Buebos v. People
Buebos v. People
Buebos v. People
DECISION
REYES, R.T. , J : p
THE law on arson has always been a constant source of confusion not only
among members of the bar, but also among those of the bench. The bewilderment
often centers on what law to apply and what penalty to impose.
In this case, the Court is again tasked to determine whether petitioners are liable
for simple arson or arson of an inhabited house which merits a penalty of up to
reclusion perpetua.
Before the Court is a petition to review on certiorari under Rule 45 the Decision 1
of the Court of Appeals (CA), a rming with modi cation that 2 of the Regional Trial
Court in Tabaco, Albay, finding petitioners Dante Buebos and Sarmelito Buebos guilty of
arson.
The Facts
On January 1, 1994 around 3:00 o'clock in the morning, Adelina B. Borbe was in
her house at Hacienda San Miguel, Tabaco, Albay watching over her sick child. 3 She
was lying down when she heard some noise around the house. She got up and looked
through the window and saw the four accused, Rolando Buela, Sarmelito Buebos, Dante
Buebos and Antonio Cornel, Jr. congregating in front of her hut. 4 When she went out,
she saw the roof of her nipa hut already on re. She shouted for help. Instead of coming
to her immediate succor, the four fled. 5
At some distance away, Olipiano Berjuela heard Adelina scream for help. Olipiano
was then drinking with Pepito Borbe to celebrate New Year's Eve. Olipiano immediately
ran to the place and saw a number of people jumping over the fence. When he focused
his ashlight on them, he was able to identify Sarmelito Buebos, Dante Buebos and
Antonio Cornel, Jr. 6 He also saw Rolando Buela running away. 7
On complaint of Adelina, petitioners Dante and Sarmelito Buebos, together with
Rolando Buela and Antonio Cornel, Jr., were indicted for arson in an Information bearing
the following accusations:
That on or about the 1st day of January, 1994 at 3:00 o'clock in the
Barangay Hacienda, Island of San Miguel, Municipality of Tabaco, Province of
Albay, Philippines and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-
named accused, conspiring, confederating and helping one another. With intent
to cause damage, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully, feloniously and
maliciously set on re the nipa roof of the house of ADELINA B. BORBE, to the
latter's damage and prejudice.
ACTS CONTRARY TO LAW. 8
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The prosecution evidence portraying the foregoing facts was principally supplied
by private complainant Adelina Borbe and Olipiano Berjuela.
Upon the other hand, denial and alibi were the main exculpating line of petitioners
and their co-accused. The trial court summed up the defense evidence in the following
tenor:
The defense contended that the accused were at different places at the
time of the incident: Rolando Buela claimed to be at sitio Tugon, Malictay, San
Miguel, Tabaco, Albay as there was a novena prayer at his parents' house on
occasion of the death anniversary of his late grandfather; Dante Buebos also
claimed to have been at Romeo Calleja's having gone there in the evening of
December 30, 1993 and left the place at 12:00 o'clock noontime of January l,
1994; Sarmelito Buebos asserted that he was at his residence at sitio Malictay,
Hacienda, San Miguel, Tabaco, Albay on the day the incident happened and that
he never left his house; Antonio Cornel, Jr. likewise claimed to be at his
residence at Agas after having visited his in-laws; that he only came to know of
the accusation ve (5) days after the incident happened when he visited his
parents at Malictay; witnesses were likewise presented by the accused to
corroborate their testimonies. 9
RTC and CA Dispositions
On April 7, 1998, the RTC found all of the accused guilty beyond reasonable
doubt of arson. The dispositive part of the judgment of conviction reads:
WHEREFORE, from all the foregoing, this Court nds accused ROLANDO
BUELA, DANTE BUEBOS, SARMELITO BUEBOS and ANTONIO CORNEL, JR.
GUILTY beyond reasonable doubt for the crime charged; accordingly, each of
the accused is hereby sentenced to suffer the indeterminate penalty ranging
from six (6) years and one (1) day of prision mayor, as minimum, to fourteen
(14) years, eight (8) months and one (1) day of reclusion temporal as maximum;
and to pay the cost.
SO ORDERED. 1 0
Via a notice of appeal, the four accused elevated the matter to the appellate
court. In their appeal, they contended that (1) the trial court erred in nding them guilty
of the crime of arson; (2) that the trial court erred in nding conspiracy; and (3) the trial
court erred in failing to give weight and credence to their defense of denial and alibi.
