A Fishy Levy

While leafing through Professor Antonio R. Bautista’s Remedial Law Quizzer (2004 ed.), I came across Question No. 252 (at p. 116), which reads as follows: “The sheriff, levying a writ of execution, harvested bangus from the judgment defendant’s fishpond.  Is this levy proper?” Without dwelling too much on the question, I answered in my mind…

Analogous Application of the Doctrine of Prejudicial Question to a Final Judgment in a Civil Case: A Critical Analysis of People v. Camenforte

In the case of People v. Camenforte, G.R. No. 220916, 14 June 2021,[1] the Supreme Court upheld the dismissal of a criminal case for falsification based on a final judgment in a civil case that the sellers’ signatures in the deeds of sale were genuine.  The Supreme Court anchored the dismissal of the criminal case…

In Search of the New Rule on Search Warrants:  Venue of Search Warrant Applications and Extent of Warrant Enforceability

This blog post seeks to study the effects of the recently issued A.M. No. 21-06-08-SC (effective 1 August 2021) on Section 2, Rule 126 of the Rules of Criminal Procedure, insofar as the venue of search warrant applications and the extent of enforceability of a search warrant are concerned. Malaloan v. Court of Appeals (1994)…