EN BANC
[G.R. No. 142564.
September 26, 2001]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. HILGEM
NERIO Y GIGANTO, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
PER CURIAM:
This case is here on appeal from
the decision[1] rendered on January 31, 2000 by the Regional Trial
Court of Bacolod City, Branch 47, finding accused-appellant guilty beyond
reasonable doubt of the crime of rape and sentencing him accordingly.
Complainant Vilma M. Concel was,
at the time material to this case, 70 years old, a widow, and a retired public
school teacher living in Purok Mahimaya-on, Brgy. Bata, Bacolod City. She had eleven children by her late husband
Clemente B. Concel.[2] She was the recipient of an award as one of the
outstanding mothers of the province of Negros Occidental.[3]
Accused-appellant Hilgem Nerio
was, at the time of the alleged commission of the crime, 28 years old, single,
and also a resident of Purok Mahimaya-on, Brgy. Bata, Bacolod City. He worked as a Field Coordinator of ABS-CBN
Radio.[4] Complainant was his teacher in Grade 1.
The Information[5] in this case charged:
“That on or about the 1st day of April, 1999, in the City of Bacolod, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of the Honorable Court, the herein accused, being armed with a bladed weapon, by means of force and intimidation, did, then and there, willfully, unlawfully and feloniously have carnal knowledge of the herein offended party Vilma Concel y Mijares, against the will of the latter.
That the crime was committed with the aggravating circumstance of insult or disregard of the respect due the offended party on account of her rank, being a retired school teacher, and her age, being 70 years old.
Act contrary to law.”
Upon his arraignment,
accused-appellant pleaded not guilty to the charge and was thereafter
tried. The following facts were
stipulated upon during the pre-trial conference:
“1. The victim Vilma C. Mijares is 70 years old (Corrected in the Order of November 22, 1999 to: The name of the victim is Vilma Concel y Mijares.)
2. Private Complainant is the teacher of the accused when he was in grade 1.
3. That the incident which led to the filing in this case happened inside the bedroom and the house of the complainant which is at Brgy. Bata, Bacolod City (Corrected in the Order of November 22, 1999 to: The incident happened inside the bedroom of the victim located at the store which is outside and far from the house of the complainant.)
4. Both private complainant and the accused Hilgem Nerio are
living in the same area known as Purok Mahimaya-on, Brgy. Bata, Bacolod City.”[6]
The prosecution presented evidence
showing the following: On April 1, 1999, at around 3:30 a.m., complainant Vilma
Concel was sleeping in her room inside her “sari-sari” store in Purok
Mahimaya-on in Barangay Bata, Bacolod City.
At that time, two of her daughters, Carmen Concel, 40 years old, single,
and Velmita Concel-Plaza, 42 years old, married, were living with her in their
house. It is not clear from the records
if there were other people, aside from the two daughters, in their house that
time. Complainant was awakened when she
felt someone touching her breast and private part. She asked who the man was as she tried to get up. The man was armed with a knife and warned
her not to make any noise or he would kill her. Complainant said she would give him what he wanted as long as he
did not harm her, but he said he did not need anything because what he wanted
was to have sex with her.[7]
According to complainant, the man,
whom she identified as accused-appellant Hilgem Nerio, undressed her, took off
his own clothes, and went on top of her, while poking a knife on her left
side. Complainant said she grappled
with accused-appellant for the knife, as a result of which she suffered cuts in
the palm of her right hand. Complainant
was overpowered by accused-appellant, who succeeded in ravishing her. Complainant testified that accused-appellant
asked how many single daughters she had, but she did not answer because she was
afraid that he might harm them.
Complainant cried and almost lost consciousness.[8]
After he was through,
accused-appellant lay on complainant’s bed as complainant put on her housedress. Accused-appellant then stood up and put on
his clothes. He told complainant to
open the main gate and then fled. But
before he left, accused-appellant told her that he would be back the next day
at the same time.[9]
After accused-appellant had left,
complainant went to the main house where her daughter Carmen was sleeping and
told her what had happened. The two
went to BAC-UP 3 (Police Station 3) that morning and reported the incident. Complainant went to BAC-UP 3 three times in
connection with the incident. On her
first visit, she did not report to the police that she had been raped. Instead, she only filed a complaint for
qualified trespass to dwelling, physical injuries, and grave threats.[10] But on April 3, 1999, at 11 a.m., she went back to
the police station with another daughter, Vilma Plaza, and reported that she
had been raped. Later, when shown with
a photograph of accused-appellant, complainant identified him as the same man
who had raped her. The photograph had
been given by accused-appellant’s father upon the request of a certain SPO3
Puentebella.[11]
That same afternoon, complainant
was examined by Dr. Cherryl Gumahin of the Corazon Locsin Montelibano Memorial
Regional Hospital. Dr. Gumahin found on
complainant’s external genitalia a 0.2 cm. partial tear at the 11 o’clock
position as well as a .5 cm. and a .2 cm. hyperemia in the hymenal are and
lacerations on her right hand. She
testified that the tear noted in the hymenal region and the reddening of the
vulvar area could have possibly been caused by a foreign blunt object, such as
a penis. On the other hand, the
lacerations in the palm of complainant’s right hand could have been caused by a
sharp instrument like a knife.[12]
SPO3 Lina Faith Mojica conducted
an ocular inspection of complainant’s house on April 5, 1999. Complainant’s house is a two-story affair
with an extension on the ground floor area where complainant’s store was
located. SPO3 Mojica theorized that
accused-appellant gained entry to the house by scaling the six-foot high
concrete wall which surrounded the house.