On November 13, 2003, through an eight-page decision penned by Associate
Justice Eliezer R. de los Santos, the CA disposed of the appeal in this wise:
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the decision appealed from is
hereby AFFIRMED with MODIFICATION. Each of the accused-appellant is hereby
sentenced to suffer the indeterminate penalty of imprisonment ranging from six
(6) years of prision correccional as minimum to ten (10) years of prision mayor
as maximum.
SO ORDERED. 1 1
In downgrading the penalty, the CA opined that the accused could only be
convicted of simple arson, punishable by prision mayor, and not for burning of an
inhabited house, which is punishable by imprisonment ranging from reclusion temporal
to reclusion perpetua. According to the appellate court, the information failed to allege
with speci city the actual crime committed. Hence, the accused should be found liable
only for arson in its simple form. 1 2
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Issues
Dissatis ed, Dante and Sarmelito Buebos have resorted to the present recourse.
The following arguments are now raised for the Court's consideration:
I.
Our Ruling
Overview of the law on arson
The confusion surrounding arson has been confounded by the dearth of
annotation on this part of our penal law. Certainly, the law on arson is one of the least
commented in this jurisdiction. For the guidance of the bench and bar, a brief legislative
history of the body of laws on arson is in order.
Previously, arson was de ned and penalized under nine different articles of the
Revised Penal Code: Article 320 (destructive arson), Article 321 (other forms of arson),
Article 322 (cases of arson not included in the preceding articles), Article 323 (arson of
property of small value), Article 324 (crimes involving destruction), Article 325 (burning
one's own property to commit arson), Article 326 (setting re to property exclusively
owned by the offender, Article 326-a (in cases where death resulted as a consequence
of arson), and Article 326-b ( prima facie evidence of arson).
On March 7, 1979, citing certain inadequacies that impede the successful
enforcement and prosecution of arsonists, then President Ferdinand E. Marcos issued
Presidential Decree (P.D) No. 1613. P.D. 1613 supplanted the penal code provisions on
arson. The pertinent parts of the said presidential issuance read:
SEC. 1. Arson. Any person who burns or sets re to the property of
another shall be punished by prision mayor.
The same penalty shall be imposed when a person sets re to his own
property under circumstances which expose to danger the life or property of
another.
SEC. 2. Destructive Arson. The penalty of reclusion temporal in its
maximum period to reclusion perpetua shall be imposed if the property burned
is any of the following:
1. Any ammunition factory and other establishments where explosives,
inflammable or combustible materials are stored;
1. One (1) or more buildings or edi ces, consequent to one single act
of burning, or as a result of simultaneous burnings, committed on
several or different occasions.
2. Any building of public or private ownership, devoted to the public in
general or where people usually gather or congregate for a de nite
purpose such as, but not limited to, o cial governmental function
or business, private transaction, commerce, trade, workshop,
meetings and conferences, or merely incidental to a definite purpose
such as but not limited to hotels, motels, transient dwellings, public
conveyances or stops or terminals, regardless of whether the
offender had knowledge that there are persons in said building or
edi ce at the time it is set on re and regardless also of whether the
building is actually inhabited or not.
3. Any train or locomotive, ship or vessel, airship or airplane, devoted to
transportation or conveyance, or for public use, entertainment or
leisure.
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4. Any building, factory, warehouse installation and any
appurtenances thereto, which are devoted to the service of public
utilities.
5. Any building the burning of which is for the purpose of concealing
or destroying evidence of another violation of law, or for the purpose
of concealing bankruptcy or defrauding creditors or to collect from
insurance.
Irrespective of the application of the above enumerated qualifying
circumstances, the penalty of reclusion perpetua to death shall likewise be
imposed when the arson is perpetrated or committed by two (2) or more persons
or by a group of persons, regardless of whether their purpose is merely to burn
or destroy the building or the burning merely constitutes an overt act in the
commission or another violation of law.
The penalty of reclusion perpetua to death shall also be imposed upon
any person who shall burn:
1. Any arsenal, shipyard, storehouse or military powder or reworks
factory, ordinance, storehouse, archives or general museum of the
Government.
2. In an inhabited place, any storehouse or factory of in ammable or
explosive materials.
If as a consequence of the commission of any of the acts penalized
under this Article, death results, the mandatory penalty of death shall be
imposed.
Of course, with the repeal of the Death Penalty Law on June 24, 2006 through
R.A. No. 9346, arson is no longer a capital offense. 1 4
We proceed to the crux of the petition.
