THIRD DIVISION
PEOPLE
OF THE Plaintiff-Appellee, - versus - BERNARDO
F. NICOLAS, Accused-Appellant. |
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G.R. No. 170234 Present: YNARES-SANTIAGO, J., Chairperson, AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ,
CALLEJO, SR., and CHICO-NAZARIO, JJ. Promulgated: |
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CHICO-NAZARIO, J.:
Assailed before Us is the decision[1] of
the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CR-H.C. No. 01191 dated 23 August 2005 which
affirmed in
toto the decision[2] of
the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Pasig City, Branch 164, in Criminal Case No. 11566-D,
finding accused-appellant Bernardo Felizardo Nicolas, a.k.a. Bernie, guilty of
violation of Section 5,[3]
Article II of Republic Act No. 9165, otherwise known as Comprehensive Dangerous
Drugs Act of 2002.
In an Information
dated
On or about August 6, 2002, in Pasig City and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the accused, who is not being authorized by law, did, then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously sell, deliver and give away to PO2 Danilo S. Damasco, one (1) heat-sealed transparent plastic sachet containing 0.42 gram of white crystalline substance which was found positive to the test for methamphetamine hydrochloride (shabu), a dangerous drug, in violation of the said law.[4]
The case was raffled to Branch 164 of
the RTC of Pasig City and docketed as Criminal Case No. 11566-D.
When arraigned on
The prosecution presented two
witnesses: PO2 Danilo S. Damasco[6]
and SPO2 Dante Zipagan,[7]
both members of the Station Drug Enforcement Unit of the Pasig Police
Station. The testimony of Police
Inspector Delfin A. Torregoza, Forensic Chemical Officer, Eastern Police
District Crime Laboratory Office, was, however, dispensed with after both
prosecution and defense stipulated that the specimen[8]
submitted in court is the same one mentioned in the Request for Laboratory
Examination[9] and in
Chemistry Report No. D-1501-02E,[10]
and that same was regularly examined by said forensic chemical officer.
For the defense, appellant[11]
took the witness stand together with his common-law wife, Susan dela Cruz
Villasoto,[12] and
brother, Jose Nicolas.[13]
The diametrical versions of the
People and the accused are narrated by the trial court as follows:
VERSION
OF THE PEOPLE
On
August 6, 2002, at about 9:30 o’clock in the evening, a confidential informant
stepped inside the office of the Station Drug Enforcement Unit of the Pasig
Police Station, Pasig City and informed SPO4 Numeriano S. De Lara, Officer
In-Charge of that unit, that a certain alias Bernie was selling shabu at his
place along Santiago Street, in Barangay Bagong Ilog, Pasig City. Immediately, SPO4 De Lara organized a team to
conduct a surveillance operation and the entrapment of alias Bernie, if
warranted by the situation. The team was
composed of PO2 Danilo S. Damasco, PO2 Montefalcon, PO2 Orig and SPO2 Zipagan
who was the team leader. PO2 Damasco was
designated to act as poseur-buyer in the buy-bust operation while the other
police officers would serve as his back-ups to assist in the possible
apprehension of alias Bernie. After a
short briefing, the team of police operatives, including the confidential
informant, proceeded to the target place at
VERSION
OF DEFENSE
x x x x
[Appellant]
testified that on
Appellant denies the charge. He insists that there was no buy-bust
operation and that the shabu (methamphetamine
hydrochloride) allegedly sold by him to the poseur buyer was planted evidence. He claims that the trumped-up charge is a way
of getting even with him because he, together with his wife, had filed a case
before the National Police Commission (NAPOLCOM) for grave misconduct against several
policemen (PO2 Joel Tapec, PO1 Christopher Semana and five John Does) assigned
at the Station Drug Enforcement Unit of the Pasig Police Station, for entering
and robbing their house on 5 February 2002.
He further claims that the policemen who arrested him for allegedly
selling shabu were the John Does
mentioned in the complaint he and his wife filed with the NAPOLCOM.
In its decision dated
WHEREFORE,
the court finds accused BERNARDO F. NICOLAS GUILTY beyond reasonable doubt, as
principal of violation of Section 5, Article II, R.A.
