EN BANC
[G.R. No. 127903.
July 9, 1998]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs. ESTEBAN VICTOR y PENIS, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
PER CURIAM:
Before the Court
for automatic review is the judgment handed down in this case by the Regional
Trial Court of Quezon City, Branch 95, on December 16, 1996 finding
accused-appellant Esteban Victor y Penis guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the
crime of rape and sentencing him to suffer supreme penalty of death, as well as
to pay the corresponding civil liability to the victim.[1]
Appellant was charged
with rape in complaint dated August 8, 1996, which somewhat faultily but
sufficiently alleges:
That sometime in June 1996
in Quezon City, Philippines, the said accused by means of force and
intimidation, to wit: by then and there wilfully, unlawfully, and feloniously
undress said Raquel Villanueva, a minor, 15 years of age, stepdaughter, and put
himself on top of her, and thereafter have carnal knowledge with the
undersigned complainant against her will and without her consent.
CONTRARY TO LAW.[2]
At this
arraignment, appellant, with the assistance of counsel, entered a plea of not
guilty.[3] Thereafter, the trial of the case
proceeded and, as already stated, a condemnatory decision was eventually
rendered therein, with the following dispositive portion:
WHEREFORE, judgment is
hereby rendered finding the accused, Esteban Victor y Penis, GUILTY beyond
reasonable doubt of the crime of rape defined in and penalized by Article 335
of the Revised Penal Code and hereby sentences the said accused to suffer the penalty
of DEATH. The accused is ordered to indemnify Raquel Villanueva (in) the amount
of P50,000.00 as moral damages.
The
accused is further ordered to pay the costs.
IT IS SO
ORDERED.[4]
The evidence
adduced by the prosecution successfully establishes that complainant Raquel
Villanueva is the daughter of the common-law wife of herein appellant. Both the
said complainant and appellant lived in the same house located at Phase IV,
Urban 2, Payatas, Quezon City, since complainant's biological father was estranged
from her mother. Sometime in June 1996, while the mother of Raquel was at work
in the factory where she was employed, appellant entered Raquel's room while
she was folding clothes and unceremoniously poked a fan knife (“balisong”)
at her. He ordered her to take off her
clothes and lie on the floor. Out of fear, she complied.
Thereafter,
appellant took off his clothes and placed himself on top of complainant. He
then held her legs, spread them apart, inserted his penis into her genitalia
and proceeded to make the pumping motions of the sexual act. The rape lasted
for about ten minutes. Appellant warned Raquel not to tell her parents about
ten minutes. Appellant warned Raquel
not to tell her parents about the incident. Terrified by his threats and
constant presence in the house, since he was jobless and usually drunk, she
maintained her silence. She was
admittedly only fifteen years old then.[5]
However, after
that sexual assault, appellant continued to take indecent liberties with the
person of the victim in the following days, sometimes by touching her private
parts. To put an end to such molestation, Raquel decided to work as a housemaid
for one of their neighbors. It was only then that she finally gathered
enough courage to report the incident to her employer who sympathetically
accompanied her to the police station[6]
Raquel was
referred on August 6, 1996 to the Philippine National Police (PNP)Crime
Laboratory Services in Quezon City. She was initially interview and,
thereafter, a medical and genital examination was conducted on her by Dr.
Rosalyn O. Cosidon. This medicolegal
officer later testified in this case and told the trial court that the victim
was no longer a virgin when so examined. Dr. Cosidon attested that in her
examination, she found a shallow, healed hymenal laceration at 2 o’clock and
two deep, healed laceration at 5 and 9 o'clock in the victim's genitalia[7]
Appellant, on
the other hand, denied the accusations made against him. At first, he alleged
that during the month of June 1996, and even about two years before that,
Raquel was staying in the house of her aunt in Valenzuela, Metro Manila. He
later corrected himself to admit that she was actually staying with him in
their Quezon City residence for more than a year before June 1996. He averred
that he could not do such a thing to Racquel since he considered and treated
her as his stepdaughter. He claimed that, possibly, the case was filed against
him as a sort of reprisal for the times when he reprimanded Raquel in the past,
although such scoldings were "not grave." Aside from that, he could
not give any other reason why she made this accusation against him since
their "relationship" was
"good."[8]
In this
appellate review, appellant interposes a lone assignment of error, namely, that
the trial court erred in finding him guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the
crime of rape.[9] It is his contention that the
evidence for the prosecution is replete with serious inconsistencies and his
conviction should be reversed.
