Medico Legal Aspect of Death
Medico Legal Aspect of Death
Medico Legal Aspect of Death
SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC
G.R. No. L-21969
SECOND DIVISION
G.R. No. 72025 June 30, 1988
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs.
CARLOS COLINARES Y SOLMERANO alias Caloy (ARRESTED) &
ERNANI BASAYSAY alias Dominador Italia y Plofino--(AT
LARGE), accused-appellants.
The Solicitor General for plaintiff-appellee.
Antonio F. Dasalla for accussed-appellant.
PARAS, J.:
Carlos Colinares y Solmerano and Ernani Basaysay alias Dominador
Italia y Plofino were charged before the Regional Trial Court, Quezon
City with the crime of murder allegedly committed as follows:
That on or about the 29th day of November, 1981,
in Quezon City, Philippines, the abovenamed
accused, conspiring together, confederating with
and mutually helping one another, with intent to
kill, with evident premeditation and treachery and
taking advantage of superior strength, did then
and there, willfully, unlawfully and feloniously
attack, assault and employ personal violence upon
the person of one ARMANDO CARDINAS (sic.) Y
LUBERIANO, by then and there, stabbing him on
the parts of his body with the use of one (1) singlebladed knife, hereby inflicting upon said Armando
Cardenas y Luberiano serious and mortal wounds
which were the direct and immediate cause of his
death, to the damage and prejudice of the heirs of
the victim in such amount as may be awarded to
them.
being taken. They saw the barangay service jeep in front of the
Commonwealth Barangay Hall, along Don Mariano Marcos Avenue.
They alighted from the passenger jeepney and went near the barangay
jeep. They saw their nephew Armando Cardenas, bleeding and seated
on the floor of the vehicle leaning against the driver's backseat. Sitting
beside the victim was accused Carlos Colinares, while sitting beside
the driver (Ernani Basaysay) was Ely Colinares, brother of the accused
and the chairman of Barangay Commonwealth at that time. Aside from
these persons, they also saw others among them a son of Rosendo de
Leon seated inside the jeep.
Upon seeing Roberto and Trinidad Lopez, Armando Cardenas spoke
and implored their help as he was afraid he would be killed by his
companions inside the jeep. Roberto Lopez assauged Armando's fears
by telling him that these persons are government authorities
(barangay) and that they would not kill him. (t.s.n., March 3, 1982, p.
3). Trinidad Lopez, thinking that Armando would be brought to a
hospital, wanted to board the barangay jeep to accompany her nephew
but accused Carlos Colinares prevented her from doing so. That was
the last time that Roberto and Trinidad Lopez saw Armando Cardenas
alive.
As per records, Armando Cardenas was brought to the Quirino
Memorial Hospital, Quezon City at about 10:40 o'clock in the morning
of November 29, 1981. He was pronounced dead on arrival, per
medicolegal necropsy report, dated January 6, 1982 issued by Lt. Col.
Gregorio C. Blanco (Exh. "A"). The same Lt. Col. Blanco performed the
autopsy on the cadaver of Armando Cardenas at about 12:00 o'clock
noon on November 29, 1981 at the Oro Memorial Homes, Cubao,
Quezon City. Armando Cardenas sustained several injuries, but the
fatal wounds were the following:
a) hacked wound, neck, measuring 15 x 3 cm,
crossing the anterior midline 7 cm to the left and 8
cm to the right, lacerating the larynx, trachea,
esophagus, left common carotid artery and vein;
b) stab wound, right hypochandriac region
measuring 2.5 by 0.3 cm, 11 cm from and anterior
midline, 5 cm deep, directed upwards,
posteriorwards and medialwards, piercing the 7th
right intercostal space, lacerating the right lobe of
the liver and right dome of the diaphragm. (Exhibit
"A").
Armando Cardenas died of cardio-respiratory arrest due to shock and
hemorrhage secondary to the stab wound of the trunk and the hacking
wound on the head. (Exhibit "A-1").
On the other hand, the version of the defense is simply stated as
follows:
Accused Carlos Colinares testified that at about 7:00 o'clock A.M. of
November 29, 1981, he was putting up an electrical post at Barangay
Commonwealth, which task he finished at about 9:00 o'clock A.M. of
the same day. He then went home which is about 10 meters away from
the barangay hall to get some wires which he brought back to the
barangay hall and left these wires with Barangay Tanod Domingo
Tuazon. From here, he proceeded to the "paradahan" (parking lot) of
the "Manila Bus" bound for Quiapo, where he was one of the
dispatchers assigned that morning. Patrolmen Moris. Dizon and Belen
of the Quezon City Police Force, approached and invited him to go to
the Quezon City Police Headquarters to see Maj. Romeo San Diego.
