EN BANC
[G.R. Nos. 140006-10. April 20, 2001]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. ROLLY
PAGADOR, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
BELLOSILLO,
J.:
ROLLY PAGADOR was charged with two (2) counts of murder
for hacking to death the spouses Herminigildo and Magdalena Mendez,[1] and with three (3)
counts of frustrated murder for the physical injuries sustained by Shirley
Mendez, Rosalinda Mendez and Emily Mendez -Castro.[2]
The spouses Herminigildo
and Magdalena Mendez were poor but hardworking peasants of Alaminos,
Pangasinan. The elderly couple had to
toil long and hard in the fields to support their seven (7) children. Ricardo, the eldest and only son, was an
invalid; Emily was married; and, with the exception of Shirley who was only ten
(10) years old, their other daughters, Nenita, Josephine, Marlyn, and
Rosalinda, were of marrying age although still single. Among their children, Nenita was fated to
introduce to the family the man who was to cause the untimely death of the
couple and bring untold sufferings to the surviving members of the family.
Accused Rolly Pagador and
Nenita Mendez were sweethearts for more than two (2) years. Although the accused was a mere tricycle
driver Nenita’s family had no objection to their relationship; in fact they
allowed him to drop by their house anytime and spend the night with her. He was treated like a member of the family
such that he would visit the Mendez household even at 1:00 o'clock or 2:00 o’clock in the morning.
On 12 October 1996, at
around 1:00 o’clock in the morning, Nenita and her sisters Emily, Josephine and
Rosalinda were awakened by shouts coming from their parents’ room. It was their mother Magdalena shouting, "Aray
ko! Aray ko!" Thinking
that their mother was again having another bout with her perennial ailment,
they hurriedly rushed to her room.
Emily was first to reach the
room, followed by Josephine, then Nenita, and finally, Rosalinda. They were shocked to see accused Rolly Pagador
stabbing their mother with a bolo at the back with two (2) hands holding the
bolo.
The accused was kneeling
behind their mother as he continuously stabbed her who was already slumped on
the floor with her legs outstretched.
Their ten (10)-year old sister Shirley was clutching her wounded stomach while lying on their
mother’s lap. Their father Herminigildo
was sprawled motionless on the floor.
Quite instinctively, the four (4) sisters approached their mother in an
attempt to repulse the assailant but the latter swung his bolo at them, cutting
Emily’s left index finger in the process.
Forthwith, Emily rushed back to her room, picked up her sleeping child
and jumped out of the window.
Meanwhile, Nenita cried
out, "Rolly! Rolly!" but the accused swung his bolo in silent
rage. Nenita retreated from the room
and, like her sister Emily, jumped out of the window. As she reached the ground, Nenita hid behind a tamarind tree. Moments later she saw the accused passing by
still wielding his bolo. Fearing that
she would be discovered, she removed her white dress and crawled towards a
group that was making charcoal. As she
went near them, she put on her clothes and pleaded to them for help. Unfortunately, no one could extend any
assistance to Nenita, much less to any of the Mendezes, as everyone was too
afraid to confront the rampaging
lothario.
According to Josephine,
like her sisters, she rushed to her parents’ room when she heard the anguished
cries of her mother. There she saw her
father lying motionless on the floor, while her younger sister Shirley was
clutching her bleeding stomach. On bent
knees the accused repeatedly stabbed their mother at the back. Josephine immediately recognized Rolly
Pagador as the assailant because the room was well lighted by a kerosene
lamp. Together with her other
sisters, she tried
to approach the
accused but the latter menacingly
swung his bolo at them hitting her forefinger.
She retreated to her room and jumped out of the window.
Among the four (4) sisters,
Rosalinda bore the brunt of Rolly’s fury.
She narrated that she was the last one to leave her parents’ room. As she escaped to her own room, Rolly went
after her and violently pulled her hair causing her to fall down. The accused sat astride on her stomach and
furiously hacked and stabbed her. As he
directed the bolo at her face, Rosalinda held the blade of the bolo and
deflected the thrust to her left side.
The accused made several more thrusts with the bolo hitting her on the
right ear, left breast, left upper portion of her arm and right thigh. To stop the murderous assault, she played
dead. Apparently the ruse succeeded
because the accused thereafter stood up and escaped through the window. With blood oozing profusely from her
numerous wounds Rosalinda slowly lost consciousness.
