EN BANC
[G.R. No. 131478.
April 11, 2002]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. RAYMUNDO CORFIN, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
KAPUNAN,
J.:
This an automatic review
of the Decision, dated August 13, 1997, of the Regional Trial Court, Branch 35,
11th Judicial Region, General Santos City,
finding accused-appellant Raymundo Corfin guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the
crime of Rape with Homicide and imposing upon him the supreme penalty of death.
The Information filed
against accused-appellant charged him with robbery with homicide committed as
follows:
That on or about 12:30 P.M. of May 18, 1995, at Purok 17, Barangay Fatima, General Santos City, Philippines and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, said accused, by means of violence and intimidation, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully, and feloniously have carnal knowledge of the daughter of complainant named Ad Jane Zabala, 4 years old, against her will and consent; that on the occasion of said rape, accused did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously attack and strike the victim with the use of stone hitting her on her head, thereby inflicting upon said Ad Jane Zabala injuries which directly caused her death.
CONTRARY TO LAW.[1]
At his arraignment,
accused-appellant, with the assistance of counsel, pleaded not guilty. Trial ensued.
The uncontroverted facts
established during the trial are as follows:
Ad Jane Zabala, 4 years
old, was the daughter of Rosemarie and Alejandro Zabala. The couple had five (5) children. They lived in 39.2 (now FVR Village),
Barangay Fatima, General Santos City.
In the morning of May 18, 1995, Rosemarie took her youngest child to the
rural health center to avail of the government’s immunization program. She came home at 11:00 in the morning and
found that Ad Jane was not in the house.
Rosemarie looked for her daughter in the neighborhood but she was
nowhere to be found.[2]
Rosemarie then requested
a neighbor to fetch her husband, Alejandro, a fisherman, in Kabu to tell him
that Ad Jane was missing. Alejandro
immediately went home and thereafter, proceeded to the Makar Police Station to
report their daughter’s disappearance.
He also visited local radio stations to seek their help in finding Ad
Jane.[3]
The following day,
Alejandro was awakened by a neighbor who told him that they found a child in
the dry creek near the road leading to RFM and Nautica. Alejandro immediately rushed to said
place. There, he found the body of her
daughter lying on the ground with her face up, her hands raised above her head
and legs spread apart. He wanted to
hold her daughter but was instructed not to do so because the body had to be
examined first. Although it was not yet
in a state of decomposition, a stench was already emitting from Ad Jane’s
body. It was then 2:00 in the afternoon
of May 19, 1995.[4]
At the instance of his
wife, Alejandro searched for Ad Jane’s slippers and panty. He found the slippers and recognized them as
Ad Jane’s because they bore the initials “AZ.”
Alejandro said he engraved these letters on her daughter’s
slippers. He also found the panty and
showed it to his wife. She confirmed
that the same belonged to their daughter.
He felt hurt and pain but could not do anything except to call the Purok
Chairman, Antonio Armilla, to ask for his help.[5]
Armilla immediately
requested the local city government to send policemen to the place where Ad
Jane’s body was found. He also
requested that the services of a funeral parlor be engaged. When they arrived, the police authorities
took several pictures and thereafter, loaded the body into the funeral car.[6] The victim’s body was brought to the General
Santos Health Office for autopsy. The
post-mortem findings of Dr. Virginia Ramirez were as follows:
1. Body on the advance state of decomposition;
2. Lacerated wound at right inquinal area with eviscerations of intestine;
3. Child on litothomy position, vagina very much inflammed [sic] with laceration at 6 o’clock and 5 o’clock.
Caused [sic] of death: Death
was due to hemorrhage secondary to rape.[7]
Dr. Ramirez substantially
confirmed the foregoing findings when she testified in court. However, she (Dr. Ramirez) averred that she
could not categorically state what caused the laceration in the victim’s
vagina. It could have been allegedly
caused by an erect penis or any hard object.[8]
There being no eyewitness
to the dastardly act perpetrated against the defenseless child, the prosecution
endeavored to inculpate accused-appellant based on the testimonies of the
following prosecution witnesses: Imelda Arnado, Alma Lawas, Mariano Mahinay and
Rosanna Rentillo.
