People Vs Paycana
People Vs Paycana
People Vs Paycana
SUPREME COURT
Manila
SECOND DIVISION
G.R. No. 179035
Lilybeth. And he stabbed her. He added that he was not aware of the number of times he stabbed
his wife because he was then dizzy and lots of blood was coming out of his wound. 7
The trial court found appellant guilty in a decision dated 14 April 2005. 8 The case was automatically
appealed to the Court of Appeals pursuant to Rule 122 Section 3(d) of the Rules of Criminal
Procedure.9 The appellate court denied appellants appeal in a decision dated 30 May
2007.10 Appellant filed a notice of appeal dated 14 June 2007 before the Court of Appeals. 11
The Court is not convinced by appellants assertion that the trial court erred in not appreciating the
justifying circumstance of self-defense in his favor.
Self-defense, being essentially a factual matter, is best addressed by the trial court. 12 In the absence
of any showing that the trial court failed to appreciate facts or circumstances of weight and
substance that would have altered its conclusion, the court below, having seen and heard the
witnesses during the trial, is in a better position to evaluate their testimonies. No compelling reason,
therefore, exists for this Court to disturb the trial courts finding that appellant did not act in selfdefense.
Appellant failed to discharge the burden to prove self-defense. An accused who interposes selfdefense admits the commission of the act complained of. The burden to establish self-defense is on
the accused who must show by strong, clear and convincing evidence that the killing is justified and
that, therefore, no criminal liability has attached. The first paragraph of Article 11 of the Revised
Penal Code13 requires, in a plea of self-defense, (1) an unlawful aggression on the part of the victim,
(2) a reasonable necessity of the means employed by the accused to prevent or repel it, and (3) the
lack of sufficient provocation on the part of the person defending himself. 14
Unlawful aggression is a condition sine qua non for the justifying circumstance of self-defense.
Without it, there can be no self-defense, whether complete or incomplete, that can validly be
invoked.15 Appellants claim of self-defense was belied by the eyewitness testimony of his own
daughter Angelina, which was corroborated by the testimony of his father-in-law Tito and the medical
findings. Angelinas testimony was very clear on how her father strangled and stabbed her mother
just as she was about to greet him upon arriving home. She begged her father to stop, and even
tried to grab her fathers hand but to no avail.16 Tito ran to appellants house as he heard his
daughter Lilybeths screaming for help, and he saw her lying prostate near the door with her feet
trembling. He moved back as he saw appellant armed with a weapon. Angelina told him by the
window that appellant had held her mothers neck and stabbed her.17
Moreover, Dr. Rey Tanchuling, a defense witness who attended to appellants wound, testified on
cross-examination that the injuries suffered by appellant were possibly self-inflicted considering that
they were mere superficial wounds.18
In any event, self-defense on the part of appellant is further negated by the physical evidence in the
case. Specifically, the number of wounds, fourteen (14) in all, indicates that appellant's act was no
longer an act of self-defense but a determined effort to kill his victim.19 The victim died of multiple
organ failure secondary to multiple stab wounds.20
need of further evidence other than the fact of the commission of any of the aforementioned crimes
(murder, homicide, parricide and rape). Moral and exemplary damages may be separately granted in
addition to indemnity. Moral damages can be awarded only upon sufficient proof that the
complainant is entitled thereto in accordance with Art. 2217 of the Civil Code, while exemplary
damages can be awarded if the crime is committed with one or more aggravating circumstances
duly proved. The amounts thereof shall be at the discretion of the courts. 30 Hence, the civil indemnity
of P50,000.00 awarded by the trial court to the heirs of Lilybeth is in order. They are also entitled to
moral damages in the amount of P50,000.00 as awarded by the trial court.31
In addition to the civil liability and moral damages, the trial court correctly made appellant account
for P25,000.00 as exemplary damages on account of relationship, a qualifying circumstance, which
was alleged and proved, in the crime of parricide. 32
WHEREFORE, the appeal is DISMISSED. The Decision of the Court of Appeals is AFFIRMED.