Evidence Batch 4
Evidence Batch 4
Evidence Batch 4
In G.R. No. 146738, petitioner raises and argues the following issues:
vs. GLORIA
MACAPAGAL-
RESOLUTION
PUNO, J.:
We find the contentions of petitioner bereft of merit.
For resolution are petitioners Motion for Reconsideration in G.R. Nos.
146710-15 and Omnibus Motion in G.R. No. 146738 of the Courts Decision of
March 2, 2001.
In G.R. Nos. 146710-15, petitioner raises the following grounds:
I. IT DISREGARDED THE CLEAR AND EXPLICIT PROVISIONS OF ART.
XI, SECTION 3 (7) OF THE CONSTITUTION AND THE SETTLED
JURISPRUDENCE THEREON.
II. IT HELD THAT PETITIONER CAN BE PROSECUTED NOW, FOR THIS
RULING WOULD VIOLATE THE DOUBLE JEOPARDY CLAUSE OF
THE CONSTITUTION, CONSIDERING THAT PETITIONER WAS
ACQUITTED IN THE IMPEACHMENT PROCEEDINGS.
III. IT HELD THAT PETITIONER IS NO LONGER ENTITLED TO
ABSOLUTE IMMUNITY FROM SUIT.
the speech of Senator Guingona by the Blue Ribbon Committee and the
Committee on Justice; (4) the investigation of the Singson expose by the
House Committee on Public Order and Security; (5) the move to impeach the
petitioner in the House of Representatives; (6) the Pastoral Letter of
Archbishop Jaime Cardinal Sin demanding petitioners resignation; (7) a
similar demand by the Catholic Bishops conference; (8) the similar demands
for petitioners resignation by former Presidents Corazon C. Aquino and Fidel
V. Ramos; (9) the resignation of respondent Arroyo as Secretary of the DSWD
and her call for petitioner to resign; (10) the resignation of the members of
petitioners Council of Senior Economic Advisers and of Secretary Mar Roxas III
from the Department of Trade and Industry; (11) the defection of then Senate
President Franklin Drilon and then Speaker of the House of Representatives
Manuel Villar and forty seven (47) representatives from petitioners Lapiang
Masang Pilipino; (12) the transmission of the Articles of Impeachment by
Speaker Villar to the Senate; (13) the unseating of Senator Drilon as Senate
President and of Representative Villar as Speaker of the House; (14) the
impeachment trial of the petitioner; (15) the testimonies of Clarissa Ocampo
and former Finance Secretary Edgardo Espiritu in the impeachment trial; (16)
the 11-10 vote of the senator-judges denying the prosecutors motion to open
the 2nd envelope which allegedly contained evidence showing that petitioner
held a P3.3 billion deposit in a secret bank account under the name of Jose
Velarde; (17) the prosecutors walkout and resignation; (18) the indefinite
postponement of the impeachment proceedings to give a chance to the
House of Representatives to resolve the issue of resignation of their
prosecutors; (19) the rally in the EDSA Shrine and its intensification in various
parts of the country; (20) the withdrawal of support of then Secretary of
National Defense Orlando Mercado and the then Chief of Staff, General
Angelo Reyes, together with the chiefs of all the armed services; (21) the
same withdrawal of support made by the then Director General of the PNP,
General Panfilo Lacson, and the major service commanders; (22) the stream
of resignations by Cabinet secretaries, undersecretaries, assistant secretaries
and bureau chiefs; (23) petitioners agreement to hold a snap election and
opening of the controversial second envelope. All these prior events are
facts which are within judicial notice by this Court. There was no
need to cite their news accounts. The reference by the Court to
certain newspapers reporting them as they happened does not make
them inadmissible evidence for being hearsay. The news account
only buttressed these facts as facts. For all his loud protestations,
petitioner has not singled out any of these facts as false.
We now come to some events of January 20, 2001 contemporaneous to
the oath taking of respondent Arroyo. We used the Angara Diary to decipher
the intent to resign on the part of the petitioner. Let it be emphasized that it
is not unusual for courts to distill a persons subjective intent from the
evidence before them. Everyday, courts ascertain intent in criminal cases, in
civil law cases involving last wills and testaments, in commercial cases
involving contracts and in other similar cases. As will be discussed below, the
use of the Angara Diary is not prohibited by the hearsay rule. Petitioner may
disagree with some of the inferences arrived at by the Court from the facts
narrated in the Diary but that does not make the Diary inadmissible as
evidence.
We did not stop with the contemporaneous events but proceeded to
examine some events posterior to the oath-taking of respondent
Evidentiary Issues
arguments. Thus, petitioner had all the opportunity to contest the use of the
Diary but unfortunately failed to do so.
Even assuming arguendo that the Angara Diary was an out of court
statement, still its use is not covered bythe hearsay rule.[6] Evidence is
called hearsay when its probative force depends, in whole or in part, on the
competency and credibility of some persons other than the witness by whom
it is sought to produce it.[7] There are three reasons for excluding hearsay
evidence: (1) absence of cross examination; (2) absence of demeanor
evidence, and (3) absence of the oath.[8] Not at all hearsay evidence,
however, is inadmissible as evidence. Over the years, a huge body of hearsay
evidence has been admitted by courts due to their relevance, trustworthiness
and necessity.[9] The emergence of these exceptions and their wide spread
acceptance is well-explained by Weinstein, Mansfield, Abrams and Berger as
follows:
xxx
On the other hand, we all make decisions in our everyday lives on the basis
of other persons accounts of what happened, and verdicts are usually
sustained and affirmed even if they are based on hearsay erroneously
admitted, or admitted because no objection was made. See Shepp v.
Uehlinger, 775 F 2d 452, 454-455 (1st Cir. 1985) (hearsay evidence alone can
support a verdict). Although volumes have been written suggesting ways to
revise the hearsay rule, no one advocates a rule that would bar all hearsay
evidence. Indeed, the decided historical trend has been to exclude
categories of highly probative statements from the definition of
hearsay (sections 2 and 3, infra), and to develop more class
exceptions to the hearsay rule (sections 4-11, infra). Furthermore,
many states have added to their rules the residual, or catch-all,
exceptions first pioneered by the Federal Rules which authorize the
admission of hearsay that does not satisfy a class exception,
provided it is adequately trustworthy and probative (section 12, infra).
Moreover, some commentators believe that the hearsay rule should
be abolished altogether instead of being loosened. See, e.g., Note, The
Theoretical Foundation of the Hearsay Rules, 93 Harv.L.Rev. 1786, 18041805, 1815 (1980) (footnotes omitted):
The Federal Rules of Evidence provide that [a]lthough relevant, evidence may
be excluded if its probative value is substantially outweighed by the danger
of unfair prejudice. Under this structure, exclusion is justified by fears of how
the jury will be influenced by the evidence.However, it is not traditional to
think of hearsay as merely a subdivision of this structure, and the Federal
Rules do not conceive of hearsay in that manner. Prejudice refers to the jurys
use of evidence for inferences other than those for which the evidence is
legally relevant; by contrast, the rule against hearsay questions the jurys
ability to evaluate the strength of a legitimate inference to be drawn from the
evidence. For example, were a judge to exclude testimony because a witness
was particularly smooth or convincing, there would be no doubt as to the
usurpation of the jurys function. Thus, unlike prejudices recognized by the
evidence rules, such as those stemming from racial or religious biases or
from the introduction of photographs of a victims final state, the exclusion of
hearsay on the basis of misperception strikes at the root of the jurys function
by usurping its power to process quite ordinary evidence, the type of
information routinely encountered by jurors in their everyday lives.
Since virtually all criteria seeking to distinguish between good and bad
hearsay are either incoherent, inconsistent, or indeterminate, the only
altenative to a general rule of admission would be an absolute rule of
exclusion, which is surely inferior. More important, the assumptions necessary
to justify a rule against hearsay seem insupportable and, in any event, are
inconsistent with accepted notions of the function of the jury. Therefore, the
hearsay rules should be abolished.
Some support for this view can be found in the limited empirical research
now available which is, however, derived from simulations that suggests
that admitting hearsay has little effect on trial outcomes because
jurors discount the value of hearsay evidence. See Rakos & Landsman,
Researching the Hearsay Rule: Emerging Findings, General Issues, and Future
Directions, 76 Minn.L.Rev. 655 (1992); Miene, Park, & Borgidas, Jury Decision
Making and the Evaluation of Hearsay Evidence, 76 Minn.L.Rev. 683 (1992);
Kovera, Park, & Penrod, Jurors Perceptions of Eyewitness and Hearsay
Evidence, 76 Minn.L.Rev. 703 (1992); Landsman & Rakos, Research Essay: A
Preliminary Empirical Enquiry Concerning the prohibition of Hearsay Evidence
in American Courts, 15 Law & Psychol. Rev. 65 (1991).
Others, even if they concede that restrictions on hearsay have
some utility, question whether the benefits outweigh the cost:
The cost of maintaining the rule is not just a function of its contribution to
justice. It also includes the time spent on litigating the rule. And of course
this is not just a cost voluntarily borne by the parties, for in our system
virtually all the cost of the court salaries, administrative costs, and capital
costs are borne by the public. As expensive as litigation is for the parties, it is
supported by an enormous public subsidy. Each time a hearsay question
is litigated, the public pays. The rule imposes other costs as
well. Enormous time is spent teaching and writing about the hearsay rule,
which are both costly enterprises. In some law schools, students spend over
half their time in evidence classes learning the intricacies of the hearsay rule,
and enormous academic resources are expended on the rule.
Allen, Commentary on Professor Friendmans Article: The Evolution of the
Hearsay Rule to a Rule of Admission, 76 Minn.L.Rev. 797, 800 [1992] (but
would abolish rule only in civil cases). See also Friedman, Toward a Partial
Economic, Game-Theoretic Analysis of Hearsay, 76 Minn. L. Rev. 723 (1992).
[10]
A complete analysis of any hearsay problem requires that we further
determine whether the hearsay evidence is one exempted from the rules
of exclusion. A more circumspect examination of our rules of
exclusion will show that they do not cover admissions of a party and
the Angara Diary belongs to this class. Section 26 of Rule 130 provides
that the act, declaration or omission of a party as to a relevant fact may be
given in evidence against him.[11] It has long been settled that these
admissions are admissible even if they are hearsay. Retired Justice
Oscar Herrera of the Court of Appeals cites the various authorities who
explain why admissions are not covered by the hearsay rule:[12]
Wigmore, after pointing out that the partys declaration has generally the
probative value of any other persons asssertion, argued that it had a special
value when offered against the party. In that circumstance, the
admission discredits the partys statement with the present claim asserted in
pleadings and testimony, much like a witness impeached by contradictory
statements. Moreover, he continued, admissions pass the gauntlet of the
hearsay rule, which requires that extrajudicial assertions be excluded if
there was no opportunity for the opponent to cross-examine because it is the
opponents own declaration, and he does not need to cross examine
himself. Wigmore then added that the Hearsay Rule is satisfied since the
party now as opponent has the full opportunity to put himself on the stand
and explain his former assertion.(Wigmore on evidence, Sec. 1048
(Chadbourn Rev. 1972), cited in Sec. 154, McCormick)
According to Morgan: The admissibility of an admission made by the party
himself rests not upon any notion that the circumstances in which it was
made furnish the trier means of evaluating it fairly, but upon the adversary
theory of litigation. A party can hardly object that he had no
opportunity to cross-examine himself or that he is unworthy of
credence save when speaking under sanction of an oath.
A mans acts, conduct, and declaration, wherever made, if voluntary, are
admissible against him, for the reason that it is fair to presume that they
correspond with the truth, and it is his fault if they do not. (U.S. vs. Ching
Po, 23 Phil. 578, 583).
The Angara Diary contains direct statements of petitioner which can be
categorized as admissions of a party: his proposal for a snap presidential
election where he would not be a candidate; his statement that he only
wanted the five-day period promised by Chief of Staff Angelo Reyes; his
statements that he would leave by Monday if the second envelope would be
opened by Monday and Pagod na pagod na ako. Ayoko na, masyado nang
masakit. Pagod na ako sa red tape, bureaucracy, intriga. (I am very tired. I
dont want any more of this its too painful. Im tired of the red tape, the
bureaucracy, the intrigue). I just want to clear my name, then I will go. We
noted that days before, petitioner had repeatedly declared that he would not
resign despite the growing clamor for his resignation. The reason for the
meltdown is obvious - - - his will not to resign has wilted.
It is, however, argued that the Angara Diary is not the diary of
the petitioner, hence, non-binding on him. The argument overlooks the
doctrine of adoptive admission. An adoptive admission is a partys reaction
to a statement or action by another person when it is reasonable to treat the
partys reaction as an admission of something stated or implied by the
other person.[13] Jones explains that the basis for admissibility
of admissions made vicariously is that arising from the ratification or
adoption by the party of the statements which the other person had made.
[14] To use the blunt language of Mueller and Kirkpatrick, this process of
attribution is not mumbo jumbo but common sense.[15] In the Angara
Diary, the options of the petitioner started to dwindle when the armed forces
withdrew its support from him as President and commander-in-chief. Thus,
Executive Secretary Angara had to ask Senate President Pimentel to advise
petitioner to consider the option of dignified exit or resignation. Petitioner
did not object to the suggested option but simply said he could never leave
the country. Petitioners silence on this and other related suggestions can be
taken as an admission by him.[16]
Petitioner further contends that the use of the Angara diary against
him violated the rule on res inter alios acta. The rule is expressed in
section 28 of Rule 130 of the Rules of Court, viz: The rights of a party cannot
be prejudiced by an act, declaration, or omission of another, except as
hereinafter provided.
Again, petitioner errs in his contention. The res inter alios acta rule
has several exceptions. One of them is provided in section 29 of Rule 130
with respect to admissions by a co-partner or agent.
Executive Secretary Angara as such was an alter ego of the
petitioner. He was the Little President. Indeed, he was authorized by the
petitioner to act for him in the critical hours and days before he
abandoned Malacaang Palace. Thus, according to the Angara Diary, the
petitioner told Secretary Angara: Mula umpisa pa lang ng kampanya, Ed, ikaw
na lang pinakikinggan ko. At hanggang sa huli, ikaw pa rin. (Since the start of
the campaign, Ed, you have been the only one Ive listened to. And now at the
end, you still are.)[17] This statement of full trust was made by the
petitioner after Secretary Angara briefed him about the progress of
the first negotiation. True to this trust, the petitioner had to ask Secretary
Angara if he would already leave Malacaang after taking their final lunch on
January 20, 2001 at about 1:00 p.m. TheAngara Diary quotes the petitioner
as saying to Secretary Angara: ed, kailangan ko na bang umalis? (Do I have
to leave now?)[18] Secretary Angara told him to go and he did. Petitioner
cannot deny that Secretary Angara headed his team of negotiators that met
with the team of the respondent Arroyo to discuss the peaceful and orderly
transfer of power after his relinquishment of the powers of the
presidency.The Diary shows that petitioner was always briefed by Secretary
Angara on the progress of their negotiations. Secretary Angara acted for
and in behalf of the petitioner in the crucial days before respondent
Arroyo took her oath as President. Consequently, petitioner is bound by
the acts and declarations of Secretary Angara.
Under our rules of evidence, admissions of an agent (Secretary
Angara) are binding on the principal (petitioner).[19] Jones very well
explains the reasons for the rule, viz: What is done, by agent, is done by
the principal through him, as through a mere instrument. So, whatever is said
by an agent, either in making a contract for his principal, or at the time and
accompanying the performance of any act within the scope of his authority,
having relation to, and connected with, and in the course of the particular
contract or transaction in which he is then engaged, or in the language of the
old writers, dum fervet opus is, in legal effect, said by his principal and
admissible in evidence against such principal.[20]
Moreover, the ban on hearsay evidence does not cover
independently relevant statements. These are statements which
are relevant independently of whether they are true or not. They
belong totwo (2) classes: (1) those statements which are the very facts in
issue, and (2) those statements which are circumstantial evidence of the
facts in issue. The second class includes the following:[21]
a. Statement of a person showing his state of mind, that is, his
mental condition, knowledge, belief, intention, ill will and other
emotions;
b. Statements of a person which show his physical condition, as
illness and the like;
c. Statements of a person from which an inference may be made
as to the state of mind of another, that is, the knowledge,
belief, motive, good or bad faith, etc. of the latter;
d. Statements which may identify the date, place and person in
question; and
e. Statements showing the lack of credibility of a witness.
Again, Jones tells us why these independently relevant
statements are not covered by the prohibition against hearsay
evidence:[22]
1088. Mental State or Condition Proof of Knowledge.- There are a number of
comon issues, forming a general class, in proof of which hearsay is so
obviously necessary that it is not customary to refer to its admissibility as by
virtue of any exception to the general exclusionary rule.Admissibility, in such
cases, is as of course. For example, where any mental state or condition
is in issue, such as motive, malice, knowledge, intent, assent or dissent,
unless direct testimony of the particular person is to be taken as conclusive
of his state of mind, the only method of proof available is testimony of
others to the acts or statements of such person. Where his acts or
statements are against his interest, they are plainly admissible within the
rules hereinabove announced as to admissions against interest. And even
where not against interest, if they are so closely connected with the event or
transaction in issue as to constitute one of the very facts in controversy, they
become admissible of necessity.
As aforediscussed, The Angara Diary contains statements of the petitioner
which reflect his state of mind and are circumstantial evidence of his intent to
resign. It also contains statements of Secretary Angara from which we can
reasonably deduce petitioners intent to resign. They are admissible and they
are not covered by the rule on hearsay. This has long been a quiet area of our
law on evidence and petitioners attempt to foment a belated tempest cannot
receive our imprimatur.
Petitioner also contends that the rules on authentication of
private writings and best evidence were violated in our Decision, viz:
The use of the Angara diary palpably breached several hornbook rules of
evidence, such as the rule on authentication of private writings
xxx
A. Rule on Proof of Private Writings Violated
The rule governing private documents as evidence was violated. The law
provides that before any private writing offered as authentic is received in
xxx
B. Best Evidence Rule Infringed
Clearly, the newspaper reproduction is not the best evidence of the Angara
diary. It is secondary evidence, of dubious authenticity. It was however used
by this Honorable Court without proof of the unavailability of the original or
duplicate original of the diary. The Best Evidence Rule should have been
applied since the contents of the diary are the subject of inquiry.
The rule is that, except in four (4) specific instances, [w]hen the subject of
inquiry is the contents of a document, no evidence shall be admissible other
than the original document itself.[23]
Petitioners contention is without merit. In regard to the Best Evidence
rule, the Rules of Court provides in sections 2 to 4 of Rule 130, as follows:
Sec. 2. Documentary evidence. Documents as evidence consist of writings or
any material containing letters, words, numbers, figures or other modes of
written expressions offered as proof of their contents.
Sec. 3. Original document must be produced; exceptions. When the subject of
inquiry is the contents of a document, no evidence shall be admissible other
than the original document itself, except in the following cases:
(a) When the original has been lost or destroyed, or cannot be produced in
court, without bad faith on the part of the offeror;
xxx
In several Canadian provinces, the principle of unavailability has been
abandoned, for certain documents in which ordinarily no real dispute
arised. This measure is a sensible and progressive one and deserves
universal adoption (post, sec. 1233). Its essential feature is that a copy may
be used unconditionally, if the opponent has been given an opportunity
to inspect it. (empahsis supplied)
Franciscos opinion is of the same tenor, viz:
Generally speaking, an objection by the party against whom secondary
evidence is sought to be introduced is essential to bring the best evidence
rule into application; and frequently, where secondary evidence has been
admitted, the rule of exclusion might have successfully been invoked if
proper and timely objection had been taken. No general rule as to the form or
mode of objecting to the admission of secondary evidence is set forth. Suffice
it to say here that the objection should be made in proper season that
is, whenever it appears that there is better evidence than that which
is offered and before the secondary evidence has been admitted. The
objection itself should be sufficiently definite to present a tangible question
for the courts consideration.[25]
He adds:
(b) When the original is in the custody or under the control of the party
against whom the evidence is offered, and the latter fails to produce it after
reasonable notice;
(d) When the original is a public record in the custody of a public officer or is
recorded in a public office.
Sec. 4. Original of document. (a) The original of a document is one the
contents of which are the subject of inquiry.
(b) When a document is in two or more copies executed at or about the same
time, with identical contents, all such copies are equally regarded as
originals.
(c) When an entry is repeated in the regular course of business, one being
copied from another at or near the time of the transaction, all the entries are
likewise equally regarded as originals.
It is true that the Court relied not upon the original but only copy of
the Angara Diary as published in the Philippine Daily Inquirer on February 46, 2001. In doing so, the Court, did not, however, violate the best
evidence rule. Wigmore, in his book on evidence, states that:
Sec. 20. Proof of private document. Before any private document offered as
authentic is received in evidence, its due execution and authenticity must be
proved either:
(a) By anyone who saw the document executed or written; or
(b) By evidence of the genuineness of the signature or handwriting of the
maker.
Any other private document need only be identified as that which it is
claimed to be.
On the rule of authentication of private writings, Francisco states that:
A proper foundation must be laid for the admission of documentary evidence;
that is, the identity and authenticity of the document must be reasonably
established as a pre-requisite to its admission. (Rouw v. Arts, 174 Ark. 79,
294 S.W. 993, 52 A.L.R. 1263, and others) However, a party who does not
deny the genuineness of a proffered instrument may not object that
it was not properly identified before it was admitted in
evidence. (Strand v. Halverson, 220 Iowa 1276, 264 N.W. 266, 103 A.L.R.
835).[27]
Petitioner cites the case of State prosecutors v. Muro,[28] which
frowned on reliance by courts on newspaper accounts. In that case, Judge
Muro was dismissed from the service for relying on a newspaper account in
dismissing eleven (11) cases against Mrs. Imelda Romualdez Marcos. There is
a significant difference, however, between the Muro case and the cases at
bar. In the Muro case, Judge Muro dismissed the cases against Mrs. Marcos
on the basis of a newspaper account without affording the
prosecution the basic opportunity to be heard on the matter by way of a
written comment or on oral argument. . .(this is) not only a blatant denial of
elementary due process to the Government but is palpably indicative of bad
faith and partiality. In the instant cases, however, the petitioner had an
opportunity to object to the admissibility of the Angara Diary when he
filed his Memorandum dated February 20, 2001, Reply Memorandum dated
February 22, 2001, Supplemental Memorandum dated February 23, 2001,
and Second Supplemental memorandum dated February 24, 2001. He was
therefore not denied due process. In the words of Wigmore, supra, petitioner
had been given an opportunity to inspect the Angara Diary but did not
object to its admissibility. It is already too late in the day to raise his
objections in an Omnibus Motion, after the Angara Diary has been used as
evidence and a decision rendered partly on the basis thereof.
III
Temporary Inability
IV
Petitioner hangs tough on his submission that his due process rights to a
fair trial have been prejudiced by pre-trial publicity. In our Decision, we held
that there is not enough evidence to sustain petitioners claim of prejudicial
publicity. Unconvinced, petitioner alleges that the vivid narration of events in
our Decision itself proves the pervasiveness of the prejudicial publicity. He
then posits the thesis that doubtless, the national fixation with the probable
guilt of petitioner fueled by the hate campaign launched by some high
circulation newspaper and by the bully pulpit of priests and bishops left
indelible impression on all sectors of the citizenry and all regions, so harsh
and so pervasive that the prosecution and the judiciary can no longer assure
petitioner a sporting chance.[51] To be sure, petitioner engages
inexageration when he
alleges
that all sectors
of
the
citizenry
and all regions have been irrevocably influenced by this barrage of
prejudicial publicity. This exaggeration collides with petitioners claim
that he still enjoys the support of the majority of our people,
especially the masses.
Petitioner pleads that we apply the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur (the
thing or the transaction speaks for itself) to support his argument. Under
the res ipsa loquitur rule in its broad sense, the fact of the occurrence of an
injury, taken with the surrounding circumstances, may permit an inference or
raise a presumption of negligence, or make out a plaintiffs prima facie case,
and present a question of fact for defendant to meet with an explanation.
[52] It is not a rule of substantive law but more a procedural rule. Its mere
invocation does not exempt the plaintiff with the requirement of proof to
prove negligence. It merely allows the plaintiff to present along with the proof
of the accident, enough of the attending circumstances to invoke the
doctrine, creating an inference or presumption of negligence and to thereby
place on the defendant the burden of going forward with the proof.[53]
We hold that it is inappropriate to apply the rule on res ipsa
loquitur, a rule usually applied only in tort cases, to the cases at
bar. Indeed, there is no court in the whole world that has applied
the res ipsa loquitur rule to resolve the issue of prejudicial
publicity. We again stress that the issue before us is whether the alleged
pervasive publicity of the cases against the petitioner has prejudiced the
minds of the members of the panel of investigators. We reiterate the test we
laid down in People v. Teehankee,[54] to resolve this issue, viz:
We cannot sustain appellants claim that he was denied the right to impartial
trial due to prejudicial publicity. It is true that the print and broadcast media
gave the case at bar pervasive publicity, just like all high profile and high
stake criminal trials. Then and now, we rule that the right of an accused to a
fair trial is not incompatible to a free press. To be sure, responsible reporting
enhances an accuseds right to a fair trial for, as well pointed out , a
responsible press has always been regarded as the handmaiden of effective
judicial administration, especially in the criminal field x x x. The press does
not simply publish information about trials but guards against the miscarriage
of justice by subjecting the police, prosecutors, and judicial processes to
extensive public scrutiny and criticism.
Pervasive publicity is not per se prejudicial to the right of an accused to fair
trial. The mere fact that the trial of appellant was given a day-to-day, gavelto-gavel coverage does not by itself prove that the publicity so permeated
the mind of the trial judge and impaired his impartiality.For one, it is
impossible to seal the minds of members of the bench from pre-trial and
other off-court publicity of sensational criminal cases. The state of the art of
our communication system brings news as hey happen straight to our
breakfast tables and right to our bedrooms. These news form part of our
everyday menu of the facts and fictions of life. For another, our idea of a fair
and impartial judge is not that of a hermit who is out of touch with the
world. We have not installed the jury system whose members are overly
protected from publicity lest they lost their impartiality. x x x x x x x x x. Our
judges are learned in the law and trained to disregard off-court evidence and
on-camera performances of parties to a litigation. Their mere exposure to
publications and publicity stunts does not per se fatally infect their
impartiality.
At best, appellant can only conjure possibility of prejudice on the part of the
trial judge due to the barrage of publicity that characterized the investigation
and trial of the case. In Martelino, et al. v. Alejandro, et al., we rejected this
standard of possibility of prejudice and adopted the test of actual
prejudice as we ruled that to warrant a finding of prejudicial publicity, there
must be allegation and proof that the judges have been unduly influenced,
not simply that they might be, by the barrage of publicity. In the case at bar,
the records do not show that the trial judge developed actual bias against
appellant as a consequence of the extensive media coverage of the pre-trial
and trial of his case. The totality of circumstances of the case does not prove
that the trial judge acquired a fixed opinion as a result of prejudicial publicity
which is incapable of change even by evidence presented during the
trial. Appellant has the burden to prove this actual bias and he has not
discharged the burden.
Petitioner keeps on pounding on the adverse publicity against
him but fails to prove how the impartiality of the panel of
investigators from the Office of the Ombudsman has been infected
by it. As we held before and we hold it again, petitioner has completely
failed to adduce any proof of actual prejudice developed by the members
of the Panel of Investigators. This fact must be established by clear and
convincing evidence and cannot be left to loose surmises and conjectures. In
fact, petitioner did not even identify the members of the Panel of
Investigators. We cannot replace this test of actual prejudice with the rule
of res ipsa loquitur as suggested by the petitioner. The latter rule assumes
that an injury (i.e., prejudicial publicity) has been suffered and then shifts the
burden to the panel of investigators to prove that the impartiality of its
members has been affected by said publicity. Such a rule will overturn our
case law that pervasive publicity is not per se prejudicial to the right of an
accused to fair trial. The cases are not wanting where an accused has been
acquitted despite pervasive publicity.[55] For this reason, we continue to hold
that it is not enough for petitioner to conjure possibility of prejudicebut
must prove actual prejudice on the part of his investigators for the Court
to sustain his plea. It is plain that petitioner has failed to do so.
Petitioner agains suggests that the Court should order a 2-month
cooling off period to allow passions to subside and hopefully the alleged
prejudicial publicity against him would die down. We regret not to acquiesce
to the proposal. There is no assurance that the so called 2-month cooling off
period will achieve its purpose. The investigation of the petitioner is a natural
media event. It is the first time in our history that a President will be
investigated by the Office of the Ombudsman for alleged commission of
heinous crimes while a sitting President. His investigation will even be
monitored by the foreign press all over the world in view of its legal and
historic significance. In other words, petitioner cannot avoid the kleiglight of
publicity. But what is important for the petitioner is that his
constitutional rights are not violated in the process of
VI
Recusation
Finally, petitioner prays that the members of this Honorable Court who
went to EDSA put on record who they were and consider recusing or
inhibiting themselves, particularly those who had ex-parte contacts with
those exerting pressure on this Honorable Court, as mentioned in our Motion
of March 9, 2001, given the need for the cold neutrality of impartial judges.
[56]
We hold that the prayer lacks merit. There is no ground to inhibit
the twelve (12) members of the Court who merely accepted the invitation of
the respondent Arroyo to attend her oath taking. As mere spectators of a
historic event, said members of the Court did not prejudge the legal basis
of the claim of respondent Arroyo to the presidency at the time she took her
oath. Indeed, the Court in its en banc resolution on January 22, 2001, the first
working day after respondent Arroyo took her oath as President, held in
Administrative Matter No. 01-1-05 SC, to wit:
A.M. No. 01-1-05-SC In re: Request for Vice President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo
to Take Her Oath of Office as President of the Republic of the Philippines
before the Chief Justice Acting on the urgent request of Vice President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo to be sworn in as President of the Republic of the
Philippines, addressed to the Chief Justice and confirmed by a letter to the
Court, dated January 20, 2001, which request was treated as an
administrative matter, the court Resolved unanimously to confirm the
authority given by the twelve (12) members of the Court then present to the
Chief Justice on January 20, 2001 to administer the oath of office to Vice
President Gloria Macapagal-Arroyo as President of the Philippines, at noon of
January 20, 2001.
This resolution is without prejudice to the disposition of any justiciable case
that may be filed by a proper party.
The above resolution was unanimously passed by the 15 members of
the Court. It should be clear from the resolution that the Court did not treat
the letter of respondent Arroyo to be administered the oath by Chief Justice
Davide, Jr., as a case but as an administrative matter. If it were considered
as a case, then petitioner has reason to fear that the Court has
predetermined the legitimacy of the claim of respondent Arroyo to
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
REGALADO, J.:
Often glossed over in the emotional arguments against capital punishment is
the amplitude of legal protection accorded to the offender. Ignored by the
polemicist are the safeguards designed to minimally reduce, if not altogether
eliminate, the grain of human fault. Indeed, there is no critique on the
plethora of rights enjoyed by the accused regardless of how ruthlessly he
committed the crime. Any margin of judicial error is further addressed by the
grace of executive clemency. But, even before that, all convictions imposing
the penalty of death are automatically reviewed by this Court. The cases at
bar, involving two death sentences, apostrophize for the condemned the role
of this ultimate judicial intervention.
Accused-appellant Danny Godoy was charged in two separate informations
filed before the Regional Trial Court, for Palawan and Puerto Princesa City,
Branch 47, with rape and kidnapping with serious illegal detention,
respectively punished under Articles 335 and 267 of the Revised Penal Code,
to wit:
In Criminal Case No. 11640 for Rape:
That on or about the evening of the 21st day of January,
1994, at Barangay Pulot Center, Municipality of Brooke's
Point, Province of Palawan, Philippines, and within the
jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the said accused by
means of force, threat and intimidation, by using a knife and
by means of deceit, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and
feloniously have carnal knowledge with one Mia Taha to her
damage and prejudice. 1
In Criminal Case No. 11641 for Kidnapping with Serious Illegal
Detention:
That on or about the 22nd day of January, 1994, at Barangay
Ipilan, Municipality of Brooke's Point, Province of Palawan,
Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court,
the said accused, a private individual, and being a teacher of
the victim, Mia Taha, and by means of deceit did then and
there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously kidnap or detained
(sic) said Mia Taha, a girl of 17 years old (sic), for a period of
five (5) days thus thereby depriving said Mia Taha of her
liberty against her will and consent and without legal
justification, to the damage and prejudice of said Mia Taha. 2
During the arraignment on both indictments, appellant pleaded not guilty to
said charges and, after the pre-trial was terminated, a joint trial of the two
cases was conducted by the trial court. 3
According to complainant Mia Taha, at around 7:00 P.M. of January 21, 1994,
she went to the boarding house of her cousin, Merlylyn Casantosan, at Pulot
Center, Brooke's Point which is near the Palawan National School (PNS), Pulot
Branch, where she was studying. When she saw that the house was dark, she
decided to pass through the kitchen door at the back because she knew that
there was nobody inside. As soon as she opened the door, somebody
suddenly grabbed her, poked a knife on her neck, dragged her by the hand
and told her not to shout. She was then forced to lie down on the floor.
Although it was dark, complainant was able to recognize her assailant, by the
light coming from the moon and through his voice, as accused-appellant
Danny Godoy who was her Physics teacher at PNS.
When she was already on the floor, appellant removed her panty with one
hand while holding the knife with the other hand, opened the zipper of his
pants, and then inserted his private organ inside her private parts against her
will. She felt pain because it was her first experience and she cried.
Throughout her ordeal, she could not utter a word. She was very frightened
because a knife was continually pointed at her. She also could not fight back
nor plead with appellant not to rape her because he was her teacher and she
was afraid of him. She was threatened not to report the incident to anyone or
else she and her family would be killed.
Thereafter, while she was putting on her panty, she noticed that her skirt was
stained with blood. Appellant walked with her to the gate of the house and
she then proceeded alone to the boarding house where she lived. She did not
see where appellant went after she left him at the gate. When she arrived at
her boarding house, she saw her landlady but she did not mention anything
about the incident.
The following morning, January 22, 1994, complainant went home to her
parents' house at Ipilan, Brooke's Point. She likewise did not tell her parents
about the incident for fear that appellant might make good his threat. At
around 3:00 P.M. of that same day, appellant arrived at the house of her
parents and asked permission from the latter if complainant could
accompany him to solicit funds because she was a candidate for "Miss PNS
Pulot." When her parents agreed, she was constrained to go with appellant
because she did not want her parents to get into trouble.
Appellant and complainant then left the house and they walked in silence,
with Mia following behind appellant, towards the highway where appellant
hailed a passenger jeep which was empty except for the driver and the
conductor. She was forced to ride the jeep because appellant threatened to
kill her if she would not board the vehicle. The jeep proceeded to the Sunset
Garden at the poblacion, Brooke's Point where they alighted.
At the Sunset Garden, appellant checked in and brought her to a room where
they staye d for three days. During the entire duration of their stay at the
Sunset Garden, complainant was not allowed to leave the room which was
always kept locked. She was continuously guarded and constantly raped by
appellant. She was, however, never drunk or unconscious. Nonetheless, she
was forced to have sex with appellant because the latter was always carrying
a knife with him.
In the early morning of January 25, 1994, appellant brought her to the house
of his friend at Edward's Subdivision where she was raped by him three
times. She was likewise detained and locked inside the room and tightly
guarded by appellant. After two days, or on January 27, 1994, they left the
place because appellant came to know that complainant had been reported
and indicated as a missing person in the police blotter. They went to see a
certain Naem ** from whom appellant sought help. On that same day, she
was released but only after her parents agreed to settle the case with
appellant.
Immediately thereafter, Mia's parents brought her to the District Hospital at
Brooke's Point where she was examined by Dr. Rogelio Divinagracia who
made the following medical findings:
GENERAL: Well developed, nourished, cooperative, walking,
conscious, coherent Filipina.
BREAST: Slightly globular with brown colored areola and
nipple.
EXTERNAL EXAM.: Numerous pubic hair, fairly developed labia
majora and minora, hymenal opening stellate in shape,
presence of laceration superficial, longitudinal at the fossa
navicularis, approximately 1/2 cm. length.
INTERNAL EXAM.: Hymenal opening, stellate in shape,
laceration noted, hymenal opening admits 2 fingers with
slight resistance, prominent vaginal rugae, cervix closed.
CONCLUSION: Hymenal opening admits easily 2 fingers with
slight resistance, presence of laceration, longitudinal at the
fossa navicularis approximately 1/2 cm. length. Hymenal
daughter. When she returned home, a certain Naem was waiting there and he
informed her that Mia was at Brooke's Point. He further conveyed appellant's
willingness to become a Muslim so he could marry Mia and thus settle the
case. Helen Taha readily acceded because she wanted to see her daughter.
In the morning of January 27, 1994, she went to the house of Naem who sent
somebody to fetch complainant. She testified that when Mia arrived, she was
crying as she reported that she was raped by appellant, and that the latter
threatened to kill her if she did not return within an hour. Because of this, she
immediately brought Mia to the hospital where the latter was examined and
then they proceeded to the municipal hall to file a complaint for rape and
kidnapping. Both Mia and Helen Taha executed separate sworn statements
before the PNP at Brooke's Point.
Later, Fruit Godoy, the wife of appellant, went to their house and offered
P50,000.00 for the settlement of the case. On their part, her husband insisted
that they just settle, hence all three of them, Adjeril, Helen and Mia Taha,
went to the Office of the Provincial Prosecutor where they met with the
mother of appellant who gave them P30,000.00. Adjeril and Helen Taha
subsequently executed an affidavit of desistance in Criminal Case No. 7687
for kidnapping pending in the prosecutor's office, which was sworn to before
Prosecutor II Chito S. Meregillano. Helen Taha testified that she agreed to the
settlement because that was what her husband wanted. Mia Taha was
dropped from the school and was not allowed to graduate. Her father died
two months later, supposedly because of what happened.
The defense presented a different version of what actually transpired.
According to appellant, he first met Mia Taha sometime in August, 1993 at
the Palawan National School (PNS). Although he did not court her, he fell in
love with her because she often told him "Sir, I love you." What started as a
joke later developed into a serious relationship which was kept a secret from
everybody else. It was on December 20, 1993 when they first had sexual
intercourse as lovers. Appellant was then assigned at the Narra Pilot
Elementary School at the poblacion because he was the coach of the Palawan
delegation for chess. At around 5:00 P.M. of that day, complainant arrived at
his quarters allegedly because she missed him, and she then decided to
spend the night there with him.
Exactly a month thereafter, specifically in the evening of January 20, 1994,
Erna Baradero, a teacher at the PNS, was looking inside the school building
for her husband, who was a security guard of PNS, when she heard voices
apparently coming from the Orchids Room. She went closer to listen and she
heard a girl's voice saying "Mahal na mahal kita, Sir, iwanan mo ang iyong
asawa at tatakas tayo." Upon hearing this, she immediately opened the door
and was startled to see Mia Taha and Danny Godoy holding hands. She asked
them what they were doing there at such an unholy hour but the two, who
were obviously caught by surprise, could not answer. She then hurriedly
closed the door and left. According to this witness, complainant admitted to
her that she was having an affair with appellant. Desirous that such illicit
relationship must be stopped, Erna Baradero informed appellant's wife about
it when the latter arrived from Manila around the first week of February,
1994.
Upon the request of appellant's wife, Erna Baradero executed an affidavit in
connection with the present case, but the same was not filed then because of
the affidavit of desistance which was executed and submitted by the parents
the funds they had solicited. That evening, however, appellant told
complainant at around 9:00 P.M. that he was going out to see a certain Bert
Dalojo at the latter's residence. In truth, he borrowed a motorcycle from
Fernando Rubio and went home to Pulot. He did not bring complainant along
because she had refused to go home.
Appellant testified that on January 21, 1994, at around 7:00 P.M., Mia Taha
went to his office asking for help with the monologue that she would be
presenting for the Miss PNS contest. He agreed to meet her at the house of
her cousin, Merlylyn Casantosan. However, when he reached the place, the
house was dark and he saw Mia waiting for him outside. Accordingly, they
just sat on a bench near the road where there was a lighted electric post and
they talked about the matter she had earlier asked him about. They stayed
there for fifteen minutes, after which complainant returned to her boarding
house just across the street while appellant headed for home some fifteen
meters away.
The following morning, January 23, 1994, appellant went to the house of
complainant's parents and informed them that Mia spent the night at the
Sunset Garden. Mia's parents said that they would just fetch her there, so he
went back to Sunset Garden and waited for them outside the hotel until 5:00
P.M. When they did not arrive, he decided to go with one Isagani Virey, whom
he saw while waiting near the road, and they had a drinking session with
Virey's friends. Thereafter, Virey accompanied him back to Sunset Garden
where they proceeded to Mia's room. Since the room was locked from the
inside, Virey had to knock on the door until it was opened by her.
It appears that while complainant was then waiting for appellant, Filomena
Pielago, a former teacher of Mia at PNS and who was then on her way to a
nearby store, saw her sitting on a bench and asked what she was doing there
at such a late hour. Complainant merely replied that she was waiting for
somebody. Filomena proceeded to the store and, along the way, she saw
Inday Zapanta watering the plants outside the porch of her house. When
Filomena Pielago returned, she saw complainant talking with appellant and
she noticed that they were quite intimate because they were holding hands.
This made her suspect that the two could be having a relationship. She,
therefore, told appellant that his wife had finished her aerobics class and was
already waiting for him. She also advised Mia to go home.
Prior to this incident, Filomena Pielago already used to see them seated on
the same bench. Filomena further testified that she had tried to talk appellant
out of the relationship because his wife had a heart ailment. She also warned
Mia Taha, but to no avail. She had likewise told complainant's grandmother
about her activities. At the trial, she identified the handwriting of complainant
appearing on the letters marked as Exhibits "1" and "2", claiming that she is
familiar with the same because Mia was her former student. On crossexamination, Filomena clarified that when she saw the couple on the night of
January 21, 1994, the two were talking naturally, she did not see Mia crying,
nor did it appear as if appellant was pleading with her.
In the afternoon of the following day, January 22, 1994, appellant met Mia's
mother on the road near their house and she invited him to come up and eat
"buko," which invitation he accepted. Thirty minutes thereafter, complainant
told him to ask permission from her mother for them to go and solicit funds at
the poblacion, and he did so. Before they left, he noticed that Mia was
carrying a plastic bag and when he asked her about it, she said that it
contained her things which she was bringing to her cousin's house. Appellant
and Mia went to the poblacion where they solicited funds until 6:30 P.M. and
then had snacks at the Vic Tan Store.
Thereafter, complainant told appellant that it was already late and there was
no more available transportation, so she suggested that they just stay at
Sunset Garden. Convinced that there was nothing wrong in that because they
already had intimate relations, aside from the fact that Mia had repeatedly
told him she would commit suicide should he leave her, appellant was
prevailed upon to stay at the hotel. Parenthetically, it was complainant who
arranged their registration and subsequently paid P400.00 for their bill from
Once inside, he talked to complainant and asked her what they were doing,
but she merely answered that what she was doing was of her own free will
and that at that moment her father was not supposed to know about it for,
otherwise, he would kill her. What complainant did not know, however, was
that appellant had already reported the matter to her parents, although he
opted not to tell her because he did not want to add to her apprehensions.
Isagani Virey further testified that when he saw appellant and complainant on
January 23 and 24, 1994, the couple looked very happy.
Appellant denied that they had sexual intercourse during their entire stay at
Sunset Garden, that is, from January 22 to 24, 1994, because he did not have
any idea as to what she really wanted to prove to him. Appellant knew that
what they were doing was wrong but he allegedly could not avoid Mia
because of her threat that she would commit suicide if he left her. Thus,
according to appellant, on January 24, 1994 he asked Isagani Virey to
accompany him to the house of Romy Vallan, a policeman, to report the
matter.
Additionally, Virey testified that appellant and Mia went to see him at his
aunt's house to ask for assistance in procuring transportation because,
according to appellant, the relatives of Mia were already looking for them and
so they intend to go to Puerto Princesa City. Virey accompanied them to the
house of Romy Vallan, whose wife was a co-teacher of appellant's wife, but
the latter refused to help because of the complicated situation appellant was
in.
Nevertheless, Vallan verified from the police station whether a complaint had
been filed against appellant and after finding out that there was none, he told
appellant to just consult a certain Naem who is an "imam." Appellant was
able to talk to Naem at Vallan's house that same day and bared everything
about him and Mia. Naem suggested that appellant marry complainant in
Muslim rites but appellant refused because he was already married. It was
eventually agreed that Naem would just mediate in behalf of appellant and
make arrangements for a settlement with Mia's parents. Later that day,
Naem went to see the parents of complainant at the latter's house.
The following day, January 25, 1994, allegedly because complainant could no
longer afford to pay their hotel bills, the couple were constrained to transfer
to the house of appellant's friend, Fernando Rubio, at Edward's Subdivision
where they stayed for two days. They just walked along the national highway
from Sunset Garden to Edward's Subdivision which was only five hundred to
seven hundred meters away. The owner of the house, Fernando Rubio, as well
as his brother Benedicto Rubio, testified that the couple were very happy,
they were intimate and sweet to each other, they always ate together, and it
was very obvious that they were having a relationship.
While they were at Edward's Subdivision, they never had sexual relations.
Appellant was told, when complainant visited him in jail, that her father
would kill her if she refused to testify against him, although by the time she
testified in court, her father had already died.
Appellant further testified that complainant has had several illicit relations in
the boarding house of her cousin, Merlylyn Casantosan, which was a wellknown fact in Pulot. However, he decided to have a relationship with her
because he wanted to change her and that was what they had agreed upon.
Appellant denied that, during the time when they were staying together, Mia
had allegedly asked permission to leave several times but that he refused.
On the contrary, he claimed that on January 27, 1994 when she told him that
her parents wanted to see her, he readily gave her permission to go.
He also identified the clothes that Mia brought with her when they left her
parents' house on January 22, 1994, but which she left behind at the Rubios'
lodging house after she failed to return on January 27, 1994. The bag of
clothes was brought to him at the provincial jail by Benedicto Rubio.
Appellant likewise declared that he had been detained at the provincial jail
since January 27, 1994 but the warrant for his arrest was issued only on
January 28, 1994; and that he did not submit a counter-affidavit because
according to his former counsel, Atty. Paredes, it was no longer necessary
since the complainants had already executed an affidavit of desistance. He
admits having signed a "Waiver of Right to Preliminary Investigation" in
connection with these cases.
On rebuttal, Lorna Casantosan, the cousin of Mia Taha, denied that she
delivered any letter to appellant when the latter was still detained at the
provincial jail. She admitted, on cross-examination, that she was requested
by Mia Taha to testify for her, although she clarified that she does not have
any quarrel or misunderstanding with appellant.
Mia Taha was again presented on rebuttal and she denied the testimony of
Erna Baradero regarding the incident at the Orchids Room because, according
to her, the truth was that she was at the boarding house of Toto Zapanta on
that date and time. She likewise negated the claim that Erna Baradero
confronted her on January 21, 1994 about her alleged relationship with
appellant contending that she did not see her former teacher on that day.
Similarly, she disclaimed having seen and talked to Filemona Pielago on the
night of January 21, 1994. She vehemently disavowed that she and appellant
were lovers, much less with intimate relations, since there never was a time
that they became sweethearts.
She sought to rebut, likewise through bare denials, the following testimonies
of the defense witnesses: that she told appellant "iwanan mo ang iyong
asawa at tatakas tayo;" that she answered "wala kang pakialam" when Erna
Baradero confronted her about her relationship with appellant; that she was
the one who registered them at Sunset Garden and paid for their bill; that
appellant left her at Sunset Garden to go to Ipil on January 22, 1994; that
Isagani Virey came to their room and stayed there for five minutes, because
the only other person who went there was the room boy who served their
food; that they went to the house of Virey's aunt requesting help for
transportation; and that she was free to roam around or to go out of the
lodging house at Edward's Subdivision.
Mia Taha also rejected as false the testimony of appellant that she went to
see him at Narra, Palawan to have sex with him and claims that the last time
she went to Narra was when she was still in Grade VI; that she ever told him
"I love you, sabik no sabik ako sa iyo" when she allegedly went to Narra; that
she wrote to him, since the letters marked as Exhibits "1" and "2" are not
hers; that she threatened to commit suicide if appellant would leave her
since she never brought a blade with her; and that at Sunset Garden and at
Edward's Subdivison, she was not being guarded by appellant.
However, on cross-examination, complainant identified her signature on her
test paper marked as Exhibit "4" and admitted that the signature thereon is
exactly the same as that appearing on Exhibits "1" and "2". Then,
contradicting her previous disclaimers, she also admitted that the
handwriting on Exhibits "1" and "2" all belong to her.
On sur-rebuttal, Armando Pasion, a provincial guard of the Provincial Jail,
Palawan who volunteered to testify in these cases, identified Lorna
Casantosan as the person who visited appellant in jail on February 27, 1994
at around 4:00 P.M. Since he was on duty at that time, he asked her what she
wanted and she said she would just visit appellant. Pasion then called
appellant and told him he had a visitor. Lorna Casantosan and appellant
talked at the visiting area which is around ten meters away from his post, and
then he saw her hand over to appellant a letter which the latter immediately
read. This witness declared that appellant never requested him to testify.
Another sur-rebuttal witness, Desmond Selga, a jeepney driver, testified that
in the afternoon of January 22, 1994, he was plying his regular route in going
to Brooke's Point and, when he passed by Ipilan, he picked up appellant and
Mia Taha. At that time, there were already several passengers inside his
jeepney. The two got off at the poblacion market. He denied that he brought
them to the Sunset Garden.
On May 20, 1994, the court a quo rendered judgment 5 finding appellant
guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crimes of rape and kidnapping with
serious illegal detention, and sentencing him to the maximum penalty of
death in both cases. 6 By reason of the nature of the penalty imposed, these
cases were elevated to this Court on automatic review.
The records show that, on the basis of the complaints for rape 7 and
kidnapping with serious illegal detention 8 filed by Mia Taha and Helen Taha,
respectively, the Municipal Trial Court of Brooke's Point issued a
resolution 9 on February 4, 1994 finding the existence of a prima faciecase
against appellant. On February 10, 1994, the spouses Adjeril Taha and Helen
Taha executed an affidavit of desistance withdrawing the charge of
kidnapping with serious illegal detention. 10 However, pursuant to a joint
resolution 11 issued on March 11, 1994 by Prosecutor II Reynaldo R. Guayco
of the Office of the Provincial Prosecutor, two separate informations for rape
and for kidnapping with serious illegal detention were nevertheless filed
against appellant Danny Godoy with no bail recommended in both charges.
Appellant is now before us seeking the reversal of the judgment of the court
below, on the following assignment of errors:
I. The trial court erred in convicting the accused-appellant (of)
the crime of rape despite the fact that the prosecution failed
to prove his guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
II. The trial court erred by failing to adhere to the
doctrine/principle in reviewing the evidence adduced in a
witness Filomena Pielago. She affirmed that in the evening of January 21,
1994, she saw both appellant and complainant seated on a bench outside the
boarding house, and that she even advised them to go home because it was
already late and appellant's wife, who was the head teacher of witness
Pielago, was waiting for him at the school building. On rebuttal, complainant
could only deny that she saw Pielago that night. Doctrinally, where the
inculpatory facts and circumstances are capable of two or more explanations
one of which is consistent with the innocence of the accused and the other
consistent with his guilt, then the evidence does not fulfill the test of moral
certainty and is not sufficient to support a conviction. 21
In the case at bar, several circumstances exist which amply demonstrate and
ineluctably convince this Court that there was no rape committed on the
alleged date and place, and that the charge of rape was the contrivance of an
afterthought, rather than a truthful plaint for redress of an actual wrong.
It was further alleged by complainant that after her alleged ravishment, she
put on her panty and then appellant openly accompanied her all the way to
the gate of the house where they eventually parted ways. This is
inconceivable. It is not the natural tendency of a man to remain for long by
the side of the woman he had raped,22 and in public in a highly populated
area at that. Given the stealth that accompanies it and the anxiety to end
further exposure at the scene, the logical post-incident impulse of the felon is
to distance himself from his victim as far and as soon as practicable, to avoid
discovery and apprehension. It is to be expected that one who is guilty of a
crime would want to dissociate himself from the person of his victim, the
scene of the crime, and from all other things and circumstances related to
the offense which could possibly implicate him or give rise to even the
slightest suspicion as to his guilt. Verily, the guilty flee where no man
pursueth.
It is of common knowledge that facts which prove or tend to prove that the
accused was at the scene of the crime are admissible as relevant, on the
theory that such presence can be appreciated as a circumstance tending to
identify the appellant. 23 Consequently, it is not in accord with human
experience for appellant to have let himself be seen with the complainant
immediately after he had allegedly raped her. 24 It thus behooves this Court
to reject the notion that appellant would be so foolhardy as to accompany
complainant up to the gate of the house, considering its strategic
location vis-a-vis complainant's boarding house which is just across the
street, 25 and the PNS schoolbuilding which is only around thirty meters
away. 26
Complainant mentioned in her narration that right after the incident she went
directly to her boarding house where she saw her landlady. Yet, the landlady
was never presented as a witness to corroborate the story of complainant,
despite the fact that the former was the very first person she came in contact
with from the time appellant allegedly left her at the gate of the Casantosan
boarding house after her alleged traumatic ordeal. Even though they
supposedly did not talk, the landlady could at least have testified on
complainant's physical appearance and to attest to the theorized fact that
indeed she saw complainant on said date and hour, possibly with dishevelled
hair, bloody skirt and all.
We are, therefore, justifiedly inclined to believe appellant's version that it was
Mia Taha who invited him to the boarding house to help her with the
monologue she was preparing for the school contest. This is even consonant
with her testimony that appellant fetched her the following day in order to
solicit funds for her candidacy in that same school affair.
In contrast, complainant's professed reason for going to the boarding house
is vague and tenuous. At first, she asserted that she was at the boarding
house talking with a friend and then, later, she said it was her cousin.
Subsequently, she again wavered and said that she was not able to talk to
her cousin. Furthermore, she initially stated that on January 21, 1994 at
around 7:00 P.M., she was at the boarding house conversing with her cousin.
Then in the course of her narration, she gave another version and said that
when she reached the boarding house it was dark and there was nobody
inside.
The apparent ease with which she changed or adjusted her answers in order
to cover up or realign the same with her prior inconsistent statements is
readily apparent from her testimony even on this single episode, thus:
Q Sometime on January 21, 1994, at about
7:00 o'clock in the evening, do you remember
where you were?
A Yes, sir.
Q Where were you?
A I was in the boarding house of Merlylyn
Casantosan, Sir.
xxx xxx xxx
Q Why were you there?
A I was conversing with my friend there, Sir.
COURT:
Q Conversing with whom?
A With my cousin, Your Honor.
Q Your cousin's name?
A Merlylyn Casantosan, Your Honor.
xxx xxx xxx
PROSECUTOR GUAYCO:
Q You said that this Dane or Danny Godoy
raped you, will you please relate to this
Honorable Court how that rape happened?
A On Friday and it was 7:00 o'clock in the
evening.
COURT:
Q Of what date?
A January 21, 1994, Your Honor.
xxx xxx xxx
PROSECUTOR GUAYCO:
Q Then what happened?
A I went to the boarding house of my cousin
Merlylyn Casantosan. I passed (through) the
kitchen and then when I opened the door
course the same cannot be said as to the alleged use of force. It has been
held that such corroborative evidence is not considered sufficient, since proof
of facts constituting one principal element of the crime is not corroborative
proof of facts necessary to constitute another equally important element of
the crime. 35
Complainant testified that she struggled a little but it was not really strong
because she was afraid of appellant. Again assuming that a sexual assault
did take place as she claims, we nevertheless strongly believe that her
supposed fear is more imaginary than real. It is evident that complainant did
not use the manifest resistance expected of a woman defending her honor
and chastity. 36 She failed to make any outcry when appellant allegedly
grabbed her and dragged her inside the house. There is likewise no evidence
on record that she put up a struggle when appellant forced her to lie on the
floor, removed her panty, opened the zipper of his trousers, and inserted his
organ inside her genitals. Neither did she demonstrate that appellant, in
committing the heinous act, subjected her to any force of whatever nature or
form.
Complainant's explanation for her failure to shout or struggle is too
conveniently general and ruefully unconvincing to make this Court believe
that she tenaciously resisted the alleged sexual attack on her by appellant.
And, if ever she did put up any struggle or objected at all to the involuntary
intercourse, such was not enough to show the kind of resistance expected of
a woman defending her virtue and honor. 37 Her failure to do anything while
allegedly being raped renders doubtful her charge of rape, 38 especially
when we consider the actual mise-en-scene in the context of her
asseverations.
There is a rule that the rape victim's panty and blood-stained dress are not
essential, and need not be presented, as they are not indispensable evidence
to prove rape. 39 We incline to the view, however, that this general rule
holds true only if there exist other corroborative evidence sufficiently and
convincingly proving the rape charge beyond reasonable doubt. The rule
should go the other way where, as in the present case, the testimony of
complainant is inherently weak and no other physical evidence has been
presented to bolster the charge of sexual abuse except for the medical report
which, as earlier discussed, even negated the existence of one of the
essential elements of the crime. We cannot, therefore, escape the irresistible
conclusion that the deliberate non-presentation of complainant's bloodstained skirt, if it did exist, should vigorously militate against the
prosecution's cause.
II. The conduct of the outraged woman immediately following the alleged
assault is of the utmost importance as tending to establish the truth or falsity
of the charge. It may well be doubted whether a conviction for the offense of
rape should even be sustained from the uncorroborated testimony of the
woman unless the court is satisfied beyond doubt that her conduct at the
time when the alleged rape was committed and immediately thereafter was
such as might be reasonably expected from her under all the circumstances
of
the
case. 40
Complainant said that on the day following the supposed rape, appellant
went to her parents' house and asked permission from them to allow her to
go with him to solicit funds for her candidacy. Nowhere throughout her entire
testimony did she aver or imply that appellant was armed and that by reason
thereof she was forced to leave with him. In brief, she was neither threatened
nor intimidated by appellant. Her pretense that she was afraid of the
supposed threat previously made by appellant does not inspire belief since
appellant was alone and unarmed on that occasion and there was no showing
of any opportunity for him to make good his threat, even assuming that he
had really voiced any. On the contrary, complainant even admitted that
appellant respectfully asked permission from her parents for her to
accompany him.
Complainant's enigmatic behavior after her alleged ravishment can only be
described as paradoxical: it was so strangely normal as to be abnormal. 41 It
seems odd, if not incredible, that upon seeing the person who had allegedly
raped her only the day before, she did not accuse, revile or denounce him, or
show rage, revulsion, and disgust. 42 Instead, she meekly went with
appellant despite the presence of her parents and the proximity of neighbors
which, if only for such facts, would naturally have deterred appellant from
pursuing any evil design. From her deportment, it does not appear that the
alleged threat made by appellant had instilled any fear in the mind of
complainant. Such a nonchalant, unconcerned attitude is totally at odds with
the demeanor that would naturally be expected of a person who had just
suffered the ultimate invasion of her womanhood. 43
III. Rape is a very emotional word, and the natural human reactions to it are
categorical: admiration and sympathy for the courageous female publicly
seeking retribution for her outrageous violation, and condemnation of the
rapist. However, being interpreters of the law and dispensers of justice,
judges must look at a rape charge without those proclivities, and deal with it
with extreme caution and circumspection. Judges must free themselves of the
natural tendency to be overprotective of every woman decrying her having
been sexually abused, and demanding punishment for the abuser. While they
ought to be cognizant of the anguish and humiliation the rape victim goes
through as she demands justice, judges should equally bear in mind that
their responsibility is to render justice based on the law. 44
The rule, therefore, that this Court generally desists from disturbing the
conclusions of the trial court on the credibility of witnesses 45 will not apply
where the evidence of record fails to support or substantiate the lower court's
findings of fact and conclusions; or where the lower court overlooked certain
facts of substance and value that, if considered, would affect the outcome of
the case; or where the disputed decision is based on a misapprehension of
facts. 46
The trial court here unfortunately relied solely on the lone testimony of
complainant regarding the January 21, 1994 incident. Indeed, it is easy to
allege that one was raped by a man. All that the victim had to testify to was
that appellant poked a knife at her, threatened to kill her if she shouted and
under these threats, undressed her and had sexual intercourse with her. The
question then that confronts the trial court is whether or not complainant's
testimony is credible. 47 The technique in deciphering testimony is not to
solely concentrate on isolated parts of that testimony. The correct meaning of
the testimony can often be ascertained only upon a perusal of the entire
testimony. Everything stated by the witness has to be considered in relation
to what else has been stated. 48
In the case at bar, the challenged decision definitely leaves much to be
desired. The court below made no serious effort to dispassionately or
impartially consider the totality of the evidence for the prosecution in spite of
the teaching in various rulings that in rape cases, the testimony of the
offended party must not be accepted with precipitate credulity. 49 In finding
that the crime of rape was committed, the lower court took into account only
that portion of the testimony of complainant regarding the January 21, 1994
incident and conveniently deleted the rest. Taken singly, there would be
reason to believe that she was indeed raped. But if we are to consider the
other portions of her testimony concerning the events which transpired
thereafter, which unfortunately the courta quo wittingly or unwittingly failed
or declined to appreciate, the actual truth could have been readily exposed.
COURT:
2. She claims that appellant always carried a knife, but it was never
explained how she was threatened with the same in such a manner that she
was allegedly always cowed into giving in to his innumerable sexual
demands. We are not unaware that in rape cases, this claim that complainant
now advances appears to be a common testimonial expedient and facesaving subterfuge.
3. According to her, they stayed at Sunset Garden for three days and three
nights and that she never noticed if appellant slept because she never saw
him close his eyes. Yet, when asked if she slept side by side with appellant,
complainant admitted that everytime she woke up, appellant was invariably
in bed beside her. 51
4. She alleged that she could never go out of the room because it was always
locked and it could not be opened from the inside. But, this was refuted by
complainant's own testimony, as follows:
Q And yet the door could be opened by you
from the inside?
A No, Sir, it was locked.
Q Can you describe the lock of that room?
A It's like that of the door where there is a
doorknob.
ATTY. EBOL:
Let it be recorded that the lock is a doorknob
and may I ask that the door be locked and
COURT:
Alright (sic) you go down the witness stand
and find out for yourself if you can open that
door from the inside.
CLERK OF COURT:
Witness holding the doorknob.
heartless people who turned their backs on her and considered her an
outcast. That would be adding insult to injury. But what is more abstruse yet
significant is that Mia and her parents were never heard to complain about
this apparent injustice. Such complacency cannot but make one think and
conclude that there must necessarily have been a valid justification for the
drastic action taken by the school and the docile submission thereto by the
Taha family.
IV. The main defense proffered by appellant is that he and complainant were
sweethearts. While the "sweetheart theory" does not often gain favor with
this Court, such is not always the case if the hard fact is that the accused and
the supposed victim are, in truth, intimately related except that, as is usual in
most cases, either the relationship is illicit or the victim's parents are against
it. It is not improbable that in some instances, when the relationship is
uncovered, the alleged victim or her parents for that matter would rather
take the risk of instituting a criminal action in the hope that the court would
take the cudgels for them than for the woman to admit to her own acts of
indiscretion. And this, as the records reveal, is precisely what happened to
appellant.
Appellant's claim that he and complainant were lovers is fortified by the
highly credible testimonies of several witnesses for the defense, viz.:
1. Filomena Pielago testified that on the night of January 21, 1994, she saw
appellant and complainant sitting on a bench in front of the house where the
sexual attack allegedly took place, and the couple were talking intimately.
She had warned Mia about the latter's illicit affair with appellant.
2. Fernando Rubio, an acquaintance of appellant and owner of the house at
Edward's Subdivision, testified that he asked Mia why she decided to have an
affair with appellant who is a married man. Mia answered that she really
loves him. 55 He heard her call appellant "Papa". 56 The couple looked
happy and were sweet to each other. 57
3. Benedicto Rubio, the younger brother of Fernando, testified on redirect
examination that he asked Mia if she knew what she getting into and she
answered, "Yes;" then he asked her if she really loved Sir Godoy, and she
again answered in the affirmative. When he was trying to give counsel to
appellant, complainant announced that if appellant left her, she would
commit suicide. 58 He could see that the couple were happy together. 59
4. Isagani Virey, who knew appellant because the Municipal Engineering
Office where he worked was located within the premises of PNS, attested that
he was able to talk to the couple and that when he was advising appellant
that what he was doing is wrong because he is married and Mia is his
student, complainant reacted by saying that no matter what happened she
would not leave Godoy, and that if she went home her father would kill
5. Erna Baradero, a co-teacher of appellant, saw the couple the day before
the alleged rape incident, inside one of the classrooms and they were holding
hands, and she heard Mia tell appellant, "Mahal na mahal kita Sir, iwanan mo
ang iyong asawa at tatakas tayo." 62 She tried to dissuade complainant from
continuing with her relationship with appellant. 63
Besides, appellant recounted certain facts that only he could have supplied.
They were replete with details which could have been known only to him,
thereby lending credence and reliability thereto. 66 His assertions are more
logical, probable and bear the earmarks of truth. This is not to say that the
testimony of appellant should be accorded full credence. His self-interest
must have colored his account, even on the assumption that he could be
trusted to stick to the literal truth. Nonetheless, there is much in his version
that does not strain the limits of credulity. More to the point, there is enough
to raise doubts that do appear to have some basis in reality. 67
Thus, the trial court's hasty pontification that appellant's testimony is
improbable, ridiculous, nonsensical and incredible is highly uncalled for. The
rule of falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus is not mandatory. It is not a positive
rule of law and is not an inflexible one. 68 It does not apply where there is
sufficient corroboration on many grounds of the testimony and the supposed
inconsistencies arise merely from a desire of the witness to exculpate himself
although not completely. 69
Complainant's denial that she and appellant were lovers is belied by the
evidence presented by the defense, the most telling of which are her two
handwritten letters, Exhibits "1" and "2", which she sent to the latter while he
was detained at the provincial jail. For analysis and emphasis, said letters are
herein quoted in full:
27 Feb. 94
Dane,
Kumusta kana? Kong ako hito hindi na makatiis sa sakit.
Sir, sumulat ako sa inyo dahil gusto kong malaman mo ang
situation ko. Sir, kong mahal mo ako gagawa kang paraan na
mailayo ako dito sa bahay. nalaman ng nanay at tatay ko na
delayed ang mens ko ng one week. pinapainom nila ako ng
pampalaglag pero ayaw ko. pagnalaman nila na hindi ko
ininom ang gamot sinasaktan nila ako.
Sir, kong maari ay huwag ng maabutan ng Martes. dahil
naabutan nila akong maglayas sana ako. kaya ngayon hindi
ako makalabas ng bahay kong wala akong kasama, kong
gaano sila kahigpit noon doble pa ngayon. ang mga gamit ko
ngayon ay wala sa lalagyan ko. tinago nila hindi ko makita,
ang narito lang ay ang bihisan kong luma. Sir kong
Oo, magtiis ako para maipakita kong mahal rin kita. March 2
darating ako sa bahay na sinasabi mo. hindi ko matiyak kong
anong oras dahil kukuha pa ako ng tiyempo na wala rito ang
tatay ko. Alam mo bang pati ang kapatid kong si Rowena ay
inuutusan akong lumayas dahil naawa no siya sa situation ko.
siya lang ang kakampi ko rito sa bahay malaki ang pag-asa
kong makalabas ako ng bahay sa tulong niya.
Lo
ve
yo
u
(S
gd
.)
Mi
a
Ta
ha
71
There is absolutely nothing left to the imagination. The letters eloquently
speak for themselves. It was complainant's handwriting which spilled the
beans, so to speak. Aside from appellant, two other defense witnesses
identified the handwriting on the letters as belonging to Mia Taha. They are
Filomena Pielago and Erna Baradero who were admittedly the former
teachers of complainant and highly familiar with her handwriting. The
greatest blunder committed by the trial court was in ignoring the testimonies
of these qualified witnesses and refusing to give any probative value to these
two vital pieces of evidence, on the dubious and lame pretext that no
handwriting expert was presented to analyze and evaluate the same.
Well-entrenched by now is the rule that resort to questioned document
examiners, more familiarly called handwriting experts, is not mandatory.
Handwriting experts, while probably useful, are not indispensable in
examining or comparing handwriting. 72 This is so since under Section 22,
Rule 132 of the Rules of Court, the handwriting of a person may be proved by
any witness who believes it to be the handwriting of such person, because he
has seen the person write, or has seen writing purporting to be his upon
which the witness has acted or been charged, and has thus acquired
knowledge of the handwriting of such person. The said section further
provides that evidence respecting the handwriting may also be given by a
comparison, made by the witness or the court, with writings admitted or
treated as genuine by the party against whom the evidence is offered or
proved to be genuine to the satisfaction of the judge. 73
The defense witnesses were able to identify complainant's handwriting on the
basis of the examination papers submitted to them by her in their respective
subjects. This Court has likewise carefully examined and compared the
handwriting on the letters with the standard writing appearing on the test
papers as specimens for comparison and, contrary to the observations and
conclusions of the lower court, we are convinced beyond doubt that they
were written by one and the same person. More importantly, complainant
herself categorically admitted that the handwriting on the questioned letters
belongs to her.
It is, therefore, extremely disconcerting, to say the least, why the trial court
again chose to turn a deaf ear to this conclusive portion of complainant's
testimony:
signature?
A Yes, sir.
ATTY. EBOL:
A Yes, sir.
A Yes, sir.
A Yes, sir.
deny
this
Exhibit
"1"
your
This is not to say that the Court approves of the conduct of appellant.
Indisputably, he took advantage of complainant's feelings for him and
breached his vow of fidelity to his wife. As her teacher, he should have acted
as adviser and counselor to complainant and helped her develop in manners
and virtue instead of corrupting her.83 Hence, even as he is freed from
physical detention in a prison as an instrument of human justice, he remains
in the spiritual confinement of his conscience as a measure of divine
retribution. Additionally, these ruminations do not rule out such other legal
options against him as may be available in the arsenal of statutory law.
VII. The trial court, in holding for conviction, relied on the presumptio
hominis that a young Filipina will not charge a person with rape if it is not
true. In the process, however, it totally disregarded the more paramount
constitutional presumption that an accused is deemed innocent until proven
otherwise.
It frequently happens that in a particular case two or more presumptions are
involved. Sometimes the presumptions conflict, one tending to demonstrate
the guilt of the accused and the other his innocence. In such case, it is
necessary to examine the basis for each presumption and determine what
logical or social basis exists for each presumption, and then determine which
should be regarded as the more important and entitled to prevail over the
other. It must, however, be remembered that the existence of a presumption
indicating guilt does not in itself destroy the presumption against innocence
unless the inculpating presumption, together with all of the evidence, or the
lack of any evidence or explanation, is sufficient to overcome the
presumption of innocence by proving the defendant's guilt beyond a
reasonable doubt. Until the defendant's guilt is shown in this manner, the
presumption of innocence continues. 84
The rationale for the presumption of guilt in rape cases has been explained in
this wise:
In rape cases especially, much credence is accorded the
testimony of the complaining witness, on the theory that she
will not choose to accuse her attacker at all and subject
herself to the stigma and indignities her accusation will entail
unless she is telling the truth. The rape victim who decides to
speak up exposes herself as a woman whose virtue has been
not only violated but also irreparably sullied. In the eyes of a
narrow-minded society, she becomes a cheapened woman,
never mind that she did not submit to her humiliation and has
in fact denounced her assailant. At the trial, she will be the
object of lascivious curiosity. People will want to be titillated
by the intimate details of her violation. She will squirm
through her testimony as she describes how her honor was
defiled, relating every embarrassing movement of the
intrusion upon the most private parts of her body. Most
frequently, the defense will argue that she was not forced to
submit but freely conjoined in the sexual act. Her motives will
be impugned. Her chastity will be challenged and maligned.
Whatever the outcome of the case, she will remain a tainted
woman, a pariah because her purity has been lost, albeit
through no fault of hers. This is why many a rape victim
chooses instead to keep quiet, suppressing her helpless
indignation rather than denouncing her attacker. This is also
and that she could not unlock the door from the inside. We must, however,
recall that when she was asked on cross-examination about the kind of lock
that was used, she pointed to the doorknob of the courtroom. The court then
ordered that the door of the courtroom be locked and then asked
complainant to open it from the inside. She was easily able to do so and, in
fact, she admitted that the two locks in the room at Sunset Garden could also
be opened from the inside in the same manner. This demonstrably
undeniable fact was never assailed by the prosecution. It also failed to rebut
the testimony of Fernando Rubio that the room which was occupied by the
couple at Edward's Subdivision could not even be locked because the lock
thereof was broken.
When the couple transferred to Edward's Subdivision, they walked along the
national highway in broad daylight. Complainant, therefore, had more than
ample opportunity to seek the help of other people and free herself from
appellant if it were true that she was forcibly kidnapped and abused by the
latter. 90 In fact, several opportunities to do so had presented themselves
from the time they left complainant's home and during their extended stay in
the hotel and in the lodging house.
According to appellant, he went to see the parents of complainant the day
after they went to Sunset Garden to inform them that Mia spent the night in
said place. This was neither denied nor impugned by Helen Taha, her
husband, or any other person. On the other hand, the allegation of Helen
Taha that she made a report to the police about her missing daughter was
not supported by any corroborative evidence, such as the police blotter, nor
was the police officer to whom she allegedly reported the incident ever
identified or presented in court.
We agree with appellant's contention that the prosecution failed to prove any
motive on his part for the commission of the crime charged. In one case, this
Court rejected the kidnapping charge where there was not the slightest hint
of a motive for the crime. 91 It is true that, as a rule, the motive of the
accused in a criminal case is immaterial and, not being an element of a
crime, it does not have to be proved. 92 Where, however, the evidence is
weak, without any motive being disclosed by the evidence, the guilt of the
accused becomes open to a reasonable doubt and, hence, an acquittal is in
order. 93 Nowhere in the testimony of either the complainant or her mother
can any ill motive of a criminal nature be reasonably drawn. What actually
transpired was an elopement or a lovers' tryst, immoral though it may be.
As a closing note, we are bewildered by the trial court's refusal to admit in
evidence the bag of clothes belonging to complainant which was presented
and duly identified by the defense, on its announced supposition that the
clothes could have easily been bought from a department store. Such
preposterous reasoning founded on a mere surmise or speculation, aside
from the fact that on rebuttal the prosecution did not even seek to elicit an
explanation or clarification from complainant about said clothes, strengthens
and reinforces our impression of an apparently whimsical exercise of
discretion by the court below. Matters which could have been easily verified
were thus cavalierly dismissed and supplanted by a conjecture, and on such
inferential basis a conclusion was then drawn by said court.
We accordingly deem it necessary to reiterate an early and highly regarded
disquisition of this Court against the practice of excluding evidence in the
erroneous manner adopted by the trial court:
EOPLE
OF
THE
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs. GENER
DE
was strong.[9]
Two other witnesses were presented by the prosecution, namely:
Resurreccion Talub Quiocho, a kumadre of the accused, and Aquilino Flores
Ambray, the husband of the complainant.
The testimonies of the witnesses for the prosecution established the
following facts:
Homeward bound on 31 March 1992 from Anson Department Store where she
worked as a sales clerk, complainant Gilda Ambray, the 32-year old wife of
Aquilino Flores Ambray and a mother of two children, was at the gate of
Meadow Wood Subdivision, Panapaan, Bacoor, Cavite, at about 8:45 p.m.
waiting for a tricycle ride toward her residence. She waited for about ten
minutes. When she noticed the accused, then wearing army pants, sitting at
the guardhouse, she approached him and asked him some questions. He
answered in a stammering manner. The complainant recognized the accused
very well because it was summertime and the gate of the subdivision was
well-lit.[10]
After Gilda started to walk, the accused mounted his tricycle, followed her
and offered her a ride, to which she agreed. While on board the tricycle, Gilda
noticed that the accused took a different route. She got scared but managed
not to show it. The accused would once in a while stop the tricycle and tell
her that it was not in good condition.[11] When they reached Phase II of the
same subdivision near an unfinished house, the accused stopped and told
Gilda to push the tricycle. She alighted from the tricycle and paid him P5.00,
which he did not accept. Gilda then walked away, but after she had taken
about ten steps, the accused embraced her from behind, covered her mouth
and held her neck tightly. She tried to shout but the accused threatened
her. The accused then dragged her to a vacant lot ten meters away from the
unfinished house.She attempted to shout again, but he threatened to kill her
if she made noise. She fought to free herself from his hold, but the accused
pushed and slapped her. He tried to raise her T-shirt while holding her neck
tightly. He shouted and commanded her to raise her T-shirt, which she
obligingly followed because of fear. He removed her bra and kissed her
breast. She shouted Saklolo! Tulungan ninyo ako, but the accused covered
her mouth and again held her neck that she could hardly breathe. He held
her hand tightly and positioned himself on top of her. He unzipped her pants
and pulled it down her knees. She struggled to liberate herself, but to no
avail. The accused then tried to insert his penis into her, but failed to do so
because she struggled and fought back, then slapped him while covering her
vagina with her hand. When she tried to stand, he pushed her down and, in
the process, was able to completely pull down her pants and underwear. She
pleaded to him to have mercy on her and told him that she had two children.
He warned her: Huwag kang sisigaw, papatayin kita. The accused again tried
to insert his penis into her, but she prevented him from doing so. The
accused took her hand and let her hold his penis to make it stiff. As Gilda
became too weak to struggle against the accuseds sexual advances, the
accused was able to finally consummate his dastardly desire. He then pulled
out his penis and fingered her private organ for a short while. The accused
then warned Gilda not to tell anybody, otherwise, he would kill her and all
members of her family.[12] He told her that she was his third victim but the
two did not complain. He then dressed up. Gilda picked up her pants and
underwear and hurriedly ran toward her home, without looking back.[13]
When Gilda arrived home, she told her mother and her husband, Aquilino
Flores Ambray, that she was raped by the accused. Aquilino got angry and
wanted to retaliate but was prevailed upon not to by Gildas mother.[14]
At almost midnight of 31 March 1992, Gilda and her mother reported the
incident to one Tony Antonio, the President of the Homeowners Association
and President of the National Press Club. Antonio radioed the Bacoor Police
Station to send an investigator. PO3 Efren Bautista and Sgt. Saguisame
responded to the alarm immediately. Upon their arrival at the house of
Antonio, PO3 Bautista saw Gilda with her mother. Gilda, who was crying,
related to PO3 Bautista that she was raped and described to him her
assailant as a tricycle driver, tall, strong, with curly hair and in army cut.
[15] Gilda also gave PO3 Bautista a vivid description of the accuseds
tricycle, viz., blue in color with the name Dimple at the back.[16] The
policemen left and went to the house of the accused. PO3 Bautista invited the
accused to go with him because the Mayor wanted to talk to him. The
accused, together with P03 Bautista, went to the residence of Antonio. When
the accused entered the house of Antonio, Gilda Ambray cried hysterically
while pointing to the accused as her rapist. The accused was then brought to
the municipal jail.[17]
Gilda Ambray was medically examined at the Las Pias Hospital and issued
a medical certificate.[18] She then proceeded to the NBI for a medico-legal
examination. Dr.
Valentin
Bernales,
a
medico-legal
officer
of
the NBI, conducted the examination on Gilda. His findings, contained in his
medico-legal report,[19] were as follows:
I. Physical Injuries:
Abrasion, brownish; lips, upper, left side, mucosal, 2.0 x 1.5 cm.; elbow, right,
postero-lateral aspect, 2.0 x 1.5 cm. and postero-medial aspect, multi-linear,
with brown scab formation, 3.0 x 1.0 cm. Contusion, reddish; back, right,
scapular area, 7.0 x 5 .0 cm. and left, 15.0 x 8.0 cm. Contused abrasion,
reddish black, scapular area, left, medial aspect, 3.0 x 2.0 cm.
II. Genital Examination:
Pubic hair, fully grown, moderate. Labia majora, gaping. Labia minora,
coaptated. Fourchette, lax. Vestibulae, pinkish, smooth. Hymen, reduced to
carunculae myrtiformis. Vaginal orifice, admits a tube, 3.0 cm. in diameter.
Vaginal wall, lax. Rugosities, obliterated.
III. Conclusions:
1. The above physical injuries were noted on the body of the subject at the
time of the examination.
2. Medical evidence indicative of recent sexual intercourse with man on or
about the alleged date of examination.
IV. Remarks:
Laboratory Report S-92-94[20] shows positive result for the presence of
human spermatozoa.
Dr. Bernales opined that the physical injuries sustained by Gilda Ambray
resulted from force applied to her,[21] while the presence of human
spermatozoa in Gildas genitals indicated recent sexual intercourse.[22]
On 3 April 1992, Bebey and Linda de Guzman, the parents of the accused,
asked the help of Resurreccion Talub Quiocho, the accuseds kumadre, to beg
for Gildas forgiveness for the accuseds sake. The following day, Resurreccion
accompanied the accuseds parents, wife, children and sister-in-law to Gildas
house.[23] Gilda met them, but to their plea for forgiveness, she told them
that should not be tolerated.[24]
Gilda further testified that she suffered moral damages, had to resign from
her job due to shame, and had spent P28,500.00 for attorneys fees.[25]
Gener de Guzman interposed the defense of alibi and presented Alfredo
Fernandez and Teotimo Camagong as his witnesses.
According to Gener de Guzman, on 31 March 1992 at around 9:00 p.m., he
was about to go home and was at the corner of Meadow Wood Subdivision
coming from Justineville Subdivision. On his way home on his tricycle, he saw
Gilda Ambray, who flagged him down and boarded his tricycle. After traveling
about half a kilometer, his tricycle malfunctioned. He told her that she better
walk home because her house was already near. He pushed his tricycle
home, and on his way, one Alfredo Fernandez approached him and inquired
what was wrong with his tricycle. Alfredo helped him push the tricycle
towards his (accuseds) home, and upon arrival thereat, he told Alfredo not to
leave at once. At around 9:10 p.m., they started to drink liquor until 11:00
p.m., and after their drinking spree, he cleaned their mess and slept. Then at
around 12:50 a.m. of 1 April 1992, PO3 Efren Bautista fetched and apprised
him that he was accused of rape by a certain Gilda Ambray. Thereafter, an
investigation was conducted and he was brought to the Bacoor Police Station.
Alfredo L. Fernandez, 37 years old, jobless, and a resident of Justineville
Subdivision, corroborated Geners story about the malfunctioning tricycle and
the drinking session.[26]
Teotimo Camagong testified that he was present when the accused was
investigated at the residence of Tony Antonio and that the complainant did
not pinpoint and identify the accused as her alleged molester.[27]
In its Decision[28] dated 30 June 1994 and promulgated on 25 July 1994,
the trial court found the accused guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime
of rape as charged, and rendered judgment as follows:
WHEREFORE, premises considered herein accused GENER SICO DE GUZMAN
is hereby found GUILTY beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of rape
punishable by Art. 335 of the Revised Penal Code. He should suffer the prison
term of reclusion perpetua and indemnify herein private complainant Gilda
Ambray the following: actual damages representing her lost monthly salary
when she resigned from her office due to shame for being a rape victim, in
the sum of P30,000.00, moral damages in the sum of P30,000.00, exemplary
damages ofP10,000.00, litigation expenses of P5,000.00, and attorneys fee[s]
including appearance fees for the private prosecutor in the sum
of P28,500.00.
