FIRST DIVISION
[G.R. No. 128382.
July 5, 2000]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. KENNETH CAÑEDO, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
PUNO,
J.:
This is an appeal from
the decision of the Regional Trial Court of Cebu City, Branch 5, finding
Kenneth Cañedo guilty of murder and sentencing him to suffer the penalty of
reclusion perpetua.
Kenneth and his father,
Baltazar “Billy” Cañedo, were indicted for murder in an information that
alleged:
That on or about the 23rd day of October, 1994, at about 1:00
o’clock dawn, more or less at Sitio Tingkoro, Barangay Pakigne, Municipality of
Minglanilla, Province of Cebu, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the above-named accused, conspiring, confederating and mutually
helping one another, with deliberate intent to kill, by means of treachery, did
then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously attack, assault and stab
VIRGILIO MAÑACAP with the use of a sharp bladed weapon, thereby inflicting upon
the latter fatal wounds which caused his death immediately thereafter.”1 [Rollo, pp. 12-13.]
Both
accused pled not guilty. After trial, the trial court acquitted Baltazar but
convicted Kenneth.
The evidence adduced by
the prosecution show that on October 22, 1994, a dance was held in the
basketball court of Sitio Tingkoro, Pakigne, Minglanilla, Cebu on the
observance of its fiesta. On this occasion, two commotions took place. The first transpired at about 12:00 midnight
inside the basketball court. This was stopped by the barangay tanods at about
12:30 A.M. The second commotion, which ended the life of Virgilio Mañacap,
occurred outside the basketball court at about 1:00 A.M.
Arjay Amistad, an alleged
eyewitness, testified that during the commotion, he saw Baltazar apply an
armlock on Virgilio. Then, Kenneth, with his right hand, stabbed Virgilio twice
with a knife. The thrusts were directed on the breast and stomach of Virgilio.
Virgilio fell down when Baltazar released his hold. Baltazar then pulled out
his gun and fired a random shot.
Virgilio was put in a
tricycle and rushed to a hospital.2 [TSN,
April 24, 1995, pp. 4-8, 11-12.]
The stabbing was reported to the Minglanilla police station and three policemen
responded. They conducted an on the spot investigation where Arjay recounted
what he saw. The police took him to their station to shed further light on the
incident. After a while, Kenneth and Baltazar allegedly arrived at the station
accompanied by policemen.3
[Ibid.] After identifying them, Arjay left the police station.4 [Ibid., pp.
12-14.]
Eric Mañacap and Venancio
Bacus corroborated the testimony of Arjay. Eric alleged that he was three to
four steps away when Kenneth stabbed Virgilio. Kenneth ran away after stabbing
Virgilio. Together with Arjay, Joseph Gonzales, Ramil Rosal and Edoy Gacama,
they lifted Virgilio to a tricycle. Eric then went to the Minglanilla police
station and reported the incident. There, he pointed to Kenneth and Baltazar as
the assailants. Allegedly, Kenneth admitted that he stabbed the victim. The two
were detained at the police station.5 [TSN,
June 14, 1995, pp. 4-6.]
Venancio Bacus, who was
then tending a store beside the basketball court, testified that at about 1:00
A.M. on October 23, 1994, a fight broke out inside the dancing place. The fight
continued outside the basketball court where Kenneth stabbed Virgilio while
armlocked by Baltazar. After the stabbing, Baltazar fired a shot and shouted
“come who is brave”6
[TSN, June 13, 1995, p.
16.] while Kenneth ran away.7 [Ibid., pp. 8-17.]
SPO2 Gerardo Peñafort
testified that Arturo Mañacap reported to him the stabbing incident. He
dispatched Nestor Canlubo and Ramil Navarro to investigate at Sitio Tingkoro.
Peñafort questioned Arjay, Eric, Arturo and Bendulo Especio who claimed to have
witnessed the incident. During the investigation, Kenneth and Baltazar were
allegedly brought by Raul Pable, barangay captain of Pakigne, to the police
station. Kenneth was identified by Arjay, Eric and Arturo as the culprit. When
Peñafort asked Kenneth if he stabbed Virgilio, the latter denied it. Baltazar
was given a paraffin test and was found positive for gun powder burns. Peñafort
did not reduce his investigation into writing but he entered the incident in
the police blotter.8
[TSN, April 26, 1995,
pp. 4-5.]
