EN BANC
[G.R. Nos. 128346-48. August 14, 2000]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs. SIMEON B. CRUZ a.k.a. “Barok”, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
DE LEON, JR., J.:
Before us on
automatic review is the Decision[1] of the Regional Trial Court of
Cabanatuan City, Branch 25, in Criminal Cases Nos. 6970-AF to 6972-AF,
convicting the appellant, Simeon B. Cruz, of three (3) counts of rape and
sentencing him to suffer the supreme penalty of death in each case.
The appellant,
Simeon B. Cruz, stands charged with three (3) counts of rape, defined and
penalized under Article 335 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended, in three (3)
criminal complaints, filed and signed by the private complainant, Vanessa S.
Cruz, assisted by her legal guardian, Felicidad Santiago, and subscribed and
sworn to on June 5, 1996 before Prosecutor II Rodolfo P. Beltran of the Office
of the Provincial Prosecutor of Nueva Ecija.
The said criminal complaints read as follows:
Criminal Case No. 6970-AF:
That on or about one evening in the
month of November, 1994 at Barangay Poblacion, Municipality of Gen. Natividad,
Province of Nueva Ecija, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the above-named accused, with lewd designs by means of force,
violence and intimidation, did then and there, wilfully, unlawfully and
feloniously have carnal knowledge of the undersigned complainant against her
will, to her damage and prejudice.
The herein accused committed the
crime with the aggravating circumstance of relationship, the accused being the
father of herein complainant.
CONTRARY TO LAW.
Criminal Case No. 6971-AF:
That on or about one evening in the
month of August, 1994 at Barangay Poblacion, Municipality of Gen. Natividad,
Province of Nueva Ecija, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the above-named accused, with lewd designs by means of force,
violence and intimidation, did then and there, wilfully, unlawfully and
feloniously have carnal knowledge of the undersigned complainant against her
will, to her damage and prejudice.
The herein accused committed the
crime with the aggravating circumstance of relationship, the accused being the
father of herein complainant.
CONTRARY TO LAW.
Criminal Case No. 6972-AF:
That on or about one evening in the
month of November, 1994 at Barangay Poblacion, Municipality of Gen. Natividad,
Province of Nueva Ecija, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the above-named accused, with lewd designs by means of force,
violence and intimidation, did then and there, wilfully, unlawfully and
feloniously have carnal knowledge of the undersigned complainant against her
will, to her damage and prejudice.
The herein accused committed the
crime with the aggravating circumstance of relationship, the accused being the
father of herein complainant.
CONTRARY TO LAW.
Upon being
arraigned on June 24, 1996, appellant Simeon B. Cruz, assisted by counsel de
oficio, entered the plea of “Not guilty” in each of these cases. Thereafter, joint trial on the merits
ensued.
The evidence of
the prosecution shows that one Wednesday evening, in the third week of August,
1994, the appellant, Simeon Cruz, arrived home in Barangay Poblacion, Gen.
Natividad, Nueva Ecija heavily drunk.
The private complainant, Vanessa S. Cruz, who was then sleeping on the
second floor of the house with her younger sister, Lorraine, woke up and went
downstairs when called by her father from the master’s bedroom which was
located on the groundfloor. Simeon
ordered Vanessa to enter the room but the latter refused thus, he pulled her
and locked the door.[2]
Simeon poked a
knife on the lower right ear of his daughter and ordered her to undress. After having undressed, Simeon, who was
already naked from waist down, removed Vanessa’s underwear and proceeded to
kiss her breast and other private parts.
Vanessa pleaded for him to stop inasmuch as she was his daughter, but in
vain. Simeon continued kissing her body
and placed himself on top of her.
Vanessa cried in pain when her father inserted his penis into her vagina
and made push and pull motions.[3]
Vanessa was
raped by her father again in the second week of November 1994. Simeon called his children namely: Vanessa, Lorraine and Mark Ian from the
master’s bedroom at past 12:00 o’clock midnight. After the three (3) had entered the room, Simeon instructed
Lorraine and Mark Ian to step out and leave Vanessa alone with him. Simeon locked the door and removed his
clothes before undressing his daughter.
Vanessa cried and asked her father why he was doing such thing when she
was her daughter, but Simeon did not respond.
Instead, he laid Vanessa in bed and kissed her. Then he instructed her to stand, hold his
penis and place the same into her mouth.
