EN BANC
[G.R. Nos. 134566-67. January 22, 2001]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. GONYETO FRANCISCO y CAPELLAN, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:
For automatic review is
the June 1, 1998 Decision[1] of the Regional Trial Court of Cavite City,
Branch 16, imposing the supreme penalty of death on accused-appellant Gonyeto
Francisco y Capellan, in Criminal Case Nos. 248-96 and 249-96, for two counts
of rape committed against his own daughter and stepdaughter, aged thirteen (13)
and sixteen (16) years, respectively.
The informations
indicting accused-appellant state:
In Criminal Case No.
248-96:
That on or about the 23rd day of July, 1996, at Barangay Wawa
III, Municipality of Rosario, Province of Cavite, Philippines, and within the
jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused, with lewd
designs, taking advantage of superior strength and moral ascendancy over her
person being his own stepdaughter who is only 17 (sic) years of age, and by
means of force, violence and intimidation, did then and there, wilfully,
unlawfully and feloniously have sexual intercourse with her (Wennie C.
Merioles) against her will and consent.
CONTRARY TO LAW.[2]
In Criminal Case No. 249-96:
That on or about the 19th day of July, 1996, at Barangay Wawa
III, Municipality of Rosario, Province of Cavite, Philippines, and within the
jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused, with lewd
designs, taking advantage of superior strength and moral ascendancy over her
person being his own daughter who is only 13 years of age, and by means of
force, violence and intimidation, did then and there, wilfully, unlawfully and
feloniously have sexual intercourse with her (Rachelle Francisco y Calitis)
against her will and consent.
CONTRARY TO LAW.[3]
Upon arraignment on
September 11, 1996, with the assistance of counsel de officio,
accused-appellant pleaded not guilty to both charges.[4] Thereafter, the cases were consolidated and
tried jointly, with the prosecution presenting Dra. Ida P. Daniel, Dr. Ronaldo
B. Mendez, and private complainants Winnie C. Merioles and Rachelle C.
Francisco as witnesses.
On the other hand,
accused-appellant and Julius Roquin, administrative assistant of Cities
Construction, testified for the defense.
The prosecution’s version
of the facts are synthesized by the Solicitor General in the Appellee’s Brief,
thus -
Facts Common to Criminal
Case Nos. 248-96 and 249-96
Private complainants Wennie Merioles (Criminal Case No. 248-96)
and Rachelle Francisco (Criminal Case No. 249-96) are stepsisters. Their mother, Nicomedes Francisco, is
married to appellant Gonyeto Francisco (p. 12, tsn, September 18, 1997) who is
the father of Rachelle. They live in a
two-storey house situated in Wawa II (sic), Little Baguio, Rosario,
Cavite. Appellant was employed as
driver with the Cities Corporation at the Export Processing Zone, Rosario,
Cavite.
Criminal Case No. 248-96
On July 23, 1996, Wennie Merioles did not attend school because
of flood (p. 16, tsn, October 20, 1996).
Wennie was then 16 years old and in high school. Appellant, Wennie’s stepfather, also stayed
home because he was suffering from rheumatism (p.18, tsn, ibid.) Nicomedes
Francisco, who alternatively worked as a laundry woman if not engaged in
selling fish, had gone out of their house by 8:00 A.M. (pp. 13-14, tsn, ibid)
At around 9:00 A.M., appellant summoned Wennie to the room
downstairs (pp. 17-20, tsn, ibid.). When she got there, appellant told her that
he wanted to have sex with her (p. 22, tsn, ibid.) At first, Wennie refused but
when appellant threatened to kill her and warned her, “sige, pag hindi ka
pumayag, makakatikim ka sa akin,” she acceded to his request. Appellant then proceeded to ravish her. (pp.
4-5, 27-28, tsn, ibid.)
What happened on July 23, 1996 was but the last of the countless
sexual molestations endured by Wennie.
The first occurred when she was only 11 years old. (p. 34., tsn, ibid.)
