SECOND DIVISION
[G.R. No. 123077.
July 20, 2000]
THE PEOPLE OF THE
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. LIBERATO GIGANTO, SR., REYNALDO
GIGANTO, EDGARDO GIGANTO, and LIBERATO GIGANTO, JR., accused-appellants.
D E C I S I O N
MENDOZA, J.:
This is an
appeal from the decision[1] of the Regional Trial Court, Branch
52, Puerto Princesa City, finding accused-appellants Liberato, Sr., Reynaldo,
Edgardo, and Liberato, Jr., all surnamed Giganto, guilty beyond reasonable
doubt of the crime of murder and sentencing each of them to suffer the penalty
of reclusion perpetua, with the accessory penalties of civil
interdiction for life and of perpetual absolute disqualification, and to
indemnify the heirs of the deceased Francisco Florentino, jointly and severally,
in the amount of P50,000.00 plus costs.
The information
against accused-appellants alleged[2] ¾
That on or about the 30th day of
October, 1993, in the evening, at Sitio Subingao, in Barangay Dumarao,
Municipality of Roxas, Province of Palawan, Philippines, and within the
jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused conspiring,
confederating together and mutually helping one another, with evident
premeditation and treachery, and with the use of superior strength, while armed
with an air gun and bladed weapons, with intent to kill, did then and there
wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously attack, assault and hack with their bladed
weapons, one FRANCISCO FLORENTINO, hitting him in the vital parts of his body
and inflicting upon him the following injuries:
1. Hack
wound on the occipital area, penetrating the cranium;
2. Hack
wound, occipital area cutting the cervical vertebrae;
3. Hack
wound, temporal area penetrating the cranium;
4. Hack
wound, posterior neck cutting the cervical vertebrae and major cervical
vessels;
5. Hack
wound on the thoracic vertebrae;
6. Multiple
superficial hack wound on the neck;
7. Amputation
of lower left arm; and,
8. Two
hack wounds on the buttock, left side.
which were the direct and immediate
cause of his instantaneous death.
CONTRARY TO LAW.
When arraigned,
accused-appellants pleaded not guilty, whereupon, trial commenced.
The evidence for
the prosecution is summarized in the following portion of the appealed
decision:[3]
Gina Martisano, a daughter of
Guillermo Martisano, was to be wedded on October 31, 1993 to Liberato Giganto,
Jr., a son of Liberato Giganto, Sr. The
prospective bride and groom are both residents of Sitio Subingao, Barangay
Dumarao, Roxas, Palawan, and as was traditional, the wedding feast follow[ing]
the exchange of nuptial vows was to be held in the residence of the prospective
bride.
The wedding ceremony was to be
performed in the morning of October 31, 1993, and to be followed by the wedding
reception. The preparation for the
wedding feast, undertaken mostly by members of the family and relatives of the
prospective groom, commenced as early as the evening of October [30], 1993 and
continued until lunch was actually served about noontime of October 31, 1993.
Guillermo Martisano, father of the
prospective bride, has 3 brothers and a married sister, Lourdes Martisano
Garmino, who resides with members of her family in Barangay Itangil, Dumarao,
Palawan. In connection with the
forthcoming marriage of his daughter, Guillermo Martisano extended invitation
to her sister and children to attend the wedding feast to be celebrated in
their residence in Sitio Subingao, Barangay Dumarao, Roxas, Palawan.
The personalities with involvement
of significance both in relation to the marriage between Gina Martisano and
Liberato Giganto, Jr., and in the prosecution of the instant criminal action,
appear to have been migrants to Palawan from the same town in the Province of
Aklan. They came on different dates to
different places in Palawan.
Prosecution witness Cristobal Sonio came to Palawan sometime in 1968 and
in 1972, established residence in Barangay Itangil, Dumarao, Palawan.
Liberato Giganto, Sr., his wife and
6 children, on the other hand, came to Palawan about 1985 to 1986 and first
lived in the town of Bataraza. In 1987,
however, the family moved to Sitio Subingao, Barangay Dumarao, Roxas,
Palawan. Having no place to live
thereat, one Francisco Florentino, a compadre of one of the children of
Liberato Giganto, Sr., welcomed the Gigantos to live with [him] in [his] own
residence in the same barangay. For
almost a year, and only after the Gigantos have acquired a parcel of land of
their own and built their own house thereon, all eight members of the family of
Liberato Giganto, Sr. lived, in the place of abode, with Francisco Florentino.
