Villaroman Case 2
Villaroman Case 2
Villaroman Case 2
SUPREME COURT
Manila
FIRST DIVISION
G.R. No. L-35241 February 28, 1983
THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs.
SERVILLANO VELASQUEZ, defendant-appellant.
The Solicitor General for plaintiff-appellee.
Honorio Valisno Garcia, I for defendant-appellant.
VASQUEZ, J.:
Under an information charging defendant-appellant Servillano Velasquez with the crime
of rape, the Court of First Instance of Nueva Ecija convicted the said defendantappellant of the offense of qualified seduction and sentenced him to an indeterminate
penalty of four months and one day of arresto mayor, as minimum, to one year, eight
months and twenty days of prision correccional as maximum, to indemnify Remedios
Domingo in the sum of P2,000.00, to suffer subsidiary imprisonment in case of
insolvency, to acknowledge and support the offspring of Remedios Domingo in the sum
of P100.00 every month, and to pay the costs. The appeal by defendant-appellant to the
Court of Appeals was certified by it to the Supreme Court upon a finding that, as
recommended by the Solicitor General, the accused should have been found guilty of
rape which is punishable by reclusion perpetua, but which penalty is beyond the
jurisdiction of the Court of Appeals to impose.
The complainant Remedios Domingo was a housemaid of Cecilia Velasquez in the
latter's house in Licab Nueva Ecija. Cecilia, a sister of the appellant, is a public school
teacher married to a dentist. The appellant, who was unmarried, was staying in the
house of said spouses in the ground floor of which he had a radio repair shop.
Remedios, at the time of the alleged rape committed on February 9, 1966, was 15
years, 2 months and 27 days old, she having been born on November 12, 1950.
There is no dispute that appellant had performed sexual intercourses with complainant
Remedios Domingo in the house where they were both staying. It is also undenied that
Remedios, Domingo delivered a child on December 22, 1966. The parties are, however,
in disagreement as to when and under what circumstances the sexual intercourses
between the appellant and the complainant had taken place. The appellant further
disputes his paternity of the child begotten by the complainant.
The testimony of the complainant was to the effect that in the evening of February 9,
1966, while she was sleeping in a room in the house of her employer, she felt someone
embracing her. Awakened, she saw the appellant by her side, threatening her with
death if she would make an outcry. The appellant held a bladed weapon which he
pressed to her breast. Overcome with fear, the complainant did not shout. The appellant
then proceeding to raise her blouse and touched her breast. Despite her struggle, the
appellant persisted in his erotic advances. He held her hands and removed her panties
after snapping its garter. The appellant then inserted his penis into her private parts and
succeeded in consummating his carnal desire. The complainant simply cried her heart
out. In the next two succeeding days, February 10 and 11, 1966, the appellant again
satisfied his lust by having sexual intercourse with the complainant.
Sometime later, the complainant told her employer that she wanted to leave, but the
latter refused to let her go until a replacement for her could be secured. The
complainant decided to write to her mother to take her home. On May 4, 1966, the
mother of the complainant took her from the house of Cecilia Velasquez and brought
her home to barrio Linao, Licab Nueva Ecija. Sometime in August 1966, the mother of
the complainant noticed that she was not menstruating and that her abdomen was
showing signs of pregnancy. The complainant had to tell her mother as to what
happened to her while she was working as a housemaid in the house of Cecilia
Velasquez.
On September 2, 1966, the complainant filed a complaint with the Office of the
Provincial Fiscal charging the appellant with the crime of "seduction or rape." After
proper preliminary investigation, an information for rape was filed with the Court of First
Instance of Nueva Ecija on October 20, 1967.