It gave full gave weight to the testimony of Gilda Ambray because
[w]ithout doubt, the complainant had endured the rigors of recalling her
harrowing ordeal and had vividly, credibly and candidly portrayed in detail
how she was raped by the accused.[29]
As to whether sexual intercourse was consummated against the will or
consent of the offended party, the trial court said:
No less than NBI Medico Legal Officer Dr. Valentin Bernales had corroborated
the stance of herein private complainant that she was raped by the accused.
The victim had sustained contusions and abrasions at her body that indicated
that she struggled against the sexual advances of the accused. As a result of
the doctors examination on the victim, he confirmed the occurrence of a
recent sexual intercourse and presence in her private part of human
spermatozoa as denoted in his Medico Legal Report (Exh. F) and Laboratory
Report (Exh. D).[30]
Likewise it ruled that since the accused was drunk, he was more aggressive
and sexually capable.[31] Finally, it considered as evidence of the accuseds
guilt the plea of his parents, wife and relatives for forgiveness and
compromise.[32]
The accused seasonably appealed from the trial courts judgment of
conviction, and in urging us to acquit him, interposes the following
assignment of errors in his Appellants Brief:
1. THE COURT ERRED IN FINDING THAT ACCUSED HAS INDUBITABLY
EMPLOYED FORCE AND INTIMIDATION IN THE RAPE OF THE VICTIM.
2. THE COURT ERRED IN FINDING THAT ACCUSED WAS POSITIVELY
IDENTIFIED BY THE VICTIM.
3. THE COURT ERRED IN STRESSING THAT THE ACCUSED WAS DRUNK AT
THE TIME OF THE COMMISSION OF RAPE.
In the Brief for the Appellee, the Office of the Solicitor General disagrees
with the accused and prays that we affirm in toto the appealed decision.
The first and second assigned errors may be taken up together. The upshot
of the accuseds stance in these alleged errors is that he was not positively
identified and that neither force nor intimidation was proven. As to the latter
he cites these facts: (a) Gildas assailant had three acts of sexual intercourse
with her; (b) the physical examination showed that she suffered injuries on
the dorsal portion only, and none was found on her neck; (c) her personal
belongings -- bra, pants, T-shirt and underwear -- were completely intact; and
(d) no signs of physical violence were discernible on both the persons of the
accused and Gilda Ambray.
Rape is essentially an offense of secrecy, not generally attempted except
in dark or deserted and secluded places away from prying eyes, and the
crime usually commences solely upon the word of the offended woman
herself and conviction invariably turns upon her credibility, as the Peoples
single witness of the actual occurrence.[33]
In the review of rape cases, therefore, this Court is guided by the following
principles: (1) an accusation for rape can be made with facility: it is difficult to
prove but more difficult for the person accused, though innocent, to disprove
it; (2) in view of the intrinsic nature of the crime of rape where two persons
are usually involved, the testimony of the complainant must be scrutinized
with extreme caution; and (3) the evidence for the prosecution must stand or
fall on its on merits, and cannot be allowed to draw strength from the
weakness of the evidence for the defense.[34]
The resolution then of the first two assigned errors and the determination
of the guilt of the accused depend primarily on the credibility of the
complainant Gilda Ambray, since only she and the accused witnessed the
incident when it happened. Her testimony alone, if credible, would render the
accuseds conviction inevitable.
1.
All the foregoing acts of Gilda were done within twenty-four hours after the
commission of the crime. The quickness and spontaneity of these deeds
manifested the natural reactions of a virtuous woman who had just
undergone sexual molestation against herself,[36] and evinced nothing more
than her instant resolve to denounce the beast who criminally abused and
ravished her, and to protect her honor. Moreover, she rejected the plea for
forgiveness sought by the accuseds parents, wife, and children, then suffered
the travails of a public trial which necessarily exposed her to humiliation and
embarrassment by unraveling the details of the rape and enduring a crossexamination which sought to discredit her.
What Gilda endured could only come from one whose obsession was to
bring to justice the person who had abused her and vindicate her honor, even
if such vindication would never erase from her memory that excruciatingly
painful chapter in her life which left her psychologically and emotionally
scarred forever. This Court has repeatedly held that no complainant would
admit that she has been raped, make public the offense, allow the
examination of her private parts, undergo the troubles and humiliation of
public trial and endure the ordeal of testifying to all its gory details if she had
not in fact been raped.[37]
We likewise agree with the trial court that the accused used force and
intimidation upon Gilda.
Another established rule in rape cases is that the force need not be
irresistible; all that is necessary is that the force used by the accused is
sufficient to consummate his evil purpose, or that it was successfully used. It
need not be so great or of such character that it could not be repelled.
[38] Intimidation, on the other hand, must be viewed in light of the victims
perception and judgment at the time of the commission of the crime and not
by any hard and fast rule; it is enough that it produces fear -- fear that if the
victim does not yield to the bestial demands of the accused, something
would happen to her at that moment, or even thereafter as when she is
threatened with death if she would report the incident.[39]
In this case, the accused embraced Gilda from behind, held her neck
tightly, and covered her mouth. As she struggled to free herself, she
sustained her injuries. Dr. Bernales confirmed the use of force, and according
to him, the abrasions and contusions on Gildas body were due to force
applied on her. Moreover, the accused also threatened Gilda with death if she
would not yield to his bestial desires. The threat certainly constituted
intimidation.
The accuseds contention that it was highly incredible that there was force
or intimidation since the assailant committed three acts of sexual intercourse
with Gilda in three hours, deserves scant consideration. In the first place,
Gilda explained in her re-direct examination that the three hours mentioned
in her cross-examination referred to the time which elapsed from the moment
she was at the gate of Meadow Wood Subdivision and until she reported the
incident to Tony Antonio.[40] The principal object of re-direct examination is
to prevent injustice to the witness and the party who has called him by
affording an opportunity to the witness to explain the testimony given on
cross-examination, and to explain any apparent contradiction or
inconsistency in his statements, an opportunity which is ordinarily afforded to
him during cross-examination. The re-direct examination serves the purpose
of completing the answer of a witness, or of adding a new matter which has
been omitted, or of correcting a possible misinterpretation of testimony.
[41] In the second place, on direct examination, Gilda categorically declared
that the accused tried to thrice insert his penis into her vagina. He failed in
the first and second attempts because she struggled, but succeeded on the
third because she was already weak. While it may be true that on crossexamination she testified that she was raped once, yet on re-direct
examination she said that she was raped three times, no inconsistency at all
may be deduced therefrom. There was merely confusion as to the legal
qualifications of the three separate acts, i.e., Gildas answers were
conclusions of law. A witness is not permitted to testify as to a conclusion of
law, among which, legal responsibility is one of the most conspicuous. A
EN
[G.R.
BANC
No.
1284.
November
10,
1905.
Rodriguez,
for Appellant.
Modesto
Reyes,
for Appellee.
SYLLABUS
1. ACTION; DISMISSAL; ERROR. The defendant is entitled to have the case
dismissed where the plaintiff fails to establish the allegations in the
complaint; and an order overruling such motion is erroneous.
2. REALTY; POSSESSION; EVIDENCE. Where one derives title to real estate
from another, the declaration act, or omission of the latter to the property is
evidence against the former only when made while the latter holds the title.
(Sec.
278,
Code
of
Civil
Procedure.)
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; REGISTRATION; PRESUMPTION OF OWNERSHIP. A possessory
information recorded in the property register is prima facie evidence of the
fact that the person who instituted the proceedings holds the property as
owner; and the presumption, under article 448 of the Civil Code, is that his
title is good unless the contrary is shown.
DECISION
MAPA, J. :
This is an action to recover the possession of the two lots describe in the
complaint, located in Calles Clavel and Barcelona, district of Tondo, at present
occupied
by
the
defendant.
The court below entered judgment in favor of the plaintiff and against the
defendant for possession and damages in the sum of $2,500, United States
currency,
and
costs.
At the trial, after the plaintiff rested, the defendant moved for the dismissal of
the case upon the ground that the plaintiff had failed to establish the
allegations in the complaint. This motion was overruled by the court, to which
ruling the defendant duly excepted. The question thus raised puts in issue
the trial courts finding that the plaintiff was entitled to the ownership and
possession of the land in question. We accordingly hold that this point is
impliedly involved in the third and fourth assignments of error.
Plaintiff introduced both documentary and oral evidence. The latter consisted
of the testimony of John R. Lorenzo del Rosario, and Modesto Reyes, the city
attorney. The first witness testified that he did not know of his own
knowledge if the land in question belonged to the city (p. 11 of the bill of
exceptions). The next witness testified that the land included in Calles Clavel
and Barcelona was formerly part of Plaza Divisoria, which belonged to the
Central Government (not the city), and that he did not know to whom it now
belongs (pp. 12 and 13 of the bill of exceptions)). It must be borne in mind
that this witness referred to the land included in Calles Clavel and Barcelona,
and not to the lots described in the complaint. These lots abut upon the
streets referred to, but do not form a part of either. According to the
complaint,
they
are
building
lots.
The third witness, Juan Villegas, testified that the land in question was
formerly included in the Gran Divisoria, and that all the land included in it
belonged to the city. In this particular his testimony is at variance with that of
the precediing witness, who testified that the land belonged to the Central
Government. Villegas testimony was merely hearsay. It consisted of what he
had learned from some of the oldest residents in that section of the city. His
testimony was introduced by the plaintiff apparently for the purpose of
proving that the city was generally considered the owner of the land, drawing
from this fact the presumption of actual ownership under paragraph 11,
section 334, of the Code of Civil Procedure. Such testimony, however, does
not constitute the "common reputation" referred to in the section mentioned.
"common reputation," as used in that section, is equivalent to universal
reputation. The testimony of this witness is not sufficient to establish the
presumption
referred
to.
Furthermore, this witness stated that the land in Calle Azcarraga had been
partitioned between the municipality and the Central Government, share and
share alike, and that the Central Government (not the city) retained Calles
Gabriel de Rivera and Barcelona, which are precisely the streets on which the
property
abuts
(bill
of
exceptions,
pp.
15
and
16).
The fourth witness (Sotera Roco) testified merely that Lorenzo del Rosario
had paid 100 pesos to her brother Cipriano Roco for the purpose of instituting
a possessory information as to the property abutting on Calle Clavel. It
appears that Lorenzo del Rosario acquired the land from Cipriano Roco and
sold it to his brother Jacinto del Rosario, the defendant in this case.
Notwithstanding this, and assuming that the hearsay testimony of Sotera
Roco is admissible, we do not see how it can be inferred from her testimony
that
the
plaintiff
is
the
real
owner
of
the
property.
The witness Modesto Reyes and Lorenzo del Rosario said nothing as to the
ownership of the land. They simply testified as to the authenticity of some of
the
documentary
evidence
introduced
by
the
plaintiff.
Of these documents the most important of all is the petition presented by
Lorenzo del Rosario to the "mayor of the city of manila" on the 26th of
September, 1891, and the letter written by him on the 9th of October, 1901,
to the Municipal Board of Manila. Lorenzo del Rosario in his testimony,
admitted the authenticity of both documents which contain an offer to the
municipality of Manila to purchase the land on Calle Clavel. Lorenzo del
Rosario admitted also that he signed the first document under the
misapprehension that the land belonged to the city, but that he had been
subsequently informed by some of the city officials that the land did not
belong to the municipality, but to Cipriano Roco y Vera. He stated that he
signed the second document because the President of the Municipal Board,
Seor Herrera, advised him to do so in order to avoid litigation with the city.
His testimony in this respect was not contradicted. We accordingly hold that
the provisions of section 346 of the Code of Civil Procedure are applicable to
the case at bar in so far as they declare that an offer of compromise is not
admissible
in
evidence.
Again, Lorenzo del Rosario signed the first document before he acquired from
Cipriano Roco y Vera the ownership of the land referred to therein, the
second document being signed after he had transferred the land to the
defendant Jacinto del Rosario, who took possession of the same and had it
registered, as the plaintiff admits (par. 2 of the complaint), on the 23d of
February, 1893. If this is so, whatever statements Lorenzo del Rosario might
have made in the documents mentioned, they are not binding upon the
defendant, because, under section 278 of the Code of Civil Procedure, "where
one derives title to real property from another, the declaration, act, or
omission of the latter, in relation to the property, is evidence against the
former only when made while the latter holds the title."cralaw virtua1aw
library
remanded to the court of its origin for action in accordance herewith. The
plaintiff shall pay the costs of the Court of First Instance. No special order is
made as to the costs on appeal. After the expiration of twenty days from the
date hereof let judgment be entered in conformity herewith. So ordered.
The plaintiff also introduced in evidence a map of the city of Manila. This map
is not before us. It is sufficient to say, in order to show that it has no value as
evidence, that the reliability of the map was not proven at the trial. The only
witness examined with regard to it was the city attorney. He was unable to
say who made it or who caused it to be made, or when it was made. He said
only that he believed the map had been drawn in the month of July, 1880, or
prior to May, 1893. Neither this nor his statement that the map was found
among the archives of the city of Manila is of itself sufficient to show that the
map is authentic. No one appears to certify as to its correctness.
Republic
SUPREME
Manila
The map identified by the witness John R. Wilson was introduced by the
plaintiff for the sole purpose of showing the location of the land in question. It
has, therefore, no value in establishing the right of possession claimed by the
plaintiff.
On the other hand, the two public instruments executed on March 7, 1900,
between the defendant and Telesfora Apostol y Perea, also introduced in
evidence by the plaintiff, show that the defendant was in possession of the
land under a good title and with the status of owner of the land. In the first
instrument if is stated so many words that the defendant is the owner in fee
simple of the land, he having repurchased it from Liberio de Aurteneche y
Menchacatorre, whose title had been recorded in the property register.
From the foregoing it appears that the evidence introduced by the plaintiff
does not prove its claim of title to the land in question. Neither the testimony
of the witnesses presented by the plaintiff nor the documentary evidence
introduced show that the city of Manila is the owner of the land, or that it has
a right to its possession as claimed in the complaint. Some of the documents
introduced, as well as the two public instruments referred to as having been
executed in 1900, tended to support the contentions of the defendant rather
than those of the plaintiff. Furthermore, the plaintiff itself admits in the
complaint that the defendants possession of the land in Calle Barcelona was
recorded since March, 1901, and his possession of that in Calle Clavel since
February, 1893. This shows that the defendant had been in the adverse
possession of the land. According to article 448 of the Civil Code he must be
presumed to hold under a just title, unless the contrary is shown.
In view of the foregoing, we hold that the defendant had a perfect right to ask
for the dismissal of the case on the ground that the plaintiff had failed to
establish the allegations in the complaint, and the court erred in overruling
his
motion
to
dismiss.
The order of the trial court overruling the motion of the defendant to dismiss
and the judgment appealed from are hereby reversed. Let the case be
Torres,
Johnson,
Carson
and
Willard, JJ.,
concur.
of
the
Philippines
COURT
SECOND DIVISION
G.R. No. 77029 August 30, 1990
BIENVENIDO, ESTELITA, MACARIO, LUIS, ADELAIDE, ENRIQUITA and
CLAUDIO,
all
surnamed,
GEVERO,petitioners,
vs.
INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT and DEL MONTE DEVELOPMENT
CORPORATION, respondents.
Carlito B. Somido for petitioners.
Benjamin N. Tabios for private respondent.
PARAS, J.:
This is a petition for review on certiorari of the March 20, 1988 decision 1 of
the then Intermediate Appellate Court (now Court of Appeals) in AC-GR CV
No. 69264, entitled Del Monte Development Corporation vs. Enrique Ababa,
et al., etc. affirming the decision 2 of the then Court of First Instance (now
Regional Trial Court) of Misamis Oriental declaring the plaintiff corporation as
the true and absolute owner of that portion of Lot 476 of the Cagayan
Cadastre, particularly Lot No. 2476-D of the subdivision plan (LRC) Psd-80450,
containing an area of Seven Thousand Eight Hundred Seventy Eight (7,878)
square meters more or less.
As found by the Appellate Court, the facts are as follows:
The parcel of land under litigation is Lot No. 2476 of the
Subdivision Plan Psd-37365 containing an area of 20,119
square meters and situated at Gusa, Cagayan de Oro City.
Said lot was acquired by purchase from the late Luis Lancero
on September 15, 1964 as per Deed of Absolute Sale
executed in favor of plaintiff and by virtue of which Transfer
Certificate of Title No. 4320 was issued to plaintiff (DELCOR
for brevity). Luis Lancero, in turn acquired the same parcel
from Ricardo Gevero on February 5, 1952 per deed of sale
executed by Ricardo Gevero which was duly annotated as
entry No. 1128 at the back of Original Certificate of Title No.
7610 covering the mother lot identified as Lot No. 2476 in the
names of Teodorica Babangha 1/2 share and her children:
Maria; Restituto, Elena, Ricardo, Eustaquio and Ursula, all
in the Title and that the Deed did not include the share of Ricardo, as
inheritance from Teodorica, because the Deed did not recite that she was
deceased at the time it was executed (Rollo, pp. 67-68).
The hereditary share in a decedents' estate is transmitted or vested
immediately from the moment of the death of the "causante" or predecessor
in interest (Civil Code of the Philippines, Art. 777), and there is no legal bar to
a successor (with requisite contracting capacity) disposing of his hereditary
share immediately after such death, even if the actual extent of such share is
not determined until the subsequent liquidation of the estate (De Borja v.
Vda. de Borja, 46 SCRA 577 [1972]).
Teodorica Babangha died long before World War II, hence, the rights to the
succession were transmitted from the moment of her death. It is therefore
incorrect to state that it was only in 1966, the date of extrajudicial partition,
when Ricardo received his share in the lot as inheritance from his mother
Teodorica. Thus, when Ricardo sold his share over lot 2476 that share which
he inherited from Teodorica was also included unless expressly excluded in
the deed of sale.
Petitioners contend that Ricardo's share from Teodorica was excluded in the
sale considering that a paragraph of the aforementioned deed refers merely
to the shares of Ricardo and Eustaquio (Rollo, p. 67-68).
It is well settled that laws and contracts shall be so construed as to
harmonize and give effect to the different provisions thereof (Reparations
Commission v. Northern Lines, Inc., 34 SCRA 203 [1970]), to ascertain the
meaning of the provisions of a contract, its entirety must be taken into
account (Ruiz v. Sheriff of Manila, 34 SCRA 83 [1970]). The interpretation
insisted upon by the petitioners, by citing only one paragraph of the deed of
sale, would not only create contradictions but also, render meaningless and
set at naught the entire provisions thereof.
Petitioners claim that DELCOR's action is barred by laches considering that
the petitioners have remained in the actual, open, uninterrupted and adverse
possession thereof until at present (Rollo, p. 17).
An instrument notarized by a notary public as in the case at bar is a public
instrument (Eacnio v. Baens, 5 Phil. 742). The execution of a public
instrument is equivalent to the delivery of the thing (Art. 1498, 1st Par., Civil
Code) and is deemed legal delivery. Hence, its execution was considered a
sufficient delivery of the property (Buencamino v. Viceo, 13 Phil. 97; [1906];
Puato v. Mendoza, 64 Phil. 457 [1937]; Vda. de Sarmiento v. Lesaca, 108 Phil.
900 [1960]; Phil. Suburban Development Corp. v. Auditor Gen., 63 SCRA 397
(1975]).
Besides, the property sold is a registered land. It is the act of registration that
transfers the ownership of the land sold. (GSIS v. C.A., G.R. No. 42278,
January 20, 1989). If the property is a registered land, the purchaser in good,
faith has a right to rely on the certificate of title and is under no duty to go
behind it to look for flaws (Mallorca v. De Ocampo, No. L-26852, March 25,
1970; Unchuan v. C.A., 161 SCRA 710 [1988]; Nuguid v. CA-G.R. No. 77427,
March 13, 1989).
Under the established principles of land registration law, the person dealing
with registered land may generally rely on the correctness of its certificate of
title and the law will in no way oblige him to go behind the certificate to
determine the condition of the property (Tiongco v. de la Merced, L-2446, July
25, 1974; Lopez vs. CA., G.R. No. 49739, January 20, 1989; Davao Grains Inc.
vs. IAC, 171 SCRA 612 [1989]). This notwithstanding, DELCOR did more than
that. It did not only rely on the certificate of title. The Court of Appeals found
that it had first investigated and checked the title (T.C.T. No. T-1183) in the
name of Luis Lancero. It likewise inquired into the Subdivision Plan, the
corresponding technical description and the deed of sale executed by Ricardo
Gevero in favor of Luis Lancero and found everything in order. It even went to
the premises and found Luis Lancero to be in possession of the land to the
exclusion of any other person. DELCOR had therefore acted in good faith in
purchasing the land in question.
Consequently, DELCOR's action is not barred by laches.
The main issues having been disposed of, discussion of the other issues
appear unnecessary.
PREMISES CONSIDERED, the instant petition is hereby DISMISSED and the
decision of the Court of Appeals is hereby AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.
G.R. No. L-12858
THE
UNITED
vs.
SANTIAGO PINEDA, defendant-appellant.
Francisco
and
Lualhati
Acting Attorney-General Paredes for appellee.
STATES, plaintiff-appellee,
for
appellant.
MALCOLM, J.:
This appeal requires a construction and an application, for the first time, of
the penal provisions of the Pharmacy Law.
Santiago Pineda, the defendant, is a registered pharmacist of long standing
and the owner of a drug store located at Nos. 442, 444, Calle Santo Cristo,
city of Manila. One Feliciano Santos, having some sick horses, presented a
copy of a prescription obtained from Dr. Richardson, and which on other
occasions Santos had given to his horses with good results, at Pineda's drug
store for filling. The prescription read "clorato de potasa 120 gramos
en seis papelitos de 20 gramos, para caballo." Under the supervision of
Pineda, the prescription was prepared and returned to Santos in the form of
six papers marked, "Botica Pineda Clorato potasa 120.00 en seis
papeles para caballo Sto. Cristo 442, 444, Binondo, Manila." Santos,
under the belief that he had purchased the potassium chlorate which he had
asked for, put two of the packages in water the doses to two of his sick
horses. Another package was mixed with water for another horse, but was
not used. The two horses, to which had been given the preparation, died
shortly afterwards. Santos, thereupon, took the three remaining packages to
the Bureau of Science for examination. Drs. Pea and Darjuan, of the Bureau
of Science, on analysis found that the packages contained not potassium
chlorate but barium chlorate. At the instance of Santos, the two chemists also
went to the drug store of the defendant and bought potassium chlorate,
which when analyzed was found to be barium chlorate. (Barium chlorate, it
should be noted, is a poison; potassium chlorate is not.) Dr. Buencamino, a
veterinarian, performed an autopsy on the horses, and found that death was
the result of poisoning.
Four assignments of error are made. The first is that the lower court erred in
admitting the testimony of the chemist Pena and Darjuan as to their purchase
of potassium chlorate at the drug store of the accused, which substance
proved on analysis to be barium chlorate. What the appellant is here relying
on is the maxim res inter alios acta. As a general rule, the evidence of other
offenses committed by a defendant is inadmissible. But appellant has
confused this maxim and this rule with certain exceptions thereto. The effort
is not to convict the accused of a second offense. Nor is there an attempt to
draw the mind away from the point at issue and thus to prejudice defendant's
case. The purpose is to ascertain defendant's knowledge and intent, and to
fix his negligence. If the defendant has on more than one occasion performed
similar acts, accident in good faith is possibly excluded, negligence is
intensified, and fraudulent intent may even be established. It has been said
that there is no better evidence of negligence than the frequency of
accidents. (See 10 R. C. L., pp. 938, 940.) The United States Supreme Court
has held that:
On the trial of a criminal case the question relates to the tendency of
certain testimony to throw light upon a particular fact, or to explain
the conduct of a particular person, there is a certain discretion on the
part of the trial judge which a court of errors will not interfere with,
unless it manifestly appear that the testimony has no legitimate
bearing upon the question at issue, and is calculated to prejudice the
accused.
Whenever the necessity arises for a resort to circumstantial evidence,
either from the nature of the inquiry or the failure of direct proof,
objections to the testimony on the ground of irrelevancy are not
favored.
Evidence is admissible in a criminal action which tends to show
motive, although it tends to prove the commission of another offense
by the defendant. (Moore vs. U. S. [1893], 150 U. S., 57.)
The second assignment of error is that the lower court erred in finding that
the substance sold by the accused to Feliciano Santos on the 22d of June,
1916, was barium chlorate and not potassium chlorate. The proof
demonstrates the contrary.
The third and fourth assignments of error that the lower court erred in finding
that the accused has been proved guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of an
infraction of Act No. 597, section 17, as amended. The third assignment
contains the points we should consider, including, we may remark, a
somewhat difficult question concerning which the briefs have given little
assistance.
The Pharmacy Law was first enacted as Act No. 597, was later amended by
Act Nos. 1921, 2236, and 2382, and is now found as Chapter 30 of the
Administrative Code. The law provides for a board of pharmaceutical
examiners, and the examination and registration of pharmacists, and finally
contains sundry provisions relative to the practice of pharmacy. High
qualification for applicants for the pharmaceutical; examination are
established. The program of subjects for the examination is wide.
Responsibility for the quality of drugs is fixed by section 17 of the Pharmacy
Law, as amended (now Administrative Code [1917], section 751), in the
following term:
and most exact and reliable safeguards consistent with the reasonable
conduct of the business, in order that human life may not be constantly be
exposed to the danger flowing from the substitution of deadly poisons for
harmless medicine." (Tombari vs. Connors [1912], 85 Conn., 235. See also
Willson vs. Faxon, Williams and Faxon [1913], 208 N. Y., 108; Knoefel vs.
Atkins [1907], 81 N. E., 600.) The "skill" required of a druggist is denominated
as "high" or "ample." (Peters vs. Jackson [1902], 50 W. Va., 644; 57 L. R. A.,
428.) In other words, the care required must be commensurate with the
danger involved, and the skill employed must correspond with the superior
knowledge of the business which the law demands.
The same section of the Pharmacy Law also contains the following penal
provision: "Any person violating the provisions of this Act shall, upon
conviction, be punished by a fine of not more than five hundred dollar." The
Administrative Code, section 2676, changes the penalty somewhat by
providing that:
Under one conception, and it should not be forgotten that the case we
consider are civil in nature, the question of negligence or ignorance is
irrelevant. The druggist is responsible as an absolute guarantor of what he
sells. In a decision which stands alone, the Supreme Court of Kentucky said:
THE
PEOPLE
OF
vs.
BENJAMIN
IRANG,
BENJAMIN IRANG, appellant.
THE
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
ET
Conrado
V.
Sanchez
Undersecretary of Justice Melencio for appellee.
AL., defendants.
for
appellant.
VILLA-REAL, J.:
The accused Benjamin Irang appeals to this court from the judgment of the
Court of First Instance of Nueva Ecija finding him guilty beyond reasonable
doubt of the complex crime robbery with homicide, the robbery having been
committed in the house of Perfecto Melocotones and Maximiniana
Melocotones, and sentencing him to the penalty of reclusion perpetua and to
indemnify the heirs of the deceased in the sum of P500, with the
proportionate part of the costs of the trial.
In support of his appeal the appellant assigns the following alleged errors as
having been committed by the courta quo in its decision in question, to wit:
1. The lower court erred in holding that the defendant Benjamin Irang
had been sufficiently identified beyond reasonable doubt, and in not
giving due weight to the testimony of the witnesses for the defense.
2. The lower court erred in not acquitting the defendant Benjamin
Irang on the ground of reasonable doubt.
The following undisputed facts have been established during the trial, to wit:
Between 7 and 8 o'clock of the night of November 9, 1935, seven individuals
with white stripes upon their faces, two of whom were armed with guns and
two with bolos, went to the house of the spouses Perfecto Melocotones and
Maximiniana Vicente, where three lights were burning, one at the balcony,
another in the room and another on a table. Some of said individuals went up
and others remained on guard downstairs. Those who went up approached
Perfecto Melocotones immediately and ordered him to bring his money.
Melocotones answered in the affirmative but before he could do what was
ordered him he was attacked with bolos until he fell to the floor. Later another
armed with a gun went up and approaching Maximiana Vicente, wife of
Perfecto Melocotones, struck herein the face with the butt of his gun, making
her lose consciousness momentarily. When she regained consciousness he
saw her husband already dead. One of the assailants then said to her: "Bring
out the money and jewelry." Maximiniana Vicente turned over to the man
who had struck her with the butt of his gun P70 in cash and jewelry valued at
P200, which she has kept in a trunk. During the short space of time that she
was turning over the money and jewelry, she looked at the man's face and
saw that he had pockmarks and a scar on his left eyelid. That same night the
house of Juana de la Cruz was assaulted by malefactors who had been firing
shots before arriving at and going up the house. All of them had white stripe
upon their faces. Juana de la Cruz noticed that one of them had pockmarks
and a scar on the left eyelid and was dressed in a maong-colored suit. It was
he who opened her trunk.
After the malefactors had left Perfecto Melocotones house, the latter's son
Toribio Melocotones, who had seen the assailants arrive but without
recognizing them, immediately reported the matter to the municipal
authorities and to the constabulary, who went to the scene of the crime
without loss of time. Maximiniana Vicente informed Lieutenant Roman
Alejandre of the Constabulary that the person who had struck her with the
butt of his gun and taken her money and jewelry was a man of regular
statute, with a lean body and pockmarked face. With this description, said
lieutenant went in search of said individual. Having arrested a group of
persons, he brought them to Maximiniana Vicente's house so that the latter
might identify among them the one who struck her with the butt of his gun,
but she did not find such man. Later another group was presented to her and
in it she identified the herein accused-appellant Benjamin Irang as the one
who had struck her with the butt of his gun and demanded delivery of her
money and jewelry. He was likewise the same man arrested by Lieutenant
Alejandre at midnight on November 9, 1935, in the barrio of Tampac which is
five or seven kilometers from Maturanoc to which he was taken and brought
to the house of the deceased. Juana de la Cruz also recognized Benjamin
Irang, through his pockmarks and scar on his left eyelid, as one of the men
who had gone up to her house that same night. Once under arrest, the
accused-appellant Benjamin Irang made an affidavit in Tagalog (Exhibit B),
stating that while he was in the barrio of Tampac, municipality of Guimba.
Province of Nueva Ecija, on November 9, 1935 at about 7 o'clock in the
evening, Fidel Estrella and Ignacio Sebastian arrived; that Fidel Estrella
invited him to go to the house of Ignacio Sebastian's brother-in-law named
Angel Talens because Estrella had something to tell him; that upon arriving at
Angel Talens' house, Fidel Estrella invited him to go to Maturanoc to look for
business; that the appellant asked Fidel Estrella why he wanted to bring him
in the latter told him to stop asking questions otherwise he would slash him
with his bolo; that Fidel Estrella carried a bolo and Ignacio Sebastian an
unlicensed firearms; that they went to the house of Perfecto Melocotones in
the barrio of Maturanoc, Guimba, Nueva Ecija, and upon arriving there Fidel
Estrella, who acted as the ringleader, assigned to each and every one of
them his corresponding place, designating those who should assault that of
Ursula Cabigon; that Benjamin Irang was in the group formed by Fidel Estrella
and Ignacio Sebastian, which assaulted the house of Perfecto Melocotones,
having been assigned to stand guard on the stairs of said house; that Fidel
Estrella, once inside the house, slashed Perfecto Melocotones thrice with his
bolo; that Fidel Estrella later told him that they had succeeded in taking
money and the shotgun; and that after the assault they dispersed, each
returning to his own home. This affidavit (Exhibit B) was sworn to by
Benjamin Irang before the deputy clerk of the Court of First Instance of Nueva
Ecija , in the presence of Graciano Pigol, the constabulary soldier who
accompanied him. Before Irang affixed his thumbmark and took his oath, the
deputy clerk of court asked him if he understood Tagalog and when he
answered in the affirmative said deputy clerk read the contends of the
document to him. Asked whether he had any thing else to add thereto, the
appellant answered that he had nothing more to say.
The defense of the accused-appellant is an alibi to the effect that in the
afternoon of the day of the commission of the crime, he was in his rice field
washing a fishing basket. There he met Roberto Alcantara. Later he went to
the house of Buenaventura Javier to return the fishing basket in question and
to exercise on the rings (jugar a las arogallas) with the latter's son Pedro, and
two unmarried sons of the appellant's uncle, in the presence of several
persons, returning home at 8 o'clock that night. When he was arrested the
constabulary soldiers opened his box but found nothing in it. They later took
him in a jitney to the victims house in the barrio of Maturanoc and upon being
brought face to face with the widow Maximiniana Vicente, Lieutenant
Alejandre told the widow: "this is the one who slashed your husband and
punctured your face." The widow answered saying: "Is it that man, sir." As
Benjamin Irang answered that he had not left his house, the lieutenant gave
him a blow which made him lose consciousness. Then the lieutenant said to
the widow: "He is the same man. It was he to whom you delivered the money
and jewelry. Look at him well. Identify him well." In the constabulary barracks
in Cabanatuan the soldiers and a sergeant manhandled him from the night of
November 9, 1935, until 4 o'clock in the morning of the 11th of said month
and year, for having denied all knowledge of the crime, making him lose his
breath and punching him in the stomach. When he could no longer bear the
maltreatment, he agreed to tell what they wanted him to tell. Upon being
taken for investigation, the constabulary soldiers told him to agree to all that
the clerk of court might read to him, otherwise they would again manhandle
him at the barracks. He was not present when the affidavit Exhibit B was
prepared. Neither are the contents thereof true. He merely affixed his
thumbmark upon said document for fear of the soldiers.
Lieutenant Alejandre as well as Sergeant Lubrico denied that the accused had
been maltreated in the least.
The only question to be decided in the present appeal is whether or not the
accused-appellant Benjamin Irang was identified as one of those who
assaulted the house of Perfecto Melocotones, killed him and robbed his wife
Maximiniana Vicente of money and jewelry.
Maximiniana Vicente, whom the accused-appellant Benjamin Irang struck in
the face with the butt of his gun and of whom he demanded delivery of her
money and jewelry scrutinized the latter's face and notice that he had
pockmarks and a scar on his left eyelid. When on that same night of the
assault Lieutenant Alejandre, guided by the description given him by
Maximiniana Vicente, went in search of the person who might have
maltreated the latter and robbed her of her money and jewelry and
presented a group of persons to said Maximiniana Vicente, she said that the
man who had maltreated her was not among those who composed that first
group. Said lieutenant later presented another group to her but neither did
the widow find in it the man who had struck her with the butt of his gun. In
the third group presented to her, she immediately pointed at one who turned
out to be the herein accused-appellant. The man pointed at protested but
when she told him that it was he who had struck her in the face with the butt
of his gun, the appellant became silent.
The testimony of Juana de la Cruz to the effect that her house, situated only
about one hundred meters from that of Perfecto Melocotones, was assaulted
that same night by some malefactors with white stripes upon their faces, and
that one of them, with pockmarks on his face and a scar on his left eyelid and
dressed in a maong-colored suit, who later turned out to be the herein
accused-appellant, opened her box, indirectly corroborates Maximiniana
Vicente's testimony that the man of the same description was the open who
went to her house and demanded delivery of her money and jewelry, having
recognized him later to be the herein accused-appellant. While evidence of
another crime is, as a rule, not admissible in a prosecution for robbery, it is
admissible when it is otherwise relevant, as where it tends to identify
Separate Opinions
LAUREL, J., dissenting:
I dissent.
The evidence presented by the prosecution consists in the main of (a) Exhibit
B, which is alleged confession of the appellant herein, (b) the testimony of
Toribio Melocotones, son of the deceased, (c) the testimony of Juana de la
Cruz, (d) that the Lieut. Roman Alejandre of the Philippine Army, and (e) that
of Maximiniana Vicente, widow of the deceased.
In his affidavit, marked Exhibit B, the appellant admitted his participation in
the commission of the crime charged. This written confession was not given
any value by the trial judge. According to the appellant, it was obtained from
him by an unknown soldier, through force and violence, under circumstances
which makes it involuntary and, therefore, inadmissible as proof of guilt (U.
S. vs. Zara, 42 Phil., 308; People vs. Buda Singh, 45 Phil., 676;
Peoplevs. Takeo Tabuche, 46 Phil., 28; People vs. Guendo Nishishima, 57 Phil.,
26; People vs. Francisco, 57 Phil., 418).
Toribio Melocotones testified that he saw the band of seven robbers on their
way to his father's house; that at that time he did not know who they were
but the he now knows five of them to be the accused Fidel Estrella, Jacinto
Sebastian, Ignacio Sebastian, Juan Levaste (alias Juan de Caste), and the
appellant herein, Benjamin Irang; that he saw the seven men enter the yard
of his father's house, where he had planted himself; that the seven men
entered the house, one at a time, the smallest in the group, Fidel Estrella,
first followed by a bigger man, the appellant Benjamin Irang, then by Juan
Levaste (alias Juan de Caste), by Jacinto Sebastian, by Ignacio Sebastian, and
finally, by the two members of the band who were unknown to him that as
soon as they all had entered he followed them but saw one of them standing
guard and firing several shots, as a result of which he heard his brothers and
sisters shouting; that it was on that occasion when he came nearer the house
but was seen by the guard who pointed a gun at him and ran away. The trial
judge brushed aside the testimony of this witness as unworthy of credence
and belief. He said:
. . . En primer lugar, cada uno de estos acusados fueron
sucesivamente llevos a su casa y presentados alli para ser
reconocidos en dias y noches sucesivos. Sin embargo, dicho testigo
no indico a ninguno de ellos que fuera el que en la noche de autos
asalto a su casa. Este testigo., no obstante, no fue llamado como tal
en la investigacion prelominarde esta causa en el Juzgado de Paz
para indicar, de conformidad con los detalles que he dado, que los
acusados eran asaltaron su acsa. Es verdad que esta falta de
explicacion no es suficienta para desacreditar su testimonio. Este
acusado es uno de los probatorio de su testimonio. Este acusado es
uno de los mas altos se entre to dos los acusados, por consiguente,
no puede decirse que era el mas pequeno. Aun admitiendo que el
testimonio del testigo al hablar de que el primero que entro era el
mas pequeno se referia si volumen del individio. Fidel Estrella
tampoco puede considerarse como el mas flaco de entre los
acusados. Es de cuerpo regular y se confunde casi como cualquiera
de los otros acusados en su volumen, a excepcion del acusado Emilio
CIVIL
SERVICE
COMMISSION, petitioner,
BELAGAN, respondent.
vs.
ALLYSON
DECISION
SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ, J.:
When the credibility of a witness is sought to be impeached by proof of
his reputation, it is necessary that the reputation shown should be that which
existed before the occurrence of the circumstances out of which the litigation
arose,[1] or at the time of the trial and prior thereto, but not at a period
remote from the commencement of the suit.[2] This is because a person of
derogatory character or reputation can still change or reform himself.
For our resolution is the petition for review on certiorari of the Court of
Appeals Decision[3] dated January 8, 1998, in CA-G.R. SP. No. 44180, the
dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE, Resolution No. 966213 dated September 23, 1996 and
Resolution No. 972423 dated April 11, 1997 of the respondent Civil Service
Commission are hereby set aside. The complaint against petitioner Allyson
Belagan filed by Magdalena Gapuz is herebyDISMISSED.
The dismissal of petitioner Belagan is lifted and he is hereby ordered to be
immediately reinstated to his position without loss of seniority, retirement,
backwages and other rights and benefits.
SO ORDERED.
The instant case stemmed from two (2) separate complaints filed
respectively by Magdalena Gapuz, founder/directress of the Mother and Child
Learning Center, and Ligaya Annawi, a public school teacher at Fort Del Pilar
Elementary School, against respondent Dr. Allyson Belagan, Superintendent
of the Department of Education, Culture and Sports (DECS), all from Baguio
City. Magdalena charged respondent with sexual indignities and harassment,
while Ligaya accused him of sexual harassment and various malfeasances.
Respondent
Baguio
City
Superintendent
Allyson
Belagan likewise GUILTY of the two counts of sexual
advances or indignities committed against the person and
honor of complainant Mrs. Magdalena Gapuz, a private school
teacher of Baguio City, while in the performance of his official
duties and taking advantage of his office.
misconduct and imposed the penalty of DISMISSAL from the service with
all the accessory penalties. The decision of the DECS Secretary is modified
accordingly.[7]
On October 29, 1996, respondent seasonably filed a motion for
reconsideration, contending that he has never been charged of any offense in
his thirty-seven (37) years of service. By contrast, Magdalena was charged
with several offenses before the Municipal
Trial Court (MTC) of Baguio City, thus:
1. Criminal
LIGHT
ORAL
DEFAMATION
2. Criminal Case No. 45629 for SLIGHT PHYSICAL INJURIES (May 13,
1982)
3. Criminal Case No. 45630 for GRAVE THREATS (May 13, 1982)
4. Criminal Case No. 45914 for GRAVE THREATS (June 24, 1982)
21. Criminal Case No. 53404 for UNJUST VEXATION (December 13,
1985)
22. Criminal Case No. 55422 for UNJUST VEXATION (October 24,
1986) [8]
6. Criminal Case No. 51533 for LIGHT THREATS (January 25, 1985)
Mrs.
11. Criminal Case No. 51821 for UNJUST VEXATION (March 18,
1985)
12. Criminal Case No. 62173 for UNJUST VEXATION (May 29, 1991)
Case
No.
030)
for
5. GABRIELA SILANG TANOD FORCES vs. Gapuz (Case No. 031) for
HABITUAL TROUBLE MAKER
13. Criminal Case No. 62172 for GRAVE ORAL DEFAMATION (May
29, 1991)
6. Pablo
(November
1,
1979)
for
ORAL
8. Mrs. Liza Ancheta vs. Gapuz (September 27, 1978) for RUMOR
MONGERING
9. Mr. Pananin (Beneco Personnel) (October 8, 1978) for ORAL
DEFAMATION
10. Mrs. Minda Valdez vs. Gapuz (November 6, 1978) for ORAL
DEFAMATION
hurling
invectives
rumors
against
Appellate
Court
Unsatisfied, the CSC, through the Solicitor General, filed the instant
petition raising the following assignments of error:
I. The Supreme Court may rule on factual issues raised on
appeal where the Court of Appeals misappreciated the
facts. Furthermore, where the findings of the Court of
Appeals and the trial court are contrary to each other,
the Supreme Court may review the record and evidence.
The Court of Appeals erred in not giving credence to the
testimony of complainant Magdalena Gapuz despite
convincing and overwhelming signs of its truthfulness.
II. The Court of Appeals committed reversible error when it
failed to give due weight to the findings of the DECS,
which conducted the administrative investigation,
specifically with respect to the credibility of the
witnesses presented.
III. The Court of Appeals erred in ruling that respondent
should be penalized under Sec. 22 (o) of the Omnibus
Rules Implementing Book V and not Sec. 22 (e) of said
rules.[12]
In his comment, respondent maintains that Magdalenas derogatory
record undermines the verity of her charge and that the Court of Appeals is
correct in dismissing it.
The petition is impressed with merit.
The pivotal issue before us is whether complaining witness, Magdalena
Gapuz, is credible. This is a question of fact which, as a general rule, is not
subject to this Courts review.
It is a rule of long standing that factual findings of the Court of Appeals,
if supported by substantial evidence, are conclusive and binding on the
parties and are not reviewable by this Court.[13] This Court is, after all, not a
trier of facts. One of the exceptions, however, is when the findings of the
Court of Appeals are contrary to those of the trial court or a quasijudicialbody, like petitioner herein.[14]
Here, the Court of Appeals and the CSC are poles apart in their
appreciation of Magdalenas derogatory record. While the former considered it
of vital and paramount importance in determining the truth of her charge, the
latter dismissed it as of minor significance. This contrariety propels us to the
elusive area of character and reputation evidence.
Generally, the character of a party is regarded as legally irrelevant in
determining a controversy.[15] One statutory exception is that relied upon by
respondent, i.e., Section 51 (a) 3, Rule 130 of the Revised Rules on Evidence,
which we quote here:
SEC. 51. Character evidence not generally admissible; exceptions.
(a) In Criminal Cases:
xxxxxx
(3) The good or bad moral character of the offended party may be
proved if it tends to establish in any reasonable degree the
probability or improbability of the offense charged.
It will be readily observed that the above provision pertains only to
criminal cases, not to administrative offenses. And even assuming that this
technical rule of evidence can be applied here, still, we cannot sustain
respondents posture.
Not every good or bad moral character of the offended party may be
proved under this provision. Only those which would establish the probability
or improbability of the offense charged. This means that the character
evidence must be limited to the traits and characteristics involved in the type
of offense charged.[16] Thus, on a charge of rape - character for chastity, on
a charge of assault - character for peaceableness or violence, and on a
charge of embezzlement - character for honesty.[17] In one rape case, where
it was established that the alleged victim was morally loose and apparently
uncaring about her chastity, we found the conviction of the accused doubtful.
[18]
In the present administrative case for sexual harassment, respondent
did not offer evidence that has a bearing on Magdalenas chastity. What he
presented are charges for grave oral defamation, grave threats, unjust
vexation, physical injuries, malicious mischief, etc. filed against her.
Certainly, these pieces of evidence are inadmissible under the above
provision because they do not establish the probability or improbability of the
offense charged.
Obviously, in invoking the above provision, what respondent was trying
to establish is Magdalenas lack of credibility and not the probability or the
improbability of the charge. In this regard, a different provision applies.
Credibility means the disposition and intention to tell the truth in the
testimony given. It refers to a persons integrity, and to the fact that he is
worthy of belief.[19] A witness may be discredited by evidence attacking his
general reputation for truth,[20] honesty[21] or integrity.[22] Section 11, Rule
132 of the same Revised Rules on Evidence reads:
SEC. 11. Impeachment of adverse partys witness. A witness may be
impeached by the party against whom he was called, by contradictory
evidence, by evidence that his general reputation for truth, honesty,
or integrity is bad, or by evidence that he has made at other times
statements inconsistent with his present testimony, but not by evidence of
particular wrongful acts, except that it may be shown by the examination
of the witness, or the record of the judgment, that he has been
convicted of an offense.
Although she is the offended party, Magdalena, by testifying in her own
behalf, opened herself to character or reputation attack pursuant to the
principle that a party who becomes a witness in his own behalf places
himself in the same position as any other witness, and may be
impeached by an attack on his character or reputation.[23]
With the foregoing disquisition, the Court of Appeals is correct in holding
that the character or reputation of a complaining witness in a sexual charge
is a proper subject of inquiry. This leads us to the ultimate question is
Magdalenas derogatory record sufficient to discredit her credibility?
A careful review of the record yields a negative answer.
First, most of the twenty-two (22) cases filed with the MTC of Baguio City
relate to acts committed in the 80s, particularly, 1985 and 1986. With respect
to the complaints filed with the Chairmen of Barangay Gabriela Silang and
Barangay Hillside, the acts complained of took place in 1978 to 1979. In the
instant administrative case, the offense was committed in 1994. Surely,
those cases and complaints are no longer reliable proofs of Magdalenas
character or reputation. The Court of Appeals, therefore, erred in according
much weight to such evidence.Settled is the principle that evidence of
ones character or reputation must be confined to a time not too
remote from the time in question.[24] In other words, what is to be
determined is the character or reputation of the person at the time
of the trial and prior thereto, but not at a period remote from the
commencement of the suit.[25] Hence, to say that Magdalenas credibility
is diminished by proofs of tarnished reputation existing almost a decade ago
is unreasonable. It is unfair to presume that a person who has wandered from
the path of moral righteousness can never retrace his steps again. Certainly,
every person is capable to change or reform.
Second, respondent failed to prove that Magdalena was convicted in any
of the criminal cases specified by respondent. The general rule prevailing in a
great majority of jurisdictions is that it is not permissible to show that a
witness has been arrested or that he has been charged with or
prosecuted for a criminal offense, or confined in jail for the purpose of
impairing his credibility.[26] This view has usually been based upon one or
more of the following grounds or theories: (a) that a mere unproven charge
against the witness does not logically tend to affect his credibility, (b) that
innocent persons are often arrested or accused of a crime, (c) that one
accused of a crime is presumed to be innocent until his guilt is legally
established, and (d) that a witness may not be impeached or discredited by
evidence of particular acts of misconduct.[27] Significantly, the same Section
11, Rule 132 of our Revised Rules on Evidence provides that a witness may
not be impeached by evidence of particular wrongful acts. Such evidence is
rejected because of the confusion of issues and the waste of time that would
be involved, and because the witness may not be prepared to expose the
falsity of such wrongful acts.[28] As it happened in this case, Magdalena was
not able to explain or rebuteach of the charges against her listed by
respondent.
A Yes, sir.
A When he came over for the inspection sir, nobody was there.[29]
ASEC R. CAPINPIN:
A Yes, sir.
Q It says here that she would relate the incident to you. Did
she relate any incident?
A Yes, she did sir.
Q What was that incident all about?
A She was saying that when Mr. Belagan went to visit her
school, he stole a kiss from her and that she was saying
that when she asked Supt. Belagan for her papers, she
was asked for a date before the Indorsement. After
that, she left.[30]
With Magdalenas positive testimony and that of Ngabit, how can we
disregard the findings of the DECS and the CSC? Surely, we cannot debunk it
simply because of the Court of Appeals outdated characterization of
Magdalena as a woman of bad reputation. There are a number of cases
where the triers of fact believe the testimony of a witness of bad
character[31]and refuse to believe one of good character.[32] As a matter of
fact, even a witness who has been convicted a number of times is worthy of
belief, when he testified in a straightforward and convincing manner.[33]
At this juncture, it bears stressing that more than anybody else, it is the
DECS investigating officials who are in a better position to determine whether
Magdalena is telling the truth considering that they were able to hear and
observe her deportment and manner of testifying.[34]
In reversing the CSCs Resolutions, the Court of Appeals ruled that there
is ample evidence to show that Magdalena had a motive in accusing
respondent, i.e., to pressure him to issue a permit. This is unconvincing. The
record shows that respondent had already issued the permit when Magdalena
filed her letter-complaint. Indeed, she had no more reason to charge
respondent administratively, except of course to vindicate her honor.
Petitioner prays that we sustain its ruling penalizing respondent for
grave misconduct and not merely for disgraceful or immoral conduct which is
punishable by suspension for six (6) months and one (1) day to one (1) year
for the first offense.[35] Misconduct means intentional wrongdoing or
deliberate violation of a rule of law or standard of behavior, especially by a
government official.[36] To constitute an administrative offense, misconduct
should relate to or be connected with the performance of the official
functions and duties of a public officer.[37]In grave misconduct as
distinguished from simple misconduct, the elements of corruption, clear
intent to violate the law or flagrant disregard of established rule, must be
manifest.[38]Corruption as an element of grave misconduct consists in the
act of an official or fiduciary person who unlawfully and wrongfully uses his
station or character to procure some benefit for himself or for another
person, contrary to duty and the rights of others.[39] This is apparently
present in respondents case as it concerns not only a stolen kiss but also a
demand for a date, an unlawful consideration for the issuance of a permit to
operate a pre-school. Respondents act clearly constitutes grave misconduct,
punishable by dismissal.[40]
j. length of service
xxxxxx
l. and other analogous cases.
Conformably with our ruling in a similar case of sexual harassment,
[43] and respondents length of service, unblemished record in the past and
numerous awards,[44] the penalty of suspension from office without pay for
one (1) year is in order.
While we will not condone the wrongdoing of public officers and
employees, however, neither will we negate any move to recognize and
remunerate their lengthy service in the government.
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The Decision of the Court of
Appeals dated January 8, 1998 in CA-G.R. SP No. 44180 is REVERSED. The
CSC Resolution Nos. 966213 and 972423 are AFFIRMED, subject to the
modification that respondent ALLYSON BELAGAN is SUSPENDED from office
without pay for ONE (1) YEAR, with full credit of his preventive suspension.
SO ORDERED.
vs.
MARILYN MENDOZA VDA. DE EREDEROS, CATALINA ALINGASA and
PORFERIO I. MENDOZA,Respondents.
DECISION
BRION, J.:
We resolve the petition for review on certiorari 1 assailing the decision2 dated
November 22 2005 and the resolution 3 dated April 21 2006 of the Court of
Appeals CA) in CA-G.R. SP Nos. 83149 83150 and 83576.
The CA decision reversed and set aside the joint decision 4 dated January 9
2004 of the Deputy Ombudsman for the Visayas (Deputy Ombudsman), Primo
C. Miro in OMB-V-A-02-0414-H finding respondents Marilyn Mendoza Vda. de
Erederos Catalina Alingasa and Porferio I Mendoza guilty of the administrative
charge of Grave Misconduct. The Deputy Ombudsman also found Oscar
Peque guilty of Simple Misconduct.
The Factual Antecedents
As culled from the records, the antecedents of the present case are as
follows:
Mendoza, Director of the Regional Office VII of the Land Transportation Office,
Cebu City (LTO Cebu), Erederos, Mendoza's niece and secretary, Alingasa,
LTO clerk, and Peque, Officer-in-Charge, Operation Division of LTO Cebu, were
administratively charged with Grave Misconduct before the Deputy
Ombudsman by private complainants, namely: Maricar G Huete (Liaison
Officer of GCY Parts), Ernesto R Cantillas (Liaison Officer of Isuzu Cebu, Inc.),
Leonardo Villaraso (General Manager of TBS Trading), and Romeo C. Climaco
(Corporate Secretary of Penta Star).5 They were likewise charged with
criminal complaints for violation of Section 3(e) of Republic Act No. 3019,
otherwise known as the Anti Graft and Corrupt Practices Act."
The administrative and criminal charges arose from the alleged anomalies in
the distribution at the LTO Cebu of confirmation certificates, an indispensable
requirement in the processing of documents for the registration of motor
vehicle with the LTO.
Specifically, the private complainants accused Alingasa of selling the
confirmation certificates, supposed to be issued by the LTO free of charge.
This scheme allegedly existed upon Mendoza's assumption in office as
Regional Director of LTO Cebu. They observed that:
(1) Confirmation certificates were sold for the amount of P2,500.00
per pad without official receipt;
(2) Alingasa would usually remit the collections to Erederos who
would, in turn, remit all the collections to Mendoza; 6
(3) The official receipt for the processing of the confirmation
certificates issued to the private complainants acknowledged only the
amount of P40.00 which they paid for each engine, chassis or new
vehicle, as MR. (Miscellaneous Receipt-LTO Form 67);
(4) Said amount was separate and distinct from the P2,500.00
required to be paid for each pad;
(5) The official receipt also served as the basis for the individual
stock/sales reports evaluation of Erederos;7 and
(6) The confirmation certificates processed during the previous
administration were no longer honored; thus, the private
complainants were constrained to reprocess the same by purchasing
new ones.
The NBI/Progress report submitted to the LTO Manila also revealed that the
confirmation certificates were given to the representatives of car dealers,
who were authorized to supply the needed data therein. In the Requisition
and Issue Voucher, it was Roque who received the forms. On August 19,
2002, Cantillas executed an Affidavit of Desi stance on the ground that he
was no longer interested in prosecuting the case.
On September 25, 2002, the Deputy Ombudsman ordered the respondents to
file their respective counter-affidavits. The respondents complied with the
order and made the required submission.
On December 12, 2002, the case was called for preliminary conference. At
the conference, the respondents, thru their counsels, manifested their
intention to submit the case for decision on the basis of the evidence on
record after the submission of their memoranda/position papers.
In the interim, additional administrative and criminal complaints for the same
charges were filed by Rova Carmelotes (Liaison Officer of ZC Trading Center),
Mildred Regidor (Liaison Officer of Grand Ace Commercial), Estrella dela
Cerna (Liaison Officer of JRK Automotive Supply), and Vevencia Pedroza
(Liaison Officer of Winstar Motor Sales) against the respondents. These new
complaints were consolidated with the complaints already then pending.
In their complaints, the new complainants commonly alleged that they had to
pay P2,500.00 per pad to Alingasa before they could be issued confirmation
certificates by the LTO Cebu. Alingasa would give her collections to Erederos
and to Mendoza. When they protested, Erederos and Alingasa pointed to
Mendoza as the source of the instructions. They were also told that the
confirmation certificates processed during the previous administration would
no longer be honored under Mendoza s administration; hence, they had to
buy new sets of confirmation certificates to process the registration of their
motor vehicles with the LTO.
In his counter-affidavit, Mendoza vehemently denied the accusations. He
alleged that the confirmation certificates actual distribution and processing
were assigned to Alingasa; the processing entails the payment of P40.00 per
confirmation certificate, as administrative fee; payment is only made when
the confirmation certificates are filled up and submitted for processing with
the LTO, not upon issuance; and he did not give any instructions to impose
additional fees for their distribution.
He also alleged that the case against him was instigated by Assistant
Secretary Roberto T. Lastimosa of the LTO Head Office so that a certain Atty.
Manuel I way could replace him as Regional Director of the L TO Cebu. 8
Mendoza additionally submitted the affidavits of desistance of Carmelotes
and Dela Cerna. Carmelotes testified that she has no evidence to support her
allegations against Mendoza. Dela Cerna, on the other hand, stated that she
was merely told to sign a document which turned out to be an affidavitcomplaint against the respondents. Subsequently, however, Dela Cerna
Erederos stated that the case against her was initiated by Huete because she
found several discrepancies in the documents she had processed. According
to her, the present case was Huete s ploy to avoid any liability.
With respect to the assailed Joint Resolution also dated January 9, 2004
(criminal aspect) issued by the public respondent, this Court has no
jurisdiction to review the same.10
For their part, Alingasa stressed that her act of maintaining a control book for
the releases of the confirmation certificate pads negates her liability, while
Peque denied any participation in the distribution and sale of the
confirmation certificates.
The Deputy Ombudsman moved for the reconsideration of the decision, but
the CA denied the motion in its resolution of April 21, 2006. The denial led to
the filing of the present petition.
It is well settled that findings of fact by the Office of the Ombudsman are
conclusive when supported by substantial evidence. 12 Their factual findings
are generally accorded with great weight and respect, if not finality by the
courts, by reason of their special knowledge and expertise over matters
falling under their jurisdiction.
It is a basic rule in evidence that a witness can testify only on the facts that
he knows of his own Rersonal knowledge, i.e. those which are derived from
his own perception.26 A witness may not testify on what he merely learned,
read or heard from others because such testimony is considered hearsay and
may not be received as proof of the truth of what he has learned, read or
heard.27 Hearsay evidence is evidence, not of what the witness knows
himself but, of what he has heard from others; it is not only limited to oral
testimony or statements but likewise applies to written statements, such as
affidavits.28
The records show that not one of the complainants actually witnessed the
transfer of money from Alingasa to Erederos and Mendoza. Nowhere in their
affidavits did they specifically allege that they saw Alingasa remit the
collections to Erederos. In fact, there is no specific allegation that they saw or
witnessed Erederos or Mendoza receive money. That the complainants
alleged in the preface of their affidavits that they "noticed and witnessed" the
anomalous act complained of does not take their statements out of the
coverage of the hearsay evidence rule. Their testimonies are still "evidence
not of what the witness knows himself but of what he has heard from
others."29 Mere uncorroborated hearsay or rumor does not constitute
substantial evidence.30
The affidavits also show that the complainants did not allege any specific act
of the respondents. All that the affidavits allege is a description of the
allegedly anomalous scheme and the arrangement whereby payments were
to be made to Alingasa. There is no averment relating to any "personal
demand" for the amount ofP2,500.00.
Based on these considerations, we cannot conclude that the complainants
have personal knowledge of Erederos' and Mendoza's participation in the
anomalous act. At most, their personal knowledge only extends to the acts of
Alingasa who is the recipient of all payments for the processing of
confirmation certificates. This situation, however, is affected by the
complainants'
failure
to
specify
Alingasa's
act
of
personally
demanding P2,500.00 -a crucial element in determining her guilt or
innocence of the grave misconduct charged.
With respect to Pedroza's allegation in her affidavit 31 that Alingasa and
Erederos categorically told them that it was Mendoza who instructed them to
collect the P2,500.00 for the confirmation certificates, we once again draw a
distinction between utterances or testimonies that are merely hearsay in
character or "non-hearsay," and those that are considered as legal hearsay.
A thorough review of the records, however, showed that the subject affidavits
of Beck and Terencio were not even identified by the respective affiants
during the fact-finding investigation conducted by the BID Resident
Ombudsman at the BID office in Manila. Neither did they appear during the
preliminary investigation to identify their respective sworn statements
despite prior notice before the investigating officer who subsequently
dismissed the criminal aspect of the case upon finding that the charge
against the petitioner "was not supported by any evidence." Hence, Beck's
affidavit is hearsay and inadmissible in evidence. On this basis alone, the
Administrative Adjudication Bureau of the Office of the Ombudsman should
have dismissed the administrative complaint against the petitioner in the first
instance. (emphasis supplied)
For the affiants' failure to identify their sworn statements, and considering
the seriousness of the charges filed, their affidavits must not be accepted at
face value and should be treated as inadmissible under the hearsay evidence
rule.
ii. NBI/Progress report
With regard to the NBI/Progress report submitted by the complainants as
corroborating evidence, the same should not be given any weight. Contrary
to the Ombudsman's assertions, the report cannot help its case under the
circumstances of this case as it is insufficient to serve as substantial basis.
The pertinent portion of this report reads:
04. P/Sinsp. JESUS KABIGTING and Senior TRO ALFONSO ALIANZA visited
JAGNA District Office at Jagna, Bohol wherein they were able to conduct
interview with MR. RODOLFO SANTOS, Officer-In-Charge who has assumed his
new post only in February 2002. During the conduct of the interview, Mr.
SANTOS revealed that the anomalous Dos-por-Dos transactions have been
prevented and eliminated when the previous District Manager in the person
of Mr. LEONARDO G. OLAIVAR, who was transferred to Tagbilaran District
Office allegedly on a floating status and under the direct control and
supervision of its District Manager, Mr. GA VINO PADEN, Mr. SANTOS
allegations of the existence of "Dos-por-Dos" transactions were supported by
the records/documents gathered of which the signatures of Mr. OLAIVAR
affixed thereof. Copies are hereto attached marked as Annexes D-D-6.
xxxx
06. Submitted Affidavits of Ms. MARICAR G. HUETE, a resident of Lahug, Cebu
City and liaison Officer of GCY Parts, Kabancalan Mandaue City and Mr.
ERNESTO R. CARTILLAS a resident of Basak, Mandaue City and liaison Officer
of Isuzu Cebu, Inc. in Jagobiao, Mandaue City stated among others and both
attested that: Annexes "E-E-1."
In order to secure the forms of Confirmation of Certificates, you have to buy
the same at the present cost ofP2,500.00 per pad from CATALINA ALINGASA,
an LTO Personnel, who will remit her collections to a certain MARILYN
MENDOZA V da De EREDEROS, a niece and secretary of the Regional
Director, PORFERIO MENDOZA.34
This quoted portion shows that it was based on complainant Huete's and
Cantillas' affidavits. It constitutes double hearsay because the material facts
recited were not within the personal knowledge of the officers who conducted
the investigation. As held in Africa, et al. v. Caltex Phil.) Inc., et al., 35 reports
being hearsay evidence, the only question that remains is whether the
respondents conduct, based on the evidence on record, amounted to grave
misconduct, warranting their dismissal in office.
Misconduct is a transgression of some established and definite rule of action,
more particularly, unlawful behavior or gross negligence by a public
officer.37 The misconduct is considered as grave if it involves additional
elements such as corruption or willful intent to violate the law or to disregard
established rules, which must be proven by substantial evidence; otherwise,
the misconduct is only simple. Corruption, as an element of grave
misconduct, consists in the act of an official or fiduciary person who
unlawfully and wrongfully uses his station or character to procure some
benefit for himself or for another person, contrary to duty and the rights of
others.38
Based on these rulings, the Deputy Ombudsman failed to establish the
elements of grave misconduct.1wphi1 To reiterate, no substantial evidence
exists to show that Erederos and Mendoza received collected payments from
Alingasa Their involvement or complicity in the allegedly anomalous scheme
cannot be justified under the affidavits of the complainants and the
NBI/Progress report, which are both hearsay.
With respect to Alingasa, in view of the lack of substantial evidence showing
that she personally demanded the payment of P2,500.00 a crucial factor in
the wrongdoing alleged we find that the elements of misconduct, simple or
grave, to be wanting and unproven.
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, we hereby AFFIRM the assailed
decision dated November 22, 2005 and the resolution dated April 21, 2006 of
the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP Nos. 83149, 83150 and 83576.
SO ORDERED.
the middle-back portion of the body. Seven (7) pellets were recovered on the
from appellants house, Michelle heard an explosion. Michelle immediately
turned her back and saw appellant pointing a gun at Alexander who, at that
moment, was staggering towards her.[7] Sendin, who was also with
Alexander and Michelle, did not look back but instead ran away and
his wife, Madoline, his stepdaughter, Franlin, PO1 Manolito Javelora, PO3
Alberto Sarmiento, and PO3 Wilson Allona. Appellant interposed alibi as his
Alexander beside the road when the latter repeatedly told her that it was
main defense. He claimed that Alexander, together with his daughter and
appellant who shot him.[9] Twenty minutes later, Alexanders other daughter,
Sendin, had gone to his house on 24 April 1998 at around 6:00 p.m. where
Novie Mae, arrived; she was also told by Alexander at that moment that it
they
were
welcomed
and
offered
snacks.[16] They
were
having
leave.After the visitors had left, appellant ordered his stepdaughter Franlin to
SPO3 Frederick Dequito (SPO3 Dequito) and other police officers rushed to
buy candle at the store across their house. Appellant and Madoline posted
the crime scene and helped carry Alexander to an ambulance. SPO3 Dequito
was able to ask Alexander who shot him to which he answered Pato. Pato is
Franlins
Alexanders wife, Susan, who rushed to the hospital was also told by
Alexander that it was appellant who shot him.[12] Alexander died the
following day.[13]
return
to
the
house,
appellant
heard
an
went to his house and told him that he was a suspect in the shooting of
presence
of
treachery
in
qualifying
the
crime
to
Alexander and was then brought to the police station.[17] The following day,
murder because the victim was unarmed and walking on his way
negative.[18]
appellant.[23] The trial court ruled that appellants alibi and denial could not
prevail over the positive testimonies of credible witnesses.[24] Moreover, it
observed that appellant was not able to prove the impossibility of his
declared that when he asked Alexander who shot him, the latter did not
presence at the crime scene which could have proven his alibi.[25]
answer.[19]Likewise, PO3 Sarmiento and Allona stated that when they went
to the hospital to interrogate Alexander, the latter could not give a definite
was initially elevated to this Court for review. However, pursuant to our ruling
in People v. Mateo,[26] the case was referred to the Court of Appeals.
On 15 August 2000, the RTC found appellant guilty beyond reasonable doubt
of murder and sentenced him to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua. The
The appellate court affirmed the trial courts ruling but modified the award of
dispositive portion of the decision read:
moral damages from Thirty Thousand Pesos to Fifty Thousand Pesos.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, and in the light of the
facts obtaining and the jurisprudence aforecited, judgement
is hereby rendered finding the accused GUILTY beyond
reasonable doubt of the crime of MURDER, hereby sentencing
the
said
accused
to
the
penalty
of RECLUSION
PERPETUA pursuant to Sec. 6 of Republic Act No. 7659[,]
amending Article 248 of the Revised Penal Code. The said
accused is further condemned to indemnify the surviving
heirs of the deceased, Alexander Parreo, the sum
of P257,774.75 by way of actual damages; the amount
of P30,000.00 by way of moral damages and the sum
of P50,000.00 by way of death compensation. The accused
who is detained is entitled to be credited in full with the
entire period of his preventive detention. The Jail
Warden, Iloilo Rehabilitation Center is ordered to remit the
said accused to the National Penitentiary at the earliest
opportunity.
SO ORDERED.[21]
declaration of Alexander considering that the circumstances under which the
The trial court regarded the victims dying declaration as the most telling
including the eyewitness, whose testimonies were relied upon by the trial
court in convicting appellant.Basic is the principle that the findings of fact of
a trial court, its calibration of the testimonies of the witnesses and its
assessment of the probative weight thereof, as well as its conclusions
anchored on said findings are accorded high respect, if not conclusive effect.
This is because the
trial court has the unique opportunity to observe the demeanor of a witness
and is in the best position to discern whether they are telling the truth. This
rule holds true especially when the trial court's findings have been affirmed
by the appellate court.[30]
to the material facts which concern the cause and circumstances of the
PROSECUTOR PADILLA:
killing and which is uttered under a fixed belief that death is impending and is
Q: You said Joemarie was pointing a firearm to your
father. Was it [a] long or short firearm?
A: About 11 inches.
statement made by a person after a mortal wound has been inflicted, under a
belief that death is certain, stating the facts concerning the cause and
circumstances surrounding his/her death.[36]
xxxx
As an exception to the rule against hearsay evidence, a dying declaration or
Q: If this Joemarie Cerilla is inside the Courtroom, can
you identify him?
A: Yes, Maam.
credence
since
no
person
false
aware
of
his
accusation.[37] It
is thus admissible to provide the identity of the accused and the deceased,
Michelles account of how her father was shot by appellant was corroborated
the circumstances under which the assault was made upon him. The reasons
located at the back of the victim.[33] In the same vein, the medico-legal
expert concluded that the gunshot was fired at a close range, as evidenced
by the presence of a power burn measuring four (4) centimeters in diameter
surrounding the periphery of the wound [34] and penetrating his internal
organs.[35]
and
trustworthiness. Necessity,
because
the
declarants
death
renders
it
impossible his taking the witness stand, and it often happens that there is no
other equally satisfactory proof of the crime; allowing it, therefore, prevents a
declarant. It is the belief in impending death and not the rapid succession of
extremity, when the party is at the point of death and when every motive to
death in point of fact that renders the dying declaration admissible. It is not
considerations to speak the truth. The law considers the point of death as a
of the deceased. The test is whether the declarant has abandoned all hopes
the doctrine relating to dying declarations is the most mystical in its theory
and, traditionally, among the most arbitrary in its limitations. In the United
evidence showing that the declarant could not have been competent to be a
victim.[44] Anent this requisite, the same deserves no further elaboration as,
admissible,
and
in fact, the prosecution had caused its witnesses to take the stand and testify
the facts of the assault itself, but also to matters both before and after the
declaration
must
concern
the
cause
assault having a direct causal connection with it. Statements involving the
nature of the declarants injury or the cause of death; those imparting
deliberation and willfulness in the attack, indicating the reason or motive for
testified with unanimity that they had been told by the victim himself that it
cause for the act are admissible.[40] Second, at the time the declaration was
happened next?
A: I approached my father and cuddled him.
Q: What happened next?
A: While I was cuddling my father he said, Day, it was
Joemarie who shot me.
Q: How many time he said he was shot?
A: Not once but about 10 times.[45]
COURT:
COURT:
Proceed.
COURT:
FISCAL:
Q: When you saw your sister Michelle assisting your
father, what [sic] happened next?
A: And I immediately went near my father and asked
him who shot him and he answered it was Joemarie
Cerilla who shot him.
Q: Before you reached your father, did you observe
his physical appearance of what happened to him?
A: Yes, Maam, he was supporting with his arm and
when I asked him he still made a response.
Q: You said [that] before you approached your
father[,] you saw him supporting his body, what was
his position at that time?
A: He was in a position of lying with his hand on the
road and my sister was assisting him.
the
victim
the
xxx
Likewise, Alexanders wife, Sonia, testified:
Q: Were you able to observe why your father was
into
xxx
Alexander in his dying declaration which must be sustained.
Q: Between you and your husband who spoke first?
A: My husband.
Q: What were the exact words stated by your
husband?
A: He told me that it was Joemarie who shot him.[48]
These statements comply with all the requisites of a dying declaration. First,
Alexanders declaration pertains to the identity of the person who shot
The fact that the crime was committed during a blackout does not cast doubt
him. Second, the fatal quality and extent of the injuries[49] he suffered
underscore the imminence of his death as his condition was so serious that
place of occurrence was dark, this did not prevent the Alexander or Michelle
from identifying the assailant, especially since the shot was delivered at close
range.
Other police officers were presented by the defense to refute the dying
declaration. PO1 Javelora alleged that he happened to pass by the crime
scene and saw a young girl crying. The girl led him to her father who was
sitting on the roadside. He asked the victim who shot him but he did not get
any reply.[50] PO3 Allona and Sarmiento arrived at the hospital and
questioned Alexander as to who shot him but the latter told them, I am not
rejected the result of the paraffin test in light of the positive identification of
appellant.
The trial court held that the killing was qualified by treachery because
Alexander, who was unarmed, was suddenly and unexpectedly shot from
behind by appellant without any risk to the latter from any defense which the
former might make. There was no opportunity given to Alexander to repel the
motive to testify falsely against appellant. Besides, Susan, Michelle and Novie
assault or offer any defense of his person.There was not the slightest
provocation on his part.[57] We agree with the findings of the trial court. The
The positive identification of appellant must necessarily prevail over his alibi.
[54] It was not physically impossible for appellant to have been present at
Under Article 248 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by Republic Act No.
the scene of the crime at the time of its commission. The distance of his
7659, murder is punishable with reclusion perpetua to death. Because the
house, where he supposedly was, from the locus criminis is only 120-150
killing of Alexander, although qualified by treachery, was not attended by any
meters, more or less.[55]
other aggravating circumstance, the proper imposable penalty is reclusion
perpetua.
Appellant counters that there was absence of any motive on his part to kill
the victim; that it was not clearly proven that he fired a gun, based on the
We deem it proper to further impose exemplary damages in the amount
paraffin test; and that he appeared calm and composed and showed no
of P25,000.00 which is recoverable in the presence of an aggravating
indication of guilt when he was invited by the police officers shortly after the
circumstance, whether qualifying or ordinary, in the commission of the crime.
commission of the crime.
[58]
WHEREFORE, the Decision of the Court of Appeals dated 26 October 2006,
Time and again, we have ruled that a negative finding on paraffin test is not a
affirming with modification the Regional Trial Court Judgment dated 15
conclusive proof that one has not fired a gun because it is possible for a
August 2000 finding appellant, Joemari Cerilla, guilty beyond reasonable
person to fire a gun and yet bear no traces of nitrates or gunpowder, as when
doubt of murder, is AFFIRMED with the MODIFICATION that appellant is
the culprit washes his hands or wears gloves.[56] The trial court correctly
further ordered to pay the heirs of Alexander Parreo P25,000.00 as exemplary
damages.
POINT OF ENTRY:
1.
Right lumbar area
2.
Right iliac area
POINT OF EXIT
1.
Left lateral area of abdomen
2.
Right hypogastric area
SO ORDERED.
Present:
QUISUMBING, J., Chairperson,
CARPIO MORALES,
TINGA,
VELASCO, JR., and
BRION, JJ.
- versus -
CONTRARY TO LAW.[2]
At 3:00 a.m. of July 1, 2002, his wife, daughter Mirasol, and son Arnel, among
PEOPLE OF THEPHILIPPINES,
Respondent.
Promulgated:
November 20, 2008
x-------------------------------------------x
victim), repaired to where he was, not far from his residence, and found him
DECISION
lying on his side and wounded. Although gasping for breath, he was able to
utter to Mirasol, within the hearing distance of Arnel, that he was shot by
Jesus
Geraldo
Amado
Ariate
were,
by
Information
dated December 23, 2002 filed on December 27, 2002 before the Regional
Petitioners who were suspected to be the Badjing and Amado responsible for
Trial Court of Surigao del Sur, charged with Homicide allegedly committed as
the shooting of the victim were subjected to paraffin tests at the Philippine
follows:
National Police (PNP) Crime Laboratory in Butuan City. In the PNP Chemistry
x x x [O]n the 1st day of July, 2002 at about 3:00 oclock early
morning, more or less, at Sitio Tinago, Barangay Bunga,
municipality of Lanuza, province of Surigao del Sur,
Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable
Court, the above-named accused, conspiring and mutually
helping one another, armed with xxx handguns and with
intent to kill, did, then and there, willfully, unlawfully and
feloniously sho[o]t one ARTHUR U.[1] RONQUILLO, thereby
hitting and inflicting upon the latter wounds described
hereunder:
SPECIMEN SUBMITTED :
Paraffin casts taken from the left and the right hands of the
following named living persons:
and answer style that her father uttered that herein petitioners shot him.
At the witness stand, Mirasol echoed her fathers declaration that Badjing and
Amado shot him. Arnel substantially corroborated Mirasols statement.[7]
/x/x/x/ /x/x/x/
PURPOSE OF LABORATORY EXAMINATION
Upon the other hand, petitioners gave their side of the case as follows:
To determine
Nitrates. /x/x/x/
the
presence
of
gunpowder
residue,
FINDINGS:
Petitioner
Ariate,
a barangay
tanod of
Bunga,
declared
that Barangay
Kagawad Omboy Roz (Roz) woke him up at 3:00 a.m. of July 1, 2002 and
informed him that the victim was shot. He and Roz thus borrowed a tricycle,
CONCLUSION:
proceeded to the crime scene and, along with others, brought the victim to
Specimens A and B do not reveal the presence of gunpowder
residue, Nitrates. /x/x/x/
REMARKS:
[8]
another
document
dated
July
4,
2002
also
denominated
the
course
of
the
testimony
of
Ariate,
his
counsel
presented
as
the PNP Chemistry Report reflecting the negative results of the paraffin test
Affidavit[6] which was subscribed and sworn to also before the same Clerk of
on him and Geraldo. The trial court restrained the presentation of the
Court II Balasa on July 26, 2002, Mirasol also gave a statement in a question
When petitioner Geraldos turn to present the same PNP Chemistry Report
COURT
That is the problem in the Pre-Trial Brief if the exhibits are not
stated. I will set aside that Order and in the interest of justice
I will allow the accused to submit, next time I will not any
more consider exhibits not listed in the Pre-trial Order.
[13] (Underscoring supplied)
COURT
Denied. I am warning you, all of you.
ATTY. AUZA
With the denial of our motion for reconsideration, I
move to tender exclusive evidence. He would have
identified this result. The paraffin test, which [forms]
part of the affidavit of this witness attached to the
record of this case on page 29. May I ask that this will
be marked as Exhibit 3 for the defense.
COURT
Mark it. (Marked).[10] (Underscoring supplied)
As shown from the above-quoted transcript of the proceedings, the trial court
restrained the presentation of the result of the paraffin tests because the
same was not covered in the Pre-trial Order. In the Pre-trial Order,[11] the
trial court noted the parties agreement that witnesses not listed in this PreOn the nature and weight of the dying declaration of the victim, the trial
trial
Order
shall
not
be
allowed
to
testify
as
additional
court observed:
Finding for the prosecution, the trial court convicted petitioners, disposing as
follows:
WHEREFORE, finding the accused JESUS GERALDO y CUBERO
and AMADO ARIATE y DIONALDO guilty beyond reasonable
doubt of the crime of Homicide penalized under Article 249 of
the Revised Penal Code and with the presence of one
(1) aggravating circumstance of night time and applying the
Indeterminate Sentence Law, the maximum term of which
could be properly imposed under the rules of said code and
the minimum which shall be within the range of the penalty
next lower to that prescribe[d] by the code for the offense,
hereby sentences each to suffer the penalty of TEN (10)
YEARS and ONE (1) DAY of Prision Mayor minimum to
SEVENTEEN (17) YEARS, FOUR (4) MONTHS and ONE (1) DAY
of Reclusion Temporal maximum as maximum, with all the
accessory penalties provided for by law. To pay the heirs of
the victim the amount of P50,000.00 as life indemnity,
P100,000.00 as moral damages and P20,000.00 as exemplary
damages. The claim for actual damages is denied, there
being no evidence to support the same.
The bail bond put up by the accused Jesus Geraldo and
Amado Ariate are ordered cancelled and to pay the cost.
SO ORDERED.[16] (Underscoring supplied)
Petitioners argue:
With due respect, herein petitioners disagree with the holding
of the Honorable Court of Appeals that It is not necessary
that the victim further identify that Badjing was in fact Jesus
Geraldo or that Amado was Amado Ariate because, [so
petitioners
contend], it
is
the obligation
of
the
prosecution to establish with moral certainty that indeed
the persons they identified as the as the assailant of Arthur
O. Ronquillo were really the ones who perpetrated the crime.
Admittedly, prosecution witnesses were able to identify
positively herein petitioners as the alleged assailant[s] of
Arthur O. Ronquillo. But said identification is based on the
assumption that they were the very same BADJING AMADO
and/or BADJING AND AMADO referred to by their deceased
father in his dying declaration.
inferred that such ante mortem declaration was made under consciousness
of an impending death.[24] The location of the victims two gunshot wounds,
his gasping for breath, and his eventual death before arriving at the hospital
meet this requirement.[25]
It has not been established, however, that the victim would have been
competent to testify had he survived the attack. There is no showing that he
had the opportunity to see his assailant. Among other things, there is no
indication whether he was shot in front, the post-mortem examination report
having merely stated that the points of entry of the wounds were at the right
Appeals dated June 30, 2006 affirming with modification the Decision of
Branch 41 of the Surigao del Sur Regional Trial Court is REVERSED and SET
ASIDE. Petitioners Jesus Geraldo and Amado Ariate are ACQUITTED of the
charge of Homicide for failure of the prosecution to establish their guilt
beyond reasonable doubt.
trial,
no
evidence
of
any
motive
was
presented
by
the
SO ORDERED.
PEOPLE
OF
THE
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs.
PIOQUINTO DE JOYA y CRUZ, defendant-appellant.
The Solicitor General for plaintiff-appellee.
Rodolfo P. Liwanag for accused-appellant.
FELICIANO, J.:p
In an Information dated 5 May 1978, appellant Pioquinto de Joya y Cruz was
charged before the Regional Trial Court, 3rd Judicial Region, Branch 14,
Malolos, Bulacan with the crime of robbery with homicide committed as
follows:
That on or about the 31st day of January, 1978, in the
Alvin then called for his Nana Edeng and told her to see his
lola because she was drenched with her own blood. His Nana
Edeng told him to immediately see his mother Herminia
Salac-Valencia to inform her of what happened. (TSN, Id).
. . . [Eulalia Diamse held his hand and after which said: "Si
Paqui". After saying these words, she let go of Alvin's hand
and passed away. (TSN, Ibid., pp. 14 and 17).
her on the sofa. She asked Alvin and the tricycle driver to call
Dr. Delfin Tolentino. (TSN, October 12,1978, pp. 25-26).
Dr. Tolentino arrived at around 4:00 o'clock that same
afternoon and examined the body of Eulalia Diamse. Said
doctor declared that said Eulalia Diamse had a heart attack
which caused her death. When asked by Herminia Valencia
why her mother's ears were punctured, no reply was given by
said doctor. Herminia requested for a death certificate, but Dr.
Tolentino did not issue one and instead immediately left.
(TSN, Ibid., pp. 27-29).
Herminia found out that the two (2) gold rings worn by her
mother were missing. The right earring of her mother was
likewise missing. All of these were valued [at] P300.00
(TSN, Id., p. 15).
That same afternoon, Herminia saw the room of the
groundfloor ransacked. The contents of the wardrobe closet
(aparador) were taken out. Its secret compartment/box was
missing. And the lock of the aparador was destroyed. (TSN,
October 12, 1978, pp. 15-17).
