The dismissal of a criminal case in the Philippines is one of the most important and most misunderstood aspects of criminal procedure. Many people assume that a criminal case may be “dropped” merely because the complainant changed his mind, because the accused apologized, because the parties settled, or because the prosecutor no longer appears interested. In Philippine law, that is not how criminal prosecution generally works.
A criminal case, once commenced, is not simply a private dispute between complainant and accused. It is a prosecution in the name of the People of the Philippines. For that reason, dismissal is governed not by personal preference alone, but by constitutional rights, procedural rules, prosecutorial authority, judicial power, and the nature of the offense charged.
This article discusses, in Philippine context, the concept of dismissal of a criminal case, the major grounds for dismissal, the stages at which dismissal may occur, the difference between dismissal and acquittal, the role of the prosecutor and the court, the rights of the accused, the effect of provisional and permanent dismissals, the relevance of double jeopardy, and the procedural routes by which a criminal case may be terminated before judgment.
1. What “dismissal of a criminal case” means
A criminal case is dismissed when the case is terminated without a judgment of conviction, and without proceeding to final adjudication on the merits in the ordinary course. But not all dismissals are alike.
A dismissal may be:
- before filing in court,
- after filing but before arraignment,
- after arraignment,
- during trial,
- after the prosecution rests,
- or on appeal in proper cases.
A dismissal may also be:
- with prejudice,
- without prejudice,
- provisional,
- jurisdictional,
- constitutional,
- or based on insufficiency of the prosecution’s evidence.
These distinctions matter because some dismissals allow refiling, while others permanently bar a new prosecution.
2. The basic structure of a criminal case before dismissal is considered
To understand dismissal, one must understand how a Philippine criminal case moves:
- a complaint or report is made;
- the prosecutor conducts preliminary investigation, if required;
- the prosecutor resolves whether probable cause exists;
- the information is filed in court;
- the judge independently determines whether to issue a warrant or otherwise proceed;
- the accused is arraigned;
- pre-trial and trial are conducted;
- judgment is rendered.
Dismissal may happen at different points in this sequence, and the applicable grounds differ depending on the stage.
3. Dismissal before filing in court: no information filed yet
Strictly speaking, before the information is filed in court, there is not yet a criminal case in the judicial sense. But in practice, people often say a “case was dismissed” when the prosecutor rejects the complaint during preliminary investigation.
At that stage, the matter may be terminated because:
- no probable cause exists;
- the complaint is insufficient in form or substance;
- the respondent is not probably guilty;
- the facts do not constitute an offense;
- the evidence is inadequate;
- there are jurisdictional defects;
- the criminal action has prescribed;
- or legal bars to prosecution already exist.
This is more accurately a dismissal or termination at the prosecutorial level, not yet a court dismissal of the criminal case proper.
4. The role of the prosecutor in seeking dismissal
The public prosecutor has control of the prosecution of criminal actions. This means the prosecutor evaluates:
- whether probable cause exists,
- whether the information should be filed,
- whether amendment is necessary,
- and in many instances whether there is basis to move for dismissal after filing.
But once the case is already in court, the prosecutor does not have unilateral power to terminate it by mere choice. The court must act.
Thus, even if the prosecutor files a motion to dismiss, the judge must independently determine whether dismissal is proper.
5. The role of the court in dismissal
The court is not a passive recorder of prosecutorial wishes. Once a criminal action is filed, the court acquires jurisdiction and must determine whether dismissal is consistent with law and due process.
The judge may:
- grant dismissal,
- deny dismissal,
- require further proceedings,
- direct amendment where appropriate,
- or in some situations dismiss on the court’s own motion when the defect is clear and fundamental.
The court’s ruling depends on the ground invoked and the procedural posture of the case.
6. The most important distinction: dismissal versus acquittal
This distinction is fundamental.
Dismissal
A dismissal ends the case, but not all dismissals amount to an adjudication that the accused is not guilty.
Acquittal
An acquittal is a judgment that the prosecution failed to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt, or that the accused is not criminally liable.