Arnado is a resident of
FVR Village, Barangay Fatima, General Santos City. She and the Zabalas were neighbors. She testified that in the morning of May 18, 1995, she went to house
of her niece, Alma Lawas, to borrow laundry brush from the latter. Arnado left her house at about 10:00 in the
morning. She just walked to her niece’s
house. On the way, Arnado passed by an
abandoned store by the road where she saw accused-appellant and Ad Jane talking
to each other. They were seated in
front of the store. Arnado overheard
accused-appellant ask the child where her mother was. Arnado no longer heard the girl’s reply. Arnado reached her niece’s house at 11:00 in
the morning. She only stayed there for
a few minutes. As she was walking home,
she saw, at a distance ahead of her, accused-appellant walking towards
RFM. Ad Jane was walking closely behind
him. Arnado learned later that Ad Jane
was found dead.[9]
Arnado described
accused-appellant as then wearing short pants and a yellow “sando.” She knew accused-appellant because he was
the “conductor” of a jeepney that plied the FVR and Dadiangas route. She had been a passenger of said jeepney a
few times in the past. On May 20, 1995,
Arnado executed a sworn statement pointing to accused-appellant as the
perpetrator of the crime.[10]
Lawas, also a resident of
FVR, Barangay Fatima, General Santos City, and the niece of Arnado,
substantially corroborated her aunt’s testimony. According to Lawas, she was at home in the morning of May 18,
1995. Her house was twenty (20) meters
away from the abandoned store where she saw accused-appellant and Ad Jane
talking to each other. A few minutes
later, she (Lawas) saw them walking towards the direction of RFM. It was about 11:00 in the morning. The following day, she heard about the news
of Ad Jane’s death. On May 20, 1995,
Lawas executed a sworn statement charging accused-appellant of the crime.[11]
Mahinay is a resident of
Diamond Valley, Barangay Tambler, General Santos City. On May 18, 1995, at about 11:00 in the
morning, he went to see his daughter in her house in 39.2 (now FVR
Village). He took the short cut route
and while on said path, he met accused-appellant. He noticed that accused-appellant was carrying a child. Mahinay recognized the child as the daughter
of Alejandro Zabala. The girl was still
alive at the time. He knew Alejandro
because they lived together in the same house in a sawmill at Calumpang
sometime in 1985.[12]
When Mahinay was already
twenty (20) meters away from the place where he met accused-appellant, he
(Mahinay) heard the crying of a child.
He turned around to where the sound came from but he did not see
anything. He then continued walking
until he reached his daughter’s house.
The following day, he learned that Alejandro’s daughter was found dead.[13]
Rentillo testified that
at about 1:00 in the afternoon of May 18, 1995, she was on her way home from
the health center. While she was
walking, she saw accused-appellant coming from Diamond [Village] and going
towards the direction of Rentillo’s house.
She noticed that he was wearing a yellow sleeveless shirt and short
pants. He looked very dirty and was
perspiring profusely. He continued
walking downhill away from Rentillo’s house.
The following day, Rentillo heard the news about Ad Jane’s death.[14]
The defense presented
accused-appellant as its sole witness.
To exculpate himself, accused-appellant interposed denial and alibi. He
averred that he worked as “conductor” of a passenger jeepney. On May 18, 1995, at around 10:00 in the
morning, he was in 39.2, Barangay Fatima, General Santos City. By 10:30, he rode the jeepney to go back to
his house in Labangal. He was home by
1:30 in the afternoon. His mother was
in the house when he arrived. From 2:00
until 3:00 in the afternoon, he played cards with his neighbors, namely, Toto
Sipagan, Jeser Mandawe and Willy Aba.[15]
He admitted that on that
day, he was wearing a yellow sleeveless shirt and short pants. He likewise affirmed that he sat down in
front of the abandoned store on that particular morning. However, he denied ever talking to a little
girl while he was there. Instead, he
claimed that there were also other people in the abandoned store but he did not
know any of them. From the store, he
went directly to the jeepney terminal and proceeded to his house.[16]
Accused-appellant further
narrated that he was arrested in their house in the evening of May 19,
1995. He was first brought to 39.2
where he was mauled by Armilla, the Purok Chairman. He was then brought to the police station in Barangay
Tambler. Later, he was transferred to
the Makar Police Station.[17]
After the prosecution and
the defense presented their respective documentary and testimonial evidence,
the trial court rendered judgment finding accused-appellant guilty beyond
reasonable doubt of rape with homicide and imposing upon him the supreme
penalty of death. The dispositive
portion of the trial court’s decision reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Court finds the accused Raymundo Corfin, guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of rape with homicide as defined and penalized under Article 335 of the Revised Penal Code as amended by Section 11, Republic Act 7659, and hereby sentences him to suffer the extreme penalty of death; to indemnify the heirs of Ad Jane Zabala for her unlawful death in the amount of P50,000.00, P30,000.00 and P20,000.00 respectively for moral and exemplary damages; P10,000.00 for actual damages and to pay the cost of this suit.
