THIRD DIVISION
[G.R. No.
133795. July 27, 2000]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs. RAYMUNDO VILLAREZ, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
PANGANIBAN, J.:
After poring
over the records of the case, this Court finds no reason to reverse or modify
the trial court in its assessment of the witnesses’ credibility. It had the unique opportunity to observe
their demeanor and conduct on the stand.
It did not overlook, misunderstand or misapply any material
evidence. Hence, we affirm its judgment
as factually and legally correct.
The Case
Before the Court
is an appeal by Raymundo Villarez,[1] challenging the February 11, 1998
Decision[2] of the Regional Trial Court (RTC)
of Olongapo City (Branch 75), in Criminal Case No. 670-89. The decretal portion of said Decision, which
found him guilty of parricide, reads as follows:
“WHEREFORE, finding the accused Raymundo Villarez guilty beyond
reasonable doubt of the offense of parricide defined and penalized under
Article 244 of the Revised Penal Code as a principal by direct participation,
he is sentenced to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua with all the
accessory penalties attached to it; and to indemnify the heirs of the deceased
Bonifacio Villarez in the amount of P50,000.00.
“The accused shall be credited in full of his preventive
imprisonment if he had agreed in writing to abide by the disciplinary rules
imposed on convicted prisoners, otherwise to only 4/5 thereof.”[3]
The Information,[4] dated October 20, 1989, charged
appellant as follows:
“That on or about the 7th day of July, 1989 at around 6:00 o’clock
in the afternoon, at Brgy. San Isidro, in the [M]unicipality of Subic,
[P]rovince of Zambales, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the said accused, with intent to kill, and armed with an iron
pipe, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously assault, strike
and hit therewith Bonifacio Villares, his (accused) natural father, and
inflicting upon him physical injuries, described as follows:
‘-Lacerated wound 4 cm. parieto-occipital area;
-Lacerated wounds both 1 cm. at the
anterior axillary line 4th and 6th ICS right;
-Cerebral contusion.’
which directly caused the death of
Bonifacio Villares.”[5]
When arraigned
on January 10, 1996, appellant pleaded[6] not guilty.[7] After due trial, the lower court
promulgated its assailed Decision.
Hence, this
appeal.[8]
The Facts
Prosecution’s Version
In its Brief,[9] the Office of the Solicitor General
presents the prosecution’s version of the facts in this wise:
“In the early afternoon of July 7, 1989, Conrado Villarez had
alighted from a tricycle he rode from his office when he saw his brother
Raymundo Villarez (appellant) drinking with one Willie Manahan at Brgy. San Isidro, Subic, Zambales. At about 5:30 P.M. of that same afternoon,
Conrado was already resting by the window of his house at Brgy. San Isidro,
Subic, Zambales which was located inside a fenced compound wherein the houses
of his brother Raymundo Villarez (Appellant) and their parents Bonifacio and
Consorcia Villarez were built.
Conrado’s house was x x x five (5) to six (6) meters away from his
brother’s house while their parents’ house was about ten (10) meters away from
appellant’s house. At that time,
Conrado’s mother Consorcia Galang-Villarez was also standing by the window of
her house conversing with her husband Bonifacio Villarez who was then in the
yard in front of their window.
“Thereupon, Conrado and Consorcia while in their respective houses,
heard appellant having an altercation with his second wife Mary Ann Fernandez
as they (spouses) shouted invectives at each other. They also overheard one of appellant’s children crying and
shouting ‘Tama na po, Itay’ after apparently being hit by appellant.
“Afterwards, Conrado saw appellant going down his house and
proceeding towards their parents’ house nearby. As appellant shouted the words ‘Putang Ina mo matanda ka,
ganid’ he approached his father Bonifacio, then in the yard in front of his
house, and stabbed him twice with a knife hitting him at the right side of his
rib cage. Thereupon, appellant tried to
break the door of his parents’ house.
When he managed to open the door of his parents’ house he started to
chase his mother Consorcia
“Incensed with his own brother’s (appellant’s) actuations, Conrado
immediately jumped out of the stairs of his house, grabbed a lead water pipe
near the door, ran towards his brother and struck his brother Raymundo with it
thereby hitting him on the shoulder. As
a result of said distraction with appellant chasing Conrado, their father
Bonifacio managed to flee to the other side of the yard. Conrado then tried to hit appellant for the
second time but the latter evaded the strike and even picked up stones which he
threw at Conrado who likewise evaded the stones by running away from appellant
towards the street adjacent to their houses.
Forthwith, appellant pursued Conrado as he (appellant) threw stones at
Conrado who then tried to hit back at appellant with the lead pipe but their
mother Consorcia who had caught up with them placed herself between her sons
and tried to pacify them.
