Showing posts with label 1989. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1989. Show all posts

Thursday, June 7, 2012

Glan People's Lumber and Hardware vs. Intermediate Appellate Court


GRN 70493  May 18, 1989

GLAN PEOPLE'S LUMBER AND HARDWARE, GEORGE LIM, FABIO S. AGAD, FELIX LIM and PAUL ZACARIAS y INFANTE, petitioners, vs. INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT, CECILIA ALFEREZ VDA. DE CALIBO, Minors ROYCE STEPHEN, JOYCE JOAN, JANISE MARIE, JACQUELINE BRIGITTE, JOCELINE CORAZON, JULIET GERALDINE, JENNIFER JILL, all surnamed CALIBO, represented by their mother, CECILIA A. VDA. DE CALIBO, respondents.

PETITION for certiorari to review the judgment of the Court of Appeals.

The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.

Rulino Mayor and Isidro M. Ampig for petitioners.
Manuel L. Hontanosas for private respondents.

NARVASA, J.:
There is a two-fold message in this judgment that bears stating at the outset. The first, an obvious one, is that it is the objective facts established by proofs presented in a controversy that determine the verdict, not the plight of the persons involved, no matter how deserving of sympathy and commiseration because, for example, an accident of which they are the innocent victims has brought them to, reduced circumstances or otherwise tragically altered their lives. The second is that the doctrine laid done many, many years ago in Picart vs. Smith,1 continues to be good law to this day.

The facts giving rise to the controversy at bar are tersely and quite accurately recounted by the Trial Court as follows:2

"Engineer Orlando T. Calibo, Agripino Roranes, and Maxima Paws were on the jeep owned by the Bacnotan Consolidated Industries, Inc., with Calibo at the wheel, as it approached from the South Lizada Bridge going towards the direction of Davao City at about 1:45 in the afternoon of July 4, 1979. At about that time, the cargo truck, loaded with cement bags, GI sheets, plywood, driven by defendant Paul Zacarias y Infante, coming from the opposite direction of Davao City and bound for Glan, South Cotabato, had just crossed said bridge. At about 59 yards after crossing the bridge, the cargo truck and the jeep collided as a consequence of which Engineer Calibo died while Roranes and Patos sustained physical injuries. Zacarias was unhurt. As a result of the impact, the left side of the truck was slightly damaged while the left side of the jeep, including its fender and hood, was extensively damaged. After the impact, the jeep fell and rested on its right side on the asphalted road a few meters to the rear of the truck, while the truck stopped on its wheels on the road.

On November 27, 1979, the instant case for damages was filed by the surviving spouse and children of the late Engineer Calibo who are residents of Tagbilaran City against the driver and owners of the cargo truck.
For failure to file its answer to the third party complaint, third party defendant, which insured the cargo truck involved, was declared in default."

The case filed by the heirs of Engineer Calibo-his widow and minor children, private respondents herein-was docketed as Civil Case No. 3283 of the Court of First Instance of Bohol.3 Named defendants in the complaint were "Felix S. Agad, George Lim and Felix Lim x x (who) appear to be the co-owners of the Glan People's Lumber and Hardware x x (and) Paul Zacarias y Infante."4 The defendants' answer however alleged that the lumber and hardware business was exclusively owned by George Y. Lim, this being evidenced by the Certificate of Registration issued by the Bureau of Domestic Trade; Fabio S. Agad was not a co-owner thereof but "merely employed by x x George Y. Lim as bookkeeper"; and Felix Lim had no connection whatever with said business, "he being a child only eight (8) years of age."5

"After (trial, and) a careful evaluation of the evidence, both testimonial and documentary," the Court reached the conclusion "that the plaintiffs failed to establish by preponderance of evidence the negligence, and thus the liability, of the defendants." Accordingly, the Court dismissed the complaint (and defendants' counterclaim) "for insufficiency of evidence." Likewise dismissed was third-party complaint presented by the defendants against the insurer of the truck. The circumstances leading to the Court's conclusion just mentioned, are detailed in the Court's decision, as follows:

