Module 3 Notes
Module 3 Notes
Module 3 Notes
In dubio pro reo – when in doubt, the rule in favor of the accuse
Lenity - a court, in construing an ambiguous criminal statute that sets out multiple or inconsistent punishments,
should resolve the ambiguity in favor of the more lenient punishment
Article 3. Definition – Acts and omissions punishable by law are felonies (delitos)
Felonies are committed not only by means of deceit (dolo) but also by means of fault
(culpa).
There is deceit when the act is performed with deliberate intent; and there is fault when
the wrongful act results from imprudence, negligence, lack of foresight, or lack of skill.
Elements of Felonies
1. Act or omission
2. Punishable under RPC
3. By means of dolo or culpa
Actus reus – act or omission that comprise the physical elements of a crime as required by statute
Mens rea – criminal mind
Actus non facit reum, nisi mens sit rea – there is no crime when there is no concurrence of the act and the
mind
NOTE: for there to be a crime, the act and the mind must concur.
“Punishable by law”
- Based upon the maxim of nullum crimen, nulla poena sine lege (no law, no crime)
- Specifically under RPC and not by special law
o Offense – special laws/statutes
o RPC – crime
- Doctrine of Legality – Article 21: No felony shall be punishable by any penalty not prescribed by law
prior to its commission.
*Most of the felonies in RPC are committed by means of dolo or with malice.
- Culpa felonies are:
- Article 217 or malversation through negligence
- Article 224 or evasion through negligence
- Article 365 punishes acts by imprudence
Negligence, which if it had been intentional, would constitute grave, less grave, or light felonies
*Murder, treason, robbery, and malicious mischief cannot be committed through imprudence or negligence.
Imprudence Negligence
Deficiency of action Deficiency of
perception
Person fails to take Person fails to pay
necessary precaution proper attention and to
to avoid injury to a use due diligence in
person or property foreseeing the injury or
damage impending to
be caused
Lack of skill Lack of foresight
In felonies committed by dolo and culpa, the acts or omission are voluntary.
The act or omission must be voluntary and punishable by law to constitute a felony.
An intentional felony is performed with deliberate intent, which must necessarily be voluntary.
Culpable felony, which is committed when the wrongful act results from imprudence, negligence, lack of
foresight, or lack of skill, the act is also voluntary.
Article 365 “reckless imprudence consists in a voluntarily, but without malice, doing or failing to do an act from
which material damage results.”
- The act, although without malice, was still done voluntarily—meaning the person still chose to do it
anyway.
*A criminal act is presumed to be voluntary. Fact prevails over assumption, and in the absence of indubitable
explanation, the act must be declared voluntary and punishable.
*When there is compulsion or prevention by force or intimidation, there is no voluntariness in the act.
Requisites of dolo
1. Freedom
a. Under compulsion or irresistible force is exempt from criminal liability
2. Intelligence
a. Inability to determine the morality of human acts exempts from criminal liability
3. Intent
a. Presumed and presumption arises from the proof of commission of an unlawful act
But the presumption of criminal intent does not arise from the proof of the commission of an act which
is not unlawful.
- Lawful act done in good faith but resulted in injury to another = not criminally liable
- Based on the maxim actus non facit reum, nisi mens sit rea – a crime is not committed if the mind of the
person performing to act complained be innocent
- General rule: if it is proved that the accused committed the criminal act charged, it will be presumed
that the act was done with criminal intention and that it is for the accused to rebut this presumption.
- Where facts proven are accompanied by other facts which show that the act complained of was lawful,
the presumption of criminal intent does not arise.
Intent = can dictate what crime or penalty the accused should have
The presumption of criminal intent can be rebutted by proof of lack of such intent:
1. Mistake of fact
a. Different from ignorance of the law
b. Resolves criminal liability
c. Misapprehension of fact on the part of the person who caused injury to another
d. Honest mistake of fact destroys the presumption of criminal intent
2. Involuntary acts
When is act considered Mistake of Fact:
1. Act done would have been lawful had the facts been as the accused believe them to be
2. Intention for performing the act should be lawful (absence of bad faith)
3. Must be without fault or negligence or carelessness
Republic v. Gervero
There is Neglect/recklessness kasi may mga circumstances that will allow them to confirm identity.