SPO2 Ramil Navarro
testified that between 1:00 to 2:00 A.M. on October 23, 1994, he, together with
SPO2 Ferdinand Navales, SPO3 Allan Gabuton, SPO1 Nestor Canlubo and a driver
named Hilarion Camacho were instructed by Peñafort to take Kenneth and Baltazar
to the police station. They proceeded to the barangay hall of Pakigne where
they saw Kenneth and Baltazar. Navarro
invited them to go to the police station. Kenneth and Baltazar did not
go with them but assured him that they would later drop by the police station.9 [TSN,
June 15, 1995, pp. 16-17.]
The autopsy conducted by
Dr. Jesus. P. Cerna showed that the victim sustained one (1) stab wound on the
chest with a length of two (2) centimeters and another on the right side of the
abdomen with a length of three (3) centimeters. Both wounds were fatal. Dr.
Cerna declared that the instrument used could have been a sharp pointed single
bladed weapon. The location of the wounds suggested that the assailant and the
victim could have been facing each other when they were inflicted.10 [TSN,
August 23, 1995, pp. 3-10.] He
opined that it was possible that two weapons could have been used in the crime.11 [Ibid. p. 11.]
The evidence of the
defense is as follows:
In the evening of October
22, 1994, Kenneth and his friends were having a drinking spree at the store of
Ana Mae Saavedra Sudaria located beside the basketball court where the dance
was being held. A commotion took place inside the basketball court. Kenneth
went inside the court to look for his cousins but as people were running away,
he decided to return to the store of Ana Mae.
In the early morning of
October 23, 1994, another commotion happened
outside the basketball court. They stood and watched the fight. Someone
told him, “Ken, your father is mauled (sic) by many persons.”12 [TSN,
October 18, 1995, p. 13.] He saw
his father surrounded by persons who were attacking him. He shouted for help
and helped his father ward off his aggressors. He was able to hit one of the
aggressors. Some barangay officials responded and those attacking his father
fled. His father complained of an aching back. Kenneth heard that somebody was
stabbed. About fifteen (15) meters away from them, they saw a person sprawled
on the ground. The person was lifted to a tricycle and Kenneth directed the
driver, a certain Socrates, to take him to a hospital. The victim was
accompanied by barangay tanod Nap Alipin.
Kenneth and Baltazar
remained at the scene of the incident for a while. Later, they proceeded to the
barangay hall to report the incident. Kenneth then went to a bakery of his
aunt. Lolit, a sister of the victim, accompanied by three policemen, came and
identified him as the assailant. He was taken to the barangay hall. Thereafter,
he went to the police station of Minglanilla for investigation accompanied by
his father and their barangay captain, Raul Pable.
During the investigation,
Arjay and Eric, who appeared to be drunk, pointed to Kenneth as the assailant.
Baltazar was not implicated. Kenneth denied that he stabbed Virgilio with his
right hand. He claimed that he was left-handed. The police made him sign a
waiver13
[Records, p. 28.] for his detention so that a preliminary
investigation may be conducted. On January 3, 1995, an information for murder
was filed against him and his father.14 [TSN,
October 18, 1995, pp. 2-12.]
Baltazar, chief of the
barangay tanods of Tingkoro, testified that they were tasked to maintain peace
and order at the dance place. He proceeded to the basketball court during the
first commotion. At the gate, he met Cesareo Vicente, one of the tanods, who
was wounded on the face. Cesareo said that someone hit him with a belt buckle
while he was pacifying the protagonists. Cesareo does not know who hit him. To
make further inquiries, Baltazar went outside the basketball court and saw
persons converging near the road. He identified himself and asked them who they
were. He was immediately boxed on the head and surrounded by the group. He kept
on parrying their blows. They struck him with a stone and he fell down. He
suffered contusions and dislocation of his right shoulder.
