SECOND DIVISION
[G.R. No.
105582. July 19, 2000]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs. ROLANDO CARDEL Y DIZON, and ARNOLD CALUMPANG Y VALERIO, accused-appellants.
D E C I S I O N
DE LEON, JR., J.:
Before Us on
appeal is the Decision[1] of the Regional Trial Court of
Valenzuela, Metro Manila, Branch 172 in Criminal Case No. 457-V-91, convicting
herein appellants, Rolando Cardel y Dizon and Arnold Calumpang y Valerio, of
the crime of murder.
On August 12,
1991 at around 8:00 o’clock in the evening, Noel Rioflorido, Jr. was stabbed to
death in Bagong Nayon, Valenzuela, Metro Manila. Noel was on his way home to Paso de Blas, Valenzuela, Metro
Manila after having visited his friends in Bagong Nayon when the incident
happened. Upon investigation of the
case by the police, two (2) eyewitnesses pinpointed Rolando Cardel and Arnold
Calumpang, as responsible for the death of the victim.
On August 14,
1991, the appellants, Rolando Cardel and Arnold Calumpang, were charged in
court with the crime of murder, defined and penalized under Article 248 of the
Revised Penal Code, as amended, in an information that reads:
That on or about the 12th day of
August, 1991 in the Municipality of Valenzuela, Metro Manila, Philippines, and
within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused,
conspiring together and mutually helping one another, without any justifiable
cause, with treachery and evident premeditation and with deliberate intent to
kill, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously attack, assault
and stab with a bladed weapon one Noel Rioflorido, Jr. y Garalza, thereby
inflicting upon the latter serious physical injuries which caused the death of
the said victim.
Contrary to law.
Upon being
arraigned on August 28, 1991, both appellants, assisted by counsel, separately
pleaded “Not guilty” to the information.
Thereafter, trial on the merits ensued.
The evidence of
the prosecution shows that on August 12, 1991 Willy Conde and Elmer Olesco were
in front of the Aling Digna’s Store in Bagong Nayon, Valenzuela, Metro
Manila. Conde was buying some
cigarettes while Olesco was sitting, drinking coke. At around 8:00 o’clock in the evening, Conde and Olesco noticed
Noel Rioflorido, Jr. together with Rolando Cardel and Arnold Calumpang, who
came close to two (2) arms length in front of Aling Digna’s Store. Calumpang punched Rioflorido, Jr. on the
right side of the face before he hurriedly left. Cardel held Rioflorido, Jr. in the nape and stabbed him at the
back, on the left side of his body, before he, too, fled from the crime scene
leaving Rioflorido, Jr. sprawling on the ground. Thereafter, Conde, Olesco and a certain Arnel carried Rioflorido,
Jr. to a passenger jeep and brought him to the Jose Reyes Memorial Hospital in
Sta. Cruz, Manila where he died.[2]
Fe G. Rioflorido
identified the body of the victim at the morgue as that of her son, Noel
Rioflorido, Jr.[3] She also signed the form for the
request for examination of the dead body dated August 13, 1991.[4]
Dr. Maximo
Reyes, M.D., medico-legal officer of the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI)
conducted the post mortem examination on the body of Noel Rioflorido, Jr. on
August 13, 1991.[5] His findings showed that the victim
suffered two (2) stab wounds which were both caused by a three-sided weapon
(tres cantos). Wound No. 1 measures 2.0
x 1.5 x 1.8 centimeters with an approximate depth of 11.0 centimeters. It was located on the left intrascapular
area, just below the chest. It was
directed slightly upward entering the posterior chest wall, severing the lower
part of the upper lobe, left lung, and posterior aspect of the left ventricle
of the heart. Wound No. 2 which
involved the skin and soft tissues measures
2.0 x 1.8 x 2.0 centimeters. It
was located over the right deltoid area.
