Plaintiff-Appellee vs. vs. Defendant-Appellant Office of The Solicitor General Aladin B. Bermudez
Plaintiff-Appellee vs. vs. Defendant-Appellant Office of The Solicitor General Aladin B. Bermudez
Plaintiff-Appellee vs. vs. Defendant-Appellant Office of The Solicitor General Aladin B. Bermudez
SYLLABUS
DECISION
MAKASIAR , J : p
The accused Jose Encomienda y Navarro appealed on September 22, 1966 from the
decision dated September 12, 1966 of the Court of First Instance of Nueva Ecija [Branch
IV Guimba] (p. 97, Vol. I, rec.) sentencing him for murder aggravated by recidivism but
mitigated by voluntary surrender, to life inprisonment or reclusion perpetua, to indemnify
the heirs of the deceased Severino Cabaral in the sum of P6,000.00, to suffer the
accessories provided for by law, and to pay the costs (pp. 84-96, Vol. I, rec.).
The record of the case was received on October 25, 1966 by the Clerk of Court of the
Supreme Court (p. 1, Vol. II, rec.) from the Clerk of Court of the Court of Appeals, who
received the same on October 20, 1966, without the transcript of stenographic notes,
which transcript was submitted to the Supreme Court on November 11, 1966 (p. 1, t.s.n.,
Vol. III), from the deputy clerk of the trial court (p. 2, Vol. II, rec.).
After the briefs of appellant and appellee were filed respectively on January 18, 1967 (pp.
26-48, Vol. II, rec.) and July 2, 1967 (p. 67, Vol. II, rec.), the case was submitted for decision
on August 14, 1967 (p. 73, Vol. II, rec.).
On January 14, 1970, one AFP T/Sgt Venancio B. Bañaga, through counsel, filed a petition
for an order directing the clerk of court of Branch IV of the Court of First Instance of Nueva
Ecija to deliver to him the .32 caliber revolver with serial No. 154646, Exhibit "E", alleging
that after the appealed decision was rendered by the trial court, the ownership of said
revolver was transferred to him by reason of which he was issued by the Philippine
Constabulary Special Permit No. 369246 authorizing him to possess the said revolver
while he is in the active service (AFP), attaching the said special permit as Annex "A" to his
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petition (pp. 74-75, 76, Vol. II, rec.), and that his motion to withdraw the said revolver was
denied by the trial court due to the pendency of this case before the Supreme Court (Annex
"A", p. 78, Vol. II, rec.). Said petition was deemed submitted for resolution on March 18,
1970 after the Solicitor General failed to comment thereon within the period allowed him
(pp. 79, 80, 82, Vol. II, rec.).
Arraigned on the following information for murder:
"That on or about the 30th day of May, 1935, in the municipality of
Cuyapo, province of Nueva Ecija, Republic of the Philippines, and within the
jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused conspiring
together and mutually aiding one another, armed with a bolo and blunt
instrument, with intent to kill and with treachery and evident premeditation,
did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously attack and hacked
one Severino Cabaral, inflicting upon him multiple wounds which caused his
instantaneous death.
accused appellant who waived the presence of his counsel at said arraignment (p. 53, Vol.
I, rec.), pleaded not guilty on June 2, 1966 (p. 54, Vol. I, rec.).
The evidence for the prosecution consists of the testimonies of Cuyapo health officer Pio
Alberto, policeman Esmenino Delo and police inspector Casimiro Aguinaldo.
