People vs. Gungon

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5/6/2021 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 287

618 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


People vs. Gungon

*
G.R. No. 119574. March 19, 1998.

THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,


vs. ROBERTO GUNGON y SANTIAGO and VENANCIO
ROXAS y ARGUELLES, accused. ROBERTO GUNGON y
SANTIAGO, accused-appellant.

Criminal Law; Kidnapping and Serious Illegal Detention


With Frustrated Murder; Evidence; Credibility of Witnesses; In the
determination of the veracity of testimony, the assessment by the
trial court is accorded the highest degree of respect and will not be
disturbed on appeal unless, of course, it is seen to have acted
arbitrarily or with evident partiality.—Appellant’s challenges, in
essence, would revolve on the issue, once again, of credibility of
witnesses. In monotone, this Court has constantly ruled that in
the determination of the veracity of testimony, the assessment by
the trial court is accorded the highest degree of respect and will
not be disturbed on appeal unless, of course, it is seen to have
acted arbitrarily or with evident partiality. Contrary to
appellant’s contention, however, it is the Court’s view that the
trial court has taken due care in evaluating the testimonies given
at the witness stand.

_______________

* EN BANC.

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People vs. Gungon

Same; Same; Same; Same; Negative assertion cannot prevail


over the unimpeached testimony of the victim describing in
sufficient detail the active participation of appellant in the
commission of the crimes charged.—The defense, verily, anchors
itself on the bare denial of appellant of the specific acts imputed
by the prosecution against him. Certainly, this negative assertion
cannot prevail over the unimpeached testimony of the victim
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describing in sufficient detail the active participation of appellant


in the commission of the crimes charged. In the face of the clear
and positive declaration of the victim herself, the defense of denial
hardly assumes probative value and sinks down the drain even
further with the absence of any evidence of a sinister or nefarious
motive on the part of the complainant to impute a crime so grave
a wrong as that made out in the Information.
Same; Same; Same; Conspiracy; Jurisprudential account tells
us consistently that the conduct of the accused before, during, and
after the commission of the crime may be considered to show an
extant conspiracy.—The argument that the finding of conspiracy
between appellant and Venancio Roxas to commit the crimes
charged has been based by the trial court merely on inferences,
conjectures and presumptions is bereft of merit. A conspiracy
exists when two or more persons come to an agreement
concerning the commission of a felony and decide to commit it.
The proof of the agreement need not rest on direct evidence; the
agreement itself may be inferred from the conduct of the parties
disclosing a common understanding among them relative to the
commission of the offense. Jurisprudential account tells us
consistently that the conduct of the accused before, during, and
after the commission of the crime may be considered to show an
extant conspiracy.
Same; Same; Same; Same; In conspiracy the act of one
conspirator is the act of the other co-conspirators and, therefore, it
is of no moment that an accused has not taken part in the actual
commission of every act constituting the crime, each of the
conspirators being held in the same degree of liability as the
others.—Appellant contends that he should not have been
convicted of violation of Republic Act No. 6539, otherwise known
as the Anti-Carnapping Act, because the taking of the subject
motor vehicle was perpetrated solely by Roxas, and at the time he
(Gungon) boarded the subject vehicle, Roxas had already acquired
effective possession of the subject vehicle. This argument would
have been consequential had there been

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620 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED

People vs. Gungon

no finding of conspiracy between appellant and Venancio Roxas.


In conspiracy, to once again stress it, the act of one conspirator is
the act of the other co-conspirators and, therefore, it is of no
moment that an accused has not taken part in the actual
commission of every act constituting the crime, each of the
conspirators being held in the same degree of liability as the
others.

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Same; Same; Same; Kidnapping and serious illegal detention


consist not only in placing a person in an enclosure but also in
detaining that person or depriving him in any manner of his
liberty.—The crime of kidnapping and serious illegal detention
consists not only in placing a person in an enclosure but also in
detaining that person or depriving him in any manner of his
liberty. Actual restraint of the victim’s liberty was evident in the
instant case from the moment Agnes was taken at gunpoint from
Panay Avenue to a remote place in Batangas.
Same; Same; Same; Qualifying Circumstances; Treachery;
Trial court properly appreciated the attendance of treachery in the
commission of the offense.—The trial court has, too, properly
appreciated the attendance of treachery in the commission of the
offense. Treachery exists when the offender employs means,
methods, or forms in the execution of the crime which tend
directly and specially to insure its execution, without risk to
himself arising from the defense which the offended party might
take. It bears stressing that the unsuspecting and defenseless
victim has sustained the gunshot wound while still trying to get
up after relieving herself.
Same; Same; Same; The crime of kidnapping and serious
illegal detention has been correctly complexed by the trial court
with frustrated murder.—The crime of kidnapping and serious
illegal detention has been correctly complexed by the trial court
with frustrated murder. A complex crime is committed when a
single act constitutes two or more grave or less grave felonies, or
when an offense is a necessary means for committing the other.
Same; Same; Same; In a complex crime, the penalty for the
most serious crime shall be imposed, the same to be applied in its
maximum period.—In a complex crime, the penalty for the most
serious crime shall be imposed, the same to be applied in its
maximum period. Since the kidnapping and serious illegal
detention is the more serious crime, the proper penalty under
Article 267 of the

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People vs. Gungon

Revised Penal Code, as amended by Republic Act No. 7659, should


be applied in its maximum period.
Same; Robbery; Two Ways of Committing Robbery; Elements
to exist to be liable for robbery with violence against or
intimidation of persons.—Article 293 of the Revised Penal Code
defines robbery to be one committed by any “person who, with
intent to gain, shall take any personal property belonging to

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another, by means of violence against or intimidation of any


person, or using force upon anything x x x.” Robbery may thus be
committed two ways: (a) with violence against, or intimidation of
persons and (b) by the use of force upon things. To be then liable
for robbery with violence against or intimidation of persons, the
following elements must concur: 1) that there be personal
property belonging to another; 2) that there is unlawful taking of
that property; 3) that the taking must be with intent to gain; and
4) that there is violence against or intimidation of any person or
use of force upon things.
Same; Same; Same; The absence of violence or intimidation
did not exculpate appellant from liability for the crime of theft.—It
would appear that the taking of the victim’s jewelry and cash
came only by way of an afterthought on the part of appellant. The
taking was not attended by violence or intimidation upon the
person of Agnes. The absence, however, of violence or intimidation
did not exculpate appellant from liability for the crime of theft,
punishable by Article 308, in relation to Article 309, of the
Revised Penal Code.

