EN BANC
[G.R. Nos. 137762-65. March 27, 2001]
THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. REYNALDO
BARES y LONGASA, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
MENDOZA,
J.:
These cases are here on
automatic review from the decision,[1] dated
January 28, 1999, of the Regional Trial Court, Branch 64, Labo, Camarines
Norte, finding accused-appellant Reynaldo Bares y Longasa guilty of four counts
of rape against his daughter Maribel Bares and sentencing him to death and
ordering him to pay the complainant for each count of rape the amount of P50,000.00
as moral damages and P30,000.00
as exemplary damages and to pay the costs.
In Criminal Case No.
96-0079, the information alleged:
That on or about 1:00 o’clock in the early morning of September 8, 1995 at Barangay Dalas, municipality of Labo, province of Camarines Norte, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused motivated by bestial lust and by means of force and intimidation, did then and there, wilfully, unlawfully, and feloniously have carnal knowledge [of] one Maribel D. Bares, a minor fifteen years of age who is his own daughter and that thereafter, the said dastardly act was repeated two more times on the same early morning, to the damage and prejudice of the offended party.
CONTRARY TO LAW.[2]
In Criminal Case No.
96-0080, the information stated:
That on or about 1:00 o’clock in the early morning of October 21, 1995 at Barangay Dalas, municipality of Labo, province of Camarines Norte, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused, motivated by bestial lust and by means of force and intimidation, did then and there, wilfully, unlawfully, and feloniously have carnal knowledge [of] one Maribel D. Bares, a minor fifteen years of age who is his own daughter, to the damage and prejudice of the offended party.
CONTRARY TO LAW.[3]
In Criminal Case No.
96-0081, the information averred:
That on or about 3:00 o’clock in the early morning of October 22, 1995, at Barangay Dalas, municipality of Labo, province of Camarines Norte, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused, motivated by bestial lust and by means of force and intimidation, did then and there, wilfully, unlawfully, and feloniously have carnal knowledge [of] one Maribel D. Bares, a minor fifteen years of age who is his own daughter, to the damage and prejudice of the offended party.
CONTRARY TO LAW.[4]
In Criminal Case No.
96-0082, the information asserted:
That on or about 2:00 o’clock in the early morning of October 20, 1995 at Barangay Dalas, municipality of Labo, province of Camarines Norte and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused urged by his bestial lust, unlawfully, feloniously, and criminally, did then and there, commit sexual intercourse with his own daughter, Maribel Bares, a girl 15 years [of age] and while on [the] family way with seven (7) months pregnancy against the will of said Maribel Bares to her damage and prejudice.
CONTRARY TO LAW.[5]
When arraigned on June 3,
1996, accused-appellant pleaded not guilty to the charges against him,[6] and
the cases were then jointly tried.
Three witnesses, namely,
complainant Maribel Bares, her aunt Nenita Bares,[7] and Dr. Marcelito Abas, medico-legal officer
of the Camarines Norte Provincial Hospital, testified for the prosecution. Their testimonies established the following
facts:
Complainant is the
daughter of accused-appellant Reynaldo Bares and his wife, Predisminda Dasco.
She finished only the fourth grade of elementary school. When she was studying, her family lived in
her grandmother’s house in Sta. Elena.
Later on, after her mother left for Manila, complainant and her brother
lived with accused-appellant in Barangay Dalas, Labo, Camarines Norte.[8]
Prior to September 8,
1995, complainant ran away with her boyfriend, Artemio Bola, and went to Mabilo
I, Labo, Camarines Norte. She stayed there until she became pregnant by
him. On September 8, 1995,
accused-appellant went to Artemio Bola’s house and fetched complainant so she
could go back with him to Barangay Dalas, Labo, Camarines Norte. By that time,
complainant was already eight months pregnant.[9]
At around 1 o’clock in
the morning of September 9, 1995,[10] complainant Maribel Bares was sleeping in
their house in Barangay Dalas, Labo, Camarines Norte when she was awakened by
accused-appellant. Complainant woke up to find that her hands and feet had been
tied. She noticed that she only had her
panty on. Upon discovering that
complainant had woken up, accused-appellant removed her panty, went on top of
her, and succeeded in having sexual intercourse with her. As she was already
eight months pregnant when she was raped by accused-appellant, complainant felt
pain on her shoulder and pelvis.
