G.R. No. 210266. June 7, 2017. Anthony de Silva Cruz, Petitioner, vs. People of The PHILIPPINES, Respondent
G.R. No. 210266. June 7, 2017. Anthony de Silva Cruz, Petitioner, vs. People of The PHILIPPINES, Respondent
G.R. No. 210266. June 7, 2017. Anthony de Silva Cruz, Petitioner, vs. People of The PHILIPPINES, Respondent
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* SECOND DIVISION.
562
Therefore, the corpus delicti of the crime is not merely the access
device, but also any evidence that proves that it is counterfeit.
Criminal Law; Access Devices; Credit Cards; Possession of a
Counterfeit Access Device; Use of a Counterfeit Access Device; Penalties;
Possession of a counterfeit access device is punishable by imprisonment of
not less than six (6) years and not more than ten (10) years and a fine of ten
thousand pesos (P10,000.00) or twice the value obtained by the offense,
whichever is higher. On the other hand, use of a counterfeit access device is
punishable by imprisonment of not less than 10 years but not more than
twelve (12) years and a fine of P10,000.00 or twice the value obtained by
the offense, whichever is higher.—Possession of a counterfeit access device
is punishable by imprisonment of not less than six (6) years and not more
than 10 years and a fine of P10,000.00 or twice the value obtained by the
offense, whichever is higher. On the other hand, use of a counterfeit access
device is punishable by imprisonment of not less than 10 years but not more
than 12 years and a fine of P10,000.00 or twice the value obtained by the
offense, whichever is higher.
Remedial Law; Evidence; The rule is that no evidence shall be allowed
during trial if it was not identified and pre-marked during trial.—The rule is
that no evidence shall be allowed during trial if it was not identified and pre-
marked during trial. This provision, however, allows for an exception: when
allowed by the court for good cause shown. There is no hard and fast rule to
determine what may constitute “good cause,” though this Court has
previously defined it as any substantial reason “that affords a legal excuse.”
The trial court retains its discretion to allow any evidence to be presented at
trial even if not previously marked during pretrial. Here, the trial court
allowed the presentation of the counterfeit credit card at trial due to the
prosecution’s explanation that during pretrial, the counterfeit credit card was
still in the Criminal Investigation and Detective Group’s custody.
Same; Same; Witnesses; Credibility of Witnesses; The determination of
the credibility of witnesses is a question of fact that should not be reviewed
by this Court in a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the
Rules of Court.—The determination of the credibility of witnesses is a
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question of fact that should not be reviewed by this Court in a petition for
review on certiorari under Rule
563
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564
LEONEN, J.:
The possession and use of a counterfeit credit card is considered
access device fraud and is punishable by law. To successfully sustain
a conviction for possession and use of a counterfeit access device,
the prosecution must present not only the access device but also any
evidence that proves that the access device is counterfeit.
This resolves a Petition1 for Review on Certiorari assailing the
Decision2 dated July 4, 2013 and Resolution3 dated
November 26, 2013 of the Court of Appeals, which affirmed the
conviction of petitioner Anthony De Silva Cruz (Cruz) by the
Regional Trial Court4 for violation of Republic Act No. 8484,
otherwise known as the Access Devices Regulation Act of 1998.
Cruz was charged with violation of Section 9(a) and (e) of
Republic Act No. 8484, which provides:
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565
566
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Cruz was arraigned on October 17, 2006, where he pleaded not
guilty for each charge.6 Trial on the merits ensued.7
According to the prosecution, on April 18, 2006, at around 7:30
p.m., Cruz allegedly tried to purchase two (2) bottles of Calvin Klein
perfume worth US$96.00 from Duty Free Philippines Fiesta Mall.
