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RESOLUTION
YNARES-SANTIAGO , J : p
On February 27, 2006, this Court's First Division rendered judgment in this case
as follows: aEDCSI
By way of brief background, petitioner is one of the accused in Criminal Case No.
99-2425, led with the Regional Trial Court of Makati City, Branch 150. The Amended
Information charged the accused with theft under Article 308 of the Revised Penal
Code, committed as follows:
On or about September 10-19, 1999, or prior thereto in Makati City, and within the
jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the accused, conspiring and confederating
together and all of them mutually helping and aiding one another, with intent to
gain and without the knowledge and consent of the Philippine Long Distance
Telephone (PLDT), did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously take,
steal and use the international long distance calls belonging to PLDT by
conducting International Simple Resale (ISR), which is a method of routing and
completing international long distance calls using lines, cables, antenae, and/or
air wave frequency which connect directly to the local or domestic exchange
facilities of the country where the call is destined, effectively stealing this
business from PLDT while using its facilities in the estimated amount of
P20,370,651.92 to the damage and prejudice of PLDT, in the said amount.
CONTRARY TO LAW. 2
PLDT further insists that the Revised Penal Code should be interpreted in the
context of the Civil Code's de nition of real and personal property. The enumeration of
real properties in Article 415 of the Civil Code is exclusive such that all those not
included therein are personal properties. Since Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code
used the words "personal property" without quali cation, it follows that all "personal
properties" as understood in the context of the Civil Code, may be the subject of theft
under Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code. PLDT alleges that the international calls
and business of providing telecommunication or telephone service are personal
properties capable of appropriation and can be objects of theft.
PLDT also argues that "taking" in relation to theft under the Revised Penal Code
does not require "asportation", the sole requisite being that the object should be
capable of "appropriation". The element of "taking" referred to in Article 308 of the
Revised Penal Code means the act of depriving another of the possession and
dominion of a movable coupled with the intention, at the time of the "taking", of
withholding it with the character of permanency. There must be intent to appropriate,
which means to deprive the lawful owner of the thing. Thus, the term "personal
properties" under Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code is not limited to only personal
properties which are "susceptible of being severed from a mass or larger quantity and
of being transported from place to place."
PLDT likewise alleges that as early as the 1930s, international telephone calls
were in existence; hence, there is no basis for this Court's nding that the Legislature
could not have contemplated the theft of international telephone calls and the unlawful
transmission and routing of electronic voice signals or impulses emanating from such
calls by unlawfully tampering with the telephone device as within the coverage of the
Revised Penal Code.
According to respondent, the "international phone calls" which are "electric
currents or sets of electric impulses transmitted through a medium, and carry a pattern
representing the human voice to a receiver," are personal properties which may be
subject of theft. Article 416 (3) of the Civil Code deems "forces of nature" (which
includes electricity) which are brought under the control by science, as personal
property.
In his Comment to PLDT's motion for reconsideration, petitioner Laurel claims
that a telephone call is a conversation on the phone or a communication carried out
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using the telephone. It is not synonymous to electric current or impulses. Hence, it may
not be considered as personal property susceptible of appropriation. Petitioner claims
that the analogy between generated electricity and telephone calls is misplaced. PLDT
does not produce or generate telephone calls. It only provides the facilities or services
for the transmission and switching of the calls. He also insists that "business" is not
personal property. It is not the "business" that is protected but the "right to carry on a
business". This right is what is considered as property. Since the services of PLDT
cannot be considered as "property", the same may not be subject of theft. AaHDSI
The Of ce of the Solicitor General (OSG) agrees with respondent PLDT that
"international phone calls and the business or service of providing international phone
calls" are subsumed in the enumeration and de nition of personal property under the
Civil Code hence, may be proper subjects of theft. It noted that the cases of United
States v. Genato , 3 United States v. Carlos 4 and United States v. Tambunting , 5 which
recognized intangible properties like gas and electricity as personal properties, are
deemed incorporated in our penal laws. Moreover, the theft provision in the Revised
Penal Code was deliberately couched in broad terms precisely to be all-encompassing
and embracing even such scenario that could not have been easily anticipated.