“While appellant and Conrado were grappling with each other for
possession of the lead pipe, appellant’s second wife Mary Ann Fernandez arrived
and struck Conrado with a piece of wood on his right shoulder. Conrado’s sister Ludy Maghirang likewise
arrived with a piece of wood and tried to help her mother. Suddenly, appellant grabbed from his sister
the piece of wood which he then used in hitting Conrado on his forehead and as
a result thereof, Conrado felt dazed which caused him to lie down on the ground
for a few seconds. Thereupon, when
appellant was already on top of Conrado, he (appellant) grabbed the lead pipe
from Conrado and chased his sister Ludy.
However, their father Bonifacio, appeared with a wooden stick but when
he met appellant, Bonifacio started to turn back but appellant hit him at the
back of his head with the lead pipe. As
a result, Bonifacio fell face down to the ground so his wife Consorcia rushed
to him and placed him on her lap.
“Meanwhile, appellant chased his
brother Conrado, then in shock, heading towards the place of the Mirador’s but
when he failed to catch up with him, appellant returned to where he left his
father. Meanwhile, one of Consorcia’s
neighbors had warned her that her son Raymundo (appellant) was coming back that
she felt so scared, left her wounded husband and returned to her house where
her youngest child was left inside.
“At that time, Conrado was proceeding towards the Barangay Hall
and farther to the house of Barangay Kagawad Bobis. Subsequently, Kagawad Bobis of Brgy. San Isidro, Subic, Zambales
who was resting at her house at Purok 2, near the Post heard somebody calling
for her assistance. She saw that it was
Conrado Villarez, also a resident of the same barangay, who told her that his
father Bonifacio had been hit with a lead pipe by his brother Raymundo. Thereafter, they proceeded towards the spot
where Conrado’s father Bonifacio lay bloodied.
Forthwith, she requested one of her staff members to help bring
Bonifacio to the hospital for treatment.
When [s]he noticed that Conrado was also wounded in his head, she told
him to seek medical assistance. She
also asked one of the barangay tanod to accompany Conrado to the police in
Subic to report the incident.
“When Bonifacio [had] already boarded the tricycle which [would]
take him to the hospital, appellant suddenly appeared holding the lead pipe and
upon seeing his brother Conrado chased the latter who managed to go inside the
house of one Lina Velacia Unable to find his brother Conrado, appellant walked
to and [fro] within the vicinity.
Eventually, appellant approached Kgd. Bobis, who as barangay Kagawad,
told him to surrender to her the lead pipe.
Appellant complied with her directive although he told her that ‘he was
really very mad and that he [would] kill everyone of them’ (papatayin ko
silang lahat). Subsequently, Kgd.
Bobis and a Barangay Tanod brought appellant and the lead pipe to the Barangay
Hall where some policemen from the Subic Police Station, including SPO4 Domingo
Permison, had already arrived.
Thereafter, Kgd. Bobis and several barangay officials surrendered the
lead pipe to the police authorities.
“Meanwhile, Bonifacio Villarez was taken to the Olongapo City
General Hospital where he was attended to by Dr. Pedro Ferrandiz, then senior
resident physician of the hospital. In
the course thereof, he found that Bonifacio Villarez sustained the following:
‘- Lacerated wound 4 cm.
parieto-occipital area;
- Lacerated wounds both 1 cm. at the anterior
axillary line 4th and 6th ICS right
-
Cerebral contusion.’
“Eventually, Bonifacio Villarez died at the hospital. Dr. Susan L. Gutierrez, then resident
physician of the hospital, issued a Certificate of Death which stated that the
immediate cause of death of the victim was cardiorespiratory arrest, the
antecedent cause was the intracerebral hemorrhage and the underlying cause was
the head injury.
“In connection with the death of Bonifacio Villarez, SPO4 Domingo
Permison of the Subic Police Station’s Investigation Section conducted an
investigation o[f] the case against appellant on July 11, 1989. He took statements of Consorcia Villarez and
Conrado Villarez on the matter on July 11, 1989. On July 12, 1989, he took the statement of Lilia Esposo. Aside from taking the statements of
Consorcia Villarez and Lilia Esposo, he also requested autopsy of the victim
and also asked appellant if he wanted the case submitted. SPO4 Permison likewise transmitted the lead
pipe which was more or less 2 feet by 3 inches long and one (1) knife which was
more or less 9 inches long, including the handle, which were previously turned
over to him by the desk sergeant then on duty to Police Officer Renato
Relocano, then evidence custodian, for which the latter issued a custody
receipt.
“During the trial of the case, Dr. Arnildo Tamayo, a physician of
the Olongapo City General Hospital, was presented to interpret findings indicated
in the medical certificate signed by Dr. Fernandez. Dr. Tamayo declared that he was assigned to conduct an
examination on all medico-legal cases in the hospital including stab wounds,
vehicular accidents and gunshot wounds and mauling since 1989 and Dr. Ferrandiz
was his senior resident. He declared
that he d[id] not know if Dr. Ferrandiz was still connected with the hospital
as he ha[d] not seen him for some time.
