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Philippine Supreme Court Jurisprudence > Year 2000 > June 2000 Decisions > G.R. No. 130588 June 8, 2000 - PEOPLE OF THE PHIL. v. ROMEO CAPILI:




PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

EN BANC

[G.R. No. 130588. June 8, 2000.]

PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. ROMEO CAPILI y TAGUDAR, Accused-Appellant.

D E C I S I O N


MELO, J.:


The judgment rendered by Branch 5 of the Regional Trial Court of the Second Judicial Region, stationed in Tuguegarao, Cagayan imposing the death sentence upon accused-appellant for the heinous crime of murder is before this Court on automatic review. A perusal of the record brings to mind the legal maxim: "mas vale que queden sin castigar dies reos presuntos, que se castigue uno inocente" (People v. Cunanan, 19 SCRA 769 [1967]).

Accused-appellant was charged in an Information pertinently reading as follows:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

Criminal Case No. 6648

That on or about October 5, 1994, in the Municipality of Alcala, Province of Cagayan, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the said accused ROMEO CAPILI y TAGUDAR, with intent to kill, with evident premeditation and treachery did then and there willfully and feloniously attack, assault, maul and thereafter submerged the said victim Alberto Capili in the Cagayan River which caused his death.

Contrary to law.

(p. 4, Rollo.)

The People’s brief summarizes the prosecution evidence as follows:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

Angelo Badua, a resident of Masical, Amulung, Cagayan, was a student of Afusing High School located at Barangay Afusing, Alcala, Cagayan. Masical is about one (1) kilometer distant from Afusing High School. Between Masical and Afusing is Barangay Abbeg, Alcala, Cagayan. To go to school, Angelo had to take the road and at Abbeg cross a creek to reach Afusing. At the mouth of the creek is the Cagayan River (t.s.n., May 10, 1995, pp. 3-7-9).chanrobles virtual lawlibrary

On October 5, 1994, at about 4:00 o’clock in the afternoon, Angelo Badua and his two schoolmates, Harlen Ormillo and Rowena Ancheta, were on their way home from school and while at the bank of the Cagayan River and about ten (10) meters away from the boat occupied by appellant and the latter’s nephew, Alberto Capili, they saw appellant who was sitting behind Alberto strike him twice with a paddle. After appellant struck and hit Alberto on the head, appellant submerged him into the river by holding his hair. When the victim did not come up from the water anymore, appellant pushed and let him go with the current of the river. Thereafter, appellant saw the three students and without uttering any word ferried them to the other side of the creek. Out of fear, the three of them did not dare inquire or talk with appellant about the incident (t.s.n., May 10, 1995, pp. 3-13, 23-24).

Angelo Badua further declared on cross-examination that on the afternoon of the incident in question, he reported or related the same to his family and to his aunt, Zosimo Caducio. The next day, October 6, 1994, he reported the matter to the Alcala, Cagayan PNP Station as well as to the family of the victim, Alberto Capili (t.s.n., May 10, 1994, pp. 14-16, 29-32).

Eyewitness Harlen Ormillo corroborated the testimony of Angelo Badua in its material points and identified the appellant as the assailant during the trial (t.s.n., June 1, 1995, pp. 6-12).

Alcala, Cagayan Municipal Health Officer Dr. Rafael Sumabat, who conducted the post mortem examination on the victim (Exh. "A"), testified on the injuries sustained (i.e., "severe abrasion circular, 4 cm. in diameter occipito parietal area with contusion around") and the cause of death (i.e., "might have been drowning") of the latter (t.s.n., June 1, 1995, pp. 3-6).

Dr. Sumabat indicated the location of the wounds to be at the back, right side of the head (ibid., p. 6).

Upon admission by the defense, the proposed or offered testimony of SPO2 Federico Vergara of the Alcala, Cagayan PNP Station to the effect that the cadaver of the victim, Alberto Capili, was found at the Cagayan River and that such fact was entered or reflected in the police blotter, was dispensed with (t.s.n., August 10, 1995, pp. 3-4).

Danilo Capili, the brother of the victim and the nephew of appellant, declared that he and the victim were both from Afusing Bato, Alcala, Cagayan. At about 6:00 o’clock in the morning of October 5, 1994, he saw appellant in the house of the victim because the two had an agreement that they were going to sell that day a pig belonging to the victim. Danilo actually saw appellant and the victim leave the latter’s house that day and that was the last time he saw his brother alive. They were able to locate the cadaver of the victim floating on the Cagayan River at Tupang, Alcala, Cagayan on October 7, 1994 at about 9:30 o’clock in the morning. Upon seeing the cadaver of his brother, Danilo and his companions reported the matter to the PNP Station in Alcala, Cagayan and requested Municipal Health Officer Dr. Rafael Sumabat to conduct an autopsy on the victim’s cadaver (t.s.n., August 10, 1995, pp. 4-9).

