EN BANC
[G.R. Nos. 131867-68. July 31, 2002]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. LAUREANO SISTOSO y DEFRANCO alias "YAYAN," accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
BELLOSILLO, J.:
LAUREANO SISTOSO y DEFRANCO alias Yayan
was convicted by the trial court of
qualified rape on two (2) counts, sentenced to death for each count and ordered
to indemnify complaining witness Rosita Gomonit, his stepdaughter, P100,000.00
in damages. He now seeks a reversal of
his conviction.
The first rape for which the
accused Laureano Sistoso was charged happened, according to Rosita Gomonit, in
the morning of 13 November 1995 in Cambailan, Catigbian, Bohol. It was the family's practice to have 12-year
old Rosita stay away from school every Monday so that her mother, Aniceta
Sistoso, could go to the market for their weekly provisions. On that particular Monday morning of 13
November, Rosita watched over her two (2) siblings, one of whom was three (3)
years of age while the other was only a year old. Her stepfather Laureano Sistoso kept them company while Aniceta
was away.
At around 9:00 o'clock that
morning while Rosita was putting her siblings to sleep, Laureano suddenly
approached her from behind and with a scythe on hand ordered her to take off
her clothes. She pleaded to her
stepfather to stop molesting her but he
was pitiless. But her diminutive size
could not deter Laureano from forcing himself on her. He succeeded in having sexual intercourse with Rosita with
facility. After satiating his lust, he
threatened to hurt her and her whole family if she reported the incident to
anyone.
The following day Rosita secretly
tried to leave for Tagbilaran City where her grandmother lived but her mother
and Laureano learned of her plans and foiled her escape. She was promptly taken back home where
Laureano repeatedly threatened her and told her not to squeal on him.
Sometime in January 1996 or almost
a month after the incident Rosita summoned
enough courage to confide to her mother. But Aniceta refused to
believe her and sided instead with Laureano.
With such indifference of her mother to her plight, Rosita kept her ordeal to herself.
The rape was repeated a few weeks
later. One early Monday morning in
February 1996 while Aniceta was out on her usual marketing chores, Laureano
again sexually assaulted Rosita.
Although she initially resisted her stepfather, the presence of his
scythe cowed her into complete submission.
She could only bemoan her misfortune.[1]
There was relative calm after that
incident in February until September 1996 when Laureano who was under the
influence of alcohol again suddenly flared up, raged and chased everyone in the
family with a slingshot. Perhaps
realizing that what her daughter Rosita confided to her earlier was true,
Aniceta finally accompanied her daughter to the municipal hospital for medical
examination. There it was learned that
Rosita already had an old hymenal laceration at 6:00 o'clock position.[2] Mother and daughter then proceeded to the police
station where Aniceta filed two (2) criminal complaints for rape against
Laureano in behalf of her minor daughter Rosita. Pending preliminary investigation, Laureano was arrested and
placed behind bars by the Catigbian police.
The two (2) criminal complaints
for rape were jointly tried upon agreement of the prosecution and the defense.[3]
The sight of Laureano in prison
drew sympathy from Aniceta. She changed
her mind. She recanted her testimony
and filed an affidavit of desistance and denied the truth of her daughter's
story thus absolving her husband Laureano from blame. She also caused an affidavit of desistance to be prepared for
Rosita's signature but before Rosita could sign the affidavit, the Department
of Social Welfare and Development intervened and took the child under its
protective custody. Thereafter, Rosita
was taken to Tagbilaran City to live with her maternal grandmother Consorcia
Aniniput.
The distance between Catigbian
where Aniceta lived and Tagbilaran City where Rosita was now living with her
grandmother Consorcia did not deter Aniceta from hounding Rosita to withdraw
the charges against Laureano. While
Rosita was attending classes in school, Aniceta went to see her and threatened
her with a bolo. But Rosita
scampered to the principal's office for safety and Aniceta was arrested by the
police for causing trouble in school.[4] Weeks after her release, Aniceta again appeared with
a letter written by Laureano to Rosita bragging that his uncle being the
chief of police in Cagayan he was capable of decimating Rosita’s entire family.[5]
But Rosita could not be prevailed
upon by her mother to desist from prosecuting Laureano nor was she terrified by
his threats of physical harm to her and
her family. She resolutely pursued the
cases she filed against her stepfather Laureano and on the witness stand stood
firm on her accusation that he robbed her of her chastity at an early age.