Patrolman Esmenino Delo declared that about 4 o'clock in the afternoon of May 30, 1965,
he was with policeman Federico Olog at police outpost No. 2 in Cuyapo, Nueva Ecija, when
one Franklin Ancheta reported that Severino Cabaral was wounded in the yard of the
accused Jose Encomienda. He proceeded to the defendant's yard where he saw Severino
mortally wounded in a kneeling position about two or three meters in front of the stairs of
the house of the accused and could not raise his head. Severino was unconscious but still
breathing (pp. 13-14, t.s.n.), On his query, the wounded Severino told him in the presence of
policemen Eufemio Delo and Mateo Castillo, that the accused Jose Encomienda stabbed
him (pp. 9-10, t.s.n.), which statement he wrote down in Ilocano on a piece of ruled paper
(Exhibit "C", p. 4, Vol. II, rec.), on which the deceased affixed his right thumbmark and duly
signed by patrolmen Mateo Castillo and Eufemio Delo as witnesses (p. 11, t.s.n.). Said
alleged ante mortem statement of the victim, Exhibit "C", was translated into English by
police inspector Casimiro Aguinaldo (Exh. "C-1", pp. 14 & 19, t.s.n.).
Exhibit "C-1" shows that the same was taken down at 4:45 P.M. of May 30, 1965 and
contains the following conversation between partrolman Esmenino Delo and the victim:
"Q Who boloed you?
A Jose Encomienda.
Q Is this true?
A Yes.
Q You thumbmark.
A Yes." (p. 5, Vol. I, rec.)
Dr. Pio Alberto, the Cuyapo health officer, recounted that about 6:00 P.M. of May 30, 1965,
he examined the victim in the clinic of Dr. Potenciano Garcia, executed the medical
certificate Exhibit "A" (p. 2, Vol. I, rec.), and issued the death certificate showing that the
victim was born in 1898 and was 67 years old when he died on May 30, 1965 (Exh. "B", p. 3,
Vol. I, rec.).
The medical certificate, which states that the victim died about 10 o'clock in the evening of
May 30, 1965 from shock and hemorrhage, describes the injuries sustained by the victim
Severino Cabaral, thus:
"1. — A clean cut horizontal wound about 1 inch above both eyebrows extending
from the outer tip of the left to the outer tip of the right eyebrow; cutting the
frontal bone and exposing the brain tissue. Fragments of the frontal bone were
extracted during the operation.
"2. — A clean cut almost horizontal wound about 2 inches long from inwards
downwards and outwards at the latero-posterior aspect of the left wrist exposing
the ligaments which were found to be intact.
"3. — An oblique clean cut wound about 11/2 inch long on the postero-medial
aspect of right forearm about 3 inches above the wrist joint from outwards
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downwards and inwards.
"4. — Swelling and ecchymosis about 2-1/2 inches by 3-1/2 inches on lower angle
of right scapula.
"5. — Swelling and ecchymosis about 2-1/2 inches by 3-1/2 inches just above the
brim of the right hip bone at the back." (Exh. "A", p 2, Vol. I, rec.).
Dr. Alberto opined that wound no. 1 on the forehead was mortal and was caused by a
sharp instrument like a bolo, with the assailant on the side of and higher than the victim or
the victim was stooping at the time said wound was inflicted (pp. 3, 4, 7, t.s.n.); that wound
no. 2, about 2 inches long on the left wrist of the victim, was also caused by a sharp
instrument like a bolo, was not fatal and could have been inflicted when the victim raised
his hands in self-defense with the right hand a little higher than the left, adding that the
victim could still move his hands (pp. 3, 4, & 8, t.s.n.); that wound no. 3 on the right forearm
and about 3 or 4 inches above the wrist could have been inflicted with a sharp instrument
like a bolo when the victim raised his hands in self-defense (pp. 3, 4, & 8, t.s.n.); that wound
no. 4, the swelling and ecchymosis about 21/2 inches by 3 1/2 inches on the lower angle
of the right scapula and about 8 inches below the right armpit, could have been caused by
a rod or a bat or a fall or a bolo's handle, but not by the narrow back of a bolo (p. 5, t.s.n.);
that wound no. 5, the swelling and ecchymosis about 2 1/2 inches by 3 1/2 inches on the
right pelvic bone just above the waistline, could have been caused by a rod with the
assailant on the side of the victim (pp. 5-6, t.s.n.); that the victim was in a state of shock at
the time he examined him; that he left the victim at about 8:30 that evening of May 30,
1965 sleeping in Dr. Garcia's clinic; and that the next day, he saw the victim already dead
due to shock and hemorrhage (pp. 6 7, t.s.n.).