When asked what the ‘cerebral contusion’ as indicated in the medical
certificate meant, he explained that it was bruise at the cerebral area of the
skull where the brain [was] located and [was] permanent in nature. He declared that said wound at the
parieto-occipital area could [have been] caused by a blunt instrument like a
water pipe and that a water pipe could possibly cause cerebral contusion. He likewise opined that said injury in the
parieto-occipital area could also be fatal if associated with great force as it
could blast the meninges of the brain as it is at the meninges where the blood
vessels [we]re found. Dr. Tamayo also
declared that he [could] not say [i]f the assailant was left-handed or
right-handed. He opined that one
[could] hit a person at the mid-portion of the head and at the back even when
one [was] in front.
“SPO4 Renato Relocano testified during the trial that he [did] not
have the police blotter regarding the July 7, 1989 incident because it was
destroyed during the Mt. Pinatubo eruption in 1991 as the ‘bodega’ where it was
kept collapsed and all records stored there covering the period from the latter
part of 1990 to 1991 were destroyed and beyond reconstruction.
“Jane Villarez-Simbulan, one of the sisters of appellant Raymundo
Villarez, was likewise presented as a witness for the prosecution. She declared that appellant and his family
stayed with her at the house at Naugsol, Subic, Zambales in July 1995 after her
father died. She stated that appellant
started helping her in farming a lot an[d] during his stay with her family, she
observed that her brother was restless and could not sleep and would drink gin
heavily and get drunk. She further
testified that for about seven (7) times, she overheard appellant muttering to
himself about killing his own father and that there was an occasion when
appellant quarreled with her and threatened to stab her in front of her
children. She explained that
thereafter, appellant and his family left but eventually returned after several
weeks to her place although they transferred to a separate hut nearby. She declared that although she knew from the
start that appellant killed their father, she allowed him and his wife to stay
because she really pitied him as he was her brother and because his children
were in her custody.”[10] (citations omitted)
Defense’s Version
On the other hand,
appellant in his Brief[11] narrated the facts in this manner:
“The accused-appellant walking for home passed the house of his
parents Bonifacio and Consorcia Villarez of Barangay San Isidro, Subic,
Zambales.
“He overheard his mother chiding and nagging over his father’s
drinking habits. Noticing his presence,
the mother with all the insult and sarcasm that she [could] muster, uttered
‘join him’ when loosely translated in tagalog ‘yan magsama kayo.’ He answered that he ha[d] nothing to do with
their problem. ‘Why do you have to
answer, I am not talking to you’, replied the mother, in a loud angry voice.
“Walking out of his parent’s yard
to the street R.V. (for Raymundo
Villarez) was met by C.V. (for Conrado Villarez), who was then inside his
house, overheard the loud voices and suspecting that his brother R.V. was
quarreling or picking a fight with their mother, went down his house picked up
a lead (water) pipe approached the trio and hit face and head [sic].
“R.V. was not knocked down by the treacherous blows with a pipe
from C.V. and R.V. turned around to face his attacker. The brothers poised in their stance for the
confrontation, B.V. (for Bonifacio Villarez) the father sensed the inevitable
and rushed towards the duo to pacify them.
Just when he was behind R.V., C.V. aimed his swing [at] R.V., but the
latter ducked the blow for his head and instead hit B.V. in the head and went
down. Seeing what happened to his
father [C.V.] escaped with R.V. in chase.
At a distance in the cou[r]se of the chase C.V. threw and left behind
the pipe finding difficulty in his escape.
R.V. retrieved the same and went straight to the barangay hall to report
the incident and surrendered the fatal weapon to Kagawad Flocerfida Bobis.
“There were no arrests and detentions among the alleged
participants. R.V. lived with his
sister J.V. (for Jane Villarez) in another remote barangay to avoid escalation
of the family tragedy.
“R.V. with immediacy filed a case against C.V. for Frustrated
Homicide, docketed as Crim. Case No. 89-108-0, which [was] x x x resolved [at]
the Municipal Trial Court of Subic, Zambales, by Presiding Judge Edilberto
Fabunan.
“In the preliminary investigation conducted [at] the municipal
court level, the case against R.V. for parricide was dismissed for lack of
probable cause and the state witnesses [were] ‘coached’.
