Plaintiff-Appellee Vs Vs Accused: Third Division
Plaintiff-Appellee Vs Vs Accused: Third Division
Plaintiff-Appellee Vs Vs Accused: Third Division
FRANCISCO
and
ANALINA
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3.ID.; ID.; ID., ID.; COMMITTED WHEN THE APPELLANTS OFFERED THE PUBLIC. AN
INVESTMENT PROGRAM CALLED "PONZI SCHEME"; CASE AT BAR. The testimonial
evidence presented by the prosecution proves that appellants employed fraud and deceit
upon gullible people to convince them to invest in the foundation. It has been held that
where one states that the future pro ts or income of an enterprise shall be a certain sum,
but he actually knows that there will be none, or that they will be substantially less than he
presents, the statement constitutes actionable fraud where the hearer believes him and
relies on the statement to his injury. That there was no pro t forthcoming can be clearly
deduced from the fact that the foundation was not engaged nor authorized to engage in
any lucrative business to nance its operation. It was not shown that it was the recipient of
donations or bequest with which to nance its "double or triple your money" scheme, nor
did it have any operating capital to speak of when it started operations. Parenthetically,
what appellants offered the public was a "Ponzi scheme," an investment program that
offers impossibly high returns and pays returns to early investors out of the capital
contributed by later investors. Named after Charles Ponzi who promoted the scheme in
the 1920s, the original scheme involved the issuance of bonds which offered 50% interest
in 45 days or a 100% pro t if held for 90 days. Basically, Ponzi used the money he received
from later investors to pay extravagant rates of return to early investors, thereby inducing
more investors to place their money with him in the false hope of realizing this same
extravagant rate of return themselves. This was the very same scheme practiced by the
Panata Foundation. However, the Ponzi scheme works only as long as there is an everincreasing number of new investors joining the scheme. To pay off the 50% bonds Ponzi
had to come up with a one-and-a-half times increase with each round. To pay 100% pro t
he had to double the number of investors at each stage, and this is the reason why a Ponzi
scheme is a scheme and not an investment strategy. The progression it depends upon is
unsustainable. The pattern of increase in the number of participants in the system explains
how it is able to succeed in the short run and, at the same time, why it must fail in the long
run. This game is dif cult to sustain over a long period of time because to continue paying
the promised pro ts to early investors, the operator needs an ever larger pool of later
investors. The idea behind this type of swindle is that the "con-man" collects his money
from his second or third round of investors and then absconds before anyone else shows
up to collect. Necessarily, these schemes only last weeks, or months at most.
4.ID.; ID.; CONSPIRACY; PRESENT WHEN THROUGH ACTIVE COOPERATION, APPELLANTS
SHOWED A COMMUNITY OF DESIGN WITH THE INCORPORATORS OF THE FOUNDATION.
The evidence adduced by the prosecution confirms the existence of a conspiracy among
the appellants in committing the crime charged. The fact that Guillermo Francisco was not
an incorporator of the foundation does not make him any less liable for the crime charged.
By his own admission, he participated in the foundation's activities by serving as its
paymaster. Because he is father and husband to three of the organizers of the foundation,
it is not farfetched to presume that he was aware of its operations. By his active
cooperation, he showed a community of design with the incorporators of the foundation,
thereby making him a co-conspirator and equally liable for the crime charged. His voluntary
and indispensable cooperation was a concatenation of the criminal acts performed by his
co-accused. In this regard, appellant Guillermo Francisco is not being implicated as a coconspirator solely because he is the father of the principal proponent of the Ponzi scheme.
He is held liable as a conspirator because indispensable act of being the paymaster of the
foundation. Likewise, Norma Francisco's bare denial cannot exempt her from complicity.
Aside from being the cashier, Norma Francisco was also an incorporator of the foundation.
Likewise, the money invested in the foundation was deposited in joint bank accounts in
Priscilla Balasa's name and hers. Norma Francisco's activities would thus show a
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community of design with the other accused making her a co-conspirator and equally
liable for the crime charged. Her voluntary and indispensable cooperation concurred with
the criminal acts performed by her co-accused.
ASTcEa
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facts or events justifying the promulgation of the decree and the sanctions for the acts
prohibited therein. As such, although it is an aid in interpretation, the preamble of an act or
decree is not the law subject thereof.
TCIDSa
9.ID.; ID.; ID.; PENALTY. P.D. No. 1689 penalizes offenders with life imprisonment to
death regardless of the amount involved, provided that a syndicate committed the crime. A
syndicate is de ned in the same law as "consisting of ve or more persons formed with
the intention of carrying out the unlawful or illegal act, transaction, enterprise or scheme." If
the offenders are not members of a syndicate, they shall nevertheless be held liable for the
acts prohibited by the law but they shall be penalized by reclusion temporal to reclusion
perpetua if the amount of the fraud is more than one hundred thousand pesos
(P100,000.00).
