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Affidavit of Desistance, Not A Ground For Dismissal

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Affidavit of Desistance, not a Ground for Dismissal

In Tabao vs. Espina,14 the Court has underscored the need to adhere strictly to the above rules. It
reminds that —

. . . each step in the trial process serves a specific purpose. In the trial of criminal cases,
the constitutional presumption of innocence in favor of an accused requires that an
accused be given sufficient opportunity to present his defense. So, with the prosecution as
to its evidence.

Hence, any deviation from the regular course of trial should always take into
consideration the rights of all the parties to the case, whether in the prosecution or
defense. In the exercise of their discretion, judges are sworn not only to uphold the law
but also to do what is fair and just. The judicial gavel should not be wielded by one who
has an unsound and distorted sense of justice and fairness.15

While Judge Savellano has claimed in his Comment that —

Petitioners-accused were each represented during the hearing on 07 November 1997 with
their respective counsel of choice. None of their counsel interposed an intention to cross-
examine rape victim Juvielyn Punongbayan, even after she attested, in answer to
respondent judge's clarificatory questions, the voluntariness and truth of her two
affidavits — one detailing the rape and the other detailing the attempts to buy her
desistance; the opportunity was missed/not used, hence waived. The rule of case law is
that the right to confront and cross-examine a witness "is a personal one and may be
waived." (emphasis supplied) —

it should be pointed out, however, that the existence of the waiver must be positively
demonstrated. The standard of waiver requires that it "not only must be voluntary, but must be
knowing, intelligent, and done with sufficient awareness of the relevant circumstances and likely
consequences."16 Mere silence of the holder of the right should not be so construed as a waiver
of right, and the courts must indulge every reasonable presumption against waiver.17 The
Solicitor General has aptly discerned a few of the deviations from what otherwise should have
been the regular course of trial: (1) Petitioners have not been directed to present evidence to
prove their defenses nor have dates therefor been scheduled for the purpose;18 (2) the parties
have not been given the opportunity to present rebutting evidence nor have dates been set by
respondent Judge for the purpose;19 and (3) petitioners have not admitted the act charged in the
Information so as to justify any modification in the order of trial.20 There can be no short-cut to
the legal process, and there can be no excuse for not affording an accused his full day in court.
Due process, rightly occupying the first and foremost place of honor in our Bill of Rights, is an
enshrined and invaluable right that cannot be denied even to the most undeserving.

This case, in fine, must be remanded for further proceedings. And, since the case would have to
be sent back to the court a quo, this ponencia has carefully avoided making any statement or
reference that might be misconstrued as prejudgment or as pre-empting the trial court in the
proper disposition of the case. The Court likewise deems it appropriate that all related
proceedings therein, including the petition for bail, should be subject to the proper disposition of
the trial court.

Nevertheless, it is needful to stress a few observations on the affidavit of desistance executed by


the complainant.

Firstly, the affidavit of desistance of Juvie-Lyn Punongbayan, hereinbefore quoted, does


not contain any statement that disavows the veracity of her complaint against petitioners
but merely seeks to "be allowed to withdraw" her complaint and to discontinue with the
case for varied other reasons. On this subject, the case of People vs. Junio,21 should be
instructive. The Court has there explained:

The appellant's submission that the execution of an Affidavit of Desistance by


complainant who was assisted by her mother supported the "inherent incredibility of
prosecution's evidence" is specious. We have said in so many cases that retractions are
generally unreliable and are looked upon with considerable disfavor by the courts. The
unreliable character of this document is shown by the fact that it is quite incredible that
after going through the process of having accused-appellant arrested by the police,
positively identifying him as the person who raped her, enduring the humiliation of a
physical examination of her private parts, and then repeating her accusations in open
court by recounting her anguish, Maryjane would suddenly turn around and declare that
"[a]fter a careful deliberation over the case, (she) find(s) that the same does not merit or
warrant criminal prosecution.