Criminal Case No. 249-96
On July 19, 1996, Rachelle Francisco, thirteen (13) years old,
was instructed by her mother to stay home to attend to her younger brother and
sister aged 3 1/2 and 5 years old (p.9, tsn, November 27, 1996). Sometime in the afternoon (p.11, tsn, ibid),
when Rachelle’s mother was no longer around, appellant told her younger brother
and sister to get out of the house.
Thereafter, he summoned Rachelle upstairs and ordered her to undress. When Rachelle refused, he told her,
“maghuhubad ka o hindi.” Still, Rachelle chose not to undress. Appellant reacted by saying, “hanggang
mamaya tatamaan ka sa akin”. Rachelle
succumbed to the intimidation and acceded by removing her clothes (upper). Thereafter, appellant started to kiss her
and fondle her breast. Appellant caused
her to lie down. Rachelle removed her
skirt and panty. When she was naked,
appellant undressed himself and inserted his penis into her vagina but only
penetrated her a little as she told him, “nasasaktan ako.” Rachelle bore the
ordeal for five (5) minutes. (pp. 39-40, tsn, ibid.)
Just like her stepsister Wennie, Rachelle was regularly abused
sexually by appellant. She could not
remember the first time appellant molested her. (p.37, tsn, ibid.).[5]
On July 29, 1996, private
complainants mustered enough courage to reveal their traumatic experience to
their mother[6] who lost no time in accompanying them to the
National Bureau of Investigation for medical examination. The medico-legal findings of Dr. Rolando B.
Mendez on private complainant Wennie C. Merioles yielded the following results:
GENITAL EXAMINATION:
Pubic hair, fully grown moderate. Labia majora and Labia minora, gaping. Fourchette, lax.
Vestibule pinkish, smooth. Hymen
original annular, moderately tall, moderately thick, with old healed,
superficial lacerations at 7 and 8 o’clock positions corresponding to the face
of a watch, edges of which are rounded and non coaptable. Hymenal orifice, admits a tube 2.5 cm in
diameter. Vaginal walls, light,
Rugosities (sic), prominent.
CONCLUSIONS:
1. No evident sign of extragenital physical
injuries noted on the body of the subject at the time of examination.
2. Old healed superficial
hymenal lacerations, present.[7]
As to private complainant
Rachelle C. Francisco, the result of the examination by Dra. Ida P. Daniel
indicates that:
GENITAL EXAMINATION:
Pubic hair, fine, short, scanty. Labia majora, coaptated.
Labia minora, gaping.
Fourchette, lax. Vestibular
mucosa, pinkish. Hymen, admits a tube
2.5 cms., in diameter with moderate resistance. Vaginal walls, lax.
Rugosities, shallow.
CONCLUSIONS:
1. No evident sign of extragenital physical
injuries noted on the body of the subject at the time of examination.
2. Hymen, intact, distensible and its orifice
wide (2.5 cms in diameter) to allow complete penetration by an average sized
adult Filipino male organ in full erection without producing genital injury.[8]
Accused-appellant on the
other hand, testified that he is married to Nicomedes C. Francisco, mother of
private complainants. Asked if he
contracted any other marriage prior to that with Nicomedes, he said that he had
a “first wife” by the name of Pacita, who is now living in the province.[9]
Insisting on his
innocence, accused-appellant interposed the defense of denial and alibi. He posited that on July 19 and 23, 1996,
when the rape complained of were allegedly committed, he was at work. He testified that as a driver of
Construction Cities, he worked continuously from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., and
then from 5:30 p.m. to 8:00 p.m., while waiting for the evening shift.[10] To bolster his claim, accused-appellant
presented Julius Roquin, administrative assistant of Cities Construction who
declared that per the daily time record, accused-appellant worked in the
company from July 12 to July 29, 1996; and that on July 23, 1996, he reported
for work from 7:00 am to 5:00 p.m.[11]
On June 1, 1998, after
finding the version of the prosecution credible, the trial court rendered the
judgment of conviction under review.
