EN BANC
[G.R. No. 143030.
March 12, 2002]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. REYNALDO
PORTUGAL Y GALLARDO, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
MELO,
J.:
Before us on automatic
review is the decision dated January 18, 2001 of Branch 40 of the Regional
Trial Court of the Fourth Judicial Region stationed in Oriental Mindoro, in its
Criminal Case No. C-4739, finding appellant Reynaldo Portugal guilty of rape
and sentencing him to suffer the supreme penalty of death.
Appellant’s conviction
for said crime arose from an Information reading as follows:
That on or about the 4th day of March, 1995, at around 7:00 o’clock in the evening, at Barangay Canubing I, Municipality of Calapan, Province of Oriental Mindoro, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused, being then the step-father of the offended party Maricel Abela y Apelado, motivated by diabolical desire and by means of force and intimidation wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously did lie and succeeded in having carnal knowledge of said MARICEL ABELA against her will and consent.
Contrary to Law.
(p. 3, Rollo.)
Appellant pleaded not
guilty to the charge and stood trial, resulting in a judgment of conviction,
disposing:
ACCORDINGLY, finding herein accused Reynaldo Portugal y Gallardo guilty beyond reasonable doubt as principal of the crime of Rape with the qualifying circumstance that the victim was under 18 years of age at the time of the commission of the offense and that the offender is the step-parent of the victim, the Court hereby sentences said accused Reynaldo Portugal y Gallardo to suffer the maximum penalty of death, with all the accessory penalties imposed by law, and to indemnify the victim Maricel Abela y Apelado, the amount of P75,000.00 as civil indemnity, P50,000.00 as moral damages and P50,000.00 as exemplary damages, without subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency, and to pay the costs.
SO ORDERED.
(p. 16, Rollo.)
The prosecution’s version
of the events is based principally on the testimony of the victim, Maricel
Abela; Dr. Cresencia Gutierrez, the examining resident physician of the
Oriental Mindoro Provincial Hospital; Angeles Marasigan, barangay captain of
Canubing I, Calapan City; and Nelly F. Asturias, Local Civil Registrar of Calapan
City.
Maricel testified that on
March 4, 1995 at around 7 o’clock in the evening, she was home taking care of
her baby brother. Suddenly, appellant
Reynaldo approached her and started to undress her. Maricel resisted and earnestly begged appellant to stop, pleading
“huwag po”, several times.
Appellant paid no heed to Maricel’s pleas and instead told her not to
cry, otherwise, she will be killed.
Maricel could not do
anything anymore, and so appellant was able to carry out his vicious plan. Naked as he was, appellant laid himself on
top of Maricel and inserted his penis into her vagina. Maricel no longer fought back as she was
continuously threatened by him.
Thereafter, appellant, with a standing order that she must not report
the matter to anyone, left. Maricel, on
the other hand, proceeded to her grandmother’s house which is just 5 meters
away from theirs and spent the night over.
It was her intention to divulge to her uncle, who at that time was in
her grandmother’s house, the ordeal she just went through. But she held back as she was haunted by
appellant’s fulminations.
The next day, Maricel
intimated to her mother her tribulation.
However, she was instead accused by her mother of being a liar. This urged her to look for her Uncle Obet,
her mother’s brother, to report the incident.
Unable to do so, Maricel sought refuge in the solicitude of their
barangay captain, Angeles Marasigan.
Consequently, Maricel’s mother was summoned by said barangay captain to
inform her of Maricel’s condition. Later,
Maricel was brought to the hospital for examination.
Prosecution witness Dr.
Cresencia Gutierrez, resident physician of the Oriental Mindoro Provincial
Hospital where Maricel was brought, testified that she conducted a physical
examination of Maricel. She revealed
that Maricel’s vagina admits the small finger with ease, with an area of
erythema around the hymen; and the cervix is closed with multiple old hymenal
lacerations at 3, 5, 6, 8, and 9 o’clock positions which could have been
sustained through sexual intercourse (pp. 11-13, tsn, May 9, 1996).
Nelly F. Asturias, the
local Civil Registrar of Calapan City, presented the birth certificate of the
victim showing that she was born on May 1, 1982.
Appellant denied the
charges leveled against him and claimed that at around 7 o’clock on the evening
of March 4, 1995, he was having a drinking spree with his four other
companions which lasted until 11 o’clock that same night. He recalled that a week prior to the alleged
rape incident, he scolded Maricel for having disobeyed her mother. But instead
of showing remorse Maricel displayed animosity and disrespect towards him, for
which behavior he slapped her.