Wound No. 1, according to Dr. Reyes, was the fatal wound.[6]
Meanwhile, after
learning that he was being implicated in the said stabbing incident in Bagong
Nayon, Bagbaguin, Valenzuela on August 12, 1991, Rolando Cardel surrendered to
the Paso de Blas Police Station in Valenzuela, Metro Manila on the same
day. He was turned over to Patrolman
Arnold Alabastro of the investigation section of the Valenzuela police for
proper investigation.[7]
Subsequent investigation which was conducted by Patrolman
Alabastro reveals that the victim Noel Rioflorido, Jr. was apprehended by
Rolando Cardel and other concerned citizens in Bagong Nayon, Valenzuela, Metro
Manila on August 12, 1991 at around 7:30 o’clock in the evening on the ground
that he was a suspect in the robbery hold-up of a certain Arnold
Calumpang. A commotion subsequently
ensued in front of Aling Digna’s Store in Bagong Nayon when Rioflorido, Jr.
resisted arrest and attempted to escape.
A certain Ronaldo Alborque admitted having punched Rioflorido, Jr. in the
process. On the other hand, Rolando
Cardel lost his temper so he held Rioflorido, Jr. in the nape, and stabbed him.[8]
At the scene of
the crime, a wristwatch and a necklace were recovered and the same were later
identified by Arnold Calumpang as among the personal belongings that were
forcibly taken from him earlier by Rioflorido, Jr. and two (2) other
persons. Patrolman Alabastro also
recovered the improvised three-sided knife that was allegedly used in stabbing
Rioflorido, Jr. in the house of Rolando Cardel. Said knife and the maong pair of pants and t-shirt of Cardel,
together with a sando belonging to Ronaldo Alborque, which were all smeared
with red substance, were forwarded by Patrolman Alabastro to the NBI in Manila
for laboratory examination.[9]
The defense
denied any liability of the appellants for the charge of murder in the
information. Rolando Cardel, a
construction worker, testified that he was in the hospital from 6:00 to 7:00
o’clock in the evening of August 12, 1991.
His neighbor, a certain Anita Antipolo, had earlier requested for his
assistance in bringing her sick child to the hospital for treatment. On his way home at around 7:30 o’clock in
the evening, his attention was incidentally drawn to a group of people carrying
a wounded person to be brought to the hospital. He was informed that the person, whose name he later learned as
Noel Rioflorido, Jr., was stabbed after having been caught for snatching. Among
the group of people, a certain Elmer handed to Cardel a wristwatch with an instruction
to return the same to the nephew of a certain Cadiz in Bagong Nayon. Being a member[10] of the bantay bayan in Bagong
Nayon, Valenzuela, Metro Manila, Cardel proceeded to the house of Cadiz. Cardel learned from Arnold Calumpang, whom
he met for the first time in the house of Cadiz, that the wristwatch was among
the personal belongings that were forcibly taken from him.[11]
Arnold Calumpang
allegedly informed Rolando Cardel that three (3) persons blocked his path. One of them punched Calumpang before they
divested him of his necklace, wristwatch and wallet containing P1,000.00
pesos. Cardel stated that the
description of one of the three (3) persons which was provided him by Calumpang
fitted that of Noel Rioflorido, Jr., who appeared thin and short. On the same evening, Rolando and other
members of the bantay bayan in Bagong Nayon were investigated by Patrolman
Arnold Alabastro of the Valenzuela police.
They informed Patrolman Alabastro that none of them witnessed the
stabbing incident.[12]
Patrolman Alabastro
requested Rolando Cardel to assist him locate the whereabout of Arnold
Calumpang so that the latter could give a statement to the police. It was Cardel who accompanied Arnold
Calumpang to the police headquarters upon the request of his aunt. Upon arrival
at the police headquarters in Valenzuela, Metro Manila, Cardel and Calumpang
were pinpointed by alleged witnesses to the stabbing incident as responsible
for the death of Noel Rioflorido, Jr..[13]
Rolando Cardel
vehemently denied before the police any participation in the killing of Noel
Rioflorido, Jr. claiming that the incident on August 12, 1991 was already
finished when he returned to Bagong Nayon from the hospital at 7:30 o’clock in
the evening. He also claimed that the
two (2) prosecution witnesses, Willy Conde and Elmer Olesco, and the victim,
Noel Rioflorido, Jr., were members of the AKHRO fraternity; and that the
brother of prosecution witness Willy Conde, a certain Danilo Conde, who is also
a member of the AKHRO fraternity, was apprehended previously by Rolando for
allegedly snatching a shoulder bag.[14] In addition, Rolando repudiated
authorship of the statement marked as Exhibit “D” of the prosecution. He claimed that the said Exhibit “D” of the
prosecution was prepared by a bantay bayan member and that he signed without
reading it beforehand.
