G.R. No. 165842 November 29, 2005 EDUARDO P. MANUEL, Petitioner
G.R. No. 165842 November 29, 2005 EDUARDO P. MANUEL, Petitioner
G.R. No. 165842 November 29, 2005 EDUARDO P. MANUEL, Petitioner
EDUARDO P. MANUEL, Petitioner,
vs.
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Respondent.
DECISION
CALLEJO, SR., J.:
The prosecution adduced evidence that on July 28, 1975, Eduardo was
married to Rubylus Gaña before Msgr. Feliciano Santos in Makati, which
was then still a municipality of the Province of Rizal.4 He met the private
complainant Tina B. Gandalera in Dagupan City sometime in January
1996. She stayed in Bonuan, Dagupan City for two days looking for a
friend. Tina was then 21 years old, a Computer Secretarial student, while
Eduardo was 39. Afterwards, Eduardo went to Baguio City to visit her.
Eventually, as one thing led to another, they went to a motel where, despite
Tina’s resistance, Eduardo succeeded in having his way with her. Eduardo
proposed marriage on several occasions, assuring her that he was single.
Eduardo even brought his parents to Baguio City to meet Tina’s parents,
and was assured by them that their son was still single.
Tina finally agreed to marry Eduardo sometime in the first week of March
1996. They were married on April 22, 1996 before Judge Antonio C. Reyes,
the Presiding Judge of the RTC of Baguio City, Branch 61.5 It appeared in
their marriage contract that Eduardo was "single."
The couple was happy during the first three years of their married life.
Through their joint efforts, they were able to build their home in Cypress
Point, Irisan, Baguio City. However, starting 1999, Manuel started making
himself scarce and went to their house only twice or thrice a year.
Tina was jobless, and whenever she asked money from Eduardo, he would
slap her.6 Sometime in January 2001, Eduardo took all his clothes, left, and
did not return. Worse, he stopped giving financial support.
Sometime in August 2001, Tina became curious and made inquiries from
the National Statistics Office (NSO) in Manila where she learned that
Eduardo had been previously married. She secured an NSO-certified copy
of the marriage contract.7 She was so embarrassed and humiliated when
she learned that Eduardo was in fact already married when they
exchanged their own vows.8
For his part, Eduardo testified that he met Tina sometime in 1995 in a bar
where she worked as a Guest Relations Officer (GRO). He fell in love with
her and married her. He informed Tina of his previous marriage to Rubylus
Gaña, but she nevertheless agreed to marry him. Their marital relationship
was in order until this one time when he noticed that she had a "love-bite"
on her neck. He then abandoned her. Eduardo further testified that he
declared he was "single" in his marriage contract with Tina because he
believed in good faith that his first marriage was invalid. He did not know
that he had to go to court to seek for the nullification of his first marriage
before marrying Tina.
Eduardo further claimed that he was only forced to marry his first wife
because she threatened to commit suicide unless he did so.
After trial, the court rendered judgment on July 2, 2002 finding Eduardo
guilty beyond reasonable doubt of bigamy. He was sentenced to an
indeterminate penalty of from six (6) years and ten (10) months, as
minimum, to ten (10) years, as maximum, and directed to indemnify the
private complainant Tina Gandalera the amount of ₱200,000.00 by way of
moral damages, plus costs of suit.9
On June 18, 2004, the CA rendered judgment affirming the decision of the
RTC with modification as to the penalty of the accused. It ruled that the
prosecution was able to prove all the elements of bigamy. Contrary to the
contention of the appellant, Article 41 of the Family Code should apply.
Before Manuel could lawfully marry the private complainant, there should
have been a judicial declaration of Gaña’s presumptive death as the absent
spouse. The appellate court cited the rulings of this Court in Mercado v.
Tan15 and Domingo v. Court of Appeals16 to support its ruling.
Eduardo, now the petitioner, filed the instant petition for review on
certiorari,
The petition is denied for lack of merit.
Article 349 of the Revised Penal Code, which defines and penalizes
bigamy, reads:
The provision was taken from Article 486 of the Spanish Penal Code, to wit:
In his commentary on the Revised Penal Code, Albert is of the same view
as Viada and declared that there are three (3) elements of bigamy: (1) an
undissolved marriage; (2) a new marriage; and (3) fraudulent intention
constituting the felony of the act. He explained that:
As gleaned from the Information in the RTC, the petitioner is charged with
bigamy, a felony by dolo (deceit). Article 3, paragraph 2 of the Revised
Penal Code provides that there is deceit when the act is performed with
deliberate intent. Indeed, a felony cannot exist without intent.
In the present case, the prosecution proved that the petitioner was
married to Gaña in 1975, and such marriage was not judicially
declared a nullity; hence, the marriage is presumed to subsist. The
prosecution also proved that the petitioner married the private
complainant in 1996, long after the effectivity of the Family Code.
The petitioner is presumed to have acted with malice or evil intent
when he married the private complainant.
It was the burden of the petitioner to prove his defense that when he
married the private complainant in 1996, he was of the well-grounded
belief that his first wife was already dead, as he had not heard from
her for more than 20 years since 1975.
The phrase "or before the absent spouse has been declared presumptively
dead by means of a judgment rendered on the proceedings" in Article 349
of the Revised Penal Code was not an aggroupment of empty or useless
words. The requirement for a judgment of the presumptive death of the
absent spouse is for the benefit of the spouse present, as protection from
the pains and the consequences of a second marriage, precisely because
he/she could be charged and convicted of bigamy if the defense of good
faith based on mere testimony is found incredible.
The requirement of judicial declaration is also for the benefit of the State.
In a real sense, there are three parties to every civil marriage; two willing
spouses and an approving State. On marriage, the parties assume new
relations to each other and the State touching nearly on every aspect of life
and death. The consequences of an invalid marriage to the parties, to
innocent parties and to society, are so serious that the law may well take
means calculated to ensure the procurement of the most positive evidence
of death of the first spouse or of the presumptive death of the absent
spouse38 after the lapse of the period provided for under the law. One such
means is the requirement of the declaration by a competent court of the
presumptive death of an absent spouse as proof that the present spouse
contracts a subsequent marriage on a well-grounded belief of the death of
the first spouse. Indeed, "men readily believe what they wish to be true," is
a maxim of the old jurists. To sustain a second marriage and to vacate a
first because one of the parties believed the other to be dead would make
the existence of the marital relation determinable, not by certain extrinsic
facts, easily capable of forensic ascertainment and proof, but by the
subjective condition of individuals.39 Only with such proof can marriage be
treated as so dissolved as to permit second marriages.40 Thus, Article 349
of the Revised Penal Code has made the dissolution of marriage
dependent not only upon the personal belief of parties, but upon certain
objective facts easily capable of accurate judicial cognizance, 41 namely, a
judgment of the presumptive death of the absent spouse.
The petitioner’s sole reliance on Article 390 of the Civil Code as basis for
his acquittal for bigamy is misplaced.
Art. 390. After an absence of seven years, it being unknown whether or not,
the absentee still lives, he shall be presumed dead for all purposes, except
for those of succession.
The absentee shall not be presumed dead for the purpose of opening his
succession till after an absence of ten years. If he disappeared after the
age of seventy-five years, an absence of five years shall be sufficient in
order that his succession may be opened.
Art. 391. The following shall be presumed dead for all purposes, including
the division of the estate among the heirs:
(2) A person in the armed forces who has taken part in war, and has been
missing for four years;
(3) A person who has been in danger of death under other circumstances
and his existence has not been known for four years.
The presumption of death of the spouse who had been absent for seven
years, it being unknown whether or not the absentee still lives, is created
by law and arises without any necessity of judicial declaration.42 However,
Article 41 of the Family Code, which amended the foregoing rules on
presumptive death, reads:
With the effectivity of the Family Code, the period of seven years under the
first paragraph of Article 390 of the Civil Code was reduced to four
consecutive years. Thus, before the spouse present may contract a
subsequent marriage, he or she must institute summary proceedings for
the declaration of the presumptive death of the absentee spouse,45 without
prejudice to the effect of the reappearance of the absentee spouse. As
explained by this Court in Armas v. Calisterio:46
The above Article of the Family Code now clearly provides that for the
purpose of the present spouse contracting a second marriage, he or she
must file a summary proceeding as provided in the Code for the declaration
of the presumptive death of the absentee, without prejudice to the latter’s
reappearance. This provision is intended to protect the present spouse
from a criminal prosecution for bigamy under Art. 349 of the Revised Penal
Code because with the judicial declaration that the missing spouses
presumptively dead, the good faith of the present spouse in contracting a
second marriage is already established.58
Under Article 238 of the Family Code, a petition for a declaration of the
presumptive death of an absent spouse under Article 41 of the Family
Code may be filed under Articles 239 to 247 of the same Code.62
In the present case, the petitioner courted the private complainant and
proposed to marry her. He assured her that he was single. He even
brought his parents to the house of the private complainant where he and
his parents made the same assurance – that he was single. Thus, the
private complainant agreed to marry the petitioner, who even stated in the
certificate of marriage that he was single. She lived with the petitioner and
dutifully performed her duties as his wife, believing all the while that he was
her lawful husband. For two years or so until the petitioner heartlessly
abandoned her, the private complainant had no inkling that he was already
married to another before they were married.
Considering the attendant circumstances of the case, the Court finds the
award of ₱200,000.00 for moral damages to be just and reasonable.
SO ORDERED.
Seeing Augusto still holding the knife allegedly used in the killing and
Fausta with her dress smeared with blood, Paja immediately ordered a
nephew of his to take the spouses to the police authorities at the Municipal
Hall in Poblacion, Ajuy. As instructed, Paja's nephew brought the Gonzales
spouses, who "backrode" on his motorcycle, to the municipal
building. 7 Upon reaching the Ajuy Police sub-station, the couple informed
the police on duty of the incident. That same night, Patrolman Salvador
Centeno of the Ajuy Police Force and the Gonzales spouses went back to
Barangay Tipacla. Reaching Barangay Tipacla the group went to Paja's
residence where Fausta was made to stay, while Paja, Patrolman Centeno,
and Augusto proceeded to the latter's residence at Sitio Nabitasan where
the killing incident allegedly occurred. There they saw the lifeless body of
Lloyd Peñacerrada, clad only in an underwear, sprawled face down inside
the bedroom. 9 The group stayed for about an hour during which time
Patrolman Centeno inspected the scene and started to make a rough
sketch thereof and the immediate surroundings. 10 The next day, February
22, 1981, at around 7:00 o'clock in the morning, Patrolman Centeno,
accompanied by a photographer, went back to the scene of the killing to
conduct further investigations. Fausta Gonzales, on the other hand, was
brought back that same day by Barangay Captain Paja to the police
substation in Ajuy. When Patrolman Centeno and his companion arrived at
Sitio Nabitasan, two members of the 321st P.C. Company stationed in
Sara, Iloilo, who had likewise been informed of the incident, were already
there conducting their own investigation. Patrolman Centeno continued with
his sketch; photographs of the scene were likewise taken. The body of the
victim was then brought to the Municipal Hall of Ajuy for autopsy.
The autopsy report thus showed that Dr. Rojas "found sixteen (16) wounds,
five (5) of which are fatal because they penetrated the internal organs,
heart, lungs and intestines of the deceased."
On February 23, two days after the incident, Augusto Gonzales appeared
before the police sub-station in the poblacion of Ajuy and voluntarily
surrendered to Police Corporal Ben Sazon for detention and protective
custody for "having been involved" in the killing of Lloyd Peñacerrada. He
requested that he be taken to the P.C. headquarters in Sara, Iloilo where
his wife, Fausta, was already detained having been indorsed thereat by the
Ajuy police force.
When arraigned on September 16, 1981, Augusto and Fausta both entered
a plea of not guilty. Before trial, however, Jose Huntoria 15 who claimed to
have witnessed the killing of Lloyd Peñacerrada, presented himself to
Nanie Peñacerrada, the victim's widow, on October 6, 1981, and
volunteered to testify for the prosecution.
At the trial, the prosecution presented Dr. Jesus Rojas, the Rural Health
physician of Ajuy who conducted the autopsy on the body of the victim;
Bartolome Paja, the barangay captain of Barangay Tipacla; Patrolman
Salvador Centeno and Corporal Ben Sazon of the Ajuy Police Force; Sgt.
(ret) Nicolas Belicanao and Sgt. Reynaldo Palomo of the 321st P.C.
Company based in Sara, Iloilo; Jose Huntoria; and Nanie Peñacerrada, the
widow.
The trial court disregarded the version of the defense; it believed the
testimony of Huntoria.
It is thus clear from the foregoing that if the conviction of the appellant by
the lower courts is to be sustained, it can only be on the basis of the
testimony of Huntoria, the self-proclaimed eyewitness. Hence, a meticulous
scrutiny of Huntoria's testimony is compelling.
To recollect, Huntoria testified that he clearly saw all the accused, including
It also bears stressing that there is nothing in the findings of the trial
court and of the Court of Appeals which would categorize the criminal
liability of the appellant as a principal by direct participation under
Article 17, paragraph 1 of the Revised Penal Code.
Likewise, there is nothing in the evidence for the prosecution that
inculpates him by inducement, under paragraph 2 of the same Article 17,
or by indispensable cooperation under paragraph 3 thereof.
What then was the direct part in the killing did the appellant perform to
support the ultimate punishment imposed by the Court of Appeals on him?
(Emphasis supplied.)
Article 3 of the Revised Penal Code, on the other hand, provides how
felonies are committed.
(Emphasis supplied.)
(2) the act or omission must be punishable under the RPC; and
Here, while the prosecution accuses, and the two lower courts both found,
that the appellant has committed a felony in the killing of Lloyd
Peñacerrada, forsooth there is insufficiency of proof as to what act was
performed by the appellant. It has been said that "act," as used in Article 3
of the Revised Penal Code, must be understood as "any bodily movement
tending to produce some effect in the external world."
Thus this principal witness did not say, because he could not whether
the appellant "hacked or "stabbed" victim. In fact, Huntoria does not
know what specific act was performed by the appellant .
This lack of specificity then makes the case fall short of the test laid
down by Article 3 of the Revised Penal Code previously discussed.
Furthermore, the fact that the victim sustained only five fatal wounds out of
the total of sixteen inflicted, as adverted to above, while there are six
accused charged as principals, it follows to reason that one of the six
accused could not have caused or dealt a fatal wound.
In fine, the guilt of the appellant has not been proven beyond reasonable
doubt.
SO ORDERED.
x-----------------------x
That on or about the 5th day of April 1988, in Barangay Quebiawan, San
Fernando, Pampanga, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the above-named accused, all public officers, being then
policemen, Brgy. Captains, Brgy. Tanod and members of the Civil Home
Defense Force (CHDF), respectively, confederating and mutually helping
one another, and while responding to information about the presence of
armed men in said barangay and conducting surveillance thereof, thus
committing the offense in relation to their office, did then and there, with
treachery and evident premeditation, willfully, unlawfully and feloniously,
and with deliberate intent to take the life of Leodevince S. Licup, attack the
latter with automatic weapons by firing directly at the green Toyota
Tamaraw jitney ridden by Leodevince S. Licup and inflicting multiple
gunshot wounds which are necessarily mortal on the different parts of the
body, thereby causing the direct and immediate death of the latter.
At the July 4, 1991 pre-trial conference, the remaining accused waived the
pre-trial inquest. 16 Hence, joint trial on the merits ensued and picked up
from where the presentation of evidence left off at the hearing on the bail
applications.
With Licup in the passenger seat and the rest of his companions at the
back of his Tamaraw jeepney, Villanueva allegedly proceeded at 5-10 kph
with headlights dimmed. Suddenly, as they were approaching a curve on
the road, they met a burst of gunfire and instantly, Villanueva and Licup
were both wounded and bleeding profusely.
Both Flores and Villanueva, contrary to what the defense would claim,
allegedly did not see any one on the road flag them down.
I.
The first duty of the prosecution is not to present the crime but to identify
the criminal.89
II.
The availability of the justifying circumstance of fulfillment of duty or lawful
exercise of a right or office under Article 11 (5) of the Revised Penal Code
rests on proof that (a) the accused acted in the performance of his duty or
in the lawful exercise of his right or office, and (b) the injury caused or the
offense committed is the necessary consequence of the due performance
of such duty or the lawful exercise of such right or office.
Thus, it must be shown that the acts of the accused relative to the crime
charged were indeed lawfully or duly performed; the burden necessarily
shifts on him to prove such hypothesis.
We find that the requisites for justification under Article 11 (5) of the
Revised Penal Code do not obtain in this case.
The undisputed presence of all the accused at the situs of the incident is a
legitimate law enforcement operation. No objection is strong enough to
defeat the claim that all of them – who were either police and barangay
officers or CHDF members tasked with the maintenance of peace and
order – were bound to, as they did, respond to information of a suspected
rebel infiltration in the locality. Theirs, therefore, is the specific duty to
identify the occupants of their suspect vehicle and search for firearms
inside it to validate the information they had received; they may even effect
a bloodless arrest should they find cause to believe that their suspects had
just committed, were committing or were bound to commit a crime. While, it
may certainly be argued that rebellion is a continuing offense, it is
interesting that nothing in the evidence suggests that the accused were
acting under an official order to open fire at or kill the suspects under any
and all circumstances. Even more telling is the absence of reference to the
victims having launched such aggression as would threaten the safety of
any one of the accused, or having exhibited such defiance of authority that
would have instigated the accused, particularly those armed, to embark on
a violent attack with their firearms in self-defense. In fact, no material
evidence was presented at the trial to show that the accused were placed
in real mortal danger in the presence of the victims, except maybe their
bare suspicion that the suspects were armed and were probably prepared
to conduct hostilities.
But whether or not the passengers of the subject jeepney were NPA
members and whether or not they were at the time armed, are immaterial in
the present inquiry inasmuch as they do not stand as accused in the
prosecution at hand. Besides, even assuming that they were as the
accused believed them to be, the actuations of these responding law
enforcers must inevitably be ranged against reasonable expectations that
arise in the legitimate course of performance of policing duties. The rules of
engagement, of which every law enforcer must be thoroughly
knowledgeable and for which he must always exercise the highest caution,
do not require that he should immediately draw or fire his weapon if the
person to be accosted does not heed his call. Pursuit without danger
should be his next move, and not vengeance for personal feelings or a
damaged pride. Police work requires nothing more than the lawful
apprehension of suspects, since the completion of the process pertains to
other government officers or agencies.108
III.
At this juncture, we find that the invocation of the concept of mistake of fact
faces certain failure. In the context of criminal law, a "mistake of fact" is a
misapprehension of a fact which, if true, would have justified the act or
omission which is the subject of the prosecution.118
The inquiry is into the mistaken belief of the defendant,121 and it does not
look at all to the belief or state of mind of any other person.122 A proper
invocation of this defense requires (a) that the mistake be honest and
reasonable;123 (b) that it be a matter of fact;124 and (c) that it negate the
culpability required to commit the crime125 or the existence of the mental
state which the statute prescribes with respect to an element of the
offense.126
If, in language not uncommon in the cases, one has reasonable cause to
believe the existence of facts which will justify a killing — or, in terms
more nicely in accord with the principles on which the rule is founded, if
without fault or carelessness he does not believe them — he is legally
guiltless of homicide; though he mistook the facts, and so the life of an
innocent person is unfortunately extinguished. In other words, and with
reference to the right of self-defense and the not quite harmonious
authorities, it is the doctrine of reason, and sufficiently sustained in
adjudication, that notwithstanding some decisions apparently adverse,
whenever a man undertakes self-defense, he is justified in acting on the
facts as they appear to him. If, without fault or carelessness, he is misled
concerning them, and defends himself correctly according to what he thus
supposes the facts to be, the law will not punish him though they are in
truth otherwise, and he has really no occasion for the extreme measure. x x
x 128
Besides, as held in People v. Oanis129 and Baxinela v. People,130 the
justification of an act, which is otherwise criminal on the basis of a
mistake of fact, must preclude negligence or bad faith on the part of
the accused. Thus, Ah Chong further explained that –
The question then squarely presents itself, whether in this jurisdiction one
can be held criminally responsible who, by reason of a mistake as to the
facts, does an act for which he would be exempt from criminal liability if the
facts were as he supposed them to be, but which would constitute the
crime of homicide or assassination if the actor had known the true state of
the facts at the time when he committed the act. To this question we think
there can be but one answer, and we hold that under such circumstances
there is no criminal liability, provided always that the alleged ignorance or
mistake of fact was not due to negligence or bad faith.132
IV.
This brings us to whether the guilt of petitioners for homicide and frustrated
homicide has been established beyond cavil of doubt.
In the instant case, petitioners, without abandoning their claim that they did
not intend to kill anyone of the victims, admit having willfully discharged
their service firearms; and the manner by which the bullets concentrated on
the passenger side of the jeepney permits no other conclusion than that the
shots were intended for the persons lying along the line of fire. We do not
doubt that instances abound where the discharge of a firearm at another is
not in itself sufficient to sustain a finding of intention to kill, and that there
are instances where the attendant circumstances conclusively establish
that the discharge was not in fact animated by intent to kill. Yet the rule is
that in ascertaining the intention with which a specific act is committed, it is
always proper and necessary to look not merely to the act itself but to all
the attendant circumstances so far as they develop in the evidence.144
V.
Verily, the shooting incident subject of these petitions was actualized with
the deliberate intent of killing Licup and Villanueva, hence we dismiss
Yapyuco’s alternative claim in G.R. No. 120744 that he and his co-
petitioners must be found guilty merely of reckless imprudence resulting in
homicide and frustrated homicide.
First, the crimes committed in these cases are not merely criminal
negligence, the killing being intentional and not accidental. In criminal
negligence, the injury caused to another should be unintentional, it being
the incident of another act performed without malice.147 People v.
Guillen148 and People v. Nanquil 149 declare that a deliberate intent to do an
unlawful act is essentially inconsistent with the idea of reckless
imprudence. And in People v. Castillo,150 we held that that there can be no
frustrated homicide through reckless negligence inasmuch as reckless
negligence implies lack of intent to kill, and without intent to kill the crime of
frustrated homicide cannot exist.
VI.
The Sandiganbayan correctly found that petitioners are guilty as co-
principals in the crimes of homicide and attempted homicide only,
respectively for the death of Licup and for the non-fatal injuries sustained
by Villanueva, and that they deserve an acquittal together with the other
accused, of the charge of attempted murder with respect to the unharmed
victims.154 The allegation of evident premeditation has not been proved
beyond reasonable doubt because the evidence is consistent with the fact
that the urge to kill had materialized in the minds of petitioners as
instantaneously as they perceived their suspects to be attempting flight and
evading arrest. The same is true with treachery, inasmuch as there is no
clear and indubitable proof that the mode of attack was consciously and
deliberately adopted by petitioners.
