PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. INOCENCIO GONZALEZ, JR., Accused-Appellant

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EN BANC

[G.R. No. 139542. June 21, 2001]


PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. INOCENCIO
GONZALEZ, JR., accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
GONZAGA-REYES, J .:
Many unfortunate tragedies would not have happened if the improvident use of a
firearm did not exacerbate a simple altercation over traffic. This is one of them.
On a day intended to pay homage to the dead, a pregnant woman was shot to
death in the course of her husbands altercation with the accused-appellant and his son
along the Garden of Remembrance within the Loyola Memorial Park in
Marikina. The trial court found the accused guilty of the complex crime of murder
and two counts of frustrated murder and accordingly sentenced him to death. This
case is before us on automatic review.
The details of what actually transpired in the few seconds immediately preceding
the shooting are controverted by both parties but the events leading to this tragedy are
not disputed.
In the afternoon of October 31, 1998 at about 2:30 p.m. both the families of the
private complainant Noel Andres and that of the accused-appellant Inocencio
Gonzalez were on their way to the exit of the Loyola Memorial Park. The appellant
was driving a white Isuzu Esteem with his grandson and three housemaids, while the
private complainant was driving a maroon Toyota FX with his pregnant wife Feliber
Andres, his two year old son, Kenneth, his nephew Kevin and his sister-in-law,
Francar Valdez. At the intersection near the Garden of Remembrance, while the
accused-appellant Gonzalez was turning left towards the exit and the complainant
Noel Andres was headed straight along the road to the exit their two vehicles almost
collided. Noel Andres was able to timely step on the brakes. The appellant continued
driving along his way while Noel Andres drove behind the appellants vehicle for
some time and cut him off when he found the opportunity to do so.
[1]
Noel Andres then
got out of his vehicle and knocked on the appellants car window.
[2]
This is as far as
their versions of the incident coincide.
The prosecutions version of the incident is that Noel Andres calmly told the
appellant to be careful with his driving and informed the latter that he, Andres, is with
his family and to this Gonzalez allegedly replied, Accidents are accidents, whats
your problem. Andres stated that he saw the appellant turning red in anger so he
decided to go back to his vehicle when he was blocked by the appellants son who
said, Anong problema mo sa erpat ko. Andres testified that he felt threatened and
so he immediately boarded his vehicle, sat at the drivers seat, closed the door, and
partially opened the car window just wide enough to talk back to appellants son,
Dino. Suddenly, one of his passengers said Binaril kami. He turned to his wife
Feliber Andres and saw her bloodied and unconscious. He turned around and saw his
son Kenneth and nephew Kevin were also wounded. Andres admitted in court that he
and Dino were shouting at each other so that he did not hear the shot. Andres then got
out of his vehicle to warn the appellant not to flee. He then took the wounded
members of his family to the exit where there was an ambulance standing by. The
three were then taken to the Sta. Monica Hospital and were later transferred to the
Quezon City Medical Center.
The defenses version of the incident is that Andres cut the appellants path by
positioning his FX obliquely along the appellants lane from the latters left
side. Andres then got out of his vehicle, stood beside the appellants car window, and
repeatedly cursed the appellant, Putang ina mo, ang tanda-tanda mo na hindi ka pa
marunong magmaneho. Ang bobo-bobo mo.
[3]
The appellant stayed inside his car
and allegedly replied, Pasensiya ka na hindi kita nakita, nasilaw ako. Aksidente
lang. The appellant Gonzalez and another witness for the defense, Quidic, testified
that Noel Andres went back to his vehicle to move it in such a way that it is straight in
front of the appellants car. Andres allegedly got out of his vehicle again and
continued shouting and cursing at the appellant.
[4]
Dino, the appellants son, who rode
in another vehicle decided to go back when he did not see his fathers car behind
him. When Dino arrived at the scene he confronted Andres and the two had an
altercation. Both Dino and the appellant stated that Andres remained outside his
vehicle during the altercation with Dino. When Andres suddenly reached for
something inside his vehicle, Dino froze on the spot where he stood. This prompted
the appellant to get his gun from the glove compartment and feeling that his son was
threatened he got out of his car ready to shoot. When he saw that Andres did not have
a weapon he put down his hand holding the gun. This is when the appellants
daughter Trisha who was riding in Dinos car arrived at the scene, walked past Dino
and Andres, and pushed the appellant away. She hugged her father and in the process
held his hand holding the gun. The appellant tried to free his hand and with Trishas
substantial body weight pushing against him the appellant lost his balance and the gun
accidentally fired. The accused stated that he did not know he shot somebody until
the private complainants sister-in-law, Francar Valdez, got out of the vehicle carrying
a bloodied small boy. The defense claims that the appellant did not try to flee and
even told the complainants sister-in-law to take the wounded to the hospital.
On November 4, 1998 an Information for the complex crime of Murder, Double
Frustrated Murder and Attempted Murder was filed against herein accused-appellant:
That on or about the 31
st
day of October 1998, in the city of Marikina, Philippines
and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused, did
then and there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously with intent to kill, attack, assault
and employ personal violence by means of treachery and abuse of superior strength
upon the person of Noel Andres y Tomas, by then and there shooting him with a
Glock cal. 9mm pistol but instead hitting one Feliber Andres y Ordoo, on the left
back portion of her head, thereby inflicting upon her serious and mortal wound which
directly caused her death, as well as hitting John Kenneth Andres y Ordoo and Kevin
Valdez y Ordoo physical injuries which ordinarily would have caused their death,
thus performing all the acts of execution which would have produced the crime of
murder as a consequence, but nevertheless did not produce it by reason of some cause
or causes, independent of their will, that is, the timely and able medical assistance
rendered to John Kenneth Andres y Ordoo and Kevin Valdez y Ordoo to their
damage and prejudice as well as to the damage and prejudice of the heirs of Feliber
Andres y Ordoo.
On arraignment the accused-appellant pleaded not guilty to the crimes charged.
The case records show that Feliber Andres, the wife of Noel Andres did not die
instantaneously. She lived to give birth to a baby girl
[5]
by caesarian section and died
the following morning on November 1, 1998. The Autopsy Report