“[When the case was r]emanded[12] to the office of the provincial fiscal at Olongapo City,
then, assistant provincial prosecutor
Benjamin Fadera reviewed and
reinvestigated x x x and filed the case docketed as Crim. Case No. 670-89: for
PARRICIDE.”[13]
Trial Court’s Ruling
Ruling that
appellant had “delivered the fatal blow,”[14] the trial judge explained:
“In parricide, the prosecution must prove the death of the victim,
that he or she was killed by the accused, and that the victim [was] his parent
or child, whether legitimate or illegitimate, or the lawful spouse, or
legitimate ascendant or descendant of the accused. In the case at bench, the accused is admittedly a legitimate son
of the deceased Bonifacio Villarez with the latter’s legitimate wife Consorcia
Villarez. The deceased Bonifacio
Villarez died of ‘respiratory arrest’ caused by ‘intra-cerebral hemorrhage’ due
to a head injury. The lacerated wound 4
cm. [at the] parieto-occipital area could have been caused by a strong impact
on the head by a blunt instrument like a ‘waterpipe’. The wound was fatal because it caused the blasting of the
meninges of the brain where the blood vessels [we]re found. It is well established therefore that somebody
must have hit Bonifacio Villarez on the head with a blunt instrument which
caused the fatal wound. The issue
therefore is: who delivered the fatal blow?
“While prosecution witnesses testified that i[t] was the accused
who hit the deceased on the head with a lead pipe, the accused and his
witnesses insisted that it was Conrado Villarez who inflicted the fatal blow on
the head of his father, albeit by mistake because the blow was intended for
Raymundo Villarez.
“Domingo Carabacan, a disinterested bystander, witnessed the
incident when he was in San Isidro, Subic, Zambales, that fateful afternoon of
July 7, 1989 while selling fish. He
ha[d] been residing at the said place for 34 years and familiar with the
Villarez family. He testified:
‘q So what happened when
Raymundo failed to catch up with his sister?
a He
went back to the corner x x x of the street and it was at that point when he
met his father, sir.
q What
was the name of his father?
a Bonifacio,
sir.
q When
Raymundo Villarez met his father, Bonifacio Villarez, what happened?
a Raymundo
hit him sir. He tried to hit him twice and the victim fell when it found its
aim, sir.
q Why
did Raymundo Villarez [fail] to hit Bonifacio Villarez for the first time?
a He
evaded it, sir.
q And
[with] what did Raymundo Villarez hit Bonifacio Villarez?
a With
a lead pipe, sir.
q Do
you know what part of the body of Bonifacio Villarez was hit with the lead pipe
when Raymundo Villarez hit him?
a I
saw him hit the head, sir.
q And
what happened to Bonifacio Villarez when he was hit with a lead pipe?
a He
fell to the ground, sir.’
x x x x x x x x x
“The testimony of Consorcia Villarez is replete with details that,
to the mind of the Court, x x x could not have been a mere fabrication. She also was spontaneous in giving her
answers. A mother, by nature, would not
resort to falsehood even if the son is utterly discourteous and a
drunkard. Consorcia testified in the
manner she did because she observed the events first hand while only a few
meters away from the protagonists. Her
vivid recollections of the events five years after the killing impressed the
Court. It must have been a heavy burden
on her part which finally found a release when she testified in Court.
“The testimony of Conrado Villarez is likewise replete with
details that precludes fabrication. He
in effect corroborated the testimony of [his] mother Consorcia on material
points. When the accused arrived that
afternoon, obviously drunk, he heard him berating his children and abusing them
physically. He overheard one of them
shouting ‘Tama na po, itay.’ He was
only six meters away from his father in the same compound when he saw the
accused [approach] the former and [utter] ‘Putang Ina mong matanda ka,
ganid.’ The accused then stabbed with a
knife his father twice hitting the latter on the ‘right rib cage.’ He went down his house and grabbed a lead
pipe by his door to help his father.
The accused started throwing stones at him but was able to evade the
stones thrown until they reached the street in front of their houses. He was hit with a piece of wood by the
accused who grabbed the same from his sister Ludy who also arrived to lend
succor to their father. On the street,
his father Bonifacio reappeared but was hit on the top of his head by the
accused which made him fall to the asphalted road. Shocked, he r[a]n towards the barangay hall to ask for help. The accused appeared to have been shocked
also.
x x x x x x x x x
“The version of the prosecution of the incident as testified to by
the witnesses appears to the Court as more credible. The accused could only offer a denial of what his own mother,
brother, and sister testified to. He
did not deny his stabbing with a knife his own father. He suffered a wound on his face because Conrado
admitted having hit him with a pipe after he had stabbed his father.
x x x x x x x x x
“The Court finds that the evidence of the prosecution ha[s]
established beyond reasonable doubt that it was the accused who killed
Bonifacio Villarez. The motive was that
Bonifacio Villarez did not give the accused his share of the proceeds of the
sale of a house by Bonifacio. Thus, in
his drunken state he stabbed with a knife and hit on the head Bonifacio with a
lead pipe causing his death. This was
manifested when he uttered to his father before the killing ‘Putang ina mong
matanda ka, ganid.’ ‘Ganid’ means
greedy in local parlance. From the
testimonies of prosecution witnesses, the accused must have been inebriated at
the time of the killing. There is no
evidence to show that he was a habitual drinker of intoxicating liquor. As an alternating [circumstance] therefore,
his drunkenness must be considered as a mitigating circumstance under Article
15 of the Revised Penal Code.”[15] (citations
omitted)
The Issues
Appellant
submits that the court a quo committed the following errors:
“I
The court a quo was in error in
arriving at a verdict of conviction based [o]n an amalgam and [a] milieu of
totality of facts and circumstances in a web of material irreconcilabilities,
incong[r]uities and improbabilities.