However, upon the finding that petitioners in Criminal Case No. 16614 had
committed attempted homicide, a modification of the penalty is in order.
The penalty of attempted homicide is two (2) degrees lower to that of a
consummated homicide, which is prision correccional. Taking into account
the mitigating circumstance of voluntary surrender, the maximum of the
indeterminate sentence to be meted out on petitioners is within the
minimum period of prision correccional, which is six (6) months and one (1)
day to two (2) years and four (4) months of prision correccional, whereas
the minimum of the sentence, which under the Indeterminate Sentence
Law must be within the range of the penalty next lower to that prescribed
for the offense, which is one (1) month and one (1) day to six (6) months
of arresto mayor.
SO ORDERED.
A.M. No. RTJ-02-1673 August 11, 2004
EDUARDO P. DIEGO, complainant,
vs.
JUDGE SILVERIO Q. CASTILLO, REGIONAL TRIAL COURT,
DAGUPAN CITY, BRANCH 43, respondent.
AZCUNA, J.:
After trial of the criminal case for bigamy, respondent Judge promulgated a
decision, on February 24, 1999, the dispositive part of which stated:
SO ORDERED.2
The decision states that the main basis for the acquittal was good faith on
the part of the accused. Respondent Judge gave credence to the defense
of the accused that she acted without any malicious intent. The combined
testimonial and documentary evidence of the defense was aimed at
convincing the court that accused Lucena Escoto had sufficient grounds to
believe that her previous marriage to Jorge de Perio had been validly
dissolved by the divorce decree and that she was legally free to contract
the second marriage with Manuel P. Diego.
In rendering the decision, respondent Judge reasoned, thus:
xxx
In his comment, respondent Judge explains that what was in issue was the
criminal culpability of the accused under Article 349 of the Revised Penal
Code. Respondent Judge does not dispute that the second marriage was
bigamous because at the time it was contracted, the first marriage was still
subsisting since divorce is not recognized in our country and because the
accused’s first husband was still alive. Respondent Judge, however,
maintains that what was controlling was whether by virtue of the
divorce decree the accused honestly believed, albeit mistakenly, that
her first marriage had been severed and she could marry again.
According to respondent Judge, the same is a state of mind personal to the
accused. He further stressed that knowledge of the law should not be
exacted strictly from the accused since she is a lay person, and that
ineptitude should not be confused with criminal intent.
A careful study of the disputed decision reveals that respondent Judge had
been less than circumspect in his study of the law and jurisprudence
applicable to the bigamy case.
Bitdu held that even if the accused, who had obtained a divorce under the
Mohammedan custom, honestly believed that in contracting her second
marriage she was not committing any violation of the law, and that she had
no criminal intent, the same does not justify her act.
This Court further stated therein that with respect to the contention that the
accused acted in good faith in contracting the second marriage, believing
that she had been validly divorced from her first husband, it is sufficient to
say that everyone is presumed to know the law, and the fact that one does
not know that his act constitutes a violation of the law does not exempt him
from the consequences thereof.
The law requires that (a) the offender is a judge; (b) he renders a judgment
in a case submitted to him for decision; (c) the judgment is unjust; (d) he
knew that said judgment is unjust.9 This Court reiterates that in order to
hold a judge liable, it must be shown that the judgment is unjust and that it
was made with conscious and deliberate intent to do an injustice. That
good faith is a defense to the charge of knowingly rendering an unjust
judgment remains the law.10
Penalty
After evaluation of the merits of the case, the Office of the Court
Administrator (OCA) recommended that respondent Judge be reprimanded
with a stern warning of a more severe penalty in the future.
SO ORDERED.
CARSON, J.:
The evidence as to many of the essential and vital facts in this case is
limited to the testimony of the accused himself, because from the very
nature of these facts and from the circumstances surrounding the incident
upon which these proceedings rest, no other evidence as to these facts
was available either to the prosecution or to the defense. We think,
however, that, giving the accused the benefit of the doubt as to the weight
of the evidence touching those details of the incident as to which there can
be said to be any doubt, the following statement of the material facts
disclose by the record may be taken to be substantially correct:
On the night of August 14, 1908, at about 10 o'clock, the defendant, who
had received for the night, was suddenly awakened by some trying to force
open the door of the room. He sat up in bed and called out twice, "Who is
there?" He heard no answer and was convinced by the noise at the door
that it was being pushed open by someone bent upon forcing his way into
the room. Due to the heavy growth of vines along the front of the porch, the
room was very dark, and the defendant, fearing that the intruder was a
robber or a thief, leaped to his feet and called out. "If you enter the room, I
will kill you." At that moment he was struck just above the knee by the edge
of the chair which had been placed against the door. In the darkness and
confusion the defendant thought that the blow had been inflicted by the
person who had forced the door open, whom he supposed to be a burglar,
though in the light of after events, it is probable that the chair was merely
thrown back into the room by the sudden opening of the door against which
it rested. Seizing a common kitchen knife which he kept under his pillow,
the defendant struck out wildly at the intruder who, it afterwards turned out,
was his roommate, Pascual. Pascual ran out upon the porch and fell down
on the steps in a desperately wounded condition, followed by the
defendant, who immediately recognized him in the moonlight. Seeing that
Pascual was wounded, he called to his employers who slept in the next
house, No. 28, and ran back to his room to secure bandages to bind up
Pascual's wounds.
There had been several robberies in Fort McKinley not long prior to the
date of the incident just described, one of which took place in a house in
which the defendant was employed as cook; and as defendant alleges, it
was because of these repeated robberies he kept a knife under his pillow
for his personal protection.
The deceased and the accused, who roomed together and who appear to
have on friendly and amicable terms prior to the fatal incident, had an
understanding that when either returned at night, he should knock at the
door and acquiant his companion with his identity. Pascual had left the
house early in the evening and gone for a walk with his friends, Celestino
Quiambao and Mariano Ibañez, servants employed at officers' quarters No.
28, the nearest house to the mess hall. The three returned from their walk
at about 10 o'clock, and Celestino and Mariano stopped at their room at
No. 28, Pascual going on to his room at No. 27. A few moments after the
party separated, Celestino and Mariano heard cries for assistance and
upon returning to No. 27 found Pascual sitting on the back steps fatally
wounded in the stomach, whereupon one of them ran back to No. 28 and
called Liuetenants Jacobs and Healy, who immediately went to the aid of
the wounded man.
The defendant then and there admitted that he had stabbed his roommate,
but said that he did it under the impression that Pascual was "a ladron"
because he forced open the door of their sleeping room, despite
defendant's warnings.
Defendant was placed under arrest forthwith, and Pascual was conveyed to
the military hospital, where he died from the effects of the wound on the
following day.
The defendant was charged with the crime of assassination, tried, and
found guilty by the trial court of simple homicide, with extenuating
circumstances, and sentenced to six years and one day presidio mayor,
the minimum penalty prescribed by law.
At the trial in the court below the defendant admitted that he killed his
roommate, Pascual Gualberto, but insisted that he struck the fatal blow
without any intent to do a wrongful act, in the exercise of his lawful right of
self-defense.
The following are not delinquent and are therefore exempt from
criminal liability:
Under these provisions we think that there can be no doubt that defendant
would be entitle to complete exception from criminal liability for the death of
the victim of his fatal blow, if the intruder who forced open the door of his
room had been in fact a dangerous thief or "ladron," as the defendant
believed him to be. No one, under such circumstances, would doubt the
right of the defendant to resist and repel such an intrusion, and the thief
having forced open the door notwithstanding defendant's thrice-repeated
warning to desist, and his threat that he would kill the intruder if he
persisted in his attempt, it will not be questioned that in the darkness of the
night, in a small room, with no means of escape, with the thief advancing
upon him despite his warnings defendant would have been wholly justified
in using any available weapon to defend himself from such an assault, and
in striking promptly, without waiting for the thief to discover his whereabouts
and deliver the first blow.
But the evidence clearly discloses that the intruder was not a thief or a
"ladron." That neither the defendant nor his property nor any of the property
under his charge was in real danger at the time when he struck the fatal
blow. That there was no such "unlawful aggression" on the part of a thief or
"ladron" as defendant believed he was repelling and resisting, and that
there was no real "necessity" for the use of the knife to defend his person
or his property or the property under his charge.
The question then squarely presents it self, whether in this jurisdiction one
can be held criminally responsible who, by reason of a mistake as to the
facts, does an act for which he would be exempt from criminal liability if the
facts were as he supposed them to be, but which would constitute the
crime of homicide or assassination if the actor had known the true state of
the facts at the time when he committed the act. To this question we think
there can be but one answer, and we hold that under such circumstances
there is no criminal liability, provided always that the alleged ignorance or
mistake or fact was not due to negligence or bad faith.
The general proposition thus stated hardly admits of discussion, and the
only question worthy of consideration is whether malice or criminal intent is
an essential element or ingredient of the crimes of homicide and
assassination as defined and penalized in the Penal Code. It has been said
that since the definitions there given of these as well as most other crimes
and offense therein defined, do not specifically and expressly declare that
the acts constituting the crime or offense must be committed with malice or
with criminal intent in order that the actor may be held criminally liable, the
commission of the acts set out in the various definitions subjects the actor
to the penalties described therein, unless it appears that he is exempted
from liability under one or other of the express provisions of article 8 of the
code, which treats of exemption. But while it is true that contrary to the
general rule of legislative enactment in the United States, the definitions of
crimes and offenses as set out in the Penal Code rarely contain provisions
expressly declaring that malice or criminal intent is an essential ingredient
of the crime, nevertheless, the general provisions of article 1 of the code
clearly indicate that malice, or criminal intent in some form, is an essential
requisite of all crimes and offense therein defined, in the absence of
express provisions modifying the general rule, such as are those touching
liability resulting from acts negligently or imprudently committed, and acts
done by one voluntarily committing a crime or misdemeanor, where the act
committed is different from that which he intended to commit. And it is to be
observed that even these exceptions are more apparent than real, for
"There is little distinction, except in degree, between a will to do a wrongful
thing and indifference whether it is done or not. Therefore carelessness is
criminal, and within limits supplies the place of the affirmative criminal
intent" (Bishop's New Criminal Law, vol. 1, s. 313); and, again, "There is so
little difference between a disposition to do a great harm and a disposition
to do harm that one of them may very well be looked upon as the measure
of the other. Since, therefore, the guilt of a crime consists in the disposition
to do harm, which the criminal shows by committing it, and since this
disposition is greater or less in proportion to the harm which is done by the
crime, the consequence is that the guilt of the crime follows the same
proportion; it is greater or less according as the crime in its own nature
does greater or less harm" (Ruth. Ints. C. 18, p. 11); or, as it has been
otherwise stated, the thing done, having proceeded from a corrupt mid, is
to be viewed the same whether the corruption was of one particular form or
another.
The celebrated Spanish jurist Pacheco, discussing the meaning of the word
"voluntary" as used in this article, say that a voluntary act is a free,
intelligent, and intentional act, and roundly asserts that without intention
(intention to do wrong or criminal intention) there can be no crime; and that
the word "voluntary" implies and includes the words "con malicia," which
were expressly set out in the definition of the word "crime" in the code of
1822, but omitted from the code of 1870, because, as Pacheco insists, their
use in the former code was redundant, being implied and included in the
word "voluntary." (Pacheco, Codigo Penal, vol. 1, p. 74.)
Viada, while insisting that the absence of intention to commit the crime can
only be said to exempt from criminal responsibility when the act which was
actually intended to be done was in itself a lawful one, and in the absence
of negligence or imprudence, nevertheless admits and recognizes in his
discussion of the provisions of this article of the code that in general without
intention there can be no crime. (Viada, vol. 1, p. 16.) And, as we have
shown above, the exceptions insisted upon by Viada are more apparent
than real.
Silvela, in discussing the doctrine herein laid down, says:
And to the same effect are various decisions of the supreme court of Spain,
as, for example in its sentence of May 31, 1882, in which it made use of the
following language:
And again in its sentence of March 16, 1892, wherein it held that
"considering that, whatever may be the civil effects of the inscription of his
three sons, made by the appellant in the civil registry and in the parochial
church, there can be no crime because of the lack of the necessary
element or criminal intention, which characterizes every action or
ommission punished by law; nor is he guilty of criminal negligence."
And to the same effect in its sentence of December 30, 1896, it made use
of the following language:
. . . Considering that the moral element of the crime, that is, intent or
malice or their absence in the commission of an act defined and
punished by law as criminal, is not a necessary question of fact
submitted to the exclusive judgment and decision of the trial court.
That the author of the Penal Code deemed criminal intent or malice to be
an essential element of the various crimes and misdemeanors therein
defined becomes clear also from an examination of the provisions of article
568, which are as follows:
The word "voluntary" as used in article 1 of the Penal Code would seem to
approximate in meaning the word "willful" as used in English and American
statute to designate a form of criminal intent. It has been said that while the
word "willful" sometimes means little more than intentionally or designedly,
yet it is more frequently understood to extent a little further and
approximate the idea of the milder kind of legal malice; that is, it signifies
an evil intent without justifiable excuse. In one case it was said to mean, as
employed in a statute in contemplation, "wantonly" or "causelessly;" in
another, "without reasonable grounds to believe the thing lawful." And
Shaw, C. J., once said that ordinarily in a statute it means "not merely
`voluntarily' but with a bad purpose; in other words, corruptly." In English
and the American statutes defining crimes "malice," "malicious,"
"maliciously," and "malice aforethought" are words indicating intent, more
purely technical than "willful" or willfully," but "the difference between them
is not great;" the word "malice" not often being understood to require
general malevolence toward a particular individual, and signifying rather the
intent from our legal justification. (Bishop's New Criminal Law, vol. 1, secs.
428 and 429, and cases cited.)
In no one thing does criminal jurisprudence differ more from civil than
in the rule as to the intent. In controversies between private parties
the quo animo with which a thing was done is sometimes important,
not always; but crime proceeds only from a criminal mind. So that —
Legal maxims. — The ancient wisdom of the law, equally with the
modern, is distinct on this subject. It consequently has supplied to us
such maxims as Actus non facit reum nisi mens sit rea, "the act itself
does not make man guilty unless his intention were so;" Actus me
incito factus non est meus actus, "an act done by me against my will
is not my act;" and others of the like sort. In this, as just said, criminal
jurisprudence differs from civil. So also —
But, however this may be, there is no technical rule, and no pressing
necessity therefore, requiring mistake in fact to be dealt with otherwise that
in strict accord with the principles of abstract justice. On the contrary, the
maxim here is Ignorantia facti excusat ("Ignorance or mistake in point of
fact is, in all cases of supposed offense, a sufficient excuse"). (Brown's
Leg. Max., 2d ed., 190.)
If the party killing had reasonable grounds for believing that the
person slain had a felonious design against him, and under that
supposition killed him, although it should afterwards appear that there
was no such design, it will not be murder, but it will be either
manslaughter or excusable homicide, according to the degree of
caution used and the probable grounds of such belief. (Charge to the
grand jury in Selfridge's case, Whart, Hom., 417, 418, Lloyd's report
of the case, p.7.)
In this case, Parker, J., charging the petit jury, enforced the doctrine as
follows:
To the same effect are various decisions of the supreme court of Spain,
cited by Viada, a few of which are here set out in full because the facts are
somewhat analogous to those in the case at bar.
QUESTION III. When it is shown that the accused was sitting at his
hearth, at night, in company only of his wife, without other light than
reflected from the fire, and that the man with his back to the door was
attending to the fire, there suddenly entered a person whom he did
not see or know, who struck him one or two blows, producing a
contusion on the shoulder, because of which he turned, seized the
person and took from his the stick with which he had undoubtedly
been struck, and gave the unknown person a blow, knocking him to
the floor, and afterwards striking him another blow on the head,
leaving the unknown lying on the floor, and left the house. It turned
out the unknown person was his father-in-law, to whom he rendered
assistance as soon as he learned his identity, and who died in about
six days in consequence of cerebral congestion resulting from the
blow. The accused, who confessed the facts, had always sustained
pleasant relations with his father-in-law, whom he visited during his
sickness, demonstrating great grief over the occurrence. Shall he be
considered free from criminal responsibility, as having acted in self-
defense, with all the circumstances related in paragraph 4, article 8,
of the Penal Code? The criminal branch of the Audiencia of
Valladolid found that he was an illegal aggressor, without sufficient
provocation, and that there did not exists rational necessity for the
employment of the force used, and in accordance with articles 419
and 87 of the Penal Code condemned him to twenty months of
imprisonment, with accessory penalty and costs. Upon appeal by the
accused, he was acquitted by the supreme court, under the following
sentence: "Considering, from the facts found by the sentence to have
been proven, that the accused was surprised from behind, at night, in
his house beside his wife who was nursing her child, was attacked,
struck, and beaten, without being able to distinguish with which they
might have executed their criminal intent, because of the there was
no other than fire light in the room, and considering that in such a
situation and when the acts executed demonstrated that they might
endanger his existence, and possibly that of his wife and child, more
especially because his assailant was unknown, he should have
defended himself, and in doing so with the same stick with which he
was attacked, he did not exceed the limits of self-defense, nor did he
use means which were not rationally necessary, particularly because
the instrument with which he killed was the one which he took from
his assailant, and was capable of producing death, and in the
darkness of the house and the consteration which naturally resulted
from such strong aggression, it was not given him to known or
distinguish whether there was one or more assailants, nor the arms
which they might bear, not that which they might accomplish, and
considering that the lower court did not find from the accepted facts
that there existed rational necessity for the means employed, and that
it did not apply paragraph 4 of article 8 of the Penal Code, it erred,
etc." (Sentence of supreme court of Spain, February 28, 1876.)
(Viada, Vol. I, p. 266.) .
The judgment of conviction and the sentence imposed by the trial court
should be reversed, and the defendant acquitted of the crime with which he
is charged and his bail bond exonerated, with the costs of both instance de
oficio. So ordered.
DECISION
MENDOZA, J.:
The fraternal contract should not be signed in blood, celebrated with pain,
marred by injuries, and perpetrated through suffering. That is the essence
of Republic Act (R.A.) No. 8049 or the Anti-Hazing Law of 1995.
This is a petition for review on certiorari seeking to reverse and set aside
the April 26, 2013 Decision1 and the October 8, 2013 Resolution2 of the
Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CR-H.C. No. 05046, which affirmed the
February 23, 2011 Decision3 of the Regional Trial Court, Branch 36,
Calamba City (RTC). The RTC found petitioners Dandy L. Dungo (Dungo)
and Gregorio A. Sibal, Jr. (Sibal), guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the
crime of violation of Section 4 of R.A. No. 8049, and sentenced them to
suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua.
The Facts
CONTRARY TO LAW.
That on or about 2:30 in the early morning of January 14, 2006, at Villa
Novaliches, Brgy. Pansol, Calamba City, Province of Laguna and within the
jurisdiction of the Honorable Court, the above-name accused, during a
planned initiation rite and being then officers and members of Alpha Phi
Omega fraternity and present thereat, in conspiracy with more or less
twenty other members and officers, whose identity is not yet known, did
then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously assault and use personal
violence upon one MARLON VILLANUEVA y MEJILLA, a neophyte thereof
and as condition for his admission to the fraternity, thereby subjecting him
to physical harm, resulting to his death, to the damage and prejudice of the
heirs of the victim. CONTRARY TO LAW.
At around 3:20 o'clock in the morning of January 14, 2006, the victim
Marlon Villanueva (Villanueva) was brought to the emergency room of Dr.
Jose P. Rizal District Hospital (JP Rizal Hospital). Dr. Ramon Masilungan
(Dr. Masilungan), who was then the attending physician at the emergency
room, observed that Villanueva was motionless, not breathing and had no
heartbeat. Dr. Masilungan tried to revive Villlanueva for about 15 to 30
minutes. Villanueva, however, did not respond to the resuscitation and was
pronounced dead. Dr. Masilungan noticed a big contusion hematoma on
the left side of the victim's face and several injuries on his arms and legs.
He further attested that Villanueva 's face was cyanotic, meaning that blood
was no longer running through his body due to lack of oxygen; and when
he pulled down Villanueva's pants, he saw large contusions on both legs,
which extended from the upper portion of the thighs, down to the couplexial
portion, or back of the knees.
Dr. Masilungan disclosed that two (2) men brought Villanueva to the
hospital. The two told him that they found Villanueva lying motionless on
the ground at a store in Brgy. Pansol, Calamba City, and brought him to the
hospital. When he asked them where they came from, one of them
answered that they came from Los Baños, Laguna, en route to San Pablo
City. He questioned them on how they found Villanueva, when the latter
was in Brgy. Pansol, Calamba City. One of the men just said that they were
headed somewhere else.
Susan Ignacio (Ignacio) was the owner of the sari-sari store located at
Purok 5, Pansol, Calamba City, in front of Villa Novaliches Resort, which
was barely ten steps away. On January 13, 2006, at around 8:30 to 9:00
o'clock in the evening, she was tending her store when she saw a jeepney
with more than twenty (20) persons arrive at the resort. Ignacio identified
Dungo as the person seated beside the driver of the jeepney.11 She
estimated the ages of these persons in the group to be between 20 to 30
years old. They were in civilian clothes, while the other men wore white
long-sleeved shirts. Before entering the resort, the men and women shook
hands and embraced each other. Three (3) persons, riding on a single
motorcycle, also arrived at the resort.
Ignacio saw about fifteen (15) persons gather on top of the terrace of the
resort who looked like they were praying, and then the lights of the resort
were turned off. Later that evening, at least three (3) of these persons went
to her store to buy some items. During her testimony, she was shown
photographs and she identified Christopher Braseros and Sibal as two of
those who went to her store.12 It was only on the morning of January 14,
2006 that she learned from the policemen visiting the resort that the
deceased person was Villanueva.
Donato Magat (Magat), a tricycle driver plying the route of Pansol, Calamba
City, testified that at around 3:00 o'clock in the morning of January 14,
2006, he was waiting for passengers at the comer of Villa Novaliches
Resort. A man approached him and told him that someone inside the resort
needed a ride. Magat went to the resort and asked the two (2) men at the
gate who needed a ride. Afterwards, he saw three (3) men in their 20's
carrying another man, who looked very weak, like a vegetable, towards his
tricycle. Magat touched the body of the man being carried and sensed it
was cold.
Magat asked the men what happened to their companion. They replied that
he had too much to drink. Then they instructed Magat to go to the nearest
hospital. He drove the tricycle to JP Rizal Hospital. Upon their arrival, two
of his passengers brought their unconscious companion inside the
emergency room, while their other companion paid the tricycle fare. Magat
then left to go home. Several days after, he learned that the person brought
to the hospital had died.