(pp. 122-125, Rollo.)

Accused-appellant imputes four errors in the trial court in convicting him of murder, to wit:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

I


THE GUILT OF THE ACCUSED HAS NOT BEEN PROVEN BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT.

II


ASSUMING WITHOUT CONCEDING THAT THERE IS STRONG EVIDENCE OF ACCUSED’S GUILT, THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN FINDING THAT TREACHERY WAS ATTENDANT IN THE DEATH OF ALBERTO CAPILI.chanrobles virtual lawlibrary

III


ASSUMING WITHOUT CONCEDING THAT THERE IS STRONG EVIDENCE OF ACCUSED’S GUILT, THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN FINDING THAT THE ACCUSED WAS GUILTY OF MURDER

IV


ASSUMING WITHOUT CONCEDING THAT THERE IS STRONG EVIDENCE OF ACCUSED’S GUILT, THE LOWER COURT ERRED IN IMPOSING THE DEATH PENALTY ON THE ACCUSED.

Accused-appellant impugns the credibility of the principal prosecution witnesses, Angelo Badua and Harlen Ormillo, on the ground that their declarations run counter to and go against natural human experience. Badua and Ormillo, after allegedly having witnessed a man being attacked and killed barely 10 meters away from where they were standing did not run away or at least hide from the culprit. Instead, they waited for the alleged assailant to fetch them and ferry them across the river, keeping silent all the while. Despite admitting that they were afraid accused-appellant might do to them the same thing he did to Alberto Capili, they chose to ride on accused-appellant’s boat with no other persons but themselves, instead of taking the earliest opportunity to flee from a supposed killer. Also telling is the fact that despite the absence of any threat or warning from accused-appellant, Badua and Ormillo failed to promptly report the incident to the proper authorities. By and large, Accused-appellant submits that the lower court erred in not taking into account numerous inconsistencies and improbabilities in the prosecution’s evidence which would have provided more than adequate basis for his acquittal on the ground of reasonable doubt.

We find merit in his contentions.

The supposed eyewitnesses to the crime charged in the case at bar were students of Afusing High School, Angelo Badua, then 16 years old (Record, p. 4), Harlen Ormillo, 15 years old, and Rowena Ancheta, 14 years old (Record, p. 6). They were allegedly on their way home from school and were approaching the riverbank at Minanga, Abbeg, Alcala, Cagayan, when they saw accused-appellant Romeo Capili in flagrante delicto, actually striking the victim, Alberto Capili twice on the head and the shoulder with a paddle and thereafter submerging the head of the victim in the river. Right after this incident, Accused-appellant apparently saw them by the riverbank and offered them a ride across the river, to which the two readily acceded.

Firstly, it is rather unnatural, to say the least, actually defying sound reason, for three young students, one boy and two girls at that, to allow themselves to be ferried by an adult male whom they have just recently witnessed kill and drown a helpless and unsuspecting victim. It makes us wonder if these three supposed eyewitnesses directly saw the actual killing of the victim in this case. It would have been more credible had these witnesses not claimed having actually witnessed the crime but that they only saw accused-appellant at the supposed scene of the crime at the time the crime took place. Their lack of knowledge of the actual commission of the crime at that time would have justified their having allowed themselves to be ferried by the alleged assailant. Their testimony would have then simply become one element in the chain of circumstantial evidence which could have formed part of an unbroken sequence of events pointing to the guilt of the Accused-Appellant. But it was unfortunately not so. The record shows that said witnesses claimed that they actually saw accused-appellant commit murder in flagrante delicto from its inception to its consummation. We find such assertion under these circumstances rather too strange and odd to accept. It is just too incredible. At the very least, this generates moral basis to reasonably doubt the veracity of the witnesses’ claim that they actually saw the killing of Alberto Capili.