When she went upstairs after putting her mother on a bed at
the ground floor, she found the two (2) rooms thereat in
disarray. She then caused the rooms and things photographed
by a certain Ricardo Ileto (Exhibits "A" to "A-11"; TSN, October
12, 1978, p. 17).
Later, Herminia went to Dr. Adela Cruz and pleaded [with]
said doctor to issue a death certificate so that her mother
could be embalmed. (TSN, Id., pp. 33-34).
On the same night, Herminia found a beach walk step-in
(Exhibit "B") by the side of the cabinet near the door of their
room downstairs, more or less one meter from where the
victim was lying prostrate. (TSN, October 12,1978, pp. 24-25).
Herminia was able to recognize the said step-in because of its
color and size, as the other half of the pair she bought for her
husband Arnedo but which she gave to Socorro de Joya, the
wife of herein appellant, before Christmas of 1977 when she
saw the old and wornout pair of slippers of the latter.
(TSN, Ibid.).
Appellant Pioquinto de Joya visited the wake only once.
During the second day of the four-day wake, Herminia saw
herein appellant Pioquinto de Joya enter the kitchen and peep
under the cabinet of the (Valencia's) house. (TSN, Id.).
On February 3, 1978, a post-mortem examination was
conducted by Dr. Romulo Madrid, a medico-legal officer of the
National Bureau of Investigation. Per examination, the cause
of the death arrived by Dr. Madrid was "shock, secondary to
punctured wound neck" (Exhibit "D-1") situated at the right
side of the neck, just below the right ear wherein it went out
thru and thru, opposite, almost in the same location, from one
side of the neck to the opposite side. (Exhibit "D-2").
In its decision, the trial court became quite clear as to the factors which led
to the judgment of conviction against appellant. These factors, as set out in
the decision of the trial court, were the following:
In the case at bar, the prosecution relied heavily on the
circumstances surrounding the death of the victim as testified
to by the witnesses and proven during the trial, also the dying
statement of the deceased, which are: Herminia testified that
two weeks before the incident the accused and the deceased
quarreled over a bicycle which the former took from their
house without the consent of the latter; that Exhibit "B" (stepin beach walk type) which was found near the cabinet one
meter away from the body of the victim was identified by
Herminia as the step-in that she gave to the wife of the
accused and which she saw accused wearing on January 29,
1978 when she visited them in their house; the testimony of
Gloria Capulong that she saw the accused in the afternoon of
January 31, 1978 at around 3:00 p.m. in the yard of Herminia
standing and holding a bicycle; the accused admitted,
although his wife is the sister of the husband of Herminia he
never visited the deceased during the four days that it was
lying in state without any justifiable reason and contrary to
the ordinary experience of man; last but most convincing is
the dying statement of the deceased when her grandson
Alvin asked her "Apo, Apo, what happened?" and she
answered, "Si Paki", then she expired. When Alvin was asked
during his testimony who is this Paki, he identified the
accused. The accused during his testimony never denied that
he is called Paki.
The foregoing circumstances established during the trial plus
the dying statement of the deceased leads only to one fair
and reasonable conclusion, that the accused is the author of
the crime.
Analyzing the above portion of the decision, the elements taken into account
by the court in convicting appellant De Joya of robbery with homicide may be
listed as follows:
1. The dying statement made by the deceased victim to her
grandson Alvin Valencia a 10-year old boy: "Si Paqui";
2. The quarrel, which, according to Herminia Valencia,
daughter of the deceased victim, took place two weeks before
the robbery and homicide, between the appellant and the
deceased over the use of a bicycle which appellant allegedly
took from the Valencia's house without the consent of the
victim;
3. The rubber slipper, one of a pair, ("step-in beach walk
type") which according to Herminia, she found near a cabinet
in their house one (1) meter away from the body of the
victim, and which Herminia identified as one of the pair that
she had given to the wife of the accused the previous
Christmas Season;
4. Accused was seen by one Gloria Capulong around 3:00
had intended to name the person who had thrust some sharp instrument
through and through her neck just below her ears. But Eulalia herself did not
say so and we cannot speculate what the rest of her communication might
have been had death not interrupted her. We are unable to regard the dying
statement as a dying declaration naming the appellant as the doer of the
bloody deed.
The other elements taken into account by the trial court are purely
circumstantial in nature. When these circumstances are examined one by
one, none of them can be said to lead clearly and necessarily to the
conclusion that appellant had robbed and killed the deceased Eulalia Diamse.
The quarrel over the use of the bicycle which was supposed to have taken
place two weeks before Eulalia's death does not, in our view, constitute
adequate proof of a motive capable of moving a person to slay another in
such a violent and gory manner. Failure to prove a credible motive where no
identification was shown at all, certainly weakens the case of the prosecution.
The testimony of Herminia Valencia about the single slipper that she found
near or under the cabinet in the living room where Eulalia Diamse was slain,
can scarcely be regarded as conclusive evidence that such slipper was
indeed one of the very same pair of slippers that she had given to appellant's
wife, who was also the sister of Herminia's husband. Rubber or beach, walk
slippers are made in such quantities by multiple manufacturers that there
must have been dozens if not hundreds of slippers of the same color, shape
and size as the pair that Herminia gave to appellant's wife. And even if
conclusive identification of the slippers had been offered, and it is assumed
that appellant (rather than his wife) had worn those very slippers on that
fatal afternoon, still the presence of that singular slipper did not clearly and
directly connect the appellant to the robbery or the slaying. At most, under
that assumption, the presence of that slipper in the house of the Valencias
showed that the accused had gone to the house of the Valencias and there
mislaid that slipper. We note in this connection, that appellant himself had
testified that he did enter the house of the Valencias that afternoon,
but after the killing of Eulalia Diamse had been perpetrated, and there had
found many persons in the house viewing the body.
The testimony of Gloria Capulong that she saw the accused in the afternoon
of 31 January 1978 around 3:00 p.m. in the yard of the Valencias, standing
and holding a bicycle and doing nothing is, by itself, not proof of any act or
circumstance that would show that appellant had perpetrated the slaying or
the robbery. The behaviour of the appellant, as testified to by Gloria
Capulong, offers no basis for supposing that appellant, himself 72 years of
age, had just slain an 88-year old woman by skewering her through the neck
and had ransacked both floors of the Valencia house.
Appellant's failure to present himself to pay his respects to the deceased or
her immediate family during the four-day wake, does not give rise to any
inference that appellant was the slayer of Eulalia Diamse. Appellant had
explained that he had been busily at work, sewing and carrying on his trade
as a tailor. Appellant, as already noted, had dropped in the Valencias' house
in the afternoon Eulalia Diamse was killed and had viewed the body (before it
was lying in state) along with several other persons. His reluctance or
inability to participate in the formal wake is not necessarily a sign of guilt. We
are unable to agree with the trial judge that such behaviour was "contrary to
the ordinary experience of man" although respect for the dead is a common
cultural trait of the Filipinos.
A Yes, air.
Q What was this conversation about?
A He called for me and took me to his counsel
Atty. Aguilar and according to him if only Atty.
Aguilar can talk with me, everything will be
settled.
Q Have you seen and talked to this Atty.
Aguilar?
A Yes, I went with him to Manila, sir.
Q When was this?
A The time he was fetched out of jail.
Q You are referring to the municipal jail?
A Yes, sir.
Q What did you and Atty. Aguilar discuss when
you finally was able to see Atty. Aguilar?
The totality of the case made out against appellant De Joya thus consists of
an incomplete, aborted, dying declaration and a number of circumstances
which, singly or collectively, do not necessarily give rise to a compelling
inference that appellant had indeed robbed and slain Eulalia Diamse. We
consider, after prolonged scrutiny, that the sum total of the evidence in the
instant case is insufficient to induce that moral certainty of guilt which
characterizes proof beyond reasonable doubt. The conscience of the Court
remains uneasy and unsettled after considering the nature and speculative
character of the evidence supporting the judgment of conviction.
The Court must, accordingly, hold as it hereby holds that appellant's guilt of
the crime of robbery and homicide was not shown beyond reasonable doubt.
ACCORDINGLY, the decision of the trial court dated 16 May 1986 is hereby
REVERSED and appellant Pioquinto de Joya is hereby ACQUITTED on grounds
of reasonable doubt.
It is so ordered.
PEOPLE
THE
PHILIPPINE
ISLANDS, plaintiff-appellee,
CLEMENTE
BABIERA,
JUSTO
BORES, defendants-appellants.
BABIERA
Zulueta
and
Cordova
and
Jesus
Trinidad
Office of the Solicitor-General Reyes for appellee.
and
for
DOMINGA
appellants.
VILLA-REAL, J.:
This is an appeal taken by Clemente Babiera, Justo Babiera and Dominga
Bores from the judgment of the Court of First Instance of Iloilo finding them
guilty of the crime of murder, the first as principal, and the last two as
accomplices, sentencing the former to life imprisonment with the accessories
of article 54 of the Penal Code, and each of the latter to fourteen years, eight
months and one day cadena temporal, with the accessories of article 54 and
59 of the Penal Code, respectively, and all three to indemnify the family of
the deceased Severino Haro in the sum of P1,000 jointly and severally, and
each of them to pay one-third of the costs of the action in the justice of the
peace court and the Court of First Instance.
The six alleged errors assigned by the accused as committed by the trial
court in its judgment may be shifted down to the following propositions:
1. That the evidence adduced at the trial by the prosecution has not
established the guilt of the defendants-appellants beyond a reasonable
doubt.
2. The Exhibit I of the prosecution is not an ante-mortem declaration and is
therefore inadmissible as evidence.
3. That the offended party's quarrelsome disposition can be proved in the
trial to determine who began the attack.
Before discussing the evidence adduced by both parties and determining its
weight and probatory value, it is well to decide the questions raised by the
appellants on the admissibility of evidence.
The first question of this nature refers to the character of the document
Exhibit I, which is a statement made by Severino Haro in Saint Paul's Hospital
of Iloilo on the morning after the crime was committed.
Although said statement in itself is inadmissible as an antemortem declaration, inasmuch as there is nothing to show that at the time he
made it Severino Haro knew or firmly believed that he was at the point of
death, nevertheless, having ratified its contents a week later when he was
near death as a result of his wounds, said declaration is admissible as a part
of that which he made ante-mortem "A statement made under circumstances
which would not render it admissible as a dying declaration becomes
admissible as such, it is held, if approved or repeated by the declarant after
he had abandoned all hope of recovery." (30 Corpus Juris, 257.)
Passing now to a consideration of the evidence, the prosecution tried to
proved the following facts:
Justo Babiera was the owner of two parcels of land situated in the
municipality of Oton, Province of Iloilo, Philippine Islands. On October 19,
1922 Justo Babiera executed a contract of sale with the right of repurchase in
favor of Basilio Copreros whereby he sold the two parcels of land to the latter
for the sum of P124 with the condition that if the vendor did not repurchase
them on or before August 1, 1923, the sale would become absolute and
irrevocable (Exhibit F). The period for repurchase having expired, Basilio
Copreros took possession of said two parcels of land, and on March 24, 1927,
made application to the registrar of deeds for the Province of Iloilo for the
registration of the consolidation of his title to said parcels. On the 26th of the
said month, Basilio Copreros leased said parcels to Severino Haro, municipal
president of Oton (Exhibit G and G-1). In view of this, on March 31, 1927,
Justo Babiera filed a complaint against Basilio Copreros in the justice of the
peace court of Oton for the recovery of the possession of said two parcels of
land. The complaint having been dismissed on April 19, 1927 on the ground
that it did not allege facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, Justo
Babiera appealed to the Court of First Instance of Iloilo (Exhibit M). Later on,
said Justo Babiera asked for the dismissal of the complaint for unlawful
detainer and filed another one for the recovery of property (Exhibit F).
Inasmuch as Severino Haro was already in possession of the aforesaid two
parcels of land as lessee, he bore all the expenses in the case of unlawful
detainer as well as in that for recovery of the property.
Fermin Bruces was Severino Haro's copartner on shares in said lands. About
the month of May, 1927, Justo Babiera accompanied by his copartner on
shares, Rosendo Paycol, went to where Fermin Bruces was plowing and asked
the latter: "Who told you to plow here?" Fermin Bruces replied: "Severino
Haro." Then Justo Babiera asked him: "If this Severino tells you to kill yourself,
will you do it?" "Of course not," answered Fermin Bruces. After this
interchange of words Justo Babiera told Fermin Bruces to stop plowing and to
tell his master, Severino Haro, to come and plow himself. Fermin Bruces
informed Severino Haro of the incident, and in answer the latter only told him
not to mind it, but to go on plowing.
On another occasion while Fermin Bruces was transplanting rice on the same
lands, Clemente Babiera and Rosendo Paycol arrived and told him that if he
continued working they would pull out someone's intestines. Fermin Bruces
also informed Severino Haro of these threats, who as before, told him not to
mind them, but to go on sowing.
On July 23, 1927, Jose Haro, brother of Severino Haro, visited his land in the
barrio of Bita, which was under the care of Victoriano Randoquile. He was told
by the latter that he lacked palay seeds. At that time, Rosendo Paycol was in
his field, Jose Haro and Victoriano Randoquile approached him and asked him
to give them some seeds. Rosendo Paycol answered that he could not do so
because he needed what he had for his own farms. Haro and Randoquile then
asked him: "Which fields do you mean?" "The fields over which Copreros and
Babiera are in litigation," answered Rosendo Paycol. Surprised at this answer,
Jose Haro told Rosendo Paycol that what he said could not be because the lot
in dispute was leased to his brother Severino Haro. Rosendo Paycol replied
that attorney Buenaventura Cordova had told Clemente Babiera and Justo
Babiera that Severino Haro would never be able to reap or enjoy the fruits of
the land, because if they did not win the suit by fair means they would win it
by foul.
Ever since he had leased said land Severino Haro visited it rather often,
especially during the months of June and July, which is the sowing season,
trying always to return to town early. To go to the land, which was in the
barrio called Bita, there was but a beaten path that passed by the house of
Rosendo Paycol, copartner on shares of Justo Babiera, where the latter and
his family lived.
On August 21, 1927, Severino Haro, as usual, went to visit his land in the
barrio of Bita, accompanied by Gregorio Torrija, Benito Carreon and Pedro
Tauro. On arriving there Fermin Bruces, his copartner on shares, told him that
the day before he had found Clemente Babiera's cow grazing on that land. It
happened at that moment Clemente Babiera and Dominga Bores were
passing by. Severino Haro then informed Clemente Babiera of what his cow
had done on the former's land and told him to take better care of his cow in
future and not to let it run loose. He then ordered Fermin Bruces to take the
animal to where the Babiera family lived. Severino Haro was not able to
return to town until almost 7 o'clock in the evening. As it was already dark,
he and his companions had to make use of a torch made out of split bamboo
to light them on their way. Severino Haro went ahead, followed by Pedro
Tauro, who carried the torch, some 8 brazas behind, with Gregorio Torrija and
Benito Carreon following. On Coming to a place in the road near Rosendo
Paycol's house, Clemente Babiera suddenly sprang from the cogon grass,
went after Severino Haro and struck him with his bolo in the back. On turning
his head to see who had attacked him Severino Haro received another bolo
blow in the forehead near the right eyebrow. In trying to defend himself with
his hand he was wounded between the index finger and the thumb. He then
tried to grasp his assailant but did not succeed and he fell to the ground.
Then Justo Babiera appeared and placing himself upon Severino Haro's
stomach, held the latter's hands. Later, Dominga Bores appeared on the
scene and held both knees of the wounded man. When Justo Babiera arrived,
a voice was heard saying: "Hold him, papa," and at the same time, Severino
Haro's voice was heard saying: "Help! help!" Pedro Tauro wished to come
near in order to help Severino Haro, but Clemente Babiera raised his bolo in
the air and kept on brandishing it to warn everybody off. Pedro Tauro, in fear,
stepped back, dropping the torch he carried. Not far from there were also
Buenaventura Gabalfin and Gregorio Paycol, who threatened to kill Severino
Haro's companions if they helped him. After the torch had been extinguished
they heard a voice which they recognized as Severino Haro's saying: "Uncle
Justo, have patience with me, for I have done no wrong." Then they heard
another voice, that of Dominga Bores, which said: "Here is the revolver; let us
return." Before the assailants left two or three revolver shots were heard.
When Severino Haro's companions saw that their assailants had already
departed, they drew near to where Severino lay stretched out to see what
had happened to him. Severino Haro told them not to fear for he did not feel
as if he were going to die, and calling his copartner on shares, Fermin Bruces,
directed him to bring a cot and take him to town. Pedro Tauro and Gregorio
Torrija did as Severino Haro wished, and on arriving at the barrio of Santa
Monica, they by chance came upon a truck in which were some policemen.
They place the wounded man in the same truck and took him to Saint Paul's
Hospital in the City of Iloilo. When Severino Haro was taken to the town he
did not have his revolver and the cartridge belt, without the holster, was
found by Gregorio Torrija near where the incident took place.
When Severino Haro was already in Saint Paul's Hospital he was examined by
Dr. Mariano Arroy, who issued a certificate stating that he found the following
wounds: Three on the right frontal regions; one on the right forehead taking
in the soft parts up to the auditory arch; on the right palmar arch; another on
the left arm; a deep one reaching down to the spinal column on the four
slight wounds on the right thigh; the ones on the forehead and the dorsal
region being mortal of necessity. All the wounds were caused, in the doctor's
opinion, by a sharp-edged and pointed weapon, and while the combatants
were on the same plane, except the wounds on the middle of the calf which
must have been caused while the assaulted party was on a lower plane than
his assailant, and the wounds on the right thigh, which must have been
get money from the town market and pay him. Severino Haro accepted the
promise and left. Clemente Babiera in turn retired to his house, together with
Dominga Bores and his father, and upon reaching a coconut palm they met
Fermin Bruces, copartner on shares with Severino Haro, who told them that
he had already tied up the cow as per his master's order. At about 7 o'clock in
the evening while Clemente Babiera was in his house conversing with his
father about the land which they had in Caboloan, which was attached by the
Government, he suddenly heard a commotion; he went to the porch of the
house to see what had happened and saw a number of persons coming one
carrying a light and another leading his cow by rope. Clemente Babiera told
his father what he saw and went out to meet said persons, and saw
Buenaventura Cabalfin leading his cow by the rope and Severino Haro
followed by his companions Pedro Tauro, Gregorio Torrija, Benito Carreon,
Margarito Mediavilla and Fermin Bruces. Clemente Babiera then asked
Severino Haro: "Why are you taking my cow away? Haven't I promised to pay
you tomorrow the loss caused by the animal? If you have no confidence in
me, then prepare a receipt showing that tomorrow without fail, I will pay
you." In reply, Severino Haro only said to Buenaventura Cabalfin: "Get on,
proceed." Clemente Babiera took hold of the rope by which the cow was led,
and said: "Buenaventura, stop!" Severino Haro then grasped Clemente
Babiera by the hand and pulled him to one side. Clemente Babiera
disengaged himself from Severino Haro's grasp, but Margarito Mediavilla
struck him with a bolo at the base of his little finger. Feeling himself
wounded, Clemente Babiera tried to unsheathe his bolo intending to return
the blow to Margarito Mediavilla but failed to do so, because he heard
someone say: "Shoot him!" Immediately thereafter he saw Severino Haro with
revolver unholstered, and without any loss of time he went up to the latter
and at that moment shots were heard. Clemente Babiera then began to slash
blindly right and left without considering what he was at, catching Severino
Haro in the back, as a result of which the latter fell to the ground on his back.
Clemente Babiera threw himself upon him, held him down so he could not get
up, and asked him: "Where is your revolver?" Severino Haro answered that he
did not have it. Then Clemente Babiera raised Severino Haro's hands and felt
his back, but did not find the revolver. Justo Babiera, Clemente's father, then
appeared, and was told by his son: "Papa, hold him, while I search for his
revolver." When Clemente Babiera saw Fermin Bruces he thought that the
latter meant to attack him because he had one hand behind, where he
carried his bolo, so Severino turned on him, but his wife, Dominga Bores,
restrained him telling him not to approach. One Nario also wanted to
approach in order to defend Severino Haro but dared not do so in view of
Clemente Babiera's threats. After having made fruitless search for Severino
Haro's revolver, Clemente Babiera, his father, and his wife went back to their
house.
After charging Rosendo Paycol with the care of the children, the three went to
town and passed the night in Florencio Mayordomo's house. On the following
morning Dominga Bores went to attorney Buenaventura Cordova's house and
informed him of what had happened. Buenaventura Cordova then went to
Florencio Mayordomo's house and told Dominga Bores to return to the place
of the incident in order to look for the revolver and deliver it to the
Constabulary if she found it. Then he accompanied Clemente Babiera to the
office of Captain Gatuslao of the Constabulary at Fort San Pedro, to whom
they delivered the holster of the revolver and the three shells they had
picked up on the night of the incident. Dominga Bores having found the
revolver in a furrow near the place of the crime took it to Iloilo and delivered
purchaser, who leased them to Severino Haro, the latter taking possession of
them. Justo Babiera restored to every lawful means to regain possession of
said parcels of land, first by an accion publiciana, which failed, and then by
an action for the recovery of possession. Severino Haro paid the expenses of
Basilio Copreros in order to carry on the suits. Such interested intervention on
Severino Haro's part without doubt must have vexed Justo Babiera, for in the
month of May 1927, he went with his copartner on shares, Rosendo Paycol, to
where Fermin Bruces, Severino Haro's copartner, was plowing, and asked him
who had ordered him there, and when Fermin Bruces answered that it was
Severino Haro, Justo asked him whether he would commit suicide if told to do
so by said Severino Haro, and then told him to tell his master to go and plow
himself. Later on, Clemente Babiera, Justo Babiera's son, accompanied by his
copartner Rosendo Paycol, seeing that Fermin Bruces went on working the
land, told him that if he continued plowing, Clemente would pull out
someone's intestines. If all these threats are true, as we believe they are,
then Justo Babiera and Clemente Babiera must have borne Severino Haro
deep resentment, doubtless believing that it was due to him that they could
not recover their two parcels of land, and this was sufficient and adequate to
move them, upon the failure of lawful means, to resort to violence.
It has been contended by the defense that the defendant-appellant,
Clemente Babiera, only acted in defense of his life and property, having been
obliged to resort to arms on seeing his life endangered, contending that the
provocation consisted in that after Severino Haro had agreed to an indemnity
of P2 for the damage caused, the latter wanted to take Clemente Babiera's
cow to the town, and that the attack consisted in that Margarito Mediavilla
gave him a bolo blow on the little finger of the right hand, and that Severino
Haro threatened him with his revolver and fired several shots at him.
Examined in the light of the ordinary conduct of men, Severino Haro's alleged
attitude, in having tried to take Clemente Babiera's cow after having agreed
to accept P2 for the damages, and having ordered that the animal be
returned to its owner, is highly illogical, and not a scintilla of evidence has
been presented to explain this change of determination, as unexpected as it
is unreasonable.
With respect to the allegation that Margarito Mediavilla and Severino Haro
began the attack, inasmuch as it has not been proved that they were the
instigators, it cannot be conceived that they committed said unlawful
aggression, for he who has no reason to provoke, has no reason to attack
unlawfully.
Another circumstance which shows the falsity of the theory of the defense is
that of having made Buenaventura Cabalfin take part as the person whom
Severino Haro employed to lead Clemente Babiera's cow. If Severino Haro's
copartner, Fermin Bruces, whom he had told to return said cow to Clemente
Babiera was with his master on that night, together with other companions,
what need was there of said Severino Haro's employing the services of
another person and one not belonging to his group? The plan of the defense
necessitated a provocation and to that end they conceived the idea of the
breach of the supposed agreement on the return of the animal through the
payment of an indemnity of P2, making use as an instrument of one on whom
the defense could depend to serve as witness, and there was no one better
suited for such a purpose than Buenaventura Cabalfin who according to the
witnesses for the prosecution, was at the place of the crime with Gregorio
Paycol threatening the deceased's friends if they offered to help him.
To rebut the evidence of the prosecution that Dominga Bores was the one
who by order of Clemente Babiera took Severino Haro's revolver from him on
the night in question, the defense tried to prove that on the following
morning attorney Buenaventura Cordova, a relative of the Babieras, told
Dominga Bores to return to the place of the incident and look for said
weapon, and that she found it in a furrow near the place and took it to the
office of the Constabulary in Iloilo between 9 and 10 o'clock in the morning.
But the rebuttal evidence of the prosecution disproved this contention and
showed that Dominga Bores did not have to look for the revolver in the field,
since at half past five in the morning she was already in the provincial
building of Iloilo carrying a package under her arm.
With regard to the small wound at the base of the little finger of the right
hand which Clemente Babiera showed to the Constabulary physician as
having been caused by Margarito Mediavilla, we are convinced that the latter
was not in the company of Severino Haro on the night in question and could
not have inflicted such a wound. Bearing in mind the plan of the defense, it
may safely be said that in order to cast an appearance of reality on the
concocted plea of an unlawful attack and self-defense, Clemente Babiera
inflicted on himself the slight wound; since, if in order to escape military
service there were men who mutilated themselves, who would not wound
himself slightly in order to escape a life penalty?
The facts related above have been proven beyond a reasonable doubt and
constitute the crime of murder defined in article 403 of the Penal Code, there
being present at the commission of the crime, the qualifying circumstance of
treachery, consisting in the accused Clemente Babiera having attacked
Severino Haro suddenly while the latter had his back turned, inflicting various
wounds on his body as a result of which he died a week later, said Clemente
Babiera being criminally liable as principal by direct participation.
While it is true that when the defense of the accused is that he acted in selfdefense, he may prove the deceased to have been of a quarrelsome,
provoking and irascible disposition, the proof must be of his general
reputation in the community and not of isolated and specific acts (Underhill
Criminal Evidence, par. 325, p.570), such as the accused Clemente Babiera
tried to prove, and hence the lower court did not err in not admitting such
proof. But even if it had been proved by competent evidence that the
deceased was of such a disposition, nevertheless, it would not have been
sufficient to overthrow the conclusive proof that it was the said accused who
treacherously attacked the deceased.
Justo Babiera and Dominga Bores are also liable but as accomplices, because,
while they did not take a direct part in the infliction of the wounds that
caused Severino Haro's death, or cooperated by acts without which they
could not have been inflicted, or induced Clemente Babiera to inflict them,
yet they took part in the commission of the crime by simultaneous acts
consisting in the former having mounted Severino Haro's body and held down
his hands, while the latter sat on his knees while he lay stretched out on the
ground in order to allow Clemente Babiera to search the body for his revolver,
Justo Babiera and Dominga Bores cannot be held as accomplices of the crime
of murder, inasmuch as it does not appear to have been proven that they
knew the manner in which Clemente Babiera was going to assault Severino
Haro, in accordance with the provision of article 79 of the Penal Code, to the
effect that the circumstances which consist in the material execution of the
act, or in the means employed to accomplish it, shall serve to aggravate or
mitigate the liability of those persons only who had knowledge of them at the
time of the act or their cooperation therein. Although in the instant case the
treachery is not considered a generic aggravating, but a qualifying
circumstance, nevertheless, it does not fail to produce a special aggravation.
To graduate the penalty, we are not to consider any modifying circumstance
of the criminal liability, for while it is true that Clemente Babiera took
advantage of the darkness of nighttime, this circumstance is included in
treachery, inasmuch as, considering the fact that Severino Haro was followed
by several companions, the accused would not have been able to conceal
himself in the cogon grass nor attack the deceased from behind without
being seen in time and prevented from executing his criminal purpose had
not been for the darkness of the night.
The penalty provided by law for the crime of murder namely, that of cadena
temporal in its maximum degree to death must therefore be imposed upon
Clemente Babiera in its medium degree, that is, life imprisonment.
The penalty provided for in article 404 of the Penal Code for the crime of
homicide is reclusion temporal in its full extent, and the one next lower
is prision mayor in its full extent, which is the penalty that must be imposed
on Justo Babiera and Dominga Bores as accomplices in the crime of homicide
(art. 67, Penal Code). In graduating the penalty, the aggravating
circumstances of nocturnity must be taken into consideration, without any
extenuating circumstances to offset it, and therefore said penalty of prision
mayor must be imposed in its maximum degree, that is, ten years and 1 day.
As there are three persons civilly liable, one as principal in the crime of
murder and two as accomplices in that of homicide, we must fix the share,
for which each must answer, of the P1,000 fixed by the trial court, in
accordance with the provision of article 124 of the Penal Code, that is, P600
for Clemente Babiera and P400 for Justo Babiera and Dominga Bores, each of
the latter being liable solidarily between themselves for their share, and
subsidiarily liable for the share of the former and the former for the share of
the latter, according to the provision of article 125 of the same Code.
By virtue whereof, the appealed judgment is hereby modified, and it is held
that Justo Babiera and Dominga Bores are guilty of the crime of homicide as
accomplices and each sentenced to ten years and 1 day prision mayor, and
to pay the sum of P400 jointly and severally, and Clemente Babiera to pay
the sum of P600, the former to be subsidiarily liable for the latter's share, and
the latter for the former's share, payment to be made to the heirs of the
deceased Severino Haro, the appealed judgment being affirmed in all other
respects with the proportional costs against each. So ordered.
Petitioner contends that the appellate court erred when it held that
petitioner was positively and categorically identified as the killer of
DANILO
L.
vs.
SIMEON B. PRUDENCIO, Respondent.
PAREL, Petitioner,
DECISION
AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ, J.:
Before us is a petition for review on certiorari filed by Danilo Parel (petitioner)
which seeks to set aside the Decision 1 dated March 31, 2000 of the Court of
Appeals (CA) which reversed the Decision of the Regional Trial Court (RTC),
Branch 60, Baguio, in Civil Case No. 2493-R, a case for recovery of possession
and damages. Also assailed is CA Resolution2 dated November 28, 2000.
On February 27, 1992, Simeon Prudencio (respondent) filed a complaint for
recovery of possession and damages against petitioner with the RTC Baguio
alleging that: he is the owner of a two-storey residential house located at No.
61 Forbes Park National Reservation near Department of Public Service (DPS)
compound, Baguio City; such property was constructed solely from his own
funds and declared in his name under Tax Declaration No. 47048; he
commenced the construction of said house in 1972 until its completion three
years later; when the second floor of said house became habitable in 1973,
he allowed petitioners parents, Florentino (now deceased) and Susan Parel,
to move therein and occupy the second floor while the construction of the
ground floor was on-going to supervise the construction and to safeguard the
materials; when the construction of the second floor was finished in 1975,
respondent allowed petitioners parents and children to transfer and
temporarily reside thereat; it was done out of sheer magnanimity as
petitioners parents have no house of their own and since respondents wife
is the older sister of Florentino, petitioners father; in November 1985,
respondent wrote Florentino a notice for them to vacate the said house as the
former was due for retirement and he needed the place to which petitioners
parents heeded when they migrated to U.S. in 1986; however, without
respondents knowledge, petitioner and his family unlawfully entered and
took possession of the ground floor of respondents house; petitioners refusal
questions of law are appealable to this Court under Rule 45. However,
considering that the findings of the RTC and CA are contradictory, the review
of the case is in order.7
We agree with the CA that respondent had shown sufficient evidence to
support his complaint for recovery of possession of the ground floor of the
subject house as the exclusive owner thereof. Respondent presented the
affidavit dated September 24, 1973 executed by Florentino and sworn to
before the Assistant City Assessor of Baguio City, G.F. Lagasca, which reads:
I, FLORENTINO PAREL, 42 years of age, employee, and residing at Forbes
Park, Reservation No. 1, after having been sworn to according to law depose
and say:
That he is the occupant of a residential building located at Forbes Park,
Reservation No. 1, Baguio City which is the subject of an advicement
addressed to him emanating from the Office of the City Assessor, Baguio City,
for assessment and declaration for taxation purposes;
That I am not the owner of the building in question;
That the building in question is owned by Mr. Simeon B. Prudencio who is
presently residing at 55 Hyacinth, Roxas District, Quezon City.
Further, affiant say not.8 (Underscoring supplied)
Petitioner concedes that while his former counsel failed to make a formal
offer of his documentary evidence before the trial court and that the court
shall consider no evidence which has not been formally offered, he maintains
that the said rule is not absolute, citing the case of Bravo, Jr. v. Borja; 6 that
his documentary evidence which were not formally offered in evidence were
marked during the presentation of the testimony of petitioners witnesses
and were part of their testimonies; that these evidence were part of the
memorandum filed by him before the trial court on July 12, 1993.
Petitioner insists that even in the absence of the documentary evidence, his
testimony as well as that of his witnesses substantiated his claim of coownership of the subject house between his late father and respondent as
found by the trial court.
The affiant, Florentino, who died in 1989 was petitioners father and had
adequate knowledge with respect to the subject covered by his statement. In
said affidavit, Florentino categorically declared that while he is the occupant
of the residential building, he is not the owner of the same as it is owned by
respondent who is residing in Quezon City. It is safe to presume that he would
not have made such declaration unless he believed it to be true, as it is
prejudicial to himself as well as to his childrens interests as his heirs. 10 A
declaration against interest is the best evidence which affords the greatest
certainty of the facts in dispute. 11 Notably, during Florentinos lifetime, from
1973, the year he executed said affidavit until 1989, the year of his death,
there is no showing that he had revoked such affidavit even when a criminal
complaint for trespass to dwelling had been filed by respondent against him
(Florentino) and petitioner in 1988 regarding the subject house which the trial
court dismissed due to the absence of evidence showing that petitioner
entered the house against the latters will and held that the remedy of
respondent was to file an action for ejectment; 12 and even when a complaint
for unlawful detainer was filed against petitioner and his wife also in 1988
which was subsequently dismissed on the ground that respondents action
should be an accion publiciana which is beyond the jurisdiction of the
Municipal Trial Court.13
Moreover, the building plan of the residential house dated January 16, 1973
was in the name of respondent and his wife. It was established during
petitioners cross-examination that the existing structure of the two-storey
house was in accordance with said building plan. 14
Notably, respondent has been religiously paying the real estate property
taxes on the house declared under his name since 1974. 15 In fact, petitioner
during his cross-examination admitted that there was no occasion that they
paid the real estate taxes nor declared any portion of the house in their
name.16
by the parties to the suit. 21 It is a settled rule that the mere fact that a
particular document is identified and marked as an exhibit does not mean
that it has thereby already been offered as part of the evidence of a party. 22
Petitioner insists that although his documentary evidence were not formally
offered, the same were marked during the presentation of the testimonial
evidence, thus it can properly be taken cognizance of relying in Bravo, Jr. v.
Borja.23
Such reliance is misplaced. In Bravo Jr., we allowed evidence on minority by
admitting the certified true copy of the birth certificate attached to a motion
for bail even if it was not formally offered in evidence. This was due to the
fact that the birth certificate was properly filed in support of a motion for bail
to prove petitioners minority which was never challenged by the prosecution
and it already formed part of the records of the case. The rule referred to in
the Bravo case was Section 7 of Rule 133 of the Rules of Court which
provides:
We agree with the CA that while tax receipts and declarations are not
incontrovertible evidence of ownership, they constitute at least proof that the
holder has a claim of title over the property. 17 The house which petitioner
claims to be co-owned by his late father had been consistently declared for
taxation purposes in the name of respondent, and this fact, taken with the
other circumstances above-mentioned, inexorably lead to the conclusion that
respondent is the sole owner of the house subject matter of the litigation.
and not Section 34 of Rule 132 of the Rules of Court which is the one
applicable to the present case.
The testimonies of petitioner and his witnesses failed to show that the
subject house is co-owned by petitioners father and respondent.
Candelario Regua merely testified that he was hired by petitioners father,
Florentino, to construct the residential building in 1972; 24 that he listed the
materials to be used for the construction which was purchased by
Florentino;25 that he and his men received their salaries every Saturday and
Wednesday from Florentino or his wife, respectively; 26 that he had not met
nor seen respondent during the whole time the construction was ongoing.27 On cross-examination, however, he admitted that he cannot tell
where the money to buy the materials used in the construction came from. 28
Corazon Garcia merely testified that Florentino started building the house
when he was allocated a lot at DPS compound, that she knew Florentino
constructed the subject house29 and never knew respondent. 30 The bare
allegation that Florentino was allocated a lot is not sufficient to overcome
Florentinos own affidavit naming respondent as the owner of the subject
house.
Petitioner himself testified that it was his father who saw the progress of the
construction and purchased the materials to be used; 31 and as a young boy
he would follow-up some deliveries upon order of his father
respondent in the construction site. The fact that not one of the witnesses
saw respondent during the construction of the said house does not establish
that petitioners father and respondent co-owned the house.
We also find that the CA did not err in ordering petitioner to pay respondent
being the sole owner of the subject house a monthly rental of P2,000.00 from
April 1988, the date of the extra-judicial demand, until petitioner actually
vacates the subject house. Although the CA made no ratiocination as to how
it arrived at the amount of P2,000.00 for the monthly rental, we find the
same to be a reasonable compensation for the use of the ground floor of the
subject house which consists of a living room, a dining room, a kitchen and
three bedrooms. The rental value refers to the value as ascertained by proof
of what the property would rent or by evidence of other facts from which the
fair rental value may be determined. 33
We likewise affirm the CAs award of attorneys fees in favor of respondent.
Article 2208 of the Civil Code allows the recovery of attorneys fees in cases
when the defendants act or omission has compelled the plaintiff to litigate
with third persons or to incur expenses to protect his interest 34 and in any
other case where the court deems it just and equitable that attorneys fees
and expenses of litigation should be recovered 35 which are both shown in
the instant case.
WHEREFORE, the decision of the Court of Appeals dated March 31, 2000 and
its Resolution dated November 28, 2000 are AFFIRMED.
Costs against petitioner.
In view of the above, you are hereby advised of your separation from
the service effective immediately unless you can show valid proof in
the form of a baptismal or birth certificate that you are below sixtyfive years of age today.
A few days later the respondent Eutiquio Mamigo was designated teacher-incharge of the said elementary school.
On August 31, 1964 the petitioner wrote the Director of Public Schools,
protesting his forced retirement on the ground that the date of his birth is not
November 26, 1897 but December 11, 1901. Attached to his letter was the
affidavit, executed on July 26, 1962, of Lazaro Bandoquillo and Pedro A.
Sienes both of Amlan Negros Oriental, in which these two affiants declared
that they knew that the petitioner "was born on December 11, 1901, in the
Municipality of Amlan formerly known as New Ayuquitan Province of Negros
Oriental, Philippines" because, "we were the neighbors of the late spouses,
NEPOMUCENO GRAVADOR and AGUEDA REGOROSA [petitioner's parents],
and we were present when said PEDRO GRAVADOR was born; furthermore,we
were also invited during the baptismal party a few weeks after the birth of
said PEDRO GRAVADOR."
On October 19, 1964 the petitioner wrote to the Division Superintendents of
Schools, reiterating his claim that he had not reached the age of 65 and
enclosing some papers in support thereof.
SO ORDERED.
including your Employee's Record Card, which has just been found in
connection with the verification of the services of all school officials
including elementary school principals in this division, you were born
on November 26, 1897. As of this date, therefore, you are now 66
years, 8 months, and 22 days old.
PEDRO
GRAVADOR, petitioner-appellee,
vs.
EUTIQUIO MAMIGO, THE DISTRICT SUPERVISOR OF BAYAWAN-STA.
CATALINA
SCHOOL
DISTRICT,
THE DIVISION SUPERINTENDENT OF SCHOOLS OF NEGROS ORIENTAL,
THE DIRECTOR OF PUBLIC SCHOOLS and THE SECRETARY OF
EDUCATION,
(all
sued
in
their
official
and
personal
capacities),respondents-appellants.
Office of the Solicitor Genero Arturo A. Alafriz, Assistant Solicitor General I. C.
Borromeo and Solicitor F. J. Bautista for respondents-appellants.
Newton E. Serion for petitioner-appellee.
CASTRO, J.:
The petitioner Pedro Gravador was the principal of the Sta. Catalina
Elementary School in Sta. Catalina, Negros Oriental on August 15, 1964 when
he was advised by the then, Superintendent of Schools Angel Salazar, Jr.,
through the respondent Supervisor Teodulfo E. Dayao, of his separation from
the service on the ground that he had reached the compulsory retirement
age of 65. The advice reads:
According to your pre-war records as a teacher in the public schools,
On April 13, 1965 he filed this suit for quo warranto, mandamus and damages
in the Court of First Instance of Negros Oriental. He asked the court to
adjudge him entitled to the office of principal of the Sta. Catalina Elementary
School and to order payment to him of not only his back salaries but also
damages in the total amount of P52,400. Named as respondents were
Eutiquio Mamigo, the District Supervisor, the Superintendent of Schools, the
Director of Public Schools and the Secretary of Education.
The respondents filed their answer, entered into a stipulation of facts with the
petitioner, and thereafter the case was submitted for decision. The trial court
concluded that the petitioner was born on December 11, 1901 accordingly
granted his petition. Immediate execution was ordered, as a result of which
the petitioner was reinstated.
The respondents appealed directly to this Court.
On July 6, 1967 the petitioner asked for the dismissal of the appeal on the
ground that the issues posed thereby had become moot with his retirement
from the service on December 11, 1966 and the payment to him of the
corresponding retirement benefits. We deem it necessary, however, to review
the trial court's decision on the merits, considering that the computation of
retirement annuities is based among other things, on the number of years of
service of a retiree,1 and that payment of benefits already made to the
petitioner on the basis of December 11, 1901 as the date of his birth would
not exempt him from the obligation to make a refund should this Court
ultimately rule that he was actually born November 26, 1897, as the
respondents claim.
In the second place, the import of the declaration of the petitioner's brother,
contained in a verified pleading in a cadastral case way back in 1924, to the
effect that the petitioner was then 23 years old, can not be ignored.
Madeante litem motam by a deceased relative, this statement is at once a
declaration regarding pedigree within the intendment and meaning of section
33 of Rule 130 of the Rules of Court.
Thus, December 11, 1901 is established as the date of birth of the petitioner
not only by evidence of family tradition but also by the declaration ante litem
motam of a deceased relative.1wph1.t
Finally, the patties are agreed that the petitioner has a brother, Constantino,
who was born on June 10, 1898 and who retired on June 10, 1963 with full
retirement pay. The petitioner then could not have been born earlier than
Constantino, say in 1897 as pre-war records indicate, because Constantino is
admittedly older than he.10
Still it is argued that the petitioner's action was prematurely brought because
he had not availed of all administrative remedies. This argument is without
merit. Suit for quo warranto to recover a public office must be brought within
one year.11 Before filing this case the petitioner waited for eight months for
the school officials to act on his protest. To require him to tarry a little more
would obviously be unfair to him since on April 13, 1965, when this case was
filed, he had only four months left within which to bring the case to court.
There was neither manner nor form of assurance that the decision of the
Director of Public Schools would be forthcoming. The rule on exhaustion of
administrative remedies does not apply where insistence on its observance
would result in the nullification of the claim being asserted.12
Accordingly, the judgment a quo is affirmed. No pronouncement as to costs.
family. [19]
We are sufficiently convinced, and so hold, that the present case is one
instance where the general requirement on evidence aliunde may be
relaxed. Petitioners are claiming a right to part of the estate of the declarant
herself. Conformably, the declaration made by Teodora Dezoller Guerrero that
petitioner Corazon is her niece, is admissible and constitutes sufficient proof
of such relationship, notwithstanding the fact that there was no other
preliminary evidence thereof, the reason being that such declaration is
rendered competent by virtue of the necessity of receiving such evidence to
avoid a failure of justice.[20] More importantly, there is in the present case an
absolute failure by all and sundry to refute that declaration made by the
decedent.
From the foregoing disquisitions, it may thus be safely concluded, on the
sole basis of the decedents declaration and without need for further proof
thereof, that petitioners are the niece and nephew of Teodora Dezoller
Guerrero. As held in one case,[21] where the subject of the declaration is the
declarants own relationship to another person, it seems absurd to require, as
a foundation for the admission of the declaration, proof of the very fact which
the declaration is offered to establish. The preliminary proof would render the
main evidence unnecessary.
Applying the general rule in the present case would nonetheless produce
the same result. For while the documentary evidence submitted by
petitioners do not strictly conform to the rules on their admissibility, we are
however of the considered opinion that the same may be admitted by reason
of private respondents failure to interpose any timely objection thereto at the
time they were being offered in evidence.[22] It is elementary that an
objection shall be made at the time when an alleged inadmissible document
is offered in evidence,[23] otherwise, the objection shall be treated as
waived,[24] since the right to object is merely a privilege which the party
may waive.[25]
As explained in Abrenica vs. Gonda, et al.,[26] it has been repeatedly
laid down as a rule of evidence that a protest or objection against the
admission of any evidence must be made at the proper time, otherwise it will
be deemed to have been waived. The proper time is when from the question
addressed to the witness, or from the answer thereto, or from the
presentation of the proof, the inadmissibility of the evidence is, or may be
inferred.
Thus, a failure to except to the evidence because it does not conform
with the statute is a waiver of the provisions of the law. That objection to a
question put to a witness must be made at the time the question is asked. An
objection to the admission of evidence on the ground of incompetency, taken
after the testimony has been given, is too late.[27] Thus, for instance, failure
to object to parol evidence given on the stand, where the party is in a
position to object, is a waiver of any objections thereto.[28]
The situation is aggravated by the fact that counsel for private
respondent unreservedly cross-examined petitioners, as the lone witness, on
the documentary evidence that were offered. At no time was the issue of the
supposed inadmissibility thereof, or the possible basis for objection thereto,
ever raised. Instead, private respondents counsel elicited answers from the
witness on the circumstances and regularity of her obtention of said
documents: The observations later made by private respondent in her
comment to petitioners offer of exhibits, although the grounds therefor were
already apparent at the time these documents were being adduced in
evidence during the testimony of Corazon Dezoller Tison but which objections
were not timely raised therein, may no longer serve to rectify the legal
consequences which resulted therefrom. Hence, even assuming ex gratia
argumenti that these documents are inadmissible for being hearsay, but on
account of herein private respondents failure to object thereto, the same may
be admitted and considered as sufficient to prove the facts therein asserted.
[29]
right. Hence, Martin Guerrero could only validly alienate his total undivided
three-fourths (3/4) share in the entire property to herein private
respondent. Resultantly, petitioners and private respondent are deemed coowners of the property covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. 374012 in
the proportion of an undivided one-fourth (1/4) and three-fourths (3/4) share
thereof, respectively.
III. The following provisions of the Civil Code provide for the manner by
which the estate of the decedent shall be divided in this case, to wit:
Art. 975. When children of one or more brothers or sisters of the deceased
survive, they shall inherit from the latter by representation, if they survive
with their uncles or aunts. But if they alone survive, they shall inherit in equal
portions.
Art. 995. In the absence of legitimate descendants and ascendants, and
illegitimate children and their descendants, whether legitimate or
illegitimate, the surviving spouse shall inherit the entire estate, without
prejudice to the rights of brothers and sisters, nephews and nieces, should
there be any, under Article 1001.
Art. 1001. Should brothers and sisters or their children survive with the widow
or widower, the latter shall be entitled to one-half of the inheritance and the
brothers and sisters or their children to the other half.
Upon the death of Teodora Dezoller Guerrero, one-half of the subject
property was automatically reserved to the surviving spouse, Martin
Guerrero, as his share in the conjugal partnership. Applying the aforequoted
statutory provisions, the remaining half shall be equally divided between the
widower and herein petitioners who are entitled to jointly inherit in their own
SO ORDERED.
MENDOZA, petitioner,
APPEALS
and
TEOPISTA
TORING
CRUZ, J.:p
The private respondent claimed she was the illegitimate daughter of Casimiro
Mendoza, but the latter denied her claim. He denied it to his dying day. The
trial court believed him and dismissed her complaint for compulsory
recognition. The appellate court did not and reversed the judgment of the
court below. Now the issue is before us on certiorari.
The complaint was filed on August 21, 1981, in the Regional Trial Court in
Cebu City. Teopista Toring Tufiacao, the herein private respondent, alleged
that she was born on August 20, 1930, to Brigida Toring, who was then single,
and defendant Casimiro Mendoza, married at that time to Emiliana
Barrientos. She averred that Mendoza recognized her as an illegitimate child
by treating her as such and according her the rights and privileges of a
recognized illegitimate child.
Casimiro Mendoza, then already 91 years old, specifically denied the plaintiffs
allegations and set up a counterclaim for damages and attorney's fees.
Amplifying on her complaint, Teopista testified that it was her mother who
told her that her father was Casimiro. She called him Papa Miroy. She lived
with her mother because Casimiro was married but she used to visit him at
his house. When she married Valentin Tufiacao, Casimiro bought a passenger
truck and engaged him to drive it so he could have a livelihood. Casimiro
later sold the truck but gave the proceeds of the sale to her and her husband.
In 1977, Casimiro allowed her son, Lolito Tufiacao, to build a house on his lot
and later he gave her money to buy her own lot from her brother, Vicente
Toring. On February 14, 1977, Casimiro opened a joint savings account with
her as a co-depositor at the Mandaue City branch of the Philippine
Commercial and Industrial Bank. Two years later, Margarita Bate, Casimiro's
adopted daughter, took the passbook from her, but Casimiro ordered it
returned to her after admonishing Margarita. 1
Lolito Tufiacao corroborated his mother and said he considered Casimiro his
grandfather because Teopista said so. He would kiss his hand whenever they
saw each other and Casimiro would give him money. Casimiro used to invite
him to his house and give him jackfruits. when his grandfather learned that
he was living on a rented lot, the old man allowed him to build a house on the
former's land. 2
Two other witnesses testified for Teopista, namely, Gaudencio Mendoza and
Isaac Mendoza, both relatives of Casimiro.
Gaudencio said he was a cousin of Casimiro and knew Brigida Toring because
she used to work with him in a saltbed in Opao. Casimiro himself told him she
was his sweetheart. Later, Gaudencio acted as a go-between for their liaison,
which eventually resulted in Brigida becoming pregnant in 1930 and giving
birth to Teopista. Casimiro handed him P20.00 to be given to Brigida at
Teopista's baptism. Casimiro also gave him P5.00 every so often to be
delivered to Brigida. 3
Isaac testified that his uncle Casimiro was the father of Teopista because his
father Hipolito, Casimiro's brother, and his grandmother, Brigida Mendoza, so
informed him. He worked on Casimiro's boat and whenever Casimiro paid him
his salary, he would also give him various amounts from P2.00 to P10.00 to
be delivered to Teopista. Isaac also declared that Casimiro intended to give
certain properties to Teopista. 4
(2) Any other means allowed by the Rules of Court and special
laws.
Casimiro himself did not testify because of his advanced age, but Vicente
Toring took the stand to resist Teopista's claim.
legitimate wife. However, it is not unusual for a father to take his illegitimate
child into his house to live with him and his legitimate wife, especially if the
couple is childless, as in this case. In fact, Vicente Toring, who also claimed to
be an illegitimate child of Casimiro, lived with the latter and his wife,
apparently without objection from the latter. We also note that Teopista did
not use the surname of Casimiro although this is, of course, not decisive of
one's status. No less significantly, the regularity of defendant's act of giving
money to the plaintiff through Gaudencio Mendoza and Isaac Mendoza has
not been sufficiently established. The trial court correctly concluded that such
instances were "off-and-on," not continuous and intermittent. Indeed, the
plaintiff s testimony on this point is tenuous as in one breath she said that
her mother solely spent for her education and in another that Casimiro
helped in supporting her. 13
But although Teopista has failed to show that she was in open and continuous
possession of the status of an illegitimate child of Casimiro, we find that she
has nevertheless established that status by another method.
What both the trial court and the respondent court did not take into account
is that an illegitimate child is allowed to establish his claimed filiation by "any
other means allowed by the Rules of Court and special laws," according to the
Civil Code, or "by evidence or proof in his favor that the defendant is her
father," according to the Family Code. Such evidence may consist of his
baptismal certificate, a judicial admission, a family Bible in which his name
has been entered, common reputation respecting his pedigree, admission by
silence, the testimonies of witnesses, and other kinds of proof admissible
under Rule 130 of the Rules of Court. 14
The trial court conceded that "the defendant's parents, as well as the plaintiff
himself, told Gaudencio Mendoza and Isaac Mendoza, that Teopista was the
daughter of the defendant." It should have probed this matter further in light
of Rule 130, Section 39, of the Rules of Court, providing as follows:
Sec. 39. Act or declarations about pedigree. The act or
declaration of a person deceased, or unable to testify, in
respect to the pedigree of another person related to him by
birth or marriage, may be received in evidence where it
occurred before the controversy, and the relationship
between the two persons is shown by evidence other than
such act or declaration. The word "pedigree" includes
relationship, family genealogy, birth, marriage, death, the
dates when and the places where these facts occurred, and
the names of the relatives. It embraces also facts of family
history intimately connected with pedigree.
The statement of the trial court regarding Teopista's parentage is not entirely
accurate. To set the record straight, we will stress that it was only Isaac
Mendoza who testified on this question of pedigree, and he did not cite
Casimiro's father. His testimony was that he was informed by his father
Hipolito, who was Casimiro's brother, and Brigida Mendoza, Casimiro's own
mother, that Teopista was Casimiro's illegitimate daughter. 15
Such acts or declarations may be received in evidence as an exception to the
hearsay rule because "it is the best the nature of the case admits and
because greater evils are apprehended from the rejection of such proof than
from its admission. 16 Nevertheless, precisely because of its nature as
hearsay evidence, there are certain safeguards against its abuse.
petition.
Before the scheduled hearing, or on January 10, 1992, the heirs of Jose
Locsin, Jr., the heirs of Maria Locsin, Manuel Locsin and Ester Jarantilla,
claiming to be the lawful heirs of the deceased, filed an opposition to
respondents petition for letters of administration. They averred that
respondent is not a child or an acknowledged natural child of the late Juan C.
Locsin, who during his lifetime, never affixed "Sr." in his name .
On January 5, 1993, another opposition to the petition was filed by Lucy
Salinop (sole heir of the late Maria Locsin Vda. De Araneta, sister of the
deceased), Manuel Locsin and the successors of the late Lourdes C. Locsin
alleging that respondent's claim as a natural child is barred by prescription or
the statute of limitations.
The Intestate Estate of the late Jose Locsin, Jr. (brother of the deceased)
also entered its appearance in the estate proceedings, joining the earlier
oppositors. This was followed by an appearance and opposition dated January
26, 1993 of Ester Locsin Jarantilla (another sister of Juan C. Locsin), likewise
stating that there is no filial relationship between herein respondent and the
deceased.
Thereupon, the trial court conducted hearings.
To support his claim that he is an acknowledged natural child of the
deceased and, therefore, entitled to be appointed administrator of the
intestate estate, respondent submitted a machine copy (marked as Exhibit
"D")[3] of his Certificate of Live Birth No. 477 found in the bound volume of
birth records in the Office of the Local Civil Registrar of Iloilo City. Exhibit "D"
contains the information that respondent's father is Juan C. Locsin, Sr. and
that he was the informant of the facts stated therein, as evidenced by his
signatures (Exhibit "D-2" and "D-3"). To prove the existence and authenticity
of Certificate of Live Birth No. 477 from which Exhibit "D" was machine
copied, respondent presented Rosita J. Vencer, the Local Civil Registrar of
Iloilo City. She produced and identified in court the bound volume of 1957
records of birth where the alleged original of Certificate of Live Birth No. 477
is included.
Respondent also offered in evidence a photograph (Exhibit "C")
[4] showing him and his mother, Amparo Escamilla, in front of a coffin
bearing Juan C. Locsin's dead body. The photograph, respondent claims,
shows that he and his mother have been recognized as family members of
the deceased.
In their oppositions, petitioners claimed that Certificate of Live Birth No.
477 (Exhibit "D") is spurious. They submitted a certified true copy of
Certificate of Live Birth No. 477 found in the Civil Registrar General, Metro
Manila, marked as Exhibit "8",[5] indicating that the birth of respondent was
reported by his mother, Amparo Escamilla, and that the same does not
contain the signature of the late Juan C. Locsin. They observed as anomalous
the fact that while respondent was born on October 22, 1956 and his birth
was recorded on January 30, 1957, however, his Certificate of Live Birth No.
After hearing, th trial court, finding that Certificate of Live Birth No. 477
(Exhibit "D") and the photograph (Exhibit "C") are sufficient proofs of
respondent's illegitimate filiation with the deceased, issued on September 13,
1996 an order, the dispositive portion of which reads:
(b) If such surviving husband or wife, as the case may be, or next of kin, or
the person selected by them, be incompetent or unwilling, or if the husband
or widow, or next of kin, neglects for thirty (30) days after the death of a
person to apply for administration or to request that administration be
granted to some other person, it may be granted to one or more of the
principal creditors, if competent and willing to serve;
Upon the other hand, Section 2 of Rule 79 provides that a petition for
letters of administration must be filed by an interested person, thus:
Sec.2 Contents of petition for letters of administration. A petition for
letters of administration must be filed by an interested person and must
show, so far as known to the petitioner:
(a) The jurisdictional facts; x x x" (Emphasis ours)
An "interested party", in estate proceedings, is one who would be
benefited in the estate, such as an heir, or one who has a claim against the
estate, such as a creditor.[9] Also, in estate proceedings, the phrase "next of
kin" refers to those whose relationship with the decedent is such that they
are entitled to share in the estate as distributees.[10] In Gabriel v. Court of
Appeals,[11] this Court held that in the appointment of the administrator of
the estate of a deceased person, the principal consideration reckoned with is
the interest in said estate of the one to be appointed administrator.
Here, undisputed is the fact that the deceased, Juan C. Locsin, was not
survived by a spouse. In his petition for issuance of letters of administration,
respondent alleged that he is an acknowledged natural son of the
deceased, implying that he is an interested person in the estate and is
considered as next of kin. But has respondent established that he is an
acknowledged natural son of the deceased? On this point, this Court, through
Mr. Justice Jose C. Vitug, held:
"The filiation of illegitimate children, like legitimate children, is
established by (1) the record of birth appearing in the civil register or a final
judgement; or (2) an admission of legitimate filiation in a public document or
a private handwritten instrument and signed by the parent concerned. In the
absence thereof, filiation shall be proved by (1) the open and continuous
possession of the status of a legitimate child; or (2) any other means allowed
by the Rules of Court and special laws. The due recognition of an illegitimate
child in a record of birth, a will, a statement before a court of record, or in any
authentic writing is, in itself, a consummated act of acknowledgement of the
child, and no further court action is required. In fact, any authentic writing is
treated not just a ground for compulsory recognition; it is in itself a voluntary
recognition that does not require a separate action for judicial
approval. Where, instead, a claim for recognition is predicated on other
evidence merely tending to prove paternity, i.e., outside of a record of birth,
a will, a statement before a court of record or an authentic writing, judicial
The event about which she testified on March 7, 1994 was the record of
respondent's birth which took place on October 22, 1956, on 37 or 38 years
ago. The Local Civil Registrar of Iloilo City at that time was Emilio G.
Tomesa. Necessarily, Vencer's knowledge of respondent's birth record
allegedly made and entered in the Local Civil Registry in January, 1957 was
based merely on her general impressions of the existing records in that
Office.
When entries in the Certificate of Live Birth recorded in the Local Civil
Registry vary from those appearing in the copy transmitted to the Civil
Registry General, pursuant to the Civil Registry Law, the variance has to be
clarified in more persuasive and rational manner. In this regard, we find
Vencer's explanation not convincing.
Respondent's Certificate of Live Birth No. 477 (Exhibit "D") was recorded
in a December 1, 1958 revised form. Asked how a 1958 form could be used
in 1957 when respondent's birth was recorded, Vencer answered that "xxx
during that time, maybe the forms in 1956 were already exhausted so the
former Civil Registrar had requested for a new form and they sent us the
1958 Revised Form."[13]
The answer is a "maybe", a mere supposition of an event. It does not
satisfactorily explain how a Revised Form dated December 1, 1958 could
have been used on January 30, 1957 or almost (2) years earlier.
Upon the other hand, Exhibit "8" of the petitioners found in the Civil
Registrar General in Metro Manila is on Municipal Form No. 102, revised in
July, 1956. We find no irregularity here. Indeed, it is logical to assume that
the 1956 forms would continue to be used several years thereafter. But for a
1958 form to be used in 1957 is unlikely.
"COURT:
I will butt in. Are these instances where your employees would only paste a
document like this Certificate of Live Birth?
WITNESS:
Yes, Your Honor, we are pasting some of the leaves just to replace the
record. Sometimes we just have it pasted in the record when the leaves were
taken.
ATTY. TIROL:
You mean to say you allow the leaves of the bound volume to be taken out?
A: No sir. It is because sometimes the leaves are detached so we have
to paste them."[14] (Emphasis ours)
There is no explanation why out of so many certificates, this vital
document, Exhibit "D", was merely pasted with the volume.
Vencer's testimony suffers from infirmities. Far from explaining the
anomalous circumstances surrounding Exhibit "D", she actually highlighted
the suspicious circumstances surrounding its existence.
The records of the instant case adequately support a finding that Exhibit
"8" for the petitioners, not respondent's Exhibit "D", should have been given
more faith and credence by the courts below.
The Civil Registry Law requires, inter alia, the Local Civil Registrar to
send copies of registrable certificates and documents presented to them for
entry to the Civil Registrar General, thus:
Duties of Local Civil Registrar. Local civil registrars shall (a) file registrable
certificates and documents presented to them for entry; (b) compile the
same monthly and prepare and send any information required of them by the
Civil-Registrar; (c) issue certified transcripts or copies of any document
registered upon payment of proper fees; (d) order the binding, properly
classified, of all certificates or documents registered during the
year; (e) send to the Civil Registrar-General, during the first ten days
of each month, a copy of the entries made during the preceding
month, for filing; (f) index the same to facilitate search and identification in
case any information is required; and (g) administer oaths, free of charge, for
civil register purposes"[15] (Emphasis ours)
In light of the above provisions, a copy of the document sent by the
Local Civil Registrar to the Civil Registrar General should be identical in form
and in substance with the copy being kept by the latter.In the instant case,
Exhibit "8", as transmitted to the Civil Registrar General is not identical with
Exhibit "D" as appearing in the records of the Local Civil Registrar of Iloilo
City. Such circumstance should have aroused the suspicion of both the trial
court and the Court of Appeals and should have impelled them to declare
Exhibit "D" a spurious document.
Exhibit "8" shows that respondent's record of birth was made by his
mother. In the same Exhibit "8", the signature and name of Juan C. Locsin
listed as respondent's father and the entry that he and Amparo Escamilla
were married in Oton, Iloilo on November 28, 1954 do not appear.
In this connection, we echo this Court's pronouncement in Roces vs.
Local Civil Registrar[16] that:
Section 5 of Act No. 3753 and Article 280 of the Civil Code of the Philippines x
x x explicitly prohibit, not only the naming of the father of the child born out
of wedlock, when the birth certificate, or the recognition, is not filed
or made by him, but also, the statement of any information or
circumstances by which he could be identified. Accordingly, the Local Civil
Registrar had no authority to make or record the paternity of an illegitimate
child upon the information of a third person and the certificate of birth of
an illegitimate child, when signed only by the mother of the latter, is
incompetent evidence of fathership of said child. (Emphasis ours)
The Roces ruling regarding illegitimate filiation is further elucidated
in Fernandez vs. Court of Appeals [17] where this Court said that "a birth
certificate not signed by the alleged father (who had no hand in its
preparation) is not competent evidence of paternity."
A birth certificate is a formidable piece of evidence prescribed by both
the Civil Code and Article 172 of the Family Code for purposes of recognition
and filiation. However, birth certificate offers onlyprima facie evidence of
filiation and may be refuted by contrary evidence.[18] Its evidentiary worth
cannot be sustained where there exists strong, complete and conclusive
proof of its falsity or nullity. In this case, respondent's Certificate of Live Birth
No. 477 entered in the records of the Local Civil Registry (from which Exhibit
"D" was machine copied) has all the badges of nullity. Without doubt, the
authentic copy on file in that office was removed and substituted with a
falsified Certificate of Live Birth.
At this point, it bears stressing the provision of Section 23, Rule 132 of
the Revised Rules of Court that "(d)ocuments consisting of entries in public
records made in the performance of a duty by a public officer are prima
facie evidence of the facts therein stated." In this case, the glaring
discrepancies between the two Certificates of Live Birth (Exhibits "D" and "8")
have overturned the genuineness of Exhibit "D" entered in the Local Civil
Registry. What is authentic is Exhibit "8" recorded in the Civil Registry
General.
Incidentally, respondent's photograph with his mother near the coffin of
the late Juan C. Locsin cannot and will not constitute proof of filiation,[19] lest
we recklessly set a very dangerous precedent that would encourage and
sanction fraudulent claims. Anybody can have a picture taken while standing
before a coffin with others and thereafter utilize it in claiming the estate of
the deceased.
Respondent Juan E. Locsin, Jr. failed to prove his filiation with the late
Juan C. Locsin, Sr.. His Certificate of Live Birth No. 477 (Exhibit "D") is
spurious. Indeed, respondent is not an interested personwithin the
meaning of Section 2, Rule 79 of the Revised Rules of Court entitled to the
for her education, such that she obtained a Master's degree, became a
certified public accountant (CPA) and eventually, a Central Bank examiner. In
view of FRANCISCO's refusal to expressly recognize her, MONINA prayed for a
judicial declaration of her illegitimate status and that FRANCISCO support and
treat her as such.
In his answer,[5] FRANCISCO alleged that he could not have had sexual
relations with Esperanza Amolar during the period specified in the complaint
as she had ceased to be in his employ as early as 1944, and did not know of
her whereabouts since then; further, he never recognized MONINA, expressly
or impliedly, as his illegitimate child. As affirmative and special defenses,
FRANCISCO contended that MONINA had no right or cause of action against
him and that her action was barred by estoppel, laches and/or
prescription. He thus prayed for dismissal of the complaint and an award of
damages due to the malicious filing of the complaint.
After MONINA filed her reply,[6] pre-trial was conducted where the
parties stipulated on the following issues:
1. Did Francisco Jison have any sexual relation[s] with Esperanza
Am[o]lar about the end of 1945 or the start of 1946?
2. Is Monina Jison the recognized illegitimate daughter of Francisco
Jison by the latters own acts and those of his family?
3. Is Monina Jison barred from instituting or prosecuting the present
action by estoppel, laches and/or prescription?
4. Damages.[7]
At trial on the merits, MONINA presented a total of eleven (11)
witnesses, namely: herself, Ruben Castellanes, Sr., Adela Casabuena, Arsenio
Duatin, Zafiro Ledesma, Danthea Lopez, Romeo Bilbao, Rudy Tingson, Alfredo
Baylosis, Dominador Zavariz and Lope Amolar.
Ruben Castellanes, Sr., a 63-year old resident of Iloilo City, testified that
he had worked for FRANCISCO for a total of six (6) years at Nelly Garden,
FRANCISCO's Iloilo residence.Towards the end of the Japanese occupation,
FRANCISCOs wife suffered a miscarriage or abortion, thereby depriving
FRANCISCO of consortium; thereafter, FRANCISCOs wife managed a nightclub
on the ground floor of Nelly Garden which operated daily from 6:00 p.m. till
3:00 a.m. of the following day, thereby allowing FRANCISCO free access to
MONINAs mother, Esperanza Amolar, who was nicknamed Pansay.
Adela Casabuena, a 61-year old farmer, testified that she served as
the yaya (nanny)
of
Lourdes
from
July
1946
up
to
February
1947. Although Pansay had left Nelly Garden two (2) weeks before Adela
started working for the Jisons, Pansay returned sometime in September 1946,
or about one month after she gave birth to MONINA, to ask FRANCISCO for
support. As a result, Pansay and Lilia Jison, FRANCISCO's wife, quarreled in
the living room, and in the course thereof, Pansay claimed that FRANCISCO
was the father of her baby. To which, Lilia replied: I did not tell you to make
that baby so it is your fault. During the quarrel which lasted from 10:30 till
11:00 a.m., FRANCISCO was supposedly inside the house listening.
Arsenio Duatin, a 77-year old retired laborer, testified that from 1947
until 1977, he worked as FRANCISCOs houseboy at the latters house on 12th
Street, Capitol Subdivision, Bacolod City. Arsenio met MONINA in 1967, when
Felipe Lagarto, the bookkeeper at Nelly Garden, informed Arsenio that
MONINA, FRANCISCOs daughter, would arrive at Bacolod City with a letter of
introduction from Lagarto.
Initially, Arsenio identified seven (7) black-and-white photographs (Exhs.
X-5 to X-11) of MONINA,[8] and as he paid for the telephone bills, he likewise
identified six (6) telephone cards (Exhs. G to L). Arsenio then declared that
when MONINA arrived in Bacolod City, she introduced herself to him as
FRANCISCOs daughter. She stayed at FRANCISCOs house, but when the latter
and his wife would come over, Arsenio would conceal the presence of
MONINA because Mrs. Jison did not like to see her face. Once, Arsenio hid
MONINA in the house of FRANCISCOs sister, Mrs. Luisa Jison Alano, in Silay
City; another time, at the residence of FRANCISCOs cousin, Mrs. Concha
Lopez Cuaycong. Finally, Arsenio declared that the last time he saw MONINA
was when she left for Manila, after having finished her schooling at La Salle
College in Bacolod City.
On re-direct and upon questions by the court, Arsenio disclosed that it
was FRANCISCO who instructed that MONINA be hidden whenever
FRANCISCO and his wife were around; that although FRANCISCO and MONINA
saw each other at the Bacolod house only once, they called each other
through long distance; and that MONINA addressed FRANCISCO as Daddy
during their lone meeting at the Bacolod house and were affectionate to each
other. Arsenio likewise declared that MONINA stayed at FRANCISCO's Bacolod
house twice: first for a month, then for about a week the second time. On
both occasions, however, FRANCISCO and his wife were abroad. Finally,
Arsenio recalled that FRANCISCO likewise bade Arsenio to treat MONINA like
his (FRANCISCOs) other daughters.
The testimony of Zafiro Ledesma, a 74-year old banker and former
mayor of Iloilo City, initially touched on how he and his wife were related to
FRANCISCO, FRANCISCO's wife and MONINA. Zafiro first identified Exhibit R, a
diagram of the family trees of the Jison and Lopez families, which showed
that former Vice-President Fernando Lopez was the first cousin of
FRANCISCOs wife, then told the court that the family of Vice-President Lopez
treated MONINA very well because she is considered a relative xxx by
reputation, by actual perception. Zafiro likewise identified Exhibits X-13 to X18, photographs taken at the 14 April 1985 birthday celebration of Mrs.
Fernando Lopez, which showed MONINA with the former Vice-President and
other members of the Lopez family.
Zafiro further testified that while MONINA lived with Mrs. Cuaycong, the
latter paid for some of MONINAs school needs and even asked MONINA to
work in a hospital owned by Mrs. Cuaycong; and that another first cousin of
FRANCISCOs wife, a certain Remedios Lopez Franco, likewise helped MONINA
with her studies and problems, and even attended MONINAs graduation in
remembered that in 1965, as part of his job, Rudy gave MONINA her
allowance from FRANCISCO four (4) times, upon instructions of a certain Mr.
Lagarto to give MONINA P15.00 a month. Rudy likewise recalled that he first
met MONINA in 1965, and that she would go to Nelly Garden whenever
FRANCISCOs wife was not around. On some of these occasions, MONINA
would speak with and address FRANCISCO as Daddy, without objection from
FRANCISCO. In fact, in 1965, Rudy saw FRANCISCO give MONINA money
thrice. Rudy further declared that in April 1965, FRANCISCOs office paid
P250.00 to Funeraria Bernal for the funeral expenses of MONINAs
mother. Finally, as to Rudy's motives for testifying, he told the court that he
simply wanted to help bring out the truth and nothing but the truth, and that
MONINAs filiation was common knowledge among the people in the office at
Nelly Garden.
On re-direct, Rudy declared that the moneys given by FRANCISCOs office
to MONINA were not reflected in the books of the office, but were kept in a
separate book, as Mr. Lagarto explained that FRANCISCOs wife and children
should not know [of] this. Rudy further revealed that as to the garden
meetings between FRANCISCO and MONINA, Rudy saw MONINA kiss
FRANCISCO on the cheek both upon arriving and before leaving, and
FRANCISCOs reaction upon seeing her was to smile and say in the Visayan
dialect: Kamusta ka iha? (How are you, daughter?); and that MONINA was
free to go inside the house as the household staff knew of her filiation, and
that, sometimes, MONINA would join them for lunch.
Alfredo Baylosis, a 62-year old retired accountant, testified that he
worked for FRANCISCO at Central Santos-Lopez in Iloilo from 1951 up to
1961, then at Nelly Garden from 1961 until 1972. Alfredo first served
FRANCISCO as a bookkeeper, then when Mr. Lagarto died in 1967 or 1969,
Alfredo replaced Mr. Lagarto as office manager.
Alfredo knew MONINA since 1961 as she used to go to Nelly Garden to
claim her P15.00 monthly allowance given upon FRANCISCOs standing
order. Alfredo further declared thatMONINAs filiation was pretty well-known in
the office; that he had seen MONINA and FRANCISCO go from the main
building to the office, with FRANCISCOs arm on MONINAs shoulder;and that
the office paid for the burial expenses of Pansay, but this was not recorded in
the books in order to hide it from FRANCISCOs wife. Alfredo also disclosed
that the disbursements for MONINAs allowance started in 1961 and were
recorded in a separate cash book. In 1967, the allowances ceased when
MONINA stopped schooling and was employed in Bacolod City with Miller,
Cruz & Co., which served as FRANCISCOs accountant-auditor. Once, when
Alfredo went to the offices of Miller, Cruz & Co. to see the manager, Mr.
Atienza, and arrange for the preparation of FRANCISCOs income tax return,
Alfredo chanced upon MONINA. When Alfredo asked her how she came to
work there, she answered that her Daddy, FRANCISCO,recommended her, a
fact confirmed by Mr. Atienza. Alfredo then claimed that Mr. Jose Cruz, a
partner at Miller, Cruz & Co., was the most trusted man of FRANCISCO.
Dominador Savariz, a 55-year old caretaker, testified that he worked as
FRANCISCOs houseboy at Nelly Garden from November 1953 up to 1965. One
morning in April 1954, MONINA and her mother Pansay went to Nelly Garden
and spoke with FRANCISCO for about an hour, during which time, Dominador
was vacuuming the carpet about six (6) to seven (7) meters away. Due to the
noise of the vacuum cleaner, FRANCISCO and MONINA spoke in loud voices,
thus
Dominador
overheard
their
conversation. As
FRANCISCO
asked Pansay why they came, Pansay answered that they came to ask for the
sustenance of his child MONINA. FRANCISCO then touched MONINA's head
and asked: How are you Hija?, to which MONINA answered: Good morning,
Daddy. After FRANCISCO told Pansay and MONINA to wait, he pulled
something from his wallet and said to Pansay: I am giving this for the child.
In May 1954, Dominador saw MONINA at Mr. Lagartos office
where Dominador was to get the days expenses, while MONINA was claiming
her allowance from Mr. Diasnes. The next month, Dominador saw MONINA at
Nelly Garden and heard in the office that MONINA was there to get her
allowance from her Daddy. In December 1960, Dominador saw MONINA at
Nelly Garden, in the room of Don Vicente (father of FRANCISCOs wife), where
she asked for a Christmas gift and she was calling Don
Vicente, Lolo (grandfather). At that time, FRANCISCO and his wife were not
around. Then sometime in 1961, when Dominador went to Mr. Lagartos office
to get the marketing expenses, Dominador saw MONINA once more claiming
her allowance.
Dominador further testified that in February 1966, after he had stopped
working for FRANCISCO, Dominador was at Mrs. Francos residence as she
recommended him for employment with her sister, Mrs. Concha
Cuaycong. There, he saw MONINA, who was then about 15 years old,
together with Mrs. Francos daughter and son. Mrs. Franco pointed at MONINA
and asked Dominador if he knew who MONINA was. Dominador answered
that MONINA was FRANCISCOs daughter with Pansay, and then Mrs. Franco
remarked that MONINA was staying with her (Mrs. Franco) and that she was
sending MONINA to school at the University of San Agustin.
Lope Amolar, a 50-year old resident of Dingle, Iloilo, and the younger
brother of Esperanza Amolar (Pansay), testified that he worked for
FRANCISCO as a houseboy from March to November 1945 at Nelly
Garden. Thereafter, FRANCISCO sent Lope to work at Elena Apartments in
Manila. By November 1945, Pansay was also working at Elena Apartments,
where she revealed to Lope that FRANCISCO impregnated her. Lope then
confronted FRANCISCO, who told Lope dont get hurt and dont cause any
trouble, because I am willing to support yourInday Pansay and my
child. Three (3) days after this confrontation, Lope asked for and received
permission from FRANCISCO to resign because he (Lope) was hurt.
On 21 October 1986, MONINA herself took the witness stand. At that
time, she was 40 years old and a Central Bank Examiner. She affirmed that as
evidenced by certifications from the Office of the Local Civil Registrar (Exhs. E
and F) and baptismal certificates (Exhs. C and D), she was born on 6 August
1946 in Barangay Tabugon, Dingle, Iloilo, to Esperanza Amolar (who passed
away on 20 April 1965) and FRANCISCO.[9] MONINA first studied at Sagrado
where she stayed as a boarder. While at Sagrado from 1952 until 1955 (up to
Grade 4), her father, FRANCISCO, paid for her tuition fees and other school
expenses. She either received the money from FRANCISCO or from Mr.
Lagarto, or saw FRANCISCO give money to her mother, or Mr. Lagarto would
pay Sagrado directly. After Sagrado, MONINA studied in different schools,
then Atty. Tirol, as instructed by Mr. Cruz. These calls were evidenced by PLDT
long distance toll cards (Exhs. G to L), with annotations at the back reading:
charged and paid under the name of Frank L. Jison and were signed by
Arsenio Duatin (Exhs. G-1 to L-1). PLDT issued a certification as to the
veracity of the contents of the toll cards (Exh. BB). Likewise introduced in
evidence was a letter of introduction prepared by Mr. Cruz addressed to Atty.
Tirol, on MONINA's behalf (Exh. N).
MONINA also declared that Atty. Tirol then told her that she would have
to go to Iloilo and sign a certain affidavit, before Mr. Cruz would turn over the
money promised by FRANCISCO.She went to Atty. Tirols office in Iloilo, but
after going over the draft of the affidavit, refused to sign it as it stated that
she was not FRANCISCOs daughter. She explained that all she had agreed
with FRANCISCO was that he would pay for her fare to go abroad, and that
since she was a little girl, she knew about her illegitimacy. She started crying,
begged Atty. Tirol to change the affidavit, to which Atty. Tirol responded that
he was also a father and did not want this to happen to his children as they
could not be blamed for being brought into the world.She then wrote a letter
(Exh. O) to FRANCISCO and sent it to the latters Forbes Park residence
(Bauhinia Place) by JRS courier service (Exhs. O-5 to O-7). MONINA
subsequently met FRANCISCO in Bacolod City where they discussed the
affidavit which she refused to sign. FRANCISCO told her that the affidavit was
for his wife, that in case she heard about MONINA going abroad, the affidavit
would keep her peace.
MONINA then narrated that the first time she went to Atty. Tirols office,
she was accompanied by one Atty. Fernando Divinagracia, who advised her
that the affidavit (Exh. P)[11] would boomerang against FRANCISCO as it is
contrary to law. MONINA returned to Bacolod City, then met with Atty. Tirol
once more to reiterate her plea, but Atty. Tirol did not relent. Thus, on the
morning of 20 or 21 September 1971, she signed the affidavit as she was
jobless and needed the money to support herself and finish her studies. In
exchange for signing the document, MONINA received a Bank of Asia check
for P15,000.00 (Exh. Q), which was less than the P25,000.00 which
FRANCISCO allegedly promised to give. As Atty. Tirol seemed hesitant to give
her a copy of the affidavit after notarizing it, MONINA merely grabbed a copy
and immediately left.
MONINA then prepared to travel abroad, for which purpose, she procured
letters of introduction (Exhs. S and T) from a cousin, Mike Alano (son of
FRANCISCOs elder sister Luisa);and an uncle, Emilio Jison (FRANCISCOs elder
brother), addressed to another cousin, Beth Jison (Emilios daughter), for Beth
to assist MONINA. Exhibit S contained a statement (Exh. S-1) expressly
recognizing that MONINA was FRANCISCOs daughter. Ultimately though,
MONINA decided not to go abroad, opting instead to spend the proceeds of
the P15,000.00 check for her CPA review, board exam and graduate
studies. After finishing her graduate studies, she again planned to travel
abroad, for which reason, she obtained a letter of introduction from former
Vice President Fernando Lopez addressed to then United States Consul
Vernon McAnnich (Exh. V).
As to other acts tending to show her filiation, MONINA related that on
one occasion, as FRANCISCOs wife was going to arrive at the latters Bacolod
to
admittedly also residing at Nellys Garden at that time. The RTC also ruled
that the probative value of the birth and baptismal certificates of MONINA
paled in light of jurisprudence, especially when the misspellings therein were
considered.
The trial court likewise resolved the second issue in the negative, finding
that MONINAs evidence thereon may either be one of three categories,
namely: hearsay evidence, incredulous evidence, or self-serving evidence." To
the first category belonged the testimonies of Adela Casabuena and Alfredo
Baylosis, whose knowledge of MONINAs filiation was based, as to the former,
on utterances of defendants wife Lilia and Esperanza allegedly during the
heat of their quarrel, while as to the latter, Alfredo's conclusion was based
from the rumors going [around] that plaintiff is defendants daughter, from his
personal observation of plaintiffs facial appearance which he compared with
that of defendants and from the way the two (plaintiff and defendant) acted
and treated each other on one occasion that he had then opportunity to
closely observe them together. To the second category belonged that of
Dominador Savariz, as:
At each precise time that Esperanza allegedly visited Nellys Garden and
allegedly on those occasions when defendants wife, Lilia was in Manila, this
witness was there and allegedly heard pieces of conversation between
defendant and Esperanza related to the paternity of the latters child. xxx
The RTC then placed MONINAs testimony regarding the acts of
recognition accorded her by FRANCISCOs relatives under the third category,
since the latter were never presented as witnesses, for which reason the trial
court excluded the letters from FRANCISCOs relatives (Exhs. S to V).
As to the third issue, the trial court held that MONINA was not barred by
prescription for it was of the perception that the benefits of Article 268
accorded to legitimate children may be availed of or extended to illegitimate
children in the same manner as the Family Code has so provided; or by
laches, which is [a] creation of equity applied only to bring equitable results,
and addressed to the sound discretion of the court [and] the circumstances
[here] would show that whether plaintiff filed this case immediately upon the
death of her mother Esperanza in 1965 or twenty years thereafter in 1985,
xxx there seems to be no inequitable result to defendant as related to the
situation of plaintiff.
The trial court then proceeded to discuss the four issues stipulated at
pre-trial, without, however, summarizing the testimonies of the witnesses nor
referring to the testimonies of the witnesses other than those mentioned in
the discussion of the issues.
The RTC ruled, however, that MONINA was barred by estoppel by deed
because of the affidavit (Exh. P/Exh. 2) which she signed when she was
already twenty-five years, a professional and under the able guidance of
counsel.