Some dismissals have the practical effect of an acquittal, especially when they occur after jeopardy has attached and the dismissal is based on insufficiency of evidence or on grounds that bar reprosecution. Other dismissals do not.
This distinction matters because of double jeopardy.
7. Dismissal before arraignment
Before arraignment, dismissal is usually easier to obtain than after arraignment, because jeopardy has not yet attached. At this stage, common grounds include:
- lack of jurisdiction over the subject matter;
- lack of jurisdiction over the person where properly raised and unresolved;
- invalid information;
- failure of the information to charge an offense;
- absence of authority of the officer who filed the information;
- extinction of criminal liability;
- prescription of the offense;
- bar by prior judgment;
- bar by prior acquittal or conviction;
- immunity or similar legal defense where clear;
- denial of due process in preliminary proceedings in a manner affecting validity;
- and other grounds allowed by the Rules of Court.
Many of these are raised through a motion to quash.
8. Motion to quash as a principal remedy
The motion to quash is one of the main procedural vehicles for dismissal of a criminal case before plea. It attacks the information on specific legal grounds.
A motion to quash does not ordinarily dispute guilt or innocence. Instead, it argues that the criminal charge is legally defective or barred.
Common grounds for a motion to quash include:
- the facts charged do not constitute an offense;
- the court trying the case has no jurisdiction over the offense charged;
- the court has no jurisdiction over the person of the accused;
- the officer who filed the information had no authority to do so;
- the information does not substantially conform to the prescribed form;
- more than one offense is charged, except when a single punishment for various offenses is prescribed by law;
- the criminal action or liability has been extinguished;
- the averments, if true, would constitute a legal excuse or justification;
- the accused has previously been convicted or acquitted of the offense charged, or the case against him was dismissed or otherwise terminated without his express consent after jeopardy attached;
- and the offense has prescribed.
These are among the classic grounds recognized in Philippine criminal procedure.
9. Failure of the information to charge an offense
One of the most important grounds for quashal is that the facts alleged do not constitute an offense.
This means that even if all allegations are hypothetically admitted, they still do not amount to the crime charged or to any punishable offense. The deficiency may arise because:
- an essential element is missing;
- the acts alleged are not criminal;
- the law cited does not apply to the facts stated;
- or the information is fatally vague as to the criminal act.
A defective information may sometimes be amended rather than dismissed permanently, depending on the nature of the defect and the stage of the proceedings.
10. Lack of jurisdiction over the offense
If the court has no jurisdiction over the offense charged, dismissal is proper. Jurisdiction over the subject matter is conferred by law and cannot be cured by consent.
Examples in principle include:
- filing in a court not empowered by law to try the offense;
- errors in selecting the proper court level;
- or charging a matter in a forum lacking criminal jurisdiction over the offense.
A case dismissed for lack of jurisdiction is generally not an acquittal on the merits, and the case may often be refiled in the proper court if no other bar exists.
11. Lack of jurisdiction over the person of the accused
Jurisdiction over the person of the accused is generally acquired by arrest or by voluntary appearance. If the accused properly raises the absence of such jurisdiction before submitting to the court’s authority beyond the limited purpose of objection, the proceedings may be challenged.
However, this ground is often technical and may be waived or overtaken by events if not timely and properly raised.
12. Lack of authority of the officer filing the information
The information must be filed by a duly authorized prosecutor or officer empowered by law and rule. If filed by one without legal authority, the information may be quashed.
This is not a trivial defect because criminal prosecution in court requires proper prosecutorial authority. Still, such defects may in some cases be corrected before final termination if timely addressed.
13. Information does not substantially conform to prescribed form
The information must comply with the rules as to form and substance. It must sufficiently state:
- the name of the accused;
- the designation of the offense;
- the acts or omissions complained of as constituting the offense;
- the name of the offended party when required;
- the approximate date of commission;
- and the place where the offense was committed, where relevant.