9165 and hereby imposes upon him the penalty of life imprisonment and a fine of
five hundred thousand pesos (P500.00),[14]
with the accessory penalties provided under Section 35 thereof.[15]
From
the decision, appellant filed a Notice of Appeal informing the court that he is
appealing the same to the Court of Appeals.[16] Though the Notice of Appeal specified that
the decision is being appealed to the Court of Appeals, the trial court
nonetheless forwarded the records of the case to the Supreme Court pursuant to
Section 3, Rule 122 of the Rules of Court.[17]
On
Since the penalty imposed by the
trial court was life imprisonment, the case was remanded to the Court of
Appeals for appropriate action and disposition pursuant to our ruling in People v. Mateo.[19]
On
With the elevation of the records of
the case to the Supreme Court, the parties were required to submit their
respective supplemental briefs, if they so desire, within 30 days from notice.[22] The parties opted not to file supplemental
briefs on the ground that they have fully argued their positions in their
respective briefs.[23]
Appellant assigns as errors the
following:
I.
THE TRIAL COURT GRAVELY ERRED IN GIVING FAITH AND CREDENCE TO THE UNRELIABLE TESTIMONIES OF THE PROSECUTION WITNESSES AND IN TOTALLY DISREGARDING THE VERSION OF THE DEFENSE.
II.
THE TRIAL COURT GRAVELY ERRED IN FINDING THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT GUILTY OF THE CRIME CHARGED DESPITE FAILURE OF THE PROSECUTION TO PROVE HIS GUILT BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT.
Appellant observed that (1) the
policemen did not conduct surveillance first; (2) they did not have any
agreement as regards the money to be used in buying the shabu; and (3) they failed to talk about any signal to inform the
back-up policemen that the transaction has been consummated. He contends that the absence of these things is
unusual and that it made even more doubtful that the buy-bust operation really
took place.
These observations will not purge him
of the charge.
Settled is the rule that the absence
of a prior surveillance or test-buy does not affect the legality of the
buy-bust operation. There is no textbook
method of conducting buy-bust operations. The Court has left to the discretion of police
authorities the selection of effective means to apprehend drug dealers.[24] A prior surveillance, much less a lengthy
one, is not necessary especially where the police operatives are accompanied by
their informant during the entrapment.[25] Flexibility is a trait of good police work.[26] In the case at bar, the buy-bust operation
was conducted without need of any prior surveillance for the reason that the
informant accompanied the policemen to the person who is peddling the dangerous
drugs.
Appellant faults the policemen
because there was no agreement or discussion among themselves as regards the
marked money and the pre-arranged signal.
From the records, it is clear that it
was PO2 Damasco who prepared the marked money[27]
as shown by his initials on the top right corner of the P500.00 bill
that was used in purchasing the shabu from
appellant.[28] The fact that the team leader and the other
members of the team did not discuss or talk about the marked money does not
necessarily mean that there was no buy-bust operation. As explained by SPO2 Zipagan, since PO2
Damasco was the designated poseur buyer it was the latter’s discretion as to
how to prepare the marked money. It is
not required that all the members of the buy-bust team know how the marked
money is to be produced and marked inasmuch as they have their respective roles
to perform in the operation. As this
Court sees it, the other members of the team left the matter of the marked
money to one person – the poseur buyer – because it was he who was to deal
directly with the drug pusher.
As to the absence of a pre-arranged
signal, same is not fatal to the cause of the prosecution. The employment of a pre-arranged signal, or
the lack of it, is not indispensable in a buy-bust operation. What determines if there was, indeed, a sale
of dangerous drugs is proof of the concurrence of all the elements of the offense. A buy-bust
operation is a form of entrapment which has repeatedly been accepted to be a
valid means of arresting violators of the Dangerous Drugs Law.[29] The elements necessary for the prosecution of
illegal sale of drugs are (1) the identity of the buyer and the seller, the
object, and consideration; and (2) the delivery of the thing sold and the
payment therefore.[30] What is material to the prosecution for
illegal sale of dangerous drugs is the proof that the transaction or sale
actually took place, coupled with the presentation in court of evidence of corpus delicti.[31]
In the case under consideration, all
these elements have been established. The
witnesses for the prosecution clearly showed that the sale of the drugs
actually happened and that the shabu
subject of the sale was brought and identified in court. The poseur buyer (PO2 Damasco) categorically
identified appellant as the seller of the shabu. His testimony was corroborated by SPO2
Zipagan. Per Chemistry Report No.
D-1501-02E of Police Inspector Delfin A. Torregoza, the substance, weighing 0.42
gram, which was bought by PO2 Damasco from appellant in consideration of P500.00,
was examined and found to be methamphetamine hydrochloride (shabu).
