People of The Philippines vs. Renato Mancao, Et Al. - Supra Source
People of The Philippines vs. Renato Mancao, Et Al. - Supra Source
People of The Philippines vs. Renato Mancao, Et Al. - Supra Source
SECOND DIVISION
NOCON, J.:
The last to be heard at the residence of the Sarabias were the voice of an eighty-three
(83) years old woman screaming for help and two (2) gun shots. The police authorities
found, upon reaching the scene of the, Rustico Sarabia, eighty-four (84) years old, dead
near the toilet which was about two (2) meters away from their house with multiple hack
wounds with his left arm completely severed, Candelaria Sarabia on the road about ten
(10) meters away from their house with a hack wound on her neck and body, and
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Dionesio Sarabia, who was a fifty-one year old abnormal, also dead in their rest house,
which was about one hundred (100) meters away from the main house, with multiple
hack wounds and stab wounds.
As a result of this heinous crime, seven (7) persons were tagged as suspects by the police
and charged of the crime of multiple murder, but only Renato Mancao and Diosdado
Banquesio were arraigned as the rest of the accused were at large. It was only later that
appellant Jose Mancao was arrested, charged and pleaded not guilty upon arraignment.
The information filed with the Regional Trial Court, Branch 6, Mati, Davao Oriental,
reads as follows:
CONTRARY TO LAW.
After trial on the merits, Renato Mancao and Diosdado Banquesio were acquitted of the
crime charged while Jose Mancao was convicted of the crime of multiple murder in a
Decision rendered by the trial court, the dispositive portion of which reads:
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the victims, and the crime was committed in dwelling of the o!ended party.
Accordingly, accused Jose Mancao is hereby sentenced to reclusion perpetua
and to indemnify the heirs of the victim in the sum of P90,000.00 (P30,000.00
each), and moral damages of P100,000.00 and to pay the costs.
With respect to accused Renato Mancao and Diosdado Banquesio, there being
no evidentiary basis for finding of guilt beyond reasonable doubt, the said
accused are hereby absolved from the criminal charge under inquiry, with
costs de o!cio.
SO ORDERED.
Felipe Estorba and Renato Mancao (one of the accused who was acquitted) were drinking
"tuba" at the former's residence at Sitio Kalubihan, Banaybanay, Davao Oriental on the
evening of February 25, 1986, at around 6 o'clock.
The two drank for about an hour when appellant Jose Mancao arrived and talked with
Renato, his brother. Estorba who was about a meter away from the Mancao brothers,
overheard them talking about the liquidation of the octogenarian couple, Rustico and
1
Candelaria. Thereafter, appellant left behind his brother Renato.
A few moments later Renato and Estorba heard two (2) gun shots and both left Estorba's
house to buy cigarettes upon the request of Renato Mancao.
On their way to the store, they met three (3) persons, namely, Diosdado Banquesio, a
certain "Angi" and herein accused-appellant, Jose Mancao along fishpond dike owned
by the Sarabias.
According to Estorba, Banquesio was wearing short pants, with no shirt but had a white
band tied around his head. He had blood stains in most parts of his body and carried with
him a samurai. "Angi" was also wearing short pants with no shirt and held a caliber .45
2
pistol while Jose Mancao was wearing a shirt and pants and held no weapon.
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Estorba further testifies that he heard Renato asked, "What now? and appellant replied,
"It is already okay". Banquesio on the other hand, said, "All fixed" and "Angi"
3
answered, "It is finished."
Estorba and Renato Mancao then went back to the former's house to finish the "tuba"
they were drinking before they were rudely interrupted by gun shots.
All three victims died due to hypovolemic shock, or massive loss of blood, by reason of
4
multiple hack and stab wounds.
