PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Plaintiff-Appellee, vs. CARLOS FERNANDO Alias COMMANDER "BOB," Defendant-Appellant

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EN BANC

[G.R. No. L-24781. May 29, 1970.]

PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plainti-appellee, vs. CARLOS


FERNANDO alias COMMANDER "BOB," defendant-appellant.

Maximo V. Cuesta, Jr. and Cipriano Manansala for defendant-appellant.


Solicitor General Antonio P. Barredo, Assistant Solicitor General Antonio A.
Torres and Solicitor Teodulo R. Dio for plainti-appellee.

SYLLABUS

1. CRIMINAL LAW; MURDER; KILLING BY MEMBERS OF HUKBALAHAP


ORGANIZATION NOT REBELLION; INSTANT CASE. Appellant's contention that
because he and Salonga as members of the Hukbalahap organization had
received from Commander Manly the order to liquidate the victim, the murder
committed by them should have been held in furtherance of and absorbed by the
crime of rebellion, and that they should have been instead charged for rebellion,
is untenable. The record is bereft of any evidence that the murder was
committed as a necessary means to commit rebellion or in furtherance thereof.
The victim had no established connection with the government at the time.
2. ID.; ID.; ID.; CONFESSION THAT KILLING WAS INSPIRED BY PERSONAL
MOTIVE; MURDER NOT ABSORBED BY REBELLION. Where far from discharging
the burden of proving clearly and satisfactorily that the killing was in pursuance
of the Huk rebellion, appellant himself revealed in his unrepudiated confession
that the killing was inspired by personal motives of avenging the alleged killing
of a relative of Commander Manly and the alleged maltreatment of Salonga's
father, as ordered by the victim Laxamana, the murder cannot be deemed
absorbed by the rebellion and should be separately prosecuted.
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; LIABILITY OF CO-ACCUSED WITHOUT SUCH PERSONAL
MOTIVE. Appellant's contention that Commander Manly's personal motive did
not apply to him and that he merely obeyed as "a mere 'soldier' of the HMB" is
of no avail either in the face of his awareness of and acquiescence to the
personal motivation and the void of any evidence that the murder was necessary
to the rebellion or in furtherance thereof.
4. ID.; REBELLION; MERE MEMBERSHIP IN HUKBALAHAP ORGANIZATION;
ACTS SHOULD NOT BE CONSIDERED IN FURTHERANCE OF OR ABSORBED BY
REBELLION. As held in People vs. Hernandez, L-14209, May 27, 196S, the
mere fact that the accused is a member of the Hukbalahap organization "is no
reason why all his acts and misdeeds should be considered in furtherance of or
absorbed by rebellion."
5. ID.; EXEMPTING CIRCUMSTANCES; COMPULSION OF IRRESISTIBLE FORCE
AND/OR IMPULSE OF UNCONTROLLABLE FEAR; FEAR OF A HUK MEMBER TO
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DISOBEY ORDERS OF HMB NOT SUFFICIENT. Where the record is devoid even
of any claim of the accused that any threats were made upon him or that he
acted under uncontrollable fear, and it appears that he was not under any
physical or moral compulsion, his fear to disobey the orders of the HMB on pain
of, as claimed by the accused, being liquidated or given another form of severe
punishment, is not sucient to exempt him from criminal liability. Before a force
can be considered to be irresistible one, it must produce such an eect upon the
individual that, in spite of all resistance, it reduces him to a mere instrument
and, as such, incapable of committing a crime. He must act not only without will
but will. Such a force can never consist in anything which springs primarily from
the man himself.
6. REMEDIAL LAW; CRIMINAL PROCEDURE; DOUBLE JEOPARDY; PREVIOUS
CONVICTION FOR REBELLION NOT A DEFENSE, WHERE THE KILLING WAS
COMMITTED AFTER THE CHARGE OF REBELLION, AND IN ANOTHER
JURISDICTION. There clearly can be no double jeopardy, because the murder of
Laxamana on March 30, 1961 could not have been possibly included as one of
the specic counts in the information for rebellion led against the accused on
October 17, 1960, as the murder had not yet been committed then. Furthermore,
the acts constituting the crime of rebellion were committed in the province of
Pampanga where the accused was charged therefor, while the murder of
Laxamana for which the accused is charged in present case was committed in the
province of Tarlac over which the Pampanga court had no jurisdiction. Finally,
as the murder here had been shown to have been committed not in furtherance
of the rebellion but for personal vengeance, it could not be deemed absorbed by
the crime of rebellion but had to be separately charged and punished.
7. CRIMINAL LAW; MURDER; CONSPIRACY; NOTWITHSTANDING INDIRECT
PARTICIPATION, ACCUSED IS LIABLE AS PRINCIPAL WHERE CONSPIRACY IS
SHOWN TO EXIST. Even going upon the accused's version at the trial that he
merely stood guard while his companion went inside and killed the victim, and
that thereafter he red three shots in the air as a signal for them to depart, the
trial court correctly held this to constitute more than adequate proof of his
participation as conspirator and of his responsibility as co-principal in the murder.