Appellant narrated that since 1947 he was a tenant of hacienda Doña Nena in Cuyapo,
Nueva Ecija; that the victim Severino Cabaral was the hacienda overseer (pp. 22, 27, t.s.n.);
that the land he was working was recorded in the name of his late father, who died in 1963
(p. 28, t.s.n.); that about one week before May 30, 1965, the victim went to his house and
invited him to go to his (victim's) house telling him that he could no longer work on the land
for the land is not in his name; that he did not go with the victim to the latter's house then;
that he was not mad when the victim told him for the first time that he can no longer work
on the land; that the second time the victim went to his house was on a Friday or Saturday,
but only his little child was home then as he was out and his wife was in the market; that
the third time the victim went to his house was about 4:30 in the afternoon of May 30,
1965 telling him that he was sent by the hacienda owner to tell him that he cannot work in
the hacienda and that he will be removed as tenant; that he was then cutting wood beside
the stairway with a bolo (Exh. "D"), while the victim was standing also beside the stairs; that
when he asked why he was being removed as tenant when it was his means of livelihood,
the victim replied that he had no right to work on the land because it was not in his name,
to which he countered that the victim had no right to remove him for he (the victim) was
only a messenger and also a tenant like him in the hacienda, which alone has the right to
remove him (pp. 23, 30, t.s.n.); that the victim became angry and with his right hand drew
his revolver tucked in his left side when they were about one meter apart (p. 23, t.s.n.); that
with his left hand he immediately grabbed the victim's right hand holding the revolver,
forcing the victim to lean on the stairway, pinned the victim's right hand also on the stairs;
that during their struggle, the revolver fired four times continuously; that with the bolo in
his right hand he struck the victim's right forearm; that when the victim wanted to get the
gun with his left hand, he boloed the victim's left arm about one inch from the left wrist;
that he shook the victim's right arm downward causing the gun to fall to the ground; that
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when the victim tried to pick up the gun, he stepped backward and hacked the victim's
forehead causing the victim to fall backward on the stairway, as he (appellant) retrieved
the gun to prevent the victim from picking it up again and then stepped about two meters
backward for the victim might grab him (pp. 24, 25, 31, 32, 34, t.s.n.); that thereafter the
victim slowly got up and washed his forehead with the water from the box nearby while
sitting in front of said box, after which he went to the municipal building with the bolo and
the gun which he surrendered to police inspector Casimiro Aguinaldo; that the ecchymosis
on the lower and right scapula of the victim might be due to his having violently pushed the
victim against the bamboo stairway with two wooden lower steps (pp. 26, 27, t.s.n.); that
he was alone in the house that afternoon of May 30, 1965 when the incident happened as
his wife was then out selling meat and his children were with his father-in-law (p. 20, t.s.n.);
that the victim was taller and slightly bigger than he is; that the victim's son, Guillermo, is
taller than his deceased father (p. 32, t.s.n.); and that he is right-handed (p 33, t.s.n.).
By actual measurement, Guillermo Cabaral is 5'6" tall; while the accused has a height of
5'3" (p. 33, t.s.n.).
The prosecution did not offer any rebuttal evidence and relied mainly on the alleged ante
mortem statement Exhibits "C" & "C-1" of the deceased and on the medical testimony of
Dr. Pio Alberto, the town health officer. There is therefore no testimonial evidence for the
state as to how and why the incident occurred for no eyewitness was presented.
It is most unfortunate that the police authorities did not cause the immediate examination
of the trigger of the revolver for finger prints and of the stairs, the hands and clothing of
both the accused and the victim for powder burns, to determine whose fingers were
actually on the trigger of the revolver.
If the four slugs had been recovered, the same would have been helpful in ascertaining the
trajectory and direction of the bullets and whether they could have been fired from the
stairs or not.