According to the OSG, prosecution under Republic Act (RA) No. 8484 or the
Access Device Regulations Act of 1998 and RA 8792 or the Electronic Commerce Act
of 2000 does not preclude prosecution under the Revised Penal Code for the crime of
theft. The latter embraces unauthorized appropriation or use of PLDT's international
calls, service and business, for personal pro t or gain, to the prejudice of PLDT as
owner thereof. On the other hand, the special laws punish the surreptitious and
advanced technical means employed to illegally obtain the subject service and
business. Even assuming that the correct indictment should have been under RA 8484,
the quashal of the information would still not be proper. The charge of theft as alleged
in the Information should be taken in relation to RA 8484 because it is the elements,
and not the designation of the crime, that control.
Considering the gravity and complexity of the novel questions of law involved in
this case, the Special First Division resolved to refer the same to the Banc.
We resolve to grant the Motion for Reconsideration but remand the case to the
trial court for proper clarification of the Amended Information.
Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code provides:
Art. 308. Who are liable for theft. 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.
The elements of theft under Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code are as follows:
(1) that there be taking of personal property; (2) that said property belongs to another;
(3) that the taking be done with intent to gain; (4) that the taking be done without the
consent of the owner; and (5) that the taking be accomplished without the use of
violence against or intimidation of persons or force upon things. SDHETI
Prior to the passage of the Revised Penal Code on December 8, 1930, the
de nition of the term "personal property" in the penal code provision on theft had been
established in Philippine jurisprudence. This Court, in United States v. Genato, United
States v. Carlos, and United States v. Tambunting, consistently ruled that any personal
property, tangible or intangible, corporeal or incorporeal, capable of appropriation can
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be the object of theft.
Moreover, since the passage of the Revised Penal Code on December 8, 1930,
the term "personal property" has had a generally accepted de nition in civil law. In
Article 335 of the Civil Code of Spain, "personal property" is de ned as "anything
susceptible of appropriation and not included in the foregoing chapter (not real
property)". Thus, the term "personal property" in the Revised Penal Code should be
interpreted in the context of the Civil Code provisions in accordance with the rule on
statutory construction that where words have been long used in a technical sense and
have been judicially construed to have a certain meaning, and have been adopted by the
legislature as having a certain meaning prior to a particular statute, in which they are
used, the words used in such statute should be construed according to the sense in
which they have been previously used. 6 In fact, this Court used the Civil Code de nition
of "personal property" in interpreting the theft provision of the penal code in United
States v. Carlos.
Cognizant of the de nition given by jurisprudence and the Civil Code of Spain to
the term "personal property" at the time the old Penal Code was being revised, still the
legislature did not limit or qualify the de nition of "personal property" in the Revised
Penal Code. Neither did it provide a restrictive de nition or an exclusive enumeration of
"personal property" in the Revised Penal Code, thereby showing its intent to retain for
the term an extensive and unquali ed interpretation. Consequently, any property which
is not included in the enumeration of real properties under the Civil Code and capable of
appropriation can be the subject of theft under the Revised Penal Code.
The only requirement for a personal property to be the object of theft under the
penal code is that it be capable of appropriation. It need not be capable of
"asportation", which is de ned as "carrying away". 7 Jurisprudence is settled that to
"take" under the theft provision of the penal code does not require asportation or
carrying away. 8
To appropriate means to deprive the lawful owner of the thing. 9 The word "take"
in the Revised Penal Code includes any act intended to transfer possession which, as
held in the assailed Decision, may be committed through the use of the offenders' own
hands, as well as any mechanical device, such as an access device or card as in the
instant case. This includes controlling the destination of the property stolen to deprive
the owner of the property, such as the use of a meter tampering, as held in Natividad v.
Court of Appeals, 1 0 use of a device to fraudulently obtain gas, as held in United States
v. Tambunting, and the use of a jumper to divert electricity, as held in the cases of
United States v. Genato, United States v. Carlos, and United States v. Menagas. 1 1cDCaTH
No person shall, for any purpose whatsoever, use or enjoy the bene ts of any
device by means of which he may fraudulently obtain any current of electricity or
any telegraph or telephone service; and the existence in any building premises of
any such device shall, in the absence of satisfactory explanation, be deemed
sufficient evidence of such use by the persons benefiting thereby.
