PEOPLE V. BONOAN G.R. No. L-45130
PEOPLE V. BONOAN G.R. No. L-45130
PEOPLE V. BONOAN G.R. No. L-45130
L-45130
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EN BANC
LAUREL, J.:
On January 5, 1935, the prosecuting attorney of the City of Manila filed an information charging Celestino Bonoan,
the defendant-appellant herein, with the crime of murder, committed as follows:
That on or about the 12th day of December, 1934, in the City of Manila, Philippine Islands, the said accused,
with evident premeditation and treachery, did then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously, without any
justifiable motive and with the decided purpose to kill one Carlos Guison, attack, assault and stab the said
Carlos Guison on the different parts of his body with a knife, thereby inflicting upon him the following injuries,
to wit:
"One stab wound at the right epigastric region penetrating one cm. into the superior surace of the right lobe of
the liver; and three non-penetrating stab wounds located respectively at the posterior and lateral lumbar
region, and left elbow", which directly caused the death of the said Carlos Guison three days afterwards.
On January 16, 1935, the case was called for the arraignment of the accused. The defense counsel forthwith
objected to the arraignment on the ground that the defendant was mentally deranged and was at the time confined
in the Psychopatic Hospital. The court thereupon issued an order requiring the Director of the Hospital to render a
report on the mental condition of the accused. Accordingly, Dr. Toribio Joson, assistant alientist, rendered his
report,Exhibit 4, hereinbelow incorporated. On March 23, 1935, the case was again called for the arraignment of the
accused, but in view of the objection of the fiscal, the court issued another order requiring the doctor of the
Psyhopatic Hospital who examined the defendant to appear and produce the complete record pertaining to the
mental condition of the said defendant. Pursuant to this order, Dr. Toribio Joson appeared before the court on March
26, 1935 for the necessary inquiry. Thereafter, the prosecution and the defense asked the court to summon the
other doctors of the hospital for questioning as to the mental condition of the accused, or to place the latter under a
competent doctor for a closer observation. The trial court then issued an order directing that the accused be placed
under the chief alienist or an assistant alienist of the Psychopatic Hospital for his personal observation and the
subsequent submission of a report as to the true mental condition of the patient. Dr. Jose A. Fernandez, assistant
alienist of the Psychopathic Hospital, rendered his report, Exhibit 5, on June 11, 1935. On June 28, 1935, the case
was called again. Dr. Fernandez appeared before the court and ratified his report, Exhibit 5, stating that the accused
was not in a condition to defend himself. In view thereof, the case was suspended indefinitely.
On January 21, 1936, Dr. Dr. Fernandez reported to the court that the defendant could be discharged from the
hospital and appear for trial, as he was "considered a recovered case." Summoned by the court, Dr. Fernandez,
appeared and testified that the accused "had recovered from the disease." On February 27, 1936, the accused was
arraigned, pleaded "not guilty" and trial was had.
After trial, the lower court found the defendant guilty of the offense charged in the information above-quoted and
sentenced him to life imprisonment, to indemnify the heirs of the deceased in the sum of P1,000, and to pay the
costs.
The defendant now appeals to this court and his counsel makes the following assignment of errors:
A. The court a quo erred in finding that the evidence establishes that the accused has had dementia only
occasionally and intermittently and has not had it immediately prior to the commission of the defense.
B. The court a quo erred in finding that the evidence in this case further shows that during and immediately
after the commission of the offense, the accused did not show any kind of abnormality either in behavior,
language and appearance, or any kind of action showing that he was mentally deranged.
C. The court a quo erred in declaring that under the circumstances that burden was on the defense to show
hat the accused was mentally deranged at the time of the commission of the offense, and that the defense did
not establish any evidence to this effect.
