SECOND DIVISION
[G.R. No. 134246. February 22, 2000]
PEOPLE OF THE
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. EDUARDO SAN ANDRES y
ANTONIO, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
BELLOSILLO, J.:
This case was originally an appeal to the
Court of Appeals from the judgment of the trial court convicting
accused-appellant Eduardo San Andres of homicide. He now assails his
conviction. On 29 May 1998 however the appellate court found him guilty instead
of murder, not homicide, and accordingly sentenced him to reclusion perpetua.
Consequently, pursuant to Sec. 13, par. 2, of Rule 124 of the Rules of Court,
the Court of Appeals refrained from entering judgment and certified the case to
this Court for review.[1]
These are the facts: On the night of 18
November 1994 the spouses Engracio and Sesona Albao of Tarosanan, Camaligan,
Camarines Sur, attended the birthday celebration of their grandson, son of
their son Arnulfo Albao, in the latter's residence. At around 11:00 o'clock in
the evening Engracio and Sesona decided to go home. However, they had to take
home another son, Enrico, who was already drunk.
After reaching Enrico's house and making
sure he was already asleep, the couple left for home. On their way they passed
through rice paddies and then trudged the elevated road where they met accused
Eduardo San Andres and Henry San Andres. Eduardo and Henry were standing
quietly about one and a half (11/2) meters away. They were armed
with a samurai and a knife, respectively.[2] Engracio innocently asked them why they were armed
and who their enemies were. But before he could get any answer Eduardo and
Henry simultaneously attacked him. Eduardo hacked Engracio with his samurai
while Henry stabbed him several times with his knife.[3]
Overwhelmed by the unexpected attack,
Engracio was forced to parry off the repeated blows with his bare hands. But
sensing the futility of any defense as his wounds were now mounting and sapping
his strength, Engracio fled. He ran downwards to the rice paddies but Henry
chased him.
The deep mud in the paddies coupled with his
debilitating condition due to his injuries prevented his escape. He fell on his
back, and in no time Henry caught up with him. Henry astraddled his fallen
victim and then delivered the coup de grace. Meanwhile, Eduardo remained
standing on the road with his samurai still on hand even as Senona
shouted hysterically for help.[4]
When Enrico and his wife heard their mother
shouting from outside they jumped out of bed and ran towards the place of the
"incident."[5] But they were stopped in their tracks by Eduardo who
drove them back to their house brandishing his samurai.[6] It took Enrico some three (3) minutes before he
could muster enough courage to make another attempt to rescue his parents. But
it was too late. His father was already mortally wounded. He could only bring
his father with the help of some barangay officials to the city hospital where
he eventually died.
The following day, or on 19 November 1994,
Dr. Felix Prado conducted a postmortem examination on the cadaver of Engracio
Albao. According to Dr. Prado, Engracio's death was the result of the multiple
stab wounds he received, and that of the twenty-two (22) wounds he sustained,
wounds Nos. 1, 2, 3, 5, 6 and 20 were fatal, each of which being enough to
cause the victim's death.[7] The examining physician further testified that the
injuries of Engracio could have been caused by sharp and pointed instruments,
e.g., a knife, a samurai, or a small bolo.
Accused-appellant Eduardo San Andres swore,
in his defense, that he was not a party to the killing of Engracio; on the
contrary, he was in fact a victim of Enrico's unlawful aggression. Eduardo
claimed that at around 10:00 o'clock in the evening of 18 November 1994 he was
attending the birthday party of a friend, Vic David, together with Henry San
Andres, Enrico "Boboy" Albao and some other guests he was not
familiar with. They ate and drank gin. As the party progressed, Enrico got
angry for no apparent reason, venting his ire at no one in particular, which
prompted Engracio, whom Eduardo intimately referred to as 'ta Jun, to
take Enrico home. Shortly after, according to Eduardo, he also left. But
moments after he arrived home, he heard someone shouting from the road around
thirty (30) meters away. So he and his wife went out to see who was causing the
disturbance. But as they were ascending the riprap towards the road they found
themselves facing an infuriated Enrico brandishing a samurai. Since
Enrico kept advancing and continuously swinging his samurai towards them
they moved backwards which sent them falling down the riprap. But Enrico left
them unharmed. They then climbed up the road and saw Henry some thirty (30)
meters away running towards the direction of Mabulo. After that, they went back
to their house.[8] It never crossed their minds to report the matter to
the authorities.
At around 1:00 o'clock the following
morning, 19 November 1994, Eduardo and his wife were awakened by two (2)
policemen who invited him for questioning. Still in a daze, Eduardo asked them
why but his protestations were met with a laconic reply, "just make my
complaint at the police station." His query was finally answered when he
was told at the police station that he was implicated in the killing of Engracio
Albao.[9]
On 6 February 1995 an Information for murder
qualified by treachery and abuse of superior strength was filed against Eduardo
San Andres and Henry San Andres in the Regional Trial Court of Naga City. Only
Eduardo San Andres was tried as his cousin Henry San Andres has remained at
large up to the present.
