Republic
of the
Supreme
Court
people of the philippines, Plaintiff-Appellee, - versus
- renato lagat y gawan a.k.a. renat gawan and james palalay y villarosa, Accused-Appellants. |
G.R.
No. 187044
Present:
CORONA, C.J.,
Chairperson, LEONARDO-DE CASTRO, BERSAMIN, DEL CASTILLO, and VILLARAMA, JR., JJ. Promulgated: September 14, 2011 |
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D
E C I S I O N
LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, J.:
This appeal was
filed by accused-appellants Renato Lagat y Gawan (Lagat), also known as Renat
Gawan, and James Palalay y Villarosa (Palalay) to challenge the Court of Appeals October 8, 2008 Decision[1]
in CA-G.R. CR.-H.C. No. 02869, for
affirming with modification the March 19, 2007 Decision[2]
of the Regional Trial Court (RTC),
Branch 21, Santiago City, wherein they were found guilty beyond reasonable
doubt of Qualified Carnapping in Criminal
Case No. 21-4949.
Accused-appellants
Lagat and Palalay were charged with the crime of Carnapping as defined under
Section 2 and penalized under Section 14[3]
of Republic Act No. 6539. The accusatory
portion of the Information,[4] reads:
That
on or about the 12th day of April 2005, at Santiago City,
Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the
above-named accused, conspiring, conniving with each other, and mutually
helping one another and with intent to gain and without the consent of the owner
thereof, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously take, steal
and carry away one (1) unit YASUKI tricycle bearing Engine No. 161FMJ41535420 and
Motor No. LX8PCK0034D002243 then driven and owned by JOSE BIAG, valued at ₱70,000.00, to the damage and
prejudice of the owner thereof.
That
in the course of the commission of carnapping, or on occasion thereof, the
above-named accused, conspiring, conniving confederating and helping each
other, and with intent to kill, did then and there assault, attack and wound the said JOSE BIAG with sharp and
pointed instrument directing blows against the vital parts of the body of the
latter thereby inflicting upon him multiple stab and hacking wounds which
directly caused the death of the said JOSE BIAG.
Lagat pleaded
not guilty upon arraignment on June 16, 2005.[5] Palalay, on the other hand, did not enter any
plea; hence, a plea of not guilty was entered by the RTC for him.[6]
On August 1,
2005, both accused proposed to plead guilty to a lesser offense.[7] In their plea-bargaining proposal,[8]
they asked that they be allowed to plead guilty to the crime of Homicide under
Article 249 of the Revised Penal Code and that the mitigating circumstances of
plea of guilty and/or no intention to commit so grave a wrong be considered in
their favor. They also asked that damages
be fixed at ₱120,000.00. This proposal was rejected[9]
by the prosecution; thus, the pre-trial conference proceeded. The pre-trial Order contained the following
facts as admitted by the parties:
1.
That
the cadaver of Jose Biag was recovered along Angadanan and Sn. Guillermo road
by members of the police together with Barangay Captain Heherson Dulay and
Chief Tanod Rumbaoa, Sr.
2. That the two accused were
arrested in possession of palay allegedly stolen in Alicia, Isabela.
3. That the cause of death of Jose
Biag was multiple stab and hack wounds as described in the Autopsy Report and
death certificate which shall be submitted during trial.[10]
After the
pre-trial conference, trial on the merits ensued.
The prosecution
first presented Florida Biag (Florida), the wife of the victim Jose Biag
(Biag), to testify on the circumstances leading to Biags disappearance and the
discovery of his body, the recovery of Biags tricycle, and the expenses she
incurred and the income she had lost as a result of her husbands death. Florida testified that her husband was a
farmer, a barangay tanod, and a
tricycle driver.[11] On April 12, 2005, at around two oclock in
the morning, her husband left to operate his tricycle for public use. It was around 11:00 a.m. of April 13, 2005, when
news reached her that their tricycle was with the Philippine National Police
(PNP) of the Municipality of Alicia and that her husband had figured in an
accident. After learning of the
incident, Florida sought the help of their Barangay (Brgy.) Captain, Heherson
Dulay, who immediately left for Angadanan without her. At around 2:00 p.m., Brgy. Captain Dulay informed[12]
Florida of what had happened to her husband.[13] Florida then presented in court the receipts[14]
evidencing the expenses she had incurred for her husbands wake and funeral and
for the repair of their tricycle, which was recovered with missing parts. She also testified as to the income Biag was
earning as a farmer, a tanod, and a tricycle
driver, and claimed that his death had caused her sleepless nights.[15]
The second
witness for the prosecution was the Chief Tanod
of Barangay Rizal, Poe Rumbaoa, Sr. (Rumbaoa).
