SECOND DIVISION
[G.R. No. 111286. February 17, 2000]
PEOPLE OF THE
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. RAMIL DACIBAR and
WARLITO DICON, accused-appellants. Edpâ mis
D E C I S I O N
QUISUMBING, J.:
On appeal is the decision dated January 25,
1993 of the Regional Trial Court of Roxas City, Branch 16, in Criminal Case No.
C-3690, finding appellants guilty of the crime of murder, imposing upon them
the penalty of life imprisonment, ordering appellants to pay, jointly and
severally, the heirs of the victim the amount of P50,000.00 as moral damages,
P29,000.00 as actual damages, and to pay the costs. Pursuant to Administrative
Circular No. 6-22 on the correct application of the penalty of reclusion
perpetua, the trial court, on February 2, 1992, rendered an amended
decision sentencing appellants to the penalty of reclusion perpetua with
its accessory penalties, instead of life imprisonment.[1]
The facts of the case, as summarized by the
Office of the Solicitor General and which we find to be supported by the
records, are as follows:
"At around
nine o’clock in the evening of September 5, 1991, Welda Bacalangco was sitting
behind their bed near her husband, Josue, who was sitting at the end of the bed
and was lifting the mosquito net. (p. 3, TSN, August 27, 1992 and p. 11, TSN,
September 8, 1992) Suddenly, there was an explosion, followed by the sounds of
footsteps. (p. 3, TSN, August 27, 1992) Welda looked through their window and
saw appellant Warlito Dicon coming out from under their house, stooping and
carrying a long firearm. (ibid.) Following him was appellant Ramil
Dacibar who was carrying a bolo. (ibid.) Seeing her husband shot, Welda
shouted to her children that their father was shot. (ibid.)
Riza who was then
washing dishes at the kitchen also heard the gunshot and saw Warlito Dicon
holding a long firearm and Ramil Dacibar holding a bolo emerging from under
their house. Upon hearing her mother shouting that her father was shot (p. 13,
TSN, August 27, 1992) she immediately ran to her father and embraced him. (p.
3, TSN, August 27, 1992) Realizing the predicament of her father, Riza together
with her sister, shouted for help. (p. 13, TSN, August 19, 1992)
Riza’s uncle came
to help. He carried the victim with the intention of bringing the latter to the
hospital. (p.4, TSN, August 27, 1992) However, by the time they reached the
basketball court, the victim was already dead. Thus, he brought the victim back
to the latter’s house. (p. 13, TSN, August 19, 1992)"[2]
On June 2, 1992, appellants were charged
with the crime of murder under the following information:[3]LEX
"That on or
about September 5, 1991 at around 9:00 o’clock in the evening in Brgy.
Balighot, Maayon, Capiz, Philippines, the above-named accused, conspiring and
helping one another, accused Warlito Dicon y Demelino being armed with a long
firearm and accused Ramil Dacibar being armed with a bolo, willfully and
feloniously shot one JOSE BACALANGCO with the said firearm, thereby inflicting
on the chest and other parts of the body of the said Jose Bacalangco gunshot
wounds which caused his death immediately thereafter.
The crime is
qualified by treachery and abuse of superior strength and aggravated by
nighttime and dwelling."
Upon arraignment, both appellants entered a
plea of not guilty.[4] Thereafter, trial on the merits ensued.
The prosecution presented the following
witnesses: (1) Dr. Alejandro Orosco, Rural Health Physician of Maayon, Capiz,
who conducted the post-mortem examination on the victim and issued the
certificate of death stating that the cause of death was "multiple gunshot
wounds";[5] (2) Riza Bacalangco, the 17 year-old daughter of the
victim; and (3) Welda Bacalangco, the widow of the victim. Both the widow and
the daughter of the victim testified they were present in the house when the
killing took place. Welda testified also on the expenses they incur: P20,000
for the funeral rites, masses and wake; and P9,000.00 for the coffin and niche,
or a total of P29,000.00 in all, for the deceased. For their suffering, she
prayed for P30,000.00 as moral damages.
