People v. Lamahang
People v. Lamahang
People v. Lamahang
LAMAHANG
August 3, 1935
RECTO, J.
FACTS: At early dawn on March 2, 1935, policeman Jose Tomambing, who was patrolling, caught accused
Lamahang in the act of making an opening with an iron bar on the wall of a store of cheap goods. At that
time the owner of the store, Tan Yu, was sleeping inside with another Chinaman. The accused had only
succeeded in breaking one board and in unfastening another from the wall, when the policeman showed
up, who instantly arrested him and placed him under custody.
CFI found him guilty of attempted robbery and sentenced him to suffer 2 years and 4 months of prision
correccional and to an additional penalty of 10 years and 1 day of prision mayor for being a habitual
delinquent, with the accessory penalties of the law.
The attempt to commit an offense which the Penal Code punishes is that which has a logical relation to a
particular, concrete offense; that, which is the beginning of the execution of the offense by overt acts of
the perpetrator, leading directly to its realization and consummation. The attempt to commit an
indeterminate offense, inasmuch as its nature in relation to its objective is ambiguous, is not a juridical fact
from the standpoint of the Penal Code.
There is no doubt that in the case at bar it was the intention of the accused to enter Tan Yu's store by
means of violence, passing through the opening which he had started to make on the wall, in order to
commit an offense which, due to the timely arrival of policeman Tomambing, did not develop beyond the
first steps of its execution. But it is not sufficient, for the purpose of imposing penal sanction, that
an act objectively performed constitute a mere beginning of execution; it is necessary to
establish its unavoidable connection, like the logical and natural relation of the cause and its
effect, with the deed which, upon its consummation, will develop into one of the offenses
defined and punished by the Code; it is necessary to prove that said beginning of execution, if
carried to its complete termination following its natural course, without being frustrated by
external obstacles nor by the voluntary desistance of the perpetrator, will logically and
necessarily ripen into a concrete offense.
Thus, in case of robbery, in order that the simple act of entering by means of force or violence another
person's dwelling may be considered an attempt to commit this offense, it must be shown that the
offender clearly intended to take possession, for the purpose of gain, of some personal property belonging
to another. In the instant case, there is nothing in the record from which such purpose of the accused may
reasonably be inferred. From the fact established and stated in the decision, that the accused on the day in
question was making an opening by means of an iron bar on the wall of Tan Yu's store, it may only be
inferred as a logical conclusion that his evident intention was to enter by means of force said store against
the will of its owner. That his final objective, once he succeeded in entering the store, was to rob, to cause
physical injury to the inmates, or to commit any other offense, there is nothing in the record to justify a
concrete finding.
In offenses not consummated, as the material damage is wanting, the nature of the action intended
(accion fin) cannot exactly be ascertained, but the same must be inferred from the nature of the acts
executed (accion medio). Hence, the necessity that these acts be such that by their very nature, by the
facts to which they are related, by the circumstances of the persons performing the same, and by the
things connected therewith, they must show without any doubt, that they are aimed at the consummation
of a crime. Acts susceptible of double interpretation, that is, in favor as well as against the culprit,
and which show an innocent as well as a punishable act, must not and cannot furnish grounds by
themselves for attempted nor frustrated crimes. The relation existing between the facts submitted
for appreciation and the offense which said facts are supposed to produce must be direct; the intention
must be ascertained from the facts and therefore it is necessary, in order to avoid regrettable instances of
injustice, that the mind be able to directly infer from them the intention of the perpetrator to cause a
particular injury.
The fact under consideration does not constitute attempted robbery but attempted trespass to
dwelling. Under article 280 of the Revised Penal Code, this offense is committed when a private person
shall enter the dwelling of another against the latter's will. The accused may be convicted and sentenced
for an attempt to commit this offense in accordance with the evidence and the following allegation
contained in the information: "... the accused armed with an iron bar forced the wall of said store by
breaking a board and unfastening another for the purpose of entering said store ... and that the accused
did not succeed in entering the store due to the presence of the policeman on beat Jose Tomambing, who
upon hearing the noise produced by the breaking of the wall, promptly approached the accused ... ." Under
the circumstances of this case the prohibition of the owner or inmate is presumed. Against the accused
must be taken into consideration the aggravating circumstances of nighttime and former convictions,
inasmuch as the record shows that several final judgments for robbery and theft have been rendered
against him and in his favor, the mitigating circumstance of lack of instruction. The breaking of the wall
should not be taken into consideration as an aggravating circumstance inasmuch as this is the very fact
which in this case constitutes the offense of attempted trespass to dwelling.
The penalty provided by the Revised Penal Code for the consummated offense of trespass to dwelling, if
committed with force, is prision correccional in its medium and maximum periods and a fine not exceeding
P1,000 (art. 280, par. 2); therefore the penalty corresponding to attempted trespass to dwelling is to
degrees lower (art. 51), or, arresto mayor in its minimum and medium periods. Because of the presence of
two aggravating circumstances and one mitigating circumstance the penalty must be imposed in its
maximum period. Pursuant to article 29 of the same Code, the accused is not entitled to credit for one-half
of his preventive imprisonment.
Wherefore, the sentence appealed from is revoked and the accused is hereby held guilty of attempted
trespass to dwelling, committed by means of force, with the aforesaid aggravating and mitigating
circumstances and sentenced to three months and one day of arresto mayor, with the accessory penalties
thereof and to pay the costs.