Complainant was raped by accused-appellant thrice that day.[11]
On October 20, 1995,
complainant was again raped by her father in their house in Barangay
Dalas. He got angry when she did not
remove her panty, and he even kicked her. Nevertheless, accused-appellant
succeeded in having sexual intercourse with complainant. The following day,
October 21, 1995, accused-appellant once more forced complainant to have sex
with him. Accused-appellant raped Maribel for the last time on October 22,
1995. She was already nine months
pregnant at that time. During the occasions she was raped by accused-appellant,
complainant was left alone with accused-appellant in their house because her
mother and sister were staying in Manila.[12]
On October 23, 1995,
complainant went to the house of Nenita Bares, sister of accused-appellant, in
Masalong, Labo, Camarines Norte and told the latter about what
accused-appellant had done to her.
Complainant then asked her aunt to file a complaint against
accused-appellant so Nenita accompanied her to the Camarines Norte Provincial
Command of the Philippine National Police in Dogongan, Daet, Camarines
Norte. At the police headquarters,
complainant gave her statement to the investigating officer. She also submitted
herself to physical examination in the Camarines Norte Provincial Hospital.[13]
On the same day, October
23, 1995, Dr. Marcelito Abas conducted a physical examination of complainant
Maribel Abas which yielded the following results:
Genital Exam:
= Multiple hymenal lacerations;
= Admits two fingers with ease;
= Pregnant nine (9) months;
= Negative for Physical injuries;[14]
Dr. Abas testified that
the multiple hymenal lacerations meant that complainant had had sexual
intercourse several times. He explained
that the opening of the vagina is closed when a woman is a virgin, but when the
vagina admits two fingers with ease, as in complainant’s case, this could only
mean that penetration of the vagina had already occurred. As the victim was already nine months
pregnant at the time of the examination, Dr. Abas confirmed that the pregnancy
was not caused by the rapes that began in September 1995. However, he said that
a woman would still be capable of engaging in sexual intercourse even if she
was already eight months pregnant. He
added that the presence of lacerations in the vagina does not preclude
voluntariness on the part of the woman in engaging in sexual intercourse.[15]
The defense then
presented as witnesses accused-appellant himself, his son Reynaldo Bares, Jr.,
and his landlady Lydia Espina.
Accused-appellant
admitted that complainant Maribel Bares is his daughter but denied that he
raped her. He claimed that he was working as a driver and helper at the Uniphil
at the time of the alleged rapes. At
around 1 o’clock in the morning of September 8, 1995, he said he and his son
Reynaldo Bares, Jr., went to the warehouse of Uniphil to load copra and later
proceeded to San Pedro, Panganiban. On
October 20, 1995, he went to the worksite at San Pedro, Panganiban and, upon
arriving there, loaded copra. He finished loading copra only at 12 noon of the
same day. He went back to Labo,
Camarines Norte at 3 o’clock in the afternoon.
The next day, October 21, 1995, he again went to San Pedro, Panganiban
and returned to the Uniphil compound in Labo, Camarines Norte at around 4
o’clock in the afternoon. At 1 o’clock
in the early morning of October 22, 1995, he went to San Pedro, Panganiban to
load copra and came back to Labo, Camarines Norte at around 3 o’clock in the
afternoon of October 23, 1995. He
testified that his wife and daughter were angry at him because he discovered that
they had been fooling around with other men as a result of which both became
pregnant. He claimed that because of
this, he maltreated his wife and daughter.
He likewise stated that his sister Nenita Bares was angry at him because
she tolerated and even helped cover up his wife’s and daughter’s
activities. Accused-appellant testified
that his sister was also interested in appropriating for herself a piece of
land left by their parents.[16]
Reynaldo Bares, Jr.
corroborated accused-appellant’s testimony that he was with the latter during
the time of the alleged rapes.[17] On cross-examination, however, he admitted
that he testified accordingly only because he had been asked to do so by
accused-appellant.[18]
Lydia Espina likewise
corroborated accused-appellant’s testimony.