DECISION

TEEHANKEE, J : p

Appeal from the sentence of reclusion perpetua imposed by the trial court on the
accused-appellant for the crime of murder.
The accused was charged with the crime of murder before the Court of First
Instance of Tarlac under the following information:
"That on or about March 30, 1961, at nighttime. in the Municipality of
Bamban, Province of Tarlac. Philippines and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the above-named accused, Carlos Fernando alias 'Bob,'
together with Francisco Ronquillo alias Commander 'Manly,' (Deceased)
and Mario Salonga (at large), confederating, conspiring and helping one
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another, with malice aforethought and the deliberate intent to take the life
of Bienvenido Laxamana, did then and there willfully, unlawfully,
feloniously and treacherously attack the latter with pistols caliber 45,
thereby inicting upon the said Bienvenido Laxamana, mortal wounds on
dierent parts of his body which directly caused his instantaneous
death."

After trial, the trial court found the accused guilty as charged, on the strength of
his two confessions, consisting of his 4-page written sworn statement taken on
June 16, 1961 by Capt. Pedro Acierto of the First Philippine Constabulary Zone 1
soon after his capture on June 12, 1961 in an encounter in Barrio Balibago
between Dau and Mabalacat, Pampanga, between PC troops and Huks led by
HMB Commander Francisco Ronquillo alias Commander Manly who was killed,
and his 3-page testimony at the preliminary examination of the criminal
complaint for murder conducted on July 19, 1961 by Judge Pompeyo S. Tiglao of
the Municipal Court of Bamban, Tarlac, 2 as well as of his own testimony at the
hearing of March 11, 1965 as the lone defense witness on his own behalf, at
which he freely admitted his participation in the murder. 3
The trial court found the facts as follows: "(O)n the evening of March 30, 1961,
at about 7:00 o'clock, Bienvenido Laxamana was inside a store of one Honoria
Atienza next to his house on the same side of the street in the poblacion of
Bamban, Tarlac. He was then sitting and eating peanuts. While in that position,
Mario Salonga alias 'Manding,' who is still at large, and the accused Carlos
Fernando alias 'Bob.' without any warning, suddenly and unexpectedly red
shots with their .45 caliber pistols at Laxamana. The duo then departed, leaving
their victim sprawled outside the store.
"Salonga and Fernando were members of the Hukbalahap Organization. Before
going to Bamban, Tarlac, on the evening of the incident, they were somewhere
within the jurisdiction of Angeles City where they received instruction from one
of their commanders, Francisco Ronquillo alias Commander Manly,' to liquidate
Laxamana. The motive was that the latter, while an ocer of the civilian guards,
had ordered the killing of a relative of Commander 'Manly' and the beating up of
the father of Salonga. Fernando and Salonga went to Bamban from Angeles City
by walking all along between sugar cane eld. After the killing of Laxamana, they
also decamped together the same route.
"The victim, Bienvenido Laxamana, was married to Remedios L. Laxamana. Two
daughters were born out of their wedlock, the elder of whom is 13 years old.
Before his death, Laxamana was a member of the Central Azucarera de Tarlac
Planters' Association of that province. When his brother-in-law, the late Sinforoso
Lomboy, was the Municipal Mayor of Bamban sometime in 1950, he became a
member of the civilian guards or the Civilian Commando Unit (CCU) in that town
with the rank of captain.
"That evening of March 30, 1961, Mrs. Laxamana came from the Catholic church
of Bamban with her elder daughter, Bernadette. While on her way home and
when the distance from her house was about thirty meters, she heard the ring
of shots. She took cover in one of the stores; and after the ring had ceased, she
went out and hurriedly proceeded to her home. In front of the store of Honoria
Atienza she saw her husband sprawled on the ground full of blood. She was not
able to come close to him because somebody hold her back. A jeep arrived where
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her husband was placed, but not long thereafter, he was brought back already
dead."
Dr. Honorato Navarro, municipal health ocer of Bamban, Tarlac made the
autopsy of the victim's cadaver on the same night of the murder, and per his
necropsy report, 4 the victim cited of "hemorrhage. massive, secondary to
GUNSHOT WOUNDS, multiple (23) in neck, chest, and back lumbar legion, and
upper and lower extremities," many of which were mortal wounds hitting vital
organs in-the neck such as the carotid artery and the vagus nerve, both lungs,
and the liver, kidneys and intestines in the lumber region.
The trial court rejected the accused's testimony at the trial that he did not re
any shot at the victim but merely stood guard outside the store, and that his
role, after Salonga had ceased ring at the victim was to re three shots in the
air as a signal for them to depart, thus: "(T)he Court entertains a very serious
doubt on the veracity of the above-mentioned statement of the accused because
the same is contrary to what he stated when he was rst investigated by the P.C.
after his apprehension. Portion of his written statement (Exh. F-1) reads as
follows:

"12. 'T Natupad ba naman ninyo ang iniutos ni Comdr.


FRANCISCO RONQUILLO na patayin si BIENVENIDO
LAXAMANA?
'S Opo, napatay namin sa pamamagitan ng pagbaril sa kanya
nuong gabing iyon ng ika-30 ng Marso, 1961.
"13. 'T Anong clase ng baril ang inyong ginamit sa pagpatay
kay LAXAMANA?

'S Pareho po kaming gumamit ng Pistola calibre 45. Si MARIO


SALONGA alias MANDING na aking kasama ay nakapagpaputok
ng humigit kumulang sa labing-dalawa at ako naman ay tatlong
putok.

"14. 'T Sinabi mong natupad ninyo ang utos ni Comdr.


FRANCISCO RONQUILLO alias Comdr. MANLY, na patayin si
Bienvenido Laxamana, natatandaan mo ba kung saan lugar
ninyo binaril at pinatay ang taong naturan?
'S Duon po sa loob ng isang tindahan sa Poblacion, Bamban,
Tarlac, na ang may-ari sa naturang tindahan ay hindi ko kilala.'

"The answer of the accused to the above-quoted question No. 13 to the eect
that he and Salonga both used .45 caliber pistols in killing Laxamana, with
Salonga ring twelve shots and he, three shots, conveys no other idea than that
the three shots he red were directed at the victim and not upwards into the air.
The Court is inclined to believe that this statement is the one is keeping with the
truth, taking into consideration the determination of the accused to participate in
the killing of Laxamana and the number of gunshot wounds found on the latter's
body."
At any rate, the trial court further held, there was no doubt as to the existence of
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conspiracy between the accused and Salonga, as the accused actively participated
in the criminal design of Salonga and acted in concert with him, granting
arguendo that the accused merely stood guard for Salonga and that Salonga
alone inicted the 23 gunshot wounds on the victim.
The trial court likewise rejected the accused's contention that he should be
punished only for the crime of rebellion as the murder was in pursuance of the
Huks' rebellion movement, since the motive for the killing of the victim was
personal, to avenge the alleged killing of a relative of Commander Manly and the
alleged maltreatment of the father of Salonga, supposedly ordered by the victim.
The trial court further pointed out that while the victim had been an ocer of
the civilian guards in Bamban, that was more than ten years ago in 1950, and
the victim was an ordinary civilian when he was shot in cold blood.
The trial court found that "(F)rom the testimony of the accused himself on the
witness stand, it clearly appears that the ring of the shots which snued out
the life of Laxamana was sudden and unexpected, without any risk to the
assailant which might have proceeded from the defense of the victim. The crime,
therefore, committed by the accused is murder, qualied by treachery," and
therefore rendered the following verdict:
"IN VIEW OF ALL THE FOREGOING, the Court nds the accused CARLOS
FERNANDO alias COMMANDER 'BOB' guilty beyond reasonable doubt of
the crime of MURDER dened and penalized under Article 248 of the
Revised Penal Code, and in view of the absence of any mitigating or
aggravating circumstance attending the commission of the crime, hereby
sentences him to suer the penalty of reclusion perpetua with the
accessory penalties prescribed by law, to indemnify the heirs of
Bienvenido Laxamana in the sum of P6,000.00, without subsidiary
imprisonment in case of insolvency in view of the nature of the principal
penalty imposed, and to pay the costs."