Republic v. Oanis
Same as Republic v. Gervero
Yapyuco v. Sandiganbayan
“a mistake of fact” is a misapprehension of a fact which if true would have justified the act/omission which is
the subject of the prosecution. Generally, this is a defense to a charge of crime where it negates the intent
component of the crime. The inquiry therefore is into the mistaken belief of the defendant and not to the belief
or state of mind of any other person.
In mistake of fact, the intention of the accused in performing the act should be lawful.
- Error in personae or mistake in the identity of the victim – does not apply
No crime of resistance when there is a mistake of fact.
- Hypo: One who resists arrest, believing that the peace officer is a bandit, but who submits to the arrest
immediately afterwards, is not guilty
When mistake of fact is out of negligence – NOPE
- Falls under imprudence/negligence
NOTE: Accused must not have ample time to make further inquiry or deliberation before taking immediate
action (Republic v. Oanis)
Criminal intent is necessary in felonies committed by means of dolo.
Legal maxims:
- Actus non facit reum nisi mens sit rea – the act itself does not make a man guilty unless his intentions
were so
- Actus me invito factus non est meus actus – an act done by me against my will is not my act
Theft
1. Intent to deprive another of personal property
2. Intent to gain
*Intent to kill is only essential in attempted or frustrated stages of homicide, patricide, murder, infanticide.
Why? The death of the victim is already the best evidence to prove intent to kill
Intent Motive
Use of a particular Moving power that
means to achieve impels a person to do a
desired results specific act to achieve
the desire result
(reason behind intent)
Material element in Immaterial to
determining criminal determine the criminal
liability liability
Established/proven by Established by the
overt acts acts/statements made
by the accused prior to
or immediately after the
crime
General Rule: Motive is not material in determining the criminal liability of the offender is identified, admits to
the commission to the crime, if the prosecution has direct evidence or eyewitness to the commission of the
crime, if crime committed is culpable felony, crime committed is not a special penal law.
Disclosure of the motive is an aid in completing the proof of the commission of the crime.
Motive alone, however strong, will never bring about conviction. But motive AND circumstantial
evidence, or motive AND supporting evidence is necessary for conviction.
Lack of motive can aid the accused in showing their innocence. (people v. Hassan)
there is fault when the wrongful act results from imprudence, negligence, lack of
foresight, or lack of skill
Requisites of culpa
1. Freedom
2. Intelligence
3. Imprudence, negligence or lacks foresight or skill
If there is neither malice nor negligence that resulted in injury or damage to another, then there is no
criminal liability as per RPC.
- Act must be lawful in the first place
Article 10. Offenses not subject to the provision of this Code – Offenses which are or
in the future may be punishable under special laws are not subject to the provisions of
this Code. This Code shall be supplementary to such laws, unless the latter should
specially provide the contrary.
In those crimes punished by special laws, the act alone, irrespective of its motives, constitutes the
offense.
Why? The act itself is injurious to public welfare.
Good faith not a valid defense for crimes punished under special laws of mala prohibita.
Exceptions:
1. Purpose of the special law cannot be realized (animus possidendi)
2. Mistake of fact – when accused had never intended to commit the offense
3. Pending application for permit/permit from an official (temporary)
4. Exemptions given to certain persons (Sama v. People)
Mala in se
Acts that are inherently wrong in nature.
Examples:
- Theft
- Rape
- homicide
Mala prohibita
Acts that are only wrong because a law prohibits or penalizes them
Not all acts punishable by special laws are mala prohibita. Some can be mala in se because it is inherently
immoral.
Example: Plunder – classified by the legislative intent fund in the “Whereas Clause” of the Plunder Law itself
dictates that it is mala in se
Estrada v. Sandiganbayan
As regards the third issue, again we agree with Justice Mendoza that plunder is a malum in se which requires
proof of criminal intent.