Circumstantial evidence points to
petitioners' culpability
Petitioners score the CA for convicting them of arson based on circumstantial
evidence. They argue that the inference that they were responsible for the burning of
private complainant's hut was not duly proven by the People.
Circumstantial evidence is de ned as that evidence that "indirectly proves a fact
in issue through an inference which the fact- nder draws from the evidence
established. Resort thereto is essential when the lack of direct testimony would result
in setting a felon free." 1 5
At the outset, We may well emphasize that direct evidence of the commission of
a crime is not the only basis on which a court draws its nding of guilt. Established
facts that form a chain of circumstances can lead the mind intuitively or impel a
conscious process of reasoning towards a conviction. 1 6 Verily, resort to circumstantial
evidence is sanctioned by Rule 133, Section 5 of the Revised Rules on Evidence. 1 7
The following are the requisites for circumstantial evidence to be su cient for a
conviction: (a) there is more than one circumstance; (b) the facts from which the
inferences are derived have been proven; and (c) the combination of all the
circumstances results in a moral certainty that the accused, to the exclusion of all
others, is the one who has committed the crime. Thus, to justify a conviction based on
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circumstantial evidence, the combination of circumstances must be interwoven in such
a way as to leave no reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the accused. 1 8
After a careful review of the evidence presented by both parties, We nd that the
circumstantial evidence extant in the records is su cient to identify petitioners as the
authors of the burning of the hut of private complainant Adelina Borbe:
1. Private complainant heard some noise emanating from outside her house
at around 3:00 a.m.;
2. When she went out to check the disturbance, private complainant saw
petitioners, together with their two other co-accused, standing in front of the house;
3. Moments later, the roof of her house caught fire;
4. Petitioners and their cohorts absconded while private complainant
desperately shouted for help.
The facts from which the cited circumstances arose have been proved through
positive testimony. 1 9 Evidently, these circumstances form an unbroken chain of events
leading to one fair conclusion the culpability of petitioners for the burning of the hut.
The Court is convinced that the circumstances, taken together, leave no doubt that
petitioner perpetrated the arson.
Conspiracy evident from coordinated
action of petitioners
Petitioners next contend that conspiracy was erroneously appreciated by both
the trial and appellate courts. They posit that the nding of conspiracy was premised
on speculation and conjecture.
The rule is well-entrenched in this jurisdiction that conspiracy exists when two or
more persons come to an agreement concerning the commission of a crime and
decide to commit it. Proof of the agreement need not rest on direct evidence, as the
same may be inferred from the conduct of the parties indicating a common
understanding among them with respect to the commission of the offense. Corollarily,
it is not necessary to show that two or more persons met together and entered into an
explicit agreement setting out the details of an unlawful scheme or the details by which
an illegal objective is to be carried out. The rule is that conviction is proper upon proof
that the accused acted in concert, each of them doing his part to ful ll the common
design. In such a case, the act of one becomes the act of all and each of the accused
will thereby be deemed equally guilty of the crime committed. 2 0
In the case at bench, conspiracy was evident from the coordinated movements
of petitioners Dante and Sarmelito Buebos. Both of them stood outside the house of
private complainant Adelina. They were part of the group making boisterous noise in
the vicinity. Petitioners also ed together while the roof of Adelina's house was ablaze.
These acts clearly show their joint purpose and design, and community of interest.
We quote with approval the CA observation along this line:
Accused-appellant's assertion that conspiracy has not been established
is belied by the accounts of the prosecution witness. The manner by which the
accused-appellants behaved after the private complainant shouted for help
clearly indicated a confederacy of purpose and concerted action on the part of
the accused-appellants. Even if there is no direct evidence showing that all of
the accused had prior agreement on how to set the roof of the house on re, the
doctrine is well settled that conspiracy need not be proved by direct evidence of
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prior agreement to commit the crime. Very seldom such prior agreement be
demonstrable since, in the nature of things, criminal undertakings are only rarely
documented by agreements in writing. 2 1
Crime committed and the penalty
The RTC sentenced all four accused to an indeterminate penalty ranging from six
(6) years and one day of prision mayor, as minimum, to fourteen (14) years, eight (8)
months and one (1) day of reclusion temporal as maximum. On appeal, the CA reduced
the sentence to six (6) years of prision correccional, as minimum, to ten (10) years of
prision mayor, as maximum. The CA ratiocinated:
The information charges accused-appellants with "violation of P.D. 1613"
without specifying the particular provision breached. The information having
failed to allege whether or not the burnt house is inhabited, and not having been
established that the house is situated in a populated or congested area,
accused-appellants should be deemed to have only been charged with plain
arson under Section 1 of the decree. Under Section 1 of the decree, the offense
of simple arson committed is punishable by prision mayor.
