Articles 4 RPC (Reyes)
Articles 4 RPC (Reyes)
Articles 4 RPC (Reyes)
Art. 4
Wrongful Act From That Intended
Application of Article 4.
Criminal liability is incurred by any person in the cases men•
tioned in the two paragraphs of Article 4. This article has no reference
to the manner criminal liability is incurred. The manner of incurring
criminal liability under the Revised Penal Code is stated in Article
3, that is, performing or failing to do an act, when either is punished
by law, by means of deceit (with malice) or fault (through negligence
or imprudence).
One is not relieved from criminal liability for the natural con•
sequences of one's illegal acts, merely because one does not intend to
produce such consequences. (U.S. vs. Brobst, 14 Phil. 310)
Thus, one who fired his gun at B, but missed and hit C instead,
is liable for the injury caused to C, although the one who fired the
gun had no intention to injure
One who gave a fist blow on the head of D, causing the latter to
fall with the latter's head striking a hard pavement, is liable for the
death of which resulted although the one who gave the fist blow
had no intention to kill D.
And one who stabbed another in the dark, believing that the
latter was E, when in fact he was G, is liable for the injury caused to
G, although the one who stabbed him had no intention to injure G.
I M P OR TA N T W OR D S AN D P H R A S E S I N P A R A G R A P H 1 O F
ART. 4.
1. "Committing a felony."
Paragraph 1 of Art. 4 says that criminal liability shall
be incurred by any person "committing a felony," not merely
performing an act. A felony is an act or omission punishable by
the Revised Penal Code. If the act is not punishable by the Code,
it is not a But the felony committed by the offender should
be one committed by means of dolo, that is, with malice, because
paragraph 1 of Art. 4 speaks of wrongful act done "different from
that which he
If the wrongful act results from the imprudence, negligence,
lack of foresight or lack of skill of the offender, his liability should
be determined under Art. 365 , which defines and penalizes
criminal negligence.
The act or omission should not be punished by a special
law, because the offender violating a special law may not have
the intent to do an injury to another. In such case, the wrongful
CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Art. 4
Wrongful Act Different From That Intended
act done could not be different, as the offender did not intend to
do any other injury.
(b) Thus, also, one who tries to retain the possession of his bolo
which was being taken by another and because of the struggle,
the tip of the bolo struck and pierced the breast of a bystander,
is not criminally liable therefor, because the law allows a person
to use the necessary force to retain what belongs to him. (See
People vs. Bindoy, 56 Phil. 15)
People vs. Bindoy
(56 Phil. 15)
Facts: In a tuba wineshop in the barrio market, the accused
offered tuba to wife; and as she refused to drink having already
Art. 4 CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Wrongful Act Different From That Intended
done so, the accused threatened to injure her if she would not accept.
There ensued an interchange of words between her and the accused,
and Pacas stepped in to defend his wife, attempting to take away
from the accused the bolo he carried. This occasioned a disturbance
which attracted the attention of Emigdio Omamdam who lived near
the market. Emigdio left his house to see what was happening, while
the accused and Pacas were struggling for the bolo. In the course of this
struggle, the accused succeeded in disengaging himself from Pacas,
wrenching the bolo from the latter's hand towards the left behind the
accused, with such violence that the point of the bolo reached Emigdio
Omamdam's chest, who was then behind the accused. The accused
was not aware of Omamdam's presence in the place.
Held: There is no evidence to show that the accused injured the
deceased deliberately and with the intention of committing a crime. He
was only defending his possession of the bolo, which Pacas was trying
to wrench away from him, and his conduct was perfectly legal. The
accused should be acquitted.
The reason for the ruling is that when the culprit demanded
money from the women, threatening to shoot if they would not bring
out their money, a felony was being committed (i.e., at that stage of
execution, attempted robbery with intimidation which is punishable
under Article 294 , in relation to Article 6 and Article 51 of the
Code).
But where it clearly appears that the injury would not have
caused death, in the ordinary course of events, but would have
healed in so many days and where it is shown beyond all doubt that
the death was due to the malicious or careless acts of the injured
person or a third person, the accused is not liable for homicide. One
is accountable only for his own acts and their natural or logical
consequences, and not for those which bear no relation to the initial
cause and are due, for instance, to the mistakes committed by the
doctor in the surgical operation and the treatment of the victim's
wound. (Decision of the Supreme Court of Spain, April cited
by Viada)
d. The victim was suffering from internal malady.
Blow was efficient cause of death.
The d e c e a se d ha d a d e l ic a t e c o n s t i t u t io n and wa s
suffering from The accused gave fist blows on
the deceased's right hypochondrium, bruising the liver and
producing internal h emorrh age, resu ltin g in the death of
the victim. The accused was liable for homicide. (People vs.
Illustre, 54 Phil. 594)
CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Art. 4
Wrongful Act Different From That Intended
e. . Th e o ff e nd ed part y r e f u se d to s u b m i t to s ur g ic a l
operation.
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Art. 4 CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Wrongful Act From That Intended
People vs.
(62 Phil. 162)
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CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Art. 4
Wrongful Act Different From That Intended
People vs.
