1. Benedicto Dapitan and Fred de Guzman robbed and killed 8-year old Rolando Amil in Rizal, Philippines in 1986. Dapitan was tried and found guilty of robbery with homicide.
2. Dapitan appealed the decision, arguing that the trial court erred by not applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law in his favor. However, the Supreme Court found that Dapitan was not deprived of due process during his trial.
3. The Supreme Court affirmed the trial court's decision, but increased the civil indemnity awarded to the victim's heirs from 30,000 pesos to 50,000 pesos in line with previous rulings. The
1. Benedicto Dapitan and Fred de Guzman robbed and killed 8-year old Rolando Amil in Rizal, Philippines in 1986. Dapitan was tried and found guilty of robbery with homicide.
2. Dapitan appealed the decision, arguing that the trial court erred by not applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law in his favor. However, the Supreme Court found that Dapitan was not deprived of due process during his trial.
3. The Supreme Court affirmed the trial court's decision, but increased the civil indemnity awarded to the victim's heirs from 30,000 pesos to 50,000 pesos in line with previous rulings. The
1. Benedicto Dapitan and Fred de Guzman robbed and killed 8-year old Rolando Amil in Rizal, Philippines in 1986. Dapitan was tried and found guilty of robbery with homicide.
2. Dapitan appealed the decision, arguing that the trial court erred by not applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law in his favor. However, the Supreme Court found that Dapitan was not deprived of due process during his trial.
3. The Supreme Court affirmed the trial court's decision, but increased the civil indemnity awarded to the victim's heirs from 30,000 pesos to 50,000 pesos in line with previous rulings. The
1. Benedicto Dapitan and Fred de Guzman robbed and killed 8-year old Rolando Amil in Rizal, Philippines in 1986. Dapitan was tried and found guilty of robbery with homicide.
2. Dapitan appealed the decision, arguing that the trial court erred by not applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law in his favor. However, the Supreme Court found that Dapitan was not deprived of due process during his trial.
3. The Supreme Court affirmed the trial court's decision, but increased the civil indemnity awarded to the victim's heirs from 30,000 pesos to 50,000 pesos in line with previous rulings. The
Download as DOCX, PDF, TXT or read online from Scribd
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 2
CRIM PRO
Title GR No. 90625
People v. Dapitan Date: May 23, 1991 Ponente: DAVIDE, JR., J. PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee BENEDICTO DAPITAN y MARTIN, @ "Benny" and FRED DE GUZMAN, accused. BENEDICTO DAPITAN y MARTIN @ "Benny", accused-appellant Nature of the case: Appeal from the Decision of the Regional Trial Court finding the accused-appellant guilty of the crime of Robbery with Homicide. FACTS Case timeline: 1. May 16, 1986 – in the Province of Rizal, Benedicto Dapitan and Fred de Guzman, armed and with intent to gain, robbed/stole watches, a pair of long pants and cash money belonging to Orencia E. Amil. On the occasion of the robbery, Dapitan and Guzman assaulted and employed personal violence upon Rolando Amil (8 year old child) by stabbing him on the neck and hitting him several times on the head with a piece of wood to prevent him from making an outcry, which directly caused his death. 2. Only Dapital was tried. His co-accused, Guzman, remained at large and the court ordered the archival of the case as against him, to be revived upon his arrest. 3. November 25, 1986 – Dapitan, with the assistance of counsel de oficio Atty. Magsanoc, entered a plea of not guilty. 4. February 10, 1987 – new counsel de oficio Atty. Gabriel Alberto manifested that the acused had expresed to him the desire to enter a plea guilty to a lesser offense. It appears that there are two mitigating circumstances that maybe applied. 5. On various dates thereafter, hearings were had until the parties completed the presentation of their evidence. 6. May 5, 1989, the trial court found Dapital guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crim of robbery with homicide and sentenced him to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua, and to pay the heirs of the victim in the amount of Thirty Thousand (P30,000.00) Pesos, without subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency. 7. May 11, 1989 – Dapital filed his Notice of Appeal, manifesting that he was appealing the decision to the court. However, Judge Cipriano de Roma erroneously directed the transmittal of the records of the case to the Court of Appeals. The Court of Appeals transmitted to this Court on 4 March 1989 the records which were erroneously transmitted to it. In the said appeal, Dapitan assigns only one error: The trial court erred in not applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law that favors the accused-appellant. 8. In support of the assigned error accused-appellant argues that the imposition over him of the penalty of reclusion temporal by the trial court is "tantamount to deprivation of life or liberty without due process of law or is tantamount to a cruel, degrading or inhuman punishment prohibited by the Constitution" and he submits that "the righteous and humane punishment that should have been meted out should be indeterminate sentence" with "all mitigating circumstances as well as the legal provisions favorable to the accused-appellant . . . appreciated or . . . taken advantage for constructive and humanitarian reasons." ISSUE/S I. Whether or not Dapitan was deprived of due process. – NO RATIO 9. Due process is satisfied if the following conditions are present: (1) there must be a court or tribunal clothed with judicial power to hear and determine the matter before it; (2) jurisdiction must be lawfully acquired by it over the person of the defendant or over the property which is the subject of the proceeding; (3) the defendant must be given an opportunity to be heard; and (4) judgment must be rendered upon lawful hearing. 10. The Supreme Court ruled that if an accused has been heard in a court of competent jurisdiction, and proceeded against under the orderly processes of law, and only punished after inquiry and investigation, upon notice to him, with opportunity to be heard, and a judgment awarded within the authority of the constitutional law, then he has had due process. 11. Neither is the penalty of reclusion perpetua cruel, degrading, and inhuman.1âwphi1 To make that claim is to assail the constitutionality of Article 294, par. 1 of the Revised Penal Code, or of any other provisions therein and of special laws imposing the said penalty for specific crimes or offenses. The proposition cannot find any support. As to the appreciation of mitigating circumstances, We also agree with the Solicitor General that since robbery with homicide under paragraph 1 of Article 294 of the Revised Penal Code is now punishable by the single and indivisible penalty of reclusion perpetua in view of the abolition of the death penalty, it follows that the rule prescribed in the first paragraph of Article 63 of the Revised Penal Code shall apply. The trial court correctly imposed on the accused the penalty of reclusion perpetua. 12. The civil indemnity awarded by the trial court should, in line with Our decision in People vs. Sison, G.R. No. 86455, 14 September 1990, and People vs. Sazon, G.R. No. 89684, 18 September 1970, be increased from P30,000.00 to P50,000.00. RULING WHEREFORE, except as modified above in respect to the civil indemnity, the decision appealed from is AFFIRMED in toto, with costs against accused-appellant. SO ORDERED. Notes