II
The trial court was in error for in
its decision it overlooked, misapplied, misunderstood and misinterpreted
material facts of importance which if considered in favor of the appellant
would acquit him of the charge.”[16]
To put it more
succinctly, appellant questions (1) the credibility of the prosecution
witnesses and (2) the trial court’s appreciation of the facts.
The Court’s Ruling
The appeal has
no merit.
First Issue:
Credibility of Witnesses
Appellant
insists that there are material inconsistencies in the “totality of factual,
circumstantial and evidentiary proofs.”[17] However, as pointed out by the
Office of the Solicitor General,[18] he fails to specify these alleged
inconsistencies. What we find instead
is a confusion of arguments in his 12-page Brief. At bottom, he merely claims that the prosecution’s evidence
conflicts with his own version of the facts.
The trial court, unfortunately for him, chose to rely on the narration
of the prosecution’s witnesses. On this
score, we have often ruled as follows:
“The trial court has the singular
opportunity to observe and consider certain potent aids in understanding and
weighing the testimony of witnesses, such as the emphasis, gesture, and
inflection of the voice of the witnesses while they are on the witness
stand. As these are not incorporated
into the record, the appellate court cannot avail of them and must therefore
rely on the good judgment of the trial court.”[19] (emphasis ours)
After going over
the records of the case, we see no reason to deviate from the aforecited
principle. We have examined the
testimonies of all the witnesses and find no material error in the trial
court’s assessment of their credibility.
Contrary to Human
Experience
In trying to
make sense of the assertions of appellant, we can see his belabored attempt to
characterize the prosecution’s evidence as being contrary to human
experience. He dismisses as implausible
the prosecution’s theory that he had wrested from Ludivina Villarez a piece of
wood that he used to hit Conrado who was thereby overpowered, and that
appellant was then able to snatch the latter’s lead pipe which was described by
the defense as a “superior” weapon.
We find nothing
wrong with the narration of the prosecution witnesses that Ludy Maghirang[20] was indeed carrying a piece of wood
while trying to help her mother, who was sandwiched between Conrado and
appellant. Similarly, we find credible the prosecution’s claim that appellant
grabbed the piece of wood from Ludy and used it to hit Conrado. Appellant’s insistence that she should have
been presented to corroborate the prosecution’s story has no legal basis. We agree with the following arguments of the
solicitor general on this point:
“With respect to the prosecution’s alleged failure to present
Ludivina Villarez, the same is not fatal to the prosecution’s case as appellant
claims because the testimony of Conrado Villarez that it was from their sister
Ludy Villarez that appellant got a piece of wood which he used in hitting
Conrado and thereby momentarily disabling him which led to his subsequent loss
of hold of the water pipe, sufficiently established such fact. Moreover, if appellant believed that her
testimony would be fatal to the prosecution’s case by casting doubt on
Conrado’s credibility, there was no cogent reason why he did not call on her as
a defense witness considering that the rule that ‘evidence willfully suppressed
would be adverse if produced does not apply if: (a) the evidence is at the disposal of both parties; (b)
the suppression was not willful;
(c) it is merely corroborative or cumulative; and (d) the suppression is
an exercise of a privilege.”[21]
The theory of
the defense that it was preposterous for Conrado to flee from appellant while
the former was holding the “superior weapon”[22] does not hold water. There is hardly any difference between a
piece of wood and a lead pipe when both are used as weapons. Notwithstanding his assertion, appellant
admits that he chased Conrado.[23] This mix-up merely demonstrates the
contradiction in the arguments of the former.
The denunciation by appellant of the flight of Conrado does not deserve
much credence, because the prosecution witnesses sufficiently repudiated the
former’s self-serving claims. They clearly
established that Conrado was pursued by appellant.
Sister’s
Testimony as Hearsay
Appellant
denounces as hearsay Jane Villarez’s testimony that she heard him admit having
killed his father. We emphasize that
the declarations given in open court by Jane, his sister, were subjected to
contemporaneous cross-examination, which placed them beyond the ambit of the
hearsay rule.[24] He was present to deny what was
being imputed to him; hence, the hearsay rule did not apply.[25]
Second Issue:
Trial Court’s Appreciation of Facts
We find no
reason to deviate from the general rule that factual findings of the trial
court are accorded respect, even finality.[26]
Indeed, we have pored over the records, and we are convinced that
appellant killed his father by hitting him with a lead pipe. The testimonies of the prosecution
witnesses, particularly Consorcia Villarez and Domingo Carabacan, provide us
with a complete picture of what transpired that day. Consorcia testified thus:
“q Now, on 7 July 1989, at
around 5:30 o’clock in the afternoon, do you recall where you were, Mrs.