He was brought to the headquarters in EDSA, Kamuning where he
was left to await Major San Diego. Nobody arrived until 3:00 P.M.
When the complainants arrived at headquarters, accused was
informed that there is a complaint against him but not told of the nature
of their complaint. Thereafter, accused was brought at 8:00 o'clock
P.M. by Pats. Dario and Balia to the house of a certain Fiscal located at
the back of PHHC. Later, he was brought back to the police
headquarters and detained at Quezon City Hall. Accused denied
having known the victim and his relatives, Roberto, Trinidad, Romeo
and Rowena, all surnamed Lopez. Accused also denied knowledge or
awareness of the incidents testified to by prosecution witnesses.
Aside from the fact that there is no evidence presented to show where
the crime took place and who inflicted the fatal wounds sustained, the
record is not clear as to the time of the mauling incident and the death
of the victim. Roberto Lopez testified that the mauling incident
happened on November 28, 1981 between 10:00 o'clock A.M. and
11:00 o'clock A.M., Trinidad Lopez testified that it happened on the
same day but at 7:30 o'clock A.M. and Rowena Lopez testified that it
happened at 10:00 o'clock A.M. Another witness for the prosecution
Col. Gregorio C. Blanco after qualifying himself as a medico-legal
expert testified that the cadaver of the victim was already inrigor
mortis (more than twelve (12) hours dead) when he autopsied it at high
noon of November 29, 1981. Taking into consideration this
unimpeachable testimony of the doctor and the necropsy report (Exh.
"A") which substantially supported the doctor's oral testimony, the
death of the victim could be calculated to have occurred at least 12
hours before time of necropsy which is about November 28, 1981 at
12:00 o'clock midnight. Thus the mauling incident of the victim did not
happen or could not have happened because the victim was already
dead at that time of the alleged mauling incident. There is no
inconsistency between the doctor's oral testimony and the Necropsy
Report because the time and date of death of the victim appearing on
the Necropsy Report as a/1040 H 29 November 1981 pertains to the
time and date as reported to the doctor by the authorities concerned
since the victim was DOA (Dead on Arrival) at 10:40 o'clock A.M.
November 29, 1981 at the Quirino Memorial General Hospital, Quezon
City.
CORTES, J.:
In the instant appeal from a conviction for murder, the Court is once
more tasked with the resolution of the pivotal issue of whether the
prosecution has successfully discharged the onus probandi imposed
upon it in criminal cases. The case stemmed from an information
charging the accused Timoteo Tolentino y Mapua and one John Doe
with the crime of murder committed as follows:
That on or about the 26th day of July, 1982, in
Quezon City, Philippines, and within the
jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the abovenamed accused, conspiring together,
confederating with and aiding one another, did,
then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously
with intent to kill, qualified by evident
premeditation and treachery, attack, assault and
employ personal violence upon the person of
Alfredo Quitoriano y Bayot, by then and there
throwing at him stones hitting him on the head and
stabbing the said victim thereby inflicting upon him
serious and mortal wounds which were the direct
and immediate cause of his untimely death, to the
damage and prejudice of the heirs of the said
Alfredo Quitoriano y Bayot. [Information, Rollo, p.
3.]
However, the trial court resolved to defer its resolution thereon, stating
in its Order dated May 27, 1983 that "the resolution of this motion to
dismiss ... is held in abeyance until the defense shall have presented
its evidence and the complete records of the proceedings from the
beginning shall be available." [Original Records, p. 123.]
Relying strongly on the merits of his demurrer to the evidence,
accused waived his right to present any evidence and moved that the
case be submitted for decision on the basis of the evidence presented
by the prosecution and his demurrer to the evidence. He likewise filed
a second motion to be released on bail. After a consideration of the
evidence presented by the prosecution, the trial court resolved to grant
the application for bail on July 18, 1983. Thereafter, the trial court
rendered its judgment, the dispositive portion of which reads as
follows:
WHEREFORE, the guilt of the accused having
been proved beyond reasonable doubt is (sic)
hereby convicted of the crime of Murder and is
hereby sentenced to life imprisonment and to
indemnify the heirs of Alfredo Quitoriano the
amount of P15,000.00. [Rollo. p. 22.]