Danilo Wong (Wong), the cashier at the Perfume Section, testified
that Cruz paid for the purchase using a Citibank Visa credit card.8
The transaction was
approved, although Wong doubted the validity of the credit card
since the number at the back was not aligned.9
At around 8:00 p.m., Cruz allegedly tried to purchase a pair of
Ferragamo shoes worth US$363.00.10 Ana Margarita Lim (Lim), the
cashier on duty, facilitated the sales transaction.11 Cruz paid for the
purchase using a Citibank Visa credit card bearing the name “Gerry
Santos,” with credit card number 4539 7207 8677 7008.12 When
Lim asked for Cruz’s Duty Free shopping card, Cruz presented a
shopping card with the name of “Rodolfo Garcia.”13 Lim asked for
another identification card, and Cruz gave her a driver’s license
bearing the name “Gerry Santos.”14
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567
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15 Id.
16 Id.
17 Id.
18 Id.
19 Id.
20 Id., at p. 50.
21 Id., at p. 31.
22 Id., at p. 51.
23 Id., at pp. 50-51.
568
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24 Id., at p. 49.
25 Id.
26 Id., at p. 53.
27 Id., at p. 31. A.M. No. 03-1-09-SC (2004), Proposed Rule on Guidelines to be
Observed by Trial Court Judges and Clerks of Court in the Conduct of Pre-Trial and
Use of Deposition-Discovery Measures.
28 Id., at pp. 31-32.
29 Id., at p. 31.
30 Id., at p. 32.
569
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WHEREFORE, all the foregoing considered, the Court finds the accused
ANTHONY DE SILVA CRUZ as follows:
(1) Under Criminal Case No. 06-0479, GUILTY beyond reasonable
doubt of the offense of Violation of Section 9, par. (a) of Republic Act No.
8484, as stated in the Information, and accordingly hereby penalizes the said
accused to suffer indeterminate sentence of fine of Ten Thousand Pesos
(P10,000.00) and imprisonment of six (6) years prisión correccional as
minimum, to ten (10) years prisión mayor as maximum.
(2) Under Criminal Case No. 06-0480, GUILTY beyond reasonable
doubt of the offense of Violation of Section 9, par. (a) of Republic Act No.
8484 as stated in the Information, and accordingly hereby sentences the said
accused to suffer indeterminate sentence of fine of Ten Thousand Pesos
(P10,000.00) and imprisonment often (10) years prisión mayor as minimum
to twelve (12) years prisión mayor as maximum.
(3) Under Criminal Case No. 06-0481, NOT GUILTY of the offense of
Violation of Section 9, par. (a) of Repub-
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31 Id., at pp. 46-56. The Decision, docketed as Criminal Case No. 06-0479, was
penned by Presiding Judge Fortunito L. Madrona of Branch 274 of the Regional Trial
Court, Parañaque.
32 Id., at p. 55.
570
lic Act No. 8484 as charged in the Information, and accordingly hereby
acquits the said accused therefrom.
SO ORDERED.33
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Aggrieved, Cruz appealed to the Court of Appeals. On July 4,
2013, the Court of Appeals rendered the Decision34 denying the
appeal and upholding Cruz’s conviction.
According to the Court of Appeals, the prosecution was able to
establish that Cruz had in his possession a counterfeit access
device.35 It also held that A.M. No. 03-1-09-SC does not absolutely
preclude the admission of evidence that has not been pre-marked
during pretrial since courts may, in its discretion and “for good cause
shown,” still admit the evidence.36
However, the Court of Appeals modified the penalties to delete
the words “prisión correccional” and “prisión mayor” as the law
itself37 provides the penalties to be imposed.38 The dispositive
portion of the Decision reads:
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33 Id., at p. 56.
34 Id., at pp. 28-41. The Decision, docketed as C.A.-G.R. CR No. 33756, was
penned by Associate Justice Angelita A. Gacutan and concurred in by Associate
Justices Fernanda Lampas-Peralta (Chair) and Francisco P. Acosta of the Tenth
Division, Court of Appeals, Manila.