[6]
states:
FINDINGS: Fairly nourished, fairly developed female cadaver, with post mortem
lividity. Conjunctivae are pale. Lips and nail beds are cyanotic. Surgical incisions
were noted at left tempero-parietal region. Surgical incisions is also noted at the
abdominal region secondary to a caesarian section.
HEAD: (1) gunshot wound, point of entry, left fronto-temporal region, measuring 1
by 0.9 cm, 9 cm from the anterior midline, with a uniform abraided collar measuring
0.2 cm., directed posteriorwards, slightly downwards, and medialwards, fracturing the
frontal, and left temporal bones, lacerating the left cerebral hemisphere, with a
deformed slug fragment embedded and recovered at the posterior lobe of the left
cerebral hemisphere. (2) hematoma, left orbital region, measuring 4.5 by 2 cm, 4 cm
from the anterior midline. There are subdural and subarachnoidal
hemorrages. Stomach contains 1 glassful of partially digested food particles mostly
rice and meaty material.
CONCLUSION: Cause of death is gunshot wound on the head.
Kenneth and Kevin were treated for extraction of metallic fragments on their
faces. They were discharged from the hospital six days later or on November 6, 1998.
On June 25, 1999 the trial court rendered judgement finding that the shooting was
attended by the qualifying circumstance of treachery and held the appellant guilty of
the complex crime of murder for the death of Feliber Andres and for two counts of
frustrated murder for the injuries sustained by Kenneth Andres and Kevin Valdez and
sentenced the appellant to the maximum of the imposable penalty which is death. The
trial court held:
Beforehand, the Court takes note of the judicial admissions on the verbal
declarations of the accused that the court a quo has jurisdiction over the case; that he
owns the black Gluck 9 mm. automatic pistol; that the said gun will never fire even if
he drops it; that only one bullet was fired from his gun; and that the victim Feliber
Andres is already dead. With this exegesis and the declarations in open court of the
eyewitness of both the prosecution and some of the defense, there is no real dispute on
the antecedent facts showing that the accused fired on Noel Andres but instead hit and
caused the fatal injuries to the victims John Kenneth Andres, Kevin Valdez and
Feliber Andres resulting to the ultimate death of the latter. The court takes further
judicial admissions of the accused made in their memorandum demonstrating the
existence of five (5) sequences of events leading to the death of Feliber Andres and
the wounding of John Kenneth Andres and Kevin Valdez which are as follows: First
is when Noel Andres overtook the car driven of the accused and cut cross his path;
Second is when Noel Andres alighted from his vehicle and confronted Inocencio;
Third is when Noel had an argument with Dino Gonzalez, the son of the accused;
Forth is when, Inocencio seeing his son having confrontation with Noel, got his gun to
protect Dino; and Fifth is when Inocencio had a struggle with his daughter. Trisha
Gonzalez, who tried to reach for the gun and as a result of which Inocencio lost his
balance and as he was falling backward to his side, his right arm holding the gun hit
the rear window of the Tamaraw FX van and the gun accidentally went off hitting the
victim, who were all then inside the van.
The court likewise take judicial notice on the feature of the automatic pistol used in
this case which is capable of unquestionable demonstration or ought to be known to
judges because of their judicial functions. Practically, the stages before an automatic
firearm would be capable of firing are as follows: 1) the loading of a bullet into the
chamber of the gun; 2) the cocking of the hammer, if uncocked; 3) the releasing of the
safety pin; 4) the pressing of the trigger to unleash the hammer so that the firing pin
will hit the cartridge to propel the bullet out to hit the target. Realistically, it
demonstrates that a gun will not fire even if the bullet is loaded in its chamber if the
hammer is uncocked; or even if cocked if the safety pin is engaged; or even if the
safety pin is disengaged if the trigger will not be pressed. However, even if the gun is
fired if it is not aimed and leveled to the target, the purpose of firing it shall not be
achieved. Contrarily, once a gun is drawn against a person, the means methods and
forms employed for its execution is already conceived. And once it is tended directly
and specifically to insure its execution, it consequently produces the conscious and
deliberate intention. Finally if all the acts of execution had been effectively done
without risk on the part of the offender arising from any defense coming from the
offended party, treachery results. In brief, there is treachery when the offender
commits any crime against persons, employing means, methods and forms in the
execution thereof which tend directly and specially to insure its execution, without
risk to himself arising from any defense which the offended party might make (People
vs. Mesa 276 SCRA 407; People vs. Carlos Patrolla, Jr. G. R. No. 112445, March 7,
1996). To appreciate treachery two (2) conditions must be present, to wit: 1) the
employment of means of execution that give the person attacked no opportunity to
defend himself or retaliate; and 2) the means of execution were deliberately or
consciously adopted. (People vs. Azugue, 268 SCRA 711; People vs. Pea, G. R. No.
116022, July 1, 1998, p. 1)
In the case at bar and guided with the above-quoted doctrinal cases, logically, the
accused is positive of the crime charged against him. When he alighted with a drawn
gun to protect his son and released all the safety measures of his gun as he fired and
missed at Noel who was then unarmed, but instead hit Kevin Valdez, John Kenneth
Andres and Feliber Andres which resulted to the death of the latter, demonstrate that
the accused has executed the two (2) conditions to generate treachery enough to
qualify the crime committed to murder.
XXXX XXXXX XXXX
WHEREFORE, foregoing premises considered, the accused Inocencio Gonzalez, Jr.,
y Esquivel is hereby found guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the complex crime of
Murder with Double Frustrated Murder and Attempted Murder penalized under Art.
248, as amended by Republic Act No. 7659 in relation to Article 48 of the Revised
Penal Code and is sentenced to suffer the maximum penalty of Death by lethal
injection.
The accused is further ordered to pay the following civil liabilities:
1. To the private complainant Noel Andres:
a) the amount of P50,000.00 as indemnity for the death of Feliber Andres;
b) the amount of P3,363,663.60 as indemnity for the loss of earning capacity of the deceased
Feliber Andres;
c) the amount of P98,384.19 as funeral expenses;
d) the amount of P271,800.56 for the hospitalization expenses incurred for the injuries
sustained by the deceased Feliber Andres and the amount of P23,622.58 representing the
expenses for the untimely delivery of the child Ma. Clarisse Andres;
e) the amount of P51,566.00 representing the hospitalization expenses for the injuries sustained
by the victim John Kenneth Andres;
f) the amount of P150,000.00 as moral damages suffered for the untimely death of his wife