Villarez?
a Yes,
sir, I was inside our house.
q What
were you doing at that ti[m]e inside your house?
a I
was having a conversation with my husband, sir.
x x x x x x x x x
PROS. FLORESTA
q Now,
while you [we]re inside you[r] hut conversing with your husband on said date
and time, do you recall any unusual incident that called your attention?
a Yes,
sir.
q Could
you please tell this Honorable Court what was that unusual incident?
a He
had a quarrel with his second wife, sir.
q To
whom are you referring to [who] had quarreled with his second wife?
a Raymundo,
sir.
q And
where [was] Raymundo [when he] quarreled with his wife?
a Inside
their house, sir.
q Now,
how did you see them quarrel inside their house?
a I
overheard them and they [we]re NAGMUMUR[A]HAN (throwing invectives), sir.
q Now,
when you heard them throwing [at] each other invectives, what happened next if
you know?
a His
children were hit, sir. (PINAGPAPALO)
q And
who struck his children?
a He
did, sir, Raymundo.
x x x x x x x x x
q Now,
after Raymundo hit his three (3) children, what happened what next?
a He
went out of the house, sir.
x x x x x x x x x
q And
what did Raymundo do after getting out [of] his house?
a He
shouted PUTANG INA MONG MATANDA KA, GANID KA, sir.
q To
whom were those word[s] directed?
a To
his father, sir.
x x x x x x x x x
COURT
q Where
was your husband at that time?
a He
was by the window. sir. We were talking
with each other.
x x x x x x x x x
q And
what then did the accused Raymundo do?
a After
saying PUTANG INA MONG MATANDA KA, GANID KA, he stabbed my husband with a
knife, sir.
x x x x x x x x x
q Where
was the accused when he stabbed your husband?
Was Raymundo outside the hut or inside the house when he stabbed your husband?
a He
was outside and he started to face me, sir.
q When
your husband was stabbed, where was your husband?
a He
ran [to] the back of the house, sir.
q At
the exact [time] when your husband was stabbed, was he outside you house?
a Outside
of the window[,] sir.
PROS. FLORESTA
q Outside
of the window of your hut when he was stabbed by Raymundo Villarez?
a Yes,
sir, my husband was outside of the hut and I was inside the house, sir.
x x x x x x x x x
COURT
q How
many times was your husband stabbed?
a Twice,
sir.
q How
may times was he hit?
a Twice,
sir.
q In
what parts of the body was he hit?
a Right
portion, sir.
q Of
what?
a Here,
sir.
INTERPRETER
Witness indicating an area over the armpit side.
x x x x x x x x x
PROS. FLORESTA
q How
about you, what did you do?
a I
was just inside our house, sir.
q And
when your husband was already at the back of the house, do you know what did
Raymundo Villarez do?
a Yes,
sir, he started to chase me.
q And
what happened when he chased you?
a He
opened the small [door] about this wide, sir.
x x x x x x x x x
PROS. FLORESTA
q Was
he able to open the door?
a Yes,
sir.
q And
when he was able to open the door what did Raymundo do?
a When
he was able to enter, Conrado arrived, sir.
q And
who is this Conrado?
a My
eldest son, sir.
q And
when your eldest son arrived, what did you do?
a Conrado
hit Raymundo with a lead pipe on the shoulder, sir.
q And
when Raymundo was hit with a lead pipe by Conrado, what did Raymundo do?
a I
saw Raymundo chase Conrado, sir.
q Was
Raymundo able to r[u]n after Conrado?
a Yes,
sir.
q And
what happened. . . . . .
COURT
q You
mean Raymundo was able to catch up with Conrado?
a Raymundo
Villarez was able to catch [up with] Conrado and they wrestled, sir.
q When
you saw you[r] two sons wrestling with each other, what did you do?
a I
was trying to pacify them, sir.
q And
were you able to pacify them?
a Raymundo
started to pick up stones and started throwing them at Conrado, sir.
q Was
he able to hit Conrado with the stone?
a No,
sir.
q So
after that, what happened next?
a Afterwards,
Raymundo was able to pick up a piece of wood about 1 1/2 meter this big, sir.
q And
what did Raymundo Villarez do with this piece of wood?
a He
thrust that wo[o]d towards Conrado, sir.
q Was
he able to hit Conrado with that piece of wood?
a Yes,
sir, and he sustained wounds, sir.
q And
what did Conrado do when he was hit?
a He
was still lying down. He fell to the
ground when he was hit on the forehead, sir.