He also instructed his daughter to masturbate his penis. Subsequently, he laid her again in bed and
kissed her private parts before finally entering her. Thereafter, Simeon threatened Vanessa with death, including her
maternal grandmother, if she would report the incident.[4]
The last
incident of rape happened in the third week of November, 1994 after Simeon
arrived home late in the evening heavily drunk. He took Vanessa from upstairs, where she was sleeping together
with her brothers and sister, and brought her into the master’s bedroom at the
ground floor. Simeon removed her bra,
then her pair of shorts and panty. He
then kissed her private parts even though she was crying. Vanessa told him to stop but Simeon
proceeded to remove his clothes and continued kissing her breast. Thereafter, he went on top of her and
inserted his penis into her vagina causing her intense pain.[5]
Vanessa
disclosed that her mother, Marlyn S. Cruz, went to Hong Kong on November 12,
1991 to work as a domestic helper.
Since then, Vanessa and her siblings namely: Michael (14), Lorraine (9)
and Mark Ian (4) had been living with their father in Barangay Poblacion, Gen.
Natividad, Nueva Ecija. Her maternal
grandmother, Felicidad Santiago, also moved in their house to keep them
company.[6] However, her grandmother was not
always in the house inasmuch as the latter would be away twice a week or, at
times for three (3) straight days in a week, to stay in her house in Mataas na
Kahoy, Gen. Natividad, Nueva Ecija, which is about three (3) kilometers away
from their house.[7]
On March 26,
1996, Simeon arrived home at around 4:00 o’clock in the afternoon heavily
drunk. He dragged Vanessa, who was then
watching the television together with her grandmother at the sala, into the
master’s bedroom. Simeon locked the
door, and this time even placed a nail to secure it. He covered the windows before he began kissing his daughter. Vanessa protested and told her father to
better kill her. Infuriated, Simeon hit
her in the stomach and bumped her head four (4) times against the wall. Apparently not contented, Simeon got hold of
a hammer and swung it against her daughter hitting her in the jaw.[8]
Aware of what
was happening, Felicidad hurried to the house where Simeon had come from
drinking, to request Julian Ibarra to intercede and pacify his kumpadre. Had it not been for the timely arrival of
Julian, Simeon would have again succeeded in molesting his daughter.[9]
On the same day,
Vanessa and her siblings were brought by Felicidad to her house in Mataas na
Kahoy, Gen. Natividad, Nueva Ecija. For
the first time, Vanessa revealed to her grandmother the bestial acts committed
by her father against her.
On March 28,
1996, Vanessa was accompanied by her grandmother to the NBI office in
Cabanatuan City to lodge a complaint for rape against her father. After taking her sworn statement on April
30, 1996, the NBI authorities in Cabanatuan City arrested the appellant on May
1, 1996.[10]
The physical
examination conducted by Dra. Lucila Gatchalian, M.D. on Vanessa at the Dr.
Paulino J. Garcia Memorial Research and Medical Center in Cabanatuan City on
April 30, 1996, shows the following findings:
NOI -- alleged rape
POI -- in their own house, Pob.,
Gen. Nat., N. E.
DOI –since she is (sic) years old,
‘till March 27, 1996
TOI – anytime
Patient came accompanied by her
maternal grandmother.
General Survey: conscious, coherent, ambulatory with the
following vital signs:
BP – 100/70; Temp. – 36 c; PR
–75/min.; RR – 20/min.
LMP – April 25, 1996 menarche 13
years old.
HEENT – pinkish palpebral
conjunctive.
Breast – well-developed pinkish
areola, no nipple discharge.
Abdomen – flat, soft, no mass
palpable.
Pelvic examination – scanty pubic
hair, well coaptated labia minora, whitish mucoid discharge was noted in the
introitus.
Hymen – old lacerations at 5
o’clock, 8 o’clock and 11 o’clock positions.
IE – admits 1 finger with slight
difficulty.
Lab. Result – no spermatozoa seen.[11]
Dra. Lucila
Gatchalian identified her signature appearing on the lower right portion of the
medical certificate and affirmed the medical findings contained therein. Dra. Gatchalian recalled that Vanessa was
crying and afraid when she came to the hospital on April 30, 1996 for physical
examination. The three (3) healed
hymenal lacerations sustained by Vanessa which are respectively indicated in
the medical certificate as 5 o’clock, 8 o’clock and 11 o’clock may have been
caused by the penetration of any hard object which could be an erect penis.[12] Internal examination reveals that
the introitus or vaginal opening of the patient admitted one (1) finger with
slight difficulty.[13]
Appellant Simeon
B. Cruz vehemently denied in court any liability for the crimes charged in the
three (3) informations. Simeon claimed
that his mother-in-law was behind the filing of the instant charges by his own
daughter against him allegedly due to a long standing quarrel over money. Simeon disclosed that he worked in Taiwan as
a factory worker from June 30, 1995 to November 15, 1995. During the said period, he sent money to his
mother-in-law through the BPI Family Bank, Cabanatuan City branch, in the total
amount of P10,000.00 to redeem their mortgaged property for the same
amount. In addition, his mother-in-law
received from him the amount of P15,000.00 which he sent her through his
brother, Claudio Cruz, who returned to the Philippines from Taiwan on October
20, 1995. Upon his arrival to the
Philippines in November 1995, Simeon learned that their property remained
mortgaged. He confronted his
mother-in-law that led to an altercation.