He heard a shout that
somebody was stabbed. They went to the place where people were gathered and saw
a person lying on the ground. Kenneth
suggested that the victim be brought to a hospital. After the victim was put in
a tricycle, Baltazar asked his companions if they recognized those who attacked
him. No one did. They repaired to the
barangay hall. Between 2:00 to 3:00
A.M., barangay captain Pable came accompanied by policemen. Pable requested that they go to the
municipal building of Minglanilla. With
other tanods, they proceeded to the office of the chief of police where they
met two youths who appeared to be drunk. Baltazar was made to undergo a
paraffin test. He returned home only at
6:00 A.M. Upon learning that Kenneth was detained, he returned to the police
station. He met Christopher Enjambre
who told him that he saw the real assailant.
Baltazar relayed this information to the police but they did not believe
him. Later, a warrant of arrest was served
on him.15
[TSN, November 16, 1995,
pp. 3-16.]
Christopher Enjambre who
allegedly saw the real culprit described him as a small man wearing a black
t-shirt and brown short pants. The assailant escaped after stabbing the victim.
He testified that Baltazar was about Fifteen (15) meters away from Virgilio
when the latter was stabbed. Kenneth was then not in sight. He only saw Kenneth
at the scene when Kenneth ran to help his father. A woman followed Kenneth. He
said that only four people were in the immediate vicinity when Virgilio was
stabbed. Fearful that another commotion might take place, he proceeded home and
met barangay captain Pable along the way. Christopher related to him the
stabbing incident since Pable did not see it. At about 7:00 A.M., Pable asked
Christopher to accompany him to the municipal hall where they met the parents
of Kenneth.16
[TSN, October 17, 1995,
p. 5-11.16
Laurentino Vellila, a
banrangay tanod of Pakigne, related that, together with Napoleon Alipin and
Joel Parajes, they helped Baltazar when the latter was attacked. Kenneth came when the fight was about to
end. After the aggressors of Baltazar
ran away, they noticed that people were gathering around a person who had
fallen on the ground twenty (20) meters away from them. Seeing that the person has been stabbed,
Kenneth shouted that the victim be brought to a hospital.17 [TSN,
October 9, 1995, pp. 8, 10, 15-18.]
Anna Mae Sudaria
testified that she followed Kenneth when he ran to help his father. She was about three (3) meters behind
him. While running, she saw a person
slumped on the ground who was even stepped on by people scampering away. She also saw Kenneth warding off the persons
attacking his father. They did not pass
by the place where the victim was found lying.
Then, she heard a shout that somebody was stabbed. She was about twenty meters (20) away from
this person while Kenneth and his father were about 12-15 meters away.18 [TSN,
October 11, 1995, pp. 23, 25.]
Raul Pable, barangay
captain of Pakigne, testified that three policemen went to his house at about
2:15 A.M. Police officer Canlubo informed him about the stabbing incident. They
requested him to accompany them. Thus, they went to the barangay hall where
they met Kenneth, some barangay tanods and some civilians. A certain Mr.
Saavedra, a brother-in-law of the victim, suggested that they go to the
municipal building since the discussion in the barangay hall was becoming
noisy. Kenneth volunteered to go with them as he heard that he was a suspect.
When they arrived at the
municipal building at approximately 4:00 A.M., they were met by around seven
(7) relatives of the victim. During the
investigation, Arjay said that Kenneth stabbed the victim and had changed his
clothes. Kenneth replied that he could
not have changed his shirt as it still had bloodstains. Eric did not claim that
he saw the stabbing incident but averred that Kenneth boxed him. Kenneth
admitted that he boxed Eric but explained that Eric attacked his father.19 [Ibid., pp. 3-8.]
To explain the presence
of gun powder burns on Baltazar, SPO2 Frederick Larrobis testified that on
October 22, 1994, at about 1:30 P.M., Police Superintendent Augusto Larrobis
and himself conducted a seminar about the use of firearms among the barangay
captain and the tanods of Pakigne. They were taught how to dismantle and fire
an armalite and a shotgun. Baltazar
fired both firearms.20
[TSN, December 20, 1995,
pp. 8-11.]