Once he was inside the lot, he detached three (3) glass louvers of the
jalousie window of the bathroom located on the ground floor. Accused-appellant passed through the window,
then went to the second floor passing by the room of Carmen Concel and, through
a vacant room, went downstairs and, through the main door, entered the store
where complainant was sleeping. The
store was separated from the main house by a concrete wall. Complainant’s room was in the store. The room had a window covered with bamboo
slats. Accused-appellant probably
inserted his hand through the bamboo slats and succeeded in opening the door
which led to the complainant’s room.[13]
Accused-appellant denied the
charge against him. He admitted having
sex with complainant in the early morning of April 1, 1999, but he claimed that
their sexual relation was voluntary and consensual. Accused-appellant said he and complainant were sweethearts and
that in fact they already had two sexual encounters before April 1, 1999, the
first on the first week of December 1998 and the second on the second week of
February 1999.
Concerning the first incident,
accused-appellant said that, as a Field Coordinator of ABS-CBN Radio, he made
the rounds of Purok Mahimaya-on in search of talents for ABS-CBN Radio. He passed by complainant’s house, who was
his Grade 1 teacher, and greeted her.
According to accused-appellant, complainant was pleased to see him and
asked him to transfer a potted plant beside the door of her store to the door
near her room. Accused-appellant
claimed that after obliging his former teacher and while he was washing his
hands to remove the dirt, he was surprised because complainant grabbed his
groin, embraced him, and pulled him insider her room. She caressed his chest and unzipped his pants. Accused-appellant said that, as he lay on
the bed, complainant held his penis and performed oral sex on him. When accused-appellant said that he felt
pain, complainant removed her false teeth and continued what she was
doing. Complainant then went on top of
him, inserted his penis into her vagina, and they had sexual intercourse.[14]
Accused-appellant said the second
sexual encounter between him and complainant took place in the second week of
February 1999. At that time,
accused-appellant said he needed money and so he went to see complainant. Accused-appellant said she let him in the house
and they again engaged in sexual intercourse.
Afterward, complainant gave him P300.00.[15]
The third sexual encounter
allegedly took place on April 1, 1999.
Accused-appellant was on his way home after a drinking spree with a
friend, Allan Imbong, in the latter’s house in Banago. Accused-appellant passed by complainant’s
house between 1:00 and 2:00 a.m. When
he knocked on the door, complainant opened it and let him in. According to accused-appellant, they again
had a tryst. He claimed that, because
he could not have an erection, complainant performed oral sex on him, mounted
him, and rubbed his penis against her private part. They then had sexual intercourse. Accused-appellant asked for water as he was thirsty. Hence, complainant put on her dress, went to
the store, and came back with a glass of water. He asked her for money and was given P100.00, with a
promise that she would give him more if he came back.[16]
The other witnesses for the
defense were Allan Imbong and PO3 Althamar Tupas. Allan Imbong corroborated accused-appellant’s claim that at
around 7 p.m. of March 31, 1999, they had a drinking spree at Brgy. Bata. They proceeded to Banago an hour and a half
later where they continued drinking.
When they finished at around 1 a.m. of April 1, 1999, they returned to
Brgy. Bata. Before they reached
accused-appellant’s house, accused-appellant invited Imbong to have some snacks
at the Burger Junction. They were not
able to eat, however, as accused-appellant did not have money. They decided to go home to
accused-appellant’s house. But, Imbong
said, at the corner of DYCP, accused-appellant decided to stay behind because
he wanted to pass by a particular house.
Imbong was shown a photograph (Exh. 6) of complainant’s house which he
identified as the one they had been to.