D. The court a quo in finding the accused guilty of the offense charged and in not acquitting him thereof.
It appears that in the morning of December 12, 1934, the defendant Celestino Bonoan met the now deceased
Carlos Guison on Avenida Rizal near a barbershop close to Tom's Dixie Kitchen. Francisco Beech, who was at the
time in the barbershop, heard the defendant say in Tagalog, "I will kill you." Beech turned around and saw the
accused withdrawing his right hand, which held a knife, from the side of Guison who said, also in Tagalog, "I will pay
you", but Bonoan replied saying that he would kill him and then stabbed Guison thrice on the left side. The assaultt
was witnessed by policeman Damaso Arnoco who rushed to the scene and arrested Bonoan and took possession of
the knife, Exhibit A. Guison was taken to the Philippine General Hospital where he died two days later. Exhibit C is
the report of the autopsy performed on December 15, 1934, by Dr. Sixto de los Angeles.
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As the killing of the deceased by the defendant-appellant is admitted, it does not seem necessary to indulge in any
extended analysis of the testimony of the witnesses for the prosecution. The defense set up being that of insanity,
the only question to be determined in this appeal is whether or not the defendant-appellant was insane at the time of
the commission of the crime charged.
On the question of insanity as a defense in criminal cases, and the incidental corollaries as to the legal presumption
and the kind and quantum of evidence required, theories abound and authorities are in sharp conflict. Stated
generally, courts in the United States proceed upon three different theories. (See Herzog, Alfred W., Medical
Jurisprudence [1931], sec. 655 et seq., p. 479 et seq.; also Lawson, Insanity in Criminal Cases, p. 11 et seq.) The
first view is that insanity as a defense in a confession and avoidance and as must be proved beyond reasonable
doubt when the commission of a crime is established, and the defense of insanity is not made out beyond a
reasonable doubt, conviction follows. In other words, proof of insanity at the time of committing the criminal act
should be clear and satisfactory in order to acquit the accused on the ground of insanity (Hornblower, C. J., in State
vs. Spencer, 21 N. J. L., 196). The second view is that an affirmative verdict of insanity is to be governed by a
preponderance of evidence, and in this view, insanity is not to be established beyond a reasonable doubt. According
to Wharton in his "Criminal Evidence" (10th ed.,vol. I, sec. 338), this is the rule in England (Reg. vs. Layton, 4 Cox,
C. C., 149; Reg. vs. Higginson, 1 Car. & K., 130), and in Alabama, Arkansas, California, Georgia, Idaho, Iowa,
Kentucky, Louisiana, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, North
Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, South Carolina, Texas, Virginia and West Virginia. The third view is that the
prosecution must prove sanity beyond a reasonable doubt (Dais vs. United States, 160 U. S. 496; 40 Law. ed., 499;
16 Sup. Ct. Rep., 353; Hotema vs. United States, 186 U. S., 413; 46 Law. ed., 1225; 22 Sup. Ct. Rep., 895; United
States vs. Lancaster, 7 Biss., 440; Fed. Cas. No. 15,555; United States vs. Faulkner, 35 Fed., 730). This liberal view
is premised on the proposition that while it is true that the presumption of sanity exists at the outset, the prosecution
affirms every essential ingredients of the crime charged, and hence affirms sanity as one essential ingredients, and
that a fortiori where the accused introduces evidence to prove insanity it becomes the duty of the State to prove the
sanity of the accused beyond a reasonable doubt.
In the Philippines, we have approximated the first and stricter view (People vs. Bacos [1922], 44 Phil., 204). The
burden, to be sure, is on the prosecution to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that the defendant committed the
crime, but insanity is presumed, and ". . . when a defendant in a criminal case interposes the defense of mental
incapacity, the burden of establishing that fact rests upon him. . . ." (U. S. vs. Martinez [1916], 34 Phil., 305, 308,
309; U. S. vs. Bascos, supra.) We affirm and reiterate this doctrine.
In the case at bar, the defense interposed being that the defendant was insane at the time he killed the deceased,
the obligation of proving that affirmative allegation rests on the defense. Without indulging in fine distinctions as to
the character and degree of evidence that must be presented sufficiently convincing evidence, direct or
circumstantial, to a degree that satisfies the judicial mind that the accused was insane at the time of the perpetration
of the offense? In order to ascertain a person's mental condition at the time of the act, it is permissible to receive
evidence of the condition of his mind a reasonable period both before and after that time. Direct testimony is not
required (Wharton, Criminal Evidence, p. 684; State vs. Wright, 134 Mo., 404; 35 S. W., 1145; State vs. Simms, 68
Mo., 305; Rinkard vs. State, 157 Ind., 534; 62 N. E., 14; People vs. Tripler, I Wheeler, Crim. Cas., 48), nor are
specific acts of derangement essential (People vs. Tripler, supra) to established insanity as a defense. Mind can
only be known by outward acts. Thereby, we read the thoughts, the motives and emotions of a person and come to
determine whether his acts conform to the practice of people of sound mind. To prove insanity, therefore,
cicumstantial evidence, if clear and convincing, suffice (People vs. Bascos [1922], 44 Phil., 204).