From said decision, Tolentino interposed an appeal to this Court.
To support the first and second assigned errors, the appellant relies
heavily upon the testimony of the medicolegal officer, Dr. Gregorio
Blanco, who performed the autopsy on the body of the victim.
According to the appellant, the finding of the trial court to the effect that
the wound located at the back of the victim's head was caused by a
stone is erroneous as the same is not supported or confirmed by the
finding of the medicolegal officer and his expert testimony before the
lower court.
The necropsy report filed by Dr. Gregorio Blanco, the Chief of the
Medico- Legal Division of the PC Crime Laboratory shows the following
injuries found on the body of the deceased, to wit:
xxx xxx xxx
HEAD, TRUNK AND EXTREMITIES:
(1) Abrasion, right supra-orbital region, measuring
0.7 by 0.2 cm. 8 cm. from the anterior midline.
(2) Lacerated wound, right post-auricular region,
measuring 2.5 by 0.3 cm. 10 cm. from the
posterior midline.
(3) Contusion, right pre-auricular region,
measuring 6 by 5 cm. 13 cm. from the anterior
midline.
(4) Contusion, right supra-scapular region,
measuring 6 by 6 cm. 13 cm. from the posterior
midline, with a superimposed abrasion, measuring
3 by 3 cm.
(5) Abrasion, right infrascapular region, measuring
5 by 0.3 cm. 10 cm. from the posterior midline.
(6) Stab wound, left axillary region, measuring 1.8
by 0.4 cm. 18 cm. from the anterior midline, 11 cm.
deep, directed downwards, posterior wards and to
the right, fracturing the 5th left thoracic rib, along
the mid-axillary line, lacerating both lobes of the
left lung.
(7) Abrasion, dorsum of the left hand, measuring
O.6 by O.5 cm. 2 cm. lateral to its posterior
midline.
(8) Abrasion, left knee, measuring 0.7 by 0.5 cm.
1.5. cm. lateral to its posterior midline.
xxx xxx xxx
REMARKS:
Cause of death is cardio-respiratory arrest due to
shock and hemorrhage secondary to injuries of the
head and stab wound of the trunk. [Original
Records, p. 74.]
It must be noted that the injuries denominated as Nos. 1, 2, and 3 in
the necropsy report were all located in the victim's head while the rest
of the injuries denominated as Nos. 4, 5, and 6 were located on the
trunk and Nos. 7 and 8 on the extremeties of the victim. The two fatal
injuries though are the lacerated wound at the back of the victim's head
(wound No. 2) and the stab wound at his left chest (wound No. 6). The
prosecution deposits that since the accused hurled stones at the back
of the victim's head, the infliction of wound No. 2 can be ascribed to
him and accordingly, he can be held liable for the victim's death.
took (sic) the proceeding and transcribed the notes failed in her duty'
[Original Records, p. 115.]
Further, the prosecution during the trial manifested that it has in its
possession the stones allegedly used in the commission of the crime
[TSN, March 15, 19831 and yet, the prosecution rested its case without
formally offering in evidence the said stones. The ineptness of the
prosecution in handling this case, while certainly prejudicial to the
State and the private offended party, cannot be treated by this Court
with indulgence as it will result in a complete disregard of the
constitutional right of the accused to be presumed innocent until his
guilt has been proven beyond reasonable doubt.