If the information is so defective that it prejudices the accused’s right to be informed of the accusation, dismissal or quashal may be warranted. Minor formal defects, however, are often cured by amendment.
14. Duplicity of offenses
A single information should generally charge only one offense, unless the law prescribes a single punishment for various offenses.
If more than one offense is improperly charged in one information, the accused may seek quashal on the ground of duplicity. This is a procedural defect designed to protect fairness and clarity in criminal accusation.
However, duplicity does not always result in final dismissal of the entire prosecution; amendment or election may sometimes solve the problem.
15. Extinction of criminal liability
A criminal case may be dismissed when criminal liability has been extinguished. This may happen through causes recognized by law, such as:
- death of the accused in proper contexts;
- service of sentence where relevant to liability already adjudged;
- amnesty;
- absolute pardon in proper cases and in its proper legal effect;
- prescription of the crime;
- prescription of the penalty where relevant;
- or other causes recognized by law.
The exact effect depends on the nature of the extinguishing circumstance and the stage of the case.
16. Prescription of the offense
Prescription is a major ground for dismissal. If the offense has prescribed before institution or before valid prosecution, the criminal action can no longer proceed.
Prescription depends on:
- the nature of the offense,
- the governing penal statute,
- the period fixed by law,
- when the period began to run,
- whether it was interrupted,
- and whether it resumed.
Prescription issues can be highly technical. A successful claim of prescription can permanently bar prosecution.
17. Legal excuse or justification appearing on the face of the information
If the averments in the information themselves show a legal excuse or justification, a motion to quash may lie.
This means that even accepting the facts alleged, the acts would be legally justified or excused. This is relatively uncommon at the facial level because most justifications are factual matters for trial, but when the information itself discloses the defense unmistakably, dismissal may be proper.
18. Double jeopardy as a ground for dismissal
A criminal case may be dismissed when prosecution is barred by double jeopardy.
Double jeopardy prohibits putting a person twice in jeopardy of punishment for the same offense once the legal requirements for prior jeopardy are present.
In general terms, jeopardy attaches when:
- a valid complaint or information exists;
- the court has jurisdiction;
- the accused has been arraigned and has pleaded;
- and the accused was acquitted, convicted, or the case was dismissed or terminated without his express consent.
If these requisites are met, a new prosecution for the same offense, or for an offense necessarily including or included in it in the proper sense, may be barred.
This is one of the strongest grounds for dismissal because it arises from constitutional protection.
19. When jeopardy attaches
Jeopardy does not attach at the mere filing of the information. Arraignment and plea are crucial. Before that point, many dismissals do not bar refiling because there has been no first jeopardy.
Once arraignment and plea occur before a competent court upon a valid charge, the accused enters the zone of constitutional protection against repeated prosecution.
20. Dismissal with the express consent of the accused
A dismissal sought by or expressly consented to by the accused usually does not bar reprosecution, because it generally falls outside double jeopardy protection. The theory is that the accused himself asked for the termination before verdict.
But this principle has important exceptions. Some dismissals sought by the accused still operate as acquittals in substance, such as:
- dismissal on demurrer to evidence for insufficiency of evidence,
- dismissal on the ground of denial of the right to speedy trial,
- and certain dismissals based on constitutional bars.
Thus, consent of the accused is not always the end of the analysis.
21. Dismissal without the express consent of the accused
If, after jeopardy has attached, the case is dismissed without the accused’s express consent, reprosecution may be barred. This is one of the classic forms of double jeopardy.
The reason is that the State had its chance and the case was terminated without the accused choosing that outcome.
22. Provisional dismissal
Philippine criminal procedure recognizes provisional dismissal in proper cases. This is a dismissal that does not immediately and absolutely bar revival, but only under certain conditions and within certain periods.
A provisional dismissal typically requires:
- express consent of the accused, and
- notice to the offended party.
Its significance lies in the rule that revival is not indefinite. If the case is not revived within the period fixed by law and rule, the dismissal may ripen into a bar to further prosecution.