AUTOMATIC REVIEW of a decision of the Regional Trial


Court of Quezon City, Br. 96.

The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.


     The Solicitor General for plaintiff-appellee.
          Algarra, Mutia & Trinidad Law Offices for
accusedappellant.

PER CURIAM:

For a direct automatic review by this Court, conformably


with Article 47 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by
Section 22 of Republic Act No. 7659, is the decision, dated
15

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People vs. Gungon

February 1995, of the Regional Trial Court (“RTC”) of


Quezon City, Branch 96, convicting accused-appellant
Roberto Gungon Y Santiago of the crimes of kidnapping
and serious illegal detention with frustrated murder, of
carnapping and of robbery in three separate
1
Informations
filed against him and two other persons. The informations
averred—
In Criminal Case No. 94-54285 for Kidnapping and
Serious Illegal Detention with Frustrated Murder—

“That on or about January 12, 1994 in Quezon City, Philippines,


and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the
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abovenamed accused, conspiring together, confederating and


mutually helping one another, did then and there by means of
force, violence against and intimidation of person and at
gunpoint, willfully, unlawfully, and feloniously kidnap, carry
away and detain AGNES GUIRINDOLA, a female, thereby
depriving her of her liberty, and thereafter bring her to an
uninhabited place in Barangay Bagong Pook, San Jose, Batangas
and then and there, with intent to kill and with treachery, evident
premeditation, and abuse of superior strength, willfully,
unlawfully, and feloniously shoot her in the face with a hand gun,
thus performing all the acts of execution which would produce the
crime of MURDER as a consequence, but which, nevertheless, do
not produce it by reason of causes independent of the will of the
accused, that is, the able and timely medical assistance given to
the said Agnes Guirindola which prevented her death, resulting to
her utmost grief, sorrow, sufferings and sleepless night,
compensable in actual, moral and exemplary damages in such
amounts as may be awarded to them under the provisions of the
Civil Code of the Philippines.
2
“CONTRARY TO LAW.”

_______________

1 Appellant Gungon was charged together with Venancio Roxas and a


John Doe. Both remained at large during the trial. Roxas was arrested
after the trial court rendered the judgment of conviction against Gungon.
2 Records, pp. 4-5.

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People vs. Gungon

In Criminal Case No. 94-54286 for Carnapping—

“That on or about January 12, 1994, in Quezon City, Philippines,


and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the
abovenamed accused, conspiring together, confederating and
mutually helping one another, with intent to gain and by means
of force, violence against and intimidation of person and at
gunpoint, did then and there, wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously,
take and carry away one Nissan Sentra Model 1993 with Plate
No. TKR-837, then driven by Agnes Guirindola but owned by her
mother, Elvira G. Guirindola to the damage and prejudice of said
Agnes Guirindola and Elvira G. Guirindola in such amount as
may be awarded to them under
3
the Civil Code of the Philippines.
“CONTRARY TO LAW.”

—and—

In Criminal Case No. 94-54287 (amended) for Robbery—

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“That on or about January 12, 1994 in Quezon City, Philippines,


and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the
abovenamed accused, conspiring together, confederating and
mutually helping one another, with intent to gain and by means
of force, violence against and intimidation of person and at
gunpoint, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously,
while on board the motor vehicle of AGNES GUIRINDOLA, a
1993 Nissan Sentra with Plate No. TKR-837, and in the course of
its trip, divested and robbed said Agnes Guirindola of the
following cash, check and personal belongings, to wit:

Cash P 1,000.00
Check 3,000.00
Pieces of jewelry valued at 34,000.00

and in the course of the execution thereof, shoot and fatally


wounded Agnes Guirindola with a handgun, which is clearly
unnecessary in the commission of the crime, to the damage and
prejudice of said Agnes Guirindola in such amount as may be
awarded to her under the provisions of the Civil Code of the
Philippines. 4
“CONTRARY TO LAW.”

_______________

3 Records of Criminal Case No. Q-94-54286, pp. 1-2.


4 Records of Criminal Case No. Q-94-54287, pp. 17-18.

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People vs. Gungon

The trial court gave a full account of the evidence


submitted by the prosecution that led to the indictments.
It was about 3:30 in the afternoon of 12 January 1994.
Agnes Guirindola, a 20-year old De La Salle University
student, was driving a red Nissan Sentra car with Plate
No. TKR-837 along Panay Avenue, Quezon City, on her
way to a bookstore and, thereafter, to fetch her mother,
Mrs. Elvira Guirindola, from work when a man, passing
himself off as a traffic enforcement officer and wearing a
“PNP” reflectorized vest, flagged her down and motioned
her to execute a U-turn towards him. She complied.
Lowering the right front window of her car, she asked the
man, whose name she later learned to be Venancio Roxas,
what traffic violation she had committed. Roxas replied
that she had wrongly traversed a one-way street where,
barely two days ago, a little girl had figured in an accident.
Agnes surrendered her driver’s license. Roxas, giving her
what appeared to be a ticket, remarked, “Miss, kunwari
5
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5
pirmahan mo ito,” but seeing that it was not the usual
traffic ticket, she merely put a check sign and returned it.
Roxas told her to open the door. He came on board the car
and directed Agnes to proceed to the next intersection
where Roxas motioned her to turn left. After executing a
left turn, she stopped and handed over to him a fifty peso
(P50.00) bill which he accepted. He then returned her
license.
Agnes asked Roxas where she could drop him off;
instead, he suddenly pointed a gun at her and switched
6
off
the engine, saying “Miss kailangan ko lang ito,” referring
to the car. Agnes started to cry. She pleaded with Roxas to
let her go and not harm her. Instead, Roxas unlocked the
rear door to let another man in. The man, identified in
open court as accusedappellant Roberto Gungon,
immediately reclined her seat and pulled her over to the
back seat by her arms while Roxas promptly slid into the
driver’s seat. She was told that they were taking her to
Philcoa but, after glancing at his beeper,

