EN BANC
[ G.R. Nos. L-38968-70, February 09, 1989 ]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, PLAINTIFF-APPELLEE, VS. FELICIANO MUÑOZ, ALIAS "TONY," ET AL., ACCUSED, MARVIN MILLORA, TOMAS TAYABA, ALIAS "TAMY TAYABA" AND JOSE MISLANG, DEFENDANTS-APPELLANTS.
D E C I S I O N
CRUZ, J.:
Of the four persons convicted in this case, one has not appealed and thus impliedly accepted his sentence. The others have questioned their conviction and insist that they are innocent. The prosecution did not think so, and neither does the Solicitor General
now. The brief for the appellee would affirm the finding of guilt and in fact even increase the penalty.
The prosecution presented a bizarre case of arbitrary condemnation and instant punishment meted out by what appear to be the members of a private army. Eleven persons, most of them bodyguards of the town mayor, went out in a jeep at the behest of one of them who had complained of having been victimized by cattle rustler. Having found their supposed quarry, they proceeded to execute each one of then in cold blood without further ado and without mercy. One was shot in the mouth and died instantly as his son and daughter looked on in horror. The second was forced to lie down on the ground and then shot twice, also in the head, before his terrified wife and son. The third, who was only sixteen years old, was kicked in the head until he bled before he too had his brains blown out. To all appearances, the unfortunate victims were only innocent farmers and not the dangerous criminals they were pronounced to be.
Bizarre but true, as the trial court agreed.
Of the eleven persons who were charged with murder in three separate informations, the four who stood trial were found guilty.[1] The other seven have yet to be identified and tried. The sentence of Feliciano Muñoz, who did not appeal, has long become final and EXECUTORY and is now being served.[2] We deal here only with the appeals of the other convicts, namely, Marvin Millora, Tomas Tayaba, and Jose Mislang, who all ask for a reversal.
The killings occurred in the morning of June 30, 1972, in Balite Sur, San Carlos City, Pangasinan.[3]
As established by the prosecution, Feliciano Muñoz, Marvin Millora, Tomas Tayaba, Jose Mislang, and the other seven unidentified men went to the house of Mauro Bulatao and asked for the address of his son Arsenio. All four of them went inside while the rest surrounded the house. All eleven men were armed. Mauro, who was then bathing his horse, was called by the accused. As he approached and while under his house, he was met by Millora who simply shot him at arm's length with a long firearm, hitting him in the mouth and killing him as he fell. At that precise time, Muñoz, Tayaba and Mislang were standing by Millora, evidently giving him armed support. None of them made any move to restrain or dissuade him.[4]
After killing Mauro, the four accused dragged out of the house his sixteen year old son, Aquilino and knocked him down. Muñoz kicked him several times in the head as he lay on the ground while the others looked on in silent approval or at least without objection. They then took the bleeding man with them to look for their third target, Alejandro Bulatao.[5]
In Alejandro's house, the group forced his wife, Juana to go with them and direct them to her husband. They found him tending to their cows with his son Pedro. Muñoz ordered Alejandro and his wife to lie down and then, even as Pedro pleaded for his father's life, shot Alejandro twice in the head, killing him instantly. Millora, Tayaba and Mislang, along with their companions, merely stood by as the brutal act was committed. Juana watched her husband's death in terror and the 12-year old boy made a desperate run for his life as one of the accused fired at him and missed.[6]
The second victim having been murdered as the first, the accused then vented their violence on Aquilino, whom Muñoz again brutally kicked as the others looked on. Aquilino was entirely defenseless. Finally, Muñoz ended the boy's agony and shot him to death, hitting him in the head and body. Muñoz and Millora then picked up all the empty shells and fled with the rest of their companions, leaving the terrified Juana with the two grisly corpses.[7]
The above events were narrated at the trial by Melecia Bulatao,[8] Mauro's daughter and Aquilino's sister; Jose Bulatao,[9] Mauro's son and Aquilino's brother; Juana Bulatao,[10] Alejandro's wife; and Pedro Bulatao,[11] their son. Their testimony was corroborated by Dr: Juanito de Vera,[12] who performed the autopsy on the three victims.
Melecia and Jose testified on the killing of their father by Marvin Millora as the other accused stood by and the mauling of their brother Aquilino before he was dragged away by the group. The trial court especially noted the straightforward account given by Jose, who positively identified Millora as the killer and described the participation of the others, including the savage kicking of his brother by Muñoz.[13] Melecia earlier pointed to Mislang as the one who had shot her father but changed her mind later on cross-examination and named Millora as the actual killer. She explained her turn-about by confessing that she had earlier agreed to exonerate Millora in exchange for the sum of P3,000.00 promised by his father although she actually did not receive the money.[14] For her part, Juana related how she was threatened with death unless she accompanied the accused to where her husband was. She narrated in detail how Alejandro was killed before her very eyes and how Aquilino was later kicked and then also shot to death, also by Muñoz, while the other accused stood by.[15] Her testimony was corroborated by Pedro, her son, whom the accused had also thought of killing because he was "talkative" and indeed was shot at when he successfully escaped after his father's murder.[16]
The defense makes much of the fact that it was only months after the killings that it occurred to these witnesses to denounce the accused and suggests that this delay should impugn their credibility. As correctly pointed out by the trial judge, however, these witnesses were naturally deterred from doing so for fear that they would meet the same fate that befell their relatives. These were humble barrio folk whose timidity did not allow them to report their grievances beyond the barrio officials they knew, more so since the higher authorities appeared to be indifferent and gave no attention, much less encouragement, to their complaints.
