V1 - 149. PEOPLE Vs DAMASO
V1 - 149. PEOPLE Vs DAMASO
V1 - 149. PEOPLE Vs DAMASO
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EN BANC
Solicitor General Felix Q. Antonio, Acting Assistant Solicitor General Dominador L. Quiroz and
Solicitor Concepcion T. Agapinan for appellees.
PER CURIAM:
The penalty of death imposed on Fausto Damaso, Victoriano Eugenio Lorenzo Alviar and
Bonifacio Espejo by the Court of First Instance of Tarlac in its Criminal Case No. 2253 for
"robbery with double homicide" is now before this Court on automatic review together with a
related case No. 2293 "for illegal possession of firearm and ammunition" involving only the
accused, Lorenzo Alviar.
The Information in Criminal Case No. 2253 charged the accused therein of "robbery with
double homicide" alleged to have been committed as follows:
That on or about the 21st day of November, 1959, at nighttime, in the Municipality of Victoria,
Province of Tarlac, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above
named accused, four of whom are armed with a scythe and firearms, namely: Fausto Damaso
with a rifle, springfield Cal. 30, Victoriano Eugenio with a paltik Cal. 12 ga., Estanislao Gregorio
with a scythe, and Lorenzo Alviar with a paltik Cal. 22, confederating, conspiring, helping and
aiding one another, by means of force, violence, threats and intimidation upon the persons of
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Donata Rebolledo, Victoriano de la Cruz and Susana Sabado, did then and there, willfully,
unlawfully and feloniously, with intent to gain, take, steal and carry away with them the
following.
A document valued at
2.30
Total.
P125.90
to the damage and prejudice of the said owners in the respective amounts of P125.90, P15.00
and P36,02, Philippine currency; that the said accused, on the occasion of the commission of
the crime above-mentioned, held and brought Catalina Sabado and Susana Sabado, daughters
of the said Donata Rebolledo, to a sugarcane field which is a secluded and uninhabited place, at
Barrio Bangar, Victoria, Tarlac, and once there and after tying together the respective forearms
of the said Catatina Sabado and Susana Sabado, in pursuance of their concerted conspiracy, by
means of force and grave abuse of superior strength, the said accused did then and there,
willfully, unlawfully and feloniously, stab the said Catalina Sabado and Susana Sabado on
different parts of their body and cut their necks with a sharp pointed instrument (scythe), as a
result of which the latter died instantly.
That in the commission of the crime above mentioned, there concurred the aggravating
circumstances of (1) abuse of superior strength, (2) nighttime, (3) uninhabited place, (4) by a
band, (5) treachery, and (6) disregard of sex. (pp. 116-117, rollo)
In Criminal Case No. 2293 Lorenzo Alviar was also charged of illegal possession of firearm and
ammunition, viz.—
That on or about November 24, 1959, in the Municipality of Victoria, Province of Tarlac,
Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above named accused,
without authority of law, did then and there, willfully, unlawfully and feloniously have in his
posssession and under his control a firearm, to wit; a paltik revolver caliber 22 with eight (8)
rounds of ammunition, without first obtaining the corresponding license or permit to keep and
possess the same. (pp. 117-118, Ibid.)
The two cases were jointly heard by the trial court. In a joint decision rendered on December
10, 1968, by then Presiding Judge, Hon. Arturo B. Santos, all the accused were found guilty as
charged. In Criminal Case No. 2253 (robbery with double homicide) the accused Fausto
Damaso, Lorenzo Alviar, Bonifacio Espejo and Victoriano Eugenio were each sentenced to suffer
the "penalty of death, to indemnify the legal heirs of the victims, Catalina Sabado and Susana
Sabado, jointly and severally in the amount of P12,000.00 for each of the victims, plus the sum
of P15,00 which was the money taken by the accused, and to pay the costs, share and share
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alike." One of the accused, Estanislao Gregorio, was no longer included in the sentence because
he died on April 6, 1967 while the cases were still undergoing trial.
