19/02/2026
The (SC) ๐๐ฏ ๐๐ข๐ฏ๐ค has issued guidelines in appreciating the mitigating circumstance of voluntary surrender, clarifying that it must be evaluated based on the personโs true intent and the totality of the circumstances.
In a Decision written by Associate Justice Samuel H. Gaerlan, the SC granted the accusedโs petition and reduced his sentence, recognizing his surrender as voluntary even if he surrendered after learning of the issuance of arrest warrant against him.
The accused went to the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) to apply for clearance. During processing, his name registered a โhitโ, indicating he had a pending case. He admitted this to the NBI officer.
He was instructed to return after one week while the records were being verified. When he came back, the NBI officer confirmed he had a pending bigamy case and an outstanding warrant for his arrest issued 13 years earlier. He then told the officer, โmasuko na lang akoโ (I will surrender) and asked help in posting bail. The arrest warrant was then served on him.
The NBI later issued a certificate stating that he voluntarily surrendered to their office. However, the return of the warrant and order of release described him as having been โarrested.โ
During arraignment, the accused first pleaded not guilty but later entered into a plea bargain, asking the court to consider his voluntary surrender and guilty plea.
The Regional Trial Court (RTC) convicted him of bigamy and considered his plea of guilt, but ruled that he did not voluntarily surrender. It relied on the warrantโs return and release order, which stated that he was โarrested,โ and noted that the case had been pending for 13 years because he could not be located. The Court of Appeals affirmed this, finding that he went to the NBI not to surrender but to apply for clearance, and that when he said he would surrender, he had no choice because he was already inside the NBI office.
The SC disagreed.
Under Article 13(7) of the ๐๐ฆ๐ท๐ช๐ด๐ฆ๐ฅ ๐๐ฆ๐ฏ๐ข๐ญ ๐๐ฐ๐ฅ๐ฆ, voluntary surrender requires that the offender had not been arrested; they surrendered themselves to a person in authority or its agent; and the surrender was voluntary.
In this case, the accused returned to the NBI and said he would surrender before the arrest warrant was actually served on him. He had not yet been arrested. He also surrendered to an NBI officer, a person in authority.
The SC ruled that voluntary surrender must be viewed with a โmore considerate and broad-minded approachโ once guilt has been established. It stressed that voluntary surrender must be assessed through the totality of circumstances, laying down the following guiding principles:
1. The voluntariness and spontaneity of the surrender must show that offender either admits their guilt or wish to spare authorities the trouble of searching for and arresting them.
2. The circumstances of the voluntary surrender is independent of the fact of the issuance of the arrest warrant. The mere fact of the arrest warrantโs prior issuance should not be taken against the accusedโs claim of voluntary surrender when other circumstances point to the fulfillment of all requirements, including voluntariness. However, knowledge of the accused of the existence of an arrest warrant against them and their continued evasion of justice can negate voluntariness and spontaneity.
3. The lapse of time an accused used to evade the law could be a criterion in negating spontaneity.
4. Voluntariness is not negated by the fact that there is likelihood that the accused may be arrested anytime before they surrendered. Imminence of arrest should be coupled with an indication that the accused fled or could further escape and evade, before it could deny voluntariness.
5. The intention of the accused at the time of surrender must be considered with other circumstances in determining entitlement to mitigating circumstance. The offender is not required to surrender at the first opportunity.
6. If the records do not clearly show that the offender voluntarily surrendered, that doubt cannot be resolved in their favor.
As to the voluntariness of his surrender, the SC emphasized that if he intended to evade arrest, he would not have returned to the NBI. While his first visit was to secure a clearance, his decision to return despite knowing there might be an active case shows his willingness to cooperate with the authorities.
The SC also clarified that while he knew about the pending case, there was no proof that he knew a warrant for his arrest had already been issued. It also noted the absence of any attempt to flee, his open use of his real name, and the fact that he returned to the NBI on his own.
The SC also reminded judges to avoid making quick or premature conclusions, emphasizing:
โWhat the Court asks and expects of magistrates on the frontlines of justice is to adjudge each case wholly, fully, and fairly as discerning persons learned in the law and literate in life experience, and not as cold-hearted automatons or soulless supercomputers, for even a single judgeโs role in the administration of our penal laws can indeed have far-reaching consequences for the parties and for human society as a wholeโฆ The law may be harsh, but it need not be harsher.โ
The accusedโs sentence was reduced from a maximum of six years to a maximum of four years in prison.
Read the full text of the press release at https://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/?p=160857
Read the full text of the Decision https://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/?p=160836
Read the Concurring Opinion of Associate Justice Alfredo Benjamin S. Caguioa at https://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/258592-formerly-udk-no-17170-concurring-opinion-justice-alfredo-benjamin-s-caguioa/