EN BANC
[G.R. No. 125128.
July 19, 2000]
THE PEOPLE OF THE
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. ARIEL PEDROSO y CIABO, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
MELO, J.:
Under Article 63 of the Revised
Penal Code, if an accused is found guilty of a felony for which the law
prescribes a penalty composed of two indivisible penalties, the trial court
judge has to impose one or the other, not both. This rule, elementary as it is, needs reiteration in the case at
bar.
On June 17, 1994, Ariel Pedroso y Ciabo was charged before Branch
26 of the Regional Trial Court of the National Capital Region stationed in
Manila with the crime of robbery with homicide, committed as follows:
That on or about June 2, 1994, in
the City of Manila, Philippines, the said accused, conspiring and confederating
with others whose true names, identities and present whereabouts are still
unknown and helping one another, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and
feloniously, with intent of gain and by means of force, violence and
intimidation, to wit: while on board a passenger jeep cruising along Legarda
Street, Sampaloc, this City, suddenly announced it was a hold-up and
simultaneously poked firearms and bladed weapons on its passengers, then
forcibly take, rob and carry away from CONSTANTINO LUCERO y FAYLOGA the
following:
three (3) pcs. men's rings
two (2) pcs. gold necklace
one (1) pc. bracelet
one (1) pc. Seiko wristwatch
all in the
total amount of P22,000.00, belonging to said Constantino Lucero y Fayloga, against
his will, to the damage and prejudice of the said owner in the aforesaid amount
of P22,000.00, Philippine currency.
That on the occasion of the said
robbery, the said accused in pursuance to their conspiracy, did then and there
willfully, unlawfully and feloniously with intent to kill, assault, attack and
use personal violence upon the person of said Constantino Lucero y Fayloga, by
then and there shooting the latter with unknown caliber of firearm hitting him
on the right side of the neck and left chest and thereafter stabbing him with
bladed weapons at the back of his body, thereby inflicting upon him serious
physical injuries, which are necessary fatal and mortal which were the direct
and immediate cause of his death thereafter and causing one ELSA DIOSO, also a
passenger of said jeepney to be hit by a stray bullet at the neck, and will
require medical attendance for a period of not less than one (1) day but not
more than nine (9) days and incapacitated and will incapacitate said Elsa Dioso
from performing her customary labor during the same period.
CONTRARY TO LAW.
(Rollo,
p. 7.)
Upon arraignment, Pedroso entered
a plea of not guilty. Trial ensued
thereafter, with the prosecution presenting five witnesses, namely, passengers
Elsa Dioso and Josephine de Leon, Medico-Legal Officer Dr. Ludivico Lagat, SPO3
Edgardo Ko, and Pacita Lucero, sister of the deceased victim Constantino
Lucero. For its part, the defense
presented two witnesses, accused-appellant Ariel Pedroso, and his friend Rolito
Roxas.
On April 23, 1996, the trial
court, the Honorable Guillermo L. Loja, Sr. presiding, rendered the decision
now under review, disposing:
WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED,
this Court finds the accused, ARIEL PEDROSO y CAIBO, GUILTY beyond reasonable
doubt of the crime of Robbery with Homicide as defined and penalized under
Article 294, par. 1, Revised Penal Code as amended by R.A. 7659, and hereby
sentences him to suffer the penalty of Reclusion Perpetua to Death plus
accessory penalty provided by law, and to indemnify the family of the victim,
Constantino Lucero, the sum of Eighty Thousand Pesos (P80,000.00) as actual
damages, and the sum of Three Hundred Thousand Pesos (P300,000.00) as moral
damages, without subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency, and to pay the
cost of suit.
SO ORDERED.
(Rollo,
p. 21.)
The case for the prosecution may
be synthesized as follows:
In the evening of June 2, 1994,
Elsa Dioso and Josephine de Leon were going home to Sta. Mesa from Divisoria,
where they had just visited a friend. They
boarded a passenger jeepney plying the Divisoria-Cubao route, sitting beside
each other on the right side of the jeepney.
As the jeepney passed Isetann Department Store along Recto Avenue, three
men got on board. One sat on the left
side of the jeepney, immediately behind the driver, while the other two sat on
the right side of the jeepney, one at Josephine de Leon's right, the other at
Elsa Dioso's left.