In the process he hurled a glass hitting her in the right arm. Since then, the two seldom talked.[14]
On March 26,
1996, Simeon attended the birthday party of his kumpadre, Juanito Torres, at
the latter’s house at 1:00 o’clock in the afternoon. At around 4:00 o’clock in the afternoon, his youngest son arrived
at the house of Juanito Torres to inform Simeon that they were going to Mataas
na Kahoy with their grandmother. Simeon
excused himself and went home with his son to see them go. After his mother-in-law and the kids,
namely: Vanessa, Lorraine and Mark Ian had left, Simeon and Julian Ibarra, who
earlier came to fetch him, went back to the birthday party. Simeon stayed at the party until 2:00
o’clock in the following morning.[15]
On March 28,
1996, Simeon went to Mataas na Kahoy, Gen. Natividad, Nueva Ecija to fetch his
children from the house of his mother-in-law.
Having been informed that they had gone to Cabanatuan City, he requested
his sister, Maria Garcia, to go to the
house of his brother-in-law, Orlando Santiago, in Cabanatuan City to inquire
about his children. At the house of
Orlando Santiago, Maria was informed that her nephew and nieces had transferred
together with their grandmother to an ex-policeman relative, a certain Rene
Bernado, who lived also in the city.[16]
On May 1, 1996
at around 6:00 o’clock in the morning, Simeon was arrested in his house by NBI
agents and was brought to the NBI stockade in Cabanatuan City. Simeon was allegedly mauled by the arresting
NBI agents when he refused to admit having raped his daughter, Vanessa. He presented a medical certificate to show
that he suffered contusions on his body.[17]
Three (3) days
after his arrest, the inquest fiscal of Cabanatuan City ordered the release of
Simeon and required him to file his counter-affidavits. From Cabanatuan City, Simeon proceeded to
the house of his sister, Maria Garcia, in Angeles City, Pampanga for fear of
his life. While thereat, he was able to
talk to his wife, Marlyn Cruz, through an overseas call to Hong Kong. He requested Marlyn to come home and help
him solve their domestic problems.
However, Marlyn’s live-in partner in Hong Kong allegedly would not allow
her.[18]
Simeon disclosed
that he knew his wife had a live-in partner in Hong Kong. Marlyn allegedly informed him of her
extra-marital affair when the latter went home to the Philippines on November
30, 1995 and explained that she did it to retain her employment in Hong Kong
for the sake of their children. Simeon
initially protested but later on agreed after Marlyn promised to come home for
good when she had enough savings.[19]
Simeon was again
arrested by NBI agents on June 6, 1996 at the Gapan-Olongapo highway while he
was on his way to file additional counter-affidavit with the fiscal in
Cabanatuan City in connection with these cases.[20]
Meanwhile, on
December 25, 1996, Simeon’s mother-in-law, Felicidad Santiago, together with
his youngest son, Mark Ian, visited Simeon at the provincial jail of Nueva
Ecija. Felicidad allegedly told Simeon
that the rape cases filed in court against him may be settled amicably provided
he paid P100,000.00. Simeon refused for
the reason that he did not commit the charges in these cases.[21]
Claudio Cruz
corroborated Simeon’s testimony that the latter sent P10,000.00 to his
mother-in-law, Felicidad Santiago, from Taiwan. Claudio testified that he was working in Taiwan at the time his
brother, Simeon, went there to work in the factory. Upon his return to the Philippines in October 1995, Claudio
proceeded to the house of Simeon in Barangay Poblacion, Gen. Natividad, Nueva
Ecija and gave to Felicidad Santiago the amount of P10,000.00 per instruction of his brother who remained
in Taiwan.[22]
Another defense
witness, Fernando Marcelo, BPI Family Bank, Cabanatuan City branch employee
identified in court the pertinent records[23]of the bank which show that
Felicidad Santiago withdrew from the Account No. S.A. 5233060005 of Simeon
Cruz, with the same bank in Cabanatuan City, the total amount of P11,299.00 on
September 7, 1995, and twice on October 9, 1995.