For his defense,
Arnold Calumpang testified that he is a native of Dumaguete City and had been
staying in Muñoz, Quezon City for only more than two (2) months when the
stabbing incident happened. Calumpang
recalled that on August 12, 1991 he decided to visit his aunt in Bagong Nayon,
Valenzuela, Metro Manila. After
alighting from the jeep at around 6:00 o’clock in the evening, his path was
blocked by three (3) unidentified persons. They held him and simultaneously
took his necklace, wristwatch and wallet.
Calumpang scampered toward the house of his aunt for fear of his life
after one (1) of the persons pulled out a fan knife.[15]
Upon reaching
the house, Arnold immediately informed his aunt that he was held up along the
way by three (3) persons and took some of his personal belongings. His aunt went outside and returned at around
7:30 o’clock in the evening together with an alleged member of the bantay bayan
who was introduced to him as Rolando Cardel.
Cardel informed him that a policeman was waiting outside to take
Calumpang’s statement involving the stabbing incident. Upon arrival at the police headquarters in
Valenzuela, certain alleged witnesses to the stabbing incident pointed to him
and Rolando Cardel as responsible for the death of Noel Rioflorido, Jr..
Specifically, he was allegedly seen by the witnesses punched Rioflorido, Jr..[16]
Calumpang denied
the accusation against him for the reason that according to him, he did not go
out of the house of his aunt from the time he arrived therein until 7:30
o’clock in the evening when the police and Rolando Cardel arrived to fetch him.[17]
After analyzing
the evidence, the trial court found, as follows:
It is clear from the evidence
presented that before the stabbing incident, subject of this case, the accused
Arnold Calumpang was divested of his wristwatch and necklace by holduppers when
he was on his way home. As the
holduppers ran away with his belongings, he shouted for help. The accused Rolando Cardel who testified
that he is a bantay bayan exhibiting his I.D. as such, and while drinking with
friends, heard the shouts of Arnold, responded by chasing the holduppers and
was able to collar one of them, the victim of this murder case Noel Rioflorido,
(Jr.). With a certain Ronaldo Alborque,
Rolando Cardel was able to drag the victim to Bagong Nayon, place of the
stabbing incident where the victim was stabbed by Rolando Cardel after having
been collared by Ronaldo Alborque and boxed by Arnold Calumpang. So this is a case of a mob action and
revenge against a snatcher who was caught while running with the loot.
x x x
From the foregoing, both accused
took the law into their own hands by practically executing Noel Rioflorido,
(Jr.), alleged snatcher of accused Arnold’s wristwatch and necklace, by
grabbing him, boxing him, and stabbing him in conspiracy with each other.
x x x
When both accused held the victim
Noel Rioflorido, (Jr.) and the latter was stabbed, superior strength was taken
advantage of by both accused, and treachery was used because the said victim
had no chance to defend himself.[18]
The dispositive
portion of the decision of the trial
court reads:
WHEREFORE, in view of the
foregoing, the Court finds both accused guilty of murder beyond reasonable doubt
acting in conspiracy with each other, and hereby sentences them to suffer the
penalty of reclusion perpetua, to indemnify the heirs of Noel
Rioflorido, (Jr.) y Garalza in the sum of P50,000.00 and to pay the costs of
the suit.
SO ORDERED.[19]
In their appeal,[20] the appellants raise the following
assignments of error:
I
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN CONVICTING BOTH ACCUSED FOR
MURDER AND NOT FOR HOMICIDE ONLY CONSIDERING THAT THE QUALIFYING CIRCUMSTANCE
OF TREACHERY AND/OR USE OF SUPERIOR STRENGTH WAS NOT DULY PROVED.
II
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN ALSO CONVICTING ARNOLD
CALUMPANG FOR MURDER CONSIDERING THAT CONSPIRACY WAS NOT DULY ESTABLISHED.