_______________

5 TSN, 19 April 1994, p. 20.


6 Ibid., p. 23.

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People vs. Gungon

7
Gungon, told Roxas, “Boss, negative Philcoa.” Roxas
nodded. After a while, Gungon spoke to Roxas, 8
“Boss,
dalhin na natin siya sa dati at doon na natin i-s,” to which
Roxas again simply nodded his head without a word.
Agnes, now really scared, took out a rosary from her bag
and prayed. Momentarily, Roxas pulled over and alighted
from the vehicle while Gungon held Agnes and poked a gun
at her. When Roxas returned, he had with him a bottle of
softdrink and skyflakes which he offered to Agnes. Agnes
refused to drink after seeing some tablets floating inside
the bottle. Gungon tried to persuade Agnes to take the9
drink, advising her, “Sige na, makakatulong ito sa iyo.”
The car stopped a second time to load gas at a gasoline
station. Escape was nil; Gungon made sure of that. The car
thereafter proceeded southwards and on to the South
Superhighway.
Roxas took time out from the wheel at a deserted area to
allow him and Gungon to relieve themselves one after the
other. Back on the road, Roxas told Gungon to have Agnes
partake of the softdrink but she continued to resist. Agnes
took out her wallet to get a prayer leaflet. Gungon saw a
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picture and asked Agnes who it was in the photograph. She


replied that it was her sister. Gungon then also took out
some pictures from his wallet to show to her, identifying
one photograph as that of his niece and two others as those
of his girlfriend and of Roxas and his girlfriend and child.
Once again, Gungon insisted that she take the drink.
Fearing his menacing look and the gun pointed at her, she
took a sip from the bottle. She was, still later, also forced to
swallow two tablets which Roxas gave to Gungon. She took
the tablets but had them under her tongue.
When asked what she wanted to eat, she said she would
prefer a McDonald’s sandwich. The car stopped at a bakery
shop, where she noticed the address on the signboard
reading,

_______________

7 Ibid., p. 28.
8 Ibid.
9 Ibid., p. 33.

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People vs. Gungon

“Sto. Tomas Batangas.” Roxas went out and returned with


a “taisan” cake which he handed over to Agnes but she just
held it. Time passed, and somehow she lost consciousness.
It was about 9:30 p.m. when she found herself lying at the
back seat with her legs on the lap of Gungon. She noticed
that her pieces of jewelry, bracelets, earrings, ring,
necklace and a wristwatch, as well as cash, were missing
and that her pair of shoes had been removed. She was told
that the items were just being meanwhile kept for her. The
pair of shoes, however, were returned to her. By this time,
a third man was already seated in front of the car with
Roxas.
When it was her turn to relieve herself, Roxas stopped
the car at a deserted area. Gungon escorted her to a place
not far away from the car. Just as she was getting up, after
relieving herself, she saw a “white spark” to her right and
she fell. She was shot. Feeling weak and unable to get up,
she was still able to glance at Roxas walking back to the
car. Then she passed out.
When she came to, Roxas, Gungon, and the third man,
as well as the car, were nowhere in sight. She managed to
get up and slowly walked down the road until she reached
a small house. Inside were two kids and a teenager, who,
apparently shocked by her appearance, hurriedly left. She
was bleeding profusely from the neck and face. She looked
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around the house but not finding anyone, she went to the
sala to lie down. People soon arrived on a vehicle. She
again lost consciousness and
10
regained it only at the
Batangas Regional Hospital. The hospital, which was ill-
equipped to give full medical treatment, advised her to
transfer to a Manila hospital. The medical certificate
described the gunshot wound:

“Gunshot wound, POE, Zygomatic area (R), POX Submandibular


area (L); Fx, Zygomatic arch & condylar area, (R) Sec
11
to GSW;
Submandibular Gland involvement with sinus tract.”

_______________

10 TSN, 11 May 1994, p. 10.


11 Records, p. 177.

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People vs. Gungon

Recounting the circumstances that paved the way for the


ultimate arrest of Gungon, the trial court narrated:

“x x x. The crimes charged herein could have easily remained


unsolved because the victim did not know any of her tormentors.
That she was abandoned in a dark and far away place strange to
her, having been saved from the claws of sure death only by her
abductor’s false belief of having already done her in with a single
gunshot, would have made the escape of the criminals
irreversible. Fate had it that her survival spelled the beginning of
her tormentors’ undoing, for her ordeal was immediately brought
to the attention of the NBI which moved and investigated without
delay and hesitation. Cartographic sketches drawn from the
recollections of the victim later started the procedure to identify
the unknown perpetrators. The alacrity, coordination, and
ingenuity of NBI agents Regner Feneza and Miralles led to the
success of the procedure.
“Feneza recounted that on January 17, 1994 he met at the NBI
offices in Manila with Miralles, who was earlier assigned to the
case of Agnes, because Miralles had left word that he wanted to
consult with Feneza. It seems that Feneza was the agent handling
the Virginia Samaniego Villena case, another kidnapping case
where the modus operandi had striking similarities with the
kidnapping of Agnes. In their meeting, Miralles showed and lent
to Feneza the cartographic sketches in the Agnes kidnapping.
Feneza referred to his Villena files and discovered a distinct
similarity of a cartographic sketch to some of the Villena suspects
with pictures in his files. With Miralles’ permission, Feneza met
with and talked to Agnes at the V. Luna Medical Center, and
showed her about 3 or 4 pictures from his files.
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“As Feneza testified: ‘When I gave the pictures to her, she


looked at them and she positively identified one in the pictures to
be one of her abductors, she nearly fainted at that time.’ Agnes had
thereby positively identified Roberto Gungon, whom Feneza had
already met in October or November, 1992 in connection with the
Villena case. He reported this breakthrough to his superiors, who
immediately authorized the search for Gungon.
“Gungon could not be arrested sooner. Based on information
given to the NBI, he and his live-in partner had left Manila by car
on a Wednesday, passed through Catbalogan, Samar, and were
bound for Davao. According to Feneza, an informant provided the
information about Davao being the final destination; he testified:

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People vs. Gungon

‘Before he left, he left his pocket bell to somebody whom he was


able to talk to. At the same time, they were calling a person and
they told this person that they were in Legaspi about to board a
ferry boat going to Davao.’ The information turned out to be a
reliable. On cross-examination, Feneza disclosed how the NBI
discovered the informant. It seems that Manila Prosecutor Alice
Vidal had been approached by a certain Mrs. Atencio, supposedly
Gungon’s motherin-law, to confide Gungon’s whereabouts and to
seek help; Prosecutor Vidal, in turn, notified the Makati Police
Department, which happened to be collaborating with the NBI on
the case. The Makati Police Department relayed the
developments to NBI, which sent agents to meet with Mrs.
Atencio in the office of Prosecutor Vidal, and it was there where
Mrs. Atencio disclosed the destination of Gungon and his partner.
The pocketbell beeper was subsequently delivered by Mrs. Atencio
to Feneza in Cubao, under a receipt.
“Feneza and fellow agent Arnold Lazaro flew to Davao on the
following Friday, still in January, but Gungon and his partner
could arrive there only on Saturday. On Sunday evening, the
agents located and arrested him and detained him at their
Regional Office in Davao. They flew him back to Manila on the
first available flight on Monday. At the lineup held on February 1,
1994 at NBI offices in Manila, Agnes picked Gungon out and
positively identified him as one of her kidnappers.
“After the lineup identification, the NBI checked the contents
of the blue bag that Gungon had brought along from Davao and
found therein, among others, a Nissan key chain with a key; a
picture of a woman; another picture of a man (Venancio Roxas),
woman, and child; and a rosary. These articles were turned over
to the NBI evidence custodian and were later presented in court.
Feneza and Lazaro prepared their joint affidavit and other papers
before transmitting the matter to the Department of Justice.

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Feneza readily12
identified and pointed to Gungon in open court
during trial.”

The defense version varies materially from that given by


the prosecution.
Roberto Gungon, an employee of the Metropolitan
Manila Authority, testified that between 3:30 and 4:00
o’clock in the

_______________

12 Rollo, pp. 37-38.

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VOL. 287, MARCH 19, 1998 629


People vs. Gungon

afternoon of 12 January 1994, he had just come from a


friend’s house and was waiting for a taxicab along Panay
Avenue, Quezon City, when a car stopped in front of him. It
was Venancio Roxas, an acquaintance he once met at a
New Year’s party, who asked him where he was going.
Gungon replied that he was waiting for a taxicab to get him
to Cubao. Roxas, who was with a lady companion, opened
the door of the car and said, “Halika na, at idadaan ka na
namin.” He boarded and sat at the rear. Roxas drove
towards Cubao. Gungon alighted at the foot of the
underpass in Cubao, only to again board the car when
Roxas invited him to go with them to Batangas.
Roxas proceeded to the South Superhighway with Agnes
in the front right seat. On the way, Agnes reminded Roxas
that her mother was waiting for her. Gungon then butted
in and remarked that his wife was also waiting for him.
Agnes took out her wallet and showed Gungon her ID, her
picture, and her sister’s picture, and in turn, he, too, drew
out his wallet from his pocket and showed Agnes his wife’s
picture. The car stopped at a bakery in Sto. Tomas,
Batangas, where Agnes and Roxas alighted to buy a piece
of cake and some softdrinks. Tired, after a long drive,
Gungon and Agnes had both fallen asleep. She awoke after
some time and requested that the car stop to allow her to
relieve herself. Gungon later learned from an investigator
that the place was somewhere in Batangas City. Roxas
accompanied Agnes. Gungon was left alone in the car. After
about 3 to 5 minutes, he heard a gunshot and felt that
something untoward had happened. He lowered the car
window to look, and he saw someone, whom he presumed
to be Roxas, coming towards his direction, holding a gun.
Agnes was not with him. Out of apprehension, he alighted
from the car, ran away, and hid in the nearby trees until

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Roxas finally drove away. He took a bus 13 back to Manila,


reaching home at about 10:30 that evening.
In its decision, promulgated on 15 February 1995, the
RTC, Hon. Lucas P. Bersamin presiding, concluded:

_______________

13 Rollo, pp. 34-35.

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People vs. Gungon

“WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered finding the accused


ROBERTO GUNGON y SANTIAGO guilty beyond reasonable
doubt:

“1. In Criminal Case No. Q-94-54285, for kidnapping and


serious illegal detention with frustrated murder, and
sentencing him to death;
“2. In Criminal Case No. Q-94-54286, for carnapping, and
sentencing him to suffer the indeterminate penalty of
imprisonment from eighteen (18) years, as minimum, to
twenty five (25) years, as maximum; and,
“3. In Criminal Case No. Q-94-54287, for robbery, and
sentencing him to suffer the indeterminate penalty of four
(4) years of prision correccional, as minimum, to eight (8)
years of prision mayor, as maximum.

“The accused shall be credited with the entire period of his


preventive imprisonment in accordance with Art. 29, Revised
Penal Code, provided he is qualified therefor pursuant to said
legal provision.
“The accused Gungon is further ordered to pay to Agnes
Guirindola, as offended party, moral damages in the amount of
P1,000,000.00, actual damages of P36,161.83, representing her
hospitalization and surgical expenses, and P35,000.00,
representing the value of the lost personal valuables and cash,
with interest on all the sums at the legal rate from the filing of the
informations herein until full payment; and P500,000.00 as
exemplary damages; to Mrs. Elvira Guirindola, as owner of the
Nissan Sentra car involved in the carnapping case, the sum of
P248,757.90, plus interest at the legal rate from the filing of the
information until full payment; and double costs of suit.
“These cases shall be archived
14
as far as they concerned
Venancio Roxas y Arguelles.”

In the instant appeal, Gungon has continued to assert his


innocence, assigning the following errors allegedly
committed by the trial court:

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_______________

14 Rollo, pp. 53-54.

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People vs. Gungon

“I.

“THE TRIAL COURT GRAVELY ERRED IN RULING THAT


APPELLANT GUNGON AND ROXAS CONSPIRED TO
COMMIT THE CRIMES SUBJECT OF THE INSTANT APPEAL.

