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[US v. VICTOR SOLINAP](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c1180?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. 5683, Dec 27, 1910 ]

US v. VICTOR SOLINAP +

DECISION

18 Phil. 77

[ G.R. No. 5683, December 27, 1910 ]

THE UNITED STATES, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. VICTOR SOLINAP, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT.

D E C I S I O N

CARSON, J.:

The defendant in this case was convicted of the crime of stealing two carabaos,  on proof that these  carabaos were stolen from the corral  of the complaining witness  on the night of  the 16th  of March, 1909,  and that one of them was found in defendant's corral on the 24th of the following April.

Defendant admitted that the carabao found in his corral was not his property, and, in explanation of its presence there, attempted to prove that  it had  been intrusted to his care by a man named Iping, deceased at the time of the trial.  We are of opinion, however, that the evidence introduced  by the defendant in support  of his explanation of the  presence of this carabao in his  corral can not be credited, because not only is it self-contradictory  in various minor details, but also,  and chiefly, because if believed, we would be forced to the  conclusion that  the animal  was not taken from the corral of the complaining witness  on the night of the 16th of March, 1909, defendant's witnesses testifying, as they  did,  that  Iping had turned the animal over to the  defendant long before the night when the complaining witness claims to have lost  it.  But the evidence of the loss  of the  identical carabao  found in  defendant's corral from the corral of  the complaining witness on  the night of the 16th of March is so positive, definite, and conclusive  that it does not admit of doubt,  and we are  of opinion therefore that defendant's explanation of the presence of the stolen  animal in  his corral is not  worthy  of belief, and  is  not sufficient to rebut  the  presumption  of his guilt arising from the  discovery of the stolen carabao in his corral not long after the crime was committed.

There is evidence in the record which tends to disclose that the other carabao stolen from the complaining witness was also found in defendant's corral; but the evidence as to the  identity  of the second  carabao found in  defendant's corral with the second carabao stolen from the complaining witness is not conclusive, and  we  therefore  refrain  from any attempt  to make  a finding on this  point.  But whatever may be the fact as to the identity of the second carabao, the unexplained discovery of one of two  carabaos,  stolen on the  same night from the  same corral, in the possession of the defendant not long after the commission of the crime, is sufficient  in itself to sustain a  finding  of the guilt  of the defendant of the theft of  both the animals.

The judgment of conviction and the  sentence  imposed by the trial court should  therefore be  affirmed with  the  costs of this  instance against the appellant.   So ordered.

Arellano, C. J., Torres, Mapa, and Johnson, JJ., concur.

Moreland and Trent, JJ., dissent.

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