People v. Villar, 322 SCRA 393 (2000)
People v. Villar, 322 SCRA 393 (2000)
People v. Villar, 322 SCRA 393 (2000)
SYNOPSIS
SYLLABUS
DECISION
MELO , J : p
This Court is once again called upon to discharge the most awesome power in the
criminal justice system, where, by way of automatic review, it is mandated to determine
whether or not the extreme penalty of death per Section 11 of Republic Act No. 7659, more
commonly referred to as the Death Penalty Law, was correctly imposed by the trial court,
in this case by Branch 52 of the Regional Trial Court of the Fourth Judicial Region,
stationed at Puerto Princesa City, Palawan for the heinous crime of statutory rape
committed by a de facto guardian against his 10-year old ward. cda
(p. 8, Rollo.)
Criminal Case No. 11875
That sometime in the month of January, 1993 at barangay Bucana,
Municipality of El Nido, Province of Palawan, Philippines, and within the
jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the said accused with lewd design and by
means of force, intimidation, did then and there willfully and feloniously have
carnal knowledge with one Mary Ann Ramos, a child below 12 years old, against
her will and consent to her damage and prejudice.
(p. 10, Rollo.)
The narration of facts by the trial court, supported as it is by the evidentiary record,
is hereby adopted, to wit:
Mary Ann Ramos is the eldest child of the spouses Danilo Ramos and
Jose na Recasa who were joined in wedlock in Masbate, on January 15, 1982.
Shortly thereafter, the spouses transferred residence to El Nido, Palawan, where in
barangay Bucana of the same town, Mary Ann was born to said spouses on April
7, 1983.
The building serving some kind of a dormitory for Mary Ann and the four
(4) other school children with her is a structure of light materials with a oor area
measuring about 18 feet long and 16 feet wide. The walls are made of sawali, or
wooden buho (reed), and with roof of nipa shingles. Its oor, built about three (3)
feet above the ground, is made of bamboo slats.
The house they were living is so structured that it could be said to have two
(2) rooms. One room serves as bedroom while on one side of the other is the
place for the kitchen, and section for the dining room. Mary Ann and the two other
girls sleep side by side on mats spread on the oor in the bedroom while the boys,
Ernie and Rene Maltos, also sleep beside each other on another side of the room
close to the kitchen. Salvador Villar, on the other hand, sleeps on a bed close to
the two boys.
Roughly 10:00 o'clock, one evening about the middle of January, 1993, and
while all the four (4) other children with her were already asleep, Mary Ann noticed
Salvador Villar approached her and with a knife poked at her chest, undressed
her. Even as she struggled to prevent him from undressing her he also took off her
panty and made her lie down. She attempted to shout but he covered her mouth
with his hand. Then he laid on top of her and thereupon forcibly inserted his male
organ in her female genitalia. With his penis inside her private organ he executed
repeated pumping motions. The entry of his male organ in to her reproductive
organ, and his execution of the pumping motions, caused her intense pain which
made her momentary loss of consciousness.
When shortly after she regained consciousness, she felt pain in her female
organ. Realizing that her organ had been bleeding she became frightened. Just
then, Salvador Villar warned her not to tell anyone what happened or he will kill
her. (TSN, Roselyn N. Teologo, February 9, 1995, pp. 9-14.) Because of fear
instilled in her by that threat she refrained from telling anyone about what the
accused did to her.
That was not to be the last time the accused forcibly imposed his sexual
gratification on the complainant.
For a period of about a year thereafter the accused repeatedly had forcible
carnal knowledge of the complainant at intervals of more or less three days, or
about ten (10) times a month. He raped her so many times, about a hundred (100)
times, that she was unable to recall the precise dates of each assault on her.
Aside from the rst occasion which she recalled to have taken place one evening
about the middle of January, 1993, the only other occasion which took place also
in the house they were staying in barangay Bucana, El Nido, Palawan, was in the
evening of January 19, 1994. (TSN, Roselyn N. Teologo, June 9, 1995, pp. 14-23)
dctai
In the evening of January 19, 1994, the accused again forcibly had carnal
knowledge of the complainant. About 10:00 o'clock that evening, and after all the
other school children with Mary Ann have already been asleep, the accused
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approached her and for nth time forcibly undressed her. Thereafter, he laid on top
of her and inserted his male organ into hers. With his penis inside her female
organ he executed pumping motions even as she struggled to free herself from
him. With his weight over her body and with a knife poked on her she was unable
to extricate herself.