The Court has consistently ruled over the decades that "evidence to be believed must not only proceed from the mouth of a credible witness, but it must be credible in itself — such as the common experience and observation of mankind can approve as probable under the circumstances" (People v. Lacson, 83 Phil. 574 [1949]; People v. Macatangay, 107 Phil. 188 [1960]; People v. Baquiran, 20 SCRA 451 [1967]; People v. Beltran, 61 SCRA 246 [1974]; People v. Santos, 94 SCRA 277 [1979]; People v. Peruelo, 105 SCRA 226 [1981]; People v. Joyno, G.R. No. 123982, March 15, 1999). There can never be a better gauge by which a witness’ testimony may be evaluated and analyzed than the ordinary common human experience.

Secondly, Badua’s inconsistency on the issue as to when he reported the incident to the relatives of the victim and/or the authorities bears heavily on his credibility. On October 13, 1994, Badua declared before Investigator SPO2 Federico Vergara and his statement was later subscribed and sworn to before Judge Nathaniel Pattugalan, MTC Judge of the 2nd Judicial Region at Alcala, Cagayan, as follows:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

12.Q: Did you report/inform to anybody regarding the incident?

A: I told my parents, sir.

13.Q: What else did you do regarding this incident, if any?

A: No more, sir.

(Exhibit "C" ; Record, p. 4)

During his testimony on May 10, 1995 he declared differently:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

ATTY. MORALES:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

Q: Did you report to the brother or to the father of Alberto Capili what you allegedly witness(ed) in the afternoon of October 5, 1994 when you went to school on October 6, 1994?

A: Yes, sir.

Q: What time on October 6, 1994?

A: Upon arrival at around 4:00 o’clock sir.

Q: In the afternoon of October 6, 1994?

A: Yes, sir.

Q: After you were dismissed from the school?

A: Yes, sir.

Q: Are you sure that you went to school on October 6, 1994 and when you were dismissed in the afternoon, you reported what you allegedly witnessed to the brother of Alberto Capili?

A: Yes, sir.

Q: Did you not mention a while ago that on October 6, 1994, you proceeded to the Police Station of Alcala in order to report what you allegedly witnessed in the afternoon of October 5, 1994?

A: Yes, sir.

Q: What time when you proceeded to the Police Station of Alcala, Cagayan, on October 6, 1994?

A: 8:00 o’clock, sir.

Q: In the morning?

A: Yes, sir.

Q: If you will go the Police Station of Alcala, Cagayan, coming from Masical, will you have to pass Afusing?

A: Yes, sir.

Q: You have to pass by Afusing and Afusing Bato?

A: Only Afusing, sir.

Q: You did not drop by the house of the father of Alberto Capili that morning of October 6, 1994 before you proceeded to the Police Station of Alcala, Cagayan?

A: We dropped by, sir.

Q: In the morning at around 8:00 o’clock?

A: Yes, sir.

Q: And then in the afternoon at 4:00 o’clock, you again dropped by the house of the father of Alberto Capili, is that what you mean?

A: Yes, sir.

Q: Why did you drop by the house of the father of Alberto Capili that afternoon of October 6, 1994?

A: In order to report the matter, sir.

COURT:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

Q: But you said you reported the matter to the father of Alberto in the morning, is it not?

A: Yes, sir.

Q: To whom did you report what you witness(ed), to the father of Alberto Capili or to his brother Danilo Capili?

A: To his brother Danilo Capili, sir.

Q: The father was not around at that time?

A: He was not around, sir.

Q: It was only in the afternoon that you informed the father about what you witness(ed)?

A: Yes, sir.

(pp. 29-32, tsn, May 10, 1995.)chanrobles.com : red

Danilo Capili, the brother of the victim, however, had a different story to tell before Investigator SPO2 Federico Vergara on October 13, 1994, to wit:chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

05.Q: Did you see actually when Romeo Capili killed your brother?

A: No, sir but I was informed by Angelo Badua, Arlene Ormillo and Rowena Ancheta all students of Afusing High School, Afusing Daga, Alcala, Cagayan and all residents of Masical, Amulung, Cagayan, sir.

06.Q: When did Angelo, Arlene and Rowena tell you that Romeo was the one who killed your brother?

A: On or about 10:30 o’clock in the morning of October 11, 1994, sir.

(Exhibit "A", Record, p. 2)

The Court finds significance in the accuracy of the time when witness Badua really reported the matter to the brother or father of the victim considering that said victim Alberto Capili was Badua’s relative. It is but logical for a relative who was an eyewitness to a crime to promptly and audaciously take the necessary steps to bring the culprit into the hands of the law and seek justice for the poor victim. There is greater probability that Badua only reported the matter, if at all he actually did, to the victim’s brother on October 11, 1994 because the latter only went to the authorities to report the matter on October 13, 1994 (see (Exhibit "A"). If we consider this unexplained delay in reporting a crime together with the supposed behavior of accused-appellant and the principal witnesses which we find rather unnatural, it would be rather risky and hazardous to pronounce accused-appellant guilty of the crime charged (see: People v. Vergara, 82 Phil. 207 [1948]).

