Lenido Lumanog v. People of The Philippines
Lenido Lumanog v. People of The Philippines
Lenido Lumanog v. People of The Philippines
DECISION
(En Banc)
VILLARAMA, JR., J.:
I.
THE FACTS
THE ISSUES
1. Did the CA decision comply with the constitutional standard that [n]o
decision shall be rendered by any court without expressing therein clearly and distinctly
the facts and the law on which it is based?
2. Was the extra-judicial confession of accused Joel de Jesus taken during the
custodial investigation valid?
3. Was the right to speedy disposition of cases of the accused violated?
4. Was the eyewitness testimony of security guard Alejo against the accused
credible?
5. Was the out-of-court identification of the accused-appellants made by the
eyewitness, security guard Alejo, in a police line-up was reliable?
6. Were the results of the ballistic and fingerprint tests conclusive of the
innocence of the accused-appellants?
7.
Can the defense of alibi of the accused prevail over their positive
identification in this case?
investigating officer and sometimes stopped Joel from answering certain questions,
SPO2 Garcia, Jr. did not say if Atty. Sansano, in the first place, verified from them the
date and time of Joels arrest and the circumstances thereof, or any previous
information elicited from him by the investigators at the station, and if said counsel
inspected Joels body for any sign or mark of physical torture.
3.
violated.
No, the right to speedy disposition of cases of the accused was NOT
Section 16, Article III of the 1987 Constitution provides that all persons shall
have the right to a speedy disposition of their cases before all judicial, quasi-judicial, or
administrative bodies. This protection extends to all citizens and covers the periods
before, during and after trial, affording broader protection than Section 14(2), which
guarantees merely the right to a speedy trial. However, just like the constitutional
guarantee of speedy trial, speedy disposition of cases is a flexible concept. It is
consistent with delays and depends upon the circumstances. What the Constitution
prohibits are unreasonable, arbitrary and oppressive delays, which render rights
nugatory.
It must be stressed that in the determination of whether the right to speedy
disposition of cases has been violated, particular regard must be taken of the facts and
circumstances peculiar to each case. A mere mathematical reckoning of the time
involved would not be sufficient. Under the circumstances, we hold that the delay of (4)
four years during which the case remained pending with the CA and this Court was not
unreasonable, arbitrary or oppressive.
In several cases where it was manifest that due process of law or other rights
guaranteed by the Constitution or statutes have been denied, this Court has not faltered
to accord the so-called radical relief to keep accused from enduring the rigors and
expense of a full-blown trial. In this case, however, appellants are not entitled to the
same relief in the absence of clear and convincing showing that the delay in the
resolution of their appeal was unreasonable or arbitrary.
4. YES, the eyewitness testimony of security guard Alejo against the
accused was credible.
In giving full credence to the eyewitness testimony of security guard Alejo, the
trial judge took into account his proximity to the spot where the shooting occurred, his
elevated position from his guardhouse, his opportunity to view frontally all the
perpetrators for a brief time -- enough for him to remember their faces (when the two [2]
lookouts he had earlier noticed walking back and forth in front of his guard post pointed
their guns at him one [1] after the other, and later when the four [4] armed men
standing around the victims car momentarily looked at him as he was approached at
the guardhouse by the second lookout), and his positive identification in the courtroom
of appellants as the six (6) persons whom he saw acting together in the fatal shooting of
Abadilla on June 13, 1996. The clear view that Alejo had at the time of the incident was
verified by Judge Jose Catral Mendoza (now an Associate Justice of this Court) during
the ocular inspection conducted in the presence of the prosecutors, defense counsel,
court personnel, and witnesses Alejo and Maj. Villena.
The trial judge also found that Alejo did not waver in his detailed account of how
the assailants shot Abadilla[,] who was inside his car, the relative positions of the
gunmen and lookouts, and his opportunity to look at them in the face. Alejo immediately
gave his statement before the police authorities just hours after the incident took place.