From Aklan, Guillermo Martisano
settled with his family and that of his cousin, Francisco Florentino, in Sitio
Subingao, Barangay Dumarao, Roxas, Palawan, years before the family of the
Gigantos settled in the same place from Bataraza, Palawan. The house built for the residence of the
Gigantos is estimated to be about 400 to 500 meters from the residence of the
family of Francisco Florentino.
It appears that despite the
invitation which Guillermo Martisano extended to his close relatives, his
married sister, Lourdes Martisano and her husband, Romulo Garmino, failed to
attend the wedding of Gina Martisano and Liberato Giganto, Jr. Their three children, however, a daughter
[and] two sons, were the ones they sent to attend the wedding. Moreover, on the basis of the invitation to
him, Romulo Garmino in turn invited Cristobal Sonio to the wedding.
Cristobal Sonio and the three
children of the spouses Lourdes and Romulo Garmino left their place of
residence in Barangay Itangil, Dumarao,
Palawan, at about 2:00 o’clock in the afternoon of October 30, 1993, and
arrived in Sitio Subingao, Barangay Dumarao, Roxas, Palawan, at about 4:00
o’clock that same afternoon. On getting
to Sitio Subingao, the three (3) Garmino children proceeded right away to the
place of residence of their uncle, Guillermo Martisano, where the feast for the
wedding of Gina Martisano and Liberato Giganto, Jr. is to take place, while
Cristobal Sonio passed by, and tarried for some time, in the residence of the
deceased Francisco Florentino.
At about 10:00 o’clock that same
evening Francisco Florentino left his residence with one Joey Segovia, Reynaldo
Martisano and Cristobal Sonio, and together they set out on foot to go to the
residence of Guillermo Martisano, about half a kilometer away, to help in the
preparation for the wedding reception for Gina and Liberato Giganto, Jr. Francisco Florentino and Cristobal Sonio,
however, were unable to get to the place for the celebration of the wedding.
It was a bright moonlight night
when Francisco Florentino left his residence with three others to go to the
residence of Guillermo Martisano for the celebration of the eve of the
wedding. When they got to that section
close to the river, about 2/5 of the way to their destination, they were
waylaid by Liberato Giganto, Sr., and his three sons, Reynaldo, Edgar[do] and
Liberato, Jr., all of whom are armed.
Liberato, Sr. was armed with an air
gun while his three sons were armed with bolos. With Liberato Giganto, Sr. pointing/poking the air gun to
Francisco Florentino, the Gigantos encircled and isolated Francisco Florentino
from his three companions. Then from
behind, Liberato Giganto Jr. delivered the first hacking blow on Francisco
Florentino, hitting the latter on his back.
Not to be outdone, Reynaldo Giganto and Edgar[do] Giganto, one after the
other, also hacked the victim similarly hitting him on his back.
Overcome with fear and
apprehension, the victim’s companions, except for Cristobal Sonio, ran away on
commencement by the offenders of the attack on Francisco Florentino. First to run away from the scene was Gerry
Martisano followed by Joey Segovia. Not
much acquainted with the place, Cristobal Sonio was unable to run away but hid
himself behind a thick growth of tall grasses nearby.
From the place where he hid, he
subsequently saw the accused dragged the fallen body of Francisco Florentino
towards the river. Then they dumped the
lifeless body of the victim close to the river and Liberato Giganto, Sr. hacked
Francisco Florentino, hitting him on his lower left arm causing it to be
amputated. Thereafter, Liberato
Giganto, Jr. also hacked the victim on his neck causing it to be similarly
disarticulated. Horrified by the
gruesome spectacle that he beheld with the aid of the bright [light] of the
full moon, Cristobal Sonio ran way from where he had been hiding and did not
proceed anymore to the residence of the Martisanos where the wedding is to take
place.