1982, p. 10.1 Moreover, while the established facts do not entirely rule
out the possibility that the accused could himself have inflicted the fatal
wounds, the Court cannot base its conviction upon mere possibilities. It
should be stressed anew that 'possibilities and suspicion are not
evidence" [Sacay v. Sandiganbayan, G.R. Nos. 66497-98, July 10,
1986,142 SCRA 593, 6121 and therefore should not be taken against
the accused. Here, what the prosecution managed to establish were
mere circumstances which were not sufficient to overcome the
constitutional presumption of innocence. While circumstantial evidence
may suffice to support a conviction, it is imperative, though, that the
following requisites should concur:
(a) There is more than one circumstance;
In fine, the failure of the prosecution to prove that the act of the
appellant produced such injury as will constitute a penal offense
is fatal to their case. In criminal cases, the burden of proof as to the
offense charged lies on the prosecution [Rule 131, Section 2 of the
Revised Rules of Court.] As the accused has in his favor the
constitutional presumption of innocence, the quantum of proof that will
warrant a verdict of guilt must be strong enough to erase any
reasonable doubt as to his culpability. True, the trial court found the
prosecution evidence sufficient for purposes of conviction. As a rule,
this Court usually desists from disturbing the conclusions of the trial
court on the credibility of witnesses, in deference to the basic precept
that the lower court, having seen and heard the witnesses and
observed their demeanor and manner of testifying, is in a better
position to appreciate the evidence. But this doctrine must bow to the
superior and immutable rule that the guilt of the accused must be
proved beyond a reasonable doubt, because the law presumes that a
defendant is innocent and this presumption must prevail unless
overturned by competent and credible proof (People v. Galvez, G.R.
Nos. L-26944-45, December 5, 1980, 101 SCRA 544.] As
authoritatively set forth by this Court in a fairly recent decision:
Appellants have in their favor the presumption of
innocence as guaranteed by the Constitution.
Proof against them must survive the test of
reason. Every circumstance against guilt and in
favor of innocence must be considered. Suspicion
no matter how strong should not sway judgment,
for well-established is the rule that the prosecution
must rely on the strength of its evidence and not
on the weakness of the defense; that appellants
need not prove their innocence because that is
presumed; that the presumption of innocence is a
conclusion of law in favor of the accused, whereby
his innocence is not only established but continues
until sufficient evidence is introduced to overcome
the proof which the law has created-that is, his
innocence; "that conscience must be satisfied that
defendant has been proven guilty of the offense
charged. Only by proof beyond reasonable doubt
which requires moral certainty, 'a certainty that
convinces and satisfies the reason and
conscience of those who are to act upon it' may
the presumption of innocence be overcome.
[People v. Clores, G.R. No. 61408, October 12,
1983, 125 SCRA 67, 75 citing People v. Inguito,
G.R. No. 53497, October 18,1982,117 SCRA 641,
649.]
Here, the evidence of the prosecution, far from proving the culpability
of the appellant for the crime charged, discloses several probabilities,
some of which point to his innocence. For one thing, Ferrer's testimony
that the appellant had just alighted in front of the carinderia at the time
he threw stones at the victim negates any possibility that he was the
one who assaulted the victim with a sharp instrument [TSN, August 25,
that Hanz undergo rehabilitation in Cebu City, but he stayed there only
for two weeks.[3]
However, respondent Junel Asetre, Hanzs brother,
claimed that the mark on Hanzs neck was not that of bedspreads but
of a rope. He claimed that petitioner Buenaventura Gamboa knew
who killed Hanz, but was reluctant to divulge it lest he be charged or
harmed by Aprils father.
On her part, respondent Charity Asetre-Alagban, Hanzs
sister, claimed that Hanz confided to her a few days before his death
that April issued checks without his knowledge, and that Hanz died
without reconciling his differences with April.[4]
[9]
I.
WHETHER THE PURPORTED OPINIONS OF
DR. SAMSON GONZAGA, DR. LUIS GAMBOA,
AND DR. NICASIO BOTIN, THAT HANZ ASETRE
DID NOT COMMIT SUICIDE HAVE SUFFICIENT
WEIGHT, AS COMPARED TO THE DIRECT
TESTIMONIES OF THE PETITIONERS, THEIR
WITNESSES, AND THE CIRCUMSTANTIAL
EVIDENCE SHOWING THAT INDEED HANZ
ASETRE COMMITTED SUICIDE.
II.
WHETHER THE CONCLUSION OF THE
RESPONDENT COURT OF APPEALS, THAT
THERE IS PROBABLE CAUSE TO CHARGE
PETITIONERS FOR PARRICIDE IS SUPPORTED
BY SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE, AND IN ACCORD
WITH JURISPRUDENCE AND LAW.
III.
WHETHER
THE
[CONCLUSION]
OF
THE RESPONDENT
COURT THAT
THE
SECRETARY OF JUSTICE COMMITTED GRAVE
ABUSE OF DISCRETION AND HAS EXCEEDED
HIS JURISDICTION IS CORRECT AND IN
ACCORDANCE WITH LAW AND PROCEDURE.
IV.