Feliber Andres and for the injuries caused to his son John Kenneth Andres;
g) the amount of P50,000.00 as and by way of attorneys fees and a fee of P2,000.00 per
appearance; and
h) the costs of the suit.
2. To the private complainant Nicasio Valdez:
a) the amount of P73,824.75 as actual damages for the injuries sustained by the victim Kevin
Valdez; and
b) the amount of P75,000.00 as and by way of moral damages.
SO ORDERED.
In his appeal, Gonzalez submits the following assignments of error:
1. The trial court committed reversible error when it found that treachery was
present.
2. The trial court committed reversible error when it presumed that there was
treachery by taking judicial notice of the feature of the automatic pistol involved in
this case.
3. The trial court committed reversible error when it violated the constitutional right
of the accused-appellant to due process when it took judicial notice of the feature of
the automatic pistol involved in this case without notice.
4. The trial court committed reversible error when it found Accused-Appellant guilty
beyond reasonable doubt of the complex crime of Murder with Double Frustrated
Murder.
5. The trial court committed reversible error when it failed to appreciate the
mitigating circumstances of passion or obfuscation, lack of intention to commit so
grave a wrong, provocation or threat on the part of the offended party immediately
preceded the act, incomplete defense of relative, and voluntary surrender.
6. The trial court committed reversible error when it failed to find that the shooting
incident was accidental.
7. The trial court committed reversible error when it gave credence to the testimonies
of prosecution witnesses Elmer Ramos and Moises Castro.
8. The trial court committed reversible error when it disregarded the basic principle
that the accused is presumed innocent and his guilt must be proven beyond reasonable
doubt.
9. The trial court committed reversible error when it ordered Accused-Appellant to
pay for the civil liabilities.
The appellant seeks a reversal and prays that judgment be rendered exempting
him from criminal and civil liabilities. Appellant declared that he had no intention to
shoot Noel Andres much less his wife nor the children. He lost his balance when his
daughter Trisha approached and pushed him backwards to stop him from joining Dino
and Noel Andres but the appellant tried to free his right hand holding the gun and it
accidentally fired. The single bullet fired hit the last window on the left side of the
Tamaraw FX. The appellant claims that he did not see the passengers inside the
vehicle at the time of the shooting. This is corroborated by the testimony of two
witnesses for the prosecution who testified that the windows of Andres vehicle are
heavily tinted so that a person outside the vehicle would not be able to see if there are
people inside. It is also argued that had the appellant intended to shoot Noel Andres
he could have simply done so by shooting at him directly. The defense asserts that the
evidence for the prosecution failed to establish the attendance of treachery and
without the attendance of the said qualifying circumstance the crime committed is
homicide, not murder.
The appellant also points out that the trial court made the factual finding that the
shooting happened in a matter of seconds and that it was preceded by a heated
argument between the parties. Such being the case, it is argued that the shooting could
not have been attended by treachery. There was no time for the appellant to
consciously and deliberately employ the mode of attack against Noel Andres, nor
against any one of the actual victims, to insure its execution and at the same time to
eliminate any form of retaliation from the alleged intended victim. And yet, the trial
court, contrary to the evidence on record, held that the loading of the bullet into the
chamber of the gun, the cocking of the hammer, the release of the safety pin and the
pulling of the trigger by the appellant of his automatic pistol constitute conscious and
deliberate effort to employ the gun as a means of committing the crime and
resultantly, qualified its commission by treachery. Such a finding presupposes that
the appellant loaded the gun to shoot Noel Andres only that very moment when his
son Dino and Noel Andres were arguing. This conclusion has no basis on
record. The appellant testified that his gun was loaded before he left the house and
two witnesses for prosecution stated in court that a few seconds after Noel Andres and
Dino started shouting at each other, the appellant got out of his car and shot at the last
window on the left side of the complainants vehicle. Further, the appellant assigns as
error the procedure adopted by the trial court in taking judicial notice that the gun
used by the appellant is an automatic pistol and as such, it will not fire unless aimed at
the intended target. The procedure taken by the trial court is contrary to Section 3,
Rule 129 of the Rules of Court.
[7]
The trial court should have given both parties the
opportunity to present evidence, expert evidence, if necessary, to inform the court on
the subject matter. The appellant argues that the factual finding borne by such
erroneous procedure is equally erroneous. The gun used by the appellant is a semi-
automatic and not an automatic pistol which means that the pistol used has no external
safety pin to be released and that the hammer need not be cocked. The pulling of the
trigger, intentional or not, will fire the gun. The use of a semi-automatic pistol does
not necessarily imply treachery.
Appellant also argues that the testimonies of prosecution witnesses Castro and
Ramos were improperly given credence by the trial court. The appellant contends that
a reading of their testimonies would show that their narration of the incident is rather
absurd and would show that they did not witness the actual shooting. Defense
witnesses, Gonzalez and his daughter, Trisha, on the other hand, testified that Castro
and Ramos arrived at the scene only after the shooting.
As regards the injuries sustained by Kevin and Kenneth, it is argued that
considering that there was no intent to kill and that they stayed in the hospital only for
six days, the crime committed is physical injuries. It is argued that the trial court
erred in awarding damages. The bunch of receipts allegedly representing the medical
expenses incurred for the injuries sustained by the victims was erroneously admitted
in evidence, without first requiring the prosecution to establish the authenticity of the
receipts. The appellant also points out that the award for loss of earning capacity has
no basis as the deceased was unemployed at the time of the incident.
Finally, the appellant assigns as error the trial courts rejection of the mitigating
circumstances pleaded by the defense which allegedly attended the commission of the
crime, i.e., lack of intent to commit so grave a wrong, passion and obfuscation,
incomplete defense of a relative and voluntary surrender. The appellant asserts that
these mitigating circumstances were duly proven during the trial and are supported by
the evidence on record. The private complainant Noel Andres testified that he saw the
