People vs. Bandian, 63 Phil. 530
People vs. Bandian, 63 Phil. 530
People vs. Bandian, 63 Phil. 530
SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC
DIAZ, J.:
The prosecuting attorney and the lower court giving absolute credit
to Dr. Nepomuceno whose testimony was not corroborated but, on
the contrary, was contradicted by the very witnesses for the
prosecution and by the appellant, as will be stated later, they were
of the opinion and the lower court furthermore held, that the
appellant was an infanticide. The Solicitor-General, however, does
not agree with both. On the contrary, he maintains that the
appellant may be guilty only of abandoning a minor under
subsection 2 of article 276 of the Revised Penal Code, the
abandonment having resulted in the death of the minor allegedly
abandoned.
The evidence certainly does not show that the appellant, in causing
her child's death in one way or another, or in abandoning it in the
thicket, did so wilfully, consciously or imprudently. She had no
cause to kill or abandon it, to expose it to death, because her affair
with a former lover, which was not unknown to her second lover,
Luis Kirol, took place three years before the incident; her married
life with Kirol — she considers him her husband as he considers
her his wife — began a year ago; as he so testified at the trial, he
knew that the appellant was pregnant and he believed from the
beginning, affirming such belief when he testified at the trial, that
the child carried by the appellant in her womb was his, and he
testified that he and she had been eagerly waiting for the birth of
the child. The appellant, therefore, had no cause to be ashamed of
her pregnancy to Kirol.
Separate Opinions
As the herein accused was not aware that she had delivered and
that the child had been exposed to the rough weather and to the
cruelty of animals, it cannot be held that she deceitfully committed
the crime of infanticide or that of abandonment of a minor, because
according to the above-cited legal provision there is deceit when
the act punishable by law is performed with deliberate intent.
Suffering from fever and from dizziness, the appellant under the
circumstances was not aware that she had given birth and,
consequently, she could not have deliberately intended to leave her
child, of whose existence she was ignorant, to perish at the mercy
of the elements and of the animals. Neither can it be held that she
faultily committed it because, as already stated, not knowing for
lack of experience in childbirth that in defecating — a perfectly
lawful physiological act, being natural — she might expel the child
she carried in her womb, she cannot be considered imprudent, a
psychological defect of a person who fails to use his reasoning
power to foresee the pernicious consequences of his willful act.
Having had no knowledge of the fact of her delivery, the accused
could not think that by leaving the child in the thicket, it would die
as a consequence of the rough weather or of the cruelty of animals.
Neither can she be considered negligent because negligence is the
omission to do what the law or morals obliges one to do, which
implies knowledge of the thing which is the subject matter of the
compliance with the obligation. Inasmuch as the accused was not
aware of her delivery, her mind cannot contemplate complying
with her legal and moral duty to protect the life of her child.
Neither can it be held that the appellant lacked foresight because,
having been absolutely ignorant of her delivery, she could not
foresee that by abandoning her child in a thicket it would die.
Neither can it be held that her act was the result of lack of skill
because she did not know that to defecate in a state of pregnancy
might precipitate her delivery, and as defecation is a natural
physiological function, she could not refrain from satisfying it.