Accused-appellant told Imbong to wait, but the latter said he wanted to
go home and left.[17]
Witness PO3 Tupas testified that
on April 1, 1999, at around 4:38 p.m., complainant and her two daughters went
to their office and filed a complaint for Trespass to Dwelling, Grave Threats,
and Physical Injuries. After recording
the incident in the police blotter, he went with two other policemen to
complainant’s house and conducted an investigation. They discovered that the intruder had gained entry to
complainant’s house by breaking the sliding window of the bathroom. The intruder proceeded to the second floor,
where the room of complainant’s daughter, Carmen, was located, and then passed
through the main door of the house to go to complainant’s room inside the store
located outside the main house.[18]
On rebuttal, complainant
vehemently denied accused-appellant’s claim that they had a relationship. She testified that in December 1998, when
accused-appellant claimed they had a tryst, she was in Manila for a medical
check-up and that she did not return to Bacolod until mid-January of the
following year. She claimed that, since
accused-appellant was in her class in Grade 1, she did not meet him again until
the morning of April 1, 1999, when the rape took place.[19]
SPO3 Mojica testified that
accused-appellant fled to his mother’s hometown in Tapaz, Capiz upon learning
that a complaint for rape against him was filed. He stayed there until he was arrested on October 11, 1999 by
members of the Presidential Anti-Organized Crime Commission.[20]
The trial court found the
prosecution evidence more credible and held accused-appellant guilty of
rape. The dispositive portion of its
decision states:
“WHEREFORE, finding accused Hilgem Nerio y Giganto guilty beyond reasonable doubt of Rape under Republic Act 8353 (Amending Article 335 of the Revised Penal code and Republic Act 7659), judgment is hereby rendered sentencing him to suffer Reclusion Perpetua, as well as the accessory penalty provided by law. Accused is further ordered to pay the private offended party Vilma Concel y Mijares: P50,000.00 as civil indemnity for the rape; P50,000.00, moral damages; and P50,000.00 exemplary damages.
Accused being detained by reason of the instant case, the period of his preventive imprisonment shall be credited in his favor and deducted fully from the service of his sentence even if penalized with reclusion perpetua (People vs. Corpuz, 231 SCRA 480), provided he has agreed in writing to abide by the same disciplinary rules imposed upon convicted prisoners in accordance with Article 29 of the Revised Penal Code.
SO ORDERED.”[21]
Hence this appeal.
Accused-appellant contends:
“I. THE COURT A QUO ERRED IN FINDING THAT THE GUILT OF THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT HAS BEEN PROVEN BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT DESPITE THE EXISTENCE OF DOUBT AS TO HOW PRIVATE COMPLAINANT POSITIVELY IDENTIFIED ACCUSED-APPELLANT.
“II. THE COURT A QUO ERRED IN APPRECIATING THE AGGRAVATING
CIRCUMSTANCE OF INSULT OR IN DISREGARD OF THE RESPECT DUE TO THE OFFENDED PARTY
ON ACCOUNT OF HER RANK AND AGE.”[22]
FIRST. Accused-appellant
contends that he was not identified as the man who had raped complainant on the
night of April 1, 1999 and that there are grave doubts whether she really
recognized him on that occasion.
Although complainant said that she recognized accused-appellant as the
person who had raped her, she did not describe the man who had abused her to
the investigating officer when she reported the incident to the police. In fact, accused-appellant claims,
complainant even testified that she did not recognize the face of her abuser.[23]
Accused-appellant also finds it
unbelievable that complainant can identify him as her abuser when she claimed
on rebuttal that she only saw him in the morning of April 1, 1999. Even if he was complainant’s pupil in Grade
1, he argues that his physical appearance had changed considerably since
then. He maintains that complainant was
able to identify him only through the picture which was supplied by his
(accused-appellant’s) father and shown to her at the police station.[24]
Finally, accused-appellant claims
that complainant has poor eyesight. She
could not even read the affidavit that she executed (Exh. 4) when it was shown
to her in court. Considering her
defective eyesight and the fact that it was improbable that she was wearing
glasses when she was raped, it is doubtful whether she really recognized the
assailant’s face.[25]
As the Solicitor General points
out, however, complainant did not say that she did not recognize the face of
her rapist. Her testimony on this point
is as follows:
“COURT:
Q The question of the counsel is why did you not tell the police that it was the accused who raped you instead you said you did not recognize?
A I knew him by face.
ATTY. DE LA FUENTE:
Q: Is it not a fact that you earlier said that you already knew him as Hilgem Nerio?
A: By face.
FISCAL YNGSON:
We object there is no mention of the name.
ATTY. DE LA FUENTE:
He said earlier. He already knew him as Hilgem Nerio.
COURT:
He even pointed to the accused. Let the witness answer.
A Upon seeing his face I
already knew his name as Hilgem Nerio.
ATTY. DE LA FUENTE
Q So you know his face
and his name as Hilgem Nerio, is that correct?