We quote the material portions of the
testimony of the poseur buyer that detailed the apprehension of appellant, as
follows:
A: And we briefed and after a short briefing we proceeded to the alleged residence of Bernie and when we reached the place, I particularly saw the subject person in front of the alleged house.
Q: You said we, whom are you referring to as those who went with you to the house of Bernie?
A: The confidential informant.
Q: After reaching the house of Bernie, what happened there?
A: I saw the subject person infront of his alleged house talking to another male person.
Q: What was the general condition of that place outside the house of Bernie when you saw him?
A: Dim light, sir.
Q: After you first saw Bernie talking with somebody else, what did you do?
A: The confidential informant greeted alias Bernie and after greeting said person the other male person he was talking to went farther from us and they conversed.
Q: And after that conversation between your informant and Bernie, what happened?
A: The confidential informant introduced me as a shabu user and as a customer.
Q: How far were you from Bernie when you were introduced?
A: Only two (sic) away.
Q: Less than a meter?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: What was the response of Bernie as you were introduced as a shabu user?
A: He checked my personality first and he asked me if I will get the stuff, he asked me in tagalog, kukuha ka ba?
Q: And what did you tell him?
A: I answered him, kung mayroon kukuha ako.
Q: And what was his answer?
A: He answered me that, mayroon kaya tamang-tama kasi isa na lang itong natitira
sa akin panggamit ko
Q: At that very moment, after you were told by Bernie isa na lang ang natitira, what did you?
A: I asked him kung puwede pang bilhin and then he told me, isa na lang ito panggamit ko, magkano ba ang kukunin mo?
Q: What was your answer?
A: I told him, P500.00 worth.
Q: And what is [his] reply?
A: Okay, ibibigay ko na lang sa inyo.
Q: And what happened next?
A: He asked my payment first.
Q: And what did you do after he asked your payment?
A: I gave him the pre-marked money.
Q: What (sic) that bill made off?
A: P500.00 bill.
Q: Where did you put that marking in that bill?
A: I put the marking on the upper right portion of the bill inside the 500.
Q: What are the markings did you put there?
A: I put my initials DSD.
Q: Now after you gave him that P500.00
marked money, what else happened?
A: After he received the pre-marked money then he gave me one (1) plastic sachet containing white crystalline substance after receiving said I examined the plastic sachet.
Q: After that examination of yours, what did you do?
A: After a brief examination immediately I introduced myself as a police officer and subsequently, arrested alias Bernie.
Q: After you introduced yourself as a police officer, what was the reaction of alias Bernie?
A: He was shocked, sir.
Q: Did he tell you anything?
A: None, sir.
Q: And what did you do after arresting him immediately?
A: After informing his constitutional right I recovered the pre-marked money.
Q: You mean, you frisked him, Mr. Witness?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: What else did you recover from him aside from the mark money?
A: Nothing more.[32]
Appellant
tries to discredit PO2 Damasco and SPO2 Zipagan by showing an inconsistency in
their testimonies regarding the condition of the scene of the incident. He points out that PO2 Damasco stressed that
the place was dark while SPO2 Zipagan said that the area was well-lighted.[33]
After
going over the testimonies of the two police operatives, we find no
inconsistency in their testimonies. When
asked about the general condition of the place outside the house of appellant,
PO2 Damasco answered “dim light.”[34] On the other hand, SPO2 Zipagan said the place
was “a lighted area.”[35] PO2 Damasco did not say that the place was
dark nor did SPO2 Zipagan say that the place was well-lighted. What is clear is that the place was lighted. Thus, since both witnesses said that the
place was lighted, the inconsistency is more apparent than real. Even assuming ad arguendo that this can be considered
an inconsistency, same is trivial to adversely affect their credibility.
We now go to appellant’s contention
that the policemen who arrested him were impelled by improper motive. He argues that he was merely talking to his
brother and a friend when the policemen suddenly arrived and insisted that he
had sold shabu
to PO2 Damasco. He claims that the charge
against him was driven by the policemen’s desire to get even with him for
filing a case for grave misconduct against the said policemen with the
NAPOLCOM. He added that the trial court
should have considered the motive as to why he was charged and that the
possibility of vengeance is not remote.