The trial judge arrived at the conclusion that the defendantwas not insane at the time of the commission of the act
for which he was prosecuted on the theory that the insanity was only occassional or intermittent and not
permanentor continuous (32 C. J., sec. 561, p. 757). We are appraised of the danger of indulging in the
preseumption ofcontinuity in cases of temporary or spasmodic insanity.We appreciate the reason forthe contrary
rule. To be sure, courts should be careful to distinguish insanity in law from passion or eccentricity, mental weakness
or mere depression resulting from physical ailment. The State should guard against sane murderers escaping
punishment through a general plea of insanity. In the case at bar, however, we are not cconcerned with connecting
two or more attacks of insanity to show the continuance thereof during the intervening period or periods but with the
continuity of a particular and isolated attack prior to the commission of the crime charged, and ending with a positive
diagnosis of insanity immediately following the commission of the act complained of. Upon the other hand, there are
facts and circumstances of record which can not be overlooked.The following considerations have weighed heavily
upon the minds of the majority of this court in arriving at a conclusion different from that reached by the court below:.
(a) From the evidence presented by the defense, uncontradicted by the prosecution, it appears that the herein
defendant-appellant, during the periods from April 11 to April 26, 1922, and from January 6 to January 10,
1926, was confined in the insane department of the San Lazaro Hospital suffering from a disease diagnosed
as dementia præcox. His confinement during these periods, it is true, was long before the commission of the
offense on December 12, 1934, but this is a circumstance which tends to show that the recurrence of the
ailment at the time of the occurence of the crime is not entirely lacking of any rational or scientific foundation.
(b) All persons suffering from dementia præcox are clearly to be regarded as having mental disease to a
degree that disqualifies them for legal responsibility for their actions (Mental Disorder in Medico-Legal
Relations by Dr. Albert M. Barrett in Peterson, Haines and Webster, Legal Medicine and Toxology, vol. I, p.
613). According to Dr. Elias Domingo, chief alienist of the Insular Psychopathic Hospital, the symptoms of
dementia præcox, in certain peeriods of excitement, are similar to those of manic depresive psychosis (p. 19,
t. s. n.) and, in either case, the mind appears "deteriorated" because, "when a person becomes affected by
this kind of disease, either dementia præcox or manic depresive psychosis, during the period of excitement,
he has no control whatever of his acts." (P. 21, t. s. n.) Even if viewed under the general medico-legal
classification of manic-depressive insanity, "it is largely in relation with the question of irrestible impulse that
forensic relations of manic actions will have to be considered. There is in this disorder a pathologic lessening
or normal inhibitions and the case with which impulses may lead to actions impairs deliberations and the use
of normal checks to motor impulses" (Peterson, Haines and Webster, Legal Medicine and Toxology [2d ed.,
1926], vol, I, p. 617).
(c) According to the uncontradicted testimony of Dr. Celedonio S. Francisco, at one time an interne at San
LazaroHospital, for four (4) days immediately preceding December 12, 1934 — the date when the crime was
committed — the defendant and appellant had "an attack of insomnia", which is one of the symptoms of, and
may lead to, dementia præcox (Exhibit 3, defense testimony of Dr. Celedonio S. Francisco, pp. 13, 14, t. s.
n.).
(d) The defendant-appellant appears to have been arrested and taken to the police station on the very same
day of the perpetration of the crime, and although attempted were made by detectives to secure a statement
from him (see Exhibit B and D and testimony of Charles Strabel, t. s. n. pp. 9, 10) he was sent by the police
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department to the Psychopathic Hospital the day following the commission of the crime. This is an indication
that the police authorities themselves doubted the mental normalcy of the acused, which doubt found
confirmation in the official reports submitted by the specialists of the San Lazaro Hospital.
