People vs. Lagata - Article 224
People vs. Lagata - Article 224
People vs. Lagata - Article 224
Lagata
FACTS:
Eusebio Abria said that while they were gathering gabi, he heard 3
shots. He was wounded by the 2nd one. They were already assembled
by the 1st shot and that he did not see Tipace being shot. He said he
ran away because he was afraid that he might be shot again and that
his companions were also probably scared and that is why they ran.
Another prisoner, Mariano Ibañez stated that Epifanio Labong did not
answer their call so Ignacio Lagata ordered to go look for him in the
mountain. He said that Abria went to the camote plantation and found
footprints and called on Lagata to inform him about the footprints.
When Abria told Lagata of the flattened grass and that he was unable
to look for Labong, Ignacio Lagata fired at him and he was hit on his
left arm.
Abria told Lagata he was wounded and in turn, Lagata told them to
assemble. Once they were assembled, Lagata cocked his gun and shot
Ceferino Tipace. Mariano said that when he saw Tipace was shot, he
ran away because he also could have been shot.
Ignacio Lagata, however, said that he fired his gun because the
prisoners were running far from him when he already ordered them to
stop. He said that he would be the one in jail if a prisoner escaped
under his custody. Furthermore, he would be discharged from duty
like the others. He was hopeless already. Moreover, the picking up of
gabi was not part of the prisoner’s work.
ISSUE: WON the accused appellant is punishable under Article 224? (YES)
Considering that the place was grassy and tall talahib was growing
therein, the height of which could conceal persons in standing position,
appellant must have seen immediately that it was a choice place for
any prisoner that may want to escape.
DISPOSITION:
NOTES:
Human Life, Value of; Mandate of Gospel "Thou Shalt Not Kill."—Human life
is valuable, albeit, sacred. Cain has been the object of unrelentless curse for
centuries and millennia and his name will always be remembered in shame
as long as there are human generations able to read the Genesis. Twenty
centuries of Christianity have not been enough to make less imperative the
admonition that "Thou shalt not kill," uttered by the greatest pundit and
prophet of Israel. Laws, constitutions, world charters have been written to
protect human life. Still it is imperative that all men be imbued with the
spirit of the Sermon on the Mount that the words of the gospels be
translated into reality, and that their meaning fill all horizons with the
eternal aroma of encyclic love of mankind. People vs. Lagata, 83 Phil., 150,
Nos. L-1940-42 March 24, 1949