People vs. Bato

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12/2/21, 7:03 PM G.R. No.

L-23405, December 29, 1967

129 Phil. 740

G.R. No. L-23405, December 29, 1967

THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES,


PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE, VS.
DOMINGO
BATO, DEFENDANT-APPELLANT.

DECISION

CONCEPCION, C. J.:

Defendant Domingo Bato seeks the review


of a de­cision of the Court of First Instance of Leyte,
convicting him of the crime of murder, with which he is charged, and sentencing
him to life
imprisonment, with the accessory penalties provided by law, to
indemnify the heirs of the
deceased, Aurelio Laguna, in the sum of P6,000.00,
without subsidiary imprison­ment in case of
insolvency, and to pay the costs,
one-half of his preventive imprisonment to be credited to him
in the ser­vice
of said penalty.

While Laguna was with his wife, Emilia


Rosales – hereinafter referred to as Mrs. Laguna – their
daughter-in-law,
Asuncion Cañete, and their children, seated around a
table, taking their dinner,
in the first floor of their house, in Barrio Bagahupi, municipality of Babatñgon,
province of
Leyte, on April 3, 1959, between 6:30 and
7:00 p. m., with his back a few inches from a half-
opened window, facing the
road, someone fired at him therefrom, thereby
inflicting upon him a
gunshot wound[1]
in consequence of which he died the next day.

The only question for determination in this case is the identity


of the culprit.  In this connection,
said
Asuncion Cañete testified that, upon hearing the
report of a gun, she stood up and looked
through the aforementioned window,
which was only a little over one meter from the ground;
that she then saw
defend­ant Bato, together with Justiniano
Ballais and Maximo Saldivia, all of
whom are well known to her, in a seemingly
squatting position, as if prepared to run; that the
place where these three (3)
persons were was illuminated by the light coming from Laguna's
house and, also,
from that of their neighbor, Florencio Rosales, aside
from a bonfire across the
street, in the yard of one Ceferino
Lacaba; that Bata was then holding a gun, whereas Ballais
and Saldivia had each a
bolo; and that, Laguna had, likewise, looked at the window and told
Mrs.
Laguna, that Domingo Bato was his assailant.

Mrs. Laguna, in turn, revealed that, upon hearing the gunshot,


she went to the door leading to
the kitchen and saw Bato
running away, pistol in hand, followed by Ballais and
Saldivia, each
holding a long bolo; that when,
immediately thereafter, she approached her husband, he said
that it was Domingo
Bato who had fired at him; that he reiterated this
statement to barrio
lieutenant Gavino Teñedo, in the presence of rural policeman Pedro Dosar, when these two
came soon after the occurrence, and,
still later, that same evening,
to municipal mayor, Ricardo
Ansale, the chief of
police, and several policemen.

Gavino Teñedo
and Ricardo Ansale confirmed this part of the
testimony of Mrs. Laguna. 
Further
corroboration was supplied by Vicente Duallo, who
said that, as he was walking
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12/2/21, 7:03 PM G.R. No. L-23405, December 29, 1967

towards the house of Laguna, in the evening of


April 3, 1959, to borrow a sack of palay, he
heard
the report of a gun and then saw Bato and two (2)
other persons running away, coming
from a place close to the house of said Florencio Rosales, which is adjacent to that of Laguna.

Bato would have us believe that, said


evening, he was with his family in a camarin
of Quinto
Bato, in which
they resided and which he did not leave that evening.  He, likewise, introduced
the testimony of Felicisimo Bacquiano, who claimed
to have spent the evening in said camarin,
together with Bato.

Testifying for the defense, Ballais and


Saldivia averred that they were in their respective
houses
at the time of the occurrence. 
Pedro Dosar tried to corroborate Saldi­via, in whose house, Dosar
said, he was when a gun was fired at the scene of the occurrence.  Dosar, moreover,
stated that
thereupon he went to the house of the Lagunas,
where Mrs. Laguna informed him that her
husband had been shot by defendant Bato.

It is thus apparent, that this case hinges on the credibility of


the testimonial evidence therein
introduced. 
The lower court found the evidence of the prosecution more worthy of
credence
than that of the defense and the records show that this appraisal is a
correct one.  Indeed, apart
from the
circumstance that the eyewitnesses for the prosecution corroborated each other,
their
version was confirmed by the fact that, im­mediately after the
occurrence, Laguna told his wife
that his assailant was Domingo Bato; that Mrs. Laguna immediately relayed this information
to
Pedro Dosar; that Laguna, in turn, reiterated his
statement to the municipal mayor, the chief of
police and members of the police
force; and that, in fact, Bato was seen near Laguna's
house
when the shot was fired, as well as running away therefrom
immediately thereafter.

Obviously, his version – which can hardly be characterized as an


alibi, for the house, in which
he alleged he was at the time of the occurrence,
was barely 800 meters from that of Laguna, and
is inherently weak – cannot
prevail over t h e foregoing circumstances.

Then, again, it appears that, prior to the occurrence, Laguna had


reported to the Constabulary
that Bato used to carry
around a firearm with which he used to threaten him (Laguna); that, as a
consequence, Bato was charged with illegal possession
of firearms, although this case was
dismissed; that, a week or two before the
occurrence, the deceased had hand-carried to the
provincial health officer a
report to the effect that dying carabaos had been
indiscriminately
slaughtered by Bato; and that, in a number of land cases against Quinto Bato, an uncle of the
defendant, Laguna had acted either as plaintiff or as a witness.

We are satisfied, therefore, that appellant is guilty of the


crime of murder, qualified by
treachery. 
Although the offense was committed at nighttime, the record does not
show that
appellant had sought it purposely or taken advantage thereof to
facilitate the perpetration of the
offense. 
In fact, the place from which he fired at Laguna seemed to be
sufficiently lighted for
him to be clearly visible to, as well as recognized
by, all of those who happened to be nearby.

WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from should be, as it is


hereby, affirmed, with costs
against appellant Domingo Bato.

IT IS SO ORDERED.

Concepcion, C.J., Reyes, Makalintal, Bengzon, Zaldivar, Sanchez, Castro, and


Angeles, JJ.,
concur.
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12/2/21, 7:03 PM G.R. No. L-23405, December 29, 1967

Dizon, and
Fernando, J., took no part.


To the right of the midvertebral line at the level of
the first and second lumbar vertebra, and
[1]

perforating the small and the large


intestines, as well as the stomach.

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