SECOND DIVISION
[G.R. No. 117218. March 20, 1997]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs.
GERRY NALANGAN, alias GERRY BUKOL, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
REGALADO, J.:
Adjudged guilty by the Regional Trial Court, Branch 19, of Bacoor, Cavite of the crime of murder in Criminal Case No. B-89-93, accused-appellant Gerry Nalangan, alias Gerry Bukol, predicates his present appellate recourse on self-defense. He seeks to bolster that apologia with the supposed unreliability of the prosecution witnesses, especially their version of the events upon which the trial court grounded its affirmative nod on the prosecution’s cause.
The initiatory criminal information, dated March 9, l989, imputed the murder subject of this case to appellant, the pertinent portion thereof alleging -
That on or about 11:30 p.m. of February 28, l988, at the vicinity
of Block 14 and 15, Barangay Ramon Cruz, Municipality of General Mariano
Alvarez, Province of Cavite, Philippines and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the above-named accused, being then armed with a kitchen
knife, with intent to kill and with treachery and evident premeditation, did,
then and there, willfully, unlawfully and feloniously assault, attack and stab
with the use of the aforesaid weapon Emmanuel Rosal on the stomach, thereby
inflicting upon the latter a mortal wound which caused his death.[1]
Appellant, duly assisted by counsel, registered a negative plea
at his arraignment on July 5, 1989.[2] At the trial conducted thereafter, the
prosecution presented as its witnesses Rogelio Alvarez, Jose Samone, Jr.,
Constancia Rosal, Pat. Roland Alamo, and Dr. Ruben Maranan. Appellant himself testified in his defense,
without corroboration from any other witness to buttress his asseverations. On
November 29, 1993, the court a quo rendered its condemnatory verdict
sentencing appellant to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua and
ordering him to indemnify the heirs of the victim in the amount of P30,000.00
for the latter’s death, P10,000.00 for hospitalization and funeral
expenses, and to pay the costs.
Appellant was credited with the period of his preventive imprisonment
caused by his failure to post bail.[3]
Prosecution witnesses Rogelio Alvarez and Jose Samone, Jr., both
of whom were townmates and common friends of the victim and appellant, narrated
before the trial court that at around 11:30 in the evening of February 28,
l989, they had just adjourned from a
drinking spree with said victim and appellant.
They were about to go their separate ways when they observed Nalangan,
who was holding a knife, running away from the wobbling victim. Emmanuel Rosal shouted that he had been
wounded. When these two witnesses
rushed to the succor of Rosal, the victim told them that appellant had stabbed
him, and asked them to bring him at once to a hospital for treatment. The stabbing incident occurred at a
well-lighted place in the vicinity of Blocks 14 and 15 in Barangay Roman Cruz,
General Mariano Alvarez, Cavite, and the witnesses were just a short distance
away from the protagonists at the time.
The victim was hospitalized for about two weeks before he expired,
apparently on account of the wound inflicted by appellant.[4]
Appellant’s own story is that it had all begun from a scuffle
between him and the victim. He was then
on his way home after watching television at a friend’s house when the victim
accosted him and tried to extort P20.00 from him. When he refused, Rosal insisted on selling
to him a plastic bag containing marijuana.
When appellant again declined, the victim assaulted him with blows from
the handle of a knife. Appellant tried
to fight back and, in the ensuing affray, the knife fell from the victim’s
hand. Appellant picked up the knife and
attempted to run away but the victim grasped his shirt and began to choke
him. At this point, appellant thrust
the knife into the victim’s stomach and then scampered away. He insists that he stabbed the deceased to
save his life.[5]
Appellant imputes error on the part of the trial court (a) when
it gave full weight and credence to the testimonies of the prosecution
witnesses and totally disregarded his own testimony; (b) when it held that
there was no unlawful aggression on the part of the deceased and that
appellant’s life was never placed in danger; and (c) when it convicted him in
spite of the failure of the prosecution to establish his guilt beyond
reasonable doubt.[6]
Evidently, all the assigned errors revolve on the question of
credibility. In that regard, resort to
appellate review to reverse the findings thereon of the trial court would
generally elicit a rebuff from the superior court where no perceivable gross
error bordering on misapprehension of the facts could be readily gleaned from
such factual conclusions.[7] In appellant’s case, while the trial court
apparently misappreciated treachery and evident premeditation against him, his
guilt for homicide in the slaying of Emmanuel Rosal, and not murder as found by
the court below, is indisputably borne out by the evidence on record.
The justifying circumstance of self-defense, to vindicate an
accused relying thereon, must be proved clearly and convincingly, and it is not
for an accused asserting its presence in his case to bank on the weakness of
the People’s evidence. Once invoked by
the accused, the burden of proof is shifted to him to establish the elements of
the same, to wit: (l) unlawful aggression on the part of the victim; (2)
reasonable necessity of the means employed to prevent or repel it; and (3) lack
of sufficient provocation on the part of the person defending himself.[8]
The incident recounted by appellant, which is uncorroborated and thus self-serving, is that an altercation occurred between him and the victim at the instance of the latter, immediately prior to the stabbing. The two prosecution witnesses, Rogelio Alvarez and Jose Samone, Jr., to whom no ill motives had ever been attributed, were however unequivocal in their testimonies that no such squabble ever transpired between the two. On the contrary, Alvarez stated that minutes before the stabbing, as he and appellant were on their way to join the group of the deceased, appellant had intimated that he was going to inflict some harm on the person of the victim and that he was then armed with a knife.