DSETcC
"Avarice, mother of crimes, greedy for more the more she possesses,
eversearching open-mouthed for gold." 1
Greed has always been one of man's failings. The hope of greater gain has lured many a
man to throw caution, and his common sense, to the wind. This human foible, known to
many, has been exploited throughout the ages by con men, charlatans and cheats to bilk
the gullible public of their hard-earned money. History has thus seen the unraveling of
various disingenuous stratagems which are at bottom nothing but scams. The case at
hand once again proves that "a sucker is born every minute."
prLL
Totoong walang pagkaubos sa ating daigdig ang mga taong nanlilinlang. Hindi
magkakagayon naman kung walang nagpapalinlang. Dahil sa kanilang malaking hangarin
na magkamal ng kimpal kimpal na kayamanan, pinapasukan nila ang mga kaduda-dudang
alok ng mga mapagsamantala na kung sila ay mamuhunan ng kaunting salapi, ito ay tutubo
ng malaki sa ilang araw lamang. Kaya't napakaraming mga tao ang nagagantso. Hindi
masasabing mga hangal o dili kaya'y mga maralita na walang gaanong pinag-aralan ang
mga nabibiktima. Kahit ang mga maykaya at matataas sa ating lipunan ay napaglalaruan
din. Milyun-milyong salapi ang nahuhuthot sa kanila, hindi ng mga masakim na
magnanakaw, kundi ng kanila na ring mga kasamahan sa tinatawag na "alta sociedad."
Mismong mga kaibigan at kapanatag ng loob ang nag-uudyok sa kanilang sumali sa mga
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sent out brochures soliciting deposits from the public, assuring would-be depositors that
their money would either be doubled after 21 days or trebled after 30 days. Priscilla Balasa
also went around convincing people to make deposits with the foundation at their of ce at
the Diaz Apartment, Puerto Princesa.
The modus operandi for investing with the foundation was as follows:
When a person would deposit an amount, the amount would be taken by a clerk to be given
to the teller. The teller would then ll up a printed form called a "slot." These "slots" were
part of a booklet, with one booklet containing one hundred "slots." A "slot," which
resembled a check, contained the following data:
PANATA FOUNDATION Control No. 33
(Logo)OF THE PHILIPPINE S INC. Date 12-5-87 / Dec. 26, 1987
PFOPI Puerto Princesa, PalawanAmount P 500.00
SEC Reg. No. 165565
MCHE STE R MONRE AL
AddressRPC
ShareFIV E
Amount in wordsFIV E HUNDRE D PE SOS o nly
(Sgd.)
(Sgd.)PRISCILLA BALASA
The control number indicated the number of the "slot" in a booklet, while the
space after "date" would contain the date when the slot was acquired, as well as the
date of its maturity. The amount deposited determined the number of shares, one share
being equivalent to one hundred pesos. The depositor had the discretion when to af x
his signature on the space provided therefor. Some would sign their slot only after
payment on maturity, while others would sign as soon as they were given the slot.
However, without the control number and the stamp of the teller, duly signed or
initialed, no depositor could claim the proceeds of his deposit upon maturity. 4
After the slot had been lled up by the teller, he would give it to the clerk assigned outside.
The clerk would then give the slot to the depositor. Hence, while it was the teller who
prepared and issued the slot, he had no direct contact with the depositor. The slots
handed to a depositor were signed beforehand by the president of the foundation.
Every afternoon, the comptrollers would take the list of depositors made by the tellers
with the amounts deposited by each, and have these typed. Norma Francisco would then
receive from the tellers the amounts deposited by the public. It was also her job to pay the
salaries of the foundation's employees. For his part, Guillermo Francisco would release
money whenever a deposit would mature as indicated in the slots.
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According to the foundation's rules, an investor could deposit up to P5,000.00 only, getting
a slot corresponding thereto. Anyone who deposited more than that amount would,
however, be given a slot but the slot had to be in the name of another person or several
other persons, depending upon the amount invested. 5 According to Sylvia Magnaye, a
foundation teller, all deposits maturing in August 1989 were to be tripled. For such
deposits, the slots issued were colored yellow to signify that the depositor would have his
deposit tripled. Deposits that would mature subsequent to August were only given double
the amount deposited. 6 However, there were times when it was the depositor who would
choose that his deposit be tripled, in which case, the deposit would mature later. 7
The amounts received by the foundation were deposited in banks. Thus, a foundation teller
would, from time to time, go to PNB, PCI Bank, DBP and the Rural Bank of Coron to deposit
the collections in a joint account in the names of Priscilla Balasa and Norma Francisco.
Initially, the operation started with a few depositors, with most depositors investing small
amounts to see whether the foundation would make good on its promise. When the
foundation paid double or triple the amounts of their investment at maturity, most not only
reinvested their earnings but even added to their initial investments. As word got around
that deposits could be doubled within 21 days, or tripled, if the period lasted for more than
30 days, more depositors were attracted. Blinded by the prospect of gaining substantial
pro ts for nothing more than a minuscule investment, these investors, like previous ones,
were lured to reinvest their earnings, if not to invest more.
Most would invest more than P5,000.00, the investment limit set by the foundation.
Priscilla Balasa would, however, encourage depositors to invest more than P5,000.00,
provided that the excess was deposited under the name of others. She assured the
depositors that this was safe because as long as the depositor was holding the slots, he
was the "owner" of the amount deposited. Most investors then deposited amounts in the
names of their relatives.
At the outset, the foundation's operations proceeded smoothly, as satis ed investors
collected their investments upon maturity. On November 29, 1989, however, the
foundation did not open. Depositors whose investments were to mature on said date
demanded payments but none was forthcoming. On December 2, 1989, Priscilla Balasa
announced that since the foundation's money had been invested in the stock market, it
would resume operations on December 4, 1989. On that date, the foundation remained
closed. Depositors began to demand reimbursement of their deposits, but the foundation
was unable to deliver.
