PP Vs Laspardas (NAT LAW)

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G.R. No.

L-461423, October 23,1979


 
THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs.
LAURENCIO LASPARDAS, accused whose death sentence is under review
FACTS
•This is a review en consulta of the judgment of the Court of First Instance of Lanao del Sur, convicting
Laurencio Laspardas of rape with homicide, sentencing him to death and ordering him to pay the heirs of
the victims, the sisters Elizabeth Arriesgado and Josephine Arriesgado the sum of twenty-four
thousand pesos as indemnity (Criminal Case No. 451).

•It was alleged therein that on December 1, 1976 in Sitio San Roque, Barrio Pagalongan, Wao,
Laspardas, with treachery and premeditation, inflicted twelve wounds upon ElizabArriesgado and
Josephine Arriesgado thereby causing their death. The certificates of death show that the two victims
were twelve and eight years old.
 
•Benjamin Catalan, the barrio captain, in his verified report dated December 3, 1976, stated that,
according to his investigation, Laspardas, alias Laurel, was the last person who saw the two victims, that
the crimes were committed in the evening of December 1, that one of the victims was raped, that the
skirt of Elizabeth was raised above her waist, the zipper of her short pants was open and torn and her
legs were spread apart, that there was blood on her genitals and that Laspardas fled from the barrio.
 
• Vicente Magdaloy, a twenty-six year old farmer residing at Sitio San Roque,
where the crimes were committed, declared in his sworn statement of
December 3, 1976 that the killing and rape were perpetrated in the
victims' house and that at two o'clock in the morning of December 2, 1976
(or less than twenty-four hours after the unusual incident) Laspardas
appeared in his house and asked for payment of the amount which
Magdaloyo owed him.
 
• The municipal court issued a warrant for the arrest of Laspardas. He was
arrested at Cabadbaran, Agusan on December 10, 1976.
 
• A Constabulary sergeant took the extrajudicial confession of Laspardas
which was sworn to before the municipal judge of Wao, Laspardas was
interrogated in the Cebuano dialect.
• In view of Laspardas admission in his confession that he raped
Elizabeth, the complaint was amended so as to add rape to the charge of
double murder. Upon arraignment in the municipal court, Laspardas
pleaded guilty. The case was elevated to the Court of First Instance
where a fiscal filed an information for those offenses aggravated by
treachery, evident premeditation and dwelling

• After the arraignment, Laspardas was placed on the witness stand. He


testified that the contents of his confession were explained to him in the
Cebuano dialect; that he affixed his thumbmark thereto and that it was
true, as stated in his confession, that he killed the two girls because he
was mad at their parents; that his organ touched the lips (labia) of the
vagina of Elizabeth Arriesgado, who was still alive, when he tried to have
sexual intercourse with her, and that he used his bolo in wounding the
two victims.
• The testimony of Laspardas, a judicial confession elicited without cajolery
or duress, is conclusive evidence as to his guilt. The thirty- eight-year-old
accused declared that he worked for two years as a farmhand of the
Arriesgado spouses, plowing their farm and harvesting their corn.
Because he had not been paid his accumulated wages amounting to more
than four hundred sixty pesos, he was very angry with the said spouses.
 
• When on December 1, 1976 the said spouses left the house and he found
himself alone with their two daughters, he conceived the Idea of killing
them. He perpetrated the killing in the evening of that day. He could not
state the exact time because he had no watch.
 
• As the elder daughter, Elizabeth, was dying, he was sexually aroused and
he had carnal intercourse with her. About half an inch of his penis
penetrated her vagina.
 
ISSUES
• Counsel de oficio, assigned to defend the accused in this Court, contends that the accused
made an improvident plea of guilty. He invokes the ruling that in a capital offense, specially
where the accused has little or no education, the proper and prudent course to follow is to
take such evidence as is available and necessary in support of the material allegations of the
information, including the aggravating circumstances therein enumerated, not only for the
satisfaction of the trial judge himself but also to aid this Court in determining whether the
accused really and truly understood the consequences of his plea (People vs. Bulalake, 106
Phil. 767).

• Counsel de oficio adverts to the trial court's failure to require the prosecution to present
evidence.

• Another contention of counsel de oficio is that the trial court erred in convicting the accused
of rape with homicide although in the information three distinct offenses, namely, rape and
two murders, were charged. The fiscal characterized them as "double murder with rape."
He alleged in the indictment that the rape was committed on the occasion of the murders.
 
RESOLUTION
•Article 335 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended, imposes the death penalty "when by
reason or on the occasion of the rape, a homicide is committed." The instant case
presents a novel, reverse situation (analogous to rape accompanying a robbery)
where the rape was committed on the occasion of the murder, that is to say, when
the female victim of a murderous assault was at death's door, she was
raped.
 
 
Those decided cases are different from the instant case. Since the victim herein
was already at the threshhold of death when she was ravished, that bestiality may
be either as a form of ignominy causing disgrace or as a form of cruelty which
aggravated the murder because it was unnecessary to the commission thereof and was
a manifest outrage on the victim's person, where the rape was treated as an
aggravating circumstance in robbery with homicide.
• We agree with counsel de oficio that the special complex crime of rape
with homicide was not committed in this case and that two separate
murders were perpetrated. The murders were qualified by treachery
and aggravated by evident premeditation and abuse of confidence, two
circumstances which are deducible from the testimony of the accused.
 
Premeditation was evident because there was a sufficient interval of
time between the planning of the murders and the execution thereof
to allow the conscience of the accused to overcome the resolution of
his will had he desired to hearken to its warnings.
 
There was abuse of confidence because, according to the accused, he
had stayed for two years with the family of his two young and trusting
victims who in their immaturity and innocence never had an inkling
that he had homicidal intentions towards them

Dwelling is not aggravating because the house of the victims was also
the residence of the accused.
The contention of counsel de oficio that passion and obfuscation and
lack of instruction should be taken into account cannot be sustained.
The accused acted in a spirit of lawlessness. His supposed passion and
obfuscation were not generated by lawful sentiments.
 

Lack of instruction is not mitigating because the illiterate accused, as a


Christian, cannot possibly be ignorant of the fifth commandment (you
shall not kill) or that it is contrary to natural law to commit murder.
 
The two murders were specifically alleged in the information. The accused
cannot complain that he was not duly informed of the nature and
cause of the accusation against him.
 

Even without his extrajudicial confession, his plea of guilty and testimony
establish his guilt beyond reasonable doubt (Sec. 5, Rule 118, and sec. 29,
Rule 130, Rules of Court. The corpus delicti, or the fact of the commission of
the two murders, is indubitably shown in the record. By his plea of guilty, he
himself supplied the necessary proof as to his culpability,
 
WHEREFORE the trial court's judgment is affirmed with the
modification that the accused is found GUILTY of two separate murders
and is sentenced to two death penalties. Costs de oficio.
APPLICATION of NATURAL LAW in the
RESOLUTION of the CASE

The accused acted in a spirit of lawlessness His supposed passion and


obfuscation were not generated by lawful sentiments.
 
Lack of instruction is not mitigating because the illiterate accused, as a
Christian, cannot possibly be ignorant of the fifth commandment (you
shall not kill) or that it is contrary to natural law to commit murder
(People vs. Mutya, 106 Phil. 1161, per Paras, C, J.; U. S. vs. Balaba, 37 PMI.
260,270).

Murder and rape are not only crimes mala prohibita in nature but
mala in se in nature as well.
“If someone were to harm my
family or a friend or somebody I
love, I would eat them. I might
end up in jail for 500 years, but I
would eat them.” 
― Johnny Depp

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