1. Moments before its collision with the truck being operated by Zacarias, the jeep of the deceased Calibo was "zigzagging."6

2. Unlike Zacarias who readily submitted himself to investigation by the police, Calibo's companions, Roranes (an accountant), and Patos, who suffered injuries on account of the collision, refused to be so investigated or give statements to the police officers. This, plus Roranes' waiver of the right to institute criminal proceedings against Zacarias, and the fact that indeed no criminal case was ever instituted in Court against Zacarias, were "telling indications that they did not attribute the happening to defendant Zacarias' negligence or fault."7

3. Roranes' testimony, given in plaintiffs' behalf, was "not as clear and detailed as that of x x Zacarias," and was "uncertain and even contradicted by the physical facts and the police investigators Dimaano and Esparcia."8

4. That there were skid marks left by the truck's tires at the scene, and none by the jeep, demonstrates that the driver of the truck had applied the brakes and the jeep's driver had not; and that the jeep had on impact fallen on its right side is indication that it was running at high speed. Under the circumstances, according to the Court, given "the curvature of the road and the descending grade 6f the jeep's lane, it was negligence on the part of the driver of the jeep, Engr. Calibo, for not reducing his speed upon sight of the truck and failing to apply the brakes as he got within collision range with the truck."

5. Even if it be considered that there was some antecedent negligence on the part of Zacarias shortly before the collision, in that he had caused his truck to run some 25 centimeters to the left of the center of the road, Engr. Calibo had the last clear chance of avoiding the accident because he still had ample room in his own lane to steer clear of the truck, or he could simply have braked to a fall stop.

The Court of Appeals saw things differently. It rendered judgment' on the plaintiffs' appeal,10 reversing the decision of the Trial Court. It found Zacarias to be negligent on the basis of the following circumstances, to wit:

1) "the truck driven by defendant Zacarias occupied the lane of the jeep when the collision occurred," and although Zacarias saw the jeep from a distance of about 150 meters, he "did not drive his truck back to his lane in order to avoid collision with the oncoming jeep x x x"11 what is worse, "the truck driver suddenly applied his brakes even as he knew that he was still within the lane of the jeep;"2 had both vehicles stayed in their respective lanes, the collision would never have occurred, they would have passed "alongside each other safely;"13

2) Zacarias had no license at the time; what he handed to M, Esparcia, on the latter's demand, was the "driver's license of his co. driver Leonardo Baricuatro;"14

3) the waiver of the right to file criminal charges against Zacarias should not be taken against "plaintiffs" Roranes and Patos who had the right, under the law, to opt merely to bring a civil suit.15

The Appellate Court opined that Zacarias' negligence "gave rise to the presumption of negligence on the part of his employer, and their liability is both primary and solidary." It therefore ordered "the defendants jointly and solidarily, to indemnify the plaintiffs the following arnounts:

(1) P30,000.00 for the death of Orlando Calibo;
(2) P378,000.00 for the loss of earning capacity of the deceased (3) P15,000.00 for attorney's fees;
(4) Cost of suit."16

The defendants George Lim, Felix Lim, Fabio S. Agad and Paul Zacarias have appealed to this Court on certiorari and pray for a reversal of the judgment of the Intermediate Appellate Court which, it is claimed, ignored or ran counter to the established facts. A review of the record confirms the merit of this assertion and persuades this Court that said judgment indeed disregarded facts clearly and undisputably demonstrated by the proofs. The appealed judgment, consequently, will have to be reversed.

The finding that "the truck driven by defendant Paul Zacarias occupied the lane of the jeep when the collision occurred" is a loose one, based on nothing more than the showing that at the time of the accident, the truck driven by Zacarias had edged over the painted center line of the road into the opposite lane by a width of twenty-five (25) centimeters. It ignores the fact that by the uncontradicted evidence, the actual center line of the road was not that indicated by the painted stripe but, according to measurements made and testified by Patrolman Juanito Dimaano, one of the two officers who investigated the accident, correctly lay thirty-six (36) centimeters farther to the left of the truck's side of said stripe.