Precisely because the constitutive crimes are mala in se the element of mens rea must be proven in a
prosecution for plunder. It is noteworthy that the amended information alleges that the crime of
plunder was committed "willfully, unlawfully and criminally." It thus alleges guilty knowledge on the part of
petitioner.
The application of mitigating and extenuating circumstances in the Revised Penal Code to prosecutions under
the Anti-Plunder Law indicates quite clearly that mens rea is an element of plunder since the degree of
responsibility of the offender is determined by his criminal intent.
According to the decision of the Congress in 1993 to include it among the heinous crimes punishable by
reclusion perpetua to death:
There are crimes, however, in which the abomination lies in the significance and implications of the subject
criminal acts in the scheme of the larger socio-political and economic context in which the state finds itself to
be struggling to develop and provide for its poor and underprivileged masse.
Viewed in this context, no less heinous are the effects and repercussions of crimes like qualified bribery,
destructive arson resulting in death, and drug offenses involving government officials, employees or officer that
their perpetrators must not be allowed to cause further destruction and damage to society.
For when the acts punished are inherently immoral or inherently wrong, they are mala in se and it does not
matter that such acts are punished in a special law, especially since in the case of plunder the predicate crimes
are mainly mala in se.
Napoles v. De Lima
In initially dismissing the criminal complaint filed by Benhur Luy's family, the prosecutor disregarded the
purported motive behind Benhur Luy's detention. According to the initial Resolution, whether Napoles and Lim
detained Benhur Luy to prevent him from exposing the anomalous transactions of the JLN Group of companies
involving the Priority Development Assistance Fund would spawn an entirely different proceeding; hence, the
issue is irrelevant in the proceedings involving the serious illegal detention charge.
Although motive is not an element of a crime, it is a "prospectant circumstantial evidence" that may
help establish intent. In this case, the Review Resolution sufficiently explained why it was "contrary to human
nature" for Benhur Luy to go on a three (3)-month spiritual retreat with priests that have close ties with
Napoles; and, instead, Benhur Luy had been detained at Bahay ni San Jose, transferred from place to place
until he was rescued in Pacific Plaza because he knew first-hand of Napoles' involvement in the pork barrel
scam.
Padilla v. Dizon
Good faith cannot be used as a defense in special laws with mala prohibita crimes/acts.
The intent is not necessarily “criminal intent” but the intent to perpetrate the act itself.
Old school yung lack of intent sa violation of mala prohibitum. There is intent to perpetuate the act.
Padilla v. CA
Special laws concerning mala prohibita cases should only ask, was the offense done? Good faith cannot be
used as defense. As long as all the elements are present, no need to prove your intent, to get convicted.
Murder Homicide
ART. 248 Art. 249:
Any person who, not Any person who, not
falling within the falling within the
provisions of Article provisions of Article
246 (Paricide), shall kill 246, shall kill another,
another, shall be guilty without the
of murder and shall be attendance of any of
punished by reclusion the circumstances
perpetua, to death if enumerated in the
committed with any of next preceding
the following article, shall be
attendant deemed guilty of
circumstances: homicide and be
punished by reclusion
temporal
Elements: Elements:
1) That a person was (a) a person was killed;
killed;
(b) the accused killed
2) That the accused him without any
killed him; justifying circumstance;
Complex Crimes – appears to have 2 crimes but only have 1 criminal intent
Not complex: Stole a candy. But then also bought a cellphone because it was beside the candy.
Complex: 1 intent but to come up with the result, you need to do 2 or more crimes.
CRIMINAL INTENT
- Exempting circumstances: anything that may affect the brain (Article 12)
The end result of the crime is the general intent of the accused. No need to be proven.
Criminal Liability should always be proven beyond reasonable doubt – meaning all the elements must be
present in the act to be proven criminal act.
Example: Man raped child. He did not mean to but the child died by accidentally hitting her head. Having
performed a felonious act, he is responsible for all the consequences of said act, regardless of his intention.