This is a technical and highly important mode of termination.
23. Effect of provisional dismissal
A provisional dismissal is not the same as an acquittal. Initially, it leaves the possibility of revival. But if the State fails to revive within the allowed period, the accused may then invoke the dismissal as a bar.
The applicable time periods depend on the penalty of the offense under the governing rule.
Thus, a provisional dismissal is temporary in form but may become permanent in effect if the prosecution remains inactive too long.
24. Demurrer to evidence as a route to dismissal
After the prosecution rests, the accused may file a demurrer to evidence, arguing that the prosecution’s evidence is insufficient to sustain conviction.
This is a pivotal procedure. If the court grants the demurrer, the case is dismissed on the ground of insufficiency of evidence. That dismissal is effectively an acquittal and bars appeal by the prosecution, subject only to very narrow exceptions involving grave abuse in extraordinary proceedings.
A granted demurrer is one of the strongest final terminations of a criminal case.
25. Demurrer with leave and without leave
A demurrer may be filed:
- with prior leave of court, or
- without leave.
The procedural consequences differ, particularly if the demurrer is denied. If filed without leave and denied, the accused may be deemed to have waived the presentation of evidence, and the case may be decided on the basis of the prosecution’s evidence alone.
This does not directly define dismissal, but it is crucial strategy in seeking one.
26. Dismissal on the ground of insufficiency of evidence
Insufficiency of evidence may lead to dismissal most classically through a demurrer after the prosecution rests, but may also arise in other legally appropriate contexts where the prosecution’s case cannot stand.
Such a dismissal generally amounts to an acquittal because it rests on failure of proof. It therefore carries the protection of double jeopardy.
27. Dismissal because of denial of the right to speedy trial
The constitutional right to speedy trial can be a basis for dismissal. If the accused is denied this right, the case may be dismissed.
A dismissal on this ground is significant because, although often initiated by the accused, it generally bars reprosecution. The reason is that the dismissal enforces a constitutional right and functions in substance like a final termination against the State’s oppressive delay.
The analysis of speedy trial is not mechanical. Courts consider factors such as:
- length of delay,
- reasons for delay,
- assertion of the right by the accused,
- and prejudice to the accused.
28. Dismissal because of violation of the right to speedy disposition of cases
Closely related but broader is the constitutional right to speedy disposition of cases. This right may be invoked not only in court proceedings but also in preliminary investigation and other stages of prosecution.
Where inordinate and unjustified delay violates this right, the case may be dismissed. Depending on the circumstances and the stage, such dismissal may bar further prosecution.
This has become one of the most discussed constitutional grounds for termination of criminal proceedings.
29. Distinguishing speedy trial from speedy disposition
The two rights are related but not identical.
Speedy trial
Applies more specifically to judicial proceedings after the case reaches court.
Speedy disposition of cases
Is broader and may apply to prosecutorial and quasi-judicial processes as well.
Both can lead to dismissal, but the doctrinal framing differs.
30. Dismissal due to unconstitutional delay in preliminary investigation
If prosecutorial proceedings are unreasonably and unjustifiably delayed, the respondent may seek dismissal on constitutional grounds. The argument is not merely technical inconvenience but a denial of due process and of the constitutional right to prompt disposition.
Where the delay is egregious and prejudicial, the criminal case may be dismissed even if already filed.
31. Dismissal because the facts do not support probable cause
At different stages, the issue of probable cause may support dismissal or withdrawal. Before filing, the prosecutor may reject the case. After filing, the prosecutor may seek withdrawal if reevaluation shows lack of probable cause. The judge, however, makes the final determination whether dismissal is warranted once the case is in court.
A judge is not bound by the prosecutor’s change of view, but must independently evaluate the motion.
32. Withdrawal of information versus dismissal
These are often confused.
Withdrawal of information
Usually refers to the prosecutor’s request, after filing, to withdraw the information on grounds such as lack of probable cause or reevaluation of the evidence.
Dismissal
Is the court’s act terminating the case.
