You're currently signed in as:
User
Add TAGS to your cases to easily locate them or to build your SYLLABUS.
Please SIGN IN to use this feature.
https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c1e63?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09
[PEOPLE v. POTENCIANO MONTALBO](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c1e63?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
{case:c1e63}
Highlight text as FACTS, ISSUES, RULING, PRINCIPLES to generate case DIGESTS and REVIEWERS.
Please LOGIN use this feature.
Show as cited by other cases (1 times)
Show printable version with highlights

[ GR No. 34750, Dec 31, 1931 ]

PEOPLE v. POTENCIANO MONTALBO +

DECISION

56 Phil. 443

[ G. R. No. 34750, December 31, 1931 ]

THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. POTENCIANO MONTALBO, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT.

D E C I S I O N

AVANCEƃ'A, C.J.:

The judgment appealed from convicts the appellant of the crime of homicide with  the extenuating circumstance of passion and obfuscation,  and sentences  him  to twelve years and one day of reclusion  temporal, the accessories of the law, to indemnify  the heirs of the deceased in the sum of  P1,000, and the costs.

Between 4 and 5 o'clock in the afternoon  of August 14, 1930, a basketball game was  in progress in the army gymnasium on General Luna Street of  this City of Manila. Among those present at the game were: The appellant, Potenciano Montalbo; the deceased, Jose Paras; and a companion  of the latter, Conrado Lorenzo, all  students.  The deceased stood with one  arm leaning against one of the goal posts with Conrado Lorenzo  to his right.  The appellant  was  behind him.  As  the deceased's  right arm, which was against the post obstructed the appellant's view, so that he could not see the game well, he called the former's attention to it, but the deceased said he had to lean his arm against the post in order to keep his  balance.  After a few moments, the appellant caught the deceased's  right sleeve and jerked it strongly  downwards.   The deceased turned  towards the appellant who stepped back two paces, saying, "What do you  want?"

According to the Government evidence,  when Conrado Lorenzo saw this, he stepped in pushing  the deceased away with his right hand and holding the appellant off with his left.  In spite  of this, the  appellant approached  the deceased and  hit him in the chest; and  it was then that Lorenzo saw the appellant had a penknife in his hand, and that the deceased was  wounded and he gradually fell until a bystander held him up.

According to the evidence of the defense, when the deceased turned towards the appellant, and the latter took two steps backward, he followed him up and struck him with his fists.  One of the witnesses corroborated this, saying that fist blows  were  indeed exchanged  by  them.   Moreover, the trial court found  that the deceased had attacked the defendant with his  fists.  This  finding must have been based upon the evidence of the defense, for that of the prosecution makes no  mention of the circumstance.  The trial court, however, further held that there  was not sufficient proof that the  attack took place  before  the appellant had used his knife.  We do not  find this borne out by the evidence for the defense, which the court took into consideration.   And as for the evidence of the prosecution, it does not admit of this conclusion,  for it shows that upon the deceased being wounded in the chest he began to sink little by little, and being in such  a state,  he could not have attacked the appellant.

Notwithstanding all this, we hold that the defendant did not act  in self-defense, the elements of which were not all present in this case.  Though the deceased struck him with his fists, the appellant was not justified in mortally wounding his assailant with the penknife.  This was not a reasonably necessary means  of  repelling the attack.   (U. S. vs. De Castro, 2 Phil, 67; Decision  of the Supreme Court of Spain of November 28, 1885;  35 Jurispnidencia Criminal, 858-861.)   Moreover,  the appellant provoked the attack by  jerking  down the deceased's coat-sleeve, taking two steps backward,  and  challenging  him  with  the  words, "What do you want?"

The  trial court  justly  took account  of the  mitigating circumstance of passion and obfuscation.   We find the judgment appealed from to be borne out by the evidence and in accordance  with the law, and  it is hereby affirmed, with costs against  the  appellant.   So ordered.

Johnson, Street, Malcolm, Villamor, Ostrand, Romualdez, Villa-Real, and Imperial,  JJ., concur.

tags