Occasioned by the fear instilled in her by the threat to her life by the
accused, the repeated sexual assaults on the complainant by the said accused
would not have been disclosed to her parents were it not for another unusual
incident which may have some bearing to the successive commission of the
offenses herein charged.
As was the habit, after dismissal from their classes late in the afternoon of
Friday, January 21, 1994, the children proceeded home on a banca to their
parents in sitio Lalutaya, barangay El Nido, Palawan. Thru Liezl Ranilo, the
mother of Mary Ann Ramos learned about the incident which made them jump
out through the window. Thereupon, her mother asked Mary Ann why they jumped
out through the window and she related why, including what Salvador Villar had
been doing to her. Her mother spanked her. But the following morning they
proceeded to the town hall of El Nido and led a complaint for rape against
Salvador Villar. (TSN, Roselyn N. Teologo, 9 February, 1995, pp. 16-17)
Aside from ling a complaint, Mary Ann, accompanied by her mother, also
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submitted for physical/medical examination by a physician on January 27, 1994.
Dr. Nestor A. Reyes of the District hospital of Taytay, Palawan, conducted that
examination and issued Medico Legal Certi cate, marked Exhibit "C", the full text
of which follows:
Accused-appellant imputes two errors upon the trial court for convicting him of two
counts of rape, to wit:
I
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN FINDING THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT GUILTY
BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT OF TWO COUNTS OF RAPE (IN JANUARY 1993
AND ON JANUARY 19, 1994) DESPITE THE IMPROBABLE AND INCONSISTENT
TESTIMONY OF THE COMPLAINING WITNESS.
II
THE TRIAL COURT ERRED IN CONVICTING THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT IN
CRIMINAL CASE NO. 11874 AND SENTENCING HIM TO DEATH PURSUANT TO
SECTION 11 OF REPUBLIC ACT NO. 7659 AMENDING ARTICLE 336 OF THE
REVISED PENAL CODE.
In his brief, accused-appellant resolutely questions the factual ndings of the trial
court concerning the credibility of the victim. For instance, accused-appellant cites the
inconsistency between the victim's declaration in her sworn statement and her direct
testimony in court as to the exact time when she was rst raped by accused-appellant in
1993.
The argument fails to persuade us.
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It may well be pointed out that not all kinds of inconsistency of a witness render the
witness' testimony unworthy of credence. Verily, inconsistencies in minor details reinforce
rather than weaken credibility (People vs. Del Prado, 110 Phil. 1034 [1960]), and such
inconsistencies do not materially impair the credibility of the witness (People vs. Modelo,
35 SCRA 639 [1970]). Under the circumstances of the case at bar, the Court nds the
materiality of the exact time the crime was committed as a minor detail and not of great
signi cance. The more important consideration is that the declarations of the victim both
in her sworn statement before the investigating police o cer and in her testimony in court,
are consistent on the basic matters constituting the elements of the crime charged.
Besides, this Court has already ruled that discrepancy between the witnesses' testimony in
court and the a davits they had previously signed, as to minor details regarding the
commission of the crime, do not constitute su cient ground to impeach the credibility of
said witnesses, where on material and important points their declarations are consistent
(People vs. Valera, 5 SCRA 910 [1962]).