The unimpugned testimony of Patrolman Dimaano, a witness for the private respondents, is to the effect that the jeep's lane was three (3) meters and seventy-five (75) centimeters wide, and that of the truck three (3) meters and three (3) centimeters, measured from the center stripe to the corresponding side lines or outer edges of the road." The total width of the road being, therefore, six (6) meters and seventy-eight (78) centimeters, the true center line equidistant from both side lines would divide the road into two lanes each three (meters) and thirty-nine (39) centimeters wide. Thus, although it was not disputed that the track overrode the painted stripe by twenty-five (25) centimeters, it was still it least eleven (11) centimeters away from its side of the true center line of the road and well inside its own lane when the accident occurred. By this same reckoning, since it was unquestionably the jeep that rammed into the stopped truck, it may also be deduced that it (the jeep) was at the time travelling beyond its own lane and intruding into the lane of the truck by at least the same 11-centimeter width of space.

Not only was the truck's lane, measured from the incorrectly located center stripe uncomfortably narrow, given that vehicle's width of two (2) meters and forty-six (46) centimeters; the adjacent road shoulder was also virtually impassable, being about three (3) inches lower than the paved surface of the road and "soft"-not firm enough to offer traction for safe passagebesides which, it sloped gradually down to a three foot-deep ravine with a river below.18 The truck's lane as erroneously demarcated by the center stripe gave said vehicle barely half a meter of clearance from the edge of the road and the dangerous shoulder and little room for maneuver, in case this was made necessary by traffic contingencies or road conditions, if it always kept to said lane. It being also shown that the accident happened at or moor the point of the truck's approach to a curve,19 which called for extra precautions against driving too near the shoulder, it could hardly be accounted negligent on the part of its driver to intrude temporarily, and by only as small as a twenty-five centimeter-wide space (less than ten inches), into the opposite lane in order to insure his vehicle's safety. This, even supposing that said maneuver was in fact an intrusion into the opposite lane, which was not the case at all as just pointed out.

Nor was the Appellate Court correct in finding that Paulino Zacarias had acted negligently in applying his brakes instead of getting back inside his lane upon espying the approaching jeep. Being well within his own lane, as has already been explained, he had no duty to swerve out of the jeep's way as said Court would have had him do. And even supposing that he was in fact partly inside the opposite lane, coming to a full stop with the jeep still thirty (30) meters away cannot be considered an unsafe or imprudent action, there also being uncontradicted evidence that the jeep was "zigzagging"20 and hence no way of telling in which direction it would go as it approached the truck.

Also clearly erroneous is the finding of the Intermediate Appellate Court that Zacarias had no driver's license at the time. The traffic accident report attests to the proven fact that Zacarias voluntarily surrendered to the investigating officers his driver's license, valid for 1979, that had been renewed just the day before the accident, on July 3, 1979.21 The Court was apparently misled by the circumstance that when said driver was first asked to show his license by the investigators at the scene of the collision, he had first inadvertently produced the license of a fellow driver, Leonardo Baricuatro, who had left said license in Davao City and had asked Zacarias to bring it back to him in Glan, Cotabato.22

The evidence not only acquits Zacarias of any negligence in the matter; there are also quite a few significant indicators that it was rather Engineer Calibo's negligence that was the proximate cause of the accident. Zacarias had told Patrolman Dimaano at the scene of the collision and later confirmed in his written statement at the police headquarters23 that the jeep had been "zigzagging," which is to say that it was travelling or being driven erratically at the time. The other investigator, Patrolman Jose Esparcia, also testified that eyewitnesses to the accident had remarked on the jeep's "zigzagging."24 There is moreover more than a suggestion that Calibo had been drinking shortly before the accident. The decision of the Trial Court adverts to further testimony of Esparcia to the effect that three of Calibo's companions at the beach party he was driving home from when the collision occurred, who, having left ahead of him went to the scene when they heard about the accident, had said that there had been a drinking spree at the party and, referring to Calibo, had remarked: "Sabi na huag nang mag drive . . . . pumipilit," (loosely translated, "He was advised not to drive, but he insisted.")