III
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN NOT ACQUITTING
ACCUSED-APPELLANT ROLANDO CARDEL OR IN THE ASSUMPTION THAT HE IS GUILTY, IN NOT
APPRECIATING IN HIS FAVOR THE PRIVELEGE MITITGATING CIRCUMSTANCE UNDER ARTICLE
69 OF THE REVISED PENAL CODE AND THE ORDINARY MITIGATING CIRCUMSTANCES OF
VOLUNTARY SURRENDER AND LACK OF INTENTION TO COMMIT SO GRAVE A WRONG AS THAT
COMMITTED.
IV
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN NOT APPLYING THE PROVISIONS
OF THE INDETERMINATE SENTENCE LAW TO LOWER THE IMPOSABLE PENALTY.
Appellant
Rolando Cardel claimed that the stabbing incident was already finished when he
arrived in Bagong Nayon, Valenzuela, Metro Manila from the hospital at 7:30
o’clock in the evening on August 12, 1991.
Appellant Arnold Calumpang also claimed that he was inside the house of
his aunt in Bagong Nayon, after he was robbed of his personal belongings by
three (3) persons at around 6:30 o’clock in the evening, and remained therein
until 7:30 o’clock in the evening. In
effect, the appellants seek refuge under the defense of alibi to escape
responsibility for the killing of Noel Rioflorido, Jr..
It must be
emphasized that aside from being inherently weak, the defense of alibi cannot
prevail over the positive identification of the appellants by the prosecution
witnesses.[21] Prosecution witness Willy Conde was
buying some cigarettes at Aling Digna’s Store in Bagong Nayon, Valenzuela,
Metro Manila when Noel Rioflorido, Jr. was stabbed in front of the store just
about two (2) arms length away.
Prosecution witness Elmer Olesco was sitting in front of the said store,
drinking coke, when the stabbing incident occurred. Both prosecution witnesses
categorically declared that
they saw Calumpang punched
Rioflorido, Jr. on the right side of the face and that thereafter, Rolando
Cardel held the victim in
the nape and stabbed him at the
back, on the right side of his body.
They saw the incident clearly for the reason that the premises was
well-lighted by an electric bulb in front of Aling Digna’s Store.[22]
The respective
testimonies of the two (2) prosecution witnesses do not suffer from any serious
and material contradictions that can detract from their credibility. The trial
court gave full faith and credence to the respective testimonies of prosecution
witnesses Willy Conde and Elmer Olesco as against those of the appellants. The
defense did not dispute the presence of the said prosecution witnesses in front
of Aling Digna’s Store in Bagong Nayon, Valenzuela, Metro Manila when the
stabbing incident occurred. The defense
likewise failed to adduce adequate evidence to establish any improper motive
that may have impelled the same witnesses to falsely testify against the
appellants. The bare allegation of the
defense that the prosecution witnesses, Willy Conde and Elmer Olesco, and the
victim, Noel Rioflorido, Jr., were members of a fraternity is too shallow and
does not deserve even a scant consideration.
It is well-settled rule that the evaluation of the testimonies of
witnesses by the trial court is received on appeal with the highest respect
because such court has the direct opportunity to observe the witnesses on the
stand and determine if they are telling the truth or not.[23]
However, this
Court finds itself unable to agree with the trial court that conspiracy existed
in this case. Under Article 8 of the
Revised Penal Code, a conspiracy exists when two or more persons come to an
agreement concerning the commission of a felony and decide to commit it. Likewise, there is conspiracy if at the time
of the commission of the offense the appellants had the same purpose and were
united in its execution.[24]
It appears that
appellant Arnold Calumpang was divested of his wristwatch, necklace and wallet
by three (3) unidentified persons while he was on his way to visit his aunt in
Bagong Nayon, Valenzuela, Metro Manila.