Additionally,
Julian Ibarra testified that Simeon was one of the guests in the birthday party
of Juanito Torres on March 26, 1996.
Julian and Simeon drank liquor with the other guests in the house of
Juanito Torres in Barangay Poblacion, Gen. Natividad, Nueva Ecija. At 4:00 o’clock in the afternoon, Simeon
went home upon being fetched by his youngest son but promised to return. After thirty (30) minutes, Julian followed
Simeon in his house, which was about three hundred (300) meters away, where he
saw Felicidad Santiago at the doorway.
Julian did not notice the appearance of Vanessa who was sitting with
Lorraine inside the sala. He merely called
for Simeon from the outside and the two of them returned to the birthday party.[24]
On rebuttal,
Felicidad Santiago testified that she brought Mark Ian to the provincial jail
of Nueva Ecija on December 25, 1996 upon the request of his father. Felicidad denied having influenced Vanessa
to file any complaint against her father nor proposed to Simeon the settlement
of the instant criminal cases for a consideration. She admitted having received from Simeon the total amount of
P8,000.00 which the latter sent from Taiwan in 1995 for his children. However, she denied having received any
instruction from him to apply the said amount to redeem their property.[25]
Thereafter, the
trial court rendered a decision the dispositive portion of which is quoted
hereunder, to wit:
PREMISES CONSIDERED, and finding
the accused Simeon B. Cruz guilty beyond reasonable doubt of rape in each of
the three (3) cases, is hereby sentenced to suffer the penalty of:
1. DEATH
in Criminal Case No. 6970-AF and to indemnify the offended party in the amount
of Fifty Thousand (P50,000.00) Pesos as moral damages and Twenty Thousand
(P20,000.00) Pesos as exemplary damages;
2. DEATH
in Criminal Case No. 6971-AF and to pay the offended party the amount of Fifty
Thousand (P50,000.00) Pesos also as moral and Twenty Thousand (P20,000.00)
Pesos as exemplary damages;
3. DEATH
in Criminal Case No. 6972-AF and to finally indemnify also the offended party
in another amount of Fifty Thousand (P50,000.00) Pesos as moral and Twenty
Thousand (P20,000.00) Pesos as exemplary damages; and
4. To
pay the costs of suit.
In his
Appellant’s Brief,[26] appellant Simeon Cruz interposed
the following assignment of errors, to wit:
I
THE TRIAL
COURT ERRED IN CONVICTING THE ACCUSED ON A TESTIMONY THAT IS HIGHLY DUBIOUS AND
INCREDIBLE; AND
II
THE TRIAL
COURT ERRED IN NOT ACQUITTING THE ACCUSED DESPITE LACK OF INCULPATORY EVIDENCE.
Appellant Simeon
Cruz characterized the instant criminal charges of rape against him as pure
lies (kasinungalingan) which were allegedly conceived maliciously by his
mother-in-law who had an axe to grind against him. He averred that Vanessa went about her daily routine even after
each of the alleged sexual abuses were committed against her. She did not disclose the same despite
opportunities to do so nor take any initiative to prevent a repetition
thereof. In fact, her grandmother did
not suspect anything wrong had happened.
The medical certificate which was issued by Dra. Lucila Gatchalian, M.D.
also attests that Vanessa’s vaginal opening admitted only one (1) finger with
slight difficulty.
In the review of
rape cases, this Court is almost invariably guided by three (3) principles, to
wit: (1) an accusation for rape can be
made with facility; it is difficult to prove but more difficult for the person accused,
though innocent, to disprove; (2) in
view of the intrinsic nature of the crime of rape where only two persons are
usually involved, the testimony of the complainant is scrutinized with extreme
caution; and (3) the evidence for the prosecution stands or falls on its own
merits and cannot be allowed to draw strength from the weakness of the defense.[27] In other words, the credibility of
the private complainant is determinative of the outcome of these cases for the
crime of rape. It is settled that in rape
cases, the lone testimony of the victim, if credible, is enough to sustain a
conviction.[28]
Private
complainant, Vanessa Cruz, testified in essence that she was raped by her
father, herein appellant Simeon Cruz, once in the third week of August, which was
a Wednesday evening, and twice in the second and third weeks of November, all
in 1994. The trial court found the
testimony of the private complainant to be direct and spontaneous. The said court also noted that Vanessa was
only twelve (12) years old and a Grade V student in one of the remote towns of
Nueva Ecija when she was raped. She
broke down in tears on several occasions during the trial of the instant cases,[29] thus giving the trial court the
unmistakable impression that she would not impute so grave an accusation
against her own father if the same were not true.