According to her, accused-appellant was not in the house during the
times of the alleged rapes as he left for work early in the morning. She also testified that Maribel Bares was
not staying in their house on October 21, 1995 as the latter lived in the house
of her supposed sister-in-law in front of the Camarines Norte College.[19]
On January 28, 1999, the
trial court rendered a decision, the dispositive portion of which states:
WHEREFORE, IN THE LIGHT OF THE FOREGOING PREMISES, JUDGMENT is
hereby rendered finding accused REYNALDO BARES, SR. Y LONGASA, GUILTY beyond
reasonable doubt of the crime of four (4) counts of rape as defined and
penalized under par. 3, Article 335 of the Revised Penal Code in relation to
Sec. 11 of Republic Act No. 7659 (Death Penalty Law) and accordingly,
sentencing him to suffer the supreme penalty of DEATH in each of the four (4)
separate crimes of rape committed on September 8, 1995 and October 21, 22 and
23, respectively, all in 1995, and to pay the victim in the amount of P50,000.00
each for four (4) separate crimes of rape with a total of P200,000.00 as
moral damages pursuant to Article 2219 (3) in relation to Article 2217 of the
New Civil Code and P30,000.00 each for four (4) separate crimes of rape
or a total of P120,000.00 as exemplary damages; and to pay the costs.
SO ORDERED.[20]
Accused-appellant now
makes the following assignment of errors:
I. THE COURT A QUO ERRED IN ACCORDING WEIGHT AND CREDENCE TO THE TESTIMONIES OF THE TWO KEY PROSECUTION WITNESSES, MARIBEL BARES AND NENITA [BARES], DESPITE THERE BEING ILL MOTIVE ON THEIR PART TO IMPUTE ACCUSATORY CHARGES AGAINST THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT.
II. THE COURT A QUO ERRED IN FINDING THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT GUILTY OF RAPE IN SPITE OF THE FACT THAT THE MEDICAL FINDINGS DO NOT CLEARLY SUPPORT SUCH A CONCLUSION AND THE ALLEGATIONS RAISED BY THE SUPPOSED VICTIM ARE INHERENTLY FLAWED.
III. THE COURT A QUO ERRED
IN SENTENCING ACCUSED-APPELLANT TO DEATH, ALTHOUGH THE MINORITY OF THE ALLEGED
VICTIM WAS NEVER DULY PROVEN IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE DOCTRINE LAID DOWN IN PEOPLE
VS. AMADO SANDRIAS JAVIER.[21]
First. Accused-appellant questions the probative value of the testimonies of
Nenita Bares and Dr. Marcelito Abas. He
claims that Dr. Abas’ testimony does not establish that he (accused-appellant)
had raped complainant as she was already pregnant at the time Dr. Abas examined
her. Nor can Nenita Bares’ testimony
be given evidentiary weight, accused-appellant argues, because Nenita had only
been told about the rape incidents by complainant.[22]
To be sure, a medical
certificate is not necessary to prove the commission of rape. Indeed, the purpose of Nenita Bares’
testimony is not to corroborate complainant as to the commission of the rapes
but only to prove that the latter told her aunt what had happened to her and
that she and her aunt reported the matter to the authorities afterwards.
The prosecution of rape
cases is anchored mainly on the credibility of the complaining witness.