The appellant has a different version of his sexual encounters with the complainant. He
denied that their first intercourse took place on February 9, 1966. He claimed that their
first intercourse occurred since the last week of January 1966, and was repeated
several times thereafter, and that the said encounters took place in his shop at day time
and never at night. Appellant averred that he gained the confidence and intimacy of the
complainant because she used to go down to his radio repair shop where he gave her
money and good things to eat. In one of such occasions, he embraced her and she
offered no resistance. He disclaimed being the father of the child of the complainant,
pointing out of the fact that from the date of his supposed last sexual intercourse with
the complainant which, according to the latter was on February 11, 1966, up to the
delivery of the child on December 22, 1966, a period of ten months and eleven days
had elapsed, which renders it medically impossible for him to have been the father of
the said child.
The issue that confronts Us is the determination of what crime, if any, had been
committed by the defendant-appellant under the facts appearing on record. The
information filed against the appellant was for rape allegedly committed as follows:
That on or about the 9th day of February, 1966, in the Municipality of Licab
Province of Nueva Ecija, Republic of the Philippines, and within the
jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused Servillano
Velasquez, armed with a bladed instrument, by means of force and
intimidation, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously have
carnal knowledge with the undersigned against her will and consent. (p. 1,
Rollo.)
The trial court ruled that the crime committed by the appellant as shown by the evidence
is that of qualified seduction, as defined and penalized in Art. 337 of the Revised Penal
Code. This conclusion of the trial court is premised principally upon its finding that the
claim of the complainant of having been threatened or forced by the appellant in making
her submit to his sexual desire is not born out by the evidence. The Solicitor General,
on the other hand, expressed the view that the trial court erred in disbelieving the claim
of the complainant that the appellant used a bladed weapon in threatening her to submit
to his sexual demand, and accordingly recommended that the appellant be pronounced
guilty of the crime of rape with the use of a bladed weapon, as defined and penalized in
Art. 335 of the Revised Penal Code. The Court of Appeals, in refusing to take
cognizance of the appeal taken therein, expressed concurrence with the said view of
the People's counsel.
It is Our considered opinion that the trial court committed error in holding the appellant
guilty of the crime of qualified seduction. Assuming it to be a fact that the appellant may
be considered a "domestic" within the meaning of Art. 337 of the Revised Penal Code
a point disputed by the appellant who claimed that he was not staying in the house of
his sister but only operated a radio repair shop in the ground floor of said house - still,
no conviction for qualified seduction may be decreed against the appellant. This is
because there is no allegation in the information filed against him of two of the essential
elements of the crime of qualified seduction, to wit: virginity of the offended party, and
that the latter is over 12 but under 18 years of age. In the event of a variance between
the offense charged in the complaint or information and that proved or established by
the evidence, the accused may only be convicted of the offense proved included in that
which is charged, or of the offense charged included in that which is proved. (Section 4,
Rule 120, Rules of Court.) "An offense charged necessarily includes that which is
proved, when some of the essential elements or ingredients of the former, as this is
alleged in the complaint or information, constitute the latter." (Section 5, Ibid,) The view
that conviction for qualified seduction may not be had on a charge of rape had already
been expounded by Chief Justice Enrique M. Fernando in People vs. Ramirez, 69
SCRA 144.
For similar reasons, neither may the appellant be validly convicted of the crime of
simple seduction. As may be note from the information filed against the appellant, there
is likewise no allegation therein of the elements of the good reputation of the offended
party and of the latter being over 12 but under 18 years of age, which are essential for
the commission of the crime of simple seduction. (Art. 332, Revised Penal Code.)
The criminal responsibility of the appellant may only be predicated on his having
committed the crime of rape should it appear from the evidence on record that he had,
indeed, obtained carnal knowledge of the complainant against her will and consent by
means of force and intimidation, and with the use of a bladed instrument, as alleged in
the information. We have meticulously examined the record of this case, particularly the
testimony of complainant Remedios Domingo, in an effort to find adequate confirmation
of her claim that the appellant succeeded in making her submit to his sexual desire by
threatening her with death by means of a bladed weapon should she refuse to do so, or
should she cry out for help. Sadly enough, Our earnest endeavor and desire to render
justice to the aggrieved party had failed to dissipate persistent doubts in Our minds as
to the credibility of her assertion that the appellant coerced and threatened her with
death into submitting to his carnal demand in the evening of February 9, 1966.