We agree. Considering the age of the private
complainant, it would be highly improbable for a girl of her age to fabricate a
charge so humiliating to herself and to her family had she not been truly
subjected to the painful experience of sexual abuse.[30] Indeed, no woman, much less a girl
of such tender age, would willingly submit herself to the rigors, the
humiliation and the stigma attendant upon the prosecution of rape, if she were
not motivated by an earnest desire to put the culprit behind bars.[31]
Besides, after a
thorough review, this Court failed to discern any material contradiction in the
testimony of Vanessa Cruz that may detract from her credibility. Vanessa testified in a direct and
spontaneous manner. She did not waver
in asserting that the appellant sexually abused her (3) three times even under
the rigorous and extensive cross-examination of the defense counsel. Hence, there is no cogent reason to depart
from the time-honored legal principle that when the issue is one of the
credibility of witnesses, appellate courts will not disturb the findings of the
trial court.[32] The reason for the principle is
cited in the case of People vs. De Guzman,[33] wherein this Court ruled that the
trial judge is in the best position to detect that sometimes thin line between
fact and prevarication that will determine the guilt or innocence of the
accused. That line may not be
discernible from a mere reading of the impersonal record by the reviewing court. The record will not reveal those tell-tale
signs that will affirm the truth or expose the contrivance, like the angry
flush of an insisted assertion or the sudden pallor of a discovered lie or the
tremulous mutter of a reluctant answer or the forthright tone of a ready
reply. The record will not show if the
eyes have darted in evasion or looked down in confession or gazed steadily with
a serenity that has nothing to distort or conceal. The record will not show if tears were shed in anger, or in shame,
or in remembered pain, or in feigned innocence. Only the judge trying the case can see all these and on the basis
of his observations arrived at an informed and reasoned verdict.
Consequently,
the bestiality of the appellant was portrayed vividly by private complainant
Vanessa S. Cruz, in her own detailed account, thus:
Atty. Cajucom:
Q: In
that month of August, 1994 while you were at the Poblacion, Gen. Natividad,
Nueva Ecija, do you remember anything unusual that happened to you?
A: Yes,
sir.
Q: Will
you please tell the court what is that?
A: In
August, 1994 that was the day when my father raped me, sir.
x x x
Q: If
your father is here, will you please point to him?
A: (The
witness is pointing to a young man inside the courtroom wearing checkered blue
long sleeves when asked of his name answered Simeon B. Cruz).
Q: Will
you please tell the court how you were raped?
A: I
was then sleeping with my sister at the upper part of our house when my father
arrived drunk, sir.
Q: When
your father arrived drunk, what did he do?
A: My
father called for me and I went down stair and he brought me inside the room of
our house, sir.
Q: Which
room?
A: The
room of my father at the lower floor of our house, sir.
Q: How
did it (sic) take you to that room?
A: He
called me and when I refused he forced me to go with him at his room at the
ground floor, sir.
Court:
Q: How
did he force you?
A: He
pulled me, your honor.
Atty. Cajucom:
Q: When
he pulled you, what else did he do?
A: He
locked the door of the room, sir.
Q: After
locking the door of the room, what else did he do?
A: He
poked his knife at my lower right ear, sir.
Q: When
he poked the knife to you, what else did he do?
A: He
instructed me to undress, sir.
Q: What
did you do?
A: I
removed my dress, sir.
Q: What
part of your dress was removed?
A: My
blouse, sir.
Q: What
about your underwear?
A: He
removed my underwear, sir.
Q: After
removing your underwear, what did he do?
A: He
kiss (sic) my breast and my private part, sir.
Q: When
he was kissing your breast and private part, what did you do?
A: I
told him not to do that because I am his daughter, sir.
Atty. Cajucom:
Please record that the witness is crying. (Witness is crying).
Q: When
you said that, what did he do?
A: He
did not listen to me and instead continued what he is (sic) doing to me, sir.
Q: What
is that he continued?
A: He
kissed my body and after that he laid me down on the bed, sir.
Q: After
laying you down on the bed, what else did he do?
A: He
placed himself on top of me, sir.
Q: Was
he wearing anything when he placed himself on top of you?
A: Only
a t-shirt, sir.
Q: What
about his underwear?
A: None,
sir.
Q: And
when he put himself on top, what else happened?
A: He
inserted his penis into my private part, sir.