A Yes, ma’am.”[26]
Thus, complainant was able to see
the face of her accused-appellant.
Indeed, her testimony is consistent with the two complaints she
filed. In her first complaint for
qualified trespass to dwelling, physical injuries, and grave threats,
complainant stated that an unidentified person broke into her house, went into
her room, poked a knife at her, and threatened to kill her if she shouted. In her second complaint with the additional
charge of rape, complainant again stated that she did not know the identity of
her abuser but said that she would be able to positively identify him if she
saw him again. When SPO3 Mojica showed
her a photograph of accused-appellant, she broke down and stated that the man
in the photograph was the same man who had raped her.[27] Complainant recalled to SPO3 Mojica that some of her
neighbors had been victimized in the same manner by an unidentified person, but
they did not file complaints against him.
Complainant wanted to be sure the intruder who had raped her was the
person her neighbors complained against.
Acting upon his lead, SPO3 Puentebella made inquiries and asked
accused-appellant’s father for a photograph of his son. SPO3 Puentebella made this request so he
could show the picture to complainant.[28]
Accused-appellant’s contention
that complainant could not have identified him after he became her pupil in
Grade 1 because his physical appearance had changed since then is without
merit. Complainant recognized
accused-appellant not because he was once her former pupil but because she had
seen his face on the date in question.
This is the reason she was able to identify accused-appellant when his
photograph was shown to her.
Accused-appellant’s claim that
complainant’s poor eyesight made it impossible for her to see her assailant’s
face clearly is flimsy.
Accused-appellant made this conclusion on the basis of complainant’s
inability to read the affidavit shown to her during the trial of November 22,
1999 because she did not have her eyeglasses.
It does not necessarily follow, however, that if complainant was unable
to read without her eyeglasses, she would likewise be unable to see the face of
her attacker, especially if he was on top of her as he raped her. Complainant testified that after
accused-appellant undressed her, she saw him remove his clothes. Accused-appellant held a knife in his left
hand and poked it at her.[29] She likewise stated in her complaint that she would
be able to positively identify her abuser if she saw him again. Thus, complainant saw accused-appellant’s
face on the night that she was sexually abused.
Accused-appellant also cites
alleged inconsistencies in the testimony of complainant. Accused-appellant asks why she did not tell
everything to the police the first time she reported the incident. And if she had been told the whole story,
why did Carmen, complainant’s daughter, not disclose the rape to the police if
her mother was reluctant to do so? From
these questions, which allegedly were not answered satisfactorily by the
prosecution, accused-appellant makes the inference that both complainant and
her daughter in fact knew the person who entered their house that morning but
they hid his identity and did not immediately report the incident to the
police.[30]
Accused-appellant’s arguments have
been sufficiently answered by the trial court which held:
“The fact that in her first report to the police of the incident as
entered in the police blotter of April 1, 1999(Exh. “1”) did not mention the
rape did not in any way mean that the crime was not committed since the sexual
contact was insolently admitted by accused Nerio. Besides, it was
satisfactorily explained by complainant that during first report, she and her
daughter Carmen who went with her to the police station were extremely nervous
and she was overwhelmed by your traumatic experience that she failed to mention
about the rape, This was heightened by
the inexpressible shame and embarrassment of reporting the sordid detail of
her ravishment from the hands of her
attacker to a male police officer, PO3 Althamar Tupas who made the
booking. x x x x x x [31]
Complainant, an old lady, was
ashamed to tell the police that she had been raped. She went to the police station three times, but it was only on
the third time, on April 3, 1999, when she mustered enough courage to tell her
story.
This Court has upheld the conviction of an accused for rape even
if the complainant disclosed the incident only after several days or even
months after the occurrence.[32] The two-day delay in reporting the rape incident in
this case cannot undermine the charge against accused-appellant as it was shown
that the delay is grounded on his threats that he would kill complainant if she
shouted and that he would return the next day.[33]
Accused-appellant alleges that
there are glaring inconsistencies between complainant’s affidavit and her
testimony in court. The alleged
inconsistencies are minor and merely refer to trivial details which may have
been caused by the natural fickleness of memory. They tend to strengthen, rather than weaken, the credibility of
the prosecution witness because they erase any suspicion of a rehearsed
testimony.[34]
Indeed, the details contained in
complainant’s affidavit (Exh. “4”) and in her testimony on direct and
cross-examination are substantially consistent with one another. What is crucial is that complainant’s
affidavit and testimony on direct and cross-examination as a whole agree on all
the essential facts and give a coherent picture of the sordid events that
happened in the morning of April 1, 1999.
Accused-appellant alleges that
complainant added other details during her cross-examination although she
affirmed the contents of her affidavit.
There is actually no inconsistency.