Appellant was a tuba gatherer of the victims who lived in a house near a fishpond, 5
some 80 meters away from the Sarabia's residence. 6
He testified that in the evening of February 25, 1986 he saw seven (7) men passing his
house going to the direction of the Sarabia's house. Two of the unidentified men were
carrying long firearms. He heard the barking of dogs and a few moments later the
shouting for help of Mrs. Sarabia followed by a gunburst. Out of fear, he just stayed in his
7
house the whole night.
The day after the massacre of the Sarabias, appellant Jose Mancao left his house at about
8 o'clock in the morning bringing along with him his family. They proceeded to the
house of Jose's mother which was about a kilometer away. Jose Mancao later returned to
their house at around 10 o'clock in the morning and noticed the presence of policemen. 8
Later in the afternoon, accused-appellant went back to his mother's house and there he
was approached by two persons who threatened and warned him to leave his house and
9
if not, he would be killed just like the Sarabias. Jose Mancao then proceeded to
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Malapatan, Glan, South Cotabato, the place of his wife. Several months thereafter, he
was arrested at Mabini, Magsaysay, Davao del Sur.
Accused-appellant now seeks to nullify the judgment of the trial court on the ground
that the circumstantial evidence presented was insu"cient to overcome accused-
appellant's presumption of innocence.
The sole issue before Us is whether or not the prosecution has amply substantiated by
circumstantial evidence and beyond reasonable doubt the participation of appellant in
the shocking massacre of the Sarabias.
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As there were not eyewitnesses to the crime, We are forced to base our verdict on
circumstantial evidence.
13
In the case of People vs. Pedrosa, the Court said:
The prosecution advances the following circumstances to prove the guilt of accused-
appellant:
First, Mrs. Olympia Ordoño, the daughter of the spouses Sarabia testified that her father
told her that on February 13, 1986, they were robbed by a group of masked men. The men
hogtied their brother, Dionesio Sarabia and ransacked the house. However, her father
said that though they were masked, he could still recognize one of the men and
identified him as Jose Mancao, their tuba gatherer. Her father further said that they
15
wanted Jose Mancao out of the land but he refused to leave the same.
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Second, the behavior of the accused-appellant in bringing along his family to his
mother's house is indicative of his guilt. It is unnatural for a neighbor, and worker at
that, of the Sarabias to flee from their house and to migrate to a place where nothing
awaits them. The immediate flight of accused is strongly indicative of his consciousness
16
of guilt.
Third, appellant's silence as to what he allegedly saw and heard that fateful night and his
failure to report the same is fatal to his credibility. His testimony therefore, become
doubtful.
Lastly, a witness in the person of Felipe Estorba saw accused-appellant on the night
when the Sarabias were massacred in the company of the two other accused one of
whom had blood all over his body, carrying a samurai and the other carrying .45 caliber
pistol. However, accused-appellant was all dressed up and holding no weapon.
The trial court gave weight to the testimony of Olympia Ordoño, one of the daughters of
the deceased spouses, on what her father told her of his suspicion that appellant was one
of those who robbed their house on February 13, 1986 and would want to dismiss him as
their tuba gatherer inspite of objections from the defense. Said the court:
It has been shown by the prosecution that the MOTIVE of the killing of the
deceased was because the spouses, Rustico and Candelaria Sarabia, wanted to
oust Jose Mancao from their fishpond as tuba gatherer for the reason that he
was identified by same spouses as one of those who robbed them on February
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13, 1986.
The testimony of Mrs. Ordoño is hearsay, hence, inadmissible in evidence. A witness can
18
testify only to facts which he knows of his own knowledge. The person who gave her
the information is not in court to testify under oath, cannot be cross-examined by the
adverse party, and cannot be met by the accused face-to-face. The weight of the witness'
testimony depends, not upon her own veracity, but upon the veracity of the person who
gave her the information without oath, which information cannot be tested in the
crucible of cross-examination because he is not on the witness stand. 19
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The trial court based the guilt of the accused-appellant, among others, on its
observation that Jose Mancao did not even lift a finger to help or ask assistance from
their neighbor but instead stayed at home that fateful night inspite of his awareness that
seven (7) persons passed his house going to the direction of the Sarabia's house at about
7:00 p.m. of February 25, 1986.