appellant getting red in anger after they, Andres and the appellant, had a heated
argument immediately prior to the shooting. These admitted circumstances show that
the appellant was not in his proper state of mind at the time of the shooting. First, he
was angered by Andres abusive language and later he got out of his car with a loaded
gun to protect his son from a perceived danger. The appellant clams that his
willingness to help the injured and his voluntary surrender to the police should
likewise be considered as mitigating circumstances in the imposition of penalties.
The Solicitor-General agrees with the appellant that the crime was not attended by
the qualifying circumstance of treachery and hence the crime committed by the
appellant for the death of Feliber Andres is homicide, not murder. The appellee takes
into consideration that the shooting was preceded by a heated argument and that the
supposed victim was placed on guard that attack was imminent. It also appears that
the shooting was done impulsively. There is no evidence that the appellant
deliberately employed the means of attack to insure execution of the crime and at the
same time eliminate the risk of retaliation from the private complainant. The appellee
also agrees with the appellant that the trial court erred in equating the use of an
automatic pistol with treachery. The trial court made the factual finding that the
appellants automatic pistol would not fire unless aimed and the trigger is deliberately
pulled and hence treachery attended the shooting. The appellee submits that if we
follow the reasoning of the trial court it would appear that the appellant intended to
shoot at the complainants vehicle only as the shot was fired at the last window on the
left side of the FX away from where Andres was allegedly seated. The fact that the
gun was drawn and fired does not mean that the mode of attack was consciously and
deliberately employed.
However, with respect to the injuries sustained by Kevin and Kenneth, the
appellee disagrees with the contention that the appellant is liable only for slight
physical injuries. The injuries sustained by both children are head injuries and could
have caused their death if not for the immediate medical attention given them. The
number of days spent in the hospital is not determinative of the severity of the
wounds. Their nature and location should instead be considered. The appellant
cannot escape liability for frustrated homicide for the injuries of the two children on
the ground that he fired a single shot at the vehicle of Noel Andres. He is liable for all
the consequences of his unlawful act even if the crime committed is different from
that intended.
As regards the pleaded mitigating circumstances, appellee asserts that none can be
considered in favor of the appellant. There is evidence on record that the appellant
did not voluntarily surrender to the police and it appears from the testimonies of
witnesses that he entertained the possibility of flight but his car was stuck in traffic
along the exit of the memorial park. His pretense of incomplete defense of a relative
is belied by his own admission that when he saw that Noel Andres did not have a gun
he lowered his hand holding the gun. There was allegedly no threat on the life of his
son at the time of the shooting, no uncontrollable fear nor irresistible force that would
mitigate the commission of the offense.
The Solicitor-General also seeks to uphold the pecuniary awards granted by the
trial court. The appellee alleges that it is not denied by the appellant that Feliber
Andres was a 38 year old registered nurse at the time of the shooting. Although she
was then unemployed on account of her pregnancy, she still had earning capacity and
the trial court properly applied the salary of a government nurse under the salary
standardization scheme in the computation of damages for the loss of earning
capacity. The receipts presented in evidence by the prosecution to establish
hospitalization and other medical expenses incurred by the private complainants by
reason of the injuries suffered by the victims were duly authenticated by the
prosecution witnesses and there is no dispute that they are exact copies of the original
receipts presented in court. The objections raised by the appellant in this regard were
duly met by the evidence presented by the private complainants.
In sum, the appellee asserts that considering that the appellant fired a single shot
and in the process committed four offenses the appellant should be held liable for the
complex crime of homicide for the death of Feliber Andres, double frustrated
homicide against Kevin and Kenneth and attempted homicide against Noel
Andres. Under the rules on complex crimes the penalty for the gravest offense,
i.e., reclusion temporal for homicide, should be imposed in its maximum period.
The appeal has merit.
Treachery under par.16 of Article 14 of the Revised Penal Code is defined as the
deliberate employment of means, methods or forms in the execution of a crime against
persons which tend directly and specially to insure its execution, without risk to the
offender arising from the defense which the intended victim might raise. For
treachery to be appreciated two elements must concur: 1) the employment of means of
execution that would insure the safety of the accused from retaliatory acts of the
intended victim and leaving the latter without an opportunity to defend himself and 2)
the means employed were deliberately or consciously adopted by the offender.
[8]
The
suddenness of the attack, the infliction of the wound from behind the victim, the
vulnerable position of the victim at the time the attack was made or the fact that the
victim was unarmed do not by themselves render the attack as treacherous.
[9]
This is of
particular significance in a case of an instantaneous attack made by the accused
whereby he gained an advantageous position over the victim when the latter
accidentally fell and was rendered defenseless.
[10]
The means employed for the
commission of the crime or the mode of attack must be shown to have been
consciously or deliberately adopted by the accused to insure the consummation of the
crime and at the same time eliminate or reduce the risk of retaliation from the
intended victim.
[11]
Accordingly, it has been consistently held by this court that chance
encounters, impulse killing or crimes committed at the spur of the moment or that
were preceded by heated altercations are generally not attended by treachery for lack
of opportunity of the accused to deliberately employ a treacherous mode of
attack.
[12]
Thus, the sudden attack made by the accused due to his infuriation by reason
of the victims provocation was held to be without treachery. Sudden attacks made by
the accused preceded by curses and insults by the victim or acts taunting the accused
to retaliate or the rebellious or aggressive behavior of the victim were held to be
without treachery as the victim was sufficiently forewarned of reprisal.
[13]
For the rules
on treachery to apply the sudden attack must have been preconceived by the accused,
unexpected by the victim and without provocation on the part of the latter.
[14]

