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[US v. ALEJANDRO MONTELI](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/ce3c?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. 525, Mar 15, 1910 ]

US v. ALEJANDRO MONTELI +

DECISION

15 Phil. 452

[ G. R. No. 525, March 15, 1910 ]

THE UNITED STATES, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. ALEJANDRO MONTELI, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT.

D E C I S I O N

MORELAND, J.:

The defendant  was convicted, in the Court of  First Instance of  the  Province of Leyte, of the crime of robbery. He was the muchacho of Lieutenant Prueyn, of the United States Army.   The house where the robbery occurred was occupied by Lieutenant Prueyn and Captain Taylor, with their muchachos,  who were the defendant  and another. Lieutenant Prueyn on the 4th day of December, 1908, had in his possession  certain funds of his company,  which, together with money and jewelry of his own, was on said date kept in a  strong box in the house aforesaid.  On the night of said December 4th, at about 12 o'clock, said strong box  was found broken open and the money and jewelry gone.  It was  conclusively  proved on the  trial that  the box  had been  opened by means  of a  hatchet which was kept in the house.   The marks upon said box corresponded with  the size of the hatchet's edge  and  the hatchet upon being examined was found stained with the red paint with which a portion  of said  strong  box was  covered at  the time it was forcibly opened.

The defendant was  convicted upon  circumstantial evidence.  No one saw the crime committed and none of the property has  been discovered.  The following  facts and circumstances were used by the court below to convict the defendant:

Lieutenant Prueyn left the house on  the afternoon  of the 4th of December at 5 o'clock and did not return until about  12 o'clock of the same night.  When he left  the house the strong box was securely locked  and he carried with  him the only key thereto.  Only four persons lived in the house - Lieutenant Prueyn,  Captain  Taylor, the defendant muchacho of Lieutenant Prueyn, and Agaton, muchacho of Captain Taylor.  These two muchachos did  not ordinarily remain in  the house at night, but at the end of each day, after serving at supper at the residence of the colonel of the regiment, went to their respective homes to pass the night. Before  leaving the house on the day in question Lieutenant Prueyn  had  sent  the  accused to  the village after a horse.

On the morning after the robbery the accused did  not return to the house at the usual time, but remained away until  9 o'clock.  On arriving at the house he appeared to Lieutenant Prueyn to be very nervous and on entering his room told  him that the box had been broken  open and that he was very much afraid.  Upon being questioned by the lieutenant as to when he  returned  from the village where he had been sent for the horse, he stated first that he had returned at  7.30 o'clock,  then  at 7 o'clock, and then at 6 o'clock, and then at 6.30 o'clock.  Ordinarily the accused did not  appear nervous nor did  he prior to the robbery appear to be of a nervous temperament.

The accused knew that the  box contained money and jewelry, as  he had many times seen Lieutenant Prueyn open it and  take out considerable  sums of money and had seen  him close it up, leaving large sums of money and valuable jewelry  therein.  The hatchet with which the box was forced  was the one usually kept in  the house for the ordinary uses of the occupants, particularly the  servants, and was always  kept in  a  particular place  in the house. So far as appears from the evidence, nobody knew where the hatchet was kept in the house except the two occupants and their muchachos, one of whom  was the accused.  After the robbery the hatchet was found  in its ordinary place in the room where  it was  usually kept.  Immediately after the discovery of the robbery Captain Taylor and  Lieutenant  Prueyn, observing that the box  had been opened with  an instrument resembling a hatchet,  got the hatchet and discovered that it had upon its blade and nose marks of the red paint  with which the strong box was covered. They  observed also that the marks and indentures  made upon  the box were closely fitted by the various  portions of the hatchet.  Prior to the commission of the robbery no such paint marks had been observed upon  the hatchet.

It was the custom of Captain  Taylor and Lieutenant Prueyn to leave the house at  about 6 o'clock to go to the colonel's apartments for their  supper.  Sometimes Agaton closed the house;  sometimes the accused.   Ordinarily after having served supper the servants, including the accused, did not return to  the house but went directly to their own homes.  The proofs show that  the servants never returned to the house without orders.   Upon the night of the robbery there  was no order to the servants to return to the house.