PO2 Alaindelon Ignacio (P02 Ignacio). testified that on January 14, 2006 at
around 3:30 o'clock in the early morning, Natividad called up the PNP
Calamba City Station to report that a lifeless body of a man was brought to
JP Rizal Hospital. When P02 Ignacio arrived, he saw Villanueva' s corpse
with contusions and bite marks all over his body. P02 Ignacio and his
policemen companions then brought Dungo and Sibal to the police station.
He asked them about what happened, but they invoked their right to remain
silent. The policemen then proceeded to Brgy. Pansol at around 9:00
o'clock in the morning. After finding Villa Novaliches Resort, they knocked
on the door and the caretaker, Maricel Capillan (Capillan), opened it.
The police asked Capillan if there were University of the Philippines Los
Baños (UP Los Baños) students who rented the resort on the evening of
January 13, 2006. Capillan said yes and added that about twenty (20)
persons arrived onboard a jeepney and told her that they would be renting
the resort from 9:30 o'clock in the evening up to 7:00 o'clock the following
morning.
Joey Atienza (Atienza) had been a good friend of Villanueva since 2004.
They were roommates at the UP Los Baños Men's Dormitory and
housemates at the DPS Apartment in Umali Subdivision, Los Baños,
Laguna. According to Atienza, on January 9, 2006, Villanueva introduced
him to Daryl Decena (Decena) as his APO - Theta Chapter batchmate, who
was also to undergo final initiation rites on January 13, 2006.
McArthur Padua of the Office of the Registrar, UP Los Baños, testified that
Villanueva was a B.S. Agricultural Economics student at the UP Los
Baños,15 as evidenced by his official transcript of record.16
Atty. Eleno Peralta and Dina S. Carlos, officers of the Student Disciplinary
Tribunal (SDT) of the UP Los Baños, testified that an administrative
disciplinary case was filed on March 31, 2006 against the APO Fraternity
regarding the death of Villanueva. They confirmed that Capilla of Villa
Novaliches Resort and Irene Tan (Tan) of APO Sorority Theta Chapter
appeared as witnesses for the complainant.17
The defense presented seven (7) witnesses to prove the innocence of the
petitioners. Their testimonies are summarized as follow:
Dungo testified that around 1:00 o'clock in the early afternoon of January
13, 2006, he arrived at the boarding house of his girlfriend, Rivera, on
Raymundo Street. At around 4:00 o'clock in the afternoon, they went to the
UP Los Baños Graduate School and inquired about the requirements for a
master's degree. They walked back to the boarding house and met
Cornelio. They talked about their fraternity's ,final initiation ceremony for
that night in Pansol, Calamba City. Dungo and Rivera then reached the
latter's boarding house around 5:00 o'clock in the afternoon. At around 7:00
o'clock in the evening, they went out for dinner at the Lacxo Restaurant,
near Crossing Junction, Los Baños. They ate and stayed at the restaurant
for at least one and a half hours. Then they walked back to the boarding
house of Rivera and, along the way, they met Cornelio again at the Burger
Machine along Raymundo Street. Cornelio asked Dungo if he would attend
their fraternity's final initiation ceremony, to which he replied in the
negative. Dungo and Rivera reached the boarding house around 9:00
o'clock in the evening and they slept there.
Around 2:00 o'clock in the early morning of January 14, 2006, Dungo was
roused from his sleep because Sibal was palling him on his cellphone.
Sibal asked for his help, requesting him to go to Villa Novaliches Resort in
Pansol, Calamba City. Upon Dungo 's arrival at the resort, Sibal led him
inside. There, he saw Rudolfo Castillo (Castillo), a fellow APO fraternity
brother, and Villanueva, who was unconscious. Dungo told them that they
should bring Villanueva to the hospital. They all agreed, and Castillo called
a tricycle that brought them to JP Rizal Hospital. He identified himself
before the security guard as Jerico Paril because he was scared to tell his
real name.
Gilbert Gopez (Gopez) testified that he was the Grand Chancellor of the
APO -Theta Chapter for years 2005-2006. At around 7:00 o'clock in the
evening of January 13, 2006, he was at the tambayan of their fraternity in
UP Los Baños because their neophytes would be initiated that night.
Around 8:30 o'clock in the evening, they met their fraternity brothers in
Bagong Kalsada, Los Baños. He noticed that their neophyte, Villanueva,
was with Castillo and that there was a bruise on the left side of his face.
Then they boarded a jeepney and proceeded to Villa Novaliches Resort in
Pansol, Calamba City. There, Gopez instructed Sibal to take Villanueva to
the second floor of the resort. He confronted Castillo as to what happened
to Villanueva. Around 11:00 or 11:30 o'clock in the evening, Gopez decided
to cancel the final rites. He told Sibal to stay at the resort and accompany
Villanueva and Castillo. Together with the other neophytes, Gopez left the
resort and went back to UP Los Baños.
Sibal testified that he was a DOST Scholar at the UP Los Baños from 2002
to 2006, taking up B.S. Agricultural Chemistry. He was a Brother Actuary of
the APO - Theta Chapter, and was in charge of fraternity activities, such as
tree planting, free medical and dental missions, and blood donations. On
January 13, 2006, at around 6:00 o'clock in the evening, he was at the
fraternity's tambayan for the final initiation rites of their neophytes. After
preparing the food for the initiation rites, Sibal, together with some
neophytes, went to Bagong Kalsada, Los Baños, where he saw fellow
fraternity brother Castillo with their neophyte Villanueva, who had a bruised
face. Thereafter, they boarded a jeepney and proceeded to Villa
Novaliches Resort in Pansol, Calamba City. Once inside the resort, he
accompanied Villanueva upstairs for the latter to take a rest. A few minutes
later, he went down and confronted Castillo about the bruises on
Villanueva's face. He was angry and irritated with Castillo. He then stayed
outside the resort until Gopez and the other neophytes came out and told
him that the final initiation rite was cancelled, and that they were returning
to UP Los Baños. Sibal wanted to go with them but ;he was ordered to stay
with Villanueva and Castillo.
After the group of Gopez left, Sibal checked on the condition of Villanueva,
who was sleeping on the second; floor of the resort. Then he went outside
for one hour, or until 1 :00 o 'dock in the early morning of January 14, 2006.
Sibal entered the resort again and saw Villanueva, who looked
unconscious, seated in one of the benc6es on the ground floor. Sibal
inquired about Villanueva's condition but he was ignored by Castillo. He
then called Dungo for help. After Dungo arrived at the resort, they hailed a
tricycle and brought Villanueva to JP Rizal Hospital. There, he gave a false
name to the security guard as he heard that Dungo had done the same.
On February 23, 2011, the RTC found Dungo and Sibal guilty of the crime
of violating Section 4 of the Anti-Hazing Law and sentenced them to suffer
the penalty of reclusion perpetua. The trial court stated that the prosecution
established the presence of Dungo and Sibal (1) at the UP Los Banos
Campus on January 13, 2006 around 3:00 o'clock in the afternoon, by the
testimony of Sunga and (2) at the Villa Novaliches Resort around 9:00
o'clock in the evening of the same day by the testimony of Ignacio. With the
extensive testimonies of Dr. Masilungan and Dr. Camarillo, the prosecution
also proved that Villanueva died from hazing injuries.
The RTC explained that even if there was no evidence that Dungo and
Sibal participated to bodily assault and harm the victim, it was irrefutable
that they brought Villanueva to the resort for their final initiation rites.
Clearly, they did not merely induce Villanueva to attend the final initiation
rites, but they also brought him to Villa Novaliches Resort.
The RTC held that the defense of denial and alibi were self-serving
negative assertions. The defense of denial and alibi of Dungo, which was
corroborated by the testimony of his girlfriend Rivera and his co-fraternity
brother, could not be given credence. The witnesses presented by the
defense were partial and could not be considered as disinterested parties.
The defense of denial of Sibal likewise failed. The corroborative testimonies
of his fraternity brothers were suspect because they had so much at stake
in the outcome of the criminal action.
WHEREFORE, the Court finds the accused Dandy Dungo and Gregorio
Sibal GUILTY of violating Section 4 of the Anti-Hazing Law and sentenced
them to suffer the penalty of RECLUSION PERPETUA and order them to
jointly and severally pay the family /heirs of Deceased Marlon Villanueva
the following sums of money:
SO ORDERED.20
The CA Ruling
The CA ruled that the appeal of Dungo and Sibal was bereft of merit. It
stated that, in finding them guilty of violating R.A. No. 8049, the RTC
properly relied on circumstantial evidence adduced by the prosecution. The
CA painstakingly discussed the unbroken chain of circumstantial evidence
to convict Dungo and Sibal as principals in the crime of hazing.
It further found that the defense of denial and alibi of Dungo and Sibal
failed to cast doubt on the positive identification made by the prosecution
witnesses; and that denial, being inherently weak, could not prevail over
the positive identification of the accused as the perpetrators of the crime.
The CA also stated that Dungo and Sibal were not only convicted based on
their presence in the venue of the hazing, but also in their act of bringing
the victim to Villa Novaliches Resort for the final initiation rites.
SO ORDERED.21
Dungo and Sibal moved for reconsideration but their motion was denied by
the CA in the assailed October 8, 2013 Resolution.
In its Comment,25 filed on May 23, 2014, the Office of the Solicitor General
(DSG) asserted that Dungo and Sibal were charged in the amended
information with the proper offense and convicted for such. The phrases
"planned initiation" and "in conspiracy with more or less twenty members
and officers" in the amended information sufficiently cover "knowingly
cooperated in carrying out the hazing by inducing the victim to be present
thereat." The planned initiation rite would not have been accomplished
were it not for the acts of the petitioners in inducing the victim to be present
thereat and it was obviously conducted in conspiracy with the others. 26 In
their Reply27 filed on September 10, 2014, Dungo and Sibal insisted that
there was a variance between the, offense charged of "actually participated
in the infliction of physical harm," and the offense "knowingly cooperated in
carrying out the hazing by inducing the victim to be present thereat." 28 The
prosecution, moreover, failed to establish conspiracy because no act or
circumstance was proved pointing to a joint purpose and design between
and among the petitioners and the other twenty accused.
Procedural Matter
Hazing can be classified into various categories including, but not limited
to, acts of violence, acts of humiliation, sexual-related acts, and alcohol-
related acts.43 The physical form of hazing may include beating, branding,
paddling, excessive exercise, drinking, and using drugs. Sexual hazing
have included simulated sex acts, sodomy and forced kissing.44 Moreover,
hazing does not only result in physical injuries and hospitalization, but also
lead to emotional damage and traumatic stress.45
In Florida, the Chad Meredith Act,50 a law named after a student who died
in a hazing incident, was enacted on July 1, 2005. It provides that a person
commits a third degree felony when he or she intentionally or recklessly
commits any act of hazing and the hazing results in serious bodily injury or
death. If a person only creates substantial risk of physical injury or death,
then hazing is categorized as a first degree misdemeanor. A similar
provision can be observed in the Penal Law of New York.51
Also, some states enacted statutes that have been interpreted to mean that
persons are guilty of hazing even if they have the consent of the victim. 54 In
New Jersey, consent is not a defense to a hazing charge, and its law
permits the prosecution of offenders under other applicable criminal
statutes.55 By including these various provisions in their anti-hazing
statutes, these states have removed the subjective inquiry of consent from
consideration, thus, presumably allowing courts to effectively and properly
adjudicate hazing cases.56
In the US, hazing victims can either file a criminal action, based on anti-
hazing statutes, or a civil suit, arising from tort law and constitutional law,
against the members of the local fraternity, the national fraternity and even
against the university or college concerned.57 Hazing, which threatens to
needlessly harm students, must be attacked from whatever legal means
are possible.58
Even in high school, hazing could exist. In Nice v. Centennial Area School
District,61 a tenth-grade wrestler at William Tennet High School was
subjected to various forms of hazing, including; a ritual where the victim
was forcibly held down, while a teammate sat on his face with his buttocks
exposed. The parents of the student sued the school because it failed to
prevent the incident despite its knowledge of the hazing rites. The court
approved the settlement of the parties in the amount ofUS$151,000.00.
The US anti-hazing laws and jurisprudence show that victims of hazing can
properly attain redress before the court. By crafting laws and prosecuting
offenders, the state can address the distinct dilemma of hazing.
R.A. No. 8049, or the Anti-Hazing Law .of 1995, has been enacted to
regulate hazing and other forms of initiation rites in fraternities, sororities,
and other organizations. It was in response to the rising incidents of death
of hazing victims, particularly the death of Leonardo "Lenny" Villa. 63 Despite
its passage, reports of deaths resulting from i hazing continue to emerge.
Recent victims were Guillo Servando of the College of St. Benilde, Marc
Andre Marcos and Marvin Reglos of the San', Beda College - Manila, and
Cris Anthony Mendez of the University of the Philippines - Diliman. With the
continuity of these senseless tragedies, one question implores for an
answer: is R.A. No. 8049 a sufficient deterrent against hazing?
To answer the question, the Court must dissect the provisions of the law
and scrutinize its effect, implication and application.
Criminal law has long divided crimes into acts wrong in themselves called
acts mala in se; and acts which would not be wrong but for the fact that
positive law forbids them, called acts mala prohibita. This distinction is
important with reference to the intent with which a wrongful act is done. The
rule on the subject is that in acts mala in se, the intent governs; but in acts
mala prohibita, the only inquiry is, has the law been violated? When an act
is illegal, the intent of the offender is immaterial.64 When the doing of an act
is prohibited by law, it is considered injurious to public welfare, and the
doing of the prohibited act is the crime itself.65
The crime of hazing under R.A. No. 8049 is malum prohibitum. The Senate
deliberations would show that the lawmakers intended the anti-hazing
statute to be ma/um prohibitum, as follows: SENATOR GUINGONA: Most
of these acts, if not all, are already punished under the Revised Penal
Code.
SENATOR GUINGONA. Or, if the person who commits sexual abuse does
so it can be penalized under rape or acts of lasciviousness.
SENATOR GUINGONA. So, what is the rationale for making a new offense
under this definition of the crime of hazing?
That is the main rationale. We want to send a strong signal across the land
that no group or association can require the act of physical initiation before
a person can become a member without being held criminally liable.
x x x x x x x x x
SENATOR GUINGONA. Yes, but what would be the rationale for that
imposition? Because the distinguished Sponsor has said that he is not
punishing a mere organization, he is not seeking the punishment of an
initiation into a club or organization, he is seeking the punishment of certain
acts that resulted in death, etcetera as a result of hazing which are already
covered crimes.
SENATOR LINA. x x x
Another point, Mr. President, is this, and this is a very telling difference:
When a person or group of persons resort to hazing as a requirement for
gaining entry into an organization, the intent to commit a wrong is not
visible or is not present, Mr. President. Whereas, in these specific crimes,
Mr. President, let us say there is death or there is homicide, mutilation, if
one files a case, then the intention to commit a wrong has to be proven. But
if the crime of hazing is the basis, what is important is the result from the
act of hazing.
To me, that is the basic difference and that is what will prevent or deter the
sororities or fraternities; that they should really shun this activity called
"hazing." Because, initially, these fraternities or sororities do not even
consider having a neophyte killed or maimed or that acts of lasciviousness
are even committed initially, Mr. President.
So, what we want to discourage, is the so-called initial innocent act. That is
why there is need to institute this kind of hazing. Ganiyan po ang nangyari.
Ang fraternity o ang sorority ay magre-recruit. Wala talaga silang
intensiybng makamatay. Hindi ko na babanggitin at buhay pa iyong kaso.
Pero dito sa anim o pito na namatay nitong nakaraang taon, walang
intensiyong patayin talaga iyong neophyte. So, kung maghihintay pa tayo,
na saka lamang natin isasakdal ng murder kung namatay na, ay after the
fact ho iyon. Pero, kung sasabihin natin sa mga kabataan na: "Huwag
ninyong gagawin iyong hazing. Iyan ay kasalanan at kung mamatay diyan,
mataas ang penalty sa inyo."
x x x x x x x x x
If that occurs, under this law, there is no necessity to prove that the
masters intended to kill or the masters intended to maim. What is important
is the result of the act of hazing. Otherwise, the masters or those who inflict
the physical pain can easily escape responsibility and say, "We did not
have the intention to kill. This is part of our initiation rites. This is normal.
We do not have any intention to kill or maim."
This is the lusot, Mr. President. They might as well have been charged
therefore with the ordinary crime of homicide, mutilation, etcetera, where
the prosecution will have a difficulty proving the elements if they are
separate offenses.
x x x x x x x x x
SENATOR LINA. x x x
I am very happy that the distinguished Minority Leader brought out the idea
of intent or whether it is mala in se or mala prohibita. There can be a radical
amendment if that is the point that he wants to go to.
If we agree on the concept, then, maybe, we can just make this a special
law on hazing. We will not include this anymore under the Revised Penal
Code. That is a possibility. I will not foreclose that suggestion, Mr.
President.69
[Emphases Supplied]
Having in mind the potential conflict between the proposed law and the
core principle of mala in se adhered to under the RPC, the Congress did
not simply enact an amendment thereto. Instead, it created a special law
on hazing, founded upon the principle of mala prohibita.70 In Vedana v.
Valencia,71 the Court noted that in our nation's very recent history, the
people had spoken, through the Congress, to deem conduct constitutive of
hazing, an act previously considered harmless by custom, as
criminal.72 The act of hazing itself is not inherently immoral, but the law
deems the same to be against public policy and must be prohibited.
Accordingly, the existence of criminal intent is immaterial in the crime of
hazing. Also, the defense of good faith cannot be raised in its prosecution.73
2. The said written notice must be secured at least seven (7) days
before the conduct of such initiation;
The first class of principals would be the actual participants in the hazing. If
the person subjected to hazing or other forms of initiation rites suffers any
physical injury or dies as a result thereof, the officers and members of the
fraternity, sorority or organization who actually participated in the infliction
of physical harm shall be liable as principals. Interestingly, the presence of
any person during the hazing is prima facie evidence of actual participation,
unless he prevented the commission of the acts punishable herein.76
The next class of principals would be the fraternity or sorority's adviser who
was present when the acts constituting hazing were committed, and failed
to take action to prevent them from occurring.83 The liability of the adviser
arises, not only from his mere presence in the hazing, but also his failure to
prevent the same.
The last class of principals would be the parents of the officers or members
of the fraternity, group, or organization.84 The hazing must be held in the
home of one of the officers or members. The parents must have actual
knowledge of the hazing conducted in their homes and failed to take any
action to avoid the same from occurring.
The law also provides for accomplices in the crime of hazing. The school
authorities, including faculty members, who consented to the hazing or who
have actual knowledge thereof, but failed to take any action to prevent the
same from occurring shall be punished as accomplices.85 Likewise, the
owner of the place where the hazing was conducted can also be an
accomplice to the crime.86 The owner of the place shall be liable when he
has actual knowledge of the hazing conducted therein and he failed to take
any steps to stop the same. Recognizing the malum prohibitum
characteristic of hazing, the law provides that any person charged with the
said crime shall not be entitled to the mitigating circumstance that there
was no intention to commit so grave a wrong.87 Also, the framers of the law
intended that the consent of the victim shall not be a defense in hazing.
During the discussion of whether sodomy shall be included as a punishable
act under the law, the issue of consent was tackled: SENATOR LINA x x x
But sodomy in this case is connected with hazing, Mr. President. Such that
the act may even be entered into with consent. It is not only sodomy. The
infliction of pain may be done with the consent of the neophyte. If the law is
passed, that does not make the act of hazing not punishable because the
neophyte accepted the infliction of pain upon himself.
If the victim suffers from serious physical injuries, but the initiator said,
"Well, he allowed it upon himself. He consented to it." So, if we allow that
reasoning that sodomy was done with the consent of the victim, then we
would not have passed any law at all. There will be no significance if we
pass this bill, because it will always be a defense that the victim allowed the
infliction of pain or suffering. He accepted it as part of the initiation rites.
But precisely, Mr. President that is one thing that we would want to prohibit.
That the defense of consent will not apply because the very act of inflicting
physical pain or psychological suffering is, by itself, a punishable act. The
result of the act of hazing, like death or physical injuries merely aggravates
the act with higher penalties. But the defense of consent is not going to
nullify the criminal nature of the act.
So, if we accept the amendment that sodomy can only aggravate the
offense if it is committed without consent of the victim, then the whole
foundation of this proposed law will collapse.
[Emphasis supplied]
Further, the law acknowledges that the offended party in the crime of
hazing can seek different courses of action. n '.'provides that the
responsible officials of the school or of the police, military or citizen's army
training organization, may impose the appropriate administrative sanctions
on the person or the persons charged under this provision even before their
conviction.89 Necessarily, the offended party can file either administrative,
civil, or criminal actions against the offenders.90
The study of the provisions of R.A. No. 8049 shows that, on paper, it is
complete and robust in penalizing the crime of hazing. It was made malum
prohibitum to discount criminal intent and disallow the defense of good
faith. It took into consideration the different participants and contributors in
the hazing activities. While not all acts cited in the law are penalized, the
penalties imposed therein involve various and serious terms of
imprisonment to discourage would-be offenders. Indeed, the law against
hazing is ideal and profound. As to whether the law can be effectively
implemented, the Court begs to continue on the merits of the case.
The petitioners claim that the amended ,information avers a criminal charge
of hazing by actual participation, but the only offense proved during the trial
was hazing by inducement. Their1 contention must fail. The Amended
Information reads:
That on or about 2:30 in the early morning of January 14, 2006, at Villa
Novaliches, Brgy. Pansol, Calamba City, Province of Laguna and within the
jurisdiction of the Honorable Court, the above-named accused, during a
planned initiation rite and being then officers and members of Alpha Phi
Omega fraternity and present thereat, in conspiracy with more or less
twenty other members and officers, whose identity is not yet known, did
then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously assault and use personal
violence upon one MARLON VILLANUEVA y MEJILLA, a neophyte thereof
and as condition for his admission to the fraternity, thereby subjecting him
to physical harm, resulting to his death, to the damage and prejudice of the
heirs of the victim. CONTRARY TO LAW.91
It is evident that the Information need not use the exact language of the
statute in alleging the acts or omissions complained of as constituting the
offense. The test is whether it enables a person of common understanding
to know the charge against him, and the court to render judgment
properly.92
The Court agrees with the OSG that the "planned initiation rite" as stated in
the information included the act of inducing Villanueva to attend it. In
ordinary parlance, a planned event can be understood to have different
phases. Likewise, the hazing activity had different stages and the
perpetrators had different roles therein, not solely inflicting physical injury to
the neophyte. One of the roles of the petitioners in the hazing activity was
to induce Villanueva to be present. Dungo and Sibal not only induced
Villanueva to be present at the resort, but they actually brought him there.