This Court has also had occasion to state that whether or not the attack succeeds
against its intended victim or injures another or whether the crime committed is graver
than that intended is immaterial, as long as it is shown that the attack is attended by
treachery, the said qualifying circumstance may still be considered by the
court.
[15]
Thus, the determining factor on whether or not the commission of a crime is
attended by treachery is not the resulting crime committed but the mode of attack
employed in its execution.
[16]

Treachery is never presumed. It is required that the manner of attack must be
shown to have been attended by treachery as conclusively as the crime itself.

[17]

We affirm the recommendation of the Solicitor-General that the shooting was not
attended by treachery and accordingly the crime committed for the death of Feliber
Andres is homicide and not murder.
The encounter between Noel Andres and the appellant was a chance
encounter. They were total strangers before their vehicles almost collided at an
intersection inside the memorial park. Unfortunately, heated exchange of remarks that
followed the near collision was fanned by a short temper, which in the case of the
appellant, was augmented by the improvident use of a firearm.
From a reading of the transcript of the testimonies of the witnesses, it would
appear that Noel Andres, who had his pregnant wife and child with him, among
others, on board the Tamaraw FX provoked the altercation. After the near collision of
his vehicle with that of the appellant, he tailed behind the latters car towards the exit
until he had the chance to cut him off to scold him for his failure to observe traffic
rules.
[18]
Andres stated in court that he calmly told the appellant to be careful with his
driving and denied that he was angry when he alighted from his vehicle to confront
the appellant.
[19]
His statement is belied by the witnesses, two prosecution witnesses
included, who uniformly testified that Andres quarreled with or shouted and cursed at
the appellant for the latters recklessness at the intersection.
[20]
The appellant narrated
in court that Andres repeatedly shouted at him, Putang ina mo, ang tanda-tanda mo
na gago ka pa.
[21]
Andres hostile behavior towards the appellant is evident from his
statement in court that he noticed the appellant turning red in anger.
[22]
It is highly
improbable for Gonzalez to have turned red in anger had Andres been polite, as he
claims he was, in scolding Gonzalez. Andres could have simply communicated to the
appellant his disgust for the latters bad driving when he overtook the appellants car
near the scene of the shooting but instead he chose to block the appellants path, insult
and virtually provoke the appellant to retaliate.
Andres stated in court that when he noticed Gonzalez infuriation he immediately
walked towards his vehicle, because according to him the altercation was over. On
his way to his FX he met another man, whom he later found out to be the appellants
son, Dino. It appears that the altercation was far from over because again Andres had
a shouting match this time with Dino.
[23]
In a matter of seconds, the appellant alighted
from his car and fired a single shot at the last window on the left side of Andres
vehicle at an angle away from Noel Andres. The single bullet fired hit Feliber Andres
on the forehead near the temporal region above the left eye and the two children with
metallic fragments of the bullet on their faces, one at the cheek and the other below
his left eye.
The prosecution did not present evidence as to the exact seating arrangement of
the victims inside the vehicle; suffice it to say, that an examination of the pictures of
the vehicle
[24]
one of which shows a mass of blood stains on the left side (towards the
drivers seat) of the white seat cover below the head rest
[25]
, would show that the
deceased Feliber must have been seated at the front passengers seat and the children
at the middle row behind the drivers seat.
[26]
Another picture shows a bullet hole on
the last window on the left side of the vehicle
[27]
and another shows that the front
windshield appears undamaged.
[28]
A ballistics expert appeared in court for the
prosecution and testified that the bullet fired at the FX came from the appellants gun,
which fact was admitted by the defense. The prosecution did not inquire from the
ballistics expert regarding the trajectory of the bullet or the approximate distance of
the appellant from the FX when he fired his gun to establish whether or not the
appellant aimed for Noel or Feliber or simply fired indiscriminately at the latters
vehicle.
[29]