As the jeepney was approaching
the Nagtahan fly-over at around 9 o'clock, the person immediately behind the
driver, later identified as accused-appellant Ariel Pedroso, whipped out a gun
and announced, "Huwag kayong kikilos ng rnasama. Holdap ito! "
Simultaneously, the man at Josephine de Leon's right pulled out a balisong
while the man at Elsa Dioso's left brandished a gun. Pedroso took from the passenger seated
beside him, later identified as Constantino Lucero, the latter's necklace and
wristwatch. Encountering resistance
while removing Constantino's other jewelry, Pedroso shot the former. Constantino was not hit, however, as he was
able to push Pedroso's shooting arm, spoiling the latter's aim. Deflected, the bullet grazed Dioso's neck
and hit one of Pedroso's companions instead, who exclaimed, "Pare,
tinamaan mo ako. " Further efforts to remove Constantino's remaining
jewelry met with difficulty, prompting one of the hold-uppers to shout `Putang
ina, pare, patayin mo na 'yan. " A gunshot rang out and Constantino
fell to the floor of the jeepney. In
this position, he was stabbed several times by the knife-wielding cohort of
Pedroso. As the attack took place, the
other passengers, Elma Dioso included, jumped off the moving jeepney. However, upon noticing that Josephine de
Leon had been left behind inside the jeepney, Elsa DIOSO returned and sat at
the front passenger seat of the jeepney.
From that vantage point, she saw the victim being stabbed. The three hold-up men then alighted, hailed
a passing jeepney, and fled.
Ramon Aduviso, the driver of the
jeepney, sped to Station 8 of the Western Police District to get help. Escorted by police, Aduviso then rushed
Constantino to the University of the East Ramon Magsaysay (UERM) Hospital for
treatment. Constantino was, however,
pronounced dead on arrival.
Informed of the incident, PO3
Edgardo Ko went to the UERM Hospital to investigate the incident. Finding Constantino dead, Ko proceeded to
the scene of the crime. An examination
of' the jeepney revealed splotches of blood on its flooring. A deformed slug was likewise found under the
passenger seat of the jeepney.
Passengers Elsa Dioso and Josephine de Leon also appeared before the
police and gave their account of the incident.
In the afternoon of June 13,
1994, a police informant called up the WPD and informed the officer on duty
that the persons involved in the robbery-holdup could be found inside a vacant
lot along Leon Guinto Street, Malate, Manila.
Acting on the tip, the police rushed to the area and found two persons
there, one of whom is accused-appellant Pedroso. The two were brought to the police station for investigation, and
the witnesses to the holdup were called to confront the suspects.
Although placed in a police
line-up of seven persons, accused-appellant Pedroso was, without hesitation,
positively identified by witnesses Elsa Dioso and Josephine de Leon as one of
those involved in the robbery-holdup.
He was consequently arrested and a case of robbery with homicide filed
against him.
In the interim, Pacita Lucero,
the sister of Constantino, requested the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI)
to conduct an autopsy on the body of Constantino. Dr. Ludivino Lagat, an NBI medico-legal officer, conducted the
autopsy at around 9:30 in the morning of June 3, 1994. His examination revealed
that Constantino had sustained two gunshot wounds and five stab wounds, all of
which were fatal. The first wound was
caused by a gun fired from a distance of 1-2 feet, with the point of entry at
the right side of Constantino’s nape and exiting at his left cheek. The second gunshot wound, which had no exit
wound, was located slightly above and to the left of Constantino's groin. On the other hand, the first stab wound, located
on the left of Constantino's chest, perforated the victim's vena cava and
aorta. The autopsy report issued by Dr.
Lagat has the following findings:
Stab wound; all elliptical, clean
cut edges, with a sharp and a blunt extremities, oriented in different
direction:
1) 1.6
cms., located at the anterior chest wall, left side, 2.5 cms., from the
anterior median line; directed backward, downward medially, involving the soft
tissues, entering the left thoracic cavity and cutting the 2nd rib, then
perforating the superior vena cava and aorta, with a depth of 12.0 cm.
2) Four
(4) in number, with an area of 12.0 x 4.0 cms., shortest is 1.8 cm. and longest
is 2.0 cm., located at the thoraco-lumbar region; left side; 9.0 cms. nearest
and 20.0 cms., farthest from the posterior median line; directed generally
forward, 3 are penetrating, 1 entered through the 8"' intercostal space
and 2 through the 10th intercostal space; involving the soft tissues, then to
the lower lobe of the left lung twice (2x) and stomach, with a depth of 13.0
cm.