As stated, the trial
court acquitted Baltazar but convicted Kenneth. Appellant now contends:
I
THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN CONCLUDING THAT NO MOTIVE IMPELLED THE PROSECUTION’S WITNESSES, ERIC MAÑACAP AND ARJAY AMISTAD, IN FALSELY TESTIFYING AGAINST THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT.
II
THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN FINDING THAT ACCUSED-APPELLANT WAS “POSITIVELY IDENTIFIED” AS THE ASSAILANT OF THE VICTIM AND HIS DENIAL OF HAVING COMMITTED THE CRIME CHARGED CANNOT PREVAIL OVER HIS “POSITIVE IDENTIFICATION” BY THE PROSECUTION’S WITNESSES.
III
THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN HOLDING THAT TREACHERY ‘ATTENDED’ THE KILLING OF DECEASED VIRGILIO MAÑACAP.
IV
THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN FINDING THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT GUILTY BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT OF THE CRIME OF MURDER AND IN SENTENCING HIM TO SUFFER THE PENALTY OF RECLUSION PERPETUA WITH A DURATION OF FROM TWENTY (20) YEARS AND ONE (1) DAY TO FORTY (40) YEARS, PURSUANT TO SECTION 21 OF REP. ACT 7659, AMENDING ARTICLE 27 OF THE REVISED PENAL CODE.
We acquit on reasonable
doubt.
First. The identification
of the appellant by Arjay is not convincing.
On direct examination,
Arjay testified that he identified the appellant and Baltazar as the assailants
of the victim at the police station of Minglanilla.21 [TSN,
April 24, 1995, p. 13.] On
cross-examination, Arjay admitted that before appellant and Baltazar came to
the police station, he described Baltazar to the policemen and the neighbors of
the victim. He did not give Baltazars name but merely described his built.
Nevertheless, the records do not show how he described his built. Thereafter,
an unnamed neighbor of the victim declared that the person described is
Baltazar. A sister of the victim and a policeman accompanied him to the place
where Baltazar repaired after the incident. He pointed to Baltazar who was
immediately arrested.22
[Ibid., pp. 23-26.] Arjay described Baltazar in this manner:
Q- Now, when did you know for the first time the accused Baltazar (Billy) Cañedo?
A- I only recognized through his face (sic) at the time he held Virgilio Mañacap.
xxx
Q- And when did you know for the first time his name?
A- I knew his name when we were already inside the precinct of Minglanilla Police Station of Minglanilla (sic).
Q- On what date was that?
A- October 23 dawn.
Q- How did you know that his name was Baltazar Cañedo?
A- Because I described him.
Q- You described him in his absence?
A- Yes, in his absence.
Q- And to whom did you relay your description of Baltazar Cañedo?
A- To the policemen and to the neighbors of the victim.
Q- You gave, how did you give his description, from head to foot?
A- I described him through his built and I described him also as the person who fired a shot.
xxx
Q- And after hearing your description of a person whom you did not know at that time[,] the police investigator immediately said that what (sic) you described was Baltazar Cañedo?
A- No, sir.
Q- So who mentioned the name of the person whom you described?
A- The neighbors (sic) of the victim.
Q- Who?
A- I did not know, he is from Minglanilla.
xxx
Q- Let’s go back to the
time you first gave the description of Baltazar Cañedo or Billy Cañedo, Cañedo
was not yet there and then you gave the description to the police investigator
and then somebody who was listening to you gave the name of that person whom
you descrived (sic) and that the name given was Baltazar (Billy) Cañedo,
correct?
A- Yes, sir.”23 [TSN, April 24, 1995, pp. 23-25.]
Appellant Kenneth was
identified in the same way. Arjay allegedly gave appellant’s description and
the same unnamed neighbor of the victim said that it was appellant who was
described by Arjay. Again, we note that Arjay did not testify how he described
appellant. Of significance too is the fact that the unknown person who named
both appellant and Baltazar was not at the scene of the stabbing incident. He
only appeared at the police station and provided the names of appellant and
Baltazar. He was not asked a single
question why he named appellant and Baltazar.24 [TSN,
April 24, 1995, pp. 23-28.]
