EN BANC
[G.R. No. 136252. October 20, 2000]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. JULIO
FRANCISCO y LOPEZ, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
DAVIDE,
JR., C.J.:
In what seems to be a
continuation of a dream so surreal, Marilyn Perez (hereinafter MARILYN), twelve
years (12) old, woke up from her deep slumber between 10 p.m. and 11 p.m. of
all nights of 25 December 1997, in their residence in barangay Sagrada Familia,
Hagonoy, Bulacan, to find her alleged stepfather Julio Francisco (FRANCISCO),
sucking her nipples and inserting his male organ into her private parts.[1] The bizarre situation assumed contemptible
proportions by reason of the perverted intrepidity in which the dastardly deed
was undertaken.
On that night, the family
members slept side by side with each other on a single mat and under one
mosquito net. MARILYN slept by the wall
and beside her mother. On her mother’s
other side slept FRANCISCO. Beside
FRANCISCO slept his daughter with Felicidad.
About a meter away was MARILYN’s brother. With these sleeping positions, FRANCISCO, as earlier detailed,
was able to sexually violate MARILYN.[2]
MARILYN claimed that
after the sexual transgression, FRANCISCO threatened her with a kitchen knife
so as not to divulge the incident to anybody lest he kill her.[3] But MARILYN seemed to have gathered courage
for she was able to tap (kalabit) her sleeping mother who woke up to
find her husband atop her daughter. She
heard her mother blurt out “Hey, why did you do that to my child? She is also your child! (Hoy, bakit mo
ginalaw ang aking anak? Anak mo na rin iyan!).[4]
Mother and daughter went
to the house of the former’s sister Virginia and told her the story. From there, the trio proceeded to the
barangay hall to lodge a complaint.
FRANCISCO was later on brought to the police station where he was
incarcerated.
FRANCISCO was
subsequently indicted for rape under an information which reads as follows:
The undersigned Asst.
Provincial Prosecutor, on complaint of offended party, Marilyn M. Perez,
accuses Julio Francisco y Lopez of the crime of rape, penalized under the
provisions of Art. 335 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by R. A. 8353 otherwise known as “The Anti-Rape Law
of 1997, committed as follows:
That on or about the 25th day of December, 1997, in the municipality of Hagonoy, Province of Bulacan, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously, by means of force and intimidation, with lewd designs, have carnal knowledge of his stepdaughter, Marilyn M. Perez, 12 years old, against her will and without her consent.
Contrary to law.[5]
FRANCISCO was arraigned
on 20 May 1998 before the Regional Trial Court of Bulacan, Branch 21 in
Malolos, whereby he entered a plea of “Not Guilty.” His case was docketed as
Criminal Case No. 529-M-98. After the
mandatory pre-trial conference, trial on the merits ensued.
The prosecution first
presented MARILYN who testified on matters tending to prove the above narration
of facts. She also disclosed that the
sexual molestation committed upon her by FRANCISCO on Christmas night of 1997
was not the first time. She revealed
that since she was eight (8) years old she had been sexually assaulted for
about five times already by FRANCISCO.
She remembered that her mother started living in with FRANCISCO when she
was about seven (7) years old. Her
natural father was already dead at that time.
The prosecution also
presented the mother of MARILYN, Felicidad Perez. She basically claimed that on the night in question, her daughter
“touched (kalabit)” her which gesture woke her up. Felicidad then heard MARILYN say that
FRANCISCO had lain on top of her. She
then saw that FRANCISCO was indeed on top of her daughter who was silently
weeping.[6] Felicidad asked FRANCISCO “why he placed
himself on top of Marilyn when she thought all the while that he treated the
girl as his own child.” FRANCISCO
remained silent.[7]
Felicidad also admitted
that the Christmas night incident was not the first time that FRANCISCO
sexually abused MARILYN. In fact,
MARILYN had been telling Felicidad of the sexual molestations which occurred
since the former was in Grade Two.
Felicidad remained patient with
FRANCISCO because their union produced a daughter. In fact, she had personally caught FRANCISCO
in coitus with MARILYN when the latter was in Grade Two.[8] Felicidad claimed that FRANCISCO is her
husband but admitted that they are not married.[9]
Felicidad’s other
testimonial evidence coincided with MARILYN’s recital relative to FRANCISCO’s
arrest.