It is true that there were several inconsistencies in the testimony of these witnesses as painstakingly pointed out by the appellants,[17] but these are minor flaws that do not detract from the essential truthfulness of their accounts of the ruthless killings.[18]
The brutality of the murders and the veracity of the testimony of the said witnesses are emphasized by the medical reports[19] of the injuries sustained by the victims as follows:
Testifying for Millora on the alleged encounter between the Bulataos and their adversaries, Victoriano Bacani said that the latter included Tayaba, Mislang and five others who fled from the scene in a jeep.[20]
Graciano Muñoz, corroborating Bacani, said he himself saw seven men in a jeep coming from the sound of the gunfire after he had paid Mauro P400.00 to redeem his stolen carabao.[21] Another witness for Millora, Orlando de los Santos, testified to having seen the encounter between the Bulataos and the other group and declared that the former were armed with carbines and Garand rifles.[22]
The trial court rejected Bacani's testimony because he appeared hesitant and suspicious on the stand and did not give the impression that he was telling the truth.[23] Moreover, it took him all of one year to report the alleged shooting encounter, which he also did not mention that same afternoon when he visited Mauro's family to condole with them.[24] It is also not believable that the group would flee because they had no more bullets when their supposed three adversaries were already dead in the field. The alleged redemption made by Muñoz was described by the trial court as preposterous, especially since no shred of evidence had been presented to show that Mauro was a cattle rustler, let alone his 16-year old son.[25] As for De los Santos, no firearms were discovered beside the dead bodies of the Bulataos, including Mauro, who was found not in the supposed battleground but under his house, as testified to by Dr. De Vera.[26]
Millora's own defense was that he was in Dagupan City at the time of the killings, having gone there in the evening of June 29, 1972. He claimed he had stayed there overnight with a female companion after drinking beer with Atty. Antonio Resngit, returning to San Carlos City only between 8 and 9 o'clock the following morning or June 30, 1972.[27] The lawyer corroborated him,[28] but he cannot be more credible than Mauro's own children, Jose and Melecia, who positively identified Millora as the person who actually shot their father in the face and killed him instantly. Such a traumatic experience could not have been forgotten by these witnesses who saw their father murdered without warning or mercy nor could their memory of the heartless killer have been easily wiped out from their minds.
It is stressed that Juana Bulatao and her son Pedro also categorically declared that Millora was with the group that she took to the field where her husband and Aquilino were killed by Muñoz.[29]
Tayaba and Mislang offered a common defense, also of alibi. Both claimed that Mislang having complained of cattle rustlers, a group of policemen, including Tayaba, stayed in the former's house the whole night of June 29, 1972, leaving only at 8 o'clock the following morning of June 30, 1972, after Mislang had served them breakfast.[30] Significantly, however, barrio Bacnar, were Mislang's house was located, is only two kilometers from Balite Sur.[31] Moreover, the trial court doubted the testimony given by Sgt. Lomibao, who corroborated them and spoke of having heard the gunfire narrated by Millora's witnesses. The decision noted that Lomibao was mysteriously absent when the police chief and Dr. de Vera went to the scene of the crime at 9 o'clock that morning to investigate the killings. In fact, it expressed the suspicion that Lomibao and Patrolman Liwanag, who also testified for the accused, might have been among the seven unidentified persons who were with Muñoz and the three appellants herein when the Bulataos were murdered.[32]
All told, we affirm the findings of the trial judge, who had the opportunity to observe the witnesses at the trial and assess their credibility. As we said in a previous case:
However, we do not accept the different, degrees of participation assigned by the court a quo, to each of the appellants in each of the three offenses imputed to them. In Criminal Case No. 0176, Millora was found guilty as principal and Muñoz and the other two herein appellants only accomplices, and in Criminal Case Nos. 0177 and 0178, Muñoz was found guilty as principal and the herein appellants only as accomplices.[34] In support of this finding, the trial court said that there was no evidence of conspiracy to justify holding each of the accused equally liable for the three murders.
We hold that there was. Indeed, it is clear that from the very start, when the eleven men went out to look for the suspected cattle rustlers, there was already an agreement among them to ferret out and punish the Bulataos whom they had condemned beforehand. They knew whom they were looking for. They knew where to look for them. They sought each of them with drawn and ready weapons. When they reached Mauro Bulatao's house, four of them went inside while the rest deployed themselves in strategic positions. When Millora shot Mauro, the appellants and the others stood by with guns at the ready. Nobody moved to dissuade or stop him. Together they dragged Aquilino from the house and the rest watched while Muñoz kicked him in the head while helpless on the ground. Together, they took him with them and then forced Juana Bulatao to lead them to her husband. The rest stood by with their weapons as Muñoz shot Alejandro in the head. No one interceded to stop him from also killing Aquilino. There is no question that the group moved in concert, pursuing a common design previously agreed upon, that made each of them part of a conspiracy.[35] As such, each of them is liable in equal degree with the others for each of the three killings. Each member of the conspiracy to commit the crime of murder is guilty as a co-principal, regardless of who actually pulled the trigger that killed the three victims. It is settled that in a conspiracy the act of one is the act of all.[36]
Each of the three killings constituted the crime of murder, qualified by alevosia. There was treachery because every one of the three victims was completely helpless and defenseless when shot and killed by the accused with no risk to themselves. Mauro was completely taken by surprise when he was shot in the face. Alejandro was lying down when he was shot in the head. Aquilino was seated when he was shot in the head and shoulders. None of the three victims had a chance to resist.
The penalty for murder under Article 248 of the Revised Penal Code was reclusion temporal in its maximum period to death, but this was modified by Article III, Section 19 (1) of the 1987 Constitution providing as follows:
In People v. Gavarra,[37] Justice Pedro L. Yap declared for the Court that "in view of the abolition of the death penalty under Section 19, Article III of the 1987 Constitution, the penalty that may be imposed for murder is reclusion temporal in its maximum period to reclusion perpetua," thereby eliminating death as the original maximum period. Later, without categorically saying so, the Court, through Justice Ameurfina A. Melencio-Herrera in People v. Masangkay[38] and through Justice Andres R. Narvasa in People v. Atencio,[39] divided the modified penalty into three new periods, the limits of which were specified by Justice Edgardo L. Paras in People v. Intino,[40] as follows: the lower half of reclusion temporal maximum as the minimum; the upper half of reclusion temporal maximum as the medium; and reclusion perpetua as the maximum.