Consequently, sixty-four informations, all charging the offense of estafa, as de ned in
Presidential Decree No. 1689, were led against Priscilla Balasa, Normita Visaya, Norma
Francisco, Guillermo Francisco, Analina Francisco and eight other persons, mostly
incorporators and employees of the Panata Foundation, before the Regional Trial Court of
Palawan. Fourteen cases, including Criminal Case Nos. 8429 and 8751, were raf ed off to
Branch 52. Two more cases, Criminal Case Nos. 8704 and 8749, were similarly assigned
to it. Of the sixteen cases assigned to Branch 52, eight were, with the consent of the
accused, provisionally dismissed for lack of evidence.
In Criminal Case No. 8429, the information charging the accused with the crime of estafa
"as amended by PD 1689" was led on December 12, 1989. The accused in this case were:
Priscilla Balasa, Almarino Agayo, Norma Francisco, Normita Visaya, Paul Francisco, Nelia
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Daco, Ruth Jalover, 8 Guillermo Francisco, Candido Tolentino, Jr., Rosemarie Balasa, 9
Ricardo del Rosario, Emelita Gabayan, Rosario Arciaga, Jessica Buaya, Avelina Yam, Anita
Macmac, Gina Gabaldon, Ronaldo Belo, Fernando Cadauan, Lolita Gelilang, Cynthia Ang,
Judith Ponciano, Sylvia Magnaye, 1 0 Analina Francisco and Sulpio Nabayan. As amended on
February 16, 1990, the information in this case reads as follows:
"That sometime on (sic) December, 1989, the above-named accused being the
Manager and employees of the PANATA Foundation of the Philippines, Inc., with
of ce at No. 20 Diaz Apartment, Manalo Extension, Puerto Princesa City,
Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the said accused
conspiring and confederating with one another and operating as a syndicate, did
then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously defraud one Estrella San
Gabriel y Lacao by means of false representation and fraudulent means which
they made to said Estrella San Gabriel to the effect that as an investor/subscriber
to the PANATA Foundation, Inc. which is a non-stock corporation allegedly
registered with the SEC under Registration No. 165565 and by means of other
similar deceit induce the said Estrella San Gabriel to give and deliver to the said
accused the amount of P5,500.00 as her investment in said foundation, and by
manifestation and misrepresentation by the said accused that the said invested
amount will be doubled or tripled within a certain period of days said accused
knowing fully well that their manifestation and representations were false and
fraudulent as they are made only for the purpose of obtaining as in fact they
obtained the amount with intent to defraud misapply, misappropriate and convert
the said amount for their own personal use and bene t, to the damage and
prejudice of said Estrella San Gabriel in the amount of P5,500.00, Philippine
Currency.
CONTRARY TO LAW and penalized under Presidential Decree No. 1689."
Likewise, in Criminal Case No. 8704, the information, led on May 23, 1990, charged
Priscilla Balasa, Norma Francisco, Guillermo Francisco, Normita Visaya, Analina Francisco,
Lolita Gelilang, Cynthia Ang, Rodolfo Ang, Jr., Purable Espidol, Melinda Mercado, Almarino
Agayo, Candido Tolentino, Jr., Ricardo del Rosario, Fernando Caduan, Paul Francisco and
Teresita Carandang with the crime of estafa "as amended by Presidential Decree No.
1689" as follows:
"That sometime in July, 1989 to December 1989, the above-named accused being
then the Manager, incorporators, members of the board of trustees, of cers and
employees of the PANATA FOUNDATION OF THE PHIL., INC. with Of ce No. 20
Diaz Apartment, Manalo Extension, Puerto Princesa City, Philippines and within
the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the said accused conspiring,
confederating together and mutually helping one another, and operating as a
syndicate, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously defraud, the
complainant Conchita Bigornia, by means of false pretenses/representation and
fraudulent means which they made to said Conchita Bigornia to the effect that as
depositor/subscriber to the PANATA FOUNDATION OF THE PHIL., INC., which is a
non-stock corporation allegedly registered with the SEC under Registration No.
165565 and by means of other similar deceit induce the said Conchita Bigornia,
to give and deliver to the said accused the amount of TWENTY FOUR THOUSAND
ONE HUNDRED (P24,100.00) PESOS, Philippine Currency, as his/her
deposit/subscription in said Foundation, and by manifestation and
misrepresentation by the said accused that the said deposited/subscription
amount will be doubled or tripled within a certain period of days said accused
knowing fully well that this manifestation were (sic) false and fraudulent as they
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are made only for the purpose of obtaining as in fact they obtained the amount of
TWENTY FOUR THOUSAND ONE HUNDRED PESOS (P24,100.00) from the said
(Conchita Bigornia) and the said accused once in possession of the said amount
with intent to defraud, misapply, misappropriate and convert the said amount for
their own personal use and bene t, to the damage and prejudice of the said
Conchita Bigornia in the amount aforestated.
CONTRARY TO LAW and penalized under P.D. No. 1689."
Similar informations were led against the same persons in Criminal Cases Nos. 8749 and
8751. The complainant in Criminal Case No. 8749, complainant Shiela San Juan, was
allegedly defrauded of P25,800.00 while in Criminal Case No. 8751, the amount of
P6,800.00 was allegedly defrauded from Benjamin Yangco.
In like manner, similarly worded informations in Criminal Case Nos. 8734 and 8428, raf ed
off to Branch 50, alleged that Elisia Mensias was defrauded in the amount of P4,500.00
and Alfonso and Prescilla Lacao defrauded in the amount of P58,850.00, respectively.