Dr. Manuel Aves of the Bulacan Provincial Crime
Laboratory Office was also called to
the witness stand to confirm the medical findings he made after conducting a
physical examination on MARILYN on 29 December 1997. Dr. Aves stated that his findings revealed that “there were
multiple [hymenal] healed lacerations at 12, 3, 4, 6, 9 and 10 o’clock with
abrasions and swelling.” He concluded that said results manifested recent
sexual manipulations.[10]
For its part, the defense
first presented accused FRANCISCO. He
denied the accusation and gave the excuse that he was sleeping on the night and
time in question. He rationalized that
his wife, furious at his failure to adequately provide for the family needs
aggravated by the fact that she had to earn money during the Christmas season,
concocted the malevolent scheme.
He then admitted that he
had been living with Felicidad without the benefit of marriage which
relationship produced a daughter who was already eight (8) years old.[11] He also testified that MARILYN lived with
the sister of Felicidad and only visited the family.
The defense also
presented Benigno Mercado who admitted that FRANCISCO was his uncle. He claimed that he visited FRANCISCO at the
Hagonoy Municipal Jail when the investigation was being conducted. He heard MARILYN state that “there was no penetration, only touching by the
accused.” He later admitted on cross-examination that he did not hear the
entire declarations of MARILYN.[12]
Both MARILYN and
FRANCISCO took the witness stand again as rebuttal witness and sur-rebuttal
witness, respectively.
In its decision of 28
October 1998, the trial court[13] convicted FRANCISCO. The trial court believed the testimony of
MARILYN that she was sexually violated by accused FRANCISCO on the night of 25
December 1997. The trial court
considered the testimony of MARILYN’s mother to have strengthened the girl’s
testimony. The positive identification of FRANCISCO and Dr. Aves’ findings or
physical evidence likewise “jibed and confirmed” MARILYN’s testimony “giving no
reason to doubt that there was consummation of the sexual intercourse.”
Against the damning
evidence of the prosecution, the trial court considered the defense’s denial a
“self-serving negative evidence x which cannot stand against the affirmative
testimonies of prosecution witnesses.” The trial court also brushed aside the
insinuation of the defense that it was physically impossible for FRANCISCO to
commit the crime given the sleeping positions of the protagonists, his alleged
physical infirmity and MARILYN’s disclosure on cross-examination that “her
shorts and underwear were rolled down half-way above the knee and her legs were
spread for about one and one-half (1½)
feet only.”
For the trial court, the
first pretext had been amply refuted by the declaration of MARILYN that she
woke up to find FRANCISCO sucking her nipples and inserting his male organ into
her vagina and supported by the mother’s testimony that she saw her husband on
top of MARILYN. Besides, the trial
court added, rape can be committed in the most unlikely places. Further, FRANCISCO had on five previous
occasions successfully imposed his evil intentions upon MARILYN which could
have “emboldened him to throw caution into the winds” and to once again impose
his lechery on the girl that Christmas night.
The trial court also rejected FRANCISCO’s alleged physical defect
considering that it did not hinder him from working as a fisherman and in
siring a daughter with Felicidad. As to
the third alleged exculpating reason, the trial court declared that the fact
that the shorts and underwear were not completely removed from the legs or that
the legs were just one and one-half feet apart was not sufficient obstacle to a
person bent on perpetrating a criminal act.
The trial court observed that “[i]t is conceded from human experience
that (under said circumstances) sexual intercourse would be difficult, but (not)
physically impossible if we consider that the victim was initially asleep and
when awakened, she was not in a position to resist.” It is also likely that
MARILYN did oversleep given her tender age.
The trial court also
noted the inconsistencies and contradictions in the testimony of MARILYN, but
concluded that the same failed to override the sincerity and candor of the girl
when she said she was raped for she said in effect all that has to be said on
the occasion.
The trial court then
proclaimed that the presence of the special circumstance of relationship
indicated in Section 11 of R.A. 7659 qualified the rape which necessitated the
imposition of the death penalty. It
found undisputed (1) MARILYN’S age, which was about twelve (12) years old at
the time of the commission of the crime as evidenced by a birth certificate[14] and the lack of objection thereto by the
defense; and (2) FRANCISCO’s relationship with MARILYN as either that of a
stepfather or common-law spouse of Felicidad by the defense’s lack of objection
to or denial of Felicidad’s testimony that FRANCISCO is her husband.
