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US v. Ah Sing - Digest

Ah Sing, a Chinese fireman, was found with 8 cans of opium hidden on his ship that had arrived in Cebu, Philippines directly from Saigon. He admitted the opium was his but did not state why he bought it or his intentions. The court held that merely bringing prohibited drugs into port on a ship from a foreign country constitutes illegal importation under Philippine law. As Ah Sing's opium was not for personal use and he offered no other explanation, it was logically deduced that he intended to import the opium into the Philippines, making him guilty of illegal importation.

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100% found this document useful (3 votes)
2K views

US v. Ah Sing - Digest

Ah Sing, a Chinese fireman, was found with 8 cans of opium hidden on his ship that had arrived in Cebu, Philippines directly from Saigon. He admitted the opium was his but did not state why he bought it or his intentions. The court held that merely bringing prohibited drugs into port on a ship from a foreign country constitutes illegal importation under Philippine law. As Ah Sing's opium was not for personal use and he offered no other explanation, it was logically deduced that he intended to import the opium into the Philippines, making him guilty of illegal importation.

Uploaded by

Jilliane Oria
Copyright
© Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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CRIMINAL LAW REVIEW Case: THE UNITED STATES v. AH SING (G.R. No.

L-13005) Date: October 10, 1917 Ponente: J. Malcolm Facts: Ah Sing is a subject of China employed as a fireman on the steamship Shun Chang, a foreign steamer which arrived at the port of Cebu after a direct voyage from the port of Saigon. Ah Sing bought 8 cans of opium in Saigon, brought them on board and had them in his possession during the trip from Saigon to Cebu. When the steamer anchored in the port of Cebu, the authorities on making a search found the 8 cans of opium hidden in the ashes below the boiler of the steamers engine. Ah Sing confessed that the same was his but he did not say anything as to the purpose why he bought them nor did he say that it was his intention to import the prohibited drug. There is no other evidence, direct or indirect, to show that the intention of the accused was to illegally import the opium in the country. Issue: WON the crime of illegal importation can be proven against Ah Sing Held: It is to be noted that section 4 of Act No. 2381 begins, "Any person who shall unlawfully import or bring any prohibited drug into the Philippine Islands." "Import" and "bring" are synonymous terms. The Federal Courts of the United States have held that the mere act of going into a port, without breaking bulk, is prima facie evidence of importation. (The Mary [U. S.], 16 Fed. Cas., 932, 933.) And again, the importation is not the making entry of goods at the custom house, but merely the bringing them into port; and the importation is complete before entry of the Custom House. (U. S. vs. Lyman [U. S.], 26, Fed. Cas., 1024, 1028; Perots vs. U. S., 19 Fed. Cas., 258.) As applied to the Opium Law, the Court expressly hold that any person unlawfully imports or brings any prohibited drug into the Philippine Islands, when the prohibited drug is found under this person's control on a vessel which has come direct from a foreign country and is within the jurisdictional limits of the Philippine Islands. In such case, a person is guilty of illegal importation of the drug unless contrary circumstances exist or the defense proves otherwise. Applied to the facts herein, it would be absurd to think that the accused was merely carrying opium back and forth between Saigon and Cebu for the mere pleasure of so doing. It would likewise be impossible to conceive that the accused needed so large an amount of opium for his personal use. No better explanation being possible, the logical deduction is that the defendant intended this opium to be brought into the Philippine Islands. Therefore, the Court accordingly found that there was illegal importation of opium from a foreign country into the Philippine Islands. To anticipate any possible misunderstanding, let it be said that these statements do not relate to foreign vessels in transit, a situation not present. NOTE: The court looked into and differentiated this case from the Look Chaw case. In the Look Chaw case, the charges were illegal possession and sale of opium, the foreign vessel was in transit and the opium was landed from the vessel upon the Philippine soil. In the present case, the charge was illegal importation of opium, foreign vessel was not in transit and the opium was not landed in the Philippine soil. Also, in US vs. Jose (34 Phil. 840), the defendants in the case were acquitted since the drug was not proven to be imported although found in the vessel. The obiter dicta in that case was used in the present case, i.e. the importation was complete, it was not necessary that the opium discharge or that it be taken from the ship, it was sufficient that the opium was brought into the waters of the Philippine Islands on a boat destined for a Philippine Port and which subsequently anchored in a port of the Philippine Islands with intent to discharge its cargo.

JJMO

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