“II.

“THE TRIAL COURT GRAVELY ERRED IN CONVICTING


APPELLANT GUNGON OF THE COMPLEX CRIME OF
KIDNAPPING AND SERIOUS ILLEGAL DETENTION WITH
FRUSTRATED MURDER.

“III.

“THE TRIAL COURT GRAVELY ERRED IN CONVICTING


APPELLANT GUNGON OF THE CRIME OF ROBBERY.

“IV.

“THE TRIAL COURT GRAVELY ERRED IN CONVICTING


APPELLANT GUNGON OF THE CRIME OF VIOLATION OF
REPUBLIC ACT NO. 6539
15
OTHERWISE KNOWN AS THE
ANTICARNAPPING ACT.”

Appellant’s challenges, in essence, would revolve on the


issue, once again, of credibility of witnesses. In monotone,
this Court has constantly ruled that in the determination
of the veracity of testimony, the assessment by the trial
court is accorded the highest degree of respect and will not
be disturbed on appeal unless, of course, it is seen to have
acted arbitrarily or with evident partiality. Contrary to
appellant’s contention, however, it is the Court’s view that
the trial court has taken due care in evaluating the
testimonies given at the witness stand. This much would
easily be apparent from the following excerpts of the
appealed decision.

“Upon thorough consideration of the evidence, the Court finds the


testimony and version of Agnes to be the truth of what transpired
on January 12, 1994 and that there was no credible fact or

_______________

15 Rollo, p. 75.

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632 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


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circumstance presented in the entire course of the trial, including


her cross-examination by the Defense, by which the neutral,
objective, and uninvolved mind could reasonably doubt her
sincerity and trustworthiness. The complainant and the accused
were subjected to the closest personal observation during their
stints as witnesses. There were contrasts in their demeanors: on
the one hand, the victim was firm, sincere, and collected when she
narrated even the most painful parts of her ordeal, easily
impressing the Court by her straightforward manner and strong
recall of the details; while, on the other hand, although Gungon
tried very much to appear cool and composed, he could not deceive
the Court by hiding behind the veneer of his feigned expressions
and concealing what happened by a clever facade of denials.
“x x x      x x x      x x x
“Gungon failed the test of credibility by relying on an
implausible defense and on mere denials. To decide issues of
credibility, the testimonies of witnesses are tested for their
plausibility or probability, i.e., whether they were contrary to the
natural course of things, or to common observation, experience,
and common sense, or contrary to natural laws, or exhibit
incredible coincidences. ‘Evidence, to be believed, must not only
proceed from the mouth of a credible witness, but it must be
credible in itself—such as the common experience and observation
of mankind can approve as probable under the circumstances. We
have no test of the truth of human testimony, except its conformity
to our knowledge, observation, and experience. Whatever is
repugnant to these belongs 16
to the miraculous and is outside of
judicial cognizance.’ ”

The defense, verily, anchors itself on the bare denial of


appellant of the specific acts imputed by the prosecution
against him. Certainly, this negative assertion cannot
prevail over the unimpeached testimony of the victim
describing in sufficient detail the active participation of
appellant in the commission of the crimes charged. In the
face of the clear and positive declaration of the victim
herself, the defense of denial hardly assumes probative
value and sinks down the drain even further with the
absence of any evidence of a sinister or nefari-

_______________

16 Rollo, pp. 40-41.

633

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VOL. 287, MARCH 19, 1998 633


People vs. Gungon

ous motive on the part of the complainant to impute a


crime so grave a wrong as that made out in the
Information.
The argument that the finding of conspiracy between
appellant and Venancio Roxas to commit the crimes
charged has been based by the trial court merely on
inferences, conjectures and presumptions is bereft of merit.
A conspiracy exists when two or more persons come to an
agreement concerning 17
the commission of a felony and
decide to commit it. The18proof of the agreement need not
rest on direct evidence; the agreement itself may be
inferred from the conduct of the parties disclosing a
common understanding 19among them relative to the
commission of the offense. Jurisprudential account tells us
consistently that the conduct of the accused before, during,
and after the commission of20 the crime may be considered to
show an extant conspiracy.
The trial court, exhibiting keen perception on the whole
bulk of evidence before it, has come up with a number of
observations not only to prove conspiracy but likewise to
establish appellant’s own part therein.

“1. Gungon’s presence on Panay Avenue and his


meeting with Roxas were not purely coincidental
and by chance but intentional and prearranged.
Roxas was representing himself to Agnes as a
traffic officer by his wearing of the PNP
reflectorized vest while Gungon was employed by
the MMA, which had a direct connection with the
functions assumed by Roxas. Roxas and Gungon
were associated with each other far longer than the
latter has admitted.
“x x x      x x x      x x x
“2. Gungon’s insistence that Roxas was only a casual
acquaintance is rejected as devoid of truth because
it is inconsistent

_______________

17 Article 8, Revised Penal Code.


18 People vs. Pinzon, 206 SCRA 93; People vs. Quiñones, 183 SCRA 747;
People vs. Pineda, 157 SCRA 71.
19 People vs. Uy, 206 SCRA 270; People vs. Dela Cruz, 190 SCRA 328.
20 People vs. Cabiltes, 25 SCRA 112; People vs. Balanag, 236 SCRA
474; People vs. Dalanon, 237 SCRA 607.