The accused knew that Lieutenant Prueyn was going for a walk on this particular night, and he also knew that when he did go for a walk he was usually away about three hours. When not taking his walk the lieutenant was usually absent from the house from one and one-half  to three hours. Prior to the robbery the lieutenant had missed from his pocket a P20 bill.  This was the only time any of his property had disappeared.  The accused usually borrowed money of the lieutenant during the  month in anticipation of his salary.

Captain  Taylor left the house  on the  afternoon of the robbery at about 6 o'clock to get his  supper at the colonel's. Ordinarily Agaton, who served at the colonel's table, left the lieutenant's house at about 6 o'clock or a little before, while the accused remained at the house until a little later, when he too went to assist with the supper at the colonel's house.  On  the night of the robbery Captain Taylor arrived at the colonel's house at about 6.30 o'clock and found there Agaton, whom he saw there  until a little after 7.  When he left the lieutenant's house at about 6 o'clock Agaton had already gone, but there still remained in the house another person,  who, while not seen by the  captain, was taken by him to  be the defendant.  The captain returned from his supper  to the  lieutenant's house  at about 7 o'clock.  On arriving there he found the accused.  It was not  usual or customary for the accused to be there at that time of night. The captain seated himself at a table to read.  While so seated the  accused two or  three  times entered the  room in which the hatchet  was kept and passed several times through the room in  which the captain was seated, going from one thing to another  in the room and appearing to be very nervous.  The conduct of the accused being very unusual, the captain  ceased  reading and  observed him, whereupon  the  accused, noticing that he  was observed, stopped  and asked him when Lieutenant  Prueyn  would return.  The captain replied that he did not know.  The captain remained at the house until twenty minutes past 9, when he went to the house next to the one occupied by him,  located  about 30 or 35 yards therefrom, returning before 10.  While at that house he would have been able to hear very easily the sounds which would necessarily have been made in forcing open the strong box in the manner in which it was found to have been opened.  He heard no such sounds while there.  He returned to the lieutenant's house before  10.  At 11 o'clock he went to bed.  While in the room he was about 24 feet from the strong box.  He was thus in a position from 7 o'clock until the discovery of the robbery where he would undoubtedly have heard the noise  which would necessarily have been made in opening the box.  He  heard no  such noise.  The robbery,  then, must  have been committed before 7 o'clock.  The accused was at the house from 6 to 7.

The servant Agaton was continuously at the lieutenant's house until 6 o'clock, when he went to the colonel's house to prepare supper.   When he left  the  house the accused was still there.  Captain  Taylor was  also there. Immediately after supper  at the colonel's house Agaton went  to his own home to pass the night.   He did not return to the lieutenant's house that night.

Miss Nellie  H. Weeks, who was a witness on the  trial, testified that  from about 6.20 to 7 o'clock she was on the balcony of her house, which  was located about 100 yards from the house of Lieutenant Prueyn.  While seated  there she heard sounds of blows coming  from the house where the robbery occurred.  The sounds lasted five or six minutes. They  were frequent and successive.  It sounded to her as if someone was trying to knock something to pieces.

From the proofs it thus appears that:
  1. The accused was one of four who knew that the strong box contained a large sum of money and some jewelry.

  2. The strong box was broken  open with the  hatchet belonging to the house.

  3. The accused was one of four who knew that there was a hatchet in the house and the place where it was located.

  4. None of the other three committed the crime.

  5. The robbery must  have been  committed between 6 and 7.

  6. The accused was in  the house alone from 6 till 7.

  7. Between 6 and 7 sounds such as would naturally result from forcing the strong box in the manner in which it was found to have been forced were heard to proceed from the place where the robbery  occurred.

  8. The accused did not return to his duties at the usual time on the morning following the robbery.

  9. The conduct and appearance of the accused at 7 o'clock, when observed by Captain Taylor, and the next  morning, when questioned by Lieutenant Prueyn, were unusual and significant.
Upon the whole case we can not say that the court below was wrong in  his conclusion as  to the defendant's guilt. We accordingly affirm the judgment appealed from, with costs against the appellant.  So ordered.

Torres, Johnson, and Carson, JJ., concur.

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