The dispositive portion thereof reads:
WHEREFORE, finding the accused Gonyeto Francisco y Capellan
GUILTY beyond reasonable doubt as principal, the Court hereby imposes upon him:
1. For the crime of rape,
in Criminal Case No. 248-96, committed by him against his stepdaughter Wennie
Merioles, which relationship he never disclaimed, the absolute penalty of DEATH
by lethal injection, and to indemnify her the sums of P50,000.00 and P20,000.00,
as moral and exemplary damages;
2. For the crime of rape,
in Criminal Case No. 249-96, committed by him against his daughter, Rachelle
Francisco, the absolute penalty of DEATH by lethal injection, and to indemnify
her the sums of P50,000.00 and P20,000.00, as moral and exemplary
damages.
Costs against the accused.
SO ORDERED.[12]
In his Brief,
accused-appellant, through the Public Attorney’s Office, contends that:
I
THE COURT A QUO ERRED IN DISREGARDING THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT’S ALIBI NOTWITHSTANDING THE EVIDENCE IN SUPPORT THEREOF.
II
THE COURT A QUO ERRED IN CONVICTING THE ACCUSED NOTWITHSTANDING THE FAILURE OF THE PROSECUTION TO PROVE HIS GUILT BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT.
III
THE COURT A QUO
ERRED IN METING OUT THE DEATH PENALTY NOTWITHSTANDING THE FAILURE OF THE
PROSECUTION TO ESTABLISH THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE PRIVATE COMPLAINANT AND
THE ACCUSED.[13]
In an appeal from a
judgment of conviction in rape cases, the issue boils down, almost invariably,
to the credibility of the victim and, just as often, the Court is constrained
to rely on the observations given by the trial court, with its vantage, not
equally enjoyed by the appellate court, during the reception of testimony. It has thus since become doctrinal that the
evaluation of testimonial evidence by the trial court is accorded great respect
precisely for its chance to observe first hand the demeanor on the stand of the
witness, a matter which is important in determining whether what has been said
should be taken to be the truth or falsehood[14]
In the case at bar, the
trial court gave full faith and credit to the testimony of private
complainants, thus -
x x x During their
respective testimonies both of them were terse and direct in the answers, even
on cross-examination and clarificatory questioning, which would not be the case
if their testimonies were conjured or rehearsed, for then such would be adorned
by flowery details. The Court takes the
conciseness of their answer and the straightforward manner in which they were
given as mirrors of the gruesome experience they have suffered in the hands of
accused, the memories of which, provoked by direct and often provocative
questioning, they excised to brevity in an attempt to obscure it from their
young minds. Their narrations of their
respective harrowing experience were too rich and vivid in details, that they
could not be easily set aside and branded as mere fabrications.
It has not also escaped the Court’s attention that when both
complainants were asked to identify the person of the accused, both boldly
confronted the accused and pointed to him as their defiler. In the case of Wennie, she looked directly
at accused, pointed to him and resonantly said, “siya ho”, as if daring him to
deny her claim as he bowed his head in silence. While Rachelle may not have been as emphatic, she was equally
firm and forthright in identifying him.
The manner by which Wennie and Rachelle have given evidence
against the accused has left the Court with no reason to doubt the truth and
candor of their testimonies.[15]
Verily, the trial court
is in a better position to determine if the victim is telling the truth or
merely narrating a concocted tale, and to weigh conflicting testimonies because
the trial court, heard the witnesses themselves, observed their deportment and
manner of testifying, and had full access to vital aids: e.g., the furtive glance, the blush
of conscious shame, the hesitation, the sincere or flippant or sneering tone,
the heat, the calmness, the yawn, the sigh, the candor or lack of it, the scant
or full realization of the solemnity of the oath, the carriage and mien.[16]
Moreover, a thorough and
careful review of the transcript of stenographic notes discloses that the
testimonies of private complainants could indeed come only from those who truly
suffered the ordeal. It is simply improbable
that private complainants who are of tender ages, innocent and guileless, would
brazenly impute a crime so serious as rape to a man, they consider their
father/stepfather, if it were not true.[17] Their disclosure that they had been raped,
coupled with their voluntary submission to medical examination, and willingness
to undergo public trial where they could be compelled to give out the details
of the assault against their dignity, cannot be easily dismissed as mere
concoction.[18]
In a desperate attempt to
free himself from liability, accused-appellant contends that the accusations
hurled against him were all fabricated by private complainants’ mother,
Nicomedes C. Francisco. According to
him, he sired a son by another woman and this allegedly angered Nicomedes,
prompting her to retaliate by instigating the private complainants to file a
rape case against him.[19]
The contentions are
without merit. They are simply too
improbable to merit any consideration.
