Mitigating Circumstances Flashcards
Mitigating Circumstances
Lesser perversity of the offender and has the effect of lowering the penalty
Classifications of mitigating circumstances
- Ordinary - lowers to the minimum period
- Privileged - lowers the imposable penalty whether divisible or indvisible, by one or more degrees
- Specific - applies to specific felony
What are the mitigating circumstances?
- Incomplete justifying/exempting circumstances
- Minority
- Praeter Intentionem
- Sufficient Provocation
- Immediate Vindication of a Grave Offense
- Passion and Obfuscation
- Voluntary Surrender
- Voluntary Plea of Guilt
- Physical defects/illness
- Analogous circumstances
Praeter Intentionem
Lack of intention to commit a grave a wrong as that committed. There should be a great disparity between the intent and the consequences. It cannot be invoked when the means employed would naturally result to the felony committed.
Sufficient Provocation
Requisites:
- Provocation must be sufficient.
- It must originate from the offended party.
- It must be immediate to the act.
Immediate Vindication of a Grave Offense
Any act or event which offends to the accused causing mental agony to him and moves him to vindicate himself of such offense.
The word offense should not be construed as
equivalent to crime
Passion and Obfuscation
To be mitigating, it must arise from the accused’s lawful sentiments and must be spur of the moment. The offended must have done an act unlawful and sufficient to excite passion or obfuscation on the part of the accused.
Voluntary Surrender
Elements:
- Offender surrendered to a person in authority or his agent
- Offender surrendered before arrest is affected.
- Surrender must be voluntary - spontaneous and deliberate
Voluntary Plea of Guilt
Elements:
- Should be made in an open court;
- Spontaneously and unconditionally
- Prior to the presentation of the evidence of the prosecution
It is mitigating because it is an act of repentance and respect for the law.
Physical defects and illness
Offender’s physical defect/illness must be related to the offense because the law requires that the defect has the effect of restricting his means of action, defense, or communication to his fellow beings, resulting in diminution of voluntariness. The illness/defect is a contributory cause to the offense.
Analogous Circumstances
Examples: 1. The act of the offender of leading the law enforcers to the place where he buried the instrument of the crime has been considered as equivalent to voluntary surrender.
- Voluntary restitution of property, similar
to voluntary surrender. - Outraged feeling of the owner of animal
taken for ransom is analogous to
vindication of grave offense