The record reveals the following disconcerting circumstances which argue against the
defendant-appellant's conviction for the crime of rape:
1. The only testimony in the record as to how the alleged rape was committed is that of
the complainant herself. Her declaration suffers not only from lack of corroboration, but
also from inherent improbabilities that effectively impair its credibility. While it may be
true that the complainant manifested initial reluctance to the appellant's erotic demand,
We are not convinced that her resistance was sufficient to make the appellant resort to
force and intimidation in accomplishing his desire. There appears to be no sincere
struggle as the complainant had claimed, or a determined effort on her part to preserve
her virtue. Neither the complainant nor the appellant sustained injuries of any kind
whatsoever. Not a single piece of complainant's apparel was torn or damaged, except a
snapped garter of her panty which could easily be attributed to the eagerness of the
appellant as readily as to a refusal of the complainant to take her panty off. Not a single
outcry came from her mouth, even as of the moment she was suddenly awakened with
the appellant lying beside her. There was no claim that the appellant pressed his hands
against her mouth or covered the same elsewhere so as to prevent her from shouting
for help. No commotion was created as could have aroused the other occupants in the
house into coming to her aid. Complainant had testified that her employers were
sleeping in a room only six meters away from hers. It is a fact that despite the alleged
struggle, not one of the occupants in the said house had been awakened during the
entire incident that allegedly transpired in the complainant's room in the evening of
February 9, 1966.
2. The claim that the intercourse in the evening of February 9, 1966 was accomplished
with force and intimidation loses adherence in the light of the admission by the
complainant herself that their aforesaid sexual encounter was repeated the following
evening, and once again in the night of the day thereafter. In the two other events
mentioned by the complainant, she made no claim that she was forced or intimidated
into having sexual intercourse with the appellant. A woman who had been the unwilling
victim of a bestial attack would not submit herself voluntarily to the further demands of
her attacker in the two successive days after the alleged violent sexual encounter.
3. It is intriguing to imagine that the complainant, who had allegedly been the victim of
forcible sexual intercourse that occurred in the evening of February 9, 1966, would
continue to sleep in the same room in the following evenings despite the admitted fact
that the said room had no lock. She further admitted that she took no precaution to
prevent entry of intruders in the said room while she was sleeping thereat. She did not
ask that a lock be installed, or see to it that the door be secured by means of even a
piece of string or wire or that her bed or some furniture be placed against the door to
prevent entry in the room while she was asleep thereat. Neither did she resort to the
simple precaution of sleeping in some other place in the house, or that someone else
sleep-with her, so as to deter the appellant from taking advantage of her womanhood in
the middle of the night when the rest of the household was asleep.
4. Complainant admitted that aside from failing to make any outcry during all her sexual
encounters with the appellant, she also failed to complain about the appellant's
misdeeds either to her employers, to her parents or relatives or to anyone else. It was
only when the mother of the complainant noticed the undeniable signs of her pregnancy
that she was compelled to confess to her having had sexual relations with the appellant.
The- assertion of the complainant that her failure to complain was due to the threat
made by the appellant may hardly be believed considering that, after her mother
brought her home to barrio Linao in May 1966, she was no longer staying with the
appellant in the same house. It further appears that a brother-in-law of the complainant
was the barrio Captain of barrio Linao and he resided just next door to the house of the
complainant's parents.
5. When the complainant finally was forced to reveal the paternity of the child she was
bearing to her parents, brothers and sisters, the reaction of the latter to her revelation
was highly indicative that she did not complain of having been raped by the appellant.
Upon being so informed, a brother of the complainant got so mad that he slapped her. If
the complainant had told her kins that she had been the victim of a bestial attack, they
would have pitied her and sought out the appellant to make him pay for what he had
done. Instead of doing so, they put the blame on complainant, and even laid hands on
her.