Thus, we have declared that at most the retraction is an afterthought which should not be
given probative value. It would be a dangerous rule to reject the testimony taken before
the court of justice simply because the witness who has given it later on changed his mind
for one reason or another. Such a rule will make a solemn trial a mockery and place the
investigation at the mercy of unscrupulous witnesses. Because affidavits of retraction can
easily be secured from poor and ignorant witnesses, usually for monetary consideration,
the Court has invariably regarded such affidavits as exceedingly unreliable [Flores vs.
People, 211 SCRA 622, citing De Guzman vs. Intermediate Appellate Court, 184 SCRA
128; People vs. Galicia, 123 SCRA 550.]22

The Junio rule is no different from ordinary criminal cases. For instance, in People vs.
Ballabare,23 a murder case, the Court has ruled:

The contention has no merit. To begin with, the Affidavit executed by eyewitness Tessie
Asenita is not a recantation. To recant a prior statement is to renounce and withdraw it
formally and publicly. [36 WORDS AND PHRASES 683, citing Pradlik vs. State, 41-A
2nd, 906, 907.] In her affidavit, Tessie Asenita did not really recant what she had said
during the trial. She only said she wanted to withdraw her testimony because her father,
Leonardo Tacadao, Sr., was no longer interested in prosecuting the case against accused-
appellant. Thus, her affidavit stated:
3. That inasmuch as my father, Leonardo Tacadao, Sr., the complainant therein, was no
longer interested to prosecute the case as manifested in the Sworn Affidavit of Desistance
before the Provincial Prosecutor, I do hereby WITHDRAW and/or REVOKE my
testimony of record to confirm (sic) with my father's desire;

It is absurd to disregard a testimony that has undergone trial and scrutiny by the court and
the parties simply because an affidavit withdrawing the testimony is subsequently
presented by the defense. In the first place, any recantation must be tested in a public trial
with sufficient opportunity given to the party adversely affected by it to cross-examine
the recanting witness. In this case, Tessie Asenita was not recalled to the witness stand to
testify on her affidavit. Her affidavit is thus hearsay. It was her husband, Roque Asenita,
who was presented and the matters he testified to did not even bear on the substance of
Tessie's affidavit. He testified that accused-appellant was not involved in the perpetration
of the crime.

In the second place, to accept the new evidence uncritically would be to make a solemn
trial a mockery and place the investigation at the mercy of unscrupulous witnesses. [De
Guzman vs. Intermediate Appellate Court, 184 SCRA 128, 134, citing People vs.
Morales, 113 SCRA 683.] For even assuming that Tessie Asenita had made a retraction,
this circumstance alone does not require the court to disregard her original testimony. A
retraction does not necessarily negate an earlier declaration. [People vs. Davatos, 229
SCRA 647.] For this reason, courts look with disfavor upon retractions because they can
easily be obtained from witnesses usually through intimidation or for monetary
considerations. [People vs. Clamor, 198 SCRA 642.] Hence, when confronted with a
situation where a witness recants his testimony, courts must not automatically exclude the
original testimony solely on the basis of the recantation. They should determine which
testimony should be given credence through a comparison of the original testimony and
the new testimony, applying the general rules of evidence. [Reano vs. Court of Appeals,
165 SCRA 525.] In this case we think the trial court correctly ruled.24

It may not be amiss to state that courts have the inherent power to compel the attendance of any
person to testify in a case pending before it, and a party is not precluded from invoking that
authority.25

Secondly, an affidavit of desistance by itself, even when construed as a pardon in the so-
called "private crimes," is not a ground for the dismissal of the criminal case once the
action has been instituted. The affidavit, nevertheless, may, as so earlier intimated, possibly
constitute evidence whose weight or probative value, like any other piece of evidence,
would be up to the court for proper evaluation. The decision in Junio went on to hold —

While "[t]he offenses of seduction, abduction, rape or acts of lasciviousness, shall not be
prosecuted except upon a complaint flied by the offended party or her parents,
grandparents, or guardian, nor in any case, if the offender has been expressly pardoned by
the above named persons, as the case may be," [Third par. of Art. 344, The Revised Penal
Code.] the pardon to justify the dismissal of the complaint should have been made prior
to the institution of the criminal action. [People vs. Entes, 103 SCRA 162, cited by
People vs. Soliao, 194 SCRA 250, which in turn is cited in People vs. Villorente, 210
SCRA 647.] Here, the motion to dismiss to which the affidavit of desistance is attached
was filed after the institution of the criminal case. And, affiant did not appear to be
serious in "signifying (her) intention to refrain from testifying" since she still completed
her testimony notwithstanding her earlier affidavit of desistance. More, the affidavit is
suspect considering that while it was dated "April 1992," it was only submitted sometime
in August 1992, four (4) months after the Information was filed before the court a quo on
6 April 1992, perhaps dated as such to coincide with the actual filing of the case.26

In People vs. Miranda,27 applying the pertinent provisions of Article 344 of the Revised Penal
Code which, in full, states —

Art. 344. Prosecution of the crimes of adultery, concubinage, seduction, abduction, rape,
and acts of lasciviousness. The crimes of adultery and concubinage shall not be
prosecuted except upon a complaint filed by the offended spouse.