The trial court also
discarded as not fatal to the prosecution’s cause, the absence in the
Information of the exact words that “offender FRANCISCO is the stepfather of
12-year old MARILYN or common-law spouse of the parent of the latter” so as to
explicitly constitute the qualifying circumstance of relationship mentioned in
Section 11 of R.A. 7659. Thus, the dispositive
portion reads as follows:
Wherefore, all premises considered, the Court resolves that the prosecution has successfully undertaken its burden to prove the guilt of accused Julio Francisco y Lopez beyond reasonable doubt. For having violated Article 335 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by Republic Act 7659 with the attendant circumstance that “the victim is under eighteen (18) years of age and the offender is a x x x stepfather, x x x or the common-law spouse of the parent of the victim”, accused Julio Francisco y Lopez is hereby found GUILTY of the crime of Rape as charged. Absent any circumstance that could mitigate the commission thereof, he is hereby sentenced to suffer the Supreme Penalty of Death by lethal injection.
In line with established jurisprudence, the said accused is also ordered to indemnify the offended party Marilyn Perez in the sum of P50,000.00 for moral damages.
With costs against the accused.
SO ORDERED.[15]
In view of the penalty
imposed, the case is brought on automatic appeal to this Court pursuant to
Article 47 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by Section 22 of R. A. 7659.
In his Appellant’s Brief,
FRANCISCO attributes to the trial court as errors (1) its finding that his
guilt was proven beyond reasonable doubt,
(2) in giving credence to the inconsistent and incredible testimonies of the
prosecution witnesses, (3) in rejecting the defense’s exculpating evidence, and
(4) in imposing the death penalty despite the erroneous allegation in the
information of the special qualifying circumstance of relationship.
FRANCISCO then specifies
the following testimonial inconsistencies and contradictions as undermining the
credibility of the prosecution witnesses and the possibility of the crime
having been committed:
1. MARILYN was not sure whether she tapped her mother before or after FRANCISCO went on top of her.
2. She was uncertain whether her undergarments and shorts were removed or merely rolled-down the middle of her thighs.
3. She also equivocated on whether she was completely undressed when her mother found FRANCISCO in a coitus position atop her.
4. She claimed to have seen a whitish sticky substance discharged from FRANCISCO’s penis although she said that the lights were off and the penis was being inserted into her when she awakened.
5. She claimed that FRANCISCO was wearing shorts with buttons while her mother claimed he was clad in briefs.
6. She said FRANCISCO asked her to masturbate him after he ejaculated - a claim that cannot be substantiated with true to life experience.
FRANCISCO also insists on
the absence of the qualifying circumstance of relationship considering that he
was never married to Felicidad, hence he could not be the stepfather of
MARILYN. He was merely the common-law
spouse of Felicidad which detail was not alleged in the information, hence he
could not be convicted of qualified rape and be meted out the death penalty,
all in consonance with the Court’s
ruling in People v. Dimapilis.[16]
The Office of the Solicitor
General counters, however, that the inconsistencies do not prove that the rape
was not committed nor do they depreciate the probative value of the
overwhelming proofs adduced by the prosecution of the fact of rape. MARILYN’s
positive identification of FRANCISCO and her testimony that he was sucking her
nipples and inserting his private parts into hers when she woke up on the date
in question, as collaborated by the other evidence of the prosecution
particularly the medical findings of genital swelling and abrasions, proved
beyond reasonable doubt the guilt of FRANCISCO. The defense of denial failed to overcome this clear and foregone
conclusion.
The Office of the
Solicitor General, however, agrees with FRANCISCO that there is no qualified
rape and opines that the case falls squarely with or is similar to People v.
Dimapilis. It respectfully
recommends the modification of the assailed decision with the reduction of the
penalty from death to reclusion perpetua.
We affirm FRANCISCO’s
conviction.