Appellants make much of a few inconsistencies in his statement and testimony, with
respect to the number of assailants and his reaction when he was ordered to get down
in his guard post. But such inconsistencies have already been explained by Alejo during
cross-examination by correcting his earlier statement in using number four (4) to refer to
those persons actually standing around the car and two (2) more persons as lookouts,
and that he got nervous only when the second lookout shouted at him to get down,
because the latter actually poked a gun at him. It is settled that affidavits, being exparte, are almost always incomplete and often inaccurate, but do not really detract from
the credibility of witnesses. The discrepancies between a sworn statement and
testimony in court do not outrightly justify the acquittal of an accused, as testimonial
evidence carries more weight than an affidavit.
5. YES, the out-of-court identification of the accused-appellants made by
the eyewitness, security guard Alejo, in a police line-up was reliable.
Applying the totality-of-circumstances test, we reiterate that Alejos out-courtidentification [of the accused] is reliable, for reasons that, first, he was very near the
place where Abadilla was shot and thus had a good view of the gunmen, not to mention
that the two (2) lookouts directly approached him and pointed their guns at
them; second, no competing event took place to draw his attention from the
event; third, Alejo immediately gave his descriptions of at least two (2) of the
perpetrators, while affirming he could possibly identify the others if he would see them
again, and the entire happening that he witnessed; and finally, there was no evidence
that the police had supplied or even suggested to Alejo that appellants were the
suspects, except for Joel de Jesus whom he refused to just pinpoint on the basis of a
photograph shown to him by the police officers, insisting that he would like to see said
suspect in person. More importantly, Alejo during the trial had positively identified
appellant Joel de Jesus independently of the previous identification made at the police
station. Such in-court identification was positive, straightforward and categorical.
6.
NO, the results of the ballistic and fingerprint tests were NOT
conclusive of the innocence of the accused-appellants.
[T]he negative result of ballistic examination was inconclusive, for there is no
showing that the firearms supposedly found in appellants possession were the same
ones used in the ambush-slay of Abadilla. The fact that ballistic examination revealed
that the empty shells and slug were fired from another firearm does not disprove
appellants guilt, as it was possible that different firearms were used by them in shooting
Abadilla. Neither will the finding that the empty shells and slug matched those in
another criminal case allegedly involving ABB members, such that they could have been
fired from the same firearms belonging to said rebel group, exonerate the appellants
who are on trial in this case and not the suspects in another case. To begin with, the
prosecution never claimed that the firearms confiscated from appellants, which were the
subject of separate charges for illegal possession of firearms, were the same firearms
used in the ambush-slay of Abadilla. A ballistic examination is not indispensable in this
case. Even if another weapon was in fact actually used in killing the victim, still,
appellants Fortuna and Lumanog cannot escape criminal liability therefor, as they were
positively identified by eyewitness Freddie Alejo as the ones who shot Abadilla to death.
The negative result of the fingerprint tests conducted by fingerprint examiner
Remedios is likewise inconclusive and unreliable. Said witness admitted that no prints
had been lifted from inside the KIA Pride and only two (2) fingerprints were taken from
the car of Abadilla.
7. NO, the defense of alibi of the accused CANNOT prevail over their
positive identification in this case.
Alibi is the weakest of all defenses, for it is easy to fabricate and difficult to
disprove, and it is for this reason that it cannot prevail over the positive identification of
the accused by the witnesses. To be valid for purposes of exoneration from a criminal
charge, the defense of alibi must be such that it would have been physically impossible
for the person charged with the crime to be at the locus criminis at the time of its
commission, the reason being that no person can be in two places at the same
time. The excuse must be so airtight that it would admit of no exception. Where there
is the least possibility of accuseds presence at the crime scene, the alibi will not hold
water.
Deeply embedded in our jurisprudence is the rule that positive identification of
the accused, where categorical and consistent, without any showing of ill motive on the
part of the eyewitness testifying, should prevail over the alibi and denial of appellants,
whose testimonies are not substantiated by clear and convincing evidence. However,
none of the appellants presented clear and convincing excuses showing the physical
impossibility of their being at the crime scene between 8:00 oclock and 9:00 oclock in
the morning of June 13, 1996. Hence, the trial court and CA did not err in rejecting their
common defense of alibi.