01 GR 211604
01 GR 211604
01 GR 211604
FIRST DIVISION
DECISION
Before this Court is an appeal from the October 30, 2013 Decision 1 of the
Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CR.-H.C. No. 04594, which affirmed the March
5, 2010 Decision2 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 25, Tagudin,
Ilocos Sur, in Criminal Case No. 870-T, finding accused-appellant Daryl
Polonio y Tuangcay guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of rape,
sentencing him to the penalty of reclusion perpetua, and ordering him to pay
the victim AAA3 Seventy-Five Thousand Pesos (P75,000.00) as civil
indemnity and Fifty Thousand Pesos (P50,000.00) as moral damages.
We have summarized the findings of fact from the RTC decision, which was
affirmed by the Court of Appeals, below.
CCC, 58 years old, married, a maintenance employee of Bessang Pass
Memorial Hospital, testified on July 5, 2006 that he is the uncle of AAA
whose mother is his first cousin. AAA is staying with him and his wife BBB in
their house because the school where she is studying is far from
the barangay where her immediate family resides. CCC testified that AAA
was 16 years old when the alleged rape happened as evidenced by her birth
certificate showing that she was born on October 14, 1988. CCC further
testified that on February 10, 2005, he arrived in their house between 4:00
and 5:00 p.m. and was told by their neighbor Joel Caud that somebody was
at their backyard garden. Caud allegedly told CCC that he saw a person on
top of another person and the one on top was boxing the person lying on the
ground. CCC immediately proceeded to the backyard garden and saw a
person about 10 meters away in a squatting position with his two hands
raised, carrying his niece AAA who was naked below the waist. He also
noticed that while the person was carrying AAA, she appeared to be
unconscious because she was not moving. When the person noticed CCC's
presence, he ran away towards the west, still carrying AAA, but upon
reaching a fence, he threw AAA over it. CCC ran after the man but was
unable to catch him. He instead rescued AAA, gathered her panties and
shorts, and put them back on her body while she was still
unconscious.8ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary
CCC asked Caud to run after the man but Caud was not able to catch him
either. CCC called Placido Pasuli, another student staying with them, to call
CCC's son for them to bring AAA to the Bessang Pass Memorial Hospital,
together with his wife BBB. CCC came to know later on, through his own
investigation on February 11, 2005, that the person he saw carrying AAA
was the accused. He positively identified the accused in open court as one
and the same person whom he saw on that afternoon carrying the
unconscious AAA without her underwear and who threw AAA over the
fence.9ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary
CCC stated that AAA was hospitalized and showed medical certificates dated
February 16 and 18, 2005, which he identified in court. He noticed that while
AAA was confined in the hospital and still unconscious, she had a lump on
her head and her mouth was bloodied. CCC also identified during his
testimony the panties and shorts worn by AAA at the time of the alleged
crime.10ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary
AAA was already 18 years old and under the custody of the Department of
Social Welfare and Development (DS WD) at the time of her testimony on
January 29, 2007. She testified that when the alleged rape happened in
February 2005, she was 16 years old and studying in high school. While she
was watering the plants in her aunt's garden in the afternoon of the day the
alleged crime took place, a male person whom she did not know approached
her. When asked during direct examination if said male person was inside
the courtroom, AAA positively identified the accused. She said that the
accused clubbed her on the head three times with a piece of wood. He also
boxed her. Before she lost consciousness, to protect herself, she bit the
assailant's finger that was stuck inside her mouth. When she regained
consciousness, she was already at the Bessang Pass Memorial Hospital with
her aunt, Dr. Allan Licyayo, and her uncle. The doctor told her that she was
raped. Police officers took her statements and reduced them into writing,
which she then signed.12ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary
AAA positively identified the pink shorts and panties that she was wearing
when the alleged rape happened. She said she felt ashamed, hurt, and very
angry considering that she had suffered so many injuries inflicted upon her
by accused, including the lacerations in her
vagina.13ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary
The defense presented the accused on February 17, 2009. He alleged that
on February 10, 2005, at around 10:00 in the morning, he was drinking gin
and brandy with his cousins Oliver Gascao and George Laus at a store in
Poblacion, Cervantes, Ilocos Sur. They went outside the store and continued
drinking up to 2:00 in the afternoon. While outside, two unidentified men
approached and boxed him and Gascao for no apparent reason. He was hit
on the mouth and this made him dizzy. They ran away and he took the
shortcut path leading to their place. While he was running, he allegedly met
someone at the curve and instinctively boxed that person, thinking that it
was the same person who had boxed him earlier. The person fell down. He
sat on his stomach and boxed the person again. He allegedly did not know
the gender of the person he had boxed until he later learned that she is
female. The woman pleaded with accused not to box her anymore and then
he ran away to hide at the nearby mango and bamboo clusters for about 10
to 15 minutes. He then proceeded to his uncle's house in Barangay Rosario,
Cervantes, Ilocos Sur. He later on came to know the identity of the person
he had boxed as AAA, and he also received news that AAA had been raped.
He admitted that AAA had bitten his finger and that he had it medically
examined. He denied CCC's allegations that he was on his way westward
towards a fence carrying AAA without her panties and shorts. He also denied
running away leaving his slippers. He avouched that he did not rape AAA but
he admitted that he boxed her for the reason stated
14
above. ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary
The RTC considered this as a case where the private offended party could
not testify on the actual commission of the rape because she was rendered
unconscious at the time the alleged crime was perpetrated. Thus, the court
ruled based on circumstantial evidence under Section 4, Rule 133 of the
Revised Rules on Evidence.17 The RTC also based its decision on the
Supreme Court ruling that it is the totality or the unbroken chain of the
circumstances proved that leads to no other conclusion than the guilt of the
accused.