6. The filing of the case against the appellant was apparently motivated by the refusal of
the appellant to marry the complainant. Prosecution witness Tomas Villaroman,
Municipal Mayor of Licab declared that when the complainant went to his office
accompanied by his brother-in-law to complain against the appellant, he invited the
latter to his office; that he tried to settle the matter by asking the appellant to marry the
complainant, both the appellant and the complainant being single; that the appellant
requested for a chance to talk with his family about such proposal; and that when the
appellant ignored the suggestion of the mayor, the latter told the complainant to see the
Chief of Police about her complaint. (TSN, December 11, 1968, pp. 2-3.)
7. When the complainant was eventually referred to the Office of the Provincial Fiscal,
her complaint was attended to by Assistant Fiscal Cecilio. Before him, the complainant
signed and swore to a complaint slip. (Exhibit "A".) In the said complaint slip, the
contents of which, except for the signature of the complainant, were all written down by
Assistant Fiscal Cecilio, the charge was "Seduction or Rape." (Exhibit " 4-A ".) It is not
improbable that the Fiscal who attended to the complaint of Remedios was not sure or
convinced that the crime she was complaining of may be classified as rape.
8. Another weak link in the theory of the prosecution is the fact that the complainant
delivered her child on December 22, 1966. If she was telling the truth that her last
intercourse with the appellant was on February 11, 1966, it would mean that her child
was born at least ten months and eleven days after conception. While We are not
certain as to whether such circumstance is not a medical impossibility, it is undeniably
contrary to ordinary and normal experience and, as such, sufficient to cast a reasonable
doubt as to its credibility. Under Our laws, a child born after three hundred days from
possible conception is not accorded any presumption either of legitimacy or illegitimacy.
Whoever alleges the paternity of the child, whether legitimate or illegitimate, must prove
such allegation. (Art. 261, Civil Code; Section 6, Rule 131, Rules of Court.) It is
accordingly believed that the sexual intercourses between the complainant and the
appellant did not terminate on February 11, 1966, as averred by the complainant, but
continued for several times thereafter as asserted by the appellant.
An abiding sense of fairness impels Us to take heed of the oft-repeated observations
that "a rape charge is easy to make, hard to prove and harder to defend by the party,
though innocent" (People vs. Barbo, 56 SCRA 459); and that "experience has shown
that unfounded charges of rape have frequently been preferred by women actuated by
some sinister, ulterior or undisclosed motive; hence, convictions for such crime should
not be sustained without clear and convincing proof of guilt." (U.S. vs. Bay, 27 Phil. 495;
(U.S. vs. Ramos, 35 Phil. 691.) Under the circumstances appearing in the case at bar,
the claim of the appellant that the complainant was not totally unresponsive to his
advances after he secured her intimacy with gifts of money and nice things to eat is, to
Our mind, not inherently improbable as to be totally disbelieved. He was single, a
brother of her employer, with a means of livelihood, and was staying in the same house
with the complainant. Their sexual encounter was not between total strangers where the
man had no means except brute force to satisfy his lust upon the woman he had
desired.
We consider it unfortunate to find Ourselves unable to impose the penalty provided by
law upon the appellant for the crime he is shown to have committed beyond reasonable
doubt, to wit, simple seduction as defined and penalized in Art. 338 of the Revised
Penal Code. The legal obstacle against Our authority to do so is no less than a
constitutional right granted to an accused person of being entitled to be "informed of the
nature and cause of the accusation against him." (Sec. 19, Art. IV, Constitution of the
Philippines.) We would be denying the appellant this fundamental right if We shall find
him guilty of seduction under an information that does not sufficiently allege the
essential elements constituting the said offense.
WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The
accused is acquitted of the charge, with cost de officio.
SO ORDERED.
Teehankee (Chairman), Melencio-Herrera, Plana, Relova and Gutierrez, Jr., JJ., concur.