It was Calibo whose driver's license could not be found on his person at the scene of the accident, and was reported by his companions in the jeep as having been lost with his wallet at said scene, according to the traffic accident report, Exhibit "J". Said license unexplainedly found its way into the record some two years later.

Reference has already been made to the finding of the Trial Court that while Zacarias readily submitted to interrogation and gave a detailed statement to the police investigators immediately after the accident, Calibo's two companions in the jeep and supposed eyewitnesses, Agripino Roranes and Maximo Patos, refused to give any statements. Furthermore, Roranes who, together with Patos, had sustained injuries as a result of the collision, waived his right to file a criminal case against Zacarias.25

Even, however, ignoring these telltale indicia of negligence on the part of Calibo, and assuming some antecedent negligence on the part of Zacarias in failing to keep within his designated lane, incorrectly demarcated as it was, the physical facts, either expressly found by the Intermediate Appellate Court or which may be deemed conceded for lack of any dispute, would still absolve the latter of any actionable responsibility for the accident under the rule of the last clear chance.

Both drivers, as the Appellate Court found, had had a full view of each other's vehicle from a distance of one hundred fifty meters. Both vehicles were travelling at a speed of approximately thirty kilometers per hour.26 The private respondents have admitted that the truck was already at a full stop when the jeep plowed into it. And they have not seen fit to deny or impugn petitioners' imputation that they also admitted the truck had been brought to a stop while the jeep was still thirty meters away.27 From these facts the logical conclusion emerges that the driver of the jeep had what judicial doctrine has appropriately called the last clear chance to avoid the accident, while still at that distance of thirty meters from the truck, by stopping in his turn or swerving his jeep away from the truck, either of which he had sufficient time to do while running at a speed of only thirty kilometers per hour. In those circumstances, his duty was to seize that opportunity of avoidance, not merely rely on a supposed right to expect, as the Appellate Court would have it, the truck to swerve and leave him a clear path.

The doctrine of the last clear chance provides as valid and complete a defense to accident liability today as it did when invoked and applied in the 1918 case of Picart vs. Smith, supra, which involved a similar state of facts. Of those facts, which should be familiar to every student of law, it is only necessary to recall the summary made in the syllabus of this Court's decision that:

"(t)he plaintiff was riding a pony on a bridge. Seeing an automobile ahead he improperly pulled his horse over to the railing on the right. The driver of the automobile, however guided his car toward the plaintiff without diminution of speed until he was only few feet away. He then turned to the right but passed so closely to the horse that the latter being frightened, jumped around and was killed by the passing car. x x x."
Plaintiff Picart was thrown off his horse and suffered contusions which required several days of medical attention. He sued the defendant Smith for the value of his animal, medical expenses and damage to his apparel and obtained judgment from this Court which, while finding that there was negligence on the part of both parties, held that that of the defendant was the immediate and determining cause of the accident and that of the plaintiff "x x x the more remote factor in the case":

"It goes without saying that the plaintiff himself was not free from fault, for he was guilty of antecedent negligence in planting himself on the wrong side of the road. But as we have already stated, the defendant was also negligent; and in such case the problem always is to discover which agent is immediately and directly responsible. It will be noted that the negligent acta of the two parties were not contemporaneous, since the negligence of the defendant succeeded the negligence of the plaintiff by an appreciable interval. Under these circumstances the law is that the person who has the last fair chance to avoid the impending harm and falls to do so is chargeable with the consequences, without reference to the prior negligence of the other party."

Since said ruling clearly applies to exonerate petitioner Zacarisa and his employer (and co-petitioner) George Lim, an inquiry into whether or not the evidence supports the latter's additional defense of due diligence in the selection and supervision of said driver is no longer necessary and win not be undertaken. The fact is that there is such evidence in the record which has not been controverted.

