Fernan vs. People: G.R. No. 145927, August 24, 2007, Second Division, Velasco, JR., J

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FERNAN vs.

PEOPLE
G.R. No. 145927, August 24, 2007, Second Division, Velasco, Jr., J

Crime charged Estafa thru Falsification of Public Documents


(Conspiracy) 
Accused Rolando Mangubat (Chief Accountant), Delia
Preagido (Accountant III), Jose Sayson (Budget
Examiner), and Edgardo Cruz (Clerk II) 

Victim People of the Phillippines


Location Cebu

Sandiganbayan Conspiracy to commit Estafa thru Falsification of


Public Documents
SC Conspiracy to commit Estafa thru Falsification of
Public Documents

Facts: 
Petitioners and 36 former officials and employees of the then Ministry of Public Highways
(MPH) and several suppliers of construction materials were involved in the misappropriation of public
funds arising from numerous transactions in the Cebu First Highway Engineering District in 1977.
Sometime in February, 1977, accused Rolando Mangubat (Chief Accountant), Delia Preagido
(Accountant III), Jose Sayson (Budget Examiner), and Edgardo Cruz (Clerk II), all of MPH Region VII,
met at the Town and Country Restaurant in Cebu City and hatched an ingenious plan to siphon off large
sums of money from government coffers.   

Mangubat had found a way to withdraw government money through the use of fake Letters of
Advice of Allotments (LAA), vouchers and other documents and to conceal traces thereof with the
connivance of other government officials and employees.   A total of 132 General Vouchers, emanating
from fake LAAs, were traced back to Rolando Mangubat, Regional Accountant of Region VII and
Adventor Fernandez, Regional Highway Engineer, also of Region VII. Those LAAs became the vehicles
in the disbursement of funds amounting to P3,839,810.74, through the vouchers purportedly issued for the
purchase and delivery of the aforementioned materials allegedly used for the maintenance and repair of
the national highways within the Cebu First HED.   

Despite the enormous additional expenditure of P3,839,810.74, the roads and bridges in the
district, as found out by the NBI, did not show any improvement. As testified to by several barangay
captains, the road maintenance consisted merely of spreading anapog or limestone on potholes of the
national highway. Because of the sheer magnitude of the illegal transactions, the number of people
involved, and the ingenious scheme employed in defrauding the government, this infamous 86 million
highway scam has few parallels in the annals of crime in the country.  

The petitioners and all other accused were charged and convicted in the Sandiganbayan all in
conspiracy with each other committing estafa thru falsification of public documents as defined and
penalized in Articles 318 and 171, in relation to Article 48 of the Revised Penal Code. 
Issue: 

Whether or not the Sandiganbayan erred in convicting petitioners as co-conspirators despite the
prosecution’s failure to specifically prove beyond reasonable doubt the facts and circumstances that
would implicate them as co-conspirators and justify their conviction (Sandiganbayan was correct) 

HELD:
Petitioners acted in conspiracy with one another.  

Petitioners vigorously claim error on the part of the lower court when it made the finding that
they were co-conspirators with the other parties accused despite the dearth of evidence to amply
demonstrate complicity.  

The Court is not convinced by petitioners’ postulation. Indeed, the burden of proving the
allegation of conspiracy falls to the shoulders of the prosecution. Considering, however, the difficulty in
establishing the existence of conspiracy, settled jurisprudence finds no need to prove it by direct evidence.
In People v. Pagalasan, the Court explicated why direct proof of prior agreement is not necessary: 

“After all, secrecy and concealment are essential features of a successful conspiracy. Conspiracies
are clandestine in nature. It may be inferred from the conduct of the accused before, during and after the
commission of the crime, showing that they had acted with a common purpose and design. Conspiracy
may be implied if it is proved that two or more persons aimed their acts towards the accomplishment of
the same unlawful object, each doing a part so that their combined acts, though apparently independent of
each other, were in fact, connected and cooperative, indicating a closeness of personal association and a
concurrence of sentiment. To hold an accused guilty as a co-principal by reason of conspiracy, he must be
shown to have performed an overt act in pursuance or furtherance of the complicity. There must be
intentional participation in the transaction with a view to the furtherance of the common design and
purpose.” 

 In Estrada v. Sandiganbayan, the Court categorized two (2) structures of multiple conspiracies,
namely: (1) the so-called "wheel" or "circle" conspiracy, in which there is a single person or group (the
"hub") dealing individually with two or more other persons or groups (the "spokes"); and (2) the "chain"
conspiracy, usually involving the distribution of narcotics or other contraband, in which there is
successive communication and cooperation in much the same way as with legitimate business operations
between manufacturer and wholesaler, then wholesaler and retailer, and then retailer and consumer.  

The Court finds that the conspiracy in the instant cases resembles the "wheel" conspiracy. The 36
disparate persons who constituted the massive conspiracy to defraud the government were controlled by a
single hub, namely: Rolando Mangubat (Chief Accountant), Delia Preagido (Accountant III), Jose Sayson
(Budget Examiner), and Edgardo Cruz (Clerk II), who controlled the separate "spokes" of the conspiracy.
Petitioners were among the many spokes of the wheel.   

Mangubat enticed Preagido, Cruz and Sayson to join him. All three agreed to help him carry out
his plan. They typed fake LAAs during Saturdays. Cruz and Sayson also took charge of negotiating or
selling fake LAAs to contractors at 26% of the gross amount. Preagido manipulated the general ledger,
journal vouchers and general journal through negative entries to conceal the illegal disbursements. The
four formed the nucleus of the nefarious conspiracy. Other government employees, tempted by the
prospect of earning big money, allowed their names to be used and signed spurious documents. 

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