It was further ruled that even without the above ordinance, the acts of
subtraction punished therein are covered by the provisions on theft of the Penal Code
then in force, thus:
Even without them (ordinance), the right of the ownership of electric current is
secured by articles 517 and 518 of the Penal Code; the application of these
articles in cases of subtraction of gas, a uid used for lighting, and in some
respects resembling electricity, is con rmed by the rule laid down in the decisions
of the supreme court of Spain of January 20, 1887, and April 1, 1897, construing
and enforcing the provisions of articles 530 and 531 of the Penal Code of that
country, articles 517 and 518 of the code in force in these islands.
The acts of "subtraction" include: (a) tampering with any wire, meter, or other
apparatus installed or used for generating, containing, conducting, or measuring
electricity, telegraph or telephone service; (b) tapping or otherwise wrongfully
de ecting or taking any electric current from such wire, meter, or other apparatus; and
(c) using or enjoying the bene ts of any device by means of which one may fraudulently
obtain any current of electricity or any telegraph or telephone service. HAaECD
In the instant case, the act of conducting ISR operations by illegally connecting
various equipment or apparatus to private respondent PLDT's telephone system,
through which petitioner is able to resell or re-route international long distance calls
using respondent PLDT's facilities constitutes all three acts of subtraction mentioned
above.
The business of providing telecommunication or telephone service is likewise
personal property which can be the object of theft under Article 308 of the Revised
Penal Code. Business may be appropriated under Section 2 of Act No. 3952 (Bulk Sales
Law), hence, could be object of theft:
Section 2. Any sale, transfer, mortgage, or assignment of a stock of goods,
wares, merchandise, provisions, or materials otherwise than in the ordinary course
of trade and the regular prosecution of the business of the vendor, mortgagor,
transferor, or assignor, or any sale, transfer, mortgage, or assignment of all, or
substantially all, of the business or trade theretofore conducted by the vendor,
mortgagor, transferor or assignor, or all, or substantially all, of the xtures and
equipment used in and about the business of the vendor, mortgagor, transferor, or
assignor, shall be deemed to be a sale and transfer in bulk, in contemplation of
the Act. . . . .
Interest in business was not speci cally enumerated as personal property in the
Civil Code in force at the time the above decision was rendered. Yet, interest in
business was declared to be personal property since it is capable of appropriation and
not included in the enumeration of real properties. Article 414 of the Civil Code provides
that all things which are or may be the object of appropriation are considered either real
property or personal property. Business is likewise not enumerated as personal
property under the Civil Code. Just like interest in business, however, it may be
appropriated. Following the ruling in Strochecker v. Ramirez, business should also be
classi ed as personal property. Since it is not included in the exclusive enumeration of
real properties under Article 415, it is therefore personal property. 1 3 aSTcCE
In the assailed Decision, it was conceded that in making the international phone
calls, the human voice is converted into electrical impulses or electric current which are
transmitted to the party called. A telephone call, therefore, is electrical energy. It was
also held in the assailed Decision that intangible property such as electrical energy is
capable of appropriation because it may be taken and carried away. Electricity is
personal property under Article 416 (3) of the Civil Code, which enumerates "forces of
nature which are brought under control by science." 1 7
Indeed, while it may be conceded that "international long distance calls", the
matter alleged to be stolen in the instant case, take the form of electrical energy, it
cannot be said that such international long distance calls were personal properties
belonging to PLDT since the latter could not have acquired ownership over such calls.
PLDT merely encodes, augments, enhances, decodes and transmits said calls using its
complex communications infrastructure and facilities. PLDT not being the owner of
said telephone calls, then it could not validly claim that such telephone calls were taken
without its consent. It is the use of these communications facilities without the consent
of PLDT that constitutes the crime of theft, which is the unlawful taking of the
telephone services and business.
Therefore, the business of providing telecommunication and the telephone
service are personal property under Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code, and the act
of engaging in ISR is an act of "subtraction" penalized under said article. However, the
Amended Information describes the thing taken as, "international long distance calls",
and only later mentions "stealing the business from PLDT" as the manner by which the
gain was derived by the accused. In order to correct this inaccuracy of description, this
case must be remanded to the trial court and the prosecution directed to amend the
Amended Information, to clearly state that the property subject of the theft are the
services and business of respondent PLDT. Parenthetically, this amendment is not
necessitated by a mistake in charging the proper offense, which would have called for
the dismissal of the information under Rule 110, Section 14 and Rule 119, Section 19 of
the Revised Rules on Criminal Procedure. To be sure, the crime is properly designated
as one of theft. The purpose of the amendment is simply to ensure that the accused is
fully and suf ciently apprised of the nature and cause of the charge against him, and
thus guaranteed of his rights under the Constitution.