The Court has reconsidered the above cases and, after extended discussion, come to the conclusion that the doctrine announced therein does not reflect the intention of the framers as embodied in Article III, Section 19(1) of the Constitution. This conclusion is not unanimous, to be sure. Indeed, there is much to be said of the opposite view, which was in fact shared by many of those now voting for its reversal. The majority of the Court, however, is of the belief that the original interpretation should be restored as the more acceptable reading of the constitutional provision in question.
The advocates of the Masangkay ruling argue that the Constitution abolished the death penalty and thereby limited the penalty for murder to the remaining periods, to wit, the minimum and the medium. These should now be divided into three new periods in keeping with the three-grade scheme intended by the legislature. Those who disagree feel that Article III, Section 19(1) merely prohibits the imposition of the death penalty and has not, by reducing it to reclusion perpetua, also correspondingly reduced the remaining penalties. These should be maintained intact.
A reading of Section 19(1) of Article III will readily show that there is really nothing therein which expressly declares the abolition of the death penalty. The provision merely says that the death penalty shall not be imposed unless for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes the Congress hereafter provides for it and, if already imposed, shall be reduced to reclusion perpetua. The language, while rather awkward, is still plain enough. And it is a settled rule of legal hermeneutics that if the language under consideration is plain, it is neither necessary nor permissible to resort to extrinsic aids, like the records of the constitutional convention, for its interpretation.[41]
At that, the Court finds that such resort, even if made, would not be of much assistance either in the case at bar. Accepting arguendo that it was the intention of the framers to abolish the death penalty, we are still not convinced from the debates in the Constitutional Commission that there was also a requirement to adjust the two remaining periods by dividing them into three shorter periods. This is not a necessary consequence of the provision as worded. The following exchange cited by those in favor of Masangkay is at best thought-provoking but not decisive of the question:
The question as we see it is not whether the framers intended to abolish the death penalty or merely to prevent its imposition. Whatever the intention was, what we should determine is whether or not they also meant to require a corresponding modification in the other periods as a result of the prohibition against the death penalty.
It is definite that such a requirement, if there really was one, is not at all expressed in Article III, Section 19(1) of the Constitution or indicated therein by at least clear and unmistakable implication. It would have been so easy, assuming such intention, to state it categorically and plainly, leaving no doubt as to its meaning. One searches in vain for such a statement, express or even implied. The writer of this opinion makes the personal observation that this might be still another instance where the framers meant one thing and said another or - strangely, considering their loquacity elsewhere - did not say enough.
The original ruling as applied in the Gavarra, Masangkay, Atencio and Intino cases represented the unanimous thinking of the Court as it was then constituted. All but two members[42] at that time still sit on the Court today. If we have seen fit to take a second look at the doctrine on which we were all agreed before, it is not because of a change in the composition of this body. It is virtually the same Court that is changing its mind after reflecting on the question again in the light of new perspectives. And well it might, and can, for the tenets it lays down are not immutable. The decisions of this Court are not petrified rules grown rigid once pronounced but vital, growing things subject to change as all life is. While we are told that the trodden path is best, this should not prevent us from opening a fresh trail or exploring the other side or testing a new idea in a spirit of continuing inquiry.
Accordingly, with the hope that "as judges, (we) will be equal to (our) tasks," whatever that means, we hereby reverse the current doctrine providing for three new periods for the penalty for murder as reduced by the Constitution. Instead, we return to our original interpretation and hold that Article III, Section 19(1) does not change the periods of the penalty prescribed by Article 248 of the Revised Penal Code except only insofar as it prohibits the imposition of the death penalty and reduces it to reclusion perpetua. The range of the medium and minimum penalties remains unchanged.
The Court realizes that this interpretation may lead to certain inequities that would not have arisen under Article 248 of the Revised Penal Code before its modification. Thus, a person originally subject to the death penalty and another who committed the murder without the attendance of any modifying circumstance will now be both punishable with the same medium period although the former is concededly more guilty than the latter. True enough. But that is the will not of this Court but of the Constitution. That is a question of wisdom, not construction. Of some relevance perhaps is the parable in the Bible of the workman who was paid the stipulated daily wage of one penny although he had worked longer than others hired later in the day but also paid the same amount. When be complained because he felt unjustly treated by the householder, the latter replied: "Friend, I do you no wrong. Did you not agree with me for a penny?"
The problem in any event is addressed not to this Court but to the Congress. Penalties are prescribed by statute and are essentially and exclusively legislative. As judges, we can only interpret and apply them and have no authority to modify them or revise their range as determined exclusively by the legislature. We should not encroach on this prerogative of the lawmaklng body.
Coming back to the case at bar, we find that there being no generic aggravating or mitigating circumstance attending the commission of the offenses, the applicable sentence is the medium period of the penalty prescribed by Article 248 of the Revised Penal Code which, conformably to the new doctrine here adopted and announced, is still reclusion perpetua. This is the penalty we impose on all the accused-appellants for each of the three murders they have committed in conspiracy with the others. The award of civil indemnity for the heirs of each of the victims is affirmed but the amount thereof is hereby increased to P30,000.00 in line with the present policy.
It remains to observe that the crimes inflicted upon the humble farmers would have remained unpunished were it not for the vigilance of certain responsible officials, especially the police and the prosecuting officer, who took up the cudgels for the victims' families. The courage and conscientiousness they displayed are still the most potent weapons against those who, in their arrogance, believe that they can flout the law and frustrate justice because they have the protection of powerful patrons.
WHEREFORE, the appealed decision is MODIFIED and all the accused-appellants are hereby declared guilty as principals in Criminal Case Nos. 0176, 0177 and 0178. Each of them is sentenced to suffer three (3) penalties of reclusion perpetua, and to pay solidarily to the heirs of their victims civil indemnity in the sum of P30,000.00 for each of the deceased, or a total indemnity of P90,000,00, with costs.