It must be pointed out, however, that the Intermediate Appellate Court also seriously erred in holding the petitioners Pablo S. Agad and Felix Lim solidarily liable for the damages awarded in its appealed decision, as alleged owners, with petitioner George Lim, of Glen People's Lumber and Hardware, employer of petitioner Zacarias. This manifestly disregarded, not only the certificate of registration issued by the Bureau of Domestic Trade identifying Glan People's Lumber and Hardware as a business name registered by George Lim,28 but also unimpugned allegations into the petitioners' answer to the Complaint that Pablo S. Agad was only an employee of George Lim and that Felix Lim, then a child of only eight (8) years, was in no way connected with the business.

In conclusion, it must also be stated that there is no doubt of this Court's power to review the assailed decision of the Intermediate Appellate Court under the authority of precedents recognizing exceptions to the familiar rule binding it to observe and respect the latter's findings of fact. Many of those exceptions may be cited to support the review here undertaken, but only the most obvious-that said findings directly conflict with those of the Trial Court-will suffice.29 In the opinion of this Court and after a careful review of the record, the evidence singularly fails to support the findings of the Intermediate Appellate Court which, for all that appears, seem to have been prompted rather by sympathy for the heirs of the deceased Engineer Calibo than by an objective appraisal of the proofs and a correct application of the law to the established facts. Compassion for the plight of those whom an accident has robbed of the love and support of a husband and father is an entirely natural and understandable sentiment. It should not, however, be allowed to stand in the way of, much less to influence, a just verdict in a suit at law.

WHEREFORE, the appealed judgment of the Intermediate Appellate Court is hereby REVERSED, and the complaint against herein petitioners in Civil Case No. 3283 of the Court of First Instance of Bohol, Branch IV, is DISMISSED. No pronouncement as to costs.

SO ORDERED.

Cruz, Gancayco, GriƱo-Aquino and Medialdea, JJ., concur.
Judgment reversed..

Saturday, July 18, 2009

People vs. Rey, G.R. No. 80089, April 13, 1989

Republic of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila

SECOND DIVISION

G.R. No. 80089 April 13, 1989

PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs.
SATURNINO REY, defendant-appellant.

The Solicitor General for plaintiff-appellee.

Julius L. Abela for defendant-appellant.

PADILLA, J.:

Saturnino Rey was charged with the crime of Murder before the Regional Trial Court of Capiz, committed as follows:

That on or about 8:40 o'clock in the evening of May 28, 1983, at Poblacion, Pilar, Capiz, Philippines, within the jurisdiction of this Court, the above-named accused armed with a .45 caliber pistol, did then and there, wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously shoot one NICOLAS PAGAYUNAN in a sudden and in unexpected manner, thereby inflicting upon the latter a gunshot wound above the nipple and sternum, right, thru and thru which caused his death thereafter; 1

After trial, Judge Rodrigo V. Cosico found the following facts to have been established:

... On the evening of May 28, 1983, which was a fiesta day, while Rosette Pagayunan, a teacher at the San Esteban Elementary School, was preparing to cook food at her house, she found out that there was no water. Accordingly, Mrs. Pagayunan instructed her two (2) children, Babette and Nicolas, to get water from the faucet of the accused Saturnino Rey, also a public school teacher. At that time, Mr. Rey's faucet was allegedly the only one with water at the neighborhood because of the long drought. Nicolas was then a nineteen-year old fourth year high school student at the Colegio de la Purisima Concepcion, Roxas City. Babette and Nicolas proceeded towards the house of Mr. Rey to get water. Babette and Nicolas found Roban Rey, son of the accused, near the faucet. Roban was sitting atop the steps of the kitchen stairway talking with Nicolas. While Nicolas was standing beside the faucet waiting for his pail to be filled with water, he was shot twice by Saturnino Rey from the window of his bedroom which was about four (4) meters away. The shooting was witnessed by Roban Rey and Babette Pagayunan, who was about three (3) meters away from the faucet. After he was hit, Nicolas said to Roban: "I was hit." Soon after, Nicolas fell in front of Roban Roban went up their house and told Saturnino Rey: "Daddy you hit Colas." Babette went home and reported the shooting incident to her mother who fainted. The Pagayunan sisters and their group went to the place to get the body of Nicolas, who was taken to the Medicare Hospital in Pilar, Capiz, where he was given a first-aid treatment. Thereafter, Nicolas was taken to Roxas City but died before reaching the hospital.