COURT
q When
Conrado was hit on his forehead, was he lying on the ground and [was he] still
standing?
a He
was lying down and Raymundo was able to lake hold of the pipe, sir.
PROS. FLORESTA
q After
Raymundo was able to take hold of the pipe, what did Raymundo do?
a Just
as when he was to take hold of the pipe that was the time the father came out
[to] the street, sir.
q And
when his father, and your husband, came out [to] the street, what happened
next?
a When
Raymundo saw his father, he came back and struck his father. The first time, it did not hit his
father. The first blow did not [find] x
x x its aim, sir.
q Why?
Was there a second blow?
a Yes,
sir, there was a second blow when my husband started to turn his back that was
when Raymundo hit him again for the second time and it found its aim, sir.
q What
happened [to] your husband when it hit its blow?
a He
fell to the ground, face down because he was hit at the back of his head, sir.”[27]
This narration
was corroborated by the other witnesses, including Conrado Villarez[28] who was directly involved in the
incident. What happened next was aptly
recounted by Domingo Carabacan, as follows:
PROS. FLORESTA
q Now,
on 7 July 1989, at around 5:30 o’clock in the afternoon, do you recall where
you were, Mr. Carabacan?
a Yes,
sir, I was at the corner of San Isidro, Subic, because I was a fish vendor.
x x x x x x x x x
q Now,
while you were vending fish at the corner of San Isidro, Subic, Zambales do you
recall of any unusual incident that took place?
a Yes,
sir.
q Could
you please tell this Honorable Court that incident which you witnessed or saw
on 7 July 1989 at 5:30 o’clock in the afternoon?
a I
saw that Raymundo and Conrado [were] grappling, sir.
q And
do you know this Conrado?
a Yes,
sir.
q What
is the relation of this Conrado to Raymundo?
a They
are brothers, sir.
q What
happened next when they were grappling with each other?
a When
they were grappling, I saw him stand up and he was holding a lead pipe,
sir. It seems that the lead pipe was
the cause of the grappling, sir.
q What
did you do with the lead pipe?
a When
Raymundo got hold of the lead pipe and he saw Ludy, he ran after her, sir.
q Was
he able to catch [up with] his sister Ludy?
a No,
sir.
q So
what happened when Raymundo failed to catch up with his sister?
a He
went back [to] the corner of the street and it was at that point when he met
his father, sir.
q What
was the name of his father?
a Bonifacio,
sir.
q When
Raymundo Villarez met his father, Bonifacio Villarez, what happened?
a Raymundo
hit him, sir. He tried to hit him twice
and the victim fell when it found its aim, sir.
q Why
did Raymundo Villarez fail to hit Bonifacio Villarez for the first time?
a He
evaded it, sir.
q And
with what did Raymundo Villarez hit Bonifacio [V]illarez?
a With
a lead pipe, sir.
q And
do you know what part of the body of Bonifacio Villarez was hit with the lead
pipe when Raymundo Villarez hit him?
a I
saw him hit the head, sir.
q And
what happened to Bonifacio Villarez, when he was hit with a lead pipe?
a He
fell to the ground, sir.
q And
when he fell to the ground, what happened?
a He
ran after his brother Conrado, sir.”[29]
Again, this testimony is supported by Conrado
Villarez[30] and the other prosecution
witnesses. At this point, we must add
that despite appellant’s assertions, he neither denied nor repudiated having
stabbed his father twice.
MTC Judge’s Order
of Dismissal
Appellant harps
on the fact that during the preliminary investigation of this case, Judge
Edilberto Fabunan[31] found no probable cause and issued
the corresponding Resolution to that effect.
Obviously, the former imputes impropriety to the prosecutor for
disregarding the findings of the judge.
We see no such impropriety. First,
the Rules of Court[32] gives the prosecutor the discretion
whether or not to adopt the findings of the investigating judge. Second, the Resolution of Judge
Fabunan did not comply with the requirements of law. He merely relied on the testimonies of the witnesses for the
defense without considering those for the prosecution. Moreover, he failed to state the findings of
fact and the law supporting his action.[33]
Motive to
Implicate Appellant
The appellant
also imputes improper motive to his relatives for testifying against him. He argues that since he was admittedly the
drunkard and the irresponsible sibling, he was chosen as the scapegoat to
exonerate Conrado. The argument is
unmeritorious. If he is right, the
family could have simply made the killing appear accidental, thereby obviating
the need for a scapegoat. Moreover,
even appellant’s mother pointed her finger at him. A mother would not just casually accuse her son of a crime if the
latter did not commit it.
WHEREFORE, the appeal is hereby DENIED
and the Decision of the Regional Trial Court AFFIRMED. Costs against appellant.
SO ORDERED.
Melo,
(Chairman), Vitug, Purisima, and Gonzaga-Reyes, JJ., concur.
[1] Also
spelled “Villares” in the Information.