Thus, Arjay testified:
“Q- What about Kenneth Cañete (sic), when did you know his name for the first time?
A- At the Minglanilla police station.
Q- When?
A- October 23 dawn.
Q- When you were also investigated?
A- Yes, sir.
Q- And you adopted the
same procedure, you gave the
description of the person?
A- Yes, sir.
Q- And somebody again
identified his name, gave his name?
A- Yes, somebody gave
the name of Kenneth Cañedo.
Q- And you do not know the name of that person who gave the name of Kenneth Cañedo?
A- I can recognize his face.
Q- He was the same person who gave the name of Baltazar?
A- Yes, the same person.
Q- Did you see the policeman who was asking question[s] from you, did you see him investigate that person who gave the name of Baltazar and Kenneth Cañedo?
A- No, sir.
xxx
Q- And that person also claimed having seen the incident, the stabbing incident?
A- No, sir.
Q- So, that person was not at the place of the incident?
xxx
WITNESS:
A- He only went to the
police station when I saw him there.”25 [Ibid., pp. 26-28.]
Arjay is consistent about his manner of
identifying the appellant. Thus, he
reiterated in his testimony:
Q- So, in other words, in the course of the police questioning on you, on Eric, on Arturo and on a certain Lolit[,] not one of you told the police that Baltazar Cañedo was involved?
A- None, sir. We only described the person.
Q- And Baltazar Cañedo was immediately identified after the questioning of the four of you?
A- We only learned the name of Baltazar Cañedo from the person in Minglanilla.
Q- You referred to the person who butted in during the investigation and identified the name Billy Cañedo?
A- Yes, sir.
Q- And that person who
mentioned the name of Billy and Kenneth Cañedo was not subjected to questioning
by the police?
A- No sir.”26 [TSN,
April 25, 1995, p. 5.26
In fine, the records do
not show how Arjay described appellant and which description enabled an
anonymous person to point at appellant as the one who stabbed the victim. In
the absence of these critical details of description, we can not adjudge
whether the appellant was correctly and properly identified. We further note
that the crime was committed when a dance was being held. The fight was a
rumble, participated in by a lot of people. People were shouting and scampering
for safety. All these circumstances should make the identification of appellant
difficult and they counsel us to be extra careful in evaluating Arjay’s
testimony. We are aware that the positive identification of malefactors should
not be disregarded just because the names of some of them were supplied to the
eyewitness.27
[People vs.
Barredo, 297 SCRA 246 (1998).]
But in such cases, the description of the criminal was detailed and fitted the
accused. In the case at bar, these reliable details which could provide a good
index for identification are missing.
We can not also rely on
the identification made by Eric Mañacap which is similar to that of Arjay. He
testified that he identified the appellant and Baltazar at the Minglanilla
police station because they were pointed to them. Thus:
Q- How about Kenneth Cañedo, when was the first time that you knew this fellow?
A- Also in the police station of Minglanilla.
Q- Why were you there in the police station of Minglanilla between 1:00 A.M. to 2:00 A.M.?
A- I went there in order to tell that the persons who held and stabbed the victim were Baltazar Cañedo and Kenneth Cañedo.
Q- Why, if you know,
Baltazar and Kenneth, were there at the police station on October 23, 1994 at
around 1:00 A.M. to 2:00 A.M.?
A- They were the ones
pointed to us.”28
[TSN, June 14, 1995, p. 6.]
Eric even changed his testimony by saying
that appellant and Baltazar revealed their names during the investigation.29 [TSN,
June 15, 1995, p. 12.]
The credibility of Arjay
and Eric is further eroded for their story runs counter to the testimony of the
investigating officer, SPO2 Peñafort, and one of the police officers dispatched
to pick up appellant and Baltazar, SPO2 Navarro. Arjay said that, accompanied
by a sister of Virgilio and a policeman, they returned to Sitio Tingkoro where
Baltazar was posted. He pointed to Baltazar and the latter was arrested and
brought to the police station. Navarro, however, testified that Peñafort
ordered them to go to the barangay hall of Pakigne and invite appellant and
Baltazar to the police station. He was accompanied by SPO2 Ferdinand Navales,
SPO3 Allan Gabuton, SPO1 Nestor Canlubo and a civilian driver named Hilarion
Camacho. He declared that Arjay and a sister of the victim were not with them.