The trial court resolved the first issue in the negative, holding that it was
improbable for witness Lope Amolar to have noticed that Pansay was
pregnant upon seeing her at the Elena Apartments in November 1945,
since Pansay was then only in her first month of pregnancy; that there was
no positive assertion that copulation did indeed take place between Francisco
and Esperanza; and that MONINAs attempt to show opportunity on the part of
FRANCISCO failed to consider that there was also the opportunity for
copulation between Esperanza and one of the several domestic helpers
Finally, the RTC denied FRANCISCOs claim for damages, finding that
MONINA did not file the complaint with malice, she having been propelled by
an honest belief, founded on probable cause.
MONINA seasonably appealed to the Court of Appeals (CA-G.R. CV No.
32860) and sought reversal of the trial courts decision on the grounds that:
I
THE TRIAL COURT WAS ERRONEOUSLY PREDISPOSED TO
ADJUDGE THIS CASE AGAINST APPELLANT DUE TO ITS
MISPERCEPTION THAT APPELLANTS DELAY IN FILING HER
COMPLAINT WAS FATAL TO HER CASE.
II
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ITS REJECTION OF THE TESTIMONIES
OF APPELLANTS WITNESSES AS TAILOR-MADE, INADEQUATE AND
INCREDIBLE.
III
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ITS REJECTION OF THE
ADMISSIBILITY OF THE CERTIFIED COPIES OF PUBLIC
DOCUMENTS PRESENTED BY APPELLANT AS PART OF HER
EVIDENCE.
IV
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ITS REQUIREMENT THAT A WITNESS
TO THE ACTUAL ACT OF COPULATION BETWEEN THE APPELLEE
AND APPELLANTS MOTHER SHOULD HAVE POSITIVELY TESTIFIED
TO SAID EFFECT.
V
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN REJECTING THE ADMISSIBILITY OF
THE DULY IDENTIFIED NOTES AND LETTER OF THE RELATIVES OF
THE APPELLEE AS HEARSAY.
VI
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN CONCLUDING THAT APPELLANTS
AFFIDAVIT (EXH. P) SERVED AS A BAR AGAINST HER CLAIM FOR
RECOGNITION INSTEAD OF REINFORCING SAID CLAIM.[13]
Expectedly, FRANCISCO refuted these alleged errors in his Appellees
Brief.[14]
In its decision of 27 April 1995,[15] the Court of Appeals initially declared
that as no vested or acquired rights were affected, the instant case was
governed by Article 175, in relation to Articles 172 and 173, of the Family
Code.[16] While the Court of Appeals rejected the certifications issued by the
Local Civil Registrar of Dingle, Iloilo (Exhs. E and F) as FRANCISCO did not
sign them, said court focused its discussion on the other means by which
illegitimate filiation could be proved, i.e., the open and continuous possession
of the status of an illegitimate child or, by any other means allowed by the
Rules of Court and special laws, such as the baptismal certificate of the child,
a judicial admission, a family bible wherein the name of the child is entered,
common reputation respecting pedigree, admission by silence, testimonies of
witnesses xxx.[17] To the Court of Appeals, the bottom line issue was
whether or not MONINA established her filiation as FRANCISCOs illegitimate
daughter by preponderance of evidence, as to which issue said court found:
[N]ot just preponderant but overwhelming evidence on record to prove that
[MONINA] is the illegitimate daughter of [FRANCISCO] and that she had
continuously enjoyed such status by direct acts of [FRANCISCO] and/or his
relatives.
In so ruling, the Court of Appeals observed that the testimonies of Lope
Amolar, Adela Casabuena and Dominador Savariz were already sufficient to
establish MONINAs filiation:
As adverted to earlier, the trial court discredited Lope Amolars testimony by
saying that Lope could not have detected Esperanzas pregnant state in
November, 1945 since at that point in time [sic] she was still in the initial
stage of pregnancy.Apparently, the trial court paid more emphasis on the
date mentioned by Lope Amolar than on the tenor and import of his
testimony. As xxx Lope xxx was asked about an incident that transpired more
than 41 years back, [u]nder the circumstances, it is unreasonable to expect
that Lope could still be dead right on the specific month in 1945 that [he] met
and confronted his sister. At any rate, what is important is not the month that
they met but the essence of his testimony that his sister pointed to their
employer [FRANCISCO] as the one responsible for her pregnancy, and that
upon being confronted, [FRANCISCO] assured him of support for Esperanza
and their child. It would appear then that in an attempt to find fault with
Lopes testimony, the trial court has fallen oblivious to the fact that even
[FRANCISCO], in his deposition, did not deny that he was confronted by Lope
about what he had done to Esperanza, during which he unequivocally
acknowledged paternity by assuring Lope of support for both Esperanza and
their child.
The Court of Appelas further noted that Casabuena and Savariz testified
on something that they personally observed or witnessed, which matters
FRANCISCO did not deny or refute.Finally, said court aptly held:
Taking into account all the foregoing uncontroverted testimonies xxx let alone
such circumstantial evidence as [MONINAs] Birth Certificates xxx and
Baptismal Certificates which invariably bear the name of [FRANCISCO] as her
father, We cannot go along with the trial courts theory that [MONINAs]
illegitimate filiation has not been satisfactorily established.
xxx
Significantly, [MONINAs] testimony finds ample corroboration from
[FRANCISCOs] former employees, Arsenio Duatin, Rudy Tingson and Alfredo
Baylosis. xxx
xxx
Carefully evaluating appellants evidence on her enjoyment of the status of an
illegitimate daughter of [FRANCISCO] vis-a-vis [FRANCISCOs] controversion
thereof, We find more weight in the former. The positive testimonies of
[MONINA] and [her] witnesses xxx all bearing on [FRANCISCOs] acts and/or
Even the affidavit (Exh 2) which [FRANCISCO] had foisted on the trial court
xxx does not hold sway in the face of [MONINAs] logical explanation that she
at first did agree to sign the affidavit which contained untruthful
statements. In fact, she promptly complained to [FRANCISCO] who, however
explained to her that the affidavit was only for the consumption of his spouse
xxx. Further, the testimony of Jose Cruz concerning the events that led to the
execution of the affidavit xxx could not have been true, for as pointed out by
[MONINA], she signed the affidavit xxx almost five months after she had
resigned from the Miller, Cruz & Co. xxx
At any rate, if [MONINA] were not his illegitimate daughter, it would have
been uncalled for, if not absurd, for [FRANCISCO] or his lawyer to have
secured [MONINAs] sworn statement xxx On the contrary, in asking [MONINA]
to sign the said affidavit at the cost of P15,000, [FRANCISCO] clearly betrayed
his intention to conceal or suppress his paternity of [MONINA]. xxx
In fine, We hold that [MONINAs] filiation as [FRANCISCOs] illegitimate
daughter has been conclusively established by the uncontroverted
testimonies of Lope Amolar, Adela Casabuena and Dominador Savariz to the
effect that appellee himself had admitted his paternity of the appellee, and
also by the testimonies of appellant, Arsenio Duatin, Romeo Bilbao, Rudy
Tingson and Alfredo Baylosis unerringly demonstrating that by his own
conduct or overt acts like sending appellant to school, paying for her tuition
fees, school uniforms, books, board and lodging at the Colegio del Sagrado
Corazon de Jesus, defraying appellants hospitalization expenses, providing
her with [a] monthly allowance, paying for the funeral expenses of appellants
mother, acknowledging appellants paternal greetings and calling appellant
his Hija or child, instructing his office personnel to give appellants monthly
allowance, recommending appellant for employment at the Miller, Cruz & Co.,
allowing appellant to use his house in Bacolod and paying for her long
distance telephone calls, having appellant spend her vacation in his
apartment in Manila and also at his Forbes residence, allowing appellant to
use his surname in her scholastic and other records (Exhs Z, AA, AA-1 to AA5, W & W-5), appellee had continuously recognized appellant as his
illegitimate daughter. Added to these are the acts of [FRANCISCOs] relatives
acknowledging or treating [MONINA] as [FRANCISCOs] daughter (Exh U) or as
their relative (Exhs T & V). On this point, witness Zafiro Ledesma, former
Mayor of Iloilo City, whose spouse belongs to the Lopez clan just like
[FRANCISCO], testified that [MONINA] has been considered by the Lopezes as
a relative. He identified pictures of the appellee in the company of the
Lopezes (Exhs X-16 & X-17). Another witness, Danthea H. Lopez, whose
husband Eusebio Lopez is appellees first cousin, testified that appellant was
introduced to her by appellees cousin, Remedios Lopez Franco, as the
daughter of appellee Francisco Jison, for which reason, she took her in as [a]
secretary in the Merchants Financing Corporation of which she was the
manager, and further allowed her to stay with her family free of board and
lodging. Still on this aspect, Dominador Savariz declared that sometime in
Finally, the Certifications of the Local Civil Registrar of Dingle (Exhs E and F)
as well as [MONINAs] Baptismal Certificates (Exhs C & D) which the trial ocurt
admitted in evidence as part of [MONINAs] testimony, may serve as
circumstantial evidence to further reinforce [MONINAs] claim that she is
[FRANCISCOs] illegitimate daughter by Esperanza Amolar.
Baylosis.
FRANCISCO further asserts that MONINAs testimony that he answered
for her schooling was self-serving and uncorroborated by any receipt or other
documentary evidence; and assuming he did, such should be interpreted as a
manifestation of kindness shown towards the family of a former household
helper.
Anent the treatment given by his relatives to MONINA as his daughter,
FRANCISCO points to the fact that Pansay was the former laundrywoman of
Mrs. Franco; MONINA resided with the families of Eusebio Lopez and Concha
Cuaycong because she was in their employ at Kahirup Hotel and Our Lady of
Mercy Hospital, respectively; MONINA failed to present Mrs. Franco, Eusebio
Lopez and Mrs. Cuaycong; and MONINAs employment at the accounting firm
of Miller, Cruz & Co. was attributable to her educational attainment, there
being absolutely no evidence to prove that FRANCISCO ever facilitated her
employment thereat. Hence, in light of Baluyot v. Baluyot,[21] the quantum
of evidence to prove paternity by clear and convincing evidence, not merely
a preponderance thereof, was not met.
With respect to the third assigned error, FRANCISCO argues that the
Court of Appeals reliance on the certifications of the Local Civil Registrar
(Exhs. E and F) and Baptismal Certificates (Exhs. C and D) as circumstantial
evidence is misplaced. First, their genuineness could not be ascertained as
the persons who issued them did not testify. Second, in light ofReyes v. Court
of Appeals,[22] the contents of the baptismal certificates were hearsay, as
the data was based only on what was told to the priest who solemnized the
baptism, who likewise was not presented as a witness. Additionally, the name
of the father appearing therein was Franque Jison, which was not FRANCISCOs
name. Third, in both Exhibits E and F, the names of the childs parents were
listed as Frank Heson and Esperanza Amador (not Amolar). FRANCISCO
further points out that in Exhibit F, the status of the child is listed as
legitimate, while the fathers occupation as laborer. Most importantly, there
was no showing that FRANCISCO signed Exhibits E and F or that he was the
one who reported the childs birth to the Office of the Local Civil Registrar. As
to MONINAs educational records, FRANCISCO invokes Baas v. Baas[23] which
recognized that school records are prepared by school authorities, not by
putative parents, thus incompetent to prove paternity. And, as to the
photographs presented by MONINA, FRANCISCO cites Colorado v. Court of
Appeals,[24] and further asserts that MONINA did not present any of the
persons with whom she is seen in the pictures to testify thereon; besides
these persons were, at best, mere second cousins of FRANCISCO. He likewise
assails the various notes and letters written by his relatives (Exhs. S to V) as
they were not identified by the authors. Finally, he stresses that MONINA did
not testify as to the telephone cards (Exhs. G to L) nor did these reveal the
circumstances surrounding the calls she made from his residence.
Anent the fourth assigned error, FRANCISCO contends that the Court of
Appeals interpretation of MONINAs affidavit of 21 September 1971 ran
counter to Dequito v. Llamas,[25] and overlooked that at the time of
execution, MONINA was more than 25 years old and assisted by counsel.
As to the last assigned error, FRANCISCO bewails the Court of Appeals
failure to consider the long and unexplained delay in the filing of the case.
In her comment, MONINA forcefully refuted FRANCISCOs arguments,
leading FRANCISCO to file his reply thereto.
On 20 November 1996, we gave due course to this petition and required
the parties to submit their respective memoranda, which they subsequently
did.
A painstaking review of the evidence and arguments fails to support
petitioner.
Before addressing the merits of the controversy, we first dispose of
preliminary matters relating to the applicable law and the guiding principles
in paternity suits. As to the former, plainly, the Family Code of the Philippines
(Executive Order No. 209) governs the present controversy. As correctly cited
by the Court of Appeals, Uyguangco[26] served as a judicial confirmation of
Article 256 of the Family Code[27] regarding its retroactive effect unless
there be impairment of vested rights, which does not hold true here, it
appearing that neither the putative parent nor the child has passed away and
the former having actually resisted the latters claim below.
Under Article 175 of the Family Code, illegitimate filiation, such as
MONINA's, may be established in the same way and on the same evidence as
that of legitimate children. Article 172 thereof provides the various forms of
evidence by which legitimate filiation is established, thus:
ART. 172. The filiation of legitimate children is established by any of the
following:
(1) The record of birth appearing in the civil register or a final judgment; or
(2) An admission of legitimate filiation in a public document or a private
handwritten instrument signed by the parent concerned.
In the absence of the foregoing evidence, the legitimate filiation shall be
proved by:
(1) The open and continuous possession of the status of a legitimate child; or
(2) Any other means allowed by the Rules of Court and special laws.
This Article reproduces, with amendments, Articles 265, 266 and 267 of
the Civil Code.
For the success of an action to establish illegitimate filiation under the
second paragraph, which MONINA relies upon given that she has none of the
evidence mentioned in the first paragraph, a high standard of proof[28] is
required. Specifically, to prove open and continuous possession of the status
of an illegitimate child, there must be evidence of the manifestation of the
permanent intention of the supposed father to consider the child as his, by
continuous and clear manifestations of parental affection and care, which
cannot be attributed to pure charity.Such acts must be of such a nature that
they reveal not only the conviction of paternity, but also the apparent desire
to have and treat the child as such in all relations in society and in life, not
accidentally, but continuously.[29]
By continuous is meant uninterrupted and consistent, but does not
require any particular length of time.[30]
The foregoing standard of proof required to establish ones filiation is
founded on the principle that an order for recognition and support may create
an unwholesome atmosphere or may be an irritant in the family or lives of
the parties, so that it must be issued only if paternity or filiation is
established by clear and convincing evidence.[31]
The foregoing discussion, however, must be situated within the general
rules on evidence, in light of the burden of proof in civil cases, i.e.,
preponderance of evidence, and the shifting of the burden of evidence in
such cases. Simply put, he who alleges the affirmative of the issue has the
burden of proof, and upon the plaintiff in a civil case, the burden of proof
never parts.However, in the course of trial in a civil case, once plaintiff makes
out a prima facie case in his favor, the duty or the burden of evidence shifts
to defendant to controvert plaintiffs prima faciecase, otherwise, a verdict
must be returned in favor of plaintiff. Moreover, in civil cases, the party
having the burden of proof must produce a preponderance of evidence
thereon, with plaintiff having to rely on the strength of his own evidence and
not upon the weakness of the defendants. The concept of preponderance of
evidence refers to evidence which is of greater weight, or more convincing,
that which is offered in opposition to it; at bottom, it means probability of
truth.[32]
With these in mind, we now proceed to resolve the merits of the instant
controversy.
FRANCISCOs arguments in support of his first assigned error deserve
scant consideration. While it has been observed that unlawful intercourse will
not be presumed merely from proof of an opportunity for such indulgence,
[33] this does not favor FRANCISCO. Akin to the crime of rape where, in most
instances, the only witnesses to the felony are the participants in the sexual
act themselves, in deciding paternity suits, the issue of whether sexual
intercourse actually occurred inevitably redounds to the victims or mothers
word, as against the accuseds or putative fathers protestations. In the instant
case, MONINAs mother could no longer testify as to the fact of intercourse, as
she had, unfortunately, passed away long before the institution of the
complaint for recognition. But this did not mean that MONINA could no longer
prove her filiation. The fact of her birth and her parentage may be
established by evidence other than the testimony of her mother. The
paramount question then is whether MONINAs evidence is coherent, logical
and natural.[34]
The complaint stated that FRANCISCO had carnal knowledge
of Pansay by about the end of 1945. We agree with MONINA that this was
broad enough to cover the fourth quarter of said year, hence her birth on 6
August 1946 could still be attributed to sexual relations between FRANCISCO
and MONINAs mother. In any event, since it was established that her mother
was still in the employ of FRANCISCO at the time MONINA was conceived as
determined by the date of her birth, sexual contact between FRANCISCO and
MONINAs mother was not at all impossible, especially in light of the
overwhelming evidence, as hereafter shown, that FRANCISCO fathered
MONINA, has recognized her as his daughter and that MONINA has been
enjoying the open and continuous possession of the status as FRANCISCOs
illegitimate daughter.
We readily conclude that the testimonial evidence offered by MONINA,
woven by her narration of circumstances and events that occurred through
the years, concerning her relationship with FRANCISCO, coupled with the
testimonies of her witnesses, overwhelmingly established the following facts:
1) FRANCISCO is MONINAs father and she was conceived at the time when
her mother was in the employ of the former;
2) FRANCISCO recognized MONINA as his child through his overt acts and
conduct which the Court of Appeals took pains to enumerate, thus:
[L]ike sending appellant to school, paying for her tuition fees, school
uniforms, books, board and lodging at the Colegio del Sagrado de Jesus,
defraying appellants hospitalization expenses, providing her with [a] monthly
allowance, paying for the funeral expenses of appellants mother,
acknowledging appellants paternal greetings and calling appellant his Hija or
child, instructing his office personnel to give appellants monthly allowance,
recommending appellant for employment at the Miller, Cruz & Co., allowing
appellant to use his house in Bacolod and paying for her long distance
telephone calls, having appellant spend her vacation in his apartment in
Manila and also at his Forbes residence, allowing appellant to use his
surname in her scholastic and other records (Exhs Z, AA, AA-1 to AA-5, W &
W-5)
3) Such recognition has been consistently shown and manifested throughout
the years publicly,[35] spontaneously, continuously and in an uninterrupted
manner.[36]
Accordingly, in light of the totality of the evidence on record, the second
assigned error must fail.
There is some merit, however, in the third assigned error against the
probative value of some of MONINAs documentary evidence.
MONINAs reliance on the certification issued by the Local Civil Registrar
concerning her birth (Exhs. E and F) is clearly misplaced. It is settled that a
certificate of live birth purportedly identifying the putative father is not
competent evidence as to the issue of paternity, when there is no showing
that the putative father had a hand in the preparation of said certificates, and
the Local Civil Registrar is devoid of authority to record the paternity of an
illegitimate child upon the information of a third person.[37] Simply put, if the
alleged father did not intervene in the birth certificate, e.g., supplying the
information himself, the inscription of his name by the mother or doctor or
registrar is null and void; the mere certificate by the registrar without the
signature of the father is not proof of voluntary acknowledgment on the
latters part.[38] In like manner, FRANCISCOs lack of participation in the
preparation of the baptismal certificates (Exhs. C and D) and school records
or coffin plates.[46]
Plainly then, Exhibits S to V, as private documents not constituting
"family possessions" as discussed above, may not be admitted on the basis
of Rule 130, Section 40. Neither may these exhibits be admitted on the basis
of Rule 130, Section 41 regarding common reputation,[47] it having been
observed that:
[T]he weight of authority appears to be in favor of the theory that it is the
general repute, the common reputation in the family, and not the common
reputation in community, that is a material element of evidence going to
establish pedigree. xxx [Thus] matters of pedigree may be proved by
reputation in the family, and not by reputation in the neighborhood or
vicinity, except where the pedigree in question is marriage which may be
proved by common reputation in the community.[48]
Their inadmissibility notwithstanding, Exhibits S to V, inclusive, may, in
like manner as MONINA's school records, properly be admitted as part of her
testimony to strengthen her claim that, indeed, relatives of FRANCISCO
recognized her as his daughter.
We now direct our attention to MONINAs 21 September 1971 affidavit
(Exh. P/Exh. 2), subject of the fourth assigned error, where she attests that
FRANCISCO is not her father.MONINA contends that she signed it under
duress, i.e., she was jobless, had no savings and needed the money to
support herself and finish her studies. Moreover, she signed Exhibit P upon
the advice of Atty. Divinagracia that filiation could not be waived and that
FRANCISCOs ploy would boomerang upon him. On the other hand,
FRANCISCO asserts that full credence should be afforded Exhibit P as MONINA
was already 25 years old at the time of its execution and was advised by
counsel; further, being a notarized document, its genuineness and due
execution could not be questioned. He relies on the testimony of Jose Cruz, a
partner at the accounting firm of Miller & Cruz, who declared that he
intervened in the matter as MONINA was spreading rumors about her filiation
within the firm, which might have had deleterious effects upon the
relationship between the firm and FRANCISCO.
On this issue, we find for MONINA and agree with the following
observations of the Court of Appeals:
Even the affidavit (Exh 2) which [FRANCISCO] had foisted on the trial court
xxx does not hold sway in the face of [MONINAs] logical explanation that she
at first did agree to sign the affidavit which contained untruthful
statements. In fact, she promptly complained to [FRANCISCO] who, however
explained to her that the affidavit was only for the consumption of his spouse
xxx.
At any rate, if [MONINA] were not his illegitimate daughter, it would have
been uncalled for, if not absurd, for [FRANCISCO] or his lawyer to have
secured [MONINAs] sworn statement xxx On the contrary, in asking [MONINA]
to sign the said affidavit at the cost of P15,000, [FRANCISCO] clearly betrayed
his intention to conceal or suppress his paternity of [MONINA]. xxx
Indeed, if MONINA were truly not FRANCISCOs illegitimate daughter, it
would have been unnecessary for him to have gone to such great lengths in
order that MONINA denounce her filiation. For as clearly established before
the trial court and properly appreciated by the Court of Appeals, MONINA had
resigned from Miller & Cruz five (5) months prior to the execution of the
sworn statement in question, hence negating FRANCISCOs theory of the need
to quash rumors circulating within Miller & Cruz regarding the identity of
MONINAs father. Hence, coupled with the assessment of the credibility of the
testimonial evidence of the parties discussed above, it is evident that the
standard to contradict a notarial document, i.e., clear and convincing
evidence and more than merely preponderant,[49] has been met by MONINA.
Plainly then, the burden of evidence fully shifted to FRANCISCO.
Two (2) glaring points in FRANCISCOs defense beg to be addressed: First,
that his testimony was comprised of mere denials, rife with bare,
unsubstantiated responses such as That is not true, I do not believe that, or
None that I know. In declining then to lend credence to FRANCISCOs
testimony, we resort to a guiding principle in adjudging the credibility of a
witness and the truthfulness of his statements, laid down as early as 1921:
The experience of courts and the general observation of humanity teach us
that the natural limitations of our inventive faculties are such that if a witness
undertakes to fabricate and deliver in court a false narrative containing
numerous details, he is almost certain to fall into fatal inconsistencies, to
make statements which can be readily refuted, or to expose in his demeanor
the falsity of his message.
For this reason it will be found that perjurers usually confine themselves to
the incidents immediately related to the principal fact about which they
testify, and when asked about collateral facts by which their truthfulness
could be tested, their answers not infrequently take the stereotyped form of
such expressions as I dont know or I dont remember. xxx[50]
Second, the reasons for the dismissals of Tingson, Baylosis and Savariz
were unspecified or likewise unsubstantiated, hence FRANCISCOs attempt to
prove ill-motive on their part to falsely testify in MONINAs favor may not
succeed. As may be gleaned, the only detail which FRANCISCO could furnish
as to the circumstances surrounding the dismissals of his former employees
was that Baylosis allegedly took advantage of his position while FRANCISCO
was in the United States. But aside from this bare claim, FRANCISCOs account
is barren, hence unable to provide the basis for a finding of bias against
FRANCISCO on the part of his former employees.
As to FRANCISCOs other witnesses, nothing substantial could be
obtained either. Nonito Jalandoni avowed that he only came to know of
MONINA in June 1988;[51] that during his employment at Nelly Garden from
1963 up to 1974, he did not recall ever having seen MONINA there, neither
did he know of any instructions from FRANCISCO nor Mr. Lagarto
(FRANCISCOs office manager before passing away) regarding the
disbursement of MONINAs allowance.[52] Teodoro Zulla corroborated
Jalandonis testimony regarding not having seen MONINA at Nelly Garden and
MONINAs allowance; declared that Alfredo Baylosis was dismissed due to
discrepancies discovered after an audit, without any further elaboration,
however;but admitted that he never prepared the vouchers pertaining to
RAFAEL
J.
FERRER,
ET
AL., plaintiff-appellants,
vs.
JOAQUIN J. DE INCHAUSTI, ET AL., defendants-appellees.
Vicente
Sotto
Araneta & Zaragoza and Cohn & Fisher
for
appellants.
TORRES, J.:
This appeal was taken through bill of exceptions by counsel for the plaintiffs
from the judgment of February 12, 1917, whereby the judge of the Court of
First Instance held that Rosa Viademonte, mother of the plaintiffs, could not
have been legitimate daughter of the deceased Isabel Gonzalez, who, on her
death, left some legitimate children. The court did not deem it necessary to
discuss whether the said Rosa Viademonte could be a daughter of the said
Isabel Gonzalez for reason, given in his decision, and held that the plaintiffs
should not be entitled to what they have demanded, and that they should
pay the costs.
Under date of May 12, 1916, the attorney of Rafael J. Ferrer y Viademonte
and Maria Angelina Ferrer y Viademonte with her husband Ricardo Hernandez
y Aracil filed a complaint in the Court of First Instance of the city of Manila,
praying for the rendition of a final judgment declaring that Rosa Matilde
Viademonte y Gonzalez had the right to succeed to the inheritance left by
Isabel Gonzalez in the same proportion and capacity as the other four
children of the latter, namely, Ramon Viademonte, Rafael C. de Inchausti,
Joaquin C. de Inchausti, and Clotilde de Inchausti de Vidal; that the plaintiffs
Rafael and Maria Angelina Ferrer are the only and legitimate heirs of the
deceased Rosa Viademonte and the only ones entitled to receive her share of
the inheritance left by Isabel Gonzalez, that is, the on-fifth part of the latter's
estate; that the defendants render to the plaintiffs an account of the fruits
and administration of all the property from the moment the said community
of property from the moment the said community of property was constituted
among them, and to deliver to the plaintiffs that part which corresponds to
them in their capacity as sole heirs of Rosa Viademonte y Gonzalez, that is,
the one-fifth part of the inheritance with all its accession, fruits, and interests;
and , finally, that the defendants pay the costs. In fact, it is alleged that the
plaintiffs are the legitimate children of Rosa Matilde Viademonte , who in turn
died on November 20, 1898, leaving the two plaintiffs as surviving legitimate
children that the said Isabel Gonzalez was married, first to Ramon Martinez
Viademonte, and from his marriage two children, named Roman and Rosa
Matilde, and surnamed Viademonte y Gonzalez survived; that after the death
of her husband Ramon Martinez Viademonte, Sr., the widow, Isabel Gonzalez,
contracted a second marriage with Don Jose Joaquin de Inchausti with whom
she had three children named Clotilde, Rafael and Joaquin, all surnamed
Inchausti y Gonzalez, that Ramon Viademonte y Gonzalez Jr., died on January
1, 1905, without leaving any forced heir, and by a will dated May 216, 1900,
he left his property to the son or sons which Rafael C. de Inchausti might
have, and in default or such child or children, to the same Rafael C. de
Inchausti, by a will, left as his heirs and successors in interest his legitimate
son Jose R. de Inchausti, his recognized natural daughter Maria Consolacion
de Inchausti de Ortigas, and his widow Maria Consolacion Rico y Medina; that
on her death, Isabel Gonzalez left a certain property in her marriage with Jose
de Joaquin de Inchausti, which would amount approximately to P1,000,000
with its accessions, according to present valuation, as shown by the inventory
of said property which makes up Exhibit A, that on January 14, 188, Jose
Joaquin Inchausti y Gonzalez and Clotilde de Inchausti y Gonzalez de Vidal,
each of whom received on-fourth of the estate left by the deceased Isabel
Gonzalez, excluding therefrom Rosa Viademonte, the mother of the plaintiffs.,
notwithstanding the fact that she had an equal rights to inherit from Isabel
Gonzalez; that since January 188 till his death, Ramon Viademonte, Jr. had
been the possessor and administrator of the fourth part of the inheritance
which he received from his deceased mother Isabel Gonzalez which portion of
the property later came to the possession and control of Rafael C. de
Inchausti, and on the death of the latter, this fourth part of the inheritance
came to the possession of Maria Consolacion Rico de Inchausti, widow of said
Rafael C. de Inchausti, in her capacity as guardian of her son Jose Rafael de
Inchausti, and part of it, to the possession of Maric Consolacion de Inchausti
de Ortigas; and that a great part of the property which the defendants actual
possess, came from the young children, who received from Isabel Gonzalez
with the earnings and accessions thereof; these children have been
possessing it pro indiviso or in coownership, in their lifetime, with Rosa
Viademonte while living, and upon the death of the latter, with her heirs, but
that, in spite of the demands made by the plaintiffs for the delivery to them
by the defendants of their corresponding share in the inheritance the latter
have always refused to do so.
In his answers, for Clotilde Inchausti de Vial admitted that the plaintiffs are
the children of Rosa viademonte and Benigno Ferrer; that Isabel Gonzalez
was married first o Ramon Martinez de Viademonte, and afterwards to Jose
Joaquin de Inchausti; that on the death of her mother Isabel Gonzalez, on
December 13, 1886, her share in the conjugal partnership amounted to P191,
248.81, and on January 14, 1888, Jose Joaquin de Inchausti, as executor of his
wife, after paying the legacies mentioned in the testament, paid to this
defendant in cash the sum of P46,295.70 as her hereditary portion in the
liquidated property of her mother, and likewise delivered to the other three
sons of said Isabel Gonzalez similar amounts; that, after receiving her share
of the inheritance from her mother, she spent it all, and she no longer has
any part of it, nor has she left any portion of it during the last thirty years,
and that neither the plaintiffs nor their deceased mother had ever possessed
or enjoyed the said sum; and denies generally all the allegations of the
complaint which are not admitted, and denies specially the allegation that
the mother of the plaintiffs had ever married with their father Benigno Ferre,
that they and their mother ever had the surname of Viademonte or
Viademonte y Gonzalez and that the mother of the plaintiffs was a daughter
of Isabel Gonzalez.
As a special defense, she alleged that her possession of the money derived
from the inheritance of her mother had been public, adverse, pacific,
continuous and under a claim of ownership, in good faith and with just title,
since January 14, 1888; that never during the lifetime of the plaintiff's mother
did she make any claim or assert any right in the amount received by this
defendant form the inheritance of her deceased mother; that more than
thirty years had elapsed since she received by this defendant inheritance of
her deceased mother; and that the action for the plaintiffs has already
prescribed in accordance with the provisions of article 1955 of the Civil Code
and section 38 of the Code of Civil Procedure they (the plaintiffs) and their
mother ever had the surname of "Viademonte" or Viademonte y Gonzalez,"
and that the mother of the plaintiffs was a daughter of Isabel Gonzalez.
As a special defense, she alleged that her possession of the money derived
from the inheritance of her mother had been public, adverse, pacific,
continuous, and under a claim of ownership, in good faith and with just title,
since January 14, 1888; that never during the lifetime of the plaintiffs' mother
did she (plaintiff's mother) make any claim or assert any right in the amount
received by this defendant from the inheritance of her deceased mother; that
more than thirty years had elapsed since she received said amount to the
date of the presentation of the complaint; and that the action of the plaintiff
has already prescribed in accordance with the provisions of article 1955 of
the Civil Code and section 38 of the Code of Civil procedure.
Counsel for Maria de la Consolacion de Inchausti, in turn, set up a special
defense similar to that of Clotilde, and alleged that Ramon Martinez
Viademonte, son of Isabel Gonzalez, died in the city of Manila on January 1,
1905, without leaving any heirs, and bequeathed by will to his brother Rafael
C. de Inchausti, father of this defendant, all of his property, with the
exception of some property of little importance which he had bequeathed to
others; but denied that any part of his (Ramon Maritnez Viademonte's)
property thas ever been bequeathed to the children of said Rafael C. de
Inchausti; that, on the death of said Ramon Martinez de Viademonte, his will
was allowed to probate in the Court of First Instance of Manila, and all his
remaining property delivered to Rafael C. de Inchausti with Martinez
Viademonte's property received by her father Rafael C. de Inchausti was a
small piece of land situated in Santa Ana and known by the name of
Hacienda de Lamayan; that the title of Rafael C. De Inchausti to said land was
registered by virtue of a decree of the Court of Land Registration, in
accordance with the provisions of the Land Registration Ac; that said land
was in turn inherited by this defendant from her father upon the death of the
latter, and that she appears in the registry of property as owner of the same;
that, upon the allowance of said will in the Court of First Instance of this city,
the plaintiffs did not present any claim to the commissioners appointed to
appraise the property, and that the period allowed for the presentation of
such claims expired on October 20, 1914, and that, therefor, the action now
filed by the plaintiffs has prescribed, in accordance with the provisions of
section 695 of the Code of Civil Procedure. In similar terms, counsel for
Joaquin C. de Inchausti worded his defense in a written answer as amended
under date of September 19, 1916.1awph!l.net
on which this compliant was filed; and consequently, said action has
prescribed; that, after the death of Ramon Viademonte, Jr., in February 1905,
probate proceedings were had in the Court of First Instance of Manila, an
administrator of the decedent's estate was appointed, on July 21 of said year
the commissioners to appraise the estate of the deceased were appointed,
and after the lapse of the period fixed for allowing claims against the state,
the property of the deceased was adjudicated to his heir Rafael C. de
Inchausti and to the legatees, the plaintiffs not having presented to the
commissioners, any claim against the estate of said deceased has thus
prescribed by the lapse of the period for its presentation, that after the death
of Rafael C. de Inchausti, on October 5, 1913, probate proceedings were had
regarding his will in the Court of First Instance of the city, an executor was
appointed, as well as the commissioners to appraise the estate, and the
period within which claims against he estate might be received has expired,
and the plaitniffs have not presented any claim whatsoever against he estate
of said Rafael C. de Inchausti, and finally, she alleged that he period fixed by
law for presenting claims against he estate of said Rafael C. de Inchausti
expired long before the date of the filing of this complaint, and consequently,
the action to assert the claim has already prescribed, and that therefore the
defendant should be absolved from the complaint with the costs against the
plaintiffs.
Counsel for the plaintiffs, in his written reply amending his replies of
September 20 and 21, 1916, denied generally and specifically each and all of
the new facts alleged in the answers of the defendants, and added that the
will of Isabel Gonzalez, dated October 12, 1886, is null and void, inasmuch as
Rosa Viademonte Gonzalez and having equal rights as her other children;
that he defendants are estopped form denying that the surname of Rosa
Matilde was a daughter of Isabel Gonzalez with Ramon Martinez Viademonte;
that the plaintiffs are legitimate children of said Rosa Matilde with Benigno
Ferre inasmuch as both their predecessors in interest as well as the present
defendants have previously made declarations and formal affirmations,
written and oral, recognizing that the surname of Rosa Matilde was
Viademonte y Gonzalez, that the same was legitimate daughter of Isabel
Gonzalez and Ramon Martinez Viademonte and that the plaintiffs are
legitimate children of Rosa Viademonte y Gonzalez with Benigno Ferrer.
The trial having been held and the evidence of both parties adduced, the trial
judge, on February 12, 1917, rendered a judgment declaring that the
plaintiffs receive nothing in this action and pay the costs. To this decision the
plaintiffs excepted and moved for a new trial, which motion was denied by
order of the court on the 27th day of the same month and year. An exception
was taken to the order denying the motion for a new trial, and the
corresponding bill of exception was presented, approved, certified, and
forwarded to the office of the clerk of this court.
The parties are agreed as regard the allegations that the plaintiffs Rafael J.
Ferrer and Maria Angelina Ferrer are children of the deceased Rosa Matilde
Viademonte, although the defendants deny that they (plaintiffs) were
legitimate children of their mother contrary to the affirmation of the plaintiffs
to this effect. The evidence of record concerning this point is of such a
character that it is difficult to deduce therefrom a certain and definite
conclusion, because, while it appears that Rosa Matilde Viademonte has, on
various occasions, stated that she was unmarried and never contracted a
marriage, she has made entirely different statements on other occassions. In
the proceedings (Exhibit 8) instituted by the said Rosa Matilde against Rafael
C. de Inchausti, it was disclosed that she had never been married and that if
her children with Benigno Ferrer were baptized as legitimate children, it was
so done in order to conceal her dishonor, such statement being found in a
document drawn in 1892 and signed by her (Exhibit 8, pp. 3-4). On page 159
of the records of the said proceedings (Exhibit 8) it appears that said Rosa
Matilde stated under oath before a judge, on January 21. 1893, that she had
never married, and the same declaration was made by her on April 15th of
the same year in another case. (Exhibit 7, pp. 17-26.)
plaintiffs have not shown that such baptismal certificate was not that of their
mother Rosa Matilde, it remains proven therefore that said certificate was
presented as exhibit by Rafael C. de Inchausti in a case concerning the
delivery of a legacy instituted against Rosa Matilde, who, instead of denying
that such a baptismal certificate referred to her, admitted that such
certificate might have been hers.
On Page 9 of the day-book which Ramon Martinez de Viademonte, Jr., kept
during his lifetime, appears a memorandum which says: On September 1,
1862, seven o'clock in the evening a children three days old named Rosa
Matilde Robles, according to the baptismal certificate issued by the acting
rector Don Ramon Fernandez of the Cathedral Church of Manila, was
delivered to my mother; this child was baptized by the priest Don Remegio
Rodriguez with the authority of said rector, and according to the baptismal
certificate, it was a child of unknown parents." This memorandum agrees with
the above-mentioned baptismal certificate of Rosa Matilde Robles.
Notwithstanding the argument of counsel for the appellants Joaquin de
Inchausti stated that one day he was assured by his half-brother Ramon
Martinez Viademonte that Rosa Matilde was not his sister, but that she was
only a mere protegee and that her true name was Rosa Matilde Robles, and
that on that occasion the said brother showed him the certificate of birth of
which Exhibit 6 is a copy, which he took from the parochial church.
In view of the fact that Ramon Martinez Viademonte is now dead, the
testimony of Joaquin Jose de Inchausti referring to the said deceased is
admissible, for they are members of the same family, in accordance with the
provisions of section 281 of Act No. 190, and consequently, the conclusion is
that Rosa Matilde is the same Rosa Matilde Robels which is mentioned in
Exhibit 6 and because she was born in 1852, in no manner could her be
legitimate daughter of Ramon Viademonte and Isabel Gonzalez whose
marriage was dissolved in 18365 by the death of the husband. Moreover, the
witness Pilar Abarca presented by the plaintiffs testified that she had known
Rosa Matilde in the Colegio de Santa Isabel in 1863, she being then 20 years
old and Rosa, 9 years. If the witness Abarca was 73 years old on the date of
giving this testimony in 1916, it follows that Rosa Matilde was born in 1854,
and that therefore she could not be a daughter of Ramon Martinez de
Viademonte who died in 1836.
Notwithstanding the attempt of the plaintiffs to impugn the testimony of said
witness, said testimony is admissible according to section 263 of the Code of
civil Procedure which provides the when part of an act, declaration
conservation, or writing is given in evidence by one party, the whole of the
same subject may be inquired into by the other. It is true that the said
witness was not presented to prove that the date of Rosa Matildes birth but
the fact is that the age of the child is 9 years old as well as that of a youth 19
or 22 years of age can be known from the appearance of the child, and even
if, in fixing the age of Rosa Matilde, as mistake has been made, said mistake
could not be such as to reduce her true age by 10 years; but even then and
even supposing still that Rosa Matilde was 20 years old in 1863, the fact
remains that she must have been born in 1843, and so she could not have
been a daughter of Ramon Martinez de Viademonte, Sr. that the age of a
child 9 years old as well as that of a youth 19 or 22 years of age can be
known from the appearance of the child, and even if, in fixing the age of Rosa
Matilde, a mistake has been made, said mistake could not be such as to
reduce her true age by 10 years; but even then and even supposing still that
Rosa Matilde was 20 years old in 1863, the fact remains that she must have
been born in 1843, and so could not have been a daugther of Ramon
Martinez de Viademonte, Sr.
Juan Ferrer, another witness for the plaintiffs, testified that Benigno Ferrer
and Rosa Matilde married in 1872, that Rosa Matilde must have been then
between 22 and 30 years of age. It is inferred from this testimony that, if
Rosa Matilde could no be over 30 years old in 1872, she could not have been
born before 1842, and much less in 1836 or 1837.
The document No. 663, page 257 of Exhibit 8, appears to have been
executed by Rosa Matilde in 1893, wherein she declared to the notary public
before whom the document was executed that she was then 39 years of age.
If she was 39 years old in 1893, she could not have been born in 1854 and
much less in 1836 and 1837.
In Exhibit 1, page 135, which is a certified copy of a discharge in full executed
by Rosa Matilde in 1894 in favor of Joaquin Jose de Inchausti, it is said that
the maker of the deed was 40 years old, thus corroborating ina convincing
manner what has been stated regarding this point in the preceding
document.
In view of the objection and arguments made by counsel for the plaintiffs
against the admission of the aforementioned documents, it becomes
necessary to say in this connection that it is undeniable that Rosa Matilde, in
executing said two documents, gave as her age those appearing therein, and
that there was no reason for the belief that she told a lie and tried to conceal
her true age; but, even admitting that we had made a mistake by telling that
she was older or younger than she really was, such a mistake could not have
given a difference of 10 years from her true age, inasmuch as she was an
educated person, and it is not possible to believe that, through ignorance,
she gave an age difference from her true anger; and, even if 10 years be
added to the age given by Rosa Matilde in the documents referred to, still the
fact remains that in 1894 she must have been only 50 years old and that she
must have been born in 1844. It is undisputed that Roa Matilde was born 16
years after the death of Ramon Viademonte, and therefor could not be a
daughter of the latter.
Counsel for plaintiffs objected to the admission in evidence of the day-book
kept by Ramon Martinez Viademonte, Jr., during his lifetime, alleging that it
has not been proven that the entries in said book were made at the same
time that those events occurred; that the witness who identified it did not see
Ramon Martinez de Viademonte, Jr., in the act of making the said entries, and
that, even if it were so, still the writing contained in the book, being a mere
memorandum of an interested party, can not be admitted at the trial.
The above objection can be met and disposed of by the provisions of section
298, No. 13 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that evidence may
be given upon trial of monuments and inscriptions in public places as
evidence of common reputation; and entries in family Bibles or other family
books or charts; engravings on rings, family portraits and the like, as
evidence of pedigree.
The law does not require that the entries in the said booklet be made at the
same time as the occurrence of those events; hence, the written
memorandum in the same is not subject to the defect attributed to it, The
witness Joaquin Jose de Inchausti declared affirmatively that the
Counsel for the defendants with reason, qualify as false, this affirmation
made by the counsel for the plaintiffs to the effect that the judge has
established the fact that Rosa Viademonte was born of Isabel Gonzalez, when
such affirmation does not appear in any part of the decision rendered by the
said judge.
This court can not look with indifference on any attempt to alter or falsify, for
certain purposes, the facts or their important details in the extracts or
references that have to be made in proceedings or records brought before it.
All the records in a proceeding should contain and reflect the truth in such a
way that all who intervene in it may have absolute confidence that the
course and procedure of a trial are under the vigilance and inspection of the
court.
It is unprofessional and worthy of the highest form of rebuke for a lawyer to
attribute to a judge a statement which he had not made in his decision, and
in view of the fact that Vicente Sotto has already been disbarred from the
exercise of his profession by resolution of this court, it is deemed
unnecessary to determine what punishment shall be adopted for said act,
which in his case, should be imposed upon him as a lawyer
For the foregoing reasons, whereby the errors assigned to the judgment
appealed from are deemed to have been refuted, the said judgment should
be, as it hereby is, affirmed and the defendants absolved from the complaint,
with the costs against the appellants. So ordered.
a Chinese; that he belongs to the yellow race and that he had used these
other names: "Tan Jua Gae", "Enciong" and "Jua Gac" (Exh. "N"). He had been
a teacher in the Candon Chinese School (t.s.n., p. 17, Oct. 3, 1962). His
explanation that it was his mother who registered him as an alien is flimsy;
and, as stated hereinbefore, he did not present his mother as a witness.
The evidence is thus clearly preponderant, if not overwhelming that the
respondent's father, Esteban Mallare or "Mallari", also known as "Esteban
Dy", "Esteban Dy Mallare" and "Esteban Tan", was and remained a Chinese
until he died; consequently, the respondent's mother, admittedly a Chinese,
retained her original citizenship and their offspring, respondent, Florencio
Mallare, together with his brothers and sisters, are likewise Chinese nationals,
through and through.
Against these pretensions of Philippine citizenship, all the five (5) known
children of the spouses Esteban Mallare and Te Na Artemio, Esperanza,
Florencio, Paciencia and Raymundo, were registered at birth as children of
aChinese father and a Chinese mother and with the added detail that their
parents were born in China.
The birth certificate of Esperanza Mallare (Exh. "F") who was born on 25
October 1939, is particularly significant in this regard, because it bears the
father's own signature. If Esteban Mallare was indeed a Filipino by choice, as
stated by him in his aforementioned affidavit (Annex 4), then he should have
so stated in this birth certificate of his daughter, instead, he admits, against
his own interest, that he is a Chinese. Esteban Mallare's own death certificate
(Exh. "C"), over the signature of his son, Artemio Mallare, shows against
Artemio's own interest that Esteban was a Chinese, born in Fookiang, China;
that he died on 5 June 1945, at the age of 42 and is buried at the Chinese
cemetery, having resided in the Philippines for 28 years (Exh. "C"), i.e., only
since 1917.
The affidavit of Artemio denying that the signature in the aforesaid death
certificate is his, is inadmissible and, therefore, should be rejected, as it was
offered in evidence for the first time after trial was closed, as an annex to the
respondent's memorandum with the investigator. The affiant was not
examined thereon, and the affidavit is self-serving besides.
Civil Case No. 329-G and Special Proceeding No. 3925 are not modes of
acquiring Philippine citizenship; neither is the Chinese citizenship of the
respondent converted to Filipino because certain government agencies
recognized him as such. He remains, by jus sanguinis, a Chinese until he is
naturalized.
The entire family, consisting of the father, mother and their four (4) children
(Raymundo was not yet born) were registered as aliens in 1942 in the then
Division of Alien Statistics, pursuant to the proclamation of the Commanderin-Chief of the Imperial Japanese Forces in the Philippines and Executive
Order No. 25 of the then Executive Commission. (See letter of Jan. 18, 1963
from the Bureau of Immigration to the Legal Officer-Investigator, see also pp.
171 and 180-181, Vol. I, No. 4, Official Gazette, published during Japanese
occupation.) .
It is noted that the declaration that the respondent and his brothers and
sisters are Filipino citizens is stated in the dispositive portion of the decision
in Civil Case No. 329-G, which was an action in personam. The
pronouncement was not within the court's competence, because the
declaration of the citizenship of these defendants was not the relief that was
sought. At the time, the pronouncement was beyond judicial power, there
being no law authorizing the institution of a judicial preceding to declare the
citizenship of an individual (Danilo Channie Tan v. Republic, L-14159, April 18,
1960; Paralaran v. Republic, L-15047, Jan. 30, 1962; Tan Yu Chin v. Republic,
L-15775, April 29, 1961; Tan v. Republic, L-16108, October 31, 1961; Santiago
vs. Commissioner, L-14653, Jan. 31, 1963; Comissioner vs. Domingo, L-
21274, July 31, 1963; Lao Yap Diok, et al. v. Republic, L-19107-09, Sept. 30,
1964).
In the basic case Channie Tan vs. Republic, ante, this Court ruled as
follows:1wph1.t
Under our laws, there can be no action or proceeding for the judicial
declaration of the citizenship of an individual. Courts of justice exist
for the settlement of justiciable controversies, which imply a given
right, legally demandable and enforceable, an act or omission
violative of said right, and a remedy granted or sanctioned by law, for
said breach of right. As an incident only of the adjudication of the
rights of the parties to a controversy, the court may pass upon, and
make a pronouncement relative to, their status. Otherwise, such a
pronouncement is beyond judicial power. Thus, for instance, no action
or proceeding may be instituted for a declaration to the effect that
plaintiff or petitioner is married, or single, or a legitimate child,
although a finding thereon may be made as a necessary premise to
justify a given relief available only to one enjoying said status. At
times, the law permits the acquisition of a given status, such as
naturalization, by judicial decree. But, there is no similar legislation
authorizing the institution of a judicial proceeding to declare that a
given person is part of our citizenry. (Tan vs. Republic, G.R. No. L14159, April 18, 1960, reiterated in G.R. No. L-15775, April 29, 1961).
The said judicial declaration3 was merely an incident to the adjudication of
the rights of the parties to the controversy over land ownership. Their
citizenship was not the thing adjudicated in the judgment and the declaration
that they are Filipinos was but a necessary premise for the court to arrive at a
conclusion that the sale of the realty was valid as between the parties. Not
being the thing directly adjudicated, their declared citizenship is not res
judicata, and cannot become conclusive.
The appearance of the fiscal, representing the Solicitor General, in Special
Proceeding No. 3925 does not bind the state to the order of "correction" of
the birth records because the proceeding was not instituted as in rem and,
under no law had the state given its consent to be party thereto. For this
reason, the fiscal's appearance was an unauthorized one.
It is noteworthy that in neither case relied upon by the respondent does it
appear that his claim for citizenship was given adequate publication so as to
apprise all concerned and give them opportunity to contest it or supply the
corresponding public office any derogatory data that might exist against the
alleged citizenship. Hence, neither decision constitutes res judicata on the
issue of respondent's alleged Filipino nationality.
And certainly, the Supreme Court, acting pursuant to its inherent and
constitutional authority, may not be precluded from inquiring into the
citizenship of persons admitted to the practice of law, independently of any
other court's findings in the cases or proceedings brought or instituted
therein.
IN VIEW OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the respondent Florencio Mallare is hereby
declared excluded from the practice of law; his admission to the Philippine
bar is revoked and he is hereby ordered to return immediately to this Court
the lawyer's diploma previously issued to him.
Let a copy of this decision be furnished, when it becomes final, to the
Secretary of Justice, for such action as may be deemed warranted; and let
another copy be sent to the Local Civil Registrar of Macalelon, Quezon, for
purposes of record in the corresponding civil registry of births. So ordered.
The assailed decision originated from Civil Case No. 90-602 filed by Radio
Mindanao Network, Inc. (respondent) against DBP Pool of Accredited
Insurance Companies (petitioner) and Provident Insurance Corporation
In
the
evening
of July
27,
1988,
respondents
SO ORDERED.[4]
located
Both insurance companies appealed from the trial courts decision but the CA
in SSS Building, Bacolod City, was razed by fire causing damage in the
affirmed the decision, with the modification that the applicable interest rate
amount
insurance policies but the claims were denied on the ground that the cause of
petitioner DBP which was denied by the CA per its Resolution dated January
loss was an excepted risk excluded under condition no. 6 (c) and (d), to wit:
30, 2001.[5]
radio
recovery
station
The insurance companies maintained that the evidence showed that the fire
was caused by members of the Communist Party of the Philippines/New
Peoples Army (CPP/NPA); and consequently, denied the claims. Hence,
respondent was constrained to file Civil Case No. 90-602 against petitioner
and Provident.
After trial on the merits, the Regional Trial Court of Makati, Branch 138,
rendered a decision in favor of respondent. The dispositive portion of the
evidence failed to support its allegation that the loss was caused by an
excepted risk, i.e., members of the CPP/NPA caused the fire. In upholding
respondents claim for indemnity, the trial court found that:
decision reads:
IN VIEW THEREOF,
judgment is
rendered in favor of
The Court will not disturb these factual findings absent compelling or
exceptional reasons. It should be stressed that a review by certiorari under
The CA went over the evidence on record and sustained the findings of the
this
Court
will
not
review
unless
there
are
exceptional
Both the trial court and the CA were correct in ruling that petitioner failed to
prove that the loss was caused by an excepted risk.
Petitioner argues that private respondent is responsible for proving that the
cause of the damage/loss is covered by the insurance policy, as stipulated in
the insurance policy, to wit:
Any loss or damage happening during the existence of
that risk, and from this it follows that an insurer seeking to defeat a
as to carry out the purpose for which the parties entered into the contract
burden of proving that the loss comes within the purview of the
within a contract of insurance, the burden is upon the insurer to prove that
obligations.[13]
the loss arose from a cause of loss which is excepted or for which it is not
liable, or from a cause which limits its liability.[17]
case, it refers to the duty of the insured to show that the loss or damage is
damage or loss. Once respondent makes out a prima facie case in its favor,
proof still rests upon petitioner to prove that the damage or loss was caused
excepted risk, then the burden of evidence shifted to petitioner to prove such
exception. It is only when petitioner has sufficiently proven that the damage
Burden of proof is the duty of any party to present evidence to establish his
or loss was caused by an excepted risk does the burden of evidence shift
why
defendant, who asserts the affirmative of the issue has the burden of proof to
obtain a favorable judgment. For the plaintiff, the burden of proof never
burden of proving that the damage or loss was caused by an excepted risk.
such
excepted
risk
does
not
release
petitioner
from
any
statement. The rule in res gestae applies when the declarant himself did not
Petitioner however, insists that the evidence on record established the
testify and provided that the testimony of the witness who heard the
identity of the author of the damage. It argues that the trial court and the CA
declarant complies with the following requisites: (1) that the principal act,
erred in not appreciating the reports of witnesses Lt. Col Torres and SFO II
the res gestae, be a startling occurrence; (2) the statements were made
Rochar that the bystanders they interviewed claimed that the perpetrators
before the declarant had the time to contrive or devise a falsehood; and (3)
that the statements must concern the occurrence in question and its
of res gestae.
A witness can testify only to those facts which he knows of his personal
knowledge, which means those facts which are derived from his perception.
gestae. While it may concede that these statements were made by the
[19] A witness may not testify as to what he merely learned from others
either because he was told or read or heard the same. Such testimony is
considered hearsay and may not be received as proof of the truth of what he
they had the time to contrive or devise a falsehood. Both SFO III
has learned. The hearsay rule is based upon serious concerns about the
Rochar and Lt. Col. Torres received the bystanders statements while they
were making their investigations during and after the fire. It is reasonable to
evidence are not given under oath or solemn affirmation and, more
assume that when these statements were noted down, the bystanders
already had enough time and opportunity to mill around, talk to one another
At best, the testimonies of SFO III Rochar and Lt. Col. Torres that these
crime immediately before, during, or after the commission of the crime, when
the circumstances are such that the statements were made as a spontaneous
not as to the veracity thereof but to the fact that they had been thus uttered.
[22]
be members of the New Peoples Army NPA,[28] and the fire investigation
Furthermore, admissibility of evidence should not be equated with its weight
that the cause of the fire is intentional, and the armed men suspected to be
members of the CPP/NPA where (sic) the ones responsible [29] All these
admitted and its tendency to convince and persuade.[24] Even assuming that
documents show that indeed, the suspected executor of the fire were
the declaration of the bystanders that it was the members of the CPP/NPA
who caused the fire may be admitted as evidence, it does not follow that
such
declarations
are
sufficient
proof. These
declarations
should
be
calibrated vis--vis the other evidence on record. And the trial court aptly
All told, the Court finds no reason to grant the present petition.
SO ORDERED.
While the documentary evidence presented by petitioner, i.e., (1) the police
blotter; (2) the certification from the Bacolod Police Station; and (3) the Fire
Investigation Report may be considered exceptions to the hearsay rule, being
entries in official records, nevertheless, as noted by the CA, none of these
Petitioner,
Present:
QUISUMBING, J.,
Chairperson,
- versus - CARPIO MORALES,
TINGA,
VELASCO, JR., and
BRION, JJ.
x----------------------------------------------------------------------------x
Bacolod Police station stated that some 20 or more armed men believed to
DECISION
TINGA, J.:
Private respondent countered that petitioner had voluntarily disembarked the
This Petition for Certiorari[1] under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court seeks to
vessel after having been warned several times of dismissal from service for
annul the Decision[2] and Resolution[3] of the Court of Appeals, dated 16
his incompetence, insubordination, disrespect and insulting attitude toward
November 2005 and2 February 2006, respectively, which upheld the validity
his superiors. It cited an incident involving petitioners incompetence wherein
of the dismissal of Juanito Talidano (petitioner). The challenged decision
the vessel invaded a different route at theOsaka Port in Japan due to the
reversed and set aside the Decision[4] of the National Labor Relations
absence of petitioner who was then supposed to be on watch duty. As proof,
Commission (NLRC) and reinstated that of the Labor Arbiter.[5]
it presented a copy of a fax message, sent to it on the date of incident,
reporting the vessels deviation from its course due to petitioners neglect of
Petitioner was employed as a second marine officer by Falcon Maritime and
duty at the bridge,[8] as well as a copy of the report of crew discharge issued
Allied Services, Inc. (private respondent) and was assigned to M/V Phoenix
by the master of M/VPhoenix Seven two days after the incident.[9]
Seven, a vessel owned and operated by Hansu Corporation (Hansu) which is
based in Korea. His one (1)-year contract of employment commenced on 15
Private respondent stated that since petitioner lodged the complaint before
October 1996 and stipulated the monthly wage at $900.00 with a fixed
the Labor Arbiter two (2) years and nine (9) months after his repatriation,
overtime pay of $270.00 and leave pay of $75.00.[6]
prescription had already set in by virtue of Revised POEA Memorandum
Circular No. 55, series of 1996 which provides for a one-year prescriptive
Petitioner claimed that his chief officer, a Korean, always discriminated
period for the institution of seafarers claims arising from employment
against and maltreated the vessels Filipino crew. This prompted him to send a
contract.[10]
letter-complaint to the officer-in-charge of the International Transport
Federation (ITF) in London, a measure that allegedly was resented by the
On 5 November 2001, the Labor Arbiter rendered judgment dismissing
chief officer. Consequently, petitioner was dismissed on 21 January 1997. He
petitioners complaint, holding that he was validly dismissed for gross neglect
filed a complaint for illegal dismissal on 27 October 1999.[7]
of duties. The Labor Arbiter relied on the fax messages presented by private
respondent to prove petitioners neglect of his duties, thus:
x x x The fax message said that the Master of M/V Phoenix
Seven received an emergency warning call from Japan Sisan
Sebo Naika Radio Authority calling attention to the Master of
the vessel M/V Phoenix Seven that his vessel is invading
On appeal, the NLRC reversed the ruling of the Labor Arbiter and declared the
dismissal as illegal. The dispositive portion of the NLRCs decision reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the decision appealed
from is hereby reversed and set aside and a new one entered
declaring
the
dismissal
of
the
complainant
as
illegal.Respondents Falcon Maritime & Allied Services, Inc.
and Hansu Corporation are hereby ordered to jointly and
severally pay complainant the amount equivalent to his three
(3) months salary as a result thereof.[12]
The NLRC held that the fax messages in support of the alleged misbehavior
and neglect of duty by petitioner have no probative value and are selfserving. It added that the ships logbook should have been submitted in
evidence as it is the repository of all the activities on board the vessel,
especially those affecting the performance or attitude of the officers and
crew members, and, more importantly, the procedures preparatory to the
discharge of a crew member. The NLRC also noted that private respondent
failed to comply with due process in terminating petitioners employment.[13]
Private
respondent
moved
for
reconsideration,[14] claiming
that
the
complaint was filed beyond the one-year prescriptive period. The NLRC,
however, denied reconsideration in a Resolution dated 30 August 2002.
[15] Rejecting the argument that the complaint had already prescribed, it
ruled:
Records show that respondent in this case had filed a motion
to dismiss on the ground of prescription before the Labor
Arbiter a quo who denied the same in an Order dated August
1, 2000. Such an Order being unappealable, the said issue of
prescription cannot be raised anew specially in a motion for
reconsideration. (Citations omitted)[16]
G.R. SP No. 73521, the filing of the second petition hinging on the same
cause of action after the first petition had been dismissed violates not only
It appears that respondent received a copy of the NLRC Resolution[17] on 24
the rule on forum shopping but also the principle of res judicata. He
September 2002 and that said resolution became final and executory on 7
highlighted the fact that the decision subject of the second petition before
October 2002.[18]
the Court of Appeals had twice become final and executory, with entries of
judgment made first by the NLRC and then by the Court of Appeals.
Private respondent brought the case to the Court of Appeals via a Petition for
Certiorari[19] on 8 October 2002. The petition, docketed as CA-G.R. Sp. No.
contracts entered into as of 1 January 1997 and not those entered prior
thereto, thus:
(1)
[T]he
VERIFICATION
AND
CERTIFICATION OF NON-FORUM SHOPPING was
signed by one Florida Z. Jose, President of
petitioner Falcon Maritime and Allied Services,
Inc., without proof that she is the duly authorized
representative of petitioner-corporation;
(2)
[T]here is no affidavit of
service of the petition to the National Labor
Relations Commission and to the adverse party;
(3)
[T]here is no explanation to
justify service by mail in lieu of the required
personal service. (Citations omitted)[20]
Private respondent, for its part, defends the appellate court in taking
Petitioner submits that the Court of Appeals erred in relying merely on fax
messages to support the validity of his dismissal from employment. He
Since the dismissal of the first petition did not ripen into res
judicata, it may not be said that there was forum shopping
with the filing of the second. The accepted test for
determining whether a party violated the rule against forum
shopping insofar as it is applicable to this setting is whether
the judgment or final resolution in the first case amounts
to res judicata in the second. Res judicata is central to the
idea of forum shopping. Without it, forum shopping is nonexistent. The dismissal of the first petition, moreover, if it
does not amount to res judicata, need not be mentioned in
the certification of non-forum shopping accompanying the
second action. The omission will not be fatal to the viability of
the second case. (Citations omitted)[30]
maintains that the first fax message containing the information that the
vessel encroached on a different route was a mere personal observation of
the ship master and should have thus been corroborated by evidence, and
that these fax messages cannot be considered as res gestae because the
statement of the ship master embodied therein is just a report. He also
contends that he has not caused any immediate danger to the vessel and
that if he did commit any wrongdoing, the incident would have been recorded
in the logbook. Thus, he posits that the failure to produce the logbook
reinforces the theory that the fax messages have been concocted to justify
his unceremonious dismissal from employment. Hence, he believes that his
dismissal from employment stemmed from his filing of the complaint with the
petitioner
filed
instead
certiorari
petition
under
Rule
petitioners allegation is a hoax because there is no showing that the alleged
65. Notwithstanding this procedural lapse, this Court resolves to rule on the
complaint has been received by the ITF and that no action thereon was ever
merits of the petition in the interest of substantial justice,[33]the underlying
taken by the ITF.[35]
consideration in this petition being the arbitrary dismissal of petitioner from
employment.
Private respondent also asserts that petitioner was not dismissed but that he
voluntarily asked for his repatriation. This assertion, however, deserves scant
CAPT.
HAD
RECEIVED EMERGENCY
WARNING
CALL
FROM JAPAN BISAN SETO NAIKAI RADIO AUTHORITY THAT
SHIP IS INVADING OTHER ROUTE.
SO, HE WAS SURPRISED N CAME TO BRIDGE N FOUND 2/O
NOT CARRY OUT HIS WATCH DUTY.
agency. Nevertheless, since the factual findings of the Court of Appeals and
the Labor Arbiter are at variance with those of the NLRC, we resolve to
evaluate the records and the evidence presented by the parties.[37]
emergency
call
was
received
from
the
Japanese
port
authority
that M/V Phoenix Seven was invading other route constituted neglect of duty,
a just cause for terminating an employee. Records reveal that this
information was related to private respondent via two fax messages sent by
the captain of M/V Phoenix Seven. The first fax message dated 18 January
1997 is reproduced below:
least proved to be one. Assuming arguendo that such absence was the
form part of the res gestae, namely: spontaneous statements and verbal
by the fax statements adverted to as parts of the res gestae. No date or time
whereas in verbal acts, the res gestae are the statements accompanying the
has been mentioned to determine whether the fax messages were made
equivocal act.[41] We find that the fax messages cannot be deemed part
these
utterances
were
made
spontaneously
or
with
careful
procedure
taken
against
the
employees
prior
to
their
dismissal.
In any event, under Article 282 of the Labor Code,[44] an employer may
evidence as Article 612 of the Code of Commerce requires the ship captain to
duty, to be a ground for dismissal, must be both gross and habitual. Gross
Habitual neglect implies repeated failure to perform ones duties for a period
In termination cases, the burden of proving just or valid cause for dismissing
employee.[45]
We also note that private respondent failed to comply with the procedural
incident should have been recorded in the ships logbook and presented by
not a mere formality that may be dispensed with at will. Its disregard is a
serving. Quite the contrary, the ships logbook is the repository of all activities
in response to man's innate sense of justice. The Labor Code does not, of
and transactions on board a vessel. Had the route invasion been so serious as
may be dismissed. This is especially true in the case of a vessel on the ocean
logbook. Private respondent would have then had all the more reason to
In Haverton Shipping Ltd. v. NLRC,[46] the Court held that the vessels
and the grant to them of an opportunity to present their own side of the
logbook is an official record of entries made by a person in the performance
alleged offense or misconduct, which led to the management's decision to
of a duty required by law.[47] In Abacast Shipping and Management Agency,
terminate. To meet the requirements of due process, the employer must
Inc. v. NLRC,[48] a case cited by petitioner, the logbook is a respectable
furnish the worker sought to be dismissed with two written notices before
record that can be relied upon to authenticate the charges filed and the
termination of employment can be legally effected, i.e., (1) a notice which
apprises the employee of the particular acts or omissions for which his
dismissal is sought; and (2) the subsequent notice after due hearing which
informs the employee of the employers decision to dismiss him.[53]
of
Appeals
is
REVERSED
and
SET
ASIDE. The Decision of the NLRC isREINSTATED with the MODIFICATION that in
addition to the payment of the sum equivalent to petitioners three (3)
months salary, the full amount of placement fee with 12% legal interest must
be refunded.
SO ORDERED.
At the arraignment, appellants pleaded not guilty.[4] Trial thereafter ensued. The
prosecution presented three (3) witnesses: Andrea Pabalan, SPO1 Raul Olavario
and Medico-Legal Officer Dr. Filemon C. Porciuncula. Taken altogether, the
evidence for the prosecution established the following facts:
Present:
- versus -
The present appeal assails the Decision[1] dated April 30, 2008 of the Court
of Appeals in CA-G.R. HC-CR No. 02701 affirming the February 27, 2007
Decision[2] of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Manila, Branch 54, convicting
appellants of the crime of robbery with homicide.
In an Information[3] dated February 2, 2001, appellants Jonjie Esoy y Hungoy
On January 18, 2001, around 8:00 p.m., the victim Lorenzo Coro and Andrea
Pabalan (Pabalan), rode a jeepney bound for Buendia Avenue at Taft
Avenue corner T.M.
Kalaw
Street in Manila.
Upon
reaching Taft
Avenue corner Pedro Gil Street, Ermita, Manila, appellants boarded the
jeepney. Bolalacao sat beside the victim while Esoy and Ciano sat on the
opposite side. Pabalan noticed that Esoy and Ciano were staring at all the
passengers. Feeling apprehensive, she moved beside the victim and
whispered to him that she did not like the way the two (2) were staring at
them. Esoy and Ciano also seemed to be high on drugs, so she told the victim
not to look at them. When she again looked at Esoy and Ciano, the two (2)
suddenly drew out their balisongs and swung the same at them. In the
ensuing commotion, the other passengers including appellants alighted from
the jeepney. When Pabalan told the victim that they should go down, she saw
the victims bloodied chest. She then shouted for help and that they be taken
to the hospital. The jeepney driver, however, told them to alight from the
vehicle. Fearing that the victim might run out of blood, she told him that they
should go down. The victim then told her that his cellular phone was
snatched and asked her where appellants fled. Pabalan just insisted that they
alight from the vehicle and not to worry about his cellular phone. Upon
alighting from the jeepney, the victim fell down after a few steps. But with
the help of two (2) motorcyclists, they were able to hail an FX taxi and the
victim was immediately brought to the nearby Philippine General Hospital
(PGH) where he was operated on. Unfortunately, however, the victim died
at 11:00 p.m. that same night.
On January 19, 2001, around 2:00 a.m., SPO1 Raul Olavario, Police
Investigator of the Homicide Division of the Western Police District
(WPD), Manila, received information from retired Police Inspector Cesar
Diokno about a stabbing victim who expired at the PGH. SPO1 Olavario then
proceeded at the PGH to investigate. The hospital guard told him about
the robbery with homicide that occurred on January 18, 2001 inside a
passenger jeepney along Taft Avenue. At that time, Pabalan had already left
the hospital but she went to SPO1 Olavarios office later in the morning the
same day to give her sworn statement and the description of the assailants.
Several days after, or on January 31, 2001, Pabalan informed SPO1 Olavario
that she saw the three (3) appellants inside the WPD jail and positively
identified them as the assailants.
PNP Crime Laboratory Police Senior Inspector and Medico-Legal Officer Dr.
Filemon C. Porciuncula testified on the autopsy he performed on the cadaver
of the victim and the Medico-Legal Report No. M-0208-01[5] he submitted.
The autopsy revealed that the victim sustained a stab wound and multiple
abrasions on the right knee.
Appellants, for their part, denied any involvement in the robbery-homicide
incident. They claimed that they were at their workplace in Bacood, Sta.
Mesa, Manila, when the incident happened. Both Ciano and Esoy testified
that they started working at 8:00 a.m. until 5:00 p.m. of January 18, 2001.
They rested for a while and resumed working with intermittent rests until five
(5) oclock the following morning of January 19, 2001. As to Bolalacao, he
claimed to be working from 7:00 a.m. of January 18, 2001 up to 5:00 a.m.the
following morning of January 19, 2001.
Lauro Dela Cruz, supervisor of appellants, was called to testify to corroborate
appellants defense. Though Dela Cruz recognized the faces of the appellants
as among those who have worked under him, he could not categorically state
that they were at the workplace at the times and dates they specified
because he was not there all the time and he does not keep time records.
On February 27, 2007, the trial court rendered a Decision finding appellants
guilty of the crime of robbery with homicide, as follows:
WHEREFORE, finding accused Jonjie Esoy y Hungoy, Rolando
Ciano y Soledad, and Roger Bolalacao y Dadivas all GUILTY
BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT of the complex crime of
Robbery with Homicide defined and penalized under Articles
293 and 294 (1) of the Revised Penal Code, as recently
amended by Republic Act No. 9346, the aforenamed accused
are each sentenced to suffer the penalty of Reclusion
Perpetua and shall indemnify the heirs of Lorenzo Coro in the
amount of One Hundred Fifty Thousand (P150,000.00) Pesos
as actual and compensatory damages and the further sum of
Seventy-Five Thousand (P75,000.00) Pesos as moral
damages.
SO ORDERED.[6]
On April 30, 2008, the Court of Appeals affirmed with modification the RTC
decision as follows:
WHEREFORE, the appeal is DISMISSED. The Decision of the
Regional Trial Court, Branch 54, Manila is AFFIRMED. The trial
courts award of civil liability is hereby MODIFIED. Appellants
JONJIE ESOY y HUNGOY, ROLANDO CIANO y SOLEDAD and
ROGER BOLALACAO y DADIVAS are each ordered to pay the
heirs of Lorenzo Coro the following sums: (a) One Hundred
Fifty Thousand (P150,000.00) as actual damages; (b) Fifty
Thousand Pesos (P50,000.00) ex delicto; and (c) Fifty
Thousand Pesos (P50,000.00) as moral damages.
SO ORDERED.[7]
before their eyes, eyewitnesses can remember with a high degree of reliability
the identity of criminals at any given time.[18]
Essentially, the issue for our resolution is whether the guilt of the appellants
for the crime of robbery with homicide has been proven beyond reasonable
doubt.
Appellants contend that their identities as perpetrators of the crime were not
established beyond reasonable doubt. They argue that even if at the time of
the incident there were many light posts along Taft Avenue, the same cannot
produce enough illumination inside the vehicle to allow Pabalan to see clearly
the faces of the assailants. The small bulb inside the jeepney simply cannot
be considered as sufficient source of light to enable Pabalan to identify and
remember the facial features of a total stranger. Further, several days had
passed before Pabalan made the identification during the police line-up and
thus, it was impossible for her to have easily remembered the faces of the
assailants whom she supposedly saw on only one (1) occasion.
We are not persuaded.
As narrated by Pabalan, two (2) of the appellants Esoy and Ciano sat infront
of them while the other, Bolalacao, sat beside the victim. Considering the
limited space inside a passenger jeepney, the faces of appellants can be
easily seen by Pabalan in close range. Moreover, it is of no moment that the
inside of a jeepney was only illuminated by a small bulb. The said kind of light
has already been held by the Court as enough lighting for identification
purposes.[13] Considering also the busy thoroughfare of Taft Avenue, Ermita,
light emanating from the headlights of passing vehicles can contribute
sufficient illumination[14] to enable Pabalan to identify appellants. We have
held that when conditions of visibility are favorable, and the witness does not
appear to be biased, as in the instant case, her assertion as to the identity of
the malefactors should normally be accepted.[15]
face of categorical statements coming from a credible witness who has no ill
motives in testifying.[19] Pabalans testimony was straightforward and
though she became emotional during the middle part of her testimony, she
remained consistent all through out even on cross-examination. Appellants
have also not shown any reason for Pabalan to testify falsely against them.
To establish alibi, an accused must prove (a) that he was present at another
place at the time the crime was perpetrated, and (b) that it was physically
impossible for him to be at the scene of the crime. Physical impossibility
refers to the distance between the place where the accused was when the
crime transpired and the place where it was committed, as well as the facility
of access between the two places.[20] Here, appellants failed to satisfy the
said requisites, especially the second. The crime happened along Taft
Avenue, Ermita, while appellants claimed to be in their workplace in Bacood,
Sta. Mesa, at that time. The distance between Ermita and Sta. Mesa cannot
be said as too far that it was physically impossible for appellants not to be at
Ermita, the scene of the crime. Even the testimony of their immediate
supervisor did not help in establishing their defense since Dela Cruz could not
categorically state that appellants were at the workplace at the time and
date the crime was committed.
Appellants next argue that (1) no evidence was presented by the prosecution
establishing that personal property was taken from the victim except for the
hearsay allegation of Pabalan; and (2) no witness testified that the victim or
Pabalan actually saw one (1) of the appellants take something from the
victim. The contentions, however, are likewise without merit.
The pertinent portion of Pabalans testimony is hereunder quoted verbatim:
Witness:
q What about Lorenzo Coro, do you know before this
just at the moment you had this jeepney ride, do you
know if he had a cellular phone?
a Yes, sir, it was clipped on the right side of his waist.
dictates that precisely because of the unusual acts of violence committed right
Court:
face of the assailant and body movements thereof, create a lasting impression
Clipped at the?
Court Interpreter:
question and its immediately attending circumstances his cellular phone was
stolen during the startling occurrence. The testimony being an exception to the
Fiscal Carisma:
(continuing)
hearsay rule, the trial court did not err in admitting the same.
Appellants also dispute the finding of conspiracy among them. They contend
that the mere fact that they boarded the jeepney at the same time does not
necessarily mean that they acted in conspiracy. Again, we are unconvinced.
Witness:
(continuing)
a After the commotion, when I was about to
alight from the jeep, he told me that my
cellular phone was snatched. I told him lets go.
He asked me where did they run? I told him not
to bother about that and lets go to the
hospital.[21] [Emphasis and underscoring supplied.]
Though Pabalans testimony as to the victims utterance that his cellular phone
was taken is only hearsay, the testimony is considered an exception to the
hearsay rule, the victims spontaneous utterance being part of res gestae.
Conspiracy may be deduced from the acts of the appellants before, during, and
after the commission of the crime which are indicative of a joint purpose,
concerted action, and concurrence of sentiments.[23] All three (3) appellants
boarded the jeepney at the same time. Two (2) strategically sat infront of the
victim and Pabalan while the other sat beside the victim. A few moments later,
two (2) of the appellants (Esoy and Ciano) suddenly drew out their balisongs and
swung the same at Pabalan and the victim. In the ensuing commotion, the
victims cellular phone was snatched and he was stabbed in the process. The
appellants then hurriedly alighted from the jeepney at the same time. Their
original and principal intention was undoubtedly to stage a robbery with the use
of violence. As conspiracy had been established among appellants, all of them
are liable as co-principals regardless of the manner and extent of their
participation since, in point of law, the act of one (1) is the act of all.
Lastly, appellants challenge the award of actual damages claiming it was not
proven for failure to present any documentary evidence particularly the proof
of funeral expenses.
Res gestae refers to those exclamations and statements made by either the
participants, the victim or spectator to a crime immediately before, during or
immediately after the commission of the crime, when the circumstances are
case, all the elements of res gestae are sufficiently established insofar as the
aforequoted spontaneous utterance is concerned: (1) the principal act (res
The defense has stipulated during the trial that the victims family
incurred P150,000 for funeral expenses, to wit:
gestae) the robbery and stabbing of the victim is a startling occurrence; (2)
Fiscal Carisma:
the statements were made before the declarant had time to contrive or
devise, that is, within minutes after the victim was stabbed and his cellular
Fiscal Carisma:
Thank you. So, we will no longer be presenting
the witness.[24] [Emphasis and underscoring
supplied.]
Atty. Fontanilla:
We object to the manifestation, your Honor.
Fiscal Carisma:
Hence, the requirement of proof in Article 2199 for the recovery of actual and
compensatory damages can be dispensed with having been stipulated by the
defense during trial.
As to the other civil liabilities, we uphold the appellate courts award of the
moral damages of P50,000 and civil indemnity of P50,000 in line with
prevailing jurisprudence.[25]
The penalty imposed is likewise proper. The special complex crime of robbery
with homicide is punished under Article 294 (as amended by Republic Act No.
7659) of theRevised Penal Code, as amended, by reclusion perpetua to
death. Article 63 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended, states that when
the law prescribes a penalty consisting of two (2) indivisible penalties, and
the crime is neither attended by mitigating nor aggravating circumstances,
the lesser penalty shall be imposed. Considering that no modifying
circumstance attended the commission of the crime, the RTC correctly
sentenced the appellants to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua.
WHEREFORE, the April 30, 2008 Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R.
HC-CR No. 02701 is AFFIRMED in toto.
With costs against the accused-appellants.
SO ORDERED.
Witness:
a We brought the body at the province at the house
of my mother, your Honor.
Atty. Fontanilla:
RUDY
DECISION
Fiscal Carisma:
STANDARD
INSURANCE
CO.,
QUISUMBING, J.:
P150,000.00
Atty. Fontanilla:
More or less, yes, we stipulate, your Honor.
reconsideration.
The original action was lodged before the Regional Trial Court of Iloilo
City, Branch 25, as Civil Case No. 17045 for breach of contract and damages,
as a result of the insurance companys refusal of petitioners claim on the
insurance policy of his truck which figured in an accident during the
effectivity of the policy.
The following are the antecedent facts:
Petitioner Rudy Lao is the owner of a Fuso truck with Plate No. FCG-538.
The truck was insured with respondent Standard Insurance Co., Inc. under
Policy No. CV-21074[3] for the maximum amount of P200,000 and an
additional sum of P50,000 to cover any damages that might be caused to his
goods.
While the policy was in effect, an accident occurred. At around 8:00 p.m.
of April 24, 1985, in Barangay Buhang, Jaro, Iloilo City, the insured truck
bumped another truck, with Plate No. FBS-917, also owned by petitioner Lao.
The latter truck was running ahead of the insured truck and was bumped
from the rear. The insured truck sustained damages estimated to be
around P110,692, while the damage to the other truck and to properties in
the vicinity of the accident, were placed at P35,000 more or less.
Petitioner filed a claim with the insurance company for the proceeds
from his policy. However, the claim was denied by the insurance company on
the ground that when its adjuster went to investigate the matter, it was found
that the driver of the insured truck, Leonardo Anit, did not possess a proper
drivers license at the time of the accident. The restriction[4] in Leonardo
Anits drivers license provided that he can only drive four-wheeled vehicles
weighing not more than 4,500 kgs. Since the insured truck he was driving
weighed more than 4,500 kgs., he therefore violated the authorized driver
clause[5] of the insurance policy. In addition, respondent cited the following
excerpts from the police blotter of the Iloilo INP, to wit:
C-UN-85 DAMAGE TO PROPERTY W/ PHY INJURIES R/ IMPRUDENCE
11:30 PM Sgt. A. Bernas informed this office that a collision took place at
Brgy. Buhang, Jaro, IC. Investigation conducted by Pat. Villahermosa, assisted
by Lt. P. Baclaron (OD), disclosed that at about 8:00 PM this date at the
aforementioned place, a collision took place between a truck (Hino) with Plate
Nr FB[S] 917 owned by Rudy Lao and driven by BOY GIDDIE Y COYEL, 38 yrs,
a res. of Balasan, Iloilo, with License Nr DLR 1108142 and another truck with
Plate Nr. FCG-538 owned by Rudy Lao and driver (sic) by LEONARDO ANIT Y
PANES, 33 yrs, a res. of Brgy Laya, Balasan, Iloilo with License Nr 1836482.
(Emphasis supplied.)[6]
Petitioner claims that at the time of the accident, it was in fact another
driver named Giddie Boy Y Coyel who was driving the insured truck. Giddie
Boy possessed a drivers license authorizing him to drive vehicles such as the
truck which weighed more than 4,500 kgs. As evidence, petitioner presented
the Motor Vehicle Accident Report[7] wherein the Investigating Officer, Pat.
Felipe D. Villahermosa, stated that it was Giddie Boy driving the insured truck
and not Leonardo Anit. The said report was made three days after the
accident or on April 27, 1985. However, respondent insurance company was
firm in its denial of the claim.
Hence, petitioner filed the civil case before the RTC. After trial, the court
disposed of the case as follows:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Court finds that plaintiff lacks
sufficient cause of action against the defendant and hence ordered his case
dismissed and further orderes (sic) him to pay the defendant the following:
1) P20,000.00 as attorneys fees plus P500.00 for appearance fee; and
2) P50,000.00 as exemplary damages.
SO ORDERED.[8]
On appeal with the Court of Appeals, the RTC decision was affirmed. The
petition was dismissed and the motion for reconsideration was denied. The
CA stated:
IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, the decision appealed from is hereby
AFFIRMED. Consequently, the complaint is DISMISSED for lack of merit.