In turn, the defense presented (1) SPO3
Paulino Durana, a member of the Philippine National Police of Maayon, Capiz,
who testified on the conduct of the police investigation of the killing; (2)
Magdalena Dacibar, an aunt of appellant Ramil Dacibar, who testified that the
victim’s daughter asked for her help on the night of the incident, and that two
of the victim’s sons had a previous dispute with her husband; and (3) appellant
Warlito Dicon, who testified that he was at his house at the time the victim
was killed.
On January 25, 1993, the trial court
rendered its decision convicting appellants of the crime of murder. The
decretal portion of the decision reads: Jjä sc
"WHEREFORE,
in the light of the foregoing, and finding the accused Warlito Dicon y Demelino
and Ramil Dacibar guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of Murder, this
Court hereby imposes to each of the accused to suffer the penalty of
Reclusion Perpetua, with its accessory penalties that carries with it, and
to indemnify jointly and severally the heirs of the victim Josue Bacalangco the
sum of Fifty-Thousand (P50,000.00) Pesos in moral damages and Twenty-Nine
Thousand (P29,000.00) Pesos as actual compensatory damages, and to pay the
costs of this proceedings.
SO ORDERED."[6]
Hence, the present appeal. Appellants are
now before us, claiming that the trial court committed the following errors:
"I
THE COURT OF
ORIGIN ERRED IN FINDING THE ACCUSED-APPELLANTS GUILTY BECAUSE THE DECISION IS
WITHOUT FACTUAL BASES.
II
THE COURT ERRED IN
BASING THE DECISION ON INFERENCE.
III
THE COURT ERRED IN
NOT GIVING WEIGHT TO THE EVIDENCE AND TESTIMONIES FOR THE DEFENSE.
IV
THE COURT ERRED IN
ENTERING THE DEFENSE OF ALIBI. THE DEFENSE IS NOT ALIBI. IT IS THAT DEFENDANTS
DID NOT COMMIT THE CRIME."[7]ScÓ jj
In their consolidated brief, appellants
allege that the trial court’s findings are without factual basis. They contend
that it was physically impossible for the victim to have been shot from under
his house by the appellants. They assail the trial court’s finding that the
victim’s relatives, Welda and Riza Bacalangco, had no reason to implicate
appellants in the crime if they were not the perpetrators thereof. They also
question the finding that the motive for the crime was the killing of Warlito
Dicon’s dog. Their failure to attend the wake of the victim despite their close
relationship to him, they say, should not have been taken against them, and
they contend that the delay of the victim’s wife in naming them as her
husband’s assailants should have been considered by the trial court. Appellants
also claim that the trial court should have favorably considered their
non-flight from the locality of the crime, and they assert that the testimony
of Magdalena Dacibar that she heard two of the victim’s relatives say that the
shooting was the victim’s fault should have been weighed in their favor.
Lastly, they contend that they do not rely on the defense of alibi.
In its brief, the Office of the Solicitor
General contends that there is enough circumstantial evidence to establish the
culpability of appellants in the killing, and that their defenses of denial and
alibi are inherently weak.
Essentially, the core issue in this case is
the credibility of witnesses and the sufficiency of circumstantial evidence to
convict appellants of the crime charged.
Appellants assail the decision of the trial
court for alleged lack of factual basis. They argue that: (1) the presence of
powder burns around the gunshot wounds on the victim show that the assailant
was inside the house of the victim, not outside; (2) the trajectory of the
bullet shows that the assailant was firing from a position on level with the
victim, thus negating the claim that he was shot from under the house; (3) the
position of the victim and the height of the assailant would have rendered it
impossible for the latter to have shot the former from under the house; and (4)
the initial blotter report of the victim’s wife indicates that the assailants
were "unidentified persons" at the time said report was made.[8]Sjä cj
Welda Bacalangco, the victim’s wife,
testified that her husband, Josue, was sitting at the side of their bed and
raising the mosquito net in order to get inside when he was shot.[9] Riza Bacalangco, the victim’s daughter, heard the
shot and looked out from the area where she was washing dishes and saw
appellants come out from under their house.[10] Welda also saw the appellants emerge from under the
house when she looked out the window right after her husband was shot, when she
heard footsteps underneath the house.[11] She also testified that she heard the gunshot come
from the hole in the floor a little further from their feet.[12] This hole, measuring at least twelve by seven
inches,[13] was estimated by Welda to be almost two arms’ length
from where her husband was seated on the bed.[14] The height of the floor of the house from the ground
was estimated to be around one meter and six inches, or forty-two inches,[15] while the height of appellant Warlito Dicon, the
alleged bearer of the firearm, was estimated by his counsel to be around five
feet and four inches, or sixty-four inches.[16]
These circumstances tend to affirm the trial
court’s finding that appellants were the victim’s assailants. The alleged
shooter, Warlito Dicon, could easily squat or crouch under the floor of the
house in order to clear the twenty-two inch difference between his height and
the floor’s elevation from the ground. At that position, he would have had to
aim his firearm through the hole in the floor at a slanting position, at the
victim who was likewise in an oblique position at the side of the bed as he was
getting inside the mosquito net at the time. This would explain the level
trajectory of the pellets found on the victim’s body.