Shirley testified that
she was awakened when she felt someone striking her on the stomach and other
parts of the body. She saw the accused
swinging a bloodied bolo at her sisters and saw her lifeless parents on the floor. But she could not ascertain who was
responsible for her wounds although she saw the accused wielding a bolo.
Dr. Rafael Manaois of the
Western Pangasinan District Hospital testified that Shirley sustained (a) a
hacking wound lateral neck on left; (b) a hacking wound 7 cm. (L) hypochondriac
with intestinal evisceration, i.e., in layman’s language, the intestine coming out of the stomach; (c) a
hacking wound 4 cm. postero-lateral aspect distal 3rd arm (L); (d) a hacking
wound 5 cm. postero-lateral aspect middle third forearm; and, (e) a stab wound
4 cm., back, projecting downward.
Interpreting the Legal
Necropsy Examination Report prepared by Dr. Rafael Quebral on the cadaver of
Herminigildo Mendez, Dr. Glorioso Maramba testified that the deceased suffered
the following wounds: (a) a
semi-circular chop wound on the head, nape, left, 3 x 4.5 cm., shallow; (b) a
penetrating stab wound on the inferior portion of the sternum; (c) a blood clot
and unclotted extracted inside the chest cavity; (d) a wound on the thoracic
cage on the posterior aspect; (e) two (2) parallel stabs cut wound, vertical,
on left shoulder anterior aspect x x x cutting off the pectoralis and deltoid
muscles; and, (f) a chop wound on the upper extremity arm. Cause of death was massive intra-thoracic
hemorrhage.
Also, according to Dr.
Maramba, the deceased Magdalena Mendez sustained the following injuries: (a) a stab wound below the scapula; and (b)
a wound on the upper portion of the lumbar region, back, left side, and another
wound just below and slightly lateral directed posteriorly, medially toward the
stomach. Cause of death was massive
bleeding inside the abdomen and the thoracic cavity.
Dr. Vicente Tongson, Jr.,
Medical Officer III of the Western Pangasinan District Hospital, testified that
he examined and treated Rosalinda Mendez and Emily Mendez. He noted in his medico-legal report that Rosalinda sustained about fourteen (14)
hacked wounds on different parts of her body:
(a) right thigh; (b) left shoulder muscle; (c) wound immediately below
wound number 2; (d) left hand between the left thumb and the index finger; (e)
right mandible on the right ear; (f) left forearm third or left wrist; (g) left
index finger; (h) below the nipple between the 7th and 8th ribs; (i) below the
ear; (j) base of the neck; (k) left shoulder; (l) right shoulder at the back;
(m) upper back ; and, (n) back of the
nape.
Likewise, the
medico-legal examination by Dr. Tongson on Emily Mendez yielded (a) an
amputated index finger, third left hand; and (b) a lacerated wound on the
fourth (4th) finger, third left hand.
Accused Rolly Pagador
denied all the accusations against him.
He narrated that on the night of 11 October 1996 he had just finished
his work as a tricycle driver when he decided to drop by the house of his
girlfriend Nenita Mendez. When he
arrived at the Mendez’ residence, he met Nenita’s father Herminigildo and
casually greeted him as was his habit.
Herminigildo told him that Nenita was already asleep.
Rolly was taken aback by
the sudden change in the old man’s attitude towards him. Nenita had been his fiancee for more than
two (2) years and her family was used to his visits even at the most ungodly
hours. But, ignoring Herminigildo’s acerbic remark, he tried to go to Nenita’s
room but Herminigildo blocked his way and tried to push him out of the
house. Herminigildo then went
inside Nenita’s room and when he reappeared moments later he was already
armed with a bolo. Without warning
Herminigildo hacked him but the accused deftly dodged the blow. According to the accused, he kicked the
kerosene lamp and dashed towards the room of Herminigildo where the latter’s
wife Magdalena was sleeping.
When the accused reached
the room of the Mendez couple, Magdalena was already awake. Imploringly, he asked Magdalena why her
husband was acting the way he did.