SO ORDERED.[9]
In his petition for review now before us, petitioner cites the following as
grounds therefor:
A. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS AND THE LOWER COURT
RELIED MAINLY ON SECTION 44, RULE 130 OF THE RULES OF
COURT IN UPHOLDING THE ENTRY IN THE POLICE BLOTTER
WHICH STATED THAT THE DRIVER OF THE INSURED VEHICLE
WAS LEONARDO ANIT Y PANES, WHO WAS NOT AN AUTHORIZED
DRIVER. UNDER THE SAID SECTION 44, RULE 130 ITSELF
HOWEVER, THE POLICE BLOTTER IS MERELY A PRIMA FACIE
EVIDENCE OF THE FACTS STATED THEREIN WHICH MAY BE
NULLIFIED BY OTHER EVIDENCE;[10]
B. PERCEPTION OF THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ON THE
DIMINISHED CREDIBILITY OF PAT. FELIPE VILLAHERMOSA, THE
TRAFFIC
POLICE
INVESTIGATOR,
IS
MISPLACED
AND
UNFOUNDED;[11]
C. THE DRIVER OF THE INSURED TRUCK WITH PLATE NR. FCG-538
WAS GIDDIE BOY Y COYEL, AN AUTHORIZED DRIVER OF THE SAID
TRUCK. THE DRIVER OF THE OTHER TRUCK INVOLVED IN THE
ACCIDENT WITH PLATE NR. FBS-917 WAS LEONARDO ANIT Y
PANES;[12]
D. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS MISAPPLIED ARTICLES 2232
AND 2208 OF THE NEW CIVIL CODE IN GRANTING EXEMPLARY
DAMAGES AND ATTORNEYS FEES TO RESPONDENT. UNDER
ARTICLES 2229 AND 2234 OF THE NEW CIVIL CODE, EXEMPLARY
In this case, the entries in the police blotter reflected the information
subject of the controversy. Stated therein was the fact that Leonardo Anit was
driving the insured truck with plate number FCG-538. This is unlike People v.
Mejia,[22] where we said that entries in the police blotters should not be
given undue significance or probative value, since the Court there found that
the entries in question are sadly wanting in material particulars.
Furthermore, in this case the police blotter was identified and formally
offered as evidence. The person who made the entries was likewise
presented in court; he identified and certified as correct the entries he made
on the blotter. The information was supplied to the entrant by the
investigating officer who did not protest about any inaccuracy when the
blotter was presented to him. No explanation was likewise given by the
investigating officer for the alleged interchange of names.
Petitioner also assails the credence given by the trial court to the version
of the respondents vis--vis the testimonies of the witnesses. Time and again
we have reiterated the settled doctrine that great weight, and even finality, is
given to the factual conclusions of the Court of Appeals which affirm those of
the trial courts.[23] We find on this score no reason to overturn such
conclusions.
On the issue of damages, we agree with petitioner that the award of
exemplary damages was improper. In Tiongco v. Atty. Deguma[24] we held
that the entitlement to the recovery of exemplary damages must be shown.
In the case at bar, respondent have not shown sufficient evidence that
petitioner indeed schemed to procure the dubious documents and lied
through his teeth to establish his version of the facts. What was found was
that the document he presented was inadmissible, and its contents were
dubious. However, no proof was adduced to sufficiently establish that it came
to his hands through his employment of underhanded means. In Tiongco, we
further stated:
Although exemplary damages cannot be recovered as a matter of right, they
also need not be proved. But a complainant must still show that he is entitled
to moral, temperate or compensatory damages before the court may
consider the question of whether or not exemplary damages should be
awarded.[25]
Thus, it was error for the courts below to award exemplary damages in
the absence of any award for moral, temperate or compensatory damages.
The award of attorneys fees must also be deleted. Such award was given
in its extraordinary concept as indemnity for damages to be paid by the
losing party to the prevailing party.[26]But it was not sufficiently shown that
petitioner acted maliciously in instituting the claim for damages. Perforce, the
award of attorneys fees was improper.
private respondent as well as receipt of the billing (Exh. C), dated May 28,
1986. However, she disputed the correctness of the bill
. . . considering that the deliveries of [private respondent] were not signed
and acknowledged by the checkers of [petitioner], the bituminous tack coat it
delivered to [petitioner] consisted of 60% water, and [petitioner] has already
paid [private respondent] about P1,400,000.00 but [private respondent] has
not issued any receipt to [petitioner] for said payments and there is no
agreement that [private respondent] will charge 3% per month interest.[8]
Petitioner subsequently amended her answer denying she had entered
into sub-contracts with private respondent.[9]
During the trial, private respondent, as plaintiff, presented its vicepresident, Sofia O. Sanchez, and Dolores Aday, its bookkeeper.
Petitioners evidence consisted of her lone testimony.[10]
On June 22, 1988, the trial court rendered its decision ordering petitioner
to pay private respondent the sum of P299,717.75 plus interest at 12% per
annum, and costs. It held:
. . . . [B]y analyzing the plaintiffs Book of Collectible Accounts particularly
page 17 thereof (Exh. K) this Court is convinced that the entries (both
payments and billings) recorded thereat are credible. Undeniably, the book
contains a detailed account of SOCORs commercial transactions with RDC
which were entered therein in the course of business. We cannot therefore
disregard the entries recorded under Exhibit K because the fact of their
having been made in the course of business carries with it some degree of
trustworthiness. Besides, no proof was ever offered to demonstrate the
irregularity of the said entries thus, there is then no cogent reason for us to
doubt their authenticity.[11]
The trial court further ruled that in spite of the fact that the contracts did
not have any stipulation on interest, interest may be awarded in the form of
damages under Article 2209 of the Civil Code.[12]
On appeal, the Court of Appeals affirmed. It upheld the trial courts
reliance on private respondents Book of Collectible Accounts (Exh. K) on the
basis of Rule 130, 37[13] of the Rules of Court.
Hence, this appeal. Petitioner contends that
I. THE RESPONDENT COURT ERRED IN ADMITTING IN EVIDENCE AS
ENTRIES IN THE COURSE OF BUSINESS THE ENTRIES IN PRIVATE
RESPONDENTS BOOK OF COLLECTIBLE ACCOUNTS CONSIDERING
THAT THE PERSON WHO MADE SAID ENTRIES ACTUALLY
TESTIFIED IN THIS CASE BUT UNFORTUNATELY HAD NO
PERSONAL KNOWLEDGE OF SAID ENTRIES.
II. THE DECISION OF THE RESPONDENT COURT SHOULD BE
REVERSED AS IT HAS ONLY INADMISSIBLE EVIDENCE TO
SUPPORT IT.
First. Petitioner contends that the presentation of the delivery receipts
duly accepted by the then Ministry of Public Works and Highways (MPWH) is
required under the contracts (Exhs. A and B) and is a condition precedent for
her payment of the amount claimed by private respondent. Petitioner argues
that the entries in private respondents Book of Collectible Accounts (Exh. K)
cannot take the place of the delivery receipts and that such entries are mere
hearsay and, thus, inadmissible in evidence.[14]
We agree with the appellate court that the stipulation in the two
contracts requiring the submission of delivery receipts does not preclude
proof of delivery of materials by private respondent in some other way. The
question is whether the entries in the Book of Collectible Accounts (Exh. K)
constitute competent evidence to show such delivery. Private respondent
cites Rule 130, 37 of the Rules of Court and argues that the entries in
question constitute entries in the course of business sufficient to prove
deliveries made for the government projects.This provision reads:
Entries in the course of business. Entries made at, or near the time of the
transactions to which they refer, by a person deceased, outside of the
Philippines or unable to testify, who was in a position to know the facts
therein stated, may be received as prima facie evidence, if such person made
the entries in his professional capacity or in the performance of duty and in
the ordinary or regular course of business or duty.[15]
The admission in evidence of entries in corporate books requires the
satisfaction of the following conditions:
1. The person who made the entry must be dead, outside the country or
unable to testify;
2. The entries were made at or near the time of the transactions to
which they refer;
3. The entrant was in a position to know the facts stated in the entries;
4. The entries were made in his professional capacity or in the
performance of a duty, whether legal, contractual, moral or religious; and
5. The entries were made in the ordinary or regular course of business or
duty.[16]
As petitioner points out, the business entries in question (Exh. K) do not
meet the first and third requisites. Dolores Aday, who made the entries, was
presented by private respondent to testify on the account of RDC
Construction. It was in the course of her testimony that the entries were
presented and marked in evidence. There was, therefore, neither justification
nor necessity for the presentation of the entries as the person who made
them was available to testify in court.
Necessity is given as a ground for admitting entries, in that they are the best
available evidence. Said a learned judge: What a man has actually done and
committed to writing when under obligation to do the act, it being in the
course of the business he has undertaken, and he being dead, there seems to
be no danger in submitting to the consideration of the court. The person who
may be called to court to testify on these entries being dead, there arises the
necessity of their admission without the one who made them being called to
court be sworn and subjected to cross-examination. And this is permissible in
order to prevent a failure of justice.[17]
Moreover, Aday admitted that she had no personal knowledge of the
facts constituting the entry. She said she made the entries based on the bills
given to her. But she has no knowledge of the truth or falsity of the facts
stated in the bills. The deliveries of the materials stated in the bills were
supervised by an engineer for (such) functions.[18] The person, therefore,
who has personal knowledge of the facts stated in the entries, i.e., that such
deliveries were made in the amounts and on the dates stated, was the
companys project engineer.The entries made by Aday show only that the
billings had been submitted to her by the engineer and that she faithfully
recorded the amounts stated therein in the books of account.Whether or not
the bills given to Aday correctly reflected the deliveries made in the amounts
and on the dates indicated was a fact that could be established by the project
engineer alone who, however, was not presented during trial. The rule is
stated by former Chief Justice Moran, thus:
[W]hen the witness had no personal knowledge of the facts entered by him,
and the person who gave him the information is individually known and may
testify as to the facts stated in the entry which is not part of a system of
entries where scores of employees have intervened, such entry is not
admissible without the testimony of the informer.[19]
Second. It is nonetheless argued by private respondent that although
the entries cannot be considered an exception to the hearsay rule, they may
be admitted under Rule 132, 10[20] of the Rules of Court which provides:
for one of them, the evidence should be excluded. The reason for the rule is
that it is the duty of a party to select the competent from the incompetent in
offering testimony, and he cannot impose this duty upon the trial court.
Where the evidence is inadmissible for the purpose stated in the offer, it
must be rejected, though the same may be admissible for another
purpose. The rule is stated thus: If a party x x x opens the particular view
with which he offers any part of his evidence, or states the object to be
attained by it, he precludes himself from insisting on its operation in any
other direction, or for any other object; and the reason is, that the opposite
party is prevented from objecting to its competency in any view different
from the one proposed.[21]
It should be noted, however, that Exh. K is not really being presented for
another purpose. Private respondents counsel offered it for the purpose of
showing the amount of petitioners indebtedness. He said:
Exhibit K, your Honor - faithful reproduction of page (17) of the book on
Collectible Accounts of the plaintiff, reflecting the principal indebtedness of
defendant in the amount of Two hundred ninety-nine thousand seven
hundred seventeen pesos and seventy-five centavos (P299,717.75) and
reflecting as well the accumulated interest of three percent (3%) monthly
compounded such that as of December 11, 1987, the amount collectible from
the defendant by the plaintiff is Six hundred sixteen thousand four hundred
thirty-five pesos and seventy-two centavos (P616,435.72);[22]
This is also the purpose for which its admission is sought as a
memorandum to refresh the memory of Dolores Aday as a witness. In other
words, it is the nature of the evidence that is changed, not the purpose for
which it is offered.
Be that as it may, considered as a memorandum, Exh. K does not itself
constitute evidence. As explained in Borromeo v. Court of Appeals:[23]
Under the above provision (Rule 132, 10), the memorandum used to refresh
the memory of the witness does not constitute evidence, and may not be
admitted as such, for the simple reason that the witness has just the same to
testify on the basis of refreshed memory. In other words, where the witness
has testified independently of or after his testimony has been refreshed by a
memorandum of the events in dispute, such memorandum is not admissible
as corroborative evidence. It is self-evident that a witness may not be
corroborated by any written statement prepared wholly by him. He cannot be
more credible just because he supports his open-court declaration with
written statements of the same facts even if he did prepare them during the
occasion in dispute, unless the proper predicate of his failing memory is
priorly laid down. What is more, even where this requirement has been
satisfied, the express injunction of the rule itself is that such evidence must
be received with caution, if only because it is not very difficult to conceive
and fabricate evidence of this nature. This is doubly true when the witness
stands to gain materially or otherwise from the admission of such evidence . .
. .[24]
The purpose for which the evidence is offered must be specified. Where the
offer is general, and the evidence is admissible for one purpose and
inadmissible for another, the evidence should be rejected. Likewise, where
the offer is made for two or more purposes and the evidence is incompetent
SEC. 10. When witness may refer to memorandum. A witness may be allowed
to refresh his memory respecting a fact, by anything written by himself or
under his direction at the time when the fact occurred, or immediately
thereafter, or at any other time when the fact was fresh in his memory and
he knew that the same was correctly stated in the writing; but in such case
the writing must be produced and may be inspected by the adverse party,
who may, if he chooses, cross-examine the witness upon it, and may read it
in evidence. So, also, a witness may testify from such a writing, though he
retain no recollection of the particular facts, if he is able to swear that the
writing correctly stated the transaction when made; but such evidence must
be received with caution.
10) Exhibit L - Bill No. 057 under the account of RDC Construction in the
amount of P153,382.75 dated August 24, 1985.
11) Exhibit M - Bill No. 069 (RDCs account), in the amount of P1,701,795.00
dated November 20, 1985.
12) Exhibit N - Bill No. 071 (RDCs account) in the amount of P47,250.00 dated
November 22, 1985.
13) Exhibit O - Bill No. 079 (RDCs account) in the amount of P7,290.00 dated
December 6, 1985.
As the trial court found:
The entries recorded under Exhibit K were supported by Exhibits L, M, N, O
which are all Socor Billings under the account of RDC Construction. These
billings were presented and duly received by the authorized representatives
of defendant. The circumstances obtaining in the case at bar clearly show
that for a long period of time after receipt thereof, RDC never manifested its
dissatisfaction or objection to the aforestated billings submitted by
plaintiff. Neither did defendant immediately protest to plaintiffs alleged
incomplete or irregular performance. In view of these facts, we believe Art.
1235 of the New Civil Code is applicable.
Art. 1235. When the obligee accepts the performance, knowing its
incompleteness and irregularity and without expressing any protest or
objection, the obligation is deemed complied with.
FINALLY, after a conscientious scrutiny of the records, we find Exhibit D-1 (p.
ROMERO, J.:p
This petition for certiorari seeks to annul and set aside the
Resolution 1 of the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC)
affirming the Decision 2 of the Philippine Overseas Employment
Administration (POEA) which disposed of POEA Case No.(M) 89-09865 as follows:
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, respondents Wallem
Maritime Services, Inc. and Wallem Shipmanagement Ltd. are
hereby ordered jointly and severally, to pay complainant the
following in Philippine currency at the prevailing rate of
exchange at the time of payment:
a) THREE HUNDRED THREE US DOLLARS
(US$303.00)
representing
to get a hose and siphon off the water. To avoid trouble, Gurimbao
used a shovel in throwing the dirty water into the sea.
Having finished his job, Gurimbao complained to private respondent
about the "improper and unauthorized act" of the cadet/apprentice.
The two then went to the cadet/apprentice who was idly standing in a
corner. They reminded him that as a mere apprentice and not an
officer of the vessel, he had no right whatsoever to order around any
member of the crew. However, the cadet/apprentice reacted violently
shouting invectives and gesturing "as if challenging" the two to a
fight. To prevent him from "intimidating" them, private respondent
pushed twice the cadet/apprentice's chest while Gurimbao "mildly
hit" his arm. Frantic and shouting, the cadet/apprentice ran to the
captain "who happened to witness the incident" from the cabin's
window.
The captain summoned private respondent and Gurimbao. With their
bosun (head of the deck crew), they went to the captain's cabin. The
captain told them to pack up their things as their services were being
terminated. They would disembark at the next port, the Port of Ube,
from where they would be flown home to the Philippines, the
repatriation expenses to be shouldered by them. The two attempted
to explain their side of the incident but the captain ignored them and
firmly told them to go home.
Before disembarking, they were entrusted by the bosun with a letter
of their fellow crew members, addressed to Capt. Dio, attesting to
their innocence. At the Port of Ube, an agent of the company handed
them their plane tickets and accompanied them the following day to
the Fukoka Airport where they boarded a Cathay Pacific airplane
bound for Manila.
A few days after their arrival in Manila or on July 1, 1989, the two
gave the letter to Capt. Dio and conferred with him and Mr. James
Nichols. The latter told private respondent that they could not secure
a reimbursement of their repatriation expenses nor could they get
their salaries for the month of June. Private respondent, in a letter
addressed to Capt. Dio, asked for a reconsideration of their dismissal
but the latter did not respond. Frustrated, private respondent sought
the assistance of a lawyer who wrote Wallem a demand letter dated
August 28, 1989 but the same was ignored. 4
Petitioners, defending their position, alleged that the incident was not
the first infraction committed by the two. As shown by the logbook,
on June 19, 1989, while the vessel was docked in Batangas, they left
it during working hours without asking permission. For this offense,
they were given a warning. On June 27, 1989 (sic), while the vessel
was anchored at the Port of Kawasaki, Japan, they assaulted the
officer on watch for the day, Mr. V.S. Sason. The three were
"mustered" and it was found that Sason "was attacked with a spanner
without provacition (sic)." The two were "severely warned that they
will be dealt according to the rules and regulation of their contact of
employment (sic)." When the vessel was about to sail that day, the
two went ashore inspite of the warning given them. They were
arrested by Japanese authorities but the vessel's departure was
delayed for five (5) hours. The agency in Manila was informed that
their wages should be settled "after deducting recoveries" or fines
dismissal
from
the
service
was
also
- versus -
Promulgated:
STEVEN P. CHIONG,
Respondent.
x------------------------------------------------------------------------------------x
DECISION
NACHURA, J.:
personnel[5] informed him that his name did not appear in the computers list
(Philimare),
Lines
TransOceans vessel M/V Elbia at the San Diego, California Port. Under the
said amount, and anxious to board the plane, Chiong queued a number of
times at Northwests Check-in Counter and presented his ticket. However, the
Northwest personnel at the counter told him to simply wait and that he was
as
the
authorized
Philippine
agent
of
TransOcean
being a pest.
Subsequently, on March 27, 1989, Philimare dispatched a Letter of Guarantee
to CL Hutchins & Co., Inc., TransOceans agent at the San Diego Port,
Frustrated, Chiong went to Calvo at the PCG counter and inquired if she had
confirming Chiongs arrival thereat in time to board the M/V Elbia which was
money so he could obtain a boarding pass from the man in barong. Calvo,
set to sail on April 1, 1989 (California, United States time). For this purpose,
who already saw that something was amiss, insisted that Chiongs plane
Philimare
for San
ticket was confirmed and as such, he could check-in smoothly and board the
Diego, California with a departure date of April 1, 1989 from Manila. Ten (10)
plane without shelling out US$100.00 for a boarding pass. Ultimately, Chiong
days before his scheduled departure, Chiong fetched his entire family
was not allowed to board Northwest Flight No. 24 bound for San Diego that
from Samar and brought them to Manila to see him off at the airport.
day and, consequently, was unable to work at the M/V Elbia byApril 1,
purchased
for
Chiong
Northwest
plane
ticket
It appears that Chiongs name was crossed out and substituted with W.
Marilyn Calvo, Philimares Liaison Officer, met Chiong at the departure gate,
and the two proceeded to the Philippine Coast Guard (PCG) Counter to
present Chiongs seaman service record book for clearance. Thereafter,
(1) the amount equivalent to Chiongs salary under the latters Crew
Calvo remained at the PCG Counter while Chiong proceeded to queue at the
fetching and bringing his family from Samar to Manila; (3) P500,000.00 as
No. 90-89722.
Northwest demurred. Thus, on May 24, 1989, Chiong filed a Complaint for
In the meantime, after a flurry of motions filed by Northwest in the civil case
were denied by the RTC, Northwest filed a Petition for Certiorari before the CA
Dismiss[9] the complaint citing the trial courts lack of jurisdiction over the
subject matter of the case, but the trial court denied the same.[10]
moved for a suspension of the proceedings before the trial court. However,
both the Petition for Certiorari and Motion for Suspension of the proceedings
In the RTCs Pre-trial Order[12] based on the parties respective Pre-trial Briefs,
the conclusion that Chiong was deliberately prevented from checking-in and
did
not
participate
in
the
preliminary
investigation;
thus,
3) P200,000.00,
Philippine
Currency,
representing moral damages suffered and
sustained by the plaintiff as a result of
defendants breach of contract of carriage;
4) P200,000.00,
Philippine
Currency,
representing exemplary or punitive damages
due to plaintiff from defendant, owing to the
latters breach of contract of carriage with
malice and fraud; and
We are in complete accord with the common ruling of the lower courts that
SO ORDERED.
On appeal, the CA affirmed in toto the ruling of the RTC. Identical to the RTCs
findings, those of the CA were as follows: on April 1, 1989, Chiong was at the
MIA three hours before the 10:15 a.m. departure time for Northwest Flight
No. 24. Contrary to Northwests claim that Chiong was a no-show passenger,
already defaulted in his obligation to abide by the terms and conditions of the
the CA likewise concluded, as the RTC did, that Chiong was not allowed to
check-in and was not issued a boarding pass at the Northwest check-in
Chiong had left the country after April 1, 1989 and worked for M/V Elbia, the
the following: (1) Chiongs seaman service record book reflects that he left the
CA ruled that Northwests failure to raise this defense in its Answer or Motion
Philippines after April 1, 1989, specifically on April 17, 1989, to board the M/V
Elbia, and was discharged therefrom upon his personal request; (2) the
event, Northwest failed to present any evidence to prove that Chiong had
Information filed against Chiong for False Testimony; and (3) the Flight
Manifest and the Passenger Name Record both indicate that he was a noshow passenger.
The records reveal that Chiong, as plaintiff in the trial court, satisfied the
present at the MIA on April 1, 1989 to board Northwests Flight No. 24; (2) As
without a hitch. Calvo further testified that she purposely stayed at the PCG
counter to confirm that Chiong was able to board the plane, as it was part of
her duties as Philimares liaison officer, to confirm with their principal,
TransOcean in this case, that the seafarer had left the country and
commenced travel to the designated port where the vessel is docked.
[21] Thus, she had observed that Chiong was unable to check-in and board
Northwest Flight No. 24, and was actually being given the run-around by
Northwest personnel.
In this regard, the Court notes that, in addition to his testimony, Chiongs
evidence consisted of a Northwest ticket for the April 1, 1989 Flight No. 24,
Chiongs passport and seaman service record book duly stamped at the PCG
on his presence at the airport on, and flight details for, April 1, 1989, and that
We have scoured the records, and found no reason to depart from the wellsettled rule that factual findings of the lower courts deserve the utmost
respect and are not to be disturbed on appeal.[20] Indeed, Chiongs
Northwest ticket for Flight No. 24 on April 1, 1989, coupled with the PCG
stamps on his passport showing the same date, is direct evidence that he
was present at MIA on said date as he intended to fly to the United States on
board that flight. As testified to by POEA personnel and officers, the PCG
stamp indicates that a departing seaman has passed through the PCG
counter at the airport, surrendered the exit pass, and complied with
establish the fact that Chiong was present at MIA on April 1, 1989, passed
through the PCG counter without delay, proceeded to the Northwest check-in
counter, but when he presented his confirmed ticket thereat, he was not
issued a boarding pass, and ultimately barred from boarding Northwest Flight
passenger and totally relied on the Flight Manifest, which, curiously, showed
a horizontal line drawn across Chiongs name, and the name W. Costine
written above it. The reason for the insertion, or for Chiongs allegedly being a
no-show passenger, is not even recorded on the remarks column of the Flight
passenger, and was scheduled to leave the country only on April 17, 1989. As
declaration of Chiong and his other witnesses, coupled with the PCG stamp
that Northwest did not present any evidence to support its belated defense
on his passport and seaman service record book, prevails over Northwests
that Chiong departed from the Philippines on April 17, 1989 to work as Third
despite the evidence presented by Chiong, and the RTCs specific order to
It is true that Chiongs passport and seaman service record book indicate that
Northwests counsel to present the person(s) who prepared the Flight Manifest
he had left the country on April 17, 1989 and come back on October 5 of the
and Passenger Name Record for a proper identification of, and to testify on,
same year. However, this evidence fails to debunk the facts established to
and Amelia Meris who were, admittedly, not competent to testify thereon.[25]
In its desperate attempt to evade liability for the breach, Northwest claims
that Chiong worked at M/V Elbia when he left the Philippines on April 17,
1989. The argument was not only belatedly raised, as we have repeatedly
had alleged. At that point, Northwest had the burden of going forward[23] to
controvert Chiongs prima facie case. As the party asserting that Chiong was a
no-show passenger, Northwest then had the burden of evidence to establish
On this point, we uphold the RTCs and CAs ruling that the failure of Northwest
Furthermore, it has not escaped our attention that Northwest, despite the
declaration in its Pre-Trial Brief, did not present as a witness their check-in
agent on that contentious date.[24] This omission was detrimental to
Northwests case considering its claim that Chiong did not check-in at their
The legal maxim falsus in uno, falsus in omnibus, cited by Northwest, is not a
positive rule of law and is not strictly applied in this jurisdiction. Before this
maxim can be applied, the witness must be shown to have willfully falsified
the truth on one or more material points. The principle presupposes the
different date. Even if Chiong left the Philippines on April 17, 1989, it would
not necessarily prove that Chiong was a no-show on April 1, 1989. Neither
does it negate the already established fact that Chiong had a confirmed
Yet, Northwest never even attempted to explain or impugn the evidence that
ticket for April 1, 1989, and first passed through the PCG counter without
Chiong passed through the PCG counter on April 1, 1989, and that his
delay, then reached and was at the Northwest check-in counters on time for
on that day.
(2) separate occasions, March 28 and April 1, 1989 because he was actually
as yet, of Chiongs guilt by the courts. But even if Chiong is adjudged guilty, it
will have little effect on the outcome of this case. As we held in Leyson v.
his passport and seaman record book. Had this new matter alleged been
Lawa:[27]
Northwest likewise insists now that there is a pending criminal case for False
Testimony against Chiong that a falsified part of Chiongs testimony would
indicate the falsity of his entire testimony, consistent with the falsus in uno,
on M/V Elbia from April 17 to October 5, 1989 under the original crew
agreement. Accordingly, we affirm the lower courts finding on Chiongs
entitlement to actual and compensatory damages.
xxxx
Professor Wigmore
commentary:
gives
the
following
enlightening
We, likewise, uphold the findings of both courts on Northwests liability for
moral and exemplary damages, and attorneys fees.
Under Article 2220 of the Civil Code of the Philippines, an award of moral
damages, in breaches of contract, is in order upon a showing that the
defendant acted fraudulently or in bad faith. Bad faith does not simply
connote bad judgment or negligence.[28] It imports a dishonest purpose or
some moral obliquity and conscious doing of a wrong.[29] It means breach of
a known duty through some motive, interest or ill will that partakes of the
nature of fraud.[30] Bad faith is in essence a question of intention.[31]
In the case at bench, the courts carefully examined the evidence as to the
Time and again, we have declared that a contract of carriage, in this case, air
transport, is primarily intended to serve the traveling public and thus, imbued
a boarding pass, and eventually barred from boarding Northwest Flight No. 24
in the Flight Manifest, and did not even personally check-in at the counter.
only had to prove the existence of the contract and the fact of its non-
[32]
We reiterate that Northwest failed to prove its claim that Chiong worked
towards Chiong.[33]
As for the award of attorneys fees, while we recognize that it is sound policy
not to set a premium on the right to litigate,[34] we sustain the lower courts
award thereof.
claim.[36] In
the
case
at
bench,
Northwest
deliberately
breached its contract of carriage with Chiong and then repeatedly refused to
satisfy Chiongs valid, just and demandable claim. This unjustified refusal
constrained Chiong to not only lose income under the crew agreement, but to
further incur expenses and exert effort for almost two (2) decades in order to
protect his interests and vindicate his right. Therefore, this Court deems it
of
the
Court
of
Appeals
in
CA-G.R.
is reasonable in view of the time it has taken for this case to be resolved.[37]
hereby AFFIRMED. Costs against the petitioner.
Finally, the issue of the exclusion of Northwests Exhibits 2 and 3 need not
detain us long. Suffice it to state that the RTC and CA correctly excluded
these documents as hearsay evidence. We quote with favor the CAs holding
thereon, thus:
As a rule, entries made at, or near the time of the
transactions to which they refer, by a person deceased, or
unable to testify, who was in a position to know the facts
therein stated, may be received as prima facie evidence, if
such person made the entries in his professional capacity or
in the performance of a duty and in the ordinary or regular
course of business or duty. [Rule 130, Section 43, Revised
Rules of Court]
Otherwise stated, in order to be admissible as entries in the
CV
No.
50308
is
SO ORDERED.
-versus-
Petitioner pled not guiltyto the offense charged in the information. At pretrial, no stipulation of factswas had, and petitioner did not avail herself of
BERSAMIN, J.:
In the trial of everycriminal case, a judge must rigidlytest the States evidence
The Prosecutions first witness was Lamberto Go, who testified that he was
guarantee
need
orders from wholesale customers coming from different towns (like Bacong,
of
due
process
of
law
is
nullified.The
accused
Siquijor), and to collect payments from them; that she could issue and sign
Antecedents
official receipts of Footluckers for the payments, which she would then remit;
that she would then submit the receipts for the payments for tallying and
reconciliation; that at first her volume of sales was quite high, but later on
dropped, leading him to confront her; that she responded that business was
slow; that he summoned the accounting clerk to verify; that the accounting
clerk discovered erasures on some collection receipts; that he decided to
subject her to an audit by company auditor Karen Guivencan; that he learned
records; and that one night later on, petitioner and her parents went to his
YYand their derivatives, inclusive. Each of the ledgers had a first column that
plead for him not to push through with a case against her, promising to settle
contained the dates of the entries, a second that identified the invoices by
her account on a monthly basis; and that she did not settle after that, but
the number, a third that statedthe debit, a fourth that noted the credit (or the
amounts paid), and a fifth that summed the balances (debit minus
credit).Only 49 of theledgerswere formally offered and admitted by the
only
other
whomFootluckers
witness
for
employed
as
the
its
Prosecution
store
was
auditor
Karen
Guivencan,
since November
16,
YYand their derivatives, inclusive, were hearsay because the persons who had
1995 until her resignation on March 31, 2001. She declared that Go had
requested her to audit petitioner after some customers had told him that
they had already paid their accounts but the office ledger had still reflected
outstandingbalances for them; that she first conducted her audit by going to
Exhibits B to YYand their derivatives (like the originals and duplicates of the
copies of the receipts petitioner submitted to the office; that upon completing
petitioner,
Discrepancies.[5]
and
Guivencans so-called
Summary
(Final
Report)
of
as per Audit Duly Verified March 16-20, 1997 marked as Exhibit A; and that
based on the report, petitioner had misappropriated the total amount
After the Prosecution rested its case, the Defense decided not to file a
ofP131,286.92.[3]
instead
rested
itscase.The
Prosecution
and
Defense
submitted
their
upon which her conviction was based, was falsification, an offense not
alleged or included in the Information under which she was arraigned and
pleaded not guilty, and that said judgment likewise blatantly ignored and
On January 28, 2004, the RTC, stating that inasmuch as petitioner had opted
not to present evidence for her defense the Prosecutions evidence remained
documents, the due execution and authenticity of which were not proved in
Petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration, butthe RTC denied the motion
on May 7, 2004.[9]
has
directly
appealed
to
the
for
Issues
Insisting that the RTCs judgment grossly violated [her] Constitutional and
statutory right to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation
against her because, while the charge against her is estafa under Art. 315,
par. 1 (b) of the Revised Penal Code, the evidence presented against her and
review
Petitioner contends that the RTC grossly violated her Constitutional right to
be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation when: (a) it held that
the information did not have to allege her falsification of the duplicate
receipts, and (b) when it convicted her of estafa under Article 315, paragraph
1(b) of the Revised Penal Codeby relying on the evidence on falsification.
among them the right to be informed of the nature and cause of the
accusation, viz:
Section 14. (1) No person shall be held to answer for a
criminal offense without due process of law.
(2) In all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall be
presumed innocent until the contrary is proved, and shall
enjoy the right to be heard by himself and counsel, to be
informed of the nature and cause of the accusation
against him, to have a speedy, impartial, and public trial, to
meet the witnesses face to face, and to have compulsory
process to secure the attendance of witnesses and the
production of evidence in his behalf. However, after
arraignment, trial may proceed notwithstanding the absence
of the accused provided that he has been duly notified and
his failure to appear is unjustifiable.
Ruling
Rule 110 of the Revised Rules of Court, the rule then in effect when the
information was filed in the RTC, contained the following provisions on the
The petition is meritorious.
proper manner of alleging the nature and cause of the accusation in the
I
information, to wit:
The importance of the proper manner of alleging the nature and cause of the
xxx
According
to
the
theory
and
proof
of
the
Prosecution,
petitioner
in
order
to
conceal
her
misappropriation
or
conversion.
II
Testimonial and documentary evidence,being hearsay,
did not prove petitioners guilt beyond reasonable doubt
this burden, the Prosecutions duty is to prove each and every element of the
inclusive.
crime charged in the information to warrant a finding of guilt for that crime or
for any other crime necessarily included therein.[14] The Prosecution must
On his part, Go essentially described for the trial court the various duties of
offense.[15]In doing all these, the Prosecution must rely on the strength of its
own evidence, and not anchor its success upon the weakness of the evidence
of the accused. The burden of proof placed on the Prosecution arises from the
means that persons other than Guivencan prepared Exhibits B to YY and their
found in the receipts supposedly issued by petitioner and in the ledgers held
his favor.In other words, the weakness of the defense put up by the accused
witness who testified on the entries effectively deprived the RTC of the
reasonable opportunity to validate and test the veracity and reliability of the
charged and in identifying the accused as the malefactor responsible for it.
Did the Prosecution adduce evidence that proved beyond reasonable doubt
the
testimonies
of
Go
and
Guivencan,
and
various
each of her customers upon their payment, (b) the ledgers listing the
toSection 36 of Rule 130,Rules of Court, a rule that states that a witness can
testify only to those facts that she knows of her personal knowledge; that is,
receipt numbers for each of the payments, and (c) the confirmation sheets
which are derived from her own perception, except as otherwise provided in
Moreover, the theory of the hearsay rule is that when a human utterance is
offered as evidence of the truth of the fact asserted, the credit of the assertor
cannot be called upon for that purpose because her testimony derives its
becomes the basis of inference, and, therefore, the assertion can be received
value not from the credit accorded to her as a witness presently testifying but
as evidence only when made on the witness stand, subject to the test of
information.
assertion to prove the matter asserted but without reference to the truth of
the matter asserted, the hearsay rule does not apply. For example, in a
In case a witness is permitted to testify based on what she has heard another
slander case, if a prosecution witness testifies that he heard the accused say
person say about the facts in dispute, the person from whom the witness
that the complainant was a thief, this testimony is admissible not to prove
derived the information on the facts in dispute is not in court and under
that the complainant was really a thief, but merely to show that the accused
thendepends not upon theveracity of the witness but upon the veracity of the
not legal hearsay.[23]The distinction is, therefore, between (a) the fact that
other person giving the information to the witness without oath. The
the statement was made, to which the hearsay rule does not apply, and (b)
the truth of the facts asserted in the statement, to which the hearsay rule
applies.[24]
It is apparent, too, that a person who relates a hearsay is not obliged to enter
Section 36, Rule 130 of the Rules of Court is understandably not the only rule
ambiguities; and that she entrenches herself in the simple assertion that she
was told so, and leaves the burden entirely upon the dead or absent author.
[19] Thus, the rule against hearsay testimony rests mainly on the ground that
may have been given under oath and before a court of justice, but if it is
witness,
being the only means of testing the credibility of witnesses and their
testimonies, is essential to the administration of justice.
We thus stress that the rule excluding hearsay as evidence is based upon
establish the truth in a dispute while also safeguardinga partys right to cross-
serious
examine
two
of hearsay evidence due to its not being given under oath or solemn
of the out-of-court declarant or actor upon whose reliability the worth of the
her
adversarys
witness,the Rules
of
Court offers
concerns
about
the
trustworthiness
and reliability
The secondsolution is to require that all witnesses besubject to the crossexamination by the adverse party. Section 6, Rule 132 of the Rules of
Courtensuresthis solutionthusly:
Section 6. Cross-examination; its purpose and extent. Upon
the termination of the direct examination, the witness may be
cross-examined by the adverse party as to any matters
stated in the direct examination, or connected therewith, with
sufficient fullness and freedom to test his accuracy and
truthfulness and freedom from interest or bias, or the
reverse, and to elicit all important facts bearing upon the
issue. (8a)
III
Lack of their proper authentication rendered
Exhibits B to YY and their derivatives
inadmissible as judicial evidence
Petitioner also contends that the RTC grossly erred in admitting as evidence
Exhibits B to YY, and their derivatives, inclusive, despite their being private
documents that were not duly authenticated as required by Section 20, Rule
132 of the Rules of Court.
to
criminal
cases, i.e.,
Section
14,
(2),
Article
III,
of
the
document and a private document for the purpose of their presentation in
have been admitted;[30] or (d) when the document is not being offered as
genuine.[31]
private document is excused only in four instances, specifically: (a) when the
document is an ancient one within the context of Section 21,[28] Rule 132 of
the Rules of Court; (b) when the genuineness and authenticity of an
actionable document have not been specifically denied under oath by the
ATTY. ABIERA:
Q. Now, these receipts which you mentioned
which do not tally with the original receipts, do
you have copies of these receipts?
A. Yes, I have a copy of these receipts, but its not
now in my possession.
Q. But when asked to present those receipts
before this Honorable Court, can you assure this
COURT:
Mark the receipt as Exhibit A.
ATTY. ABIERA:
And the signature be bracketed and be marked as
Exhibit A-1.
(Next Page)
ATTY ABIERA (continuing):
Honorable Court that you will be able to present
those receipts?
A. Yes.
Q. You are also familiar with the signature
of the accused in this case, Anna Lerima Patula?
A. Yes.
Q. Why
are
you
familiar
with
the
signature of the accused in this case?
A. I used to see her signatures in the payroll
and in the receipts also.
Q. Okay, I have here a machine copy of a
receipt which we would present this,or offer the
same as soon as the original receipts can be
presented, but for purposes only of your
testimony, Im going to point to you a
certain signature over this receipt number
FLDT96
20441, a
receipt
from
Cirila
Askin, kindly go over the signature and tell
the Honorable Court whether you are
familiar with the signature?
A. Yes, that is her signature.
INTERPRETER:
Witness is pointing to a signature above the
printed word collector.
(Next Page)
COURT:
Bracket the signature &mark it as Exh. A-1. What
is the number of that receipt?
ATTY. ABIERA:
Receipt No. 20441 dated August 4, 1996 the
statement that: received from Cirila Askin.[32]
xxx
(Next Page)
thereon was marked as Exhibit A-1) immediately fizzled out after the
ATTY. ABIERA:
Q. Is this the only receipt wherein the name,
the signature rather, of the accused in this
case appears?
A. That is not the only one, there are many
receipts.
ATTY. ABIERA:
In order to save time, Your Honor, we will just
be presenting the original receipts Your
Honor, because its quite voluminous, so we will
just forego with the testimony of the witness but
we will just present the same using the
testimony of another witness, for purposes
of
identifying
the
signature
of
the
accused. We will request that this signature
which has been identified to by the witness in this
case be marked, Your Honor, with the reservation
to present the original copy and present the same
to offer as our exhibits but for the meantime, this
is only for the purposes of recording, Your Honor,
which we request the same, the receipt which has
just been identified awhile ago be marked as our
Exhibit A You Honor.
ATTY. ZERNA:
We pray, Your Honor, that this receipt identified
be marked as Exhibit B-3, receipt number 20441.
It is true that the original of the receipt bearing serial number FLDT96 No.
20441was
subsequentlypresented
as
Exhibit
Bthrough
Guivencan.
(Next Page)
ATTY. ZERNA:
Q. Ms. Witness, here is a receipt colored white,
number 26603 issued to one Divina Cadilig. Will
you please identify this receipt if this is the
receipt of your office?
A.Yes.
Q.There is a signature over the portion for the
collector. Whose signature is this?
A.Ms. Patula.
Q.How do you know that this is her signature?
A.Because we can read the Patula.[34]
(Next page)
WITNESS (continuing):
[r]eceipt she has a balance of Ten Thousand
Seven hundred Ninety-one Pesos and
Seventy-five Centavos (10,791.75).
COURT:
Q. What about the duplicate receipt, how much is
indicated there?
A. The customer has no duplicate copy because it
was already forwarded to the Manila Office.
Q. What then is your basis in the entries in the
ledger showing that it has already a zero
balance?
A. This is the copy of the customer while in the
office, in the original receipt she has still a
balance.
xxx
ATTY. ZERNA:
The confirmation sheet ---
COURT:
The confirmation sheet was the one you
referred to as the receipt in your earlier
testimony? Is that what you referred to as the
receipts, the original receipts?
A. This is what I copied from the ledger.
Q. So where was that(sic) original receipt which
you said showed that that particular customer
still has a balance of Ten Thousand something?
A. The receipt is no longer here.
Q. You mean the entry of that receipt was
already entered in the ledger?
(Next Page)
ATTY. ZERNA (continuing):
[i]n your office?
COURT:
That was already answered paero, the office has
a ledger.
Q. Now, did you bring the ledger with you?
A. No, Maam.[35]
A. Yes.[36]
In the face of the palpable flaws infecting the Prosecutions evidence, it should
come as no surprise that petitioners counsel interposed timely objections.
Yet,
the
RTC
mysteriously
overruled
the
objections
and
discrepancies
allowedthe
The mystery shrouding the RTCs soft treatment of the Prosecutions flawed
presentation was avoidable simply by the RTC adhering to the instructions of
the rules earlier quoted, as well as withSection 22 of Rule 132 of the Rules of
Court,which contains instructions on how to prove the genuineness of a
handwriting in a judicial proceeding, as follows:
Section 22. How genuineness of handwriting proved. The
handwriting of a person may be proved by any witness who
believes it to be the handwriting of such person because he
has seen the person write, or has seen writing
purporting to be his upon which the witness has acted
or been charged, and has thus acquired knowledge of the
If it is already clear that Go and Guivencan had not themselves seen the
merely technical and procedural, and were defects that the adverse partys
waiver of her cross-examination or failure to rebutcould not set right or cure.
Nor did the trial courts overruling of petitioners objections imbue the flawed
The Court has to acquit petitioner for failure of the State to establish her guilt
beyond reasonable doubt. The Court reiterates that in the trial of every
criminal case, a judge must rigidly test the States evidence of guilt in order to
Curiously, the RTC excepted the entries in the ledgers from the application of
ensure that such evidence adhered to the basic rules of admissibility before
the hearsay rule by also terselystating that the ledgers were prepared in the
pronouncing an accused guilty of the crime charged upon such evidence. The
of law in favor of the accused, who had no obligation to prove her innocence.
Heracquittal should follow.
IV
No reliable evidence on damage
Conformably with finding the evidence of guilt unreliable, the Court declares
that the disposition by the RTC ordering petitioner to indemnify Footluckers in
This was another grave error of the RTC.The terse yet sweeping mannerof
the amount ofP131,286.92 with interest of 12% per annum until fully paid
was not yet shown to be factually founded. Yet, she cannot now be absolved
show the concurrence of the several requisites before entries in the course of
business could be excepted from the hearsay rule. The requisites are as
prejudice to the filing of a civil action against her for the recovery of any
follows:
the
Court SETS
ASIDE
ANDREVERSESthe
decision
the recoveryof any amount still owing in favor of Footluckers Chain of Stores,
Inc.
SO ORDERED.
Janda
for
the
respondents.
MAKALINTAL., J.:
This case is before us on a petition for review of the decision of the Court of
Appeals, which affirmed that of the Court of First Instance of Manila
dismissing petitioners' second amended complaint against respondents.
The action is for damages under Articles 1902 and 1903 of the old Civil Code.
It appears that in the afternoon of March 18, 1948 a fire broke out at the
Caltex service station at the corner of Antipolo street and Rizal Avenue,
Manila. It started while gasoline was being hosed from a tank truck into the
underground storage, right at the opening of the receiving tank where the
nozzle of the hose was inserted. The fire spread to and burned several
neighboring houses, including the personal properties and effects inside
them. Their owners, among them petitioners here, sued respondents Caltex
(Phil.), Inc. and Mateo Boquiren, the first as alleged owner of the station and
the second as its agent in charge of operation. Negligence on the part of both
of them was attributed as the cause of the fire.
The trial court and the Court of Appeals found that petitioners failed to prove
negligence and that respondents had exercised due care in the premises and
with respect to the supervision of their employees.
The first question before Us refers to the admissibility of certain reports on
the fire prepared by the Manila Police and Fire Departments and by a certain
Captain Tinio of the Armed Forces of the Philippines. Portions of the first two
reports are as follows:
competent evidence. And even if he had testified, his testimony would still
have been objectionable as far as information gathered by him from third
persons was concerned.
Petitioners maintain, however, that the reports in themselves, that is, without
further testimonial evidence on their contents, fall within the scope of section
35, Rule 123, which provides that "entries in official records made in the
performance of his duty by a public officer of the Philippines, or by a person
in the performance of a duty specially enjoined by law, are prima
facie evidence of the facts therein stated."
There are three requisites for admissibility under the rule just mentioned: (a)
that the entry was made by a public officer, or by another person specially
enjoined by law to do so; (b) that it was made by the public officer in the
performance of his duties, or by such other person in the performance of a
duty specially enjoined by law; and (c) that the public officer or other person
had sufficient knowledge of the facts by him stated, which must have been
acquired by him personally or through official information (Moran, Comments
on the Rules of Court, Vol. 3 [1957] p. 398).
Of the three requisites just stated, only the last need be considered here.
Obviously the material facts recited in the reports as to the cause and
circumstances of the fire were not within the personal knowledge of the
officers who conducted the investigation. Was knowledge of such facts,
however, acquired by them through official information? As to some facts the
sources thereof are not even identified. Others are attributed to Leopoldo
Medina, referred to as an employee at the gas station were the fire occurred;
to Leandro Flores, driver of the tank truck from which gasoline was being
transferred at the time to the underground tank of the station; and to
respondent Mateo Boquiren, who could not, according to Exhibit V-Africa, give
any reason as to the origin of the fire. To qualify their statements as "official
information" acquired by the officers who prepared the reports, the persons
who made the statements not only must have personal knowledge of the
facts stated but must have the duty to give such statements for record.1
The reports in question do not constitute an exception to the hearsay rule;
the facts stated therein were not acquired by the reporting officers through
official information, not having been given by the informants pursuant to any
duty to do so.
The next question is whether or not, without proof as to the cause and origin
of the fire, the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur should apply so as to presume
negligence on the part of appellees. Both the trial court and the appellate
court refused to apply the doctrine in the instant case on the grounds that
"as to (its) applicability ... in the Philippines, there seems to he nothing
definite," and that while the rules do not prohibit its adoption in appropriate
cases, "in the case at bar, however, we find no practical use for such
doctrine." The question deserves more than such summary dismissal. The
doctrine has actually been applied in this jurisdiction, in the case of Espiritu
vs. Philippine Power and Development Co. (CA-G.R. No. 3240-R, September
20, 1949), wherein the decision of the Court of Appeals was penned by Mr.
Justice J.B.L. Reyes now a member of the Supreme Court.
The facts of that case are stated in the decision as follows:
In the afternoon of May 5, 1946, while the plaintiff-appellee and other
companions were loading grass between the municipalities of Bay
until
gasoline
Records show that there have been two cases of fire which caused
not only material damages but desperation and also panic in the
neighborhood.
Although the soft drinks stand had been eliminated, this gasoline
service station is also used by its operator as a garage and repair
shop for his fleet of taxicabs numbering ten or more, adding another
risk to the possible outbreak of fire at this already small but crowded
gasoline station.
The foregoing report, having been submitted by a police officer in the
performance of his duties on the basis of his own personal observation of the
facts reported, may properly be considered as an exception to the hearsay
rule. These facts, descriptive of the location and objective circumstances
surrounding the operation of the gasoline station in question, strengthen the
presumption of negligence under the doctrine of res ipsa loquitur, since on
their face they called for more stringent measures of caution than those
which would satisfy the standard of due diligence under ordinary
circumstances. There is no more eloquent demonstration of this than the
statement of Leandro Flores before the police investigator. Flores was the
driver of the gasoline tank wagon who, alone and without assistance, was
transferring the contents thereof into the underground storage when the fire
broke out. He said: "Before loading the underground tank there were no
people, but while the loading was going on, there were people who went to
drink coca-cola (at the coca-cola stand) which is about a meter from the hole
leading to the underground tank." He added that when the tank was almost
filled he went to the tank truck to close the valve, and while he had his back
turned to the "manhole" he, heard someone shout "fire."
Even then the fire possibly would not have spread to the neighboring houses
were it not for another negligent omission on the part of defendants, namely,
their failure to provide a concrete wall high enough to prevent the flames
from leaping over it. As it was the concrete wall was only 2-1/2 meters high,
and beyond that height it consisted merely of galvanized iron sheets, which
would predictably crumple and melt when subjected to intense heat.
Defendants' negligence, therefore, was not only with respect to the cause of
the fire but also with respect to the spread thereof to the neighboring houses.
There is an admission on the part of Boquiren in his amended answer to the
second amended complaint that "the fire was caused through the acts of a
stranger who, without authority, or permission of answering defendant,
passed through the gasoline station and negligently threw a lighted match in
the premises." No evidence on this point was adduced, but assuming the
allegation to be true certainly any unfavorable inference from the
admission may be taken against Boquiren it does not extenuate his
negligence. A decision of the Supreme Court of Texas, upon facts analogous
to those of the present case, states the rule which we find acceptable here.
"It is the rule that those who distribute a dangerous article or agent, owe a
degree of protection to the public proportionate to and commensurate with a
danger involved ... we think it is the generally accepted rule as applied to
torts that 'if the effects of the actor's negligent conduct actively and
continuously operate to bring about harm to another, the fact that the active
and substantially simultaneous operation of the effects of a third person's
innocent, tortious or criminal act is also a substantial factor in bringing about
the harm, does not protect the actor from liability.' (Restatement of the Law
of Torts, vol. 2, p. 1184, #439). Stated in another way, "The intention of an
unforeseen and unexpected cause, is not sufficient to relieve a wrongdoer
from consequences of negligence, if such negligence directly and proximately
cooperates with the independent cause in the resulting injury." (MacAfee, et
al. vs. Traver's Gas Corporation, 153 S.W. 2nd 442.)
The next issue is whether Caltex should be held liable for the damages
caused to appellants. This issue depends on whether Boquiren was an
independent contractor, as held by the Court of Appeals, or an agent of
Caltex. This question, in the light of the facts not controverted, is one of law
and hence may be passed upon by this Court. These facts are: (1) Boquiren
made an admission that he was an agent of Caltex; (2) at the time of the fire
Caltex owned the gasoline station and all the equipment therein; (3) Caltex
exercised control over Boquiren in the management of the state; (4) the
delivery truck used in delivering gasoline to the station had the name of
CALTEX painted on it; and (5) the license to store gasoline at the station was
in the name of Caltex, which paid the license fees. (Exhibit T-Africa; Exhibit UAfrica; Exhibit X-5 Africa; Exhibit X-6 Africa; Exhibit Y-Africa).
In Boquiren's amended answer to the second amended complaint, he denied
that he directed one of his drivers to remove gasoline from the truck into the
tank and alleged that the "alleged driver, if one there was, was not in his
employ, the driver being an employee of the Caltex (Phil.) Inc. and/or the
owners of the gasoline station." It is true that Boquiren later on amended his
answer, and that among the changes was one to the effect that he was not
acting as agent of Caltex. But then again, in his motion to dismiss appellants'
second amended complaint the ground alleged was that it stated no cause of
action since under the allegations thereof he was merely acting as agent of
Caltex, such that he could not have incurred personal liability. A motion to
dismiss on this ground is deemed to be an admission of the facts alleged in
the complaint.
Caltex admits that it owned the gasoline station as well as the equipment
therein, but claims that the business conducted at the service station in
question was owned and operated by Boquiren. But Caltex did not present
any contract with Boquiren that would reveal the nature of their relationship
at the time of the fire. There must have been one in existence at that time.
Instead, what was presented was a license agreement manifestly tailored for
purposes of this case, since it was entered into shortly before the expiration
of the one-year period it was intended to operate. This so-called license
agreement (Exhibit 5-Caltex) was executed on November 29, 1948, but made
effective as of January 1, 1948 so as to cover the date of the fire, namely,
March 18, 1948. This retroactivity provision is quite significant, and gives rise
to the conclusion that it was designed precisely to free Caltex from any
responsibility with respect to the fire, as shown by the clause that Caltex
"shall not be liable for any injury to person or property while in the property
herein licensed, it being understood and agreed that LICENSEE (Boquiren) is
not an employee, representative or agent of LICENSOR (Caltex)."
But even if the license agreement were to govern, Boquiren can hardly be
considered an independent contractor. Under that agreement Boquiren would
pay Caltex the purely nominal sum of P1.00 for the use of the premises and
all the equipment therein. He could sell only Caltex Products. Maintenance of
the station and its equipment was subject to the approval, in other words
control, of Caltex. Boquiren could not assign or transfer his rights as licensee
without the consent of Caltex. The license agreement was supposed to be
from January 1, 1948 to December 31, 1948, and thereafter until terminated
by Caltex upon two days prior written notice. Caltex could at any time cancel
and terminate the agreement in case Boquiren ceased to sell Caltex products,
or did not conduct the business with due diligence, in the judgment of Caltex.
Termination of the contract was therefore a right granted only to Caltex but
not to Boquiren. These provisions of the contract show the extent of the
control of Caltex over Boquiren. The control was such that the latter was
virtually an employee of the former.
Taking into consideration the fact that the operator owed his position
to the company and the latter could remove him or terminate his
services at will; that the service station belonged to the company and
bore its tradename and the operator sold only the products of the
company; that the equipment used by the operator belonged to the
company and were just loaned to the operator and the company took
charge of their repair and maintenance; that an employee of the
company supervised the operator and conducted periodic inspection
of the company's gasoline and service station; that the price of the
products sold by the operator was fixed by the company and not by
the operator; and that the receipts signed by the operator indicated
that he was a mere agent, the finding of the Court of Appeals that the
operator was an agent of the company and not an independent
contractor should not be disturbed.
Tonog was already taken to the hospital; that Brenda even inquired from him
what happened and then prodded him to testify; that his refusal coupled with
the fact that he owed Gonzales some money earned him the ire of the latter
and that was why he was charged for the death of Tonog.
Accused-appellant claims in this appeal that the trial court erred: (a) in
giving credence to the testimonies of prosecution witnesses Brenda Gonzales
and Pio Ochobillo, and for discrediting his; (b) in finding that the killing was
attended with evident premeditation; (c) in ruling that he committed
treachery and, (d) in convicting him of murder.[4]
We sustain the conviction of the accused for murder. It is settled that
findings of fact of the trial court are accorded greatest respect by the
appellate court absent any abuse of discretion,[5] and none is perceivable in
the case at bench; hence we affirm the factual findings of the trial court.
The accused contends that the testimonies of the prosecution witnesses
are incredible and conflicting. We however find otherwise. Gonzales and
Ochobillo, as observed by the trial court, testified in a direct and candid
manner. No evil motive is attributed to them as to testify falsely against the
accused. That Gonzales harbored a grudge against the accused because he
owed her some money, and even enticed her customers into patronizing
another carinderia, can hardly be believed. We are not convinced that Brenda
Gonzales would testify against accused-appellant for a crime so grave simply
because he owed her a measly sum of P300.00. That he enticed the
customers of Gonzales into patronizing another carinderia is belied by the
fact that on the night of the incident he was, as he claimed, eating at
the carinderia of Gonzales. If there be any testimony that should be
considered incredible and illogical it must be that of the accused. His
assertion that Mando stabbed the victim should not receive any evidentiary
value when weighed against the positive assertion of the prosecution
witnesses that the accused was the assailant of Jaime Tonog.
Quite interestingly, the accused did not offer any information regarding
the person and circumstances of Mando. Up to this date Mando remains a
myth. Not a single witness was presented by the defense to prove who
Mando was, nor even a hint of his personal circumstances. During the entire
proceedings in the court below Mando was never mentioned by the
prosecution witnesses. Nobody ever implicated him except the accused. In
fact, there should have been no difficulty procuring witnesses to testify on
the part of the accused as the incident was viewed openly by a multitude of
bystanders. His failure to present any witness pointing to Mando as the
perpetrator of the crime convinces us that Mando in fact existed only as a
figment of the mind.
The accused also asserts that Gonzales arrived at the crime scene only
after the victim was brought to the hospital and that she even inquired from
him about what happened.
Again we are not persuaded. The statement contradicts the earlier
version of the accused that Gonzales was prejudiced against him as he owed
her some money. For, granting that Gonzales had a grudge against him it was
not likely that she would inquire from him about the incident as there were
other persons then present who could shed light on the startling occurrence.
Equally dubious is the avowal of the accused that Gonzales arrived at
the crime scene only after the victim was rushed to the hospital considering
that the incident took place just in front of her store. Besides, this claim was
easily demolished by Gonzales detailed account of the fight.
The fact that the witnesses did not immediately report the incident to
the police does not necessarily discredit them. After all, reports were made
albeit by different persons. The accused banks on the apparent inconsistency
as to why Gonzales failed to give immediately her account of the killing to the
authorities. But the discrepancy is so minor that it cannot undermine her
credibility nor detract from the truth that she personally witnessed the
incident and positively identified the accused.
The
accused
leans
heavily
on
the Advance
Information
Sheet[6] prepared by Pat. Steve Casimiro which did not mention him at all
and named only Ramon Doe as the principal suspect.Unfortunately this
cannot defeat the positive and candid testimonies of the prosecution
witnesses. Entries in official records, as in the case of a police blotter, are
only prima facie evidence of the facts therein stated. They are not
conclusive. The entry in the police blotter is not necessarily entitled to full
credit for it could be incomplete and inaccurate, sometimes from either
partial suggestions or for want of suggestions or inquiries, without the aid of
which the witness may be unable to recall the connected collateral
circumstances necessary for the correction of the first suggestion of his
memory and for his accurate recollection of all that pertain to the subject. It
is understandable that the testimony during the trial would be more lengthy
and detailed than the matters stated in the police blotter.[7] Significantly,
the Advance Information Sheet was never formally offered by the defense
during the proceedings in the court below.Hence any reliance by the accused
on the document must fail since the court cannot consider any evidence
which has not been formally offered.[8]
Parenthetically, the Advance Information Sheet was prepared by the
police officer only after interviewing Camba, an alleged eyewitness. The
accused then could have compelled the attendance of Camba as a
witness. The failure to exert the slightest effort to present Camba on the part
of the accused should militate against his cause.
Entries in official records made in the performance of his duty by a
public officer or by a person in the performance of a duty specially enjoined
by law are prima facie evidence of the facts therein stated.[9] But to be
admissible in evidence three (3) requisites must concur: (a) The entry was
made by a police officer or by another person specially enjoined by law to do
so; (b) It was made by the public officer in the performance of his duties or by
such other person in the performance of a duty specially enjoined by law;
and, (c) The public officer or other person had sufficient knowledge of the
facts by him stated, which must have been acquired by him personally or
through official information.[10]
totally unprepared for the unexpected attack from behind and had no weapon
to resist it, the stabbing could not but be considered as treacherous. The
evidence proved that the victim was caught unaware by the sudden
assault. No weapon was found, nor even intimated to be, in his possession.
Conversely the court a quo should have disregarded evident
premeditation. Evident premeditation requires a showing that the execution
of the criminal act was preceded by cool thought and reflection upon the
resolution to carry out the criminal intent during a space of time sufficient to
arrive at a calm judgment.[16] Evidence for the prosecution showed that
after the fight was broken up the accused and Ramon Doe proceeded towards
the highway. They returned only after a lapse of approximately
five (5) minutes. From the foregoing we cannot conclude that the accused
had sufficient time within which to meditate on the consequences of his acts.
Meditation necessitates that it be evident and proven. Be that as it may,
treachery as a qualifying circumstance having attended the killing, the
conviction of the accused for murder still holds.
WHEREFORE,. the decision of the court a quo in Crim. Case No. 9081744 dated 25 July 1991 convicting accused-appellant RICARDO SAN
GABRIEL Y ORTIZ of murder is AFFIRMED. The penalty of life imprisonment
however is MODIFIED to reclusion perpetua,[17] while the award of
P30,000.00 as indemnity is INCREASED to P50,000.00 conformably with
existing jurisprudence. Costs against accused-appellant.
SO ORDERED.
The presence of the accused in the vicinity even after the commission of
the crime does not in any way extricate him from his dilemma. Certainly, it is
no proof of his innocence.
The court a quo properly considered the aggravating circumstance of
treachery in convicting the accused of murder. Treachery is present when the
offender commits any of the crimes against person, employing means,
methods or forms in the execution thereof which tend directly and specially
to insure its execution, without risk to himself arising from the defense which
the offended party might make.[13] Alevosia or treachery presumes an
attack that is deliberate and unexpected. There is no treachery when the
victim is placed on guard, as when a heated argument preceded the attack,
especially when the victim was standing face to face with his assailants, and
the initial assault could not have been unforeseen.[14]
BARCELON,
ROXAS
SECURITIES, INC. (now known
as UBP Securities, Inc.)
Petitioner,
It is true that in the case at bench the attack was preceded by a fistfight.
It was however established that they were already pacified by onlookers
when the accused and Ramon returned. Lulled into complacency the victim
simply stayed where he was before the fistfight when after a brief moment
the accused together with Ramon returned with bladed weapons.Both
approached the victim and circled him surreptitiously. The attack was sudden
and simultaneous that the victim was never given a chance to defend
himself. As we have held in People v. Balisteros,[15] where a victim was
COMMISSIONER OF INTERNAL
Promulgated:
REVENUE,
Respondent.
August 7, 2006
x--------------------------------------------------x
- versus -
DECISION
G. R. No. 157064
Pre s e n t :
PA N G A N I B A N , C . J . ,
C h a i rm a n ,
Y N A R E S - S A N T I AG O
A U S T R I A- M A RTI N E Z ,
C A L L E J O , S R. , a n d
C H I C O - NA Z A R I O , J J .
CHICO-NAZARIO, J.:
This is a Petition for Review on Certiorari, under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court,
1998, petitioner received a letter dated 30 April 1998 from the respondent
seeking to set aside the Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No.
60209 dated 11 July 2002,[1] ordering the petitioner to pay the Government
the amount of P826,698.31 as deficiency income tax for the year 1987 plus
25% surcharge and 20% interest per annum. The Court of Appeals, in its
assailed Decision, reversed the Decision of the Court of Tax Appeals (CTA)
dated 17 May 2000[2] in C.T.A. Case No. 5662.
Petitioner Barcelon, Roxas Securities Inc. (now known as UBP Securities, Inc.)
WHEREFORE,
in
view
of
the
foregoing,
the 1988 deficiency tax assessment against petitioner is
hereby CANCELLED. Respondent is hereby ORDERED TO
DESIST
from
collecting
said
deficiency
tax. No
pronouncement as to costs.[6]
petitioner filed its Annual Income Tax Return for taxable year 1987. After an
audit investigation conducted by the Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR),
respondent Commissioner of Internal Revenue (CIR) issued an assessment for
deficiency income tax in the amount of P826,698.31 arising from the
disallowance of the item on salaries, bonuses and allowances in the amount
ofP1,219,093,93 as part of the deductible business expense since petitioner
taxes. This assessment was covered by Formal Assessment Notice No. FAN-187-91-000649 dated 1 February 1991, which, respondent alleges, was sent to
petitioner through registered mail on 6 February 1991.However, petitioner
denies receiving the formal assessment notice.[3]
1987. Petitioner filed a formal protest, dated 25 March 1992, against the
I
W H E T H E R O R N O T L E G A L B A SE S E X I S T F O R TH E
C O U RT O F A P P E A L S F I N D I N G T H AT T H E C O U RT O F
TA X A P P E A L S C O M M I TT E D G R O S S E R R O R I N TH E
A P P R E C I AT I O N O F FAC T S .
II
WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT OF APPEALS WAS CORRECT IN
REVERSING THE SUBJECT DECISION OF THE COURT OF TAX
APPEALS.
III
WHETHER OR NOT THE RIGHT OF THE BUREAU OF INTERNAL
REVENUE TO ASSESS PETITIONER FOR ALLEGED DEFICIENCY
INCOME TAX FOR 1987 HAS PRESCRIBED.
IV
WHETHER OR NOT THE RIGHT OF THE BUREAU OF INTERNAL
REVENUE TO COLLECT THE SUBJECT ALLEGED DEFICIENCY
INCOME TAX FOR 1987 HAS PRESCRIBED.
V
WHETHER OR NOT PETITIONER IS LIABLE FOR THE ALLEGED
DEFICIENCY INCOME TAX ASSESSMENT FOR 1987.
VI
WHETHER OR NOT THE SUBJECT ASSESSMENT IS VIOLATIVE
OF THE RIGHT OF PETITIONER TO DUE PROCESS.[10]
While the general rule is that factual findings of the Court of Appeals are
binding on this Court, there are, however, recognized exceptions[11] thereto,
such as when the findings are contrary to those of the trial court or, in this
case, the CTA.[12]
In its Decision, the CTA resolved the issues raised by the parties thus:
Jurisprudence is replete with cases holding that if the
taxpayer denies ever having received an assessment from
the BIR, it is incumbent upon the latter to prove by
competent evidence that such notice was indeed received by
the addressee. The onus probandi was shifted to respondent
to prove by contrary evidence that the Petitioner received the
assessment in the due course of mail. The Supreme Court has
consistently held that while a mailed letter is deemed
received by the addressee in the course of mail, this is
merely a disputable presumption subject tocontroversion and
a direct denial thereof shifts the burden to the party favored
by the presumption to prove that the mailed letter was
indeed received by the addressee (Republic vs. Court of
Appeals, 149 SCRA 351). Thus as held by the Supreme Court
in Gonzalo P. Nava vs. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 13
SCRA 104, January 30, 1965:
The facts to be proved to raise this
presumption are (a) that the letter was
properly addressed with postage prepaid, and
(b) that it was mailed. Once these facts are
proved, the presumption is that the letter was
received by the addressee as soon as it could
have been transmitted to him in the ordinary
course of the mail. But if one of the said facts
fails to appear, the presumption does not
lie. (VI, Moran, Comments on the Rules of
Court, 1963 ed, 56-57 citing Enriquez
vs. Sunlife Assurance of Canada, 41 Phil 269).
In the instant case, Respondent utterly failed to discharge
this duty. No substantial evidence was ever presented to
prove that the assessment notice No. FAN-1-87-91-000649 or
other supposed notices subsequent thereto were in fact
issued or sent to the taxpayer. As a matter of fact, it only
submitted the BIR record book which allegedly contains the
list of taxpayers names, the reference number, the year, the
nature of tax, the city/municipality and the amount (see Exh.
5-a for the Respondent). Purportedly, Respondent intended to
show to this Court that all assessments made are entered
into a record book in chronological order outlining the details
of the assessment and the taxpayer liable thereon. However,
as can be gleaned from the face of the exhibit, all entries
thereon appears to be immaterial and impertinent in proving
that the assessment notice was mailed and duly received by
Petitioner. Nothing indicates therein all essential facts that
could sustain the burden of proof being shifted to the
Respondent. What is essential to prove the fact of mailing is
showing of gross error or abuse on the part of the Tax Court.[15] In the
absence of any clear and convincing proof to the contrary, this Court must
presume that the CTA rendered a decision which is valid in every respect.
Under Section 203[16] of the National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC),
respondent had three (3) years from the last day for the filing of the return to
send an assessment notice to petitioner. In the case of Collector of Internal
Revenue v. Bautista,[17] this Court held that an assessment is made within
the prescriptive period if notice to this effect is released, mailed or sent by
the CIR to the taxpayer within said period. Receipt thereof by the taxpayer
within the prescriptive period is not necessary. At this point, it should be
clarified that the rule does not dispense with the requirement that the
taxpayer should actually receive, even beyond the prescriptive period, the
assessment notice which was timely released, mailed and sent.
xxxx
The failure of the respondent to prove receipt of the
assessment by the Petitioner leads to the conclusion that no
assessment was issued. Consequently, the governments right
to issue an assessment for the said period has already
prescribed. (Industrial Textile Manufacturing Co. of the Phils.,
Inc. vs. CIR CTA Case 4885, August 22, 1996).[13]
In the present case, records show that petitioner filed its Annual Income Tax
Return for taxable year 1987 on 14 April 1988.[18] The last day for filing by
petitioner of its return was on 15 April 1988,[19] thus, giving respondent
until 15 April 1991 within which to send an assessment notice. While
Jurisprudence has consistently shown that this Court accords the findings of
fact by the CTA with the highest respect. In Sea-Land Service Inc. v. Court of
1991 on 6 February 1991, within the three (3)-year period prescribed by law,
Appeals[14] this Court recognizes that the Court of Tax Appeals, which by the
Petitioner alleges that it came to know of the deficiency tax assessment only
on 17 March 1992 when it was served with the Warrant of Distraint and Levy.
[20]
when a mail matter is sent by registered mail, there exists a presumption, set
by him or such facts were acquired by him from reports made by persons
forth under Section 3(v), Rule 131 of the Rules of Court, [22] that it was
received in the regular course of mail. The facts to be proved in order to raise
There are three requisites for admissibility under the rule just
mentioned: (a) that the entry was made by a public officer, or
by another person specially enjoined by law to do so; (b) that
it was made by the public officer in the performance of his
duties, or by such other person in the performance of a duty
specially enjoined by law; and (c) that the public officer or
other person had sufficient knowledge of the facts by him
stated, which must have been acquired by him personally or
through official information x x x.
this presumption are: (a) that the letter was properly addressed with postage
prepaid; and (b) that it was mailed. While a mailed letter is deemed received
by the addressee in the ordinary course of mail, this is still merely a
disputable presumption subject to controversion, and a direct denial of the
receipt thereof shifts the burden upon the party favored by the presumption
to prove that the mailed letter was indeed received by the addressee.[23]
In the present case, petitioner denies receiving the assessment notice, and
the respondent was unable to present substantial evidence that such notice
was, indeed, mailed or sent by the respondent before the BIRs right to assess
In this case, the entries made by Ingrid Versola were not based on
her personal knowledge as she did not attest to the fact that she personally
prepared and mailed the assessment notice. Nor was it stated in the
transcript of stenographic notes[26] how and from whom she obtained the
pertinent information. Moreover, she did not attest to the fact that she
acquired the reports from persons under a legal duty to submit the
same. Hence, Rule 130, Section 44 finds no application in the present
case. Thus, the evidence offered by respondent does not qualify as an
exception to the rule against hearsay evidence.
had prescribed and that said notice was received by the petitioner. The
respondent presented the BIR record book where the name of the taxpayer,
the kind of tax assessed, the registry receipt number and the date of mailing
were noted. The BIR records custodian, Ingrid Versola, also testified that she
made the entries therein. Respondent offered the entry in the BIR record
book and the testimony of its record custodian as entries in official records in
accordance with Section 44, Rule 130 of the Rules of Court,[24] which states
notice.
that:
Section 44. Entries in official records. - Entries in official
records made in the performance of his duty by a public
officer of the Philippines, or by a person in the performance of
a duty specially enjoined by law, are prima facie evidence of
the facts therein stated.
IN
VIEW
OF
THE
FOREGOING,
the
instant
Petition
is GRANTED. The assailed Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No.
60209 dated 11 July 2002, is hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE, and the
Decision of the Court of Tax Appeals in C.T.A. Case No. 5662, dated 17 May
2000, cancelling the
1988
Deficiency
Tax
Assessment
against Barcelon, Roxas Securitites, Inc. (now known as UPB Securities, Inc.)
for being barred by prescription, is hereby REINSTATED. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
October 1996 and stipulated the monthly wage at $900.00 with a fixed
overtime pay of $270.00 and leave pay of $75.00.[6]
Petitioner,
Present:
against and maltreated the vessels Filipino crew. This prompted him to send a
QUISUMBING, J.,
Chairperson,
- versus - CARPIO MORALES,
TINGA,
x----------------------------------------------------------------------------x
DECISION
TINGA, J.:
Private respondent countered that petitioner had voluntarily disembarked the
This Petition for Certiorari[1] under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court seeks to
vessel after having been warned several times of dismissal from service for
November 2005 and2 February 2006, respectively, which upheld the validity
the vessel invaded a different route at theOsaka Port in Japan due to the
absence of petitioner who was then supposed to be on watch duty. As proof,
it presented a copy of a fax message, sent to it on the date of incident,
reporting the vessels deviation from its course due to petitioners neglect of
duty at the bridge,[8] as well as a copy of the report of crew discharge issued
On appeal, the NLRC reversed the ruling of the Labor Arbiter and declared the
by the master of M/VPhoenix Seven two days after the incident.[9]
dismissal as illegal. The dispositive portion of the NLRCs decision reads:
Private respondent stated that since petitioner lodged the complaint before
the Labor Arbiter two (2) years and nine (9) months after his repatriation,
prescription had already set in by virtue of Revised POEA Memorandum
Circular No. 55, series of 1996 which provides for a one-year prescriptive
period for the institution of seafarers claims arising from employment
contract.[10]
The NLRC held that the fax messages in support of the alleged misbehavior
of duties. The Labor Arbiter relied on the fax messages presented by private
and neglect of duty by petitioner have no probative value and are self-
serving. It added that the ships logbook should have been submitted in
evidence as it is the repository of all the activities on board the vessel,
Private
respondent
moved
for
reconsideration,[14] claiming
that
the
complaint was filed beyond the one-year prescriptive period. The NLRC,
however, denied reconsideration in a Resolution dated 30 August 2002.
[15] Rejecting the argument that the complaint had already prescribed, it
ruled:
Records show that respondent in this case had filed a motion
to dismiss on the ground of prescription before the Labor
Arbiter a quo who denied the same in an Order dated August
1, 2000. Such an Order being unappealable, the said issue of
prescription cannot be raised anew specially in a motion for
reconsideration. (Citations omitted)[16]
G.R. SP No. 73521, the filing of the second petition hinging on the same
cause of action after the first petition had been dismissed violates not only
It appears that respondent received a copy of the NLRC Resolution[17] on 24
the rule on forum shopping but also the principle of res judicata. He
September 2002 and that said resolution became final and executory on 7
highlighted the fact that the decision subject of the second petition before
October 2002.[18]
the Court of Appeals had twice become final and executory, with entries of
judgment made first by the NLRC and then by the Court of Appeals.
Private respondent brought the case to the Court of Appeals via a Petition for
Certiorari[19] on 8 October 2002. The petition, docketed as CA-G.R. Sp. No.
contracts entered into as of 1 January 1997 and not those entered prior
thereto, thus:
(1)
[T]he
VERIFICATION
AND
CERTIFICATION OF NON-FORUM SHOPPING was
signed by one Florida Z. Jose, President of
petitioner Falcon Maritime and Allied Services,
Inc., without proof that she is the duly authorized
representative of petitioner-corporation;
(2)
[T]here is no affidavit of
service of the petition to the National Labor
Relations Commission and to the adverse party;
(3)
[T]here is no explanation to
justify service by mail in lieu of the required
personal service. (Citations omitted)[20]
Private respondent, for its part, defends the appellate court in taking
Petitioner submits that the Court of Appeals erred in relying merely on fax
messages to support the validity of his dismissal from employment. He
Since the dismissal of the first petition did not ripen into res
judicata, it may not be said that there was forum shopping
with the filing of the second. The accepted test for
determining whether a party violated the rule against forum
shopping insofar as it is applicable to this setting is whether
the judgment or final resolution in the first case amounts
to res judicata in the second. Res judicata is central to the
idea of forum shopping. Without it, forum shopping is nonexistent. The dismissal of the first petition, moreover, if it
does not amount to res judicata, need not be mentioned in
the certification of non-forum shopping accompanying the
second action. The omission will not be fatal to the viability of
the second case. (Citations omitted)[30]
maintains that the first fax message containing the information that the
vessel encroached on a different route was a mere personal observation of
the ship master and should have thus been corroborated by evidence, and
that these fax messages cannot be considered as res gestae because the
statement of the ship master embodied therein is just a report. He also
contends that he has not caused any immediate danger to the vessel and
that if he did commit any wrongdoing, the incident would have been recorded
in the logbook. Thus, he posits that the failure to produce the logbook
reinforces the theory that the fax messages have been concocted to justify
his unceremonious dismissal from employment. Hence, he believes that his
dismissal from employment stemmed from his filing of the complaint with the
petitioner
filed
instead
certiorari
petition
under
Rule
petitioners allegation is a hoax because there is no showing that the alleged
65. Notwithstanding this procedural lapse, this Court resolves to rule on the
complaint has been received by the ITF and that no action thereon was ever
merits of the petition in the interest of substantial justice,[33]the underlying
taken by the ITF.[35]
consideration in this petition being the arbitrary dismissal of petitioner from
employment.
Private respondent also asserts that petitioner was not dismissed but that he
voluntarily asked for his repatriation. This assertion, however, deserves scant
CAPT.
HAD
RECEIVED EMERGENCY
WARNING
CALL
FROM JAPAN BISAN SETO NAIKAI RADIO AUTHORITY THAT
SHIP IS INVADING OTHER ROUTE.
SO, HE WAS SURPRISED N CAME TO BRIDGE N FOUND 2/O
NOT CARRY OUT HIS WATCH DUTY.
agency. Nevertheless, since the factual findings of the Court of Appeals and
the Labor Arbiter are at variance with those of the NLRC, we resolve to
evaluate the records and the evidence presented by the parties.[37]
emergency
call
was
received
from
the
Japanese
port
authority
that M/V Phoenix Seven was invading other route constituted neglect of duty,
a just cause for terminating an employee. Records reveal that this
information was related to private respondent via two fax messages sent by
the captain of M/V Phoenix Seven. The first fax message dated 18 January
1997 is reproduced below:
least proved to be one. Assuming arguendo that such absence was the
form part of the res gestae, namely: spontaneous statements and verbal
by the fax statements adverted to as parts of the res gestae. No date or time
whereas in verbal acts, the res gestae are the statements accompanying the
has been mentioned to determine whether the fax messages were made
equivocal act.[41] We find that the fax messages cannot be deemed part
these
utterances
were
made
spontaneously
or
with
careful
procedure
taken
against
the
employees
prior
to
their
dismissal.
In any event, under Article 282 of the Labor Code,[44] an employer may
evidence as Article 612 of the Code of Commerce requires the ship captain to
duty, to be a ground for dismissal, must be both gross and habitual. Gross
Habitual neglect implies repeated failure to perform ones duties for a period
In termination cases, the burden of proving just or valid cause for dismissing
employee.[45]
We also note that private respondent failed to comply with the procedural
incident should have been recorded in the ships logbook and presented by
not a mere formality that may be dispensed with at will. Its disregard is a
serving. Quite the contrary, the ships logbook is the repository of all activities
in response to man's innate sense of justice. The Labor Code does not, of
and transactions on board a vessel. Had the route invasion been so serious as
may be dismissed. This is especially true in the case of a vessel on the ocean
logbook. Private respondent would have then had all the more reason to
In Haverton Shipping Ltd. v. NLRC,[46] the Court held that the vessels
and the grant to them of an opportunity to present their own side of the
logbook is an official record of entries made by a person in the performance
alleged offense or misconduct, which led to the management's decision to
of a duty required by law.[47] In Abacast Shipping and Management Agency,
terminate. To meet the requirements of due process, the employer must
Inc. v. NLRC,[48] a case cited by petitioner, the logbook is a respectable
furnish the worker sought to be dismissed with two written notices before
record that can be relied upon to authenticate the charges filed and the
termination of employment can be legally effected, i.e., (1) a notice which
apprises the employee of the particular acts or omissions for which his
dismissal is sought; and (2) the subsequent notice after due hearing which
informs the employee of the employers decision to dismiss him.[53]
of
Appeals
is
REVERSED
and
SET
ASIDE. The Decision of the NLRC isREINSTATED with the MODIFICATION that in
addition to the payment of the sum equivalent to petitioners three (3)
months salary, the full amount of placement fee with 12% legal interest must
be refunded.
SO ORDERED.
SHIPPING
AND
TRANSPORT
CORPORATION, petitioner,
vs. HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS and MARIA EFIGENIA
FISHING CORPORATION, respondents.
DECISION
ROMERO, J.:
A party is entitled to adequate compensation only for such pecuniary
loss actually suffered and duly proved.[1] Indeed, basic is the rule that to
recover actual damages, the amount of loss must not only be capable of
proof but must actually be proven with a reasonable degree of certainty,
premised upon competent proof or best evidence obtainable of the actual
amount thereof.[2] The claimant is duty-bound to point out specific facts that
afford a basis for measuring whatever compensatory damages are borne.
[3] A court cannot merely rely on speculations, conjectures, or guesswork as
to the fact and amount of damages[4] as well as hearsay[5] or
uncorroborated testimony whose truth is suspect.[6] Such are the
jurisprudential precepts that the Court now applies in resolving the instant
petition.
The records disclose that in the early morning of September 21, 1977,
the M/V Maria Efigenia XV, owned by private respondent Maria Efigenia
Fishing Corporation, was navigating the waters near Fortune Island in
Nasugbu, Batangas on its way to Navotas, Metro Manila when it collided with
the vessel Petroparcel which at the time was owned by the Luzon
Stevedoring Corporation (LSC).
Unsatisfied with the lower courts decision, petitioner elevated the matter
to the Court of Appeals which, however, affirmed the same in toto on October
14, 1992.[21] On petitioners assertion that the award of P6,438,048.00 was
not convincingly proved by competent and admissible evidence, the Court of
Appeals ruled that it was not necessary to qualify Del Rosario as an expert
witness because as the owner of the lost vessel, it was well within his
knowledge and competency to identify and determine the equipment
installed and the cargoes loaded on the vessel. Considering the documentary
evidence presented as in the nature of market reports or quotations, trade
journals, trade circulars and price lists, the Court of Appeals held, thus:
Consequently, until such time as the Supreme Court categorically rules on
the admissibility or inadmissibility of this class of evidence, the reception of
In assailing the Court of Appeals decision, petitioner posits the view that
the award of P6,438,048 as actual damages should have been in light of
these considerations, namely: (1) the trial court did not base such award on
the actual value of the vessel and its equipment at the time of loss in 1977;
(2) there was no evidence on extraordinary inflation that would warrant an
adjustment of the replacement cost of the lost vessel, equipment and cargo;
(3) the value of the lost cargo and the prices quoted in respondents
documentary evidence only amount toP4,336,215.00; (4) private respondents
failure to adduce evidence to support its claim for unrealized profit and
business opportunities; and (5) private respondents failure to prove the
extent and actual value of damages sustained as a result of the 1977
collision. Noticeably, petitioner did not object to the exhibits in terms of the
time index for valuation of the lost goods and equipment. In objecting to the
same pieces of evidence, petitioner commented that these were not duly
authenticated and that the witness (Del Rosario) did not have personal
knowledge on the contents of the writings and neither was he an expert on
the subjects thereof.[31] Clearly ignoring petitioners objections to the
exhibits, the lower court admitted these pieces of evidence and gave them
due weight to arrive at the award of P6,438,048.00 as actual damages.