In an attempt to
discredit the veracity of complaint's account of the incident, appellant
contends that there is an inconsistency between her testimony at the trial and
her declaration before the representatives of the Department of Social Welfare
and Development (DSWD). He asserts that, in open court, the victim testified
that she that she was raped only once but in her previous statement in the
DSWD, she declared that she was repeatedly raped by appellant since she was
twelve years old. Dr. Cosidon declared that in the interview in the DSWD, there
were intimidations to this effect, but neither the prosecution nor the defense
subsequently followed up this aspect, apparently because it arose from an
informal interview of a young victim still erratic from the trauma of her
experience. The imputed inconsistency is, therefore, more apparent than real.
A review of the
records actually shows that the victims made no such declaration in the DSWD.
Appellant’s aforestated argument is premised solely upon an unsigned and
unidentified statement written in longhand on what appears to be a draft of a
mimeographed form[10] appended to a request for
laboratory/medical examination of the victims,[11] and stating: "Since patient
was 12 y/o she was raped repeatedly by suspect." That handwritten phrase
was neither made nor signed by the victim, hence she is not bound by it.[12] The authorship thereof was never
established, thus it cannot be given any probative value nor used to impeach
the victim. In fact, that form letter
on which it is written contains many other writings and scribbling in different
penmanship, with some of the writings having been either intercalated or
subsequently canceled.
Further, even if
those words be considered as a statement of the victim relayed to the writer,
it will not only be hearsay but substantially it cannot discredit her
testimony. Even an affidavit o a witness carries less weight than testimonial
evidence of the same affiant at the trial, considering that such judicial
declarations are more precise and elaborate than those stated in extrajudicial
statements which are often inaccurate and incomplete.[13] With much more reason should the
cryptic and unidentified statement in question be disregarded.
The Solicitor
General, on his part, posits that even assuming that the victim did make that
statement in the DSWD, when she later declared in court that she was raped by
appellant once in June 1996, she simply meant that the forcible sexual congress
happened only once on said date. That
statement in court cannot be extrapolated to mean that it was the only occasion
when appellant raped her. Thus viewed,
even indulging appellant in his postulation, there is actually no
irreconcilable inconsistency. More importantly, all these quibblings are unavailing
against and do not detract from the proven fact that appellant did rape the
victim in June 1996.
Furthermore,
appellant’s posture was contradicted by the joint affidavit of two social
workers of the DSWD, Remedios Jazmin and Hope Bernardes, who narrated therein
how such sexual depredations of appellant were brought to the attention of the
authorities. The pertinent parts of
their declaration appear as follows:
2. Na, noong mga alas 10:00
ng umaga petsa 06 ng Agosto 1996, mayroon dinadala na dalawang mga dalagita na
magkapatid na ang mga pangalan nila ay MARILYN VILLANUEVA, 13 taon gulang, at
RAQUEL VILLANUEVA, 15 taong gulang, pawang mga nakatira sa Urban Poor, Phase 4,
Payatas, Quezon City at ito ay dinala nila SPO4 AURORA VILLANUEVA, ng Station
6, Central Police District Command na isang personnel ng Womens Desk sa
nasabing station.
3. Na ayon sa policewoman
na nagdala sa mga bata doon sa aming opisina, iyong bata ay pinagsamantalahan
daw ng kanilang amain (stepfather) o ni rape sila kaya sila ay lumayas sa
kanilang bahay.
4. Na, dahil dito iyong
nasabing mga bata ng aming tanungin kong ano ang totoo nangyari sa kanila, sinabi
sa amin nang dalawang magkapatid na sila daw ay hinalay ng stepfather nila na
ang pangalan ay ESTEBAN VICTOR at sila ay paulit-ulit daw hinihipuan sa
kanilang maselang bahagi ng katawan, kong wala iyong kanilang Nanay sa loob ng
bahay nila (Emphasis ours).[14]
Appellant also
desperately claims that Raquel was being coached by someone in court when she
was under cross-examination. That
ascription is completely without bases. It was drawn solely from the fact that
the defense counsel made this manifestation during the trial: "may I Make
a manifestation that the witness is talking with somebody here in this
Courtroom and is gazing (at) somebody."[15] As pointed out by the Solicitor
genera, That "somebody" whom Raquel was gazing at could have been
appellant himself, as manifested by the public prosecutor on the same occasion.[16]
Of crucial
importance in a rape case, especially when the life of an accused may be held
forfeit, is the determination of the credibility both of the victim herself and
her version as to how the crime charged was committed. For these, we must
perforce repose almost total reliance on the finding and conclusions of the
trial court. Additionally, we have
jurisprudential guidelines distilled from judicial experience as touchstones
for our own evaluation of the evidence which, ex debito justitiae, we
analyze.
