Barut Vs People
Barut Vs People
Barut Vs People
167454
the accused, thereby enabling her to see if the witnesses werefidgeting and prevaricating, or were sincere and
trustworthy.
Secondly, Barut adverts to the extra-judicial sworn statement that Villas gave at about 1:00 oclock in the afternoon
of September 25, 1995 barely a day following the fatal shooting of Vincent in which he declared not having seen
Barut fire a gun. Barut contends that this declaration definitely contradicted Villas court testimony on June 10,
1996, and manifested that he was "not clear and convincing because he never pointed out who [had] really shot
Vincent Ucag."7 Citing Villas answer of "Maybe he was hit" to the question on direct examination: "What was the
reason if you know why he [referring to Vincent Ucag] was weak?" 8 Barut insists that Villas was thereby ambiguous
and gave rise to the doubt as "to who [had] really shot and killed the victim," whether it was Ancheta (who had
traded shots with the victims father), or himself.9
Noting that neither Ucag nor Ancheta had shot Vincent, the RTC explained that the former could not anymore fire
his gun at Vincent not only because Vincent was his own son but also because he himself had already been lying on
the ground after being hit in his lower extremities; and that
Ancheta could not have fired at Vincent at all because he, too, had been already wounded and lying on the
groundand profusedly bleeding from his own gunshot wounds. The RTC further noted that the slug extracted from
the body of Vincent had come from a .38 caliber revolver, not from Ucags .45 caliber firearm.
Baruts contention did not itselfgo unnoticed by the CA, which observed that the RTC could not takethe declaration
of Villas into consideration because Villas extra-judicial sworn statement containing the declaration had not been
offered and admitted as evidence by either side. The CA stressed that only evidence thatwas formally offered and
made part of the records could be considered; and that in any event, the supposed contradiction between the extrajudicial sworn statement and the court testimony should be resolved in favor of the latter.
The CAs negative treatment of the declaration contained in Villas extra-judicial sworn statement was inaccord with
prevailing rules and jurisprudence. Pursuant to Section 34, Rule 132 of the Rules of Court, the RTC as the trial court
could consideronly the evidence that had been formally offered; towards that end, the offering party must specify the
purpose for which the evidence was being offered. The rule would ensure the right of the adverse party to due
process of law, for, otherwise, the adverse party would not be put in the position to timely object to the evidence, as
well as to properly counter the impact of evidence not formally offered. 10 As stated in Candido v. Court of Appeals:11
It is settled that courts will only consider as evidence that which has been formally offered. x x x
A document, or any article for that matter, is not evidence when it is simply marked for identification; it must be
formally offered, and the opposing counsel given an opportunity toobject to it or cross-examine the witness called
upon to prove or identify it. A formal offer is necessary since judges are required to base their findings of fact and
judgment only and strictlyupon the evidence offered by the parties at the trial. To allow a party to attach any
document to his pleading and then expect the court to consider it as evidence may draw unwarranted consequences.
The opposing party will be deprived of his chance to examine the document and object to its admissibility. The
appellate court will have difficulty reviewing documents not previously scrutinized by the court below. The pertinent
provisions of the Revised Rules of Court on the inclusion on appeal of documentary evidence or exhibits in the
records cannot be stretched as to include such pleadings or documents not offered at the hearing of the case.
The rule that only evidence formally offered before the trial court can be considered is relaxed where two requisites
concur, namely: one, the evidence was duly identified by testimony duly recorded; and, two, the evidence was
incorporated inthe records of the case.12 Furthermore, the rule has no application where the court takes judicial
notice of adjudicative facts pursuant to Section 2, 13 Rule 129 of the Rules of Court; or where the court relies on
judicial admissions or draws inferences from such judicial admissions within the context of Section 4, 14 Rule 129 of
the Rules of Court; or where the trial court, in judging the demeanor of witnesses, determines their credibility even
without the offer of the demeanor as evidence.15
The Court also sees fit to correct the indeterminate sentence of 10 years and one day of prision mayor, as the
minimum, to 17 years and eight months of reclusion temporal, as the maximum, fixed by the RTC and affirmed by
the CA. The maximum of17 years and eight months comes from the maximum period of reclusion temporal, but the
maximum of the indeterminate sentence should insteadcome from the medium period of reclusion temporal, whose
duration is from 14 years, eight months and one day to 17 years and four months, because neither the RTC nor the
CA had found the attendance of any aggravating circumstance. The minimum of the indeterminate sentence is fixed
at 10 years of prision mayor, and the maximum of 17 years and eight months of reclusion temporalis modified to 17
years and four months of the medium period of reclusion temporal.