The exhibits were presented ostensibly in the course of Del Rosarios
testimony. Private respondent did not present any other witnesses especially
those whose signatures appear in the price quotations that became the bases
of the award. We hold, however, that the price quotations are ordinary
private writings which under the Revised Rules of Court should have been
proffered along with the testimony of the authors thereof. Del Rosario could
not have testified on the veracity of the contents of the writings even though
he was the seasoned owner of a fishing fleet because he was not the one
who issued the price quotations. Section 36, Rule 130 of the Revised Rules of
Court provides that a witness can testify only to those facts that he knows of
his personal knowledge.
x x x. If the market value of the ship reflects the fact that it is in any case
virtually certain of profitable employment, then nothing can be added to that
value in respect of charters actually lost, for to do so would be pro tanto to
compensate the plaintiff twice over. On the other hand, if the ship is valued
without reference to its actual future engagements and only in the light of its
profit-earning potentiality, then it may be necessary to add to the value thus
assessed the anticipated profit on a charter or other engagement which it
was unable to fulfill. What the court has to ascertain in each case is the
`capitalised value of the vessel as a profit-earning machine not in the
abstract but in view of the actual circumstances, without, of course, taking
into account considerations which were too remote at the time of the loss.
[27] [Underscoring supplied].
For this reason, Del Rosarios claim that private respondent incurred
losses in the total amount of P6,438,048.00 should be admitted with extreme
caution considering that, because it was a bare assertion, it should be
supported by independent evidence. Moreover, because he was the owner of
private respondent corporation[32] whatever testimony he would give with
regard to the value of the lost vessel, its equipment and cargoes should be
viewed in the light of his self-interest therein. We agree with the Court of
Appeals that his testimony as to the equipment installed and the cargoes
loaded on the vessel should be given credence[33] considering his familiarity
thereto. However, we do not subscribe to the conclusion that his valuationof
such equipment, cargo and the vessel itself should be accepted as gospel
truth.[34] We must, therefore, examine the documentary evidence presented
to support Del Rosarios claim as regards the amount of losses.
In this case, actual damages were proven through the sole testimony of
private respondents general manager and certain pieces of documentary
evidence. Except for Exhibit B where the value of the 1,050 baeras of fish
were pegged at their September 1977 value when the collision happened, the
pieces of documentary evidence proffered by private respondent with respect
to items and equipment lost show similar items and equipment with
corresponding prices in early 1987 or approximately ten (10) years after the
vvvvvvvvv
T E R M S : CASH
DELIVERY : 60-90 days from date of order.
VALIDITY : Subject to our final confirmation.
WARRANTY : One (1) full year against factory defect.
Very truly yours,
POWER SYSTEMS, INC.
(Sgd.)
E. D. Daclan
To be sure, letters and telegrams are admissible in evidence but these
are, however, subject to the general principles of evidence and to various
rules relating to documentary evidence.[42] Hence, in one case, it was held
that a letter from an automobile dealer offering an allowance for an
automobile upon purchase of a new automobile after repairs had been
completed, was not a price current or commercial list within the statute
which made such items presumptive evidence of the value of the article
specified therein. The letter was not admissible in evidence as a commercial
list even though the clerk of the dealer testified that he had written the letter
in due course of business upon instructions of the dealer.[43]
But even on the theory that the Court of Appeals correctly ruled on
the admissibility of those letters or communications when it held that
unless plainly irrelevant, immaterial or incompetent, evidence should better
be admitted rather than rejected on doubtful or technical grounds,[44] the
same pieces of evidence, however, should not have been given probative
weight. This is a distinction we wish to point out. Admissibility of evidence
refers to the question of whether or not the circumstance (or evidence) is to
considered at all.[45] On the other hand, the probative value of evidence
refers to the question of whether or not it proves an issue.[46] Thus, a letter
may be offered in evidence and admitted as such but its evidentiary weight
depends upon the observance of the rules on evidence. Accordingly, the
author of the letter should be presented as witness to provide the other party
to the litigation the opportunity to question him on the contents of the
letter. Being mere hearsay evidence, failure to present the author of the
letter renders its contents suspect. As earlier stated, hearsay evidence,
whether objected to or not, has no probative value. Thus:
The courts differ as to the weight to be given to hearsay evidence admitted
without objection. Some hold that when hearsay has been admitted without
objection, the same may be considered as any other properly admitted
testimony.Others maintain that it is entitled to no more consideration than if
it had been excluded.
The rule prevailing in this jurisdiction is the latter one. Our Supreme Court
held that although the question of admissibility of evidence can not be raised
for the first time on appeal, yet if the evidence is hearsay it has no probative
value and should be disregarded whether objected to or not. `If no objection
is made quoting Jones on Evidence - `it (hearsay) becomes evidence by
reason of the want of such objection even though its admission does not
confer upon it any new attribute in point of weight. Its nature and quality
remain the same, so far as its intrinsic weakness and incompetency to satisfy
the mind are concerned, and as opposed to direct primary evidence, the
latter always prevails.
The failure of the defense counsel to object to the presentation of
incompetent evidence, like hearsay evidence or evidence that violates the
rules of res inter alios acta, or his failure to ask for the striking out of the
same does not give such evidence any probative value. But admissibility of
evidence should not be equated with weight of evidence. Hearsay evidence
whether objected to or not has no probative value.[47]
Accordingly, as stated at the outset, damages may not be awarded on the
basis of hearsay evidence.[48]
Nonetheless, the non-admissibility of said exhibits does not mean that it
totally deprives private respondent of any redress for the loss of its
vessel. This is because in Lufthansa German Airlines v. Court of
Appeals,[49] the Court said:
In the absence of competent proof on the actual damage suffered, private
respondent is `entitled to nominal damages which, as the law says, is
adjudicated in order that a right of the plaintiff, which has been violated or
invaded by defendant, may be vindicated and recognized, and not for the
purpose of indemnifying the plaintiff for any loss suffered. [Underscoring
supplied].
Nominal damages are awarded in every obligation arising from law,
contracts, quasi-contracts, acts or omissions punished by law, and quasidelicts, or in every case where property right has been invaded.[50] Under
Article 2223 of the Civil Code, (t)he adjudication of nominal damages shall
preclude further contest upon the right involved and all accessory questions,
as between the parties to the suit, or their respective heirs and assigns.
Actually, nominal damages are damages in name only and not in
fact. Where these are allowed, they are not treated as an equivalent of a
wrong inflicted but simply in recognition of the existence of a technical injury.
[51] However, the amount to be awarded as nominal damages shall be equal
or at least commensurate to the injury sustained by private respondent
considering the concept and purpose of such damages.[52] The amount of
nominal damages to be awarded may also depend on certain special reasons
extant in the case.[53]
Applying now such principles to the instant case, we have on record the
fact that petitioners vessel Petroparcel was at fault as well as private
respondents complaint claiming the amount of P692,680.00 representing the
fishing nets, boat equipment and cargoes that sunk with the M/V Maria
Efigenia XV. In its amended complaint, private respondent alleged that the
vessel had an actual value of P800,000.00 but it had been paid insurance in
the amount of P200,000.00 and, therefore, it claimed only the amount
of P600,000.00. Ordinarily, the receipt of insurance payments should diminish
the total value of the vessel quoted by private respondent in his complaint
considering that such payment is causally related to the loss for which it
claimed compensation. This Court believes that such allegations in the
original and amended complaints can be the basis for determination of a fair
amount of nominal damages inasmuch as a complaint alleges the ultimate
facts constituting the plaintiff's cause of action.[54] Private respondent
should be bound by its allegations on the amount of its claims.
With respect to petitioners contention that the lower court did not
acquire jurisdiction over the amended complaint increasing the amount of
damages claimed to P600,000.00, we agree with the Court of Appeals that
the lower court acquired jurisdiction over the case when private respondent
paid the docket fee corresponding to its claim in its original complaint. Its
failure to pay the docket fee corresponding to its increased claim for
damages under the amended complaint should not be considered as having
curtailed the lower courts jurisdiction. Pursuant to the ruling in Sun
Insurance Office, Ltd. (SIOL) v. Asuncion,[55] the unpaid docket fee
should be considered as a lien on the judgment even though private
respondent specified the amount of P600,000.00 as its claim for damages in
its amended complaint.
Moreover, we note that petitioner did not question at all the jurisdiction
of the lower court on the ground of insufficient docket fees in its answers to
both the amended complaint and the second amended complaint. It did so
only in its motion for reconsideration of the decision of the lower court after it
had received an adverse decision. As this Court held in Pantranco North
Express, Inc. v. Court of Appeals,[56] participation in all stages of the
case before the trial court, that included invoking its authority in asking for
affirmative relief, effectively barred petitioner by estoppel from challenging
the courts jurisdiction. Notably, from the time it filed its answer to the second
amended complaint on April 16, 1985,[57] petitioner did not question the
lower courts jurisdiction. It was only on December 29, 1989[58] when it filed
its motion for reconsideration of the lower courts decision that petitioner
raised the question of the lower courts lack of jurisdiction. Petitioner thus
foreclosed its right to raise the issue of jurisdiction by its own inaction.
WHEREFORE, the challenged decision of the Court of Appeals dated
October 14, 1992 in CA-G. R. CV No. 26680 affirming that of the Regional Trial
Court of Caloocan City, Branch 121, is hereby MODIFIED insofar as it awarded
actual damages to private respondent Maria Efigenia Fishing Corporation in
the
amount
of P6,438,048.00
for
lack
of
evidentiary
bases
therefor. Considering the fact, however, that: (1) technically petitioner
sustained injury but which, unfortunately, was not adequately and properly
proved, and (2) this case has dragged on for almost two decades, we believe
that an award of Two Million (P2,000,000.00)[59] in favor of private
respondent as and for nominal damages is in order.
No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
reason of the dismissal with prejudice of Civil Case 26909 of the Court of First
Instance of Manila; and that, even on the merits, plaintiffs [the present
petitioners] have not made out their case with sufficient evidence," and
dismissed the complaint, without costs.
CARMELITA
TAN
and
RODOLFO
TAN, petitioners,
vs.
COURT OF APPEALS and FRANCISCO TAN (alias Tan Uh Bak and Tan
Seng Ka), respondents.
Amando
Asis
for
Taada, Teehankee and Carreon for respondents.
petitioners.
SANCHEZ, J.:
The present is a suit aimed at establishing a children-to-father, illegitimate
relationship between petitioners and the principal respondent Francisco Tan,
and to compel the latter to support petitioners.
The background facts follow:
On July 22, 1955, petitioners, thru their mother Celestina Daldo as
guardian ad litem, sued respondent Tan in the Court of First Instance of
Manila for acknowledgment and support (Civil Case 26909). 1wph1.t
On March 26, 1956, Celestina Daldo after petitioners had already
presented oral and documentary evidence and were about to rest their case
moved to dismiss the foregoing civil case upon the ground that the parties
had come to an amicable settlement, and prayed that the same be dismissed
with prejudice and without recourse of appeal.
On the same day, March 26, 1956, Celestina Daldo subscribed before the
clerk of the Court of First Instance of Manila to an affidavit categorically
stating that respondent Francisco Tan, defendant in Civil Case 26909, "is not
the father of my said minor children named Carmelita and Rodolfo (herein
petitioners) but another person whose name I cannot divulge"; and that she
prepared said affidavit precisely "to record what is true and to correct what
misinterpretation may arise in the future".
On March 26, 1956, the Court of First Instance of Manila issued the following
order:
The controlling statute is Section 37, Rule 123 of the 1940 Rules of Court,
now Section 41, Rule 130, viz:
As prayed for by plaintiffs in their motion filed today for the dismissal
of their complaint, on the ground that the parties have already come
to an amicable settlement, with the conformity of counsel for
defendant, the Court hereby orders this case dismissed with prejudice
and without pronouncement as to costs.
On November 25, 1957 one year and eight months after Civil Case 26909
was dismissed petitioners, this time thru their maternal grandfather
Servillano Daldo as guardian ad litem, commenced the present action before
the Juvenile & Domestic Relations Court (Civil Case 00855) for
acknowledgment and support, involving the same parties, cause of action
and subject matter.
On September 10, 1960, then Judge Juan P. Enriquez (Judge of the Court of
First Instance of Manila detailed to preside over the Juvenile & Domestic
Relations Court in the absence of the presiding Judge thereof who was on
leave rendered judgment declaring that "the present case is res judicata by
But are their testimonies in the former trial within the coverage of the rule of
admissibility set forth in Section 41, Rule 130? These witnesses are not dead.
They are not outside of the Philippines. Can they be categorized as witnesses
of the class unable to testify? The Court of Appeals, construing this term, held
that "subsequent failure or refusal to appear thereat [second trial] or hostility
since testifying at the first trial does not amount to inability to testify, but
such inability proceeding from a grave cause, almost amounting to death, as
when the witness is old and has lost the power of speech. (Griffith vs. Sauls,
77 Tex 630, 14 S.W. 230, 231; section 37 of Rule 123, Rules of Court)."
Here, the witnesses in question were available. Only, they refused to testify.
No other person that prevented them from testifying, is cited. Certainly, they
do not come within the legal purview of those unable to testify.
Besides in the situation here presented, petitioners are not at all bereft of
remedy. They could have urged the court to have said witnesses arrested,
punished for contempt.1 After all, these remedies are in the statute books to
help litigants in the prosecution of their cases. Petitioners failed to avail of
these remedies, went ahead and submitted their case.
We note petitioners' argument that to follow strictly the law of admissibility of
testimony in former trials, is to permit party litigants to buy witnesses to
dissuade them from testifying again. Nothing extant in the record will as
much as intimate that respondent was responsible for the non-appearance of
these witnesses. The danger of tampering with witnesses is a problem that
attends trials in many a time and in number of imaginable situations. And,
petitioners argument works both ways. Because, witnesses at the former trial
can be bought not to testify at the second trial, in just the same way that
they could have been bought to give their original testimony. Solution of this
problem lies elsewhere, not in the non-enforcement of Section 41, Rule 130 of
the Rules of Court.
2. The procedural problem out of the way, we go direct to the merits.
Petitioners tried to prove that Celestina Daldo and respondent Francisco
Tan lived together as husband and wife for more than eight years
commencing from 1936 to 1944. Petitioners Carmelita Tan and Rodolfo Tan
are allegedly the fruits of such cohabitation. Respondent stoutly denies this
claim, avers that he is very much a married man with children. Celestina
Daldo, by her own admission, had been a nursemaid (yaya) in respondent's
residence but for l short period of not less than one year in 1939. Carmelita
was born on May 8, 1942 and Rodolfo, on September 11, 1944. The validity of
the testimony of petitioners' witnesses in the present case was considerably
downgraded by the affidavit of Celestina Daldo, heretofore adverted to,
attached to the record of the former Case 26909. In that affidavit, Celestina
deposed that petitioners were not fathered by Francisco Tan, but, in
Celestina's own words, by "another person whose name I cannot divulge."
Striking is the fact that this affidavit was executed after petitioners in the
former case had finished with their oral and documentary evidence and were
about to submit their case. By then, their counsel had a grasp of the
situation. Petitioners and their guardian ad litem could have known whether
they had reasonably made out a case against respondent.
Correctly then did the Court of Appeals rule out the probative value of
petitioners' evidence and found for respondent. On this point the Court of
Appeals said:
... we now come to the resolution of the second point; i.e., whether or
not the plaintiffs have sufficiently proved their case. We have gone
over and examined thoroughly the arguments and evidence of the
parties, and we find that the evidence for the plaintiffs-appellees fall
short of the requirement of clear strong and convincing evidence.
Such evidence is necessary whether to prove legitimate or illigitimate
paternity and filiation, considering the seriousness of the relationship
We agree with the findings of the trial court in its original correctly
appreciating the evidence of the plaintiffs as unsatisfactory and
insufficient, in view of the following considerations;
(1) That Exhibits H and I, former testimonies of witnesses in Civil Case
No. 26909, are inadmissible. ...
(2) That the baptismal certificates, Exhs. A and C are not admissible
proofs of filiation (Malonda vs. Malonda, 45 O.G. 5468; Pareja vs.
Pareja, G.R. L-3824, prom. May 31, 1954; Capistrano vs. Gabino, 8
Phil. 135; Adriano vs. De Jesus, 23 Phil. 350; Madridejo vs. Leon, 55
Phil. 1) The birth certificate Exhibit B is likewise inadmissible against
the defendant because it failed to comply with Section 5 of Act 3753.
The alleged illegitimate father did not sign under oath the said birth
certificate (Roces vs. Local Civil Registrar of Manila, G.R. L-10598,
prom. February 14, 1958; Crisolo vs. Macadaeg, G.R. L-7017 prom.
April 29, 1954).
It should be noted that said baptismal certificates are also useless to
prove the dates of birth of the appellees-minors, considering that the
period of cohabitation or any intimate relations at all between their
mother and the appellant has been denied and that same has not
been satisfactorily proved. Stated in another way, the date of birth as
appearing in the birth certificate would be material only if it coincides
with the period of cohabitation as admitted or sufficiently proved. To
reason otherwise would be to put the cart before the horse, so to
speak.
(3) The oral evidence for the plaintiffs, consisting principally of the
testimonies of the grandfather and of the mother of the minors, are
unsatisfactory, being inconsistent and contradictory on material
points, and unbelievable. The loose character of the mother of the
minors who admittedly had lived and begotten children with several
men of different nationalities, cannot also be overlooked. Weighed
against each other, the evidence for the plaintiffs do not tip the
scales in their favor as against the defendant-appellant. We are not
convinced, by preponderance of evidence, that appellant is the father
of the minor appellees. ...
Section 2, Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, formerly Section 2, Rule 46 of the
1940 Rules, employs the commanding language that "[o]nly questions of law
may be raised" in an appeal by certiorari from a judgment of the Court of
Appeals. That judgment, jurisprudence teaches, is conclusive as to the facts.
We are not to alter said facts they bind us, or to review the questions of
fact.2
Having reached the conclusion that, on the merits, petitioners made no case,
it is unnecessary for us to pass upon the other questions raised on appeal.
For the reasons given, we vote to affirm the judgment of the Court of Appeals
under review. No costs in all instances. So ordered.
2. The identity of the drivers and the fact that they are duly licensed;
3. The date and place of the vehicular collision;
4. The extent of the injuries suffered by plaintiff Modesto Calaunan
and the existence of the medical certificate;
MAURICIO
MANLICLIC
and PHILIPPINE
INC., Petitioners,
vs.
MODESTO CALAUNAN, Respondent.
RABBIT
BUS
LINES,
DECISION
CHICO-NAZARIO, J.:
Assailed before Us is the decision 1 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No.
55909 which affirmed in toto the decision 2 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of
Dagupan City, Branch 42, in Civil Case No. D-10086, finding petitioners
Mauricio Manliclic and Philippine Rabbit Bus Lines, Inc. (PRBLI) solidarily liable
to pay damages and attorneys fees to respondent Modesto Calaunan.
The factual antecedents are as follows:
The vehicles involved in this case are: (1) Philippine Rabbit Bus No. 353 with
plate number CVD-478, owned by petitioner PRBLI and driven by petitioner
Mauricio Manliclic; and (2) owner-type jeep with plate number PER-290,
owned by respondent Modesto Calaunan and driven by Marcelo Mendoza.
At around 6:00 to 7:00 oclock in the morning of 12 July 1988, respondent
Calaunan, together with Marcelo Mendoza, was on his way to Manila from
Pangasinan on board his owner-type jeep. The Philippine Rabbit Bus was
likewise bound for Manila from Concepcion, Tarlac. At approximately
Kilometer 40 of the North Luzon Expressway in Barangay Lalangan, Plaridel,
Bulacan, the two vehicles collided. The front right side of the Philippine
Rabbit Bus hit the rear left side of the jeep causing the latter to move to the
shoulder on the right and then fall on a ditch with water resulting to further
extensive damage. The bus veered to the left and stopped 7 to 8 meters from
point of collision.
Respondent suffered minor injuries while his driver was unhurt. He was first
brought for treatment to the Manila Central University Hospital in Kalookan
City by Oscar Buan, the conductor of the Philippine Rabbit Bus, and was later
transferred to the Veterans Memorial Medical Center.
By reason of such collision, a criminal case was filed before the RTC of
Malolos, Bulacan, charging petitioner Manliclic with Reckless Imprudence
Resulting in Damage to Property with Physical Injuries, docketed as Crim.
Case No. 684-M-89. Subsequently on 2 December 1991, respondent filed a
complaint for damages against petitioners Manliclic and PRBLI before the RTC
of Dagupan City, docketed as Civil Case No. D-10086. The criminal case was
tried ahead of the civil case. Among those who testified in the criminal case
were respondent Calaunan, Marcelo Mendoza and Fernando Ramos.
In the civil case (now before this Court), the parties admitted the following:
1. The parties agreed on the capacity of the parties to sue and be
sued as well as the venue and the identities of the vehicles involved;
5. That both vehicles were going towards the south; the private jeep
being ahead of the bus;
6. That the weather was fair and the road was well paved and
straight, although there was a ditch on the right side where the jeep
fell into.3
When the civil case was heard, counsel for respondent prayed that the
transcripts of stenographic notes (TSNs) 4of the testimonies of respondent
Calaunan, Marcelo Mendoza and Fernando Ramos in the criminal case be
received in evidence in the civil case in as much as these witnesses are not
available to testify in the civil case.
Francisco Tuliao testified that his brother-in-law, respondent Calaunan, left for
abroad sometime in November, 1989 and has not returned since then.
Rogelio Ramos took the stand and said that his brother, Fernando Ramos, left
for Amman, Jordan, to work. Rosalia Mendoza testified that her husband,
Marcelo Mendoza, left their residence to look for a job. She narrated that she
thought her husband went to his hometown in Panique, Tarlac, when he did
not return after one month. She went to her husbands hometown to look for
him but she was informed that he did not go there.1awphil.net
The trial court subpoenaed the Clerk of Court of Branch 8, RTC, Malolos,
Bulacan, the court where Criminal Case No. 684-M-89 was tried, to bring the
TSNs of the testimonies of respondent Calaunan, 5 Marcelo Mendoza6 and
Fernando Ramos7 in said case, together with other documentary evidence
marked therein. Instead of the Branch Clerk of Court, it was Enrique Santos
Guevara, Court Interpreter, who appeared before the court and identified the
TSNs of the three afore-named witnesses and other pertinent documents he
had brought.8 Counsel for respondent wanted to mark other TSNs and
documents from the said criminal case to be adopted in the instant case, but
since the same were not brought to the trial court, counsel for petitioners
compromised that said TSNs and documents could be offered by counsel for
respondent as rebuttal evidence.
For the defendants, petitioner Manliclic and bus conductor Oscar Buan
testified. The TSN9 of the testimony of Donato Ganiban, investigator of the
PRBLI, in Criminal Case No. 684-M-89 was marked and allowed to be adopted
in the civil case on the ground that he was already dead.
Respondent further marked, among other documents, as rebuttal evidence,
the TSNs10 of the testimonies of Donato Ganiban, Oscar Buan and petitioner
Manliclic in Criminal Case No. 684-M-89.
The disagreement arises from the question: Who is to be held liable for the
collision?
Respondent insists it was petitioner Manliclic who should be liable while the
latter is resolute in saying it was the former who caused the smash up.
The versions of the parties are summarized by the trial court as follows:
The parties differed only on the manner the collision between the two (2)
vehicles took place. According to the plaintiff and his driver, the jeep was
cruising at the speed of 60 to 70 kilometers per hour on the slow lane of the
expressway when the Philippine Rabbit Bus overtook the jeep and in the
process of overtaking the jeep, the Philippine Rabbit Bus hit the rear of the
jeep on the left side. At the time the Philippine Rabbit Bus hit the jeep, it was
about to overtake the jeep. In other words, the Philippine Rabbit Bus was still
at the back of the jeep when the jeep was hit. Fernando Ramos corroborated
the testimony of the plaintiff and Marcelo Mendoza. He said that he was on
another jeep following the Philippine Rabbit Bus and the jeep of plaintiff when
the incident took place. He said, the jeep of the plaintiff overtook them and
the said jeep of the plaintiff was followed by the Philippine Rabbit Bus which
was running very fast. The bus also overtook the jeep in which he was riding.
After that, he heard a loud sound. He saw the jeep of the plaintiff swerved to
the right on a grassy portion of the road. The Philippine Rabbit Bus stopped
and they overtook the Philippine Rabbit Bus so that it could not moved (sic),
meaning they stopped in front of the Philippine Rabbit Bus. He testified that
the jeep of plaintiff swerved to the right because it was bumped by the
Philippine Rabbit bus from behind.
Both Mauricio Manliclic and his driver, Oscar Buan admitted that the
Philippine Rabbit Bus bumped the jeep in question. However, they explained
that when the Philippine Rabbit bus was about to go to the left lane to
overtake the jeep, the latter jeep swerved to the left because it was to
overtake another jeep in front of it. Such was their testimony before the RTC
in Malolos in the criminal case and before this Court in the instant case.
[Thus, which of the two versions of the manner how the collision took place
was correct, would be determinative of who between the two drivers was
negligent in the operation of their respective vehicles.]11
Petitioner PRBLI maintained that it observed and exercised the diligence of a
good father of a family in the selection and supervision of its employee,
specifically petitioner Manliclic.
On 22 July 1996, the trial court rendered its decision in favor of respondent
Calaunan and against petitioners Manliclic and PRBLI. The dispositive portion
of its decision reads:
I
THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED ON A QUESTION OF LAW IN
AFFIRMING THE TRIAL COURTS QUESTIONABLE ADMISSION IN
EVIDENCE OF THE TSNs AND OTHER DOCUMENTS PRESENTED
IN THE CRIMINAL CASE.
II
THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED ON A QUESTION OF LAW IN
AFFIRMING THE TRIAL COURTS RELIANCE ON THE VERSION OF
THE RESPONDENT ON HOW THE ACCIDENT SUPPOSEDLY
OCCURRED.
III
THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED ON A QUESTION OF LAW IN
AFFIRMING THE TRIAL COURTS UNFAIR DISREGARD OF HEREIN
PETITIONER PRBLs DEFENSE OF EXERCISE OF DUE DILIGENCE IN
THE SELECTION AND SUPERVISION OF ITS EMPLOYEES.
IV
THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED ON A QUESTION OF LAW IN
AFFIRMING THE TRIAL COURTS QUESTIONABLE AWARD OF
DAMAGES AND ATTORNEYS FEE.
With the passing away of respondent Calaunan during the pendency of this
appeal with this Court, we granted the Motion for the Substitution of
Respondent filed by his wife, Mrs. Precila Zarate Vda. De Calaunan, and
children, Virgilio Calaunan, Carmelita Honeycomb, Evelyn Calaunan, Marko
Calaunan and Liwayway Calaunan.15
In their Reply to respondents Comment, petitioners informed this Court of a
Decision16 of the Court of Appeals acquitting petitioner Manliclic of the
For Section 47, Rule 13021 to apply, the following requisites must be
satisfied: (a) the witness is dead or unable to testify; (b) his testimony or
deposition was given in a former case or proceeding, judicial or
administrative, between the same parties or those representing the same
interests; (c) the former case involved the same subject as that in the present
case, although on different causes of action; (d) the issue testified to by the
witness in the former trial is the same issue involved in the present case; and
(e) the adverse party had an opportunity to cross-examine the witness in the
On the first assigned error, petitioners argue that the TSNs containing the
testimonies of respondent Calaunan,18Marcelo Mendoza19 and Fernando
Ramos20 should not be admitted in evidence for failure of respondent to
comply with the requisites of Section 47, Rule 130 of the Rules of Court.
former case.22
Admittedly, respondent failed to show the concurrence of all the requisites
set forth by the Rules for a testimony given in a former case or proceeding to
be admissible as an exception to the hearsay rule. Petitioner PRBLI, not being
a party in Criminal Case No. 684-M-89, had no opportunity to cross-examine
the three witnesses in said case. The criminal case was filed exclusively
against petitioner Manliclic, petitioner PRBLIs employee. The cases dealing
with the subsidiary liability of employers uniformly declare that, strictly
speaking, they are not parties to the criminal cases instituted against their
employees.23
Notwithstanding the fact that petitioner PRBLI was not a party in said criminal
case, the testimonies of the three witnesses are still admissible on the
ground that petitioner PRBLI failed to object on their admissibility.
It is elementary that an objection shall be made at the time when an alleged
inadmissible document is offered in evidence; otherwise, the objection shall
be treated as waived, since the right to object is merely a privilege which the
party may waive. Thus, a failure to except to the evidence because it does
not conform to the statute is a waiver of the provisions of the law. Even
assuming ex gratia argumenti that these documents are inadmissible for
being hearsay, but on account of failure to object thereto, the same may be
admitted and considered as sufficient to prove the facts therein
asserted.24 Hearsay evidence alone may be insufficient to establish a fact in
a suit but, when no objection is made thereto, it is, like any other evidence, to
be considered and given the importance it deserves. 25
In the case at bar, petitioner PRBLI did not object to the TSNs containing the
testimonies of respondent Calaunan, Marcelo Mendoza and Fernando Ramos
in the criminal case when the same were offered in evidence in the trial
court. In fact, the TSNs of the testimonies of Calaunan and Mendoza were
admitted by both petitioners. 26Moreover, petitioner PRBLI even offered in
evidence the TSN containing the testimony of Donato Ganiban in the criminal
case. If petitioner PRBLI argues that the TSNs of the testimonies of plaintiffs
witnesses in the criminal case should not be admitted in the instant case,
why then did it offer the TSN of the testimony of Ganiban which was given in
the criminal case? It appears that petitioner PRBLI wants to have its cake and
eat it too. It cannot argue that the TSNs of the testimonies of the witnesses of
the adverse party in the criminal case should not be admitted and at the
same time insist that the TSN of the testimony of the witness for the accused
be admitted in its favor. To disallow admission in evidence of the TSNs of the
testimonies of Calaunan, Marcelo Mendoza and Fernando Ramos in the
criminal case and to admit the TSN of the testimony of Ganiban would be
unfair.
We do not subscribe to petitioner PRBLIs argument that it will be denied due
process when the TSNs of the testimonies of Calaunan, Marcelo Mendoza and
Fernando Ramos in the criminal case are to be admitted in the civil case. It is
too late for petitioner PRBLI to raise denial of due process in relation to
Section 47, Rule 130 of the Rules of Court, as a ground for objecting to the
admissibility of the TSNs. For failure to object at the proper time, it waived its
right to object that the TSNs did not comply with Section 47.
In Mangio v. Court of Appeals,27 this Court, through Associate Justice
petitioner Manliclic who was negligent in driving the PRBLI bus which was the
cause of the collision. In giving credence to the version of the respondent, the
trial court has this say:
x x x Thus, which of the two versions of the manner how the collision took
place was correct, would be determinative of who between the two drivers
was negligent in the operation of their respective vehicle.
In this regard, it should be noted that in the statement of Mauricio Manliclic
(Exh. 15) given to the Philippine Rabbit Investigator CV Cabading no mention
was made by him about the fact that the driver of the jeep was overtaking
another jeep when the collision took place. The allegation that another jeep
was being overtaken by the jeep of Calaunan was testified to by him only in
Crim. Case No. 684-M-89 before the Regional Trial Court in Malolos, Bulacan
and before this Court. Evidently, it was a product of an afterthought on the
part of Mauricio Manliclic so that he could explain why he should not be held
responsible for the incident. His attempt to veer away from the truth was also
apparent when it would be considered that in his statement given to the
Philippine Rabbit Investigator CV Cabading (Exh. 15), he alleged that the
Philippine Rabbit Bus bumped the jeep of Calaunan while the Philippine
Rabbit Bus was behind the said jeep. In his testimony before the Regional
Trial Court in Malolos, Bulacan as well as in this Court, he alleged that the
Philippine Rabbit Bus was already on the left side of the jeep when the
collision took place. For this inconsistency between his statement and
testimony, his explanation regarding the manner of how the collision between
the jeep and the bus took place should be taken with caution. It might be true
that in the statement of Oscar Buan given to the Philippine Rabbit
Investigator CV Cabading, it was mentioned by the former that the jeep of
plaintiff was in the act of overtaking another jeep when the collision between
the latter jeep and the Philippine Rabbit Bus took place. But the fact,
however, that his statement was given on July 15, 1988, one day after
Mauricio Manliclic gave his statement should not escape attention. The oneday difference between the giving of the two statements would be significant
enough to entertain the possibility of Oscar Buan having received legal
advise before giving his statement. Apart from that, as between his
statement and the statement of Manliclic himself, the statement of the latter
should prevail. Besides, in his Affidavit of March 10, 1989, (Exh. 14), the
unreliability of the statement of Oscar Buan (Exh. 13) given to CV Cabading
rear its "ugly head" when he did not mention in said affidavit that the jeep of
Calaunan was trying to overtake another jeep when the collision between the
jeep in question and the Philippine Rabbit bus took place.
xxxx
If one would believe the testimony of the defendant, Mauricio Manliclic, and
his conductor, Oscar Buan, that the Philippine Rabbit Bus was already
somewhat parallel to the jeep when the collision took place, the point of
collision on the jeep should have been somewhat on the left side thereof
rather than on its rear. Furthermore, the jeep should have fallen on the road
itself rather than having been forced off the road. Useless, likewise to
emphasize that the Philippine Rabbit was running very fast as testified to by
Ramos which was not controverted by the defendants.40
Having ruled that it was petitioner Manliclics negligence that caused the
smash up, there arises the juris tantum presumption that the employer is
negligent, rebuttable only by proof of observance of the diligence of a good
father of a family.41 Under Article 218042 of the New Civil Code, when an
injury is caused by the negligence of the employee, there instantly arises a
presumption of law that there was negligence on the part of the master or
employer either in the selection of the servant or employee, or in supervision
over him after selection or both. The liability of the employer under Article
2180 is direct and immediate; it is not conditioned upon prior recourse
against the negligent employee and a prior showing of the insolvency of such
employee. Therefore, it is incumbent upon the private respondents to prove
that they exercised the diligence of a good father of a family in the selection
and supervision of their employee.43
In the case at bar, petitioner PRBLI maintains that it had shown that it
exercised the required diligence in the selection and supervision of its
employees, particularly petitioner Manliclic. In the matter of selection, it
showed the screening process that petitioner Manliclic underwent before he
became a regular driver. As to the exercise of due diligence in the supervision
of its employees, it argues that presence of ready investigators (Ganiban and
Cabading) is sufficient proof that it exercised the required due diligence in the
supervision of its employees.
In the selection of prospective employees, employers are required to examine
them as to their qualifications, experience and service records. In the
supervision of employees, the employer must formulate standard operating
procedures, monitor their implementation and impose disciplinary measures
for the breach thereof. To fend off vicarious liability, employers must submit
concrete proof, including documentary evidence, that they complied with
everything that was incumbent on them.44
In Metro Manila Transit Corporation v. Court of Appeals, 45 it was explained
that:
Due diligence in the supervision of employees on the other hand, includes
the formulation of suitable rules and regulations for the guidance of
employees and the issuance of proper instructions intended for the
protection of the public and persons with whom the employer has relations
through his or its employees and the imposition of necessary disciplinary
measures upon employees in case of breach or as may be warranted to
ensure the performance of acts indispensable to the business of and
beneficial to their employer. To this, we add that actual implementation and
monitoring of consistent compliance with said rules should be the constant
concern of the employer, acting through dependable supervisors who should
regularly report on their supervisory functions.
In order that the defense of due diligence in the selection and supervision of
employees may be deemed sufficient and plausible, it is not enough to
emptily invoke the existence of said company guidelines and policies on
hiring and supervision. As the negligence of the employee gives rise to the
presumption of negligence on the part of the employer, the latter has the
burden of proving that it has been diligent not only in the selection of
employees but also in the actual supervision of their work. The mere
allegation of the existence of hiring procedures and supervisory policies,
without anything more, is decidedly not sufficient to overcome such
presumption.
We emphatically reiterate our holding, as a warning to all employers, that
"the formulation of various company policies on safety without showing that
they were being complied with is not sufficient to exempt petitioner from
liability arising from negligence of its employees. It is incumbent upon
petitioner to show that in recruiting and employing the erring driver the
recruitment procedures and company policies on efficiency and safety were
followed." x x x.
with the MODIFICATION that (1) the award of moral damages shall be reduced
to P50,000.00; and (2) the award of exemplary damages shall be lowered
to P50,000.00. Costs against petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
The trial court found that petitioner PRBLI exercised the diligence of a good
father of a family in the selection but not in the supervision of its employees.
It expounded as follows:
From the evidence of the defendants, it seems that the Philippine Rabbit Bus
Lines has a very good procedure of recruiting its driver as well as in the
maintenance of its vehicles. There is no evidence though that it is as good in
the supervision of its personnel. There has been no iota of evidence
introduced by it that there are rules promulgated by the bus company
regarding the safe operation of its vehicle and in the way its driver should
manage and operate the vehicles assigned to them. There is no showing that
somebody in the bus company has been employed to oversee how its driver
should behave while operating their vehicles without courting incidents
similar to the herein case. In regard to supervision, it is not difficult to
observe that the Philippine Rabbit Bus Lines, Inc. has been negligent as an
employer and it should be made responsible for the acts of its employees,
particularly the driver involved in this case.
We agree. The presence of ready investigators after the occurrence of the
accident is not enough to exempt petitioner PRBLI from liability arising from
the negligence of petitioner Manliclic. Same does not comply with the
guidelines set forth in the cases above-mentioned. The presence of the
investigators after the accident is not enough supervision. Regular
supervision of employees, that is, prior to any accident, should have been
shown and established. This, petitioner failed to do. The lack of supervision
can further be seen by the fact that there is only one set of manual
containing the rules and regulations for all the drivers of PRBLI. 46 How then
can all the drivers of petitioner PRBLI know and be continually informed of
the rules and regulations when only one manual is being lent to all the
drivers?
For failure to adduce proof that it exercised the diligence of a good father of a
family in the selection and supervision of its employees, petitioner PRBLI is
held solidarily responsible for the damages caused by petitioner Manliclics
negligence.
We now go to the award of damages. The trial court correctly awarded the
amount of P40,838.00 as actual damages representing the amount paid by
respondent for the towing and repair of his jeep. 47 As regards the awards for
moral and exemplary damages, same, under the circumstances, must be
modified. The P100,000.00 awarded by the trial court as moral damages
must be reduced to P50,000.00.48 Exemplary damages are imposed by way
of example or correction for the public good. 49 The amount awarded by the
trial court must, likewise, be lowered to P50,000.00.50 The award
of P15,000.00 for attorneys fees and expenses of litigation is in order and
authorized by law.51
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the instant petition for review is DENIED.
The decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 55909 is AFFIRMED
Promulgated:
December 3, 2009
x-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------x
DECISION
BRION, J.:
We review in this petition for review on certiorari[1] the decision dated March
7, 2008 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in C.A-G.R. AMPARO No. 00009.[2] This
CA decision confirmed the enforced disappearance of Engineer Morced N.
Tagitis (Tagitis) and granted the Writ of Amparo at the petition of his wife,
Mary Jean B. Tagitis (respondent). The dispositive portion of the CA decision
reads:
the disappearance. Responsibility refers to the extent the actors have been
WHEREFORE,
premises
considered,
petition
is
hereby GRANTED. The Court hereby FINDS that this is
an enforced disappearance within the meaning of the
United Nations instruments, as used in the Amparo
Rules. The privileges of the writ of amparo are hereby
extended to Engr. Morced Tagitis.
Consequently:
(1)
respondent GEN.
EDGARDO
M.
DOROMAL, Chief, Criminal Investigation and Detention
Group (CIDG) who should order COL. JOSE VOLPANE
PANTE, CIDG-9 Chief, Zamboanga City, to aid him; (2)
respondent GEN. AVELINO I. RAZON, Chief, PNP, who
should order his men, namely: (a) respondent GEN. JOEL
GOLTIAO, Regional Director of ARMM PNP, (b) COL. AHIRON
AJIRIM, both head of TASK FORCE TAGITIS, and (c)
respondent SR.
SUPERINTENDENT
LEONARDO
A.
ESPINA, Chief, Police Anti-Crime and Emergency Response,
to aid him as their superior- are hereby DIRECTED to
exert extraordinary diligence and efforts, not only to
protect the life, liberty and security of Engr. Morced Tagitis,
but also to extend the privileges of the writ of amparo to
Engr. Morced Tagitis and his family, and to submit a monthly
report of their actions to this Court, as a way ofPERIODIC
REVIEW to enable this Court to monitor the action of
respondents.
We highlight this nature of a Writ of Amparo case at the outset to stress that
the unique situations that call for the issuance of the writ, as well as the
considerations and measures necessary to address these situations, may not
This Decision reflects the nature of the Writ of Amparo a protective remedy
at all be the same as the standard measures and procedures in ordinary court
against violations or threats of violation against the rights to life, liberty and
actions
of Amparo[4] (Amparo Rule) issued by this Court is unique. The Amparo Rule
should be read, too, as a work in progress, as its directions and finer points
individual, in this case, Engr. Morced N. Tagitis.It does not determine guilt nor
remain to evolve through time and jurisprudence and through the substantive
pinpoint
criminal
culpability
for
the
disappearance;
rather,
it
and
proceedings. In
this
sense,
the
Rule
on
the
Writ
Chief, Criminal Investigation and Detention Group (CIDG); Sr. Supt. Leonardo
summarized below.
The established facts show that Tagitis, a consultant for the World Bank and
Goltiao, Regional Director, ARMM-PNP; and Gen. Ruben Rafael, Chief, Anti-
the Senior Honorary Counselor for the Islamic Development Bank (IDB)
Scholarship Programme, was last seen in Jolo, Sulu. Together with Arsimin
Tagitis personal circumstances and the facts outlined above, the petition
Kunnong (Kunnong), an IDB scholar, Tagitis arrived in Jolo by boat in the early
went on to state:
xxxx
7. Soon after the student left the room, Engr. Tagitis went out
of the pension house to take his early lunch but while out on
the street, a couple of burly men believed to be police
intelligence operatives, forcibly took him and boarded
the latter on a motor vehicle then sped away without
the knowledge of his student, Arsimin Kunnong;
Tagitis and even sent a text message to the latters Manila-based secretary
who did not know of Tagitis whereabouts and activities either; she advised
Kunnong to simply wait.[7]
professor of Muslim studies and Tagitis fellow student counselor at the IDB,
reported Tagitis disappearance to the Jolo Police Station.[8] On November 7,
2007, Kunnong executed a sworn affidavit attesting to what he knew of the
circumstances surrounding Tagitis disappearance.[9]
More than a month later (on December 28, 2007), the respondent filed a
Petition for the Writ of Amparo (petition) with the CA through her Attorney-inFact, Atty. Felipe P. Arcilla.[10] The petition was directed against Lt. Gen.
Alexander Yano, Commanding General, Philippine Army; Gen. Avelino I.
In their verified Return filed during the hearing of January 27, 2008, the
petitioners denied any involvement in or knowledge of Tagitis alleged
abduction. They argued that the allegations of the petition were incomplete
and did not constitute a cause of action against them; were baseless, or at
best speculative; and were merely based on hearsay evidence. [12]
The affidavit of PNP Chief Gen. Avelino I. Razon, attached to the Return,
stated that: he did not have any personal knowledge of, or any participation
in, the alleged disappearance; that he had been designated by President
divisions.
Gloria Macapagal Arroyo as the head of a special body called TASK FORCE
USIG,
to
address
concerns
about
extralegal
killings
and
enforced
disappearances; the Task Force, inter alia, coordinated with the investigators
and local police, held case conferences, rendered legal advice in connection
to these cases; and gave the following summary:[13]
xxxx
4.
a)
On November 5, 2007, the Regional Director,
Police Regional Office ARMM submitted a report on the
alleged disappearance of one Engr. Morced Tagitis. According
to the said report, the victim checked-in at ASY Pension
House on October 30, 2007 at about 6:00 in the morning and
then roamed around Jolo, Sulu with an unidentified
companion. It was only after a few days when the said victim
did not return that the matter was reported to Jolo
MPS. Afterwards, elements of Sulu PPO conducted a thorough
investigation to trace and locate the whereabouts of the said
missing person, but to no avail. The said PPO is still
conducting investigation that will lead to the immediate
findings of the whereabouts of the person.
b)
Likewise, the Regional Chief, 9RCIDU submitted a
Progress Report to the Director, CIDG. The said report stated
among others that: subject person attended an Education
Development Seminar set on October 28, 2007 conducted at
Ateneo de Zamboanga, Zamboanga City together with a Prof.
Matli. On October 30, 2007, at around 5:00 oclock in the
morning, Engr. Tagitis reportedly arrived at Jolo Sulu wharf
aboard M/V Bounty Cruise, he was then billeted at ASY
Pension House. At about 6:15 oclock in the morning of the
same date, he instructed his student to purchase a fast craft
ticket bound for Zamboanga City and will depart from Jolo,
Sulu on October 31, 2007. That on or about 10:00 oclock in
the morning, Engr. Tagitis left the premises of ASY Pension
House as stated by the cashier of the said pension
house. Later in the afternoon, the student instructed to
purchase the ticket arrived at the pension house and waited
for Engr. Tagitis, but the latter did not return. On its part, the
elements of 9RCIDU is now conducting a continuous case
build up and information gathering to locate the whereabouts
of Engr. Tagitis.
c)
That the Director, CIDG directed the conduct of
the search in all divisions of the CIDG to find Engr. Tagitis who
was allegedly abducted or illegally detained by covert CIDGPNP Intelligence Operatives since October 30, 2007, but after
diligent and thorough search, records show that no such
person is being detained in CIDG or any of its department or
Likewise attached to the Return of the Writ was PNP-PACER[15] Chief PS Supt.
Leonardo A. Espinas affidavit which alleged that:[16]
xxxx
That, I and our men and women in PACER vehemently deny
any participation in the alleged abduction or illegally [sic]
detention of ENGR. MORCED N. TAGITS on October 30,
2007. As a matter of fact, nowhere in the writ was mentioned
that the alleged abduction was perpetrated by elements of
PACER nor was there any indication that the alleged
abduction or illegal detention of ENGR. TAGITIS was
undertaken jointly by our men and by the alleged covert
CIDG-PNP intelligence operatives alleged to have abducted
or illegally detained ENGR. TAGITIS.
That I was shocked when I learned that I was implicated in
the alleged disappearance of ENGR. MORCED in my capacity
as the chief PACER [sic] considering that our office, the Police
Anti-Crime and Emergency Response (PACER), a special task
force created for the purpose of neutralizing or eradicating
kidnap-for-ransom groups which until now continue to be one
of the menace of our society is a respondent in kidnapping or
illegal detention case. Simply put, our task is to go after
kidnappers and charge them in court and to abduct or
illegally detain or kidnap anyone is anathema to our mission.
That right after I learned of the receipt of the WRIT OF
AMPARO, I directed the Chief of PACER Mindanao Oriental
(PACER-MOR) to conduct pro-active measures to investigate,
locate/search the subject, identify and apprehend the persons
responsible, to recover and preserve evidence related to the
disappearance of ENGR. MORCED TAGITIS, which may aid in
the prosecution of the person or persons responsible, to
identify witnesses and obtain statements from them
concerning the disappearance and to determine the cause,
manner, location and time of disappearance as well as any
pattern or practice that may have brought about the
disappearance.
That I further directed the chief of PACER-MOR, Police
Finally, the PNP PRO ARMM Regional Director PC Supt. Joel R. Goltiao (Gen.
Goltiao), also submitted his affidavit detailing the actions that he had taken
upon receipt of the report on Tagitis disappearance, viz:[17]
xxxx
3) For the record:
1.
I am the Regional Director of Police Regional
Office ARMM now and during the time of the incident;
xxxx
4. It is my duty to look into and take appropriate measures on
any cases of reported enforced disappearances and when
they are being alluded to my office;
5. On November 5, 2007, the Provincial Director of Sulu Police
Provincial Office reported to me through Radio Message Cite
No. SPNP3-1105-07-2007 that on November 4, 2007 at
around 3:30 p.m., a certain Abdulnasser Matli, an employee
of Islamic Development Bank, appeared before the Office of
the Chief of Police, Jolo Police Station, and reported the
disappearance
of
Engr.
Morced
Tagitis,
scholarship
coordinator of Islamic Development Bank, Manila;
6. There was no report that Engr. Tagibis was last seen in the
company of or taken by any member of the Philippine
National Police but rather he just disappeared from ASY
Pension House situated at Kakuyagan Village, Village, Patikul,
Sulu, on October 30, 2007, without any trace of forcible
abduction or arrest;
In the same hearing, PS Supt. Ajirim testified that since the CIDG was alleged
FORCE TAGITIS.[18]
On January 11, 2008, Gen. Goltiao designated PS Supt. Ahiron Ajirim (PS
Supt. Ajirim) to head TASK FORCE TAGITIS.[19] The CA subsequently set three
their supporting units to perform their respective tasks; that they even talked
to, but failed to get any lead from the respondent in Jolo.[26] In his submitted
hearing would be to mobilize the CIDG, Zamboanga City; (2) the second
hearing would be to mobilize intelligence with Abu Sayyaf and ARMM; and (3)
the third hearing would be to mobilize the Chief of Police of Jolo, Sulu and the
Chief of Police of Zamboanga City and other police operatives.[21]
In the hearing on January 17, 2008, TASK FORCE TAGITIS submitted to the CA
an intelligence report from PSL Usman S. Pingay, the Chief of Police of the
Jolo Police Station, stating a possible motive for Tagitis disappearance.
[22] The intelligence report was apparently based on the sworn affidavit
dated January 4, 2008 of Muhammad Abdulnazeir N. Matli (Prof. Matli),
Professor of Islamic Studies at the University of the Philippines and an
Honorary Student Counselor of the IDB Scholarship Program in the
xxxx
It is recommended that the Writ of Amparo filed against the
respondents be dropped and dismissed considering on [sic]
the police and military actions in the area particularly the
CIDG are exerting their efforts and religiously doing their
tasked [sic] in the conduct of its intelligence monitoring and
investigation for the early resolution of this instant case. But
rest assured, our office, in coordination with other lawenforcement agencies in the area, are continuously and
religiously conducting our investigation for the resolution of
this case.
On January 7, 2008, the respondent, Mary Jean B. Tagitis, testified on direct
examination that she went to Jolo and Zamboanga in her efforts to locate her
On February 4, 2008, the CA issued an ALARM WARNING that TASK FORCE
husband. She said that a friend from Zamboanga holding a high position in
TAGITIS did not appear to be exerting extraordinary efforts in resolving Tagitis
the military (whom she did not then identify) gave her information that
disappearance on the following grounds:[28]
allowed her to specify her allegations, particularly paragraph 15 of the
(1)
This Court FOUND that it was only as late as
January 28, 2008, after the hearing, that GEN. JOEL GOLTIAO
and COL. AHIRON AJIRIM had requested for clear photographs
when it should have been standard operating procedure in
kidnappings or disappearances that the first agenda was for
the police to secure clear pictures of the missing person,
Engr. Morced Tagitis, for dissemination to all parts of the
country and to neighboring countries. It had been three (3)
months since GEN. JOEL GOLTIAO admitted having
been informed on November 5, 2007 of the alleged
abduction of Engr. Morced Tagitis by alleged bad elements of
the CIDG. It had been more than one (1) month since the Writ
of Amparo had been issued on December 28, 2007. It had
been three (3) weeks when battle formation was ordered
through Task Force Tagitis, on January 17, 2008. It was only
on January 28, 2008 when the Task Force Tagitis requested for
clear and recent photographs of the missing person, Engr.
Morced Tagitis, despite the Task Force Tagitis claim that they
already had an all points bulletin, since November 5, 2007,
on the missing person, Engr. Morced Tagitis. How could the
police look for someone who disappeared if no clear
photograph had been disseminated?
(2)
Furthermore, Task Force Tagitis COL. AHIROM
AJIRIM informed this Court that P/Supt KASIM was designated
as Col. Ahirom Ajirims replacement in the latters official
designated post. Yet, P/Supt KASIMs subpoena was returned
to this Court unserved. Since this Court was made to
understand that it was P/Supt KASIM who was the petitioners
unofficial source of the military intelligence information that
Engr. Morced Tagitis was abducted by bad elements of the
CIDG (par. 15 of the Petition), the close contact between
P/Supt KASIM and Col. Ahirom Ajirim of TASK FORCE TAGITIS
should have ensured the appearance of Col. KASIM in
response to this courts subpoena and COL. KASIM could have
confirmed the military intelligence information that bad
elements of the CIDG had abducted Engr. Morced Tagitis.
petition.[29] This friend also told her that her husband [was] in good hands.
[30] The respondent also testified that she sought the assistance of her
former boss in Davao City, Land Bank Bajada Branch Manager Rudy Salvador,
who told her that PNP CIDG is holding [her husband], Engineer Morced Tagitis.
[31] The respondent recounted that she went to Camp Katitipan in Davao
City where she met Col. Julasirim Ahadin Kasim (Col. Kasim/Sr. Supt Kasim)
who read to her and her friends (who were then with her) a highly
confidential report that contained the alleged activities of Engineer Tagitis
and informed her that her husband was abducted because he is under
custodial investigation for being a liaison for J.I. or Jemaah Islamiah.[32]
report her husbands disappearance to the Jolo Police Station, since she had
the impression that her husband could not communicate with her because his
cellular phones battery did not have enough power, and that he would call
her when he had fully-charged his cellular phones battery.[36]
The respondent also identified the high-ranking military friend, who gave her
the information found in paragraph 15 of her petition, as Lt. Col. Pedro L.
Ancanan, Jr (Col. Ancanan). She met him in Camp Karingal, Zamboanga
through her boss.[37] She also testified that she was with three other people,
namely, Mrs. Marydel Martin Talbin and her two friends from Mati City, Davao
Oriental, when Col. Kasim read to them the contents of the highly confidential
report at Camp Katitipan, Davao City. The respondent further narrated that
the report indicated that her husband met with people belonging to a
terrorist group and that he was under custodial investigation. She then told
Col. Kasim that her husband was a diabetic taking maintenance medication,
and asked that the Colonel relay to the persons holding him the need to give
The respondent also narrated her encounter with Col. Kasim, as follows:[41]
On November 7, 2007, I went to Land Bank of the Philippines,
Bajada Branch, Davao City to meet Mr. Rudy Salvador. I told
him that my husband, Engineer Morced Tagitis was presumed
to be abducted in Jolo, Sulu on October 30, 2007. I asked him
a favor to contact his connections in the military in Jolo, Sulu
where the abduction of Engr. Tagitis took place. Mr. Salvador
immediately called up Camp Katitipan located in Davao City
looking for high-ranking official who can help me gather
reliable information behind the abduction of subject Engineer
Tagitis.
On that same day, Mr. Salvador and my friend, Anna
Mendoza, Executive Secretary, accompanied me to Camp
Katitipan to meet Col. Kasim. Mr. Salvador introduced me to
Col. Kasim and we had a short conversation. And he assured
Serrano and Mini Leong, to Camp Katitipan to talk to Col. Kasim.[44] The
respondent asked Col. Kasim if he knew the exact location of Engr.
Tagitis. Col. Kasim told them that Tagitis was in good hands, although he was
not certain whether he was with the PNP or with the Armed Forces of the
Philippines (AFP). She further recounted that based on the report Col. Kasim
read in their presence, Tagitis was under custodial investigation because he
was being charged with terrorism; Tagitis in fact had been under surveillance
since January 2007 up to the time he was abducted when he was seen talking
to Omar Patik and a certain Santos of Bulacan, a Balik Islam charged with
terrorism. Col. Kasim also told them that he could not give a copy of the
report because it was a raw report.[45] She also related that the Col. Kasim
did not tell them exactly where Tagitis was being kept, although he
mentioned
Talipapao,
Sulu.Prof., lalabas
din
yan.[50] Prof.
Matli
also
On February 11, 2008, the respondent presented Mrs. Marydel Martin Talbin
emphasized that despite what his January 4, 2008 affidavit indicated,[51] he
(Mrs. Talbin) to corroborate her testimony regarding her efforts to locate her
never told PS Supt. Pingay, or made any accusation, that Tagitis took away
husband, in relation particularly with the information she received from Col.
money entrusted to him.[52] Prof. Matli confirmed, however, that that he had
Kasim. Mrs. Talbin testified that she was with the respondent when she went
received an e-mail report[53] from Nuraya Lackian of the Office of Muslim
to Zamboanga to see Col. Ancanan, and to Davao City at Camp Katitipan to
Affairs in Manila that the IDB was seeking assistance of the office in locating
meet Col. Kasim.[42]
the funds of IDB scholars deposited in Tagitis personal account.[54]
In Zamboanga, Mrs. Talbin recounted that they met with Col. Ancanan, who
On cross-examination by the respondents counsel, Prof. Matli testified that his
told them that there was a report and that he showed them a series of text
January 4, 2008 affidavit was already prepared when PS Supt. Pingay asked
messages from Tagitis cellular phone, which showed that Tagitis and his
him to sign it.[55]Prof Matli clarified that although he read the affidavit before
daughter would meet in Manila on October 30, 2007.[43]
signing it, he was not so much aware of [its] contents.[56]
She further narrated that sometime on November 24, 2007, she went with
On February 11, 2008, the petitioners presented Col. Kasim to rebut material
CIDG-9, to disprove the respondents allegation that Tagitis was in the custody
stated that Tagitis was in the custody of either the military or the PNP.
of CIDG-Zamboanga City.[65] Col. Pante clarified that the CIDG was the
[57] Col. Kasim categorically denied the statements made by the respondent
investigative arm of the PNP, and that the CIDG investigates and prosecutes
in her narrative report, specifically: (1) that Tagitis was seen carrying boxes of
all cases involving violations in the Revised Penal Code particularly those
medicines as supplier for the injured terrorists; (2) that Tagitis was under the
Tagitis was baseless, since they did not conduct any operation in Jolo, Sulu
armed abductors; and (3) that Tagitis was under custodial investigation by
before or after Tagitis reported disappearance.[67] Col. Pante added that the
the
Kasim
four (4) personnel assigned to the Sulu CIDT had no capability to conduct any
emphasized that the informal letter he received from his informant in Sulu did
not indicate that Tagitis was in the custody of the CIDG.[59] He also stressed
monitor the terrorism situation.[68] He denied that his office conducted any
that the information he provided to the respondent was merely a raw report
sourced from barangay intelligence that still needed confirmation and follow-
further
up as to its veracity.[60]
whereabouts of Tagitis.[70]
military,
the
PNP
or
the
CIDG
Zamboanga
City.[58] Col.
testified
that
his
investigation
of
Tagitis
disappearance
was
respondent was given to him by his informant, who was a civilian asset,
through a letter which he considered as unofficial.[61] Col. Kasim stressed
THE CA RULING
that the letter was only meant for his consumption and not for reading by
read it to the respondent and her companions because it was not important
relation with the abduction of Tagitis.[63] He explained that he did not keep
the investigative arm of the PNP (CIDG) to be involved in the abduction, the
the letter because it did not contain any information regarding the
that the CIDG was involved was based on the respondents testimony,
corroborated by her companion, Mrs. Talbin. The CA noted that the
In the same hearing on February 11, 2008, the petitioners also presented
information that the CIDG, as the police intelligence arm, was involved in
Police Senior Superintendent Jose Volpane Pante (Col. Pante), Chief of the
Tagitis abduction came from no less than the military an independent agency
of government. The CA thus greatly relied on the raw report from Col. Kasims
extraordinary diligence and efforts to protect the life, liberty and security of
Tagitis, with the obligation to provide monthly reports of their actions to the
that raw reports from an asset carried great weight in the intelligence
CA. At the same time, the CA dismissed the petition against the then
respondents from the military, Lt. Gen Alexander Yano and Gen. Ruben
retraction of his statement that the military, the police, or the CIDG was
Rafael, based on the finding that it was PNP-CIDG, not the military, that was
involved.
On March 31, 2008, the petitioners moved to reconsider the CA decision, but
THE PETITION
In this Rule 45 appeal questioning the CAs March 7, 2008 decision, the
student of the IDB scholarship program ever came forward to complain that
he or she did not get his or her stipend. The CA also found no basis for the
the Amparo petition filed before the CA; the sufficiency of the legal remedies
police theory that Tagitis was trying to escape from the clutches of his second
the respondent took before petitioning for the writ; the finding that the rights
wife, on the basis of the respondents testimony that Tagitis was a Muslim who
to life, liberty and security of Tagitis had been violated; the sufficiency of
could have many wives under the Muslim faith, and that there was no issue
evidence supporting the conclusion that Tagitis was abducted; the conclusion
at all when the latter divorced his first wife in order to marry the second.
that the CIDG Zamboanga was responsible for the abduction; and, generally,
Finally, the CA also ruled out kidnapping for ransom by the Abu Sayyaf or by
the ruling that the respondent discharged the burden of proving the
the ARMM paramilitary as the cause for Tagitis disappearance, since the
respondent,
the
police
and
the
military
noted
that
there
was
no
PNP Chief Avelino I. Razon, TASK FORCE TAGITIS heads Gen. Joel Goltiao and
Col. Ahiron Ajirim, and PACER Chief Sr. Supt. Leonardo A. Espina to exert
1)
of
the
investigation,
victims rights. As in any other initiatory pleading, the pleader must of course
state the ultimate facts constituting the cause of action, omitting the
source of information;
must be read in light of the nature and purpose of the proceeding, which
describe with certainty how the victim exactly disappeared, or who actually
acted to kidnap, abduct or arrest him or her, or where the victim is detained,
5)
6)
who caused the disappearance. In this type of situation, to require the level
of specificity, detail and precision that the petitioners apparently want to read
disappearance; and
into the Amparo Rule is to make this Rule a token gesture of judicial concern
2)
3)
4)
7)
supporting affidavits, with the annotation that these can be used as the
affiants direct testimony.[78] This requirement, however, should not be read
11 the circumstances under which Tagitis suddenly dropped out of sight after
not strictly followed. Where, as in this case, the petitioner has substantially
despite efforts to locate him. The petition alleged, too, under its paragraph 7,
detailing the facts relied upon, the strict need for the sworn statement that
in
reliable
attach the required affidavits was fully cured when the respondent and her
clearly alleged how Tagitis rights to life, liberty and security were violated
and 17 and February 18, 2008 to swear to and flesh out the allegations of the
burly men believed to be police intelligence operatives, and then taken into
relation
to
paragraphs
15
and
16, that
according
to
agents of the State in this disappearance, the failure of the State to release
not comply with the Section 5(d) requirements of the Amparo Rule, as the
the actual violation of his right to liberty. Thus, the petition cannot be faulted
Sulu as
soon
as
they
were
relatively
certain
that
he
indeed
had
disappeared. The police, however, gave them the ready answer that Tagitis
If a defect can at all be attributed to the petition, this defect is its lack
could have been abducted by the Abu Sayyaf group or other anti-government
to the summary nature of the proceedings for the writ and to facilitate the
that she filed a complaint with the PNP Police Station in Cotobato and in Jolo,
resolution of the petition, the Amparo Rule incorporated the requirement for
but she was told of an intriguing tale by the police that her husband was
having a good time with another woman. The disappearance was alleged to
have been reported, too, to no less than the Governor of the ARMM, followed
by the respondents personal inquiries that yielded the factual bases for her
petition.[80]
Section
5(e)
merely
requires
that
(the
respondent in the present case) allege the actions and recourses taken to
These allegations, to our mind, sufficiently specify that reports have
determine the fate or whereabouts of the aggrieved party and the identity of
been made to the police authorities, and that investigations should have
the person responsible for the threat, act or omission. The following
followed. That the petition did not state the manner and results of the
allegations of the respondents petition duly outlined the actions she had
investigation that the Amparo Rule requires, but rather generally stated the
taken and the frustrations she encountered, thus compelling her to file her
petition.
xxxx
7. Soon after the student left the room, Engr. Tagitis went out
of the pension house to take his early lunch but while out on
the street, a couple of burly men believed to be police
intelligence operatives, forcibly took him and boarded the
latter on a motor vehicle then sped away without the
knowledge of his student, Arsimin Kunnong;
the very least, their reported failed efforts, should not be a reflection on the
completeness of the petition. To require the respondent to elaborately specify
the names, personal circumstances, and addresses of the investigating
authority, as well the manner and conduct of the investigation is an overly
xxxx
strict interpretation of Section 5(d), given the respondents frustrations in
securing
an
investigation
with
meaningful
results.
Under
these
10. When Kunnong could not locate Engr. Tagitis, the former
sought the help of another IDB scholar and reported the
matter to the local police agency;
circumstances, we are more than satisfied that the allegations of the petition
on the investigations undertaken are sufficiently complete for purposes of
bringing the petition forward.
were taken by the respondent, and that there was an undue haste in the
filing of the petition when, instead of cooperating with authorities, the
respondent immediately invoked the Courts intervention.
xxxx
17. [The respondent] filed her complaint with the PNP Police
Station at the ARMM in Cotobato and in Jolo, as suggested by
her friends, seeking their help to find her husband, but [the
respondents] request and pleadings failed to produce any
positive results
xxxx
20. Lately, [respondent] was again advised by one of the
[petitioners] to go to the ARMM Police Headquarters again in
Cotobato City and also to the different Police Headquarters
including the police headquarters in Davao City, in
Zamboanga City, in Jolo, and in Camp Crame, Quezon City,
and all these places have been visited by the [respondent] in
search for her husband, which entailed expenses for her trips
to these places thereby resorting her to borrowings and
beggings [sic] for financial help from friends and relatives
only to try complying to the different suggestions of these
police officers, despite of which, her efforts produced no
positive results up to the present time;
xxxx
25. [The respondent] has exhausted all administrative
avenues and remedies but to no avail, and under the
circumstances, [respondent] has no other plain, speedy and
adequate remedy to protect and get the release of subject
Engr. Morced Tagitis from the illegal clutches of [the
petitioners], their intelligence operatives and the like which
are in total violation of the subjects human and constitutional
rights, except the issuance of a WRIT OF AMPARO.
continent under Operation Condor[84] and during the Dirty War[85] in the
for the Writ of Amparo is sufficient in form and substance and that the Court
1970s and 1980s. The escalation of the practice saw political activists
of Appeals had every reason to proceed with its consideration of the case.
secretly arrested, tortured, and killed as part of governments counterinsurgency campaigns. As this form of political brutality became routine
elsewhere in the continent, the Latin American media standardized the term
The Desaparecidos
disappearance cases:
1)
2)
3)
alive
and
97
were
found
dead. The
number
of
enforced
the
law
now
stands,
extra-judicial
killings
and
enforced
to
ensure
that
all
efforts
concerning
the
protection
and
enforcement
of
that the life of the victim is preserved and his or her liberty and security
the fate and the whereabouts of the victim, by the production of the
disappeared person and the restoration of his or her liberty and security, and,
guilty parties.
Enforced Disappearance
Under International Law
doubly paralyzing impact for the victims, as they are kept ignorant of their
own fates, while family members are deprived of knowing the whereabouts of
their detained loved ones and suffer as well the serious economic hardship
and poverty that in most cases follow the disappearance of the household
breadwinner.[102]
in
December
1978
under
Resolution
33/173. The
Resolution
expressed the General Assemblys deep concern arising from reports from
various parts of the world relating to enforced or involuntary disappearances,
and requested the UN Commission on Human Rights to consider the issue of
enforced
disappearances
recommendations.[103]
with
view
to
making
appropriate
The Convention is the first universal human rights instrument to assert that
there is a right not to be subject to enforced disappearance[107] and that
universal agreement has been reached on the precise extent of the human
was the UN itself that issued the Declaration on enforced disappearance, and
not apply until the fate and whereabouts of the victim are established.[111]
As a matter of human right and fundamental freedom and as a policy matter
Binding Effect of UN
Action on the Philippines
To date, the Philippines has neither signed nor ratified the Convention, so
that the country is not yet committed to enact any law penalizing enforced
In the recent case of Pharmaceutical and Health Care Association of
disappearance as a crime.The absence of a specific penal law, however, is
the Philippines v. Duque III,[116] we held that:
not a stumbling block for action from this Court, as heretofore mentioned;
underlying every enforced disappearance is a violation of the constitutional
rights to life, liberty and security that the Supreme Court is mandated by the
Constitution to protect through its rule-making powers.
Separately from the Constitution (but still pursuant to its terms), the
Court is guided, in acting on Amparo cases, by the reality that the Philippines
We characterized generally accepted principles of international law as norms
is a member of the UN, bound by its Charter and by the various conventions
of general or customary international law that are binding on all states. We
we signed and ratified, particularly the conventions touching on humans
held further:[117]
rights. Under the UN Charter, the Philippines pledged to promote universal
respect for, and observance of, human rights and fundamental freedoms for
part of the laws of the land even if they do not derive from
treaty
obligations.
The classical
formulation
in
international law sees those customary rules accepted
as binding result from the combination [of] two
elements:
the
established,
widespread,
and
consistent practice on the part of States; and
a psychological
element
known
as
the opinion
juris sive necessitates (opinion as to law or necessity).
Implicit in the latter element is abelief that the practice in
question is rendered obligatory by the existence of a
rule of law requiring it. [Emphasis in the original]
cases when the crime was committed within their jurisdiction, when the
victim is a national of that State, and when the alleged criminal is within its
territory and it does not proceed to extradite him, which can be interpreted
as establishing universal jurisdiction among the parties to the Inter-American
Convention.[124] At present, Colombia, Guatemala, Paraguay, Peru and
Venezuela have enacted separate laws in accordance with the Inter-American
provision
dealing
with
the
protection
against
enforced
rights
affected
by
enforced
disappearance
through
the
indicative
of
the
State
practice
and opinio
juris requirements
of
leading example demonstrating the protection afforded by the European
right to liberty and security of the disappeared person when the applicants
son disappeared after being taken into custody by Turkish forces in the
Kurdish village of Agilli in November 1993. It further found the applicant (the
[122] State parties undertook under this Convention not to practice, permit,
result of the silence of the authorities and the inadequate character of the
investigations undertaken. The ECHR also saw the lack of any meaningful
their respective national criminal laws and to establish jurisdiction over such
Third, in the United States, the status of the prohibition on enforced
of the ICCPR, and the act may also amount to a crime against humanity.[131]
provides that [a] State violates international law if, as a matter of State
Fifth, Article 7, paragraph 1 of the 1998 Rome Statute establishing the
policy, it practices, encourages, or condones (3) the murder or causing the
International Criminal Court (ICC) also covers enforced disappearances
disappearance of individuals.[129] We significantly note that in a related
insofar as they are defined as crimes against humanity,[132] i.e., crimes
matter that finds close identification with enforced disappearance the matter
committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack against any civilian
of torture the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit Court held
population, with knowledge of the attack. While more than 100 countries
in Filartiga v. Pena-Irala[130] that the prohibition on torture had attained the
have ratified the Rome Statute,[133] the Philippines is still merely a signatory
status of customary international law. The court further elaborated on the
and has not yet ratified it. We note that Article 7(1) of the Rome Statute has
significance of UN declarations, as follows:
been incorporated in the statutes of other international and hybrid tribunals,
These U.N. declarations are significant because they
specify with great precision the obligations of member
nations under the Charter. Since their adoption, "(m)embers
can no longer contend that they do not know what human
rights they promised in the Charter to promote. Moreover, a
U.N. Declaration is, according to one authoritative definition,
"a formal and solemn instrument, suitable for rare occasions
when principles of great and lasting importance are being
enunciated. Accordingly, it has been observed that the
Universal Declaration of Human Rights "no longer fits into the
dichotomy
of
binding
treaty
against
non-binding
pronouncement,' but is rather an authoritative statement of
the international community." Thus, a Declaration creates an
expectation of adherence, and "insofar as the expectation is
gradually justified by State practice, a declaration may by
custom become recognized as laying down rules binding
upon the States." Indeed, several commentators have
concluded that the Universal Declaration has become, in toto,
a part of binding, customary international law. [Citations
omitted]
including Sierra Leone Special Court, the Special Panels for Serious Crimes in
Timor-Leste, and the Extraordinary Chambers in the Courts of Cambodia.
[134] In addition, the implementing legislation of State Parties to the Rome
Statute of the ICC has given rise to a number of national criminal provisions
also covering enforced disappearance.[135]
While the Philippines is not yet formally bound by the terms of the
Convention on enforced disappearance (or by the specific terms of the Rome
Statute) and has not formally declared enforced disappearance as a specific
crime, the above recital shows that enforced disappearance as a State
to which the Philippines is both a signatory and a State Party, the UN Human
Rights Committee, under the Office of the High Commissioner for Human
land, and which we should act upon to the extent already allowed
Rights, has stated that the act of enforced disappearance violates Articles 6
under our laws and the international conventions that bind us.
Article 2 of the ICCPR, which binds the Philippines as a state party, provides:
Article 2
3. Each State Party to the present Covenant undertakes:
(a) To ensure that any person whose rights or freedoms as
herein recognized are violated shall have an effective
remedy, notwithstanding that the violation has been
committed by persons acting in an official capacity;
(b) To ensure that any person claiming such a remedy
shall have his right thereto determined by competent
judicial, administrative or legislative authorities, or by
any other competent authority provided for by the legal
system of the State, and to develop the possibilities of judicial
remedy;
(c) To ensure that the competent authorities shall enforce
such remedies when granted. [Emphasis supplied]
Committee
attaches
importance
to
States
Parties'
establishing
appropriate
judicial
and administrative
mechanisms for addressing claims of rights violations under
domestic
law Administrative
mechanisms
are
particularly required to give effect to the general
obligation to investigate allegations of violations
promptly,
thoroughly
and
effectivelythrough
independent and impartial bodies. A failure by a State
Party to investigate allegations of violations could in and of
itself give rise to a separate breach of the Covenant.
Cessation of an ongoing violation is an essential element of
the right to an effective remedy. [Emphasis supplied]
The UN Human Rights Committee further stated in the same General
Comment No. 31 that failure to investigate as well as failure to bring to
justice the perpetrators of ICCPR violations could in and of itself give rise to a
separate breach of the Covenant, thus:[138]
18. Where the investigations referred to in paragraph 15
reveal violations of certain Covenant rights, States Parties
must ensure that those responsible are brought to
justice. As with failure to investigate, failure to bring
to justice perpetrators of such violations could in and
of itself give rise to a separate breach of the
Covenant. These obligations arise notably in respect of
those violations recognized as criminal under either
domestic or international law, such as torture and similar
cruel, inhuman and degrading treatment (article 7), summary
and
arbitrary
killing
(article
6) and
enforced
disappearance (articles 7 and 9 and, frequently,
6). Indeed, the problem of impunity for these violations, a
matter of sustained concern by the Committee, may well be
an important contributing element in the recurrence of the
violations. When committed as part of a widespread or
systematic attack on a civilian population, these violations of
the Covenant are crimes against humanity (see Rome Statute
of the International Criminal Court, article 7). [Emphasis
supplied]
In General Comment No. 31, the UN Human Rights Committee opined that
the right to an effective remedy under Article 2 of the ICCPR includes the
In Secretary of National Defense v. Manalo,[139] this Court, in ruling that the
obligation of the State to investigate ICCPR violations promptly, thoroughly,
right to security of persons is a guarantee of the protection of ones right by
and effectively, viz:[137]
the government, held that:
15. Article 2, paragraph 3, requires that in addition to
effective protection of Covenant rights, States Parties must
ensure that individuals also have accessible and
effective remedies to vindicate those rights The
Writ
of Amparo,
which
the
Court
made
effective
on
October
24,
2007. Although the Amparo Rule still has gaps waiting to be filled through
substantive law, as evidenced primarily by the lack of a concrete definition of
enforced disappearance, the materials cited above, among others,
provide ample guidance and standards on how, through the medium
of the Amparo Rule, the Court can provide remedies and protect the
constitutional rights to life, liberty and security that underlie every
enforced disappearance.
Evidentiary Difficulties Posed
by the Unique Nature of an
Enforced Disappearance
Before going into the issue of whether the respondent has discharged
the burden of proving the allegations of the petition for the Writ of Amparo by
the degree of proof required by the Amparo Rule, we shall discuss briefly the
the right to security not only as a prohibition on the State against arbitrary
protection to the right to liberty. The Court notably quoted the following
ECHR ruling:
[A]ny deprivation of liberty must not only have been effected
in conformity with the substantive and procedural rules of
national law but must equally be in keeping with the very
purpose of Article 5, namely to protect the individual from
arbitrariness... Having assumed control over that individual, it
is incumbent on the authorities to account for his or her
whereabouts. For this reason, Article 5 must be seen as
requiring the authorities to take effective measures to
safeguard against the risk of disappearance and to
conduct a prompt effective investigation into an
arguable claim that a person has been taken into
custody and has not been seen since. [Emphasis
supplied]
These difficulties largely arise because the State itself the party
whose involvement is alleged investigates enforced disappearances. Past
experiences in other jurisdictions show that the evidentiary difficulties are
generally threefold.
These rulings effectively serve as the backdrop for the Rule on the
deliberately
deny
that
the
enforced
disappearance
ever
occurred.
of
legal
standards
ensuring
the
victims
human
rights.
aware of any disappearance, that the missing people may have fled the
country, or that their names have merely been invented.[150]
disappearance out of fear for their own lives.[143] We have had occasion to
These considerations are alive in our minds, as these are the
note this difficulty in Secretary of
Defense v.
Manalo[144] when we
difficulties we confront, in one form or another, in our consideration of this
surprise.
Second, deliberate
concealment
of
pertinent
evidence
of
the
Sections
13,
17
and
18
of
define
the
nature
an Amparo proceeding and the degree and burden of proof the parties to the
case carry, as follows:
Section 13. Summary Hearing. The hearing on the petition
shall be summary. However, the court, justice or judge may
call for a preliminary conference to simplify the issues and
determine the possibility of obtaining stipulations and
admissions from the parties.
xxxx
of
of duty.
The landmark case of Ang Tibay v. Court of Industrial Relations[151] provided
The respondent public official or employee cannot invoke the
presumption that official duty has been regularly performed
or evade responsibility or liability.
Section 18. Judgment. If the allegations in the petition are
proven by substantial evidence, the court shall grant the
privilege of the writ and such reliefs as may be proper and
appropriate;otherwise, the privilege shall be denied.
[Emphasis supplied]
in
standard
of
the Court its first opportunity to define the substantial evidence required to
arrive at a valid decision in administrative proceedings. To directly quote Ang
Tibay:
Substantial evidence is more than a mere scintilla. It
means such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind
might accept as adequate to support a conclusion.
[citations omitted] The statute provides that the rules of
evidence prevailing in courts of law and equity shall not be
controlling. The obvious purpose of this and similar provisions
is to free administrative boards from the compulsion of
technical rules so that the mere admission of matter which
would be deemed incompetent in judicial proceedings would
not invalidate the administrative order. [citations omitted] But
this assurance of a desirable flexibility in administrative
procedure does not go so far as to justify orders without a
basis in evidence having rational probative force. [Emphasis
supplied]
diligence
to
be
forgotten
in
considering
the
evidentiary
aspects
Chief of the Armed Forces.[155] The IACHR likewise considered the hearsay
testimony of a second witness who asserted that he had been told by a
Honduran military officer about the disappearance, and a third witness who
with a lack of direct evidence that the government of Honduras was involved
Manfredo.[156]
Velasquez stresses the lesson that flexibility is necessary under the unique
case can be linked to that practice.[154] The IACHR took note of the realistic
fact
through
that
enforced
disappearances
could
be
proven
only
The fair and proper rule, to our mind, is to consider all the pieces of evidence
adduced
the basis of conversations she had with witnesses who saw Manfredo
kidnapped by men in civilian clothes in broad daylight. She also told the
Court that a former Honduran military official had announced that Manfredo
the issue at hand and its consistency with all other pieces of
in
their
totality,
and
to
consider
any
evidence
otherwise
evidence is not at all novel in the Philippine legal system. In child abuse
(a)
or
any
form
of
expressly recognized as an exception to the hearsay rule. This Rule allows the
(b)
admission of the hearsay testimony of a child describing any act or
attempted act of sexual abuse in any criminal or non-criminal proceeding,
outside
the
admission find their counterpart in the present case under the above-
disappeared. The direct evidence at hand only shows that Tagitis went out of
the ASY Pension House after depositing his room key with the hotel desk and
was never seen nor heard of again. The undisputed conclusion, however,
disappearance cases.
from all concerned the petitioner, Tagitis colleagues and even the police
authorities is that Tagistis disappeared under mysterious circumstances and
was never seen again. The respondent injected the causal element in her
petition and testimony, as we shall discuss below.
The threshold question for our resolution is: was there an enforced
disappearance within the meaning of this term under the UN Declaration we
We likewise find no direct evidence showing that operatives of PNP
have cited?
CIDG Zamboanga abducted or arrested Tagitis. If at all, only the respondents
allegation that Tagistis was under CIDG Zamboanga custody stands on
The Convention defines enforced disappearance as the arrest,
record, but it is not supported by any other evidence, direct or circumstantial.
detention, abduction or any other form of deprivation of liberty by agents of
the State or by persons or groups of persons acting with the authorization,
In her direct testimony, the respondent pointed to two sources of
that Tagitis was in good hands. Nothing came out of this claim, as both the
respondents testimony:
Q: Were you able to speak to other military officials
regarding the whereabouts of your husband
particularly those in charge of any records or
investigation?
A: I went to Camp Katitipan in Davao City. Then one
military officer, Col. Casim, told me that my
husband is being abducted [sic] because he is
under custodial investigation because he is
allegedly parang liason ng J.I., sir.
Q: What is J.I.?
Tagitis,
sir.
A: Yes, maam.
Q: And a certain Col. Kasim told you that your
husband was abducted and under custodial
investigation?
met in Camp Katitipan in Davao City. To quote the relevant portions of the
Engineer
Col. Kasim, whom the respondent, together with her witness Mrs. Talbin,
of
respondent herself and her witness, Mrs. Talbin, failed to establish that Col.
activities
who occupied a high position in the military and who allegedly mentioned
custody. Col. Ancanan, for his part, admitted the meeting with the respondent
alleged
A: Yes, maam.
Q: And you mentioned that he showed you a report?
A: Yes, maam.
Q: Were you able to read the contents of that report?
A: He did not furnish me a copy of those [sic]
report because those [sic] were highly
confidential. That is a military report, maam.
Q: But you were able to read the contents?
A: No. But he read it in front of us, my friends, maam.
Q: How many were you when you went to see Col. Kasim?
A: There were three of us, maam.
Q: Who were your companions?
xxxx
Q: You mentioned that you received information that
Engineer Tagitis is being held by the CIDG in
Zamboanga, did you go to CIDG Zamboanga to verify
that information?
A: I did not go to CIDG Zamboanga. I went to Camp
Karingal instead. Enough na yun na effort ko because
I know that they would deny it, maam.[164]
her testimony that her husband was abducted and held under custodial
investigation by the PNP-CIDG Zamboanga City, viz:
A: Yes, sir.
Q: What information did you get from Col. Kasim during that time?