The unrebutted fact that the incident happened inside the yard and just beside the stairway
of the house of the accused and that the victim was armed with a revolver licensed in his
name, confirms appellant's story that the deceased, as the hacienda overseer, went to the
residence of the accused, informed the latter that the hacienda owner had removed him as
tenant, and directed him to vacate the land tilled by him as it was not recorded in his name.
When the accused questioned the victim's authority to remove him, the victim became
furious and drew his gun.
While it is true that the victim was taller and slightly bigger than the accused, the latter
could match the strength of the right hand of the victim with his left hand since he was
then a 37-year old farmer and the victim was 67 years of age or 30 years his senior. In his
excitement and apprehension of the peril to his life, appellant was not expected nor had
the time, to determine whether he could save himself by just kicking the gun away from the
victim or stepping on it or pushing the victim away from the latter when the victim tried to
pick up the gun after he was already wounded on both forearms; or whether the victim, if
able to pick up the gun, could have fired the remaining two bullets at appellant who was
just about a meter away.
The alleged dying declaration of the deceased which consists only of three brief, mostly
monosyllabic, answers to equally brief questions of partrolman Esmenino Delo, to wit:
"Q Who boloed you?
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A Jose Encomienda.
Q Is this true?
A Yes.
Q You thumbmark.
A Yes." (Exhs. "C" & "C-1", pp. 4-5, Vol. I, rec.)
Under the circumstances, the version of the appellant appears to meet the required clear
and convincing evidence to establish self-defense, 2 or weakens all the more and therefore
neutralizes the effect of the proof of the prosecution. The story of the appellant is partly
corroborated by Aurelio Encomienda, his second cousin (p. 41, t.s.n., Vol. II) and his
nearest neighbor just about four meters away (p. 37, t.s.n., Vol. III), who testified to his
having heard several gunshots while he was lying down that afternoon and thereafter his
having seen through a hole in his kitchen wall the victim sitting under the shed of the stairs
of appellant's house, who was also sitting in front of the victim and holding a bolo and a
revolver, which Aurelio Encomienda related the next morning to the barrio captain, who
called for him (pp. 37-40, t.s.n., Vol. III).
Three essential elements must concur for legitimate self-defense to exist, namely; (1)
unlawful aggression on the part of the victim; (2) reasonable necessity of the means
employed to prevent or repel the attack; and (3) lack of sufficient provocation on the part
of the person defending himself. 3
Illegal aggression is equivalent to assault or at least threatened assault of immediate and
imminent kind. 4 Here when the deceased drew his gun with his right hand, appellant
grabbed with his free left hand the victim's right hand holding the revolver, forced the
victim to lean on the stairs and pinned the victim's right hand also on the stairs. During the
struggle, the revolver fired four times continuously and he hacked the victim's right
forearm. When the victim tried to get the gun with his left hand, appellant boloed the
victim's left arm and then shook the victim's right arm downward causing the gun to fall to
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the ground. When the victim tried to pick up the gun, appellant stepped backward and
hacked the victim's forehead, after which he himself picked up the gun so as to prevent the
victim from retrieving the same.
If the deceased had no intention to use his gun on the appellant, he would not have drawn it
or resisted appellant's attempt to prevent him from using it. There was therefore real
danger to the life or personal safety of the appellant. 5
The instant case is quite analogous to the case of People vs. Pangan, et al., 6 wherein the
accused, also an agricultural share tenant, killed with a penknife the superintendent of the
hacienda. When the accused therein denied the charge of the superintendent that he was
letting his carabaos run loose to destroy the tender sugar cane shoots, the deceased while
berating him, struck him twice with a whip hitting him (the accused) on the left temporal
and occipital regions causing his ear to bleed, against which the accused offered no
resistance but only tried to evade the blows. After they were separated by a third party, the
accused sat down on an acacia trunk, but the deceased approached him again and
insultingly asked him whether he wanted to fight, to which accused replied he would not
fight. Thereafter, the accused retired to his home. Between four and five o'clock in the
afternoon of the same day, accused went to the house of the deceased to ask him to
return his two cows that had been caught but the deceased kicked him and struck him
with a cane, causing a welt on this left shoulder. As the accused stepped back to avoid the
second blow aimed at him, the deceased placed his right hand upon the handle of the
revolver he carried by his waist. When the accused saw this intention of the deceased, he
drew his knife and opened it with his teeth. The deceased then drew his revolver; but
before he could fire it, the accused wrestled with him and caught the hand holding the gun.
