats will be carried into effect.
The crime of grave threats is consummated as soon as the threats come to the knowledge of the person
threatened.
If there is another crime actually committed or the objective of the offender is another crime, and the
threat is only a means to commit it or a mere incident in its commission, the threat is absorbed by the
other crime.
But if the threat was made with the deliberate purpose of creating in the mind of the person
threatened, the belief that the threat would be carried into effect, the crime committed is grave threats,
and the minor crime which is accompanied it should be disregarded.
The offender in grave threats does not demand the delivery on the spot of the money or other personal
property asked by him, if the offender does demand the delivery on the spot of the money, then the
crime is robbery with intimidation.
Elements
For Article 283 to apply, it requires that there be demand for money or that other condition be imposed.
Punishable acts
1. By threatening another with a weapon, or by drawing such weapon in a quarrel, unless it be in
lawful self-defense
Two acts punished:
A. Threatening another with a weapon, even if there is no quarrel
B. Drawing a weapon in a quarrel, which is not in lawful self-defense.
2. By orally threatening another, in the heat of anger, with some harm constituting a crime,
without persisting in the idea involved in his threat.
3. By orally threatening to do another any harm not constituting a felony.
Note: For this article to apply, there must not be demand for money, or that there is no
condition imposed when the offender threatens another with a weapon
Other light threats can be committed even if the person to whom it is directed is absent
1. By preventing another, by means of violence, threats or intimidation, from doing something not
prohibited by law.
2. By compelling another, by means of violence, threats or intimidation, to do something against
his will, whether it be right or wrong.
Elements
1. That a person is prevented by another from doing something not prohibited by law, or
compelled to do something against his or her will, be it right or wrong.
2. That the prevention or compulsion is effected by violence, either by material force or such a
display of it as would produce intimidation and consequently, control over the will of the
offended party.
3. That the person who restrains the will and liberty of another has no right to do so.
In grave coercion, the act of preventing by force must be made at the time the offended party was doing
or about to do the act to be prevented. If the act was already done when violence is exerted, the crime
is unjust vexation.
When the complainant is in the actual possession of a thing, even if he has no right to that possession,
compelling him by means of violence to give up the possession, even by the owner himself, is grave
coercion.
The force or violence must be immediate, actual or imminent.
Any person who, by means of violence, shall seize anything belonging to his debtor for the purpose of
applying the same to the payment of the debt.
Elements
Taking possession of the thing belonging to the debtor, through deceit and misrepresentation, for the
purpose of applying the same to the payment of the debt, is unjust vexation
Unjust vexation – includes any human conduct which, although not productive of some physical or
material harm would, however, unjustly annoy or vex an innocent person.
The paramount question to be considered, in determining whether the crime of unjust vexation is
committed, is whether the offender’s act cause annoyance, irritation, vexation, torment, distress or
disturbance to the mind of the person to whom it is directed.
TITLE 10
Chapter 1
Robbery in General
Note: The property taken must be personal property, for if real property is occupied or real right is
usurped by means of violence against or intimidation of person, the crime is usurpation.
The taking is complete from the moment the offender gains possession of the thing, even if the
culprit has had no opportunity to dispose the same
2. As to robbery with force upon things
The rule is that robbery is consummated after the accused had taken material possession of the thing
with intent to appropriate the same, although his act of making use of the thing was frustrated.
Absence of intent to gain will make the taking of personal property grave coercion if there is violence
IF there is no violence or intimidation, or force upon things but there is unlawful taking, then the crime
is theft.
Exception:
When the violence results in (1) homicide, rape, intentional mutilation, or any of the serious physical
injuries, the taking of personal property robbery complexed with any of those crimes under Art. 294,
even if the taking was already complete when the violence was used by the offender.
Section One – Robbery with violence against or intimidation of persons
The killing may occur before, during or after the robbery. And it is immaterial that death would
supervene by mere accident, or that the victim of homicide is other than the victim of robbery, or that
two or more persons are killed.
Robbery with homicide need not be committed inside a building. Thus, the culprit who killed the victim
on the street to get, as in fact they got, the latter’s personal belongings are guilty of robber with
homicide.
If the idea of taking the personal property of another with intent to gain came to the mind of the
offender after he killed the victim, he is guilty of two separate crimes of homicide or murder, as the case
may be and theft
When homicide is committed by reason or on the occasion of robbery, all those who took part as
principals in the robbery would be held liable as principals of the single and indivisible felony of robbery
with homicide although they did not actually take part in the killing, unless it clearly appears that they
endeavoured to prevent the same.