Complainant was more detailed in her testimony in court because more
questions were asked. In one case, we
ruled:
“Generally an affidavit is not prepared by the affiant himself, but
by another person who uses his own language in writing the affiant’s
statements. Omissions and
misunderstandings by the writer are not infrequent particularly under
circumstances of hurry and impatience.
For this reason, the infirmity of affidavits as a species of evidence is
much a matter of judicial experience.”[35]
We have many times ruled that when
the question of credence as to which of the conflicting versions of the
prosecution and defense should be believed the trial court’s findings are generally
accorded with respect because it has seen the way the witness testified and
observed them while testifying.[36] Unless shown that it has overlooked some facts which
would affect the result of the case, the trial court’s factual findings will
not be disturbed by the appellate court.[37] The trial court arrived at a judgment of conviction
by relying on the testimony of complainant.
The trial court held:
“Prudently, judiciously, objectively and meticulously evaluating,
analyzing, calibrating and going through the finer points of the evidence
adduced by a contending parties on the charge of rape by complainant Vilma
Concel viz-a-viz the audacious admission by accused Hilgem Nerio of voluntary
sexual tryst with complainant anchored on “sweetheart defense,” we find in
favor of the prosecution. There is a
total dearth of raison d’ etre for us to be skeptical of the credibility of
private complainant who is a venerable grandmother of 70, a retired public
school teacher, a purok president and a recipient of the plum as one of the
1994 Outstanding Mothers of Negros Occidental (province).”[38]
The trial court, characterizing
complainant’s testimony as simple but candid, straightforward, and sincere,
found it more worthy of belief than accused-appellant’s testimony. This is in keeping with settled
jurisprudence that since rape is essentially an offense of secrecy, not
generally attempted except in dark or deserted and secluded places away from
prying eyes, a complaint arising from the crime usually commences solely upon
the word of the woman herself, and conviction invariably hangs only upon her
credibility as the People’s single witness of the actual occurrence.
Accused-appellant asserts that the
trial court showed its bias by believing complainant’s explanation that the
reason she did not initially report the rape to the police was because she was
ashamed. Her claim that she did not
want to make a report to a policeman was flimsy because she could have been
referred to a female investigator at the Women’s and Children’s Desk, which was
specifically set up to handle cases of this nature.[39] But did complainant know this? Could she have for a female investigator
when by doing so she would be letting the male investigators know exactly what
she did not want them to know? These
are questions which she should have been asked during the cross-examination and
not only now on appeal.
Indeed, complainant’s testimony
that accused-appellant forced himself upon her, that he threatened her with a
knife, and that she tried to protect herself and in so doing suffered cuts in
the palm of her right hand remain unchallenged despite all of
accused-appellant’s sophistry. As the
trial court found:
“The circumstances of force and intimidation with the use of a
bladed weapon in the perpetration of rape as charged in the Information
attending the instant case were manifested clearly not merely in the victim’s
testimony but also in the physical evidence presented during trial, i.e., the
medico-legal report showing three (3) laceration in the right palm of the said
victim. These injuries were sustained
by her while trying to wrest away the knife from her sexual attacker and
exerting efforts to disengage herself from the sexual anchorage. Such piece of evidence is more eloquent than
a hundred witnesses. The fact of carnal
knowledge is not disputed; it is in fact admitted. Moreover, it was positively established through the offended
party’s own testimony and corroborated by that of her examining physician.”[40]
In her medical report (Exh. B),
Dr. Cherryl C. Gumahin stated that complainant had a 0.2 cm. partial tear at
the 11 o’clock position in the hymenal area with hyperenia of the vulvar area
(Exh. B-1).[41] She testified that these could have been caused by a
blunt object, such as a penis. She also
found lacerations measuring 2 cm., .5 cm. and .3 cm. on complainant’s right
hand. According to Dr. Gumahin, these
lacerations could have been caused by a sharp instrument, like a knife.[42]
Indeed, the defense has utterly
failed to show why complainant, a septuagenarian in the twilight of her life, a
widow, and a mother of eleven children, who testified not knowing
accused-appellant except when she was his Grade 1 teacher, would file such a
malicious charge against him. Verily, a
rape victim would not publicly disclose that she has been raped and undergo the
trouble and humiliation of a trial if her motive was not to bring to justice
the person who had abused her.[43]
In this case, complainant was 70
years old when the attack occurred. She
was, and is, respected not only in the community, having once been a candidate
of their barangay, but in the entire province of Negros Occidental, being one
of the recipients of an awards as Outstanding Mother of the said province. Why would she take interest in prurient matters
and even want to engage in a sexual liaison when ladies of her age and station
in life are turning their thoughts to virtues?