Appellant also mentioned
an earlier cuffing incident. Allegedly,
when he confronted Maricel about her baby brother whom she was supposed to take
care of but fell from the crib and sustained an injury, Maricel answered back,
“Why don’t you look for someone to take care of the child?”
The trial court did not
accord credence to the testimony of appellant, pointing out that denial and
alibi are purely self-serving and deserve scant consideration. Further, appellant failed to present any
witness to corroborate his alibi. The
trial court found the victim’s testimony unbridled and unadulterated. It characterized Maricel’s testimony as
categorical, straightforward, spontaneous, and frank.
Aggrieved, appellant is
now before us insisting on his innocence, anchoring his plea for reversal upon
the following assigned errors:
I
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN GIVING FULL FAITH AND CREDENCE TO THE INCREDIBLE TESTIMONY OF THE PRIVATE COMPLAINANT ANENT THE INCIDENT IN QUESTION.
II
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN NOT GIVING EVIDENTIARY WEIGHT TO THE EVIDENCE ADDUCED BY THE DEFENSE AND IN NOT DISREGARDING THE TESTIMONY OF THE PRIVATE COMPLAINANT CONSIDERING THAT SHE WAS MOTIVATED BY ILL-WILL.
III
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN RENDERING A VERDICT OF CONVICTION DESPITE THE FACT THAT THE GUILT OF THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT WAS NOT PROVEN BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT.
IV
GRANTING FOR THE SAKE OF ARGUMENT THAT THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT IS GUILTY OF RAPE, NONETHELESS, THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN IMPOSING UPON HIM THE DEATH PENALTY NOTWITHSTANDING THE FACT THAT THE QUALIFYING CIRCUMSTANCE OF MINORITY WAS NOT ALLEGED IN THE INFORMATION, HENCE, THE APPROPRIATE PENALTY SHOULD ONLY BE RECLUSION PERPETUA.
(pp. 29-30, Rollo.)
In a prosecution for
rape, the complainant’s credibility becomes the single most important
issue. In view of the intrinsic nature
of the crime of rape where only two persons normally are involved, the testimony
of the complainant must always be scrutinized with great caution, and the
evidence for the prosecution must stand or fall on its own merits and should
not be allowed to gain validity from the lack of evidence for the defense.
In the instant case, after
a meticulous examination of the evidentiary record, we find it difficult to
conceive that Maricel would reveal and admit the sexual abuse she suffered if
it were not true. It would be highly
improbable for Maricel, against whom no proof of sexual perversity or loose
morality has been shown, to fabricate charges.
The Court usually accords
confidence and weight to the testimony of a child who is a victim of sexual
assault because ordinarily, no person would be willing to undergo the
humiliation of a public trial if her motive were not to bring to justice the
person who had abused her. Maricel was
barely 13 years old, innocent and inexperienced, when subjected to her
step-father’s sexual abuse.
Nonetheless, her testimony was frank, straightforward, and clear, as
observed by the trial court.
Just as often, the Court
has relied on the observations of trial courts in the appreciation of
testimony, said courts having been given the opportunity, not equally enjoyed
by the appellate courts, to observe at first hand the demeanor of the witness
on the stand, they, therefore, are in a better position to form accurate
impressions and conclusions.
Although it is
well-settled that a medical examination of the victim is not indispensable in a
prosecution for rape (People vs. Salazar, 258 SCRA 55 [1996]), and no
law requires a medical examination for the successful prosecution thereof (People
vs. Julian, 270 SCRA 733 [1997], Dr. Cresencia Gutierrez confirmed
Maricel’s claim that she was raped after she examined the latter and testified
that the hymenal lacerations could have been sustained by Maricel through
sexual intercourse.
In rape cases, the
gravamen of the offense is sexual intercourse with a woman against her will or
without her consent (People vs. Igat, 291 SCRA 100 [1998]). In this case, Maricel narrated that she
resisted and protested accused-appellant’s sexual advances. She even begged him to stop and the words “huwag
po” were repeatedly spoken by her. Sufficient basis thus exists to warrant
a conclusion that the essential requisite of carnal knowledge has thereby been
established since the testimony of the victim is consistent with the medical
findings (People vs. Tabion, 317 SCRA 126 [1999]).
