People vs. Allison
People vs. Allison
People vs. Allison
SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC
G.R. No. L-30612 May 3, 1983
THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs.
BONIFACIO ALISON, JUANITO ALERTA, ENRICO CABATINGAN, AQUINO ALVAREZ, PABLO
MENDOZA, ROMULO CABATINGAN, PEDRO GALUPO, IdOLES CORO, NAZALITO SUBING
-SUBING GERARDO SANTIAGO and DOMINADOR ALERTA, defendants-appellants.
The Solicitor General for plaintiff-appellee.
Manuel & Tonogbanua counsel de oficio for defendants-appellants.
RELOVA, J.:
This case is before Us for the review of the decision of the Court of First Instance of Quezon, Branch
IV, in Criminal Case No. C-351, dated January 3, 1969, the dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing, the four (4) accused AQUINO ALVAREZ,
ENRICO CABATINGAN, JUANITO ALERTA and PABLO MENDOZA are hereby
CONVICTED with the crime as charged, because their guilt has been proven beyond
reasonable doubt, and they are hereby punished to death by electrocution, pursuant
to Art. 299 in relation with Arts. 248, 6, 48 and 51 of the Revised Penal Code, as
amended by Republic Acts Nos. 12 and 18; while the seven (7) other accused,
namely: DOMINADOR ALERTA, BONIFACIO ALISON, IdOLES CORO, NASALITO
SUBING-SUBING, ROMULO CABATINGAN, GERARDO SANTIAGO and PEDRO
GALUPO, considering their lesser degree of participation and their guilt equally
proven beyond reasonable doubt, are hereby CONVICTED and to suffer
imprisonment for life or cadena perpetua.; hereby ordering the eleven (11) accused
to indemnify the heirs of SGT. GREGORIO CALNEA, and CPL. ALFREDO
LLANTINO, the amount of TWELVE THOUSAND (P12,000.00) PESOS for each
victim, or a total of TWENTY FOUR THOUSAND (P24,000.00) PESOS, to be
divided pro rata among them, but without subsidiary imprisonment in case of
insolvency; and, to reimburse Juanito Uy the amount of FOUR THOUSAND THREE
HUNDRED THIRTY (P4,330.00) PESOS, and the heirs of Sgt. Gregorio Calnea as
well as Capt. Plaridel M. Abaya himself the amount of NINE HUNDRED EIGHTY
(P980.00) PESOS, or a grand total of FIVE THOUSAND THREE HUNDRED TEN
(P5,310.00) PESOS, in Philippine currency, (representing the cash and articles
robbed), with costs de oficio.
On February 20, 1979, this Court issued a resolution as follows: "The motion of accused-appellants
Nasalito Subing-Subing and Dominador Alerta, withdrawing their appeal in this case, is GRANTED."
Likewise, on September 22, 1970, this Court issued this resolution: "The motion of appellants Idoles
Coro and Gerardo Santiago praying that they be allowed to withdraw their appeal in this case, is
GRANTED."
And, on April 27, 1972, the case against appellant Bonifacio Alison was dismissed on the ground that
on January 26, 1972, he died. "The death of accused-appellant Bonifacio Alison having been
established and considering that there is as yet no final judgment in view of the pendency of the
appeal, the criminal and civil liability of said accused-appellant Alison was extinguished by his death
(Resolution, G.R. No. 30612, April 27, 1972).
" Thus, this appeal concerns Juanita Alerta, Enrico Cabatingan, Aquino Alvarez, Pablo Mendoza,
Romulo Cabatingan and Pedro Galupo only.
Records show that on May 3, 1966, the Office of the Provincial Fiscal of Quezon filed an amended
information for the crime of robbery in band with double murder and attempted murder against
twelve (12) persons, namely: Juanito Alerta, Dominador Alerta, Enrico Cabatingan, Bonifacio Alison,
Idoles Coro, Aquino Alvarez, Pablo Mendoza, Nazalito Subing-Subing, Romulo Cabatingan, Gerardo
Santiago, Pedro Galupo and Valeriano Jimenez. The last named accused, Valeriano Jimenez, was
discharged with his consent from the information, upon motion of the prosecuting fiscal and made a
state witness.