At first blush it would seem that the shooting of Feliber Andres was attended by
treachery as she was inside the FX witnessing her husbands altercation, first, with the
appellant then with the appellants son, totally defenseless from the shot that came
suddenly from her left side. Public outrage over the death of Feliber was heightened
by the fact that she was then pregnant with her second child and her death left a new
born baby girl and a two year old boy motherless.
However, a meticulous review of the evidence prevents a conclusive finding of
treachery and any doubt must be resolved, like the fact of the commission of an
offense, in favor of the accused. The pictures indicate that Gonzalez fired at the FX at
an angle away from Noel Andres and that Gonzalez was not aiming at anybody in
particular. It is not disputed that the appellants car was directly behind the
complainants FX and that Gonzalez who was then seated at the drivers seat alighted
from his car, took a few steps then fired at the left side of the FX. Whether Noel
Andres was seated at the drivers seat inside his vehicle when Gonzalez fired at the
FX, as the prosecution asserts, or was standing by the door of the drivers seat outside
his vehicle, as the defense submits, it is clear that the shot was fired away from Noel
Andres. The bullet hit Feliber near her temple above the left eye indicating that she
was facing left towards her husband when the shot was fired.
[30]
The direct hit on
Felibers head shows that the angle of the shot was indeed away from Noel
Andres. Even the eyewitness for the prosecution testified that had the appellant
intended to kill Noel Andres he could have shot directly at him, considering that Noel
Andres was just a few steps away from him
[31]
and that Noel Andres was visible from
the outside because his window was partially open.
[32]
The pictures show that the bullet
hole was on the third window on the left side of the Tamaraw FX
[33]
belying any
attempt to shoot Noel Andres. Two prosecution witnesses Ramos and Castro
unequivocally declared that nothing or no one prevented Gonzalez from shooting
directly at Noel Andres and that Gonzalez could have simply done so if he wanted
to. But after alighting from his car, Gonzalez took a few steps and shot at the left side
window of the FX.
[34]

The fact that the appellant fired his gun from behind the victim does not by itself
amount to treachery. There is no evidence on record that the appellant deliberately
positioned himself behind the victim to gain advantage over him when he fired the
shot. On the contrary, the evidence before us reveals that the position of the
appellants car was not of his own doing but it became so when Noel Andres overtook
his car and cut off his path.
We note further, that the appellant did not act belligerently towards Noel Andres
even after the latter cut off the appellants path. Andres stated in court that the
appellant did not alight from his car nor opened his window until he, Andres, tapped
on it.
[35]
For his part Gonzalez categorically stated in court that he did not point his gun
nor threatened Andres during their short spat.
[36]
Gonzalez, although he had his gun in
his car, did not react to Andres cursing until the latter was having an altercation with
the appellants son, Dino. Gonzalez claimed that he perceived that his son was in
imminent danger.
[37]
Whether he overreacted or he shot at Andres vehicle out of rage
over Andres aggressive behavior, one thing appears clear to us, that the shooting was
not done in cold blood. It is undisputed that the windows of the FX are heavily or
darkly tinted so that a person outside would not see if anybody was inside.
[38]
The
pictures of the FX
[39]
on record confirm the testimonies of both prosecution and
defense witnesses that the other passengers of the FX were not visible from the
outside. Gonzalez admitted in court that Noel Andres mentioned that he has
passengers with him while he was shouting and cursing at Gonzalez but there is no
indication that Gonzalez had any opportunity to see the passengers when he fired the
shot. The totality of the evidence on record fails to support a conclusion that
Gonzalez deliberately employed the mode of attack to gain undue advantage over the
intended nor the actual victim. Without any decisive evidence to the contrary,
treachery cannot be considered; thus the crime committed is homicide.
[40]

The trial courts finding that the loading of the gun, the cocking of the hammer
and finally the pulling of the trigger constitute a deliberate effort on the part of
appellant to use the gun as a means of a treacherous attack is patently erroneous. A
single and continuous attack cannot be divided into stages to make it appear that
treachery was involved.
[41]
The entire incident happened in a matter of minutes, as
testified to by witnesses, and as noted by the trial court.
[42]
It was error to our mind for
the trial court to divide the assault in stages to arrive at the conclusion that the mode
of attack was consciously employed by the appellant. Contrary to the finding of the
trial court that the appellant prepared the gun before getting out of his car, the
appellant testified that he loaded his gun before he left the house and that it was ready
to fire when he alighted his car. There was no time for him to reflect on the mode of
attack since he just picked up his gun and alighted from his car and shot at the FX a
few seconds after Dino and Noel Andres started shouting at each other.
[43]
We note
further that the trial court pointed out that from the fact that the appellant prepared his
gun to shoot, this was an indication of the deliberate employment of the gun as a
means to kill; i.e. that the use of an automatic pistol shows that the shooting was
attended by treachery.
We do not agree that the weapon used, by itself, is determinative of treachery,
unless it is shown, and it is not herein shown, that the appellant deliberately used the
gun to insure the commission of the crime and to render the unarmed victim
defenseless. As discussed above, the encounter between the appellant and the
Andresses was a chance encounter and the appellants gun was in the glove
compartment of his car even before he left his house. The shooting was clearly a spur
of the moment or impulsive decision made by the appellant preceded by a heated
altercation at the instance of the private complainant. Jurisprudence teaches us that
under the circumstances, treachery is not obtaining. In the case of People vs.
Valles,
[44]
the accused, a security guard, fired his Armalite and mortally wounded the
victim when the latter approached the accused four times insisting on entering the
workplace wearing improper uniform, then cursed and insulted and challenged the
accused to a fight. We held that the shooting was not attended by treachery as the
shooting was preceded by a heated altercation at the instance of the victim. It is to be
noted that the kind of weapon used against an unarmed victim was not taken into
consideration in determining the attendance of treachery; it is the mode of attack
employed by the accused under the particular circumstances of a case that determines
its attendance in the commission of a crime. We find that the prosecution has not
discharged its burden to show that the shooting was attended by treachery and we are
convinced that the crime committed for the death of Feliber Andres is homicide.
As regards the injuries sustained by the two children we find that the crime
committed are two counts of slight physical injuries. The intent to kill determines
whether the crime committed is physical injuries or homicide and such intent is made
manifest by the acts of the accused which are undoubtedly intended to kill the
victim.
[45]
In a case wherein the accused did not know that a person was hiding behind
a table who was hit by a stray bullet causing superficial injuries requiring treatment
for three days, the crime committed is slight physical injuries.
[46]
In case of doubt as to
the homicidal intent of the accused, he should be convicted of the lesser offense of
physical injuries.
[47]
We have earlier pointed out that the intent to kill is absent in this
case. It was also found that one small metallic fragment was extracted from Kenneth
below his left eye while another fragment was extracted from Kevin immediately
below the level of his skin before the cheek bone.
[48]
An examination of the
testimonies of the attending physicians, showed that the wounds sustained by the two
children from the metallic fragments are not in themselves fatal but may cause death if
left untreated. One of the attending physician testified in court that the fragments
themselves will not cause complication, it is the entry of the fragment or the open
wound that is susceptible to infection.
[49]
Two small fragments were no longer
extracted from the face of Kevin Valdez, as the doctor deemed it to be without danger
of complication.
[50]
We note that the various sizes of the metallic fragments were not
established, at least to give an indication of the severity of the wounds
sustained. Both children were discharged after six days of treatment and there is no
showing that they required subsequent treatment or that they were immobilized for a
greater number of days by reason of the injuries sustained. Considering the nature
and location of their injuries and the number of days required for their treatment, we
find that the crime committed for the injuries sustained by the children are two counts
of slight physical injuries under Art. 266 of the Revised Penal Code which imposes a
penalty of arresto menor or imprisonment for 1 to 30 days for injuries sustained that
has incapacitated the victim for one to nine days or required medical attendance for
the same period. For evident lack of criminal intent to kill the complainant, Noel
Andres, as above stated, the information for attempted homicide must fail.
The mitigating circumstances of voluntary surrender, passion and obfuscation,
incomplete defense of a relative and lack of intent to commit so grave a wrong,
pleaded by the defense, were not convincingly proved and none can be considered in
the imposition of penalties. The testimony of prosecution witness contradicts the
appellants pretense of voluntary surrender. Witness Ramos testified that the
appellant drove away towards the gate of the memorial park while he was questioning
him after the shooting and had not Noel Andres and onlookers blocked his path the
appellant could have fled the scene of the crime.
[51]