He testified that on April 13, 2005, after he and Brgy. Captain Dulay received
Floridas report, they immediately went to the Alicia Police Station, wherein
they found Biags tricycle. The PNP of
Alicia showed them the identification card recovered in the tricycle and told
them that the tricycle was used in stealing palay
from a store in Angadanan, Isabela that belonged to a certain Jimmy Esteban
(Esteban). Rumbaoa and Brgy. Captain
Dulay were also told that the owner of the tricycle was killed and dumped along
the Angadanan and San Guillermo Road.
They were thereafter shown the two suspects and the place where Biags
body was dumped. Rumbaoa said that he
was able to identify the body as Biags, which was almost unrecognizable
because it was bloated all over, only because Biag had a mark on his right
shoulder, which Rumbaoa knew of.[16]
Police Officer 2
(PO2) Arthur Salvador, a member of the PNP in Alicia, took the witness stand
next. He testified that on April 13,
2005, he was on duty along with other colleagues at the Alicia PNP Station,
when they received a report from Esteban that the cavans of palay stolen
from him were seen at Alice Palay Buying Station in Alicia, Isabela, in a tricycle
commandeered by two unidentified male persons.
PO2 Salvador said that upon receipt of this report, their Chief of
Police composed a team, which included him, PO2 Bernard Ignacio, and PO2 Nathan
Abuan, to verify the veracity of the report.
At Alice Palay Buying Station, they saw the tricycle described to them
by their chief, with the cavans of palay, and the two accused, Lagat and
Palalay. PO2 Salvador averred that he
and his team were about to approach the tricycle when the two accused
scampered[17]
to different directions. After
collaring the two accused, they brought them to the Alicia PNP Station
together with the tricycle and its contents.
PO2 Salvador asseverated that when they reached the station, they asked
the two accused if they had any papers to show for both the tricycle and the palay, to which the two accused did not
answer. They allegedly kept silent even
after they were informed of their rights not only to remain as such, but also
to have counsel, either of their own choosing, or to be assigned to them if
they cannot afford one. PO2 Salvador then
continued that when they unloaded the tricycle, they discovered bloodstains inside
and outside the sidecar. He also
personally found a wallet containing the tricycles Certificate of Registration
and Official Receipt[18]
issued by the Land Transportation Office in the name of Jose Biag. When they asked the two accused about their
discoveries, Lagat and Palalay voluntarily answered that the name in the papers
is that of the owner of the tricycle, whom they killed and dumped along Angadanan
and San Guillermo Road, when they carnapped his tricyle. PO2 Salvador alleged that upon hearing this
revelation, they again informed Lagat and Palalay that anything they say would
be used against them, and that they had a right to counsel. Thereafter, they coordinated with the PNP of
Angadanan Police Station, and together with the two accused, they proceeded to Angadanan-San
Guillermo Road, where they found Biags body in a ravine just after the bridge near
the road.[19]
The
prosecutions last witness, PO2 Ignacio corroborated PO2 Salvadors testimony
on the events that led them to the tricycle, the palay, the two accused, and the body of Biag. He also confirmed PO2 Salvadors claim that
they had informed the two accused of their rights but the latter just ignored
them; hence, they continued with their investigation.[20] PO2 Ignacio added that the two accused also
told them how they killed Biag, to wit:
A-
They
rented a tricycle from Santiago to Alicia but they proceeded to Angadanan. And upon arrival at the site, they poked a
knife to the driver and the driver ran away.
They chased him and stabbed him, sir.[21]
Upon cross-examination,
PO2 Ignacio averred that they were not able to recover the murder weapon
despite diligent efforts to look for it and that they had questioned the people
at Alice Palay Buying Station and were told that the two accused had no other
companion. PO2 Ignacio also admitted
that while they informed Lagat and Palalay of their constitutional rights, the
two were never assisted by counsel at any time during the custodial
investigation.[22]
The prosecution
also submitted the Post-Mortem Autopsy Report[23]
on Biag of Dr. Edgar Romanchito P. Bayang, the Assistant City Health and
Medico-Legal Officer of Santiago City.