In the morning of October 31, 1993,
the body of Francisco Florentino was found in the river of Barangay Dumarao,
Roxas, Palawan, close to where the victim was hacked by the brothers, Liberato,
Jr., Edgar[do] and Reynaldo, all surnamed Giganto and their father, Liberato
Giganto, Sr. About 4:30 o’clock in the
afternoon of the same day, Dr. Leo C. Salvino, Municipal Health Officer of
Roxas, Palawan, conducted in Barangay III, Roxas, Palawan, an autopsy of the
body of Francisco Florentino.
In connection with his examination
of the body of Francisco Florentino, the examining physician issued a
handwritten Autopsy Report, marked Exh. “C” which contained the following:
PHYSICAL EXAM FINDINGS:
HEAD - 1)
Hacking wound, 15 cm., 5 cm.
deep, occipital area, penetrating the cranium with exenteration of brain
sus. and amputation of (L) ear tragus and anti-tragus.
2) Hacking wound, 13 cm., 5 cm.
deep, occipital area, with complete disarticulation of cervical vertebrae.
3) Hacking wound, 13 cm., 7 cm.
deep, temporal area, penetrating the cranial cavity.
NECK - Hacking
wound, 15 cm., 8 cm. deep, posterior neck, with complete disarticulation of
cervical vert. and severed major cervical vessels.
BACK 1) Hacking wound, 39 cm., 9 cm. deep, bet.
thoracic vert. 1 and 2, with complete disarticulation of thoracic vertebrea.
2) Multiple superficial hacking wounds.
EXT - 1) Amputation of
distal 3rd (L) lower arm.
2) Hacking wound, 10 cm. x 1 cm.
,(L) buttock
3) Hacking wound, 8.5 cm. x 2
cm., (L) buttock.
PROBABLE CAUSE OF DEATH:
- Intracranial Hemorrhage due to multiple hacked
wound.
- Severed spinal cord due to multiple hacked
wound.
The evidence for
the defense is summarized in the following portion of the trial court’s
decision:[4]
Through the testimonies of
Guillermo Martisano, father of the bride and father-in-law of co-accused
Liberato Giganto Jr., and [of] two of the four accused, namely Liberato
Giganto, Sr. and Reynaldo Giganto, the defense sought to prove that for the
duration of the period from early in the evening of October 30, 1993 until
dinner time in the evening of October 31, 1993, all four accused have always
been in the residence of Guillermo Martisano helping in the preparation of the
food to be served to the guests and visitors, and subsequently assisting in
serving food and entertaining guests.
None of them had been to the scene of the slaying, nor in the immediate
vicinity thereof about the time of its supposed commission.
Co-accused Liberato Giganto, Sr.,
father of all three other co-accused declared that on invitation of his
son-in-law, he and members of his family came to Sitio Subingao, Barangay
Dumarao, Roxas, Palawan, from Bataraza, Palawan, sometime in 1987. As they were yet without any place for his
big family to live in, and on invitation by Francisco Florentino, a compadre of
his son-in-law, the Gigantos were accommodated in the residence of the
latter. For almost a year, and until
they have acquired a land and build a house of their own thereon, the family of
the Gigantos lived free of charge in the residence of Francisco
Florentino. They build their house,
also in Sitio Subingao, Barangay Dumarao, Roxas, Palawan, about 500 meters from
the residence of Guillermo Martisano.
In relation to the forthcoming
marriage of his son, Liberato, Jr. to Gina Martisano on October 31, 1993,
Liberato Giganto, Sr., as early as 6:00 o’clock in the evening of October 30,
1993, went to the residence of Guillermo Martisano, father of his prospective
daughter-in-law, to oversee and supervise the food preparations for the wedding
feast following the wedding ceremony.
With him in the same place were his sons, Reynaldo, Liberato, Jr. and
Edgar[do], and some other friends who also helped in the preparation for the
wedding feast. The accused Liberato
Giganto, Sr. and all his three sons aforenamed remained in the residence of
Guillermo Martisano for the duration of the whole evening of October 30, 1993,
and until the conclusion of the celebration about 6:00 o’clock in the afternoon
of October 31, 1993.