A: The first time we met with [him] I asked him if he
knew of the exact location, if he can furnish us the
location of Engr. Tagitis. And he was reading this
report. He told us that Engr. Tagitis is in good
hands. He is with the military, but he is not
Col. Kasim never denied that he met with the respondent and her
friends, and that he provided them information based on the input of an
unnamed asset. He simply claimed in his testimony that the informal letter
he received from his informant in Sulu did not indicate that Tagitis was in the
custody of the CIDG. He also stressed that the information he provided the
respondent was merely a raw report from barangay intelligence that still
needed confirmation and follow up as to its veracity.[167]
in
enforced
disappearance
cases,
we
hold
it
duly
characterized Col. Kasim as a military officer who told her that her husband is
liaison for the JI and who had been under surveillance since January
allegedly parang liason ng J.I. The petitioners also noted that Mrs. Talbins
complicity with the JI after he was seen talking to one Omar Patik
testimony imputing certain statements to Sr. Supt. Kasim that Engr. Tagitis is
with the military, but he is not certain whether it is the PNP or AFP is not
worthy of belief, since Sr. Supt. Kasim is a high ranking police officer who
defeated by Col. Kasims plain denial and his claim that he had destroyed his
would certainly know that the PNP is not part of the military.
informants letter, the critical piece of evidence that supports or negates the
parties conflicting claims. Col. Kasims admitted destruction of this letter
truthfulness
rather
than
prevarication[169]and
only
tend
to
regard that Col. Kasim was never quoted to have said that the custodial
evidence taking into account the surrounding circumstances and the test of
Strictly speaking, we are faced here with a classic case of hearsay
evidence i.e., evidence whose probative value is not based on the personal
knowledge of the witnesses (the respondent, Mrs. Talbin and Col. Kasim
himself) but on the knowledge of some other person not on the witness stand
(the informant).[172]
The evidence about Tagitis personal circumstances surrounded him
To say that this piece of evidence is incompetent and inadmissible
with an air of mystery. He was reputedly a consultant of the World Bank and a
simply dismiss the petition. To our mind, an immediate dismissal for this
reason is no different from a statement that the Amparo Rule despite its
the day after he arrived in Jolo. Nothing in the records indicates the purpose
of his overnight sojourn in Jolo. A colleague in the IDB, Prof. Matli, early on
informed the Jolo police that Tagitis may have taken funds given to him in
killings and enforced disappearances. The Amparo Rule was not promulgated
trust for IDB scholars. Prof Matli later on stated that he never accused Tagitis
with this intent or with the intent to make it a token gesture of concern for
of taking away money held in trust, although he confirmed that the IDB was
direct evidence is that Tagitis was last seen at 12.30 p.m. of October 30, 2007
was relayed did not appear to have lifted a finger to pursue these aspects of
the case.
made by the petitioners. Then PNP Chief Gen. Avelino I. Razon merely
State and thus brings into question how the State reacted to the
reported the directives he sent to the ARMM Regional Director and the
disappearance.
Regional Chief of the CIDG on Tagitis, and these reports merely reiterated the
open-ended initial report of the disappearance. The CIDG directed a search in
all of its divisions with negative results. These, to the PNP Chief, constituted
Jolo, the police informed Kunnong that Tagitis could have been taken by the
Doromal, for his part, also reported negative results after searching all
Abu Sayyaf or other groups fighting the government. No evidence was ever
divisions and departments [of the CIDG] for a person named Engr. Morced N.
offered on whether there was active Jolo police investigation and how and
Tagitis . . . and after a diligent and thorough research, records show that no
why the Jolo police arrived at this conclusion. The respondents own inquiry in
Jolo yielded the answer that he was not missing but was with another woman
divisions. PNP-PACER Chief PS Supt. Leonardo A. Espina and PNP PRO ARMM
purposes. Thus, it was only the inquiry from Col. Kasim that yielded positive
results. Col. Kasims story, however, confirmed only the fact of his custodial
The extent to which the police authorities acted was fully tested when
abductor/s or the party holding him in custody. The more significant part of
do. The negative results reflected in the Returns on the writ were again
Col. Kasims story is that the abduction came after Tagitis was seen talking
replicated during the three hearings the CA scheduled. Aside from the
with Omar Patik and a certain Santos of Bulacan, a Balik Islam charged with
terrorism. Mrs. Talbin mentioned, too, that Tagitis was being held at Talipapao,
accusation that Tagitis took money held in trust for students, PS Supt. Ajirim
reiterated in his testimony that the CIDG consistently denied any knowledge
or complicity in any abduction and said that there was no basis to conclude
that the CIDG or any police unit had anything to do with the disappearance of
to the responses made to the respondent when she herself reported and
ran away with the money in his custody. As already noted above, the TASK
TAGITIS itself.
the personal
Tagistis with terrorists and his alleged custody in Talipapao, Sulu. No attempt
at best haphazard since the authorities were looking for a man whose picture
appears to have ever been made to look into the alleged IDB funds that
they initially did not even secure. The returns and reports made to the CA
Tagitis held in trust, or to tap any of the assets who are indispensable in
aggravated by the CA findings that it was only as late as January 28, 2008 or
point out the obvious, if the abduction of Tagitis was a black operation
three months after the disappearance that the police authorities requested
for clear pictures of Tagitis. Col. Kasim could not attend the trial because his
would ever appear in the CIDG records; Tagitis, too, would not be detained in
subpoena was not served, despite the fact that he was designated as Ajirims
the usual police or CIDG detention places. In sum, none of the reports on
replacement in the latters last post. Thus, Col. Kasim was not then
made to inquire into the identity of Col. Kasims asset and what he indeed
officials indicating the personnel and units they directed to investigate can
wrote.
reports
of
the
activities
undertaken
to
search
for
Tagitis. Indisputably, the police authorities from the very beginning failed to
come up to the extraordinary diligence that the Amparo Rule requires.
eventually denied that he ever made the disclosure that Tagitis was under
custodial investigation for complicity in terrorism. Another distinctive trait
that
runs
through
these
developments
is
the
governments
denials
and
this
a leader of the Kurdish Workers Party (PKK) in the Silopi region. The petition
conclusion. For why would the government and its officials engage in their
was filed in southeast Turkey nearly six and one half years after the
chorus of concealment if the intent had not been to deny what they already
knew
thorough
signed
the Amparo Rule covers. From the prism of the UN Declaration, heretofore
cited and quoted,[173] the evidence at hand and the developments in this
of being a leader of the PKK in the Silopi region. On this basis, Turkey was
of
the
the
haphazard
disappearance?
investigations
Would
not
cannot
an
but
in-depth
point
and
to
by
the
commander
of
gendarme
operations
in
Silopi,
This kind of fact situation and the conclusion reached are not without
the PNP and the PNP-CIDG, and in particular, the Chiefs of these
not exactly the same, the facts of this case run very close to those
organizations
together
with Col.
Kasim,
should
be
held
fully
Act No. 6975, otherwise known as the PNP Law,[175] specifies the PNP as the
father in this case brought a claim against Turkey for numerous violations of
the European Convention, including the right to life (Article 2) and the rights
effect the arrest of criminal offenders, bring offenders to justice and assist in
to liberty and security of a person (Article 5). The applicant contended that
their prosecution. The PNP-CIDG, as Col. Jose Volpane Pante (then Chief of
on August 14, 1993, gendarmes apprehended his son, Abdulvahap for being
CIDG Region 9) testified, is the investigative arm of the PNP and is mandated
consideration of this Court at the end of the 4th quarter counted from the
WHEREFORE,
premises
considered,
we DENY the
petitioners
organized crime groups, unless the President assigns the case exclusively to
petition for review on certiorari for lack of merit, and AFFIRM the decision of
the Court of Appeals dated March 7, 2008 under the following terms:
case showing that the President ever directly intervened by assigning the
a.
were the ones who were remiss in their duties when the government
and responsibility, declaring the government (through the
completely failed to exercise the extral'>To fully enforce the Amparo remedy,
PNP and the PNP-CIDG) and Colonel Julasirim Ahadin Kasim
we refer this case back to the CA for appropriate proceedings directed at the
accountable for the enforced disappearance of Engineer
monitoring of the PNP and the PNP-CIDG investigations and actions, and the
Morced N. Tagitis;
validation of their results through hearings the CA may deem appropriate to
c.
Holding the PNP, through the PNP Chief, and the PNP-
to
this
Court
a quarterly
report containing
its
actions
diligence,
with
the
obligation
to
show
and
investigation results acceptable to this Court;
the first report due at the end of the first quarter counted from the finality
this case and holding him accountable with the obligation to
of this Decision. The PNP and the PNP-CIDG shall have one (1) full year to
disclose information known to him and to his assets in
undertake their investigation. The CA shall submit its full report for the
f.
N. Tagitis;
specific to this case and are not standard remedies that can be applied to
every Amparo situation.
Chief,
Anti-Terrorism
Task
Force
Comet,
Zamboanga
City,
is
SO ORDERED.
vs.
PEOPLE
OF
THE
The PNP and the PNP-CIDG shall have one (1) full year to
undertake their investigations; the Court of Appeals shall
submit its full report for the consideration of this Court at the
end of the 4th quarter counted from the finality of this
Decision;
DECISION
PANGANIBAN, J.:
To warrant conviction based on circumstantial evidence, the totality of
the circumstances must eliminate beyond reasonable doubt the possibility of
innocence; otherwise, the accused must be acquitted.
The Case
are SENTENCED to four (4) years and two (2) months of prision
correccional, as minimum, to ten (10) years of prision mayor, as maximum.
The award with respect to damages and costs stand.[3]
In its May 14, 2002 Resolution,[4] the CA denied petitioners Motion for
Reconsideration of the assailed Decision.
The Facts
it. He was only able to get the description of the gunman the following day
when he interviewed the victim at the hospital.
The police investigators were able to get the lead when a certain Andy
Magdadaro went to the Sasa Police Station and told Policeman Pagal that he
knew something about the shooting of Erlinda Boyose. He told the said police
investigator that he was asked by one Edwin Amparado to kill Boyose but the
plan was not carried out. He pointed to accused-appellant Zaldy Bontia as the
man who hired Amparado to look for a triggerman.
Thus, Edwin Amparado was picked up by the police. While in the police
station where he was brought, he told the police investigators that in one
occasion, he went to the house of appellant Mallari and the latter asked him
to kill Boyose who used to be his neighbor at Doa Pilar Village but the same
did not push thru. He later offered this job to Andy Magdadaro who was his
neighbor in Agdao. They talked about the plan to kill Boyose and Magdadaro
was only waiting for his go-signal. At the police station, he executed an
affidavit regarding the offer of Mallari to kill Boyose.
On August 1, 1989, at around 3:00 p.m., Pagal together with other policemen
from the Sasa Police Station arrested appellant Zaldy Bontia near the house
of accused-appellant Mallari. Zaldy allegedly admitted participation in the
incident and implicated his brother Leonardo Bontia as the gunman. The
police lost no time in going to Asuncion, Davao del Norte to arrest Leonardo
Bontia.
Leonardo Bontia was brought to the Sasa Police Station at about 2:00 p.m. of
August 2, 1989. Later that day, a police line-up was conducted and Boyose
identified accused Leonardo Bontia as the gunman. She likewise identified
accused-appellant Zaldy Bontia to be the constant companion and protg of
accused-appellant Mallari.
When the custodial investigation was about to start, the Bontia brothers were
apprised by police investigators Anastacio Naive of their rights under the
Constitution. When asked by Naive if they had a lawyer to assist them, they
told him that they had none. Naive then stopped the investigation and called
the PAO office for assistance. At around 5:00 p.m. on that day, Atty. Jonathan
Jocum,**** a PAO lawyer arrived. Pfc. Naive then asked the Bontia brothers if
they wanted to be represented by Atty. Jocum and they said they are
agreeable.
During the custodial investigation, Leonardo Bontia admitted to be the
gunman. He pointed to appellant Mallari as the one who hired him to kill
Boyose. On the [other] hand, Zaldy Bontia admitted to have been hired by
Mallari to look for a gunman to kill Erlinda Boyose and that he was the one
who recommended to Mallari his brother Leonardo Bontia to do the job for a
fee.
Melanio Mallari, Leonardo Bontia and Zaldy Bontia, were accordingly charged
by Asst. City Prosecutor Jose Emmanuel M. Castillo of the crime of Frustrated
Murder, in an Information alleging
That on or about June 29, 1989, in the City of Davao, Philippines and within
the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-mentioned accused
Melanio Mallari, directly interested in the death of Erlinda P. Boyose,
conspiring, confederating and helping one another, accused Melanio Mallari
induced his co-accused Leonardo Bontia and Zaldy Bontia, the latter
convincing his brother Leonardo Bontia of the plan to kill said Erlinda P.
Boyose by giving price and/or offering a reward to kill said Erlinda P. Boyose
and which price and/or offer was accepted by said Leonardo Bontia and Zaldy
Bontia; that in pursuance of said conspiracy said accused Leonardo Bontia,
with treachery and evident premeditation, willfully, unlawfully and feloniously
assaulted, and shot with a caliber 22 Magnum homemade revolver and hit
said Erlinda Boyose, thereby inflicting upon her the following, to wit:
AVULSION. LOWER LIP AND NAPE SECONDARY TO GUNSHOT WOUND WITH
DISPLACEMENT OF TEETH ON MANDIBLE; FOREIGN BODY, G-4-5 LEVEL which
injuries would ordinarily cause the death of the said Erlinda Boyose, thus
performing all the acts of execution which should have produced the crime of
murder as a consequence, but nevertheless did not produce it by reason of
causes independent of their will, that is the timely shout and cry for help of
Erlinda Boyose that as a result of which immediate assistance was had from a
member of a coast guard and by the timely and able medical assistance
rendered to the said Erlinda Boyose which prevented her death.[6]
During their arraignment,[7] all the accused pleaded not guilty.
Thereafter, herein Petitioner Mallari moved for a separate trial, which was
granted by the trial court in its Order dated September 18, 1990.
In his separate trial, Mallari did not present evidence to establish his
innocence or to refute the prosecutions evidence against him. Instead, he
moved for dismissal by way of demurrer to evidence which, however, the trial
court denied in its Order dated July 2, 1992. Thereafter, although given ample
time and granted numerous postponements over about a year, petitioner
failed to present any witness in his favor.
Even in its Memorandum, the defense did not present its version of
facts.
After evaluating the evidence on record, the RTC concluded that there
was conspiracy among the three accused, although Leonardo Bontia was
alone when he shot Erlinda Boyose. It held herein Petitioner Mallari liable as
principal by inducement, Leonardo Bontia as principal by direct participation,
and Zaldy Bontia as principal by indispensable cooperation, based on the
following circumstances supposedly establishing their complicity:
1. Accused Mallari has an axe to grind against victim Boyose therefore, has
an interest of silencing her because of her persistent inquiries regarding the
use or misuse of school funds under the custody of Mallari as principal of
Bustamante Barangay High School. This is the motive for the shooting of
Erlinda Boyose.
The appellate court was convinced that petitioner was the one who had
induced the Bontia brothers to kill Boyose, despite the absence of direct
evidence showing his participation in the crime charged. It ratiocinated that
the accused could be convicted on the basis of circumstantial evidence.
There was more than one circumstance, the facts from which the inferences
were derived had been proven, and the combination of all the circumstances
was such as to produce a conviction beyond reasonable doubt.
2. The contact man Zaldy Bontia is beholden to Melanio Mallari being a protg
and a man Friday of the latter who exercised moral ascendancy considering
that he promised Zaldy a steady government job and have been extending
cash advances in the form of allowances to tide him over till such time that
It further held that, in the separately held trial of petitioner, there was no
need for the prosecution to offer the evidence adduced during the trial of the
Bontia brother[s,] considering that only one criminal Complaint had been filed
against all the accused. Moreover, the issue could not be raised for the first
time on appeal.
Hence, as stated earlier, the CA modified the trial courts disposition and
convicted the accused-appellants of attempted murder.
First Issue:
Evidence Proffered in Separate Trial
Issues
Petitioner alleges that the trial and the appellate courts convicted him on
the basis mainly of evidence adduced at the separately held trial of his coaccused. He submits that absent such evidence, there would have been no
sufficient proof to establish his guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
presented during the trial of the Bontias were likewise presented during the
separate trial of petitioner. Testifying against him on December 20, 1990, was
Pfc. Danilo Carvajal. The latter said that, as police investigator of the Sasa
Patrol Station, he had conducted an investigation of the shooting incident
involving Erlinda Boyose, leading to the arrest of Zaldy and Leonardo Bontia
and Melanio Mallari. He had allegedly taken the supposed extrajudicial
confession of Leonardo Bontia who, after being apprised of his constitutional
rights, voluntarily executed his Sworn Statement in the presence of an
inquest lawyer of the Public Attorneys Office (PAO).[16]
reading the letter, Mallari told her sarcastically that he had been to so many
schools, but that it was only she who had written to him in such a manner; he
warned her that she made a mistake in writing this [letter].
On the same day, Atty. Jonathan Jocom testified that he was the PAO
lawyer who had assisted the Bontias while each of them was under custodial
investigation on August 2, 1989; that prior to their investigation, he had
apprised them of their constitutional rights to counsel and not to be
compelled to make any statement against their interests; and that despite his
repeated warnings about the negative consequences of their statements,
they nevertheless voluntarily executed and signed their statements
confessing to the crime.[17]
While the instant case was pending trial, Leonardo Bontia supposedly
wrote her a letter[23] asking for forgiveness for the crime [he] had done
against [her,] saying that he was in dire need of money at the time.
Allegedly, he had to go to Mallari, hoping to be able to ask for some, but the
latter instead dared [him] to discipline Mrs. Boyose, gave [him] food and
drinks until [he] got drunk, and also promised to give him money and a job.
Because the accused was drunk and, thus, out of his mind, he supposedly
gave in to the prodding of Mallari.
On April 19, 1991, Pfc. Anastacio Naive testified that he had also
investigated the shooting incident; interviewed the victim (Erlinda Boyose)
and the witness (Edwin Amparado) who was an alleged friend of petitioner;
and that he had reduced the statement of Zaldy Bontia into writing after
informing the latter of his constitutional rights in the presence of Atty. Jocom.
Zaldy named Melanio Mallari as the mastermind who had asked him to look
for a triggerman who would eliminate Boyose.[18]
Only two other witnesses against the Bontias were not presented against
Petitioner Mallari. They were (1) Pfc. Remo Pagal, who had also participated in
the investigation and allegedly received an informers tip that led to their
arrest; and (2) Dr. Roberto Alabado, who had treated the injuries of the
victim.[24]
Boyose also attested to the incidents of that fateful day, June 29, 1989,
which culminated in the attempt on her life by Leonardo Bontia. He had
asked her earlier that day in school about how to enroll his nephew at the
Bustamante High School. Because of the gunshot injuries that she sustained,
she had to undergo hospitalization for which she incurred expenses.
Second Issue:
Sufficiency of Circumstantial Evidence
establishing the guilt of the person incriminated. In the instant case, the
merits of the fifth and the sixth circumstances mentioned by the appellate
court depend, therefore, on the strength of the other circumstantial evidence
against petitioner.
But, as discussed so far, just the first circumstance, establishing
petitioners motive, may be given due weight. Only one more remains to be
considered, as the three other circumstances have been discounted as
hearsay.
This last circumstance cited by the appellate court pertains to a
supposed letter of Leonardo Bontia addressed to the victim, containing
explicit details regarding the commission of the crime and asking for
forgiveness. The latter was presented as part of the testimony of the victim,
Erlinda Boyose. However, Leonardo was not presented in court to identify it.
No other witness testified as to its genuineness or as to the fact that it had
personally and voluntarily been written by him. Incidentally, Boyose received
it through the mail, and no one ever attested that it had in fact been written
and sent by the same Leonardo Bontia, petitioners co-accused.[38]
As we have said earlier, witnesses can testify only with regard to facts of
which they have personal knowledge. Testimonial or documentary evidence is
hearsay if it is based, not on the personal knowledge of the witness, but on
the knowledge of some other person not on the witness stand. Consequently,
hearsay evidence -- whether objected to or not -- has no probative value
unless the proponent can show that the evidence falls within any of the
exceptions to the hearsay rule, as provided in the Rules of Court.[39] Clearly,
none of the exceptions apply to the present case.
Thus, an unverified and unidentified private document cannot be
accorded probative value. It is precluded because the party against whom it
is presented is deprived of the right and opportunity to cross-examine the
person to whom the statements or writings are attributed. Its executor or
author should be presented as a witness to provide the other party to the
litigation the opportunity to question its contents. Being mere hearsay
evidence, failure to present the author of the letter renders its contents
suspect and of no probative value.[40]
There is another circumstance, not mentioned by the appellate court but
advanced by the Office of the Solicitor General: that Prosecution Witness
Edwin Amparado declared that he had been contacted by petitioner to kill
Boyose. Let us first recall the testimony of that witness, as related by the trial
court:
On December 11, 1990, Edwin Amparado testified that he personally knows
accused Mallari because he studied at F. Bangoy Barangay High School where
Melanio Mallari was the principal from 1983 to 1984, that he also knows
Zaldy Bontia, that the last time he saw Zaldy Bontia was in February 1989 in
the house of Melanio Mallari located at Juan Luna, corner Chavez Streets, that
he went to the house of Melanio Mallari to pledge his electric fan, that
Melanio Mallari asked him to kill Mrs. Boyose who used to be his neighbor at
Doa Pilar Village but nothing came out of it, that later he heard over the radio
that Mrs. Boyose was shot, that he knows Andy Magdadaro who was his
neighbor in Agdao, that they talked about the plan to kill Mrs. Boyose, that
Andy Magdadaro was only waiting for his go-signal, that he executed an
affidavit regarding the offer of Melanio Mallari to kill Mrs. Boyose. He said on
cross-examination that he did not feel disgusted when Mallari asked him to
kill Mrs. Boyose, that he thought of killing Mrs. Boyose and relayed the offer
to Andy Magdadaro the same job, that he is close to Mr. Mallari, that the job
of killing Mrs. Boyose was the only illegal job offered to him by Melanio
Mallari, that during that time he needed money because his wife was
pregnant, that he relayed the offer to Andy Magdadaro because he is a rebel
returnee.[41]
It appears that the prosecution presented Amparado merely to show that
petitioner had criminal intent against the victim. The testimony of the
witness, however, concerned petitioners alleged proposal to him (not to the
Bontias) to kill Boyose -- an act that, by his own admission, did not
materialize. Even if indeed petitioner made such a proposal, it did not
necessarily mean that it was also made to the Bontias, absent any strong
supporting evidence. The witness does not in fact appear privy to any
conspiracy between petitioner and the Bontias.
Thus, insofar as the actual attempt on the life of Boyose is concerned,
Amparados testimony is clearly irrelevant or of no probative weight. It does
not tend to establish, to any reasonable degree, the probability of a fact in
issue[42] -- whether petitioner had induced or conspired with the Bontias to
kill Boyose. Hence, the testimony is worthless in establishing the guilt of
petitioner of the crime charged against him.
In the final analysis, other than the victims letter to petitioner tending to
establish his ill motive, there is hardly any evidence to corroborate his coaccuseds extrajudicial confessions (later recanted) or to establish the
probability of his actual participation (by inducement) in the commission of
the crime. Considering that the strength of the prosecution evidence against
him falls short of the required quantum of proof beyond reasonable doubt, his
constitutional right to be presumed innocent must prevail.
The Court has repeatedly held that when the circumstances shown to
exist yield at least two inferences -- one of which is consistent with the
presumption of innocence and the other with the finding of guilt -- the Court
must acquit the accused, because the evidence does not then fulfill the test
of moral certainty or suffice to support a judgment of conviction.[43]
Consistent with the above principles, and in view of the dearth of
evidence to prove his guilt beyond reasonable doubt, petitioner must be
acquitted.
Third Issue:
Due Process
Petitioner also claims that he was denied due process by the Court of
Appeals, because it allegedly failed to tackle all the issues raised in his
appeal brief.
While it is no longer necessary to resolve this issue in view of our
disposition of the second one, it is enough to say that petitioner has
neglected to substantiate this allegation in his Petition. He did not, in fact,
even care to point out -- much less discuss -- what issues the appellate court
had failed to resolve. In any event, a wrong disposition by the court is not
tantamount to denial of due process.
WHEREFORE, the assailed Decision insofar as it pertains to Petitioner
is REVERSED and SET ASIDE. On reasonable doubt, Petitioner Melanio
Mallari y Liberato is ACQUITTED. The director of the Bureau of Corrections is
directed to cause the immediate release of petitioner, unless the latter is
being lawfully held for another cause; and to inform the Court of the date of
his release, or the reasons for his continued confinement, within ten days
from notice. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
ANTONIO, J.:p
Certiorari and prohibition with prayer for preliminary injunction to nullify the
Order of respondent Judge, dated July 30, 1975, sustaining the procedure
proposed by defense counsel that, in lieu of the testimony of the witnesses
for the accused on direct examination in open court, he was filing their
affidavits, subject to cross-examination by the prosecution. Per Resolution
dated August 22, 1975, this Court issued a temporary restraining order
enjoining the respondent Judge from enforcing the questioned Order.
In Criminal Case No. 2891, entitled "People of the Philippines, plaintiff, versus
Gregorio Ojoy, accused", of the Court of First Instance of Iloilo, Branch III,
after the accused himself had testified in his defense, his counsel manifested
that for his subsequent witnesses he was filing only their affidavits subject to
by the judge if the witness testifies orally in court. Indeed, the great weight
given the findings of fact of the trial judge in the appellate court is based
upon his having had just that opportunity and the assumption that he took
advantage of it to ascertain the credibility of the witnesses. This has been
explained by Chief Justice Appleton, thus:
THE
PEOPLE
OF
THE
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs.
DOMINADOR MOLO, defendant-appellant.
Thus, Section 1 of Rule 133 of the Rule 7 requires that in determining the
superior weight of evidence on the issues involved, the court, aside from the
other factors therein enumerated, may consider the "witness manner of
testifying" which can only be done if the witness gives his testimony orally in
open court". If a trial judge prepares his opinion immediately after the
conclusion of the trial, with the evidence and his impressions of the witnesses
fresh in his mind, it is obvious that he is much more likely to reach a correct
result than if he simply reviews the evidence from a typewritten transcript,
without having had the opportunity to see, hear and observe the actions and
utterances of the witnesses.
There is an additional advantage to be obtained in requiring that the direct
testimony of the witness be given orally ill court. Rules governing the
examination of witnesses are intended to protect the rights of litigants and to
secure orderly dispatch of the business of the courts. Under the rules, only
questions directed to the eliciting of testimony which, under the general rules
of evidence, is relevant to, and competent to prove, the issue of the case,
may be propounded to the witness. A witness in testify only on those facts
which he knows of his own knowledge. Thus, on direct examination, leading
questions are not allowed, except or, preliminary matters, or when there is
difficult in getting direct and intelligible answer from the witness who is
ignorant, a child of tender years, or feebleminded, or a deaf mute. 8 It is
obvious that such purpose may be subverted, and the orderly dispatch of the
business of the courts thwarted if trial judges are allowed, as in the case at
bar, to adopt any procedure in the presentation of evidence other than what
is specifically authorized by the Rules of Court.
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the petition for certiorari is hereby
granted and the order of respondent Judge, dated July 30, 1975, in Criminal
Case No. 2891 is hereby set aside, and the temporary restraining order
issued on August 22, 1975 is hereby made permanent, without any
pronouncement as to costs.
PER CURIAM:
Automatic review of the death sentence with accessory penalties imposed on
September 3, 1976 upon accused-appellant Dominador Molo by Hon. Job B.
Mandayag of the Court of First Instance of Romblon, 11th Judicial District, in
Criminal Case No. 571 for the murder of Venancio Gapisa on 9 April 1976 at
Sitio Dacotan, Barrio Tambac, Romblon, Romblon.
The above-named accused was charged with murder in an Information filed
by Asst. Provincial Fiscal Cesar M. Solis, on May 31,1976, as follows:
The undersigned Assistant Provincial Fiscal of Romblon
accuses DOMINADOR MOLO of the crime of MURDER
committed as follows:
That on or about the 9th day of April 1976, at around 8:00
o'clock in the evening, at sitio Dacotan, barrio of Tambac
municipality of Romblon, province of Romblon, Philippines and
within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the abovenamed accused with treachery and taking advantage of
superior strength, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and
feloniously attack and assault one Venancio Gapisa, with the
use of a bolo as a consequence of which he sustained mortal
injuries that resulted in his death thereafter.
That the killing was attended with the following aggravating
circumstances:
(A) Dwelling, for the crime was committed in the house of the
offended party who has not given any provocation at all.
(B) Recidivism in view of the fact that the accused has been
charged for (1) Frustrated Murder before the Court of First
instance of Mindoro in Criminal Case V-542 entitled People va.
Dominador Molo and convicted thereof on September 2,
1950; and (2) Murder, before the Court of First Instance of
Romblon in Criminal Case No. 862 entitled People vs.
Dominador Molo and convicted thereof on July 27, 1961.
(C) Reiteration, since he has been charged and convicted
before different courts in the following criminal cases:
(1) Grave Slander, before the Court of First Instance of
Romblon in Criminal Case No. V-669 and convicted on June 5,
1957.
(2) Less Serious Physical Injuries, before the Municipal Court
of Romblon, Romblon in Criminal Case No. 839 and convicted
on October 9, 1959.
Not long after the couple had retired, Simeona, who had not yet fallen asleep,
heard an indistinct sound of murmur and gnashing of teeth. Although she was
seized by fear, she managed to peep through the dilapidated buri wall and
saw accused Dominador Molo attired only in short pants. He was alone.
Trembling, she immediately lighted a kerosene lamp and placed it on top of
the trunk nearby. She tried to awaken her husband, but the latter did not
respond. 2
Meanwhile, the accused had already climbed up the house which was only a
flight of two steps. The accused forcibly pushed the sliding door and barged
into the house. He inquired from Simeona where Venancio was and she
replied that he was asleep. Finding Venancio sleeping near the door, he
immediately grabbed his left wrist and started hacking at the sleeping old
man. Rudely awakened, Venancio quickly stood up and with his right hand
reached for his bolo which was atop the table nearby; but he was not able to
retaliate in as much as Dominador Molo was quick to hack at him again.
Fearing for her own life, Simeona rushed out of the house through the door of
the unfinished kitchen to summon help from her son, Alejandro Gapisa, who
was at Roman Mangaring's house some 100 meters away. Trembling, she told
him that his father was boloed by Boslo, the name by which accusedappellant was known in their locality. 3
Upon being informed, Alejandro and Roman ran towards the house of
Venancio, followed by Simeona. Upon arrival, they saw Venancio bleeding
profusely and in weakened condition. He was sitting on the floor of the
kitchen, defecating in his pants. When Alejandro took him in his arms,
Venancio told him that he was boloed by Boslo. Roman Mangaring who was
present also inquired from Venancio who his assailant was and elicited the
answer, "Boslo". 4 Venancio was then rushed to the hospital and arrived
there at about 1:50 a.m. He expired a few minutes after. 5
An autopsy of the victim disclosed that he died of hemorrhage from multiple
incised wounds. The wounds sustained were:
1. Incised wound, 10 cms. in length, gaping about 4 cms.,
slanting in position with the lower portion located anteriorly,
penetrating the bone, at the anterolateral aspect of the distal
3rd of the left arm.
2. Incised wound, about 10 cms. in length, gaping, slanting in
position, with the lower and located anteriorly, penetrating
the bone, located 3 cms. below the wound mentioned above.
3. Incised wound, about 10 cms. in length, gaping slightly at
the anterolateral aspect of the neck, left side, slanting, with
the lower and located anteriorly penetrating the muscle layer.
4. Incised wound, about 10 cms. gaping, slightly slanting with
the lower end located anteriorly, located 3 cms. below the 3rd
wound, fracturing the clavicle, the costo-chondral portion of
the 2nd rib and the lateral portion of the sternum, left side.
5. Incised wound, 8 cms. in length, gaping about 4 cms.,
slanting with the lower end located anteriorly, penetrating the
bone, located at the lower end of the distal 3rd of the right
arm, anterolateral portion.
6. Incised wound, 5 cms. in length, gaping slightly, slanting
SO ORDERED. 13
Accused-appellant thru Atty. Pedro Q. Quadra, counsel de oficio now seeks
acquittal on the basis of two assigned erors, to wit 1. Appellant was convicted upon proof not beyond reasonable
doubt;
2. Identification of the appellant was not proven beyond
reasonable doubt. 14
1. In support of the first, he argues that while proof of motive is unnecessary
if the evidence of Identification is convincing citing People vs. Cunanan, 19
SCRA 769; People vs. Portugueza, 20 SCRA 901; People vs. Jamero, 24 SCRA
206; and People vs. Guardo, 24 SCRA 851 there is, he claims, a total want
of motive on appellant's part, as admitted by the victim's wife, Simeona
Gapisa, and son, Alejandro Gapisa. 15
2. In support of the second assigned error, appellant contents that his
Identity as the assailant was not established beyond reasonable doubt,
because of (a) alleged inconsistencies and incredible assertions in
Simeona's testimony; (b) physical conditions which rendered it impossible for
her to recognized accused-appellant; (c) her alleged admission that she
pointed to accuse-appellant as the assailant because he was a hated criminal
in their locality; and (d) that the so-called dying declarations should not have
been accorded credence, because the victim could not have Identified his
assailant. 16
Solicitor General Estelito P. Mendoza - who was assisted by Assistant Solicitor
General Reynato Puno and Solicitors Romeo S. dela Cruz - after refuting the
foregoing assignment of errors submits the following conclusions as to the
nature of the offense committed, the qualifying and aggravating
circumstances that attended the commission thereof, and, that the accused
is not entitled to the mitigating circumstance of voluntary surrender, thus
xxx xxx xxx
Since the attack was commenced while Venancio Gapisa was
asleep and therefore he could not make a defense, the killing
was attended with treachery. Treachery qualifies the killing
into murder. (Article 248, Revised Penal Code).
Dwelling is an aggravating circumstance because the killing
was done in the house of Venancio Gapisa who had not given
provocation. (Art. 14 (3), Revised Penal Code).
Other aggravating circumstances are recidivism and
reiteration. (Article 14, paragraphs 9 and 19, Revised Penal
Code). Accused-appellant had been previously convicted of
murder, frustrated murder, grave slander, less serious
physical injuries, qualified trespass to dwelling and robbery.
(pp. 10-12, tsn., July 12, 1976).
Accused-appellant is not entitled to the mitigating
circumstance of voluntary surrender. He did not surrender to
the authorities. As admitted by him, he was arrested by a
combined force of policemen and Philippine Constabulary
agents at his residence the day after the killing. (p, 6, tsn.,
July 29,1976).
thus
xxx xxx xxx
Fiscal Solis:
Q By the way, when you first heard the
unusual sound since you were still awake,
what did you do?
A I lighted a lamp, I first looked at him by
peeping thru the wall of our house and once I
had recognized his face as that of Dominador
Molo I lighted a lamp.
Q Was it only the face of Dominador Molo
that you recognized outside?
A Yes, and he was alone.
Q What about his body, did you recognize
that body belong to Dominador Molo?
A I could see and that was the very body of
his including his face because it was bright.
Q What provides the brightness that
allowed you to recognize him outside the
house?
A The moon was bright.
Q Now, aside from the unusual murmuring
sound, did you hear the sound of grinding
teeth?
A In fact that was what he had done he was
murmuring and at the same time sounding
like grinding teeth.
Q Now, after you lighted a lamp what else
did you do inside?
A I stood up and stepped back because he
had come up into the house.
2. Re the contention that his Identity as assailant was not established beyond
reasonable doubt.
(a) That there are inconsistencies and incredible assertions in Simeona's
testimony.Simeona Gapisa who was present when accused-appellant
attacked her husband Venancio with a bolo testified on direct and re-direct
examinations by Assistant Provincial Fiscal Cesar M. Solis and on cross and
recross examinations by Atty. Alexander Mortel, counsel de oficio of accused,
do?
Fiscal Solis:
A Yes.
Q And as a matter of fact when this person
whom you said was making murmuring
sounds when you peeped through your
window he was being illuminated by the beam
of the light of the moon and his face seems to
be a yellowish and as clear as if there is an
alladin lamp, correct?
A But I know that he was the very one I
recognized his face and he is far from the
banana plantation and the Moon lights very
well on him.
Atty. Mortel:
Q Now, according to you when the door was
pushed open the person entered and he has
the looks of that fellow whom you are pointing
to as Dominador Molo, is that correct?
A He is the very one.
Q And not only that person who entered the
looks of that Dominador Molo the accused in
this case but he also has the height that looks
like the height of Dominador Molo, is that
correct?
A Yes.
A Yes.
Q Because of fear?
A Yes.
A Yes.
Q Terrible fear?
(b) That conditions rendered it impossible for Simeona to recognize accusedappellant. It is contended that Simeona could not have recognized accusedappellant while he was at the foot of the stairs because the banana plants
obstructed the light cast by the moon. 39
This, again, is without merit. Simeona testified that the banana plants did not
obstruct the light cast by the moon and the defense did not disprove this
fact:
xxx xxx xxx
Atty. Mortel:
Q And because of the banana plantation
that is covering your yard this quarter moon,
the illumination thereof is obstructing a little
by this banana plantation?
A But the bananas are not directly
obstructing the door of our house because
they are standing towards the footpath the
part of our house was not obstructed of the
light cast by the moon .
Q Except by the footpath and the
surrounding premises of the east side of the
house is shaded because the banana
plantation are there to obstruct the
illumination of the moon, correct?
A No, the light coming from the moon could
not be obstructed anymore by that plantation
entered.
Q So it is clear that you had a conversation
with him?
A Yes.
Q And that is what you stated in the police?
A Yes, sir. 43
(d) Re the dying declarations. Appellant claims that the same should not be
accorded credence because the victim could not have recognized his
assailant, since as testified by Simeona he was asleep when
attacked. 44Again this is inaccurate. It was only at the initial stage of the
attack when the victim was asleep, because he was awakened by the first
blows and stood up to defend himself Simeona declared:
xxx xxx xxx
Fiscal Solis:
Q How many times did you see Dominador
bolo your husband on the left arm?
Atty. Mortel:
Q Now, according to you when the door was
pushed open the person entered and he has
the looks of that fellow whom you are pointing
to as Dominador Molo, is that correct.
A He is the very one.
A He was sitting.
Q What else if any did you observe of your
father?
A When I came up he said, "Ando I have
wounds because I was boloed by Boslo. "
Q What was his actual physical situation
when he uttered these words?
A He was already weak, his body was weak.
Q How did you observe that he was already
very weak, that he was already weak
physically?
A Because his wounds are big and many.
Q Was it bleeding?
A It was bleeding but the flow of the blood
had declined since they had been drained of
blood.
Q In your observation was he dying or not?
A He was about to die.
Q Now, since he had wounds what did you
do with these injuries?
A Upon arrival I tied his wounds.
Q Which injuries did you bind, what did you
tie?
A The wounds in the arm because it was
dangling.
Q Which arm the left or the right?
A The left.
Q What about the right arm?
A It had also many wounds.
Q What was your father doing there, in that
kitchen?
A He was sitting.
Q Was he doing anything else from sitting ?
A I think he was defecating as a result of
the pain.
Q Did he have his pants on?
A Yes. 46
Ad Roman Mangaring declared:
xxx xxx xxx
SO ORDERED.
failed to show that the credit upon which said cause of action is based had
been legally assigned to it. Both the plaintiff and the defendant Gorayeb
appealed from this judgment.
March 18, 1927
JUAN
YSMAEL
&
CO.,
INC., plaintiff-appellant,
vs.
NAGEEB T. HASHIM and AFIFE ABDO CHEYBAN GORAYEB, defendants.
AFIFE ABDO CHEYBAN GORAYEB, appellant.
M.H. de Joya, Felipe Ysmael and Claudio R. Sandoval for plaintiff-appellant.
Gibbs & McDonough and J.E. Blanco for defendant-appellant.
OSTRAND, J.:
The complaint in the present case sets forth two causes of action.For its first
cause of action the plaintiff alleges, in substance, that the defendant Nageeb
T. Hashim on September 21, 1916, executed a chattel mortgage in favor of
said plaintiff for the sum of P13,160.87, with interest at 8 per cent per
annum, the mortgage falling due on September 21, 1917; that the said
defendant having failed to make payment in accordance with the terms
agreed upon, the chattel mortgage was foreclosed and the mortgage
property sold by the sheriff on January 15, 1921; that the proceeds of the sale
amounted to the sum of P2,100 only, thus leaving a balance of P11,060.87,
which, with thecorresponding interest at the rate of 8 per cent per annum
from September 21, 1916, until January 9, 1925, now amounts to the sum of
P19,134.32, for which amount judgment is prayed.
For the second cause of action, the plaintiff alleges that the defendant
Nageeb T. Hashim has been indebted in the sum of P14,646.47 to the Hashim
Commercial & Trading Company, Ltd., a limitedcopartnership, organized
under the laws of the Philippine Islands and that, for good and valuable
consideration, the said Hashim Commercial & Trading Company, Ltd.,
assigned the amount due it on saidindebtedness to the plaintiff on October 3,
1921, together with its other bills receivable, fixtures, cash on hand in banks,
and its entire stock of goods; that the plaintiff has in vain demanded payment
from the defendants and now asks judgment against them for said sum of
P14,060.47. The plaintiff also prayed for a writ of attachment of the property
of the defendants, which prayer was granted.
The defendant Hashim in his answer admits all of the allegations of the
complaint and consents to the rendition of the judgment in conformity
therewith. The defendant Afife Abdo Cheyban Gorayeb in her answer admits
that the plaintiff is a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws
of the Philippine Islands and that thedefendants are huband and wife, but
deny all other allegationscontained in the complaint and set up as a special
defense that the action is the result of a conspiracy between Hashim and his
relations, the stockholders is Juan Ysmael & Co., Inc., to defraud her of the
alimony granted her in civil case No. 19115 of the Court of First Instance of
Manila. She also alleges that she has suffered damages in the sum of
P20,000 by reason of the preliminary attachment upon said real property
belonging to her exclusively.
Upon trial the Court of First Instance rendered judgment in favor of the
plaintiff for the full amount demanded under the first cause of action, but
dusmissed the second cause of action on the ground that the plaintiff had
The plaintiff-appellant assigns as error the finding of the trialcourt that the
indebtedness of the defendant Nageeb T. Hashim to the Hashim Commercial
& Trading Co., Ltd., in the amount of P14,646.47, was assigned by the latter
to the Asia Banking Corporation and not to the plaintiff Juan Ysmael & Co.,
Inc., and that the court likewise erred in dismissing the second cause of
action alleged in the complaint. This contention is principally based on a
resolution of the stockholders of the Hashim Commercial & Trading Co., Ltd.,
adopted on October 3, 1921, the last three paragraphs of which reads as
follows:
Whereas, Messrs. Juan Ysmael & Co., Inc., owners of 1678 shares of
the stock of this company, have arranged for the suspension of the
foreclosure proceedings began as mentioned above, and agree to
assume the obligation of this company with the Asia Banking
Corporation as stated in the deed dated March 8th, 1921, on
condition that this company transfer to Juan Ysmael & Co., Inc. its
entire stock of goods, cash on hand and in banks, bills receivable,
fixtures, and to have access to the books whenever required by them;
Now, therefore, be it resolved that Mr. A. T. Hashim, President and
General Manager of this company, be and hereby is, authorized in an
irrevocable manner to transfer in favor of Messrs. Juan Ysmael & Co.,
Inc., its entire stock of goods, cash on hand and in banks, bills
receivable, fixtures and to have access to the books whenever
required by them; and be it further.
Resolved that the said Mr. A. T. Hashim be and hereby is authorized in
an irrevocable manner to execute, acknowledge, and deliver all such
documents and intruments in writing as may be necessary to
effectuate the foregoing purpose.
It does not appear that the assignment authorized by this resolution was ever
made and on November 2, 1921, the same stockholders, together with Juan
Ysmael & Co., Inc., also a stockholders, adopted another resolution which
practically revoked the resolution of October 3, 1921 and which reads as
follows:
Whereas, on October 3rd, 1921, A. T. Hashim was authorized by the
stockholders of Hashim Commercial & Trading Co., Ltd., to transfer
the entire stock of the Company, cash on hand, bills receivable, and
fixtures, to Juan Ysmael & Co., Inc., and
Whereas, subsequently, it appeared advisable to A. T. Hashim that
the transfer of said stocks of goods, etc., should be made to the Asia
Banking Corporation, who would then make Juan Ysmael & Co., Inc.,
its agent, for the purpose of disposing the same, and
Whereas, a transfer was made to the Asia Banking Corporation, in the
form of an agreement entered into between the Asia Banking
Corporation, Juan Ysmael & Co., Inc., and Hashim Commercial &
Trading Co., Ltd., thru their proper representatives, on the 31st day of
October, 1921.
Now, therefore, be it resolved that the transfer made by A. T. Hashim,
testimony given by Mr. Hemady and the Hashims in the earlier case, the
defendant-appellant did not claim that said testimony contained admissions
against interest by the parties to the action or their agents; if such had been
the case, the testimony would have been admissible without the laying of a
foundation and without the witnesses having testified in the case at bar. But
the purpose of the offer of the testimony was evidently to impeach the
testimony of the same witnesses in the present case and if so, a foundation
should have been laid by calling the attention of the witnesses to the former
statements so as to give them opportunity to explain before the statements
were offered in evidence.
In discussing their first assignment of error, counsel for the defendantappellant insist that, taking into consideration the facts of the case and the
circumstances preceeding the same, it is obvious that the case is "fraudulent
and that even if the indebtedness claimed were over a true indebtedness,
either the same had been paid or payment thereof waived." This contention
is not entirely without foundation and though we cannot fully agree with
counsel, we do think that, in view of the very apparent unreliability of some
of the oral evidence presented, the plaintiff's recovery on its first cause of
action should be limited to the amount shown by its books of account.
On December 31, 1924, the plaintiff's ledger showed a balance of P12,238.02
against the defendant Hashim, and it does not appear that he has incurred
any further indebtedness to the plaintiff since that date. The plaintiff explains
that the amount claimed in excess of the sum shown by the ledger
represents interest at the rate of 8 per centper annum, but under the
circumstances of the case, we cannot give much weight to this explanation. It
clearly appears that the chattel mortgage debt, upon which the plaintiff's first
cause of action is based, is included in the ledger account and it may
properly beconsidered as merged therein. It also appears that the account
was balanced at the end of the years 1920, 1922 and 1924, and considering
the fact that the plaintiff corporation is a well conducted business
organization, it seems rather improbable that, in striking its book balances, it
would have overlooked the important item of interest if any interest on the
book account in question had been agreed upon.
The judgment appealed from is, therefore, modified by reducing the plaintiff's
recovery to the sum of P12,238.02, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent per
annum from January 13, 1925, the date of the filing of the complaint. In all
other respects said judgment is affirmed without costs in this instance. So
ordered.
EN BANC
G.R. No. 26708
ISLANDS, Plaintiff-Appellee,
Melquiades
G.
Ilaw
and
Vicente
Attorney-General Jaranilla for appellee.
Sotto
for
vs.ALEJO
appellant.
VILLAMOR, J.:
The evidence shows, as an indisputable fact, that in the early morning of
April 25, 1926, one Primo Ordiz died at his own home in the barrio of Bogo,
accused revealed it, and who, through fear of the police, transferred it to the
neighboring lot, burying it at the foot of a tree called "mabago." By following
the directions of this witness, Carmelo Ordiz, the chief of police, who
investigated the case, found the revolver wrapped in two pieces of cloth
Exhibits C and C-1. The revolver was loaded with two bullets and an empty
shell, and had a rusty barrel. It must be noted that Exhibit C-1 appears to be
a piece of cloth from a pair of drawers, and the chief of police who searched
the house where the accused lived, found a piece of a pair of drawers in a
trunk that was in the kitchen. Upon examination of said Exhibits F and C-1 by
this court, it was found that these two pieces of cloth Exhibit F and C-1 made
a complete pair of drawers, all of which shows that the accused tore the
piece of cloth Exhibits C-1 from an old pair of drawers in order to wrap up the
revolver before putting it in the place indicated by the witness Carmelo
Ordiz.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
This witness testified, furthermore, that on the night of April 24, 1926, the
accused believing him to be still an enemy of the deceased Primo Ordiz, and
showing him the revolver Exhibit B, invited him to accompany him to do away
with Primo Ordiz. On the other hand, the witness Vicente Ambalong
corroborates Glicerio Orits testimony to the effect that early in the morning of
April 25, 1926, the accused went to the house where the latter was sleeping
to awaken him, and that he then saw the accused on the staircase, calling to
said Glicerio Orit.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
And what is the motive of the crime? According to the evidence presented by
the prosecution, some twenty days before the incident the accused had a
disagreement with the deceased because of the carabao that destroyed
some coconut trees belonging to the deceased Primo Ordiz. The accused
requested the deceased to return the carabao that was under his care, but
the deceased refused to do so before he was paid the value of the trees
destroyed. This naturally produced resentment, which, among country
people, is sufficient cause for the commission of the act charged in the
information.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
The defense of alibi set up by the accused is not, in our opinion, sufficient to
overthrow the evidence of the prosecution; for taking into consideration the
short distance between the deaceased's house and that in which the accused
slept on the night of the incident, the accused could easily have gone out of
his house and returned later, without having been noticed by his companions
in the house, namely, his wife, his mother-in-law, and his sister-in-law, aside
from the natural interest these have in testifying in the accused's
favor.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
The defense argues that Glicerio Orit is not a credible witness, because of his
having been excluded from the information to be used as a witness for the
prosecution; and, because, moreover, of the contradiction in his testimony at
the preliminary investigation and during the trial. We are of the opinion that
the mere fact of having been excluded from the information to be used as a
witness for the Government, does not prevent this witness from telling the
truth in this case, especially in the absence of proof showing the interest he
might possibly have in testifying against the accused. Neither is the apparent
contradiction which may be noted in his declarations before the court of the
justice of the peace, and before the court of first instance sufficient to
discredit his testimony, for the simple reason that this witness was not given
ample opportunity, by a reading to him of his declarations before the court of
the justice of the peace, to explain the discrepancies noted by counsel for the
accused. The mere presentation of Exhibit 1, without said declaration having
been read to the witness while he testified in the Court of First Instance, is no
ground for impeaching his testimony. (U. S. vs. Baluyot, 40 Phil., 385,
406.)chanrobles virtual law library
The defense also contends that the conduct of the accused in going with his
family to the deceased's house on the morning of April 25, 1926, helping in
the preparations for the burial, is incompatible with his being a criminal. It is,
indeed, an old belief that the fear of the suspected party to touch the corpse
was a sign of guilt. But experience has shown that some criminals have gone
to the extreme that the accused did, to avoid all suspicion of
guilt.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
The evidence in the record shows that guilt of the accused beyond a
reasonable doubt, and he deserves the penalty provided for in article 403 of
the Penal Code. The crime committed is murder, qualified by treachery for, in
the commission of the crime, the accused employed ways, means, and forms
that tended directly and especially to assure, it, without risk to his person
from
any
defense
the
assaulted
party
might
make.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
The trial court imposed the death penalty on the accused, by reason of the
aggravating circumstances of evident premeditation, nocturnity, and
dwelling, without any mitigating circumstances to offset them. On this point
the opinion of the court is divided, with the result that we cannot impose on
the accused the maximum penalty, or death, in accordance with Act No.
3104, because the vote of the members of the court who took part in the
discussion of the case, as to the justice of the imposition of the death penalty
was not unanimous. And, it being so, it is unnecessary to discuss in detail the
presence
of
the
said
aggravating
circumstances.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
In virtue whereof, we are of the opinion, and so hold, that the accused is
guilty of the crime of murder, committed with treachery, on the person of
Primo Ordiz, and with the modification of the judgment on review, the penalty
of cadena perpetua is imposed on the accused, with the accessories of Article
54 of the Penal Code, the judgment of the trial court being affirmed in all
other
respects,
with
the
costs
against
the
appellant.
So
ordered.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
Republic
SUPREME
Manila
FIRST DIVISION
of
the
Philippines
COURT
PEOPLE
OF
THE
PHILIPPINES, petitioners,
vs.
HON. BAYANI S. RIVERA, Judge, Branch 129 , Regional Trial Court of
Kalookan City, and WILFREDO L. EMBRANO, respondent.
NARVASA, J.:p
The special civil action of certiorari at bar instituted in this Court to annul an
order rendered by the Regional Trial Court at Kalookan City, Branch 129, in a
prosecution for arson docketed in that Court as Criminal Case No. 28820 (87).
Accused in that case of arson is Wilfredo L. Sembrano. It is the prosecution's
theory that he wilfully caused the fire in the early morning of May 21, 1987
which totally burned and destroyed the second and third floors of the "I Love
You Restaurant and Sauna Bath" owned by Juanita L. Tan, located at No. 2 L.
Bustamante St. Kalookan City. 1
Among the witnesses presented by the Government to demonstrate
Sembrano's culpability was Benjamin Lee, a room boy of the restaurant and
bath. Lee testified on direct examination at the hearing of December 8, 1987.
His testimony was essentially that Sembrano had run out of the VIP room
where the fire had started and refused to heed his (Lee's) call to stop. Lee
took the witness stand again on April 26, 1987 during which he was crossexamined by defense counsel, gave additional evidence on redirect
examination, was again questioned on recross-examination by the same
defense counsel, and thereafter allowed to step down. 2
The prosecution completed presentation of its evidence-in-chief in due
course. But before it could rest its case, and two (2) months or so after
Benjamin Lee had completed his testimony, the defendant's original counsel,
Benjamin Formoso, withdrew his appearance and was substituted by another
attorney, Eduardo S. Rodriguez. 3The latter then filed a motion on June 8,
1988 to recall Benjamin Lee for further examination. 4 The ground relied upon
by Atty. Rodriguez was simply that after he had reviewed the record of
Benjamin Lee's testimony, he came to the conclusion that " there seems to
be many points and questions that should have been asked but were not
profounded (sic) by the other defense counsel who conducted.. (the crossexamination). It was on this averment, and counsel's reference to "the
gravity of the offense charge (sic)" and the need "to afford the accused full
opportunity to defend himself," that Lee's recall for further cross examination
was sought to be justified. Over objections of the prosecution, the
Court 5 granted the motion.
Efforts were thereafter exerted to cause witness Benjamin Lee to again
appear before the Court for further cross-examination. These efforts met with
no success; and the trial had to be postponed several times. It appears that
Lee had terminated his employment and moved elsewhere without indicating
his new address.
So, on October 1, 1990 the private prosecutor filed a "Manifestation and
Motion" drawing attention to the inability to procure the re-appearance of
witness Lee for which "the prosecution could not be held liable," and to the
fact that "Lee has already been thoroughly examined by the former defense
counsel," and praying upon these premises "that the farther examination of
Benjamin Lee be dispensed with and ... the prosecution ... allowed to
terminate the presentation of its evidence."
By Order dated October 2, 1990, 6 the Trial Court denied the motion to
dispense with the recall of Benjamin Lee. In fact, it ordered the testimony of
Benjamin Lee for the prosecution xx stricken off the record for lack of
complete cross-examination" because the witness could no longer be found,
and "the failure of counsel for the accused to further cross-examine the
witness is not the fault of the defense. 7
In the same order, the Court also set the "reception of further evidence for
the prosecution, if any, ... on October 23, 1990 xx as earlier scheduled."
Subsequently, it denied the private prosecutor's motion for reconsideration of
the order. 8 Hence, the action at bar, instituted by the Office of the Solicitor
General.
The writ of certiorari prayed for will issue. The Trial Court acted with grave
abuse of discretion in authorizing the recall of witness Benjamin Lee over the
objections of the prosecution, and in later striking out said witness' testimony
for want of further cross-examination.
There is no doubt that a Trial Court has discretion to grant leave for the recall
of a witness. This is clear from a reading of Section 9, Rule 132 of the Rules of
Court, as amended, 9 viz.:
SEC. 9. Recalling witness. After the examination of a
witness by both sides has been concluded, the witness
cannot be recalled without leave of the court. The court will
grant or withhold leave in its discretion, as the interests of
justice may require.
But obviously that discretion may not be exercised in a vacuum, as it were,
entirely, isolated from a particular set of attendant circumstances. The
discretion to recall a witness is not properly invoked or exercisable by an
applicant's mere general statement that there is a need to recall a witness "in
the interest of justice," or "in order to afford a party full opportunity to
present his case," or that, as here, "there seems to be many points and
questions that should have been asked" in the earlier interrogation. To regard
expressed generalities such as these as sufficient ground for recall of
witnesses would make the recall of witness no longer discretionary but
ministerial. Something more than the bare assertion of the need to propound
additional questions is essential before the Court's discretion may rightfully
be exercised to grant or deny recall. There must be a satisfactory showing of
some concrete, substantial ground for the recall. There must be a satisfactory
showing on the movant's part, for instance, that particularly identified
material points were not covered in the cross-examination, or that
of
the
Philippines
COURT
THIRD DIVISION
G.R. No. 76792 March 12, 1990
RESURRECCION
BARTOLOME,
ET
AL., petitioners,
vs.
THE INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT (now Court of Appeals) and
HEIRS
OF
SPOUSES
BERNABE
BARTOLOME
and
URSULA
CID, respondents.
Rafael B. Ruiz for petitioners.
FERNAN, C.J.:
This is a petition for review on certiorari of the decision 1 of the then
Intermediate Appellate Court "adjudicating the whole Lot No. 11165 in favor
of" Bernabe Bartolome and Ursula Cid, thereby reversing the decision 2 of the
Regional Trial Court of Ilocos Norte, Branch XII at Laoag City. The dispositive
portion of the latter decision states:
WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered adjudicating the
eastern portion to the heirs of the late Epitacio Batara
measuring 27 meters from south to north by 32 meters from
east to west, with an area of 864 square meters, bounded on
the east by the Provincial Road; on the north by the heirs of
Rufo Manuel; on the west by a portion of the same Lot No.
11165; and on the south by Lot No.11164; the remaining
portion to the heirs of Doroteo Bartolome, bounded on the
east by the portion of Lot No. 11165 adjudicated to the heirs
of Epitacio Batara and heirs of Rufo Manuel; on the north by
Eugenio Andrada; on the west by Nieves Caday or Lot No.
11166; and on the south by Lot No. 11164.
Likewise, the heirs of Epitacio Bartolome Batara are hereby
ordered to reserved (sic) the road right of way for the
necessary expansion of the road adjacent to the eastern side
of said lot, subject, however, to just compensation.
Once this Decision becomes final, let the corresponding
Decree be issued accordingly.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
The record shows that a 725-square meter portion of said Lot No. 11165
located in Barrio 11, Laoag, Ilocos Norte, was first declared as his property by
Epitacio Batara under tax declaration No. 5708 dated May 23, 1906. 3The
property was described therein as bounded on the north by the property of
Pedro Manuel, on the east by the road, on the south by the property of
Doroteo Bartolome and on the west by the property of one named Esteban,
and as having "una casa de tabla de dimension 5 x 4 metros" as
improvement. Tax declaration No. 5708 was superseded by tax declaration
No. 37576 labelled as a "revision of declaration of real property (urban)"
dated April 23, 1914. 4 The residential lot described in the latter tax
declaration contained an area of 772 square meters with a "casa" and a
"granero" as improvements thereon.
Epitacio Batara and his wife, Maria Gonzales, had two children: Catalina and
Pedro. The latter died a bachelor and without issue. Catalina, who married
someone surnamed Bartolome, bore five children named Isabela, Tarcila,
Calixto, Resurreccion and Ruperta. In 1912, before he left Laoag to settle in
Culalabo, Gamo (Burgos), Isabela, Epitacio entrusted the lot to his cousin,
Doroteo Bartolome, who owned the lot bounding Epitacio's property on the
south. 5 Maria Gonzales remained in the lot for sometime. When she later
notices for the "continuation of the hearing" on June 13, 1968 in Cadastral
Case No. 53. 18 It should be remembered, however, that from the time Ursula
Cid and Resurreccion Bartolome filed their answers to the petition in the
cadastral case, there had been no progress in the proceedings.
A year later or in 1969, Maria J. Bartolome filed in Cadastral Case No. 53 a
"motion to admit answer in intervention," alleging that she is one of the
children of Doroteo Bartolome and that she and her co-heirs had been
excluded in Ursula Cid's answer to the petition. She therefore prayed that the
answer
of Ursula Cid be amended so as to include the rightful heirs of Doroteo
Bartolome. 19 At the same time, she filed an answer claiming co-ownership
over Lot No. 11165 with Clemente, Julia and Rosario Bartolome and Ursula
Cid, the widow of Bernabe. She likewise alleged therein that she and her
siblings inherited the 1660-square meter lot from Doroteo Bartolome. 20
Three months later, Ursula Cid filed a motion to amend her answer to reflect
the complete "ground or basis of acquisition" of Lot No. 11165. 21 In her
amended answer, Ursula Cid stated that she was the absolute owner of Lot
No. 11165; that she had been the possessor of Lot No. 11165 for over fifty
years; that she "acquired by inheritance from Bernabe Bartolome, who
together with her, purchased the . . . lot which used to be three adjoining lots
from their respective owners;" and that Lot No. 11165 had been declared for
tax purposes in the name of her late husband Bernabe Bartolome. 22
No hearing was conducted in the case until 1974. To buttress her claim that
she and her husband purchased Lot No. 11165, Ursula Cid presented at the
trial three deeds of sale: [a] one dated March 1, 1917 showing that Bernabe
Bartolome and Ursula Cid bought a 374-square meter lot for fifteen pesos
from the spouses Domingo Agustin and Josefa Manrique; 23 [b] another
document dated February 18, 1913 executed by Ignacia Manrique in favor of
Bernabe Bartolome evidencing the sale of another lot also for fifteen
pesos; 24 and [c] still another deed executed by Maria Gonzales y Paguyo on
February 9, 1917 in favor of Bernabe Bartolome and Ursula Cid ceding to the
latter 772 square meters of land for P103.75. 25 The last-mentioned piece of
land is the one being claimed by Resurreccion Bartolome.
On May 10, 1984, the Regional Trial Court of Ilocos Norte rendered a decision
the dispositive portion of which is quoted above. The court entertained only
the answers of Ursula Cid and Resurreccion Bartolome. It found that the lots
described in Exhibits 2 and 3 presented by Ursula Cid "are not within Lot
11165" and that said exhibits "are defective as the vendors are not the real
owner(s)" of the lots described therein. As to Exhibit 4, the court ruled that it
has "no probative value as the same is incomplete and unsigned." The court
also held that Ursula Cid's possession of the land "after the claimants had
filed their respective answer(s) or after the declaration of a general default,"
did not confer ownership on her because said possession was interrupted and
merely tolerated by all the parties during the pendency of the case. 26
Ursula Cid appealed to the then Intermediate Appellate Court. In its decision
reversing the lower court, the appellate court held that the deeds of sale
presented by Ursula Cid are ancient documents under Section 22, Rule 132 of
the Rules of Court. It also ruled that Ursula Cid's continuous possession of the
lot from its acquisition and her exercise of rights of ownership over it vested
her with the legal presumption that she possessed it under a just title.
Her motion for the reconsideration of said decision having been denied,
Resurreccion
Bartolome
filed
the
instant
petition
for
review
on certiorari based on two principal issues: [a] whether the provisions of Rule
132 on ancient documents are applicable with respect to Exhibit 4, and [b]
whether acquisitive prescription runs during the pendency of a cadastral
case.
Exhibit 4 consists of three pieces of paper. The first piece is a blank sheet
which apparently serves as a cover page. The two other pages contain the
handwritten document in Ilocano stating that in consideration of the amount
of P103.75, Maria Gonzales y Paguyo sold to the spouses Bernabe Bartolome
and Ursula Cid 772 square meters of land bounded on the north by the
property of Pedro Manuel, on the east by the Bacarra road, on the south by
the property of Doroteo Bartolome and on the west by the property of
Bernabe Bartolome. The third sheet or page 2 thereof contains a warranty
against eviction and other disturbances with the last three lines indicating
the date of the execution of the instrument.
According to Dominador Bartolome, he first saw Exhibit 4 in the possession of
his mother, Ursula Cid, when he was just eleven years old. He noticed that
the document had a fourth page containing the signature of Maria Gonzales
and that all four pages were sewn together. 27 However, when the document
was entrusted to him by his mother in 1947 as he was then representing the
family in litigation concerning the land, the document's fourth page was
already missing. 28 He stated that his mother told him that the fourth page
was lost during the Japanese occupation while they were evacuating from
Davao City. 29
Dominador Bartolome also presented in court a sworn statement in Ilocano
executed by Ursula Cid on February 19, 1937. 30 In her statement, Ursula Cid
declared that the sale of the lot to her and her husband by Maria Gonzales
was evidenced by a written instrument; that the land had been transferred in
the name of her husband; that she had been paying taxes therefor, and that
they had been in continuous possession of the land for more than twenty
years. 31
Rule 132 of the Rules of Court provides:
Sec. 22. Evidence of execution not necessary. Where a
private writing is more than thirty years old, is produced from
a custody in which it would naturally be found if genuine, and
is unblemished by any alterations or circumstances of
suspicion, no other evidence of its execution and authenticity
need be given.
We agree with the appellate court that the first two requirements ordained by
Section 22 are met by Exhibit 4. It appearing that it was executed in 1917,
Exhibit 4 was more than thirty years old when it was offered in evidence in
1983. 32 It was presented in court by the proper custodian thereof who is an
heir of the person who would naturally keep it. 33 We notice, however, that the
Court of Appeals failed to consider and discuss the third requirement; that no
alterations or circumstances of suspicion are present.
Admittedly, on its face, the deed of sale appears unmarred by alteration. We
hold, however, that the missing page has nonetheless affected its
entrusted to him by Epitacio Batara. Granting that the 1520-square meter lot
Bernabe Bartolome had declared as his own in 1925 39 is within Lot No.
11165, still, the period from 1925 until the filing of the cadastral case in 1933
failed to give him an advantage. It is short of the 10-year actual, adverse and
uninterrupted period of possession mandated by Section 41 of the Code of
Civil Procedure in order that a full and complete title could be vested on the
person claiming to be the owner of a piece of land.
Furthermore, while it is true that the property had been declared for tax
purposes by Bernabe Bartolome and that, subsequent to his death, taxes
thereon were paid in the name of his son, Dominador, 40 ownership thereof
had not been acquired by Ursula Cid or her heirs. Aside from the fact that
said declarations and payments were made during the pendency of the
cadastral case, a tax declaration in the name of the alleged property owner
or of his predecessor-in-interest, does not prove ownership. It is merely an
indicium of a claim of ownership. 41 In the same manner, neither does the
payment of taxes conclusively prove ownership of the land paid for.
The foregoing discussion notwithstanding, the Court is unprepared to decree
824 square meters of Lot No. 11165 in favor of Resurreccion Bartolome and
her co-heirs to the estate of Epitacio Batara. The revised declaration of real
property in the name of Epitacio, which petitioners presented as Exhibit B,
reveals that Epitacio Batara owned only 772 square meters of the lot
involved. Certainly, petitioner and her co-heirs may not be entitled to an area
greater than what their grandfather claimed as his own.
Similarly, what remains of Lot No. 11165 after the portion herein adjudicated
to Resurreccion Bartolome and her co-heirs has been determined, may not be
granted to the heirs of Bernabe Bartolome and Ursula Cid exclusively. The
two other deeds of sale presented as Exhibits 2 and 3 having been found
worthless by the trial court as they involve parcels of land not within Lot No.
11165 and the vendors of which were not the real owners of the property,
which findings of facts are binding on this Court, the law mandates that the
property, having been inherited from Doroteo Bartolome, must be shared in
equal portions by his children or their heirs.
WHEREFORE, the appealed decision of the then Intermediate Appellate Court
is hereby reversed and set aside.
The eastern portion of Lot No. 11165 with an area of 772 square meters is
hereby adjudicated in favor of the heirs of Epitacio Batara who are herein
represented by Resurreccion Bartolome while the remaining area of Lot No.
11165 is hereby adjudicated in favor of the heirs of Doroteo Bartolome.
Petitioners shall pay the cost of the survey and subdivision of Lot No. 11165.
No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Republic
SUPREME
Manila
THIRD DIVISION
of
the
Philippines
COURT
EMMANUEL
B.
vs.
CITIBANK, N.A., (Philippines), Respondent.
AZNAR, Petitioner,
DECISION
AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ, J.:
Before this Court is a Petition for Review assailing the Decision 1 of the Court
of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV No. 62554 dated January 30, 2004 which set
aside the November 25, 1998 Order of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) Branch
10, Cebu City and reinstated the Decision of RTC Branch 20 of Cebu City
dated May 29, 1998 in Civil Case No. CEB-16474; and the CA Resolution
dated May 26, 2004 denying petitioners motion for reconsideration.
The facts are as follows:
Emmanuel B. Aznar (Aznar), a known businessman 2 in Cebu, is a holder of a
Preferred Master Credit Card (Mastercard) bearing number 5423-3920-07867012 issued by Citibank with a credit limit of P150,000.00. As he and his wife,
Zoraida, planned to take their two grandchildren, Melissa and Richard Beane,
on an Asian tour, Aznar made a total advance deposit of P485,000.00 with
Citibank with the intention of increasing his credit limit toP635,000.00.3
With the use of his Mastercard, Aznar purchased plane tickets to Kuala
Lumpur for his group worth P237,000.00. On July 17, 1994, Aznar, his wife
and grandchildren left Cebu for the said destination. 4
Aznar claims that when he presented his Mastercard in some establishments
in Malaysia, Singapore and Indonesia, the same was not honored. 5 And when
he tried to use the same in Ingtan Tour and Travel Agency (Ingtan Agency) in
Indonesia to purchase plane tickets to Bali, it was again dishonored for the
reason that his card was blacklisted by Citibank. Such dishonor forced him to
buy the tickets in cash. 6 He further claims that his humiliation caused by the
denial of his card was aggravated when Ingtan Agency spoke of swindlers
trying to use blacklisted cards. 7 Aznar and his group returned to the
Philippines on August 10, 1994. 8
On August 26, 1994, Aznar filed a complaint for damages against Citibank,
docketed as Civil Case No. CEB-16474 and raffled to RTC Branch 20, Cebu
City, claiming that Citibank fraudulently or with gross negligence blacklisted
his Mastercard which forced him, his wife and grandchildren to abort
important tour destinations and prevented them from buying certain items in
their tour.9 He further claimed that he suffered mental anguish, serious
anxiety, wounded feelings, besmirched reputation and social humiliation due
to the wrongful blacklisting of his card. 10 To prove that Citibank blacklisted his
Mastercard, Aznar presented a computer print-out, denominated as ON-LINE
AUTHORIZATIONS FOREIGN ACCOUNT ACTIVITY REPORT, issued to him by
Ingtan Agency (Exh. "G") with the signature of one Victrina Elnado Nubi
(Nubi)11 which shows that his card in question was "DECL OVERLIMIT" or
declared over the limit.12
Citibank denied the allegation that it blacklisted Aznars card. It also
contended that under the terms and conditions governing the issuance and
use of its credit cards, Citibank is exempt from any liability for the dishonor of
its cards by any merchant affiliate, and that its liability for any action or
incident which may be brought against it in relation to the issuance and use
of its credit cards is limited to P1,000.00 or the actual damage proven
whichever is lesser.13
To prove that they did not blacklist Aznars card, Citibanks Credit Card
Department Head, Dennis Flores, presented Warning Cancellation Bulletins
which contained the list of its canceled cards covering the period of Aznars
trip.14
On May 29, 1998, RTC Branch 20, Cebu City, through Judge Ferdinand J.
Marcos, rendered its decision dismissing Aznars complaint for lack of
merit.15 The trial court held that as between the computer printout16presented by Aznar and the Warning Cancellation Bulletins 17 presented
by Citibank, the latter had more weight as their due execution and
authenticity were duly established by Citibank. 18 The trial court also held that
even if it was shown that Aznars credit card was dishonored by a merchant
establishment, Citibank was not shown to have acted with malice or bad faith
when the same was dishonored.19
Aznar filed a motion for reconsideration with motion to re-raffle the case
saying that Judge Marcos could not be impartial as he himself is a holder of a
Citibank credit card.20 The case was re-raffled21 and on November 25, 1998,
the RTC, this time through Judge Jesus S. De la Pea of Branch 10 of Cebu
City, issued an Order granting Aznars motion for reconsideration, as follows:
WHEREFORE, the Motion for Reconsideration is hereby GRANTED. The
DECISION dated May 29, 1998 is hereby reconsidered, and consequently, the
defendant is hereby condemned liable to pay the following sums of money:
a) P10,000,000.00 as moral damages;
b) P5,000,000.00 as exemplary damages;
c) P1,000,000.00 as attorneys fees; and
d) P200,000.00 as litigation expenses.22
Judge De la Pea ruled that: it is improbable that a man of Aznars stature
would fabricate Exh. "G" or the computer print-out which shows that Aznars
Mastercard was dishonored for the reason that it was declared over the limit;
Exh. "G" was printed out by Nubi in the ordinary or regular course of business
in the modern credit card industry and Nubi was not able to testify as she
was in a foreign country and cannot be reached by subpoena; taking judicial
notice of the practice of automated teller machines (ATMs) and credit card
facilities which readily print out bank account status, Exh. "G" can be
received as prima facie evidence of the dishonor of Aznars Mastercard; no
rebutting evidence was presented by Citibank to prove that Aznars
Mastercard was not dishonored, as all it proved was that said credit card was
not included in the blacklisted cards; when Citibank accepted the additional
deposit of P485,000.00 from Aznar, there was an implied novation and
Citibank was obligated to increase Aznars credit limit and ensure that Aznar
will not encounter any embarrassing situation with the use of his Mastercard;
November 25, 1998 Order of the RTC; the RTC found that Aznars Mastercard
was dishonored for the reason that it was declared over the credit limit; this
factual finding is supported by Exh. "G" and by his (Aznars) testimony; the
issue of dishonor on the ground of DECL OVERLIMIT, although not alleged in
the complaint, was tried with the implied consent of the parties and should
be treated as if raised in the pleadings pursuant to Section 5, Rule 10 of the
Rules of Civil Procedure;32 Exh. "G" cannot be excluded as it qualifies as an
electronic evidence following the Rules on Electronic Evidence which provides
that print-outs are also originals for purposes of the Best Evidence Rule; Exh.
"G" has remained complete and unaltered, apart from the signature of Nubi,
thus the same is reliable for the purpose for which it was generated; the RTC
judge correctly credited the testimony of Aznar on the issuance of the
computer print-out as Aznar saw that it was signed by Nubi; said testimony
constitutes the "other evidence showing the integrity and reliability of the
print-out to the satisfaction of the judge" which is required under the Rules on
Electronic Evidence; the trial court was also correct in finding that Citibank
was grossly negligent in failing to credit the additional deposit and make the
necessary entries in its systems to prevent Aznar from encountering any
embarrassing situation with the use of his Mastercard. 33
Citibank, in its Comment, contends that: Aznar never had personal
knowledge that his credit card was blacklisted as he only presumed such fact;
the issue of dishonor on the ground that the card was declared over the limit
was also never tried with the implied consent of both parties; Aznars selfserving testimony is not sufficient to prove the integrity and reliability of Exh.
"G"; Aznar did not declare that it was Nubi who printed the document and
that said document was printed in his presence as he merely said that the
print-out was provided him; there is also no annotation on Exh. "G" to
establish that it was Nubi who printed the same; assuming further that Exh.
"G" is admissible and Aznars credit card was dishonored, Citibank still cannot
be held liable for damages as it only shows that Aznars credit card was
dishonored for having been declared over the limit; Aznars cause of action
against Citibank hinged on the alleged blacklisting of his card which
purportedly caused its dishonor; dishonor alone, however, is not sufficient to
award Aznar damages as he must prove that the dishonor was caused by a
grossly negligent act of Citibank; the award of damages in favor of Aznar was
based on Article 117034 of the Civil Code, i.e., there was fraud, negligence or
delay in the performance of its obligation; there was no proof, however that
Citibank committed fraud or delay or that it contravened its obligations
towards Aznar; the terms and conditions of the credit card cannot be
considered as a contract of adhesion since Aznar was entirely free to reject
the card if he did not want the conditions stipulated therein; a person whose
stature is such that he is expected to be more prudent with respect to his
transactions cannot later on be heard to complain for being ignorant or
having been forced into merely consenting to the contract. 35
In his Reply, Aznar contended that to a layman, the term "blacklisting" is
synonymous with the words "hot list" or "declared overlimit"; and whether his
card was blacklisted or declared over the limit, the same was dishonored due
to the fault or gross negligence of Citibank.36
Aznar also filed a Memorandum raising as issues the following:
I. Whether or not the augmentation deposit in the amount
of P485,000.00 of the Petitioner constitutes relative extinctive
novation;
II. Whether or not the purchases made by Petitioner were beyond his
credit limit;
III. Whether or not the issues of dishonor by reason of overlimit was
tried with the consent of the parties;
IV. Whether or not the "On Line Authorization Report" is an electronic
document."
V. Whether or not the "On Line Authorization Report" constitutes
electronic evidence;
VI. Whether or not the agreement between the parties is a contract of
adhesion;
VII. Whether or not the Respondent is negligent in not crediting the
deposits of the Respondent.37
Aznar further averred in his Memorandum that Citibank assured him that with
the use of his Mastercard, he would never be turned down by any merchant
store, and that under Section 43, Rule 130 of the Rules of Court, Exh. "G" is
admissible in evidence.38
Citibank also filed a Memorandum reiterating its earlier arguments. 39
It is basic that in civil cases, the burden of proof rests on the plaintiff to
establish his case based on a preponderance of evidence. The party that
alleges a fact also has the burden of proving it.40
As correctly pointed out by the RTC and the CA, however, such exhibit cannot
be considered admissible as its authenticity and due execution were not
sufficiently established by petitioner.
In the complaint Aznar filed before the RTC, he claimed that Citibank
blacklisted his Mastercard which caused its dishonor in several
establishments in Malaysia, Singapore, and Indonesia, particularly in Ingtan
Agency in Indonesia where he was humiliated when its staff insinuated that
he could be a swindler trying to use a blacklisted card.
The prevailing rule at the time of the promulgation of the RTC Decision is
Section 20 of Rule 132 of the Rules of Court. It provides that whenever any
private document offered as authentic is received in evidence, its due
execution and authenticity must be proved either by (a) anyone who saw the
document executed or written; or (b) by evidence of the genuineness of the
signature or handwriting of the maker.
Stripped to its essentials, the only question that needs to be answered is:
whether Aznar has established his claim against Citibank.
As correctly found by the RTC in its May 29, 1998 Decision, Aznar failed to
prove with a preponderance of evidence that Citibank blacklisted his
Mastercard or placed the same on the "hot list."41
Aznar in his testimony admitted that he had no personal knowledge that his
Mastercard was blacklisted by Citibank and only presumed such fact from the
dishonor of his card.
Q Now, paragraph 12 also states and I quote: "its entry in the "hot" list was
confirmed to be authentic".
Now, who confirmed that the blacklisting of your Preferred Citibank
Mastercard was authentic?
Aznar, who testified on the authenticity of Exh. "G," did not actually see the
document executed or written, neither was he able to provide evidence on
the genuineness of the signature or handwriting of Nubi, who handed to him
said computer print-out. Indeed, all he was able to allege in his testimony are
the following:
Q I show to you a Computer Print Out captioned as On Line Authorization
Activity Report where it is shown that the Preferred Master Card Number
5423392007867012 was denied as per notation on the margin of this
Computer Print Out, is this the document evidencing the dishonor of your
Preferred Master Card?
xxxx
A Yes sir, after that Ingtan incident, I went straight to the Service Agency
there and on the left hand side you will be able to see the name of the person
in-charged [sic] there certifying that really my card is being blacklisted and
there is the signature there of the agency.
ATTY. NAVARRO:
The witness, your honor, is pointing to the signature over the handwritten
name of Victrina Elnado Nubi which I pray, your honor, that the Computer
Print Out be marked as our Exhibit "G" and the remarks at the left hand
bottom portion of Victorina Elnado Nubi with her signature thereon be
encircled and be marked as our Exhibit "G-1".
xxxx
Q Now, paragraph 12 also states and I quote: "its entry in the "hot" list was
confirmed to be authentic"
Q Mr. Aznar, where did you secure this Computer Print Out marked
as Exhibit "G"?
A This is provided by that Agency, your honor. They were the ones
who provided me with this. So what the lady did, she gave me the
Statement and I requested her to sign to show proof that my
Preferred Master Card has been rejected.44 (Emphasis supplied).
Even if examined under the Rules on Electronic Evidence, which took effect
on August 1, 2001, and which is being invoked by Aznar in this case, the
authentication of Exh. "G" would still be found wanting.
Pertinent sections of Rule 5 read:
Section 1. Burden of proving authenticity. The person seeking to introduce
an electronic document in any legal proceeding has the burden of proving its
authenticity in the manner provided in this Rule.
Section 2. Manner of authentication. Before any private electronic
document offered as authentic is received in evidence, its authenticity must
be proved by any of the following means:
(a) by evidence that it had been digitally signed by the person
purported to have signed the same;
(b) by evidence that other appropriate security procedures or devices
as may be authorized by the Supreme Court or by law for
authentication of electronic documents were applied to the
document; or
(c) by other evidence showing its integrity and reliability to the
satisfaction of the judge.
Aznar claims that his testimony complies with par. (c), i.e., it constitutes the
"other evidence showing integrity and reliability of Exh. "G" to the
satisfaction of the judge." The Court is not convinced. Aznars testimony that
the person from Ingtan Agency merely handed him the computer print-out
and that he thereafter asked said person to sign the same cannot be
ATTY. NERI
As correctly pointed out by the RTC in its May 29, 1998 Decision, there
appears on the computer print-out the name of a certain "Victrina Elnado
Nubi" and a signature purportedly belonging to her, and at the left dorsal side
were handwritten the words "Sorry for the delay since the records had to be
retrieved. Regards. Darryl Mario." It is not clear therefore if it was Nubi who
encoded the information stated in the print-out and was the one who printed
the same. The handwritten annotation signed by a certain Darryl Mario even
suggests that it was Mario who printed the same and only handed the printout to Nubi. The identity of the entrant, required by the provision above
mentioned, was therefore not established. Neither did petitioner establish in
what professional capacity did Mario or Nubi make the entries, or whether the
entries were made in the performance of their duty in the ordinary or regular
course of business or duty.
And even if Exh. "G" is admitted as evidence, it only shows that the use of
the credit card of petitioner was denied because it was already over the limit.
There is no allegation in the Complaint or evidence to show that there was
gross negligence on the part of Citibank in declaring that the credit card has
been used over the limit.
The Court is also perplexed that stated on Exh. "G" is the amount of
"6,289,195.10" opposite petitioner's account number, which data, petitioner
did not clarify.48 As plaintiff in this case, it was incumbent on him to prove
that he did not actually incur the said amount which is above his credit limit.
As it is, the Court cannot see how Exh. "G" could help petitioner's claim for
damages.