After the ling of the informations, warrants for the arrest of the defendants in the
corresponding criminal cases were issued. However, only Priscilla Balasa, Normita Visaya,
Guillermo Francisco, Norma Francisco and Analina Francisco were arrested, the rest of the
defendants having gone into hiding.
On arraignment, the arrested defendants all pleaded not guilty to the crimes charged but
before the presentation of prosecution evidence, Priscilla Balasa and Normita Visaya
escaped from police custody. With their escape, only the spouses Guillermo and Norma
Francisco were called to present evidence on behalf of the defense. Analina Francisco,
being a deaf-mute, was not called to the witness stand due to the lack of a competent
interpreter. The spouses, in denying criminal liability, presented the following facts:
Priscilla Balasa, Normita Visaya, and Analina Francisco, full-blooded sisters, are the
common children of appellant spouses Guillermo and Norma Francisco. Before the Panata
Foundation started operations in July 1989, Priscilla had been living with her parents in San
Mateo, Isabela. Analina, on the other hand, was living with their elder sister, Normita, in
Manila. Priscilla, however, left for Palawan in June 1989.
Sometime thereafter, Guillermo Francisco received a letter from Priscilla asking him to
come to Palawan to provide her company, the latter's husband having left for abroad as a
seaman. Consequently, Francisco came to Palawan sometime in August 1989 to live with
Priscilla at the Diaz Apartment in Puerto Princesa. Norma Francisco also came to Palawan
in August, purportedly to visit Priscilla's daughter, whom she missed. Analina likewise
came to Palawan from Manila in August.
Guillermo denies participation in the commission of the crime charged. In his testimony, he
limits his participation in the foundation's activities to paying the holders of matured slots.
It was the comptroller, Ruth Jalover, who would give him the record on which to base the
remittances he would make. 1 1 The money he disbursed was not always in his possession,
as it would have to come from the bank. It was Sylvia Magnaye who would withdraw the
money from the bank while it was Nelia Daco who would directly receive money from the
people. Thus, not even once did he participate in the process of receiving money. His
daughters Priscilla Balasa and Normita's Visaya performed other jobs in the operation of
the foundation while his other daughter, Analina Francisco, only typed documents. He knew
that the foundation helped people who received money from it. 1 2 Although the primary
purpose of the foundation was to help the needy, Guillermo testi ed having knowledge of
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On March 31, 1992, Branch 50 of the Regional Trial Court of Palawan issued a joint
decision in Criminal Case Nos. 8734 and 8428 nding the accused guilty of the crime
charged and of having acted in conspiracy in committing the same. Finding no aggravating
or mitigating circumstances in the commission of the crime, the trial court decreed thus:
"WHEREFORE, AND IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING CONSIDERATIONS, judgment is
hereby rendered nding all the accused in the 2 above-entitled cases guilty as
principals of the crime of estafa as the same is de ned and penalized under the
Revised Penal Code.
a.In Criminal Case No. 8428 accused Priscilla Balasa, Normita Visaya, Analina
Francisco, Guillermo Francisco and Norma Francisco are hereby sentenced
to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua as well as to pay the costs. The
accused are jointly and severally ordered to pay the offended party Alfonso
Lacao the sum of Fifty Eight Thousand Eight Hundred Fifty (P58,850.00)
Pesos and to pay the further sum of Thirty Thousand Pesos (P30,000.00)
as and for moral damages;
b.In Criminal Case No. 8734, accused Normita Visaya, Analina Francisco, Norma
Francisco and Guillermo Francisco are hereby sentenced to suffer the
penalty of reclusion perpetua as well as to pay the costs. They are
furthermore ordered jointly and severally to indemnify the offended party
Elisea Mensias the sum of Four Thousand Five Hundred (P4,500.00) Pesos
as well as to pay the additional sum of Fifteen Thousand (P15,000.00)
Pesos as and for moral damages.
The cases against the accused Almarino Agayo, Paul Francisco, Candido
Tolentino, Jr., Ricardo del Rosario, Jessica Buaya, Fernando Cadauan, Lolita
Gelilang, Cynthia Ang, Rodolfo Ang, Jr., Purable Espidol, Melinda Mercado, and
Teresit Carandang who remained at large up to the present time are hereby
ordered archived to be reinstated in the docket of this Court as soon as they shall
have been arrested or surrendered voluntarily to the jurisdiction of this Court.
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SO ORDERED."
On the other hand, Branch 52 rendered separate decisions in the cases assigned to it.
Thus, on October 14, 1991, the trial court, in Criminal Case No. 8429 rendered a decision,
the dispositive portion of which reads as follows:
"WHEREFORE, premises considered, judgment is hereby rendered nding coaccused PRISCILLA BALASA, NORMITA VISAYA, GUILLERMO FRANCISCO, and
NORMA FRANCISCO guilty beyond reasonable doubt as co-principals of the crime
of estafa committed by a syndicate in violation of Section 1 of Presidential
Decree No. 1689, and each of the aforenamed accused is sentenced to reclusion
perpetua; to pay to Estrella Lacao San Gabriel, jointly and severally, by way of
restitution, the sum of P5,500.00.00, with interest thereon of 12% per annum from
December, 1989, until fully paid; and to pay the costs.
On grounds of reasonable doubt engendered by lack of suf ciently clear and
convincing evidence as against her, co-accused Analina Francisco is acquitted of
the offense charged.