Generally, the nature of the offense is such that the only evidence that can
prove the guilt of the accused is the testimony of the complainant herself.[23] Hence, in deciding rape cases, this Court
has been guided by the following principles:
(1) an accusation for rape can be made with facility; it is difficult to
prove but more difficult for the person accused, though innocent, to disprove it;
(2) in view of the intrinsic nature of the crime, where two persons are usually
involved, the testimony of the complainant must be scrutinized with extreme
caution; and (3) the evidence for the prosecution must stand or fall on its own merits and cannot
be allowed to draw strength from the weakness of the evidence for the defense.[24]
It is well settled that
the accused in a rape case may be convicted solely on the testimony of the
complaining witness, provided that such is credible, natural, convincing, and
otherwise consistent with human nature and the normal course of things.[25] In this case, Maribel testified in a direct,
unequivocal, and consistent manner with regard to the rapes committed by
accused-appellant:
Q Sometime on September 8, 1995, while you and your father were staying in Dalas, Labo, Camarines Norte, in the morning at around 1:00 o’clock, do you remember [an] unusual incident that happened to you?
A Yes, sir.
Q What happened to you?
A I was raped, sir.
Q Who raped you?
A My father, sir.
Q What is his name?
A Reynaldo Bares, sir.
Q At that time, where was your mother then?
A In Manila, sir.
Q How did the accused, Reynaldo Bares, your own father, raped you?
A I was asleep, sir.
Q Then, while you were asleep, what happened to you?
A I noticed that I was already tied, sir.
Q What part of your body was tied?
A My two hands were tied and separated and my two feet were also tied and separated, sir.
Q What were you wearing then at that time?
A I was wearing my panty, sir.
(The witness’ answer to the question is punctuated by sobs and cries.)
Q After you were tied by your father, what did your father do to you?
A He immediately went on top of me, sir.
Q Were you still wearing your panty?
A No longer, sir.
Q Who removed your panty?
A My father, sir.
Q While your father was on top of you, what did you do?
A I was already raped, sir.
Q How did he rape you?
A He was already on top of me and he was so heavy, sir.
Q Did you feel pain?
A Yes, sir.
Q What part of your body was painful?
A My shoulder and my pelvis, sir.
(At this point [in] time, the witness is already crying.)
Q How about your sexual organ, what did you feel?
A It’s painful, sir.
Q Why was it painful?
A It’s painful, sir.
Q What was the cause of the pain?
A My father put his penis [into] my vagina, sir.
Q How long did your father place his penis inside your vagina?
A Thrice within a night, sir.
Q How do you call your father?
A I would not call him anything, sir. (“Wala po akong itatawag d’yan.”)
(The witness answered in a [sarcastic] voice.)
Q Now, while your father was on top of you and his penis penetrated your vagina, what did you tell your father?
A I told him to remove it, but he did not, sir.
Q Now, how about on October 20, 1995, while you were in your house in Brgy. Dalas, do you remember anything out of ordinary that happened to you?
A Yes, sir.
Q What happened to you?
A I was raped, sir.
Q Who sexually abused you?
A My father, sir.
Q What’s his name?
A Reynaldo Bares, sir.
Q How did the accused, your own father, sexually abuse you?
A He was always angry with me if I do not remove my panty. He used to kick me, sir.
(At this point [in] time, the witness is again crying.)
Q Can you continue testifying?
A Yes, sir.
Q On October 20, 1995, where was your mother then at that time?
A She was in Manila together with my sister, sir.
Q When your mother left for Manila, who was left in your house at Brgy. Dalas?
A My father and I, sir.
Q On October 21, 1995, also in the morning at around 1:00 o’clock, do you remember what happened to you in your house at Brgy. Dalas?
A Yes, sir.
Q What happened to you?
A He raped me, sir.
Q How did your father sexually abuse you?
A I was tied by my father, sir.
Q Was your father able to penetrate his penis [into] your vagina?
A Yes, sir.
Q How about on October 22, 1995 in the morning also, what happened to you in your house in Brgy. Dalas?
A I was raped by my father, sir.
Q Was your father able to penetrate his penis into your vagina?
A Yes, sir. It’s big, sir.
Q At that time on October 22, 1995, where was your mother then at that time?
A She was in Manila, sir.
Q Whenever your father sexually abused you, what did you tell him, if any?
A I don’t like it, sir, but he insisted.
Q When did your mother arrive from Manila?
A It was a long time already, sir.
Q Do you know who filed a complaint against your father by reason of the sexual ordeal that you have suffered from your own father?
A I myself, sir.