In fact, there is even some possibility that Badua’s identification of accused-appellant as the perpetrator was a mere afterthought, there being no definite lead as to the identity of the author of the crime even after the lapse of several days following the finding of the cadaver of the victim by the riverbank on October 7, 1994. The foregoing considerations taken together cast reasonable doubt on the culpability of accused-appellant as killer of Alberto Capili. The evidence which stands on record does not eliminate the possibility of absence of foul-play, i.e., that there had been only an accidental death by drowning. Striking a rock after accidentally slipping could cause contusions similar to those found at the back of the victim’s head and shoulders and result in the loss of consciousness leading to drowning. Only by proof beyond reasonable doubt, which requires moral certainty, may the presumption of innocence be overcome (People v. Custodio, 47 SCRA 289 [1972]). Moral certainty has been defined as "a certainty that convinces and satisfies the reason and conscience of those who are to act upon it" (People v. Lavarias, 23 SCRA 1301 [1967]). Absent the moral certainty that accused-appellant caused the death of the victim, acquittal perforce follows.

Proof beyond reasonable doubt is needed to overcome the presumption of innocence (People v. Reyes, 60 SCRA 126 [1974]). Accused-appellant’s guilt [1974]) must be proved beyond reasonable doubt (People v. Maliwanag, 58 SCRA 323 [1974]) otherwise, the Court would be left without any other recourse but to rule for acquittal. Courts should be guided by the principle that it would be better to set free ten men who might be probably guilty of the crime charged than to convict one innocent man for a crime he did not commit.

In this instance, while there are accusing fingers pointing to accused- appellant as the perpetrator of the crime, the circumstances obtaining leave some probability that he is innocent. Although it has been held that non-flight is not an indication of innocence, the situation facing the Court compels it to recognize the fact that while the guilty flees even if no one pursues, the innocent remains as brave and steadfast as a lion. Had there been some feeling of guilt in accused-appellant’s part on that fateful day of October 5, 1994, he would not have allowed Badua, Ormillo, and Ancheta who were possible witnesses, to live a minute longer.

To put it mildly, the Court is not satisfied that the constitutional presumption of innocence accorded to accused-appellant has been overcome. To overcome that presumption, his guilt must be shown beyond reasonable doubt. While this does not connote absolute certainty, it means that degree of proof which after an investigation of the whole record, produces moral certainty in an unprejudiced mind of accused-appellant’s culpability. It signifies such proof that convinces and satisfies the reason and conscience of those who are to act upon it that accused-appellant is guilty of the crime charged. As held in People v. Beltran (61 SCRA 246 [1974]), "the proof against him must survive the test of reason; the strongest suspicion must not be permitted to sway judgment. The conscience must be satisfied that on the defendant could be laid the responsibility for the offense charged; that not only did he perpetrate the act but that it amounted to a crime" (pp. 255-256). This responsibility heavily rests upon us, especially in a case of review of a death sentence such as in the present case.

With this conclusion, we find no need to discuss the other assigned errors.chanroblesvirtuallawlibrary

WHEREFORE, the judgment appealed from is hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE, and a new one hereby entered ACQUITTING accused-appellant of the charge of murder for insufficiency of evidence, and forthwith ordering his release from detention unless he is being held on account of some other charges. Costs de oficio.

SO ORDERED.

Bellosillo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Purisima, Pardo, Buena and Gonzaga-Reyes, JJ., concur.

Davide, Jr., C.J., on official business.

Panganiban, Quisumbing, Ynares-Santiago and De Leon, Jr., JJ., on leave.




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  • A.M. No. RTJ-99-1519 June 27, 2000 - GREGORIO LIMPOT LUMAPAS v. CAMILO E. TAMIN

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  • G.R. Nos. 127022 & 127245 June 28, 2000 - FIRESTONE CERAMICS, ET AL. v. COURT OF APPEALS, ET AL.

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    CECILIA GASTON v. COURT OF APPEALS, ET AL.

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  • G.R. Nos. 132379-82 June 29, 2000 - PEOPLE OF THE PHIL. v. BENIDO ALCARTADO, ET AL.

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