In Criminal Case No. 2293, accused Lorenzo Alviar was sentenced "to three years imprisonment
and to pay the costs," 1
The evidence of the prosecution as found by the trial court establish the following incidents: 2
Donata Rebolledo and her son-in-law, Victoriano de la Cruz were residents of Barrio Bangar,
municipality of Victoria, province of Tarlac. At about 9 o'clock in the evening of November 21,
1959, Donata and Victoriano heard the barkings of dogs outside their house. Shortly, two men
armed with guns, entered, pointed their weapons at them, tied up the hands of Victoriano,
covered him with a blanket and asked Donata for the wereabouts of her daughter Catalina
Sabado. Stricken by fear, Donata kept silent and blocked the door leading to her daughter's
room but was promptly pushed aside. Donata was then ordered to open an "aparador" from
which the two men took valuables like jewelry, clothing, documents, and cutting instruments.
All the while, Donata and Victoriano could hear the movements and voices of some three to
four other persons beneath the house. The two men brought Catalina Sabado down from the
house and then asked where they could find Susana Sabado, Donata's other daughter who was
then in her store located about five meters away in the same house. Thereafter, Donata heard
the men opening the door to Susana's store. After several minutes, feeling that the intruders
had left, Donata untied the hands of Victoriano and asked him to go to the store to see if her
daughters were there. When the two women could not be found, Donata sent Victoriano to the
barrio lieutenant to report the incident. Accordingly, Victoriano went to the barrio lieutenant
and the two later went to town to inform the police of the occurrence.
On the same night, Chief of Police Pedro Valdez with the aid of several policemen and a handful
of civilians went out in search for the Sabado sisters. It was only the following morning when
the two women were found already dead with wounds in several parts of their bodies. They
were found in a sugar plantation belonging to one Ignacio Fabros, located about one hundred
meters from Donata Rebolledo's house.
Dr. Carlos Briones, Municipal Health Officer of Victoria performed the autopsy on the two
bodies and reported that the deaths were caused by profuse hemorrhage due to a fatal, big,
wide, gaping and deep lacerated wound just above the Adam's apple. He also testified in court
that the death weapon must have been a sharp instrument with a pointed tip, like a scythe.
A few days after the incident, Donata Rebolledo singled out the accused Fausto Damaso from a
police line-up as one of the men who went up to her house on that evening. She and Victoriano
had recognized Damaso because of the light coming from a kerosene lamp placed on a small
table near the "aparador." Damaso, however, initially denied ever having been to Donata's
house that night. Later, the PC rounded up four other suspects in the persons of co-accused
Gregorio, Eugenio Alviar and Espejo.
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In his sworm statement marked as Exhibit "J", Fausto Damaso stated that he was with his co-
accused Gregorio, Eugenio, Alviar and Espejo on the night the Sabado sisters were killed; that
he never went into the house of Donata Rebolledo as Eugenio and Gregorio were the ones who
did; that it was Gregorio and Eugenio who actually did the killing while he, Alviar and Espejo
merely stood by; that the victims were stabbed and their throats cut with a reaping knife
(pangapas or lait); that the killing was motivated by the failure of the older woman (Catalina) to
pay for a carabao bought from Gregorio; and that on that evening, Gregorio, Eugenio, Alviar
and Espejo were carrying caliber .45 pistols while he was unarmed.
In a subsequent statement marked as Exhibit "P", Damaso reiterated his claim that it was
Gregorio who actually stabbed and cut the throats of the victims in the presence of all the
accused; that Catalina was killed ahead of Susana; that Gregorio killed Susana as she was being
held by Eugenio; and that while still in the house, they were able to get P15 from Susana's
store. Contrary to what he confessed in his previous sworn statements, he admitted that it was
he and Eugenio who went up to Donata Rebolledo's house and not Eugenio and Gregorio. He
also changed his theory as to the motive for the killings, declaring this time that the two women
were killed because the latter had already recognized them. He further stated that on that
night, he was armed with a caliber .22 (paltik) revolver, Eugenio with a 12-gauge paltik,
Gregorio with two reaping knives (lait), Lorenzo with a long firearm and Espejo with two stones.