SO ORDERED.
Fernan, C. J, Gutierrez, Jr., Feliciano, Gancayco, Padilla, Bidin, Griño-Aquino, and Medialdea, JJ., concur.
Melencio-Herrera, J., with separate concurring and dissenting opinion.
Narvasa, Sarmiento, and Cortes, JJ., joins Mme. Justice Herrera in her separate opinion.
Paras, and Regalado, JJ., concur. in the dissent of Justice Amuerfina Herrera.
[1] Decision was penned by Judge Himerio B. Garcia, Circuit Criminal Court, Judicial District, Dagupan City, Rollo, pp. 28-58.
[2] Consolidated Brief for the Appellee, p. 5, Rollo, p. 296.
[3] Rollo, p. 28.
[4] TSNs, May 16, 1973, pp. 40-45; May 23, 1973, pp. 181-189.
[5] Ibid., pp 45-48; Id., 190-194.
[6] TSNs, May 18, 1973, pp. 124-128; May 24, 1973, pp. 231-236, 258-259.
[7] Ibid. pp. 128-131; Id., p. 236.
[8] TSNs, May 16, 1973, pp.39-71; May 17, 1973, pp. 76-104.
[9] TSN, May 23, 1973, pp. 180-221.
[10] TSN, May 24, 1973, pp. 230-269.
[11] TSNs, May 18, 1973, pp. 119-146; May 23, 1973, pp. 151-178.
[12] TSN, May 16, 1973, pp. 7-39.
[13] Decision, Rollo, pp. 38-39.
[14] TSN, May 17, 1973, pp. 102-103.
[15] TSN, May 24, 1973, pp. 230-236.
[16] TSN, May 18, 1973, pp. 124-132.
[17] Brief for accused-appellant Marvin Millora, Rollo, pp. 243-254; Brief for accused-appellant Tomas Tayaba, pp. 15-33; Rollo, p. 193; Brief for accused-appellant Jose Mislang, pp. 8-10, Rollo, p. 212.
[18] People v. Abigan, 144 SCRA 130; People v. Bautista, 142 SCRA 649; People v. Valentino, 141 SCRA 397; People v. Arbois, 138 SCRA 24; People v. Pacabes, 137 SCRA 158.
[19] Exch. "A," Records of Crim. Case No. III-0176, p. 88, Exch "A," Records of Crim. Case No. III-0177, p. 43; Exh. "A," Records of Crim. Case No. III-0178, p. 40.
[20] TSN, June 11, 1973, pp. 351-353.
[21] TSN, July 25, 1973, pp. 388-394.
[22] Ibid., pp. 427-432.
[23] Decision, Rollo, p. 43.
[24] Ibid.
[25] Id., pp. 43-44.
[26] Id., p. 43; TSN, May 16, 1973, pp. 23-24.
[27] TSN, December 20, 1973, pp. 473-478.
[28] Ibid., pp. 502-505.
[29] TSNs, May 24, 1973, pp. 231-233, 236; May 18, 1973, pp. 126-127, 131.
[30] TSN, January 30, 1974, pp. 627-631; January 31, 1974, pp. 672-678.
[31] TSN, January 29, 1974, p. 597.
[32] Decision, Rollo, pp. 47-50.
[33] People v. Guardo, et al., G.R. No. L-42965, December 3, 1987.
[34] Decision, Rollo, pp. 55-58.
[35] Consolidated Brief for the Appellee, pp. 45-46, Rollo, p. 296.
[36] People v. Punzalan, 153 SCRA 1; People v. Liza, 152 SCRA 318; People v. Serante, 152 SCRA 510; People v. Rojas, 147 SCRA 169; People v. Loren, 130 SCRA 311.
[37] 155 SCRA 327.
[38] 155 SCRA 113.
[39] 156 SCRA 242.
[40] L-69934, September 26, 1988.
[41] 16 C. J. S. 67-68.
[42] Chief Justice Teehankee and Chief Justice Yap.
The prosecution presented a bizarre case of arbitrary condemnation and instant punishment meted out by what appear to be the members of a private army. Eleven persons, most of them bodyguards of the town mayor, went out in a jeep at the behest of one of them who had complained of having been victimized by cattle rustler. Having found their supposed quarry, they proceeded to execute each one of then in cold blood without further ado and without mercy. One was shot in the mouth and died instantly as his son and daughter looked on in horror. The second was forced to lie down on the ground and then shot twice, also in the head, before his terrified wife and son. The third, who was only sixteen years old, was kicked in the head until he bled before he too had his brains blown out. To all appearances, the unfortunate victims were only innocent farmers and not the dangerous criminals they were pronounced to be.
Bizarre but true, as the trial court agreed.
Of the eleven persons who were charged with murder in three separate informations, the four who stood trial were found guilty.[1] The other seven have yet to be identified and tried. The sentence of Feliciano Muñoz, who did not appeal, has long become final and EXECUTORY and is now being served.[2] We deal here only with the appeals of the other convicts, namely, Marvin Millora, Tomas Tayaba, and Jose Mislang, who all ask for a reversal.