The Report showed that Biag was likely killed between 12:00 noon and
2:00 p.m. of April 12, 2004, and that he had sustained three stab wounds, an
incise wound, two hack wounds and an avulsion of the skin extending towards
the abdomen.[24]
After the
prosecution rested its case, the accused filed a Motion to Dismiss on Demurrer
to Evidence[25]
without leave of court[26]
on the ground that the prosecution failed to prove their guilt beyond
reasonable doubt. Lagat and Palalay
averred that their constitutional rights on custodial investigation were
grossly violated as they were interrogated for hours without counsel,
relatives, or any disinterested third person to assist them. Moreover, the admissions they allegedly made were
not supported by documentary evidence.
Palalay further claimed that Rumbaoas testimony showed that he had a
swelling above his right eye and a knife wound in his left arm, which
suggests that he was maltreated while under police custody.[27]
The accused also
claimed that the circumstantial evidence presented by the prosecution was not
sufficient to convict them. They averred
that aside from the alleged admissions they had made, the prosecution had
nothing else: they had no object evidence for the bloodstains allegedly found
in the tricycle; the murder weapon was never found; and no eyewitness aside
from the police officers was presented to show that they were in possession of
the tricycle at the time they were arrested.
Lagat and Palalay argued that the prosecution failed to establish an
unbroken chain of events that showed their guilt beyond reasonable doubt, thus,
they were entitled to enjoy the constitutional presumption of innocence absent
proof that they were guilty beyond reasonable doubt.[28]
As the accused
filed their Demurrer to Evidence without leave of court, they in effect waived
their right to present evidence, and submitted the case for judgment on the
basis of the evidence for the prosecution.[29]
On March 19,
2007, the RTC rendered a Decision, the dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE
in the light of the foregoing considerations the Court finds the accused Renato
Lagat y Gawan and James Palalay y Villarosa GUILTY beyond reasonable doubt of
qualified carnapping and hereby sentences each of them to the penalty of reclusion perpetua. They are also ORDERED TO PAY Florida Biag the
sum of Twelve thousand three hundred pesos (₱12,300.00) as actual damages plus Fifty thousand
pesos (₱50,000.00) for death indemnity
and another Fifty thousand pesos (₱50,000.00) for moral damages.[30]
After evaluating
the evidence the prosecution presented, the RTC agreed with the accused that
their rights were violated during their custodial investigation as they had no
counsel to assist them. Thus, whatever
admissions they had made, whether voluntarily or not, could not be used against
them and were inadmissible in evidence.[31]
However, the RTC
held that despite the absence of an eyewitness, the prosecution was able to
establish enough circumstantial evidence to prove that Lagat and Palalay
committed the crime, to wit:
1.
The accused were
caught by the Alicia PNP in possession of Biags tricycle, loaded with stolen palay;
2. The accused ran immediately when they saw the Alicia
PNP approaching them;
3. The Alicia PNP found bloodstains on the tricycle and
Biags wallet with documents to prove that Biag owned the tricycle;
4. The Alicia PNP contacted the PNP of Santiago City to
inquire about a Jose Biag, and this was how the barangay officials of Santiago City and Florida found out that
Biags tricycle was with the Alicia PNP;
5. Biag left early morning on April 12, 2005 and never
returned home;
6.
The accused
themselves led the Alicia PNP and Barangay Captain Dulay and Rumbaoa to where
they dumped Biags body.[32]
The RTC
convicted Lagat and Palalay of the crime of carnapping, qualified by the
killing of Biag, which, according to the RTC, appeared to have been done in the
course of the carnapping.[33]
Lagat and
Palalay asked the RTC to reconsider its Decision on the grounds that it erred
in giving full credence to the testimonies of the prosecutions witnesses and
in relying on the circumstantial evidence presented by the prosecution.[34]
On May 29, 2007,
the RTC denied[35] this
motion, holding that the testimonies of the witnesses were credible and
supported by the attending facts and circumstances, and that there was
sufficient circumstantial evidence to convict the accused.