Subsequently, Noel Rioflorido, Jr. was apprehended by appellant Rolando
Cardel and other concerned citizens in Bagong Nayon as suspect in the snatching
of Calumpang’s personal belongings. The
prosecution failed to establish that appellants Cardel and Calumpang came to an
agreement to kill Rioflorido, Jr., nor any such agreement may be deduced from
the manner in which the offense was committed; or from the acts of the
appellants before, during, and after the commission of the crime, indubitably
pointing to and indicating a joint purpose, concert of action and a community
of interest.[25]
The evidence
shows that appellant Cardel and the concerned citizens were on their way to
bring Noel Rioflorido, Jr. to the bantay bayan headquarters in Bagong Nayon,
when the latter resisted arrest and attempted to escape. Prosecution witness Willy Conde testified on
direct examination that when appellant Cardel stabbed Rioflorido, Jr.,
appellant Calumpang had already fled from the scene of the crime, to wit:
Fiscal: At the time that Cardel stabbed Jun what was Arnold doing?
A: He
ran away, sir.
Q: You
mean he was not around when Cardel stabbed Noel?
A: Yes,
sir.
Q: So
you are saying that Arnold after boxing Jun had already left or immediately ran
away?
A: Yes
and then Rolando stabbed him, sir.
Q: So
when Jun was stabbed only Rolando Cardel was there?
A:
Yes sir.[26]
There is no
basis for the conclusion of the trial
court “that both accused took the law
into their own hands by practically executing Noel Rioflorido, Jr. xxx in
conspiracy with each other”. It should be pointed out that apppellant Calumpang
could not have assented nor actively cooperated in the killing of the victim
for the reason that he was no longer at the scene of the crime when appellant
Cardel stabbed Rioflorido, Jr.. The existence of conspiracy is never presumed. It is axiomatic that the prosecution must
establish conspiracy beyond reasonable doubt.[27] Hence, the appellants will be
separately adjudged according to the extent of their individual participation
in the commission of the crime charged in the information.
Article 248 of
the Revised Penal Code, as amended, states:
“Article 248. Murder.-
Any person who, not falling within the provisions of Article 246 shall kill
another, shall be guilty of murder and shall be punished by reclusion
perpetua to death if committed with any of the following attendant
circumstances:
1.
With treachery, taking advantage of superior strength, with the aid of
armed men, or employing means to weaken the defense or of means or persons to
insure or afford impunity.
2.
In consideration of a price, reward or promise.
3.
By means of inundation, fire, poison, explosion, shipwreck, stranding of
a vessel, derailment or assault upon a railroad, fall of an airship, or by
means of motor vehicles, or with the use of any other means involving great
waste and ruin.
4. On occasion of any of the
calamities enumerated in the preceding paragraph, or of an earthquake, eruption
of a volcano, destructive cyclone, epidemic or other public calamity.
5.
With evident premeditation.
6.
With cruelty, by deliberately and inhumanly augmenting the suffering of
the victim, or outraging or scoffing at his person or corpse.”
We do not find
sufficient evidence to hold appellant Arnold Calumpang liable for the killing
of Noel Rioflorido, Jr.. Appellant Calumpang desisted from inflicting further
blows, after punching Rioflorido, Jr. once on the right side of the face, and
immediately fled from the scene of the crime. His actuation hardly suggests any
intent to kill the victim. He merely vented his anger on Rioflorido, Jr. when the latter, who was allegedly one (1)
of the three (3) persons who earlier divested him of his personal belongings,
resisted apprehension and attempted to escape.
Dr. Maximo Reyes did not find any injury on the body of Rioflorido, Jr.
that may have caused or contributed to his death as a result of the fist blow
from appellant Calumpang. Accordingly,
appellant Calumpang should be acquitted.
On the other
hand, it has been sufficiently established that appellant Rolando Cardel was
the one who inflicted the stab wound at the back, on the right side of the body
of Noel Rioflorido, Jr. which, according to Dr. Maximo Reyes, was the wound
that caused the death of the victim.
Prosecution witnesses Willy Conde and Elmer Olesco testified that
appellant Cardel stabbed Rioflorido, Jr. and left the scene of the crime only
after the body of Rioflorido, Jr. was already sprawling on the ground.