Accused-appellant would want this Court to believe that complainant was
a sex-starved old woman who found accused-appellant, then 28 years of age, so
virile and irresistible that she showed sexual aggressiveness even in their
first encounter. She allegedly grabbed
his groin and helped him attain erection by performing oral sex on him. Indeed, the picture painted of her by accused-appellant
is that of the equivalent of the dirty old man. We cannot believe this fantasy.
The same thoughts appear to have
crossed the mind of the trial judge.
Now, accused-appellant asks why a young and exceedingly virile male like
him would prefer to have sex with a 70-year old woman when her younger daughter
was easily accessible. The answer is:
Probably he would not have done this had he not just been to a drinking bout
with a friend which lasted from 7:00 p.m. of the previous night up to 1:00 a.m.
of the next day, when he committed the crime.
As to why accused-appellant did
not molest complainant’s daughter, whose room he passed in going to the store,
SPO3 Mojica found that the intruder had first tried to open the door of
complainant’s daughter’s room on the second floor. Finding that it was locked, he proceeded to open the door of the
next room. After seeing that it was
empty, he proceeded to the ground floor.[44] Thus, accused-appellant did indeed try to reach
complainant’s daughter first, contrary to what he claims. Finding her to be inaccessible,
accused-appellant opted to look for complainant.
As to why he took a longer route
going to complainant, a possible reason can be given for such behavior. He could have had robbery in mind when he
entered the main house. In fact, his
companion, Allan Imbong, testified that they wanted to eat after their drinking
spree, but accused-appellant did not have money. Accused-appellant told him to wait while he dropped by
complainant’s house.[45] SPO3 Mojica theorized that accused-appellant tried to
enter several rooms in the house before finally going to complainant’s room
because he wanted to rob the place.
SECOND. It is
charged that the trial court was so prejudiced against accused-appellant that
it ignored and even refused to listen to the latter’s version of the incident
and placed on him the burden of proving his innocence. Accused-appellant avers that the court erred
in finding that the bathroom window through which the intruder passed was made
of louvers of jalousies, as testified to by SPO3 Mojica, when, according to PO3
Tupas, it was an old single glass window with a wooden cross brace. According to accused-appellant, because of
these conflicting descriptions of the window, the court should have conducted
an ocular inspection of the house.
Accused-appellant filed a Motion for Ocular Inspection, which would have
shown that neither of the two police officers’ descriptions of the bathroom
window was correct and that it was in fact made of a single broken glass which
would not allow entrance even of a child’s head. Accused-appellant argues that such finding would also have proved
his defense that he was familiar with the interior of complainant’s room
because he was a frequent visitor there.[46]
SPO3 Mojica categorically stated
that the bathroom window was of the jalousie type and that the intruder gained
entry into the house by detaching three glass louvers of the jalousie
window. Accused-appellant was given the
opportunity to controvert this fact and he, in fact, did so by describing in
detail the features of complainant’s room.
But the trial court was not convinced.
It denied accused-appellant’s motion for ocular inspection in the
interest of conducting a speedy trial.
The trial court had the opportunity to hear accused-appellant’s
testimony and to observe his demeanor while testifying. It did not attach any significance to these
particular defenses presented by accused-appellant. We find no cogent reason to disturb the trial court’s findings on
these points.
THIRD. Accused-appellant makes much of the statement in the
medical report that complainant “claims to have had no penile penetration but
the penis was noted to enter only on vaginal opening. No ejaculation.”
Accused-appellant argues that, if there was neither penile penetration
by force nor ejaculation, then there was no rape. Suffice it to say that neither complete penetration nor
ejaculation is required to consummate rape.
What is material is that there is penetration no matter how slight of the
female organ.[47] The mere introduction of the male organ into the
labia of the pudendum is sufficient.
That there was penetration in this case was proven by the testimony of
the complainant. She testified that
accused-appellant inserted his penis into her vagina and made the coital
movement for about five to ten
minutes. As we have long held, when a
woman says that she has been raped, she says in effect all that is necessary to
show that rape has been committed. Her
testimony is credible where she has no motive to testify falsely against the
accused, as in the case at bar.
In any event, even granting that
he and complainant had really been sweethearts, that fact alone would not
negate the commission of rape. A
sweetheart cannot be forced to have sex against her will. Love is not a license for lust.[48] Not even a past sexual relationship between the
parties is a defense to a rape.[49]
The conduct of complainant
immediately after the alleged rape as well as accused-appellant’s behavior upon
learning that a complaint for rape had been filed against him is
significant. Immediately after the
sexual assault, complainant told her daughters about the incident, went with
them to the police station to file a complaint, and submitted herself to a
difficult and humiliating physical examination during which she exposed her
private parts to a stranger. This fact
belies accused-appellant’s claim that complainant agreed to have sexual
intercourse with him.[50]
Accused-appellant, on the other
hand, upon learning that a complaint for rape had been filed against him on
April 5, 1999, fled and went into hiding in his mother’s hometown and later
stayed with his sister. He hid there
for six months and six days until he was arrested on October 11, 1999. Accused-appellant claims that he fled and
hid because he was afraid. We are not
convinced by accused-appellant’s self-serving explanation. We have repeatedly held that the flight of
an accused signifies an awareness of guilt and a consciousness that he had no
tenable defense against the rape charge.[51]
FOURTH.