Nonetheless, appellant
attempts to discredit Maricel’s testimony by imputing ill-motives to her. Appellant is trying desperately to impress
upon the Court that the case was instituted to avenge the physical violence
Maricel suffered from him when he slapped her down a number of times. Maricel,
in open court, declared that she wanted appellant to be punished. However, Maricel’s honesty in admitting to
having a grudge against appellant, and her straightforwardness in declaring
that she wanted him to go to jail should be considered in her favor (People
vs. Ramos, 260 SCRA 402 [1996]). Maricel was raped several times and having
been subjected to appellant’s sexual perversion and physical violence, it is
but natural and even more believable and within the realm of human experience
that she should feel damaged and show animosity against appellant (People
vs. Lacaba, 318 SCRA 301 [1999]).
Too, Maricel regarded appellant, being the husband of her mother, as a
true father.
Appellant’s alibi that he
was drunk with his brother-in-law when the rape was committed, it is to be
noted, remained but a stark, unsupported averment, as verily, the defense
neither identified nor presented the alleged drinking partners of appellant,
much more his supposed brother-in-law (People vs. Mijano, 311 SCRA 81
[1999]).
The crime of rape
committed by appellant against his step-daughter is an act highly offensive to
decency and morality. It is a violation
of the dignity, purity, and privacy of a child who is still innocent and
unexposed to the ways of the worldly pleasures (People vs. Mahinay, 302
SCRA 455 [1999]). It is a disturbing
and detestable experience that destroys Maricel’s future. The unbearable vision of that episode in
Maricel’s life will forever remain in her memory.
In sum, the Court finds
no serious flaw in the testimony of the prosecution witnesses nor in the
conclusions of the trial court which, to the contrary, appear to be properly
founded on the direct, positive, and categorical statements made by Maricel and
her witnesses in most material points.
The mass of physical and testimonial evidence in this case clearly
establishes appellant’s guilt of the crime of rape.
While we agree with the
trial court that appellant is guilty of rape, we cannot, however, subscribe to
the penalty of death imposed. Both the defense and the Office of the Solicitor
General are in concurrence. Article 335
of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by Republic Act No. 7659, provides
that the death penalty shall be imposed if the rape victim is under eighteen
years of age and the offender is a step-parent of the victim. Believing that the instant case fell within
the said circumstances, the trial court sentenced appellant to death. A reading of the information would, however,
reveal that appellant was charged only with simple rape under Article 335 of
the Revised Penal Code, with the additional allegation that he is the
step-father of the victim.
Although the rape of a
person under 18 years of age by the step-father of the victim is punishable by
death, this penalty cannot be imposed on appellant because the minority of the
victim is not alleged in the information.
The elements of minority of the victim and her relationship to the
offender must concur. The penalty of
death cannot be automatically imposed on appellant merely because of the trial
court’s appreciation of both minority and relationship, no matter how clearly
established. Jurisprudence is to the
effect that these twin facts be alleged in the information or complaint and
thereafter clearly and positively proved before the death penalty may be
properly imposed (People vs. Ramos, 296 SCRA 559 [1999]; People
vs. Ilao, 296 SCRA 658 [1999]).
Further, Section 8, Rule
110 of the Revised Rules of Procedure, as amended, provides that the complaint
or information shall state the designation of the offense given by the statute,
aver the acts or omissions constituting the offense, and specify its qualifying
and aggravating circumstances. To be
sure, appellant can only be meted out the penalty of reclusion perpetua on
account of the information’s failure to specifically allege the minority of the
victim.
Finally, we find that the
trial court’s award of civil indemnity and exemplary damages must be
reduced. If the death penalty is not
decreed by the Court, the victim would instead be entitled to P50,000.00 as
civil indemnity (People vs. Betonio, 279 SCRA 532 [1997]). The amount of P20,000.00 as exemplary
damages is more in accord with current jurisprudence.
WHEREFORE, the judgment under review is hereby
AFFIRMED, with modifications. Appellant
Reynaldo Portugal is hereby found guilty beyond reasonable doubt of simple rape
and is consequently sentenced to suffer the penalty of reclusion
perpetua. In addition to the trial
court’s award of P50,000.00 as moral damages, appellant is further ordered to
pay the victim P50,000.00 as civil indemnity, and P20,000.00 as exemplary
damages to deter other sex perverts from sexually molesting hapless women. No special pronouncement is made as to
costs.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J.,
Bellosillo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing, Buena,
Ynares-Santiago, De Leon, Jr., Sandoval-Gutierrez, and Carpio, JJ., concur.