They fulfilled their roles in the planned hazing rite which eventually led to
the death of Villanueva. The hazing would not have been accomplished
were it not for the acts of the petitioners that induced the victim to be
present.
Secrecy and silence are common characterizations of the dynamics of
hazing.93 To require the prosecutor to indicate every step of the planned
initiation rite in the information at the inception of the criminal case, when
details of the clandestine hazing are almost nil, would be an arduous task,
if not downright impossible. The law does not require the impossible (lex
non cognit ad impossibilia).
Conspiracy of the
offenders was duly proven
The petitioners assail that the prosecution failed to establish the fact of
conspiracy.
SENATOR LINA. That is why I said that it should not be murder. It should
be hazing, Mr. President.98
The Court does not categorically agree that, under R.A. No. 8049, the
prosecution need not prove conspiracy. Jurisprudence dictates that
conspiracy must be established, not by conjectures, but by positive and
conclusive evidence. Conspiracy transcends mere companionship and
mere presence at the scene of the crime does not in itself amount to
conspiracy. Even knowledge, acquiescence in or agreement to cooperate,
is not enough to constitute one as a party to a conspiracy, absent any
active participation in the commission of the crime with a view to the
furtherance of the common design and purpose.99
Verily, the disputable presumption under R.A. No. 8049 can be related to
the conspiracy in the crime of hazing. The common design of offenders is
to haze the victim. Some of the overt acts that could be committed by the
offenders would be to (1) plan the hazing activity as a requirement of the
victim's initiation to the fraternity; (2) induce the victim to attend the hazing;
and (3) actually participate in the infliction of physical injuries.
In this case, there was prima facie evidence of the petitioners' participation
in the hazing because of their presence in the venue. As correctly held by
the RTC, the presence of Dungo and Sibal during the hazing at Villa
Novaliches Resort was established by the testimony of Ignacio. She
testified that she saw Sibal emerge from the resort and approach her store,
to wit:
MR. DIMACULANGAN
Q: And how many persons from this group did you see again?
WITNESS
Q: And what did they do if any if they came out of the resort?
xxxx
Q: Did you have any other visitors to your store that night?
xxxx
A: "Meron po".
Q: If I show you pictures of these people, will you be able to identify them
before this Court.
A: Yes, sir.
xxxx
Q: Mrs. Ignacio, I am showing you this picture of persons marked as Exhibit
"L" in the Pre-Trial, can you please look over this document carefully and
see if any of the persons whom you said visited your store is here?
xxxx
COURT:
Make it of record that the witness pinpointed to the first picture appearing
on the left picture on the first row.
xxxx
ATIY. PAMAOS:
For the record, your Honor, we manifest that the picture and the name
pointed by the witness has been previously marked as Exhibit "L-3" and
previously admitted by the defense as referring to Gregorio Sibal, Jr.,
accused in this case…104
COURT
Q: xx x Now, when you say other people you could identify who are not in
the pictures then how would you know that these people are indeed those
people you could identify?
WITNESS
Q: And what will be the significance of the alleged embrace and shake
hands for you to say that you could identify those people?
A: "Hindi po. Noong dumating po sila nasa isang jeep, meron pong lalaki
doon sa may tabi ng driver bumaba siya tapos po noong bumaba siya
tapos iyong mga kasamahan nya sa likod nagbaba-an din, iyon po nagbati-
an po sila."
Q: And from these greeting, how could you identify these people?
Q: So, are you telling the Court that this person you positively saw seated
beside the driver came out and subsequently embraced and shook hands
with the other people from the jeepney, is that your testimony?
Hence, generally, mere presence at the scene of the crime does not in
itself amount to conspiracy.106 Exceptionally, under R.A. No. 8049, the
participation of the offenders in the criminal conspiracy can be proven by
the prima facie evidence due to their presence during the hazing, unless
they prevented the commission of the acts therein.
Aside from inducing Villanueva to attend the initiation rites and their
presence during the hazing, the petitioners? guilt was proven beyond
reasonable doubt by the sequence of circumstantial evidence presented by
the prosecution. Their involvement in the hazing of Villanueva is not merely
based on prima facie evidence but was also established by circumstantial
evidence.
3. Later at 5:00 o'clock in the afternoon, two more men coming from
the entomology wing arrived and approached the three men. Among
the men who just arrived was the victim, Marlon Villanueva. One of
the men wearing black APO shirts handed over to the two fraternity
neophytes some money and told the men "Mamalengke na kayo." He
later took back the money and said, "Huwag na, kami na lang."
4. One of the men wearing a black APO shirt, who was later identified
as appellant Dungo, stood up and asked Marlon if the latter already
reported to him, and asked him why he did not report to him when he
was just at the tambayan. Dungo then continuously punched the
victim on his arm. This went on for five minutes. Marlon just kept quiet
with his head bowed down. Fifteen minutes later, the men left going
towards the Entomology wing.
9. The four (4) men boarded his tricycle but Magat noticed that when
he touched the body of the man who was being carried, it felt cold.
The said man looked very weak like a vegetable.
11. Afterwards, Espina asked the two meq for identification cards.
The latter replied that they did not bring with them any I.D. or
wallet.1âwphi1 Instead of giving their true names, the appellants
listed down their names in the hospital logbook as Brandon Gonzales
y Lanzon and Jericho Paril y Rivera. Espina then told the two men not
to leave, not telling them that they secretly called the police to report
the incident which was their standard operating procedure when a
dead body was brought to the hospital.
12. Dr. Ramon Masilungan, who was then the attending physician at
the emergency room, observed that Marlon was motionless, had no
heartbeat and already cyanotic.
14. When Dr. Masilungan pulled down Marlon's pants, he saw a large
contusion on both legs which extended from the upper portion of his
thigh down to the couplexial portion or the back of the knee.
15. Due to the nature, extent and location of Marlon's injuries, Dr.
Masilungan opined that he was a victim of hazing. Dr. Masilungan is
familiar with hazing injuries, having undergone hazing when he was a
student and also because of his experience treating victims of hazing
incidents.
Petitioners Dungo and Sibal, on the other hand, presented the defense of
denial and alibi. These defenses, however, must fail. Time and time again,
this Court has ruled that denial and alibi are the weakest of all defenses,
because they are easy to concoct and fabricate.115 As properly held by the
RTC, these defenses cannot prevail over the positive and unequivocal
identification of the petitioners by prosecution witnesses Sunga and
Ignacio. The testimonies of the defense witnesses also lacked credibility
and reliability. The corroboration of defense witness Rivera was suspect
because she was the girlfriend of Dungo, and it was only logical and
emotional that she would stand by the man she loved and cared for. The
testimonies of their fellow fraternity brothers, likewise, do not hold much
weight because they had so much at stake in the outcome of the case.
Stated differently, the petitioners did not present credible and. disinterested
witnesses to substantiate their defenses of denial and alibi.
After a careful review of the records, the Court agrees with the CA and the
R TC that the circumstantial evidence presented by the prosecution was
overwhelming enough to establish the guilt of the petitioners beyond a
reasonable doubt. The unbroken chain of events laid down by the CA
leaves us no other conclusion other than the petitioners' participation in the
hazing. They took part in the hazing and, together; with their fellow
fraternity officers and members, inflicted physical injuries to Villanueva as a
requirement of his initiation to the fraternity. The physical injuries eventually
took a toll on the body of the victim, which led to his death. Another young
life lost.
With the fact of hazing, the identity ,of the petitioners, and their participation
therein duly proven, the moral certainty that produces conviction in an
unprejudiced mind has been satisfied.
Final Note
Hopefully, the present case will serve as a guide to the bench and the bar
on the application of R.A. No. 8049. Through careful case-build up and
proper presentation of evidence before the court, it is not impossible for the
exalted constitutional presumption of innocence of the accused to be
overcome and his guilt for the crime of hazing be proven beyond
reasonable doubt. The prosecution must bear in mind the secretive nature
of hazing, and carefully weave its chain of circumstantial evidence.
Likewise, the defense must present a genuine defense and substantiate
the same through credible and reliable witnesses. The counsels of both
parties must also consider hazing as a malum prohibitum crime and the
law's distinctive provisions.
While the Court finds R.A. No. 8049 adequate to deter and prosecute
hazing, the law is far from perfect. In Villareal v. People,116 the Court
suggested that the fact of intoxication and the presence of non-resident or
alumni fraternity members during hazing should be considered as
aggravating circumstances that would increase the applicable penalties.
Equally, based on the discussion earlier, this Court suggests some further
amendments to the law. First, there should be a penalty or liability for
noncompliance with Section 2, or the written notice requirement, and with
Section 3, or the representation requirement. Second, the penalties under
Section 4 should also consider the psychological harm done to the victim of
hazing. With these additional inputs on R.A. No. 8049, the movement
against hazing can be invigorated. R.A. No. 8049 is a democratic response
to the uproar against hazing. It demonstrates that there must, and should,
be another way of fostering brotherhood, other than through the culture of
violence and suffering. The senseless deaths of these young men shall
never be forgotten, for justice is the spark that lights the candles of their
graves.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. The April 26, 2013 Decision and
the October 8, 2013 Resolution of the Court of Appeals in CAG.R. CR-H.C.
No. 05046 are hereby AFFIRMED in toto. Let copies of this Decision be
furnished to the Secretary of the Department of Justice as guidance for the
proper implementation and prosecution of violators of R.A. No. 8049; and
to the Senate President and the Speaker of the House of Representatives
for possible consideration of the amendment of the Anti-Hazing Law to
include the penalty for noncompliance with its Section 2 and 3, and the
:penalty for the psychological harms to the surviving victims of hazing.
SO ORDERED.
DECISION
ABAD, J.:
This case is about a municipal mayor charged with illegal diversion of food
intended for those suffering from malnutrition to the beneficiaries of
reconsideration projects affecting the homes of victims of calamities.
The Facts and the Case
The Office of the Ombudsman for the Visayas accused Arnold James M.
Ysidoro before the Sandiganbayan in Criminal Case 28228 of violation of
illegal use of public propertry (technical malversation) under Article 220 of
the Revised Penal Code.1
The facts show that the Municipal Social Welfare and Development Office
(MSWDO) of Leyte, Leyte, operated a Core Shelter Assistance Program
(CSAP) that provided construction materials to indigent calamity victims
with which to rebuild their homes. The beneficiaries provided the labor
needed for construction.
On June 15, 2001 when construction for calamity victims in Sitio Luy-a,
Barangay Tinugtogan, was 70% done, the beneficiaries stopped reporting
for work for the reason that they had to find food for their families. This
worried Lolita Garcia (Garcia), the CSAP Officer-in-Charge, for such
construction stoppage could result in the loss of construction materials
particularly the cement. Thus, she sought the help of Cristina Polinio
(Polinio), an officer of the MSWDO in charge of the municipality’s
Supplemental Feeding Program (SFP) that rationed food to malnourished
children. Polinio told Garcia that the SFP still had sacks of rice and boxes
of sardines in its storeroom. And since she had already distributed food to
the mother volunteers, what remained could be given to the CSAP
beneficiaries.
Garcia and Polinio went to petitioner Arnold James M. Ysidoro, the Leyte
Municipal Mayor, to seek his approval. After explaining the situation to him,
Ysidoro approved the release and signed the withdrawal slip for four sacks
of rice and two boxes of sardines worth P3,396.00 to CSAP.2 Mayor
Ysidoro instructed Garcia and Polinio, however, to consult the accounting
department regarding the matter.
In his defense, Ysidoro claims that the diversion of the subject goods to a
project also meant for the poor of the municipality was valid since they
came from the savings of the SFP and the Calamity Fund. Ysidoro also
claims good faith, believing that the municipality’s poor CSAP beneficiaries
were also in urgent need of food. Furthermore, Ysidoro pointed out that the
COA Municipal Auditor conducted a comprehensive audit of their
municipality in 2001 and found nothing irregular in its transactions.
On February 8, 2010 the Sandiganbayan found Ysidoro guilty beyond
reasonable doubt of technical malversation. But, since his action caused no
damage or embarrassment to public service, it only fined him P1,698.00 or
50% of the sum misapplied. The Sandiganbayan held that Ysidoro applied
public property to a pubic purpose other than that for which it has been
appropriated by law or ordinance. On May 12, 2010 the Sandiganbayan
denied Ysidoro’s motion for reconsideration. On June 8, 2010 Ysidoro
appealed the Sandiganbayan Decision to this Court.
But the evidence shows that on November 8, 2000 the Sangguniang Bayan
of Leyte enacted Resolution 00-133 appropriating the annual general fund
for 2001.6 This appropriation was based on the executive budget7 which
allocated P100,000.00 for the SFP and P113,957.64 for the
Comprehensive and Integrated Delivery of Social Services8 which covers
the CSAP housing projects.9 The creation of the two items shows the
Sanggunian’s intention to appropriate separate funds for SFP and the
CSAP in the annual budget.
Since the municipality bought the subject goods using SFP funds, then
those goods should be used for SFP’s needs, observing the rules
prescribed for identifying the qualified beneficiaries of its feeding programs.
The target clientele of the SFP according to its manual10 are: 1) the
moderately and severely underweight pre-school children aged 36 months
to 72 months; and 2) the families of six members whose total monthly
income is P3,675.00 and below.11 This rule provides assurance that the
SFP would cater only to the malnourished among its people who are in
urgent need of the government’s limited resources.
Two. Ysidoro claims that the subject goods already constituted savings of
the SFP and that, therefore, the same could already be diverted to the
CSAP beneficiaries. He relies on Abdulla v. People12 which states that
funds classified as savings are not considered appropriated by law or
ordinance and can be used for other public purposes. The Court cannot
accept Ysidoro’s argument.
The power of the purse is vested in the local legislative body. By requiring
an ordinance, the law gives the Sanggunian the power to determine
whether savings have accrued and to authorize the augmentation of other
items on the budget with those savings.
Three. Ysidoro claims that, since the municipal auditor found nothing
irregular in the diversion of the subject goods, such finding should be
respected. The SB ruled, however, that since Ysidoro failed to present the
municipal auditor at the trial, the presumption is that his testimony would
have been adverse if produced. Ysidoro argues that this goes against the
rule on the presumption of innocence and the presumption of regularity in
the performance of official functions.
Ysidoro may be right in that there is no basis for assuming that had the
municipal auditor testified, his testimony would have been adverse to the
mayor. The municipal auditor’s view regarding the transaction is not
conclusive to the case and will not necessarily negate the mayor’s liability if
it happened to be favorable to him. The Court will not, therefore, be drawn
into speculations regarding what the municipal auditor would have said had
he appeared and testified.
Four. Ysidoro insists that he acted in good faith since, first, the idea of
using the SFP goods for the CSAP beneficiaries came, not from him, but
from Garcia and Polinio; and, second, he consulted the accounting
department if the goods could be distributed to those beneficiaries. Having
no criminal intent, he argues that he cannot be convicted of the
crime.1âwphi1
Dura lex sed lex. Ysidoro’s act, no matter how noble or miniscule the
amount diverted, constitutes the crime of technical malversation. The law
and this Court, however, recognize that his offense is not grave, warranting
a mere fine.
WHEREFORE, this Court AFFIRMS in its entirely the assailed Decision of
the Sandiganbayan in Criminal Case 28228 dated February 8, 2010.
SO ORDERED.
DECISION
PERALTA, J.:
In two (2) separate Informations, Patulot was charged with child abuse,
defined and penalized under Republic Act (R.A.) No. 7610, otherwise
known as the Special Protection of Children Against Abuse, Exploitation
and Discrimination Act,4 the accusatory portions of which read:
That on or about the 14th day of November 2012, in the City of Taguig,
Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-
named accused, did, then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously
commit acts of child abuse upon one BBB, a two (2) month old baby, by
throwing on her a boiling oil, thereby inflicting upon said victim-minor
physical injuries, which acts are inimical and prejudicial to the child's
normal growth and development. CONTRARY TO LAW.6
At around 2:00 p.m. of November 14, 2012, CCC gathered clothes from the
clothesline outside her house. As she was about to enter the house, she
was surprised to see Patulot who was holding a casserole. Without
warning, Patulot poured the contents of the casserole - hot cooking oil - on
her. CCC tried to dodge, but to no avail. AAA and BBB, who were nearby,
suddenly cried because they were likewise hit by the hot cooking oil. CCC
hurriedly brought AAA and BBB to her three neighbors who volunteered to
bring the children to the Polyclinic at South Signal, Taguig City, for
treatment. She then went to the barangay hall also at South Signal, Taguig
City, to report the incident. Accompanied by barangay personnel, she went
to Patulot's house, but Patulot was not there. She instead returned to her
children at the Polyclinic. While there, she learned from a neighbor that
Patulot had been arrested. Consequently, having been assured that her
children were all right and that medication had already been given, they
returned to the barangay hall, where DDD met them. At the barangay hall,
CCC noticed that her children were shivering. Thus, she asked her
neighbors to bring them to Pateros-Taguig District Hospital while she
stayed behind to give her statement. Afterwards, she proceeded to the
hospital where she was likewise treated for injuries. While she and BBB
were able to go home, AAA needed to be confined but was discharged the
next morning. Before going home, however, CCC proceeded to the Taguig
Police Station where she executed her Sinumpaang
Salaysay.8 Subsequently, Dr. Vitales of the Pateros-Taguig District
Hospital, who examined and treated CCC and her children, testified that
the injuries suffered by AAA and BBB would heal for an average period of
thirty (30) days. Next, DDD testified that he incurred ₱7,440.00 in medical
expenses for his wife and children.9
Solely testifying in her defense, Patulot denied the allegations against her.
She recounted that prior to the alleged incident, she was on her way to the
market to sell her merchandise when CCC bumped her on the arm, uttering
foul words against her. Due to the impact, Patulot's merchandise fell.
Because of this, she cursed CCC back who, in turn, merely laughed and
repeated the invectives as she moved away. Then, from 11:00 a.m. to 2:30
p.m. on November 14, 2012, she was repacking black pepper at her house
when she heard CCC taunt her in a loud voice, "Bakit hindi ka pa sumama
sa asawa mo? Dapat sumama ka na para pareha kayong
paglamayan." Because of this, Patulot proceeded to Barangay Central
Signal, Taguig City, to file a complaint against CCC, but she was ignored.
So she went instead to the Barangay South Signal, Taguig City. But upon
reaching said location, she was apprehended by the Barangay Tanod and
brought to the Barangay Hall of South Signal, Taguig City for
questioning. 10
On November 19, 2014, the RTC found Patulot guilty of child abuse and
disposed of the case as follows:
SO ORDERED. 11 (Italics supplied.)
The RTC found that while Patulot may not have intended to cause harm on
AAA and BBB, her negligence nonetheless caused injury on them, which
left visible scars that are most likely to stay on their faces and bodies for
the rest of their lives. Besides, the trial court added that R.A. No. 7610 is a
special law such that intent is not necessary for its violator to be liable. 12
In a Decision dated July 13, 2017, the CA affirmed Patulot's conviction, but
modified the penalty imposed by the RTC in the following wise:
I.
According to Patulot, she can only be convicted of physical injuries and not
child abuse. Citing our pronouncement in Bongalon v. People, 16 she
submits that not every instance of laying hands on a child constitutes the
crime of child abuse under Section 10(a) of R.A. No. 7610. Only when the
laying of hands is shown to be intended to debase, degrade, or demean the
intrinsic worth and dignity of the child as a human being should it be
punished as child abuse. Otherwise, it is punished under the RPC. Thus, in
the absence of such intention on the part of Patulot, her true intention being
to pour hot oil only on CCC with AAA and BBB being merely accidentally
hit, she cannot be convicted of child abuse.
Patulot adds that even considering her to have committed child abuse, the
CA erred in determining the imposable penalty for failing to apply Article
4917 of the RPC. According to Patulot, there was error in personae as the
oil that was intended for CCC accidentally hit the children. She intended to
commit physical injuries, but ended up committing child abuse. Applying
Article 49, since the penalty of the intended crime (physical injuries) is less
than the crime committed (child abuse), the imposable penalty is that which
refers to physical injuries, in its maximum period. As to the extent of the
physical injuries intended, based on the finding of Dr. Vitales that the
injuries suffered by AAA and BBB would heal for an average period of thirty
(30) days, the offense Patulot intended to commit is only Less Serious
Physical Injuries under the first paragraph of Article 26518 of the RPC.
Thus, the proper penalty should only be arresto mayor in its maximum or
four (4) months and one (1) day to six (6) months for each count.19
Under Section 3(b) of R.A. No. 7610, "child abuse" refers to the
maltreatment, whether habitual or not, of the child which includes any of
the following: (1) psychological and physical abuse, neglect, cruelty, sexual
abuse and emotional maltreatment; (2) any act by deeds or words which
debases, degrades or demeans the intrinsic worth and dignity of a child as
a human being; (3) unreasonable deprivation of his basic needs for
survival, such as food and shelter; or (4) failure to immediately give medical
treatment to an injured child resulting in serious impairment of his growth
and development or in his permanent incapacity or death.
----
(a) Any person who shall commit any other acts of child abuse, cruelty or
exploitation or to be responsible for other conditions prejudicial to the
child's development including those covered by Article 59 of Presidential
Decree No. 603, as amended, but not covered by the Revised Penal Code,
as amended, shall suffer the penalty of prision mayor in its minimum
period.1âшphi1 (Italics supplied.)
Corollarily, Section 2 of the Rules and Regulations on the Reporting and
Investigation of Child Abuse Cases defines the term "child abuse" as the
infliction of physical or psychological injury, cruelty to, or neglect, sexual
abuse or exploitation of a child. In turn, the same Section defines "physical
injury" as those that include but are not limited to lacerations, fractured
bones, burns, internal injuries, severe injury or serious bodily harm suffered
by a child.
As gleaned from the foregoing, the provision punishes not only those
enumerated under Article 59 of Presidential Decree No. 603, but also four
distinct acts, i.e., (a) child abuse, (b) child cruelty, (c) child exploitation and
(d) being responsible for conditions prejudicial to the child's development.
The Rules and Regulations of the questioned statute distinctly and
separately defined child abuse, cruelty and exploitation just to show that
these three acts are different from one another and from the act prejudicial
to the child's development. Contrary to petitioner's assertion, an accused
can be prosecuted and be convicted under Section 10(a), Article VI of
Republic Act No. 7610 if he commits any of the four acts therein. The
prosecution need not prove that the acts of child abuse, child cruelty and
child exploitation have resulted in the prejudice of the child because an act
prejudicial to the development of the child is different from the former acts.