We find appelant’s
imputation of ill motive on the police officers to be unsubstantiated by clear
and convincing evidence. We agree in the
trial court’s ruling when it said:
The evidence does
not show that Damasco and Zipagan were moved by ill-will in testifying against
the accused. There was no ill feeling or
personal animosity existing between the police officers and the accused at the
time of the latter’s arrest. It is true
that accused Bernardo F. Nicolas and his common-law wife Susan Dela Cruz
Villasoto filed an administrative case against PO2 Joel Tapec and PO1
Christopher Semana, both of the Pasig City Police Station for grave misconduct
before the National Police Commission which is docketed as ADM CASE No.
2003-008 (NCR). But the filing of this
case against Tapec and Semana is not enough reason for Damasco and Zipagan to
fabricate or plant evidence against the accused. There was absolutely no reason at all for
them to risk their lives and career to go and plant evidence against the
accused which is in violation of Section 29 of R.A. 9165 that imposes upon any
person found guilty of planting any dangerous drug regardless of quantity and
purity, the penalty of death. These
police officers are presumed to know this law and the court believes that these
police officers do not wish to lose their lives by fabricating evidence against
innocent individuals. Accused Bernardo
Nicolas, naturally, was expected to deny the accusation against him, for
admission would automatically result in conviction. The testimony of his common-law wife, Susan
Dela Cruz Villasoto is not much of help to the accused’[s] defense. Since she did not witness what transpired
when accused went out of the house in the evening of
We likewise find appellant’s
declaration that the policemen who arrested him were the very same ones who
robbed his house on
Appellant’s contention that he was
framed-up is made even more suspect by the fact that the statement[37]
of his common-law wife that he had gone out of the house for only two minutes when
the policemen arrived and took him away is belied by the statement[38]
of his brother that he had been outside the house for 30 minutes and was
talking with his brother and Arnold Mendez when the policemen arrived.
Frame-up, like alibi, is generally
viewed with caution by this Court, because it is easy to contrive and difficult
to disprove. Moreover, it is a common
and standard line of defense in prosecutions of violations of the Dangerous
Drugs Act.[39] For this claim to
prosper, the defense must adduce clear and convincing evidence to overcome the
presumption that government officials have performed their duties in a regular
and proper manner.[40] In the case at bar, the presumption remained uncontradicted because the defense failed to present clear
and convincing evidence that the police officers did not properly perform their
duty or that they were inspired by an improper motive.
Prosecutions involving illegal drugs
largely depend on the credibility of the police officers who conducted the
buy-bust operation. Considering that
this Court has access only to the cold and impersonal records of the proceedings,
it generally relies upon the assessment of the trial court, which had the
distinct advantage of observing the conduct and demeanor of the witnesses
during trial. Hence, factual findings of
the trial courts are accorded respect absent any showing that certain facts of
weights and substance bearing on the elements of the crime have been
overlooked, misapprehended or misapplied.[41] We have no reason to deviate from this rule. We affirm the factual findings of the trial
court as affirmed by the Court of Appeals.
The evidence presented by the prosecution
proves to a moral certainty petitioner’s guilt of the crime of selling dangerous
drugs.
The sale of shabu is penalized under Section 5,
Article II of Republic Act No. 9165.
Said section reads:
SEC. 5. P500,000.00) to Ten million
pesos (P10,000,000.00) shall be imposed upon any person, who, unless
authorized by law, shall sell, trade, administer, dispense, deliver, give away
to another, distribute, dispatch in transit or transport any dangerous drug,
including any and all species of opium poppy regardless of the quantity and
purity involved, or shall act as a broker in any of such transactions.
Under said law, the sale of any
dangerous drug, regardless of its quantity and purity, is punishable by life
imprisonment to death and a fine of P500,000.00
to P10,000,000.00. For selling 0.42
gram of shabu
to PO2 Damasco, the trial court, as sustained by the
Court of Appeals, imposed the penalty of life imprisonment and a fine of P500,000.00 in accordance with Article 63(2)[42]
of the Revised Penal Code.
Section 98 of Republic Act No. 9165,
however, provides for the limited application of the provisions of the Revised
Penal Code on said law. This Section
reads:
SEC. 98. Limited Applicability of the Revised Penal Code. – Notwithstanding any law, rule or regulation to the contrary, the provisions of the Revised Penal Code (Act No. 3815), as amended, shall not apply to the provisions of this Act, except in the case of minor offenders. Where the offender is a minor, the penalty for acts punishable by life imprisonment to death provided herein shall be reclusion perpetua to death. (Underscoring supplied.)