Q: When
he was inserting his private part to your private part, what did you do?
A: None,
sir. I just cried.[34]
x x x
Atty. Cajucom:
Q: In
the month of November, 1994, do you remember anything unusual that happened to
you?
A: Yes,
sir.
Q: What
is that?
A: That
was the second time when my father raped me, sir.
x x x
Q: After
locking the room, what else did he do?
A: He
removed his dress, sir.
Q: After
removing his dress, what else did he do?
A: He
removed my dress, sir.
Q: When
he was removing your dress, what did you do?
A: I
was then crying, sir.
Q: How
did you cry?
A: I
cried very loud, sir.
Q: While
crying, did you say anything?
A: Yes,
sir.
Q: What?
A: I
told him why you are doing this to me when I am your daughter, sir.
Q: What
did he reply?
A: None,
sir.
Q: After
stating that and without saying anything, what happened?
A: He
kiss (sic) me, sir.
Q: After
doing that, what else happened?
A: He
laid me down on the bed, sir.
Q: While
laying on the bed, what else did he do?
A: He
instructed me to stand up and hold his penis, sir.
Atty. Cajucom:
Please make it on record that the witness is crying
again. (Witness is crying).
Q: Did
you hold his penis?
A: Yes,
sir.
Q: While
holding the penis, what did he say, if any?
A: He
instructed me to put his penis into my mouth, sir.
Q: Did
you follow him?
A: Yes,
sir.
Q: And
after that, what happened?
A: After
that he instructed me to masturbate his penis, sir.
Q: Did
you masturbate his penis?
A: Yes,
sir.
Q: After
doing that, what happened?
A: After
that he laid me down again, sir.
Q: While
you were laying (sic) down, what else did he do?
A: He
again kiss (sic) me, sir.
Q: After
kissing you, what else happened?
A: He
kiss (sic) my private part, sir.
Q: What
else did he do after that?
A: He
placed his body on top of me, sir.
Q: And
when he did that, what else happened?
A: He
inserted his penis to my private part, sir.
Q: Did
he succeed?
A: Yes,
sir.
Q: While
he was doing that what did you do?
A: I
was then crying, sir.
Q: Did
you not struggle?
A: I
was pushing him, sir.
Q: After
that, what else happened?
A: After
that he threatened me that if I will reveal the matter he will kill me and my
grandmother, sir, if I will report the matter.[35]
x x x
Q: In
answer to the court you said that you were twice raped in November, when was
the second time in November?
A: Third
week in November, sir.
Q: What
time of the day?
A: Also
in the evening, sir.
Q: What
time in the evening?
A: I
cannot remember anymore, sir.
Q: How
did it happen?
A: He
arrived then very drunk, sir.
x x x
Q: What
happened when he went up?
A: He
took me down stair, sir.
Q: Where
at down stair?
A: In
his room, sir.
Q: When
you were there, what happened?
A: He
kiss (sic) my body and laid me down his bed, sir.
Q: When
he laid you, were you fully dressed?
A: Yes,
sir.
Q: When
you were laying (sic) down, what else did he do?
A: He
removed my bra, sir.
Q: And
then what happened?
A: He
removed my short and panty, sir.
Q: What
else happened?
A: He
kiss (sic) my private part, sir.
Q: And
when he was doing that, what were you doing?
A: I
was then crying, sir.
Q: Did
you say anything?
A: Yes,
sir.
Q: What?
A: I
told him no don’t do that, sir.
Q: What
else happened after that?
A: After
that, he again placed himself on top of me, sir.
Q: Was
he dressed?
A: He
removed his dress, sir.
Q: And
when he removed his dress what did he do?
A: He
kiss (sic) my breast sir.
Q: When
he was on top of you what did he do?
A: He
inserted his private part to my private part, sir.
Q: Was
he able to insert?
A:
Yes, sir.
Q: What
did you feel when he inserted his penis?
A: Also,
I felt pain, sir.
Q: After
this incident, did you report this matter to anyone?
A: No,
sir. I did not.
Q: Why
not?
A: I
was afraid to (sic) his threat, sir.[36]
The appellant
failed to impute any improper motive on the part of the private
complainant. However, he lays the blame
on his mother-in-law, Felicidad Santiago, who allegedly had an axe to grind
against him over money. He seeks to
impress upon this Court that the instant criminal cases were offshoots of his
mother-in-law’s malicious contrivance which was aimed at exacting revenge
against him and to pave the way for her daughter’s unhampered homecoming to the
Philippines who allegedly maintained an adulterous relationship in Hong Kong
where she works.