The finding of
trial court on the credibility of witnesses deserve great weight, given the
clear advantage of a trial judge over an appellate magistrate in the
appreciation of testimonial evidence.
In this connection, it is well entrenched that the trial court is in the
best position to assess the credibility of witnesses and their testimonies
because of its unique opportunity to observe the witnesses firsthand and note
their demeanor, conduct and attitude under grueling examination. These are the most significant factors in
evaluating the sincerity of witnesses and in unearthing the truth.[17]
The emphasis,
gesture and inflection of the voice are potent aids in understanding the
testimony of witnesses. The trial court has the opportunity and is presumed to
take advantage of these aids in weighing the testimony of the witnesses. But as they cannot be incorporated into the
record, this Court has no assistance in the examination of the testimony and
must, therefore, rely upon the good judgment of the lower court.[18] Thus, in the absence of any showing
that the trail court's calibration of credibility was flawed, we are bound by
its assessment.[19]
Furthermore, it
is a reputable precept that testimonies of rape victims who are young or of
tender age are credible. The revelation of an innocent child whose chastity was
abused deserves full credit.[20] Courts usually lend credence to the
testimony of young girl especially where the facts point to her having been a
victim of sexual assault. For sure, the victim would not make public the
offense, undergo the trouble and humiliation of a public trail and endure the
ordeal of testifying to all its gory details if she had not in fact been raped,
for no decent Filipina would publicly admit she had been raped unless it was
the truth. As a rule, a victim of rape will not come out in the open if her
motives were not to obtain justice.[21] The willingness of the complainant
to face police investigators and to submit to physical examination is a mute
but eloquent testimony of the truth of her complaint.[22]
With the
foregoing teachings in mind, and in the context of the evidence of record, we
are satisfied that the court a quo prudently and conscientiously
discharged its duties as a trier of fact and an arbiter of law. We quote its
pertinent findings with excerpts from the victim's testimony, which vividly
illustrate that the mode of her presentation and the substance thereof justify
our acceptance of the conclusion and verdict of the trial court, to wit:
Culled from the evidence
and after a judicious and cursory examination of the evidence especially the
testimony of Raquel, the Court firmly believes that the incident complained of
as narrated by Raquel actually took place during the month of June 1996. The Court keenly observed the demeanor of
Raquel while testifying and she testified in a straightforward and forthright manner,
bereft of any artificialities that would impair her credibility. The spontaneous and categorical testimony of
Raquel can easily be deduced from the portion of her testimony as follows:
"PROSECUTION: (to the witness)
Q Madam
Witness, do you know a person by the name of Esteban Victor?
A Yes,
sir.
Q If
said person is inside the courtroom, will you be able to point to him?
A Yes,
sir. He is the one.
(Witness
pointed to a person wearing yellow T-shirt who, when asked of his name,
answered Esteban Victor).
Q Since
when have you known him?
A Long
time ago because he and his three-year old son were living in our place at
Phase IV, Urban 2, Payatas, Quezon City, sir.
Q Will
you kindly tell the Honorable Court why he and his son were living in your
house?
A Because
my mother is the girlfriend of the accused, sir.
x x x
PROSECUTION: (to the witness)
Q Are
you aware if your mother and the accused were legally married?
A They
were not married, sir.
Q Sometime
in the month of June 1996, do you remember where you were at daytime?
A Yes,
sir I was inside our house folding clothes, sir.
Q Was
there any unusual incident that took place?
A Yes,
sir. We were three in the house at that
time, Esteban Victor and his son Jobet w(ere) playing outside the room when
Esteban Victor entered my room.
Q When
Esteban Victor entered your room, what happened next?
A He
ordered me to undress, sir.
Q When
so ordered by Esteban Victor to undress, what did you do?
A I
followed him because he (was) threatening me by pointing a bladed weapon at my
neck, sir.
Q After
undressing what happened next, if any?
A He
also undress(ed) himself and he told me to lie on the floor, sir.
Q Did
you follow his order?
A Yes,
sir, because he was holding a bladed weapon.
Q What
else happened after that?
A He
held both my legs and spread them and went on top of me, sir.
Q After
he went on top of you, what happened next, if any?
A He
inserted his private organ into my private organ, sir.
Q And
as he inserted his private organ into your private organ, what happened next,
if any?