It is hard to believe that Nicomedes would expose her own daughters to
ridicule. Indeed, no mother would
sacrifice her own daughters, children of tender years, and subject them to the
rigors and humiliation of a public trial for rape, if she were not motivated by
an honest desire to have her daughters’ transgressor punished accordingly.[20]
So also, we find no merit
in the claim of accused-appellant that the sexual intercourse between him and
the private complainants, assuming it indeed took place, was consensual and
voluntary on the part of the latter.
The records reveal that private complainant Wennie C. Merioles refused
to accede to accused-appellant’s sexual advances, and it was only when accused-appellant
threatened to kill her and warned her, “sige, pag hindi ka pumayag,
makakatikim ka sa akin,” that she was finally cowed into submission. In the same manner, accused-appellant
threatened private complainant Rachelle C. Francisco that, “hanggang mamaya
tatamaan ka sa akin,” before she was forced to give in to the despicable
acts of accused-appellant.
Furthermore, and more
importantly, actual force or intimidation need not even be employed for rape to
be committed, as in the present case, where the over powering influence of
accused-appellant who is private complainants’ father and stepfather, suffices.[21] Undoubtedly, private complainants’ tender
age and accused-appellant’s custodial control and domination over them rendered
the former so meek and subservient to the lecherous advances of the latter.
Settled is the rule that
in a rape committed by a father/stepfather against his own
daughter/stepdaughter, the former’s moral ascendancy and influence over the
latter substitutes for violence and intimidation. That ascendancy or influence necessarily flows from the
father/stepfather’s parental authority, which the Constitution and the laws
recognize, support and enhance, as well as from the children’s duty to obey and
observe reverence and respect towards their parents. Such reverence and respect are deeply ingrained in the minds of
Filipino children and are recognized by law.
Abuse of both by a father/stepfather can subjugate his
daughter/stepdaughter’s will, thereby forcing her to do whatever he wants.[22]
Then too, there is no
ground to give credence to the defense of denial and alibi interposed by
accused-appellant. These defenses are
inherently weak and cannot prevail over a positive identification.[23] It is elementary that for alibi to prosper,
the accused must not only prove his presence at another place at the time of
the commission of the offense, but he must also demonstrate that it would be
physically impossible for him to be at the locus criminis at the time of
the commission of the crime.[24]
In the case at bar,
pertinent records show that it was not physically impossible for
accused-appellant to be at the scene of the crime, which is merely an hour’s
walk from his place of work. Using a
tricycle, which is the common mode of transportation in the locality of
Rosario, the three (3) kilometer distance from the house of accused-appellant
and his place of work could be traversed in less than an hour.
In the same vein, the
daily time record of accused-appellant, indicating that he was at work on those
days that the crime was committed, cannot exculpate him from liability. These daily time records were not even
certified by accused-appellant as true and correct; neither were they approved
by the time keeper. The testimony of
Julius Roquin, who keeps the daily time record of the employees in the company where accused-appellant used to work, would
likewise be of no help to him. As
admitted by Julius Roquin, he did not see if accused-appellant actually
reported for work on the dates material to this case.
Clearly, the trial court
did not err in disregarding the defenses put up by accused appellant. Not only did accused-appellant fail to
discharge the burden of proving the impossibility of his presence at the scene
of the crime at the time of the commission thereof, he was also positively
identified by the private complainants as the person who raped them.