On March 17, 1966, the abovenamed defendants met together in Burias Island and there planned to
rob Juanito Uy, who was known to be wealthy. Valeriano Jimenez was to guide the group of the Uy's
residence in San Narciso, Quezon because, being a tenant of the latter, he knew the place.
The plan was, Aquino Alvarez, Enrico Cabatingan, Juanito Alerta, and Pablo Mendoza would enter
the house of the intended victim, and execute the robbery; and the rest were to form an armed
cordon around the premises.
The group left in a pump boat of Pablo Mendoza from Burias Island to San Narciso at about 6:00 in
the afternoon of March 17, 1966. They reached San Narciso about midnight of the same day. On the
way, Enrico Cabatingan distributed the firearms which would be used in the commission of the crime.
Upon reaching San Narciso, the group went to the Uy's residence, leaving Pedro Galupo at the
wharf to guard the boat.
As Valeriano Jimenez was familiar with the place because he had been there several times before,
he, together with the group, climbed over the fence and he pointed to them the backdoor of the
house through the stairs. They drilled a hole on the door of the kitchen and, thereafter, Juanito Alerta
told Jimenez to return to the boat so that he would not be Identified.
It was about 1:00 in the morning of March 18, 1966 when Juanito Uy was awakened by persons who
said: "Gising, gising, PC ito," following which one of the armed men asked him: PC ka ba?" Uy
answered: "Hindi po." The armed men then tied up Uy's hands and he was asked where his guests,
the PC men, were sleeping. Threatened and coerced, he pointed the room, which was then lighted
with a native gas lamp, of PC Lt. Plaridel Abaya, PC Sgt. Gregorio Calnea and PC Cpl. Alfredo
Llantino. Pushing the door open, one of the armed men shouted: "Huwag lalaban, huwag kikilos,"
and immediately Enrico Cabatingan, Aquino Alvarez, Pablo Mendoza and Juanito Alerta commenced
firing. Aquino Alvarez then approached Lt. Abaya's bed and said: "Ito PC rin? Papatayin ko na. "
Juanito Alerta replied: " Huwag."
Lieutenant Abaya's hands, like Juanito Uy's were hogtied, after which they were taken down the
ground floor of the residence where the safe was located. Uy was ordered to open it and then
ordered to lie face down on the cement floor. The men got the money and even remarked that the
amount was not much.
The men brought Uy outside his residence and was ordered to go with them to the wharf. As they
ran, Juanita Uy was directed to shout, repeatedly: "I am Juanito, policemen, PC, don't fight." Upon
reaching the wharf and before the men boarded the boat, Juanito was made to lie face down.
Upon his return to his residence, Juanito found papers scattered on the floor, one of the PC men
already dead and the other hovering between life and death. He discovered that the group had taken
P3,500.00 from the safe, his .22 caliber magnum revolver and wallet containing personal papers and
some cash.
Philippine Constabulary Sgt. Gregorio Calnea and Cpl. Alfredo Llantino died of severe hemorrhage
due to multiple gunshot wounds in the chest, abdomen, head and other parts of the body, all of
which according to Dr. Ziegfredo Cabungkal and Dr. Hilarion Tan, Jr. were caused by different
weapons.
Herein appellants were arrested in Masbate in the last week of April 1966. Their extra judicial
statements, wherein they admitted their participation in the incident, were taken and sworn to before
City Judge Aquilino Villanueva.