In this sworn statement, Exhibit "O", Victoriano Eugenio likewise admitted that he was a party
to the commission of the offense: that it was Gregorio who conceived of the plot to commit the
crime; that it was also Gregorio who killed the two women with a reaping knife; that after
Catalina was killed he held Susana by the arms as Gregorio stabbed her and cut her throat; that
Alviar, Damaso and Lorenzo were also with them that night; that he did not know what
motivated Gregorio to kill the victims; that he had no previous agreement with his co-accused
to kill the two women; that he and Damaso were the ones who entered Donata's house, took
P15 from the "aparador," brought down Catalina and also got Susana from another portion of
the house; that he was then armed with a 12- gauge paltik, Damaso with a caliber.22 paltik
revolver, Alviar with a Springfield caliber .30 rifle, Gregorio with a reaping knife and Espejo with
two stones; and that he was with the group that night because at about 7 o'clock in the
evening, Gregorio dropped by his house and invited him to Barrio Bangar where the crime was
committed.
In his separate statement (Exhibit "Q"), Estanislao Gregorio narrated that in the afternoon of
November 21, 1959, his four co-accused came and informed him of a plan to rob the Sabado
sisters, to which plan he agreed; that Damaso and Eugenio went up Donata Rebolledo's house,
got P15 in cash and brought out Catalina and Susana by force; that he stabbed and cut the
throats of the victims with all his co-accused present; that Eugenio held Catalina while Damaso
held Susana as he killed them both with a reaping knife; that the two women were killed
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because they had recognized Eugenio and Damaso and might testify against them in court; that
during the commission of the crime, his only weapon was a reaping knife while Alviar was
carrying a caliber .22 paltik revolver, Damaso, a Springfield caliber .30 rifle, Eugenio a 12-gauge
single shot paltik and Espejo was unarmed.
Exhibit "N" is Bonifacio Espejo's sworn statement. Here he declared that he happened to be
with the group because Damaso and Eugenio invited him to Barrio Bangar and they dropped by
the houses of Alviar and Gregorio before actually proceeding to the barrio; that they had a
previous agreement to commit the crime; that they planned the same in a lot owned by a
certain Don Juan Garcia in Barrio Bangar; that it was Damaso and Eugenio who entered Donata
Rebolledo's house while he, Alviar and Gregorio were left downstairs to keep watch; that they
were able to get P15 from the house; that it was Gregorio who actually killed the two women;
and that Damaso and Eugenio were armed with a 12-gauge paltik and another long arm the
caliber of which he did not know; that Alviar had a caliber .22 paltik revolver, Gregorio a knife
and he had two big stones.
Substantially similar were the admissions of Lorenzo Alviar in his sworn statement (Exhibit "R").
He likewise declared that he and his co-accused took P15 from the house of the victims; that it
was Gregorio who stabbed and cut the throats of the victims with a reaping knife; that the
killing was done in a sugarcane plantation between 10:00 and 11:00 o'clock in the evening of
November 21, 1959; that Catalina was killed before Susana; that he was armed with a caliber .
22 paltik revolver, Eugenio with a single shot, 12-gauge paltik, Damaso with a Springfield caliber
.30 rifle and Espejo with two stones. He claimed, however, that he was only forced and
intimidated by his co-accused to join the group.
At the trial, the five accused set up the defense of alibi and repudiated their respective sworn
statements alleging that these were obtained from them through duress, force and
intimidation. Instances of the use of third degree methods like boxing, pouring of "7-up" into
the nostrils, stripping of clothes, pricking of the penis, kicking and slapping of the ears were
narrated by the accused on the witness stand, all of which were not believed by the trial court.
Taken as a whole, the assigned errors boil down to the question of credibility and sufficiency of
the evidence to sustain the conviction of appellants for the special complex crime of robbery
with double homicide. It is argued that (a) there is no evidence of the alleged robbery; (b) that
the homicide was not committed by reason or on occasion of the robbery; and (c) that the
crime was not attended by the aggravating circumstances of armed band, treachery and
uninhabited place.
1. That robbery was committed is evident from the declaration of prosecution witness Donata
Rebolledo who testified that the two men who barged into her house, one of whom she
recognized as Fausto Damaso, ordered her to open her "aparador" and then they took
therefrom the following items with their respective values a jacket-P25; a necklace P50;
earrings — P25; a ring-P15; a hat-P5; scythes-P3.60; and documents worth P2.30. 3 Moreover
the appellants admitted in their separate statements that they were able to get P15 from
Donata's house. On this point, We agree with the Solicitor General that it matters not from
what part of the house the accused got the P15. What is important is that the culprits carried
away personal property belonging to another by the use of force, intimidation or violence.