Q Who initiated in filing the complaint?
A I was accompanied by my auntie, sir.
Q Where?
A To the Provincial Command in Dogongan, sir.
Q What is the name of your auntie?
A Nenita Bares, sir.
Q By the way, after your father have sexually abused you on different occasions, did you submit yourself for genital examination of your genital organ?
A Yes, sir.
Q To what hospital did you go?
A Camarines Norte
Provincial Hospital, sir.[26]
Thus, with tears in her
eyes, Maribel told of how accused-appellant, her own father, bound her hands
and legs, removed her underwear, and forced himself upon her the first time he
raped her. She described how accused-appellant,
by employing force and instilling fear in her, succeeded in having repeated
sexual intercourse with her. Lastly, Maribel narrated how she, unwilling to
endure more of her father’s abuse, finally told her aunt what accused-appellant
had been doing to her and willingly subjected herself to medical examination.
Indeed, Maribel’s tale of
accused-appellant’s sexual abuse bears the earmarks of truth and candor. The tears she shed during her testimony
further enhance her credibility as they indicate the outrage and distress she
felt over what accused-appellant had done to her.[27] This Court is hard put to dismiss the
testimony of a girl who is a victim of sexual assault, particularly if it
constitutes incestuous rape, as a mere concoction. For normally, no person
would disclose the fact that she had been raped, subject herself to medical
examination, and willingly undergo the humiliation of a public trial and
testify on the details of her ordeal, especially at the hands of her father,
were it not the truth.[28]
Accused-appellant,
however, questions the veracity of complainant’s testimony by pointing out the
inconsistency in her testimony as to when she was first raped. He argues that
it was physically impossible for her to have been raped early in the morning of
September 8, 1995 as she stated that she was fetched by him on the same day in
the house of Artemio Bola.[29]
We have time and again
ruled that it is not unnatural for a rape victim, especially one who is of
tender age, to make inconsistent statements.
But so long as the testimony is consistent on material points, slightly
conflicting statements will not undermine the witness’ credibility nor the
veracity of her testimony. They in fact
tend to buttress, rather than impair, her credibility as they erase any
suspicion of a rehearsed testimony.[30]
In this case, Maribel’s
testimony made it clear that she was raped by accused-appellant for the first
time after the latter had fetched her from her boyfriend’s house on September
8, 1995. When the rape occurred at
around 1 o’clock early the following morning, it was still dark and complainant
had just been awakened by accused-appellant.
It is thus understandable for her to be disoriented and think, however
erroneously, that the first rape occurred on the day she was fetched by
accused-appellant.[31]
A witness is not expected
to remember with perfect recollection every minute detail of her harrowing
experience. A minor mistake as to the
exact time of the commission of the rape is immaterial and cannot discredit the
testimony of a witness.[32] We have repeatedly held that the exact date
of the commission of the rape is not an essential element of the crime. What is decisive in a rape charge is that
the commission of the rape by accused-appellant against complainant has been
sufficiently proven. Inconsistencies
and discrepancies as to minor matters which are irrelevant to the elements of
the crime cannot be considered grounds for acquittal. Thus, accused-appellant can be validly convicted under the
information in Criminal Case No. 96-0079 alleging that he committed rape on
September 8, 1995 even if it appears that the actual date is September 9, 1995.[33]
Neither can
accused-appellant’s attempt to cast aspersions on complainant’s moral character
free him from criminal liability. In rape cases, the moral character of the
victim is immaterial. Rape may be
committed not only against single women and children but also against those who
are married, middle-aged, or pregnant.
