Punzalan v. de La Pena, July 21, 2004, G.R. No. 158543

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FIRST DIVISION

[G.R. No. 158543. July 21, 2004]

ROSALINDA PUNZALAN, RANDALL PUNZALAN and RAINIER


PUNZALAN, petitioners, vs. DENCIO DELA PEA and ROBERT
CAGARA, respondents.

DECISION
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:

Assailed in this petition for review under Rule 45 of the Revised Rules of
Court is the June 6, 2002 Decision of the Court of Appeals and its May 23,
[1]

2003 Resolution which denied petitioners motion for reconsideration.


The Punzalan and the Plata families were neighbors in Hulo Bliss,
Mandaluyong City. At around 11:00 p.m. of August 13, 1997, Dencio dela Pea,
a house boarder of the Platas, was in front of a store near their house when the
group of Rainier Punzalan, Randall Punzalan, Ricky Eugenio, Jose Gregorio,
Alex Toto Ofrin, and several others arrived. Ricky Eugenio shouted at Dela
Pea, Hoy, kalbo, saan mo binili and sumbrero mo? Dela Pea replied, Kalbo
[2]

nga ako, ay pinagtatawanan pa ninyo ako. Irked by the response, Jose


[3]

Gregorio slapped Dela Pea while Rainier punched him in the mouth. The group
then ganged up on him. In the course of the melee, somebody shouted, Yariin
na yan! Thereafter, Alex Toto Ofrin kicked Dela Pea and tried to stab him with
[4]

a balisong but missed because he was able to run. The group chased him.
While Dela Pea was fleeing, he met Robert Cagara, the Platas family driver,
who was carrying a gun. He grabbed the gun from Cagara and pointed it to the
group chasing him in order to scare them. Michael Plata, who was nearby,
intervened and tried to wrestle the gun away from Dela Pea. The gun
accidentally went off and hit Rainier Punzalan on the thigh. Shocked, Dela Pea,
Cagara and Plata ran towards the latters house and locked themselves in. The
group ran after them and when they got to the Platas house, shouted, Lumabas
kayo dyan, putang ina ninyo! Papatayin namin kayo! Dela Pea, Cagara, and
[5]

Plata left the house through the back door and proceeded to the police station
to seek assistance.
As a result of the incident, Rainier Punzalan filed a criminal complaint
against Michael Plata for Attempted Homicide and against Robert Cagara for
[6]
Illegal Possession of Firearm. In turn, Plata, Cagara and Dela Pea filed several
counter-charges for grave oral defamation, grave threats, robbery, malicious
[7]

mischief and slight physical injuries against the Punzalans, including one for
Attempted Murder filed by Dela Pea against Rainier and Randall Punzalan and
fourteen others (I.S. No. 97-11528); and one for Grave Threats filed by Dela
Pea against Alex Toto Ofrin (I.S. No. 97-11520-21).
In their counter-affidavit, the Punzalans argued that the charges against
[8]

them were fabricated in order to dissuade them from testifying in the Attempted
Homicide and Illegal Possession of Firearm cases instituted by Rainier against
Plata and Cagara, respectively.
Subsequently, Robert Cagara also filed a complaint for Grave Oral
Defamation, docketed as I.S. No. 97-11522, against Rosalinda Punzalan,
mother of Rainier, alleging that on October 16, 1997 at the Office of the
Prosecutor of Mandaluyong City, Rosalinda approached him, and within
hearing distance of other people, told him, Hoy Robert, magkanong ibinigay ng
mga Plata sa iyo sa pagtestigo? Dodoblehin ko at ipapasok pa kita ng
trabaho. In her defense, Rosalinda denied having uttered the alleged
[9]

defamatory statements.
On July 28, 1998, the Assistant City Prosecutor of Mandaluyong City
dismissed the complaint for Grave Oral Defamation against Rosalinda
Punzalan, holding that Cagara failed to show that the alleged defamatory
[10]

statements would cast dishonor, discredit or contempt upon him. He also found
that the statements were uttered by Rosalinda in a state of distress and, hence,
were not actionable. The charge of Attempted Murder against Rainier, Randall
[11]

and 14 others was also dismissed by the Assistant Prosecutor because


complainant Dela Peas claim that he accidentally shot Rainier forms part of the
defense of Michael Plata in the Attempted Homicide case previously filed by
Rainier against the latter. [12]