(e) According to the report (Exhibit 4) of the alienist in charge, Dr. Toribio Joson, which report was made
within the first month of treatment, the defendant was suffering from a form of psychosis, called manic
depressive psychosis.We quote the report in full:
1. MENTAL STATUS:
(a) General behavior. — The patient is undetective, staying most of the time in his bed with his
eyes closed and practically totally motionless. At other times, however, but on very rare
occassions and at short intervals he apparently wakes up and then he walks around, and makes
signs and ritualistic movements with the extremities and other parts of the body. Ordinarily he
takes his meal but at times he refuses to take even the food offered by his mother or sister, so
that there have been days in the hospital when he did not take any nourishment. On several
occassions he refused to have the bath, or to have his hair cut and beard shaved, and thus
appear untidy. He would also sometimes refuse his medicine, and during some of the intervals
he displayed impulsive acts, such as stricking his chest or other parts of the body with his fists
and at one time after a short interview, he struck strongly with his fist the door of the nurse's
office without apparent motivation. He also sometimes laughs, or smiles, or claps his hands
strongly without provocation.
(b) Stream of talk. — Usually the patient is speechless, can't be persuaded to speak, and would
not answer in any form the questions propounded to him. Very often he is seen with his eyes
closed apparently praying as he was mumbling words but would not answer at all when talked to.
At one time he was seen in this condition with a cross made of small pieces of strick in his hand.
He at times during the interviews recited passages in the literature as for example the following.
"La virtud y las buenas costumbres son la verdadera nobleza del hombre. (Truthfulness,
honesty and loyalty are among the attributes of a dependable character.)"
At one time he tried to recite the mass in a very loud voice in the hospital.
(c) Mood. — Patient is usually apathetic and indifferent but at times he looks anxious and rather
irritable. He himself states that the often feels said in the hospital.
(d) Orientation. — During the periods that he was acccessible he was found oriented as to place
and person but he did not know the day or the date.
(e) Illusion and hallucination. — The patient states that during the nights that he could not sleep
he could hear voices telling him many things. Voices, for example, told that he should escape.
That he was going to be killed because he was benevolet. That he could sometimes see the
shadow of his former sweetheart in the hospital. There are times however when he could not
hear or see at all anything.
(f ) Delusion and misinterpretation. — On one occassion he told the examiner that he could not
talk in his first day in the hospital because of a mass he felt he had in his throat. He sometimes
thinks that he is already dead and already buried in the La Loma Cemetery.
(h) Memory. — The patient has a fairly good memory for remote events, but his memory for
recent events or for example, for events that took place during his stay in the hospital he has no
recollection at all.
(i) Grasp of general informartion. — He has a fairly good grasp of general information. He could
not, however, do simple numerial tests as the 100-7 test.
( j) Insight and judgment. — At his fairly clear periods he stated that he might have been insane
during his first days in the hospital, but just during the interview on January 14, 1935, he felt fairly
well. Insight and judgment were, of course, nil during his stuporous condition. During the last two
days he has shown marked improvement in his behavior as to be cooperative, and coherent in
his speech.
The patient during his confinement in the hospital has been found suffering from a form of
physchosis, called Manic depressive psychosis.
In the subsequent report, dated June 11, 1935 (Exhibit 5), filed by Dr. Jose A. Fernandez, another assistant alienist
in the Insular Pshychopatic Hospital, the following conclusion was reached:
I am of the opinion that actually this patient is sick. He is suffering from the Manic Depressive
form of psychosis. It might be premature to state before the court has decided this case, but I
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believe it a duty to state, that this person is not safe to be at large. He has a peculiar personality
make-up, a personality lacking in control, overtly serious in his dealings with the every day
events of this earthly world, taking justice with his own hands and many times executing it in an
impulsive manner as to make his action over proportionate — beyond normal acceptance. He is
sensitive, overtly religious, too idealistic has taste and desires as to make him queer before the
average conception of an earthly man.