The defense is alibi, the appellants c g that on March 17, and 18, 1966 they were in Masbate and
therefore had nothing to do with the robbery and death of the two (2) PC soldiers in San Narciso,
Quezon; that upon their arrest they were hogtied and maltreated by the PC soldiers who forced them
to sign prepared statements; and that the arresting officers were accompanied by Valeriano Jimenez
from whom they inquired why he pointed to them and Jimenez answered that he could no longer
endure the punishment inflicted upon him by the PC soldiers.
After consideration of all the evidence presented and relying on the testimonies of eyewitnesses
Juanito Uy, PC Lt. Plaridel Abaya and Valeriano Jimenez, the trial court disregarded the alibi
interposed by the appellants and convicted them of the crane charge, saying:
With the foregoing principles as our guidelines, may we register our observation that
practically all witnesses for the accused have invoked the defense of alibi and that
their affidavits or extrajudicial confessions were allegedly extracted thru
maltreatment, so that may we quote the following doctrines: 'Alibi is one of the
weakest defenses that can be resorted to by an accused. Either or both of the
following reasons were used by the Supreme Court in rejecting the defense of alibi.
(1) the place where the accused claimed he was at the time of the commission of the
offense was not of such a distance from the place of commission as to make it
impossible for him to be at the latter place at or about the tune of the commission of
the crime; and (2) positive Identification of the accused by witnesses.
Illustrating the first is the case of People vs. Secapuri, which held that 'for the
defense of alibi to succeed, it should be shown to the satisfaction of a prudent mind
that the distance between the places where the accused claimed to be and where
the crime was committed is such that it would have been clearly impossible for him to
be at the latter at the time of the crime. (G. R. No. 21419, September 29, 1966, et al.
In this case the place of origin of the accused is Masbate, an island that is about 4 to
5 hours to traverse up to San Narciso, Quezon by pump-boat of Pablo Mendoza.
An extra-judicial confession made by an accused, shag not be sufficient ground for
conviction, unless corroborated by evidence of corpus delicti.
What is meant by' evidence of corpus delicti? This phrase was explained by the
Supreme Court in the case of People v. Abrera, when it pointed out that 'the rule that
an extrajudicial confession to be sufficient must be corroborated by evidence
of corpus delicti does not mean that all the elements of the crime must be clearly
established by evidence independent of that confession. It only means that there
should be some evidence tending to show the commission of the crime apart from
the confession. (G.R. No. 18760, September 29, 1966). There is no doubt that the
corroborative testimonies of the government witnesses, except for minor details
substantiate the facts contained in the affidavits of the accused which are all true.
xxx xxx xxx
In this case, some of the accused were not only investigated by PC soldiers, but also
by Fiscals Jose Veluz Jr., and Celso B. Florido in the Office of the Provincial Fiscal of
Quezon, and one by one tile affiants were sworn to inside the room of Lucena City
Judge Aquilino Villanueva. If they were truly maltreated and forced into signing their
statements they had all the opportunity to complain. Besides, they had counsel
departe who failed to appear during the investigation although he promised to come.
Their silence, therefore, militates against their clamour that they were punished."
(Decision, pp. 65-69, January 3, 1969)
Hereunder is the testimony of Juanito Uy:
Q Can you Identify these people who entered your room if they are
shown to you?
A Yes, sir, but not all of them.
Q How many could you possibly Identify if they are shown to you?
A Two (2).
Q If they are around the courtroom will you please point to them,
please look over the room?
(At this juncture, the witness is going down the witness stand and pointing to the
accused who when asked their names answered 'Aquino Alvarez' then witness also
pointed to one of the accused who gave his name as Pablo Mendoza.
ATTY. BALBIN:
Q Who among these two (2) focused his flashlight to you?
A Pablo Mendoza.
COURT:
Q Who pointed the gun to you?
A Aquino Alvarez and Pablo Mendoza with a flashlight and a gun.
COURT:
Next question.
ATTY. BALBIN:
Q What kind of firearm was Pablo Mendoza holding?
A A short firearm.
Q How about Alvarez what kind of did he hold?
A A long firearm.