Even a prostitute may be a victim of rape.[34] Nor is it relevant to discuss the paternity
of Maribel’s child. The question of who
fathered complainant’s child has no bearing on rape cases, pregnancy not being
an element of the crime.[35]
Accused-appellant
likewise contends that he could not have raped complainant on October 20, 21,
and 22, 1995 as the latter was already nine months pregnant at that time. He states that Dr. Marcelito Abas, the medico-legal
officer who conducted the examination of the complainant, testified that a
pregnant woman could engage in sexual intercourse only up to the eighth month of her pregnancy.[36]
This contention must
fail. That complainant was already pregnant before the commission of the first
rape does not belie her testimony that accused-appellant raped her.[37] Indeed, while married couples may abstain
from contact after the eighth month of pregnancy of the wife, no such rule
applies to rape which may still be committed despite the fact that the victim
is already eight months pregnant.[38]
Furthermore, contrary to
accused-appellant’s representation, Dr. Marcelito Abas testified:
Q Doctor, if a woman is on the family way at around eight (8) months, is the woman still susceptible to have a sexual intercourse?
A Yes, sir.[39]
Accused-appellant claims,
however, that complainant bore a grudge against him because he left her mother
and often maltreated her. He contends that complainant, with hatred in her
heart, fabricated lies against him and implicated him for crimes he did not
commit.[40]
Accused-appellant’s
contention is without merit. It strains
credulity for accused-appellant to say that his maltreatment of his daughter
and separation from his wife propelled complainant to accuse him of crimes that
could possibly cost him his life.
Moreover, no woman, especially one who is of tender age, would concoct a
story of defloration, allow an examination of her private parts, and thereafter
make herself subject to a public trial if she was not motivated solely by the
desire to have the guilty brought to justice.[41] Furthermore, a rape victim’s testimony
against her father is entitled to greater weight because it is deeply ingrained
in our culture to revere and respect our elders. Hence, absent any evidence to show that complainant had an
improper motive to falsely testify against accused-appellant, her testimony is
deemed credible and trustworthy.[42]
In contrast to
complainant’s credible and consistent testimony, accused-appellant could only
offer the defenses of denial and alibi.
Denial is an intrinsically weak defense which must be supported by
strong evidence of non-culpability to merit credibility.[43] It is negative self-serving evidence which
cannot be given greater weight than the testimony of a credible witness who
testified on affirmative matters. Between the positive declarations of a
prosecution witness and the negative statements of the accused, the former
deserve more credence.[44]
With respect to
accused-appellant’s alibi, we hold that such defense cannot prevail over
complainant’s positive identification of accused-appellant as her rapist.[45]
It is noteworthy that the
witnesses who corroborated accused-appellant’s alibi are his son and landlady,
who are evidently biased witnesses. A
witness is considered biased when his relation to the cause or to the parties
is such that he has an incentive to exaggerate or give false color to his
statements, to suppress or to pervert the truth, or to state what is false.[46] In this case, Reynaldo Bares, Jr. admitted
that accused-appellant had instructed him to testify in these cases and that he
did so out of filial obedience.[47] On the other hand, Lydia Espina testified
that she usually went to sleep between 9 to 10 o’clock in the evening and woke
up at around 4 o’clock in the morning.[48] Hence, she could not have known if
accused-appellant did not arrive home in the early morning on the days the
rapes were committed. Moreover,
Espina’s testimony, full of gaps and uncertainties, cannot be deemed worthy of
belief.
In sum, what
accused-appellant raises are issues of credibility, which are best left for
determination by the trial court which had the opportunity of observing the
behavior and demeanor of the witnesses while testifying.[49] Unless there are facts or circumstances of
weight and influence which were misconstrued or overlooked by the trial court,
its findings and conclusions concerning the credibility of witnesses must be
accorded respect and should not be disturbed on appeal.[50]
Second. But although accused-appellant is guilty of four counts of rape, we
agree with him that he cannot be sentenced to death because the minority of the
victim, which is a special qualifying circumstance, was not established by the
prosecution.[51] Art. 335 of the Revised Penal Code, as
amended by R. A. No. 7659, provides:
The death penalty shall also be imposed if the crime of rape is committed with any of the following attendant circumstances:
1. When the victim is under eighteen (18) years of age and the offender is a parent, ascendant, step-parent, guardian, relative by consanguinity or affinity within the third civil degree, or the common-law spouse of the parent of the victim.