Lagat and
Palalay went[36] to
the Court of Appeals, asserting that their guilt was not established beyond
reasonable doubt.[37] They averred that circumstantial evidence, to
be sufficient for a judgment of conviction, must exclude each and every
hypothesis consistent with innocence,[38]
which was allegedly not the case in their situation. They elaborated on why the circumstantial
evidence the RTC enumerated could not be taken against them:
1.
The accuseds possession
of the tricycle cannot prove that they killed its owner;
2. Their act of fleeing may be due to the stolen palay (which is not the subject of this
case), and not the tricycle;
3. No evidence was given that would link the
bloodstains found in the tricycle to Biag himself. They could have easily been Palalays, who
was shown to have a knife wound; and
4.
The accuseds
act of pointing to the police and the barangay
officials the ravine where Biags body was dumped was part of their
interrogation without counsel, which the RTC itself declared as inadmissible in
evidence.[39]
On October 8,
2008, the Court of Appeals rendered its Decision with the following dispositive
portion:
WHEREFORE, the Decision dated March 19, 2007
of the RTC, Branch 21, Santiago City, in Criminal Case No. 21-4949, is AFFIRMED with the MODIFICATION that accused-appellants Renato Lagat y Gawan and James
Palalay y Villarosa are ordered to pay to private complainant the increased
amount of ₱14,900.00 as actual damages.[40]
In affirming the
conviction of the accused, the Court of Appeals held that the elements of
carnapping were all present in this case.
The Court of Appeals pointed out that Lagat and Palalay were in
possession of the missing tricycle when they were apprehended by the Alicia PNP. Moreover, they failed to offer any
explanation as to how they came to be in possession of the tricycle. The Court of Appeals also agreed with the RTC
that whatever confession or admission the Alicia PNP extracted out of the
accused could not be used in evidence for having been done without the
assistance of counsel. The Court of
Appeals nonetheless affirmed the RTCs judgment as it was convinced that the
following circumstantial evidence supported the conviction of the accused for
qualified carnapping:
1.
Biag and his tricycle went missing on
April 12, 2005;
2.
Lagat and Palalay were found in
unauthorized possession of the tricycle on April 13, 2005;
3.
The Alicia PNP, upon inspection of the tricycle,
found traces of blood inside it, together with the original receipt and
certificate of registration of the vehicle in the name of Jose Biag;
4.
Palalay had a stab wound on his left arm
when the Alicia PNP presented him and Lagat to Brgy. Capt. Dulay and
prosecution witness Rumbaoa;
5.
Biag bore five (5) hack wounds on his
body when the Alicia PNP recovered his corpse in a ravine; and
6.
Lagat and Palalay failed to account for
their possession of the bloodstained tricycle immediately after their arrest.[41]
The accused are
now before us with the same lone assignment of error they posited before the
Court of Appeals, to wit:
THE TRIAL COURT GRAVELY ERRED IN
FINDING THE ACCUSED-APPELLANTS GUILTY OF THE CRIME CHARGED DESPITE FAILURE OF
THE PROSECUTION TO ESTABLISH HIS GUILT BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT.[42]
Ruling of the Court
Lagat and Palalay
have been charged and convicted of the crime of qualified carnapping under
Republic Act. No. 6539[43]
or the Anti-Carnapping Act of 1972.
Section 2 of the Act defines carnapping and motor vehicle as
follows:
Carnapping
is the taking, with intent to gain, of a motor vehicle belonging to another
without the latters consent, or by means of violence against or intimidation
of persons, or by using force upon things.
Motor
vehicle is any vehicle propelled by any power other than muscular power using
the public highways, but excepting road rollers, trolley cars, street-sweepers,
sprinklers, lawn mowers, bulldozers, graders, fork-lifts, amphibian trucks, and
cranes if not used on public highways, vehicles, which run only on rails or
tracks, and tractors, trailers and traction engines of all kinds used exclusively
for agricultural purposes. Trailers
having any number of wheels, when propelled or intended to be propelled by
attachment to a motor vehicle, shall be classified as separate motor vehicle
with no power rating.[44]
The elements of carnapping as defined
and penalized under the Anti-Carnapping Act of 1972 are the following:
1.
That there is an actual taking of the
vehicle;
2.
That the vehicle belongs to a person
other than the offender himself;
3.
That the taking is without the consent
of the owner thereof; or that the taking was committed by means of violence
against or intimidation of persons, or by using force upon things; and
4.