In meting out the supreme
penalty of death, the trial court applied Article 335, of the Revised Penal
Code, as amended by Republic Act No. 7659.
Pertinent portion thereof states that –
x x x x x x x
x x
The death penalty shall also be imposed if the crime of rape is
committed with any of the following attendant circumstances:
1. When the victim is
under eighteen (18) years of age and the offender is a parent, ascendant,
step-parent, guardian, relative by consanguinity or affinity within the third
civil degree, or the common-law spouse of the parent of the victim;
x x x x x x x
x x.
As consistently held by
this Court, the seven circumstances (including minority and relationship) added
by R.A. 7659 to Article 335 of the Revised Penal Code, are special qualifying
circumstances, the presence of any of which takes the case out of the purview
of simple rape and effectively qualifies the crime to one punishable by death.[25] Corollary thereto, the Court, in People
v. Javier,[26] stressed that in a criminal prosecution
especially of cases involving the extreme penalty of death, nothing but proof
beyond reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the crime
with which the accused is charged must be established by the prosecution in
order for said penalty to be upheld.
Therefore, to warrant the imposition of the supreme penalty of death in
the instant case, the qualifying circumstances of minority and relationship
must be proved with equal certainty and clearness as the crime itself.
Applying the foregoing
provision and legal precepts in point, the Court is left with no choice but to
reduce the penalty of accused-appellant to reclusion perpetua. While it is true that the age of private
complainants were specifically alleged in the information in Criminal Case Nos.
248-96 and 249-96, no birth certificate was presented by the prosecution to
prove beyond reasonable doubt the age of private complainants.
Thus, in People v.
Bawang,[27] the Court said –
x x x However, while the offended party averred that she was
fourteen years old at the time, she presented no birth certificate to
substantiate the averment. It has been
held -
“At all events, it is the burden of the prosecution to prove
with certainty the fact that the victim was below 18 when the rape was
committed in order to justify the imposition of the death penalty. The record of the case is bereft of any
independent evidence, such as the victim’s duly certified Certificate of Live
Birth, accurately showing private complainant’s age. The fact that accused-appellant Manuel has not denied the
allegation in the complaint that Maricel was 16 years old when the crime was
committed cannot make up for the failure of the prosecution to discharge its
burden in this regard. Because of this
lapse, as well as the corresponding failure of the trial court to make a
categorical finding as to the minority of the victim, we hold that the
qualifying circumstance of minority under Republic Act No. 7659 cannot be appreciated in this case,
and accordingly the death penalty cannot be imposed.”
Finally, the qualifying
circumstance of relationship as to private complainant, Wennie Merioles in
Criminal Case No. 248-96, was similarly not established beyond any scintilla of
doubt. The testimony of
accused-appellant that he is married to Nicomedes Francisco, mother of Wennie
is not sufficient, considering that accused-appellant also testified that
before Nicomedes, he had a “first wife” by the name of Pacita, who now lives in
the province. The doubt could have been
easily resolved by the presentation of a marriage certificate. However, the prosecution failed to so
present a marriage certificate to prove the fact of marriage between
accused-appellant and Nicomedes Francisco.
Hence, the relationship of accused-appellant to private complainant
Wennie Merioles as her step-father, which presupposes a valid marriage[28] between accused-appellant and private complainant’s
mother, was not proven beyond reasonable doubt by the prosecution. Accordingly, the qualifying circumstance of
relationship in Criminal Case No. 248-96 could likewise not raise the penalty
of rape to death.
In light of the
foregoing, accused-appellant could only be held liable for simple rape, in both
cases, and sentenced to the penalty of reclusion perpetua for each
count.
Pursuant to Article 100[29] of the Revised Penal Code, and in line with
prevailing jurisprudence,[30] accused-appellant should be held liable to
pay the amount of P50,000.00 as indemnity ex delicto in addition
to the P50,000.00 as moral damages and P20,000.00 as exemplary
damages awarded by the court a quo.