ACCORDINGLY, the motion for reconsideration is GRANTED. The assailed
Decision dated February 27, 2006 is RECONSIDERED and SET ASIDE. The Decision of
the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 68841 af rming the Order issued by Judge Zeus
C. Abrogar of the Regional Trial Court of Makati City, Branch 150, which denied the
Motion to Quash (With Motion to Defer Arraignment) in Criminal Case No. 99-2425 for
theft, is AFFIRMED. The case is remanded to the trial court and the Public Prosecutor of
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Makati City is hereby DIRECTED to amend the Amended Information to show that the
property subject of the theft were services and business of the private offended party.
SO ORDERED.
Puno, C.J., Quisumbing, Carpio, Austria-Martinez, Carpio-Morales, Azcuna, Chico-
Nazario, Velasco, Jr., Nachura, Leonardo-de Castro and Brion, JJ., concur.
Corona, J., see separate opinion.
Tinga, J., please see concurring opinion.
Separate Opinions
CORONA , J.,:
The bone of contention in this case is: who owns the telephone calls that we
make? If respondent Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company (PLDT) can claim
ownership over them, then petitioner Luis Marcos P. Laurel (Laurel) can be charged with
theft of such telephone calls under Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code. If PLDT does
not own them, then the crime of theft was not committed and Laurel cannot be charged
with this crime. aHTCIc
One view is that PLDT owns the telephone calls because it is responsible for
creating such calls. The opposing view is that it is the caller who owns the phone calls
and PLDT merely encodes and transmits them.
The question of whether PLDT creates the phone calls or merely encodes and
transmits them is a question of fact that can be answered by science. I agree with
Justice Consuelo Ynares-Santiago that, while telephone calls "take the form of electrical
energy, it cannot be said that such [telephone] calls were personal properties belonging
to PLDT since the latter could not have acquired ownership over such calls. PLDT
merely encodes, augments, enhances, decodes and transmits said calls using its
complex infrastructure and facilities."
In my view, it is essential to differentiate between the conversation of a caller and
recipient of the call, and the telephone service that made the call possible. Undoubtedly,
any conversation between or among individuals is theirs alone. For example, if two
children use two empty cans and a string as a makeshift play phone, they themselves
create their "phone call". However, if individuals separated by long distances use the
telephone and have a conversation through the telephone lines of the PLDT, then the
latter owns the service which made possible the resulting call. The conversation,
however, remains protected by our privacy laws.
Accordingly, I vote to GRANT the motion for reconsideration.
I do not have any substantive disagreements with the ponencia. I write separately
to esh out one of the key issues behind the Court's present disposition whether the
Philippine Long Distance Company (PLDT) can validly claim ownership over the
telephone calls made using its telephone services. As the subject Amended
Information had alleged that petitioners had "unlawfully and feloniously take, steal and
use the international long distance calls belonging to PLDT", said information could
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have been sustained only if its premise were accepted that PLDT indeed owned those
phone calls.
I.
It is best to begin with an overview of the facts that precede this case. Among
many other services, PLDT operates an International Gateway Facility (IGF), 1 through
which pass phone calls originating from overseas to local PLDT phones. However, there
exists a method of routing and completing international long distance calls called
International Simple Resale (ISR), which makes use of International Private Leased
Lines (IPL). Because IPL lines may be linked to switching equipment connected to a
PLDT phone line, it becomes possible to make an overseas phone call to the Philippines
without having to pass through the IGF. 2
Petitioner Laurel was, until November of 1999, the Corporate Secretary of Baynet
Co., Ltd. (Baynet), as well as a member of its Board of Directors. 3 Baynet was in the
business of selling phone cards to people who wished to call people in the Philippines.