On 5 March 1996 the trial court rendered a
decision finding accused-appellant Eduardo San Andres guilty of homicide and
meted him an indeterminate prison term of eight (8) years and one (1) day of prision
mayor in its medium period to fourteen (14) years and eight (8) months of reclusion
temporal in its minimum period. He was ordered to pay the heirs of Engracio
Albao P50,000.00 as civil indemnity, P30,000.00 as moral damages
and P22,314.70 as actual damages.[10] The trial court found no basis to doubt the
credibility of Senona Albao and her son Enrico who both positively identified
accused-appellant Eduardo San Andres and the other accused, Henry San Andres,
who is at large. Senona in particular was just one and a half (11/2) meters away from the two (2) assailants when they simultaneously
attacked Engracio. She could not possibly be mistaken as to their identities as
it was a moonlit night.
Finding conspiracy in the commission of the offense
the trial court observed -
Eduardo San
Andres' presence at the scene of the incident was not merely passive. He and
Henry San Andres simultaneously attacked Engracio Albao. He may not have joined
Henry San Andres in chasing Engracio Albao and did not strike the deceased
anymore when the latter was already lying on his back with Henry San Andres on
top of him repeatedly stabbing him, but he remained standing on the road still
holding his samurai. When Enrico Albao, and his wife came he prevented them
from helping the deceased by chasing them with his samurai x x x x[11]
But the trial court ruled out treachery and
abuse of superior strength as having attended the perpetration of the crime -
x x x x the
qualifying circumstance of treachery was not, however, sufficiently
established. Although the testimony of Senona Albao shows that the deceased was
not aware that he would be attacked by the two accused, there is no showing the
method of attack employed by the accused was deliberately chosen with a special
view of accompanying the act without risk to themselves x x x x
With respect to
the other alleged qualifying circumstance of abuse of superior strength, the
same has not been proven beyond reasonable doubt either. While it is true that
both accused were armed and the deceased was not, there is no sufficient
evidence to show that both accused deliberately employed and used excessive
force out of proportion to the means of defense available to the person attack
(sic) (People v. Bacay, 132 SCRA 27). When the deceased was being
stabbed by Henry San Andres when the former was already lying down, Eduardo San
Andres merely stood by x x x x[12]
Perhaps believing, rightly or wrongly, that
he deserved to be acquitted, accused Eduardo San Andres appealed his conviction
to the Court of Appeals. However, on 29 May 1998 the appellate court found him
guilty instead of murder, not homicide, and imposed upon him the higher penalty
of reclusion perpetua while sustaining the award of damages in favor of
the heirs of the victim.[13]
As found by the appellate court, as by the
trial court, the circumstances surrounding the commission of the offense
evinced a conspiratorial design between the perpetrators. The fact that both
accused with unsheathed weapons waited for the victim and his wife at the place
where the latter would pass; that they were together earlier in the same party;
that both launched simultaneous attacks upon their victim when they saw him;
and, that Eduardo remained standing on the road evidently as a lookout while
Henry astraddled his fallen victim and finally delivered the death blow,
created no other logical inference than that they were impelled by a common
criminal effort and objective.
Whether the crime was attended by treachery,
the appellate court found no showing that the two (2) accused employed schemes
to render their victim defenseless. Engracio had all the opportunity to avoid
the accused Eduardo and Henry since they did not conceal themselves and their
weapons when they drew near the couple. Engracio simply misappreciated the
impending danger from the posturing of his would-be attackers; thus it was his
misjudgment, not the seemingly treacherous conduct of his assailants, that
finally spelled his doom.
However, the appellate court appreciated the
qualifying circumstance of abuse of superiority in view of the marked disparity
in the age and strength of the parties. Accused-appellant Eduardo San Andres
was thirty-four (34) years old when he viciously attacked, along with his
cousin Henry, sixty-two (62)-year old Engracio Albao. But it was not only youth
and numbers. There was also the glaring contrast between the victim who was
totally unarmed and his two (2) killers who were in possession of fatal weapons
which were already unsheathed. The act of accused-appellant of joining his
co-accused in simultaneously attacking Engracio without any provocation from
the latter, betrayed the desire of the two (2) to overwhelm their victim with
their superior force.[14]
Accused-appellant insists in his defense
that there was nary any evidence indicating that he and his co-accused connived
to liquidate the deceased. The mere fact, according to him, that he was present
when Henry stabbed Engracio, which in fact he denies, does not adequately prove
any conspiracy. Granting without admitting that he was present and participated
in the commission of the crime, accused-appellant assails the appreciation of
the qualifying circumstance of abuse of superior strength, citing in his favor People
v. Martinez[15] and People v. Ybañez[16] where this Court clarified that mere numerical
superiority is not enough but that deliberate intent to take advantage of
superior strength must be clearly shown for superiority to be properly
considered.
The arguments of accused-appellant are
puerile; utterly unpersuasive. His gratuitous denial cannot prevail over the
positive testimony of the widow Senona and her son Enrico. Both were
categorical in saying that they recognized accused-appellant as one of the two
(2) slayers of Engracio. Senona, in particular, could not possibly be mistaken
because accused-appellant and his co-accused, who are first cousins, are quite
familiar to her, being relatives of her husband Engracio.