That the offender intends to gain from
the taking of the vehicle.[45]
The records of this case show that
all the elements of carnapping are present and were proven during trial.
The tricycle, which was
definitively ascertained to belong to Biag, as evidenced by the registration
papers, was found in Lagat and Palalays possession. Aside from this, the prosecution was also able
to establish that Lagat and Palalay fled the scene when the Alicia PNP tried to
approach them at the palay buying
station. To top it all, Lagat and
Palalay failed to give any reason why they had Biags tricycle. Their unexplained possession raises the
presumption that they were responsible for the unlawful taking of the
tricycle. Section 3(j), Rule 131 of the
Rules of Court states that:
[A] person found in possession of
a thing taken in the doing of a recent wrongful act is the taker and the doer of
the whole act; otherwise, that thing which a person possesses, or exercises
acts of ownership over, are owned by him.
In Litton Mills, Inc. v. Sales,[46]
we said that for such presumption to arise, it must be proven that: (a) the
property was stolen; (b) it was committed recently; (c) that the stolen
property was found in the possession of the accused; and (d) the accused is
unable to explain his possession satisfactorily.[47] As mentioned above, all these were proven by
the prosecution during trial. Thus, it
is presumed that Lagat and Palalay had unlawfully taken Biags tricycle. In People
v. Bustinera,[48]
this Court defined unlawful taking, as follows:
Unlawful
taking, or apoderamiento, is the
taking of the motor vehicle without the consent of the owner, or by means of
violence against or intimidation of persons, or by using force upon things; it
is deemed complete from the moment the offender gains possession of the thing,
even if he has no opportunity to dispose of the same.[49]
Lagat and Palalays intent to gain
from the carnapped tricycle was also proven as they were caught in a palay buying station, on board the
stolen tricycle, which they obviously used to transport the cavans of palay they had stolen and were going to sell at the station. In Bustinera,
we elucidated on the concept of intent to gain and said:
Intent to
gain or animus lucrandi is an
internal act, presumed from the unlawful taking of the motor vehicle. Actual gain is irrelevant as the important
consideration is the intent to gain. The
term gain is not merely limited to pecuniary benefit but also includes the
benefit which in any other sense may be derived or expected from the act which
is performed. Thus, the mere use of the
thing which was taken without the owners consent constitutes gain.[50]
Having established that the
elements of carnapping are present in this case, we now go to the argument of
the two accused that they cannot be convicted based on the circumstantial
evidence presented by the prosecution.
Under Section 4, Rule 133 of the
Rules of Court, circumstantial evidence is sufficient for conviction if:
(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 results in a moral certainty that the
accused, to the exclusion of all others, is the one who has committed the crime.
In People v. Mansueto,[51]
we said:
Circumstantial
evidence is that evidence which proves a fact or series of facts from which the
facts in issue may be established by inference.
Such evidence is founded on experience and observed facts and
coincidences establishing a connection between the known and proven facts and
the facts sought to be proved.[52]
Hence, to justify a conviction
based on circumstantial evidence, the combination of circumstances must be
interwoven in such a way as to leave no reasonable doubt as to the guilt of the
accused.[53]
A careful and exhaustive
examination of the evidence presented, excluding those that are inadmissible,
show that the circumstantial evidence, when viewed as a whole, effectively
establishes the guilt of Lagat and Palalay beyond reasonable doubt. We considered the following pieces of evidence
as convincing:
First,
Lagat and Palalay were found in possession of the tricycle the same day that it,
together with its owner Biag, was reported missing.
Second,
Lagat and Palalay were found at a palay
buying station, with the stolen tricycle packed with cavans of palay allegedly
stolen in Alicia, Isabela.
Third,
Lagat and Palalay who were then on board the tricycle, jumped and ran the
moment they saw the Alicia PNP approaching them.
Fourth,
Lagat and Palalay could not explain to the Alicia PNP why they were in
possession of Biags tricycle.
Fifth,
Biags wallet and his tricycles registration papers were found in the tricycle
upon its inspection by the Alicia PNP.
Sixth,
Biags body bore hack wounds as evidenced by the post-mortem autopsy done on
him, while his tricycle had traces of blood in it.
The foregoing circumstantial
evidence only leads to the conclusion that Lagat and Palalay conspired to kill
Biag in order to steal his tricycle.