The claim of petitioner that Citibank blacklisted his card through fraud or
gross negligence is likewise effectively negated by the evidence of Citibank
which was correctly upheld by the RTC and the CA, to wit:
Between said computer print out (Exhibit G) and the Warning Cancellation
Bulletins (Exhibits 3 to 8 and their submarkings) the latter documents
adduced by defendant are entitled to greater weight than that said computer
print out presented by plaintiff that bears on the issue of whether the
plaintiffs preferred master card was actually placed in the hot list or
blacklisted for the following reasons:
The first reason is that the due execution and authentication of these
Warning Cancellation Bulletins (or WCB) have been duly established and
identified by defendants own witness, Dennis Flores, one of the banks
officers, who is the head of its credit card department, and, therefore,
competent to testify on the said bulletins as having been issued by the
defendant bank showing that plaintiffs preferred master credit card was
never blacklisted or placed in the Banks hot list. But on the other hand,
plaintiffs computer print out (Exhibit G) was never authenticated or its due
execution had never been duly established. Thus, between a set of duly
authenticated commercial documents, the Warning Cancellation Bulletins
(Exhibits 3 to 8 and their submarkings), presented by defendants (sic) and
an unauthenticated private document, plaintiffs computer print out (Exhibit
G), the former deserves greater evidentiary weight supporting the findings
of this Court that plaintiffs preferred master card (Exhibit 1) had never been
blacklisted at all or placed in a so-called hot list by defendant. 49
Petitioner next argues that with the additional deposit he made in his account
which was accepted by Citibank, there was an implied novation and Citibank
was under the obligation to increase his credit limit and make the necessary
entries in its computerized systems in order that petitioner may not
encounter any embarrassing situation with the use of his credit card. Again,
the Court finds that petitioner's argument on this point has no leg to stand
on.
xxx Mr. Dennis Flores, the Head of the Credit Card Department of defendant
Bank, presented documents known as Warning Cancellation Bulletin for July
10, 17, 24, and 31, 1994 (Exhibits 3, 3-1 to 3-38, 4, 4-1 to 4-38 5, 51 to 5-39 and 6, 6-1 to 6-39), for August 7, 1994 (Exhibit[s] 7, 7-1 to
7-37), for August 8, 1994 (Exhibit[s] 8, 8-1 to 8-20) which show that
plaintiffs Citibank preferred mastercard was not placed in a hot list or was
not blacklisted.
Q When was this ticket purchased, after the account was augmented
COURT:
or before?
A After the account was augmented, Your Honor, because there is no way we
can approve a P250,000.00 purchase with a P150,000.00 credit limit. 51
xxx
ATTY. NERI:
For the record, your honor, the deposit of P450,000.00 was made as
per exhibit of the plaintiff on June 28. The purchase of the tickets
amount to P237,000.00 was approved and debited on the account of
Mr. Aznar on July 20, your honor. The deposit was made about a
month before the purchase of the tickets as per documentary
actions of its merchant affiliates, and should not be held liable therefor, it is
incorrect, however, to give it blanket freedom from liability if its card is
dishonored by any merchant affiliate for any reason. Such phrase renders the
statement vague and as the said terms and conditions constitute a contract
of adhesion, any ambiguity in its provisions must be construed against the
party who prepared the contract,55 in this case Citibank.
Citibank also invokes paragraph 15 of its terms and conditions which limits its
liability to P1,000.00 or the actual damage proven, whichever is lesser.
Again, such stipulation cannot be considered as valid for being
unconscionable as it precludes payment of a larger amount even though
damage may be clearly proven. This Court is not precluded from ruling out
blind adherence to the terms of a contract if the attendant facts and
circumstances show that they should be ignored for being obviously too onesided.56
The invalidity of the terms and conditions being invoked by Citibank,
notwithstanding, the Court still cannot award damages in favor of petitioner.
It is settled that in order that a plaintiff may maintain an action for the
injuries of which he complains, he must establish that such injuries resulted
from a breach of duty which the defendant owed to the plaintiff a
concurrence of injury to the plaintiff and legal responsibility by the person
causing it. The underlying basis for the award of tort damages is the premise
that an individual was injured in contemplation of law; thus there must first
be a breach before damages may be awarded and the breach of such duty
should be the proximate cause of the injury. 57
It is not enough that one merely suffered sleepless nights, mental anguish or
serious anxiety as a result of the actuations of the other party. It is also
required that a culpable act or omission was factually established, that proof
that the wrongful act or omission of the defendant is shown as the proximate
cause of the damage sustained by the claimant and that the case is
predicated on any of the instances expressed or envisioned by Arts.
221958 and 222059 of the Civil Code.60
In culpa contractual or breach of contract, moral damages are recoverable
only if the defendant has acted fraudulently or in bad faith, or is found guilty
of gross negligence amounting to bad faith, or in wanton disregard of his
contractual obligations. The breach must be wanton, reckless, malicious or in
bad faith, oppressive or abusive.61
While the Court commiserates with Aznar for whatever undue
embarrassment he suffered when his credit card was dishonored by Ingtan
Agency, especially when the agencys personnel insinuated that he could be
a swindler trying to use blacklisted cards, the Court cannot grant his present
petition as he failed to show by preponderance of evidence that Citibank
breached any obligation that would make it answerable for said suffering.
As the Court pronounced in BPI Express Card Corporation v. Court of
Appeals,62
We do not dispute the findings of the lower court that private respondent
suffered damages as a result of the cancellation of his credit card. However,
antecedents
of
the
instant
case
are
as
follows:
lack
of
basis,
the
SO
Counterclaim
is
likewise
dismissed.
ORDERED.
This Court, in the exercise of its appellate jurisdiction, hereby AFFIRMS the
Decision of the Court below in toto for being in accord with the facts and the
law
of
the
case.
SO ORDERED.4cralawlawlibrary
It also denied the motion to cite Atty. Quimpo in contempt of court.
The Spouses Norberte thus elevated the case to the CA, seeking the reversal
of the rulings of the courts below. On September 21, 2007, the appellate
court ruled:chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the case is REMANDED to Branch 129 of
the Regional Trial Court of Caloocan City for further proceedings.
Atty. Nancy Quimpo is, on the other hand, REPRIMANDED for her failure
and/or refusal to completely perform her duties under Section 16, Rule 3 of
the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure. She is further warned that a repetition of
similar
act
or
omission
will
be
dealt
with
more
severely.
SO ORDERED.5cralawlawlibrary
The Norbertes then filed a Motion for Reconsideration, but the same was also
denied.
Hence,
the
present
petition.
The Spouses Norberte mainly argue that their action is one for unlawful
detainer and, as such, the MeTC has jurisdiction over the same. They likewise
contend that the March 28, 1988 Deed of Conditional Sale is not absolute in
nature
but
is,
in
fact,
a
mere
contract
to
sell.
The
Court
Finds
the
petition
to
be
without
merit.
In summary ejectment suits (unlawful detainer and forcible entry), the only
issue to be determined is who between the contending parties has better
possession of the contested property. The' Municipal Trial Courts, Metropolitan
Trial Courts in Cities, and the Municipal Circuit Trial Courts exercise exclusive
original jurisdiction over these cases and the proceedings are governed by
the Rules on Summary Procedure. On the other hand, accion publiciana, also
known as accion plenaria de posesion, is a plenary action for the recovery of
possession in an ordinary civil proceeding to determine the better and legal
right to possess, independently of title. The main distinctions between these
two remedies lie in the period within which the action can be instituted and in
the court which exercises jurisdiction over the matter. Actions for unlawful
detainer and forcible entry must be filed within one (1) year from the date
possession is lost, while accion publiciana may be filed only after the
expiration of that period but within the period prescribed in the statute of
limitations. An accion publiciana may only be filed with the RTC, while a
complaint, for unlawful detainer or forcible entry may only be filed with the
first
level
courts.6
The Court sustains the finding that the MeTC had no jurisdiction over the
case. The ownership of the subject property passed to the Spouses Norberte
by constructive delivery upon the execution of the March 28, 1988 contract of
conditional sale between them and the Legaspis. Although denominated as
conditional, a deed of sale is absolute in nature in the absence of any
stipulation reserving title to the seller until full payment of the purchase
price. In such case, ownership of the thing sold passes to the buyer upon
actual or constructive delivery.7 In a contract of sale, the title to the property
passes to the buyer upon the delivery of the thing sold. In a contract to sell,
on the other hand, the ownership is, by agreement, retained by the vendor
and is not to pass to the vendee until full payment of the purchase
price.8 Here, there was already a perfected contract. The condition imposed
was only on the performance of the obligations of the parties. 9 As admitted
by the Spouses Norberte themselves, there is nothing in the Deed of
Conditional Sale which expressly provides for the retention of title or
ownership of the property by the sellers until full payment of the purchase
price.10 There is clearly no express reservation of title made by the Legaspis
over the property, or any provision which would impose payment of the price
as a condition for the contract's entering into force. 11 The absence of such
stipulation indicates that what the parties have actually contemplated was a
contract
of
absolute
sale.12
of
the
Philippines
COURT
SECOND DIVISION
G.R. Nos. 79597-98
for
petitioners.
PADILLA, J.:
This is a petition for review on certiorari of the decision * of respondent Court
(G) Ordering the plaintiffs to pay jointly and severally, the defendants
the sum of Ten Thousand (P10,000.00) Pesos, Philippine Currency, as
attorney's fees;
(H) Costs against the plaintiffs.
SO ORDERED.
The lower court thus held that the fishpond in question belongs to the private
respondents, having been inherited by them from their deceased father
Inocencio Songco. 8
IV. IN HOLDING THAT INOCENCIO SONGCO, THE PREDECESSOR-ININTEREST OF THE APPELLEES WAS AN INNOCENT PURCHASER FOR
VALUE;
10
(E) Ordering the plaintiffs to pay jointly and severally, the defendants
the sum of Twenty Five Thousand (P25,000.00) Pesos, Philippine
Currency, as and for moral damages;
(F) Ordering the plaintiffs to pay jointly and severally, the defendants
the sum of Twenty Five Thousand (P25,000.00) Pesos, Philippine
Currency, as and for exemplary damages;
SO ORDERED.
11
Petitioners flied a motion for reconsideration with the Court of Appeals but
the same was denied in its resolution dated 14 August 1987. 12 Hence, this
petition.
Petitioners assign the following alleged errors to the Court of Appeals:
I. IN APPLYING THE "ANCIENT DOCUMENT RULE" ON THE
QUESTIONED DOCUMENT ENTITLED "ESCRITURA DE PARTICION
EXTRAJUDICIAL" AND "ESCRITURA DE VENTA ABSOLUTA; AND
MARKED DURING THE TRIAL AS EXHIBITS "3" AND "7", RESPECTIVELY,
FOR THE RESPONDENT HEREIN;
II. IN DISREGARDING THE MANDATORY REQUIREMENT OF THE
NOTARIAL LAW WHICH TOOK EFFECT AS EARLY AS FEBRUARY 1, 1903;
III. IN DISREGARDING THE RULE ON PROOF OF PUBLIC OR OFFICIAL
RECORD, (SEC. 25, RULE 132, RULES OF COURT) 13
Petitioners contend that the Court of Appeals wrongfully applied the "ancient
document rule" provided in Sec. 22, Rule 132 of the Rules of Court. 14 The rule
states that:
Sec. 22. Evidence of execution not necessary. Were a private
writing is more than thirty years old, is produced from a custody in
which it would naturally be found if genuine, and is unblemished by
any alterations or circumstances of suspicion, no other evidence of its
execution and authenticity need be given.
It is submitted by petitioners that under this rule, for a document to be
classified as an "ancient document", it must not only be at least thirty (30)
years old but it must also be found in the proper custody and is unblemished
by alterations and is otherwise free from suspicion. 15 Thus, according to
petitioners, exhibits "3" and "7", entitled "Traduccion Al Castellano de la
Escritura de Particion Extrajudicial" and "Escritura de Venta Absoluta",
respectively, can not qualify under the foregoing rule, for the reason that
since the "first pages" of said documents do not bear the signatures of the
alleged parties thereto, this constitutes an indelible blemish that can beget
unlimited alterations. 16
We are not persuaded by the contention. Under the "ancient document rule,"
for a private ancient document to be exempt from proof of due execution and
authenticity, it is not enough that it be more than thirty (30) years old; it is
also necessary that the following requirements are fulfilled; (1) that it is
produced from a custody in which it would naturally be found if genuine; and
(2) that it is unblemished by any alteration or circumstances of suspicion. 17
The first document, Exhibit "3", entitled 'Traduccion Al Castellano de la
Escritura de Particion Extrajudicial" was executed on 7 April 1923 whereas
the second document, exhibit "7", entitled "Escritura de Venta Absoluta" was
executed on 20 January 1924. These documents are, therefore, more than
thirty (30) years old. Both copies of the aforementioned documents were
certified as exact copies of the original on file with the Office of the Register
of Deeds of Pampanga, by the Deputy Register of Deeds. There is a further
certification with regard to the Pampango translation of the document of
extrajudicial partition which was issued by the Archives division, Bureau of
Records Management of the Department of General Services. 18
Documents which affect real property, in order that they may bind third
parties, must be recorded with the appropriate Register of Deeds. The
documents in question, being certified as copies of originals on file with the
Register of Deeds of Pampanga, can be said to be found in the proper
custody. Clearly, therefore, the first two (2) requirements of the "ancient
document rule" were met.
As to the last requirement that the document must on its face appear to be
genuine, petitioners did not present any conclusive evidence to support their
allegation of falsification of the said documents. They merely alluded to the
fact that the lack of signatures on the first two (2) pages could have easily
led to their substitution. We cannot uphold this surmise absent any proof
whatsoever. As held in one case, a contract apparently honest and lawful on
its face must be treated as such and one who assails the genuineness of such
contract must present conclusive evidence of falsification. 19
Moreover, the last requirement of the "ancient document rule" that a
document must be unblemished by any alteration or circumstances of
suspicion refers to the extrinsic quality of the document itself. The lack of
signatures on the first pages, therefore, absent any alterations or
circumstances of suspicion cannot be held to detract from the fact that the
documents in question, which were certified as copied of the originals on file
with the Register of Deeds of Pampanga, are genuine and free from any
blemish or circumstances of suspicion.
The documents in question are "ancient documents" as envisioned in Sec. 22
of Rule 132 of the Rules of Court.1wphi1Further proof of their due execution
and authenticity is no longer required. Having held that the documents in
question are private writings which are more than thirty (30) years old, come
from the proper repository thereof, and are unblemished by any alteration or
circumstances of suspicion, there is no further need for these documents to
fulfill the requirements of the 1903 Notarial Law. Hence, the other
contentions of the petitioners that the documents do not fulfill the mandatory
requirements of the Notarial Law 20 and that the proper person or public
official was not presented to testify on his certification of the documents in
question, 21 need not be resolved as they would no longer serve any purpose.
WHEREFORE, the Petition is DENIED. The appealed decision of the Court of
Appeals is AFFIRMED. Costs against the petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
Republic
SUPREME
Manila
of
the
Philippines
COURT
FIRST DIVISION
INC., petitioner,
CRUZ, J.:
This case hinges on the proper interpretation and application of the rules on
the admissibility of documentary evidence and the viability. of a civil action
for damages arising from the same acts imputed to the defendant in a
criminal action where he has been acquitted.
In the information filed against Rufo and Josephine Aviles, the private
respondents herein, it was alleged that being then sub-agents of Interpacific
Transit, Inc. and as such enjoying its trust and confidence, they collected from
its various clients payments for airway bills in the amount of P204,030.66
which, instead of remitting it to their principal, they unlawfully converted to
their own personal use and benefit. 1
At the trial, the prosecution introduced photocopies of the airway bills
supposedly received by the accused for which they had not rendered proper
accounting. This was done in, the course of the direct examination of one of
the prosecution witnesses. 2 The defense objected to their presentation,
invoking the best evidence rule. The prosecution said it would submit the
original airway bills in due time. Upon such undertaking, the trial court
allowed the marking of the said documents a s Exhibits "B" to "OO." The e
prosecution n did submit the original airway bills nor did it prove their loss to
justify their substitution with secondary evidence. Nevertheless, when the
certified photocopies of the said bills formally were offered, 3 in evidence, the
defense interposed no objection.
In acquitting the accused, Judge Herminio I. Benito of the Regional Trial Court
of Makati rejected the agency theory of the prosecution and held that the
relationship between the petitioner and Rufo Aviles was that of creditor and
debtor only. "Under such relationship,' it declared, "the outstanding account,
if any, of the accused in favor of ITI would be in the nature of an
indebtedness, the non- payment of which does not Constitute estafa." 4
The court' also held that the certified photocopies of the airway by were not
admissible under the rule that "there can be no evidence of a writing the
content of which is the subject of inquiry other' than the writing itself." Loss
of the originals had not been proved to justify the exception to the rule as
one of the prosecution witness had testified that they were still in the ITI
bodega. Neither had it been shown that the originals had been "recorded in
an existing record a certified copy of which is made evidence by law."
In its order denying the motion for reconsideration, the trial court declared
that it "had resolved the issue of whether the accused has civil obligation to
ITI on the basis of the admissibility in evidence of the xerox copies of the
airway bills." 5
Right or wrong, the acquittal on the merits of the accused can no longer be
the subject of an appeal under the double jeopardy rule. However, the
petitioner seeks to press the civil liability of the private respondents, on the
ground that the dismissal of the criminal action did not abate the civil claim
for the recovery of the amount. More to the point, ITI argues that the
evidence of the airways bills should not have been rejected and that it had
sufficiently established the indebtedness of the private respondents to it.
The Court of Appeals 6 affirmed, the decision of the trial court in toto, adding
that the existing record spoken of in Section 2 (e) and (d) of Rule 130 of the
Rules of Court must be in the custody, of a public officer only. It also declared
that:
Since no evidence of civil liability was presented, no necessity
existed on the part of the private respondents to present
evidence of payment of an obligation which was not shown to
exist.
The petitioner now asks this Court to annul that judgment as contrary to law
and the facts established at the As in the courts below, it is insisting on the
admissibility of its evidence to prove the civil liability of the private
respondents.
We agree with the petitioner. The certified photocopies of the airway bills
should have been considered.
In assessing this evidence, the lower courts confined themselves to the best
evidence rule and the nature of the documents being presented, which they
held did not come under any of the exceptions to the rule. There is no
question that the photocopies were secondary evidence and as such were not
admissible unless there was ample proof of the loss of the originals; and
neither were the other exceptions allowed by the Rules applicable. The
trouble is that in rejecting these copies under Rule 130, Section 2, the
respondent court disregarded an equally important principle long observed in
our trial courts and amply supported by jurisprudence.
This is the rule that objection to documentary evidence must be made at the
time it is formally offered. as an exhibit and not before. Objection prior to that
time is premature.
It is instructive at this paint to make a distinction between Identification of
documentary evidence and its formal offer as an exhibit. The first is done in
the course of the trial and is accompanied by the marking of the evidence an
an exhibit. The second is done only when the party rests its case and not
before. The mere fact that a particular document is Identified and marked as
an exhibit does not mean it will be or has been offered as part of the
evidence of the party. The party may decide to formally offer it if it believes
this will advance its cause, and then again it may decide not to do so at all. In
the latter event, the trial court is, under Rule 132, Section 35, not authorized
to consider it.
Objection to the documentary evidence must be made at the time it is
formally offered, not earlier. The Identification of the document before it is
marked as an exhibit does not constitute the formal offer of the document as
evidence for the party presenting it. Objection to the Identification and
marking of the document is not equivalent to objection to the document
when it is formally offered in evidence. What really matters is the objection to
the document at the time it is formally offered as an exhibit.
In the case at bar, the photocopies of the airway bills were objected to by the
private respondents as secondary evidence only when they, were being
Identified for marking by the prosecution. They were nevertheless marked as
exhibits upon the promise that the original airway bills would be submitted
later. it is true that the originals were never produced. Yet, notwithstanding
this omission, the defense did not object when the exhibits as previously
marked were formally offered in evidence. And these were subsequently
admitted by the trial court. 7
We hold therefore that it was erroneous for the lower courts to reject the
photocopies of the airway bills to prove the liability of the private
respondents to the petitioner. While we may agree that there was really no
criminal liability that could attach to them because they had no fiduciary
relationship with ITI, the rejected evidence sufficiently established their
indebtedness to the petitioner. Hence, we must reverse the ruling below that
"on account of the inadmissibility of the prosecution's Exhibits 'B' and 'OO',
coupled with the denial made by the accused, there appears to be no
concrete proof of such accountability."
Accoording to Rule 120, Section 2, of the Rules of Court:
In case of acquittal, unless there is a clear showing that the
act from which the civil liability might arise did not exist, the
judgment shall make a finding on the civil liability of the
accused in favor of the offended party.
With the admission of such exhibits pursuant to the ruling above made, we
find that there is concrete proof of the defendant's accountability. More than
this, we also disbelieve the evidence of the private respondents that the said
airway bills had been paid for. The evidence consists only of check stubs
corresponding to payments allegedly made by the accused to the ITI, and we
find this insufficient.
As it is Aviles who has alleged payment, it is for him to prove that allegation.
He did not produce any receipt of such payment. He said that the cancelled
payment checks had been lost and relied merely on the check stubs, which
are self-serving. The prosecution correctly stressed in its motion for
reconsideration that the accused could have easily secured a certification
from the bank that the checks allegedly issued to ITI had been honored. No
such certification was presented. In short, the private respondents failed to
establish their allegation that payment for the airway bills delivered to them
had been duly remitted to ITI.
In Padilla v. Court of Appeals,
12
we held:
of
the
Philippines
COURT
SECOND DIVISION
REGALADO, J.:
A maritime suit 1 was commenced on May 12, 1978 by herein Petitioner
Philippine American General Insurance Co., Inc. (Philamgen) and Tagum
Plastics, Inc. (TPI) against private respondents Sweet Lines, Inc. (SLI) and
Davao Veterans Arrastre and Port Services, Inc. (DVAPSI), along with S.C.I.
Line (The Shipping Corporation of India Limited) and F.E. Zuellig, Inc., as codefendants in the court a quo, seeking recovery of the cost of lost or
damaged shipment plus exemplary damages, attorney's fees and costs
allegedly due to defendants' negligence, with the following factual backdrop
yielded by the findings of the court below and adopted by respondent court:
It would appear that in or about March 1977, the vessel SS
"VISHVA YASH" belonging to or operated by the foreign
common carrier, took on board at Baton Rouge, LA, two (2)
consignments of cargoes for shipment to Manila and later for
transhipment to Davao City, consisting of 600 bags Low
Density Polyethylene 631 and another 6,400 bags Low
Density Polyethylene 647, both consigned to the order of Far
East Bank and Trust Company of Manila, with arrival notice to
Tagum Plastics, Inc., Madaum, Tagum, Davao City. Said
cargoes were covered, respectively, by Bills of Lading Nos. 6
and 7 issued by the foreign common carrier (Exhs. E and F).
The necessary packing or Weight List (Exhs. A and B), as well
as the Commercial Invoices (Exhs. C and D) accompanied the
shipment. The cargoes were likewise insured by the Tagum
Plastics Inc. with plaintiff Philippine American General
Insurance Co., Inc., (Exh. G).
In the course of time, the said vessel arrived at Manila and
discharged its cargoes in the Port of Manila for transhipment
to Davao City. For this purpose, the foreign carrier awaited
and made use of the services of the vessel called M/V "Sweet
Love" owned and operated by defendant interisland carrier.
Subject cargoes were loaded in Holds Nos. 2 and 3 of the
interisland carrier. These were commingled with similar
cargoes belonging to Evergreen Plantation and also
Standfilco.
On May 15, 1977, the shipment(s) were discharged from the
interisland carrier into the custody of the consignee. A later
survey conducted on July 8, 1977, upon the instance of the
plaintiff, shows the following:
Of the cargo covered by Bill of Lading No. 25 or (2)6,
supposed to contain 6,400 bags of Low Density Polyethylene
647 originally inside 160 pallets, there were delivered to the
consignee 5,413 bags in good order condition. The survey
shows shortages, damages and losses to be as follows:
Undelivered/Damaged bags as tallied during
discharge from vessel-173 bags; undelivered
and damaged as noted and observed whilst
stored at the pier-699 bags; and shortlanded110 bags (Exhs. P and P-1).
Of the 600 bags of Low Density Polyethylene 631, the survey
conducted on the same day shows an actual delivery to the
consignee of only 507 bags in good order condition. Likewise
noted were the following losses, damages and shortages, to
wit:
Due to the reversal on appeal by respondent court of the trial court's decision
on the ground of prescription, 5 in effect dismissing the complaint of herein
petitioners, and the denial of their motion for reconsideration, 6 petitioners
filed the instant petition for review on certiorari, faulting respondent
appellate court with the following errors: (1) in upholding, without proof, the
existence of the so-called prescriptive period; (2) granting arguendo that the
said prescriptive period does exist, in not finding the same to be null and
void; and (3) assuming arguendo that the said prescriptive period is valid and
legal, in failing to conclude that petitioners substantially complied
therewith. 7
Parenthetically, we observe that herein petitioners are jointly pursuing this
case, considering their common interest in the shipment subject of the
present controversy, to obviate any question as to who the real party in
interest is and to protect their respective rights as insurer and insured. In any
case, there is no impediment to the legal standing of Petitioner Philamgen,
even if it alone were to sue herein private respondents in its own capacity as
insurer, it having been subrogated to all rights of recovery for loss of or
damage to the shipment insured under its Marine Risk Note No. 438734
dated March 31, 1977 8 in view of the full settlement of the claim thereunder
as evidenced by the subrogation receipt 9 issued in its favor by Far East Bank
and Trust Co., Davao Branch, for the account of petitioner TPI.
Upon payment of the loss covered by the policy, the insurer's entitlement to
subrogation pro tanto, being of the highest equity, equips it with a cause of
action against a third party in case of contractual breach. 10 Further, the
insurer's subrogatory right to sue for recovery under the bill of lading in case
of loss of or damage to the cargo is jurisprudentially upheld. 11 However, if an
insurer, in the exercise of its subrogatory right, may proceed against the
erring carrier and for all intents and purposes stands in the place and in
substitution of the consignee, a fortiori such insurer is presumed to know and
is just as bound by the contractual terms under the bill of lading as the
insured.
On the first issue, petitioners contend that it was error for the Court of
Appeals to reverse the appealed decision on the supposed ground of
prescription when SLI failed to adduce any evidence in support thereof and
that the bills of lading said to contain the shortened periods for filing a claim
and for instituting a court action against the carrier were never offered in
evidence. Considering that the existence and tenor of this stipulation on the
aforesaid periods have allegedly not been established, petitioners maintain
that it is inconceivable how they can possibly comply therewith. 12 In
refutation, SLI avers that it is standard practice in its operations to issue bills
of lading for shipments entrusted to it for carriage and that it in fact issued
bills of lading numbered MD-25 and MD-26 therefor with proof of their
existence manifest in the records of the case. 13 For its part, DVAPSI insists on
the propriety of the dismissal of the complaint as to it due to petitioners'
failure to prove its direct responsibility for the loss of and/or damage to the
cargo.14
On this point, in denying petitioner's motion for reconsideration, the Court of
Appeals resolved that although the bills of lading were not offered in
evidence, the litigation obviously revolves on such bills of lading which are
practically the documents or contracts sued upon, hence, they are inevitably
involved and their provisions cannot be disregarded in the determination of
the relative rights of the parties thereto. 15
Respondent court correctly passed upon the matter of prescription, since that
defense was so considered and controverted by the parties. This issue may
accordingly be taken cognizance of by the court even if not inceptively raised
as a defense so long as its existence is plainly apparent on the face of
relevant pleadings. 16 In the case at bar, prescription as an affirmative
defense was seasonably raised by SLI in its answer, 17 except that the bills of
lading embodying the same were not formally offered in evidence, thus
reducing the bone of contention to whether or not prescription can be
maintained as such defense and, as in this case, consequently upheld on the
strength of mere references thereto.
As petitioners are suing upon SLI's contractual obligation under the contract
of carriage as contained in the bills of lading, such bills of lading can be
categorized as actionable documents which under the Rules must be properly
pleaded either as causes of action or defenses, 18 and the genuineness and
due execution of which are deemed admitted unless specifically denied under
oath by the adverse party. 19 The rules on actionable documents cover and
apply to both a cause of action or defense based on said documents. 20
In the present case and under the aforestated assumption that the time limit
involved is a prescriptive period, respondent carrier duly raised prescription
as an affirmative defense in its answer setting forth paragraph 5 of the
pertinent bills of lading which comprised the stipulation thereon by parties, to
wit:
5. Claims for shortage, damage, must be made at the time of
delivery to consignee or agent, if container shows exterior
signs of damage or shortage. Claims for non-delivery,
misdelivery, loss or damage must be filed within 30 days
from accrual. Suits arising from shortage, damage or loss,
non-delivery or misdelivery shall be instituted within 60 days
from date of accrual of right of action. Failure to file claims or
institute judicial proceedings as herein provided constitutes
waiver of claim or right of action. In no case shall carrier be
liable for any delay, non-delivery, misdelivery, loss of damage
to cargo while cargo is not in actual custody of carrier. 21
In their reply thereto, herein petitioners, by their own assertions that
cause of action, while a cause of action consists of the operative facts which
give rise to such right of action. The right of action does not arise until the
performance of all conditions precedent to the action and may be taken away
by the running of the statute of limitations, through estoppel, or by other
circumstances which do not affect the cause of action. 37 Performance or
fulfillment of all conditions precedent upon which a right of action depends
must be sufficiently alleged, 38 considering that the burden of proof to show
that a party has a right of action is upon the person initiating the suit. 39
More particularly, where the contract of shipment contains a reasonable
requirement of giving notice of loss of or injury to the goods, the giving of
such notice is a condition precedent to the action for loss or injury or the right
to enforce the carrier's liability. Such requirement is not an empty formalism.
The fundamental reason or purpose of such a stipulation is not to relieve the
carrier from just liability, but reasonably to inform it that the shipment has
been damaged and that it is charged with liability therefor, and to give it an
opportunity to examine the nature and extent of the injury. This protects the
carrier by affording it an opportunity to make an investigation of a claim
while the matter is fresh and easily investigated so as to safeguard itself from
false and fraudulent claims. 40
Stipulations in bills of lading or other contracts of shipment which require
notice of claim for loss of or damage to goods shipped in order to impose
liability on the carrier operate to prevent the enforcement of the contract
when not complied with, that is, notice is a condition precedent and the
carrier is not liable if notice is not given in accordance with the
stipulation, 41 as the failure to comply with such a stipulation in a contract of
carriage with respect to notice of loss or claim for damage bars recovery for
the loss or damage suffered. 42
On the other hand, the validity of a contractual limitation of time for filing the
suit itself against a carrier shorter than the statutory period therefor has
generally been upheld as such stipulation merely affects the shipper's
remedy and does not affect the liability of the carrier. In the absence of any
statutory limitation and subject only to the requirement on the
reasonableness of the stipulated limitation period, the parties to a contract of
carriage may fix by agreement a shorter time for the bringing of suit on a
claim for the loss of or damage to the shipment than that provided by the
statute of limitations. Such limitation is not contrary to public policy for it
does not in any way defeat the complete vestiture of the right to recover, but
merely requires the assertion of that right by action at an earlier period than
would be necessary to defeat it through the operation of the ordinary statute
of limitations. 43
In the case at bar, there is neither any showing of compliance by petitioners
with the requirement for the filing of a notice of claim within the prescribed
period nor any allegation to that effect. It may then be said that while
petitioners may possibly have a cause of action, for failure to comply with the
above condition precedent they lost whatever right of action they may have
in their favor or, token in another sense, that remedial right or right to relief
had prescribed. 44
The shipment in question was discharged into the custody of the consignee
on May 15, 1977, and it was from this date that petitioners' cause of action
accrued, with thirty (30) days therefrom within which to file a claim with the
carrier for any loss or damage which may have been suffered by the cargo
and thereby perfect their right of action. The findings of respondent court as
supported by petitioners' formal offer of evidence in the court below show
that the claim was filed with SLI only on April 28, 1978, way beyond the
period provided in the bills of lading 45 and violative of the contractual
provision, the inevitable consequence of which is the loss of petitioners'
remedy or right to sue. Even the filing of the complaint on May 12, 1978 is of
no remedial or practical consequence, since the time limits for the filing
thereof, whether viewed as a condition precedent or as a prescriptive period,
would in this case be productive of the same result, that is, that petitioners
had no right of action to begin with or, at any rate, their claim was timebarred.
What the court finds rather odd is the fact that petitioner TPI filed a
provisional claim with DVAPSI as early as June 14, 1977 46 and, as found by
the trial court, a survey fixing the extent of loss of and/or damage to the
cargo was conducted on July 8, 1977 at the instance of petitioners. 47 If
petitioners had the opportunity and awareness to file such provisional claim
and to cause a survey to be conducted soon after the discharge of the cargo,
then they could very easily have filed the necessary formal, or even a
provisional, claim with SLI itself 48 within the stipulated period therefor,
instead of doing so only on April 28, 1978 despite the vessel's arrival at the
port of destination on May 15, 1977. Their failure to timely act brings us to no
inference other than the fact that petitioners slept on their rights and they
must now face the consequences of such inaction.
The ratiocination of the Court of Appeals on this aspect is worth reproducing:
xxx xxx xxx
It must be noted, at this juncture, that the aforestated time
limitation in the presentation of claim for loss or damage, is
but a restatement of the rule prescribed under Art. 366 of the
Code of Commerce which reads as follows:
Art. 366. Within the twenty-four hours
following the receipt of the merchandise, the
claim against the carrier for damage or
average which may be found therein upon
opening the packages, may be made,
provided that the indications of the damage
or average which gives rise to the claim
cannot be ascertained from the outside part
of the packages, in which case the claims
shall be admitted only at the time of the
receipt.
After the periods mentioned have elapsed, or
the transportation charges have been paid,
no claim shall be admitted against the carrier
with regard to the condition in which the
goods transported were delivered.
Gleanable therefrom is the fact that subject stipulation even
lengthened the period for presentation of claims thereunder.
case, Ong Yiu vs. Court of Appeals, et al., 50 instructs us that "contracts of
adhesion wherein one party imposes a ready-made form of contract on the
other . . . are contracts not entirely prohibited. The one who adheres to the
contract is in reality free to reject it entirely; if he adheres he gives his
consent." In the present case, not even an allegation of ignorance of a party
excuses non-compliance with the contractual stipulations since the
responsibility for ensuring full comprehension of the provisions of a contract
of carriage devolves not on the carrier but on the owner, shipper, or
consignee as the case may be.
While it is true that substantial compliance with provisions on filing of claim
for loss of or damage to cargo may sometimes suffice, the invocation of such
an assumption must be viewed vis-a-vis the object or purpose which such a
provision seeks to attain and that is to afford the carrier a reasonable
opportunity to determine the merits and validity of the claim and to protect
itself against unfounded impositions. 51 Petitioners' would nevertheless adopt
an adamant posture hinged on the issuance by SLI of a "Report on Losses and
Damages," dated May 15, 1977, 52 from which petitioners theorize that this
charges private respondents with actual knowledge of the loss and damage
involved in the present case as would obviate the need for or render
superfluous the filing of a claim within the stipulated period.
Withal, it has merely to be pointed out that the aforementioned report bears
this notation at the lower part thereof: "Damaged by Mla. labor upon
unloading; B/L noted at port of origin," as an explanation for the cause of loss
of and/or damage to the cargo, together with an iterative note stating that
"(t)his Copy should be submitted together with your claim invoice or receipt
within 30 days from date of issue otherwise your claim will not be honored."
Moreover, knowledge on the part of the carrier of the loss of or damage to
the goods deducible from the issuance of said report is not equivalent to nor
does it approximate the legal purpose served by the filing of the requisite
claim, that is, to promptly apprise the carrier about a consignee's intention to
file a claim and thus cause the prompt investigation of the veracity and merit
thereof for its protection. It would be an unfair imposition to require the
carrier, upon discovery in the process of preparing the report on losses or
damages of any and all such loss or damage, to presume the existence of a
claim against it when at that time the carrier is expectedly concerned merely
with accounting for each and every shipment and assessing its condition.
Unless and until a notice of claim is therewith timely filed, the carrier cannot
be expected to presume that for every loss or damage tallied, a
corresponding claim therefor has been filed or is already in existence as
would alert it to the urgency for an immediate investigation of the soundness
of the claim. The report on losses and damages is not the claim referred to
and required by the bills of lading for it does not fix responsibility for the loss
or damage, but merely states the condition of the goods shipped. The claim
contemplated herein, in whatever form, must be something more than a
notice that the goods have been lost or damaged; it must contain a claim for
compensation or indicate an intent to claim. 53
Thus, to put the legal effect of respondent carrier's report on losses or
damages, the preparation of which is standard procedure upon unloading of
cargo at the port of destination, on the same level as that of a notice of claim
by imploring substantial compliance is definitely farfetched. Besides, the
cited notation on the carrier's report itself makes it clear that the filing of a
notice of claim in any case is imperative if carrier is to be held liable at all for
the loss of or damage to cargo.
Turning now to respondent DVAPSI and considering that whatever right of
action petitioners may have against respondent carrier was lost due to their
failure to seasonably file the requisite claim, it would be awkward, to say the
least, that by some convenient process of elimination DVAPSI should
proverbially be left holding the bag, and it would be pure speculation to
assume that DVAPSI is probably responsible for the loss of or damage to
cargo. Unlike a common carrier, an arrastre operator does not labor under a
presumption of negligence in case of loss, destruction or deterioration of
goods discharged into its custody. In other words, to hold an arrastre operator
liable for loss of and/or damage to goods entrusted to it there must be
preponderant evidence that it did not exercise due diligence in the handling
and care of the goods.
Petitioners failed to pinpoint liability on any of the original defendants and in
this seemingly wild goose-chase, they cannot quite put their finger down on
when, where, how and under whose responsibility the loss or damage
probably occurred, or as stated in paragraph 8 of their basic complaint filed
in the court below, whether "(u)pon discharge of the cargoes from the
original carrying vessel, the SS VISHVA YASH," and/or upon discharge of the
cargoes from the interisland vessel the MV "SWEET LOVE," in Davao City and
later while in the custody of defendant arrastre operator. 54
The testimony of petitioners' own witness, Roberto Cabato, Jr., Marine and
Aviation Claims Manager of petitioner Philamgen, was definitely inconclusive
and the responsibility for the loss or damage could still not be ascertained
therefrom:
Q In other words, Mr. Cabato, you only
computed the loss on the basis of the figures
submitted to you and based on the
documents like the survey certificate and the
certificate of the arrastre?
A Yes, sir.
Q Therefore, Mr. Cabato, you have no idea
how or where these losses were incurred?
A No, sir.
xxx xxx xxx
Q Mr. Witness, you said that you processed
and investigated the claim involving the
shipment in question. Is it not a fact that in
your processing and investigation you
considered
how
the
shipment
was
transported? Where the losses could have
occurred and what is the extent of the
respective responsibilities of the bailees
and/or carriers involved?
FIRST DIVISION
of
the
BELLOSILLO, J.:
Is the testimony of a witness inadmissible in evidence if not formally offered
at the time the witness is called to testify, as required in Sec. 35, in relation
to Sec. 34, Rule 132, of the Revised Rules on Evidence? 1
On 8 June 1990, two (2) Informations for estafa were filed against petitioner
Concepcion M. Catuira with the Regional Trial Court of Calamba, Laguna, for
having issued two (2) checks in payment of her obligation to private
complainant Maxima Ocampo when petitioner had no sufficient funds to
cover the same, which checks upon presentment for payment were
dishonored by the drawee bank. 2
After the prosecution had presented its evidence, petitioner Concepcion M.
Catuira filed a Motion to Dismiss (by way of Demurrer to Evidence) under Sec.
15, Rule 119, of the 1985 Revised Rules on Criminal Procedure. 3Petitioner
contended that the testimony of private respondent Ocampo was
inadmissible in evidence since it was not properly introduced when she was
called to testify as mandated in Sec. 35, Rule 132, of the Revised Rules on
Evidence. Petitioner also argued that even if the testimony of private
respondent was considered, the evidence of the prosecution still failed to
prove that the checks were issued in payment of an obligation.
55
Neither did nor could the trial court, much less the Court of Appeals, precisely
establish the stage in the course of the shipment when the goods were lost,
destroyed or damaged. What can only be inferred from the factual findings of
the trial court is that by the time the cargo was discharged to DVAPSI, loss or
damage had already occurred and that the same could not have possibly
occurred while the same was in the custody of DVAPSI, as demonstrated by
the observations of the trial court quoted at the start of this opinion.
Republic
SUPREME
Manila
CONCEPCION
M.
CATUIRA, petitioner,
vs.
COURT OF APPEALS and PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, respondents.
Philippines
COURT
On 26 July 1991, the trial court denied the motion to dismiss for lack of merit.
On 18 October 1991, it likewise denied the motion to reconsider its denial of
the motion to dismiss.
On 4 November 1991 petitioner elevated her case to the Court of Appeals
through a petition for certiorari, prohibition and mandamus. In a similar
move, the appellate court rejected her petition and sustained the trial court
in its denial of the motion to dismiss. Hence, this recourse seeking to annul
the decision of the Court of Appeals rendered on 27 February 1992 as well as
its resolution of 1 June 1992. 4
Petitioner claims that the Court of Appeals erred when it accepted the
testimony of private respondent despite the undisputed fact that it was not
offered at the time she was called to testify; her testimony should have been
stricken off the record pursuant to Sec. 34, Rule 132, which prohibits the
court from considering evidence which has not been formally offered; and, it
was error for respondent appellate court to declare that petitioner's objection
was not done at the proper time since under Sec. 36, Rule 132, 5 objection to
evidence offered orally must be made immediately after the offer is made.
Evidently, petitioner could not have waived her right to object to the
admissibility of the testimony of private respondent since the rule requires
that it must be done only at the time such testimony is presented and the
records plainly show that the opportunity for petitioner to object only came
when the prosecution attempted, albeit belatedly, to offer the testimony after
it has rested its case. 6
The petition is devoid of merit. The reason for requiring that evidence be
formally introduced is to enable the court to rule intelligently upon the
objection to the questions which have been asked. 7 As a general rule, the
proponent must show its relevancy, materiality and competency. Where the
proponent offers evidence deemed by counsel of the adverse party to be
inadmissible for any reason, the latter has the right to object. But such right
is a mere privilege which can be waived. Necessarily, the objection must be
made at the earliest opportunity, lest silence when there is opportunity to
speak may operate as a waiver of objections. 8
Thus, while it is true that the prosecution failed to offer the questioned
testimony when private respondent was called to the witness stand,
petitioner waived this procedural error by failing to object at the appropriate
time, i.e., when the ground for objection became reasonably apparent the
moment private respondent was called to testify without any prior offer
having been made by the proponent. Most apt is the observation of the
appellate court:
While it is true that the prosecution failed to offer in evidence
the testimony of the complaining witness upon calling her to
testify and that it was only after her testimony and after the
petitioner moved that it be stricken that the offer was made,
the respondent Court did not gravely err in not dismissing the
case against the petitioner on the ground invoked. For, she
should have objected to the testimony of the complaining
witness when it was not first offered upon calling her and
should not have waited in ambush after she had already
finished testifying. By so doing she did not save the time of
the Court in hearing the testimony of the witness that after
all according to her was inadmissible. And for her failure to
make known her objection at the proper time, the procedural
error
or
defect
was
waived. 9
Indeed, the rationale behind Sec. 34, Rule 132, is manifest in the minutes of
the Revision of Rules Committee. 10Thus
The new rule would require the testimony of a witness to
offer it at the time the witness is called to testify. This is the
best time to offer the testimony so that the court's time will
not be wasted. Since it can right away rule on whether the
testimony is not necessary because it is irrelevant or
immaterial.
If petitioner was genuinely concerned with the ends of justice being served,
her actuations should have been otherwise. Instead, she attempted to
capitalize on a mere technicality to have the estafa case against her
dismissed. 11 But even assuming that petitioner's objection was timely, it was
at best pointless and superfluous. For there is no debating the fact that the
testimony of complaining witness is relevant and material in the criminal
prosecution of petitioner for estafa. It is inconceivable that a situation could
of
the
Philippines
COURT
FIRST DIVISION
KAPUNAN, J.:
Petitioners challenge the decision of the trial court, as affirmed by respondent
court, for lack of basis. They argue that the lower court and the Court of
Appeals erred in considering evidence not formally offered by private
respondent in accordance with the Rules of Court.
The controversy involves Lot No. 1571, a riceland located at Toran, Aparri,
Cagayan covered by Transfer Certificate of Title No. T-5168. On January 10,
1980, an action for specific performance with damages was filed in the then
Court of First Instance of Cagayan, Branch II by Eulalia Marcita Taguba in her
capacity as administratrix of the estate of the deceased Leonor Taguba
against Elvira Mato Vda. de Oate.
As the trial court found, the deceased Leonor Taguba bought the subject
parcel of land from Elvira Mato Vda. de Oate sometime in 1976 for a
consideration of P5,000.00 payable in four (4) installments. Accordingly, she
paid P2,250.00 on January 20, 1976, 1 P750.00 on February 23,
1976, 2 P1,000.00 on March 20, 1976 3 and P1,000.00 on July 29, 1976. 4 After
full payment was made on July 29, 1976, the parties however failed to reduce
their contract in writing. On December 30, 1976, Leonor Taguba died. The
instant complaint was filed when demand was made upon Elvira Mato Vda.
de Oate to execute a public document of sale in favor of the deceased and
The trial court rejected the petitioners' defense that Elvira Mato Vda. de
Oate contracted a verbal loan from Leonor Taguba in the amount of
P12,000.00 payable within a period of 4 years with 12% interest. Also
disbelieved was the allegation that two (2) parcels of land covered by TCT No.
5167 and TCT No. 5168 (the land in dispute) were mortgaged by Elvira Mato
Vda. de Oate to Leonor Taguba as security for the payment of the loan and
that only P5,000.00 of the P12,000.00 loan was given by Taguba.
On July 12, 1990, the trial court rendered judgment, the dispositive portion of
which reads:
WHEREFORE judgment is hereby rendered as follows:
1. Declaring the agreement between the late Leonor Taguba
and deceased defendant Elvira Mato Vda. de Oate entered
into on 20 January 1976, as a contract of "to sell";
2. Ordering the defendants to execute the proper document
to give effect to the contract within thirty (30) days,
otherwise, this Court shall be forced to order the cancellation
of the certificate of title covering Lot No. 1571 of the Aparri
Cadastre, and the Register of Deeds of Cagayan to issue
another certificate of title in the name of the Estate of Leonor
Taguba;
3. Ordering the plaintiff to prosecute their money claims
against deceased defendant's estate in accordance with
Section 21, Rule 3 of the Rules of Court.
Costs de oficio.
SO ORDERED.
COURT:
Was that admitted by the other party?
ATTY. LUCERO:
May we put it on record that the amount of
P750.00 was paid by Miss Leonor B. Taguba
on February 23, 1976, Your Honor.
COURT:
First receipt is P2,250.00. 13
xxx xxx xxx
ATTY. LUCERO:
The receipt for the amount of Two Thousand
two hundred fifty (P2,250.00) pesos be
marked as Exhibit "F", Your Honor.
COURT:
Mark it as Exhibit "F." 14
ATTY. LUCERO:
May we request Your Honor that the amount
of 750.00 receipt be marked as Exhibit "F-1"
dated February 23, 1976; Exhibit "F-2" is the
receipt for P1,000.00 paid on March 20, 1976;
all in all, the amount is P5,000.00 including
Exhibit "J" or rather Exhibit "F-3" which is the
amount of P1,000.00 and was paid apparently
on July 29, 1976 as partial payment for the
parcel of land covered by TCT No. 5167
(sic),Your Honor.
xxx xxx xxx
COURT:
This is a petition for review on certiorari of the Decision [1] of the Court of
Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. CV No. 65352 affirming the Decision [2] of the Regional
Trial Court (RTC) in Civil Case No. 8634, as well as the Resolution
dated November 21, 2003 which denied the motion for reconsideration
thereof.
Calma,
Fabian
Calma,
Emilio
Calma
and
Demetria
Calma.
However, the declaration did not bear the name and signature of the
declarant.
Filomena,
Jose,
Josefina,
Ana,
Rufino,
and
Avelina,
all
over a lot located in Barrio Tibag, Tarlac City; the said lot was identified as Lot
been abandoned, and (c) the complaint stated no cause of action. [10] The
No. 3844 of the Tarlac Cadastre No. 274, with an area of 20.5464 hectares;
court denied the motion. The heirs of Calma filed their answer, reiterating the
OCT No. 1112 was issued to Emilio on April 21, 1932, and from then had
enjoyed full ownership and dominion over the said lot; and prior to his death,
Emilio ordered Felimon to work for the recovery of the said property. [7]They
further averred that when Felimon went to the Register of Deeds of Tarlac for
record of the said title, nor TCT No. 13287. [12] He discovered from the said
a final verification, he discovered that the lot covered by OCT No. 1112 was
office that the subject lot was covered by TCT No. 19181 with the names of
already registered in the names of Agatona, Fabian, Emilio and Demetria, all
surnamed Calma, under TCT No. 19181 issued on November 27, 1953. It
appeared from the said TCT No. 19181 that the title was a transfer from TCT
No. 13287.[8]
Agatona Calma and her co-heirs as owners. [13] The title was, in turn, cancelled
and replaced by TCT No. 71286 also in the names of Agatona Calma and her
co-heirs.
On cross-examination, Felimon declared that his father, Emilio,
mentioned the property to the plaintiffs sometime before he died in 1973.
From that time on, he tried to ascertain the particulars of the property and
The heirs contended that Emilio was the first registrant of the subject
lot and, as such, was its lawful owner. The land could no longer be the subject
succeeded in 1990 only when he went through the records at the Community
Environment and Natural Resources Office (CENRO).[14]
of Cadastral Survey No. 274 and as indicated in the Area Sheet of Lot 3844,
Cad. 274, Emilio Santioque was the claimant of the lot. However, the Bureau
II
admitted
that
Amando
Bangayan, Chief,
Records
Management Division of the LMB certified that, based on the survey records
(LRA), certified that after due verification of the records of the Book of
Cadastral Lots, Lot 3844 had been the subject of Cadastral Case No. 61, LRC
III
Homestead Patent No. 18577 dated March 31, 1932.[16] Felino Cortez, Chief,
Ordinary and Cadastral Decree Division of the Land Registration Authority
Cad. Record No. 1879; the case had been decided but no final decree of
issuance of TCT No. 19181. He explained that in 1987 and 1988, his office
had to be reconstructed, and titles and documents had to be moved from one
IV
registration had been issued; and the lot was subject to the annotation con
patent No. 18577 segun report of B.L.[17] The Register of Deeds of Tarlac
stated that, on January 25, 1998, despite diligent efforts, he could not locate
TCT No. 13287 and OCT No. 1112 or any other document leading to the
place
to
another.[18] The
Register
of
Deeds
issued
certification[19] dated September 10, 1998 stating that despite diligent efforts,
he could not locate OCT No. 1112 or any document showing how it was
cancelled.The Records Officer of the Register of Deeds in Tarlac City also
certified that OCT No. 1112 and TCT No. 13287 could not be found despite
diligent efforts.[20]
After the heirs of Santioque rested their case, the defendants, heirs of
Calma, demurred to plaintiffs evidence and sought its dismissal on the
ground that the latter failed to establish a preponderance of evidence to
support their ownership over the property.[21]
On August 11, 1999, the trial court issued an Order [22] granting the
demurrer and dismissing the complaint on the ground that plaintiffs failed to
establish their case.
The heirs of Santioque appealed said order to the CA claiming that
I
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN HOLDING THAT PLAINTIFFS-
V
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN SWEEPINGLY CONCLUDING THAT
DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES HAVE ACQUIRED THE SUBJECT
PROPERTY BY ACQUISITIVE PRESCRIPTION AND IN RULING
THAT PLAINTIFFS-APPELLANTS HAVE SLEPT ON THEIR RIGHT
FOR MANY YEARS AND THAT THEY HAVE CONSTRUCTIVE
NOTICE OF THE ISSUANCE OF DEFENDANTS-APPELLEES TITLE,
THUS THEY ARE ESTOPPED BY LACHES.
6.
7.
8.
9.
VI
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN REFUSING WITHOUT VALID
CAUSE
TO
ISSUE SUBPOENA
DUCES
TECUM AND AD
TESTIFICANDUM TO THE REGISTER OF DEEDS OF TARLAC
AND THE LAND REGISTRATION AUTHORITY IN ORDER TO
SHED LIGHT ON THE WHEREABOUTS OF OCT 1112 AND THE
ISSUANCE OF TCT NOS. 13287, 19181 AND 71826. [23]
The heirs of Santioque did not present the said documents at the trial
below but they included the same in their appellants brief.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Without waiting for the report of the NBI on their request, the heirs of
Santioque filed a motion with the CA for the early resolution of the case.
[35]
On June 27, 2003, the CA affirmed the appealed decision. [36] The appellate
court did not give probative weight to the certifications and other documents
submitted by the heirs of Santioque, as their authenticity had not been
established and the signatories therein were not presented for crossexamination. It noted that none of the crucial documents were presented in
the trial court. Assuming that OCT No. 1112 was indeed issued to Emilio
Santioque, the claim of his heirs was nevertheless barred by laches; the latter
must bear the consequences of their fathers inaction.
Petitioners aver that prescription and laches do not bar their complaint since
they have been vigilant in protecting their rights. They contend that Emilio
was old and sickly and died at an old age. Laches presupposes negligence,
and neither Emilio nor his successors were negligent in protecting their rights
over the subject property. It took sometime before they could lodge a
would ordinarily have to do, if it is shown by plaintiffs evidence that the latter
complaint against respondents because they had to make inquiries first and
For their part, respondents aver that there were no indicia of proof that OCT
No.1112 was really issued to Emilio. The evidence proffered by the petitioners
only tends to prove that Emilio was a mere claimant. It is not incumbent upon
the respondents to present any proof that they are the owners of the subject
lot because the property is registered in their name. The mere fact that the
records are not available would not ipso facto mean that the transactions
made affecting OCT No. 1112 were irregular.[42]
A demurrer to evidence may be issued when, upon the facts and the
law, the plaintiff has shown no right to relief. [45] Where the plaintiffs evidence
together with such inferences and conclusions as may reasonably be drawn
therefrom does not warrant recovery against the defendant, a demurrer to
evidence should be sustained. [46] A demurrer to evidence is likewise
sustainable when, admitting every proven fact favorable to the plaintiff and
indulging in his favor all conclusions fairly and reasonably inferable
Respondents further aver that the appellate court was correct in not
giving credence to the documents, which were not submitted during the trial
even though they were obtainable at that time. To allow the introduction of
these documents on appeal would violate the essence of due process as the
therefrom, the plaintiff has failed to make out one or more of the material
elements of his case,[47] or when there is no evidence to support an allegation
necessary to his claim.[48] It should be sustained where the plaintiffs evidence
is prima facie insufficient for a recovery.[49]
claim by their own evidence required by law. [50] More so, where, as in this
case, on the face of TCT No. 19181 under the names of the respondents, it
The core issues in this case are: (1) whether the trial court erred in
granting the demurrer to evidence of respondents, and (2) whether
petitioners claim is barred by prescription and laches.
On the first issue, the Court holds that CA ruling which affirmed that
of the RTC granting the demurrer is correct.
was derived from TCT No. 13287, which in turn cancelled OCT No. 1112
issued on April 21, 1932 on the basis of a homestead patent. It must be
stressed that the original certificate of title carries a strong presumption that
the provisions of law governing the registration of land have been complied
with. The OCT enjoys a presumption of validity. Once the title is registered,
the owners can rest secure on their ownership and possession. [51] Once a
applicant should comply with before a patent could be issued to him, thus:
certificate of title issued in virtue of said patent has the force and effect of
a Torrens title issued under the land registration law.[52]
Petitioners rely on Tax Dec. No. 19675 to substantiate their claim over
the subject property. However, it is axiomatic that tax receipts and tax
declarations of ownership for taxation purposes do not constitute sufficient
proof of ownership. They must be supported by other effective proofs. [54]
The appellate court was also correct in not giving credence to the
the said documents were not presented in the trial court. Petitioners, thus,
It is well settled that courts will consider as evidence only that which
should have filed a motion for new trial based on newly-discovered evidence
has been formally offered,[55] otherwise, the opposing party would be denied
under Rule 37, Section 2 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure after the trial
said documents during the rebuttal stage of the proceedings before the trial
hardly
be
considered
records. Petitioners
evidence that supports his case during the presentation of his evidence in
they would not, in any way, bolster petitioners case, or remedy the vacuum
the evidence on the case in chief before the close of the proof, and may not
in their evidence-in-chief.
could
newly
have
discovered
earlier
since
secured
they
copies
are
public
thereof
during
add to it by the device of rebuttal. [59] After the parties have produced their
respective direct proofs, they are allowed to offer rebutting evidence only. [60]
ten years, the point of reference being the date of registration of the deed or
the date of issuance of the certificate of title over the property. [64] Even if we
reckon the prescription period from TCT No. 19181 issued on November 27,
1953, the only title verified to be in the name of respondents, more than ten
years have already elapsed since then until the time the petitioners filed their
complaint
on February
29,
1998.
An
action
for
reconveyance
is
[65]
PEOPLE
OF
THE
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. AGPANGA
LIBNAO y KITTEN and ROSITA NUNGA y VALENCIA, accused.
AGPANGA LIBNAO y KITTEN, accused-appellant.
DECISION
PUNO, J.:
Before us is an appeal from the Decision dated November 19, 1998 of
the Regional Trial Court, Branch 65, Tarlac City, finding appellant Agpanga
Libnao and her co-accused Rosita Nunga guilty of violating Article II, Section
4 of R.A. No. 6425, otherwise known as the Dangerous Drugs Act of 1972.
[1]
For their conviction, each was sentenced to suffer an imprisonment
of reclusion perpetua and to pay a fine of two million pesos.
Appellant and her co-accused were charged under the following
Information:
That on or about October 20, 1996 at around 1:00 oclock dawn, in the
Municipality of Tarlac, Province of Tarlac, Philippines, and within the
jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused conspiring,
confederating and helping with one another, without being lawfully
authorized, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously make
delivery/transport with intent to sell marijuana leaves wrapped in a
transparent plastic weighing approximately eight (8) kilos, which is in
violation of Section 4, Article II of RA 6425, otherwise known as the
Dangerous Drugs Act of 1972, as amended.
CONTRARY TO LAW.[2]
During their arraignment, both entered a plea of Not Guilty. Trial on the
merits ensued.
It appears from the evidence adduced by the prosecution that in August
of 1996, intelligence operatives of the Philippine National Police (PNP)
stationed in Tarlac, Tarlac began conducting surveillance operation on
suspected drug dealers in the area. They learned from their asset that a
certain woman from Tajiri, Tarlac and a companion from Baguio City were
transporting illegal drugs once a month in big bulks.
On October 19, 1996, at about 10 oclock in the evening, Chief Inspector
Benjamin Arceo, Tarlac Police Chief, held a briefing in connection with a tip
which his office received that the two drug pushers, riding in a tricycle, would
be making a delivery that night. An hour later, the Police Alert Team installed
Upon reaching the center, PO3 Ferrer fetched Barangay Captain Roy
Pascual to witness the opening of the black bag. In the meantime, the two
women and the bag were turned over to the investigator on duty, SPO3
Arthur Antonio. As soon as the barangay captain arrived, the black bag was
opened in the presence of the appellant, her co-accused and personnel of the
center. Found inside it were eight bricks of leaves sealed in plastic bags and
covered with newspaper. The leaves were suspected to be marijuana.
To determine who owns the bag and its contents, SPO3 Antonio
interrogated the two. Rosita Nunga stated that it was owned by the
appellant. The latter, in turn, disputed this allegation. Thereafter, they were
made to sign a confiscation receipt without the assistance of any counsel, as
they were not informed of their right to have one. During the course of the
investigation, not even close relatives of theirs were present.
The seized articles were later brought to the PNP Crime Laboratory in
San Fernando, Pampanga on October 23, 1996. Forensic Chemist Daisy P.
Babu conducted a laboratory examination on them. She concluded that the
articles were marijuana leaves weighing eight kilos. [4]
For their part, both accused denied the accusation against them. Rosita
Nunga testified that in the evening of October 19,1996, she went to buy
medicine for her ailing child at a pharmacy near the Tarlac Provincial
Hospital. The child was suffering from diarrhea, occasioned by abdominal
pain. To return to their house, she boarded a tricycle bound for Barangay
Tariji, where she resides. Along the way, the tricycle she was riding was
flagged down by a policeman at a checkpoint in Barangay Salapungan. She
was taken aback when the officer invited her to the Kabayan Center. It was
there that she was confronted with the black bag allegedly containing eight
bricks of marijuana leaves. She disputed owning the bag and knowing its
contents. She also denied sitting beside the appellant in the passengers seat
inside the tricycle, although she admitted noticing a male passenger behind
the driver.
Remarkably, appellant did not appear in court and was only represented
by her lawyer. The latter marked and submitted in evidence an affidavit
executed by one Efren Gannod, a security guard of Philippine Rabbit Bus
Lines in Tarlac, Tarlac. The sworn statement declared that at about 0220H on
October 20, 1996, SPO2 Antonio arrived at their terminal and arrested a
certain woman who boarded their Bus No. 983. The incident was recorded in
of
the
Philippines
COURT
FIRST DIVISION
G.R. No. L-28499 September 30, 1977
VICTORIAS
MILLING
COMPANY,
INC., petitioner,
vs.
ONG SU AND THE HONORABLE TIBURCIO S. EVALLE IN HIS CAPACITY
AS DIRECTOR OF PATENT'S,respondents.
Gonzalo W. Gonzalez, Agpalo & Associates for petitioner.
Salonga, Ordoez,
respondents.
Yap
&
Associates
and
Armando
G.
Gungon
for
FERNANDEZ, J.:
This is a petition to review the decision of the Director of Patents in Inter
Partes Case No. 304 entitled "Victorias Milling Company, Inc., petitioner,
verus, Ong Su" dated August 15, 1967 denying the petition to cancel the
certificate of registration issued by the philippines Patent Office on Jurie 20,
1961 in favor of Ong Su covering the tradenwk "VALENTINE" and design and
used on refined sugar. 1
V
THE RESPONDENT DIRECTOR OF PATENTS ERRED IN
CONFINING HIS COMPARISON OF PETITIONER'S AND
RESPONDENT'S RESPECTIVE TRADEMARKS TO ONE SOLE
ITEM OF THEIR DESIGN, IGNORING THE COMPLETE LABELS AS
ACTUALLY USED IN TRADE AND SEEN BY CONSUMERS.
VI
THE RESPONDENT DIRECTOR OF PATENTS ERRED IN TAKING
THE POSITION THAT IN CASES OF TRADEMARK CANCELLATION
INVOLVING, AMONG OTHERS, OBVIOUS ACTS OF UNFAIR
COMPETITION,
HE
NEED
NOT
TAKE
ANY
ACTION
WHATSOEVER, SINCE HE SUPPOSEDLY HAS NO JURISDICTION
IN THE PREMISES.
VII
THE RESPONDENT DIRECTOR OF PATENTS ERRED IN HOLDING
THAT PETITIONER'S REGISTERED COLOR DESIGN DOES NOT
FUNCTION AS A TRADEMARK.
VIII
THE RESPONDENT DIRECTOR OF PATENTS ERRED IN HOLDING
THAT BECAUSE THE LITERAL PORTIONS OF THE RESPECTIVE
TRADEMARKS IN QUESTION, NAMELY, THE RESPECTIVE
NAMES 'VICTORIAS' AND 'VALENTINE', HAVE NO SIMILARITY,
THERE IS NO REASONABLE LIKELIHOOD OF PURCHASER
CONFUSION.
IX
THE RESPONDENT DIRECTOR OF PATENTS ERRED IN
ASSUMING THAT PETITIONER, OR THE OWNER OF ANY
IMITATED OR INFRINGED TRADEMARK FOR THAT MATTER,
MUST ESTABLISH ACTUAL PURCHASER CONFUSION.
X
THE RESPONDENT DIRECTOR OF PATENTS ERRED IN
PREVENTING THE TESTIMONIES OF RESPONDENT ONG SU
AND WITNESS ERNESTO DURAN AS REBUTTAL WITNESSES
FOR PETITIONER, SAID RULINGS OF RESPONDENT DIRECTOR
CONSTITUTING REVERSIBLE ERROR AND THE DENIAL OF
PROCEDURAL DUE PROCESS.
XI
THE RESPONDENT DIRECTOR OF PATENTS ERRED IN HOLDING
THAT THE REGISTRATION OF THE VALENTINE TRADEMARK BY
RESPONDENT ONG SU WAS NOT PRUDULENTLY OBTAINED.
XII
and
rebuttal is to ask the latter if he had judicial authority to use the alias
'Mariano'. Ang It appears, however, that the counsel of petitioner had already
extensively cross-examined Ong Su as to a citizenship, alien certificate of
registration and the other name Mariano Ang. It seems immaterial whether or
not Ong Su has judicial authority to use Mariano Ang as an alias. There is
evidence that even before the last World War, the trademark 'Valentine' and
design had been used under the name of either Ong Su or Mariano Ang.
The petitioner sought to present Emesto T. Duran as rebuttal witness to prove
that there was a confusion among consumers or buyers of sugar caused by
the alleged sorority of the "Victorias" and "Valentine" trademarks. The
presentation of Emesto T. Duran as rebuttal witness was objected to by
counsel of the respondent on the ground that the evidence sought to be
elicited from Duran did not directly contradict the testimony of witness
Chicane The objection was sustained by the hearing officer whose ruling was
subsequently confer by the Director of Patents. Counsel for the petitioner
made the following formal offer of proof:
ATTY. GONZALEZ:
Your Honor please, in view of the ruling of the Honorable
Director your Honor please on the admissibility of certain
items of evidence, which resolution dated February 21, 1966
was received by undersigned counsel for the petitioner on
February 22, 1966, said resolution was setting the hearing of
this case for this morning, I wish to state, I wish to register
my exception, my respectful exception to said resolution. In
view of the resolution not permitting me to present Mr.
Ernesto Duran, my proposed witness whom I attempted to
present at the last hearing, I wish to offer as proof the
following items ol' the testimony of witness Duran. Now as he
would go shopping with his parents and that sometime in the
month of February 1963 he went to the Aranque market, and
while he was buying groceries he saw a shelf with five (5) lbs.
bag of sugar with the bag and package he thought was
VICTORIAS. Witness Duran will further testify that he went to
the shelf and pointed to the bag of sugar and hesaid Isang
support ng Victorias Ang. That the sugar was taken by the
shopkeeper and when he went home he found out that the
sugar was marked VALENTINE. lie went on again on another
time later and saw that the shelf was still filled with five (5)
pounds (lbs,) bag VALENTINE sugar. The shelf also has bags
of VICTORIAS sugar side by side with VALENTINE sugar, that
the package of VALENTINE looked so much alike will
VICTORIAS sugar that he was misled into pointing to
VALENTINE and asked for VICTORIAS.
HEARING OFFICER:
What is that, is that supposed to be the testimony of witness
Duran?
ATTY. GONZALEZ:
Yes, your Honor, I am offering as proof of what the witness
Duran would have testified. Since this office has ruled that I
cannot present him an offer of proof is being made for
purposes of putting on record what he would have testified to
on record in accordance with the Rules of Evidence. 11
Having made the foregoing formal offer of proof, the petitioner cannot
complain that it was denied procedural due process.
The proposed testimony of Emesto T. Duran that in February 1963 he went to
Arangue market and bought one bag of sugar which he thought was
"Victorias" and when he went home he found out that the sugar was marked
"Valentine" is not sufficient evidence that the two trademarks are so similar
that buyers of sugar are confused. The words "Victorias" and "Valentine" are
not similar in spelling and do not have a similar sound when pronounced.
Even the diamond designs are different. The diamond design of the
trademark "Valentine" has protruding fines at the comers. Even an illiterate
person can see the difference between the two diamond designs.
There is no evidence that the respondent Ong Su had obtained the
registration of his trademark "Valentine" and design by means of fraud. The
said trademark was registered in the Philippines Patent Office before the
petitioner registered its trademark.
The record and evidence show that Ong Su had also used in his business the
name Mariano Ang. Hence the licenses and permits in the name of Ong Su
and/or Mariano Ang were correctly admitted as evidence.
WHEREFORE the decision of the Director of Patents sought to be reviewed is
hereby affirmed, without pronouncement as to costs.
CARPIO, J.:
The Case
Before the Court is a petition for review [1] assailing the 23 June 2000
Decision[2] and the 7 November 2001 Resolution [3] of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. CR No. 21450. The Court of Appeals affirmed the
30 September 1997 Decision[4] of the Regional Trial Court of Manila,
Branch 50 (trial court) in Criminal Cases Nos. 94-135055-56. The trial
court found Coverdale Abarquez y Evangelista (Abarquez) guilty
beyond reasonable doubt as an accomplice in the crime of homicide
in Criminal Case No. 94-135055.
SO ORDERED.
THIRD DIVISION
COVERDALE ABARQUEZ, G.R. No. 150762
y EVANGELISTA,
Petitioner,
Present:
Quisumbing, J.,
Chairman,
Carpio,
- versus - Carpio Morales, and
Tinga, JJ.
Promulgated:
THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES,
Respondent. January 20, 2006
x- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -x
DECISION
The Charge
The
prosecution
charged
Abarquez
with
the
crimes
of
Abarquezs son Bardie and Sonito Masula (Masula) joined Paz and
CONTRARY TO LAW.[7]
Almojuela got angry and attacked Paz with a knife. Paz parried the
attack with his left arm but sustained an injury. Abarquez held Paz
Abarquez entered a plea of not guilty to both charges. The cases
on both shoulders while Bardie pacified Almojuela. Paz asked
were tried jointly.
Abarquez, What is our atraso, we were going home, why did you
block
our
way?
Abarquez
answered, Masyado
kang
matapang.
They
learned
that
Almojuela,
assisted
by
Abarquez,
still on the ground. Almojuela and Abarquez were still in the area.
Paz and his companions brought Quejong to the UST Hospital. They
Abarquez met the Chief Tanod of the barangay and two kagawads.
Kagawad Rudy Lego (Lego) advised him to report the incident to the
police. They all proceeded to Precinct No. 4 where Lego reported the
incident to the desk officer. The desk officer told them that a person
residence at 3363 San Jose St., Sta. Mesa, Manila. About 7:30 p.m.,
Almojuelas wife informed him that the group of Paz was challenging
informed them that he had just reported the incident. Upon the
Almojuela testified that he was inside his house when his daughter
informed him that there was marijuana smoke coming to their
window. He went outside to look for the source of the smoke and
saw Quejong, Paz, and Masula smoking marijuana. Almojuela asked
the group to move away as there were children inside the house. He
was on his way back to the house when Quejong tried to strangle
him. Later, Almojuela heard a gunshot. He also heard Abarquez
shouting, Tumigil na kayo. Quejong, Masula, and Paz ran away.
and
Quejong
were
quarreling.
Evangelista
saw
Paz
kicking
not to interfere. Abarquez was forced to fire a warning shot and the
Appeals.
trial courts Decision. The Court of Appeals sustained the trial court
in giving more credence to the testimony of Paz. The Court of
In its Decision
[11]
The Issues
SO ORDERED.[12]
(1)
community
of
design,
which
means
that
the
of
previous
or
simultaneous
acts
that
are
not
The rule is that the trial court is in the best position to determine
Indeed, in one case, the Court ruled that the mere presence of the
the value and weight of the testimony of a witness. The exception is
accused at the crime scene cannot be interpreted to mean that he
if the trial court failed to consider certain facts of substance and
committed the crime charged.[21]
value, which if considered, might affect the result of the case. [16] This
case is an exception to the rule.
q.
a.
q.
a.
q.
a.
PROSECUTOR F. G. SUPNET:
I would like to make it of record demonstrated
being held by the accused holding both
shoulders, your Honor.
q.
Now, when this Dale Abarquez held both
on your shoulders, what happened next, if any?
a.
He got angry scolding us. While scolding
me the two
who were grappling each other walking away,
sir. (sic)
q.
a.
q.
a.
q.
a.
q.
a.
q.
a.
q.
a.
[q.] And it was during that time when you were held in
both shoulders by the accused [C]overdale
Abarquez?
a.
Yes, sir.
q.
and that Coverdale Abarquez was infront of you,
is it not?
a.
Yes, sir on my side.
q.
a.
q.
ATTY. GASCON:
Make I make it of record your Honor that the
interpreter act as the witness while the witness
act as the accused demonstrating holding both
hands of interpreter preventing the witness
and saying Joey tumigil ka na, joey tumigil ka
na.
COURT:
q.
a.
Twice, Your Honor.
ATTY. GASCON:
The accused told you Joey tumigil ka na, Joey
tumigil ka na because you were trying to attack
Bitoy, is it not?
a.
a.
me to stop.
COURT:
Does the Court get from you that you are trying
to explain to Bitoy when the accused tried to
hold you and prevent you?
a.
q.
a.
Yes, sir.
That is why the reason you concluded
that the accused is not pacifying you but to
stop you from helping the victim?
Yes, sir.
in
Almojuelas
criminal
act.
When
Paz
ran
away,
Hence:
xxx The equipoise rule finds application if, as in this
case, the inculpatory facts and circumstances are
capable of two or more explanations, one of which is
consistent with the innocence of the accused and the
SO ORDERED.
FIRST DIVISION
HEIRS OF VICENTE REYES, represented by
DOMINADOR REYES; HEIRS OF APOLONIA REYES
SAMSON, represented by MILAGROS FRANCISCO;
MONICO REYES PALMARIO; FELICISIMA REYES
CHING-CUANCO; JULIA REYES; LEONORA REYES;
EDILBERTA REYES; MAXIMA REYES; BIENVENIDO
REYES; HEIRS OF MANUEL REYES SAMSON,
represented
by
ZENADIA
FRILLES;
MARIOG.R. No. 157959
SAMSON; GLISERIO SAMSON; CRISPIN SAMSON;
NUMERIANO SAMSON; FERMENIA SAMSON, HEIRS Present:
OF MARTIN SAMSON, represented by MA. CLARA PUNO, C.J., Chairperson,
SAMSON; ELPIDIO SAMSON; RICARDO SAMSON; SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ,
VICTORINO SAMSON; EMILIANO SAMSON, JR.; CORONA,
CARMELITA SAMSON VERGARA; SHEILA ANN AZCUNA, and
SAMSON; FRANCISCO SAMSON AND MAGNO GARCIA, JJ.
SARREAL, represented by the substituted heirs,
AIDA SARREAL and the HEIRS OF CELERINA Promulgated:
SARREAL KAMANTIGUE, represented by LAURA S.
KAMANTIGUE,
March 28, 2007
Petitioners,
- versus subject to the condition, among others, that upon the expiration of such
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS, ANATALIA
REYES AND GLORIA REYES-PAULINO,
Respondents.
X----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------X
term, the ownership of all the improvements found within the leased property
would
automatically
be
transferred
to
the
lessor
without
need
for
property, they are co-owners of the resulting subdivision lots with private
guardian ad
respondents, the same being held in trust by the latter for the co-
order[16] dated August 26, 1994. Thereafter, the Office of Legal Aid filed, on
ownership. Similarly, the rents from the market stalls on the property belong
his behalf, the answer[17] dated September 5, 1994 which now denied for lack
not only to private respondents but also to them and private respondents
should be made to account for all rents received from the date of Eustaquias
death. They further prayed that the property be placed under receivership
litem of
Magno,
which
the
RTC
granted
in
an
was likewise denied, with Magno now claiming that the property was part of
the conjugal partnership from the very beginning.
they are the owners in fee simple of the property under TCT Nos. 272977 and
On December 12, 1994, Magno died and was substituted as defendant by
272976; 3) complainants are not compulsory heirs of Eustaquia; and 4) the
Celerina Sarreal Kamantigue, his sister, and Aida Sarreal. [18] During pre-trial,
title to the property has been transferred in the names of private respondents
the parties agreed that the sole issue to be resolved in the case was whether
pursuant to a valid sale long before the death of Eustaquia.
the sale of the property to private respondents was simulated or fictitious.
A separate answer[13] was filed on behalf of Magno Sarreal by his
On September
11,
1996,
petitioners
separate
applications
for
guardian ad litem was still in issue in two pending consolidated civil cases,
siblings but before a ruling could be made thereon, the decision [20] dated
namely, Civil Case No. Q-51482 [14] and Special Proceeding No. 50893. [15] The
September 7, 2001 was rendered by the RTC on September 12, 2001 in favor
Eustaquia and private respondents null and void; 2) ordered the Register of
had no means or source of income that would enable them to buy the
Deeds of Quezon City to cancel TCT Nos. 272976 and 272977; 3) allowed the
property and that they merely lived with the spouses Eustaquia and Magno
partition of the property among the legal heirs of Eustaquia and the legal
heirs of her deceased husband, Magno; 4) appointed the Branch Clerk of
Sarreal during their lifetime were mere generalities and fell short of the clear,
overcome the notarized deed of sale. [23] The CA, moreover, found the
she was able to establish she was earning an income and that she lived with
The CA held that the RTC showed undue bias in favor of complainants
On February 10, 2003, the CA reversed the decision of the RTC and rendered
by resolving the case on issues not agreed upon during the pre-trial,
particularly with regard to the true nature of the property and whether the
same was paraphernal or conjugal. It should be kept in mind that because the
property was deemed conjugal, the RTC held that the Deed of Absolute Sale
which did not bear Magnos signature was void.
Thereafter, separate motions for reconsideration[24] were filed by the children
of Eustaquias siblings and the heirs of Magno Sarreal. Collaborating counsel
for private respondents, on the other hand, filed a notice of entry of
appearance with omnibus motion.[25] The omnibus motion, attached as Annex
A to the notice, prayed for 1) the revocation of the appointment of the
The CA pointed out that during pre-trial, the parties agreed that the sole
receiver over the property; 2) the discharge of the appointed receiver; and 3)
issue that would limit or control the course of the trial was whether the
private respondents.
fictitious. The CA ruled that the burden of proof, which rested upon
complainants in this instance, was not met, after finding that the testimonies
constructed
thereon
at
the
expense
of
the
conjugal
This petition was thereupon filed on May 9, 2003. This Court issued
partnership.
a status quo order on May 15, 2003, to stop the immediate execution of the
CA decision and resolution.
out that the RTC had gone beyond the scope of the lone issue agreed upon by
1.
the parties during pre-trial, that is, whether the sale of the property to private
3.
the dark. Thus, to obviate the element of surprise, parties are expected to
nullified on the basis that it was simulated or fictitious. Rather, the ruling was
disclose at a pre-trial conference all issues of law and fact which they intend
that the absence of Magnos conformity rendered the deed of absolute sale
fatally defective. In this regard, the evidence relied upon by the RTC to
matters.[27] The rule, however, is not to be applied with rigidity and admits of
support its conclusion that the property had become conjugal and therefore
certain exceptions.[28]
There is merit in petitioners claim that the limitation upon the issue
embodied in the pre-trial order did not control the course of the trial. The
issue on the nature of the property was embodied in the pleadings filed
xxx
by the parties subsequent to the complaint and was actively
6. The
litigated by them without any objection on the part of private
respondents. In view thereof, the latter are deemed to have given their
implied consent for the RTC to try this issue. It is worthy to note that a careful
perusal of the RTC decision would reveal that the trial court found it
unnecessary to make a categorical finding as to whether the deed was
simulated or fictitious, the focal point being the character of the property at
the time of the transfer to private respondents. While it is true that the RTC
cited the evidence introduced by petitioners to establish that the sale was
simulated or fictitious, it did not make a clear and definitive ruling on this
matter, and instead stated as follows:
While these circumstances may be considered in the
determination of the alleged fraud in the transfer of property
by way of Deed of Sale allegedly executed by Eustaquia Reyes
in favor of defendants Gloria Reyes-Paulino and Anatalia
Reyes, the Court is nevertheless confronted with a significant
factual element which, by and in itself alone and independent
of circumstances indicative of fraud, nullifies the said Deed of
Sale. There is a clear absence of Magno Sarreals signature in
the Deed of Sale of the subject property in favor of Gloria
Reyes-Paulino and Anatalia Reyes. [29]
Contrary to the assumption made by the CA, the deed was clearly not
xxx
As in the Embrado Case, the sale of the subject property to
defendants Gloria Reyes-Paulino and Anatalia Reyes was void
because Magno Sarreal did not consent to the sale, which
consent was necessary because the property is conjugal,
hence the consent of Magno Sarreal as spouse is
necessary. While it is true that the parcel of land
covered by TCT 26031 was acquired by Eustaquia
Reyes prior to her marriage to defendant Sarreal, it
was established that improvements were made
consisting of houses, buildings for rent. Likewise, all
improvements
introduced
thereon
by
Acme-Abrasive
Manufacturing Corporation upon the expiration of the lease
on June 5, 1983 became conjugal properties of Spouses
Eustaquia Reyes Sarreal and Magno Sarreal. There is no
substantial evidence presented as to the source of funds used
in the improvements but it was testified upon that the same
were made during the subsistence of the marriage hence the
presumption that the funds used were conjugal stands. Under
Article 158 of the Civil Code, the land becomes conjugal upon
the
construction
of
the
building
without
awaiting
reimbursement before or at the liquidation of the partnership
upon the concurrence of two conditions, to wit: (a) the
construction of the building at the expense of the partnership;
and (b) the ownership of the land by one of the spouses
(Embrado vs. Court of Appeals, supra). Thus, in this instant
case, while the land originally belonged to Eustaquia Reyes,
the same became conjugal upon the construction of
improvements thereon.[30]
lease. Rather, under the terms of the lease contract, it was the building itself
that would inure to the lessor as fruits but only at the end of the lease
period on June 1, 1983. At that time, however, Eustaquia had already sold
the land, on January 24, 1979, to private respondents. Hence, the transfer of
the ownership of the building from the lessee to the lessor could not convert
the land into conjugal property since the land itself no longer belonged to one
of the spouses at that time.
This
notwithstanding,
the
RTC
did
not
rely
solely
upon
the
being
conjugal.
The
statutory
requirement
set
forth
under
Article 158 of the Civil Code [31] is that the improvements have to be made or
undertaken at the expense of the conjugal partnership. Under the terms
of the lease agreement, the lessee was allowed to build on the property at
its own expense, subject to the condition that after the termination of the
lease, ownership over the same would inure to the benefit of the lessor. This
Court agrees that the expense incurred by ACME in constructing the buildings
the witness whose action is more closely connected to the point at issue that
expense taken against the civil fruits of the property by virtue of the
should be given more credence. [33] In the present case, the RTC gave
A Balintawak, sir.
xxxxxxxxx
Paulino, who rented from the spouses Eustaquia and Magno one of the
houses or apartments, and lived therein, and who testified that these houses
A Yes, sir.
the latter is more reliable since her act of renting and living in one of the
houses or apartments makes her the actor more closely related to the point
at issue, i.e., whether or not the houses were on the property in question. For
A Yes, sir.
while a carpenter would not concern himself with the title of the property, a
lessee would normally look into the title covering the property leased,
A I worked as a carpenter, sir.
including its precise location or boundaries, and in fact Gloria Reyes-Paulino
testified that the lot on which the house she rented was found had a separate
title.
respondents on January 24, 1979 was paraphernal, the consent of Magno was
not required and the sale cannot be held invalid on the basis of its absence.
dated February
by
the
Court
of
Appeals
in
28,
CA-G.R.
2003,
CV
No.
respectively,
71807
are
hereby AFFIRMED. The status quo order issued by this Court on May 15,
2003 is LIFTED effective upon the finality of this Decision.
Costs against petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
Accordingly, since the property sold by Eustaquia to private
10,