Before she could answer, Herminigildo barged into the room and hacked
his wife believing it was the accused.
The accused grappled with Herminigildo for possession of the bolo and
succeeding, he boloed the deceased causing the latter to fall face down. He denied having caused the injuries
suffered by Shirley and surmised that she might have been wounded during the
struggle.
Further the accused
narrated that the sisters Emily, Nenita, Josephine and Rosalinda arrived and
upon seeing their lifeless father, the four (4) women furiously manhandled
him. Some kicked him while the others
pulled his hair. When he noticed that
Rosalinda was trying to take hold of the bolo, he wrested it from her and swung
it at the four (4) enraged women never knowing whether anyone was hit. After the women took flight, he ran out in
pursuit of Nenita but she was nowhere to be found. He further claimed that while detained at the municipal jail, he
gathered reports from Nenita’s relatives that Herminigildo had already
committed Nenita to marry a certain seaman which, according to him, explained
the hostile treatment he received from the deceased father.
The trial court found the
accused guilty in all five (5) cases charged against him. Specifically, he was convicted of frustrated
murder on two (2) counts committed individually against Shirley and Rosalinda
and imposing upon him the penalty of reclusion temporal or twelve (12)
years and one (1) day to twenty (20) years; another penalty of arresto mayor
for the crime of frustrated murder against Emily Mendez-Castro; and, murder on
two (2) counts committed individually against the spouses Herminigildo and
Magdalena Mendez for which the accused was
meted the supreme penalty of death for each count.[3]
In finding the accused
Rolly Pagador guilty as charged, the trial court said -
In short, the accused would want to foist before this (Honorable) Court the justifying circumstance of killing by way of self-defense, availing of Art. 11, Par. 1, (RPC) x x x x
What the Court cannot understand was, the insistence of the accused to enter the room of Nenita since they are (sic) merely sweethearts. Assuming arguendo that the deceased blocked his way when he persisted to enter Nenita’s room, this does (sic) not constitute unlawful aggression on the part of the deceased as the latter had the perfect right to allow or not the entry of persons in his house; that if there was unlawful aggression, it was not the deceased who committed the unlawful aggression, but the accused x x x x
If it is true that the accused stabbed the deceased in order to
defend himself, it defies reasons why the accused have (sic) to stab the
deceased several times inflicting wounds on the chest, left shoulder, arm,
nape, infra-scapular region x x x x[4]
On automatic review,
accused-appellant laments the failure of the trial court to give weight to his
plea of self-defense in the light of his unrebutted testimony that established
the elements of this justifying circumstance.
In support of his contention, he insists that the following facts have
been sufficiently established: (a)
Although not yet married to Nenita, he had already been going to their house,
and often slept there; (b) If he had a bolo and the intention to kill the
deceased spouses, he would have right then and there, at the ground floor of
the two-storey house, first killed Herminigildo Mendez, who met him at the door.
The fact is undisputed that
Herminigildo died inside his own bedroom where his wife and youngest daughter
Shirley were sleeping; (c) It was the deceased Herminigildo who was in fact the
aggressor when he struck him with a bolo but accidentally hit his own wife;
and, (d) Even more enraged, the deceased Herminigildo assaulted him more
aggressively leaving him with no other choice but to disable him with the
deceased’s own weapon.
We do not agree. In light of the established evidence,
accused-appellant’s insistence on his incredible story is like forcing a square
peg into a round hole. We are
confounded how he could possibly invoke self-defense in view of the contrary
findings of the medico-legal officers and the credible testimonies of the
prosecution witnesses.
We do not believe
accused-appellant’s claim that Herminigildo was killed when he overpowered and
hacked him (Herminigildo) with his own bolo during their fatal encounter. The multiplicity and nature of the injuries
inflicted on the deceased belie his claim.