A prosecutor may ask for withdrawal, but only the court can dismiss.
33. Dismissal when complainant desists
The desistance of the complainant does not automatically dismiss a criminal case. This is a critical rule in Philippine criminal law.
Because crimes are generally offenses against the State, the prosecution may continue even if the complainant:
- forgives the accused,
- executes an affidavit of desistance,
- refuses to testify,
- or wants the case dropped.
An affidavit of desistance may affect the evidentiary strength of the prosecution, but it does not by itself extinguish criminal liability or compel dismissal.
34. Affidavit of desistance: real effect
An affidavit of desistance may matter if:
- it undermines the prosecution’s evidence,
- it reveals serious doubt on the truth of prior accusations,
- or it becomes part of a broader reassessment of probable cause.
Still, courts treat such affidavits cautiously because they may be motivated by intimidation, settlement, or pressure. They are not automatically credited and do not automatically require dismissal.
35. Compromise or settlement as ground for dismissal
As a general rule, crimes are not extinguished by private compromise. But there are exceptions depending on the nature of the offense.
Some offenses are essentially private in character or subject to special rules. Others may have civil aspects that can be settled without eliminating criminal liability. In some cases, compromise may affect the willingness of the offended party to pursue the matter, but not the State’s authority to prosecute.
One must distinguish:
- offenses that can still be criminally pursued despite settlement;
- offenses where pardon or forgiveness has legal effect under special rules;
- and civil liabilities that may be settled separately.
36. Private crimes and dismissal
Certain offenses historically treated as private crimes involve special rules on who may institute them and how pardon or consent may affect them. In those cases, the offended party’s acts may have special significance.
But even here, the rules are technical. One should never assume that all crimes become dismissible merely because the offended party forgave the accused.
37. Death of the accused
The death of the accused has major effects.
If the accused dies before final judgment, criminal liability is generally extinguished. This can lead to dismissal of the criminal case.
The effect on civil liability depends on the nature and source of the civil action. Civil liability ex delicto is affected differently from independent civil actions based on other sources of obligation.
This is a subject of major doctrinal importance.
38. Death of the complainant or offended party
The death of the complainant or offended party does not automatically dismiss the criminal case. Since the action is prosecuted in the name of the People, the prosecution may continue if the offense and the available evidence allow it.
Of course, the practical effect on proof may be significant, especially if the complainant was a key witness.
39. Amnesty, pardon, and similar acts
Amnesty may extinguish criminal liability and support dismissal where applicable. Its effect is broader and more obliterative than ordinary pardon.
Pardon, on the other hand, has its own legal effects and limitations. Whether it bars prosecution, extinguishes penalty, or affects accessory consequences depends on the type of pardon, timing, and governing law.
These grounds are special and must be carefully distinguished.
40. Dismissal because of invalid arrest
An invalid arrest does not automatically dismiss the criminal case. This is an area of frequent confusion.
Illegal arrest may affect the legality of detention and may require timely objection. But once the court acquires jurisdiction and the accused enters plea without properly preserving the objection, the defect may be deemed waived.
Thus, unlawful arrest does not necessarily nullify the information itself.
41. Dismissal because of absence or irregularity of preliminary investigation
The absence or irregularity of preliminary investigation does not automatically warrant dismissal. The usual remedy is to ask for preliminary investigation or for remand to allow it, if the right was denied in a timely manner.
It is generally not a jurisdictional defect that permanently bars prosecution. It is more often a correctable procedural issue.
42. Dismissal because evidence was illegally obtained
The mere existence of illegally obtained evidence does not automatically require dismissal of the criminal case. What usually follows is exclusion of the inadmissible evidence. If, after exclusion, the prosecution no longer has sufficient proof, dismissal or acquittal may result. But the direct legal consequence is ordinarily suppression or exclusion, not automatic dismissal.
43. Dismissal because of unconstitutional statute
If the penal statute under which the accused is charged is unconstitutional, the criminal case cannot stand and dismissal is proper. A prosecution cannot rest on an invalid law.