During the ensuing struggle, both fell to the ground, the deceased upon his back, while the
accused upon him, with one hand gripping the deceased's hand holding the revolver and
with the other stabbing the deceased on the abdomen and other parts of the body
including the right arm compelling the deceased to drop the revolver. Then the accused
took hold of the revolver and threw it to one side. Thereafter, he ran to the municipal
building and surrendered to the authorities. 7 The defense of the accused in said case was
sustained by this Court.
In U.S. vs. Domen, 8 the theory of self-defense was likewise upheld. There the deceased
and the accused quarreled about a carabao which had gotten into the corn patch of the
deceased, who, by reason thereof, struck the accused four or five times with a piece of
wood about one yard long and about the size of one's wrist. The accused did not retreat
but struck back wounding the deceased on the forehead.
In U.S. vs. Mojica, 9 the deceased, a constabulary soldier, resisted arrest, struck the
arresting policeman with a fist, drew a mess kit knife and brandished it at the accused, and
other policeman, who retreated a step or two, drew his revolver and fired, killing the
soldier. WE ruled that the policeman acted in self-defense.
That there is reasonable necessity of the means employed by herein appellant to prevent
or repel the unlawful aggression cannot seriously be disputed. "Reasonable necessity of
the means employed does not imply material commensurability between the means of
attack and defense. What the law requires is rational equivalence, in the consideration of
which will enter as principal factors the emergency, the imminent danger to which the
person attacked is exposed, and the instinct, more than the reason, that moves or impels
the defense, and the proportionateness thereof does not depend upon the harm done, but
rests upon the imminent danger of such injury . . ." 1 0 As WE stated in the case of People
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vs. Lara, in emergencies of this kind, human nature does not act upon processes of formal
reason but in obedience to the instinct of self-preservation; and when it is apparent that a
person has reasonably acted upon this instinct, it is the duty of the courts to sanction the
act and hold the act irresponsible in law for the consequences."
In the case at bar, appellant did not immediately hack the deceased to completely disable
him, much less to kill him. When the deceased drew his gun with his right hand, the
appellant merely grabbed the right hand of the deceased holding the gun, pinning said right
hand on the stairs with out striking the deceased with the bolo in his right hand. After the
gun fired four times continuously as they struggled, it was only then that appellant struck
the right forearm of the victim with his bolo. Appellant could have continued hacking the
deceased right then and there. But he did not. He boloed the victim's left forearm because
the victim tried to get the gun from his right hand. And then he just shook the right arm of
the victim downward, forcing the latter to release the gun which fell to the ground. It was
only when the deceased tried to pick up the gun that the appellant boloed him on the
forehead. As heretofore stated, appellant had no time to coolly deliberate on whether he
could save himself by just kicking the gun away or by just pushing or boxing the victim or
stepping on the hands of the deceased to prevent him from getting the gun and firing the
same at him. The immediate danger to his life precluded such serene rationalization on his
part.
It should be stressed that the victim did not sustain any gunshot wounds. After taking
possession of the victim's revolver, appellant did not use it against the victim to finish him
off, nor did he continue hacking the deceased with his bolo. He was free to do either as the
victim was completely rendered hors de combat. Instead the appellant allowed the
disabled and defenseless victim to wash his wounds with water in appellant's own wooden
box.