35 Id., at p. 35.
36 Id., at p. 36.
37 Rep. Act No. 8484 (1998), Sec. 10 provides:
SECTION 10. Penalties.—Any person committing any of the acts
constituting access device fraud enumerated in the immediately preceding
section shall be punished with:
(a) a fine of Ten Thousand Pesos (P10,000.00) or twice the value obtained
by the offense, whichever is greater and imprisonment for not less than six (6)
years and not more than ten (10) years, in the case of an offense under Section
9(b)-(e), and (g)-(p) which does not occur after a conviction for another
offense under Section 9;
(b) a fine of Ten Thousand Pesos (P10,000.00) or twice the value obtained
by the offense, and imprisonment for not less than ten (10) years and for not
571
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Cruz moved for reconsideration, but the Motion was denied in
the Resolution40 dated November 26, 2013.
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more than twelve (12) years, in the case of an offense under Section 9(a), and
(f) of the foregoing section, which does not occur after a conviction for
another offense under Section 9; and
(c) a fine of Ten thousand pesos (P10,000.00) or twice the value obtained
by the offense, or imprisonment for not less than twelve (12) years and not
more than twenty (20) years, or both, in the case of any offense under Section
9, which occurs after a conviction for another offense under said subsection,
or an attempt to commit the same.
38 Rollo, p. 39.
39 Id., at p. 40.
40 Id., at pp. 42-43. The Resolution was penned by Associate Justice Angelita A.
Gacutan and concurred in by Associate Justices Fernanda Lampas-Peralta and
Francisco P. Acosta of the Former Tenth Division, Court of Appeals, Manila.
572
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573
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50 Id., at pp. 110-127. The Entry of Appearance was noted by this Court in a
Resolution dated August 31, 2016.
51 Id., at p. 118.
52 Id., at pp. 121-123.
53 Id., at pp. 115-118.
54 Id., at p. 124.
574
any card, plate, code, account number, electronic serial number, personal
identification number, or other telecommunications service, equipment, or
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Since a credit card is “any card, plate, coupon book, or other
credit device existing for the purpose of obtaining money, goods,
property, labor or services or anything of value on credit,”56 it is
considered an access device.
Section 9(a) and (e) make the possession and use of a counterfeit
access device as “access device fraud” that is punishable by law:
A counterfeit access device is “any access device that is
counterfeit, fictitious, altered, or forged, or an identifiable
component of an access device or counterfeit access device.”57
Under Section 9(a) and (e) of Republic Act No. 8484, the possession
and use of an access device is not illegal. Rather, what is prohibited
is the possession and use of a counterfeit access device. Therefore,
the corpus delicti of the crime is not merely
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575
the access device, but also any evidence that proves that it is
counterfeit.
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576
the case of an offense under Section 9(a) and (f) of the foregoing
section, which does not occur after a conviction for another offense
under Section 9[.]61
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2. The parties shall submit, at least three (3) days before the pretrial,
pretrial briefs containing the following:
....
d. The documents or exhibits to be presented, stating the purpose
thereof. (No evidence shall be allowed to be presented and offered
during the trial in support of a party’s evidence-in-chief other than
those that had been earlier identi-
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577
The rule is that no evidence shall be allowed during trial if it was
not identified and pre-marked during trial. This provision, however,
allows for an exception: when allowed by the court for good cause
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65 Fortune Corporation v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 108119, January 19, 1994,
229 SCRA 355, 371 [Per J. Regalado, Second Division].
578
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579
Pros. Rodriguez: Exhibit F, Your Honor, the Certification that this card is not
the . . .
Court: The certification of Citibank?
Pros. Rodriguez: Yes, that this card is not a genuine card. So this is F-1.
Court: How come that it will be certification? That card?
Pros. Rodriguez: No, that this card is not the — because this is a . . .
Court: What is the certification of the Citibank Exhibit F? Does it mention
that that card is part?