Herminigildo suffered stab wounds on the chest, left shoulder, arm,
nape, and other portions of his body while Rolly emerged unscathed. He suffered no lacerations or even abrasions
despite his supposed vicious encounters not only with the armed Herminigildo
but also with four (4) enraged women. A
plea of self-defense cannot be
justifiably appreciated where it is not only uncorroborated by independent and
competent evidence, but also extremely doubtful by itself.[5]
Self-defense as a
justifying circumstance must fail where unlawful aggression on the part of the
person injured or killed was not properly established. According to accused-appellant, when Herminigildo
Mendez barged into the room and accidentally struck his wife with a bolo,
accused-appellant after a brief scuffle took possession of the weapon and
hacked the deceased. At this point, it
cannot be claimed that unlawful aggression existed. Granting that unlawful aggression initially existed, the same
ceased as soon as the danger on the life and limb of accused-appellant vanished
when he wrested the bladed weapon from the deceased.
Accused-appellant’s
testimony that Magdalena was accidentally boloed by her husband hitting her on
the back is adverse to the testimonies of the four (4) prosecution witnesses
where they said that accused-appellant
repeatedly stabbed their mother at the back.
The autopsy report showing that the deceased Magdalena Mendez sustained
several hacking wounds could not in any way be characterized as
accidental. Her wounds were more
indicative of a deliberate and resolute attempt by the perpetrator to snuff out
her life. The nature and number of
wounds are constantly and unremittingly considered important indicia
which disprove the plea of self-defense.[6]
Accused-appellant now
bewails his conviction for triple frustrated murder notwithstanding the absence
of any clear showing of any intent on his part to kill the three (3) private
offended parties. He does not deny that
he hurt Emily and Rosalinda but their injuries were not fatal. Intent to kill was not in his heart. As for Shirley, he emphatically stated that
he never laid a hand on her. As far as
he was concerned, Shirley was wounded when he and Herminigildo struggled for
the possession of the bolo and fought each other to death.
The pivotal issue is to
determine whether the court a quo correctly convicted accused-appellant
of three (3) counts of frustrated murder.
Let us examine the factual backdrop of each case.
As regards Rosalinda, we
gather from her testimony that when she rushed out of her parent’s room,
accused-appellant stood up and chased her.
Overtaking her, accused-appellant pulled her hair back which caused her
to stumble. He sat on her stomach and
tried to hack her on the face but she gripped
the bolo with her two (2) hands. But
her assailant pulled the bolo from her hands and hit her successively on the
right ear and other parts of her body.
If only to stop the relentless assault, Rosalinda pretended to be
dead. Before finally abandoning his
quarry, Rolly swung the bolo for the last time and hit her on the thigh. Going by the evidence for the prosecution,
we agree with the finding of the court a quo that accused-appellant is
guilty of frustrated murder against Rosalinda Mendez as charged.[7] Accused-appellant had already performed all the acts
of execution which tended to produce the death of Rosalinda but failed to cause
her death by reason independent of his own free will. We observe that when the perpetrator stood up and left the crime
scene it was on the belief that he had consummated his heinous act, not
suspecting that Rosalinda was merely feigning death. In other words, the subjective phase had already been passed. On this point, the ruling in People v.
Eduave is appropriate - [8]
The subjective phase is that portion of the acts constituting the crime included between the act which begins the consummation of the crime and the last act performed by the offender which, with the prior acts, should result in the consummated crime. From the 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 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.
With respect to Shirley
and Emily, we are of the opinion that the court a quo incorrectly
convicted accused-appellant of frustrated murder in both cases.[9] Prosecution
witnesses Josephine and Rosalinda Mendez testified that when they entered the
room of their parents, they saw accused-appellent Rolly Pagador stabbing their
mother Magdalena, while Shirley who was lying on the lap of her mother was
holding her bleeding stomach. Both
witnesses disaffirmed having seen the person responsible for the injuries
suffered by Shirley although they were certain it was accused-appellant as
there was no other stranger in the house swinging a bolo and who could have
done it.
The principal and
essential element of attempted or frustrated homicide, or murder, is the intent
on the part of the assailant to take the life of the person attacked. Such intent must be proved in a clear and
evident manner to exclude every possible doubt as to the homicidal intent of
the aggressor. Although we can safely
assume that the injuries sustained by Shirley were inflicted by
accused-appellant, the factual environment of the case is inconclusive as to
whether he was impelled to injure Shirley purposely to kill her. Even Shirley stated that she was awakened
when someone struck her and she felt excruciating pain in her stomach. In short, no one except probably
accused-appellant could shed light on the circumstances which led to the
wounding of Shirley, but this notwithstanding, 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.[10] When such intent is lacking but wounds were
inflicted, the crime is not frustrated murder but physical injuries only
- less serious physical
injuries in the
present case considering the medico-legal’s expert opinion that the
wounds sustained by Shirley would require medical attendance of more than two
weeks or more than fourteen (14) days.[11]
In the same vein, we
cannot also conclude with certainty that the injuries inflicted on Emily were
the result of the murderous intent of accused-appellant. Emily testified that as she approached her
mother, accused-appellant swung his bolo, cutting her left index finger and
lacerating her left ring finger.