Laureano Sistoso denied the accusations and swore that he
never subjected his stepdaughter Rosita, whom he claimed he treated as his own
daughter, to sexual abuse. According to
him, the charges were nothing but the product of his wife's malicious
imagination. He recounted that sometime
in September 1996 he told his wife that he planned to work as a singer in
Cebu. She disagreed and they fought
hard over the issue. In fact, to show
that he was serious about his plan, he packed his things and slept in a
friend's house. But several days later,
and even before he could leave for Cebu, he was arrested by the police.
He denied ever threatening
Rosita. He explained that his letter to
Rosita was not meant to frighten her.
He theorized that Rosita pursued her complaints so that she could live
with her grandmother in the big city.[6]
Aniceta betrayed her daughter and
supported Laureano's defense. Aniceta claimed that she hatched the plan
to falsely accuse her husband to stop him from leaving. She admitted having stooped so low when she
subjected her daughter to the shame and
scandal that went with the prosecution for rape purportedly to thwart her
husband's dream of being a singer which she did not approve of. She even went to the extent of accusing her
own mother Consorcia of sexually abusing Rosita by supposedly inserting her
fingers in Rosita's vagina while the girl was asleep. This, according to Aniceta, could have caused the hymenal
laceration in Rosita's vagina.[7]
Quite incredibly, Aniceta led her
daughter Rosario, Rosita's younger sister, to support her (Aniceta) explanation
that Rosita's defloration was not caused by Laureano but by her own
masturbation, supposedly witnessed twice by Rosario, and done even in her
presence.[8] Obviously, this is another version of Aniceta's
fantastic story that the breaking of Rosita's hymen was caused by her own
grandmother, Aniceta's mother, who supposedly inserted her two (2) fingers into
Rosita's vagina!
We are far from persuaded by the
version of the defense, just as accused-appellant failed to convince the trial
court. On the basis of the evidence
for the prosecution, the lower court found accused-appellant Laureano Sistoso
guilty of two (2) counts of qualified rape, sentenced him to death and ordered
him to indemnify his stepdaughter Rosita Gomonit with P100,000.00.[9] The court a quo branded the testimony of
accused-appellant as self-serving and rejected those offered by his wife and
stepdaughter Rosario for being biased.
In rejecting his bid for an acquittal, the trial court likewise took into
consideration the pattern of harassment perpetrated by Laureano and his wife
Aniceta upon the 12-year old complainant.
Forthwith, the cases were elevated
to this Court for automatic review.
In this appeal, accused-appellant
Laureano Sistoso argues that Rosita's accusations of rape should not be taken
as conclusive in the face of the testimonies offered by her mother Aniceta and
her sister Rosario. He also seeks
refuge in his wife's desistance from pursuing the cases as well as her
disclosure that it was her idea to falsely accuse him of rape.[10]
Consistent with giving due
deference to the observations of the trial court on the credibility of
witnesses, we agree with the court a quo when it believed Rosita more
than Aniceta and Rosario. Nothing is
better settled in our jurisprudence than that the conclusions of the trial
court with respect to the credibility of witnesses are generally not disturbed
on appeal unless the court a quo is
perceived to have overlooked, misunderstood or misinterpreted certain facts or
circumstances of weight which if properly assessed would warrant a reversal of
the questioned decision.[11]
Certainly, Rosita’s testimony is
straightforward, categorical and convincing.
When asked to recount her first harrowing experience in the hands of her
stepfather, tears freely fell from her eyes.[12] The young Rosita could not have given a more
convincing reply than this simple display of unspoken anguish. It is indeed inconceivable that Rosita, a
wisp of a lass when she took the witness stand, would reveal her family's shame
to the small town where they lived, hale her stepfather to court and suffer her
mother's wrath, if her accusations were not true. Truly, her tenacity in pursuing the cases was not done out of
mere caprice or unfounded hatred
against her stepfather
but was impelled
by her desire to speak the truth
and seek justice for the grievous wrong done to her by her stepfather.