Co-accused Reynaldo Giganto, the
only other accused who testified for the defense similarly set up the defense
of alibi. Among others, he affirmed his
father’s testimony that in 1987, the Gigantos first lived in the residence of
the deceased Francisco Florentino in Sitio Subingao, Barangay Dumarao, Roxas,
Palawan. After about a year, they
transferred to the house of their own build also in Sitio Subingao, about 500
meters away from the residence of
Francisco Florentino. By close
association with one another, Francisco and the Giganto brothers regard each
other as blood brothers. Moreover,
Liberato Giganto, Sr. and his wife, Anastacia, are treated as parents by
Francisco Florentino.
Like his father and two other
brothers, co-accused Reynaldo Giganto was in the residence of Guillermo
Martisano, also in Sitio Subingao,
Barangay Dumarao, Roxas, Palawan, starting about 6:00 o’clock in the
evening of October 30, 1993, attending to the food preparation for the wedding
of his brother Liberato, Jr. and Gina Martisano. Like his father and two other brothers, Reynaldo Giganto remained
in the residence of Guillermo Martisano, attending to the food preparations and
subsequently entertaining guests until about 6:00 o’clock in the evening of
October 31, 1993. For the duration of that
span of time, there was never any instance that Reynaldo Giganto, his father
and two other brothers leave the premises of the residence of Guillermo
Martisano.
Guillermo Martisano, father of the
bride, Gina Martisano, and who became the father-in-law of co-accused Liberato
Giganto, Jr., and one of two other witnesses for the defense, similarly
affirmed that from about 6:00 o’clock in the evening of October 30, 1993 until
about 6:00 o’clock in the evening of the following day, the accused Liberato
Giganto, Sr. and his three sons, co-accused Reynaldo, Edgar[do] and Liberato,
Jr., were in the residence of the Martisano attending to the food preparations
for the wedding reception following the solemnization of the marriage. He personally know such fact because as
father of the bride, he was also [at] home for that span of time and he
actually noticed the presence in his residence of all the persons of the
accused.
Tarciso Factor, the only other
witness for the defense, was called to the stand to prove that he [was]
acquainted with all the accused and the deceased Francisco Florentino, and that
no feud or quarrel exist between any member of the family of one and the
other. Like Guillermo Martisano though,
Tarciso Factor also [knew] that the deceased Francisco Florentino [was]
troublesome, especially after taking intoxicating drinks.
On September 28,
1995, the trial court rendered its decision finding accused-appellants guilty
of murder. The court gave credence to
the testimony of Cristobal Sonio and dismissed the defense of alibi of
accused-appellants on the ground that the house of Guillermo Martisano, where
they said they were at the time of the killing, and the place of the killing
can be negotiated by foot in only two and a half minutes. It was thus not physically impossible for
the accused-appellants to sneak from the residence of Guillermo Martisano and
proceed to the vicinity where they attacked the victim and his companions. The court surmised that because the victim
was known in the neighborhood as a troublemaker, “[t]he Gigantos may not have
relished the sad spectacle of a pleasurable wedding reception being disrupted
by the rowdiness of a troublemaker.” It relied on the sworn statement (Exh. A)
of Joey Segovia that accused-appellant Liberato Giganto, Sr. pointed an air gun
at them (including the victim Francisco Florentino), while the other
accused-appellants took turns in attacking the victim with their bolos. The trial court held:[5]
In seeking exoneration from the
charge, the accused relied on alibi, reputed to be one of the weakest defenses
the defendants can invoke. . . .
The place of residence o Guillermo
Martisano, where the accused were supposed to have been attending to the food
preparation for the wedding reception the following day, was only about half a
kilometer from the residence of the deceased Francisco Florentino, and only
about 400 meters from the river close to where the latter was purportedly
slain. Co-accused Reynaldo Giganto
conceded that the distance from Martisano residence to the place where
Francisco Florentino was slain can be negotiated on foot in only about 2½
minutes. (TSN, Roselyn Teologo, July
19, 1995, pp. 26 & 27)
On the basis of the proximity of
the distance between the two places, it was not physically impossible for the
accused to sneak from the residence of Guillermo Martisano where they were
attending to the food preparations for the wedding and proceed to the vicinity
of the river where they waylaid the deceased. . . .