WHETHER THE PETITION FOR CERTIORARI
FILED BY PRIVATE RESPONDENTS BEFORE
THE RESPONDENT COURT, SHOULD HAVE
BEEN DISMISSED CONSIDERING THAT THE
REGIONAL TRIAL COURT BR. 50, WAS NOT
IMPLEADED AND THE INFORMATION WAS
ALREADY ORDERED WITHDRAWN, AND SUCH
FACT WAS NOT REVEALED BY THE PRIVATE
RESPONDENTS IN THEIR PETITION FOR
CERTIORARI BEFORE THE COURT OF
APPEALS EVEN IN THEIR DISCLAIMER OF
FORUM SHOPPING.[15]
of
Investigating
xxxx
If upon petition by a proper party under
such Rules as the Department of Justice may
prescribe or motu proprio, the Secretary of Justice
reverses or modifies the resolution of the
provincial or city prosecutor or chief state
prosecutor, he shall direct the prosecutor
concerned either to file the corresponding
information without conducting another preliminary
investigation, or to dismiss or move for dismissal
of the complaint or information with notice to the
parties. The same Rule shall apply in
preliminary investigations conducted by the
officers of the Office of the Ombudsman.
her reason in opposing the exhumation, e.g., that her prior consent
was not secured, is flimsy.
All circumstances considered, we find that the DOJ Secretary
correctly held that the circumstantial evidence presented by private
respondents to prove probable cause against petitioners, does not
support the theory of conspiracy to commit murder. Such
circumstantial evidence in our view, would not sufficiently warrant a
conclusion that private respondents are responsible for the death of
Hanz. Petitioners mere presence at the death scene, without more,
does not suffice to establish probable cause against them. It is
noteworthy that complainants failed to establish conclusively that April,
Hanzs cousins, and his workers had an ax to grind against
Hanz. The alleged quarrel of the couple the night before the incident is
hearsay and could not establish enough credible motive on the part of
April, contrary to the opinion of the investigating prosecutor, because the
same witness who testified about the alleged fight also stated that the
couple had a good relationship and that it was not unusual for the couple
to have verbal altercations occasionally. Equally worth stressing is the
positive proof that the accused were not the only persons present inside
the couples house; and that the door of the gate of the house,
including the door of the room where the victim was found hanging, were
not so well secured as to exclude the possibility that the act was
committed by other persons who were also then present in the house, or
even by intruders. April was not attempting to reduce the number of
possible witnesses as stated by the investigating prosecutor when she
sent her children to Iloilo as it was the victims decision to send their
children to Iloilo upon his cousins invitation. Likewise, concerning
the act of burning the bedsheets, we find no grave abuse of discretion in
the ruling of the DOJ that an ordinary person like April could have
believed that the police investigation made at the death scene and the
post-mortem examination conducted on the body of the victim were
already more than enough to conclude and close the
investigation. Thus, we find no grave abuse of discretion on the part of
the Secretary of Justice.
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The Decision of
the Court of Appeals dated October 18, 2005 in CA-G.R. SP No. 78493
is REVERSED and the Resolution dated December 17, 2002 of the
Department of Justice isAFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.
Republic of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila
FIRST DIVISION
G.R. No. L-26657 September 12, 1974
VISAYAN STEVEDORE & TRANSPORTATION
COMPANY, petitioner,
vs.
WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION COMMISSION and JULIETA S.
LABIYO respondents.
Efrain B. Trenas for petitioners.
P. C. Villavieja & D.C. Arellano for respondent Commission.
Amado B. Atol for respondent Julieta S. Labiyo.
MAKALINTAL, C.J.:p
Appeal from the decision of the Workmen's Compensation
Commission requiring petitioner Visayan Stevedore & Transportation
Company to pay respondent Julieta S. Labiyo compensation benefits,
burial expenses and costs in connection with the death of her husband
Eduardo Labiyo.
The deceased, employed as engineer by Visayan Stevedore &
Transportation Company with a monthly salary of P235.00 was part of
a 3-man crew of the tugboat "M/T DILIS." His main duty consisted in
his starting the engine and seeing to it that it functioned properly during
the voyage, with the actual navigation of the tugboat being the
responsibility of his 2 other companions, the "Patron" who controlled
the wheel and a helper (timonel) who operated the rudder. According to
Federico Sespene, "patron" of the tugboat when the deceased died,
... from February 10 to 17 (1964) they were given
orders to tow barges to the ship and load it with
cargoes. They also had to shift or bring barges to
dry dock at the company's compound in Iloilo.