That appellant did just that appears to be beyond question for, indeed, the victim later sustained a fatal wound on the stomach, inflicted no doubt by appellant who fled shortly thereafter from the scene of the incident. By his flight, appellant’s claim of self-defense was exposed as a mere subterfuge since he had no reason to flee considering that the persons present there were his friends. It could not even be suggested to an acceptable degree that he had to escape from his antagonist since the latter had by then been rendered hors de combat.
While it may be conceded that the two witnesses for the
prosecution did not actually see the very act of stabbing, the concatenation of
the events immediately prior to and after the victim shouted that he had been
hit confirms the criminal plan hatched by appellant. As further observed by the Solicitor General, appellant emerged
unscathed from the supposed struggle despite his claim that the deceased had
boxed and also struck him with the handle of the knife and, on top of that,
even choked him. In any case, it has
been held that in the absence of evidence showing that the victim was the
unlawful aggressor at the start, the law will consider the aggression as
reciprocal between the combatants.[9]
Upon the other hand, the evidence on record fails to bear out the
presence of treachery and evident premeditation, both of which cannot be simply
presumed or speculated upon. For alevosia
to be considered, it must be established as clearly as the elements of the
crime or crimes it is alleged to qualify.[10] And, as with treachery, evident
premeditation must likewise be proved with as much certainty and clarity as the
criminal act itself.[11] Absent any particulars as to the manner in
which the aggression commenced or how the act which resulted in the death of
the victim unfolded, treachery cannot be appreciated.[12] In the case of appellant, as already noted,
the prosecution witnesses had not actually seen the stabbing of the
victim. Hence, it could not just be
assumed that appellant had coolly and deliberately adopted treacherous means to
take the victim’s life.
Evident premeditation could not also qualify the slaying of
Emmanuel Rosal, since there was no evidence of (l) the time when the offender
determined to commit the crime; (2) an act manifestly indicating that the
offender had clung to his determination; and (3) a sufficient lapse of time
between the determination and execution, to allow the accused time to reflect
on the consequences of his act.[13] Here, although there is evidence showing
that appellant had harbored an evil design against the victim, the time within
which he made known that plan to Alvarez until the stabbing of the victim,
which involved an interval of only a few minutes, could not have afforded
appellant a sufficient opportunity for reflection on the consequences of his
criminal plan. Thus, the crime
committed by appellant, given these factual considerations, is homicide and not
murder.
ACCORDINGLY, the judgment appealed from is hereby
MODIFIED. Accused-appellant Gerry
Nalangan, alias Gerry Bukol, is declared guilty of simple homicide and is
hereby sentenced to suffer an indeterminate prison term of ten (l0) years, of prison
mayor in its medium period, as the minimum, to seventeen (l7) years and
four (4) months of reclusion temporal in its medium period, as the
maximum. Further, the death indemnity
for the victim is hereby increased to P50,000.00 in accordance with
present case law. In all other
respects, the judgment of the court a quo is hereby AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.
Romero, Puno, Mendoza, and Torres Jr., JJ., concur.
[1] Original Record, 42.
[2] Ibid., 45.
[3] Ibid.,
126-127.
[4] TSN, July 24, 1989,
3-12; November 14, 1989, 2-8; December 20, 1989, 2-11.
[5] Ibid., July
11, 1990, 2-5; September 11, 1990, 2-7.
[6] Appellant’s Brief,
1; Rollo, 33.
[7] People vs.
Sanchez, G.R. Nos. 98402-04, November 16, 1995, 290 SCRA 14; People vs.
Salodaga, et al., G.R. No. 106784, August 7, 1995, 297 SCRA 98.
[8] People vs.
Ronquillo, G.R. No. 96125, August 31, 1995, 247 SCRA 793; People vs.
Aliviado, G.R. Nos. 113783-84, August 14, 1995, 247 SCRA 300; People vs.
Morin, et al., G.R. No. 101794, February 24, 1995, 241 SCRA 709.
[9] Bitalac vs.
Court of Appeals, et al., G.R. No. 45835, February 15, 1995, 241 SCRA
351.
[10] People vs.
Rosario, et al., G.R. No. 108789, July 18, 1995, 246 SCRA 659.
[11] People vs.
Barros, G.R. Nos. 101107-08, June 27, 1985, 245 SCRA 312.
[12] People vs.
Patamama, G.R. No. 107938, December 4, 1995, 250 SCRA 603.
[13] People vs.
Gauzagan, Jr., G.R. No.
113793, August 11, 1995, 247 SCRA 220;
People vs. De la Cruz, G.R. No. 111968, March 2, 1995, 242 SCRA 129.