A I
was trying to resist by pushing him away from me but I was not able to do so,
sir.
Q While
he inserting his private organ into your private organ, what did you feel, if
any?
A I felt pain in my private organ, sir.
Q When
the accused successfully entered (sic) his private organ into your private
organ, what movement did he do, if any?
A (The
witness answered by placing her right hand of top of her left hand upwards and
downwards.)
Q While
the accused was on top of you, and inserted his private organ into your private
organ making an upward and downward movement, what else was he doing?
A He
was mashing my breast and kissing my neck, sir.
Q Madam
Witness, would you be able to tell this Honorable Court how long a time in
terms of minutes or hours was the accused on top of you?
A More
or less, ten minutes, sir.
Q After
that ten minutes, what happened next, if any?
A He ordered me to wear my clothes and threatened
me not to report the incident to father and mother, sir."[23]
In stark
contrast to the convincing recital of facts in complainant's testimony is the
evasive and illogical stance adopted by appellant who could offer only bare denials.
Denial, like alibi, is inherently a weak defense and cannot prevail over the
positive and credible testimony of the prosecution witnesses that the accused
committed the crime.[24] As between a categorical testimony
which has a ring of truth on one hand, and a bare denial on the other, the
former is generally held to prevail.[25] A mere denial constitutes
self-serving negative evidence which cannot be accorded greater evidentiary
weight than the declaration of credible witnesses who testify on affirmative
matters.[26] As against the positive
identification by the private complainant, mere denials of the accused cannot
prevail to overcome conviction by the trial court.[27]
Appellant also
failed to establish any unworthy or ill motive which induced or impelled the
victim to falsely accuse him of the capital offense of rape. The is nothing in the record which would
lead us to conclude that she had any improper motive against appellant. It is
settled that where there is no evidence to show any dubious reason or improper
motive why a prosecution witness would testify falsely against an accused or
falsely implicate him in a heinous crime, the testimony is worthy of full faith
and credit.[28]
In imposing the
capital punishment on appellant, the court below rationalized as follows:
The use of the accused of a
bladed weapon in order to have carnal knowledge with Raquel is sufficient
evidence to establish the presence of "force and intimidation," an
essential element of the crime of rape. Added to this is the relationship of the
accused and Raquel wherein the accused, by accused's own admission, is the
stepfather of Raquel, and in light of the prevailing doctrine that relationship
may substitute for "force and intimidation," as the stepfather
exercises "moral ascendancy and influence" over the stepdaughter, the
Court is overwhelmingly convinced that the prosecution was able to clearly
establish that the carnal knowledge of June 1996 was without the consent of
Raquel. x x x."[29]
Although he
claimed otherwise, the lower court found that appellant was not legally married
to complainant's mother and, strictly speaking, is not really the victim's
stepfather. However, this does not, in principle, completely divest him of some
degree of moral ascendancy over her. Be that as it may, the fact remains that
the element of force or intimidation is nonetheless duly established and
supplied by appellant's use of a deadly bladed weapon to threaten, coerce and
compel submission to his satyric desires by the hapless complainant.
Along the same
vein, the trial court justified the death sentence pursuant to the amendment
introduced by Republic Act No. 7659 to Article 335 of the Revised Penal Code,
which now further provides:
x x x x
x x x x x
The death penalty shall
also be imposed if the crime of rape is committed with any of the following
attendant circumstances:
1. When
the victim is under eighteen (18) years of age and the offender is a parent,
ascendant, step-parent, guardian, relative by consanguinity or affinity within
the third civil degree, or the common-law spouse of the parent of the
victim. (Italics supplied)
x x x x
x x x x x
The lower court,
however, erred in categorizing the award of P50,000.00 to the offended
party as being in the nature of moral damages.
We have heretofore explained in People vs. Gementiza.[30] that the indemnity authorized by
our criminal law as civil liability ex delicto for the offended party,
in the amount authorized by the prevailing judicial policy and aside from other
proven actual damages, is itself equivalent to actual or compensatory damages
in civil law. It is not to be
considered as moral damages thereunder, the latter being based on different
jural foundations and assessed by the court in the exercise of sound discretion.
One other point
of concern has to be addressed. Indictments for rape continue unabated and the
legislative response has been in the form of higher penalties. The Court
believes that, on like considerations, the jurisprudential path on the civil
aspect should follow the same direction.
