People v. Tolentino y Estrella
People v. Tolentino y Estrella
People v. Tolentino y Estrella
DECISION
CHICO-NAZARIO, J : p
causing the latter to fall right into the fishpond and disappear from sight. 15
Antonio Bea was then tied to the door from the waist down with Emelio
Tolentino guarding him. 16 In that position, Antonio Bea saw Josita Novelo
being mauled by Jesus Trinidad and Arnel Trinidad. All of a sudden, Jesus
Trinidad shot Josita Novelo on the left cheek with a gun. 17 Immediately
after, Emelio Tolentino entered the house and slashed the face of Josita with
a jungle bolo. 18 The three assailants untied the binding on Antonio Bea's
feet while leaving the ropes tied behind his back. 19 They left Novelo's house
proceeding towards the fishpond watergate which was about three meters
from the house. Emelio Tolentino led the way, followed by Bea, with Jesus
and Arnel Trinidad taking the rear. Without warning, Emelio Tolentino
stabbed Antonio Bea four times in the stomach with the former's jungle bolo.
Antonio Bea fell into the fishpond.
The assailants left the victim and boarded a boat which was operated
by Jimmy Trinidad. Injured and bleeding, Antonio Bea managed to untie his
hands and swim across the river to ask for help. He received help from the
people of Purok 7 and was brought to the house of the Barangay Captain
Wilfredo Llarena in a hammock. 20 The barangay captain then brought the
victim to a hospital. From the hospital, Barangay Captain Wilfredo Llarena,
along with some members of the police, went to the house of spouses
Novelo and came upon the dead body of Josita Novelo. 21
Dr. Noli Bayani, the Rural Health Physician of Sta. Elena, Camarines
Norte, conducted an autopsy of the body and found that the cause of Josita
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Novelo's death was "[h]ypovolemic shock secondary to gunshot wounds and
lacerated wound." 22 Dr. Rolando C. Victoria, a Medico-Legal Officer of the
National Bureau of Investigation, who also conducted an autopsy on the
body of the deceased, testified that the shotgun wound at the left side of the
face of the victim caused her death. 23
The medical certificate of Antonio Bea shows that the four stab wounds
inflicted on him caused damage to his intestines. 24
On 19 October 1999, the prosecution rested its case and made a
formal offer of evidence. 25
On 13 April 2000, appellants through counsel filed a Demurrer to
Evidence, without leave of court. 26 In an order 27 dated 17 May 2000, the
RTC denied the demurrer and submitted the case for decision pursuant to
Section 15, Rule 119 of the 1985 Rules on Criminal Procedure. 28 On 31 May
2000, appellants filed a motion for reconsideration, praying that the order
denying their Demurrer to Evidence be recalled and that they be allowed to
present evidence. The RTC denied the said motion. Unfazed, appellants filed
a petition for certiorari before this Court. This Court denied the petition in a
Resolution dated 2 December 2002, which became final and executory on 5
February 2003. As a result, the case was submitted for decision without any
evidence proffered by the defense.
On 30 November 2004, the RTC rendered a decision finding appellants
guilty of the crimes charged in Criminal Case No. 98-0258 and Criminal Case
No. 98-0260 for murder and frustrated murder, respectively. The decretal
portion of the RTC decision reads:
CRIM. CASE NO. 98-0258
For: MURDER
WHEREFORE, finding accused EMELIO TOLENTINO y ESTRELLA
and JESUS TRINIDAD y MARAVILLA guilty beyond reasonable doubt of
the crime of Murder, they are hereby sentenced to suffer the supreme
penalty of DEATH. They are also ordered to pay the heirs of the
victim, Josita Novelo, the amount of P75,000.00 by way of civil
indemnity, P50,000.00 as moral damages and another P50,000.00 as
exemplary damages.
CRIM. CASE NO. 98-0260
For: FRUSTRATED MURDER
WHEREFORE, finding accused EMELIO TOLENTINO y ESTRELLA
and JESUS TRINIDAD y MARAVILLA guilty beyond reasonable doubt of
the crime of Frustrated Murder, they are hereby sentenced to suffer
the penalty of RECLUSION PERPETUA. They are also ordered to pay
their victim, Antonio Bea the amount of P50,000.00 as civil indemnity,
P50,000.00 as moral damages and P30,000.00 as exemplary
damages. 29
The trial court, however, acquitted appellants of the crime of frustrated
murder allegedly committed against Antonio Novelo in Criminal Case No. 98-
0270.
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On 10 December 2004, appellants filed a Motion For New Trial on the
ground that "errors of law or irregularities prejudicial to the substantial rights
of the accused have been committed during the trial." 30 Appellants argued
that in the interest of justice and equity, they should be given the
opportunity to testify in their favor considering that they are meted out by
the RTC the supreme penalty of death.
In an Order 31 dated 15 December 2004, the RTC denied appellants'
motion for new trial ratiocinating that the error of appellants' counsel during
the trial does not amount to error of law or irregularity which constitutes a
valid ground for the granting of a motion for new trial. It appears that
appellants no longer questioned the denial of their motion for new trial.
The trial court ordered the transmittal of the entire records of the case
to this Court. Thereafter, this Court ordered the referral of the case to the
Court of Appeals conformably with the ruling in the case of People v. Mateo .
32
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Will you please tell us what is that incident that you recalled?
A: There was somebody that called me, sir.
xxx xxx xxx
Q: When you heard somebody called you on that occasion, what
did you do?
A: I flash[ed] a light to the Prensa, sir.
Q: And what happened next after you were pulled outside your
house?
A: I am (sic ) telling him I have no fault.
Cross-examination:
Q: Who was the person who held you?
A: Emelio Tolentino, sir.
Q: How did you recognize him to be Emelio Tolentino?