Accused-appellant contends that the trial court erred in appreciating
the aggravating circumstance of insult or disregard of the respect due to the
offended party on account of her rank and age.
He claims that, other than the bare allegation that she is 70 years old
and a retired public school teacher, there is no proof that he deliberately
intended to offend or insult complainant’s rank or age.
We hold that the trial court
properly appreciated the existence of the aggravating circumstance of insult or
disregard of the respect due to the offended party on account of her rank and
age. Accused-appellant knew that
complainant was his Grade 1 public school teacher and was already quite old. Indeed, these facts were admitted by accused-appellant
in the stipulation of facts embodied in the pre-trial order which he signed.[52] As the Solicitor General observes, accused-appellant
was fully aware that he was raping his old teacher. That complainant had already retired from the service as a
teacher did not diminish the respect due her rank as a former Grade 1 teacher
of accused-appellant.
In analogous cases, rank
aggravated the murder by a pupil of his teacher[53] and the assault upon a 66-year old District Judge of
the Court of First Instance by a justice of the peace.[54] On the other hand, age aggravated the murder of the
victim, who was 65 years old, by her offenders, aged 32 and 27.[55] It was also appreciated in the killing of a 73-year
old man by a 27-year old assailant.[56]
Under Art. 266-A, par. 1(a) of the
Revised Penal Code, as amended by R.A. No. 7659 and R.A. No. 8353, rape is
committed by a man who shall have a carnal knowledge of a woman through force,
threat, or intimidation. Article 266-B
provides that rape under paragraph 1 of Article 266-A shall be punished with
reclusion perpetua to death whenever the rape is committed with the use of a
deadly weapon. The use by
accused-appellant of a bladed weapon when he raped complainant was alleged in the
information and sufficiently proven in this case. Under Article 63 of the Revised Penal Code, in all cases in which
the law prescribes a penalty composed of two indivisible penalties, and the
crime was committed with the presence of one aggravating circumstance, the
greater penalty shall be applied.
Considering the presence in this case of the aggravating circumstance of
insult or disregard of the respect due the offended party on account of her age
and rank, the sentence reclusion perpetua imposed by the trial court
should be changed to the penalty of death.
Four (4) members of the Court,
although maintaining their adherence to the separate opinions expressed in People
vs. Echagaray[57] that R.A. No. 7659, insofar as it prescribes the
penalty of death, is unconstitutional, nevertheless submit to the ruling of the
majority that the law is constitutional and that the death penalty should
accordingly be imposed.
The award of civil indemnity of
accused-appellant in the amount of P50,000.00 should be increased to P75,000.00. This is in line with current case law,[58] that if the crime is qualified by circumstances which
warrant the imposition of the death penalty by applicable amendatory laws, the
accused should be ordered to pay the complainant the amount of P75,000.00 as
civil indemnity. The award of
P50,000.00 as moral damages is in accordance with recent rulings.[59] As to the award of exemplary damages, we held in People
vs. Catubig[60] that the
presence of an aggravating circumstance, whether ordinary or qualifying,
entitles the offended party to an award of exemplary damages. Hence, the award of exemplary damages by the
trial court is proper, but the same should be reduced to P25,000.00 in line
with the ruling in Catubig.
WHEREFORE, the decision of the trial court is AFFIRMED with the
MODIFICATION that accused-appellant is sentenced to suffer the maximum penalty
of DEATH. He is likewise ordered to pay
complainant P75,000.00 as civil indemnity, and, in addition, P50,000.00 as
moral damages, P25,000.00 as exemplary damages, and the costs.
In accordance with Section 25 of
R.A. No. 7659, amending Art. 83 of the Revised Penal Code, upon the finality of
this decision, let the records of this case be forthwith forwarded to the
President of the Philippines for the possible exercise of the pardoning power.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., Bellosillo, Melo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing, Pardo, Buena, Ynares-Santiago, De Leon, Jr., and Sandoval-Gutierrez, JJ., concur.
[1] Penned by Judge
Edgar G. Garvilles
[2] TSN, Nov. 22, 1999,
pp. 3-6.
[3] Records, p. 82. See
Exh. F and G.
[4] TSN, Dec. 7, 1999,
p. 53.