It is, therefore, clear from the foregoing that when a child is subjected to
physical abuse or injury, the person responsible therefor can be held liable
under R.A. No. 7610 by establishing the essential facts above. Here, the
prosecution duly proved the following allegations in the Information
charging Patulot of child abuse: (1) the minority of both AAA and BBB; (2)
the acts committed by Patulot constituting physical abuse against AAA and
BBB; and (3) the fact that said acts are punishable under R.A. No. 7610. In
particular, it was clearly established that at the time of the incident, AAA
and BBB were merely three (3) years old and two (2) months old,
respectively; that Patulot consciously poured hot cooking oil from a
casserole on CCC, consequently injuring AAA and BBB; and that said act
constitutes physical abuse specified in Section 3(b)(1) of R.A. No. 7610.
Neither can Patulot argue that in the absence of intention on her part to
harm AAA and BBB, she cannot be convicted of child abuse because she
merely intended on committing physical injuries against CCC. Our
pronouncement in Mabunot v. People25 is squarely on point. There,
petitioner Jester Mabunot accidentally shoved a female minor child
consequently fracturing her rib while he was engaged in a fistfight with
another boy. But he points out that the injury sustained by the minor victim
was unintentional. Thus, according to Mabunot, this single and unintended
act of shoving the child while trading punches with another can hardly be
considered as within the definition of child abuse under Section 10(a) of
R.A. No. 7610. Assuming, therefore, that he was the cause of the injury,
Mabunot insists that he should only be held liable for slight physical injuries
under Section 265 of the RPC. The Court, however, rejected Mabunot's
contention and held him liable not for slight physical injuries, but for child
abuse. We explained:
The petitioner also posits that since he and Dennis were exchanging
punches then, he could not have made a deliberate design to injure Shiva.
Without intent to harm Shiva, the petitioner insists that he deserves an
acquittal.
In the petitioner's case, criminal intent is not wanting. Even if the Court
were to consider for argument's sake the petitioner's claim that he had no
design to harm Shiva, when he swang his arms, he was not performing a
lawful act. He clearly intended to injure another person. However, it was not
Dennis but Shiva, who ended up with a fractured rib. Nonetheless, the
petitioner cannot escape liability for his error. Indeed, criminal liability shall
be incurred by any person committing a felony (delito) although the
wrongful act done be different from that which he intended.26 (Citations
omitted.)
Similarly, in the instant case, Patulot's criminal intent is not wanting for as
she expressly admitted, she intended on pouring hot cooking oil on CCC.
As such, even granting that it was not her intention to harm AAA and BBB,
she was performing an unlawful act when she threw the hot oil from her
casserole on CCC. She cannot, therefore, escape liability from the same in
view of the settled doctrine mentioned in Mabunot that a person incurs
criminal liability although the wrongful act done be different from that which
he intended. As defined in the law, child abuse charged against Patulot is
physical abuse of the child, whether the same is habitual or not. To the
Court, her act of pouring hot oil on AAA and BBB falls squarely within this
definition. Thus, in view of the fact that her acts were proven to constitute
child abuse under the pertinent provisions of the law, she must be held
liable therefor.
Indeed, it cannot be denied that AAA and BBB are children entitled to
protection extended by R.A. No. 7610. Time and again, the Court has
stressed that R.A. No. 7610 is a measure geared towards the
implementation of a national comprehensive program for the survival of the
most vulnerable members of the population, the Filipino children, in
keeping with the Constitutional mandate under Article XV, Section 3,
paragraph 2, that "[t]he State shall defend the right of the children to
assistance, including proper care and nutrition, and special protection from
all forms of neglect, abuse, cruelty, exploitation, and other conditions
prejudicial to their development."27 This piece of legislation supplies the
inadequacies of existing laws treating crimes committed against children,
namely, the RPC and Presidential Decree No. 603 or The Child and Youth
Welfare Code. As a statute that provides for a mechanism for strong
deterrence against the commission of child abuse and exploitation, the law
has stiffer penalties for their commission, and a means by which child
traffickers could easily be prosecuted and penalized. Also, the definition of
child abuse is expanded to encompass not only those specific acts of child
abuse under existing laws but includes also "other acts of neglect, abuse,
cruelty or exploitation and other conditions prejudicial to the child's
development."28
SO ORDERED.
DECISION
LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, J.:
That on or about 23rd day of January 2002, in Navotas, Metro Manila, and
within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused,
armed with a sharpened bamboo stick, with intent to kill, treachery and
evident premeditation, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and
feloniously attack, assault and stab with the said weapon one DANILO
SALVADOR CRUZ, thereby inflicting upon the victim serious wounds which
caused his immediate death.
Mendeja narrated that on January 23, 2002, she was tending her sari-sari
store located at C-4 Road, Bagumbayan, Navotas. Both Cruz and Villacorta
were regular customers at Mendeja’s store. At around two o’clock in the
morning, while Cruz was ordering bread at Mendeja’s store, Villacorta
suddenly appeared and, without uttering a word, stabbed Cruz on the left
side of Cruz’s body using a sharpened bamboo stick. The bamboo stick
broke and was left in Cruz’s body. Immediately after the stabbing incident,
Villacorta fled. Mendeja gave chase but failed to catch Villacorta. When
Mendeja returned to her store, she saw her neighbor Aron removing the
broken bamboo stick from Cruz’s body.5 Mendeja and Aron then brought
Cruz to Tondo Medical Center.6
Dr. Belandres was Head of the Tetanus Department at the San Lazaro
Hospital. When Cruz sustained the stab wound on January 23, 2002, he
was taken to the Tondo Medical Center, where he was treated as an out-
patient. Cruz was only brought to the San Lazaro Hospital on February 14,
2002, where he died the following day, on February 15, 2002. While
admitting that he did not personally treat Cruz, Dr. Belandres was able to
determine, using Cruz’s medical chart and diagnosis, that Cruz died of
tetanus infection secondary to stab wound.7 Dr. Belandres specifically
described the cause of Cruz’s death in the following manner:
The prosecution also intended to present Dr. Deverni Matias (Dr. Matias),
who attended to Cruz at the San Lazaro Hospital, but the prosecution and
defense agreed to dispense with Dr. Matias’ testimony based on the
stipulation that it would only corroborate Dr. Belandres’ testimony on Cruz
dying of tetanus.
For its part, the defense presented Villacorta himself, who denied stabbing
Cruz. Villacorta recounted that he was on his way home from work at
around two o’clock in the morning of January 21, 2002. Upon arriving
home, Villacorta drank coffee then went outside to buy cigarettes at a
nearby store. When Villacorta was about to leave the store, Cruz put his
arm around Villacorta’s shoulder. This prompted Villacorta to box Cruz,
after which, Villacorta went home. Villacorta did not notice that Cruz got
hurt. Villacorta only found out about Cruz’s death upon his arrest on July
31, 2002.9
WHEREFORE, in the light of the foregoing, the Court finds accused Orlito
Villacorta guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of Murder and is
hereby sentenced to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua and to pay the
heirs of Danilo Cruz the sum of ₱50,000.00 as civil indemnity for the death
of said victim plus the costs of suit.10
Villacorta, through his counsel from the Public Attorney’s Office (PAO), filed
a notice of appeal to assail his conviction by the RTC.11 The Court of
Appeals directed the PAO to file Villacorta’s brief, within thirty days from
receipt of notice.
Villacorta filed his Appellant’s Brief12 on May 30, 2007; while the People,
through the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), filed its Appellee's
Brief13 on October 2, 2007.
On July 30, 2008, the Court of Appeals promulgated its Decision affirming
in toto the RTC judgment of conviction against Villacorta.
Hence, Villacorta comes before this Court via the instant appeal.
Villacorta manifested that he would no longer file a supplemental brief, as
he was adopting the Appellant's Brief he filed before the Court of
Appeals.14 The OSG, likewise, manifested that it was no longer filing a
supplemental brief. 15
II
III
In this case, both the RTC and the Court of Appeals gave full faith and
credence to the testimony of prosecution witness Mendeja. The Court of
Appeals rejected Villacorta’s attempts to impugn Mendeja’s testimony,
thus:
His [Villacorta’s] other argument that the swiftness of the stabbing incident
rendered impossible or incredible the identification of the assailant cannot
likewise prosper in view of his admission that he was in the store of witness
Mendeja on January 23, 2002 at 2:00 o’clock in the morning and that he
assaulted the victim by boxing him.
Proximate cause has been defined as "that cause, which, in natural and
continuous sequence, unbroken by any efficient intervening cause,
produces the injury, and without which the result would not have
occurred."21
"The incubation period of tetanus, i.e., the time between injury and the
appearance of unmistakable symptoms, ranges from 2 to 56 days.
However, over 80 percent of patients become symptomatic within 14 days.
A short incubation period indicates severe disease, and when symptoms
occur within 2 or 3 days of injury the mortality rate approaches 100 percent.
"Non-specific premonitory symptoms such as restlessness, irritability, and
headache are encountered occasionally, but the commonest presenting
complaints are pain and stiffness in the jaw, abdomen, or back and
difficulty swallowing. As the disease progresses, stiffness gives way to
rigidity, and patients often complain of difficulty opening their mouths. In
fact, trismus is the commonest manifestation of tetanus and is responsible
for the familiar descriptive name of lockjaw. As more muscles are involved,
rigidity becomes generalized, and sustained contractions called risus
sardonicus. The intensity and sequence of muscle involvement is quite
variable. In a small proportion of patients, only local signs and symptoms
develop in the region of the injury. In the vast majority, however, most
muscles are involved to some degree, and the signs and symptoms
encountered depend upon the major muscle groups affected.
In the case at bar, Javier suffered a 2-inch incised wound on his right palm
when he parried the bolo which Urbano used in hacking him. This incident
took place on October 23, 1980. After 22 days, or on November 14, 1980,
he suffered the symptoms of tetanus, like lockjaw and muscle spasms. The
following day, November 15, 1980, he died.
If, therefore, the wound of Javier inflicted by the appellant was already
infected by tetanus germs at the time, it is more medically probable that
Javier should have been infected with only a mild case of tetanus because
the symptoms of tetanus appeared on the 22nd day after the hacking
incident or more than 14 days after the infliction of the wound. Therefore,
the onset time should have been more than six days. Javier, however, died
on the second day from the onset time. The more credible conclusion is
that at the time Javier's wound was inflicted by the appellant, the severe
form of tetanus that killed him was not yet present. Consequently, Javier's
wound could have been infected with tetanus after the hacking incident.
Considering the circumstance surrounding Javier's death, his wound could
have been infected by tetanus 2 or 3 or a few but not 20 to 22 days before
he died.23
The incubation period for tetanus infection and the length of time between
the hacking incident and the manifestation of severe tetanus infection
created doubts in the mind of the Court that Javier acquired the severe
tetanus infection from the hacking incident. We explained in Urbano that:
The rule is that the death of the victim must be the direct, natural, and
logical consequence of the wounds inflicted upon him by the accused.
(People v. Cardenas, supra) And since we are dealing with a criminal
conviction, the proof that the accused caused the victim's death must
convince a rational mind beyond reasonable doubt. The medical findings,
however, lead us to a distinct possibility that the infection of the wound by
tetanus was an efficient intervening cause later or between the time Javier
was wounded to the time of his death. The infection was, therefore, distinct
and foreign to the crime. (People v. Rellin, 77 Phil. 1038).
Doubts are present. There is a likelihood that the wound was but
the remote cause and its subsequent infection, for failure to take necessary
precautions, with tetanus may have been the proximate cause of Javier's
death with which the petitioner had nothing to do. As we ruled in Manila
Electric Co. v. Remoquillo, et al. (99 Phil. 118).
"A prior and remote cause cannot be made the basis of an action if such
remote cause did nothing more than furnish the condition or give rise to the
occasion by which the injury was made possible, if there intervened
between such prior or remote cause and the injury a distinct, successive,
unrelated, and efficient cause of the injury, even though such injury would
not have happened but for such condition or occasion. If no danger existed
in the condition except because of the independent cause, such condition
was not the proximate cause. And if an independent negligent act or
defective condition sets into operation the instances, which result in injury
because of the prior defective condition, such subsequent act or condition
is the proximate cause." (45 C.J. pp. 931-932). (at p. 125)24
We face the very same doubts in the instant case that compel us to set
aside the conviction of Villacorta for murder. There had been an interval of
22 days between the date of the stabbing and the date when Cruz was
rushed to San Lazaro Hospital, exhibiting symptoms of severe tetanus
infection.
If Cruz acquired severe tetanus infection from the stabbing, then the
symptoms would have appeared a lot sooner than 22 days later. As the
Court noted in Urbano, severe tetanus infection has a short incubation
period, less than 14 days; and those that exhibit symptoms with two to
three days from the injury, have one hundred percent (100%) mortality.
Ultimately, we can only deduce that Cruz’s stab wound was merely the
remote cause, and its subsequent infection with tetanus might have been
the proximate cause of Cruz's death. The infection of Cruz’s stab wound by
tetanus was an efficient intervening cause later or between the time Cruz
was stabbed to the time of his death.
However, Villacorta is not totally without criminal liability. Villacorta is guilty
of slight physical injuries under Article 266(1) of the Revised Penal Code
for the stab wound he inflicted upon Cruz. Although the charge in the
instant case is for murder, a finding of guilt for the lesser offense of slight
physical injuries may be made considering that the latter offense is
necessarily included in the former since the essential ingredients of slight
physical injuries constitute and form part of those constituting the offense of
murder.25
Appellant stabbed the victim only once using a sharpened bamboo stick,
hitting him on the left side of the body and then immediately fled. The
instrument used is not as lethal as those made of metallic material. The
part of the body hit is not delicate in the sense that instant death can ensue
by reason of a single stab wound. The assault was done only once. Thus,
there is doubt as to whether appellant had an intent to kill the victim, which
should be resolved in favor of the appellant. x x x.26
The intent must be proved in a clear and evident manner to exclude every
possible doubt as to the homicidal (or murderous) intent of the aggressor.
The onus probandi lies not on accused-appellant but on the prosecution.
The inference that the intent to kill existed should not be drawn in the
absence of circumstances sufficient to prove this fact beyond reasonable
doubt. When such intent is lacking but wounds were inflicted, the crime is
not frustrated murder but physical injuries only.27
Evidence on record shows that Cruz was brought to Tondo Medical Center
for medical treatment immediately after the stabbing
incident.1avvphi1 Right after receiving medical treatment, Cruz was then
released by the Tondo Medical Center as an out-patient. There was no
other evidence to establish that Cruz was incapacitated for labor and/or
required medical attendance for more than nine days. Without such
evidence, the offense is only slight physical injuries.28
Both the RTC and the Court of Appeals found that treachery was duly
proven in this case, and we sustain such finding. Cruz, the victim, was
attacked so suddenly, unexpectedly, and without provocation. It was two
o’clock in the morning of January 23, 2002, and Cruz, who was out buying
bread at Mendeja’s store, was unarmed. Cruz had his guard down and was
totally unprepared for an attack on his person. Villacorta suddenly
appeared from nowhere, armed with a sharpened bamboo stick, and
without uttering a word, stabbed Cruz at the left side of his body, then
swiftly ran away. Villacorta’s treacherous mode of attack left Cruz with no
opportunity at all to defend himself or retaliate.
ART. 266. Slight physical injuries and maltreatment. – The crime of slight
physical injuries shall be punished:
1. By arresto menor when the offender has inflicted physical injuries which
shall incapacitate the offended party from labor from one to nine days, or
shall require medical attendance during the same period.
The penalty of arresto menor spans from one (1) day to thirty (30)
days.31 The Indeterminate Sentence Law does not apply since said law
excludes from its coverage cases where the penalty imposed does not
exceed one (1) year.32 With the aggravating circumstance of treachery, we
can sentence Villacorta with imprisonment anywhere within arresto menor
in the maximum period, i.e., twenty-one (21) to thirty (30) days.
Consequently, we impose upon Villacorta a straight sentence of thirty (30)
days of arresto menor; but given that Villacorta has been in jail since July
31, 2002 until present time, already way beyond his imposed sentence, we
order his immediate release.
Under paragraph (1), Article 2219 of the Civil Code, moral damages may
be recovered in a criminal offense resulting in physical injuries. Moral
damages compensate for the mental anguish, serious anxiety, and moral
shock suffered by the victim and his family as being a proximate result of
the wrongful act. An award requires no proof of pecuniary loss. Pursuant to
previous jurisprudence, an award of Five Thousand Pesos (₱5,000.00)
moral damages is appropriate for less serious, as well as slight physical
injuries.33
WHEREFORE, the Decision dated July 30, 2008 of the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. CR.-H.C. No. 02550, affirming the Decision dated September 22,
2006 of the Regional Trial Court, Branch 170, of Malabon, in Criminal Case
No. 27039-MN, is REVERSED and SET ASIDE. A new judgment is entered
finding Villacorta GUILTY beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of slight
physical injuries, as defined and punished by Article 266 of the Revised
Penal Code, and sentenced to suffer the penalty of thirty (30) days arresto
menor. Considering that Villacorta has been incarcerated well beyond the
period of the penalty herein imposed, the Director of the Bureau of Prisons
is ordered to cause Villacorta’s immediate release, unless Villacorta is
being lawfully held for another cause, and to inform this Court, within five
(5) days from receipt of this Decision, of the compliance with such order.
Villacorta is ordered to pay the heirs of the late Danilo Cruz moral damages
in the sum of Five Thousand Pesos (₱5,000.00).
SO ORDERED.
DECISION
DEL CASTILLO, J.:
In a criminal case, factual findings of the trial court are generally accorded
great weight and respect on appeal, especially when such findings are
supported by substantial evidence on record.1 It is only in exceptional
circumstances, such as when the trial court overlooked material and
relevant matters, that this Court will re-calibrate and evaluate the factual
findings of the court below. In this case, we hold that the trial court did not
overlook such factual matters; consequently, we find no necessity to
review, much less, overturn its factual findings.
Factual Antecedents
Contrary to law.
Petitioner denied hitting Lucrecio and alleged that the latter died of cardiac
arrest. Petitioner claimed that he suddenly stood up during their heated
argument with the intent to punch Lucrecio. However, since the latter was
seated at the opposite end of the bench, Lucrecio lost his balance and fell
before he could be hit. Lucrecio’s head hit the improvised stove as a result
of which he lost consciousness.
SO ORDERED.9
Thus:
SO ORDERED.10
Issues
I
The Court of Appeals erred in affirming the trial court’s judgment of
conviction.
II
Our Ruling
Petitioner disputes the conclusion that the fracture on the right middle fossa
of the skull, beneath the area where a hematoma developed was due to the
blow he delivered because according to the testimony of Dr. Vertido, the
fracture may also be caused by one falling from a height. Petitioner also
maintains that the punches he threw at Lucrecio had nothing to do with the
fatal head injuries the latter suffered. According to him, Lucrecio sustained
the head injuries when he accidentally hit the hollow block that was used as
an improvised stove, after falling from the opposite end of the bench.
Petitioner insists that Lucrecio died due to a fatal heart attack.
It is on record that Lucrecio suffered two external injuries and one internal
injury in his head. The autopsy report showed that Lucrecio died of internal
hemorrhage caused by injuries located at the upper right portion of the
head, left side of the center of his head, and a "fracture, linear, right middle
fossa, hemorrhage, subdural, right and left cerebral hemisphere."
We find no reason to doubt the findings of the trial court, as affirmed by the
appellate court, that petitioner punched Lucrecio twice causing him to fall to
the ground. Melchor categorically testified that petitioner punched Lucrecio
twice and as a result, Lucrecio fell to the ground and lost consciousness.
Melchor would not have testified falsely against petitioner, who was his
nephew. He even hesitated to testify as shown by his execution of a sworn
statement just after the autopsy of Lucrecio which revealed that the cause
of death was traumatic head injury attributed to petitioner.
xxxx
Court:
: And then the left occipital area, this is left occipital area with a
hematoma again measuring 5.0 x 4.0 centimeters, sir.
(Witness pointing to the back left part, middle back portion)12
xxxx
Fiscal Feril:
Q: What about this which reads "Fracture, linear, right middle fossa",
where is this injury located?
xxxx
Court:
If you look at the head at the cut portion, the fracture is located on the
base of the brain, particularly on the right mid-cranial fossa, sir.13
xxxx
Fiscal Feril:
A: Yes, sir.
Fiscal Feril:
The testimony of Dr. Vertido also ruled out petitioner’s contention that
Lucrecio died of a heart attack. The fact that Lucrecio’s cause of
death is internal hemorrhage resulting from the head injuries suffered
during his encounter with the petitioner and the certainty that he had
no heart problem are evident in the following portion of Dr. Vertido’s
testimony:
Atty. Antonio:
Court:
Q: Supposed the victim had a heart attack first and then fell down
later, can you determine then x x x the cause of death?
xxxx
Court:
A: That is why sir, I said, I examined the heart and I found out that
there was noting wrong with the heart, and why should I insist on
further examining the heart.16
The petitioner belatedly contends that the delay in the autopsy of Lucrecio’s
body and its embalming compromised the results thereof. To substantiate
his claim, he quotes the book entitled Legal Medicine authored by Dr.
Pedro Solis, viz:
"a dead body must not be embalmed before the autopsy. The embalming
fluid may render the tissue and blood unfit for toxilogical analyses. The
embalming may alter the gross appearance of the tissues or may result to a
wide variety of artifacts that tend to destroy or obscure evidence."
"the body must be autopsied in the same condition when found at the crime
scene. A delay in the performance may fail or modify the possible findings
thereby not serving the interest of justice."17
Further, it is settled that courts will only consider as evidence that which
has been formally offered.18 The allegation that the results of the autopsy
are unworthy of credence was based on a book that was neither marked for
identification nor formally offered in evidence during the hearing of the
case. Thus, the trial court as well as the appellate court correctly
disregarded them. The prosecution was not even given the opportunity to
object as the book or a portion thereof was never offered in evidence.19
A formal offer is necessary since judges are required to base their findings
of fact and judgment only – and strictly – upon the evidence offered by the
parties at the trial. To rule otherwise would deprive the opposing party of
his chance to examine the document and object to its admissibility. The
appellate court will have difficulty reviewing documents not previously
scrutinized by the court below.20 Any evidence which a party desires to
submit to the courts must be offered formally because a judge must base
his findings strictly on the evidence offered by the parties at the trial.21
We are not impressed with petitioner’s argument that he should be held
liable only for reckless imprudence resulting in homicide due to the
absence of intent to kill Lucrecio. When death resulted, even if there was
no intent to kill, the crime is homicide, not just physical injuries, since with
respect to crimes of personal violence, the penal law looks particularly to
the material results following the unlawful act and holds the aggressor
responsible for all the consequences thereof.22 Accordingly, Article 4 of the
Revised Penal Code provides:
xxxx
Considering the foregoing discussion, we find that both the trial court and
the appellate court correctly appreciated the evidence presented before
them. Both courts did not overlook facts and circumstances that would
warrant a reevaluation of the evidence. Accordingly, there is no reason to
digress from the settled legal principle that the appellate court will generally
not disturb the assessment of the trial court on factual matters considering
that the latter as a trier of facts, is in a better position to appreciate the
same.