On the morning of May 29, 1983, Patrolmen Jose Ballera and Hanzel Villareal conducted an investigation at the place of the shooting incident and found an empty shell (Exh. C) below the window of the room of Saturnino Rey. During the investigation, Roban Rey, in the presence of the police investigators and Romeo Bacalocos, pointed to the direction of the window of the room of his father, Saturnino Rey, as the place where the firing came from. 2

The trial court found the defendant-appellant guilty, as charged, and sentenced him to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua to indemnify the heirs of the victim in the amount of P30,000.00, to pay the heirs of the victim the amount of P50,000.00 for moral damages and to pay the costs.

From this judgment, the accused Saturnino Rey appealed. His counsel assails the trial court for completely believing the testimony of the prosecution witnesses. Counsel points to certain facts and circumstances of weight and substance which the trial court allegedly overlooked, misapplied or misinterpreted, and which, if considered, will materially alter the result, to wit: "1) the fact that it was summer and the water system connections, particularly those in the higher level of the town, were not functioning; 2) the fact that the water faucet at the backyard of the accused-appellant was not functioning, not merely because the water pressure was too weak for the faucet to function but also because the water connection had been disconnected (t.s.n., p. 283); 3) the fact that the houses of both the deceased and the accused-appellant and their immediate neighborhood are on the same higher level of the town; 4) the fact that the household of the accused-appellant were getting their water supply from Martin Cunada, their nearest neighbor, because he had a water pump, several water storage tanks, and a well; 5) the fact that the immediate neighbors of the Pagayunans had wells, water storage tanks, as well as water system connections and some of their neighbors were relatives and close friends of the Pagayunans; 6) the fact that the Pagayunans were known and seen to obtain their water supply from these immediate neighbors; 7) the fact that the Pagayunans (who were relatively new in the neighborhood) had never drawn water from the faucet of the accused-appellant; 8) the fact that the house of the accused-appellant was at least 120 meters away from the house of the deceased; 9) the fact that the only access to the accused-appellant's bedroom window from the outside was through the shuttered gate of the wire-enclosed vegetable garden; 10) the fact that the six-foot-high chicken and barb-wire fence of the vegetable garden was covered with climbing plants, thereby blocking the view from the windows as well as from the outside into the bedroom; 11) the fact that the accused- appellant's house was of the bungalow type and the sill of the bedroom window was only about 3.5 feet from the ground; 12) the fact that the deceased was found just below or near the bedroom window and within the enclosed vegetable garden, not only by members of the accused-appellant's family but also by Martin Cunada, a friend and barkada of the deceased, who happened to be passing by just after gunfire sounded; 13) the fact that Martin Cunada, who stayed for some five minutes at the scene of the incident right after the shooting, did not see Babette Pagayunan or any other member of the deceased's family anywhere in the vicinity; 14) the fact that after the shooting only Babette Pagayunan of the Pagayunan household was seen with the deceased and the Rey children at the Medicare Hospital and in Roxas City; 15) the fact that none of the four water containers the deceased allegedly brought with him to the accused-appellant's backyard faucet was ever found or seen before, during, or after the shooting; 16) the fact that except for Dr. Buenvenida, all the other four (4) witnesses of the prosecution concocted some material portions of their testimonies; 17) the fact that in a small rural town in the interior the inhabitants sup and sleep early; and 18) the fact that it was the night of the town fiesta and older folks tend to be more security-conscious." 3

The appeal is without merit. The circumstances enumerated by the counsel for the appellant are of little importance because the accused-appellant, Saturnino Rey, had admitted having fired the shot that killed the deceased Nicolas Pagayunan. His testimony in court reads, as follows:

Q Now, will you please inform the Honorable Court at about 8:40 in the night of May 28, 1983 where you were and what you were doing.

A I was inside my room of my house.

Q And what were you doing.

A I was lying down.