SO ORDERED.[18]
In view of the imposition
of the death penalty, this case was automatically elevated to this Court for
review. In his appeal brief,
accused-appellant made a lone assignment of error:
THE TRIAL COURT GRAVELY ERRED IN
CONVICTING ACCUSED-APPELLANT ON THE BASIS MERELY OF CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE
WHICH DO NOT, HOWEVER, PROVE WITH MORAL CERTAINTY THAT HE WAS THE PERPETRATOR
OF THE CRIME CHARGED.[19]
Accused-appellant mainly
assails his conviction on the basis of circumstantial evidence. According to
accused-appellant, the circumstantial evidence presented by the prosecution
does not sufficiently establish his guilt beyond reasonable doubt. While the
prosecution may have shown that accused-appellant was last seen with the
victim, it (prosecution) allegedly failed to establish precisely where and what
time the crime was committed. Thus,
accused-appellant opines that this omission suggests the possibility that
another person may have committed the crime.
Indeed, the pivotal issue
that needs to be resolved in this case is whether or not there is sufficient
evidence to hold accused-appellant guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime
of rape with homicide.
Concededly in this case,
there was neither an eyewitness nor direct evidence linking accused-appellant
to the crime for which he was charged and convicted. However, direct evidence is not the only matrix from which the
trial court may draw its findings and conclusions of culpability. Resort to circumstantial evidence is
essential when to insist on direct testimony would result in setting felons
free.[20]
Under the rules,
circumstantial evidence is sufficient to convict an accused if the following
requisites concur: (a) there is more than one circumstance; (b) the facts from which the inferences are
derived are proven; and (c) the combination of all the circumstances is such as
to produce a conviction beyond reasonable doubt.[21]
The corollary rule is
that the circumstances proven must constitute an unbroken chain which leads to
one fair and reasonable conclusion pointing to the accused, to the exclusion of
all others, as the guilty person;[22] i.e., the circumstances proven must
be consistent with each other, consistent with the hypothesis that the accused
is guilty and at the same time inconsistent with the hypothesis that he is
innocent and with any other rational hypothesis except that of guilt.[23]
Circumstantial evidence
finds application in crimes such as rape with homicide. The nature of the crime of rape, where it is
usually only the victim and the rapist who are present at the scene of the
crime, makes prosecutions for the complex crime of rape with homicide
particularly difficult since the victim can no longer testify against the
perpetrator of the crime. In these
cases, the pieces of evidence against the accused are usually circumstantial.[24]
The trial court in this
case appreciated the following circumstantial evidence to convict
accused-appellant:
1. That accused Raymundo Corfin was seen conversing with the victim, Ad Jane Zabala, at an abandoned store (Exh. “C-3”) on that fateful day of May 18, 1995 at 10:30 A.M. by witnesses Imelda Arnado and Alma Lawas wearing a yellow sando and short pants. He was positively identified by both witnesses as the conductor of a navigator jeep that services their area in going to Dadiangas and vice versa. The two knew the accused for at least six (6) months before the incident as such conductor.
2. Imelda Arnado and Alma Lawas, later on saw the accused and the victim leaved (sic) the abandoned store at 11:00 A.M. on the same day at a place (Exh. “C-4”) passing the footpath (Exh. “C”) and going towards RFM (Exh. “G-7”).