Pros. Rodriguez: Yes, Your Honor. At this point, exhibiting to this
Honorable Court Exhibit “F” reads that, “Citibank Visa Card with
embossed account number 4539-7207-8677-7008,” which is the physical
evidence in this case presented to this Court, is a counterfeit, Your
Honor. So, this is only part of Exhibit F.
Court: Okay, the Court will allow that.
Atty. De Guia: We will just put our continuing objection on record, Your
Honor.66 (Emphasis supplied)
The prosecution was able to present and mark during pretrial
Citibank’s certification that the access device used was counterfeit. It
is this certification that makes the possession and use of the access
device illegal. Therefore, the trial court determined that the access
device could still be presented at trial since it merely formed part of
an exhibit that had already been presented and marked during
pretrial.
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580
III
Petitioner points out the alleged inconsistencies in the
testimonies of Ana Margarita Lim and Danilo Wong.67 Wong
testified that the credit card presented in trial was not the same credit
card that petitioner used in purchasing the Calvin Klein perfumes
worth US$96.00.68
The determination of the credibility of witnesses is a question of
fact that should not be reviewed by this Court in a petition for
review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court.69 There
are exceptions to this rule;70 however, none of those exceptions are
present here. Even if we were to review the witnesses’ testimonies,
petitioner’s argument would still be unmeritorious.
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581
Two (2) transactions took place on the night of April 18, 2006:
the purchase of perfumes at Counter 1571 and the purchase of shoes
at Counter 12.72 Lim, the cashier for Counter 12, and Wong, the
cashier for Counter 15, were called to testify on two (2) different
transactions. There can be no inconsistency between two witnesses
testifying on two different occurrences.
Petitioner also points out other inconsistencies in the prosecution
witnesses’ testimonies, such as whom among Lim and Redentor
Quejada turned over the credit card to the
police;73 whether petitioner introduced himself;74 and why Lim did
not bother to make a copy of petitioner’s driver’s license.75
These alleged inconsistencies are minor and do not detract from
the conclusion that petitioner used a counterfeit access device in the
purchase of goods.
In any case, the trial court found these witnesses credible. Its
assessment on the credibility of the witnesses is entitled to great
weight and respect, especially if it is affirmed by the Court of
Appeals.76
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71 Rollo, p. 49.
72 Id., at p. 48.
73 Id., at pp. 21-22.
74 Id., at p. 22.
75 Id.
76 See People v. Diu, 708 Phil. 218, 232; 695 SCRA 229, 243 (2013) [Per J.
Leonardo-De Castro, First Division]: “Thus, it has been an established rule in
appellate review that the trial court’s factual findings — including its assessment of
the credibility of the witnesses, the probative weight of their testimonies, and the
conclusions drawn from the factual findings — are accorded great respect and even
conclusive effect. These factual findings and conclusions assume greater weight if
they are affirmed by the Court of Appeals.”
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582
77 People v. Dalinog, 262 Phil. 98, 111; 183 SCRA 88, 100 (1990) [Per CJ.
Fernan, Third Division], citing People v. Anquillano, 233 Phil. 456, 460-461; 149
SCRA 442, 446 (1987) [Per J. Cruz, En Banc].
78 Rollo, pp. 121-122.
79 See Dimarucot v. People, 645 Phil. 218, 227; 630 SCRA 659, 668 (2010) [Per
J. Villarama, Jr., Third Division].
80 Rollo, pp. 121-122.
81 Id., at pp. 57-61, TSN dated August 1, 2007. Petitioner’s counsel on record for
this hearing is a certain Atty. De Guia, al-
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583
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though the pretrial order (id., at pp. 44-45) states that petitioner’s counsel is Atty.
Edwin Michael P. Musico.
82 Id., at pp. 49 and 51.
83 Id., at p. 31.
84 Id., at pp. 128-132.
85 Id., at p. 133.
86 Id.
87 See People v. Magallanes, 231 Phil. 89, 98; 147 SCRA 92, 101 (1987) [Per J.
Paras, Second Division].
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584
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