Contrary to the claim of Arjay, they did not arrest Baltazar. Rather, they
merely asked appellant and Baltazar to go to the police station.30 [TSN,
June 15, 1995, pp. 16-17.]
Peñafort also said that Arjay and Eric merely waited for the appellant and
Baltazar to come to the police station.31 [TSN,
April 26, 1995, p. 15.]
This is not all. Both
Arjay and Eric testified that they identified appellant and Baltazar at the
police station as the perpetrators of the crime.32 [TSN,
April 24, 1995, p. 18; TSN, June 14, 1995, p. 6.] Eric also said that the two were then detained at the police station.
This conflicts with the testimony of Peñafort that Eric and Arjay only pointed
to appellant as the culprit.33 [TSN,
April 26, 1995, p. 7] Even in
the police blotter,34
[Records, p. 7.] the name of Baltazar does not appear as a
suspect. This is the reason why only appellant was detained.35 [Ibid., p. 8.] Eric also alleged that appellant admitted
that he stabbed the victim.36 [TSN,
June 14, 1995, p. 6.] But
Peñafort declared that appellant denied that he stabbed the victim during the
investigation.37
[TSN, April 26, 1995. p.
7.] These numerous contradictions
can not but induce doubt on the truthfulness of Arjay and Eric.
If the testimonies of
Arjay and Eric were bad, the testimony of Venancio, another alleged prosecution
eyewitness, was worse. Venancio admitted that the mother of Virgilio prodded him
to testify in May 1994. The crime was committed on October 23, 1994.38 [TSN,
June 13, 1995, p. 16.] Venancio
contradicted Arjay when he testified that no policeman responded after the
incident. Incredibly, he did not see any barangay official at the scene and
yet, he claimed to have stayed there from 2:00 A.M. to 5:00 A.M. When he was recalled to the witness stand,
he further self-destruct when he declared that it was Baltazar who stabbed the
victim. He added that when Baltazar fired his gun, no one was present except
him and his wife.39
[TSN, July 24, 1995, pp.
3-4, 6-7.] Arjay and even Eric
testified that they were present when Baltazar fired his gun.
There is more. The
eyewitnesses claimed to be near the place of the incident,40 [Arjay
Amistad testified that he was three steps away, Eric Mañacap was about three to
four steps away and Venancio Bacus was four arm’s length away.] yet they could not even agree on how the
victim was stabbed. Arjay testified that the victim was stabbed firstly on the
chest and then on the right of his navel.41 [TSN,
July 25, 1995, p. 9.] In
contrast, Eric said that appellant plunged the knife from down going up using
his right hand.42
[TSN, June 15, 1995, p.
4.] Venancio averred that the
the victim was stabbed only once on his chest. This is repudiated by the
autopsy report which revealed that the victim suffered two stab wounds.43 [TSN,
June 13, 1995, p. 17.]
Similarly disconcerting
is the disagreement of Arjay and Eric on the statements they made in their
joint affidavits as pointed out by the appellant. Arjay said that paragraph 644 [Paragraph
6 states that “(d)uring the commotion we saw Baltazar Cañedo holding the arms
of Virgilio Mañacap from behind while Kenneth Cañedo suddenly stabbed Virgilio
Mañacap twice.”] of their joint
affidavit is not correct.45
[TSN, APRIL 24, 1995, P.
32.] He averred that he called
the attention of the typist about the mistake but other persons whom he does
not know nevertheless included the statement. He also alleged that Assistant
Provincial Prosecutor Ivan Herrero did not ask whether or not he read or
understood his affidavit before he signed it. Neither was he required to swear
before Prosecutor Herrero. Allegedly, the prosecutor immediately signed the
statement.46
[Ibid., pp. 32-34.] Arjay even charged that Eric did not sign the affidavit before
Prosecutor Herrero.47
[Ibid., p. 34.] Eric testified that he protested paragraph 6 of their joint affidavit
to the person who made the affidavit but the latter assured him that the
statement was all right.48
[TSN, June 14, 1995, p.