GUNSHOT WOUNDS:
1) ENTRANCE,
1.1 x 0.9 cms., ovaloid, inverted edges, contusion collar widest at the
inferior border, with tattooing measuring 5.0 x 4.0 cms., located at the nape,
right side; 5.0 cm. behind and 6.0 cm. below the right external auditory
meatus; directed forward, upward right to left, involving the soft tissues
fracturing the maxillary and palatine bones and bones on the middle cranial
fossa, left making an EXIT; 2.0 x 1.0 cms., stellate, everted edges at the left
maxillary area; 5.5 cms. in front and 2.0 cms. below the left external auditory
meatus.
2) ENTRANCE,
1.0 x 1.0 cms., round, inverted edges, clean cut almost uniform in
distribution, located at the left iliac region, 85.0 cm. from the left heel and
16.5 cm. from the anterior median line, directed backward, medially, slightly
upward, involving the soft tissues and fracturing the iliac bone and the
deformed slug was recovered in that area, 89.0 cm. from the left heel.
CAUSE OF DEATH: Stab wounds and
gunshot wounds.
(p. 75,
original Record.)
Pacita Lucero, the sister of the
victim, testified that their family spent P80,000.00 for the burial of her
brother. She presented receipts and
expense reports as proof of her claim.
Testifying in his behalf,
accused-appellant Ariel Pedroso asserted that at the time of the incident, he
was at home in Leon Guinto Street, Malate.
Accused-appellant claimed that he was only forced to admit to the crime
by the police, who mauled and tortured him while he was under detention. He claimed that when he reported his ordeal
at the hands of the police to the inquest fiscal, the latter ignored his
complaint. Accused-appellant, however,
did not present any medical certificate to prove his claim of torture.
Likewise, accused-appellant was
unable to present any other witness to corroborate or confirm his alibi. The testimony of his only witness, Rolito
Roxas, was limited to the alleged good and trustworthy character of
accused-appellant.
Giving full faith and credence to
the eyewitness accounts of Elsa Dioso and Josephine de Leon, the trial court,
in its April 20, 1996 decision, found accused-appellant guilty of robbery with
homicide and imposed on him the penalty of reclusion perpetua to death.
In this appeal, accused-appellant
anchors his prayer for acquittal on the alleged lack of credibility of
prosecution witnesses Elsa Dioso and Josephine de Leon. Specifically, he claims that he could not
have been positively identified by the prosecution witnesses since they were
not afforded a clear view of the hold-uppers under the circumstances. Accused-appellant asserts that the
prosecution’s evidence would, thus, be insufficient to support his conviction.
Accused-appellant's contentions
lack merit.
Preliminarily, it must be
observed that the issues raised by accused-appellant involve the credibility of
witnesses, matters which are best addressed by the trial court, it being in a
better position than an appellate court to decide such questions, having heard
the witnesses and observed their demeanor, conduct, and attitude under grilling
examination (People v. Pili, 289 SCRA 118 [1998]). Likewise, a trial court's findings on the
credibility of witnesses are entitled to the highest degree of respect and will
not be disturbed on appeal absent any clear showing that it overlooked,
misunderstood or misapplied some facts or circumstances of weight or substance
which could have affected the result of the case (People v. Pulusan, 290
SCRA 353 [1998]).
The exception spoken of above all
too clearly does not apply in the present case, the identity of
accused-appellant and his participation in the robbery having been established
beyond reasonable doubt by the testimony of Elsa Dioso and Josephine de Leon.
In his defense, accused-appellant
claims that it was impossible for the two witnesses to have seen him, the
jeepney being fully loaded at the time of the incident. This contention is belied by the testimony
of Josephine de Leon, thusly:
Court: How many hold-uppers were inside the jeepney?
A: There
were three (3), sir.
Court: Who shouted "hold-up" among the three?
A: The
one (1) besides the victim, sir.
Court: did you come to know the name of the hold-upper besides the
victim?
A: Yes,
sir.
Court: Even up to this time?
A: I
know him now, sir.
Court: If he is in court, can you identify him?
A: Yes,
sir.
Court: Please point to him.
A: There
he is (witness pointing to a person whom when asked answered by the name of
Ariel Pedroso the accused in this case)
Court: You have identified that the one who shouted
"hold-up" was the accused in this case, was he the one besides the
victim?
A: Yes,
sir.
Pros.: In what side of the jeepney was the accused Pedroso and the
victim seated?
A: Behind
the driver, sir.
xxx xxx xxx
Pros.: ...where was the victim Lucero seated?
A: In
front of me, sir.
Q: So
after they announced "hold-up ito!" and brought out their arms, what
happened next, if any?
A: They
divested Lucero of his jewelries, sir.