Aside from that, their other work was to bring the
barges from Jordan to Iloilo City, from the terminal
to the middle of Guimaras Strait or to bring
workers, food and checkers to the ship and back.
As a consequence of this work, they were
compelled to stay in the tugboat. On that fatal day
of February 17 (1964), they had received various
orders. And at about 4 a.m. of the same day, they
were towing barges from the Shell wharf to
Tabangao, and while they were navigating,
Eduardo Labiyo visibly tired and in active duty
asked for permission to take a rest. When the
tugboat reached Tabangao, witness Sespene was
ordered by Orleans to start towing the barge but
when Sespeno called Labiyo to start the engine,
there was no answer from Labiyo. The
Quartermaster was the one who responded
instead and was the one ordered to wake up
Labiyo, who at the time was already dead. It was
about 6:30 o'clock in the morning of February 17,
1964. ...
A subsequent autopsy of the deceased's remains conducted by Dr.
Raymundo L. Torres, the assistant medicolegal officer of the Iloilo City
Police Department, traced the cause of Eduardo Labiyo's death to
"bangungot." The autopsy report reads:
AUTOPSY FINDINGS
HEAD AND NECK No apparent external lesion
was found.
THORAX No apparent lesion was found.
ABDOMEN No apparent external lesion was
found. Stomach was full.
UPPER AND LOWER EXTREMITES No
apparent external lesion was found.
CAUSE OF DEATH BANGUNGUT.
(Sgd.) RAYMUNDO L. TORRES Asst. Med.
Legal Officer
On March 16, 1964 respondent Julieta Labiyo, the widow, filed a claim
for compensation with the Department of Labor, Regional Office No.
VII, Iloilo City. After appropriate proceedings, the acting referee of the
We do not think that the main point pressed by petitioner, namely, that
death caused by "bangungot" is not compensable, is at all decisive in
the case at bar. What is not denied, and this is crucial insofar as the
compensability of Eduardo Labiyo's death is concerned, is that when
death came to the deceased he was in active duty as an engineeremployee of the petitioner. This being the case, the need to pinpoint
the cause of his death as work connected in Order to render it
compensable assumes very little importance. "(It) is to be presumed,
under section 44 of the Workmen's Compensation Act, as amended,
that the employee's death, supervening at the time of his employment,
either arose out of, or was at least aggravated by said employment.
With this legal presumption the burden of proof shifts to the employer,
and the employee is relieved of the burden to show causation. ... The
mere opinion of doctors presented by petitioner as evidence cannot
prevail over the presumption established by law." (Abana vs.
Quisumbing, 22 SCRA 1278, 1282)
The liberal attitude displayed by this Court in considering as
compensable the death by heart attack of an off-dutyemployee helping
in the loading operation of a vessel (William Lines, Inc. vs. Sanopal, 42
SCRA 48), or the disappearance of an off-duty crew member of a
vessel who has no choice but to be in the vessel during the voyage
(Aboitiz Shipping Corporation vs. Pepito, 18 SCRA 1028), or the death
by drowning of an employee whose duty was to watch over and take
charge of a barge in the absence of the patron (Luzon Stevedoring
Co., Inc. vs. Workmen's Compensation Commission, 10 SCRA 207),
proceeds from an awareness of the fact that when an employee
undertakes to satisfy, in the course of employment, certain human
wants, i.e. eating, freshening up, sleeping and the like, "and something
takes place that may cause injury, harm or death to the employee or
laborer, it is fair and logical that the happening be considered as one
occurring in the course of employment for under the circumstances it
cannot be undertaken in any other way" (Luzon Stevedoring Co., Inc.
vs. Workmen's Compensation Commission, supra), unless it can be
clearly shown that the mishap occurred because the employee acted
beyond his duty or outside the course of employment, which is not so
in the case at bar. For aside from the conclusion arrived at by the
medicolegal officer who conducted the autopsy that "bangungot" was
the cause of Eduardo Labiyo's death, * there was hardly anything else
that would disconnect the deceased's death from his employment, In
other words, petitioner had not proved that death was not and could
not be caused or aggravated by the deceased's work as engineer who,
at the time of his death, was practically on 24-hour continuous duty.
The petitioner's reliance on the case of Luzon Brokerage Co., Inc. vs.