Furthermore, the hole in the floor through
which the victim was shot was estimated by Welda Bacalangco to be almost two
arms’ length from where the victim was seated. Considering that the victim was
bent over at the time, the distance between the location of the victim’s wounds
and the hole in the floor would closely approximate the estimate of the
examining physician that the muzzle of the gun was around eighteen to
twenty-four inches away from the victim’s body.[17] This estimate of the examining physician was based
on the presence of powder burns around the entrance of the wounds on the left
arm of the victim. Hence, the presence of powder burns on the victim would not
negate the trial court’s finding that the victim was shot from outside the house,
specifically from under the floor.
In addition, the fact that the first blotter
report made by the victim’s wife refers to the assailants as "unidentified
persons" does not detract from the veracity of her positive identification
of appellants as the perpetrators of the crime in a later report, and in the
course of trial.[18] In the first place, we have held that entries in the
police blotter should not be given undue significance or probative value, as
they do not constitute conclusive proof.[19] Secondly, Welda Bacalangco testified that she
initially hesitated to identify her husband’s assailants during the police
investigation due to her fear that her sons might carry out reprisals against
appellants.[20] She did tell the police, however, that she would
come back to file a case because she knew the identity of the perpetrators.[21] When her sons arrived from sea one week after the
killing, Welda gathered all her children and relatives, revealed to them the
names of her husband’s killers, and admonished them not to resort to any
drastic measures.[22] Having done this, she then filed a complaint, this
time identifying appellants as the perpetrators of the crime. Supremeä
The evidence for the defense confirms
Welda’s claim that she chose not to immediately identify appellants for valid
reasons. Defense witness SPO3 Paulino Durana testified that during the police
investigation of the incident, Welda Bacalangco told him that she could not yet
give the names of the assailants as she still had a "problem."[23] When he asked her what this problem was, she
answered that she could not identify the assailants for "security
reasons."[24] Instead, she said that she would come back to file a
case because she knew the identity of the killers.[25] These findings show that Welda’s reluctance to
identify the perpetrators in the police blotter was justified by her fear of
her kin’s wrath against appellants, which would only complicate matters for her
family. The initial reluctance of witnesses such as Welda to volunteer
information about a criminal case is of common knowledge and has been
judicially declared as insufficient to affect credibility,[26] especially when a valid reason exists for such
hesitance.