2. Counsel points out that because there was a motive, at least on the part of Gregorio, for the
killing of the Sabado sisters, the double homicide could not have been "committed by reason or
on occasion of the robbery" as the law contemplates. He calls Our attention to the sworn
statement wherein Fausto Damaso declared that Gregorio killed Catalina and Susana because
Catalina bought a carabao from him and did not pay for it. Harping further on this motive
theory, counsel mentions such circumstances as why the accused specifically asked for Catalina
and Susana upon entering Donata Rebolledo's house and why Donata and Victoriano were not
killed together with the sisters if the purpose was to remove all opposition to the robbery or to
eliminate witnesses thereto.
As to Damaso's declaration, it should be noted that Damaso himself, in his subsequent sworn
statement, changed his motive theory and stated that the victims were killed in order to
eliminate witnesses to the crime. This was corroborated by Gregorio in the latter's own written
confession. Even assuming, however, that such a motive for vengeance existed on the part of
Gregorio, it does not necessarily exclude the fact that he and co-accused also intended, when
they went to Donata's house that night, to rob the family. In a complex crime of robbery with
homicide, while an intent to commit robbery must precede the taking of human life, the fact
that the intent of the culprit was tempered with a desire also to avenge grievances against the
person killed does not prevent the punishment of the accused for the complex crime.
3. Counsel for appellants also argues that the trial court erred in its appreciation of the
aggravating circumstances of armed band, treachery and uninhabited place.
The aggravating circumstance of band exists whenever more than three armed malefactors
act together in the commission of an offense. Counsel concedes that at least three of the
accused-appellants, namely Eugenio, Alviar, and Gregorio, ,were armed during the
commission of the crime. He doubts, however, whether accused Damaso carried any weapon
and whether the "two stones" carried by accused Espejo fall under the category of "arms." But
even granting that Espejo's stones do not constitute arms, the prosecution presented the
following evidence to show that Damaso was also armed and, as such, there were more than
three of the accused who were armed: (1) that extrajudicial confession of Damaso himself
(Exhibit "P") that he was carrying a caliber .22 paltik revolver; (2) the sworn statement of
accused Eugenio (Exhibit "O") that Damaso had a caliber .22 paltik revolver; (3) the separate
written confessions of Alviar, Gregorio and Espejo (Exhibits R, Q, and "N") that Damaso had a
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caliber .30 Springfield rifle; and (4) the testimonies of Donata Rebolledo and Victoriano de la
Cruz that both men who entered their house (one of whom they later Identified as Damaso)
were carrying firearms. It is clear from the above, that Damaso was armed during the night of
the commission of the crime, and it is immaterial what kind of firearm he carried, the only
important thing being that he was armed. In this case, the presence of an armed band is to be
considered as a generic aggravating circumstance under Article 14(6) of the Revised Penal
Code inasmuch as the crime committed was that provided for and penalized in Article 294,
paragraph 1 and not under Article 295, Revised Penal Code (see People v. Apduhan, Jr., per
Justice, now Chief Justice Fred Ruiz Castro, 24 SCRA 798)
Treachery is present if the victim is killed while bound in such a manner as to be deprived of the
opportunity to repel the attack or escape with any possibility of success. The fact that the
bodies of Catalina and Susana were found dead with their arms tied behind their backs as well
as the admission of Gregorio in his confession (Exhibit "Q") that he killed the sisters while their
arms were held by Eugenio and Damaso lead us to conclude that the killing of the two women
was done under treacherous circumstances.
Anent the circumstances of uninhabited place, counsel disclaims its existence by pointing to
the proximity of the sugarcane field where the victims were killed to the national highway as
well as to certain houses in the barrio. The uninhabitedness of a place is determined not by
the distance of the nearest house to the scene of the crime, but whether or not in the place of
commission, there was reasonable possibility of the victim receiving some help. Considering
that the killing was done during nighttime and the sugarcane in the field was tall enough to
obstruct the view of neighbors and passersby, there was no reasonable possibility for the
victims to receive any assistance. That the accused deliberately sought the solitude of the
place is clearly shown by the fact that they brought the victims to the sugarcane field
although they could have disposed of them right in the house of Donata Rebolledo where
they were found. Thus, in People v. Saguing, the Court considered the crime as having been
committed in an uninhabited place because the killing was done in a secluded place at the
foot of a hill, forested, and uninhabited.