This is a rare but fundamental ground because it attacks the very legal basis of the charge.
44. Dismissal because the act is not punishable under the law in force
If intervening legal developments decriminalize the act, or the act does not fall within the scope of the penal law as properly interpreted, dismissal may be proper. This may occur through:
- statutory repeal or amendment,
- constitutional invalidation,
- or authoritative interpretation showing non-criminality.
45. Dismissal after plea and before prosecution rests
At this stage, dismissal becomes more sensitive because jeopardy may already have attached. Grounds may include:
- constitutional violations such as speedy trial;
- lack of jurisdiction discovered later;
- bar by double jeopardy;
- invalid or void information in a manner affecting validity;
- or prosecutorial inability to proceed in circumstances warranting dismissal.
The effect of dismissal at this stage depends heavily on whether the accused consented and on the nature of the ground.
46. Dismissal after the prosecution has rested
Once the prosecution has finished presenting evidence, the principal procedural tool for dismissal is the demurrer to evidence. If granted, the case ends in what is functionally an acquittal.
At this stage, dismissal is no longer merely technical. It reflects the inadequacy of the State’s proof.
47. Court-initiated dismissal
In certain cases, the court may dismiss on its own initiative where a fundamental defect is patent, such as:
- clear lack of jurisdiction,
- manifest invalidity of the information,
- patent bar by prior judgment,
- or other grounds apparent on the face of the record.
However, because criminal cases implicate both public interest and due process, courts generally act with caution and usually after hearing the parties.
48. Effect of dismissal on civil liability
The effect of dismissal on civil liability depends on the basis of dismissal.
If the dismissal amounts to acquittal because guilt was not proven beyond reasonable doubt, civil liability may still in some instances be considered depending on the nature of the civil action and the findings of the court.
If the dismissal is based on a ground showing that the act did not exist or the accused did not commit it, the implications differ.
If the dismissal occurs before adjudication and without prejudice, civil claims based on other sources of obligation may still exist independently.
One must carefully distinguish:
- civil liability arising from the crime,
- independent civil actions,
- and civil liability based on contract, law, quasi-delict, or other sources.
49. Dismissal with prejudice and without prejudice
With prejudice
The case is terminated permanently and cannot be refiled.
Without prejudice
The case may be refiled if the defect is cured and no constitutional or statutory bar exists.
The wording of the order matters, but the true effect depends on law, not on labels alone. A court cannot make a dismissal “without prejudice” if constitutional double jeopardy already bars reprosecution.
50. Refiling after dismissal
A criminal case may often be refiled when dismissal occurred:
- before jeopardy attached,
- because of curable defects,
- because of lack of jurisdiction,
- because of defective information,
- or because the dismissal was expressly without prejudice and no constitutional bar exists.
But refiling is barred when dismissal amounts to acquittal, when double jeopardy applies, or when the offense is already prescribed or liability otherwise extinguished.
51. Remedies against an improper dismissal
If the prosecution believes dismissal was improper, the available remedies depend on whether the dismissal is equivalent to acquittal.
If it is a true acquittal, appeal is generally barred because of double jeopardy. Only narrow extraordinary remedies may sometimes be invoked where the court acted without jurisdiction or with grave abuse amounting to lack of due process, and even these are strictly limited.
If the dismissal is not an acquittal and does not trigger double jeopardy, the State may pursue the proper remedy under the rules.
52. Remedies of the accused when dismissal is wrongly denied
If the accused believes dismissal should have been granted, the usual course is to continue litigating and raise the issue through the proper remedy at the proper time, unless extraordinary circumstances justify immediate recourse. The availability of special civil actions depends on the nature of the alleged error and whether there is grave abuse of discretion.
53. Practical grounds most often invoked in real cases
In actual practice, the most frequently litigated grounds for dismissal include:
- absence of probable cause;
- insufficiency of evidence;
- defective information;
- lack of jurisdiction;
- prescription;
- double jeopardy;
- violation of the right to speedy disposition of cases;
- violation of the right to speedy trial;
- extinction of criminal liability;
- and provisional dismissal not timely revived.