Appellants also allege that the trial court
based its decision on inference, and that it did not give weight to the
evidence for the defense. They say that the court should have relied on the
evidence presented by the parties and should not have made its own conclusions
without basis. They find fault in the trial court’s statement concerning the prosecution
witnesses to the effect that "Considering their relationship, the Court
had (sic) no reason to believe for them to (sic) concoct a story and pinning
(sic) the guilt of a serious crime as murder to (sic) these two accused if they
were in truth and in fact not the perpetrators thereto (sic)."[27]
This statement of the trial court is in
accord with our rulings on the matter. We have held that where there is no
evidence to indicate that the witness against the accused has been actuated by
any improper motive, and absent any compelling reason to conclude otherwise,
the testimony given is ordinarily accorded full faith and credit.[28] We find no indicia of improper motive on the
part of Welda and Riza Bacalangco when they testified against appellants, in
spite of their relationship to the deceased victim. It is settled that in the
absence of a showing of improper motive on the part of witnesses, their
testimonies are not affected by their relationship to the victim.[29] The earnest desire to seek justice for a dead kin is
not served should the witnesses abandon their conscience and prudence and blame
one who is innocent of the crime.[30] A witness’ relationship to the victim of a crime
would even make his or her testimony more credible as it would be unnatural for
a relative who is interested in vindicating the crime to accuse thereof
somebody other than the real culprit.[31]
Appellants urge that the trial court should
not have readily believed the allegations of the prosecution witnesses as to
why they killed Josue Bacalangco. These allegations, however, were never
refuted nor disproved by the defense in the course of trial. Courtä
Welda and Riza Bacalangco both testified
that the dispute between appellant Warlito Dicon and the victim arose when the
latter exchanged his rooster for a dog, which turned out to be that of the
former. The dog was later slaughtered and feasted on by the Bacalangco family.
Three days later, Dicon confronted the victim at the basketball court and
shouted that he would "have his day also."[32] Throughout the trial, these allegations of the
prosecution were never disputed nor questioned, even as appellant Warlito Dicon
testified on his behalf. Instead, appellants would haphazardly try to make it appear
that other persons had a dispute with the victim, particularly one Ludovico de
la Guna, Jr.[33] However, as borne out by the stenographic notes, we
find that the testimonies of Welda and Riza Bacalangco were delivered in a
convincing and straightforward manner, supporting the veracity of their
assertions.
We agree with appellants that their failure
to attend the wake of the victim despite there being relatives and neighbors of
the latter is not by itself indicative of their guilt of the crime. Likewise,
however, the fact that appellants never fled the locality where the crime was
committed is not by itself a valid defense against the prosecution’s
allegations, as the defense would like this Court to believe.[34] Although it is settled that the flight of an accused
is competent evidence against him as tending to establish his guilt, there is
no law or principle holding that non-flight per se is proof, let alone
conclusive proof, of innocence. Much like the defense of alibi, the defense of
non-flight cannot prevail against the weight of positive identification of the
appellants.[35]
Appellants further allege that the testimony
of defense witness Magdalena Dacibar was never appreciated by the trial court.
This witness testified that she heard Riza Bacalangco and another member of the
household say that the shooting was the victim’s fault because he had been
handling his firearm at the time.[36] She also testified that two of the victim’s sons had
an altercation with her family earlier.[37]
We fail to see the witness’ point in
recalling the dispute between the victim’s sons and her family, specifically
her husband. Even if such were established, it would not clear the question as
to who killed the victim. At best, it would even point to an additional motive
on the part of appellant Ramil Dacibar for the killing, as he is a nephew of
the husband of Magdalena Dacibar.[38] In addition, the witness stayed for a mere five
minutes at the victim’s house after she was called by Riza Bacalangco to help
them. Whatever aid she offered the victim’s family was limited to her telling
them not to worry anymore as the victim was already dead and that there was
nothing else to be done. Thereafter, she went home.[39]Jä lexj
Within that short span of time immediately
after the killing, the victim’s family was understandably in a state of shock
and could not yet discern what had really happened. As a matter of common
observation and knowledge, the reaction or behavior of persons when confronted
with a shocking incident varies.[40] Hence, they could not be expected to utter any sort
of remark or aside on the incident, even an insensitive one, such as that the
victim was at fault for his own death. It would only be later, after Welda and
Riza Bacalangco recalled seeing appellants emerge from under their house, that
they would realize what had actually transpired.
Moreover, the witness’ testimony regarding
what she heard Riza Bacalangco and an unidentified relative say about the
victim’s alleged fault in the killing cannot prevail over the positive
identification of appellants as the persons who fled the scene of the crime.
Against this, appellants have interposed the defenses of denial and alibi.