There being neither aggravating nor mitigating circumstances in the case
at bar accused-appellants should be sentenced to suffer the penalty of prision
mayor in its medium period as provided under Article 321, paragraph 1 of the
Revised Penal Code, as amended, by Presidential Decree No. 1613. Applying the
Indeterminate Sentence Law, the minimum penalty should be anywhere within
the range of prision correctional. 2 2
The legal basis of the trial court in convicting petitioners of arson is Section 3,
paragraph 2 of P.D. No. 1613. The said provision of law reads:
SEC. 3. Other Cases of Arson. The penalty of reclusion temporal to
reclusion perpetua shall be imposed if the property burned is any of the
following:
xxx xxx xxx
2. Any inhabited house or dwelling;
The elements of this form of arson are: (a) there is intentional burning; and (b)
what is intentionally burned is an inhabited house or dwelling. 2 3 Admittedly, there is a
con uence of the foregoing elements here. However, the information failed to allege
that what was intentionally burned was an inhabited house or dwelling. That is fatal.
Sections 8 and 9 of the 2000 Rules of Criminal Procedure state:
Sec. 8. Designation of the offense. The complaint or information
shall state the designation of the offense given by the statute, aver the acts or
omissions constituting the offense, and specify its qualifying and aggravating
circumstances. If there is no designation of the offense, reference shall be made
to the section or subsection of the statute punishing it.
Sec. 9. Cause of the accusation. The acts or omissions
complained of as constituting the offense and the qualifying and aggravating
circumstances must be stated in ordinary and concise language and not
necessarily in the language used in the statute but in terms su cient to enable
a person of common understanding to know what offense is being charged as
well as its qualifying and aggravating circumstances for the court to pronounce
judgment.
The elements of arson under Sec. 3, par. 2, of PD 1613 are: (a) there is
intentional burning; and (b) what is intentionally burned is an inhabited
house or dwelling. Incidentally, these elements concur in the case at bar."
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As stated in the body of the Information, accused-appellant was charged
with having intentionally burned the two-storey residential house of Robert
Separa. Said con agration likewise spread and destroyed seven (7) adjoining
houses. Consequently, if proved, as it was proved, at the trial, she may be
convicted, and sentenced accordingly, of the crime of simple arson. Such is the
case "notwithstanding the error in the designation of the offense in the
information, the information remains effective insofar as it states the facts
constituting the crime alleged therein." "What is controlling is not the title of the
complaint, nor the designation of the offense charged or the particular law or
part thereof allegedly violate, . . . but the description of the crime charged and
the particular facts therein recited."
There is, thus, a need to modify the penalty imposed by the RTC as Sec. 5
of PD No. 1613 categorically provides that the penalty to be imposed for simple
arson is:
SEC. 5. Where Death Results from Arson. If by reason of or on the
occasion of arson death results, the penalty of reclusion perpetua to death
shall be imposed. [Emphasis supplied]
Accordingly, there being no aggravating circumstance alleged in the
Information, the imposable penalty on accused-appellant is reclusion perpetua.
30
Now, to the penalty. Applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law, the maximum of
the indeterminate penalty should range from six (6) years and one (1) day to twelve
(12) years. Considering that no aggravating or mitigating circumstance attended the
commission of the offense, the penalty should be imposed in its medium period [eight
(8) years and one (1) day to ten (10) years]. The minimum of the indeterminate
sentence is prision correctional, which has a range of six (6) months and one (1) day to
six (6) years, to be imposed in any of its periods.
The CA sentence is in accord with law and jurisprudence. We sustain it.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. The appealed judgment is AFFIRMED in full.
SO ORDERED.
Austria-Martinez, * Tinga, ** Chico-Nazario and Nachura, JJ., concur.
Footnotes
1. Rollo, 65-72. Penned by Associate Justice Eliezer R. de los Santos (now deceased), with
Associate Justices B. A. Adefuin-de la Cruz and Jose C. Mendoza, concurring.
2. Id. at 26-28. Criminal Case No. T-2563. Penned by Judge Mamerto M. Buban, Jr., RTC,
Branch 18, Tabaco, Albay.
3. TSN, September 7, 1995, p. 5.
4. Id. at 6.
5. Id. at 12.
6. TSN, December 8, 1994, p. 14.
7. Id. at 16.
8. Id. at 25.
(b) The facts from which the inferences are derived are proven; and