Each phone card, which apparently was sold in Japan, contained an ISR telephone
number and a PIN. For the caller to use the phone card, he or she would dial the ISR
number indicated, and would be connected to an ISR operator. The caller would then
supply the ISR operator with the PIN, and the operator would then connect the caller
with the recipient of the call in the Philippines through the IPL lines. Because the IPL
Lines bypass the IGF, PLDT as operator of the IGF would have no way of knowing that
the long-distance call was being made. 4
Apparently, the coursing of long distance calls through ISR is not per se illegal.
For example, the Federal Communications Commission of the United States is
authorized by statute to approve long-distance calling through ISR for calls made to
certain countries, as it has done so with nations such as Australia, France and Japan. 5
However, as indicated by the Of ce of the Solicitor General's support for the subject
prosecution, there was no authority yet for the practice during the time of the subject
incidents.
Taking issue with this scheme, PLDT led a complaint against Baynet "for
network fraud". 6 A search warrant issued caused the seizure of various equipment
used in Baynet's operations. However, after the inquest investigation, the State
Prosecutor, on 28 January 2000, issued a Resolution nding probable cause "for theft
under Article 308" of the RPC and for violating Presidential Decree No. 401, a law which
criminalizes the installation of a telephone connection without the prior authority from
the PLDT, or the tampering of its lines. 7 However, when the Information was led
against petitioner with the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Makati on 8 February 2000, the
Information charged petitioner only with theft under Article 308 of the RPC . The
accusatory portion of the Amended Information reads as follows: HCTEDa
On or about September 10-19, 1999, or prior thereto, in Makati City, and within the
jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the accused, conspiring and confederating
together and all of them mutually helping and aiding one another, with intent to
gain and without the knowledge and consent of the Philippine Long Distance
Telephone (PLDT), did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously take,
steal and use the international long distance calls belonging to PLDT by
conducting International Simple Resale (ISR), which is a method of routing and
completing international long distance calls using lines, cables, antennae, and/or
air wave frequency which connect directly to the local or domestic exchange
facilities of the country where the call is destined, effectively stealing this
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business from PLDT while using its facilities in the estimated amount of
P20,370,651.92 to the damage and prejudice of PLDT, in the said amount. 8
Prior to arraignment, petitioner led a Motion to Quash on the ground that the
factual allegations in the Amended Information do not constitute the felony of theft
under Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code. He claimed, among others, that telephone
calls with the use of PLDT telephone lines, whether domestic or international, belong to
the persons making the call, not to PLDT. The RTC denied the Motion to Quash, and the
Court of Appeals affirmed the denial of the motion. However, in its Decision now sought
to be reconsidered the Court reversed the lower courts and directed the quashal of the
Amended Information.
II.
Preliminarily, it should be noted that among the myriad possible crimes with
which petitioner could have been charged, he was charged with theft, as de ned in the
RPC provision which has remained in its vestal 1930 form. Even our earlier Decision
now assailed pointed out that petitioner could have been charged instead with estafa
under the RPC, or with violation of the Access Devices Regulation Act of 1998. 9
Moreover, it appears that PLDT's original complaint was for "network fraud", and that
the State Prosecutor had initially recommended prosecution as well under P.D. 401, a
law speci cally designed against tampering with the phone service operations of PLDT.
Facially, it would appear that prosecution of petitioner under any of these other laws
would have been eminently more appropriate than the present recourse, which utilizes
the same provision used to penalize pickpockets.
But since the State has preferred to pursue this more cumbersome theory of the
case, we are now belabored to analyze whether the facts as alleged in the Amended
Information could somehow align with the statutory elements of theft under the RPC. cCSDTI
The crime of theft is penalized under Article 308 of the RPC. From that provision,
we have long recognized the following as the elements of theft: (1) that there be taking
of personal property; (2) that said property belongs to another; (3) that the taking be
done with intent to gain; (4) that the taking be done without the consent of the owner;
and (5) that the taking be accomplished without the use of violence against or
intimidation of persons or force upon things. 1 0
In analyzing whether the crime of theft had been committed given the allegations
in this case, it is against these ve elements that the facts must be tested. We can
agree outright that the "taking" alleged in this case was accomplished without the use
of violence against or intimidation of persons or force upon things. It can also be
conceded for now that the element of animo lucrandi, or intent to gain, does not bear
materiality to our present discussion and its existence may be presumed for the
moment.