He will always have troubles and difficulaties with this world of realities.
(Sgd.) J. A. Fernandez, M. D.
Assistant Alienist
To prove motive and premeditation and, indirectly, mental normlacy of the accused at the time of the commission of
the crime, the prosecution called on policeman Damaso Arnoco. Arnoco testified that upon arresting the defendant-
appellant he inquired from the latter for the reason for the assault and the defendant-appellant replied that the
deceased Guison owed him P55 and would pay; that appellant bought the knife, Exhibit A, for 55 centavos in Tabora
Street and that for two days he had been watching for Guison in order to kill him (pp. 5, 6, t. s. n.). Benjamin Cruz, a
detective, was also called and corroborated the testimony of policeman Arnoco. That such kind of evidence is not
necessarily proof of the sanity of the accused during the commission of the offense, is clear from what Dr. Sydney
Smith, Regius Professor of Forensic Medicine, University of Edinburg, said in his work on Forensic Medicine (3d ed.
[London], p. 382), that in the type of dementia præcox, "the crime is ussually preceded by much complaining and
planning. In these people, homicidal attcks are common, because of delusions that they are being interfered with
sexually or that their property is being taken."
In view of the foregoing, we are of the opinion that the defendant-appellant was demented at the time he perpetrated
the serious offense charged in the information and that conseuently he is exempt from criminal liability. Accordingly,
the judgment of the lower court is hereby reversed, and the defendant-appellant acquitted, with costs de oficio in
both instances. In conforminty with paragraph 1 of article 12 of the Revised Penal Code, the defendant shall kept in
confinement in the San Lazaro Hospital or such other hospital for the insane as may be desiganted by the Director
of the Philippine Health Service, there to remain confined until the Court of First Instance of Manila shall otherwise
order or decree. So ordered.
Separate Opinions
There is not question as to the facts constituting the crime imputed to the accused. The disagreement arises from
the conclusions which both opinions attempt to infer therefrom. The majority opinon establishes the conclusion that
the accused was not in his sound mind when he committed the crime because he was then suffering from dementia
præcox. The dissenting opinions, in establishing the conclusion that the accused was then in the possession of his
mental facilities, or, at leats, at a lucid interval, are based on the fact admitted by the parties and supported by
expert testimony, that the accused, before the commission of the crime, had been cured of dementia præcox and
later of manic depressive psychosis. The majority opinion admits that there is no positive evidence regarding the
mantal state of the accused when he comitted the crime, but it infers from the facts that he must have then been
deprived of his reason. This inference is not sufficiently supported by the circumtantial evidence. I it is admitted that
the legal presumption is that a person who commits a crime is in his right mind (U. S. vs. Hontiveros Carmona, 18
Phil., 62; U. S. vs. Guevara, 27 Phil., 547; U. S. vs. Zamora, 32 Phil., 218; U. S. vs. Martinez, 34 Phil., 305; People
vs. Bascos, 44 Phil., 204), because the law presumes all acts and ommissions punishable by law to be voluntary
(art. 1, Penal Code; article 4, subsection 1, Revised Penal Code), and if, as it appears, there is sufficient or
satisfactory evidence that the accused was mentally incapacitated when he committed the crime, the conclusion of
fact must be the same presumption established by law, that is, that he was in his right mind, and the conclusion of
law must be that he is criminal liable.
There is another detail worth mentioning which is that no credit was given to the conclusions of fact arrived at by the
judge who tried the case. He observed and heard the witnesses who testified and he had the advantage of testing
their credibility nearby. After weighing all the evidence he arrived at the conclusion that the accused committed the
crime while he was in his right mind. This court generally gives much weight to the conclusions of fact of the judge
who tried the case in the first instance and does not reject them useless they are clearly in conflict with the
evidence.
I do not agree to the majority opinion. The appellant committed the crime while he was sane, or at least, during a
lucid interval. He did not kill his victim without rhyme or reason and only for the sake of killing him. He did so to
avenge himself or to punish his victim for having refused, according to him, to pay a debt of P55 after having made
him many promises. He so stated clearly to the policeman who arrested him immediately after the incident; and he
made it so understood to the witness Mariano Yamson, a friend of both the appellant and his victim, before the
commission of the crime.