Further, it is settled that findings of fact of the trial court are accorded
greatest respect by the appellate court absent any abuse of
discretion.24 There being no abuse of discretion in this case, we affirm the
factual findings of the trial court.
The penalty for Homicide under Article 249 of the Revised Penal Code
is reclusion temporal the range of which is from 12 years and one day to 20
years. Applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law, the penalty next lower in
degree is prision mayor the range of which is from six years and one day to
12 years. In this case, we find that the mitigating circumstance of no
intention to commit so grave a wrong as that committed, attended the
commission of the crime. Thus, the appellate court correctly imposed the
indeterminate penalty of six years and one day of prision mayor, as
minimum, to 12 years and one day of reclusion temporal, as maximum.
The award of ₱135,331.00 for the loss of earning capacity was also in
order.27 The prosecution satisfactorily proved that the victim was earning an
annual income of ₱14,000.00 from the harvest of pineapples. Besides, the
defense no longer impugned this award of the trial court.
However, the other awards of damages must be modified. It is error for the
trial court and the appellate court to award actual damages of ₱30,000.00
for the expenses incurred for the death of the victim. We perused the
records and did not find evidence to support the plea for actual damages.
The expenses incurred in connection with the death, wake and burial of
Lucrecio cannot be sustained without any tangible document to support
such claim. While expenses were incurred in connection with the death of
Lucrecio, actual damages cannot be awarded as they are not supported by
receipts.281avvphi1
In lieu of actual damages, the heirs of the victim can still be awarded
temperate damages. When pecuniary loss has been suffered but the
amount cannot, from the nature of the case, be proven with certainty,
temperate damages may be recovered. Temperate damages may be
allowed in cases where from the nature of the case, definite proof of
pecuniary loss cannot be adduced, although the court is convinced that the
aggrieved party suffered some pecuniary loss.29 In this regard, the amount
of ₱25,000.00 is in accordance with recent jurisprudence.30
Moral damages was correctly awarded to the heirs of the victim without
need of proof other than the fact that a crime was committed resulting in
the death of the victim and that the accused was responsible
therefor.31 The award of ₱50,000.00 as moral damages conforms to
existing jurisprudence.32
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. The Decision of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. CR No. 25069 finding petitioner Roño Seguritan y Jara
guilty of homicide and sentencing him to suffer the penalty of six years and
one day of prision mayor as minimum, to 12 years and one day
of reclusion temporal as maximum, and to pay the heirs of Lucrecio
Seguritan the amounts of ₱50,000.00 as moral damages and ₱135,331.00
as loss of earning capacity is AFFIRMED with MODIFICATION that
petitioner is further ordered to pay ₱25,000.00 as temperate damages in
lieu of actual damages, and ₱50,000.00 as civil indemnity.
SO ORDERED.
MELBA QUINTO, Petitioners,
vs.
DANTE ANDRES and RANDYVER PACHECO, Respondents.
DECISION
CALLEJO, SR., J.:
The cadaver of Wilson was buried without any autopsy thereon having
been conducted. The police authorities of Tarlac, Tarlac, did not file any
criminal complaint against the respondents for Wilson’s death.
POSTMORTEM FINDINGS
Abrasion, 4.0 x 3.0 cms., right face, 5.0 x 3.0 cms., left forearm.
The NBI filed a criminal complaint for homicide against respondents Andres
and Pacheco in the Office of the Provincial Prosecutor, which found
probable cause for homicide by dolo against the two.
An Information was later filed with the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Tarlac,
Tarlac, charging the respondents with homicide. The accusatory portion
reads:
CONTRARY TO LAW.10
After the prosecution had presented its witnesses and the respondents had
admitted the pictures showing the drainage system including the inside
portions thereof,13 the prosecution rested its case.
The respondents filed a demurer to evidence which the trial court granted
on the ground of insufficiency of evidence, per its Order dated January 28,
1998. It also held that it could not hold the respondents liable for damages
because of the absence of preponderant evidence to prove their liability for
Wilson’s death.
The petitioner appealed the order to the Court of Appeals (CA) insofar as
the civil aspect of the case was concerned. In her brief, she averred that –
The acquittal in this case is not merely based on reasonable doubt but
rather on a finding that the accused-appellees did not commit the criminal
acts complained of. Thus, pursuant to the above rule and settled
jurisprudence, any civil action ex delicto cannot prosper. Acquittal in a
criminal action bars the civil action arising therefrom where the judgment of
acquittal holds that the accused did not commit the criminal acts imputed to
them. (Tan v. Standard Vacuum Oil Co., 91 Phil. 672)15
The petitioner filed the instant petition for review and raised the following
issues:
II
The petitioner avers that the trial court indulged in mere possibilities,
surmises and speculations when it held that Wilson died because (a) he
could have fallen, his head hitting the stones in the drainage system since
the culvert was slippery; or (b) he might have been bitten by a snake which
he thought was the prick of a fish fin, causing his head to hit hard on the
top of the culvert; or (c) he could have lost consciousness due to some
ailment, such as epilepsy. The petitioner also alleges that the trial court
erred in ruling that the prosecution failed to prove any ill motive on the part
of the respondents to kill the victim, and in considering that respondent
Andres even informed her of Wilson’s death.
The petitioner posits that the trial court ignored the testimony of the
Medico-Legal Expert, Dr. Aguda; the nature, location and number of the
injuries sustained by the victim which caused his death; as well as
the locus criminis. The petitioner insists that the behavior of the
respondents after the commission of the crime betrayed their guilt,
considering that respondent Pacheco left the scene, leaving respondent
Andres to bring out Wilson’s cadaver, while respondent Andres returned
inside the drainage system only when he saw Garcia seated in the grassy
area waiting for his friend Wilson to come out.
In their comment on the petition, the respondents aver that since the
prosecution failed to adduce any evidence to prove that they committed the
crime of homicide and caused the death of Wilson, they are not criminally
and civilly liable for the latter’s death.
The prime purpose of the criminal action is to punish the offender in order
to deter him and others from committing the same or similar offense, to
isolate him from society, to reform and rehabilitate him or, in general, to
maintain social order.21 The sole purpose of the civil action is the restitution,
reparation or indemnification of the private offended party for the damage
or injury he sustained by reason of the delictual or felonious act of the
accused.22 While the prosecution must prove the guilt of the accused
beyond reasonable doubt for the crime charged, it is required to prove the
cause of action of the private complainant against the accused for
damages and/or restitution.
The extinction of the penal action does not carry with it the extinction of the
civil action. However, the civil action based on delict shall be deemed
extinguished if there is a finding in a final judgment in the civil action that
the act or omission from where the civil liability may arise does not exist.23
Moreover, a person committing a felony is criminally liable for all the natural
and logical consequences resulting therefrom although the wrongful act
done be different from that which he intended.24 "Natural" refers to an
occurrence in the ordinary course of human life or events, while "logical"
means that there is a rational connection between the act of the accused
and the resulting injury or damage. The felony committed must be the
proximate cause of the resulting injury. Proximate cause is that cause
which in natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by an efficient
intervening cause, produces the injury, and without which the result would
not have occurred. The proximate legal cause is that acting first and
producing the injury, either immediately, or by setting other events in
motion, all constituting a natural and continuous chain of events, each
having a close causal connection with its immediate predecessor.25
There must be a relation of "cause and effect," the cause being the
felonious act of the offender, the effect being the resultant injuries and/or
death of the victim. The "cause and effect" relationship is not altered or
changed because of the pre-existing conditions, such as the pathological
condition of the victim (las condiciones patologica del lesionado); the
predisposition of the offended party (la predisposicion del ofendido); the
physical condition of the offended party (la constitucion fisica del
herido); or the concomitant or concurrent conditions, such as the
negligence or fault of the doctors (la falta de medicos para sister al
herido); or the conditions supervening the felonious act such as
tetanus, pulmonary infection or gangrene.26
The felony committed is not the proximate cause of the resulting injury
when:
(a) there is an active force that intervened between the felony committed
and the resulting injury, and the active force is a distinct act or fact
absolutely foreign from the felonious act of the accused; or
(b) the resulting injury is due to the intentional act of the victim.27
In the present case, the respondents were charged with homicide by dolo.
In People v. Delim,33 the Court delineated the burden of the prosecution to
prove the guilt of the accused for homicide or murder:
In the present case, we rule that, as held by the trial court and the CA, the
prosecution failed to adduce preponderant evidence to prove the facts on
which the civil liability of the respondents rest, i.e., that the petitioner has a
cause of action against the respondents for damages.
It bears stressing that the prosecution relied solely on the collective
testimonies of Garcia, who was not an eyewitness, and Dr. Aguda.
COURT:
A It is also possible.
Q So it is your finding that the victim was submerged while still breathing?
A Yes, Your Honor, considering that the finding on the lung also would
indicate that the victim was still alive when he was placed under water.37
The doctor also admitted that the abrasion on the right side of the victim’s
face could have been caused by rubbing against a concrete wall or
pavement:
Q The abrasion 4x3 centimeters on the right [side of the] face, would it be
caused by the face rubbing against a concrete wall or pavement?
Q Rough surface?
Q When you say that the trachea region was full of mud, were there no
signs that the victim was strangled?
The trial court gave credence to the testimony of Dr. Aguda that the
deceased might have slipped, causing the latter to fall hard and hit his head
on the pavement, thus:
Q -Could it be possible, Doctor, that this injury might have been caused
when the victim fell down and that portion of the body or occipital portion hit
a blunt object and might have been inflicted as a result of falling down?
A - If the fall … if the victim fell and he hit a hard object, well, it is also
possible.39
Again, it could be seen from the pictures presented by the prosecution that
there were stones inside the culvert. (See Exhibit "D" to "D-3"). The stones
could have caused the victim to slip and hit his head on the pavement.
Since there was water on the culvert, the portion soaked with water must
be very slippery, aside from the fact that the culvert is round. If the victim hit
his head and lost consciousness, he will naturally take in some amount of
water and drown.40
The CA affirmed on appeal the findings of the trial court, as well as its
conclusion based on the said findings.
We agree with the trial and appellate courts. The general rule is that the
findings of facts of the trial court, its assessment of probative weight of the
evidence of the parties, and its conclusion anchored on such findings,
affirmed no less by the CA, are given conclusive effect by this Court, unless
the trial court ignored, misapplied or misconstrued cogent facts and
circumstances which, if considered, would change the outcome of the case.
The petitioner failed to show any justification to warrant a reversal of the
findings or conclusions of the trial and appellate courts.
That the deceased fell or slipped cannot be totally foreclosed because even
Garcia testified that the drainage culvert was dark, and that he himself was
so afraid that he refused to join respondents Andres and Pacheco
inside.41 Respondent Andres had no flashlight; only respondent Pacheco
had one.
Moreover, Dr. Aguda failed to testify and explain what might have caused
the abrasion on the left forearm of the deceased. He, likewise, failed to
testify whether the abrasions on the face and left forearm of the victim were
made ante mortem or post mortem.
A Not much but he used to go to our house and play with my son after
going from her mother who is gambling, Sir.
Q But you are acquainted with him, you know his face?
A Yes, Sir.
Q Will you please look around this courtroom and see if he is around?
When the petitioner’s son died inside the drainage culvert, it was
respondent Andres who brought out the deceased. He then informed the
petitioner of her son’s death. Even after informing the petitioner of the
death of her son, respondent Andres followed the petitioner on her way to
the grassy area where the deceased was:
Q So when you went to the place where your son was lying, Dante Andres
was with you?
A No, Sir. When I was informed by Dante Andres that my son was there at
the culvert, I ran immediately. He [was] just left behind and he just followed,
Sir.
Q So when you reached the place where your son was lying down, Dante
Andres also came or arrived?
SO ORDERED.
BARREDO, J.:
Appeal by accused Rafael Marco from the judgment of the Court of First
Instance of Zamboanga del Sur in Criminal Case No. 2757, entitled People
of the Philippines vs. Rafael Marco, Dulcisimo Beltran and Simeon Marco,
the dispositive part of which reads thus:
The Court further sentences the three defendants to pay, jointly and
severally, to the heirs of Bienvenido Sabelbero, the amount of P6,000.00,
to suffer the accessory penalties of the law, and to pay the costs. (Page 69,
Record.)
Actually, there were two cases filed against appellant in connection with
two successive phases of a single occurrence. The two cases were
consolidated and tried together. In Criminal Case No. 2757, he was
charged together with his son Simeon and one Dulcisimo Beltran with the
alleged murder of one Bienvenido Sabelbero. 1 In Criminal Case 2758, he
was charged together also with his son Simeon with frustrated murder
allegedly committed against Constancio Sabelbero, a brother Bienvenido.
In this second case, herein appellant was found guilty only a slight physical
injuries and sentenced to twelve (12) days of arresto menor. He did not
appeal. Simeon was acquitted.
The incident in question took place on November 5, 1964 at about 2:30
o'clock in the afternoon within the vicinity of the market place of Barrio
Subang, Pagadian, Zamboanga del Sur. There was a fiesta being
celebrated, but it was raining. The details, according to the the are as
follows:
At this juncture, Rafael Marco approached Vicente armed with a cane and
a hunting knife. Sensing danger, Vicente shouted to his son Constancio,
who had been hit by Rafael, and his other son Bienvenido, who appeared
on the scene, to run away because the Marcos were armed. Constancio
was able to run away. So also Vicente. Bienvenido who was being chased
by Rafael was stabbed by the latter, and when the parried the blow, he was
wounded on the left hand. After being stabbed by Rafael, Bienvenido still
tried to run father, but unluckily, his foot got caught in a vine on the ground
and he fell, whereupon, out of nowhere, Dulcisimo Beltran, who was
accused with herein appellant and who did not appeal his conviction,
arrived and stabbed Bienvenido near his anus while he was in the position
described in the record thus "(Witness demonstrating with his two hands
touching the floor and his both feet (sic) in a forward position)". (p. 24,
t.s.n.) Beltran was followed by Simeon, 2 who stabbed Bienvenido on the
left breast and the upper part of the left arm. Afterwards, Rafael, Simeon
and Beltran ran away. "Bienvenido Sabelbero stood up slowly and walked
zigzagly towards the store of Pinda and when he arrived in front of the
store, he fell to the ground." (p.27, t.s.n.)
When Vicente came to know that his son Bienvenido was wounded, he
went to the store of Pinda and found him lying there. Vicente asked him
what happened, "Bienvenido Sebelvero answered that he was wounded
because he was ganged up by them and immediately after that he died."
(p. 28 t.s.n.)
For the purposes of this appeal, the foregoing facts We have gathered from
the recorded evidence and which coincide substantially with the findings
and basis of tea appealed decision are more or less admitted by appellant
in the brief of his counsel de oficio to be more credible version of what
happened. Nevertheless, counsel has assigned seven alleged errors of the
trial court, although the whole thrust of this appeal revolves around the
issue of whether not with what has been proven, as narrated above, to be
the participation of appellant in the Phase of the incident that led to the
death of Bienvenido appellant, Rafael Marco, may be held liable for
murder, as found by the court below.
It will be recalled that the whole incident was started by Simeon Marco, the
son of Rafael, who approached Constancio and after asking him if he was
the one who boxed his (Simeon's) brother the year before, brandished a
hunting knife, which caused Constancio to run away. While thus running,
he passed by appellant who hit him with a round cane. Such was the first
phase of the incident subject of this case. According the trial court for such
act of Rafael, he was guilty of slight physical injuries, since "it is safe to
assume that at that moment there was no intent to kill any one."
Upon these facts, the People maintain that appellant is as guilty as Simeon
and Beltran of the killing of Bienvenido, the theory being that there was
obvious conspiracy among there
The trouble with the evidence of the prosecution is that it is vague and
incomplete. For instance, as to the first phase of the incident, the relative
Positions and distances from each other Of the three Protagonist, Simeon,
Constancio and Rafael are not revealed. How far Rafael was from Simeon
and Constancio when Simeon sort of threatened him with a knife is not
clear. Neither is it shown how Rafael happened to be in the path of
Constancio when the latter was running away from Simeon, such that
Rafael was able to hit him with a cane. In this situation, We do not feel safe
in concluding that there was concerted connection between the act of
Simeon, on the one hand, and that of Rafael, on the other. Thus, the trial
court was correct in acquitting Simeon and holding Rafael guilty only of
slight physical injuries instead of frustrated murder as charged.
A Rafael Marco.
A I know.
ATTY. ORGANO —
A I know.
A Bayonet.
ATTY. PIELAGO —
A Yes, sir.
A Yes, sir.
Q Where is he?
A A bayonet.
Proceed.
ATTY. ORGANO —
(continuing)
A No, sir.
It would seem that there must have been some bad blood between the
Sabelveros and the Marcos but Vicente categorically denied that there was
any misunderstanding between them and although Constancio suggested
that there was, he was quick in adding that the same had been patched up.
This makes commonality of intent on the part of the three accused not
necessarily existent.
As already stated, Simeon and Beltran did not appeal from the decision of
the trial court which credited them with the mitigating circumstance of
voluntary and imposed on them the penalty of only Ten (10) Years and One
(1) Day of prision mayor, as minimum, to Seventeen (17) Years, Four (4)
Months and One (1) Day of reclusion temporal as maximum. And indeed
there can be no doubt as to the homicidal character of their assault on
Bienvenido. In the case of herein appellant, while it is true that he somehow
started the by trying to stab Bienvenido, and did cause him injury on the left
hand, there is no clear evidence connecting his act with those of Beltran
and Simeon. As We have noted earlier, Beltran came out of nowhere and it
is not shown that Rafael saw him before the latter stabbed Bienvenido near
the anus. On the other hand, the most that We can gather from Carbajosa's
testimony is that Simeon was being held by Vicente, when Rafael tried to
chase Bienvenido. In any event, if Rafael had any intention to really kill
Bienvenido, he did not have to await for Simeon and Beltran to do it.
Bienvenido had fallen to the ground, and that was the chance to finish with
him. But here is precisely where the prosecution's evidence is incomplete.
The distance and relative position of Rafael from where Bienvenido fell are
not indicated. What appears instead is that Beltran and Simeon were the
ones who stabbed him fatally. What Rafael did or where he was after
Bienvenido fell and while Beltran and Simeon were assaulting has not been
shown.
Neither is there any showing that after the decedent was able to
run away from the appellant with only a slight would on the
hand, the latter shouted to Dulcisimo Beltran or Simeon Marco
for assistance. As the facts were related by the star prosecution
witness. Dulcisimo Beltran and Simeon Marco just came upon
the fallen decedent and stabbed him. There is no showing that
Dulcisimo Beltran and Simeon Marco fell upon the decedent in
response to shout or cries from the appellant. Lastly, there is no
proof that while Simeon Marco and Dulcisimo Beltran were
stabbing the decedent, appellant gave them any inciting or
encouraging words, or that he even joined them.
DECISION
CAGUIOA, J.:
This is an Appeal1 under Section 13, Rule 124 of the Rules of Court from
the Decision2 dated August 31, 2016 (assailed Decision) of the Court of
Appeals, Eighteenth (18th) Division (CA) in CA-G.R. CEB-CR-HC No.
02007. The assailed Decision, affirmed with modification the
Judgment3 dated January 26, 2015 rendered by the Regional Trial Court of
Bais City, Branch 45 (trial court), in Criminal Case No. 07-25-T, which
found accused-appellant Hesson Callao y Marcelino (Hesson) guilty
beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of Murder as defined and penalized
under Article 248 of the Revised Penal Code (RPC).
The accusatory portion of the Information4 reads:
That on or about the 15th day of July, 2006 in the Municipality [of] Tayasan,
Negros Oriental, Philippines and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable
Court, the above-named accused, conspiring, confederating and helping
one another, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously, by
means of treachery, suddenly attack and strike the forehead of Fernando
Adlawan with the use of an iron rod and thereafter, with the use of a knife,
opened the stomach of the (sic) said Fernando Adlawan and took out his
liver and throw (sic) it to the pig which ate it and proceeded to slice the
flesh of the thigh of said victim and again throw (sic) the same to the pig
which also ate it, which injuries caused the immediate death of victim
Fernando Adlawan, to the damage and prejudice of his heirs. 5 (Italics in the
original)
On February 14, 2007, when this case was filed, Hesson and fellow
accused Junello Amad (Junello) were at large causing the case to be sent
to archives.6 On February 18, 2008, Hesson was arrested and the case
was revived as to him.7 On March 17, 2008, upon arraignment, Hesson
entered a plea of "not guilty."8
The Facts
The prosecution presented its lone witness, Sario Joaquin (Sario), who
testified that on July 15, 2006, he was at the flea market of Guincalaban,
Tayasan, Negros Oriental together with his friends Hesson, Junello and
one Remmy9 Casello (Remmy). While in the market, Hesson and Junello
discussed a plan to kill the victim, Fernando Adlawan (Fernando) as
ordered by one Enrile Yosores (Enrile). Sario was not part of the planning
and did not know why Enrile wanted to have Fernando killed. 10
At 8:00 in the evening of the same day, Hesson, Junello, Remmy and Sario
left the flea market and went to the house of Fernando. 11 Sario tagged
along because Hesson threatened to kill him if he separated from the
group.12
Hesson and Junello then fed Fernando's organs to a nearby pig after which
they cut Fernando's neck and sliced his body into pieces.17 Thereafter, the
two (2) accused left the crime scene, followed by Sario and Remmy.18
Sario was on the opposite side watching the incident. He and Remmy did
not attempt to stop the two (2) accused or run away for fear that the latter
would kill them.19 Sario went home from the crime scene20 and did not tell
anyone about the incident because Hesson and Junello threatened to kill
him if he did so.21
After the incident, Remmy was killed by Enrile during the town fiesta of
Guincalaban.22
Hesson put forth the defense of denial. He testified that he was resting in
his house on the night of the incident when Fernando arrived and invited
him to the latter's house.25 While Hesson was cooking rice inside
Fernando's house, he heard a loud sound from the yard so he looked
through the window and saw Junello hacking Fernando on the
chest.26 Enrile approached and stabbed Fernando as the latter was lying on
the ground.27 Hesson then shouted, "what did you do to him[?]"28 at which
point Enrile remarked, "So this Hesson is here. We better also kill him
because he might reveal this."29 Scared, Flesson jumped through the
window and ran towards a bushy area where he hid until
morning.30 Hesson denied that Sario was present during the incident31 but
admitted that Remmy was there.32 He said he could not have stabbed the
victim because the latter was the son of his godfather.33
Hesson told no one about the incident because of fear.38 He and his
parents left their house and transferred to Lag-it one (1) day after the
incident.39 Upon further probing, though, Hesson testified that he and his
family transferred six (6) months after the incident.40 In the meantime that
they stayed in Guincalaban, no threats were received by him or his family.41
Hesson testified that he knew Remmy and Sario and that he was not
friends with them but neither did they have any misunderstanding or
quarrel.42
In the Judgment dated January 26, 2015, the trial court found Hesson guilty
beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of Murder qualified by treachery. The
trial court gave credence to the testimony of lone prosecution witness
Sario, stating that he testified in a straightforward manner and categorically
identified Hesson. Likewise, there is nothing that indicates any improper
motive on Sario's part to falsely impute an offense as grave as murder to
Hesson. The dispositive portion of the Judgment reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the court finds accused HESSON
CALLAO guilty beyond reasonable doubt as principal for the crime of
Murder as defined and penalized under Article 248 of the Revised Penal
Code and is accordingly sentenced to Reclusion Perpetua and to pay the
cost.