The killings occurred in the morning of June 30, 1972, in Balite Sur, San Carlos City, Pangasinan.[3]
As established by the prosecution, Feliciano Muñoz, Marvin Millora, Tomas Tayaba, Jose Mislang, and the other seven unidentified men went to the house of Mauro Bulatao and asked for the address of his son Arsenio. All four of them went inside while the rest surrounded the house. All eleven men were armed. Mauro, who was then bathing his horse, was called by the accused. As he approached and while under his house, he was met by Millora who simply shot him at arm's length with a long firearm, hitting him in the mouth and killing him as he fell. At that precise time, Muñoz, Tayaba and Mislang were standing by Millora, evidently giving him armed support. None of them made any move to restrain or dissuade him.[4]
After killing Mauro, the four accused dragged out of the house his sixteen year old son, Aquilino and knocked him down. Muñoz kicked him several times in the head as he lay on the ground while the others looked on in silent approval or at least without objection. They then took the bleeding man with them to look for their third target, Alejandro Bulatao.[5]
In Alejandro's house, the group forced his wife, Juana to go with them and direct them to her husband. They found him tending to their cows with his son Pedro. Muñoz ordered Alejandro and his wife to lie down and then, even as Pedro pleaded for his father's life, shot Alejandro twice in the head, killing him instantly. Millora, Tayaba and Mislang, along with their companions, merely stood by as the brutal act was committed. Juana watched her husband's death in terror and the 12-year old boy made a desperate run for his life as one of the accused fired at him and missed.[6]
The second victim having been murdered as the first, the accused then vented their violence on Aquilino, whom Muñoz again brutally kicked as the others looked on. Aquilino was entirely defenseless. Finally, Muñoz ended the boy's agony and shot him to death, hitting him in the head and body. Muñoz and Millora then picked up all the empty shells and fled with the rest of their companions, leaving the terrified Juana with the two grisly corpses.[7]
The above events were narrated at the trial by Melecia Bulatao,[8] Mauro's daughter and Aquilino's sister; Jose Bulatao,[9] Mauro's son and Aquilino's brother; Juana Bulatao,[10] Alejandro's wife; and Pedro Bulatao,[11] their son. Their testimony was corroborated by Dr: Juanito de Vera,[12] who performed the autopsy on the three victims.
Melecia and Jose testified on the killing of their father by Marvin Millora as the other accused stood by and the mauling of their brother Aquilino before he was dragged away by the group. The trial court especially noted the straightforward account given by Jose, who positively identified Millora as the killer and described the participation of the others, including the savage kicking of his brother by Muñoz.[13] Melecia earlier pointed to Mislang as the one who had shot her father but changed her mind later on cross-examination and named Millora as the actual killer. She explained her turn-about by confessing that she had earlier agreed to exonerate Millora in exchange for the sum of P3,000.00 promised by his father although she actually did not receive the money.[14] For her part, Juana related how she was threatened with death unless she accompanied the accused to where her husband was. She narrated in detail how Alejandro was killed before her very eyes and how Aquilino was later kicked and then also shot to death, also by Muñoz, while the other accused stood by.[15] Her testimony was corroborated by Pedro, her son, whom the accused had also thought of killing because he was "talkative" and indeed was shot at when he successfully escaped after his father's murder.[16]
The defense makes much of the fact that it was only months after the killings that it occurred to these witnesses to denounce the accused and suggests that this delay should impugn their credibility. As correctly pointed out by the trial judge, however, these witnesses were naturally deterred from doing so for fear that they would meet the same fate that befell their relatives. These were humble barrio folk whose timidity did not allow them to report their grievances beyond the barrio officials they knew, more so since the higher authorities appeared to be indifferent and gave no attention, much less encouragement, to their complaints.
It is true that there were several inconsistencies in the testimony of these witnesses as painstakingly pointed out by the appellants,[17] but these are minor flaws that do not detract from the essential truthfulness of their accounts of the ruthless killings.[18]
The brutality of the murders and the veracity of the testimony of the said witnesses are emphasized by the medical reports[19] of the injuries sustained by the victims as follows:
Mauro Bulatao:The three appellants invoked individual defenses which the trial court correctly rejected as false and unbelievable. All claimed the Bulataos were killed as a result of an exchange of gunfire with a rather hazy group and each claimed he was not involved in the shoot-out.
"1. Thru and thru gunshot wound with point of entrance at the upper lip left side around 1 cm. in diameter and with the exit at the middle of the back of the head around 1-1/2 cm. in diameter.
"2. Gunshot wound at the lower lip left side of the mouth."
Alejandro Bulatao:
"1. Lacerated gunshot wound at the left eye with the whole eye practically lacerated.
"2. Lacerated gunshot wound of the right eye and the forehead practically opened with the brain tissue outside."
Aquilino Bulatao:
"1. Thru and thru gunshot wound with point of entrance at the upper right jaw bone around 1-1/2 cm. in diameter and with the exit at the middle of the back of the head around 2 cm. in diameter.
"2. Gunshot wound at the upper left shoulder out the middle of the left clavicle around 1-1/2 inches in diameter."
Testifying for Millora on the alleged encounter between the Bulataos and their adversaries, Victoriano Bacani said that the latter included Tayaba, Mislang and five others who fled from the scene in a jeep.[20]
Graciano Muñoz, corroborating Bacani, said he himself saw seven men in a jeep coming from the sound of the gunfire after he had paid Mauro P400.00 to redeem his stolen carabao.[21] Another witness for Millora, Orlando de los Santos, testified to having seen the encounter between the Bulataos and the other group and declared that the former were armed with carbines and Garand rifles.[22]
The trial court rejected Bacani's testimony because he appeared hesitant and suspicious on the stand and did not give the impression that he was telling the truth.[23] Moreover, it took him all of one year to report the alleged shooting encounter, which he also did not mention that same afternoon when he visited Mauro's family to condole with them.[24] It is also not believable that the group would flee because they had no more bullets when their supposed three adversaries were already dead in the field. The alleged redemption made by Muñoz was described by the trial court as preposterous, especially since no shred of evidence had been presented to show that Mauro was a cattle rustler, let alone his 16-year old son.[25] As for De los Santos, no firearms were discovered beside the dead bodies of the Bulataos, including Mauro, who was found not in the supposed battleground but under his house, as testified to by Dr. De Vera.[26]
Millora's own defense was that he was in Dagupan City at the time of the killings, having gone there in the evening of June 29, 1972. He claimed he had stayed there overnight with a female companion after drinking beer with Atty. Antonio Resngit, returning to San Carlos City only between 8 and 9 o'clock the following morning or June 30, 1972.[27] The lawyer corroborated him,[28] but he cannot be more credible than Mauro's own children, Jose and Melecia, who positively identified Millora as the person who actually shot their father in the face and killed him instantly. Such a traumatic experience could not have been forgotten by these witnesses who saw their father murdered without warning or mercy nor could their memory of the heartless killer have been easily wiped out from their minds.