The mitigating circumstance of passion and obfuscation is also not obtaining. For
this mitigating circumstance to be considered, it must be shown that (1) an unlawful
act sufficient to produce passion and obfuscation was committed by the intended
victim; (2) that the crime was committed within a reasonable length of time from the
commission of the unlawful act that produced the obfuscation in the accuseds mind;
and that (3) the passion and obfuscation arose from lawful sentiments and not from a
spirit of lawlessness or revenge.
[52]
Noel Andres act of shouting at the appellants
son, who was then a nurse and of legal age, is not sufficient to produce passion and
obfuscation as it is claimed by the accused. Besides, the appellants son, Dino was
shouting back at Noel Andres. It was not a case wherein the appellants son appeared
helpless and oppressed that the appellant lost his reason and shot at the FX of Noel
Andres. The same holds true for the appellants claim of provocation on the part of
Noel Andres. Provocation must be sufficient to excite a person to commit the wrong
committed and that the provocation must be commensurate to the crime
committed. The sufficiency of provocation varies according to the circumstances of
the case.
[53]
The aggressive behavior of Noel Andres towards the appellant and his son
may be demeaning or humiliating but it is not sufficient provocation to shoot at the
complainants vehicle.
The plea for the appreciation of the mitigating circumstance of incomplete
defense of a relative is also unmeritorious since the act of Andres in cursing and
shouting at the appellant and his son do not amount to an unlawful aggression against
them, Dino Gonzalez. Finally, the plea for the appreciation of the mitigating
circumstance of lack of intent to commit so grave a wrong is likewise devoid of
merit. This mitigating circumstance is obtaining when there is a notable disparity
between the means employed by the accused to commit a wrong and the resulting
crime committed. The intention of the accused at the time of the commission of the
crime is manifested from the weapon used, the mode of attack employed and the
injury sustained by the victim.
[54]
The appellants use of a gun, although not
deliberately sought nor employed in the shooting, should have reasonably placed the
appellant on guard of the possible consequences of his act. The use of a gun is
sufficient to produce the resulting crimes committed.
For the death of Feliber Andres, and in the absence of any mitigating
circumstance, the appellant is hereby sentenced to an indeterminate sentence of 8
years and 1 day of prision mayor, in its medium period, as minimum to 14 years 8
months and 1 day of reclusion temporal in its medium period, as maximum. For each
count of the slight physical injuries committed against Kenneth Andres and Kevin
Valdez, the appellant is hereby sentenced to 20 days of arresto menor in its medium
period.
The rules on the imposition of penalties for complex crimes under Art. 48 of the
Revised Penal Code are not applicable in this case. Art. 48 applies if a single act
constitutes two or more grave and less grave felonies or when an offense is a
necessary means of committing another; in such a case, the penalty for the most
serious offense shall be imposed in its maximum period. Art. 9 of the Revised Penal
Code in relation to Art. 25 defines grave felonies as those to which the law attaches
the capital punishment or afflictive penalties from reclusion perpetua to prision
mayor; less grave felonies are those to which the law attaches a penalty which in its
maximum period falls under correctional penalties; and light felonies are those
punishable by arresto menor or fine not exceeding two hundred pesos. Considering
that the offenses committed by the act of the appellant of firing a single shot are one
count of homicide, a grave felony, and two counts of slight physical injuries, a light
felony, the rules on the imposition of penalties for complex crimes, which requires
two or more grave and/or less grave felonies, will not apply.
The pecuniary award granted by the trial court for actual damages was duly
established by the testimonies of the prosecution witnesses as supported by the
original receipts for hospitalization and other medical expenses presented in evidence
by the prosecution. The award for loss of earning capacity is likewise sustained for
the reason that while Feliber Andres was pregnant and was unemployed at the time of
death, it is not disputed that she was a registered nurse and had earning capacity. Noel
Andres also testified that he and his wife had plans to go back to Saudi Arabia to work
after Feliber had given birth to their second baby. While there is no evidence as to
Felibers actual income at the time of her death, in view of her temporary separation
from work because of her pregnancy, we do not consider it reversible error for the
trial court to peg her earning capacity to that of the salary of a government nurse
under the salary standardization law, as a fair estimate or reasonable assessment of her
earning capacity at the time of her death. It would be grossly inequitous to deny her
spouse and her minor children damages for the support that they would have received,
considering clear evidence on record that she did have earning capacity at the time of
her death.
The awards for moral damages for the death of Feliber Andres and for the injuries
sustained by the two children, which under the circumstances are reasonable, are
likewise sustained.
WHEREFORE, the decision of the trial court is hereby MODIFIED. The
appellant is hereby found guilty of homicide for the death of Feliber Andres and is
sentenced to an indeterminate sentence of 8 years and 1 day of prision mayor in its
medium period, as minimum, to 14 years 8 months and 1 day of reclusion temporal in
its medium period, as maximum. For each count of the slight physical injuries
committed against Kenneth Andres and Kevin Valdez, the appellant is hereby
sentenced to 20 days of arresto menor.
The pecuniary awards granted by the trial court are hereby sustained.
SO ORDERED
People of the Philippines vs. Gonzales, Jr.
People of the Philippines, plaintiff-appellee, vs.
Inocencio Gonzales, Jr., accused-appellant.
G.R. No. 139542
June 21, 2001