Ramil Dacibar in effect interposed the
defense of denial. Given the evidence, however, there is nothing to substantiate
his denial of complicity in the killing. It is well-settled that denial, if
unsubstantiated by clear and convincing evidence, is a negative self-serving
assertion, which deserves no weight in law.[41]
Warlito Dicon, for his part, testified that
he was at his house at the time the incident in question took place.[42] Unquestionably, he invokes the defense of alibi,
contrary to his counsel’s assertion that all he invoked was denial.[43] His assertion that he was at home at the time the
killing took place, however, was not corroborated by anyone else. Dicon’s
defense of alibi is thus inherently weak as it is wanting in material
corroboration.[44] Furthermore, Dicon stated that the distance of his
house from that of the victim was only (300) meters,[45] an easily traversible distance, which cannot
discount his presence at the crime scene. For alibi to prosper, an accused must
prove that not only was he absent at the scene of the crime at the time of its
commission, but also that it was physically impossible for him to be situated
at said instance.[46]LexjÓ uris
While the principal witnesses for the
prosecution did not actually see appellants shoot and kill the victim, direct
proof of their culpability is not necessary when circumstantial evidence would
suffice. The requisites thereof are: (1) there is more than one circumstance;
(2) the facts from which the inferences are derived are proven; and (3) the
combination of all the circumstances is such as to produce a conviction beyond
a reasonable doubt. For circumstantial evidence to be sufficient to support a
conviction, all circumstances must be consistent with each other, consistent
with the hypothesis that the accused is guilty, and at the same time
inconsistent with the hypothesis that he is innocent and with every other rational
hypothesis except that of guilt. Facts and circumstances consistent with guilt
and inconsistent with innocence, constitute evidence which, in weight and
probative force, may surpass even direct evidence in its effect upon the court.[47]
In the case at bar, we consider the
following circumstances established: (1) that the victim’s family ate and
slaughtered the dog of appellant Warlito Dicon; (2) on account of which the
latter subsequently confronted the victim and shouted that he "would have
his day also;" (3) the killing of the victim took place, effected by
gunshot wounds; and (4) right after the shooting, Welda and Riza Bacalangco
both saw appellants Warlito Dicon and Ramil Dacibar emerge from under their
house, carrying a long firearm and bolo, respectively. We find that these
established circumstances, taken together, form an unbroken chain of events
that point to the culpability of appellants, and to no other conclusion except
their guilt.
The lackluster defenses of appellants,
particularly denial and alibi, fail to cast doubt on the continuous chain of
circumstances established by the prosecution. The defenses invoked by
appellants cannot prevail over the positive identification by the prosecution
witnesses who had no improper motive whatsoever to falsely testify against
them.[48] When circumstantial evidence constitutes an unbroken
chain of natural and rational circumstances corroborating each other, it cannot
be overcome by inconcrete and doubtful evidence, such as that presented by
appellants in the case at bar.[49]
Likewise, circumstantial evidence will also
serve to establish the degree of participation of each appellant. In its
decision, the trial court established the existence of a conspiracy to kill the
victim[50] between appellants. It inferred conspiracy from the
acts of appellants, which pointed to a joint purpose and design. JuriÓ smis
We have held that conspiracy need not be
established by direct evidence of acts charged, but may and generally must be
proved by a number of indefinite acts, conditions and circumstances, which vary
according to the purpose accomplished. Previous agreement to commit a crime is
not essential to establish conspiracy, it being sufficient that the condition
attending its commission and the acts executed may be indicative of a common
design to accomplish a criminal purpose and objective. If there is a chain of
circumstances to that effect, conspiracy has been established.[51]
Thus, the rule is that conspiracy must be
shown to exist by direct or circumstantial evidence, as clearly and
convincingly as the crime itself.[52] In the absence of direct proof thereof, as in the
present case, it may be deduced from the mode, method and manner by
which the offense was perpetrated, or inferred from the acts of the accused
themselves when such acts point to a joint purpose and design, concerted
action and community of interest.[53] Hence, it is necessary that a conspirator should
have performed some overt act as a direct or indirect contribution in the
execution of the crime planned to be committed. The overt act may consist of
active participation in the actual commission of the crime itself, or it may
consist of moral assistance to his co-conspirators by being present at the
commission of the crime or by exerting moral ascendancy over the other co-conspirators.[54]
In the case at bar, it was established that
appellant Warlito Dicon had a dispute with the victim over the killing and
eating of the formers' dog, as a result of which Dicon verbally threatened the
victim with vengeance. The victim was later shot and killed, on which occasion
both appellants were seen leaving the scene of the crime carrying a firearm and
a bolo, emerging from under the victim’s house.