The RTC found that the prosecution adequately established that the accused
v/as within the vicinity where the incident happened; that the accused
knocked AAA out by clubbing her thrice with a piece of wood and punching
different parts of her body; and that when she regained consciousness, she
was already at the hospital and the doctor who attended to her issued a
medical certificate showing that she sustained several injuries and the
medical findings are consistent with the fact that the panties used by the
victim had blood stains. Taken together, the circumstances established
beyond moral certainty that AAA was ravished while she was deprived of
consciousness and the accused was the one culpable for defiling her. The
pieces of evidence adduced by the prosecution constitute an unbroken chain
of events which clearly points to the accused as the guilty
person.18ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary
The RTC held that the defenses of alibi and denial used by the accused are
self-serving and deserve scant consideration. The accused offered
explanations during his testimony that were too flimsy to be given
consideration. He did not even present his alleged two companions to
corroborate his claim that they were approached by two other men who
boxed him without provocation.19ChanRoblesVirtualawlibrary
II.
Lupac's argument hews closely to what the Court has stated in People v.
Campuhan to the effect that there must be proof beyond reasonable doubt
of at least the introduction of the male organ into the labia of
the pudendum of the female genital organ, which required some degree of
penetration beyond the vulva in order to touch the labia majora or the labia
minora.
The fact that all her injuries x x x were confined to the posterior region area
of her genitals signified the forceful penetration of her with a blunt
instrument, like an erect penis. (Citations omitted, Emphasis
supplied.)cralawred
The Anti-Rape Law of 1997, Republic Act No. 8353, defines when and how
rape is committed:chanRoblesvirtualLawlibrary
Article 266-A. Rape; When And How Committed. — Rape is Committed —
1) By a man who shall have carnal knowledge of a woman under any of the
following circumstances:
As can be readily seen above, both the RTC and the Court of Appeals
declared AAA's testimony and those of CCC and PO1 Patil-ao to be credible
and convincing. We thus find it unnecessary to disturb the findings and
conclusions of the RTC and the Court of Appeals. This Court has repeatedly
maintained the sanctity of the factual findings of the trial courts, especially
when affirmed by the Court of Appeals. As we held in People v.
Quintos27:chanRoblesvirtualLawlibrary
The observance of the witnesses' demeanor during an oral direct
examination, cross-examination, and during the entire period that he or she
is present during trial is indispensable especially in rape cases because it
helps establish the moral conviction that an accused is guilty beyond
reasonable doubt of the crime charged. Trial provides judges with the
opportunity to detect, consciously or unconsciously, observable cues and
microexpressions that could, more than the words said and taken as a
whole, suggest sincerity or betray lies and ill will. These important aspects
can never be reflected or reproduced in documents and objects used as
evidence.
We likewise note that AAA did not hesitate or waver in her narration even
during her rigorous cross examination. As such, her sole but credible
testimony as the rape victim sufficed to convict the accused of his crime. It
is remarkable, indeed, that there was neither allegation nor proof of any ill
motive on her part or on the part of her family in accusing him of raping her.
(b) The facts from which the inferences are derived are proven; and
fraud or gross fraud — that intensifies the injury. The terms punitive or
vindictive damages are often used to refer to those species of damages that
may be awarded against a person to punish him for his outrageous conduct.
In either case, these damages are intended in good measure to deter the
wrongdoer and others like him from similar conduct in the future.
x x x x
SO ORDERED.
Sereno, C. J., on leave.
Bersamin, Perlas-Bernabe, and Caguioa, JJ., concur.
Endnotes:
**
Per Special Order No. 2354 dated June 2, 2016.
1
Rollo, pp. 2-9; penned by Associate Justice Manuel M. Barrios with
Associate Justices Remedios A. Salazar-Fernando and Normandie B. Pizarro
concurring.
2
CA rollo, pp. 29-50; penned by Presiding Judge Sixto D. Diompoc.
3
The real names of the private complainant and those of her immediate
family members are withheld in consonance with People v. Cabalquinto, 533
Phil. 703 (2006), Republic Act No. 7610 (Special Protection of Children
Against Child Abuse, Exploitation and Discrimination Act), Republic Act No.
9262 (Anti-Violence Against Women and Their Children Act of 2004), and
A.M. No. 04-10-11-SC (Rule on Violence Against Women and Their
Children).
4
CA rollo,p. 13.
5
Records, p. 26.
6
Id. at 167-170.
7
Id. at 176.
8
CA rollo, p. 30.
9
Id. at 31.
10
Id.
11
Id. at 32.
12
Id. at 33.
13
Id. at 34.
14
Id. at 35-36.
15
Id. at 36.
16
Id.
17
SECTION 4. Circumstantial evidence, when sufficient. — Circumstantial
evidence is sufficient for conviction if:
18
CA rollo, pp. 37-48.
19
Id. at 49.
20
Id. at 50.
21
Id. at 60.
22
Rollo, pp. 6-8.
23
CA rollo, pp. 57-71.
24
People v. Belgar, G.R. No. 182794, September 8, 2014, 734 SCRA 347,
348.chanrobleslaw
25
695 Phil. 505, 514-516 (2012).
26
People v. Belgar, supra note 24 at 353.
27
G.R. No. 199402, November 12, 2014, 740 SCRA 179, 190-191.
28
Supra note 24 at 357-360.
29
G.R. No. 202124, April 5, 2016.