Direct proof that the two accused conspired is not essential as it may
be inferred from their conduct before, during, and after their commission of
the crime that they acted with a common purpose and design.[54] The pieces of evidence presented by the
prosecution are consistent with one another and the only rational proposition
that can be drawn therefrom is that the accused are guilty of killing Biag to carnap his tricycle.
When a person is killed or raped in
the course of or on the occasion of the carnapping, the crime of carnapping is
qualified and the penalty is increased pursuant to Section 14 of Republic Act
No. 6539, as amended:
Section 14. Penalty for Carnapping. Any person who is
found guilty of carnapping, as this term is defined in Section Two of this Act,
shall, irrespective of the value of motor vehicle taken, be punished by
imprisonment for not less than fourteen years and eight months and not more
than seventeen years and four months, when the carnapping is committed without
violence or intimidation of persons, or force upon things; and by imprisonment
for not less than seventeen years and four months and not more than thirty
years, when the carnapping is committed by means of violence against or
intimidation of any person, or force upon things; and the penalty of reclusion perpetua
to death shall be imposed when the owner, driver or occupant of the carnapped
motor vehicle is killed or raped in the course of the commission of the
carnapping or on the occasion thereof.
(As amended by R.A. No. 7659.)
(Emphasis ours)
As there was no aggravating
circumstance attendant in the commission of the crime, the RTC properly imposed
the penalty of reclusion perpetua.
In conformity with prevailing
jurisprudence, we affirm the award of ₱50,000.00 as civil indemnity ex delicto for the death of Jose Biag
and ₱50,000.00 as moral damages for the proven mental suffering of his
wife as a result of his untimely death.
However, when actual damages proven by receipts during trial amount to
less than ₱25,000.00, as in this case, the award of temperate damages for
₱25,000.00 is justified in lieu of actual damages of a lesser amount.[55] Thus, an award of ₱25,000.00 as
temperate damages in lieu of the amount of ₱14,900.00 that the Court of
Appeals awarded as actual damages is proper in this case.
Both the RTC and the Court of
Appeals failed to consider that under Article 2206 of the Civil Code, the
accused are also jointly and severally liable for the loss of the earning
capacity of Biag and such indemnity should be paid to his heirs.[56]
In
People v. Jadap,[57]
this Court said:
As a
rule, documentary evidence should be presented to substantiate the claim for
damages for loss of earning capacity. By
way of exception, damages for loss of earning capacity may be awarded despite
the absence of documentary evidence when (1) the deceased is self-employed and
earning less than the minimum wage under current labor laws, in which case judicial
notice may be taken of the fact that in the deceased's line of work no
documentary evidence is available; or (2) the deceased is employed as a daily
wage worker earning less than the minimum wage under current labor laws. In this case, no documentary evidence was
presented to prove the claim of the victims heirs for damages by reason of
loss of earning capacity. However, the
victims father testified that at the time of his sons death, he was only 20
years old and was working as a mason with a monthly income of ₱3,000.00. We
find the fathers testimony sufficient to justify the award of damages for loss
of earning capacity.[58]
Biags widow, Florida, testified
that Biag worked as a farmer, tanod,
and tricycle driver, and that his income amounted to ₱40,000.00 per
cropping season as a farmer, ₱2,000.00 per month as a tanod, and ₱300.00 per day as a tricycle
driver. However, since the prosecution
failed to present any document pertaining to Biags appointment as a tanod, or that he actually worked as a
farmer, we shall consider only his earnings as a tricycle driver. According to the death certificate[59]
submitted by the prosecution, Biag was 56 years old at the time of his death.
The amount of damages recoverable
for the loss of earning capacity of the deceased is based on two factors: 1)
the number of years on the basis of which the damages shall be computed; and 2)
the rate at which the losses sustained by the heirs of the deceased should be
fixed. The first factor is based on the
formula (2/3 x 80 age of the deceased at the time of his death = life
expectancy) which is adopted from the American Expectancy Table of Mortality.[60] Net income is computed by deducting from the
amount of the victims gross income the amount of his living expenses. As there is no proof of Biags living
expenses, the net income is estimated to be 50% of the gross annual income.[61] Thus, the loss of earning capacity of the
deceased is computed as follows:
Net Earning
Capacity = life expectancy x [gross annual income living expenses][62]
=
2/3 [80-age at time of death] x [gross annual income - 50% of gross annual
income]
= 2/3 [80-56] x [₱109,500.00 - ₱54,750.00]
= 16 x ₱54,750.00
= ₱876,000.00
WHEREFORE,
we
AFFIRM with MODIFICATION the October 8, 2008 decision of the Court of Appeals
in CA-G.R.