Penalty – Article 49
Causes which may produce different results from what was intended:
c. Mistake in identity of victim (error in personae)
i. Offender intended to hit the victim
ii. said victim turned out not to be the intended the victim of the offender
*NOTE: Accused should be convicted of the actual crime, but when there is a variance of penalty
between intended felonious act and actual felonious act, penalty imposed should be the lower
between the two. Otherwise, if both intended and actual felonious acts are the same, no change in
penalty. (Article 49)
d. Mistake in the blow (aberratio ictus)
i. Blow is targeted at the intended victim
ii. Poor aim
iii. Blow landed on someone else
*NOTE: Conviction should lie on the actual felonious act regardless of intent.
e. Resulting act exceed intent (praeter intentionem)
i. Blow landed on the intended victim
ii. Injurious result is far greater than what is intended by the offender
*NOTE: Praeter intentionem is always considered a mitigating circumstance under Article 13 (3) – That
the offender had no intention to commit so grave a wrong as that committed.
Impossible Crimes – when all elements of a felony against person or property are present but it does not
ripen into a crime or offense in the end because it is inherently impossible or the means is ineffectual or
inadequate.
OTHERWISE, it would be called a felony instead.
It is not really a crime in the legal sense of the word because a crime requires a substantive change in the
outside world.
CASES
Punishable Conduct – Wrongful Act Different from that Intended (RPC Art. 4 [1])
Proximate cause - the overturning of the bus because it completely turned on its back which resulted to the
leak of the gasoline from the tank (unnatural or unexpected).
Consequences – 1) the coming of men with lighted torch as response to the calls for help; 2) nighttime so they
needed light; 3) rural area so torch was the most handy and available source of light; 4) rescuers innocently
approached the vehicle to extend aid
*The rescuers were not an EIC because they were direct, natural and logical consequence of the prox cause.
“For want of a nail, the shoe was lost. For want of a shoe, the horse was lost. For want of a horse, the rider
was lost. For want of a rider, the battle was lost.”
Intended Crime – Murder (treachery – suddenly drew out his gun and shot the intended victim)
Intended Victim – Gerry, the father of the victim
*Completely missed the victim
RULING: Accused is liable to the death of the victim even though she was not his intended victim and he was
targeting the father instead. It would not be considered homicide because the elements of treachery is still
there:
1. employment of means to ensure offender’s safety from any defense or retaliatory act from the offended
party
2. means was deliberately chosen by the offender
*Complex – there are two or more crimes resulting from one act – NOT a difficult crime
Accused, police officer, fired his gun at victim. Hit the latter on the arm and hit an unsuspecting minor. Intended
victim was survived but collateral victim died.
- Accused’s defense – the victim drew his gun first so he had no choice but to defend himself
RTC RULING: frustrated homicide and reckless imprudence resulting to homicide (lack of intent)
CA RULING: same
Accused’s arguments: justifying circumstances of self-defense and lawful performance of duty + mitigation on
the part of the intended victim
Setting was in a disco. Accused, his companions, and the victims had been drinking. An altercation ensued
when someone spilled beer all over accused. Victim and his companion tried to pacify the fight. Accused tried
to shoot the victim’s companion at the back but the bullet hit the back of the victim instead.
- Accused’s version, he ended up grappling with someone over the gun and so it accidentally fired,
hitting the back of the victim
The victims were driving their friend’s car. Their other companions were in another car behind them, in convoy.
While parking the car, the following accused began raining bullets on the victims and their companions
because they thought that they were connected with the person whom the accused had prior altercations with.
So the accused thought that the victims were there to exact their revenge on him. Two of the victims died.
While three were injured as a result to the ambush.
Accused are law enforcers who mistakenly thought that the victims were NPAs. Victims were in fact just
employees of San Miguel Corp. While driving on the way home after a night of drinking, the victims
encountered the accused along the road. The accused signaled them to stop but they didn’t. So the accused
fired warning shots to which the victims accelerated instead. At this point, the accused started firing at the
fleeing vehicle resulting to the death of one of the victims and injuries to the rest.
Guillen knew fully well that by throwing one of the hand grenades at President Roxas, he could not prevent the
persons who were around his main and intended victim from being killed or injured once the bomb exploded
due to the explosive nature of the bomb employed. He stated to the trial judge that he performed the act
voluntarily. He admitted that his purpose was to kill the President, but it did not make any difference if there
were some people around the President.