The trial court considered separately the three circumstances of armed band, treachery and
uninhabited place where under other situations one may be considered absorbed or inherent
in the other. There is ample justification for this. The elements of each circumstance subsist
independently and can be distinctly perceived thereby revealing a greater degree of
perversity on the part of the accused.
4. In the third assignment of error, defense counsel assails the sufficiency of the evidence for
the prosecution. He urges that the extrajudicial confessions, having been repudiated during the
trial, are insufficient to sustain the trial court's judgment of conviction, specially so since no
direct evidence was introduced of any conspiracy or of the involvement of appellants in the
crime in question.
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Regarding this matter, the following are strongly persuasive. First, the appellants' separate
extrajudicial confessions were subscribed and sworn to before Municipal Judge Conrado de
Gracia of Paniqui, Tarlac. On the witness stand, Judge de Gracia testified as to the authenticity
and due execution of the statements. He declared that before the statements were sworn to
before him, he had the appellants' PC escorts excluded from the room. He then took pains in
translating and explaining to the appellants the contents of their written statements and got
their assurance that such statements were freely and voluntarily made. 10 If it were true that
appellants were forced or intimidated into making the confessions, they could have easily
manifested before the judge that they did not voluntarily give the same. Certainly, they could
have then been afforded the necessary protection from any untoward incident that could
happen. Their failure there and then to air any injustice or misdeed committed upon them
belies their stories of maltreatment. Too, there is no credible proof of the alleged maltreatment
that they suffered in the hands of the police or other authorities as a result of which they
executed the confessions. Considering that repudiation of confessions comes very easily, the
same must be taken with a grain of salt. it occurs all too often that guilty persons, after
confession to crime, experience a change of heart and repudiate their confessions in the hope
of escaping liability.
Secondly, there was the reenactment of the robbery and the killings. The movements
reconstructed by the appellants conform substantially with the details set forth in their
individual sworn statements. The reenactment was done in the presence of people, including a
photographer who had no connection with the police or the prosecution.
Fiscal Magin Tañedo who was present during the reenactment testified that the entire
proceeding was spontaneous and free from coercion. On several occasions, appellants, even
corrected themselves in certain details. Nobody directed the whole show except the appellants
themselves. 11
Fiscal Tañedo's testimony was corroborated by photographer Manuel Gamalinda who also
declared that there was no dictation, violence, force or intimidation employed upon the
appellants during the reenactment. 12 Gamalinda also testified as to the authenticity of the
pictures he took during the reenactment, which the prosecution also submitted as evidence. 13
Again, concerning the confessions, other circumstances are equally significant. Some of the
statements made, specifically the one of accused Alviar, were exculpatory in nature and would
not have been included had the confessant been coerced into making his confession. Others
cite plausible facts and details which only actual participants in the crime could have known.
Also, partial corroboration of appellants' statements are found in the testimonies of Donata
Rebolledo and Victoriano de la Cruz, more particularly, as to the robbery. As such, the
confessions, coupled by evidence of the corpus delicti the human remains of Catalina and
Susana Sabado, are sufficient bases for the trial court's declaration of guilt.
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5. With regards to the defense of alibi, We find no justifiable reason for discarding the findings
of the trial court on this matter. In People v. Berdida, et al., this Court held that the defense of
alibi is an issue of fact that hinges on credibility, which depends much on the credibility of the
witnesses who seek to establish it. In this respect the relative weight which the trial judge
assigns to the testimony of the witnesses must, unless patently and clearly inconsistent with
the evidence on record, be accepted. The defense of alibi is worthless in the face of positive
Identification by prosecution witnesses, pointing to the accused as participants in the crime. (17
SCRA 520, citing People v. Tansiangco,
L-19448, February 28,1964; People v. Rivera, L-14077, March 31, 1964)
6. As to conspiracy, the trial court's inference as to the existence of the same is well-founded
and is amply discussed in its decision. Said His Honor:
From the simultaneous and cooperative acts of the accused, the Court finds and so holds that
there was conspiracy among them. For conspiracy to exist, direct proof is not essential The
same may be inferred from the acts of the conspirators in the commission of the offense. It is
not essential that each conspirator takes part in every act or that he should know the exact part
to be performed by the others in the execution of the conspiracy. Conspiracy merely implies
concert of design and does not require participation in every detail of execution. Neither is it
necessary to show any previous plan or that the parties should actually come together and
agree in express terms in pursuing a common design. It is sufficient if it is proved that the acts of
the conspirators were in fact connected and cooperative in accomplishing the unlawful object,
thereby indicating a closeness of personal association and concurrence of sentiments.