The issues raised herein
primarily dealt with the credibility of the prosecution witnesses particularly
MARILYN. FRANCISCO harps on the
inconsistencies and contradictions in the statements of MARILYN and her mother
which allegedly cast serious doubt on their credibility and the fact of the
crime having been committed. It is,
however, jurisprudentially settled that findings of the trial court on the
credibility of witnesses are entitled great weight on appeal unless cogent
reasons are presented necessitating a reexamination, if not a disturbance of
the same; the reason being the former is in a better and unique position of
hearing first hand the witnesses and observing their deportment, conduct and
attitude.[17]
A careful scrutiny of the
records reveals no cogent reason requiring a disturbance of the trial court’s
findings. We agree with the trial court
in affording full credit and merit to MARILYN’s testimony that she was
raped. The medical findings
conclusively support the testimonial evidence of rape. Besides, when a woman says that she has been
raped, she says in effect, all that is necessary to show that she has indeed
been raped.[18]
We likewise affirm the
trial court’s conclusion that FRANCISCO’s impugnment of the prosecution’s
evidence failed to destroy the prosecution’s case. The inconsistent and conflicting statements averred to in the
Appellant’s Brief are not entirely irreconcilable with or even material to the
fact of rape.
Whether MARILYN tapped or
touched her mother before or after the rape is inconsequential. The truth is MARILYN reached out to her
mother in an attempt to wake her up and discover the disgusting deed being
perpetrated by her common-law husband.
On the averment that MARILYN prevaricated on whether her undergarments
and shorts were completely taken off or were merely rolled halfway down her
thigh is again trifling. Either
situation could not have prevented a perverse and lecherous mind from
unleashing its lust on a hapless girl.
Further, it is jurisprudentially recognized that lust is no respecter of
time and place and may be committed even inside cramped quarters.[19]
The other averred
incredulous claims of MARILYN (seeing a whitish sticky substance discharged by
FRANCISCO even though the lights were off and being required to masturbate
FRANCISCO after the fact of rape) and Felicidad (observing FRANCISCO as clad in
briefs) refer to irrelevant and trite matters that, it is reiterated here, do
not and could not disparage the credibility of the prosecution witnesses to the
extent of invalidating the entire prosecution’s case. For truth be told, the defense’s efforts to shred the threads of
coherence and congruity that firmly bind the prosecution’s case appear futile,
foolish and nugatory.
This Court thus discards
the defense of denial interposed by FRANCISCO.
In so doing, we resort once again to the primordial doctrinal
predication, whose sagacity and truth remain as constant as the progression of
the years in which it has been applied, that denial, like alibi, as an
exonerating justification is inherently weak and if uncorroborated regresses to
blatant impotence. A mere denial, just
like alibi, constitutes a self-serving negative evidence which cannot be accorded greater evidentiary weight than the
declaration of credible witnesses who testify on affirmative matters.[20]
A careful scrutiny of
FRANCISCO’s other pretexts like the imputation to Felicidad that she concocted
the rape charge in reprisal of his alleged inability to satisfactorily provide
for the family needs discloses the frivolity of the defense’s cause. On that specific item, however, we decree
that it is unnatural for a parent, more so, a mother to use her offspring as an
instrument of malice or retribution if it will subject her child to the
humiliation, disgrace and even stigma attendant to the prosecution of rape, if
she were not motivated solely and rightly by the desire to incarcerate the
person responsible for the child’s defilement if the same is not true.[21] Felicidad precisely wanted FRANCISCO behind
bars because motherly concerns prevailed over a love gone errant. She had already caught him previously
sexually molesting MARILYN and had known of the other sexual abuses he
committed which acts she had condoned but not the abomination committed on Christmas
night right next to her. In fact,
FRANCISCO should be held culpable for these previous acts of lechery if proven
in separate cases.
In sum, it is clear that
the prosecution persuasively discharged its onus of proving the guilt of
FRANCISCO beyond reasonable doubt.
Despite this affirmation of the trial court’s judgment of conviction,
we, nonetheless, agree with FRANCISCO’s contention and that of the Office of
the Solicitor General that the death penalty cannot be imposed.
We agree that this case
is similar to the factual settings of People v. Dimapilis. In the informations of the instant case and
in People v. Dimapilis, the victims, who were below eighteen (18) years
old, have been stated as the stepdaughters of accused-appellants; yet, the
evidence indubitably show that accused-appellants are the common-law spouses of
the victims’ mothers.[22] In both instances, the victims’ mothers are
not married to accused-appellants. Both accused-appellants cannot therefore be
considered as the respective stepfather of the victims, for that relationship
presupposes a legitimate relationship, i.e., they should have been
legally married to the mothers’ victims.