Accused had been planning to assassinate Pres. Roxas. Concealed two hand grenades in a paper bag. From
a distance of 7 meters from the platform where Pres was finishing his speech. Hurled grenade at the Pres.
General Castaneda who was also at the platform kicked the grenade. It flew towards an open space. It
exploded in the middle of a group. Group got injured. 1 died. 4 injured. Accused admitted to the crime.
The aggravating circumstance of treachery should also be applied on account of aberratio ictus.
While driving a car, the accused began shooting the victim, who was also driving another car. The victim’s car
fell in the canal in the road embankment. 4 men then alighted from the accused’s car and started shooting at
the victim A stray bullet hit a bystander nearby. Both intended and collateral victims died as a result.
The accused’s daughter was impregnated by the victim, so the accused confronted the victim, bringing with
him a penknife. He had no intention of killing the victim. The penknife was just there to slightly injure the victim.
But due to his partial paralysis, the weapon landed on the base of the victim’s neck, killing the latter.
RULING: Should be penalized for the crime committed (Homicide) with mitigating circumstances.
SAF 44 story.
RULING: Dismissed.
Without doubt, Napeñas had been negligent, as borne by both the Senate and PNP-BOI reports. However, We
find it difficult to isolate the effects of his negligence from the effects of all the other factors that contributed to
the loss of lives in the implementation of Oplan Exodus.
1. Lack of prior coord with AFP – apparent leak of info
2. Didn’t foresee the presence of MILF
3. Equipment failure
4. Terrain – difficulty for the support to come on time
In any case, to charge Napeñas with reckless imprudence would be to charge under his responsibility the
consequences of all incidents that contributed to the death of the 44 SAF members, even those beyond what
he and his team may or should have reasonably foreseen during the planning and execution of Oplan Exodus
— which is not fair. Moreover, it would pose a threat to future law enforcement undertakings if military and
police officials would be held susceptible to criminal charges for injury or death resulting from a legitimate
operation.
There is no perfect law enforcement operation. To the contrary, they are mostly idiosyncratic and risky. There
is no guarantee of police officers' safety even in developed countries possessed of sophisticated crime-fighting
technology.
Accused’s argument: cause of death was multiple organ failure. 6 days after the stabbing incident. And not
the stabbing itself.
However, the stab wounds were said to be deep enough to have caused trauma on both kidneys. As a result, it
had caused an infection which later caused the multiple organ failure. Their act has accelerated or contributed
to the death of the victim.
Accused and victim got into a fight. Injured the victim in the palm by a bolo (Oct. 22). Victim went fishing in a
shallow irrigation canal after a typhoon (Nov 5). Died a few weeks later from tetanus (Nov. 14). 22 days after
passed.
The Court looked into the nature of tetanus and based on a medical findings, the reaction to tetanus depends
on the incubation period of the disease. Severe tetanus has a short incubation period (2 or 3) while mild
tetanus has a longer incubation period (at least 14 days and an onset time of more than 6 days).
RULING: Acquitted.
Intod v. CA (1992)
Impossible Crime:
1. Performed an act that would have been an offense against person or property
2. Were it not for the inherent impossibility of its accomplishment or on account of the employment of
inadequate or ineffectual means
3. But no offense was produced
Likewise, there must either be:
1. Legal impossibility
a. When all intended acts even if committed would not have amounted to a crime
2. Physical or Factual impossibility – THE CASE
a. Extraneous circumstances unknown or beyond the control of the offender prevented to produce
the crime
Accused and 4 other men went to the house of the intended victim with intent to kill her. They fired at the
bedroom, but it turned out that she was out of town. There were witnesses who saw the act.
Qualified theft of checks that turned out to have no commercial value. Accused were all employees of PAL that
had direct access to the cargo.
CONSPIRACY
Variance of the penalties does not prove that there was no conspiracy. Conspiracy implies concert of
design and not participation in every detail of execution.