Court: Who divested Lucero of his jewelries?
A: The
one sitting besides him, sir. (witness referring to accused Pedroso)
(tsn,
Oct. 11, 1994, p. 21, 23, 25.)
The identification of
accused-appellant as one of the holduppers is further bolstered by the
testimony of Elsa Dioso who, on cross-examination, declared:
Atty. Fabe: When the announcement of hold-up was given, was there light inside
the jeepney?
A: Yes,
mam.
Q: How
would you describe the light?
A: Very
bright, main.
Q: When
you said Ariel Pedroso announce the hold-up, did you immediately look at him?
A: Yes,
mam, I saw his face.
Q: When
you saw the face of the accused, did you have some fear?
A: Yes,
ma’am.
Q: Did
you continue to look at him despite his announcement of hold-up?
A: Yes,
ma’am, but I pretended not to look at him.
Q: Because
you were afraid, is that correct?
A: Yes,
ma'am.
Q: So,
you looked at him at glance?
A: Yes,
ma'am.
Q: That
was about one (1) second?
A: Quite
longer, ma'am.
Q: Did
you not say that when you look at him as he announced the hold-up you did not
look at him because of fear?
A: Yes,
sir.
Q: You
were not able to see clearly his face at that time he announced the hold-up, am
I correct?
A: It
was recorded in my mind because I saw him, ma'am.
(tsn,
Oct. 11, 1994, p. 25.)
As has been observed by the
Court, the most natural reaction of victims of violence is to strive to look at
the appearance of the perpetrators of the crime and observe the manner in which
the crime is being committed (People v. Pulusan, supra.).
Neither is there any merit in
accused-appellant's contention that it was highly inconceivable for Elsa Dioso,
after alighting from the back of the jeepney, to transfer to the front
passenger seat and observe the holdup going on. As explained by Dioso, she reboarded the vehicle and sat at the
front seat thereof because her friend, Josephine de Leon, was still inside the
jeepney at that time. Moreover, the workings
of the human mind under emotional stress are unpredictable, such that people
react differently to startling situations: some may shout, some may faint, some
may be shocked into insensibility, some may openly welcome their intrusion (People
v. Bersabe, 289 SCRA 695 [1998]). In
this case, Elsa Dioso disregarded her own safety for the sake of a friend who
was left behind in the jeepney. In all
probability the action of Elsa was spontaneous, without conscious thought of
the consequences of her going back to the jeepney just to be with her friend.
Given the positive identification
of accused-appellant by the prosecution witnesses as one of the holduppers, his
defense of alibi must necessarily fail.
The defense of alibi is inherently weak and cannot prevail over the
positive identification of the accused-appellant as the offender (People v.
Maguad, 287 SCRA 535 [1998]). Moreover, for the defense of alibi to
prosper, it is not sufficient that accused-appellant prove that he was
somewhere else when the crime was committed; he must also show that it was
physically impossible for him to be at the locus criminis or its
immediate vicinity when the crime was perpetrated (People v. Cabebe, 290 SCRA
543 [1998]). In the case at bar, aside
from his bare assertion that he was in Malate at the time of the incident,
accused-appellant failed to adduce any evidence that it was physically
impossible for him to be present at the place where the crime was committed at
the time it happened. Leon Guinto
Street in Malate is not very far from Legarda.
It would not have taken a long time for accused-appellant to traverse
that distance, especially so, it was getting late in the evening (9 P.M.) with
the traffic already light and thinning out.
Furthermore, accused-appellant did not present any other witness to
corroborate his defense of alibi.
Already a weak defense, alibi becomes even weaker by reason of the
failure of the defense to present any corroboration (People v. Fuertes, 296
SCRA 602 [1998]).
Article 294(1) of the
Revised Penal Code reads:
Art. 294. Robbery with violence against or intimidation of
persons-Penalties.-Any person guilty of robbery with the use of violence
against or intimidation of any person shall suffer:
1.
The penalty of reclusion perpetua to death, when by reason or on
occasion of the robbery, the crime of homicide shall have been committed...
The elements of robbery with
homicide are (1) the taking of personal property is committed with violence or
intimidation against persons; (2) the property taken belongs to another; (3)
the taking is with animo lucrandi; and (4) by reason of the robbery or
on the occasion thereof, homicide is committed (People v. Tidula, 292
SCRA 596[1998]).
It is beyond dispute that
accused-appellant and his cohorts employed violence and intimidation against
persons to consummate their criminal intent to take away, for personal gain,
the personal property of Constantino Lucero.