[2] Written by Judge Leopoldo T. Calderon Jr.
[3] Decision,
p. 13; rollo, p. 47.
[4] Signed
by Assistant Provincial Prosecutor Benjamin A. Fadera.
[5]Information,
dated October 20, 1989; records, p. 1.
[6] Assisted
by Counsel de Oficio Santiago Cabrera.
[7] See
the lower court’s Order dated January 10, 1996; records, p. 7.
[8] This
case was deemed submitted for resolution on March 31, 2000, when the Court
received the Appellee’s Brief. The
filing of a reply brief was deemed waived, as none had been submitted within
the reglementary period.
[9] Signed
by Solicitor General Ricardo P. Galvez, Assistant Solicitor General Cecilio O.
Estoesta and Solicitor Anna Esperanza R. Solomon.
[10] Appellee’s
Brief, pp. 3-11; rollo, pp. 218-226.
[11] Signed
by Counsel de Oficio Santiago A
Cabrera.
[12] §5,
Rule 112 of the Rules of Court, uses the word “transmit,” not “remand.”
[13] Appellant’s
Brief, pp. 2-4; rollo, pp. 79-81.
[14] Decision,
p. 8; rollo, p. 42.
[15] Decision,
pp. 7-13; rollo, pp. 41-47.
[16] Appellant’s
Brief, p. 1; rollo, p. 78; all caps in original.
[17] Appellant’s
Brief, p. 4; rollo, p. 81.
[18] Appellee’s
Brief, p. 22; rollo, p. 237.
[19] People
v. Lorenzo, 240 SCRA 624, 635, January 26, 1995, per Davide Jr., J.
(now CJ). See also People v. Mendoza,
254 SCRA 18, February 22, 1996; People v. Arcilla, 256 SCRA 757, May 15,
1996; People v. De Vera, 263 SCRA 725, October 30, 1996.
[20] Or
Ludivina Villarez as used in Appellant’s Brief.
[21] Appellee’s
Brief, p. 21; rollo, p. 236, citing People v. Andal, 279 SCRA
479, September 25, 1997. See also
People v. Lorenzo, supra
[22] Referring
to the lead pipe or water pipe used in hitting Bonifacio Villarez.
[23] See
Appellant’s Brief, p. 3; rollo, p. 80.
[24] See
People v. Martinez, 274 SCRA 259, June 19, 1997; People v. Basao,
GR No. 128286, July 20, 1999; Rodriguez v. CA, 273 SCRA 607, June 17, 1997.
[25] Justice Paras, citing Graham on Evidence,
explained:
“The four risks to be
considered in evaluating the testimony of a witness are (1) perception in the
sense of capacity and actuality of observation by means of any of the senses,
(2) recordation and recollection [sometimes called memory], (3) narration
[sometimes called ambiguity], and (4) sincerity [sometimes called
fabrication). In order to encourage the
witness to testify to the best of his ability with respect to each of the four
risks, and to expose inaccuracies in the witness’ testimony, a witness is
required to testify at trial (1) under oath or affirmation, (2) personally so
that the trier of fact may observe the witness’ demeanor, and (3) subject to
contemporaneous cross-examination. Hearsay
evidence is excluded because an out of court statement is not subject to each
of these three tests for ascertaining truth.
Of the three, inability to conduct cross-examination is the essential
factor underlying the rule excluding hearsay.” (Paras, Rules of Court
Annotated, Vol. 4, 1991 ed., pp. 325-326.)
[26] See
Almeda v. CA, 269 SCRA 643, March 13, 1997.
[27] TSN,
June 6, 1996, pp. 5-15.
[28] TSN,
May 8, 1996, pp. 29-39.
[29] TSN,
April 17, 1996, pp. 5-7.
[30] TSN,
May 8, 1996, pp. 29-39.
[31] MTC
Judge of Subic, Zambales, acting as investigating judge.
[32] Section 5, Rule 112, provides:
“Sec. 5. Duty of investigating judge. -- Within ten (10) days after the conclusion of the preliminary investigation, the investigating judge shall transmit to the provincial or city fiscal, for appropriate action, the resolution of the case, stating briefly the findings of facts and the law supporting his action, together with the entire records of the case which shall include: (a) the warrant, if the arrest is by virtue of a warrant; (b) the affidavits and other supporting evidence of the parties; (c) the undertaking or bail of the accused; (d) the order of release of the accused and cancellation of his bail bond, if the resolution is for the dismissal of the complaint.
Should the provincial
or city fiscal disagree with the findings of the investigating judge on the
existence of probable cause, the fiscal’s ruling shall prevail, but he must
explain his action in writing furnishing the parties with copies of his resolution,
not later than thirty (30) days from receipt of the records form the
judge. If the accused is detained, the
fiscal shall order his release.” (emphasis supplied)
[33] Ibid.