The evidence for the defense
portrayed the deceased Francisco Florentino as a trouble maker. Because of that, neither Guillermo
Martisano, a first cousin of the deceased, nor anyone of the Gigantos extended
invitation for him to help in the food preparations or even as a guest in the
wedding reception. Yet, they may have
expected that Francisco Florentino will be going to the residence of Guillermo
Martisano with Cristobal Sonio, Joey Segovia and Reynaldo Martisano that
evening of October 30, 1993.
. . . . The Garmino children must
have been asked who were with them from Barangay Itangil, and they must have
related that they were with Cristobal Sonio, but who passed by and tarried for
some time in the residence of Francisco Florentino. The Gigantos may not have
relished the sad spectacle of a pleasurable wedding reception being disrupted
by the rowdiness of a troublemaker.
In connection with the police
investigation of the incident which resulted to the death of Francisco
Florentino, on November 3, 1993, Senior Police Officer 2 Roselito Cervantis Abis
took sworn statement of Joey Segovia, one of those with Francisco Florentino at
the time the Gigantos waylaid them by the river and eventually hacked and
killed the victim. In that same
statement marked Exh. “A”, Joey Segovia declared among others that:
Noon pong ika 30 ng Octobre, 1993,
sa Sitio Subingao, Barangay Dumarao, Roxas, Palawan, humigit kumulang bandang
ika 10:00 ng gabi, kami ay magkasama nina Francisco Florentino at Ronaldo
Martisano upang magtulong sa pagkatay ng mga baboy para sa handa sa kasalan at
nang sa daan papunta sa nasabing kasalan na malapit sa may ilog ay hinarang
kami ng apat na tao na sina Liberato
[Giganto, Sr.], Reynaldo [Giganto], Liberato [Giganto, Jr.] and Edgar[do]
[Giganto], at tinutukan kami ng air gun ni Liberato [Giganto, Sr.] habang ang
tatlo niyang anak ay pawang may hawak na mga gulok, at nakita kong biglang
inuundayan ng taga ni Liberato [Giganto, Jr.] si Francisco Florentino at nang
makita ko ang ganoong pangyayari ako ay napatakbo dahil sa takot at ako ay
nagtago at tuloy na akong umuwi sa aming bahay.” (Portion of sworn statement
marked Exh. “A”.)
When compelled to take the witness
stand as a witness for the prosecution, having been ordered arrested for having
previously failed to appear despite notice, the same witness turned hostile to
the case of the prosecution and declared that his declarations contained in the
sworn statement marked Exh. “A” are not true as he was only coerced, threatened
and intimidated into affixing his signature
in the same document.
The court, however, has not been
impressed by the reason for the retraction by Joey Segovia of his statements in
Exh. A”. It has not convinced the Court
that the contents thereof were only dictated to him by the close relatives of
the deceased Francisco Florentino.
Rather, it appeared to the court that the statement therein were
voluntarily given by him in the course of the investigation by the police,
conducted only a few days after the death of the victim. His responses to questions on
cross-examination tended to show that he himself gave the statements to the
police.
Q Do
you know why you were brought to the police station?
A Yes,
sir.
Q Why?
A In
order to give my statements.
Q And
did you give your Malayang Salaysay before the police?
A Yes,
sir.
. . . .
Q And
actually your statement was taken by the police?
A Yes,
sir.
Q And
the statement taken by the police is the same statement you identified earlier
and marked Exhibit ”A”?
A Yes,
sir. (TSN, Timothea RV Basa, March 14,
1995, pp. 13 & 14)
The death of Francisco Florentino
was conclusively established by the evidence.
The manner the deceased was attacked by the four accused as testified to
by prosecution witness Cristobal Sonio is borne by the kind of injuries inflicted
on the victim as found by Dr. Leo Salvino, the MHO of Roxas, Palawan, who
conducted the Post Mortem Examination the day following his death.
The dispositive
portion of the trial court’s decision reads:[6]
WHEREFORE, premises considered,
judgment is hereby rendered finding the accused Liberato Giganto, Sr., Reynaldo
Giganto, Edgar[do] Giganto and Liberato Giganto, Jr., guilty beyond reasonable
doubt as co-principals of the crime of murder and there being no modifying
circumstances appreciated, and not being entitled to the benefits of the
Indeterminate Sentence Law, all said accused are sentenced to reclusion
perpetua, with the accessory penalt[ies] of civil interdiction for life, and of
perpetual absolute disqualification; to pay the heirs of the deceased Francisco
Florentino, jointly and severally, civil indemnity of P50,000; and to
pay the costs.
