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[US v. AGAPITO BIRAY](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/cfe7?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. 6569, Mar 12, 1910 ]

US v. AGAPITO BIRAY +

DECISION

17 Phil. 584

[ G. R. No. 6569, March 12, 1910 ]

THE UNITED STATES, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. AGAPITO BIRAY, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT.

D E C I S I O N

MORELAND, J.:

The defendant was  convicted  of the  crime of  robbery with homicide in the Court of First Instance of the Province of Misamis and sentenced to death, there having been found present in the commission of the crime several aggravating circumstances.   The case  comes to  us en consulta.

The court below found clearly and conclusively proved the  following facts, using the language of his decision:

"On or about the 12th day of June, 1908, in Casol, barrio of Baliangao, municipality of Langaran, Province of Misamis, Rafaela Magusara, her niece Francisca Magusara, two children  of the latter, the elder of  whom was 11 years of age,  named  Hilario, Bonifacio  Palot and  Mateo Uraga occupied a house of light materials located in an  isolated place. While there were three neighboring houses in  that vicinity,  they were so  far away that a cry made at the house in  question could  not be heard at either of the others. On the day named, at about 2 o'clock  in the morning, the accused and two  companions, dressed  in black, he and one companion wearing red chevrons on  their cuffs, entered the house in question.  They were  all armed with daggers, bolos, and revolvers.  The accused, who appeared to be the leader,  called to the household in the name of the law. They awoke and lighted a lamp.   The accused entered the house and  immediately compelled Bonifacio and Mateo to go  outside,  striking said Bonifacio  with a tail  of a fish called 'ray'  as he passed out.  On passing out they  were instantly seized and bound  together by those outside and one of  their  captors conducted them  to a field of hemp near by.  The accused  compelled Francisca Magusara and her two children  to sit  ctown in the  house, threatening them with death if they moved.  He and  his companion then placed a rope around the waist of Rafaela Magusara, threw it over a rafter in the  house, and  seizing the end thereof, they raised and lowered her, and permitted her to violently drop to the floor several times, for the purpose of compelling her to disclose where her  money was hidden. They then unbound her  and  took her with them to another part of the house  separated from the  others  by  a curtain  of matting, where  they  broke open trunks  and appropriated  the contents, including her money.  In the meantime Francisca and her  children  escaped from the house, taking different directions.  On  the following day they were found in the forest.  Some moments after  their escape Rafaela Magusara, still conducted by  her captors, passed near  the place  where Bonifacio and  Mateo  were being detained in the  direction of the  seashore  opposite the little island of Murcielagos, called also Cagban. When the accused passed near where Bonifacio and Mateo  were detained, he called to the one who was guarding them to go  to the house and get a bag  of money  which he  had forgotten, he  himself standing guard  over the prisoners, who were about 10 meters distant.  Bonifacio availed  himself of this  opportunity to loosen  the rope with which he and Mateo were bound,  telling the latter to escape.  Mateo fled in the  direction of a forest, while Bonifacio, being lame, was able to go only a short distance, where he hid himself  beneath some dry hemp leaves.  When the accused was told of the  escape  of  Bonifacio and Mateo, he said that they  ought  to have killed them in order that they might not  reveal  what had been done.  On the fourth day after,  the  corpse of Rafaela  was found  on  the beach of Cagban with two stones tied  to the waist, floating on the water, 1 yard deep.  The body was substantially nude, with a strip of the skirt on the waist.  One  foot was gone and there  were several  serious wounds on  the  body,  among others, one near the navel, from which protruded a portion of the intestines.  The right arm and forearm were covered with wounds.

" We have carefully examined the evidence adduced at the trial and are thoroughly  satisfied that the court below was quite correct in his conclusions as to the  facts proved.  The guilt of the defendant is  proved beyond a reasonable doubt. In addition to  the  evidence of the persons who were in the house at the time the robbery and homicide were  committed and  who testify directly to the  commission of the one and circumstantially to the other,  the  testimony  of Florencia Gumiter corroborates and fortifies the case against the accused in  a  manner that leaves no  room for doubt. She had been a servant in the house of the accused for some  time  prior  to the  commission of  the  crime.  She testified that prior to the crime she made for the accused, at his order, the  red sleeves which  the other witnesses testified he wore the night of the crime; that on Thursday before the  night of the crime he, accompanied by two other men, left  home taking with him the said sleeves and a kris; that the other two were also armed; that on Saturday at about 3 o'clock in the afternoon two of them returned; that one of them carried some money in a handkerchief; that there were blood stains  on some  of their weapons and on their clothes; that the day following, the witness and the wife of the accused washed the blood out  of the garments of the accused; that at the order of the accused, one Guillermo took the  money thus  brought to Misamis to change it for other money; that the  accused, after his return,  did  not stay  at  the house, but remained in the forest in hiding, charging the witness that if anyone came looking  for  him she  should say that he had returned  to his pueblo; that some days  after the crime the wife of the accused  returned from Oroquieta, where she had  been  to attend church, and told her  husband that they were looking for  him; that  thereupon the accused became very  much frightened, and leaving the house ran to the woods; that on Tuesday  following he and his companions  started for the Island of Siquijor on a very rainy night.

The evidence fully justifying the conviction, and  there being  no error in the record  of which the accused  may complain, the judgment of the trial court is affirmed with costs against the appellant.

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

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