Ruling of the CA
In the assailed Decision, the CA affirmed the trial court's conviction with
modification only as to the damages awarded, to wit:
WHEREFORE, the instant appeal is DENIED. The assailed Judgment
dated January 26, 2015 of Branch 45 of the Regional Trial Court of Bais
City in Crim. Case No. 07-25-T is hereby AFFIRMED with
MODIFICATION. Civil indemnity and moral damages awarded to the heirs
of Fernando Adlawan are INCREASED to P75,000.00 each. Exemplary
damages are also AWARDED in the amount of P30,000.00. The grant of
funeral expenses in the amount of P15,000.00 is RETAINED. The
aggregate amount of the monetary awards stated herein shall earn interest
at the rate of six percent (6%) per annum from the finality of this Decision
until the same is fully paid.49 (Emphasis in the original)
Issues
The trial court inadvertently erred in failing to rule that the crime committed
was not murder but an impossible crime.54
The Appeal is totally without merit. The issues, being interrelated, shall be
jointly discussed below.
The prosecution was able to adequately establish the guilt of Hesson of the
crime charged.
First, the testimony of Sario, the lone witness for the prosecution, suffices
to establish the culpability of Hesson for Murder qualified by treachery.
Sario clearly narrated the details of the incident and positively identified
Hesson as one of the assailants. In a simple, spontaneous and
straightforward manner, Sario recounted the disturbing manner by which
the victim was killed and his body violated, thus:
[Pros. Yuseff YC Ybañez]55 Did you arrive at the house of Fernando?
[Witness] Yes.
Q When you arrived there, what happened then if any?
A This Junello asked of a lighter from Fernando.
Q Did this Fernando give the lighter to Junello?
A Yes.
Q After Fernando gave the lighter to Junello, what happened then?
A This Junello struck with a piece of firewood.
Q Where was Fernando hit?
A (witness pointing at the nape).
Q What happened to Fernando when he was hit at the nape?
A After that he was hacked by Junello.
Q And did you see where was Fernando hit when he was hacked by
Junello?
A At the side.
Q What did Junello use in hacking Fernando?
A Bolo.
Q What happened to Fernando after he was hacked by Junello?
A He was stabbed by Hesson.
Q And who was stabbed by Hesson, Fernando or this Junello?
A Fernando.
Q And was Fernando hit by the stab of Hesson?
A Yes.
Q What was the position of Fernando when he was stabbed by Hesson?
A He was lying on the ground faced (sic) up.
Q How many times did Hesson stab Fernando?
A Twice.
Q And where was Fernando hit by the stab of Hesson?
A On the chest.
Q After that, what happened then, if any?
A He took out the heart of Fernando.
Q After taking out the heart of Fernando, what happened if any?
A He also took the liver of Fernando.
Q What did he do with the heart and the liver of Fernando?
A He gave it to the pig.
Q Did you know particularly who took the heart of Fernando?
A It was Hesson.
Q And what about the liver of Fernando, who took the liver of Fernando?
A It was Junello.
Court:
Q What did Hesson use in getting the heart of Fernando?
A Knife.
Q How about Junello?
A He was using a bolo.
Q Where were you at that time?
A I was opposite in their location.
Q You were watching then when they were taking the internal organ?
A Yes.56
The Court has carefully and assiduously examined the testimony of Sario
and has found no reason whatsoever to disturb the conclusion reached by
the trial court that Sario's testimony was straightforward, guileless and very
credible.
Third, there is no showing that the lone witness Sario was motivated by ill-
will which could have impelled him to falsely testify against Hesson.
Hesson's own testimony points to the absence of such ill-motive, thus:
Q What about you and Sario, are you friends or acquaintance?
A We are not friends.
Q Before July 15, 2006 do you have any quarrel or misunderstanding
with Sario Joaquin?
A No.
Q What about your family and the family of Sario?
A None.60
In the absence of proof to the contrary, the presumption is that the witness
was not moved by ill-will and was untainted by bias, and thus worthy of
belief and credence.61
Fourth, Hesson's immediate departure from the scene of the crime and
successful effort to elude arrest until his apprehension almost two (2) years
after is hardly consistent with his claim of innocence. Flight from the scene
of the crime and failure to immediately surrender militate against Hesson's
contention of innocence "since an innocent person will not hesitate to take
prompt and necessary action to exonerate himself of the crime imputed to
him."62
Fifth, the Court finds no reason to disturb the findings of the trial court on
the credibility of the witnesses, which findings were likewise affirmed by the
CA. Indeed, there is no showing that said findings are tainted with
arbitrariness or oversight of some fact or circumstance of weight and
influence. When it comes to credibility, the trial court's assessment
deserves great weight, and may even be conclusive and binding, as it is in
the best position to make such determination, being the one who has
personally heard the accused and the witnesses. In People v.
Gabrino,63 the Court ruled:
We have held time and again that "the trial court's assessment of the
credibility of a witness is entitled to great weight, sometimes even
with finality." As We have reiterated in the recent People v.
Combate, where there is no showing that the trial court overlooked or
misinterpreted some material facts or that it gravely abused its
discretion, then We do not disturb and interfere with its assessment
of the facts and the credibility of the witnesses. This is clearly
because the judge in the trial court was the one who personally heard
the accused and the witnesses, and observed their demeanor as well
as the manner in which they testified during trial. Accordingly, the trial
court, or more particularly, the RTC in this case, is in a better position to
assess and weigh the evidence presented during trial.
Without admitting his guilt, Hesson argues that he should only be convicted
of committing an impossible crime. Allegedly, he cannot be held liable for
Murder because it was legally impossible for him to kill Fernando as the
latter was already dead when Hesson stabbed him.
x x x x
x x x x
Thus, the requisites of an impossible crime are: (1) that the act performed
would be an offense against persons or property; (2) that the act was done
with evil intent; and (3) that its accomplishment was inherently
impossible, or the means employed was either inadequate or
ineffectual.67
x x x x
To support his theory that what was committed was an impossible crime,
Hesson cites the following testimony of Sario:
Q And it was followed by the stab using a bolo?70
A Yes.
Q And he was hit at the side of the body?
Q Yes.
Q And you saw Fernando did not move anymore with that blow?
A Not anymore.
Q And you think that he is already dead?
A Yes.
Q About how many minutes when Hesson delivered the stabbing blow?
A About five (5) minutes.
Q So five minutes after he is motionless. You testified that Hesson stab
(sic) Fernando and he was already dead when Flesson stabbed
Fernando, right?
A Yes.71
The Court agrees with the CA and the People: the victim's fact of death
before he was stabbed by Hesson was not sufficiently established by the
defense. While Sario testified that he thought Fernando was already dead
after he was hacked by Junello because the former was already lying on
the ground motionless, this statement cannot sufficiently support the
conclusion that, indeed, Fernando was already dead when Hesson stabbed
him. Sario's opinion of Femando's death was arrived at by merely looking
at the latter's body. No other act was done to ascertain this, such as
checking of Fernando's pulse, heartbeat or breathing.
Likewise, considering that Sario was in the middle of a surely stressful and
frightful event, he cannot be expected to have focused enough and be fit to
determine if Fernando was indeed dead when Sario thought he was. In
other words, Sario's opinion of Femando's death at that point in time could
have easily been just an erroneous estimation coming from a very flustered
witness.
More importantly, even assuming that it was Junello who killed Fernando
and that the latter was already dead when he was stabbed by Hesson,
Hesson is still liable for murder because of the clear presence of
conspiracy between Hesson and Junello. As such, Junello's acts are
likewise, legally, Hesson's acts.
The Court, therefore, sustains the findings of the trial court, as affirmed by
the CA, that Hesson is guilty beyond reasonable doubt for the killing of
Fernando. Treachery was proven by the prosecution and the same
qualifies the killing to Murder under Article 24878 of the RPC, the elements
of which are: (1) that a person was killed; (2) that the accused killed him;
(3) that the killing was attended by any of the qualifying circumstances
mentioned in Article 248; and (4) the killing is not parricide or infanticide.
On the qualifying circumstance of treachery, the same was established.
The essence of treachery is a swift and unexpected attack on an unarmed
victim without the slightest provocation on the part of the victim. It is
deemed present in the commission of the crime, when two conditions
concur, namely, that the means, methods, and forms of execution
employed gave the person attacked no opportunity to defend himself or to
retaliate; and that such means, methods, and forms of execution were
deliberately and consciously adopted by the accused without danger to his
person.79 In this case, Fernando was unarmed and totally unaware of the
imminent danger to his life. Junello asked for a lighter deliberately to catch
Fernando off guard. When Fernando handed the lighter, he was suddenly
hacked and thereafter stabbed to death. Fernando had no foreboding of
any danger, threat or harm upon his life at the time and occasion that he
was attacked. Treachery was attendant not only because of the
suddenness of the attack but likewise due to the absence of opportunity to
repel the same.
Under Article 248 of the RPC, the penalty for the crime of Murder qualified
by treachery is reclusion perpetua to death. As there were no aggravating
or mitigating circumstances that attended the commission of the crime, the
Court affirms the penalty of reclusion perpetua imposed by the trial court
and affirmed by the CA.80
Finally, with respect to the award of damages, the Court affirms and finds
correct and in accordance with prevailing jurisprudence,81 the amounts
adjudged by the CA, to wit: (1) civil indemnity at Seventy Five Thousand
Pesos (P75,000.00); (2) moral damages at Seventy Five Thousand Pesos
(P75,000.00); (3) exemplary damages at Thirty Thousand Pesos
(P30,000.00); and funeral expenses at the parties' stipulated amount of
Fifteen Thousand Pesos (P15,000.00). All monetary awards shall earn
interest at the legal rate of six percent (6%) per annum from the date of
finality of this Decision until fully paid.
SO ORDERED.
GEMMA T. JACINTO, Petitioner,
vs.
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Respondent.
DECISION
PERALTA, J.:
Petitioner, along with two other women, namely, Anita Busog de Valencia y
Rivera and Jacqueline Capitle, was charged before the Regional Trial
Court (RTC) of Caloocan City, Branch 131, with the crime of Qualified
Theft, allegedly committed as follows:
That on or about and sometime in the month of July 1997, in Kalookan City,
Metro Manila, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-
named accused, conspiring together and mutually helping one another,
being then all employees of MEGA FOAM INTERNATIONAL INC., herein
represented by JOSEPH DYHENGCO Y CO, and as such had free access
inside the aforesaid establishment, with grave abuse of trust and
confidence reposed upon them with intent to gain and without the
knowledge and consent of the owner thereof, did then and there willfully,
unlawfully and feloniously take, steal and deposited in their own account,
Banco De Oro Check No. 0132649 dated July 14, 1997 in the sum of
₱10,000.00, representing payment made by customer Baby Aquino to the
Mega Foam Int'l. Inc. to the damage and prejudice of the latter in the
aforesaid stated amount of ₱10,000.00.
CONTRARY TO LAW.3
The prosecution's evidence, which both the RTC and the CA found to be
more credible, reveals the events that transpired to be as follows.
In the month of June 1997, Isabelita Aquino Milabo, also known as Baby
Aquino, handed petitioner Banco De Oro (BDO) Check Number 0132649
postdated July 14, 1997 in the amount of ₱10,000.00. The check was
payment for Baby Aquino's purchases from Mega Foam Int'l., Inc., and
petitioner was then the collector of Mega Foam. Somehow, the check was
deposited in the Land Bank account of Generoso Capitle, the husband of
Jacqueline Capitle; the latter is the sister of petitioner and the former
pricing, merchandising and inventory clerk of Mega Foam.
On August 15, 2007, Ricablanca and petitioner met at the latter's house.
Petitioner, who was then holding the bounced BDO check, handed over
said check to Ricablanca. They originally intended to proceed to Baby
Aquino's place to have the check replaced with cash, but the plan did not
push through. However, they agreed to meet again on August 21, 2007.
Petitioner and Valencia were brought to the NBI office where the Forensic
Chemist found fluorescent powder on the palmar and dorsal aspects of
both of their hands. This showed that petitioner and Valencia handled the
marked money. The NBI filed a criminal case for qualified theft against the
two and one Jane Doe who was later identified as Jacqueline Capitle, the
wife of Generoso Capitle.
The defense, on the other hand, denied having taken the subject check and
presented the following scenario.
Petitioner admitted that she was a collector for Mega Foam until she
resigned on June 30, 1997, but claimed that she had stopped collecting
payments from Baby Aquino for quite some time before her resignation
from the company. She further testified that, on the day of the arrest,
Ricablanca came to her mother’s house, where she was staying at that
time, and asked that she accompany her (Ricablanca) to Baby Aquino's
house. Since petitioner was going for a pre-natal check-up at the Chinese
General Hospital, Ricablanca decided to hitch a ride with the former and
her husband in their jeep going to Baby Aquino's place in Caloocan City.
She allegedly had no idea why Ricablanca asked them to wait in their jeep,
which they parked outside the house of Baby Aquino, and was very
surprised when Ricablanca placed the money on her lap and the NBI
agents arrested them.
Anita Valencia also admitted that she was the cashier of Mega Foam until
she resigned on June 30, 1997. It was never part of her job to collect
payments from customers. According to her, on the morning of August 21,
1997, Ricablanca called her up on the phone, asking if she (Valencia) could
accompany her (Ricablanca) to the house of Baby Aquino. Valencia claims
that she agreed to do so, despite her admission during cross-examination
that she did not know where Baby Aquino resided, as she had never been
to said house. They then met at the house of petitioner's mother, rode the
jeep of petitioner and her husband, and proceeded to Baby Aquino's place.
When they arrived at said place, Ricablanca alighted, but requested them
to wait for her in the jeep. After ten minutes, Ricablanca came out and, to
her surprise, Ricablanca gave her money and so she even asked, "What is
this?" Then, the NBI agents arrested them.
The trial of the three accused went its usual course and, on October 4,
1999, the RTC rendered its Decision, the dispositive portion of which reads:
SO ORDERED.7
The three appealed to the CA and, on December 16, 2003, a Decision was
promulgated, the dispositive portion of which reads, thus:
SO ORDERED.
xxxx
Under this article, the act performed by the offender cannot produce an
offense against persons or property because: (1) the commission of the
offense is inherently impossible of accomplishment; or (2) the means
employed is either (a) inadequate or (b) ineffectual.
xxxx
The fact that petitioner was later entrapped receiving the ₱5,000.00 marked
money, which she thought was the cash replacement for the dishonored
check, is of no moment. The Court held in Valenzuela v. People12 that
under the definition of theft in Article 308 of the Revised Penal Code, "there
is only one operative act of execution by the actor involved in theft ─ the
taking of personal property of another." Elucidating further, the Court held,
thus:
xxxx
x x x when is the crime of theft produced? There would be all but certain
unanimity in the position that theft is produced when there is deprivation of
personal property due to its taking by one with intent to gain. Viewed from
that perspective, it is immaterial to the product of the felony that the
offender, once having committed all the acts of execution for theft, is able
or unable to freely dispose of the property stolen since the deprivation from
the owner alone has already ensued from such acts of execution. x x x
xxxx
From the above discussion, there can be no question that as of the time
that petitioner took possession of the check meant for Mega Foam,
she had performed all the acts to consummate the crime of theft, had
it not been impossible of accomplishment in this case. The
circumstance of petitioner receiving the ₱5,000.00 cash as supposed
replacement for the dishonored check was no longer necessary for the
consummation of the crime of qualified theft. Obviously, the plan to
convince Baby Aquino to give cash as replacement for the check was
hatched only after the check had been dishonored by the drawee bank.
Since the crime of theft is not a continuing offense, petitioner's act of
receiving the cash replacement should not be considered as a continuation
of the theft. At most, the fact that petitioner was caught receiving the
marked money was merely corroborating evidence to strengthen proof of
her intent to gain.
Moreover, the fact that petitioner further planned to have the dishonored
check replaced with cash by its issuer is a different and separate fraudulent
scheme. Unfortunately, since said scheme was not included or covered by
the allegations in the Information, the Court cannot pronounce judgment on
the accused; otherwise, it would violate the due process clause of the
Constitution. If at all, that fraudulent scheme could have been another
possible source of criminal liability.
CRUZ, J.:
The boy was detained for only about three hours and was released even
before his parents received the ransom note. But it spawned a protracted
trial spanning all of 8 years and led to the conviction of the two accused.1
The victim was Enrico Paulo Agra, who was 8 years old at the time of the
incident in question. The accused were Pablito Domasian and Samson
Tan, the latter then a resident physician in the hospital owned by Enrico's
parents. They were represented by separate lawyers at the trial and filed
separate briefs in this appeal.
The evidence of the prosecution showed that in the morning of March 11,
1982, while Enrico was walking with a classmate along Roque street in the
poblacion of Lopez, Quezon, he was approached by a man who requested
his assistance in getting his father's signature on a medical certificate.
Enrico agreed to help and rode with the man in a tricycle to Calantipayan,
where he waited outside while the man went into a building to get the
certificate. Enrico became apprehensive and started to cry when, instead of
taking him to the hospital, the man flagged a minibus and forced him inside,
holding him firmly all the while. The man told him to stop crying or he would
not be returned to his father. When they alighted at Gumaca, they took
another tricycle, this time bound for the municipal building from where they
walked to the market. Here the man talked to a jeepney driver and handed
him an envelope addressed to Dr. Enrique Agra, the boy's father. The two
then boarded a tricycle headed for San Vicente, with the man still firmly
holding Enrico, who continued crying. This aroused the suspicion of the
driver, Alexander Grate, who asked the man about his relationship with the
boy. The man said he and the boy were brothers, making Grate doubly
suspicious because of the physical differences between the two and the
wide gap between their ages. Grate immediately reported the matter to two
barangay tanods when his passengers alighted from the tricycle. Grate and
the tanods went after the two and saw the man dragging the boy. Noticing
that they were being pursued, the man told Enrico to run fast as their
pursuers might behead them. Somehow, the man managed to escape,
leaving Enrico behind. Enrico was on his way home in a passenger jeep
when he met his parents, who were riding in the hospital ambulance and
already looking for him.2
At about 1:45 in the afternoon of the same day, after Enrico's return, Agra
received an envelope containing a ransom note. The note demanded P1
million for the release of Enrico and warned that otherwise the boy would
be killed. Agra thought the handwriting in the note was familiar. After
comparing it with some records in the hospital, he gave the note to the
police, which referred it to the NBI for examination.3
The test showed that it bad been written by Dr. Samson Tan.4 On the other
hand, Enrico was shown a folder of pictures in the police station so be
could identify the man who had detained him, and he pointed to the picture
of Pablito Domasian.5 Domasian and Tan were subsequently charged with
the crime of kidnapping with serious illegal detention in the Regional Trial
Court of Quezon.6
The defense of both accused was denial and alibi. Domasian claimed that
at the time of the incident he was watching a mahjong game in a friend's
house and later went to an optical clinic with his wife for the refraction of his
eyeglasses.7 Dr. Tan for his part said he was in Manila.8
After trial Judge Enrico A. Lanzanas found both accused guilty as charged
and sentenced them to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua and all
accessory penalties. They were also required to pay P200,000.00 to Dr.
and Mrs. Enrique Agra as actual and moral damages and attorney's fees.
In the case at bar, Judge Lanzanas relied heavily on the testimony of the
victim himself, who positively identified Domasian as the person who
detained him for three hours. The trial court observed that the boy was
"straight-forward, natural and consistent" in the narration of his detention.
The boy's naivete made him even more believable. Tirso Ferreras, Enrico's
classmate and also his age, pointed to Domasian with equal certainty, as
the man who approached Enrico when they were walking together that
morning of March 11, 1982. Grate, the tricycle driver who suspected
Enrico's companion and later chased him, was also positive in identifying
Domasian. All these three witnesses did not know Domasian until that
same morning and could have no ill motive in testifying against him. By
contrast, Eugenia Agtay, who testified for the defense, can hardly be
considered a disinterested witness because she admitted she had known
Domasian for 3 years.
The defense asks why Domasian openly took Enrico to several public
places if the intention was to kidnap and detain him. That is for Domasian
himself to answer. We do no have to probe the reasons for the irrational
conduct of an accused. The more important question, as we see it, is why
Domasian detained Enrico in the first place after pretending he needed the
boy's help. That is also for Domasian to explain. As for Enrico's alleged
willingness to go with Domasian, this was manifested only at the beginning,
when he believed the man sincerely needed his assistance. But he was
soon disabused. His initial confidence gave way to fear when Domasian,
after taking him so far away from the hospital where he was going,
restrained and threatened him if he did not stop crying.
Concerning the note, Rule 132, Section 22, of the Rules of Court provides
as follows:
Two expert witnesses were presented in the case at bar, one from the
NBI, 10 who opined that the ransom note and the standard documents were
written by one and the same person, and another from the PC/INP 11 who
expressed a contrary conclusion. The trial court chose to believe the NBI
expert because his examination and analysis "was more comprehensive
than the one conducted by the PC/INP handwriting expert, who virtually
limited his reliance on the perceived similarities and dissimilarities in the
pattern and style of the writing, thereby disregarding the basic principle in
handwriting identification that it is not the form alone nor anyone feature but
rather a combination of all the qualities that identify."