It is elementary
that where there is no showing that the private complainant was impelled by any
improper motive in making the accusations against the accused, her complaints
are entitled to full faith and credence.[37] The claims of the appellant against
his mother-in-law are at best self-serving and too speculative to deserve any
serious consideration by the Court.
That a grandmother would allegedly be so callous so as to expose her
12-year old granddaughter, Vanessa, to the humiliation and stigma of a rape
trial just to satisfy a purely personal interest, defies logic and human
experience. We rule that no possible
amount of influence from a grandmother can drive a daughter to willingly send
her father to the gallows by imputing charges of rape if the same were not
true.
Besides, even on
the assumption that Marlyn S. Cruz had a paramour in Hong Kong where she works,
the same was subsequently condoned by her husband, herein appellant, and had
become a consensual matter between them, thus:
Court:
Q: When
for the first time that you knew that your wife had a live-in partner?
A: When
she went home, Your Honor, on November 30, 1995.
Q: So,
you want to impress the court that through overseas call your wife went home
and you talked together about her live-in partner?
A: Yes,
Your Honor.
Q: Now,
when you had talk in November 1995 about her live-in partner, what was your
final decision both of you?
A: She
informed me that she did that because of our children and if she can already
save money she will return home.
Q: So,
meaning to say, you agreed with that condition of your wife?
A: At
first, Your Honor, I did not agree.
Q: But
ultimately, you agreed that’s why she left again for abroad?
A: Yes,
Your Honor.[38]
Even when
consumed with revenge, it takes a certain amount of psychological depravity for
a young woman to concoct a story which could take the life of her own father
and drag herself and the rest of the family to a lifetime of shame.[39] As aptly pointed out by the
Solicitor General, the appellant failed to demonstrate that his daughter,
Vanessa, suffers from such kind of psychological depravity. On the contrary, Vanessa was found by the
trial court as a meek and modest girl.[40] She was also gifted with
brilliance, being an honor student, and having graduated from the elementary as
one of the top five students in her class.[41]
The appellant
also contended that Vanessa appeared unaffected and went about her daily
routine even after the alleged sexual abuses.
The contention is devoid of merit.
It should be emphasized that such alleged unseemly attitude of his
daughter does not in any way negate that rape had been committed against
her. We have already ruled that people
react differently to a given type of situation, and there is no standard form
of human behavioral response when one is confronted with a strange, startling
or frightful experience.[42] Additionally, Vanessa’s failure to
promptly report the incidents of rape may be attributed to her young age and
the appellant’s moral ascendancy. It
may be noted that the appellant threatened Vanessa with death after he
perpetrated the dastardly acts against his said daughter. It is not uncommon for young girls to
conceal for sometime the assaults on their virtue because of the rapist’s
threats on their lives.[43]
In a desperate
attempt to extricate himself from the instant charges, appellant Simeon Cruz
underscores the particular finding of the attending physician which states that
Vanessa’s vagina admitted one (1) finger, which was two (2) centimeters in
diameter, with slight difficulty. The
examining physician, Dra. Lucila Gatchalian, M.D. however, explained on
cross-examination that Vanessa was afraid and crying while her hands were
perspiring when she came to the hospital on April 30, 1996 for
examination. If a woman is afraid,
according to Dra. Gatchalian, M.D., vaginismus or the unconscious constriction
of the introitus or vaginal opening may happen. In any case, the slight difficulty which occasioned the insertion
of a finger, two (2) centimeters in diameter, into the private complainant’s
vagina does not militate against the fact that she was raped. The said fact is corroborated by the finding
in the same medical certificate which shows that Vanessa sustained three (3)
hymenal lacerations.
In view of the
foregoing, the guilt of the appellant, Simeon B. Cruz, for three (3) counts of
the crime of rape has been established beyond reasonable doubt. However, the trial court erred in imposing
the supreme penalty of death on the appellant.
Section 11 of Republic Act No. 7659 amending Article 335 of the Revised
Penal Code provides:
x x x
The death
penalty shall 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. xxx
It appears that
the criminal complaints in Criminal Cases Nos. 6970-AF, 6971-AF and 6972-AF
against appellant Simeon B. Cruz merely allege that the private complainant,
Vanessa S. Cruz, is the daughter of the appellant. However, the same criminal complaints failed to allege that the
private complainant was a minor or under eighteen (18) years of age at
the time when each of the crimes of rape was committed against her. In the cases of People vs. Garcia,[44] People vs. Ramos[45] and People vs. Medina,[46] this Court declared that the
attendant circumstances enumerated in Section 11 of R.A. No. 7659 partake of
the nature of qualifying circumstances since the same are punishable by the
single indivisible penalty of death and not reclusion perpetua to
death. It has been the rule that
qualifying circumstances must be properly pleaded in the indictment. If the same are not pleaded but proved, they
shall be considered only as aggravating circumstances. Despite the absence of allegation in each of
the criminal complaints in these cases that the private complainant was a minor
or under eighteen (18) years of age at the time of the commission of each of
the crimes of rape, the trial court erroneously imposed on the appellant the
indivisible penalty of death in violation of his right under Article III,
Section 14 of the 1987 Constitution to be informed of the nature and cause of
the accusations against him.