A stepfather is the husband of one’s mother by virtue of a marriage
subsequent to that of which the person spoken of is the offspring; or, a
stepdaughter is a daughter of one’s spouse by a previous marriage or the
daughter of one of the spouses by a former marriage.[23]
But notwithstanding the
unequivocal proof at the trial of this case and in People v. Dimapilis,
of the special circumstance that accused-appellants were the common-law spouses
of the victims’ mothers, said relationship could not be considered as such
because it was not specifically alleged in the information. Special qualifying circumstances indicated
in the amendatory provisions of Section 11 of R.A. 7659 must be specifically
pleaded or alleged with certainty in the information; otherwise the death
penalty cannot be imposed.[24] to impose the death penalty on the basis of
relationship, which has not been alleged in the information, would violate
FRANCISCO’s constitutional and statutory right to be informed of the nature and
the cause of the accusation against him.[25]
With this favorable
serendipity, FRANCISCO can only be convicted of simple rape where the proper imposable penalty is reclusion
perpetua under the second paragraph of Article 335, now Article 266-A of
the Revised Penal Code, in view of the amendments of R.A. 8353[26]and R.A. 7659. Nonetheless, this does not preclude this Court from imposing, in
addition to the moral damages already decreed, civil indemnity in the amount of
P50,000 which the trial court inadvertently omitted.
WHEREFORE, IN VIEW OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the decision of
28 October 1998 of the Regional Trial Court of Bulacan, Branch 21 in Malolos,
in Criminal Case No. 529-M-98 convicting herein accused-appellant Julio
Francisco y Lopez of qualified rape is hereby MODIFIED. As modified, accused-appellant is hereby
declared guilty beyond reasonable doubt of simple rape as defined and penalized
under the new Article 266-A of Revised Penal Code pursuant to R.A. No. 8353,
sentenced to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua and ordered to pay
MARILYN PEREZ the amounts of P50,000 as civil indemnity and P50,000
as moral damages.
Costs against
accused-appellant.
SO ORDERED.
Bellosillo, Melo, Puno,
Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing, Purisima, Pardo, Buena,
Gonzaga-Reyes, Ynares-Santiago, and De Leon,
Jr., JJ., concur.
[1] TSN,
6 July 1998, 1, 34.
[2] TSN,
6 July 1998, 7.
[3] Id.
8.
[4] Id.
9.
[5] Rollo,
6.
[6] TSN,
8 July 1983.
[7] Id.,
3-4.
[8] Id.
6.
[9] Id.,
2.
[10] TSN,
17 July 1998, 4.
[11] TSN,
23 September 1998 2-3.
[12] Rollo,
14.
[13] Per
Judge Cesar M. Solis.
[14] Original
Records (OR), 151. Marilyn was born on
24 May 1985.
[15] Rollo,
18.
[16] 300
SCRA 279 [1998].
[17] People
v. Alvero, G. R. Nos. 134536-38,
5 April 2000, citing People v. Landicho, 258 SCRA 1 [1996]; People v. Villaviray, 262 SCRA 13, 18 [1996]; People v.
Leoterio, 264 SCRA 698, 617 [1996]; See also People v. Antolin, G.R. No.
133880, 12 April 2000.
[18] People
v. Gonzales G.R. No. 133859, 24 August 2000.
[19] People
v. Docena G.R. Nos. 131894-98 20 January 2000, citing People v.
Leoterio, 264 SCRA 608 [1996] and People v. Escala, 292 SCRA 48
[1998]. See also People v.
Logarto and Cordero, G.R. Nos. 118828 & 119371, 29 February 2000.
[20] Peole
v. Alvero, G.R. Nos. 134536-38, 5 April 2000.
[21] People
v. Alvero, Supra note 20, citing People v. Silvano, G.R.
No. 127356, 29 June 1999 and People v. Escobar, 281 SCRA 498 [1997].
[22] See
also People v. Poñado, 311 SCRA 529 [1999].
[23] People
v. Tolentino, 308 SCRA 485, 495 [1999].
[24] People
v. Ferolino G.R. Nos. 131730-31, 5 April 2000.
[25] People
v. Bartolome, G.R. No. 133987, 28 January 2000.
[26] Otherwise
known as the Anti-Rape Law of 1997.