With the aforesaid section, the
provisions of the Revised Penal Code shall no longer apply to the provisions of
the Drugs law except when the offender is a minor. Thus, Article 63(2) of the Revised Penal Code
shall not be used in the determination of the penalty to be imposed on the
accused. Since Section 98 of the Drugs
Law contains the word “shall,” the non-applicability of the Revised Penal Code
provisions is mandatory, subject only to the exception in case the offender is
a minor.
In the imposition of the proper
penalty, the courts, taking into account the circumstances attendant in the
commission of the offense, are given the discretion to impose either life
imprisonment or death, and the fine as provided for by law. In light, however, of the effectivity
of Republic Act No. 9346 entitled, “An Act Prohibiting the Imposition of Death
Penalty in the P500,000.00
were properly imposed on the accused-appellant.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the
instant appeal is DISMISSED. The decision of the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. CR-H.C. No. 01191 dated 23 August 2005 which affirmed in toto
the decision of the Regional Trial Court of Pasig
City, Branch 164, in Criminal Case No. 11566-D, finding accused-appellant
Bernardo Felizardo Nicolas, a.k.a. Bernie, guilty of violation of Section 5,
Article II of Republic Act No. 9165, is hereby AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.
|
MINITA V. CHICO-NAZARIOAssociate Justice |
WE
CONCUR:
CONSUELO YNARES-SANTIAGO
Associate Justice
Chairperson
Associate Justice Associate Justice
ATTESTATION
I attest that the conclusions in the above
Decision were reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the
writer of the opinion of the Court’s Division.
CONSUELO YNARES-SANTIAGO
Associate Justice
Chairperson, Third Division
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII
of the Constitution, and the Division Chairperson’s Attestation, it is hereby
certified that the conclusions in the above Decision were reached in
consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the
Court’s Division.
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
[1] Penned by Associate Justice (now Presiding Justice) Ruben T. Reyes with Associate Justices Josefina Guevara-Salonga and Fernanda Lampas Peralta, concurring. Rollo, pp. 100-118.
[2] Records, pp. 89-94.
[3]
[4] Records, p. 1.
[5]
[6] TSN,
[7] TSN,
[8] Exhibit E-1.
[9] Exhibit B-1; Records, p. 52.
[10] Exhibit C-1; Records, p. 54.
[11] TSN, 26 May and
[12] TSN,
[13] TSN,
[14] Should read P500,000.00.
[15] Records, p. 93.
[16]
[17] SEC. 3. How appeal taken. –
x x x x
(c) The appeal to the Supreme Court in cases where the penalty imposed by the Regional Trial Court is reclusion perpetua or life imprisonment, or where a lesser penalty is imposed but for offenses committed on the same occasion or which arose out of the same occurrence that gave rise to the more serious offense for which the penalty of death, reclusion perpetua, or life imprisonment is imposed shall be by filing a notice of appeal in accordance with paragraph (a) of this section.
[18] Rollo, pp. 70-92.
[19] G.R. Nos. 147678-87,
[20] Rollo, p. 118.
[21]
[22]
[23]
[24] People v. Li Yin
[25] People v. Gonzales, 430 Phil. 504, 514 (2002).
[26] People v. Cadley,
G.R. No. 150735,
[27] Exh. D; Records, pp. 55-56.
[28] TSN,
[29] People v. Corpuz, 442 Phil. 405, 414 (2002).
[30] People v. Adam, 459 Phil. 676, 684 (2003).
[31] People v. Padasin, 445 Phil. 448, 461 (2003).
[32] TSN,
[33] Appellant’s Brief, p. 10; rollo, p. 56.
[34] TSN,
[35] TSN,
[36] Records, pp. 92-93.
[37] TSN,
[38] TSN,
[39] People v. Eugenio, 443 Phil. 411, 419 (2003).
[40] People v. Zheng Bai Hui, 393 Phil. 68, 135 (2000).
[41] People v. Ahmad, G.R. No. 148048,
[42] ART. 63. Rules for the application of indivisible penalties.
x x x
In all cases in which the law prescribes a penalty composed of two indivisible penalties, the following rules shall be observed in the application thereof:
x x x
2. When there are neither mitigating nor aggravating circumstances in the commission of the deed, the lesser penalty shall be applied.