CR.-H.C. No. 02869. Accused-appellants Renato Lagat y Gawan and
James Palalay y Villarosa are found GUILTY
beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of QUALIFIED
CARNAPPING and are sentenced to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua. They are hereby ORDERED to pay the heirs of the victim Jose Biag the following: (a)
₱50,000.00 as civil indemnity; (b) ₱50,000.00 as moral damages; (c) ₱25,000.00 as temperate damages; (d) ₱876,000.00 as loss of earning capacity; and (e) interest
on all damages awarded at the rate of 6% per
annum from the date of finality of this judgment.
SO ORDERED.
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
Chief Justice
Chairperson
LUCAS P. BERSAMINAssociate Justice |
MARIANO C. DEL CASTILLO Associate Justice
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MARTIN S. VILLARAMA, JR. Associate Justice |
[1] Rollo, pp. 2-17; penned by Associate Justice Hakim S. Abdulwahid with Associate Justices Portia Alio-Hormachuelos and Teresita Dy-Liacco Flores, concurring.
[2] Records, pp. 126-133.
[3] As amended by Republic Act No.
7659.
[4] Records,
pp. 1-2.
[5] Id.
at 22.
[6] Id.
at 21.
[7] Id.
at 28.
[8] Id.
at 38.
[9] Id.
at 41.
[10] Id.
at 39.
[11] TSN,
January 9, 2006, p. 10.
[12] Records,
p. 4.
[13] TSN,
January 9, 2006, pp. 3-6.
[14] Records,
pp. 98A-98I.
[15] TSN,
January 9, 2006, pp. 7-13.
[16] TSN,
April 20, 2006, pp. 3-6.
[17] TSN,
September 18, 2006, p. 5.
[18] Records,
p. 8.
[19] TSN,
September 18, 2006, pp. 4-16.
[20] TSN,
November 15, 2006, pp. 4-10.
[21] Id.
at 9.
[22] Id.
at 13-21.
[23] Records,
pp. 94-96.
[24] Id.
[25] Id.
at 104-110.
[26] Rules of Court, Rule 119, Section 23.
[27] TSN,
April 20, 2006, p. 10.
[28] Records,
pp. 108-109.
[29] Rules
of Court, Rule 119, Section 23, paragraph 2.
[30] Records,
p. 133.
[31] Id.
at 130-131.
[32] Id.
at 131-132.
[33] Id.
at 131-133.
[34] Id.
at 135-138.
[35] Id.
at 141-142.
[36] Id.
at 143.
[37] CA
rollo, p. 29.
[38] Id.
at 34.
[39] Id.
at 35-36.
[40] Rollo, p. 16.
[41] Id.
at 14.
[42] CA rollo, p. 33.
[43] As
amended by Republic Act No. 7659.
[44] Republic
Act No. 6539, Section 2.
[45] People v. Bernabe and Garcia, 448 Phil.
269, 280 (2003).
[46] G.R.
No. 151400, September 1, 2004, 437 SCRA 488.
[47] Id.
at 502.
[48] G.R.
No. 148233, June 8, 2004, 431 SCRA 284.
[49] Id.
at 295.
[50] Id.
at 296.
[51] 391
Phil. 611 (2000).
[52] Id.
at 629.
[53] People v. Casitas, Jr., 445 Phil. 407,
417 (2003).
[54] People v. Sube, 449 Phil. 165, 176-177 (2003).
[55] People v. Magdaraog, G.R. No. 151251,
May 19, 2004, 428 SCRA 529, 543.
[56] People v. Sirad, 390 Phil. 412, 426 (2000).
[57] G.R.
No. 177983, March 30, 2010, 617 SCRA 179.
[58] Id. at 196-197.
[59] Records,
p. 9.
[60] People v. Librando, 390 Phil. 543, 559 (2000).
[61] People v. Templo, 400 Phil. 471, 494 (2000).
[62] People v. Verde, 362 Phil. 305, 321 (1999).