These circumstances, proved by the evidence,
indicate a conspiracy to kill the victim. The fact that immediately after the
killing, both appellants were seen emerging from under the victim’s house - a
place where they had no business to be at 9’o-clock in the evening - indicates
that a particular, deliberate and planned method of attack was employed by them
to kill the victim. And while it was not determined who fired the fatal shot,
it was established that both appellants left the house together, indicating a
joint purpose and design, concerted action and community of interest between
appellants. If one of the two shot the victim, the other was nonetheless
present at the scene of the crime, undoubtedly to lend some form of moral and
material assistance to the actual assassin – another badge of conspiracy. Thus,
appellants as conspirators are equally liable for the crime as it is
unnecessary to determine who inflicted the fatal wounds because in conspiracy
the actof one is the act of all.[55]Jjjä uris
In finding appellants guilty of murder, the
trial court ruled that the crime was qualified by treachery, premeditation,
superior strength, nighttime and dwelling, although it said that premeditation,
superior strength and nighttime were absorbed by treachery.[56]
We agree that treachery attended the
commission of the crime. Treachery is present when the shooting was unexpected
and sudden, giving the unarmed victim no chance whatsoever to defend himself.[57] The two conditions for treachery to be present are
(1) that at the time of the attack, the victim was not in a position to defend
himself and (2) the offender consciously adopted the particular means, method,
or form of attack employed by him.[58]
In the case at bar, the victim had
absolutely no idea that he was going to be shot as he went to bed, from under
his own house at that. He was not in a position to defend himself, being
unaware and unexpectant of an attempt on his life, in the particular manner
purposely adopted by appellants. Clearly, he was killed in a treacherous
manner. The circumstance of treachery, however, absorbs the aggravating circumstances
of superior strength and nighttime.[59] We cannot appreciate the existence of evident
premeditation as the trial court did, as there is no proof as to when
appellants determined to kill the victim, and which acts manifested that they
clung to this nefarious scheme. Furthermore, the attendance of evident
premeditation as an aggravating circumstance was not alleged in the information
filed against appellants.[60]
The trial court was correct in appreciating
the aggravating circumstance of dwelling. Although the triggerman fired the
shot from outside the house, his victim was inside. For the circumstance of
dwelling to be considered, it is not necessary that the accused should have
actually entered the dwelling of the victim to commit the offense; it is enough
that the victim was attacked inside his own house, although the assailant may
have devised means to perpetrate the assault from without.[61] Thus, in the case at bar, although the attack was
made not from inside the house but from below the floor of the house,
nevertheless, the aggravating circumstance of dwelling may be considered as
attending the shooting,[62] as in fact the target/victim was hit inside his own
house. lex
The aggravating circumstance of dwelling was
considered by the trial court in imposing the maximum penalty upon appellants
for the crime of murder qualified by treachery. At the time of the commission
of the offense at bar, the imposable penalty for murder was reclusion
temporal in its maximum period to death, the maximum thereof being death.
With the non-effectivity of the death penalty at the time, the trial court
imposed the penalty of reclusion perpetua upon appellants. We are in
full accord with said penalty.
On the matter of damages, we note that the
trial court ordered appellants to jointly and severally pay the heirs of the
victim P50,000.00 for moral damages. We find this award supported by testimony
in the records but only in the amount of P30,000.00. Pursuant to current
jurisprudence,[63] we also find that the heirs of the victim are
entitled to a death indemnity of P50,000.00. We further find the award of
P29,000.00 as actual damages in order. Lastly, considering that the crime was
attended by the aggravating circumstance of dwelling,[64] the amount of P20,000.00 should also be awarded as
exemplary damages.