In comparison with the
unpretentious and credible testimony of Rosita, the declaration given by her
mother Aniceta, as well as her affidavit of desistance, is a desperate clutch
at straws. It is indeed implausible
that for a petty quarrel over her
husband's plan to work in Cebu, a mother would concoct a tale of sexual
abuse, bring her family into a lifelong grief and embarrassment and imperil her
daughter's honor and future. Besides,
courts generally look with disfavor upon recanted testimonies.[13]
In the same vein, the explanation
offered by accused-appellant on why private complainant charged him with rape,
e.g., that the child wanted to live with her grandmother in the big city, is
much too flaccid to stay firm against the candid and detailed testimony of
Rosita. Family relations are not easily
compromised with the stepfather at risk of being imprisoned or put to death for
trite and flimsy reasons, such as those alleged by accused-appellant.[14]
However, the trial court erred in
imposing upon accused-appellant the supreme penalty of death. To warrant the death penalty, the minority
of the victim and her relationship with the accused must be both alleged and
proved.[15]
Although the minority of the
victim and her relationship with accused-appellant in these cases were alleged
in the Informations, they were not sufficiently proved at the trial. The prosecution did not present Rosita's
birth certificate to establish her age and filiation as well as the marriage
certificate of Aniceta and Laureano to establish private complainant's
relationship with accused-appellant, although this may not be absolutely
necessary as common law relationship between them may be enough. The admission of accused-appellant that
Rosita was his minor stepdaughter, he being married to her mother, did not meet
the required standard of proof. Since
it is the concurrence of the victim's minority and her relationship to the
accused which qualifies the rape as a heinous crime that warrants the
imposition of the death penalty, accused-appellant can only be convicted of
simple rape and sentenced to reclusion perpetua.
With respect to the award of
damages, we note that the trial court failed to specify and particularize the
damages being given to Rosita Gomonit.
Evidently, the amount of P100,000.00 was intended as
indemnification to the private complainant as the text of the Decision
indicates. At any rate, in accordance
with current case law, we award Rosita Gomonit civil indemnity in the amount of
P50,000.00 for each count of rape.[16] And we also deem it proper to award her P50,000.00
for moral damages for each rape inasmuch as in rape cases the moral sufferings
of the victim are presumed and therefore need not be proved.[17]
WHEREFORE, the Decision of the court a quo finding
accused-appellant Laureano Sistoso y Defranco alias Yayan guilty of two
(2) counts of rape is AFFIRMED with
the MODIFICATION that the two (2) death penalties imposed on
him are reduced instead from death to reclusion perpetua for each count
and to pay private complainant Rosita Gomonit P50,000.00 as civil
indemnity and P50,000.00 as moral damages also for each count.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., Puno, Vitug,
Kapunan, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing, Ynares-Santiago, Sandoval-Gutierrez,
Carpio, Austria-Martinez, and
Corona, JJ., concur.
[1] TSN, 13 February
1997, pp. 1- 42.
[2] Exh. “B.”
[3] Original Records, p.
25.
[4] TSN, 5 March 1997,
pp. 1-23.
[5] Exh. “D.”
[6] TSN, 15 May 1997,
pp. 2-30.
[7] TSN, 20 March 1997,
pp. 7-35.
[8] TSN, 1 April 1997,
pp. 4-28.
[9] Decision penned by
Judge Baudilio K. Dosdos, RTC-Br. 2, Tagbilaran City, Bohol; Rollo, pp.
18-27.
[10] Id, pp.
39-52.
[11] People v. Ariola, G.R. Nos.
142602-05, 3 October 2001; People v.
Cabigting, G.R. No. 131806, 20 October 2000, 344 SCRA 86; People v.
Pallarco, G.R. No. 119971, 26 March 1998, 288 SCRA 151; People v.
Tabaco, G.R. Nos. 100382-100385, 19 March 1997, 270 SCRA 32; People v.
Abboc, No. L-28327, 14 September 1973, 53 SCRA 54.
[12] See Note 1, p. 9.
[13] People v.
Garcia, G.R. Nos. 120387-88, 31 March 1998, 228 SCRA 382; People v.
Romero, G.R. Nos. 103385-86, 26 July 1993, 224 SCRA 749; Ibabao v.
People, No. L-36957, 28 September 1984, 132 SCRA 216.
[14] People v.
Perez, G.R. No. 118332, 26 March 1997, 270 SCRA 526.
[15] People v. Makilang, G.R. No. 139329,
23 October 2001; People v.
Alcoreza, G.R. Nos. 135452-53, 5 October 2001; People v. Ybañez,
G.R. No. 136257, 14 February 2001.
[16] People v. Cabuntog, G.R. No. 136337,
23 October 2001; People v.
Gonzaga, G.R. Nos. 135402-03, 7 September 2001; People v. Lucban, G.R. No. 119217,
19 January 2000, 322 SCRA 313.
[17] People v. Dizon, G.R. No. 129236,
17 October 2001; People v.
Mercado, G.R. No. 139904, 12 October 2001; People v. Villar, G.R. No. 127572,
19 January 2000, 322 SCRA 393.