Let us discuss the remaining elements of theft as they relate to the Amended
Information, and its contentious allegation that petitioner did "unlawfully and feloniously
take, steal and use the international long distance calls belonging to PLDT."
Are "international long distance calls" personal property? The assailed Decision
did not believe so, but I agree with the present Resolution that they are. The Court now
equates telephone calls to electrical energy. To be clear, telephone calls are not exactly
alike as pure electricity. They are sound waves (created by the human voice) which are
carried by electrical currents to the recipient on the other line. 11 While electricity is
merely the medium through which the telephone calls are carried, it is suf ciently
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analogous to allow the courts to consider such calls as possessing similar physical
characteristics as electricity.
The assailed Decision conceded that when a telephone call was made, "the
human voice [is] converted into electronic impulses or electrical current." 1 2 As the
Resolution now correctly points out, electricity or electronic energy may be the subject
of theft, as it is personal property capable of appropriation. Since physically a
telephone call is in the form of an electric signal, our jurisprudence acknowledging that
electricity is personal property which may be stolen through theft is applicable.
III.
I now turn to the issue of the legal ownership of the "international long distance
calls", or telephone calls in general for that matter. An examination of the physical
characteristics of telephone calls is useful for our purposes. ISTHED
As earlier stated, telephone calls take on the form of electrical current, though
they are distinguished from ordinary electricity in that they are augmented by the
human voice which is transmitted from one phone to another. A material inquiry is how
these calls are generated in the first place?
It bears significance that neither the RTC nor the Court of Appeals concluded that
PLDT owns the telephone calls. Instead, they concluded that PLDT owns the telephone
service, a position that is intellectually plausible, unlike the contention that PLDT owns
the actual calls themselves. Yet PLDT is willing to make the highly controversial claim
that it owns the phone calls, despite the absence of any reliable or neutral evidence to
that effect.
PLDT argues that it does not merely transmit the telephone calls but "actually
creates them". The claim should beggar belief, if only for the underlying implication that
if PLDT "creates" telephone calls, such calls can come into existence without the
participation of a caller, or a human voice for that matter.
Let us examine the analysis of the American law professors Benjamin, Lichtman
and Shelanski in their textbook Telecommunications Law and Policy . In illustrating the
"telephone system vocabulary", they offer the following discussion:
Consumers have in their homes standard equipment (like telephones) capable of
encoding and receiving voice communications. Businesses have similar basic
equipment. This equipment is what insiders call customer premises equipment,
which is abbreviated "CPE". The Telecommunications Act of 1996 de nes CPE as
"equipment employed on the premises of a person (other than a carrier) to
originate, route or terminate telecommunications." 47 U.S.C. 153(14). This
category, as implemented by the FCC, includes not only basic telephones but also
answering machines, fax machines, modems, and even private branch exchange
(PBX) equipment (in which a large entity maintains, in effect, its own switchboard
to various internal extensions). 1 3
It has been suggested that PLDT owns the phone calls because it is the entity
that encodes or decodes such calls even as they originate from a human voice. Yet it is
apparent from the above discussion that the device that encodes or decodes telephone
calls is the CPE, more particularly the telephone receiver. It is the telephone receiver,
which is in the possession of the telephone user, which generates the telephone call at
the initiative of the user. Now it is known from experience that while PLDT does offer its
subscribers the use of telephone receivers marked with the PLDT logo, subscribers are
free to go to Abenson and purchase a telephone receiver manufactured by an entity
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other than PLDT, such as Sony or Bell Siemens or Panasonic. Since such is the case, it
cannot be accurately said that the encoding or decoding of Philippine telephone calls is
done through the exclusive use of PLDT equipment, because the telephone receivers we
use are invariably purchased directly by the very same people who call or receive the
phone calls. IESDCH
It likewise appears from the particular facts of this case that some, if not many
of the phone calls alleged to have been stolen from PLDT were generated by calls
originating not from the Philippines, but from Japan. Assuming that the telephone
company exclusively generates the phone calls, those calls originating from Japan were
not generated by PLDT, but by KDDI, NTT, Japan Telecom, Verizon Japan, and all the
other long distance telephone service providers in Japan.