In U.S. vs. Molina, 1 1 the accused was unarmed while the deceased attacked him with a
bolo. After overpowering the deceased and wresting the bolo from him, the accused
struck the deceased several times with the bolo thereby killing him almost instantaneously
as the deceased tried to seize a hatchet. Under the circumstances, WE held that the
accused employed reasonable means to repel the assault against his life.
In People vs. Rabandaban, 1 2 one night appellant found his wife lying in bed with another
man, who escaped through the window. He scolded his wife and ordered her to leave the
house. Calling him names, the wife gathered her clothes and picked up a bolo in the
kitchen. When the accused husband followed her there, she attacked him with the bolo,
wounding him twice on the abdomen. Wresting the bolo from his wife, appellant stabbed
her with it in the breast, causing her death that same night. WE ruled that the appellant
acted in self-defense and that there was reasonable necessity of the means employed by
him to repel the attack. WE overruled the opinion of the trial court wherein it stated that
appellant could have saved himself by throwing away the bolo after wresting it from his
wife and that there was no need for him to stab her once she was disarmed; because she
struggled to regain possession of the bolo, justifying appellant's belief that his wife
wanted to finish him off. Considering that he must have been losing strength due to loss of
blood, with his wife armed to fight to the finish, it would have been sheer folly or stupidity
on his part to throw away the bolo so that his wife may again use it against him.
In People vs. Sumikat, 1 3 a bolo was considered a reasonable means of repelling an attack
by a bully of known violent disposition, who was larger and stronger than the accused and
who was trying to wrest the bolo from him.
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In People vs. Lara, supra, the use of a pistol in shooting to death the deceased who was
much stronger than the appellant and who in the darkness and from behind suddenly threw
his arms around appellant and attempted to wrest the pistol from him, was considered
reasonably necessary; because by reason of the darkness as well as the superior strength
of the deceased, there was probability that the deceased would seize control of the pistol
and use it against appellant.
There certainly was lack of sufficient provocation on the part of appellant. On the contrary,
he was the one provoked by the deceased. He was in his own yard cutting wood when the
deceased arrived ordering him to vacate the land he was then tilling, which was his
livelihood. Ejecting him from the land he was farming and which his father farmed before
him, was, to this simple farmer, like depriving him of his life. Yet, with all that provocation,
appellant merely told the deceased that the latter had no right to eject him from the land
because he was also a tenant like him in the hacienda. Certainly, this retort was no
justification for the victim to draw his gun.
In view of the uncontradicted testimony of the appellant that the victim drew his revolver
to assault the appellant, which is not a lawful purpose, the victim lost thereby the privilege
to possess the same.
WHEREFORE, the appealed judgment is hereby reversed, the accused-appellant is hereby
acquitted, and his immediate release from confinement is hereby ordered.
The .32 caliber revolver with serial No. 15446 (Exh "E") is hereby ordered forfeited to the
government and the Clerk of Court is hereby directed to deliver the same for record
purposes to the official headquarters of the Philippine Constabulary at Camp Crame,
Quezon City. The bolo (Exhibit "D") is ordered returned to appellant.
With costs de officio.
Concepcion, C.J., Reyes, J.B.L., Makalintal, Zaldivar, Castro, Fernando, Teehankee, Antonio
and Esguerra, JJ., concur.
Barredo, J., did not take part.
Footnotes
1. People vs. Constantino, L-23558, Aug. 10, 1967, 20 SCRA 940; People vs. Pelago, L-
24884, Aug. 31, 1968, 24 SCRA 1026.
2. People vs. Talabok, Jr., 30 SCRA 87; People vs. Libed, 14 SCRA 410: People vs. Mendoza,
13 SCRA 11.
3. Art 11, 1, R.P.C.; People vs. Bautista, L-17772, Oct. 21, 1962, 6 SCRA 522.
9. 42 Phil. 784.
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10. People vs. Lara, 48 Phil. 153; People vs. Paras, 9 Phil. 367.
11. 19 Phil. 227.
12. 85 Phil. 636.
13. 56 Phil. 643.