SO ORDERED.
Hence, this
appeal. Accused-appellants maintain
their defense of alibi and question the credibility of prosecution witness
Cristobal Sonio. We find their
contentions to be well taken. As is
evident from the above excerpt, the trial court relied on the weakness of the
defense, rather than on the strength of the prosecution evidence, by
emphasizing that alibi is a weak defense.
While it is true
that alibi is a weak defense, it is equally settled that where the evidence of
the prosecution is itself feeble, particularly as to the identity of the
accused as the author of the crime, the defense of alibi assumes importance and
acquires commensurate strength.[7] The rule that alibi must be
satisfactorily proven was never intended to change the burden of proof in
criminal cases; otherwise, the accused would be put in the difficult position
of proving his innocence even where the prosecution’s evidence is vague and
weak.[8] The prosecution cannot profit from
the weakness of accused-appellants’ alibi.
It must rely on the strength of its evidence and establish the guilt of
the accused-appellants beyond reasonable doubt.[9]
In the case at
bar, discarding for the moment the defense of alibi of accused-appellants and
how easily they could have gone to the place of the commission of the crime,
there is no evidence of the prosecution on which a judgment of conviction can
be based. Two prospective prosecution
witnesses, Joey Segovia and Ronaldo Martisano, repudiated the affidavits which
they had given on November 3, 1993 on the ground that they had been coerced to
make the affidavits. These persons
retracted what they had stated in their affidavits twice, on November 26, 1993
and again on March 7, 1994, leaving the prosecution without any positive
evidence to link accused-appellants to the crime except the testimony of
Cristobal Sonio.
There are,
however, several reasons for disbelieving the testimony of Sonio.
First. Sonio surfaced as a witness only
on May 31, 1994, seven months after the killing of Francisco Florentino on
October 30, 1993. He was accompanied by
Rosalina Florentino, sister of the victim, to give his Sinumpaang Salaysay before
the police authorities. He testified
that he decided to come out and reveal what he knew of the case because he had
been told by Elpidio Florentino, the victim’s brother, that Joey Segovia and
Ronaldo Martisano had been paid to keep their silence and thereafter, refused
to testify for the prosecution.[10] Sonio said he was reluctant in the
beginning to testify for the prosecution because he lived quite far from the
court. But, upon learning that Segovia
and Martisano had retracted their
earlier sworn statements, he was moved by pity for the victim’s family and decided to come out in the open.
The explanation
for the eleventh-hour decision of Cristobal Sonio to talk is too pat to be
believed. Sonio allegedly dropped by
the house of the deceased on his way to the Martisano residence to which he had
been invited. He and the deceased were
good friends. If he really witnessed
the killing of his friend, it is hard to understand why he did not even tell
Elpidio Florentino, the brother of the deceased, or Anastacia Florentino, the
widow, about what he had allegedly seen considering that he admitted that he
saw them after October 30, 1993.[11] He could not possibly have been
afraid of reprisals as he did not reside in the town of Subingao where
accused-appellants and the victim lived.
Indeed, he never claimed he had been threatened or intimidated if he
testified.
As a rule, the
failure of a witness to report immediately a crime he had witnessed does not
affect his credibility. It is not
unusual for a witness to show some reluctance about getting involved in a
criminal case and such natural reticence of most people is of judicial
notice. The witness may also be
threatened.[12] For this reason, the delay or
vacillation in making a criminal accusation does not necessarily weaken the
credibility of a witness.[13] But, in this case, the delay of
seven months was not satisfactorily explained, especially considering the fact
that the deceased was a friend of the witness.
These circumstances distinguish this case from those cases[14] cited by the prosecution to explain
the failure of Sonio to come out earlier and implicate accused-appellants in
the crime.
It is more
likely that because Joey Segovia and Ronaldo Martisano repudiated their
previous statements, Cristobal Sonio was persuaded to take their place. It is noteworthy that Sonio’s statement was
given on May 31, 1994, while Segovia and Martisano made their retractions for
the second time on March 7, 1994. It is
also noteworthy that the two did not mention that Sonio was with them when the
victim was killed.[15] There is thus some doubt whether
Sonio actually witnessed the killing.