The offended party cannot institute criminal prosecution without including both the guilty
parties, if they are both alive, nor, in any case, if he shall have consented or pardoned the
offenders.

The offenses of seduction, abduction, rape or acts of lasciviousness, shall not be


prosecuted except upon a complaint filed by the offended party or her parents,
grandparents, or guardian, nor, in any case, if the offender has been expressly pardoned
by the above named persons, as the case may be.

In cases of seduction, abduction, acts of lasciviousness and rape, the marriage of the
offender with the offended party shall extinguish the criminal action or remit the penalty
already imposed upon him. The provisions of this paragraph shall also be applicable to
the coprincipals, accomplices and accessories after the fact of the above-mentioned
crimes.

the Court said:

Paragraph 3 of the legal provision above quoted prohibits a prosecution for seduction,
abduction, rape, or acts of lasciviousness, except upon a complaint made by the offended
party or her parents, grandparents, or guardian, nor, in any case, if the offender has been
expressly pardoned by the above-named persons, as the case may be. It does not prohibit
the continuance of a prosecution if the offended party pardons the offender after the cause
has been instituted, nor does it order the dismissal of said cause. The only act that
according to article 344 extinguishes the penal action and the penalty that may have been
imposed is the marriage between the offended and the offended party.28

In People vs. Infante, 29 decided just a little over a month before Miranda, the Court similarly
held:
In this court, after the case had been submitted, a motion to dismiss was filed on behalf of
the appellant predicated on an affidavit executed by Manuel Artigas, Jr., in which he
pardoned his guilty spouse for her infidelity. But this attempted pardon cannot prosper for
two reasons. The second paragraph of article 344 of the Revised Penal Code which is in
question reads: "The offended party cannot institute criminal prosecution without
including both the guilty parties, if they are both alive, nor, in any case, if he shall have
consented or pardoned the offenders." This provision means that the pardon afforded the
offenders must come before the institution of the criminal prosecution, and means,
further, that both the offenders must be pardoned by the offended party. To elucidate
further, article 435 of the old Penal Code provided: "The husband may at any time remit
the penalty imposed upon his wife. In such case the penalty imposed upon the wife's
paramour shall also be deemed to be remitted." These provisions of the old Penal Code
became inoperative after the passage of Act No. 1773, section 2, which had the effect of
repealing the same. The Revised Penal Code thereafter expressly repealed the old Penal
Code, and in so doing did not have the effect of reviving any of its provisions which were
not in force. But with the incorporation of the second paragraph of article 344, the pardon
given by the offended party again constitutes a bar to the prosecution for adultery. Once
more, however, it must be emphasized that this pardon must come before the institution
of the criminal prosecution and must be for both offenders to be effective —
circumstances which do not concur in this case.30

The decisions speak well for themselves, and the Court need not say more than what it has
heretofore already held.

Relative to the prayer for the disqualification of Judge Savellano from further hearing the case,
the Court is convinced that Judge Savellano should, given the circumstances, the best excused
from the case. Possible animosity between the personalities here involved may not all be that
unlikely. The pronouncement of this Court in the old case of Luque vs. Kayanan31 could again
be said: All suitors are entitled to nothing short of the cold neutrality of an independent, wholly-
free, disinterested and unbiased tribunal. Second only to the duty of rendering a just decision is
the duty of doing it in a manner that will not arouse any suspicion as to the fairness and integrity
of the Judge.32 It is not enough that a court is impartial, it must also be perceived as impartial.

The Court cannot end this ponencia without a simple reminder on the use of proper language
before the courts. While the lawyer in promoting the cause of his client or defending his rights
might do so with fervor, simple courtesy demands that it be done within the bounds of propriety
and decency. The use of intemperate language and unkind ascriptions hardly can be justified nor
can have a place in the dignity of judicial forum. Civility among members of the legal profession
is a treasured tradition that must at no time be lost to it.

Finally, it may be opportune to say, once again, that prosecutors are expected not merely to
discharge their duties with the highest degree or excellence, professionalism and skill but also to
act each time with utmost devotion and dedication to duty.33 The Court is hopeful that the zeal
which has been exhibited many times in the past, although regrettably a disappointment on few
occasions, will not be wanting in the proceedings yet to follow.

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