It is stressed that Juana Bulatao and her son Pedro also categorically declared that Millora was with the group that she took to the field where her husband and Aquilino were killed by Muñoz.[29]
Tayaba and Mislang offered a common defense, also of alibi. Both claimed that Mislang having complained of cattle rustlers, a group of policemen, including Tayaba, stayed in the former's house the whole night of June 29, 1972, leaving only at 8 o'clock the following morning of June 30, 1972, after Mislang had served them breakfast.[30] Significantly, however, barrio Bacnar, were Mislang's house was located, is only two kilometers from Balite Sur.[31] Moreover, the trial court doubted the testimony given by Sgt. Lomibao, who corroborated them and spoke of having heard the gunfire narrated by Millora's witnesses. The decision noted that Lomibao was mysteriously absent when the police chief and Dr. de Vera went to the scene of the crime at 9 o'clock that morning to investigate the killings. In fact, it expressed the suspicion that Lomibao and Patrolman Liwanag, who also testified for the accused, might have been among the seven unidentified persons who were with Muñoz and the three appellants herein when the Bulataos were murdered.[32]
All told, we affirm the findings of the trial judge, who had the opportunity to observe the witnesses at the trial and assess their credibility. As we said in a previous case:
"We see no reason to reverse the factual findings of the trial judge, who had the opportunity to observe the demeanor of the witnesses and to assess their credibility. The written record will not show that nuance of tone or voice, the meaningful contract between the hesitant pause and the prompt reply, and the expression or color or tilt of face that will affirm the truth or expose the fabrication. All these subtle factors could be considered by the trial judge in weighing the conflicting declarations before him, and we do not find that he has erred."[33]We agree that the three appellants, together with Muñoz and their seven other companions, participated in the killings of the three Bulataos in the manner described by the witnesses for the prosecution. The defenses of the herein appellants should be, as they properly were, rejected as undeserving of belief in the light of the more convincing and telling evidence submitted by the government.
However, we do not accept the different, degrees of participation assigned by the court a quo, to each of the appellants in each of the three offenses imputed to them. In Criminal Case No. 0176, Millora was found guilty as principal and Muñoz and the other two herein appellants only accomplices, and in Criminal Case Nos. 0177 and 0178, Muñoz was found guilty as principal and the herein appellants only as accomplices.[34] In support of this finding, the trial court said that there was no evidence of conspiracy to justify holding each of the accused equally liable for the three murders.
We hold that there was. Indeed, it is clear that from the very start, when the eleven men went out to look for the suspected cattle rustlers, there was already an agreement among them to ferret out and punish the Bulataos whom they had condemned beforehand. They knew whom they were looking for. They knew where to look for them. They sought each of them with drawn and ready weapons. When they reached Mauro Bulatao's house, four of them went inside while the rest deployed themselves in strategic positions. When Millora shot Mauro, the appellants and the others stood by with guns at the ready. Nobody moved to dissuade or stop him. Together they dragged Aquilino from the house and the rest watched while Muñoz kicked him in the head while helpless on the ground. Together, they took him with them and then forced Juana Bulatao to lead them to her husband. The rest stood by with their weapons as Muñoz shot Alejandro in the head. No one interceded to stop him from also killing Aquilino. There is no question that the group moved in concert, pursuing a common design previously agreed upon, that made each of them part of a conspiracy.[35] As such, each of them is liable in equal degree with the others for each of the three killings. Each member of the conspiracy to commit the crime of murder is guilty as a co-principal, regardless of who actually pulled the trigger that killed the three victims. It is settled that in a conspiracy the act of one is the act of all.[36]
Each of the three killings constituted the crime of murder, qualified by alevosia. There was treachery because every one of the three victims was completely helpless and defenseless when shot and killed by the accused with no risk to themselves. Mauro was completely taken by surprise when he was shot in the face. Alejandro was lying down when he was shot in the head. Aquilino was seated when he was shot in the head and shoulders. None of the three victims had a chance to resist.
The penalty for murder under Article 248 of the Revised Penal Code was reclusion temporal in its maximum period to death, but this was modified by Article III, Section 19 (1) of the 1987 Constitution providing as follows:
"Excessive fines shall not be imposed, nor cruel, degrading or inhuman punishment inflicted. Neither shall death penalty be imposed, unless, for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes, the Congress hereafter provides for it. Any death penalty already imposed shall be reduced to reclusion perpetua."Conformably, the Court has since February 2, 1987 not imposed the death penalty whenever it was called for under the said article but instead reduced the same to reclusion perpetua as mandated by the above provision. The maximum period of the penalty was thus in effect lowered to the medium, the same period applied, as before, where the offense was not attended by any modifying circumstance, with the minimum period, i.e., reclusion temporal maximum, being still applicable in all other cases. The three-grade scheme of the original penalty, including death, was thus maintained except that the maximum period was not imposed because of the constitutional prohibition.
In People v. Gavarra,[37] Justice Pedro L. Yap declared for the Court that "in view of the abolition of the death penalty under Section 19, Article III of the 1987 Constitution, the penalty that may be imposed for murder is reclusion temporal in its maximum period to reclusion perpetua," thereby eliminating death as the original maximum period. Later, without categorically saying so, the Court, through Justice Ameurfina A. Melencio-Herrera in People v. Masangkay[38] and through Justice Andres R. Narvasa in People v. Atencio,[39] divided the modified penalty into three new periods, the limits of which were specified by Justice Edgardo L. Paras in People v. Intino,[40] as follows: the lower half of reclusion temporal maximum as the minimum; the upper half of reclusion temporal maximum as the medium; and reclusion perpetua as the maximum.