Petitioner is an employee of Mega Foam. Customer handed a BDO check as payment for her purchases. The
check was deposited to the bank account of the petitioner’s brother-in-law instead of the account of Mega
Foam. Check bounced/dishonored. No value remitted to the account of the bro-in-law. Another employee
found out and was invited to join the scheme. However they were caught.
RULING: DISMISSED
The court agrees with the CA: the victim’s fact of death before he was stabbed by petitioner was not sufficiently
established by the defense. While the witness testified that he thought the victim’s dead after being hacked by
Junello, this statement cannot sufficiently support the conclusion that, indeed, the victim was already dead
when petitioner stabbed him. Witness’ opinion of victim’s death was arrived at by merely looking at the body.
No other act was done to ascertain this, such as checking of the heartbeat or breathing.
More importantly, even assuming that it was Junello who killed Fernando and that the latter was already dead
when he was stabbed by the petitioner, the petitioner is still liable for murder because of the clear presence of
conspiracy between the petitioner and Junello. As such, Junello’s acts are likewise legally the petitioner’s acts.
(Conspiracy)
There is proposal when the person who has decided to commit a felony
proposes its execution to some other person or persons.
Conspiracy Proposal
More than two people involved (bicameral act) Only one to decide (unilateral act)
General Rule: Conspiracy and proposal to commit a felony are not punishable as an act
Exception: Unless the law specially provides for their penalty.
Conspiracy as a Crime
Law specifically classifies the acts of conspiring and proposal as crimes in itself. Not necessary for there to be
an overt act committed. (US v. Bautista (1906))
1. Treason (115)
2. Rebellion (136)
3. Sedition (141)
4. Monopolies and combinations n restraint of frauds (186)
5. Brigandage (306)
6. Corruption of Minors (340)
7. Terrorism
Kinds
1. Direct/express
2. Implied/inferred - People v. Vengco (1984)
Elements of Direct/Express
1. Prior agreement or preconceived plan
2. Presence at the time of the commission of the crime
NOTE: Failure to appear at the commission of the crime = desistance = not liable as conspirator
General Rule: Conspirators are liable only for the crime agreed upon. They are not liable for any crime which is
not agree upon.
Exceptions:
1. other crime was committed in the presence of the other conspirators and they did not perform acts to
prevent its commission
2. the other crime was the natural consequence of the crime agreed upon
3. resulting crime is a composite crime or special complex crime or a single indivisible complex crime
Penalty
- Act of one is the act of all
- All perpetrators have the same penalty
NOTE: If conspiracy was not established, then penalty will be individual in nature
US v. Bautista (1906)
WHEN CONSPIRACY IS CONSIDERED A CRIME
As a rule, conspiracy in itself is not a crime (based on the reason that a person might be entirely innocent of all
intention of joining the conspiracy, never having to authorize the conspirators to use his name or send such
commission to him). But where a genuine conspiracy is shown to have existed as in this case, and it is proven
that the accused voluntarily accepted an appointment as an officer in that conspiracy (to overthrow the
Government/treason), we think that this fact may properly be taken into consideration as evidence of his
relations with the conspirators.
Conspiracy to overthrow the US Government in the Philippines by force of arms and establish a gov’t to be
known as Republica Universal Democratica Filipina.
- Hatched in HongKong
- Perfected in Manila/PH
- Appellants were involved in the conspiracy
o Bautista was an intimate friend of the appointed chief of military forces of the conspirators
Knew that his friend was coming to Manila from HK
Forward his friend money for his return
Present in several meetings where the plan was perfected
o Puzon was appointed to be brigadier-general
Puzon’s Defense:
- He had no intention of taking further actions
- Only accepted it since they were friends
- Just a joke
- Didn’t know that they were already organizing the conspiracy at that time
Court’s counter-argument:
Based on the record, it clearly discloses that the accused actually and voluntarily accepted the appointment in
question and in doing so assumed all obligation implied by such acceptance. This fact may properly be taken
into consideration as evidence of his relations with the conspirators.
RULING: the rest were convicted. Except for Aniceto de Guzman.