Q Did you have any companion in your room that night and at that time?

A Yes, sir.

Q Inform the court who were your companions.

A My child aging four years of age with my second wife.

Q What happened while you were in your room that night and that time with your child?

A There was a person who opened my window, the window of my room where I was lying down.

Q Now do you know who was that person who opened the window of your room where you were, lying down?

A No, sir. At first I did not know.

Q Will you please describe to the Honorable Court the room where you were staying in and the window which was opened?

A The frontage of my house is facing (witness pointing to the western direction). The elevation of the flooring is one foot. The height of the window from the floor is this high (witness referring to the window of the courtroom estimated to be 2 1/2 feet).

Q After you noticed that a person opened your window, the window of your bedroom, what happened?

A I felt for my pistol.

Q What happened after that?

A I sat on the bed and asked, Who are you?'

Q And did you receive an answer after asking who was that person?

A No, sir.

Q What happened after you received no answer?

A I fired a shot.

Q How many times did you fire your pistol?

A Twice.

Q By the way, how wide was that window in your room?

A About 1 1/2 meters wide.

Q And did you see anybody to whom or at whom you fired your pistol?

A The first shot that I fired was upward, on the air.

Q My question to you is, did you see any person outside the window?

A Yes, sir.

Q Were you able to discern the facial features of the person you saw at the window?

ATTY. PATRICIO:

Objection, your Honor.

COURT:

All right, reform.

ATTY. ABELA:

Q How well did you see the person you saw at your window?

A Silhouette.

Q Will you be able to recognize the person you saw at your window that night?

A No, sir.

Q And what was the person you saw at your window doing when you fired the shot?

A You mean the first shot?

Q The first shot what was the person doing.?

A After he pushed the shutter of the window he put his hand down.

Q And at that time you fired the second shot what was the man doing.?

A I was looking at him and he had the action of drawing something and that was the time I fired the second shot.

Q By the way how close was the man to your window that night?

A Just like this, from myself up to Atty. Abela (distance estimated to be 1 1/2 meters).

Q My question to you is, how close was that man to the window of your room?

A He was right at the window.

Q And what part of the body of that man can be seen by you?

A From the waist.

Q And how far were you seated on your bed, how far was your bed from the wall of the window?

A About one foot.

Q What happened after you fired the second shot directed at that man at your window?

A I gave out an alarm to my children. 4

Having invoked self-defense, it was incumbent upon the defendant-appellant to prove by clear and convincing evidence the fact that he acted in self-defense. The defendant must rely on the strength of his own evidence and not on the weakness of that of the prosecution, for even if it were weak, it could not be disbelieved after the accused himself admitted the killing. 5 In this regard, defendant-appellant failed to discharge the burden reposed upon him by law to prove self-defense. The trial court found that the testimony of the defendant-appellant gave evasive and ambiguous answers before the court. 6 We have examined the record of the case and we find no cogent reason to disturb said findings of the trial court. The witnesses for the prosecution had no evil motive to testify falsely against the appellant.

Besides, defendant-appellant's testimony, even if true, does not establish a case of self-defense. There is no evidence of unlawful aggression on the part of the deceased. The defendant-appellant merely testified that he saw a person open the window of his bedroom and when he inquired who the person was and received no answer, he fired a shot into the air then, when said person lifted his right arm chest high, 7 he fired the second shot. The interval between the two shots was only about three (3) to five (5) seconds. 8 For unlawful aggression to be appreciated in self-defense, there must be an actual sudden and unexpected attack or imminent danger thereof, and not merely a threatening or intimidating attitude. 9 The raising of the right arm chest high alone by an unarmed person cannot be considered unlawful aggression. Absent unlawful aggression on the part of the deceased, there cannot be self-defense on the part of the accused.