If PLDT were indeed the owner of the telephone calls, then it should be able to
demonstrate by which mode did it acquire ownership under the Civil Code. Under that
Code, ownership may be acquired by occupation, by intellectual creation, by law, by
donation, by testate and intestate succession, by prescription, and in consequence of
certain contracts, by tradition. 1 4 Under which mode of acquisition could PLDT deemed
as acquiring ownership over the telephone calls? We can exclude outright, without need
of discussion, such modes as testate and intestate succession, prescription, and
tradition. Neither can the case be made that telephone calls are susceptible to
intellectual creation. Donation should also be ruled out, since a donation must be
accepted in writing by the donee in order to become valid, and that obviously cannot
apply as to telephone calls.
Can telephone calls be acquired by "occupation"? According to Article 713,
properties which are acquired by occupation are "things appropriable by nature which
are without an owner, such as animals that are the object of hunting and shing, hidden
treasure and abandoned movables". It is not possible to establish a plausible analogy
between telephone calls and "animals that are the object of hunting or shing", or of
"hidden treasure" and of "abandoned movables".
Is it possible that PLDT somehow acquired ownership over the phone calls by
reason of law? No law vesting ownership over the phone calls to PLDT or any other
local telephone service provider is in existence.
All these points demonstrate the strained reasoning behind the claim that PLDT
owns the international long distance calls. Indeed, applying the traditional legal
paradigm that governs the regulation of telecommunications companies, it becomes
even clearer that PLDT cannot validly assert such ownership. Telephone companies
have historically been regulated as common carriers. 1 5 The 1936 Public Service Act
classi es wire or wireless communications systems as a "public service", along with
other common carriers. 1 6 In the United States, telephone providers were expressly
decreed to operate as common carriers in the Mann-Elkins Act of 1910, 1 7 utilizing an
analogy typically akin to the regulation of railroads. 1 8
CAIHaE
At the very least, it is clear that the caller or the recipient of the phone call has a
better right to assert ownership thereof than the telephone company. And critically, the
subject Amended Information does not allege that the "international long distance
calls" were taken without the consent of either the caller or the recipient.
I am thus hard pressed to conclude that the Amended Information as it stands
was able to allege one of the essential elements of the crime of theft, that the personal
property belonging to another was taken without the latter's consent. All the Amended
Information alleged was that the taking was without PLDT's consent, a moot point
considering that PLDT is most definitely not the owner of the phone calls.
The consensus of the majority has been to direct the amendment of the subject
Amended Information to sustain the current prosecution of the petitioners without
suggesting in any way that PLDT is the owner of those "international long distance
calls". Said result is acceptable to me, and I concur therein.
Footnotes
2. Id. at 57-58.
3. 15 Phil. 170 (1910).
Significantly, a prosecution under the law shall be without prejudice to any liability for
violation of any provisions of the Revised Penal Code inclusive of theft under Rule 308
of the Revised Penal Code and estafa under Article 315 of the Revised Penal Code. Thus,
if an individual steals a credit card and uses the same to obtain services, he is liable of
the following: theft of the credit card under Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code;
violation of Republic Act No. 8484; and estafa under Article 315 (2) (a) of the Revised
Penal Code with the service provider as the private complainant. The petitioner is not
charged of estafa before the RTC in the Amended Information." Laurel v. Abrogar, G.R.
155706, 27 February 2006, 483 SCRA 243.
10. See e.g., People v. Bustinera, G.R. No. 148233, 8 June 2004, 431 SCRA 284, 291; citing
People v. Sison, 322 SCRA 345, 363-364 (2000).
11. "When a person speaks into a telephone, the sound waves created by his voice enter the
mouthpiece. An electric current carries the sound to the telephone of the person he is
talking to." See How the Telephone Works, at
http://atcaonline.com/phone/telworks.html.
12. Id. at 273.
13. S. Benjamin, D. Lichtman & H. Shelanski, Telecommunications Law and Policy (2001
ed.), at 613.
14. See Article 712, Civil Code.
15. See Globe Telecom v. National Telecommunication Communications, G.R. No. 143964,
26 July 2004, 435 SCRA 110, 121; citing K. MIDDLETON, R. TRAGER & B. CHAMBERLIN,
THE LAW OF PUBLIC COMMUNICATION (5th ed., 2001), at 578; in turn citing 47 U.S.C.
Secs. 201, 202. CTHDcS