To justify the imposition
of the death penalty, therefore, the circumstances of the minority of the
victim and her relationship with the offender must both be alleged in the
information and proved in court.[52] The minority of the victim must be proved
with equal certainty as the commission of the crime itself.[53]
While the relationship of
complainant to accused-appellant has been alleged and proved, no proof was
presented by the prosecution to establish the minority of complainant at the
time of the commission of the crime.
Neither complainant nor her aunt testified as to the former’s age. The
birth certificate of complainant was not offered in evidence to prove her
age. Accordingly, the death penalty
cannot be imposed on accused-appellant.
In addition, the trial
court erred in convicting accused-appellant only of four counts of rape,
corresponding to the number of informations filed against him. In must be noted that in Criminal Case No.
96-0079, the information against accused-appellant alleged that “the
above-named accused motivated by bestial lust and by means of force and
intimidation, did then and there, wilfully, unlawfully, and feloniously have carnal
knowledge on one Maribel D. Bares, a minor fifteen years of age who is his own
daughter and that thereafter, the said dastardly act was repeated two more
times on the same early morning, to the damage and prejudice of the offended
party.”[54] The wording of the information is thus
clear. Accused-appellant raped
complainant not once but thrice.
Under Rule 110, §13 of
the Revised Rules of Criminal Procedure, “[a] complaint or information must
charge only one offense, except when the law prescribes a single punishment for
various offenses.” While this may be
so, accused-appellant failed to timely question the defect in the information
in Criminal Case No. 96-0079, and he may be deemed to have waived his objection
to the multiplicity of charges.[55] Accused-appellant may thus be convicted of
as many offenses as are charged and proven, and the appropriate penalty may be
imposed on him for each and every one of them.[56]
Complainant testified
that she was raped by her father three times one early September morning.[57] There being no question as to complainant’s
credibility, sufficient evidence exists to prove beyond reasonable doubt that
accused-appellant is guilty of three counts of rape, not merely one, under
Criminal Case No. 96-0079.
Anent the damages awarded
to complainant, we find the award of P50,000.00 as moral damages for
each count of rape to be in accord with our rulings.[58] Moral damages are awarded in rape cases
without need of proof other than the fact of rape itself because it is assumed
that the victim has suffered moral injuries entitling her to such an award.[59] An additional award of P50,000.00 as
indemnity for each count of rape should, however, be given complainant in
consonance with current jurisprudence.[60] The award of exemplary damages in the amount
of P30,000.00 should also be sustained considering that the generic
aggravating circumstance of relationship has been established.[61]
WHEREFORE, the decision of the Regional Trial Court,
Branch 64, Labo, Camarines Norte, is hereby AFFIRMED with the MODIFICATIONS
that accused-appellant is found guilty of six (6) counts of rape against his
daughter Maribel Bares and for each count is hereby sentenced to suffer the
penalty of reclusion perpetua and to pay complainant P50,000.00
as civil indemnity in addition to the awards of moral damages in the amount of P50,000.00
and exemplary damages in the amount of P30,000.00 for each count of
rape.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J.,
Bellosillo, Melo, Vitug, Kapunan, Panganiban, Quisumbing, Pardo, Buena,
Gonzaga-Reyes, Ynares-Santiago, De Leon, Jr., and Sandoval-Gutierrez,
JJ., concur.
Puno, J., on official business.
[1] Per Judge Amaro M.
Meteoro.
[2] Records, p. 2.
[3] Id., p. 16.
[4] Id., p. 22.
[5] Id., p. 31.
[6] Certificate of
Arraignment; id., p. 58.
[7] Also referred to as
Nenita Asis.
[8] TSN (Maribel Bares),
pp. 2-4, July 30, 1996.
[9] Id., pp.
12-13, 15-17.
[10] Complainant
testified that she was raped in the early morning of September 8, 1995. Her narration, however, tends to show that
she was raped the morning after she was fetched by her father on September 8,
1995, i.e., on September 9, 1995.
[11] TSN (Maribel Bares),
pp. 4-7, 12, July 30, 1996.
[12] Id., pp. 8-10, 12.
[13] TSN (Maribel Bares),
pp. 10-11, July 30, 1996; TSN (Nenita Bares), pp. 5-8, Sept. 12, 1996.