3. At about the same time, i.e. at 11:00 A.M. on the same day, Mariano Mahinay, a Barangay Tanod, while coming from the Barangay Hall, and was also taking the same footpath (Exh. “C”) going down to 39.2 (now FVR Village) to see his daughter, Elsa Tapaya, he met the accused carrying a child on his shoulder, “abba” position. The accused was duly identified by him as a conductor of a jeep whom he knew one month before the incident. He likewise knew the child being carried by the accused to be the daughter of Alejandro Zabala but he did not talk to Corfin as he presumed they were relatives. The child was still alive. He met the accused on the footpath (Exh. “C-8”).
4. At 1:00 P.M. of the same day, while Rosanna Rentillo was coming from the health center where she rendered duties and was going down towards her house at 39.2, she came side by side with the accused in the same footpath (Exh. “C”). The accused was also going down towards 39.2 and he was wearing a yellow T-shirt with short pants, basketball type. He appears to her to be very untidy (bulingit) and perspiring profusely.
5. The next day at about 2:00 P.M. of May 19, 1995,
the child Ad Jane Zabala was found dead in a dry creek (Exh. “C-9”).[25]
Undoubtedly, the
requisites for conviction based on circumstantial evidence have been satisfied
by the foregoing circumstances. There
are clearly more than one circumstance linking accused-appellant to the killing
of Ad Jane: he was the last person seen with the victim; accused-appellant and
the victim were seen together near the dry creek; accused-appellant was seen
leaving said place alone; and, the body of Ad Jane was found in the dry creek.
Accused-appellant himself
admitted that in the morning of that fateful day, he was in 39.2 and that he
stopped by the abandoned store.
Consistent with the prosecution witnesses’ testimonies,
accused-appellant confirmed that, on that day, he was wearing a yellow
sleeveless shirt and short pants. That
he was the same person last seen with the victim and he was at the place where
the victim’s body was found had been indubitably established.
The foregoing
circumstances, taken together, lead to no other conclusion than that
accused-appellant, and no other else, was responsible for the death of Ad
Jane. The prosecution’s evidence,
albeit circumstantial, overpowers accused-appellant’s defense of denial and
alibi.
Denial and alibi are
inherently weak defenses. Denial is
negative and self-serving and cannot be given greater evidentiary weight over
the testimonies of credible witnesses who positively testified that accused was
at the locus criminis and was the last person seen with the victim.[26]
Accused-appellant’s alibi
likewise deserves scant consideration in light of the fact that his claim that
he was in his house at 1:30 in the afternoon of May 18, 1995 does not preclude
his physical presence at the place where the crime was committed. For alibi to
prosper, accused must prove not only (1) that he was somewhere else when the
crime was committed, but (2) it must likewise be demonstrated that he was so
far away that he could not have been physically present at the place of the
crime or its immediate vicinity at the time of its commission.[27] The distance between accused-appellant’s
house and the dry creek, i.e., eight hundred (800) meters, is not
such as to render it impossible for accused-appellant to be at the locus
criminis or its immediate vicinity at the time of the incident.
Accused-appellant
attempts to destroy the credibility of the prosecution witnesses by pointing to
several inconsistencies or inaccuracies in their statements. Specifically, Lawas allegedly stated in her
testimony that she was twenty (20) meters away from accused-appellant and the
victim when she saw them at the abandoned store. However, when she was recalled to the witness stand, she claimed
that the distance was merely “more or less ten (10) meters.” The same witness,
in her sworn statement, said that when she saw accused-appellant and the victim
walking towards the direction of RFM, the child was walking ahead of
accused-appellant. During her testimony in court, Lawas averred that the victim
was walking behind accused-appellant.
Further, in her sworn statement, Lawas described accused-appellant as
5’6” in height and has a short straight hair.
However, accused-appellant is actually 5’10” tall and has a curly hair.
On the other hand, Arnado
testified that accused-appellant was not holding the hand of the victim when
they were walking. However, she later
claimed that accused-appellant held the hand of the victim.
To the Court’s mind,
these inconsistencies in the testimonies of Lawas and Arnado refer to trivial
and inconsequential details. They do
not detract from the fact that accused-appellant was the last person seen with
the victim and that he was subsequently seen hurriedly leaving the place where
the body of Ad Jane was found. Notably,
accused-appellant himself lends credence to the testimonies of the prosecution
witnesses when he admitted that he was at the abandoned store where Lawas and
Arnado said they saw him and that he was then wearing a yellow sleeveless shirt
and short pants, exactly as described by the prosecution witnesses.