Second.
Evidence to be believed must not only come from the mouth of a credible
witness but must itself be credible.
This is a well-established rule of evidence.
In this case,
the killing took place on October 30, 1993, on the eve of a wedding. The prospective groom was accused-appellant
Liberato Giganto, Jr. The prospective
bride was a relative of the deceased, the first cousin of her father. Given these facts, why should
accused-appellants want to kill on the eve of a wedding and mar the joy of the
occasion when there was no sufficient reason for them to do so? Why would they wish to kill someone who was
a relative of the future wife of one of them?
Moreover, it
appears that when accused-appellants first arrived in 1986 in Sitio Subingao,
Barangay Dumarao to settle there, they lived in the house of the deceased and
stayed there until they were able to build their own house nearby. Their relations with the deceased remained
cordial. They did not have any
quarrel. Accused-appellant Reynaldo
Giganto said he and the victim regarded each other as brothers.[16] And even after the death of
Francisco Florentino, Anastacia, his widow, went to the house of
accused-appellants to borrow palay.[17] Given these facts, why should
accused-appellant kill Francisco Florentino?
To the question
why accused-appellant would want to kill the deceased, the trial court had one
answer: The deceased was a menace (salot)
in the community. Because of his
violent temper, people were afraid of him.
The trial court theorized that “[t]he Gigantos may not have relished the
sad spectacle of a pleasurable wedding reception being disrupted by the
rowdiness of a troublemaker.” That is certainly not a sufficient reason for a
prospective groom and his family to commit murder against a man who is a
relative of the future bride, whom they themselves regarded as a member of
their family.
Guillermo
Martisano was the cousin of the victim but he testified for the defense. Reason would dictate that he should testify
for the prosecution, considering that the victim was his first cousin. This fact and the other circumstances just
enumerated cast serious doubt on the veracity of Cristobal Sonio’s testimony.
When the
evidence of the prosecution is weak, it is necessary to prove motive;
otherwise, the guilt of the accused becomes open to reasonable doubt, and the
accused must be acquitted.[18] For if the inculpatory facts are
capable of two or more explanations, one of which is consistent with the
innocence of the accused and the other consistent with his guilt, then the
evidence fails to meet the test of moral certainty and is insufficient to
support a conviction.
WHEREFORE, the decision of Regional Trial
Court, Branch 52, Puerto Princesa City, in Criminal Case No. 11567 is REVERSED,
and accused-appellants Liberato Giganto, Sr., Reynaldo Giganto, Edgardo
Giganto, and Liberato Giganto, Jr. are ACQUITTED.
The immediate
release from confinement of accused-appellants is ordered unless some other
lawful cause warrants their further detention.
The Director of the Bureau of Corrections is directed to implement this
Decision and to report to this Court the action taken hereon within five (5)
days from receipt hereof.
SO ORDERED.
Bellosillo, (Chairman),
Quisumbing, Buena, and De Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.
[1] Per Judge Filomeno A. Vergara.
[2] Rollo, pp. 1-2.
[3] Decision, pp. 1- 6; Id., pp. 16-20.
[4] Id., pp. 7-11; Id., pp. 21-25.
[5] Id., pp. 11-15; Id., pp. 25-29.
[6] Rollo, pp. 31-32.
[7] People v. Galera, 280 SCRA 492 (1997); People v. De la Cruz, 279 SCRA 245 (1997).
[8] People vs. Manambit, 271 SCRA 344 (1997).
[9] People v. Ragay, 277 SCRA 106 (1997).
[10] TSN, pp. 12-13, March 15, 1995.
[11] Id., p. 9.
[12] People v. Castillo, G.R. No. 130188, April 27, 2000.
[13] People v. Funesalida, 281 SCRA 452 (1997).
[14] People v. Plasencia, 249 SCRA 674 (1995); People v. Francisco, 249 SCRA 526 (1995); People v. Pacapac, 248 SCRA 77 (1995).
[15] TSN, p. 6, March 14, 1995.
[16] TSN, p. 8, July 19, 1995.
[17] Id., pp. 18-19.
[18] People v. Vasquez, 280 SCRA 160 (1997).