Consequently, the appellant can be held liable for three (3) counts of
simple rape only and for which the impossible penalty is reclusion perpetua.
In line with prevailing
jurisprudence,[47] the civil indemnity ex delicto
due the victim shall be in the amount of P50,000.00 in addition to moral
damages of P50,000.00 for each count of
simple rape and without need of pleading or proof of the basis thereof.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Court
hereby AFFIRMS the appealed decision convicting the appellant, Simeon B. Cruz,
a.k.a. Barok, of three (3) counts of rape with the MODIFICATION that the
appellant shall suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua and to
indemnify the victim, herein private complainant Vanessa S. Cruz, in the amount
of P50,000.00 as civil indemnity in addition to P50,000.00 as moral damages for
each count of the offense proved.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, C.J.,
Melo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing, Purisima, Pardo,
Buena, Gonzaga-Reyes, and
Ynares-Santiago, JJ., concur.
Bellosillo,
J., on
official leave.
[1] Penned
by Judge Johnson L. Ballutay. Rollo,
pp. 30-42.
[2] TSN
dated November 4, 1996, pp. 5-6, 19.
[3] Id.,
pp. 6-8, 23.
[4] Id.,
pp. 9-13.
[5] Id.,
pp. 13-15.
[6] Id.,
pp. 18, 23-24.
[7] TSN
dated November 8, 1996, pp. 10-11.
[8] TSN
dated November 4, 1996, pp. 15-16.
[9] Id.,
pp. 16-17.
[10] Ibid.
[11] Exhibits
“A”, “A-1”.
[12] TSN
dated October 21, 1996, pp. 13-14.
[13] Id.,
pp. 22-23.
[14] TSN
dated December 16, 1996, pp. 11-21.
[15] Id.,
pp. 21-26.
[16] Id.,
pp. 27-29.
[17] Id.,
pp. 30-31.
[18] Id.,
p. 34.
[19] Id.,
pp. 35-36.
[20] TSN
dated January 7, 1997, pp. 15-16.
[21] TSN
dated January 20, 1997, pp. 3-6.
[22] TSN
dated January 13, 1997, pp. 7-8.
[23] Exhibits
“4” and “5”.
[24] TSN
dated January 20, 1997, pp. 4-8.
[25] TSN
dated February 10, 1997, pp. 4-6.
[26] Rollo,
pp. 56-78.
[27] People
vs. Perez, 270 SCRA 526, 531 (1997).27
[28]28 People
vs. Quitoriano, 266 SCRA 373, 376 (1997).
[29] Decision,
Rollo, pp. 40-41.
[30] People
vs. Molas, 286 SCRA 684, 690 (1998); People vs. Dacoba 289 SCRA
267, 272 (1998).
[31] People
vs. Cabebe, 290 SCRA 543, 554 (1998).
[32] People
vs. Llaguno, 285 SCRA 124,135 (1998).
[33] 188
SCRA 407, 410-411 (1990).
[34] TSN
dated November 4, 1996, pp. 5-8.
[35] Id.,
pp. 9-13.
[36] Id.,
pp. 13-15.
[37] People
vs. Malabago, 271 SCRA 464, 476 (1997).
[38] TSN
dated December 16, 1996, pp. 35-36.
[39] People
vs. Melivo, 253 SCRA 347,362 (1996).
[40] Decision. Rollo, p. 40.
[41] TSN
dated November 13, 1996, pp. 18, 25.
[42] People
vs. Villanueva, 254 SCRA 202, 208 (1996); People vs. Talaboc, 256
SCRA 441, 453 (1996).
[43] People
vs. Devilleres, 269 SCRA 716, 729 (1997).
[44] 281
SCRA 463, 489 (1997).
[45] G.R.
No. 129439, September 25, 1998.
[46] 300
SCRA 98, 116 (1998).
[47] People
vs. Tabarangao, 303 SCRA 623, 636 (1999).