Hence, starting with the case at bar, if the crime of rape is committed
or effectively qualified by any of the circumstances under which the death
penalty is authorized by the present amended law,[31] the indemnity for the victim shall
be in the increased amount of less than P75,000.00. This is not only a reaction to the apathetic
societal perception of the penal law and the financial fluctuation over time,
but also an expression of the displeasure of the Court over the incidence of
heinous crimes against chastity.
From all the
foregoing considerations, therefore, and the People having established the
guilt of appellant beyond reasonable doubt, his conviction and the penalty
imposed must be sustained. Four members
of this Court maintain their position that Republic Act No. 7659, insofar as it
prescribes the death penalty, is unconstitutional; but they nevertheless submit
to the ruling of the majority of the Court that the law is constitutional and
the death penalty should be imposed in the case at bar.
WHEREFORE, The judgment of the trial court in
Criminal Case No. Q-96-67321 imposing the death penalty on accused-appellant
Esteban Victor y Penis is hereby AFFIRMED, with the modification that the
amount awarded to the offended party should be increased to P75,000.00
and considered as actual, and not moral, damages.
In accordance
with Section 25 of Republic Act No. 7659, amending Article 83 of the revised
Penal Code, upon finality of this decision, let the records of this case be
forthwith forwarded to the Office of the President for possible exercise of the
pardoning power.
SO ORDERED.
Narvasa, C.J.,
Regalado, Davide, Jr., Romero, Bellosillo, Melo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza,
Panganiban, Martinez, Quisumbing, and Purisima, JJ., concur.
[1]
Per Judge Diosdado Madarang Peralta.
[2]
Original record, p. 1.
[3]
Ibid., p. 17.
[4]
Rollo, pp. 11-19.
[5]
TSN, September 30, 1996, pp.2-5.
[6]
Ibid., id., pp. 9-11.
[7]
Ibid., September 27, 1996, pp. 2-6; Exhibit A, A-1, B, C to C-4.
[8]
Ibid., November 13, 1996, pp. 4-10.
[9]
Appellant's Brief, p. 1; Rollo, p. 40.
[10]
Exhibit B.
[11]
Exhibit A.
[12]
See Palo-Palo vs. Intermediate Appellate Court., G.R. No. 75584, October
19, 1992, 214 SCRA 673.
[13]
People vs. Sarellana, G.R. Nos. 102056-57, June 8, 1994, 233 SCRA
31; People vs. Leangsiri, et al., G.R. No. 112659, January 24,
1996, 252 SCRA 213; People vs. Erardo, G.R. No. 119368, August 18, 1997.
[14]
Exhibit G.
[15]
TSN, October 7, 1996, p. 13.
[16]
Ibid., id., p. 8.
[17]
People vs. Betonio, G.R. No. 119165, September 26, 1997.
[18]
People vs. Pamor, G.R. No 108599, October 7, 1994, 237 SCRA 467.
[19]
People vs. Taton, G.R. Nos. 122757-61, November 28, 1997.
[20]
People vs. Taton, G.R. No. 113345, February 9, 1996, 253 SCRA
455; People vs. Garcia, G.R. No. 120093, November 6, 1997.
[21]
People vs. Junio, G.R. No. 110990, October 28, 1994,237 SCRA 826.
[22]
People vs. Baculi, G.R. No. 110591, July 26, 1995, 246 SCRA 756;
People vs. Fuensalida, G.R. No. 119963, November 6, 1997.
[23]
Original Record, pp. 63-66.
[24]
People vs. Macagaling, G.R. 109131-33, October 3, 1994, 237 SCRA
299.
[25]
People vs. Abonada, G.R. No. 50041, January 27, 1989, 169 SCRA
530; People vs. Biago, G.R. No
54411, February 21, 1990, 182 SCRA 411; People vs. Bello, et al.,
G.R. No. 92597, October 4, 1994, 237 SCRA 347.
[26]
People vs. Rosalijos, et al., G.R. No. 98253, November 25, 1994, 238 SCRA 362.
[27]
People vs. Manuel, G.R. Nos. 107732-33, September 19, 1994, 236
SCRA 545.
[28]
People vs. Pama, G.R. Nos. 90297-98, December 11, 1992, 216 SCRA
385; People vs. Alvero, Jr., et al., G.R. No 72319, June 30,
1993, 224 SCRA 16; People vs. Evangelista, G.R. No. 121627, November 17,
1997.
[29]
Original Record, p. 68.
[30]
G.R. No. 123151, January 29, 1998.
[31]
For obvious reasons, the provisions of R. A. No. 8353, "The
Anti-Rape Law of 1997," are not involved in this decision on a crime
committed in 1994.