[5] Rollo, p. 9.
[6] Pre-trial Order, p.
1; Records, p. 26.
[7] TSN, Nov. 22, 1999,
pp. 8-10. See also Investigation Report
(Exh C.), Records, p. 48.
[8] TSN, Nov. 22, 1999,
pp. 10-14.
[9] Id., pp.
15-16.
[10] Id., pp.
16-18; 52-54.
[11] Id., pp. 65,
82-83.
[12] Id., pp.
19-20; TSN, Nov. 29, 1999, pp. 16-22. See
also Exhibits 3-A and 3-B.
[13] TSN, Nov. 22, 1999,
pp. 37, 56, 71-74, and 86. See
Investigation Report (Exh. C), Records, p. 48.
See also TSN, Dec. 7, 1999, p. 39.
[14] TSN, Dec. 7, 1999,
pp. 56-64.
[15] Id., pp.
67-77.
[16] Id., pp.
77-91.
[17] TSN, Dec. 7, 1999,
pp. 5-14.
[18] Id., pp.
26-41.
[19] TSN, Jan. 11, 2000,
pp. 2-4.
[20] Brief for the
Accused-Appellant (Public Attorney’s Office, Bacolod City District Office), p.
9; Rollo, p. 64.
[21] Decision, p. 17; Rollo,
p. 34.
[22] Brief for the
Accused-Appellant (Department of Justice, Public Attorney’s Office, Quezon
City) p. 1; Rollo, p. 131.
[23] Id., p. 10; id.,
p. 140.
[24] Ibid.
[25] Brief for the Accused-Appellant
(Department of Justice, Public Attorney’s Office, Quezon City) p. 12; Rollo,
p. 142.
[26] TSN, Nov. 22, 1999,
pp. 54-55.
[27] Rollo, p.
105.
[28] TSN, Nov. 22, 1999,
p. 83-85.
[29] Id., 33-35.
[30] Brief for the
Accused-Appellant (Public Attorney’s Office, Bacolod City District Office), pp.
16-19, Rollo, p. 71-74.
[31] Decision, p. 9; id.,
p. 26.
[32] People vs.
Cervantes, 265 SCRA 832 (1996).
[33] See People vs.
Talaboc, 256 SCRA 441 (1996).
[34] Ibid.
[35] People vs.
Patilan, 197 SCRA 354 (1991).
[36] People vs. Carson,
204 SCRA 266 (1991), citing People vs. Eguac, 80 SCRA 665 (1977).
[37] People vs.
Hinto, G.R. No. 138146-91, February 28, 2001, citing People vs. Tan, 264
SCRA 425, 445 (1996).
[38] Decision, p. 8; Rollo,
p. 25.
[39] Brief for the Accused-Appellant
(Public Attorney’s Office, Bacolod City District Office), p. 34; Rollo,
p. 89.
[40] Decision, p. 13; id.,
p. 30.
[41] See also TSN, Nov.
29, 1999, p. 16.
[42] TSN, Nov. 29, 1999,
p. 16-21.
[43] People vs.
Domingo, 226 SCRA 156 (1993).
[44] Investigation Report
(Exh. C), Records, p. 48.
[45] TSN, pp. 9-11, Dec.
7, 1999.
[46] Brief for the
Accused-Appellant (Public Attorney’s Office, Bacolod City District Office), pp.
33-34; Rollo, pp. 88-89.
[47] People vs.
Faigano, 254 SCRA 10 (1996).
[48] People vs.
Domingo, 226 SCRA 156 (1993), citing People vs. Tismo, 204 SCRA 535
(1991).
[49] People vs.
Sarellana, 233 SCRA 31 (1994).
[50] See People vs.
Domingo, 226 SCRA 156 (1993), citing People vs. Cruz, 203 SCRA 682
(1991).
[51] People vs.
Sarellana, 233 SCRA 31 (1994); People vs. Cruz, 165 SCRA 130 (1988).
[52] See Pre-trial Order,
p.1; Records, p. 26.
[53] U.S. vs.
Cabling, 7 Phil 469 (1907).
[54] People vs.
Rodil, 109 SCRA 308 (1981).
[55] People vs.
Zapanta and Tubadea, 107 Phil 103 (1960).
[56] People vs.
Rubio, 257 SCRA 528 (1996).
[57] 267 SCRA 682 (1997).
[58] People vs. Brondial,
G.R. No. 135517, October 18, 2000; People vs. Sancha, 324 SCRA 646
(2000); People vs. Alba, 305 SCRA 811 (1999).
[59] People vs.
Nunez, 310 SCRA 168; People vs. Narido, 316 SCRA 131 (1999).
[60] G.R. No. 137842,
August 23, 2001.