Ancieto de Guzman’s guilt rests substantially upon his acceptance of a number of bonds from one of the
conspirators, which were prepared by the conspirators’ purpose to raise funds to carry out the conspiracy.
He does not affirmatively appear that
(1) he knew anything of the existence of the conspiracy,
(2) when he received the wrapped and bundled bonds, he knew what the contents of the bundle were,
(3) assumed any obligation with respect to these bonds.
He stated that when he opened the bundle and discovered the nature of the contents, he destroyed them and
never had any dealings with the conspirators in relation to the conspiracy.
OA must show
1. Two or more people
2. Aimed their acts towards the accomplishment of the same unlawful act (same aim)
3. Acts may appear independent but are in fact connected and cooperative (unity of acts)
4. Indicates closeness of personal association and concurrence of sentiment (unity of intent)
The conspiracy among therein appellants and their companions is easily discernible from their conduct. The
way in which they assaulted the victim and their conduct sometime before and immediately after the stabbing,
clearly show that they had agreed to kill him.
Night time. Victim alighted from a taxicab. 4-5 people (accused) approached and stabbed victim to death with
dagger, ice pick, and a pointed blade. Victim was held against the wall of a house while being stabbed. They
ran away after the stabbing. (Before the incident, the accused was said to have chased the victim and threw
bottles at him.) 11 stab wounds (5 fatal) – chest, abdomen and back.
1 – was with them during the drinking spree but was too drunk to participate in the crime
2 – departed from the group before the crime committed; saw them; shouted at them to stop; ran away to avoid
getting implicated
The rest – denied the allegation
The victim and his family were at home (yard & kitchen) minding their own business. House stands on the
slope of a mountain. The are was lighted with petromax lamp. Victim was playing the guitar with his back
toward the north. Upon standing up, victim was shot (8 gun wounds on the back). The shot came from the
north. Victim died immediately. Mother (yard) and brother (kitchen) looked toward the north and saw the 2
accused running down the hill and away from the bamboo grove near the house. One was armed while the
other was not. Accused was a neighbor and relative of the family.
Circumstantial Evidence:
1. Footprints found at the area where witnesses said that accused fled
2. Witnesses (mother and brother)
a. Saw the two accused fleeing the crime scene
b. Only one of the accused had a firearm (gunshot wounds from the victim)
c. But did not see either of the two fire at the victim (principal evidence is merely circumstantial in
character)
d. Described the clothing
3. Victim said that if something were to happen to him, the accused should be held responsible
a. Quarrel with them concerning their stealing and robbing
b. Accused had a personal grudge against victim
4. Accused were well-known by the family (no mistaken identity)
OSG’s argument:
Appellant Simplicio Orodio should be acquitted for lack of sufficient evidence to sustain this conviction either as
a principal or an accomplice.
Court’s counter
Orodio could not sufficiently explain what he was doing with the accused at the night of the murder. He had no
business of going there in the first place. Close friend to the accused. Pleaded the same alibi.
“Well-established is the rule in this jurisdiction that whenever a homicide has been committed as a
consequence of or on the occasion of a robbery, all those who took part as principals in the
commission of the robbery are also guilty as principals in the special complex crime of robbery with
homicide although they did not actually take part in the homicide unless it clearly appeared that they
endeavored to prevent the homicide.”
Chua was owner of an electrical supply corporation. Escobar was a security guard of the company. While the
rest of the accused were former security guards. Escobar was assigned to the post. Victim went to the office
with his 2 children. Kids were watching TV while victim took a bath. Abuyen, Punzalan, and 2 other
companions knocked at the pedestrian door. Escobar opened it since he knew the others. Escobar was held at
gunshot. Punzalan waited outside. Others went in. There were gunshots. Chua went out and saw his son and
daughter mortally wounded and a bloodied scissor blade. Children dead on arrival at the hospital.
Chua’s wife on the way home. Saw Punzalan. Heard gunshot. Saw Abuyen and Escobar walking towards the
gate.
In the absence of a previous plan or agreement to commit a crime, the criminal responsibility arising
from different acts directed against one and the same person is individual and not collective, and that
each of the participants is liable only for his own acts.
