The Supreme Court upheld the conviction of Ricardo Bacabac and others for murder qualified by treachery. There was a dance hall altercation between two groups that resulted in one group member hitting another with a stick on the ear. Later that evening, when the two groups encountered each other again, Bacabac and Jose were carrying firearms while others had a piece of wood and revolver. Jose fired indiscriminately, killing one and injuring others. The Court found conspiracy between Bacabac and Jose as Bacabac failed to help victims after and only reported shooting later. It also rejected Bacabac's argument that he was carrying out duty as immediate vindication did not apply as offense on nephew was minor
The Supreme Court upheld the conviction of Ricardo Bacabac and others for murder qualified by treachery. There was a dance hall altercation between two groups that resulted in one group member hitting another with a stick on the ear. Later that evening, when the two groups encountered each other again, Bacabac and Jose were carrying firearms while others had a piece of wood and revolver. Jose fired indiscriminately, killing one and injuring others. The Court found conspiracy between Bacabac and Jose as Bacabac failed to help victims after and only reported shooting later. It also rejected Bacabac's argument that he was carrying out duty as immediate vindication did not apply as offense on nephew was minor
The Supreme Court upheld the conviction of Ricardo Bacabac and others for murder qualified by treachery. There was a dance hall altercation between two groups that resulted in one group member hitting another with a stick on the ear. Later that evening, when the two groups encountered each other again, Bacabac and Jose were carrying firearms while others had a piece of wood and revolver. Jose fired indiscriminately, killing one and injuring others. The Court found conspiracy between Bacabac and Jose as Bacabac failed to help victims after and only reported shooting later. It also rejected Bacabac's argument that he was carrying out duty as immediate vindication did not apply as offense on nephew was minor
The Supreme Court upheld the conviction of Ricardo Bacabac and others for murder qualified by treachery. There was a dance hall altercation between two groups that resulted in one group member hitting another with a stick on the ear. Later that evening, when the two groups encountered each other again, Bacabac and Jose were carrying firearms while others had a piece of wood and revolver. Jose fired indiscriminately, killing one and injuring others. The Court found conspiracy between Bacabac and Jose as Bacabac failed to help victims after and only reported shooting later. It also rejected Bacabac's argument that he was carrying out duty as immediate vindication did not apply as offense on nephew was minor
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BACABAC VS PEOPLE
Sept 11, 2007 | CARPIO-MORALES
P: Ricardo Bacabac R: People of the PH TOPIC: Mitigating Circumstance VINDICATION OF A WRONG FACTS RTC Convicted policeman Bacabac, Jose, Edzel, Jonathan, and Jesus of murder qualified by treachery. Evening of Dec 23, 1990: 2 groups of people were at a dance hall in Purok 4, San Joaquin, Iloilo City. - Group 1: Hernani Quidato (victim) and companions Eduardo and Melchor - Group 2: Jonathan and Edzel - Also at the dance hall: Jesus On their way home, the 2 groups encountered each other and had a misunderstanding. Jesus, also on his way home, witnessed the commotion - Saw that Melchor "hugging" Edzel, and "tying" Jonathan "with his hands." - Also saw the victim hit Edzel with a "stick." - He told Group 1 that Edzel is the son of Councilor Jose Talanquines, Jr. - Eduardo told Jesus to go away for they might shoot him - Jesus thus left and went to Edzel's residence to report to his father what he had witnessed. Edzel and Jonathan managed to flee. Group 1 headed back home but they again encountered Group 2. This time, Group 2 was with their uncle Ricardo Bacabac, Edzel's father, Jose, mother, and 2 sisters - Bacabac and Jose were carrying M-16 armalites, while Jonathan and Edzel were carrying a piece of wood and a revolver, respectively Jesus pointed to Group 1 and told Group 2 companions that they were the ones who manhandled Jonathan and Edzel. The victim apologized, explaining that he and his companions mistook Jonathan and Edzel for other persons.
Jesus blurted out: "You are just bragging that
you are brave. You are only bullying small children." THEN SHOOTING STARTED! Bacabac fired his armalite into the air. Jose also fired his armalite, but directed at Group 1, "as if spraying his rifle from right to left" - He hit Jonathan in the thigh as he moved to strike the victim with a piece of wood. - Eduardo and the victim fell. As the victim was raising his hands in surrender, Jose shot him again Melchor escaped. The victim, Eduardo, and Jonathan were brought to the hospital. - Victim pronounced DOA - Eduardo died 2 hours later RTC Convicted Bacabac, Jose, Edzel, Jonathan, and Jesus of murder qualified by treachery - But there is a mitigating circumstance o Immediate vindication for Jose and Jesus o Voluntary surrender for Bacabac Bacabac argues that there is no conspiracy to kill - He merely fired a warning shot into the air to respond to a public disturbance, to avert further acts of violence, in pursuance of his duty as police officer to keep peace in the community - There was no unity of purpose and execution. Witnesses said after Jose fired, Bacabac merely stood there, doing and saying nothing. Bacabac said this is because he was stunned by the events - Bacabac immediately reported the incident to their office - His action were not something a coconspirator would do - RTC gave credence to an improbable and unnatural scenario where the men let their daughters and wife become exposed to danger ISSUES 1. W/N there was conspiracy and treachery between Bacabac and Joses company YES
2. W/N the mitigating circumstance of
immediate vindication absolves him of liability NO HELD/RATIO 1. There was conspiracy because - Bacabacs failure to assist the victims after the shooting reinforces the conspiracy between him and his coaccused to harm the victims. That it was he who first officially reported the shooting to the police station does not make him any less a conspirator. - A conspirator who wants to free himself from criminal liability usually performs an overt act to dissociate or detach himself from the felony while the commission of the felony is in progress. o He only reported the shooting after it had taken place o Voluntary surrender and non-flight do not conclusively prove innocence. Once conspiracy is established, the act of one is the act of all even if not all actually hit and killed the victim
There was also treachery because victim
and companions had no chance to defend themselves were not armed, the attack was unexpected, and the victim already surrendered 2. Bacabacs invocation of the mitigating circumstance of immediate vindication of a grave offense fails because for it to be credited, the act should be committed in the immediate vindication of a grave offense to the one committing the felony, his spouse, ascendants, descendants, legitimate, natural or adopted brothers or sisters, or relatives by affinity within the same degree [RPC Article 13 (5)] - The offense committed on Edzel was "hitting" his ear with a stick (according to Jesus), a bamboo pole (according to Edzel). - By Edzel's own clarification, "he was hit at his ear, not on his head" NOT A GRAVE OFFENSE - Edzel is petitioner's nephew, hence, not a relative by affinity "within the same degree" PETITION DISMISSED