The Court of Appeals correctly held, as did
the lower court, that there was conspiracy in the commission of the crime. When
the spouses Albao encountered the two (2) malefactors beside the road, the
latter had their weapons unsheathed and drawn which prompted Engracio to ask
innocently what was the matter and who were their enemies. Instead of answering
him, the accused simultaneously attacked Engracio. Worse, while Henry chased
Engracio after the latter took flight, accused-appellant stood by as lookout
and thereafter drove back Enrico and his wife to their house to prevent them
from extending aid to Engracio. Evidently, these circumstances indicated a
common sentiment and community of purpose between the offenders who acted in
unison towards the attainment of a common malevolent design.
Similarly, we sustain the conclusion of the
appellate court that there was no treachery. For treachery to be appreciated as
a qualifying circumstance, two (2) requisites must concur: (a) employment of
means, methods or forms in the execution thereof which would deprive the person
attacked of any opportunity to defend himself, much less retaliate; and, (b)
the mode of attack must be consciously and deliberately adopted. But the means
employed by the accused did not eliminate any risk to them from the defense
which the victim might make. When asked what happened after her husband
inquired from the two (2) accused why they were armed, Senona's reply was
"x x x they attacked each other" (nag-aratakehan). Further,
she disclosed that although Engracio did not fight back, he defended himself.[17] Suddenness of the attack would not constitute
treachery if the victim had the chance to defend or to ward off the aggression.
Although at a notoriously disadvantaged position, Engracio was not altogether
deprived of the opportunity to strike back as he managed to parry the initial
thrusts. Neither can the simultaneity of the aggression give rise to treachery
where it is not shown that the killers deliberately and consciously adopted a
method intended to facilitate the perpetration of the offense without risk to
themselves.
Where two (2) persons took part in the crime
armed with deadly weapons, such as a samurai and a knife, as in this
case, and made a simultaneous attack upon a defenseless person, the aggravating
circumstance of abuse of superior strength should be taken into consideration.[18] It is manifest that accused-appellant and his
co-accused, both armed with bladed weapons, overwhelmed their unarmed victim
with a sudden synchronized assault. As correctly pointed out by the appellate
court, it is of no moment that after the initial attack accused-appellant
merely stood afar while Henry San Andres chased and repeatedly stabbed the
victim, when at the very outset the two (2) had already secured advantage of
their superior power in subduing and killing Engracio. To underscore the
disproportion in strength between the parties, we should also consider their
relative ages. At the time of the killing, accused-appellant was only in his
thirties while the victim was already in his sixties.
The reliance of accused-appellant on the Martinez
and Ybañez cases is misplaced. In Martinez, this Court disallowed
the appreciation of the qualifying circumstance of superior strength where it
was shown that the participation of the accused's four companions was confined
to applauding his act, without the use of force. In Ybañez, it was
established that the two (2) accused did not conspire to kill the victim,
implying that they did not jointly exploit their superior strength. In the
instant case, however, both accused-appellant and his co-accused simultaneously
and in concert attacked Engracio Albao in such a manner as to secure advantage
from their combined strength. The proper crime, therefore, is murder qualified
by abuse of superior strength.
WHEREFORE, the Decision of the Regional Trial Court of Naga
City appealed from is MODIFIED. Accused-appellant EDUARDO SAN ANDRES y ANTONIO
is found guilty of MURDER, not homicide, and accordingly sentenced to suffer
the penalty of reclusion perpetua. The award of damages to the heirs of
the deceased Engracio Albao in the amounts of P50,000.00 as civil
indemnity, P30,000.00 as moral damages and P22,314.70 as actual
damages, is AFFIRMED. Costs against accused-appellant.
SO ORDERED.
Mendoza, Quisumbing, and De Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.
Buena, J., on leave.
[1] Decision penned by Associate Justice Cancio Garcia, concurred in by Associate Justices Omar U. Amin and Bernardo P. Abesamis, Special Ninth Division, Court of Appeals.
[2] TSN, 20 April 1995, p. 9,
[3] Id., pp. 13 and 20.
[4] Id., p. 18.
[5] When asked on direct examination what incident he was referring to, his answer was: "That incident where my father was being hacked sir;" id., p. 8.
[6] Id., p. 9.
[7] TSN, 29 March 1995, p. 8.
[8] TSN, 2 October 1995, pp. 3-9.
[9] Id., pp. 10-11.
[10] Crim. Case No. RTC '95-5737; Decision penned by Judge Antonio N. Gerona, RTC-Br. 28, Naga City; Original Records, pp. 218-226.
[11] Id., p. 224.
[12] Id., pp. 224-225.
[13] See Note 1.
[14] Rollo, p. 136.
[15] No. L-31755, 31 March 1980, 96 SCRA 714.
[16] No. L-30421, 28 March 1974, 56 SCRA 210.
[17] TSN, 20 April 1995, p. 13.
[18] U. S. v. Banagale, 24 Phil. 69 (1913); U. S. v. Lasada, 21 Phil. 287 (1912).