Q How about the other fellow whom you said you could not
recognize?
A A long firearm.
Q After that what was done to you?
Atty. MARTINEZ:
Leading, your Honor.
COURT:
Other question.
ATTY. BALBIN:
Q What happened next?
A While I was told to lie and face downward they tore my undershirt
which they used in hogtying me.
COURT:
Q What portion of your body was tied?
A My two (2) hands.
ATTY. BALBIN:
Q Now, what happened next?
A Afterwards they stood me up and asked me where is the PC and I
told them over there.
Q After that will you please tell this Honorable Court what happened
next?
A They were ordering me to open the room and because I could not
open the room, one of them open the room.
Q Who particularly opened the room and how was it opened?
A I do not remember.
Q How?
A They just open with their hands.
ATTY. BALBIN:
Q Now, do you know that one of them was able to open the door?
COURT:
Q Wait a minute, what happened when the door was opened?
A One of them shouted 'Don't move Huwag lalaban huwag kikilos,"
after that Aquino Alvarez fired at them, at the PC men.
ATTY. BALBIN:
Q What happened next?
A I saw a PC trying to grab the gun of one of the 3 men and one fell
from the bed to the floor and Lt. Abaya's right hand was at his nape
while lying down in his bed.
COURT:
Q And then what happened?
A One was taking me downstairs and that he took my eyeglasses
inside the room and then put them on me, and then we went
downstairs.
Q What else happened next?
A Afterwards they ordered me to open the safe, which I opened and
then ordered me to lie face down on cement floor. (TSN, pp. 13-16,
July 22, 1966 hearing).
and of Lt. Plaridel Abaya:
Q When you were awakened by the indiscriminate firing at Sgt.
Calnea and Cpl. Llantino who were sleeping then, what happened
next?
A After the tremendous gun fire one of the armed men approached
me and said 'Ito PC rin, papatayin ko na'
COURT: (Interrupts)
Wait a minute which in English means 'This one is also PC, I win kill
him now.'
SPECIAL COUNSEL FLORIDO: (answers the Court)
However, the defense contends, and rightly so, that if at all, Romulo Cabatingan and Pedro Galupo
should have not been convicted of the complex crime of robbery in band with double murder and
attempted murder because from the testimony of defendant Jimenez, who turned state witness, the
plan was only to rob Juanito Uy and the killing of the PC soldiers came about only when Aquino
Alvarez, Enrico Cabatingan, Juanito Alerta and Pablo Mendoza entered the room where the victims
were sleeping. Otherwise stated, the killing or the assault upon the PC soldiers were not known to
the other accused who were left outside to guard the premises and to Pedro Galupo who stayed in
the pumpboat. The crime committed by these two appellants Romulo Cabatingan and Pedro Galupo
is only robbery in band, attended by the aggravating circumstances of nighttime and evident
premeditation, punishable by prision mayor in its medium period.
With respect to appellants Aquino Alvarez, Enrico Cabatingan, Juanito Alerta, and Pablo Mendoza
who were sentenced to "death by electrocution", for lack of necessary votes, each is hereby
sentenced to the next lower penalty of reclusion perpetual.
WHEREFORE, as modified in the sense that Aquino Alvarez, Enrico Cabatingan, Juanito Alerta and
Pablo Mendoza are each sentenced to suffer reclusion perpetua and that Romulo Cabatingan and
Pedro Galupo are each sentenced to SEVEN (7) YEARS, FOUR (4) MONTHS and ONE (1) DAY, as
minimum to TEN YEARS of prision mayor, as maximum, the appealed judgment is hereby
AFFIRMED in all other respects.
SO ORDERED.
Teehankee, Makasiar, Concepcion, Jr., Guerrero, Abad Santos, De Castro, Melencio-Herrera,
Plana, Escolin, Vasquez, and Gutierrez, Jr., JJ., concur.
Aquino, J, took no part.
Fernando, C.J., is on official leave.