WHEREFORE, the decision dated January 25, 1993, amended on
February 2, 1993, of the Regional Trial Court of Roxas City, Branch 16, finding
appellants guilty of Murder and sentencing them to reclusion perpetua is
AFFIRMED WITH MODIFICATION, in that appellants are ordered to pay jointly and
severally the heirs of the victim Josue Bacalangco, the amounts of P50,000.00
as death indemnity, P29,000.00 as actual damages, P30,000.00 as moral damages
and P20,000.00 as exemplary damages. Costs against appellants.
SO ORDERED.
Bellosillo, (Chairman), Mendoza, and De Leon, Jr., JJ., concur. Jksm
Buena, J., on official leave.
[1] Rollo, pp. 20-31.
[2] Id. at 94-96.
[3] Id. at 9.
[4] Records, p. 69.
[5] TSN, August 19, 1992, p. 3; Records, p. 145.
[6] Supra, note 1 at 31.
[7] Id. at 44.
[8] Id. at 52-56.
[9] TSN, September 8, 1992, p. 5
[10] TSN, August 19, 1992, p. 13.
[11] TSN, August 27, 1992, p. 3.
[12] Ibid.
[13] Supra, note 9 at 10.
[14] Id. at 11.
[15] Id. at 4.
[16] Rollo, p. 54.
[17] Supra, note 10 at 9-10.
[18] Records, p. 209.
[19] Santiago v. Court of Appeals, 295 SCRA 334, 354 (1998).
[20] TSN, September 8, 1992, pp. 12, 14, 15.
[21] Id. at 13.
[22] Id. at 15-16.
[23] TSN, September 10, 1992, pp. 9, 13.
[24] Id. at 15.
[25] Supra, note 21.
[26] People v. Lising, 285 SCRA 595, 641 (1998).
[27] Rollo, p. 27-A.
[28] People v. Solis, 291 SCRA 529, 539 (1998).
[29] People v. Guillermo, 302 SCRA 257, 271 (1999).
[30] People v. Realin, 301 SCRA 495, 510 (1999).
[31] People v. Villanueva, 302 SCRA 380, 399 (1999).
[32] TSN, August 19, 1992, p. 13-14; TSN, August 27, 1992, p. 4.
[33] TSN, October 22, 1992, p. 6, 9.
[34] Rollo, pp. 57-58.
[35] People v. Gementiza, 285 SCRA, 478, 487 (1998).
[36] TSN, October 15, 1992, p. 5, 6, 14.
[37] Id. at 8, 12.
[38] Id. at 10.
[39] Id. at 6.
[40] People v. Aranjuez, 285 SCRA 466, 474-475 (1998).
[41] People v. Atop, 286 SCRA 157, 174 (1998).
[42] TSN, October 22, 1992, p. 3.
[43] Rollo, p. 59.
[44] People v. Sanchez, 302 SCRA 21, 47 (1999).
[45] Supra, note 42 at 4, 10.
[46] People v. Villanueva, 302 SCRA 380, 394-395 (1999).
[47] People v. Mahinay, 302 SCRA 455, 469 (1999).
[48] People v. Reyes, 287 SCRA 229, 243 (1998).
[49] People v. Mendoza, 301 SCRA 66, 82 (1999).
[50] Rollo, pp. 29-30.
[51] People v. Maranion, 199 SCRA 421, 432 (1991).
[52] People v. Trinidad, 162 SCRA 714, 725 (1988).
[53] People v. Datun, 272 SCRA 380, 389 (1997).
[54] People v. Berroya, 283 SCRA, 111, 129 (1998).
[55] People v. Baniel, 275 SCRA 472, 485, 486 (1997).
[56] Rollo, p. 29.
[57] People v. Delmendo, 296 SCRA 371, 380 (1998).
[58] People v. Gutierrez, Jr., G.R. No. 116281, February 8, 1999, p. 23.
[59] People v. Broncano, 260 SCRA 724, 738 (1996).
[60] Supra, note 3.
[61] People v. Ompad, 26 SCRA 750, 760 (1969).
[62] People v. Albar, 86 Phil. 36, 42 (1950).
[63] People v. Verde, G.R. No. 119077, February 10, 1999, p. 17.
[64] People v. Gutierrez, G.R. No. 116281, February 8, 1999, p. 27.