Furthermore, the Court cannot impose the burden of exactness in the victim's
recollection of her harrowing experience more so in the present case where the victim was
an innocent and tender 9-year old lass when she was rst raped. It is all the more
understandable that the victim in the present case may have been confused as to the exact
details of each and every rape incident, considering that she claimed she had been sexually
ravished for more than 100 times in a span of one whole year. It is in fact expected that
such a victim would rather wish and even purposely forget the abhorrent memories of
every single occasion. This being the case, it would be exacting too much should the Court
demand a very accurate, detailed, and awless account of the two occasions now subject
of her charges out of the 100 occasions of forcible intercourse. In People vs. Sagucio (277
SCRA 183 [1997]), where this Court faced the same issue of alleged inconsistencies in the
victim's narration, we held that errorless testimony cannot be expected especially when a
witness is recounting details of a harrowing experience. A court cannot expect a rape
victim to remember every detail of the appalling outrage. cda
Finally, accused-appellant claims that the death penalty cannot be imposed upon
him under the provisions of Section 11 of Republic Act No. 7659 which pertinently
provides:
The death penalty shall also be imposed if the crime of rape is committed
with any of the following attendant circumstances:
(1) when the victim is under eighteen (18) years of age and the
offender is a parent, ascendant, step-parent, guardian, relative by
consanguinity or affinity within the third civil degree, or the
common-law-spouse of the parent of the victim.
He posits that he was not a guardian of the victim. He argues that he was a mere
employee of the victim's parents, spouses Danilo and Jose na Ramos, charged with the
duty of looking after the needs of their children Mary Ann and May Ramos, and likewise
given the task of conducting them by banca from Barangay Bucana to Sitio Lalutaya and
vice-versa to attend school. He further contends that he cannot be said to have the power,
control or authority over the person of Mary Ann Ramos which a guardian should have,
because it is still her parents who exercise the same over her. He insists that he served as
a mere companion of the children while they attended their classes.
There may be ample evidence on record to show that accused-appellant quali ed as
a guardian of the victim the way the lawmakers intended the word to be understood, but
the Court reserves its ruling on the issue considering that this special qualifying
circumstance of being a guardian was not duly alleged in the information.
The Court cannot a rm the death sentence imposed by the trial court anchored
upon the above-cited provision of the Death Penalty Law.
In People vs. Dela Cuesta (G.R. No. 126134, March 2, 1999), we held:
The seven modes of committing rape introduced under R.A. 7659 and R.A.
4111 which warrant the automatic imposition of death penalty partake of the
nature of a qualifying circumstance under the Revised Penal Code since it
increases the penalty of rape to one degree. As such, this qualifying circumstance,
that the child is under eighteen (18) and the offender is a guardian, should be
alleged in the information to be appreciated as such.
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(pp. 10-11)
Although the circumstances to qualify simple rape to the heinous crime of rape,
namely: (a) victim under 18 years old (the certi cate of live birth – Exhibit "A" was admitted
by the defense), and (b ) the offender being a guardian, were duly proven in the present
case, these circumstance cannot considered for purposes of imposing the extreme
penalty of death unless these were alleged in the information. An examination of the two
informations in the present case reveals that only the qualifying circumstance that the
child is under 12 was alleged. There was no allegation that the offender was a guardian of
the victim. To consider said circumstance as qualifying, would constitute denial of the right
of accused-appellant to due process and to be informed of the charges against him. At
best, such circumstance may only be treated as a generic aggravating circumstance,
which, in the case of simple statutory rape, however, is inconsequential because the
imposable penalty is the singular indivisible penalty of reclusion perpetua.
For each the two counts of simple statutory rape, accused-appellant may be held
civilly liable for the amount of P50,000.00 by way of indemnity and an additional
P50,000.00 as moral damages.
WHEREFORE, nding the conviction of accused-appellant for two counts of rape
justi ed by the evidence on record, the Court hereby AFFIRMS the decision of Branch 52 of
the Regional Trial Court, Fourth Judicial Region, stationed at Puerto Princesa City (a) in
Criminal Case No. 11875 sentencing accused-appellant to reclusion perpetua, with civil
indemnity of P50,000.00 in favor of the victim, with an ADDITIONAL P50,000.00 as moral
damages; and (b) in Criminal Case No. 11875 MODIFYING the sentence to reclusion
perpetua, also with civil indemnity of P50,000.00, and P50,000.00 as moral damages in
favor of the victim. Costs de oficio.
Cdpr
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J., Bellosillo, Puno, Vitug, Kapunan, Mendoza, Panganiban, Quisumbing,
Purisima, Pardo, Buena, Gonzaga-Reyes, Ynares-Santiago and De Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.