A: Yes, sir.
xxx xxx xxx
Q: From the place you were tied did you see Josita Novelo?
A: Yes, sir.
Q: And while you were tied on that occasion what happened to
Josita Novelo?
A: I cannot hear the reply of Josita Novelo because they are mauling
her or "binubugbog nila."
Q: What happened after Josita Novelo was mauled by these two you
mentioned?
A: Suddenly, Jesus Trinidad shot Josita Novelo.
A: Yes, sir.
Q: Where was she hit, if you have seen?
A: Emelio Tolentino entered the house and then slashed the face of
Josita Novelo.
Court:
Q: So in other words from the time you were untied you walked
towards that 'prensa' for about three (3) meters?
A: Yes, sir.
A: Yes, sir.
Q: What about Tolentino who was ahead of you what was he doing?
The foregoing testimony can only be told by a person who had really
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witnessed the incident and had been subjected to personal violence from the
perpetrators, hence, such testimony is entitled to full faith and credit.
Furthermore, Bea's testimony jibed with the physical evidence. The nature of
the wound of the deceased was affirmed by the medical experts to be a
result of a gunshot wound. The location of the wounds found on Josita
Novelo's face as described by witness Bea was consistent with the
documentary evidence, i.e., photographs, autopsy result and the physical
examination of the corpse of the victim. All these tend to dispel any doubt
that witness Bea would have concocted the whole story. The prosecution
successfully established beyond reasonable doubt that the appellants and
their cohorts killed Josita Novelo.
Anent the third issue, appellants argue that in the stabbing of Antonio
Bea, they should have been liable only for attempted murder and not
frustrated murder since the prosecution failed to prove, due to its failure to
present the attending physician, that the injury suffered by the victim was
fatal.
A crime is frustrated when the offender has performed all the acts of
execution which should result in the consummation of the crime. 48 The
offender has passed the subjective phase in the commission of the crime. 49
Subjectively, the crime is complete. 50 Nothing interrupted the offender while
passing through the subjective phase. He did all that is necessary to
consummate the crime. However, the crime was not consummated by
reason of the intervention of causes independent of the will of the offender.
51 In homicide cases, the offender is said to have performed all the acts of
execution if the wound inflicted on the victim is mortal and could cause the
death of the victim without medical intervention or attendance. 52
In the instant case, the prosecution established that Antonio Bea
sustained four stab wounds inflicted by Emelio Tolentino which caused
damage to the victim's abdomen resulting in massive blood loss. The victim
was hospitalized for two months because of these injuries. 53 In fact, at the
trial, the victim showed the scars in his abdomen. All these tend to show the
seriousness of the wounds suffered by the victim and which would have
caused his death had it not been for the timely medical intervention.
The trial court, in assessing the testimonial evidence of the
prosecution, made this appropriate observation:
In the instant cases, the corroborative testimonies of
prosecution witnesses, Antonio Bea, Ricardo Basila and Antonio
Novelo, positively identifying the accused as the perpetrators of the
crime satisfactorily persuade the Court. . . . .
Footnotes
1. Penned by Associate Justice Rodrigo V. Cosico with Associate Justices
Edgardo F. Sundiam and Celia C. Librea-Leagogo, concurring. Rollo, pp. 2-18.
If the Court denies the motion for dismissal, the accused may adduce
evidence in his defense. When the accused files such motion to dismiss
without express leave of court, he waives the right to present
evidence and submits the case for judgment on the basis of the
evidence for the prosecution.
29. Id. at 806-807.
30. Id. at 819-823.
31. Id. at 825.
32. G.R. Nos. 147678-87, 7 July 2004, 433 SCRA 640.
35. Private Enterprise Corp. v. Magada , G.R. No. 149489, 30 June 2006, 494
SCRA 167, 180.
36. Id.
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37. Id.
38. People v. Sayaboc , 464 Phil. 824, 844 (2004).
39. Id.
40. Id.
41. Id.
42. Osumo v. Serrano, 429 Phil. 626, 632 (2002).
43. People v. Matito, 468 Phil. 14, 24 (2004).
44. People v. Piedad, 441 Phil. 818, 838-839 (2002).
45. TSN, 10 August 1998, pp. 22-31.
46. TSN, 8 September 1998, p. 14.
48. Martinez v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 168827, 13 April 2007, 521 SCRA
176, 195.
49. Id.
50. Id.
51. Id.
52. Id.
53. Rollo , p. 16.
54. Records, pp. 803-804.
55. People v. Castillo , G.R. No. 118912, 28 May 2004, 430 SCRA 40, 50.
56. People v. Molina, 370 Phil. 546, 554-555 (1999).
57. Id.
58. People v. Belaro, 367 Phil. 90, 107 (1999).
59. Id.
60. People v. Pidoy, 453 Phil. 221, 230 (2003).
61. People v. Prades, 355 Phil. 150, 168 (1998).
62. People v. Paraiso, 377 Phil. 445, 464 (1999).
63. Id.
64. People v. Casitas, Jr., 445 Phil. 407, 427 (2003).
65. People v. Paraiso, supra note 62 at 465.
66. People v. Salome , G.R. No. 169077, 31 August 2006, 500 SCRA 659, 676.
67. Id.
69. People v. Buban, G.R. No. 170471, 11 May 2007, 523 SCRA 118, 134.
70. People v. Caraig, G.R. No. 116224-27, 28 March 2003, 400 SCRA 67, 83.
71. People v. Buban, supra note 69 at 134.
72. Martinez v. Court of Appeals, supra note 48.
73. Id.
74. Id.
75. People v. Castillo , 426 Phil. 752, 768-769 (2002).
76. People v. Ibañez , 455 Phil. 133, 167-168 (2003).
77. Id.
78. Id.