People v. Murillo
People v. Murillo
People v. Murillo
* EN BANC.
343
forfeit a human life; What justifies the remand of the criminal case
to the trial court is the unfairness or complete miscarriage of justice
in the handling of the proceedings a quo as occasioned by the
improvident plea of guilt.·To warrant a remand of the criminal
case, the Court has held that it must be shown that as a result of
such irregularity there was inadequate representation of facts by
either the prosecution or the defense during the trial. Where the
improvident plea of guilty was followed by an abbreviated
proceeding with practically no role at all played by the defense, we
have ruled that this procedure was just too meager to accept as
being the standard constitutional due process at work enough to
forfeit a human life. What justifies the remand of the criminal case
to the trial court is the unfairness or complete miscarriage of justice
in the handling of the proceedings a quo as occasioned by the
improvident plea of guilt. In this case, apart from the testimony of
appellant, the prosecution does not have any other evidence to hold
him liable for the crime charged.
Constitutional Law; Due Process; Right to Counsel; The due
process requirement is part of a personÊs basic rights and is not a
mere formality that may be dispensed with or performed
perfunctorily; The right to counsel springs from the fundamental
principle of due process.·It is well established that the due process
requirement is part of a personÊs basic rights and is not a mere
formality that may be dispensed with or performed perfunctorily.
An accused needs the aid of counsel lest he be the victim of
overzealous prosecutors, of the lawÊs complexity or of his own
ignorance and bewilderment. Indeed, the right to counsel springs
from the fundamental principle of due process. The right to counsel,
however, means more than just the presence of a lawyer in the
courtroom or the mere propounding of standard questions and
objections. The right to counsel means that the accused is
sufficiently accorded legal assistance extended by a counsel who
commits himself to the cause for the defense and acts accordingly.
This right necessitates an active involvement by the lawyer in the
proceedings, particularly at the trial of the case, his bearing
constantly in mind of the basic rights of the accused, his being well-
versed on the case and his knowing the fundamental procedures,
essential laws and existing jurisprudence. Indeed, the right of an
accused to counsel finds meaning only in the performance by the
lawyer of his sworn duty of fidelity to his client and an efficient and
truly decisive legal assistance which is not just a simple perfunctory
representation.
344
AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ, J.:
1
Before this Court on automatic review is the decision
rendered by the Regional Trial Court, Branch 259,
Parañaque, dated June 1, 1998, finding appellant Freddie
Murillo guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of
murder and sentencing him to suffer the penalty of death.
The Information charges appellant Freddie Murillo as
follows:
_______________
345
_______________
346
toilet bowl over the septic tank. His brother Arlan did not
know that he killed their aunt. It took him a while to
confess his guilt because he was afraid that the police
might hurt him. While his mother, Sarah Murillo, often
visited him and Arlan at their auntÊs house, he did not
8
tell
his mother about what he did because he was afraid.
After the testimony of appellant, the prosecution rested
its case. On June 1, 1998, the trial court rendered its
decision with the following findings:
_______________
347
II
_______________
348
_______________
349
_______________
16 People vs. Ibañez, G.R. Nos. 133923-24, July 30, 2003, 407 SCRA
406.
17 People vs. Pastor, G.R. No. 140208, March 12, 2002, 379 SCRA 181,
189.
18 People vs. Ibañez, supra note 16, People vs. Nadera, G.R. Nos.
131384-87, February 2, 2000, 324 SCRA 490, 501; People vs. Principe,
G.R. No. 135862, May 2, 2002, 381 SCRA 642, 648.
19 People vs. Ibañez, supra note 16.
20 People vs. Molina, G.R. Nos. 141129-33, December 14, 2001, 372
SCRA 378, 386-387.
350
_______________
351
_______________
352
Under Sec. 3, Rule 116 of the Rules of Court, when the accused
pleads guilty to a capital offense, the court shall conduct a
searching inquiry into the voluntariness and full comprehension of
the consequences of his plea and require the prosecution to prove
his guilt and the precise degree of culpability. The accused may also
present evidence in his behalf.
In People vs. Salvador, 224 SCRA 819, to be liable for murder, an
accused must be proven to have committed the killing of another
person under the attendant circumstances specified in Article 248 of
the Revised Penal Code.
In People vs. Jocson, 163 SCRA 525, AccusedÊs plea of guilty
which was freely and voluntarily made added to the evidence
adduced by the prosecution sufficiently established his culpability.
With the plea of guilty, appellant had admitted the commission of
the unlawful act. Hence, the presumption is that the act was done
with an unlawful intent unless accused rebuts this presumption.
People vs. Verona, 163 SCRA 614.
Assessing the evidence on record, particularly considering the
admission made in open Court by the herein accused despite having
been duly informed by his counsel of the consequences of his
testimony, this Court finds without an iota of doubt that he alone
committed the abominable act of killing his aunt and later on
hideously dismembering her body in his attempt to hide the corpus
of his crime. Truly unspeakable is the manner by which accused
Murillo disposed of the body of the victim first by cutting her body
parts and hiding them in a septic tank and then throwing away the
victimÊs head in a canal or drainage along the service road near the
28
South Superhighway.
_______________
27 People vs. Benavidez, G.R. Nos. 142372-74, September 17, 2002, 389
SCRA 253.
28 Rollo, pp. 18-19.
353
ATTY. GARIN:
Your Honor please the accused already pleaded guilty
to the offense charged and the only reason we have to
the motion of presenting evidence is that the guilt of
the accused must be proven by the prosecution
notwithstanding the plea of guilty entered into during
his arraignment. This representation your Honor finds
it necessary to inform the accused of his constitutional
rights. And with the CourtÊs permission, before he will
testify as hostile witness, I would like to inform the
accused for the record.
Q. Mr. Freddie Murillo, ikaw ang akusado dito sa kasong
ito. Ang proseso natin ay kung sino man ang
nagbibintang ay siyang dapat magpatunay ng
kasalanang ibinibintang. Sa sitwasyong ito, ikaw ay
pinagbibintangan ng kasong murder. At ang
ebidensiyang gagamitin ay dapat manggagaling sa
kung sino man ang nagbibintang sa iyo na ikaw ay
nakapatay ng tao. Ngayon ikaw ay uupo ngayon sa
silyang iyan para magsalita tungkol doon sa
pangyayari. Meron kang karapatan na hindi pumayag
na magsalita ng anoÊng bagay na maaaring
ikapahamak mo. Maaari mong hindi sagutin iyong
tanong, maaring hindi ka umupo riyan, nasa sa iyo
ang desisyon. Naiintindihan mo ba?
A. Opo.
Q. Ngayong naipaliwanag ko na sa iyo ikaw ba ay
handang magsalita tungkol sa kasong ito?
A. Opo.
29
ThatÊs all for the witness, your Honor.
Clearly, the proceedings taken by the trial court was short
of being satisfactory. Appellant was never asked about the
circumstances of his arrest and detention, not even when
SPO2 Nieves himself in his testimony mentioned that he
ordered that the two brothers be brought to „Block 6‰ for
questioning without the presence of counsel. Where or
what kind of place „Block 6‰ is, was not even explained by
the witness neither did the court nor the defense counsel
ask the witness to clarify said point. The Court also did not
ask appellant about the circumstances of his arraignment
as well as his age and educational attainment. He was also
neither apprised of the consequences of his plea nor was it
explained to him that the penalty imposable for the crime
attended by its qualifying
_______________
354
_______________
355
_______________
356
··o0o··