Gonzaga-Reyes, J.

FACTS:
On October 31, 1998 at about 2:30 p.m., the families of Noel Andres and herein accused-appellant
were both on their way to the exit of the Loyola Memorial Park. At the intersection point, the cars they
were driving almost collided. Later on, when Andres found an opportunity, he cut Gonzalez off,
disembarked from his car and went over to Gonzales. Altercation then ensued. Meanwhile, Dino
Gonzalez, son of Inocencio, entered the scene in defense of his father. Fearing that his son was in
danger, Gonzalez took out the gun which was already in his car compartment. Upon seeing his father,
Gonzalezs daughter, Trisha, hugged her father and in the process held his hand holding the gun. The
appellant tried to free his hand and with Trishas substantial body weight pushing against him the
appellant lost his balance and the gun accidentally fired. Feliber Andres, Noels wife, was shot to
death while their son, Kenneth and nephew Kevin were wounded.
The trial court found the accused guilty of the complex crime of murder and two counts of frustrated
murder and accordingly sentenced him to death. Accused were also ordered to pay for civil liabilities
to the heirs of Mrs. Andres, and the parents of Kevin Valdez.
Hence, an automatic review or this case.



ISSUES:
1. Whether or not the trial court committed reversible error when it found treachery was present in
the commission of the crime.
2. Whether or not the trial court committed reversible error when it failed to appreciate voluntary
surrender, passion and obfuscation, incomplete defense of a relative and lack of intent to commit so
grave a wrong be considered as mitigating circumstances.

RULINGS:
1. It has been consistently held by this court that chance encounters, impulse killing or crimes
committed at the spur of the moment or that were preceded by heated altercations are generally not
attended by treachery for lack of opportunity of the accused to deliberately employ a treacherous
mode of attack. Thus, the sudden attack made by the accused due to his infuriation by reason of the
victims provocation was held to be without treachery. Sudden attacks made by the accused preceded
by curses and insults by the victim or acts taunting the accused to retaliate or the rebellious or
aggressive behavior of the victim were held to be without treachery as the victim was sufficiently
forewarned of reprisal. For the rules on treachery to apply the sudden attack must have been
preconceived by the accused, unexpected by the victim and without provocation on the part of the
latter. We affirm the recommendation of the Solicitor-General that the shooting was not attended by
treachery and accordingly the crime committed for the death of Feliber Andres is homicide and not
murder.

2. The mitigating circumstances of voluntary surrender, passion and obfuscation, incomplete defense
of a relative and lack of intent to commit so grave a wrong, pleaded by the defense, were not
convincingly proved and none can be considered in the imposition of penalties. The testimony of
prosecution witness contradicts the appellants pretense of voluntary surrender.

The mitigating circumstance of passion and obfuscation is also not obtaining. Provocation must be
sufficient to excite a person to commit the wrong committed and that the provocation must be
commensurate to the crime committed. The sufficiency of provocation varies according to the
circumstances of the case. The aggressive behavior of Noel Andres towards the appellant and his son
may be demeaning or humiliating but it is not sufficient provocation to shoot at the complainants
vehicle.

The plea for the appreciation of the mitigating circumstance of incomplete defense of a relative is also
unmeritorious since the act of Andres in cursing and shouting at the appellant and his son do not
amount to an unlawful aggression against them, Dino Gonzalez.

Finally, the plea for the appreciation of the mitigating circumstance of lack of intent to commit so
grave a wrong is likewise devoid of merit. This mitigating circumstance is obtaining when there is a
notable disparity between the means employed by the accused to commit a wrong and the resulting
crime committed. The intention of the accused at the time of the commission of the crime is
manifested from the weapon used, the mode of attack employed and the injury sustained by the
victim. The appellants use of a gun, although not deliberately sought nor employed in the shooting,
should have reasonably placed the appellant on guard of the possible consequences of his act. The use
of a gun is sufficient to produce the resulting crimes committed.

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