15.] Contrary to Arjay’s
testimony, Eric testified that he signed the affidavit in the presence of
Prosecutor Herrero.49
[Ibid., p. 7.] These contradictions and inconsistencies are too many and taken as a
whole, further weakened the prosecution evidence.
We also note that the
prosecution claimed that appellant fled after the incident. But according to
SPO2 Ramil Navarro, they found appellant and his father at the barangay hall of
Pakigne. If indeed, appellant fled after stabbing the victim, why would he
return to the barangay hall? Courts go by the biblical truism that the wicked
flee when no man pursueth but the righteous are as bold as a lion.”50 [People
vs. Hassan, supra note 16.]
There are other
circumstances that engender reasonable doubt on the guilt of the appellant. For
one, even the trial court found no motive on the part of appellant and his
father in committing the crime. It held:
“The court painstakingly subjected the evidence adduced to an exacting examination, but finds no evidence to establish at least any motive why both accused (father and son) would conspire to kill the victim.
“Even the evidence for the prosecution shows that the victim did not participate in the mauling of accused Baltazar Cañedo. The prosecution evidence did not show that previous to or immediately before the stabbing incident, the victim quarrelled with or had a misunderstanding with either or both accused.
“The question that confronts and bothers the court is why would the two accused get rid of Virgilio Mañacap, or what is their motive in killing the victim.
xxx
“There is also no evidence that accused Kenneth Cañedo has a motive to kill Virgilio Mañacap. However, proof of motive is not indispensable as against accused Kenneth Cañedo because he was positively identified as the person who stabbed the victim in this case. In other words, motive need not be established if the identity of the accused is otherwise shown beyond reasonable doubt. (Pp. vs. Sespene, G.R. No. 9346, Oct. 30, 1957; Pp. vs. Divinagracia, G.R. No. 10611, March 13, 1959; Pp. vs. Arcillas, G.R. No. 11797, June 30, 1959; Pp. vs. Regales, G.R. No. 17531, Nov. 30, 1962; Pp. vs. Judice, et al., G.R. No. 18071-72, Jan. 31, 1964; and Pp. vs. Ragsac, 61 Phil 146).
Besides, it is a matter of judicial knowledge that nowadays the
impulsiveness of the youth has given way to mature thinking; that people have
been killed or assaulted for lesser or no reason at all; that others are killed
even in an argument for a traffic violation.”51 [Decision, pp. 27-31.]
Surely, motive need not
be proved if an accused has been identified beyond reasonable doubt. But in the
case at bar, the identification of appellant is extremely tenuous, hence, proof
of motive is essential.52
[People vs.
Peruelo, 105 SCRA 226 (1981).]
Finally, the version of
the appellant is corroborated by several witnesses whose impartiality can not
be assailed. Raul Pable is the barangay captain of Pakigne; Laurentino Vellila
is a barangay tanod; Anna Mae Sudaria is a childhood friend of the wife of the
victim and SPO2 Larrobis is a member of the Philippine National Police. Their
testimonies do not bear out the usual badges of fraud. They dovetailed in
various significant details.
It is a basic rule that
the guilt of an accused must be proved beyond reasonable doubt. Before he is
convicted, there should be moral certainty-a certainty that convinces and
satisfies the reason and conscience of those who are to act upon it53 [U.S.
vs. Reyes, 3 Phil 3 (1903).]
that he is guilty of the crime charged. In the case at bar, the prosecution
failed to prove the guilt of appellant beyond reasonable doubt.
IN VIEW WHEREOF the decision of the regional trial court
convicting appellant is REVERSED. Appellant Kenneth Cañedo is ACQUITTED
on the ground of reasonable doubt. His immediate release is ordered unless he
is held for other legal cause.
The Director of Prisons
is ordered to report within ten (10) days his compliance with this decision.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J.,
(Chairman), Kapunan, Pardo, and Ynares-Santiago,
JJ., concur.