Dela Pea and Cagara separately appealed to the Department of Justice. On


March 23, 2000, then Justice Secretary Artemio Tuquero issued a Resolution
modifying the July 28, 1998 Joint Resolution of the Assistant City Prosecutor by
ordering, among others (1) that the charge of Grave Oral Defamation against
Rosalinda Punzalan be downgraded to Slight Oral Defamation; (2) that the
charge of Attempted Murder against Rainier, Randall and 14 others be
downgraded to Attempted Homicide; and (3) that the charge of Grave Threats
against Alex Toto Ofrin be downgraded to Other Light Threats. The dispositive
portion of the Resolution reads:
WHEREFORE, the resolution is hereby MODIFIED. The City Prosecutor of
Mandaluyong City is directed to file information for three (3) counts of slight oral
defamation against Rosalinda Punzalan; information for two (2) counts [of] other
light threats against Alexander Toto Ofrin; information for attempted homicide
against Alexander Toto Ofrin, Rainier Punzalan, Jose Gregorio Lanuzo, Avelino
Serrano, Lito dela Cruz, Emmanuel Nobida, Randall Punzalan, Mark Catap,
Ricky Eugenio, Alejandro Diez, Vicente Joven Manda, Herson Mendoza, Mark
Labrador, Alex Pascua, Edwin Vivar and Raymond Poliquit; information for
malicious mischief and theft against Rainier Punzalan, Mark Catap, Alejandro
Diez, Jose Gregorio Lanuzo, Alexander Toto Ofrin, Herson Mendoza,
Emmanuel Nobida, Edwin Vivar, Avelino Bobby Serrano, and John Does; and
to report action taken within 10 days from receipt hereof.
SO ORDERED. [13]

Petitioners, Rosalinda, Rainier and Randall Punzalan, together with their


co-respondents, filed separate motions for reconsideration. On June 6, 2000,
the Secretary of Justice set aside the March 23, 2000 Resolution and directed
the withdrawal of the Informations against the movants. He ruled, among
others, that the Oral Defamation case should be dismissed because the alleged
defamatory statements were uttered without malice as Rosalinda was then in a
state of shock and anger. Anent the Attempted Homicide case filed by Dela Pea
against Rainier, the Secretary held that the allegations in support thereof should
first be threshed out in the trial of the Attempted Homicide case filed by Rainier
against Michael Plata. He added that Dela Pea failed to prove that Rainier,
Randall and his companions intended to kill him. The dispositive portion thereof
reads:
Wherefore, in view of the foregoing, the appealed resolution is REVERSED.
The resolution dated March 23, 2000 is set aside and the City Prosecutor of
Mandaluyong City is directed to withdraw the separate informations for slight
oral defamation, other light threats, attempted homicide, malicious mischief and
theft against all respondents and to report the action taken within ten (10) days
from receipt hereof.
SO ORDERED. [14]

Respondents filed a motion for reconsideration of the foregoing Resolution,


but the same was denied in a Resolution dated October 11, 2000. [15]

On January 11, 2001, respondents filed a petition for certiorari with the
Court of Appeals praying that the City Prosecutor of Mandaluyong be directed
to file one count of Slight Oral Defamation against Rosalinda; one count of
Attempted Homicide against Rainier, Randall and 14 others; and two counts of
Other Light Threats against Alex Toto Ofrin. [16]

On June 6, 2002, the Court of Appeals rendered judgment as follows:


WHEREFORE, premises considered, the petition is granted and the questioned
Resolutions of public respondent dated 06 June 2000 and 11 October 2000 are
set aside insofar as it directed the withdrawal of informations for slight oral
defamation against Rosalinda Punzalan and attempted homicide against the
respondents Alexander Toto Ofrin, Rainier Punzalan, Jose Gregorio Lanuzo,
Avelino Serrano, Lito de la Cruz, Emmanuel Nobido, Randall Punzalan, Mark
Catap, Ricky Eugenio, Alejandro Diez, Vicente Joven Manda, Herson
Mendoza, Mark Labrador, Alex Pascua, Edwin Vivar, and Raymond Poliquit.
The resolution dated 06 June 2000 and 11 October 2000 is hereby affirmed
insofar as it directed the withdrawal of information for two (2) counts of other
light threats against Alexander Toto Ofrin.
SO ORDERED. [17]

Petitioners motion for reconsideration was denied. Hence, the instant


[18]

petition raising the following assignment of errors:


I

THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS COMMITTED GRAVE AND


SERIOUS REVERSIBLE ERROR IN SETTING ASIDE THE RESOLUTIONS
OF THE HONORABLE SECRETARY OF JUSTICE DATED JUNE 6, 2000 AND
OCTOBER 11, 2000.
II

THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS SERIOUSLY ERRED IN HOLDING


THAT THERE IS SUFFICIENT EVIDENCE TO SHOW THAT, MORE LIKELY
THAN NOT, SLIGHT ORAL DEFAMATION HAD BEEN COMMITTED AND
WAS COMMITTED BY HEREIN PETITIONER ROSALINDA PUNZALAN.
III

THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ERRED IN HOLDING


THAT THE ALLEGATIONS OF RESPONDENTS AND THEIR WITNESSES,
WHICH SHOULD BE GIVEN WEIGHT, ARE SUFFICIENT TO PROVE INTENT
TO KILL SUCH THAT PETITIONERS RANDALLL AND RAINIER PUNZALAN
MUST BE PROSECUTED FOR ATTEMPTED HOMICIDE. [19]

The issue to be resolved in this petition is whether or not there is sufficient


evidence to sustain a finding of probable cause against petitioner Rosalinda
Punzalan for Slight Oral Defamation and against petitioners Randall and Rainier
Punzalan for Attempted Homicide.
The petition is impressed with merit.
The pertinent law in relation to this case is Section 1 of Rule 65 of the Rules
of Court, which provides:
Section 1. Petition for certiorari. When any tribunal, board or officer exercising
judicial or quasi-judicial functions has acted without or in excess of its or his
jurisdiction, or with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of its
or his jurisdiction, and there is no appeal, or any plain speedy, and adequate
remedy in the ordinary course of law, a person aggrieved thereby may file a
verified petition in the proper court, alleging the facts with certainty and praying
that judgment be rendered annulling or modifying the proceedings of such
tribunal, board or officer, and granting such incidental reliefs as law and justice
may require.
A petition for certiorari is the proper remedy when any tribunal, board, or
officer exercising judicial or quasi-judicial functions has acted without or in
excess of its jurisdiction, or with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or
excess of jurisdiction and there is no appeal, nor any plain, speedy, and
adequate remedy at law. Where the error is in the judges findings and
conclusions or to cure erroneous conclusions of law and fact, appeal is the
remedy. [20]

Lack of jurisdiction and excess of jurisdiction are distinguished thus: the


respondent acts without jurisdiction if he does not have the legal power to
determine the case; where the respondent, being clothed with the power to
determine the case, oversteps his authority as determined by law, he is
performing a function in excess of his jurisdiction. In the case of Meat Packing
[21]

Corp. v. Sandiganbayan, it was held that grave abuse of discretion implies a


[22]

capricious and whimsical exercise of judgment as is equivalent to lack of


jurisdiction, or, when the power is exercised in an arbitrary or despotic manner
by reason of passion or personal hostility, and it must be so patent and gross
as to amount to an evasion of positive duty enjoined or to act at all in
contemplation of law. It is not sufficient that a tribunal, in the exercise of its
power, abused its discretion; such abuse must be grave. [23]

We now resolve whether the Secretary of Justice committed grave abuse of


discretion in his Resolutions dated June 6, 2000 and October 11, 2000. Under
the Revised Administrative Code, the Secretary of Justice exercises the power
of direct control and supervision over the decisions or resolutions of the
prosecutors. Supervision and control includes the authority to act directly
whenever a specific function is entrusted by law or regulation to a subordinate;
to direct the performance of duty; and to approve, revise or modify acts and
decision of subordinate officials or units. [24]