In the case of the accused herein, they got together and planned the criminal act shortly before
its execution; they proceeded together to the house of the victims and, while Damaso and
Eugenio went upstairs, the other accused stayed under the house as lookout; once inside the
house, the two asked and demanded for the victims, forcibly dragged them downstairs, handed
them to those waiting under the house and, together as a group, they brought the victims to
the sugarcane field and mercilessly stabbed them to death. Clearly, there was a concert of acts
among the accused aimed at one common design, and each act was connected to and
cooperative with the others.
The basic rule is that when conspiracy is established, like in the present case, the act of one
conspirator is imputable to the others and the criminal liability of each participant is the same
as those of the others.
7. On the matter of accused Lorenzo Alviar's conviction for illegal possession of firearms in
Criminal Case No. 2293, two errors are assigned. First, that the trial court had no jurisdiction
over the case because the same having been previously filed before the Justice of the Peace
Court of Victoria, Tarlac, which also acquired jurisdiction over the person of the accused, the
latter court acquired jurisdiction to the exclusion of all other courts.
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This is untenable. That the Justice of the Peace Court has concurrent jurisdiction with the Court
of First Instance in this case is not questioned. It, however, appears from the order of the
justice of the Peace Court forwarding the records of the case to the Court of First Instance 14
that the case was brought before the former court merely for purposes of a preliminary
investigation. Where a Justice of the Peace acquires jurisdiction for the purpose of preliminary
investigation and not for trial on the merits, such court does not necessarily acquire exclusive
jurisdiction to try the case on the merits. 15
In the second assigned error, counsel attacks the flimsiness of the evidence for the prosecution.
He questions the sufficiency of a document (Exhibit "B"), purportedly a receipt issued to Alviar
upon the confiscation from him of the alleged firearm. It is argued that from the manner the
receipt is worded as well as from the fact that it is thumb marked by Alviar and not signed by
the person confiscating, it appears to be a confession rather than a receipt.
The controversial receipt, however, is not the only evidence presented by the prosecution. Sgt.
Melencio Fiesta of the Philippine Constabulary also declared on the witness stand that Alviar
verbally confessed to him his (Alviar's) possession of a caliber .22 paltik revolver. 16 He further
stated that he properly translated from English to Ilocano the contents of the receipt before
Alviar affixed his thumbmark on the same. 17 Whether Exhibit " B " is taken as a receipt or as a
confession, it has its own weight as an evidence against appellant Alviar.
Still on the illegal possession of firearm, the prosecution also presented as evidence Exhibit "C"
properly sworn to before Judge Conrado de Gracia, wherein Alviar confessed that he did own
and possess a caliber .22 paltik which he carried on the night the robbery and killings were
committed. The voluntariness of this confession has not been disproved.
8. In conclusion, the crime committed by appellants in Criminal Case No. 2253 is robbery with
homicide defined in Article 294, paragraph 1, Revised Penal Code, to wit:
Robbery with violence against or intimidation of persons Penalties - Any person guilty of
robbery with the use of violence against or intimidation of any person shall suffer:
1. The penalty of reclusion perpetua to death, when by reason or on occasion of the robbery,
the crime of homicide shall have been committed.
The penalty is to be imposed in its maximum period by reason of the presence of three
aggravating circumstances found by the trial court, to wit: that the robbery was committed by a
band, 18 with treachery, 19 and in an uninhabited place. 20 There is likewise the additional
aggravating circumstance that the robbery was committed in the dwelling of the victim. Donata
Rebolledo which although not alleged in the Information is however established by the
evidence.
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IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING CONSIDERATIONS, We hereby affirm in toto the decision of the
trial court in the two cases.
SO ORDERED.