People Vs Arrojado

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[G.R. No. 130492.

  January 31, 2001]

PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. SALVADOR ARROJADO, accused-appellant.


Facts:
On June 1, 1996 the accused stabbed one Mary Ann Arrojado with a knife with treachery and
evident premeditation on the different parts of her body inflicting serious and mortal wounds which were
the direct and immediate cause of her death.
The RTC found accused-appellant guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of murder and
sentenced him to imprisonment of 30 years of reclusion perpetua.
The trial court held that there was a circumstantial evidence to convict accused-appellant for the
death of the victim.
Appelant argued that the victim committed suicide. He claimed that most of the victim’s wounds
were inflicted after she committed suicide to make it appear that she was murdered. He also stated that
he only saw one wound in the victim’s stomach.

Issue:

Whether or not the victim was murdered by the accused-appellant

Whether or not the aggravating circumstance of abuse of confidence can appreciated and
would elevate the penalty of murder from reclusion perpetua to death eventhough it was not
alleged in the said information.

Ruling:
Yes.
In sum, the following circumstances point to accused-appellant as the perpetrator of the crime:
.  Accused-appellant, the victim, and the latter’s father were the only ones living in the house in
which the crime was committed in the evening of May 31, 1996.
2.  No one from the outside can gain entry since all doors of the house were locked and the
windows had grills.
3.  Accused-appellant had access to the victim’s bedroom because the bedroom doors were left
unlocked so that the victim could check on her father’s condition during the night.  Accused-
appellant sleeps in the same bedroom as the victim’s father.
4.  The murder weapon was a kitchen knife readily accessible to the occupants of the house . As
the Solicitor General observed, common sense dictates that if an outsider entered the house
with the intent to kill the victim, he would have brought his own weapon to ensure the execution
of his purpose
5.  None of the victim’s belongings was missing or disturbed, indicating that the motive for the
crime was not gain but revenge.
6.  Judging from the number and severity of the wounds (10 stab wounds, half of which were
fatal), the killer felt deep-seated resentment and anger toward the victim.  Accused-appellant
had admitted those feelings to Erlinda Arrojado Magdaluyo and Thelma Arrojado.
7.  Aside from accused-appellant, no one was known to harbor a grudge against the victim.
8.  As the Solicitor General also pointed out, accused-appellant’s behavior in the morning of
June 1, 1996 was inconsistent with someone who had just found his cousin and employer, a
person he claims to get along with, dead. [59] By his testimony, he did not even go inside the
room to check on her condition on the lame excuse that he was afraid.  He also did not inform
his neighbors about the incident for the equally flimsy reason that he did not know them nor did
he go to the police.
The supreme court held that the aggravating circumstance of abuse of confidence is present in this
case. For this aggravating circumstance to exist, it is essential to show that the confidence between the
parties must be immediate and personal such as would give the accused some advantage or make it
easier for him to commit the criminal act.  The confidence must be a means of facilitating the commission
of the crime, the culprit taking advantage of the offended party’s belief that the former would not abuse
said confidence.[68] In this case, while the victim may have intimated her fear for her safety for which
reason she entrusted her jewelry and bank book to Erlinda Arrojado Magdaluyo, her fears were
subsequently allayed as shown by the fact that she took back her personal effects from Erlinda.
[69]
 Thinking that accused-appellant would not do her any harm, because he was after all her first cousin,
the victim allowed accused-appellant to sleep in the same room with her father and left the bedroom
doors unlocked.
No. Eventhough, the murder in this case took place after the effectivity of R.A. No. 7659 on
December 31, 1993 which increased the penalty for murder from reclusion temporal maximum to death
to reclusion perpetua to death.  In view of the presence of the aggravating circumstance of abuse of
confidence and in accordance with Art. 63(1) of the Revised Penal Code, the trial court should have
imposed the penalty of death on accused-appellant. 
However,The Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure took effect on December 1, 2000,
requiring that every complaint or information state not only the qualifying but also the aggravating
circumstances. This provision may be given retroactive effect in the light of the well settled rule that
“statutes regulating the procedure of the court will be construed as applicable to actions pending and
undetermined at the time of their passage.  Procedural laws are retroactive in that sense and to that
extent. 
In this case, the aggravating circumstance of abuse of confidence was not alleged in the said
information the information, thus the aggravating circumstance of abuse of confidence cannot be
appreciated to raise the penalty to death.

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