The Court has reconsidered the above cases and, after extended discussion, come to the conclusion that the doctrine announced therein does not reflect the intention of the framers as embodied in Article III, Section 19(1) of the Constitution. This conclusion is not unanimous, to be sure. Indeed, there is much to be said of the opposite view, which was in fact shared by many of those now voting for its reversal. The majority of the Court, however, is of the belief that the original interpretation should be restored as the more acceptable reading of the constitutional provision in question.
The advocates of the Masangkay ruling argue that the Constitution abolished the death penalty and thereby limited the penalty for murder to the remaining periods, to wit, the minimum and the medium. These should now be divided into three new periods in keeping with the three-grade scheme intended by the legislature. Those who disagree feel that Article III, Section 19(1) merely prohibits the imposition of the death penalty and has not, by reducing it to reclusion perpetua, also correspondingly reduced the remaining penalties. These should be maintained intact.
A reading of Section 19(1) of Article III will readily show that there is really nothing therein which expressly declares the abolition of the death penalty. The provision merely says that the death penalty shall not be imposed unless for compelling reasons involving heinous crimes the Congress hereafter provides for it and, if already imposed, shall be reduced to reclusion perpetua. The language, while rather awkward, is still plain enough. And it is a settled rule of legal hermeneutics that if the language under consideration is plain, it is neither necessary nor permissible to resort to extrinsic aids, like the records of the constitutional convention, for its interpretation.[41]
At that, the Court finds that such resort, even if made, would not be of much assistance either in the case at bar. Accepting arguendo that it was the intention of the framers to abolish the death penalty, we are still not convinced from the debates in the Constitutional Commission that there was also a requirement to adjust the two remaining periods by dividing them into three shorter periods. This is not a necessary consequence of the provision as worded. The following exchange cited by those in favor of Masangkay is at best thought-provoking but not decisive of the question:
"FR. BERNAS: The effect is the abolition of the death penalty from those statutes - only the death penalty. The statute is not abolished, but the penalty is abolished.So there we have it - "this is a matter which lawyers can argue with judges about." Assuming that Commissioner Bernas's answer reflected the consensus of the body, we are still not persuaded that it was the intention of the framers to lower not only the maximum period but also the other periods of the original penalty. That is not necessarily inferable from his statement that "the judges will be equal to their task," especially so since he also said - and we think with more definiteness - that "all we are saying is that the judges cannot impose the death penalty" (italics supplied). We understand this to mean that they were not saying more.
"MR. MAAMBONG: That is what I am worried about, because the statutes, especially in the General Criminal Law, which is the Revised Penal Code, do not necessarily punish directly with death. Sometimes it has a range of reclusion temporal to death or reclusion perpetua to death. And what would be the effect on the judges, for example, if the range is reclusion temporal to death and he can no longer impose the death penalty? He will have difficulty in computing the degrees.
"Could the committee enlighten us on how the judge will look at the specific situation.
"FR. BERNAS: I grant that the judges will have difficulty, but I suppose that the judges will be equal to their tasks. The only thing is, if there is a range, the range cannot go as far as death (Record, CONCOM, July 18, 1986, Vol. I, 749).
"FR. BERNAS: Certainly, the penalties lower than death remain.
"MR. REGALADO: That would be reclusion perpetua. But the range of the penalty for murder consists of three periods. The maximum period of reclusion temporal under the present status is the minimum period for the penalty for murder. The medium period is reclusion perpetua. The maximum period is death. If we now remove the death penalty, we will, therefore, have a range of penalty of 17 years, 4 months and 1 day to 20 years of reclusion temporal up to reclusion perpetua. You cannot divide reclusion perpetua into two. While it has a duration of 30 years, it is an indivisible penalty. Where do we get the medium period now until such time that Congress gets around to accommodate this amendment?
"FR. BERNAS: As I said, this is a matter which lawyers can argue with judges about. All we are saying is, the judges cannot impose the death penalty (Records, CONCOM July 18, 1986, Vol. I, p. 750)."
The question as we see it is not whether the framers intended to abolish the death penalty or merely to prevent its imposition. Whatever the intention was, what we should determine is whether or not they also meant to require a corresponding modification in the other periods as a result of the prohibition against the death penalty.
It is definite that such a requirement, if there really was one, is not at all expressed in Article III, Section 19(1) of the Constitution or indicated therein by at least clear and unmistakable implication. It would have been so easy, assuming such intention, to state it categorically and plainly, leaving no doubt as to its meaning. One searches in vain for such a statement, express or even implied. The writer of this opinion makes the personal observation that this might be still another instance where the framers meant one thing and said another or - strangely, considering their loquacity elsewhere - did not say enough.
The original ruling as applied in the Gavarra, Masangkay, Atencio and Intino cases represented the unanimous thinking of the Court as it was then constituted. All but two members[42] at that time still sit on the Court today. If we have seen fit to take a second look at the doctrine on which we were all agreed before, it is not because of a change in the composition of this body. It is virtually the same Court that is changing its mind after reflecting on the question again in the light of new perspectives. And well it might, and can, for the tenets it lays down are not immutable. The decisions of this Court are not petrified rules grown rigid once pronounced but vital, growing things subject to change as all life is. While we are told that the trodden path is best, this should not prevent us from opening a fresh trail or exploring the other side or testing a new idea in a spirit of continuing inquiry.
Accordingly, with the hope that "as judges, (we) will be equal to (our) tasks," whatever that means, we hereby reverse the current doctrine providing for three new periods for the penalty for murder as reduced by the Constitution. Instead, we return to our original interpretation and hold that Article III, Section 19(1) does not change the periods of the penalty prescribed by Article 248 of the Revised Penal Code except only insofar as it prohibits the imposition of the death penalty and reduces it to reclusion perpetua. The range of the medium and minimum penalties remains unchanged.