SO ORDERED."
Although Branch 52 rendered separate decisions in the cases assigned to it, all had
essentially the same disposition imposing the penalty of reclusion perpetua upon each
of the convicted accused only the name of the offended party and the amount to be
restituted varied. Thus, in Criminal Case No. 8704, 1 4 the trial court ordered the accused to
pay Conchita Bigornia by way of restitution, the amount of P24,200.00 with interest
thereon of 12% per annum from December 1989. In Criminal Case No. 8749, 1 5 the same
convicted accused were ordered to restitute Shiela San Juan the amount of P25,800.00
plus 12% per annum from December 1989. In Criminal Case No. 8751, 1 6 the convicted
accused were ordered to restitute Benjamin Yangco the amount of P6,800.00 with 12%
interest per annum from December 1989.
Guillermo and Norma Francisco led notices of appeal in Criminal Case Nos. 8429, 8704,
8749 and 8751. Their appeal was docketed as G.R. No. 106357. Likewise, the joint
decision in Criminal Case Nos. 8734 and 8428 was appealed to this Court by Guillermo
Francisco, Norma Francisco, Analina Francisco, and Normita Visaya, docketed herein as
G.R. Nos. 108601-02. Noting Normita Visaya's escape from police custody after
arraignment, the Court, on August 15, 1994, and pursuant to Section 8, Rule 124 of the
Revised Rules of Court, ordered the dismissal of her appeal on the ground of
abandonment. The Court also considered Priscilla Balasa's conviction to be nal and
executory, in light of her escape from police custody. It also ordered the issuance of a
warrant for the arrest of Normita Visaya and an alias warrant of arrest against Priscilla
Balasa.
On October 16, 1993, appellants' counsel, Atty. Agustin Rocamora, led an appellants' brief
in G.R. No. 106357. Thereafter, appellants appointed the Maramba and Mamauag Law
Of ce as new counsel in substitution of Atty. Rocamora. On November 2, 1994, new
counsel led a motion to consolidate G.R. No. 106357 and G. R. Nos. 108601-02. On
December 7, 1994, the Court granted the motion and ordered the consolidation of the two
cases. On the same day, counsel for appellants submitted a consolidated appellants' brief.
In G.R. No. 106357, counsel for appellants raise the following errors:
1.The trial court erred in convicting the appellants despite the total absence
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"Funding
Any funding requirements to nance the operation of the association shall be
done through the collection of membership fees, dues, donations, bequests and
other assessments. The amount of which shall be subject to the approval of the
general membership of the association.
Likewise, all funds in- ows would be used exclusively to carry out the purposes
for which the FOUNDATION is established and would not inure to the bene t of
any single member of the FOUNDATION.
The operations personnel shall come from volunteers among its members and
should the need arise, hiring of additional personnel be resorted to."
In contravention of these by-laws and modus operandi, the people behind the foundation
enticed people to "deposit or invest" funds in the foundation under a "double or treble your
deposit" scheme. These investment activities were clearly ultra vires acts or acts beyond
the foundation's authority. Evidently, SEC registration was obtained only for the purpose of
giving a semblance of legitimacy to the foundation; that the foundation's business was
sanctioned by the government; and that it was allowed by law to accept deposits. This
pretension was carried out even on the slots it issued, the foundation's S.E.C. registry
number being indicated thereon.
LLjur
In carrying out the charade, the manager went to the extent of delivering a speech and
personally encouraging people to deposit or invest in the foundation. Alfonso Lacao, a
complainant and prosecution witness, testified:
"QHave you heard of this so called Panata Foundation?
AYes, ma'am I heard it from my friends who are talking about this Panata
Foundation they even informed me that the manager of this Panata
Foundation is calling for a meeting for all depositors and prospective
depositors on Saturday afternoon.
QWith that information did you get interested in the proposed meeting being
called by this Panata Foundation?
AI was curious and came Saturday I went to the of ce of the Panata Foundation
to attend the meeting.
QAnd at that time where was this office located?
AAt Diaz Apartment, Manalo Extension, Puerto Princesa City.
QDid you attend that meeting?
AYes ma'am.
QWhom did you see sponsoring that meeting on that particular day?
AUpon arrival I saw a woman delivering her message to the depositors and to the
prospective depositors. I asked a friend of me (sic) who is that woman and
he informed me that she is the manager of the Panata Foundation Priscilla
Balasa.
xxx xxx xxx
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Priscilla Balasa, thus, promised the credulous public quick nancial gains on their
investments. The foundation even printed brochures proclaiming the merits of the
foundation's investment scheme. 2 5 Likewise, to bolster the illusion that indeed, the
foundation was legitimate, the claim was made that deposits would be invested abroad in
a world bank, with said transactions allegedly enabling the foundation to double or treble
depositors' investments. The evidence, however, proves the contrary. Sylvia Magnaye, one
of the tellers, testified:
"QOther than to issue slots, do you know what other phase of operation in running
the Panata Foundation during the time that you were employed?
ANo sir, I can only observe that issuing of slots.
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QMadam Witness, aside from issuing slots, there is only the activity of the
foundation that you are well aware of?
ASometimes they also sent me to deposit.
QThe deposit of the amount collected in the bank, is that correct?
AI do not know but they just send me to deposit amounts.
QBut you do not know in what other business activity other than the matter of
collecting money and issuance of slots you do not know if the Panata
Foundation is involved in any business activity?