Victim and companion went out to buy mango at a nearby sari-sari store. It was evening and they had been
drinking. The 2 accused and another companion (Menes) were in front of the store. Victim told Menes to not
touch him because his clothes might get dirty. Menes punch victim on the face. The other accused punched
and kicked the victim as well. Victim and his companion ran. Upon their return home, the 2 accused and
Menes were waiting for them. One of the accused kicked the victim. Victim tried running away but the other
accused overtook him and stabbed him and continued to do so even when victim was pleading for his life.
Punzalan was not present at the time of the killing. Menes remained at large. Victim died at the hospital.
Lacks 2 – only kicked the victim – kicking does not show concurrence - no evidence to show unity of purpose
and design
Lacks 1 no evidence to show that punzalan knows elijorde’s intent to kill or that the latter has a knife
RULING: Punzalan was acquitted from the crime of murder by reason of conspiracy with Elijorde.
Li v. People (2004)
PROOF FOR IMPLIED CONSPIRACY
It is difficult to presume conspiracy in extemporaneous outburst of evidence, so it must be founded on facts,
not on mere inferences and presumption. Nonetheless, spontaneity alone does not preclude conspiracy – a
single word of assent to a proposal or a handshake can be considered as conspiracy.
General Rule: To establish conspiracy, direct evidence is not required. (Express and implied)
An implied conspiracy must still be based on facts established by positive and conclusive evidence. Even if
conspiracy per se is not criminal, as it rarely is in this jurisdiction, the weight of factual evidence necessary to
prove conspiracy is the same as required to establish criminal liability — proof beyond reasonable doubt.
Different versions.
1 version: Victim was at home watching TV with his sister, girlfriend, and sister’s boyfriend. Accused and
Sangalang were taking a bath completely naked facing the house. Victim and accused got into a fight. Victim
went out of the house to confront accused. Accused, with a baseball bat, hit victim causing the latter to fall.
Accused ran back to his house and emerged with a knife and stabbed victim. Sangalang also stabbed victim
once. Continued to chase the victim.
2 version: Night before, accused refused to drink with victim because of work next day. Accused was at home
w/ his friend and Sangalang. Victim and GF were hurling stones at his house and shouting invectives at him.
Accused shouted at victim. To which victim kicked the gate causing it to misalign. Victim ran back to his house
and brought with him two kitchen knives while accused fix gate. Accused fetched a baseball. They began
hitting each other. Victim acquired a bolo and hit accused until the latter passed out. Accused was hit with a
baseball by the lil sister’s BF.
RTC’s version: Accused hit victim first with baseball bat. Victim retaliated by hitting accused with bolo. Latter
lost consciousness. Sangalang then stabbed the victim several times, causing the latter’s death.
CA’s version: Accused might still have inflicted at least one fatal stab wound and so with Sangalang. Since it
has not been established which wound was inflicted by either one of them, they should both be held liable and
each one is guilty of homicide, whether or not a conspiracy exists.
SC’s version: Four participants in the brawl. Accused hit victim with a bat. Victim retaliated by hitting accused
with bolo. Accused lost consciousness. Sangalang stabbed victim at least 4 times. Tan (lil sis’s BF) hit accused
on the head with the bat.
Cause of death of victim: stab wounds of the chest and abdomen (multiple abrasions, incisions, contusions)
RULING: Li acquitted from the charge of homicide but guilty of slight physical injuries.
Overt Act - some physical activity or deed, indicating the intention to commit a particular crime... must have an
immediate and necessary relation to the offense.
Birthday party. Accused was drunk. Hurled invectives at victim and his companions. Victim asked accused to
leave. Accused returned with some companions in tow. All were armed with bladed weapons. Accused and his
companions demanded victim to come out. Upon doing so, each of the accused took turns stabbing victim.
Two of the accused stabbed another victim.
2 – victims; Avelino died; Manuel underwent surgery but survived
5 – accused; only 4 participated in the stabbing; Levie was only present but did not participate in the stabbing;
lend moral support to the other accused.