We have held that the value of the opinion of a handwriting expert depends
not upon his mere statements of whether a writing is genuine or false, but
upon the assistance he may afford in pointing out distinguishing marks,
characteristics and discrepancies in and between genuine and false
specimens of writing which would ordinarily escape notice or detection from
an unpracticed observer. 12 The test of genuineness ought to be the
resemblance, not the formation of letters in some other specimens but to
the general character of writing, which is impressed on it as the involuntary
and unconscious result
of constitution, habit or other permanent course, and is, therefore itself
permanent. 13
Presented with the conflicting opinions of the witnesses in the case at bar,
the Court feels that the scales should tilt in favor of the prosecution.
Significantly, the NBI opinion was bolstered by the testimony of Agra, who
believed that the ransom note was written by Tan, with whose handwriting
he was familiar because they had been working in the hospital for four
years and he had seen that handwriting every day in Tan's prescriptions
and daily reports. 14
As for the nature of the crime committed, Article 267 of the Revised Penal
Code provides as follows:
Contrary to Tan's submission, this crime may consist not only in placing a
person in an enclosure but also in detaining him or depriving him in any
manner of his liberty. 16 In the case at bar, it is noted that although the
victim was not confined in an enclosure, he was deprived of his liberty
when Domasian restrained him from going home and dragged him first into
the minibus that took them to the municipal building in Gumaca, thence to
the market and then into the tricycle bound for San Vicente. The detention
was committed by Domasian, who was a private individual, and Enrico was
a minor at that time. The crime clearly comes under Par. 4 of the above-
quoted article.
Tan claims that the lower court erred in not finding that the sending of the
ransom note was an impossible crime which he says is not punishable. His
reason is that the second paragraph of Article 4 of the Revised Penal Code
provides that criminal liability shall be incurred "by any person performing
an act which would be an offense against persons or property, were it not
for the inherent impossibility of its accomplishment or on account of the
employment of inadequate or ineffectual means." As the crime alleged is
not against persons or property but against liberty, he argues that it is not
covered by the said provision.
Tan conveniently forgets the first paragraphs of the same article, which
clearly applies to him, thus:
x x x x x x x x x
Even before the ransom note was received, the crime of kidnapping with
serious illegal detention had already been committed. The act cannot be
considered an impossible crime because there was no inherent
improbability of its accomplishment or the employment of inadequate or
ineffective means. The delivery of the ransom note after the rescue of the
victim did not extinguish the offense, which had already been
consummated when Domasian deprived Enrico of his liberty. The sending
of the ransom note would have had the effect only of increasing the penalty
to death under the last paragraph of Article 267 although this too would not
have been possible under the new Constitution.
On the issue of conspiracy, we note first that it exists when two or more
persons come to an agreement concerning the commission of a felony and
decide to commit it, whether they act through physical volition of one or all,
proceeding severally or collectively. 17
It is settled that conspiracy can be inferred from and proven by the acts of
the accused themselves when said acts point to a joint purpose and
design, concerted action and community of interests. 18 In the instant case,
the trial court correctly held that conspiracy was proved by the act of
Domasian in detaining Enrico; the writing of the ransom note by Tan; and
its delivery by Domasian to Agra. These acts were complementary to each
other and geared toward the attainment of the common ultimate
objective, viz., to extort the ransom of P1 million in exchange for Enrico's
life.
The motive for the offense is not difficult to discover. According to Agra,
Tan approached him six days before the incident happened and requested
a loan of at least P15,000.00. Agra said he had no funds at that moment
and Tan did not believe him, angrily saying that Agra could even raise a
million pesos if he really wanted to help. 19 The refusal obviously triggered
the plan to kidnap Enrico and demand P1 million for his release.
We are satisfied that Tan and Domasian, in conspiracy with each other,
committed the crime of kidnapping as defined and penalized under Article
267 of the Revised Penal Code and so deserve the penalty imposed upon
them by the trial court.
Let a copy of this decision be sent to the Commission on Human Rights for
investigation of the alleged violation of the constitutional rights of Pablito
Domasian.
SO ORDERED.
SULPICIO INTOD, petitioner,
vs.
HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS and PEOPLE OF THE
PHILIPPINES, respondents.
CAMPOS, JR., J.:
Petitioner, Sulpicio Intod, filed this petition for review of the decision of the
Court of Appeals 1 affirming in toto the judgment of the Regional Trial
Court, Branch XIV, Oroquieta City, finding him guilty of the crime of
attempted murder.
After trial, the Regional Trial Court convicted Intod of attempted murder.
The court (RTC), as affirmed by the Court of Appeals, holding that
Petitioner was guilty of attempted murder. Petitioner seeks from this Court
a modification of the judgment by holding him liable only for an impossible
crime, citing Article 4(2) of the Revised Penal Code which provides:
On the other hand, Respondent People of the Philippines argues that the
crime was not impossible. Instead, the facts were sufficient to constitute an
attempt and to convict Intod for attempted murder. Respondent alleged that
there was intent. Further, in its Comment to the Petition, respondent
pointed out that:
Under this article, the act performed by the offender cannot produce an
offense against person or property because: (1) the commission of the
offense is inherently impossible of accomplishment: or (2) the means
employed is either (a) inadequate or (b) ineffectual. 10
The case at bar belongs to this category. Petitioner shoots the place where
he thought his victim would be, although in reality, the victim was not
present in said place and thus, the petitioner failed to accomplish his end.
One American case had facts almost exactly the same as this one.
In People vs. Lee Kong, 18 the accused, with intent to kill, aimed and fired
at the spot where he thought the police officer would be. It turned out,
however, that the latter was in a different place. The accused failed to hit
him and to achieve his intent. The Court convicted the accused of an
attempt to kill. It held that:
The fact that the officer was not at the spot where the attacking
party imagined where he was, and where the bullet pierced the
roof, renders it no less an attempt to kill. It is well settled
principle of criminal law in this country that where the criminal
result of an attempt is not accomplished simply because of an
obstruction in the way of the thing to be operated upon, and
these facts are unknown to the aggressor at the time, the
criminal attempt is committed.
The aforecited cases are the same cases which have been relied upon by
Respondent to make this Court sustain the judgment of attempted murder
against Petitioner. However, we cannot rely upon these decisions to
resolve the issue at hand. There is a difference between the Philippine and
the American laws regarding the concept and appreciation of impossible
crimes.
Congress has not yet enacted a law that provides that intent
plus act plus conduct constitutes the offense of attempt
irrespective of legal impossibility until such time as such
legislative changes in the law take place, this court will not
fashion a new non-statutory law of criminal attempt.
BELLOSILLO, J.:
At this juncture, Vicente Madriaga stood up and tried to calm down Henry,
but the latter refused to be pacified ("ayaw paawat"). Angel ran away and
Henry aimed his gun instead at Noli. Noli cried for mercy, for his life and
that of his daughter, but to no avail.3 Henry shot Noli at the left side of his
stomach sending him immediately to the ground. His daughter, unscathed,
held on to Noli, crying. Henry then turned on Noel and shot him on the left
thigh. Noel managed to walk lamely ("paika-ika") but only to eventually fall
to the ground. Thereafter, Vicente Madriaga called on his neighbors who
brought Noli and Noel to the hospital. Noli however died before reaching
the hospital, while Noel survived his injuries.
Dr. Ma. Cristina Freyra of the PNP Crime Laboratory Service conducted an
autopsy on the body of Noli which revealed that the cause of the victim's
death was a gunshot at the trunk from a .38 caliber revolver. Dr. Misael
Jonathan Ticman, attending physician of Noel, in turn declared that the
gunshot wound on the left thigh of Noel was a minor injury that would heal
in a week.4 Noel was never admitted in the hospital as his doctor sent him
home the same day.5 On cross-examination, Dr. Ticman testified that if not
medically treated the wound might get infected or lead to the victim's
death.6
Witnesses for the defense narrated a different version. They pointed to
Angel Soliva instead as the person to blame for Noli Madriaga's death while
justifying Noel Madriaga's wound as a result of self-defense.
In imposing the penalty for each offense, the lower court appreciated the
qualifying circumstance of treachery against accused-appellant on the
ground that the victims were completely defenseless when attacked and
did not commit the slightest provocation, but found no justification for
evident premeditation as there was no proof as to the manner and time
during which the plan to kill was hatched. On the contrary, the trial court
found in favor of accused-appellant the mitigating circumstance of passion
and obfuscation. Thus, in Crim. Case No. C-51276, accused-appellant was
sentenced to the reduced penalty of reclusion perpetua instead of death,
with all the accessory penalties according to law, and ordered to pay the
heirs of the victim P50,000.00 as death indemnity, P8,000.00 as funeral
expenses, and to pay the costs; while in Crim. Case No. C-51277, he was
sentenced to an indeterminate prison term of eight (8) years of prision
mayor, as minimum, to fourteen (14) years and eight (8) months
of reclusion temporal, as maximum, with all the accessory penalties
provided by law, and to pay P20,000.00 as civil indemnity, without
subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency, and to pay the costs.9
As for Crim. Case No. C-51277, accused-appellant contends that the trial
court erred in holding him guilty of frustrated murder as the wound
sustained by Noel Madriaga was not fatal that could have caused his death
if not for timely medical assistance. Moreover, accused-appellant claims
that he shot Noel only to forestall any attack on him and not to kill Noel
intentionally.
Appellate courts are doctrinally bound by the trial court's assessment of the
credibility of witnesses given the clear advantage of a trial judge in the
appreciation of testimonial evidence. The trial court is in the best position to
assess the credibility of witnesses and their testimonies because of its
unique opportunity to observe the witnesses first-hand and to note their
demeanor, conduct and attitude under grueling examination - factors which
are significant in the evaluation of the sincerity of witnesses and in
unearthing the truth.10 We see no reason to depart from this doctrine.
The witnesses for the prosecution were consistent in their narration of the
manner by which the events transpired, and they remained steadfast in
their identification of accused-appellant as the author of the violence.
Despite attempts to confound them, Vicente Madriaga and Noel Madriaga
were relentless in their declaration that it was accused-appellant, armed
with a .38 caliber revolver, who pounced upon them without warning
thereby killing Noli Madriaga and wounding Noel Madriaga in the process.
They were one in their assertion that accused-appellant was inflamed by
his suspicion that Angel Soliva and Noel Madriaga had stolen his fighting
cocks and was intent on getting even with them, thus he fired at them.
Efforts to pass the blame on the group by claiming that in their inebriated
state they mocked accused-appellant and thus initiated the violence were
actually set to naught as Vicente and Noel Madriaga unfailingly denied the
same.
In the same vein, the testimony of Angel Soliva or of Allan, with whom
Vicente Madriaga was playing chess, is unnecessary as the facts on record
are clear enough for judicial assessment and verdict.
The defense suggests that it could be Angel Soliva instead who shot Noli
Madriaga. This is unacceptable in the face of the positive identification of
the accused by the prosecution witnesses. The allegation that the shooting
was the accidental consequence of the struggle between accused-
appellant and Angel Soliva does not inspire belief as no substantial
evidence was presented to prove it. It is highly improbable that a struggle
even occurred as accused-appellant and Angel Soliva were surrounded by
the latter's friends who would have easily ganged up on accused-appellant.
Testimonial evidence to be credible should not only come from the mouth
of a credible witness but should also be credible, reasonable and in accord
with human experience,12 failing in which, it should be rejected.
The trial court properly appreciated the presence of treachery as the attack
was made upon the unarmed victims who had not committed the slightest
provocation and who were totally unaware of the murderous designs of
accused-appellant. Contrary to the finding of the court a quo, treachery in
this case qualifies the offense to murder, hence, may not be considered a
generic aggravating circumstance to increase the penalty from reclusion
perpetua to death. In other words, while the imposable penalty for murder
is reclusion perpetua to death, in the absence of any mitigating or
aggravating circumstance, the lesser penalty of reclusion perpetua shall be
imposed. The mitigating circumstance of passion and obfuscation cannot
be appreciated in favor of accused-appellant as this was never proved
during the trial.
SO ORDERED.
DECISION
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:
For the deadly assault on the brothers Jeonito Araque and Marlon Araque,
Agapito Listerio y Prado, Samson dela Torre y Esquela, Marlon dela Torre,
George dela Torre, Bonifacio Bancaya and several others who are still at
large were charged in two (2) separate Amended Informations with Murder
and Frustrated Murder.
CONTRARY TO LAW.
CONTRARY TO LAW.
Trial thereafter ensued after which the court a quo rendered judgment only
against accused Agapito Listerio because his co-accused Samson dela
Torre escaped during the presentation of the prosecution’s evidence and
he was not tried in absentia. The dispositive portion of the decision3 reads:
1. For the death of Jeonito Araque y Daniel in Criminal Case NO. 91-
5842, RECLUSION PERPETUA;
SO ORDERED.4
II
Agapito Listerio, Marlon dela Torre and George dela Torre, who were
armed with bladed weapons, stabbed Jeonito Araque from behind.11 Jeonito
sustained three (3) stab wounds on the upper right portion of his back,
another on the lower right portion and the third on the middle portion of the
left side of his back12 causing him to fall down.13 Marlon Araque was hit on
the head by Samson dela Torre and Bonifacio Bancaya with lead pipes and
momentarily lost consciousness.14 When he regained his senses three (3)
minutes later, he saw that Jeonito was already dead.15 Their assailants then
fled after the incident.16 Marlon Araque who sustained injuries in the arm
and back,17 was thereafter brought to a hospital for treatment.18
We disagree.
It is well settled that witnesses are to be weighed, not numbered, such that
the testimony of a single, trustworthy and credible witness could be
sufficient to convict an accused.40 More explicitly, the well entrenched rule is
that "the testimony of a lone eyewitness, if found positive and credible by
the trial court is sufficient to support a conviction especially when the
testimony bears the earmarks of truth and sincerity and had been delivered
spontaneously, naturally and in a straightforward manner. It has been held
that witnesses are to be weighed not numbered; hence, it is not at all
uncommon to reach a conclusion of guilt on the basis of the testimony of a
single witness."41
The trial court found Marlon Araque’s version of what transpired candid and
straightforward. We defer to the lower court’s findings on this point
consistent with the oft-repeated pronouncement that: "the trial judge is the
best and the most competent person who can weigh and evaluate the
testimony of witnesses. His firsthand look at the declarant’s demeanor,
conduct and attitude at the trial places him in a peculiar position to
discriminate between the true and the false. Consequently appellate courts
will not disturb the trial court’s findings save only in cases where
arbitrariness has set in and disregard for the facts important to the case
have been overlooked."42
The account of Marlon Araque as to how they were assaulted by the group
of accused-appellant was given in a categorical, convincing and
straightforward manner:
A Yes, sir.
A He is my brother.
A He is already dead.
A Yes, sir.
Q Will you please inform the Honorable Court what is your own
knowledge?
A Yes, sir.
Q Will you please inform the Honorable Court who are these person or
persons, if you know?
A Its (sic) Agapito Listerio, Samson dela Torre, George dela Torre, Marlon
dela Torre and Bonifacio.
Q Now if these persons [are] inside the courtroom, could you identify them?
A They (sic) are only two persons but the three persons is (sic) not around.
Q Could you please point to this Honorable Court who are these two
persons in side the courtroom?
A Yes, sir (Witness pointing to a persons [sic] and when asked [identified
themselves as] Agapito Listerio and Samson dela Torre.)
Q Now, at around 5:00 o’clock in the afternoon of August 14, 1991, do you
recall where were you?
A Yes, sir.
Q Will you please inform the Honorable Court where were you at that time?
A I’m in Alabang at Purok 4 and I’m collecting.
A Yes, sir.
A No, sir.
Q If you said that there were no collections, what did you do?
A We went back.
A Yes, sir.
A My brother.
Q While you were going back, was there any untoward incidents that
happened?
Q Now, what particular place [where] you were waylaid, if you recall?
A In Tramo, near Tino’s place.
A Agapito Listerio, Samson dela Torre, George dela Torre and Bonifacio.
Q Will you please inform the Honorable Court how will (sic) you waylaid by
these persons?
A We were walking then suddenly they stabbed us with knife (sic) and ran
afterwards.
Q Do you know the reason why your brother fall (sic) down?
Q Do you know the reason why your brother fall (sic) before you painted
(sic)?
A Yes, sir.
Q Will you please inform the Honorable Court why your brother fall (sic)
down?
x x x x x x x x x
Q What particular place of his body was [he] stabbed if you know?
Q Do you know the person or persons who was (sic) stabbed him?
A Yes, sir.
Q Will you please inform the Honorable Court who was that persons was
stabbed him?
COURT
COURT
A Witness pointing to his back upper right portion of the back, another on
the lower right portion and another on the middle portion of the left side at
the back.
COURT
Proceed.
Q Will you please inform the Honorable Court why you are (sic) lost
consciousness?
Q How about the accused, the persons who way laid, what happened to
them?
A No, sir.
Q And you stand to your testimony that you never drink (sic) on August 14,
1991?
A Yes, sir.
Q Were (sic) there no occasion on August 14, 1991 when you visited
Sonny Sari-Sari Store at 4:00 p.m. on August 14, 1991?
A No, sir.
Q And did you not have a drinking spree with George dela Torre?
A No, sir.
A No, sir.
Q Bonifacio?
Q So you want to tell this Honorable Court that there was no point in time
on August 14, 1991 at 4:00 p.m. that you did not take a sip of wine?
A No, sir.
COURT
Q Mr. Witness, will you please tell the Honorable Court where this George
dela Torre, Marlon dela Torre and a certain Bonifacio were?
Atty. Agoot
Witness is incompetent.
Q Mr. Witness, you testified that it was your brother the deceased who
invited you to Purok 4?
A Yes, sir.
Atty. Lumakang
That Marlon was able to recognize the assailants can hardly be doubted
because relatives of the victim have a natural knack for remembering the
faces of the attackers and they, more than anybody else, would be
concerned with obtaining justice for the victim by the felons being brought
to the face of the law.45 Indeed, family members who have witnessed the
killing of a loved one usually strive to remember the faces of the
assailants.46 Marlon’s credibility cannot be doubted in this case because as
a victim himself and an eyewitness to the incident, it can be clearly gleaned
from the foregoing excerpts of his testimony that he remembered with a
high degree of reliability the identity of the malefactors.47
We remain unconvinced.
More explicitly –
… conspiracy need not be established by direct evidence of acts charged,
but may and generally must be proved by a number of indefinite acts,
conditions and circumstances, which vary according to the purpose
accomplished. Previous agreement to commit a crime is not essential to
establish a conspiracy, it being sufficient that the condition attending to its
commission and the acts executed may be indicative of a common design
to accomplish a criminal purpose and objective. If there is a chain of
circumstances to that effect, conspiracy can be established.52
It must be noted in this regard that the manner in which the stab wounds
were inflicted on the deceased were clearly meant to kill without posing any
danger to the malefactors considering their locations and the fact that they
were caused by knife thrusts starting below going upward by assailants
who were standing behind the victim.64 Treachery is present when the
offender commits any of the crimes against persons employing means,
methods or forms in the execution thereof which tend directly and specially
to insure its execution, without risk to himself arising from the defense
which the offended party might make.65 That circumstance qualifies the
crime into murder.
All told, an overall scrutiny of the records of this case leads us to no other
conclusion than that accused-appellant is guilty as charged for Murder in
Criminal Case No. 91-5842.
The reasoning of the lower court on this point is flawed because it is not the
gravity of the wounds inflicted which determines whether a felony is
attempted or frustrated but whether or not the subjective phase in the
commission of an offense has been passed. By subjective phase is meant
"[t]hat portion of the acts constituting the crime included between the act
which begins the commission of the crime and the last act performed by the
offender which, with the prior acts, should result in the consummated crime.
From that time forward, the phase is objective. It may also be said to be
that period occupied by the acts of the offender over which he has control –
that period between the point where he begins and the point where
he voluntarily desists. If between these two points the offender is stopped
by reason of any cause outside of his own voluntary desistance, the
subjective phase has not been passed and it is an attempt. If he is not so
stopped but continues until he performs the last act, it is frustrated."72
It must be remembered that a felony is frustrated when: 1.] the offender has
performed all the acts of execution which would produce the felony; 2.] the
felony is not produced due to causes independent of the perpetrator’s
will.73 On the other hand, in an attempted felony: 1.] the offender commits
overt acts to commence the perpetration of the crime; 2.] he is not able to
perform all the acts of execution which should produce the felony; and 3.]
his failure to perform all the acts of execution was due to some cause or
accident other than his spontaneous desistance.74 The distinction between
an attempted and frustrated felony was lucidly differentiated thus in the
leading case of U.S. v. Eduave:75
To put it another way, in case of an attempt the offender never passes the
subjective phase of the offense. He is interrupted and compelled to desist
by the intervention of outside causes before the subjective phase is
passed.
An appeal in a criminal case throws the whole case wide open for
review78 and the reviewing tribunal can correct errors, though unassigned in
the appealed judgement79 or even reverse the trial court’s decision on the
basis of grounds other than those that the parties raised as errors.80 With
the foregoing in mind, we now address the question of the proper penalties
to be imposed.
With regard to the frustrated felony, Article 250 of the Revised Penal Code
provides that –
The trial court, however, correctly ignored the claim for loss of income or
earning capacity of the deceased for lack of factual basis.1âwphi1 The
estimate given by the deceased’s sister on his alleged income as a ‘pre-
cast’ businessman is not supported by competent evidence like income tax
returns or receipts. It bears emphasizing in this regard that compensation
for lost income is in the nature of damages92 and as such requires due proof
thereof.93 In short, there must be unbiased proof of the deceased’s average
income.94 In this case, the victim’s sister merely gave an oral, self-serving
and hence unreliable statement of her deceased brother’s income.
As for the awards given to Marlon Araque, the award for actual damages
must be affirmed as the same is supported by documentary
evidence.95 With regard to moral and exemplary damages, the same being
distinct from each other require separate determination.96 The award for
moral damages must be struck down as the victim himself did not testify as
to the moral suffering he sustained as a result of the assault on his person.
For lack of competent proof such an award is improper.97 The award for
exemplary damages must, however, be retained considering that under
Article 2230 of the Civil Code, such damages may be imposed "when the
crime is committed with one or more aggravating circumstances."98
Finally, this Court has observed that the trial court did not render judgment
against accused Samson dela Torre, notwithstanding that he was arraigned
and pleaded not guilty to both charges. Under the circumstances, he
should be deemed to have been tried in absentia and, considering the
evidence presented by the prosecution against him, convicted of the crime
charged together with appellant Agapito Listerio.
After finality of this Decision, the records shall be remanded to the Regional
Trial Court of Makati City, which is directed to render judgment based on
the evidence against Samson dela Torre y Esquela.
SO ORDERED.