These are the grounds that most often determine whether a case survives.
54. Common misconceptions
“If the complainant withdraws, the case is automatically dismissed.”
Incorrect. Crimes are generally prosecuted in the name of the People, not solely at the complainant’s option.
“If the accused files the motion to dismiss, the case can always be refiled.”
Not always. Some dismissals sought by the accused, such as on demurrer to evidence or speedy trial grounds, bar reprosecution.
“A defective preliminary investigation voids the whole case forever.”
Usually not. The defect is often curable and does not always require permanent dismissal.
“Illegal arrest means automatic dismissal.”
Incorrect. It may affect detention and require timely objection, but does not by itself always nullify the case.
“Dismissal and acquittal are the same.”
Not always. Some dismissals are temporary or technical; others are equivalent to acquittal.
55. Strategic importance of timing
Timing is often decisive in criminal dismissal.
- Before arraignment, the accused may use a motion to quash.
- After arraignment, constitutional bars and jeopardy become central.
- After the prosecution rests, demurrer to evidence becomes critical.
- During delays, speedy trial or speedy disposition claims may emerge.
- In long-dormant cases, provisional dismissal and prescription may become important.
The same legal problem may have different consequences depending on when it is raised.
56. The prosecutor, the offended party, and the accused do not control dismissal equally
A criminal case is not dismissed merely because one side wants it dismissed.
- The complainant cannot usually terminate it unilaterally.
- The prosecutor controls prosecution but still needs judicial action once the case is in court.
- The accused may invoke defenses and constitutional rights, but must do so in the proper mode and stage.
- The court makes the binding determination on dismissal once the case is pending before it.
This balance reflects the public nature of criminal prosecution.
57. The constitutional dimension of dismissal
Some grounds for dismissal are merely procedural; others are constitutional. The constitutional grounds are the most powerful because they implicate:
- due process,
- double jeopardy,
- speedy trial,
- speedy disposition of cases,
- and the right to be informed of the accusation.
A dismissal grounded on constitutional violation is often more final and more resistant to reprosecution than one based on curable technical defects.
58. Best doctrinal summary
A proper doctrinal summary would be this:
A criminal case in the Philippines may be dismissed before or after filing, before or after arraignment, or during trial, on grounds including defects in the information, lack of jurisdiction, absence of authority of the prosecutor, duplicity, extinction of criminal liability, prescription, legal justification apparent on the face of the charge, double jeopardy, denial of speedy trial or speedy disposition, insufficiency of evidence, and other constitutional or procedural bars. The mode and effect of dismissal depend on the stage of the case and on whether jeopardy has attached. Some dismissals are provisional or without prejudice and permit refiling; others operate as acquittals or otherwise bar further prosecution.
59. Conclusion
The dismissal of a criminal case in the Philippines is not a single doctrine but a network of doctrines governed by the Rules of Criminal Procedure, constitutional protections, prosecutorial authority, and judicial control. The grounds range from technical defects in the information to profound constitutional bars like double jeopardy and denial of speedy disposition. The procedure also changes sharply depending on timing: before plea, the motion to quash is central; after the prosecution rests, the demurrer to evidence becomes decisive; throughout the proceedings, constitutional violations may justify termination.
The most important principles to remember are these: first, not every dismissal is an acquittal; second, not every defect results in permanent termination; third, once jeopardy attaches, the effect of dismissal becomes much more serious; and fourth, the complainant’s desistance or private settlement does not ordinarily control the fate of a criminal prosecution.
In Philippine criminal procedure, the true legal question is never simply whether the case can be “dropped.” The real question is on what ground, at what stage, through what procedure, and with what effect on the power of the State to prosecute again.
I can also turn this into a more formal law-review style article with rule-based subheadings, or into a bar-reviewer format with codal grounds, distinctions, and procedural flowcharts.