[14] Exh. A; Records, p.
8.
[15] TSN (Dr. Marcelito
Abas), pp. 6-11, July 29, 1996.
[16] TSN (Reynaldo
Bares), pp. 4-11, 15-17, 20, March 11, 1997.
[17] TSN (Reynaldo Bares,
Jr.), pp. 4-9, Dec. 19, 1996.
[18] Id., pp.
15-16.
[19] TSN (Lydia Espina),
pp. 4-8, Oct. 7, 1997.
[20] Decision, p. 15; Records, p. 279.
[21] Brief for the
Accused-Appellant, pp. 1-2; Rollo, pp. 55-56.
[22] Id., p. 11; id.,
p. 65.
[23] People v.
Adora, 275 SCRA 441 (1997).
[24] People v. Aloro,
G.R. No. 129208, Sept. 14, 2000.
[25] People v. De Guzman,
G.R. No. 124368, June 8, 2000; People v. Ulgasan, G.R. Nos. 131824-26, July 11,
2000; People v. Docena, 322 SCRA 20 (2000).
[26] TSN (Maribel Bares),
pp. 4-11, July 30, 1996.
[27] See People v.
Penaso, G.R. No. 121980, Feb. 23, 2000.
[28] People v.
Gabiana, G.R. No. 123543, Aug. 23, 2000; People v. Quilatan, G.R. No. 132725,
Sept. 28, 2000.
[29] Brief for the
Accused-Appellant, pp. 12-13; Rollo,
pp. 66-67.
[30] People v. Campaner,
G.R. Nos, 130500 and 143834, July 26, 2000; People v. Licanda, G.R. No. 134084,
May 4, 2000.
[31] See People v.
Lomibao, G.R. No. 135855, Aug. 3, 2000.
[32] People v.
Quilatan, supra.
[33] People v. Sancha,
G.R. Nos. 131818-19, Feb. 3, 2000; People v. Lim, 312 SCRA 550 (1999).
[34] People v. Docena,
supra.
[35] People v.
Penaso, supra.
[36] Brief for the
Accused-Appellant, p. 13; Rollo, p. 67.
[37] People v.
Adora, supra.
[38] People v.
Perez, 307 SCRA 276 (1999). See also
People v. Mostrales, 294 SCRA 701 (1998).
[39] TSN, p. 11, July 29,
1996.
[40] Brief for the
Accused-Appellant, pp. 11-12; Rollo,
pp. 65-66.
[41] People v. Cajara,
G.R. No. 122498, Sept. 27, 2000.
[42] People v.
Aloro, supra; People v. Perez, supra.
[43] People v. Martinez,
G.R. No. 130606, Feb. 15, 2000.
[44] People v. Fraga,
G.R. Nos. 134130-33, April 12, 2000.
[45] People v.
Gabiana, G.R. No. 123543, Aug. 23, 2000.
[46] People v.
Ulgasan, supra.
[47] TSN, pp. 15-16, Dec.
19, 1996.
[48] TSN, p. 15, Oct. 7,
1997.
[49] People v.
Castillo, G.R. Nos 130205, July 5, 2000.
[50] People v.
Aloro, supra.
[51] Brief for the
Accused-Appellant, p. 14; Rollo, p. 68.
[52] People v. Mendez,
G.R. No. 132546, July 5, 2000.
[53] People v.
Tundag, G.R. Nos. 135695-96, Oct. 12, 2000.
[54] Records, p. 2
[55] People v.
Ramon, 320 SCRA 775 (1999).
[56] People v.
Villamor, 297 SCRA 262 (1998).
[57] TSN, p. 7, July 30,
1996.
[58] People v. Lapiz, G.
R. No. 129239, Sept. 5, 2000; People v. Aloro, supra; People v.
Mendez, supra.
[59] People v.
Ulgasan, supra.
[60] People v.
Lomibao, supra; People v. Fraga, supra.
[61] People v. Freta,
G.R. Nos. 134451-52, March 14, 2001; People v. Tundag, supra.