Accused-appellant did not pursue
her as she ran out of the room and jumped out of the window. Apparently, his purpose was merely to
drive away the four (4) sisters and dissuade them from attacking him. Thus, in evaluating the circumstances of the
case, we fail to find any trace of intent or inclination on the part of
accused-appellant to kill Emily ever mindful that in criminal cases there is no
room for conjectures as the quantum of proof required must be beyond reasonable
doubt. From the cold facts of the case,
the crime committed against Emily was not frustrated murder but only serious
physical injuries.
We are quite perplexed as
to how the lower court arrived at the "appropriate" penalties
considering that it never discussed the modifying circumstances. The answer is left for us to discover. We therefore reiterate that judges must
strive to be more thorough in crafting their decisions always conscious of the
constitutional injunction that decisions must state the facts and the law upon
which they are based. This assumes
infinite significance in the present case given the gravity of the offenses
involved.
As regards the modifying
circumstances, we find that while the Decision can be sustained insofar as the
killing of Herminigildo Mendez could not be an act of self-defense, its
conclusion as to the existence of a qualifying circumstance, presumably
treachery, raises a doubt not altogether fanciful.[12] Treachery as a qualifying circumstance may not be
deduced from mere presumptions. The
fact that accused-appellant employed ways and means in the execution of the
crime tending directly and especially to ensure it must be proved with
convincing evidence. Treachery cannot
be appreciated against accused-appellant because there is no showing whatsoever
that he adopted a mode of attack to ensure his safety from any retaliatory act
on the part of the offended party. It
was established that when the prosecution witnesses entered the room of their
parents, their father Herminigildo was already lying on the floor bloodied and
lifeless. In short no one saw
the actual killing. In the absence of
any witness, the manner and mode of attack employed by accused-appellant could
not be established with certitude. For
this, the killing of Herminigildo Mendez should only be considered as homicide,
not murder.[13]
We cannot however
similarly conclude with respect to the killing of Magdalena Mendez. Evidence adduced by the prosecution clearly
showed that accused-appellant repeatedly stabbed the unarmed victim who was all
the time shielding and protecting her wounded child Shirley. The defenseless victim could not possibly
put up any retaliatory or defensive measure against the onslaught of the
attacker’s fury. In view hereof,
treachery was properly appreciated and the killing was correctly classified as
murder.
Incidentally, the
Information in Crim. Case No. 3285-A alleges treachery, evident premeditation
and nighttime. Technically, we cannot
appreciate nighttime since the same is absorbed by treachery. Neither can we justify any finding of
evident premeditation in the absence of proof that accused-appellant had clung
to a determination to eliminate Magdalena Mendez. Therefore, it cannot be said that there was sufficient lapse of
time between the determination and the killing to allow accused-appellant to
overcome the resolution of his will had he desired to hearken to its
warnings. Thus the murder of Magdalena
was not attended by any other modifying circumstance.
As regards the killing of
Herminigildo Mendez, a victim of homicide, the penalty under Art. 249 of The
Revised Penal Code is reclusion temporal, the range of which is
twelve (12) years and one (1) day to twenty (20) years. Considering the presence of the aggravating
circumstance of nighttime[14] and applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law,
the maximum of the imposable penalty shall be taken from the maximum period of reclusion
temporal, which is seventeen (17)
years four (4) months and one (1) day to twenty (20) years, while the minimum
shall be taken from the penalty next lower in degree, which is prision
mayor, the range of which is six (6) years and one (1) day to twelve (12)
years, in any of its periods.