AYes, sir.
QYou do not know whether the foundation receives money regularly from any
other source?
AI do not know sir." 2 6
The testimonial evidence presented by the prosecution proves that appellants employed
fraud and deceit upon gullible people to convince them to invest in the foundation. It has
been held that where one states that the future pro ts or income of an enterprise shall be
a certain sum, but he actually knows that there will be none, or that they will be
substantially less than he represents, the statement constitutes actionable fraud where the
hearer believes him and relies on the statement to his injury. 28 That there was no pro t
forthcoming can be clearly deduced from the fact that the foundation was not engaged
nor authorized to engage in any lucrative business to nance its operation. It was not
shown that it was the recipient of donations or bequest with which to finance its "double or
triple your money" scheme, nor did it have any operating capital to speak of when it started
operations.
Parenthetically, what appellants offered the public was a "Ponzi scheme," an investment
program that offers impossibly high returns and pays these returns to early investors out
of the capital contributed by later investors. 2 9 Named after Charles Ponzi who promoted
the scheme in the 1920s, the original scheme involved the issuance of bonds which
offered 50% interest in 45 days or a 100% pro t if held for 90 days. Basically, Ponzi used
the money he received from later investors to pay extravagant rates of return to early
investors, thereby inducing more investors to place their money with him in the false hope
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of realizing this same extravagant rate of return themselves. This was the very same
scheme practiced by the Panata Foundation.
However, the Ponzi scheme works only as long as there is an ever-increasing number of
new investors joining the scheme. To pay off the 50% bonds Ponzi had to come up with a
one-and-a-half times increase with each round. To pay 100% pro t he had to double the
number of investors at each stage, and this is the reason why a Ponzi scheme is a scheme
and not an investment strategy. The progression it depends upon is unsustainable. The
pattern of increase in the number of participants in the system explains how it is able to
succeed in the short run and, at the same time, why it must fail in the long run. This game is
dif cult to sustain over a long period of time because to continue paying the promised
pro ts to early investors, the operator needs an ever larger pool of later investors. 30 The
idea behind this type of swindle is that the "con-man" collects his money from his second
or third round of investors and then absconds before anyone else shows up to collect.
Necessarily, these schemes only last weeks, or months at most. 31
Note should also be taken of the fact that appellants used "slots" in their operation. These
slots are actually securities, 3 2 the issuance of which needs the approval of the Securities
and Exchange Commission. Knowing fully well that the S.E.C. would not approve the
issuance of securities by a non-stock, non-pro t organization, the operators of the Ponzi
scheme, nevertheless, applied for registration as a foundation, an entity not allowed to
engage in securities.
Finally, if the foundation were indeed legitimate, the incorporators, outside of the members
of the Francisco family, would not have escaped from the clutches of the law. If the
foundation and its investment scheme were legal, then it behooved them to come out and
testify for their own exoneration. The wicked ee when no man pursueth: but the righteous
are bold as a lion. 3 3
In their defense, appellants would shift the blame on the investors. Invoking the legal
principle of caveat emptor, they maintain that it was the investors' own greed that did them
in, implying that the depositors should have known that no sensible business could afford
to pay such extravagant returns. Having investigated the foundation and its activities, the
investors should fault themselves, not the appellants, for investing in the foundation
despite the patent impossibility of its claims.
The contention is untenable. The fact that the buyer makes an independent investigation or
inspection has been held not to preclude him from relying on the representation made by
the seller where the seller has superior knowledge and the falsity of such representation
would not be apparent from such examination or inspection, and, a fortiori, where the
efforts of a buyer to learn the true pro ts or income of a business or property are thwarted
by some device of the seller, such efforts have been held not to preclude a recovery. 34 It
has often been held that the buyer of a business or property is entitled to rely on the
seller's statements concerning its pro ts, income or rents. The rule that where a speaker
has knowingly and deliberately made a statement concerning a fact the falsity of which is
not apparent to the hearer, and has thus accomplished a fraudulent result, he cannot
defend against the fraud by proving that the victim was negligent in failing to discover the
falsity of the statement is said to be peculiarly applicable where the owner of the
property or a business intentionally makes a false statement concerning its rents, pro ts
or income. The doctrine of caveat emptor has been held not to apply to such a case. 35
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The second assignment of error is likewise devoid of merit. Appellants deny the existence
of a conspiracy in the perpetration of the fraudulent scheme, charging that mere
relationship does not prove conspiracy. Guillermo Francisco further maintains that he was
not even an incorporator of the foundation.
The evidence adduced by the prosecution con rms the existence of a conspiracy among
the appellants in committing the crime charged. The fact that Guillermo Francisco was not
an incorporator of the foundation does not make him any less liable for the crime charged.
By his own admission, he participated in the foundation's activities by serving as its
paymaster. Because he is father and husband to three of the organizers of the foundation,
it is not farfetched to presume that he was aware of its operations. By his active
cooperation, he showed a community of design with the incorporators of the foundation,
thereby making him a co-conspirator and equally liable for the crime charged. His voluntary
and indispensable cooperation was a concatenation of the criminal acts performed by his
co-accused. 3 6 In this regard, appellant Guillermo Francisco is not being implicated as a
co-conspirator solely because he is the father of the principal proponent of the Ponzi
scheme. He is held liable as a conspirator because of his indispensable act of being the
paymaster of the foundation.