634

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634 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


People vs. Gungon

with and contrary to the established facts and circumstances. The


records already showed that Gungon knew several personal
circumstances about Roxas, including the fact that Roxas was
formerly employed at MMA and that Roxas was unemployed when
the incident took place, but was the president of a homeowners’
association in Commonwealth Avenue. Moreover, Gungon’s
conduct in relation to Roxas during the entire duration of the trip
from Panay Avenue to Batangas City, be it judged from Agnes’
point of view or from Gungon’s own, exhibited a deeper and closer
familiarity and association than Gungon would admit. He called
Roxas ‘boss,’ an appellation of familiarity, if not also
subordination. He never protested his being invited to the
unplanned Batangas trip. He never asked who Agnes was, nor
where Roxas and Agnes had come from.
“In any case, even assuming that Gungon, indeed, just
happened to be on Panay Avenue that afternoon, implying
thereby that he had no prior understanding with Roxas to meet
thereat and also indicating thereby that their acquaintance was
merely casual, the Court is still puzzled: (a) why Roxas on his
part, should have stopped for him; should have offered to convey
him to wherever he was going; and should even invite him to go
on the unplanned trip to distant Batangas without notice to the
latter’s family, unless they were more familiar and closer; and (b)
why Gungon, on his part, should have agreed to go to Batangas
unless he was in on the plans of Roxas. The unbelievable
unnaturalness of Gungon’s disavowal of his connection with
Roxas rendered his testimony suspect and implausible.
“x x x      x x x      x x x
“4. Another inconsistency was detected between Gungon’s
allegations, on one hand, that he concealed himself in the nearby
trees from the returning Roxas after the shooting of Agnes and
allowed Roxas to leave in the Nissan car without him, so that he
returned to Manila by bus, and, on the other hand, that the
Nissan keychain and the key of the bar lock were recovered from
his blue bag. If he was to be believed, how did he come into the
subsequent possession of the keychain and the key unless he and
Roxas had met after the shooting?
“x x x      x x x      x x x
“6. On account of his admitted presence during the trip,
although protesting his innocence, the Court has also carefully
analyzed Gungon’s conduct following the criminal incidents and
found such conduct indicative of guilt rather than innocence.
Despite his

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insistence to the contrary, he knew that at least one serious crime


had been perpetrated because he had heard a shot and had seen
Roxas returning with a firearm at hand but without Agnes. Yet,
he never reported the incidents to anyone else, most of all to the
authorities, despite his allegations that he thereafter continued to
report to work at MMA. The civic-minded and dedicated public
servant that he alleged himself to be notwithstanding, he did not
impress the Court that he was truly guiltless because of his
unexplained failure to report to the authorities.
“On the matter of the Davao land trip being taken on January
28, 1994, the Court must have to consider it as positively
indicative of flight. It should first be mentioned, as a premise for
this conclusion, that Gungon inextricably contradicted himself on
this point, since, in his direct testimony, he cited the calls made
by somebody about two or three days before to the office of Ms.
Atencio asking her to meet a person near the Makati Police
Department about an alleged estafa case in relation to a roofing
transaction as justification for the trip, implying that it was
sudden and unplanned; whereas, in the cross-examination, he
stated that he and his wife had planned the Davao trip for
vacation purposes even before New Year’s Day, 1994. Aside from
negatively reflecting on Gungon’s testimonial integrity, such self-
contradiction, not being a merely minor or inconsequential
development in the Defense’s presentation, exposed 21
the Davao
trip to be for what it was—the flight of a guilty man.”

It would defy logic and common sense to conclude that the


above circumstances and events implicating appellant to
the crime were all purely coincidental.
Nor did the trial court err in convicting appellant of the
crime of kidnapping and serious illegal detention. Article
267 of the Revised Penal Code defines the felony thus:

“Art. 267. Kidnapping and serious illegal detention.—Any private


individual who shall kidnap or detain another, or in any other
manner deprive him of his liberty, shall suffer the penalty of
reclusion perpetua to death;
“1. If the kidnapping or detention shall have lasted more than
three days.

_______________

21 Rollo, pp. 140-143.

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636 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


People vs. Gungon

“2. If it shall have been committed simulating public


authority.

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“3. If any serious physical injuries shall have been inflicted


upon the person kidnapped or detained; or if threats to kill
him shall have been made.
“4. If the person kidnapped or detained shall be a minor,
except when the accused is any of the parents, female or a
public officer.

“The penalty shall be death where the kidnapping or detention


was committed for the purpose of extorting ransom from the
victim or any other person, even if none of the circumstances
abovementioned were present in the commission of the offense.
“When the victim is killed or dies as a consequence of the
detention or is raped, or is subjected to torture or dehumanizing
acts, the maximum penalty shall be imposed. (As amended by Sec.
8, Republic Act No. 7659).” (Italics ours.)

The crime of kidnapping and serious illegal detention


consists not only in placing a person in an enclosure but
also in detaining that 22
person or depriving him in any
manner of his liberty.
Actual restraint of the victim’s liberty was evident in the
instant case from the moment Agnes was taken at gunpoint
from Panay Avenue to a remote place in Batangas. The
victim testified, thus:

“Q. What did he do with the P50.00 bill?


“A. He received it.
“Q. After receiving the P50.00 bill, what did he do next?
“A. He gave my license back.
“Q. After getting back your license, what happened?
“A. He immediately poked a gun at me.
  “x x x      x x x      x x x
“Q. After Venancio Roxas pointed a gun at you, what
happened next?

_______________

22 People vs. Domasian, 219 SCRA 245.

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People vs. Gungon

“A. He switched off the engine and then told me, ‘Miss,
kailangan ko lang ito.’
“Q. After that, what happened?
“A. I was so terrified, I cried and then pleaded to him to

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let me go, to take anything but not to harm me.


“Q. Did he heed your plea?
“A. No, sir.
“Q. What happened next?
“A. After some minutes, he opened the back door of the car
and then someone entered, another guy entered the
car.
  “x x x      x x x      x x x
“Q. After that second guy entered the car, what happened?
“A. He reclined the seat and he took my arm and pulled
me to the back seat.
“Q. While that second guy who entered the car reclined
your seat, and pulled your arm towards the back seat,
what was Roxas doing?
“A. He was sitting at the passenger seat and when I was
at the back seat already, he took the driver’s seat.
“Q. This second guy who boarded the car and pulled you
towards the back seat, is he inside the courtroom?
“A. Yes, sir.
“Q. Will you please point to him?
  “x x x      x x x      x x x
“Court
  (Witness tapping a person in the first row) Will the
person tapped please rise? Do you wish to give your
name?
“A. Yes, your honor.
“Court
  What is your name?
“A. Roberto Santiago Gungon, your honor.
  “x x x      x x x      x x x
“State Pros. Agcaoili
  You said that after you refused to drink the bottle of
softdrink being offered by Roxas, Roxas handed the
bottle over to Gungon?
“A. Yes, sir.

638

638 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


People vs. Gungon

“Q. After Gungon took the bottle, what happened next?