The penalty for murder
under Art. 248 of The Revised Penal Code is reclusion perpetua to
death. Parenthetically, Art. 63, 2nd
par., provides that "in all cases
in which the law prescribes a penalty composed of two (2) indivisible penalties
the following rules shall be observed in the application thereof: x x x x 2. (W)hen there are neither
mitigating nor aggravating circumstances in the commission of the deed, the lesser penalty shall be
applied."[15] Thus, the imposable penalty being composed of two
(2) indivisible penalties, and there being no modifying circumstance, the
lesser penalty of reclusion perpetua shall be imposed on
accused-appellant for the killing of Magdalena Mendez.
The less serious physical
injuries suffered by Shirley Mendez is defined under Art. 265 of The Revised
Penal Code which provides that
"(A)ny person who inflicts upon another physical injuries not
described as serious physical injuries but which shall incapacitate the
offended party for labor for ten (10) days or more, or shall require medical
attendance for the same period, shall be guilty of less serious physical
injuries and shall suffer the penalty of arresto mayor."
As regards the frustrated
murder of Rosalinda Mendez, the penalty one (1) degree lower than reclusion
perpetua to death, which is reclusion
temporal, shall be imposed pursuant to Art. 250 of The Revised Penal
Code in relation to Art. 50 thereof.
In the absence of any modifying circumstance,[16] the maximum penalty to be imposed shall be taken
from the medium period of the imposable penalty, which is reclusion temporal
medium, while the minimum shall be taken from the penalty next lower in degree,
which is prision mayor in any of its periods.
The offense for the
physical injuries inflicted on Emily Mendez is properly classified as serious
physical injuries under Art. 263 of The Revised Penal Code which states
that “(A)ny person who shall wound,
beat, or assault
another shall be
guilty of serious physical injuries,” and par. 3
thereof provides that “the penalty of prision
correccional in its minimum and medium periods, if in consequence the
person injured shall have become deformed, or shall have lost any part of his
body, or shall have lost the use thereof.”
Complaining witness Emily Mendez lost her left index finger by
amputation as a result of the crime, and appreciating treachery as an
aggravating circumstance,[17] evident
premeditation although alleged but not having been proved, the imposable
penalty shall be prision correccional
in its minimum and medium periods the range of which is six (6) months
and one (1) day to four (4) years and two (2) months. Applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law, the
minimum shall be taken from the minimum of the imposable penalty, which is six
(6) months and one (1) day to one (1) year eight (8) months and twenty (20)
days, and the maximum shall be taken from its medium period, which is one (1)
year, eight (8) months and twenty-one (21) days, to two (2) years eleven (11)
months and ten (10) days.
The real motive that
triggered the commission of such hideous crimes appears stashed somewhere in
the confused mind of accused-appellant.
Indeed, it is not unlikely that fierce jealousy, as he himself hinted,
may have unleashed his demonic, infernal frenzy. For, truly, intense love can evoke not only the most noble of
sentiments but also even the basest of man's passions. Nonetheless, motive in the instant case is
now inconsequential in view of the positive identification of accused-appellant
by the prosecution witnesses who saw and clearly demonstrated how he
perpetrated the gruesome transgressions of the law.
The complexity and
variance in the offenses committed against the five (5) members of the Mendez
family in contrast with the lower court’s sweeping conviction for murder and
frustrated murder betray a glaring disregard for the varying legal implications
and the factual peculiarities of accused-appellant’s varied criminal acts.
Judges, who are called upon to administer the law and apply it to the
facts, should be studious of the principles of the law and diligent in endeavoring to ascertain the facts. They are in the frontline
of the sacred task of dispensing
justice to all; hence, a dispassionate, assiduous and devoted discharge of their
duties is demanded of them at all times.