Anent the civil liability, the RTC granted P250,000.00 without specifying the amounts corresponding toactual and
moral damages, as well as to the civil indemnity for the death of Vincent. The CA affirmed the grant. Both lower
courts thereby erred on a matter of law. Actual and moral damages are different in nature and purpose. To start with,
different laws govern their grant, with the amounts allowed as actual damages being dependent on proof of the loss
to a degree of certainty, while the amounts allowed as moral damages being discretionary on the part of the court.
Secondly, actual damages address the actual losses caused by the crime to the heirs of the victim; moral damages
assuage the spiritual and emotional sufferings of the heirs of the victim of the crime. On the civil indemnity for
death, law and jurisprudence have fixed the value to compensate for the loss of human life. Thirdly, actual damages
may not be granted without evidence of actual loss; moral damages and death indemnity are always granted in
homicide, it being assumed by the law that the loss of human life absolutely brings moral and spiritual losses as well
as a definite loss. Moral damages and death indemnity require neither pleading nor evidence simply because death
through crime always occasions moral sufferings on the part of the victims heirs. 16 As the Court aptly said in one
case,17
x x x a violent death invariably and necessarily brings about emotional pain and anguish on the partof the victims
family.1wphi1 It is inherently human to suffer sorrow, torment, pain and anger when a loved one becomes the
victim of a violent or brutal killing. Such violent death or brutal killing not only steals from the family of the
deceased his precious life, deprives them forever ofhis love, affection and support, but often leaves them with the
gnawing feeling that an injustice has been done to them.
The death indemnity and moral damages are fixed at P75,000.00 each in view of homicide being a gross offense.
Considering that the decisions of the lower courts contained no treatment of the actual damages, the Court is now
not in any position to dwell on this. Nonetheless, the Court holds that despite the lack of such treatment, temperate
damages of P25,000.00 should be allowed. Article 2224 of the Civil Codedeclares that temperate damages may be
recovered when some pecuniary loss has been suffered but its amount cannot be proved with certainty. There is no
longer any doubt that when actual damages for burial and related expenses are not substantiated with receipts,
temperate damages of atleast P25,000.00 are warranted, for it is certainly unfair to deny to the surviving heirs of the
victim the compensation for such expenses as actual damages. 18 This is based on the sound reasoning that it would
be anomalous that the heirs of the victim who tried and succeeded in proving actual damages of less than P25,000.00
would only be put in a worse situation than others who might have presented no receipts at all but would still
beentitled to P25,000.00 as temperate damages.19
Also, in line with recent jurisprudence, 20 the interest fixed by the RTC is reduced to six percent (6%) per annumon
all the items of civil liability computed from the date of the finality of this judgment until fully paid.
WHEREFORE, the Court AFFIRMS the conviction for homicide of petitioner EMERITU BARUT, subject to the
MODIFICATIONS that: (a) his indeterminate sentence is from 10 years of prision mayor, as the minimum, to 17
years and four months of reclusion temporal, as the maximum; (b) he shall pay to the heirs of the late Vincent Ucag
civil indemnity of P75,000.00 for his death;moral damages of P75,000.00; and emperate damages of ~25,000.00,
plus interest of six percent (6%) per annum on each of the items of damages hereby awarded from the date of
finality of this judgment until fully paid; and (c) he shall pay the costs of suit.