“A. He forced me to drink it, sabi niya, sige na,
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makakatulong ito sa iyo.


  “x x x      x x x      x x x
“State Pros. Agcaoili
  And what was your reaction to that remark of
Gungon?
“A. Of course, I still refused to drink.
“Q. And when you refused, what happened next?
“A. He was still holding the bottle, and then he continued
to drive and then stopped to a nearby gas station.
“Q. What did you do at the gas station if you did anything?
“A. He gassed up.
“Q. After gassing up, what else happened?
“A. During that time, I was trying to escape but I cannot
escape since Gungon was holding
23
me and from time to
time poking a gun at me.”
“Q. Going back to your earlier testimony, madam witness,
you testified earlier that along the way, Mr. Roxas
alighted from the car and bought Sprite and skyflakes,
how about you and Mr. Gungon when Mr. Roxas
alighted from the car?
  “x x x      x x x      x x x
“Q. What was Mr. Gungon doing while Mr. Roxas was
buying softdrinks and skyflakes?
  “x x x      x x x      x x x
“A. Gungon and I were still inside the car and he was
holding me and from time to time poking a gun at me.
  “x x x      x x x      x x x
“Q. You also testified earlier that along the way Roxas
stopped somewhere at the South Expressway and took
a leak, what was Mr. Gungon doing while Mr. Roxas
was taking a leak?
“A. The same thing when Roxas left the car.
“Q. What about when it was Mr. Gungon’s turn to take a
leak, what was Mr. Roxas doing?

_______________

23 TSN, 19 April 1994, pp. 22-34.

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“A. Roxas held me and he was holding the door and


24
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24
checking if it was locked and poking a gun at me.”

The evidence would likewise show, ineluctably, the


commission of frustrated murder. Not rebutted was the
medical finding that the gunshot wound sustained by the
victim would have resulted in the death of the victim had
25
it
not been for the proper medical attention given to her.
The trial court has, too, properly appreciated the
attendance of treachery in the commission of the offense.
Treachery exists when the offender employs means,
methods, or forms in the execution of the crime which tend
directly and specially to insure its execution, without risk
to himself arising 26
from the defense which the offended
party might take. It bears stressing that the unsuspecting
and defenseless victim has sustained the gunshot wound
while still trying to get up after relieving herself.
The idea of killing the victim was likewise premeditated;
Agnes testified:

“State Pros. Agcaoili


  After this second guy who pulled you to the back seat
whom you just identified as accused Roberto Gungon
pulled you towards the back seat, what happened
next?
“A. I asked them where they are taking me.
“Q. What was their reply if any?
“A. They said they are taking me to Philcoa.
“Q. After telling you that they are taking you to Philcoa,
what else happened?
“A. Gungon got his beeper and then he read it, then told
Roxas, boss, negative Philcoa.
“Q. And what was the reaction of Roxas?
“A. He just nodded.

_______________

24 TSN, 11 May 1994, pp. 16-18.


25 Dr. Norberto Camarce, Jr., TSN, 22 July 1994, pp. 31-32.
26 Article 14, par. 16, Revised Penal Code.

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People vs. Gungon

“Q. And what else happened?


“A. After that, Gungon said, ‘Boss, dalhin na natin siya sa
dati at doon na natin i-S.’
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“Q. And how did Roxas react to that remark of Gungon?


27
“A. The same, he just nodded.”

The perpetration of the premeditated killing, albeit


frustrated, was hatched from the moment the accused and
his coconspirator took the victim in Quezon City until she
was ultimately “executed” in Batangas to insure impunity
to the perpetrators by eliminating the only witness.
Murder is punishable under Article 248 of the Revised
Penal Code by reclusion perpetua to death if committed
with the attendant circumstances, among other 28
circumstances, of treachery and evident premeditation.
When the crime is

_______________

27 TSN, 19 April 1994, pp. 27-28.


28 Article 248. Revised Penal Code.

ART. 248. Murder.—Any person who, not falling within the provisions of Article
246 shall kill another, shall be guilty of murder and shall be punished by reclusion
perpetua to death if committed with any of the following attendant circumstances:

1. With treachery, taking advantage of superior strength, with the aid of


armed men, or employing means to weaken the defense or of means or
persons to insure or afford impunity.
2. In consideration of a price, reward, or promise.
3. By means of inundation, fire, poison, explosion, shipwreck, stranding of a
vessel, derailment or assault upon a railroad, fall of an airship, or by
means of motor vehicles, or with the use of any other means involving
great waste and ruin.
4. On occasion of any of the calamities enumerated in the preceding
paragraph, or of an earthquake, eruption of a volcano, destructive cyclone,
epidemic or other public calamity.
5. With evident premeditation.
6. With cruelty, by deliberately and inhumanly augmenting the suffering of
the victim, or outraging or scoffing at his person or corpse.

641

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People vs. Gungon

“frustrated,” a “penalty lower by one degree” or, in this


case, prision mayor to reclusion temporal is imposed.
The crime of kidnapping and serious illegal detention
has been correctly complexed by the trial court with
frustrated murder. A complex crime is committed when a
single act constitutes two or more grave or less grave
felonies, or when an29 offense is a necessary means for
committing the other.
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In a complex crime, the penalty for the most serious


crime shall be imposed,
30
the same to be applied in its
maximum period. Since the kidnapping and serious illegal
detention is the more serious crime, the proper penalty
under Article 267 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended
by Republic Act No. 7659, should be applied in its
maximum period.
The Court finds merit, however, in appellant’s third
assigned error.
Appellant would have it that the trial court erred in
convicting him of robbery considering that the taking of the
victim’s jewelry and cash were perpetrated while the latter
was asleep. The victim herself testified that shortly after
the car had proceeded from Sto. Tomas, Batangas, she lost
consciousness and regained it only at about 9:30 that
evening. She then found herself lying at the back seat
minus her 31personal belongings with a total value of
P38,000.00.
Article 293 of the Revised Penal Code defines robbery to
be one committed by any “person who, with intent to gain,
shall take any personal property belonging to another, by
means of violence against or intimidation of any person, or
using force upon anything x x x.” Robbery may thus be
committed two ways:32 (a) with violence against, or
intimidation
33
of persons and (b) by the use of force upon
things. To be then liable for

_______________

29 Article 48, Revised Penal Code.


30 Article 48, Revised Penal Code.
31 TSN, 19 April 1994, pp. 45-48; see also TSN, 11 May 1994, pp. 20-22.
32 Articles 294, 297 and 298, Revised Penal Code.
33 Articles 299 and 302, Revised Penal Code.