WHEREFORE, the Decision of the Regional Trial Court of
Alaminos, Pangasinan is MODIFIED as
follows:
1) In G.R. No. 140006
(Crim. Case No. 3284-A), accused-appellant Rolly Pagador is found guilty of Homicide
(instead of Murder as found by the trial court) and is sentenced to suffer
an indeterminate prison term of eight
(8) years four (4) months and ten (10) days of prision mayor medium as
minimum, to seventeen (17) years six (6) months and twenty (20) days of reclusion
temporal maximum, as maximum, and to pay the heirs of Herminigildo Mendez
the amounts of P50,000.00 as
civil indemnity and another P50,000.00 for moral damages;
2) In G.R. No. 140007
(Crim. Case No. 3285-A), accused-appellant is found guilty of Murder (as
likewise found by the trial court) and is sentenced to suffer the penalty of reclusion
perpetua and to pay the heirs of Magdalena Mendez the amounts of P50,000.00
as civil indemnity and another P50,000.00 for moral damages;
3) In G.R. No. 140008
(Crim. Case No. 3286-A), accused-appellant is found guilty of Less Serious Physical Injuries (instead
of Frustrated Murder as found by the trial court) and is sentenced to suffer a
straight prison term of four (4) months
and ten (10) days of arresto mayor maximum;
4) In G.R. No. 140009
(Crim. Case No. 3287-A), accused-appellant is found guilty of Frustrated
Murder and is sentenced to an indeterminate prison term of
eight (8) years four (4)
months and ten (10) days of prision mayor medium as minimum, to
sixteen (16) years two (2) months and ten (10) days of reclusion temporal
medium as maximum; and
5) In G.R. No. 140010 (Crim. Case No. 3288-A,
or CA-G.R. CR No. 23485, erroneously
numbered G.R. No. 143934), accused-appellant is found guilty of Serious
Physical Injuries (instead of Frustrated Murder as found by the trial
court) and is sentenced to an
indeterminate prison term of ten (10)
months and twenty (20) days of the minimum period of prision correccional
minimum and medium, as minimum, to one (1) year ten (10) months and twenty (20)
days of the medium period of prision correccional minimum and medium, as
maximum.
Consequently, G.R. No.
143934, which came from the Court of Appeals as CA-G.R. CR No. 23485 after it
was erroneously elevated thereto, is now disregarded it being a mere
duplication of G.R. No. 140010. Costs de
oficio.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J.,
Melo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing, Pardo, Buena,
Gonzaga-Reyes, Ynares-Santiago, De Leon, Jr., and Sandoval-Gutierrez,
JJ., concur.
[1] Crim.
Cases Nos. 3284-A and 3285-A, respectively.
[2] Crim.
Cases Nos. 3286-A, 3287-A and 3288-A, respectively.
[3] Decision
by Judge Jules A. Mejia, RTC-Br. 54, Alaminos, Pangasinan.
[4] Rollo,
pp. 57-58.
[5] People
v. De la Cruz, G.R. Nos. 109619-23, 26 June 1998, 291 SCRA 164.
[6] People
v. Cañete, G.R. No. 120495, 12 March 1998, 287 SCRA 490.
[7] Crim.
Case No. 3287-A.
[8] People
v. Eduave, 36 Phil. 209 (1917).
[9] Crim.
Cases Nos. 3286-A and 3288-A, respectively.
[10] People
v. Pablo Villanueva, 51 Phil. 488 (1928).
[11] Original
Records; Exhibit “H.”
[12] Rollo,
p. 36. In Crim. Case No. 3284-A the
following aggravating circumstances were alleged: treachery, nighttime and
evident premeditation.
[13] People
v. Nagum, G.R. No. 134003, 19 January 2000, People v. Garcia, No.
L-30449, 31 October 1979, 94 SCRA 14, People v. Macaso, No. L-30489, 30
June 1975, 64 SCRA 659, People v. Samonte, No. L-31225, 11 June 1975, 64
SCRA 319, US v. Catigbac, 4 Phil. 259 (1905).
[14] In
Crim. Case No. 3284-A three (3) aggravating circumstances were likewise alleged
but since treachery and evident premeditation were not established, only nighttime
was left to be considered.
[15] We
recall that the Information in Crim. Case No. 3285-A alleged only treachery,
nighttime, and evident premeditation. As the crime of murder was already
qualified by treachery which absorbed nighttime, and evident premeditation was
not established, no aggravating circumstance could properly be appreciated,
hence the lesser penalty.
[16]
Nocturnity cannot be properly appreciated as it is already absorbed by
treachery.
[17] In
Crim. Case No. 3288-A treachery and evident premeditation were alleged in the
Information. Treachery could be properly taken into account in imposing the
penalty but not evident premeditation as this was not proven.