The evidence,
however, failed to establish the existence of the qualifying circumstance of
treachery. The requisites for
appreciating treachery (alevosia) in the commission of the crime are: 1) at the time of the attack, the victim was
not in a position to defend himself; 2)
appellant consciously and deliberately adopted the particular means, methods or
forms of the attack employed by him.[28] As correctly observed by the Office
of the Solicitor General, when appellant Cardel stabbed Noel Rioflorido, Jr.
the latter was resisting and was even attempting to escape. Treachery cannot be appreciated when the evidence
shows that at the time of the attack, the victim was not rendered totally
helpless and defenseless.[29]
The fact that
the victim had a stab wound at the back is not, in itself, indicative of
treachery.[30] Where treachery is alleged, the
manner of attack must be proven. It
cannot be presumed or concluded merely on the basis of the resulting crime.[31] Also, it does not appear that
appellant Cardel consciously adopted the mode of attack to facilitate the
killing of Rioflorido, Jr. without risk to himself. The stabbing of the victim by appellant Cardel was the result of
a rash and impetuous impulse of the moment, rather than from a deliberate act
of will[32] thus, negating the existence of
treachery. Based on the investigation
that he conducted relative to the stabbing incident, Patrolman Arnold Alabastro
testified, as follows:
Atty. Domingo:
Q: Mr.
witness, based on your investigation, what precipitated the stabbing incident?
A: The
snatching incident, sir.
Q: Specifically,
what?
A: The
resistance put up by Rioflorido, (Jr.) when he was arrested, sir. May I be allowed to elaborate on my answer?
Q: Please
do.
A: When
the victim Noel Rioflorido, (Jr.) is a suspect in the snatching incident, then
he was nabbed by Rolando Cardel together with the concerned citizens. He was arrested and was brought along with
the Bantay Bayan, concerned citizens together with the victim in the snatching
incident and on their way to the Bantay Bayan Noel Rioflorido, (Jr.) resisted
and that precipitated the stabbing incident. (sic)
Court:
Q: Who
resisted?
A: Noel
Rioflorido, (Jr.) ma’am and that brought the stabbing incident.[33]
Likewise, abuse
of superior strength may not be appreciated to qualify the killing to the crime
of murder for the reason that the same is not alleged in the information. 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.[34]
In any event,
the trial court grievously erred when it ruled the existence of abuse of superior
strength in the case at bench. To appreciate the attendant circumstance of
abuse of superior strength, what should be considered is whether the aggressors
took advantage of their combined strength in order to consummate the offense. It is considered whenever there is a
notorious inequality of forces between the victim and the aggressor, possessing
a superiority of strength notoriously advantageous to the aggressor which is
selected or taken advantage of by him in the commission of the crime.[35] There is no evidence in the case at
bar to show that appellants Rolando Cardel and Arnold Calumpang took advantage
of their combined strength in order to consummate the offense. It should be pointed out that appellant Calumpang
immediately fled from the scene of the crime after punching Noel Rioflorido,
Jr., leaving behind appellant Cardel who stabbed the victim subsequently.
On the other
hand, appellant Rolando Cardel cannot be considered as acting in the
fulfillment of a duty or in the lawful exercise of a right or office so as to
justify his act of stabbing to death Noel Rioflorido, Jr. under Article 11(5)
of the Revised Penal Code. It appears
from the evidence that effective July 2, 1991, appellant Cardel was not anymore
a member of the bantay bayan of Bagong Nayon, Valenzuela, Metro Manila.[36]
The ordinary
mitigating circumstance of lack of intent to commit so grave a wrong under
Article 13(3) of the Revised Penal Code is also unavailing in this case. This mitigating circumstance addresses
itself to the intention of the offender at the particular moment when he
executes or commits the criminal act.[37] Noel Rioflorido, Jr. suffered two
(2) serious stab wounds in his body.
One (1) was located in the right deltoid area while the other was aimed
by appellant Cardel at the back of the victim, on the left side of the body,
severing the lower part of the upper lobe, left lung, and posterior aspect of
the left ventricle of the heart. The number, location and nature of the said
stab wounds belie the appellant’s claim of lack of intention to commit so grave
a wrong against his victim.
However, the
mitigating circumstance of voluntary surrender should be credited in favor of
appellant Rolando Cardel. For voluntary
surrender to be appreciated as a mitigating circumstance, the following
requisites must concur: (1) the
offender has not been actually arrested; (2)
the offender surrenders himself
to a person in authority; and
(3) his surrender was voluntary.[38] It appears that Cardel was never
arrested in connection with the killing of Noel Rioflorido, Jr.. He voluntarily surrendered to the Paseo de
Blas Police Station in Valenzuela, Metro Manila on the same day the stabbing
incident happened on August 12, 1991.