We find nothing unnatural in Jose Mancao's behavior taking into consideration the tense
situation in the locality wherein armed groups, the NPA's, and the Bangsa Moro Army
have been extorting money from the people not only in Banaybanay but even in the
Capital town of Mati, Davao Oriental, Corporal Manuel de la Cruz, one of the policeman
who first arrived at the scene of the crime, testified —
A Regarding insurgency.
Q As a matter of fact, there had been armed men that were observed
by your police station?
A Yes, Sir. 20
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Naturally, in cases of deaths like these, no one would dare to go out and report such fact
to the police authorities or barangay o"cials especially in the evening. Where a killing
has taken place in a certain area, it is but natural for those living therein to leave and
seek residence somewhere given the prevailing peace and order situation. Flight must
not always be attributed to one's consciousness of guilt. In the case at bar, the accused-
appellant did not leave immediately but waited until morning and even went back that
very same morning. He left because he was threatened and moreover, his neighbors has
also left. 21 Had he been the perpetrator of the crime, he could have left that very
evening to insure non-apprehension and never to go back to the place where the crime
was committed. Admittedly, there were other suspects in this case but they are still at
large.
The testimony of Felipe Estorba is not clear and convincing and not consistent with the
hypothesis that the guilt of the accused-appellant is beyond reasonable doubt. In fact,
there is nothing in his testimony pointing to Jose Mancaoa as the assailant. On the
contrary, his testimony reveals that Jose Mancao was all dressed up and held no weapon.
Thus, the conviction of appellant by the lower court is predicted on the prosecution's
claim that appellant was heard conversing with his brother about a plan to liquidate the
victims; that he was seen in the company of two persons, one carrying a samurai and all
bloodied up while the other was carrying a gun; that a told by one of the victims to his
daughter before the incident in question, he suspected appellant as one of the persons
who robbed his house on February 13, 1986, although they were masked, and that the
next day, he bundled up his family and brought them to stay temporarily in the house of
his mother.
Nobody saw appellant hack and kill the victims in this case. The testimonies of the
prosecution witnesses are all hearsay. While flight may indicate guilt, the assumption is
not always true, taken in the light of the environmental circumstances of this case. It
could be that appellant's first impulse was to flee, frightened by the killing of the
Sarabias, impelled by the instinct of self-preservation especially so when his immediate
neighbors also fled.
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It is di"cult to ignore the trial court's acquittal of Diosdado Banquesio whom Felipe
Estorba positively identified as one of the three men he saw on the night of the massacre
all bloodied up and holding a samurai.
If the trial court saw fit to acquit Diosdado Banquesio who was seen holding a samurai
and whose body was splattered with blood on the night of the killing of the Sarabias,
with more reason should appellant be acquitted on the flimsy evidence of the
prosecution.
It is sad to know that the true criminals are still out there scot-free but We cannot
convict an innocent man. Our only consolation is, to borrow the words of William
Shakespeare, "Truth will come to light; and murder cannot be hid long."
WHEREFORE, the guilt of the accused-appellant not having been approved beyond
reasonable doubt, the appealed decision is hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE and
accused-appellant Jose Mancao is hereby ACQUITTED.
SO ORDERED.
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Footnotes
4 T.S.N., December 8, 1987, pp. 28-30; Exhibits "B", "C" and "D".
6 Id., at p. 17.
9 Id., at p. 7.
10 Id., at p. 9.
14 Ibid., at p. 552, citing People vs. Nabaluna, No. L-60087, 142 SCRA 446, (1986).
17 Decision, p. 10.
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22 G.R. Nos. 90191-96, People vs. Furugganan, 193 SCRA 471, (1991).
Short Title
People of the Philippines vs. Renato Mancao, et al.
G.R. Number
G.R. No. 97495
Date of Promulgation
October 30, 1992
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