The Court realizes that this interpretation may lead to certain inequities that would not have arisen under Article 248 of the Revised Penal Code before its modification. Thus, a person originally subject to the death penalty and another who committed the murder without the attendance of any modifying circumstance will now be both punishable with the same medium period although the former is concededly more guilty than the latter. True enough. But that is the will not of this Court but of the Constitution. That is a question of wisdom, not construction. Of some relevance perhaps is the parable in the Bible of the workman who was paid the stipulated daily wage of one penny although he had worked longer than others hired later in the day but also paid the same amount. When be complained because he felt unjustly treated by the householder, the latter replied: "Friend, I do you no wrong. Did you not agree with me for a penny?"
The problem in any event is addressed not to this Court but to the Congress. Penalties are prescribed by statute and are essentially and exclusively legislative. As judges, we can only interpret and apply them and have no authority to modify them or revise their range as determined exclusively by the legislature. We should not encroach on this prerogative of the lawmaklng body.
Coming back to the case at bar, we find that there being no generic aggravating or mitigating circumstance attending the commission of the offenses, the applicable sentence is the medium period of the penalty prescribed by Article 248 of the Revised Penal Code which, conformably to the new doctrine here adopted and announced, is still reclusion perpetua. This is the penalty we impose on all the accused-appellants for each of the three murders they have committed in conspiracy with the others. The award of civil indemnity for the heirs of each of the victims is affirmed but the amount thereof is hereby increased to P30,000.00 in line with the present policy.
It remains to observe that the crimes inflicted upon the humble farmers would have remained unpunished were it not for the vigilance of certain responsible officials, especially the police and the prosecuting officer, who took up the cudgels for the victims' families. The courage and conscientiousness they displayed are still the most potent weapons against those who, in their arrogance, believe that they can flout the law and frustrate justice because they have the protection of powerful patrons.
WHEREFORE, the appealed decision is MODIFIED and all the accused-appellants are hereby declared guilty as principals in Criminal Case Nos. 0176, 0177 and 0178. Each of them is sentenced to suffer three (3) penalties of reclusion perpetua, and to pay solidarily to the heirs of their victims civil indemnity in the sum of P30,000.00 for each of the deceased, or a total indemnity of P90,000,00, with costs.
SO ORDERED.
Fernan, C. J, Gutierrez, Jr., Feliciano, Gancayco, Padilla, Bidin, Griño-Aquino, and Medialdea, JJ., concur.
Melencio-Herrera, J., with separate concurring and dissenting opinion.
Narvasa, Sarmiento, and Cortes, JJ., joins Mme. Justice Herrera in her separate opinion.
Paras, and Regalado, JJ., concur. in the dissent of Justice Amuerfina Herrera.
[1] Decision was penned by Judge Himerio B. Garcia, Circuit Criminal Court, Judicial District, Dagupan City, Rollo, pp. 28-58.
[2] Consolidated Brief for the Appellee, p. 5, Rollo, p. 296.
[3] Rollo, p. 28.
[4] TSNs, May 16, 1973, pp. 40-45; May 23, 1973, pp. 181-189.
[5] Ibid., pp 45-48; Id., 190-194.
[6] TSNs, May 18, 1973, pp. 124-128; May 24, 1973, pp. 231-236, 258-259.
[7] Ibid. pp. 128-131; Id., p. 236.
[8] TSNs, May 16, 1973, pp.39-71; May 17, 1973, pp. 76-104.
[9] TSN, May 23, 1973, pp. 180-221.
[10] TSN, May 24, 1973, pp. 230-269.
[11] TSNs, May 18, 1973, pp. 119-146; May 23, 1973, pp. 151-178.
[12] TSN, May 16, 1973, pp. 7-39.
[13] Decision, Rollo, pp. 38-39.
[14] TSN, May 17, 1973, pp. 102-103.
[15] TSN, May 24, 1973, pp. 230-236.
[16] TSN, May 18, 1973, pp. 124-132.
[17] Brief for accused-appellant Marvin Millora, Rollo, pp. 243-254; Brief for accused-appellant Tomas Tayaba, pp. 15-33; Rollo, p. 193; Brief for accused-appellant Jose Mislang, pp. 8-10, Rollo, p. 212.
[18] People v. Abigan, 144 SCRA 130; People v. Bautista, 142 SCRA 649; People v. Valentino, 141 SCRA 397; People v. Arbois, 138 SCRA 24; People v. Pacabes, 137 SCRA 158.
[19] Exch. "A," Records of Crim. Case No. III-0176, p. 88, Exch "A," Records of Crim. Case No. III-0177, p. 43; Exh. "A," Records of Crim. Case No. III-0178, p. 40.
[20] TSN, June 11, 1973, pp. 351-353.
[21] TSN, July 25, 1973, pp. 388-394.
[22] Ibid., pp. 427-432.
[23] Decision, Rollo, p. 43.
[24] Ibid.
[25] Id., pp. 43-44.
[26] Id., p. 43; TSN, May 16, 1973, pp. 23-24.
[27] TSN, December 20, 1973, pp. 473-478.
[28] Ibid., pp. 502-505.
[29] TSNs, May 24, 1973, pp. 231-233, 236; May 18, 1973, pp. 126-127, 131.
[30] TSN, January 30, 1974, pp. 627-631; January 31, 1974, pp. 672-678.
[31] TSN, January 29, 1974, p. 597.
[32] Decision, Rollo, pp. 47-50.
[33] People v. Guardo, et al., G.R. No. L-42965, December 3, 1987.
[34] Decision, Rollo, pp. 55-58.
[35] Consolidated Brief for the Appellee, pp. 45-46, Rollo, p. 296.
[36] People v. Punzalan, 153 SCRA 1; People v. Liza, 152 SCRA 318; People v. Serante, 152 SCRA 510; People v. Rojas, 147 SCRA 169; People v. Loren, 130 SCRA 311.
[37] 155 SCRA 327.
[38] 155 SCRA 113.
[39] 156 SCRA 242.
[40] L-69934, September 26, 1988.
[41] 16 C. J. S. 67-68.
[42] Chief Justice Teehankee and Chief Justice Yap.