Dayao, et al., 105 Phil. 525, particularly that portion of the decision
which reads:
That Antonio Dayao died of heart failure is not
disputed. The point of controversy is: what caused
such failure? Was it as the petitioner Company
claims a natural disease locally called
'bangungot' where the victim dies in his sleep
allegedly due to bad dreams or nightmares? If this
be the case then the death is not compensable.
Or, was it as maintained by the respondents
the over-exertion or undue fatigue their deceased
father suffered in helping lift, carry and transfer
from one place to another the heavy household
effects belonging to Mr. Karning or Cummins? If
this be the cause then the death is compensable.
is misplaced to justify its claim of non-liability under the Workmen's
Compensation Act. The aforequoted portion of the decision was
evidently intended merely to emphasize that in said case the theory
that "bangungot" could have caused the deceased's death appeared to
be tenuous, there being competent contrary evidence that excessive
exertion and physical strain accounted for the deceased's heart failure,
In fact, in the very same case doubt was expressed as to the
soundness of the theory that "bangungot" by itself can be the cause of
death, thus:
Although the enlightening points ... brought out
about the dreaded disease are worthy of note, still
the inescapable conclusion is that 'bangungot' is
still a theoretical disease whose remote and
immediate cause, pathology and cure have not as
yet been accurately determined and scientifically
established and confirmed. Whether it is a natural
phenomenon that by itself can destroy or snuff the
life out of a human being is still a question to
which medical science has yet to give a more
definite and conclusive answer. That 'bangungot' is
still veiled in its own mystery is openly admitted by
Dr. Santa Cruz who, on the witness stand,
declared that 'until now, the real cause
of bangungot is not known and that its pathology
cannot be found in any textbook on medicine.
The decision under review is affirmed, with costs against the petitioner.
Castro, Teehankee, Esguerra and Muoz Palma, JJ., concur.
Makasiar, J., took no part.
Republic of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila
FIRST DIVISION
MAKALINTAL, C.J.:
This is a petition for review of the decision of the Workmen's
Compensation Commission dated August 26, 1969 in its WCC Case
No. R07-8957.
On October 2, 1962, at about 5:30 o'clock in the afternoon, a hand
grenade exploded inside the office of the Seven-Up Bottling Company,
Iloilo Plant, in Iloilo City, instantly killing William Peaflorida, a stock
clerk of the company, and Felixberto Herrera, the branch cashier.
Another employee, Victorino Trespeces, was wounded seriously.
Finding that William Peaflorida's death arose out of and in the course
of his employment, the Workmen's Compensation Commission in its
decision dated August 26, 1969 reversed that of the Acting Referee
and awarded compensation to the claimants. Said the Commission:
Atty. Mabunay:
A Yes sir.
Atty. Centeno:
It says here, from somewhere.
Witness:
I concluded in that statement
because when I arrived there,
the cadaver of Pe__aflorida
was right on his back on the
floor and that of Herrera was
stooping, so I concluded that
the hand grenade could have
been exploded from
somewhere or it could have
been thrown from
somewhere.
A That is a possibility.
Q And a conjecture?
FIRST DIVISION
A That is a possibility.
A That is possible.
Q It is possible that it could
not have been thrown from
outside.
VITUG, J.:p
A Yes, sir.
Q And in your autopsy, none
of these evidence is present
in this particular victim?
A There was, sir.
Q What was that?
A There was a slight
congestion, and there was a
marked congestion of the
lower third of the thyroid
cartilage towards and
including the superior part of
the first portion of the trachea
revealed marked congestion
(cricoid cartilage.
xxx xxx xxx
ATTY. MARTINEZ:
Q Will not the lapse of time of
about one and one half month
between death and autopsy
erase or blurred the trace of
the ligature marks?
A May I qualify my answer, in
cases of victim that were not
embalmed and submerged in
water, yes, but in case of
embalming, no.
Q So if the victim is not
embalmed and not
submerged in water, it will
erase the marks?
A Yes, sir.
Q And you would like us to
understand that the
embalming would preserve
ligature marks?
A Yes, sir.
Q And you are 100% certain
that the cadaver had
undergone embalming?
A Yes, sir, and there were no
ligature marks in the neck.
COURT:
I have some clarificatory
questions. (to the witness)
A None, sir.
A Yes, sir.
A No, sir.
PROS: (to the witness)