The law presumes that everybody is in his sound mind because ordinarily such is his normal condition. Insanity is an
exception which may be said to exist only when thereis satisfactorily evidence establishing it and it certainly is not
always permanent because there are cases in which it comes and takes place only occasionaly and lasts more or
less time according to the circumstances of the individual, that is, the condition of his health, his environment, and
the other contributory causes thereof. The law itself recognizes this, so much so that in establishing the rule that
insane persons are excempt from criminal liability, because they commit no crime, it also makes the exception that
this is true only when they have not acted during a lucid intervals (art. 12, subsec. 1, of the Revised Penal Code).
The appellant was afflicted with insanity only for a few days during the months stated in the majority opinion; April
1922 and January 1926, but he was later pronounced cured in the hospital where he had been confined because he
had already returned to normalcy by recovering his reason. For this one fact alone, instead of stating that he acted
during a lucid interval on said occasion, it should be said on the contrary, taking into consideration the explanations
given by him to the policemen who arrested him and to other witnesses for the prosecution with whom he had been
talking before and after the incident, that he acted while in the full possession of his mental faculties.
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The fact that the appellant was aflicted with manic depressive psychosis after the crime, as certified by Drs. Toribio
Joson, J. A. Fernandez and Elias Domingo who examined him, does not prove that he was so afflicted on the date
and at the time of the commission of the crime nor that said ailment, taking for granted that he was suffering
therefrom, had deprived him of his reason to such an extent that he could not account for his acts.
There is no evidence of record to show that the appellant was actually insane when he committed the crime or that
he continued to be afflicted with said ailment for which he had to be confined in the insane asylum for some days
during the months above-stated, in 1922 and 1926. The most reasonable rule which should be adopted in these
cases is the one followed by various courts of the United States stated in 32 C. J., 757, section 561, and 16 C. J.,
538, 539, section 1012 as follows:
If the insanity, admitted, or proved, is only occassional or intermittent in its nature, the presumption of its
continuance does not arise, and he who relies on such insanity proved at another time must prove its
existence also at the time alleged. (32 C. J., 757, sec. 561.)
Where it is shown that defendant had lucid intervals, it will be presumed that the offense was committed in
one of them. A person who has been adjudged insane, or who has been committed to a hospital or to an
asylum for the insane, is presumed to continue insane; but as in the case of prior insanity generally, a prior
adjudication of insanity does not raise a presumption of continued insanity, where the insanity is not of a
permanent or continuing character, or where, for a considerable period of time, the person has been on
parole from the hospital or asylum to which he was committed, or where he escaped from the asylum at a
time when he was about to be discharged. (16 C. J., 538, 539, sec. 1012.)
On the other hand, in Clevenger's Medical Jirusprudence of Insanity (vol. 1, pp. 482 and 484, the following appears:
Fitful and exceptional attacks of insanity are not presumed to be continuous. And the existence of prior or
subsequent lunacy, except where it is habitual, does not suffice to change the burden of proof. And where an
insane person has lucid intervals offenses committed by him will be presumed to have been committed in a
lucid intervals unless the contrary appears. The maxim "Once insane presumed always to be insane" does
not apply where the malady or delusion under which the alleged insane person labored was in its nature
accidental or temporary, or the effect of some sickness or disease.
And in order to raise a presumption of continuance it must be of permanent type or a continuing nature or
possessed of the characteristics of an habitual and confirmed disorder of the mind. And it must appear to
have been of such duration and character as to indicate the probability of its continuance, and not simply the
possibility or probability of its recurrence. And there should be some evidence tending to show settled insanity
as contradistinguished from temporary aberration or hallucination, to justify an instruction which does nor
recognize such a distinction.
It is alleged that the appellant was suffering from insomia before he committed the crime in question. Such condition
does not necessarily prove that on the day in question he was actually insane. Insomia, according to Dr. Elias
Domingo, is not an exlcusive symptom of insanity; other diseases and ailments also have it (t. s. n., p.19).