WHEREFORE, the Decision of the Regional Trial Court of
Cavite City, Branch 16, in Criminal Case Nos. 248-96 and 249-96, finding
accused-appellant Gonyeto Francisco y Capellan guilty beyond reasonable doubt
of the crime of rape on two counts is AFFIRMED, with the MODIFICATION that
accused-appellant is sentenced to suffer the penalty of RECLUSION PERPETUA in
Criminal Case Nos. 248-96 and 249-96; and to pay private complainants Wennie C.
Merioles and Rachelle C. Francisco the sum of P50,000.00, or a total of P100,000.00,
by way of civil indemnity; P50,000.00, or a total of P100,000.00,
as moral damages; and P20,000.00, or a total of P40,000.00, as exemplary
damages. Costs against
accused-appellant.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J.,
Bellosillo, Melo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing, Pardo,
Buena, Gonzaga-Reyes, De Leon, Jr., and
Sandoval-Gutierrez, JJ., concur.
[1] Penned by Judge Manuel A. Mayo.
[2] Rollo, pp. 19-20.
[3] Rollo, p. 20.
[4] Original Records, pp. 13-14.
[5] Rollo, pp. 128-131.
[6] TSN, October 30, 1996, p. 30.
[7] Record, Criminal Case No. 248-96, p. 5.
[8] Record, Criminal Case No. 249-96, p. 5.
[9] TSN, September 18, 1997, pp. 12 and 18.
[10] TSN, July 31, 1997, pp. 12-13.
[11] TSN, October 16, 1997, pp. 5-6.
[12] Rollo, p. 45.
[13] Rollo, pp. 59-60.
[14] People v. Lopez, 302 SCRA 669, 675
(1999); citing People v. Atuel, 261 SCRA 339 (1996).
[15] Rollo, pp. 31-33.
[16] People v. Sagucio, 277 SCRA 183,
188-189 (1997); citing People v. Excija, 258 SCRA 424 (1996).
[17] People v. Molas, 286 SCRA 684, 691
(1998); citing People v. Sagaral, 267 SCRA 671 (1997).
[18] Ibid., p. 690, citing People v.
Cabillan, 267 SCRA 258 (1997); People v. Gaban, 262 SCRA 593 (1996); and People v. Derpo, 168 SCRA
447 (1988).
[19] TSN, September 18, 1997, p. 6.
[20] People v. Tumala, Jr., 284 SCRA 436,
443 (1998).
[21] People v. Robles, 170 SCRA 557, 561
(1989); citing People v. Erardo, 127 SCRA 250 (1984).
[22] People v. Matrimonio, 215 SCRA 613,
631 (1992); citing People v. Erardo, 127 SCRA 250 (1984); People v.
Lucas, 181 SCRA 316 (1990); People v. Caballes, 199 SCRA 152 (1991);
Article 311, Civil Code and Article 211, The Family Code of the Philippines;
and People v. Robles, 170 SCRA 557, 561 (1989); citing People v.
Alcid, 135 SCRA 280 (1985).
[23] People v. Caisip, 290 SCRA 451, 456
(1998) and People v. Culala, 316 SCRA 582, 590-591 (1999); citing People
v. Lacatan, 295 SCRA 203 (1998).
[24] People v. Barellano, 319 SCRA 567, 586
(1999); citing People v. Fuertes, 296 SCRA 602 (1998) and People v.
Alcantara, 254 SCRA 384 (1996).
[25] People v. Bawang, G.R. No. 131942, October 5,
2000; citing People v. Dominador
Historillo, G.R. No. 130408, June 16, 2000 and People v. Garcia,
281 SCRA 463 (1997).
[26] 311 SCRA 122, 141 (1999).
[27] Supra.; citing People v. Cula, G.R. No.
133146, March 28, 2000.
[28] People v. Brigildo, G.R. No. 124129, January
28, 2000.
[29] Art. 100. Civil liability of a person guilty
of felony. - Every person criminally liable is also civilly liable.
[30]
People v. Gabriel Flores, G.R. No. 130713, January 20, 2000.