This Court has invariably held:
That there are inconsistencies, even improbabilities, in the testimony of a witness, especially on minor details or collateral matters is a common phenomenon. That the accounts of witnesses regarding the same occurrence are contradictory on certain details is not unusual. There is no perfect or omniscient witness because there is no person with perfect faculties or senses. An adroit cross-examiner may trap a witness into making statements contradicting his testimony on direct examination. By intensive cross-examination on points not anticipated by a witness and his lawyer, a witness may be inveigled into making statements that do not dovetail with the testimonies of other witnesses on the same points.
Yet, if it appears that
the witness has not wilfully perverted the truth, as may be gleaned from the
tenor of his testimony and as concluded by the trial judge from his demeanor
and behavior on the witness stand, his credibility on material points may be
accepted.[28]
Moreover, the
inaccuracies adverted to by accused-appellant in the sworn statements of Lawas
and Arnado are too insignificant to discredit them as witnesses. The Court recognizes that affidavits are not
entirely reliable evidence in court due to their incompleteness and the
inaccuracies that may have attended their formulation.[29]
Besides, no evil motive
has been established against the witnesses for the prosecution that might
prompt them to incriminate the accused or testify falsely against him. It is settled that when there is no showing
that the principal witnesses for the prosecution were actuated by improper
motive, the presumption is that the witnesses were not so actuated and their
testimonies are thus entitled to full faith and credit.[30]
In fine, the
circumstantial evidence as established by the prosecution and enumerated by the
trial court sufficiently established accused-appellant’s culpability for the
death of Ad Jane. The Court, however,
finds that the evidence presented by the prosecution does not conclusively prove
that accused-appellant raped Ad Jane.
The trial court based its
conclusion that Ad Jane was raped on the following circumstances: when her body
was found, “it was lying face up, hands and legs spread;” “she had no more
panty;” and “the doctor found lacerations on the vagina.”[31] Unfortunately, these circumstances do not
establish to a degree of moral certainty the guilt of accused-appellant for the
crime of rape. Dr. Ramirez’ testimony regarding Ad Jane’s vaginal laceration
was as follows:
PROS.
LORENZO:
Q Doctora, what would have been the caused
(sic) of this vaginal laceration?
A It could be due to a hard object being
inserted forcibly to a vagina or it could be also a sharp instrument.
Q And this hard object, could it be possible
that it could be caused by a penis which have erect (sic)?
ATTY. FORNAN:
Objection, Your Honor.
COURT:
Reform again. Make it very
specific.
PROS.
LORENZO:
Q Now, you said that it could have been
caused by a hard object?
A Yes, sir.
Q Now, is it possible that it could be caused
by a penis of a man?
ATTY.
FORNAN:
Objection again, Your Honor.
COURT:
I think witness may answer.
Q What is the possibility of that hard
object? Could it be anything? What is that? Could it be a stone?
A It could be a stone. It could be a sharp object. It could be anything that is hard that could
be (sic) possibly enter into a vagina.
Q Could it be a penis also?
A It could also be, hardened.
Q Hardened penis?
A Yes, sir.
Q So you are not sure whether it was a penis,
a stone or what?
A I’m not sure,
sir.[32]
Absent any conclusive and
categorical evidence that the laceration on Ad Jane’s vagina was caused in the
course of coitus or by a male organ, accused-appellant cannot be held liable
for rape. The Court has held:
x
x x As testified upon by the
prosecution’s expert witness, Dr. Abiera, it cannot be conclusively stated that
the victim was raped. Due to the fact
that the entirety of the evidence presented in this case are all
circumstantial, the fact that the victim had hematoma formations on both sides
of vaginal canal and near the urethral opening cannot conclusively prove that
she was raped.[33]
Notwithstanding the
prosecution’s failure to prove accused-appellant’s guilt for rape, the Court,
as discussed earlier, finds that there is sufficient evidence to hold
accused-appellant liable for the crime of homicide. Homicide, under Article 249 of the Revised Penal Code (RPC), is
punished with reclusion temporal.