In view of the foregoing considerations and of those stated in the dissenting opinion of Justice Concepcion, I vote for
the affirmance of the appealed sentence, because in my opinion it is supported by the evidence and in accordance
with law.
I dissent: Above all, I wish to state: (1) that the crime committed by the accused is an admitted fact; and (2) that I
adhere to the statement of the majority that it is settled in this jurisdiction that a defense based upon the insanity of
the accused should be established by means of clear, indubitable and satisfactory evidence.
On December 12, 1934, the accused stabbed the deceased Carlos Guison who, as a result the wounds received by
him, died in the hospital two days after the aggression.
It is alleged that the accused was insane at the time he committed this crime. What evidence is there of record in
support of this defense? Mention has been made of the fact that the accused had been confined in the san Lazaro
Hospital and later in the Psychopathic Hospital. He was confined in the San Lazaro Hospital from April 11 to April
26, 1922. He returned to the hospital on January 6, 1926, and left on the 10th of said month and years. Dr Elias
Domingo, chief alienist of the Psychopathic Hospital was questioned as follows:
Q. When he left the hospital, can you state whether he was already completely cured of his insanity? — A. He
wassocially adjustable.
Q. What do you mean by socially adjustable? — A. That he could adapt himself to environment.
There is no evidence that from the month of January, 1926, when he was declared cured at the Psychopathic
Hospital, to December 12, 1934, the date of the crime, he had shown signs of having had a relapse. Therefore it is a
proven fact during the long period of nine years the accused had been sane.
It is alleged, however, that four days before the crime the accused was under treatment by Dr. Celedonio S.
Francisco because he was suffering from insomia. Dr. Francisco admitted that he was not a specialist in mental
diseases. He is, therefore, disqualified from testifying satisfactorily on the mental condition of the accused four days
before the crime; and in fact neither has Dr. Francisco given any convincing testimony to prove that when the
accused was under treatment by him he was suffering from dementia præcox, as the only thing he said was that the
accused-appellant had an attack of insomia which is one of the symptoms of and may lead to dementia præcox
(Exhibit 3; t. s. n., pp. 13, 14). This is not an affirmation of a fact but of a mere possibility. The innoncence of the
accused cannot be based on mere theories or possibilities. To prove insanity as a defense, material, incontrovertible
facts, although circumstantial, are necessary.
On the contrary the evidence shows that on the day the accused committed the crime he talked and behaved as an
entirely normal man. Policemen Damaso T. Arnoco and Benjamin Cruz testified that the accused, after having been
asked why he had attacked Carlos Guison, replied that it was because Guison owed him P55 for a long time and did
not pay him. The accused stated that he bought the knife with which he had stabbed Guison on Tabora Street for
fifty centavos and he had been waiting for two days to kill Guison. The accused took his dinner at noon on
December 12th. The statement of the accused which was taken in writing by detectives Charles Strubel and Manalo
on December12th was left unfinished because Cruz of the Bureau of Labor arrived and told the accused not to be a
fool and not to make any statement. Thereafter the accused refused to continue his statement. All of these show
that on that day the accused behaved as a sane man and he even appeared to be prudent, knowing how to take
advantage of advice favorable to him, as that given him by Cruz of the Bureau of Labor. Furthermore it cannot be
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said hat the accused had stabbed Guison through hallucination because it is an established fact that his victim really
owed him money as confirmed by the fact that when Guison was stabbed he cried to the accused "I am going to pay
you", according to the testimony of an eyewitness. Therefore the motive of the aggression was a real and positive
fact: vengeance.
Some days after the commission of the crime, the accused was placed under observation in the Psychopathic
Hospital because he showed symptoms of a form of psychosis called depressive psychosis from which he had
already been cured when the case was tried. This pyschosis is of course evidence that the accused was afflicted
with this ailment after the commission of the crime. It would not be casual to affirm that the commission of the crime
had affected his reason. Nervous shock is one of the causes of insanity (Angeles, Legal Medicine, p. 728); but it
cannot be logically inferred therefrom that the accused was also mentally deranged on the day of the crime, aside
from the ciscumstance that the evidence shows just the contrary. I am, therefore, of the opinion that the appealed
sentence should be affirmed.
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