Likewise, Norma Francisco's bare denial cannot exempt her from complicity. Denials of an
accused cannot be accorded greater evidentiary weight than the positive declarations of
credible witnesses who testify on af rmative matters. 3 7 Moreover, her efforts to show
that she was a mere housewife who simply helped in her daughter's "business" is refuted
by the prosecution witnesses. Ruth Jalover testified:
"QMadam Witness, do you know a person by the name of Norma Francisco?
AYes sir.
QAnd how did you come to know her Madam Witness?
AShe is my co-employee at the Panata Foundation sir.
QWhat was her job in the Panata Foundation?
AShe was the one who received the money from our tellers every afternoon." 3 8
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QWhen you say she is the cashier, do you mean to say that she is the one who
pays out money or amounts to the employees Madam Witness?
AYes sir." 4 0
Aside from being the cashier, Norma Francisco was also an incorporator of the foundation.
Likewise, the money invested in the foundation was deposited in joint bank accounts in
Priscilla Balasa's name and hers. Norma Francisco's activities would thus show a
community of design with the other accused making her a co-conspirator and equally
liable for the crime charged. Her voluntary and indispensable cooperation concurred with
the criminal acts performed by her co-accused.
As for Analina Francisco, however, the evidence adduced as to her complicity in the
nefarious scheme is far from conclusive. While she was an incorporator and treasurer of
the foundation, there is no denying the fact that she is a deaf-mute. As such, she is
incapable of communicating and conveying her thoughts to the complaining witnesses
and other depositors. This casts serious doubt on whether she could be deemed to have
similarly conspired and confederated with the other accused. As Branch 52 pointed out, on
paper she might have been in the thick of the foundation's operation being an
incorporator and treasurer. We are not, however, convinced that she was actually involved
in the sinister scheme. In fact, she was given the manual task of typing papers, despite her
being the treasurer of the foundation. Her disability might have been the principal reason
for giving her that job she was literally deaf and mute to the nefarious activities going on
in the foundation that she did not pose a danger to it. Furthermore, it is well settled that
where the acts of an accused are capable of two interpretations, that which is in
consonance with innocence should prevail.
With respect to the third assignment of error, appellants cannot raise the defense of
double jeopardy for which the following requisites must concur: (1) a rst jeopardy must
have attached prior to the second; (2) the rst jeopardy must have been validly terminated,
(3) the second jeopardy must be for the same offense, or the second offense includes or
is necessarily included in the offense charged in the rst information, or is an attempt to
commit the same or a frustration thereof. 4 1 In the instant case, the offense charged in
Criminal Case No. 8429 is different from the offense charged in the other cases. While
these cases arose out of the same scheme, the fraudulent acts charged were committed
against different persons, hence they do not constitute the same offense.
Lastly, appellants assert that they cannot be convicted under P.D. No. 1689. They contend
that the following requisites must concur for conviction under P.D. No. 1689: (1) that
estafa is committed under Articles 315 or 316 of the Revised Penal Code; (2) by a
syndication of ve or more persons; (3) against a) stockholders or members of rural
banks, cooperatives, or samahang nayon; b) corporations or associations the funds of
which are solicited from the general public; and (4) such defraudation erodes the
con dence of the public in the banking and cooperative systems, contravenes public
interest, and (5) constitutes economic sabotage that threatens the stability of the nation."
42
In support of their argument, appellants point out that there could not have been economic
sabotage under the facts of the case because the total amount of P125,400.00 allegedly
embezzled "by the other accused (not herein appellants)," did not weaken or threaten
national economic stability. To emphasize that point, appellants enumerate the revenue
collections of Palawan and Puerto Princesa City, "for dearth of a better reference," from
1987 to 1992 showing that the revenue collections for 1989 alone amounted to
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Under this law, the elements of the crime are: (a) estafa or other forms of swindling as
de ned in Articles 315 and 316 of the Revised Penal Code is committed; (b) the estafa or
swindling is committed by a syndicate, and (c) defraudation results in the
misappropriation of moneys contributed by stockholders, or members of rural banks,
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Assuming arguendo that the preamble was part of the statute, appellants' contention that
they should not be held criminally liable because it was not proven that their acts
constituted economic sabotage threatening the stability of the nation remains too imsy
for extensive discussion. As the preamble of P.D. No. 1689 shows, the act prohibited
therein need not necessarily threaten the stability of the nation. It is suf cient that it
"contravenes public interest." Public interest was affected by the solicitation of deposits
under a promise of substantial pro ts, as it was people coming from the lower income
brackets who were victimized by the illegal scheme.
Similarly, the fact that the entity involved was not a rural bank, cooperative, samahang
nayon or farmers' association does not take the case out of the coverage of P.D. No. 1689.
Its third "whereas clause" states that it also applies to other "corporations/associations
operating on funds solicited from the general public." The foundation ts into these
category as it "operated on funds solicited from the general public." To construe the law
otherwise would sanction the proliferation of minor-league schemers who operate in the
countryside. To allow these crimes to go unabated could spell disaster for people from
the lower income bracket, the primary target of swindlers.
Again, P.D. No. 1689 penalizes offenders with life imprisonment to death regardless of the
amount involved, provided that a syndicate committed the crime. A syndicate is de ned in
the same law as "consisting of ve or more persons formed with the intention of carrying
out the unlawful or illegal act, transaction, enterprise or scheme." If the offenders are not
members of a syndicate, they shall nevertheless be held liable for the acts prohibited by
the law but they shall be penalized by reclusion temporal to reclusion perpetua if the
amount of the fraud is more than one hundred thousand pesos (P100,000.00).