Feb. 43 SCRA 526, 532)
Facts: The accused stabbed the victim with an ice pick. The victim
was brought to the hospital where a surgical operation was performed
upon Although the operation was successful and the victim seemed
to be in the process of recovery, he developed, five (5) days later, a
paralytic ileum — which takes place, sometimes, in consequence of
the exposure of the internal organs during the operation — and then
died.
Held: It is contended that the immediate cause of the death of the
victim was a paralysis of the ileum that supervened five (5) days after
the stabbing, when he appeared to be on the way to full recovery. It has
been established, however, that the exposure of the internal organs in
consequence of a surgical operation in the abdomen sometimes results
in a paralysis of the ileum and that said operation had to be performed
on account of the abdominal injury inflicted by the accused. The accused
is responsible for the natural consequences of his own acts.
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Art. 4 CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Wrongful Act Different From That Intended
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CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Art. 4
Wrongful Act Different From That Intended
side of the chassis, spreading over and permeating the body of the
bus and the ground under and around it. About ten men, one of them
carrying a lighted torch, approached the overturned bus to help those
left therein, and almost immediately a fierce fire started, burning the
four passengers trapped inside it.
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Art. 4 CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Act Different From That Intended
spilled, specially over a large area, can be smelt and detected even
from a distance, and yet neither the driver nor the conductor would
appear to have cautioned or taken steps to warn the rescuers not to
bring the lighted torch too near the bus." That is negligence on the
part of the agents of the carrier. (Vda. de Bataclan, et al. vs. Medina,
102 Phil. 181, 186, 187)
In the case of People vs. Martin, 89 Phil. 18, the accused, who
strangled his wife then suffering from heart disease, was found guilty
of parricide even if the death of his wife was the result of heart failure,
because the heart failure was due to the fright or shock caused by the
strangling, which is a felony.
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CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Art. 4
Wrongful Act Different From That Intended
Is the accused who stabbed the injured party liable for the latter's
death?
Held: The doctors who attended the injured party agreed that his
weakened condition which caused disturbance in the functions of his
intestines made it possible for him to contract mucous colitis, which
shows that while the wounds inflicted were not the immediate cause,
they were however the proximate cause of death. This is enough to
make the accused responsible for the crime charged.
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Art. 4 CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Wrongful Act Different From That Intended
Note: The charge was robbery with homicide. The homicide was
committed with malice.
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CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Art. 4
Wrongful Act From That Intended
Thus, where a person struck another with his fist and knocked
him down and a horse near them jumped upon him and killed him,
the assailant was not responsible for the death of that other person.
(People vs. Rockwell, 39 Mich. 503)
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Art. 4 CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Wrongful Act Different From That Intended
As the true cause of the child's death was not proved, the
accused was convicted of physical injuries only. (U.S. vs.
3 Phil. 640)
d. Where medical findings lead to a distinct possibility that
the infection of the wound by tetanus was an efficient
intervening cause later or between the time the deceased
was wounded to the time of his death, the accused must be
acquitted of the crime of homicide. (Urbano vs. 157
SCRA 10)
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CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Art. 4
Impossible Crimes
injured person, which are exceptions to the rule not arising in the
present case."
In the case of People us. 62 Phil. 162, it is stated that
one who inflicts injury on another is deemed guilty of homicide if the
injury contributes to the death of the latter, "even if the deceased
might have recovered if he had taken proper care of himself, or sub•
mitted to surgical operation."
Impossible crimes.
The commission of an impossible crime is indicative of criminal
propensity or criminal tendency on the part of the actor. Such person is
a potential According to thinking, the community
must be protected from anti-social activities, whether actual or
potential, of the morbid type of man called "socially dangerous
person."
The penalty for impossible crime is provided in Article 59 of this
Code.
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Art. 4 CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Impossible Crimes
IM P O R T A N T WOR D S AN D P H R A S E S IN P A R A G R A P H 2 OF
ART. 4.
1. an act which would be an offense against
persons or property."
In committing an impossible crime, the offender
intends to commit a felony against persons or a felony
against property, and the act performed would have been
an offense against persons or property. But a felony against
persons or property should not be actually committed, for,
otherwise, he would be liable for that felony. There would
be no impossible crime to speak of.
F e l o n i e s a g a i n s t p e r s o n s are
:
a. Parricide (Art. 246)
b. Murder (Art. 248)
Homicide (Art. 249)
d. Infanticide (Art. 255)
e. Abortion (Arts. 256, 257, 258 and 259)
f. Duel (Arts. 260 and 261)
g. Physical injuries (Arts. 262, 263, 264, 265 and 266)
h. Rape (Art. 266-A)
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Art. 4
Impossible Crimes
F e l o n i e s a g a i n s t p r o p e r t y are
:
a. Robbery (Arts. 294, 297, 298, 299, 300, 302 and 303)
b. Brigandage (Arts. 306 and 307)
Theft 311)
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Art. 4 CRIMINAL LIABILITY
Impossible Crimes
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Art. 4
Impossible Crimes
b. "Employment of means.
Example: A, determined to poison B, uses a
small quantity of arsenic by mixing it with the food
given to B, believing that the quantity employed by
him is sufficient. But since in fact it is not sufficient,
B is not killed. The means employed (small quantity
of poison) is inadequate to kill a person.
2
Art. 5 WHEN ACTS ARE NOT COVERED BY LAW
AND IN CASES OF EXCESSIVE PENALTIES