The defendant-appellant also failed to rebut the presumption that the shooting was done with criminal intention. His conduct after the shooting incident was inconsistent with the conduct of a person who had innocently shot a person by accident. It would appear that he did not do anything to help his victim who was lying down on the ground, bleeding and moaning. He did not go down from his house even after finding that the person he had shot was Nicolas Pagayunan. Instead, he uttered curses. 10 Then, very early the next morning, at about 5:30 o'clock, he left his house and stayed with his brother in a neighboring municipality, 11 and did not go home even to help the police in their investigation. 12 Flight is an indication of a guilty mind.

The defendant-appellant also contends that treachery or alevosia was not charged in the information filed against him, or proven by the evidence presented by the prosecution at the trial.

The contention is without merit. The information filed in this case specifically stated that the accused, Saturnino Rey, armed with a.45 caliber pistol, wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously shot Nicolas Pagayunan "in a sudden and unexpected manner." This is sufficient allegation of treachery because a sudden and unexpected attack, without the slightest provocation on the person of the one attacked is the essence of treachery or alevosia. It is not necessary that the information should use specifically the word "alevosia" or treachery. It is sufficient if the information alleges facts in clear and explicit language which would show treachery or alevosia without the use of the specific word. 13

Treachery in the shooting of Nicolas Pagayunan was established by the testimony of Babette Pagayunan who declared that the accused-appellant suddenly and without warning shot the deceased as the latter was waiting for his pail to be filled with water and while talking to the son of the accused-appellant. The attack was sudden, unexpected, without warning, and without giving the victim an opportunity to defend himself or repel the aggression. In fact, the deceased did not sense any danger that he would be shot by the defendant-appellant as there was no previous grudge or misunderstanding between them.

The claim of the defendant-appellant that he had fired a warning shot into the air appears to be an afterthought. Babette Pagayunan categorically declared that her brother, Nicolas Pagayunan, was hit on the first shot. Her testimony, on cross examination, reads as follows:

Q How many shots did Saturnino Rey the accused, direct to your brother?

A Two shots were delivered by Saturnino Rey. The first shot hit my brother. I did not know whether the second shot hit my brother. After the first shot my brother staggered towards Roban. 14

Besides, the shots were fired in rapid succession so that the first shot could not serve as a warning shot. Babette Pagayunan stated:

Q How long after the first shot did you hear the second shot?

A Seconds only. The interval was seconds.

Q So that the second shot came right after the first shot?

A Yes, sir. 15

The defendant-appellant, Saturnino Rey, also testified, as follows:

Q You testified a while ago that you fired two shots. How long after you fired the first shot that you also fired the second shot?

A The interval was only seconds.

Q About two seconds?

A Three seconds or more.

Q But it could not be more than five seconds, right?

A No, sir. 16

As the People's counsel observed, if the version of the defendant-appellant were true, the empty shell would have fallen near the defendant-appellant's bed, inside his room, and not outside the house where Pat. Hanzel Villareal found it; and that the first shot would have hit a part of the house.

The trial court, therefore, correctly found the offense committed by the defendant-appellant to be murder, qualified as it was by treachery.

WHEREFORE, the judgment appealed from is AFFIRMED With costs against the appellant.

SO ORDERED.

Melencio-Herrera, J., (Chairman), Paras, Sarmiento, Regalado, JJ, With reservations as to the penalty only consistent with my dissent in P. vs. Millora.

Footnotes

1 Rollo, p. 15.

2 Id., pp. 26-27.

3 Appellant's Brief, pp. 62-64.

4 T.s.n. of October 27, 1986, pp, 4-6.

5 People vs. Llamera, G.R. No. L-21604-06, May 25, 1973, 51 SCRA 48, 57, and cases cited therein.

6 Decision, pp. 3-4.

7 T.s.n. of October 27, 1986, p. 16.

8 T.s.n of March 26, 1987, p. 17.

9 People vs. Pasco, Jr., G.R. No. L-45715-16, June 24, 1985, 137 SCRA 137.

10 T.s.n. of March 26, 1987, pp. 22-25.

11 Id., P. 11.

12 Id., p. 16.

13 Sec. 9, Rule 110, Rules of Court.

14 T.s.n. of November 27,1984, pp. 67-68.

15 Id., p. 68.

16 T.s.n. of March 26, 1987, p. 17