In the case of People v. Peralta, we reiterated the rule that the right to
[25]

prosecute vests the prosecutor with a wide range of discretion the discretion of
whether, what and whom to charge, the exercise of which depends on a variety
of factors which are best appreciated by prosecutors. Likewise, in the case
of Hegerty v. Court of Appeals, we declared that:
[26]

A public prosecutor, by the nature of his office, is under no compulsion to file a


criminal information where no clear legal justification has been shown, and no
sufficient evidence of guilt nor prima facie case has been presented by the
petitioner.
We need only to stress that the determination of probable cause during a
preliminary investigation or reinvestigation is recognized as an executive
function exclusively of the prosecutor. An investigating prosecutor is under no
obligation to file a criminal action where he is not convinced that he has the
quantum of evidence at hand to support the averments. Prosecuting officers
have equally the duty not to prosecute when after investigation or
reinvestigation they are convinced that the evidence adduced was not sufficient
to establish a prima facie case. Thus, the determination of the persons to be
prosecuted rests primarily with the prosecutor who is vested with discretion in
the discharge of this function.
Thus, the question of whether or not to dismiss a complaint is within the
purview of the functions of the prosecutor and, ultimately, that of the Secretary
of Justice.
The reasons of the Secretary of Justice in directing the City Prosecutor to
withdraw the informations for slight oral defamation against Rosalinda Punzalan
and for attempted homicide against the other respondents other than Rosalinda
Punzalan is determinative of whether or not he committed grave abuse of
discretion.
First, in the charge of slight oral defamation, the records show that the
defamatory remarks were uttered within the Office of the City Prosecutor of
Mandaluyong City. The Court of Appeals in its Decision dated June 6, 2002
stated the settled rule that the assessment of the credibility of witnesses is best
left to the trial court in view of its opportunity to observe the demeanor and
conduct of the witnesses on the stand. The City Prosecutor, the proper officer
at the time of the occurrence of the incident, is the best person to observe the
demeanor and conduct of the parties and their witnesses and determine
probable cause whether the alleged defamatory utterances were made within
the hearing distance of third parties. The investigating prosecutor found that no
sufficient evidence existed. The Secretary of Justice in his Resolution affirmed
the decision of the City Prosecutor.
As to the charge of attempted homicide against the herein petitioners other
than Rosalinda Punzalan, the Secretary of Justice resolved to dismiss the
complaint because it was in the nature of a countercharge. The Department of
Justice in a Resolution dated June 18, 1998 had already directed that Dencio
Dela Pea be likewise investigated for the charge of attempted homicide in
connection with the shooting incident that occurred on August 13, 1997 making
him a party to the case filed by Rainier Punzalan. This resulted in the resolution
of the Secretary of Justice that the complaint of herein respondent Dencio Dela
Pea should be threshed out in the proceedings relevant to the shooting incident
that resulted in the serious injury of herein petitioner Rainier Punzalan.
In the case at bar, therefore, the Secretary of Justice did not commit grave
abuse of discretion contrary to the finding of the Court of Appeals. It is well-
settled in the recent case of Samson, et al. v. Guingona that the Court will not
[27]

interfere in the conduct of preliminary investigations or reinvestigations and


leave to the investigating prosecutor sufficient latitude of discretion in the
exercise of determination of what constitutes sufficient evidence as will
establish probable cause for the filing of information against an offender.
Moreover, his findings are not subject to review unless shown to have been
made with grave abuse. [28]

WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The Decision of the Court of


Appeals dated June 6, 2002 and the Resolution dated May 23, 2003 denying
petitioners motion for reconsideration are REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The
Resolution of the Secretary of Justice, directing the withdrawal of the
informations for slight oral defamation and attempted homicide against the
petitioners, is REINSTATED.
No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., (Chairman), Quisumbing, Carpio, and Azcuna,
JJ., concur.

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