They brandished guns and a knife while divesting the latter of his
necklace, bracelet, wristwatch, and rings.
That a homicide was committed on
the occasion of the robbery is equally beyond dispute. Constantino Lucero was shot twice and
stabbed five times as he was divested of his jewelry. He was pronounced dead on
arrival at the UERM hospital.
We, therefore, agree with the
trial court that the crime committed by accused-appellant is robbery with
homicide, as defined and penalized under Article 294(1) of the Revised Penal
Code.
Likewise, conspiracy has been
amply and sufficiently proven in this case.
Pretending to be passsengers, accused-appellant and his cohorts boarded
Aduviso’s jeepney as it passed Isetann along Recto. When the hold-up was announced, they all pulled out and pointed
weapons at the passengers. They all
assaulted Constantino Lucero when the latter resisted. They alighted and fled from the jeepney
together.
These acts, taken together, show
that there was, among accused-appellant and his cohorts, unity of purpose and
design in the execution of the unlawful act, establishing beyond reasonable doubt
the existence of conspiracy (People v. Verzosa, 294 SCRA 466 [1998]).
It is settled that whenever
homicide has been committed as a consequence of or on the occasion of the
robbery, all those who took part as principals in the robbery will also be held
guilty as principals of the special complex crime of robbery with homicide
although they did not actually take part in the homicide, unless it appears
that they endeavored to prevent the homicide (People v. Nang, 289 SCRA
16 [1998]). Not only is there no
proof that accused-appellant tried to prevent the death of Constantino Lucero,
the evidence even positively shows that he fired at least one shot at the
victim.
Accused-appellant is, therefore,
liable for robbery with homicide. Under Article 294(1) of the Revised
Penal Code, the penalty for robbery with homicide is composed of two
indivisible penalties, namely, reclusion perpetua to death. As mentioned
earlier, the trial court erred when it sentenced accused-appellant to suffer
the penalty of reclusion perpetua to death.
Article 63 of the Revised
Penal Code provides:
Art. 63. Rules for the application of indivisible penalties.-
xxx xxx xxx
In all cases in which the law
prescribes a penalty composed of two indivisible penalties, the following rules
shall be observed in the application thereof:
1. When
in the commission of the deed there is present only one aggravating
circumstance, the greater penalty shall be applied.
2. When
there are neither mitigating nor aggravating circumstances in the commission of
the deed, the lesser penalty shall be applied.
3. When
the commission of the act is attended by some mitigating circumstance and there
is no aggravating circumstance, the lesser penalty shall be applied.
4. When
both mitigating and aggravating circumstances attended the commission of the
act, the courts shall reasonably allow them to offset one another in
consideration of their number and importance, for the purpose of applying the
penalty in accordance with the preceding rules, according to the result of such
compensation.
Withal, in all cases in which the
law prescribes a penalty composed of two indivisible penalties, the court is
mandated to impose one or the other, depending on the presence or absence of
mitigating and aggravating circumstances.
Since no aggravating circumstance was alleged in the information - and
to be sure if one were later proved during the trial, it could not be
appreciated so as to increase the penalty to death, and since neither was any
mitigating circumstance established by the defense, the lesser penalty, or reclusion
perpetua, should be imposed upon accused-appellant.
As to accused-appellant's civil
liability, aside from the award of P80,000.00 as actual damages, civil
indemnity in the amount of P50,000.00 should be awarded to the heirs of
Constantino Lucero, the same being automatically granted to the offended party
or his heirs in the case of death, without need of further evidence other than
the fact of the commission of the crime and the accused-appellant’s culpability
therefor (People v. Sumalpong, 284 SCRA 464 [1998]). As to the award of moral damages, the Court
finds the amount of P300,000.00 to be excessive under the circumstances, and
reduces the same to P50,000.00
WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from and under review finding
accused-appellant GUILTY of ROBBERY WITH HOMICIDE is hereby AFFIRMED with the
modification that accused-appellant is sentenced to suffer the reduced penalty
of RECLUSION PERPETUA. He is likewise
ordered to indemnify the heirs of the victim the sum of Fifty Thousand
(P50,000.00) Pesos as civil indemnity, Eighty Thousand (P80,000.00) Pesos as
actual damages. The award of moral
damages is reduced from P300,000.00 to Fifty Thousand (P50,000.00) Pesos.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., Bellosillo,
Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing, Purisima, Pardo, Buena,
Gonzaga-Reyes, Ynares-Santiago, and De Leon, Jr.,
JJ., concur.