Considering the
absence of any qualifying circumstance in the case at bar, appellant Rolando
Cardel is liable for the crime of homicide only. While there is one (1)
attendant mitigating circumstance of voluntary surrender, there is no aggravating circumstance.
WHEREFORE, the Decision of the Regional Trial
Court of Valenzuela, Metro Manila, Branch 172, in Criminal Case No. 457-V-91,
is MODIFIED. Appellant Arnold
Calumpang y Valerio is hereby ACQUITTED of the crime of murder on
the ground of reasonable doubt. Appellant
Rolando Cardel y Dizon is hereby found
GUILTY beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of homicide, and there being one
mitigating circumstance of voluntary surrender and no aggravating circumstance
in offset, he is hereby sentenced to suffer the indeterminate penalty of ten
(10) years of prision mayor, as minimum, to twelve (12) years and one
(1) day of reclusion temporal, as maximum; and to pay the heirs of the
victim the amount of P50,000.00 by way of civil indemnity ex delicto.
SO ORDERED.
Bellosillo,
(Chairman), Mendoza, Quisumbing, and Buena, JJ., concur.
[1] Penned
by Judge Teresita Dizon-Capulong. Rollo, pp. 23-30.
[2] TSN
dated September 2, 1991, pp. 5-11; TSN
dated September 16, 1991, pp. 5-6; TSN
dated September 20, 1991, pp. 2-6.
[3] Exhibit
“H”.
[4] Exhibit
“G”.
[5] Exhibits
“J” and “K”.
[6] TSN
dated December 2, 1991, pp. 11-13.
[7] TSN
dated September 30, 1991, p. 5.
[8] TSN
dated October 23, 1991, pp. 6-8.
[9] TSN
dated October 23, 1991, pp. 5-6.
[10] Exhibit
“1”.
[11] TSN dated February 24, 1992, pp. 5-14.
[12] TSN
dated February 24, 1992, pp. 14-17; TSN
dated March 6, 1992, pp. 3-5.
[13] TSN
dated March 6, 1992, pp. 6-8.
[14] TSN
dated March 6, 1992, pp. 8-10.
[15] TSN
dated March 23, 1992, pp. 4-7.
[16] TSN
dated March 23, 1992, pp. 7-10.
[17] TSN
dated March 23, 1992, pp. 10-11.
[18] Rollo,
pp. 29-30.
[19] Rollo,
p. 30.
[20] Rollo,
pp. 106-129.
[21] People
vs. Aquino, 284 SCRA 369, 375 (1998);
People vs. Tenorio, 284 SCRA 420, 432 (1998).
[22] TSN
dated September 2, 1991, p. 11.
[23] People
vs. Baccay, 284 SCRA 296, 304 (1998).
[24] People
vs. Bergante, 286 SCRA 629, 642 (1998).
[25] People
vs. Perez, et al., G.R. No. 130501,
September 2, 1999.
[26] TSN
dated September 2, 1991, p. 11.
[27] People
vs. Hilario, 284 SCRA 344, 354 (1998);
People vs. Lising, 285 SCRA 595, 643 (1998); People vs. de Vera, et al., G.R. No. 128966, August 18, 1999.
[28] People
vs. Reyes, 287 SCRA 229, 238 (1998).
[29] People
vs. Carpio, 191 SCRA 108, 118 (1990).
[30] People
vs. Germina, 290 SCRA 146, 151 (1998).
[31] People
vs. Asis, 286 SCRA 64, 74 (1998).
[32] People
vs. Tugbo, Jr., 196 SCRA 133, 139 (1991).
[33] TSN
dated October 28, 1991, pp. 9-10.
[34] People
vs. Medina, 300 SCRA 98, 117 (1998).
[35] People
vs. Aquino, G.R. No. 126047, September 16, 1999.
[36] TSN
dated December 23, 1991, p. 8; Exhibit
“M”.
[37] People
vs. Abueg, 145 SCRA 622, 634 (1986).
[38] People
vs. Timblor, 285 SCRA 64, 79 (1998).