There being no mitigating or aggravating circumstances, the penalty
shall be imposed in its medium period.[34] Applying the said provision, the penalty of reclusion
temporal in its medium period or 14 years, 8 months and 1 day to 17 years
and 4 months should be imposed on accused-appellant. Under the Indeterminate Sentence Law, said penalty shall
constitute the maximum term, while the minimum shall be within the range of the
penalty next lower to that prescribed by the RPC for the offense, i.e., prision
mayor or 6 years and 1 day to 12 years.
Finally, the damages
awarded by the trial court must be slightly modified. The amount of P20,000.00 as exemplary damages should be deleted
considering that the absence of any generic aggravating circumstance attending
the crime precludes the award thereof.[35] However, the amounts of P50,000.00 as civil
indemnity for the death of Ad Jane; P10,000.00 as actual damages for the burial
and funeral expenses; and P30,000.00 as moral damages, are all in order.
WHEREFORE, the
Decision of the Regional Trial Court, Branch 35 of General Santos City in
Criminal Case No. 11456 is hereby MODIFIED.
Accused-appellant Raymundo Corfin is found guilty beyond reasonable
doubt of Homicide, as defined and penalized under Article 249 of the Revised
Penal Code, and sentenced to suffer the indeterminate penalty of 12 years of prision
mayor as minimum to 17 years and 4 months of the medium period of reclusion
temporal as maximum.
Accused-appellant is further ordered to pay the heirs of the victim, Ad
Jane Zabala, the amounts of P50,000.00 as civil indemnity, P10,000.00 as actual
damages and P30,000.00 as moral damages.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J.,
Bellosillo, Melo, Puno, Vitug, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing,
Ynares-Santiago, De Leon, Jr., Sandoval-Gutierrez, and Carpio, JJ., concur.
[1] Records, p. 1.
[2] TSN, Testimony of Rosemarie Zabala, October 8,
1996, pp. 142-146.
[3] TSN, Testimony of Alejandro Zabala, September 2, 1996, pp. 98-101.
[4] Id., at
101-105.
[5] Id., at
105-107.
[6] TSN, Testimony of Antonio Armilla, October 8,
1996, pp. 126-128.
[7] Exhibit “A” Original Records, p. 48.
[8] TSN, Testimony of Dr. Virginia Ramirez,
September 2, 1996, pp. 78-85.
[9] TSN, Testimony of Imelda Arnado, February 5,
1996, pp. 1-9.
[10] Id., at
13-18.
[11] TSN, Testimony of Alma Lawas, February 5,
1996, pp. 26-33.
[12] TSN, Testimony of Mariano Mahinay, July 1,
1996, pp. 4-6.
[13] Id., at 9-10.
[14] TSN, Testimony of Rosanna Rentillo, August 27,
1996, pp. 55-61.
[15] TSN, Testimony of Raymund Corfin, April 16,
1997, pp. 213-218.
[16] Id., at
224-226.
[17] Id., at
220-223.
[18] RTC Decision, p. 11; Record, p. 77.
[19] Accused-appellant’s Brief, p. 9; Rollo,
p. 54.
[20] People vs. Salas, 327 SCRA 319
(2000).
[21] Section 4, Rule 113 of the Rules of Court.
[22] People vs. Ragundiaz, 334 SCRA
193 (2000). People vs. Fabon, 328 SCRA 302 (2000).
[23] Id.
[24] People vs. Gallarde, 325 SCRA
835 (2000).
[25] RTC Decision, pp. 7-8; Record, pp.73-74.
[26] People vs. Salas, supra..
[27] People vs. Blanco, 324 SCRA 280
(2000); People vs. Estorco, 331 SCRA 38 (2000).
[28] People vs. Geguira, 328 SCRA 11
(2000) citing People vs. Resagaya, 54 SCRA 350 (1973). Underscoring supplied.
[29] People vs. Mercado, 346 SCRA 256
(2000); People vs. Rivera, 295 SCRA 99 (1998).
[30] People vs. Gallarde, supra.
[31] RTC Decision, p. 10; Record, p.76.
[32] TSN, Testimony of Dr. Ramirez, September 2,
1996, pp. 82-84.
[33] People vs. Fabon, supra.
[34] Article 64, REVISED PENAL CODE.
[35] People vs. Pirame, 327 SCRA 552
(2000).