Here, the offender must have the intent to take the personal property belonging to another with intent
to gain, and such intent must precede the rape
This is usually committed when, while some robbers are ransacking for personal property in the house,
the other is raping a woman in the same house.
Even if the rape was committed in another place, it is still robbery with rape
Note: But if the rape is committed against a woman in a house other than that where the robbery is
committed, the rape should be considered a separate offense.
The violence need not result in serious physical injuries. All that the first clause requires that the
violence be unnecessary for the commission of the robbery.
SIMPLE ROBBERY
The robbery is simple robbery because the use of violence against any person does not result in
homicide, rape, intentional mutilation, or any of the serious physical injuries.
There is violence, even if the physical force employed by the offender merely consists in his pushing the
victim.
Art. 295 – Robbery with physical injuries, committed in an uninhabited place and by a band, or with the
use of firearm on a street, road or alley
1. In an uninhabited place
2. By a band
3. By attacking a moving train, streetcar, motor vehicle or airship
4. By entering the passengers’ compartments in a train, or in any manner taking the passengers
thereof by surprise in the respective conveyances
5. On a street, road, highway, or alley, and the intimidation is made with the use of firearms
Article does not apply to robbery with homicide, or robbery with rape, or robbery with serious physical
injuries
Art. 297 – Attempted and frustrated robbery committed under certain circumstances
There is only one crime of attempted robbery with homicide even if slight physical injuries were inflicted
on other persons on the occasion or by reason of the robbery.
SECTION TWO
Robbery by the use of force upon things
One essential requisite of robbery with force upon things is that the malefactor should enter the
building or dependency where the object to be taken is found.
Art. 299 – Robbery in an inhabited house or public building or edifice devoted to worship
Inhabited house is any shelter, ship or vessel constituting the dwelling of one or more persons even
though the inhabitants thereof are temporarily absent therefrom when the robbery is committed.
The whole body of culprit must be inside the building to constitute entering.
CHAPTER TWO
BRIGANDAGE
Brigandage is a crime committed by more than three armed persons who form a band of robbers for the
purpose of committing robbery in the highway or kidnapping persons for the purpose of extortion or to
obtain ransom, or for any other purpose to be attained by means of force and violence.
Theft is committed by any person who, with intent to gain but without violence against, or intimidation
of persons nor force upon things, shall take personal property of another without the latter’s consent.
Theft is produced when there is deprivation of personal property due to its taking by one with intent to
gain. To freely dispose of the property of the property stolen is immaterial since the deprivation from
the owner alone has already ensued from such acts of execution.
There is taking even if the offender received the thing from the offended property
For robbery to exist, it is necessary that there should be a taking against the will of the owner, and for
theft, it sufficed that consent on the part of the owner is lacking.
Theft is committed
Simple theft, not qualified theft when there was no confidence reposed on the accused.
CHAPTER FOUR
USURPATION
Acts punishable
1. By taking possession of any real property belonging to another by means of violence against or
intimidation of person
2. By usurping any real rights in property belonging to another by means of violence against or
intimidation of persons.
Art. 315 – Swindling (Estafa)
Deceit with intent to defraud is not an essential requisite in cases wherein the money or other
personal property has been voluntarily entrusted to the offender
How committed: By altering the substance, quantity, or quality of anything of value which the offender
shall deliver by virtue of an obligation to do so, even though such obligation be based on an immoral or
illegal consideration
When there is no agreement as to the quality of the thing to be delivered, the delivery of the thing not
acceptable to the complainant is not estafa
How committed: By misappropriating or converting to the prejudice of another, money, goods, or any
other personal property received by the offender in trust or on commission, or for administration, or
under delivery of or to return the same, even though such obligation be totally or partially guaranteed
by a bond, or by denying having received such money, goods or other property.
A person receiving money from another and failing to return it does not commit the crime of estafa
unless it is clearly demonstrated that he received it “for safekeeping, or on commission, or for
administration; or under any other circumstances giving rise to the obligation to make delivery of or to
return the same.
Three ways of committing estafa with abuse of confidence
A person who misappropriated the thing which he had received from the offended party may be
guilty of theft, not estafa, if he acquired only the material or physical possession of the thing.
In theft, upon the delivery of the thing to the offender, the owner expects and immediate return of
the thing to him. Failure to return it would constitute theft.
When the owner does not expect the immediate return of the thing he delivered to the accused, the
misappropriation of the same is estafa.
ESTAFA BY TAKING UNDUE ADVANTAGE OF THE SIGNATURE OF THE OFFENDED PARTY IN BLANK
The paper with the signature in blank must be delivered by the offended party to the offender.