642

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People vs. Gungon

robbery with violence against or intimidation of persons,


the following elements must concur:

1) that there be personal property belonging to


another;
2) that there is unlawful taking of that property;
3) that the taking must be with intent to gain; and
4) that there is violence against or intimidation of any
person or use of force upon things.

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It would appear that the taking of the victim’s jewelry and


cash came only by way of an afterthought on the part of
appellant. The taking was not attended by violence or
intimidation upon the person of Agnes. The absence,
however, of violence or intimidation did not exculpate
appellant from liability for the crime of theft, punishable by
Article 308, in relation to Article 309, of the Revised Penal
Code; viz.:

“Art. 308. Who are liable for theft.—Theft is committed by any


person who, with intent to gain but without violence against, or
intimidation of persons nor force upon things, shall take personal
property of another without the latter’s consent.”
“Art. 309. Penalties.—Any person guilty of theft shall be
punished by:
“1. The penalty of prision mayor in its minimum and medium
periods, if the value of the thing stolen is more than 12,000 pesos
but does not exceed 22,000 pesos; but if the value of the thing
stolen exceed the latter amount, the penalty shall be the
maximum period of the one prescribed in this paragraph, and one
year for each additional ten thousand pesos, but the total of the
penalty which may be imposed shall not exceed twenty years.”

The Information in Criminal Case No. Q-94-54287 contains


sufficient allegations, adequately proven by the prosecution
during the trial, to warrant a conviction of appellant for the
crime of theft. Section 4, Rule 120, of the 1988 Rules on
Criminal Procedure provides on this score; thus:

“Section 4. Judgment in case of variance between allegation and


proof.—When there is variance between the offense charged in

643

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People vs. Gungon

the complaint or information, and that proved or established by


the evidence, and the offense as charged is included in or
necessarily includes the offense proved, the accused shall be
convicted of the offense proved included in that which is charged,
or of the offense charged included in that which is proved.”

Since the value of the personal property taken from the


victim amounted to P38,000.00 the penalty imposable is
the maximum period of the penalty prescribed by Article
309 which is the maximum of prision mayor in its
minimum and medium periods plus one year for the
additional ten thousand pesos in excess of P22,000.00.
Applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law, the penalty for
this particular offense of theft that may thus be imposed is
anywhere from two (2) years, four (4) months and one (1)

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day of prision correccional minimum period to six (6) years


of prision correccional maximum period, as minimum, to
anywhere from eight (8) years, eight (8) months and one (1)
day to ten (10) years of prision mayor medium period, plus
one (1) year for the additional P10,000.00 in excess of
P22,000.00 value of the property taken, or eleven (11) years
of prision mayor maximum period, as maximum.
Lastly, appellant contends that he should not have been
convicted of violation of Republic Act No. 6539, otherwise
known as the Anti-Carnapping Act, because the taking of
the subject motor vehicle was perpetrated solely by Roxas,
and at the time he (Gungon) boarded the subject vehicle,
Roxas had already acquired effective possession of the
subject vehicle. This argument would have been
consequential had there been no finding of conspiracy
between appellant and Venancio Roxas. In conspiracy, to
once again stress it, the act of one conspirator is the act of
the other co-conspirators and, therefore, it is of no moment
that an accused has not taken part in 34 the actual
commission of every act constituting the crime,

_______________

34 Antonio vs. Sandiganbayan, 166 SCRA 595; People vs. Serante, 152
SCRA 510; People vs. Paredes, 24 SCRA 635.

644

644 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


People vs. Gungon

each of the conspirators being held in the same degree of


liability as the others.
WHEREFORE, the Court sustains the appealed decision
of the trial court, dated 15 February 1995, except for
appellant’s conviction for the crime of ROBBERY in
Criminal Case No. Q94-54287 which is hereby MODIFIED
to one of THEFT of which offense appellant is found guilty
beyond reasonable doubt and sentenced to a prison term of
from two (2) years, four (4) months and one (1) day of
prision correccional, as minimum, to eight (8) years, eight
(8) months and one (1) day of prision mayor plus one (1)
year for the additional P10,000.00 in excess of P20,000.00
value of the property taken or a total of nine (9) years,
eight (8) months and one (1) day, as maximum. The
decision of the court a quo with respect to Criminal Case
No. Q-94-54285 and Criminal Case No. Q-9454286 is
AFFIRMED. In Criminal Case No. Q-94-54285, four
members of the Court, although maintaining their
adherence to the separate opinions expressed in People vs.
Echegaray (G.R. No. 117472, 07 February 1997) that
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5/6/2021 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 287

Republic Act No. 7659, insofar as it prescribes the death


penalty, is unconstitutional, nevertheless, bow to the ruling
of the Court, by a majority vote, that the law is
constitutional and that the death penalty should
accordingly be imposed.
In accordance with Section 25 of Republic Act No. 7659,
amending Article 83 of the Revised Penal Code, upon
finality of this decision, let the records of this case be
forthwith forwarded to the Office of the President for
possible exercise of the pardoning power.
SO ORDERED.

          Narvasa (C.J.), Regalado, Davide, Jr., Romero,


Bellosillo, Melo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza,
Panganiban, Martinez, Quisumbing and Purisima, JJ.,
concur.

Appealed decision of February 15, 1995 sustained;


Appellant’s conviction in Criminal Case No. Q-94-54287
modified; Decision in Criminal Case Nos. Q-94-54285 and
Q-94-54286 affirmed.
645

VOL. 287, MARCH 19, 1998 645


Biantan vs. NLRC (Fourth Division, Cebu City)

Note.—The essence of the offense of kidnapping is the


actual deprivation of the victim’s liberty coupled with
intent of the accused to effect it. (People vs. Villanueva, 253
SCRA 155 [1996])

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