Ricardo Agliday shot and killed his son Richard with a shotgun during a quarrel with his wife Conchita over his drinking habits. Agliday claimed it was an accident while he was cleaning the shotgun, but the court ruled his acts of cocking the shotgun and firing it at his son showed clear intent rather than a lawful accident. As firing the shotgun at his son was an unlawful act, Agliday could not claim the exemption of accident. The court affirmed the guilty verdict of parricide and sentenced Agliday to reclusion perpetua with indemnification of 50,000 pesos to the victim's heirs.
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Ricardo Agliday shot and killed his son Richard with a shotgun during a quarrel with his wife Conchita over his drinking habits. Agliday claimed it was an accident while he was cleaning the shotgun, but the court ruled his acts of cocking the shotgun and firing it at his son showed clear intent rather than a lawful accident. As firing the shotgun at his son was an unlawful act, Agliday could not claim the exemption of accident. The court affirmed the guilty verdict of parricide and sentenced Agliday to reclusion perpetua with indemnification of 50,000 pesos to the victim's heirs.
Ricardo Agliday shot and killed his son Richard with a shotgun during a quarrel with his wife Conchita over his drinking habits. Agliday claimed it was an accident while he was cleaning the shotgun, but the court ruled his acts of cocking the shotgun and firing it at his son showed clear intent rather than a lawful accident. As firing the shotgun at his son was an unlawful act, Agliday could not claim the exemption of accident. The court affirmed the guilty verdict of parricide and sentenced Agliday to reclusion perpetua with indemnification of 50,000 pesos to the victim's heirs.
Copyright:
Attribution Non-Commercial (BY-NC)
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Ricardo Agliday shot and killed his son Richard with a shotgun during a quarrel with his wife Conchita over his drinking habits. Agliday claimed it was an accident while he was cleaning the shotgun, but the court ruled his acts of cocking the shotgun and firing it at his son showed clear intent rather than a lawful accident. As firing the shotgun at his son was an unlawful act, Agliday could not claim the exemption of accident. The court affirmed the guilty verdict of parricide and sentenced Agliday to reclusion perpetua with indemnification of 50,000 pesos to the victim's heirs.
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PEOPLE V.
AGLIDAY, 367 SCRA 273 (2001)
FACTS: On the evening of February 25, 1999 at about 8:00 o'clock, Ricardo Agliday and his wife Conchita were quarreling over her working as a laundrywoman and his liquor drinking habit. While they were quarreling, their son Richard intervened and tried to pacify his father who was under the influence of liquor. Apparently angered and not listening to his son, he proceeded inside their bedroom and took his gun and thereafter shot his son Richard . After seeing her son being shot by her husband, Conchita ran outside and called for help. The son died in the emergency room. The medico-legal officer found a gunshot wound in the buttock of the victim. CRIME COMMITTED: Parricide CONTENTION OF THE ACCUSED: Accused contends that he should be acquitted on the basis of the exempting circumstance of accident under Article 12 (paragraph 4) of the Revised Penal Code. According to him, he was cleaning the shotgun that he would have used for the evening patrol with other barangay tanods when he accidentally touched the trigger and hit Richard, who was going up the stairs into the house with Conchita. Appellant also contends that since he was only negligent, he should have been convicted, not of parricide, but only of reckless imprudence resulting in homicide. RULING: Before the accused may be exempted from criminal liability by reason of Article 12 (paragraph 4), the following elements must concur: (1) a person is performing a lawful act (2) with due care, and (3) he causes an injury to another by mere accident and (4) without any fault or intention of causing it. For an accident to become an exempting circumstance, the act has to be lawful. The act of firing a shotgun at another is not a lawful act. An accident is an occurrence that "happens outside the sway of our will, and although it comes about through some act of our will, lies beyond the bounds of humanly foreseeable consequences."It connotes the absence of criminal intent. Intent is a mental state, the existence of which is shown by a person's overt acts. In the case at bar, appellant got his shotgun and returned to the kitchen to shoot his son, who had intervened in the quarrel between the former and Conchita. It must also be pointed out that the firearm was a shotgun that would not have fired off without first being cocked. Undoubtedly, appellant cocked the shotgun before discharging it, showing a clear intent to fire it at someone. Appellant's external acts prove malice or criminal intent. A deliberate intent to do an unlawful act is inconsistent with reckless imprudence. WHEREFORE, the appeal is hereby DENIED and the assailed Decision AFFIRMED. The court finds the accused Ricardo T. Agliday guilty beyond reasonable doubt of parricide and hereby sentenced to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua and to indemnify the heirs of the victim in the amount of fifty thousand pesos (50,000.00)
II. The Court of Appeals Erred in Finding That There Can Be No Valid Partition Among The Heirs of The Late Efraim Santibañez Until After The Will Has Been Probated