In the instant case, a syndicate perpetrated the Ponzi scheme. The evidence shows that at
least ve persons Priscilla Balasa, Normita Visaya, Norma Francisco, Guillermo
Francisco, and the other incorporators of the foundation collaborated, confederated and
mutually helped one another in directing the foundation's activities.
In its decision in Criminal Case Nos. 8428 and 8734, Branch 50 found that the "accused
numbering 5 who composed the Francisco Family together with others acted and
operated as a syndicate as de ned under P.D. No. 1689 and should be held liable therefor."
4 6 However, it imposed the penalty of reclusion perpetua, the penalty imposable under the
second paragraph of Section 1 of P.D. No. 1689 where the offenders are not members
of a syndicate and the amount involved is more than P100,000.00. The existence of a
syndicate having been proved, the crime falls under the rst paragraph of Section 1 of P.D.
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No. 1689, with an imposable penalty of life imprisonment to death. Hence, the imposition
o f reclusion perpetua is incorrect. Given the absence of aggravating or mitigating
circumstances, the lesser penalty, or life imprisonment, should have been meted out. 4 7
Branch 52, likewise, ruled that the accused committed the offense of estafa by a syndicate
under P.D. No. 1689. Therefore appellants, due to the absence of mitigating or aggravating
circumstances, should have been punished with life imprisonment. However, in the
dispositive portion of its decision in the four cases assigned to it, Branch 52 imposed the
penalty of reclusion perpetua instead.
The Court nds this an opportune time to restate that the penalties of life imprisonment
and reclusion perpetua are not the same. Thus:
"While 'life imprisonment' may appear to be the English translation of reclusion
perpetua, in reality, it goes deeper than that. First, 'life imprisonment' is invariably
imposed for serious offenses penalized by special laws, while reclusion perpetua
is prescribed under The Revised Penal Code. Second, 'life imprisonment,' unlike
reclusion perpetua, does not carry with it any accessory penalty. Third, 'life
imprisonment' does not appear to have any de nite extent or duration, while
reclusion perpetua entails imprisonment for at least thirty (30) years after which
the convict becomes eligible for pardon, although the maximum period thereof
shall in no case exceed forty (40) years." 4 8
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the decisions appealed from are hereby AFFIRMED in
so far as appellants GUILLERMO and NORMA FRANCISCO are convicted for violation of
the rst paragraph of Section 1 of Presidential Decree No. 1689 and ordered to restitute
to complainants the amounts they have been defrauded, subject to the MODIFICATION
that appellants GUILLERMO and NORMA FRANCISCO shall each suffer the penalty of life
imprisonment for each violation of the same law under the corresponding criminal cases.
Appellant ANALINA FRANCISCO is hereby ACQUITTED of the crimes charged under
Criminal Case Nos. 8428 and 8734 on ground of reasonable doubt and her immediate
release from custody is ordered unless she is being held on other legal grounds. Let a
copy of this Decision be furnished the Department of Justice and the Philippine National
Police in order that the arrest of Priscilla Balasa, Normita Visaya and the others who have
so far eluded the law shall be effected with dispatch.
SO ORDERED.
cdtai
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pyramid scheme is different from a Ponzi scheme. A "pyramid sales scheme" as de ned
in Section 53 of R.A. 7394, known as the Consumer Act of the Philippines. involves:
". . . sales devices whereby a person, upon condition that he makes an
investment, is granted by the manufacturer or his representative a right to recruit for
pro t one or more additional persons who will also be granted such right to recruit
upon condition of making similar investments: Provided, That, the pro ts of the person
employing such a plan are derived primarily from the recruitment of other persons into
the plan rather than from the sale of consumer products, services and credit: Provided,
further, That the limitation on the number of participants does not change the nature of
the plan."
In the classic pyramid scheme 10 people say, make an investment and each in
turn gets 10 additional people to invest, who in their turn must each get 10, and so on.
The money for the rst 10 "investors" comes from the 10 they enroll, and the money for
the second group of 10 comes from the 10 investors that each of them enrolls, and so
on. This type of scheme involves a geometric increase in the number of "investors."
The interesting thing about a geometric progression like this is that starting with only
10 investors, by the 10th round of such a scheme the number of participants would
have to be twice as large as the total population of the earth. Diagrammatically, such a
scheme looks like a pyramid hence its name.
31.http://199.173.224.3/history/Ponzi.html.
32.Sec. 2 (a) of The Revised Securities Act (B.P. Blg. 178) de nes "securities" as including
"bonds, debentures, notes, evidences of indebtedness. shares in a company,
preorganization certi cates or subscriptions, investment contracts, certi cates of
interest or participation in a pro t sharing agreement, collateral trust certi cates,
equipment trust certi cates (including conditional sale contracts or similar interests or
instruments serving the same purpose), voting trust certi cates, certi cates of deposit
for a security, . . ."
33.Proverbs 28:1.
34.37 Am. Jur. Frauds and Deceits 234.
35.Ibid., 277
36.Subayco v. Sandiganbayan, 260 SCRA 798 (1996).
37.People v. Pabalan, 262 SCRA 574 (1996).
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46.Decision, p. 10.
47.Art. 65, Revised Penal Code.
48.People vs. Ballabare, 264 SCRA 350 (1996), citing People vs. Retuta, 234 SCRA 645 (1994).
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