In this appeal, the accused-appellant assigns as errors the trial court's rejection
of his contentions that his participation in the murder was in furtherance of the
Huk movement and that he should have been held by virtue of his Huk
membership to have acted under the compulsion of an irresistible force and/or
under the impulse of an uncontrollable fear of an equal or greater injury. He
further assigns as error the trial court's denial of his motion to dismiss the case
led on November 4, 1963, after the prosecution had rested its case, on the
ground of double jeopardy, on the ground of his previous conviction on August
31, 1961 by the Pampanga Court in another case 5 of the crime of simple
rebellion, on his entering of plea of guilty.
We nd the trial court's rulings to be in accordance with the evidence and the
law.
1. Appellant's contention that because he and Salonga as members of the
Hukbalahap organization had received from Commander Manly the order to
liquidate the victim. the murder committed by them should have been held in
furtherance of and absorbed by the crime of rebellion, and that they should have
been instead charged for rebellion, is untenable. The record is bereft of any
evidence that the murder was committed as a necessary means to commit
rebellion or in furtherance thereof. The victim had no established connection with
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the government at the time. 6 As emphasized in People vs. Paz 7 besides, "(T)hat
the killing was in pursuance of the Huk rebellion is a matter of mitigation or
defense that the accused has the burden of proving clearly and satisfactorily." Far
from discharging the burden, appellant himself revealed in his unrepudiated
written confessions that the killing was inspired by personal motives of avenging
the alleged killing of a relative of Commander Manly and the alleged
maltreatment of Salonga's father, as ordered by the victim Laxamana, and
cannot be deemed absorbed by the rebellion and should be separately
prosecuted. 8 As held in Hernandez, supra, 9 the mere fact that the accused is a
member of the Hukbalahap organization "is no reason why all his acts and
misdeeds should be considered in furtherance of or absorbed by rebellion."
Appellant's contention that Commander Manly's personal motive did not apply to
him and that he merely obeyed as "a mere 'soldier' of the HMB" is of no avail
either in the face of his awareness of an acquiescence to the personal motivation
and the void of any evidence that the murder was necessary to the rebellion or
in furtherance thereof.
Accused next asks the Court to "take judicial notice of the fact that the
Hukbalahap or HMB organization deal with its members who disobey or refuse to
carry out its orders in the most severe manner. A member who disobeys or
refuses to carry out its order may be liquidated or given another form of severe
punishment." On this tenuous premise, he claims that by virtue of his Huk
membership, his participation in the murder of the victim should have been
deemed to be an act under the compulsion of an irresistible force and/or under
the impulse of an uncontrollable fear of an equal or greater injury as to exempt
him from criminal liability. 10
Justice Moreland long set the norm for the application of these exempting
circumstances: " . . . before a force can be considered to be an irresistible one, it
must produce such an eect upon the individual that, in spite of all resistance, it
reduces him to a mere instrument and, as such, incapable of committing a crime.
It must be such that, in spite of the resistance of the person on whom it operates,
it compels his members to act and his mind to obey. He must act not only
without will but against his will. Such a force can never consist in anything
which springs primarily from the man himself; it must be a force which acts upon
him from the outside and by means of a third person. In order that one may take
advantage of subdivision 10 of article 8 and allege with success that he acted
under the impulse of an uncontrollable fear of an equal or greater injury, it must
appear that the threat which caused the uncontrollable fear related to a crime of
such gravity and so imminent that it must safely be said that the ordinary run of
men would have been governed by it. And the evil threatened must be greater
than, or at least equal to, that which he is compelled to cause." 11
2. Accused dismally failed to show that he acted "not only without will but
against will." On the contrary, he testied that he joined the Hukbalahap
organization since December 28, 1950 "because it is a good organization." 12 The
record is devoid even of any claim of the accused that any threats were made
upon him or that he acted under uncontrollable fear. He was not under any
physical or moral compulsion when according to his own version at the trial, he
freely stood on guard outside the store while his companion Salonga went inside
and shot the victim. At his preliminary examination before Judge Tiglao, he
further testied that his role as guard was to ght o any persons who might
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come to the aid of the victim Laxamana. 13 And without any physical or moral
compulsion, after the killing, he and Salonga, according to his own testimony at
the same preliminary examination, returned to report the same to Commander
Manly at Barrio Kutid, Angeles, Pampanga and accept his congratulations and
thanks. 14
3. The last principal error assigned by accused that the trial court should have
dismissed the present case by virtue of his previous conviction for rebellion on
August 31, 1961 is without merit.
The accused, even before his apprehension in the encounter with the PC troops
on June 12, 1961, already faced the criminal charge of rebellion in an
information led on October 17, 1960 against him and several others before the
Pampanga Court of First Instance. 15 After his apprehension, he entered a plea of
guilty to the charge and was sentenced to six years, eight months and one day of
prision mayor per the decision handed down by the Pampanga court on August
31, 1961.
The murder of Laxamana for which the accused stands charged in the present
case was committed on March 30, 1961. The criminal complaint therefor was
led with the municipal court of Bamban, Tarlac on July 19, 1961 and after the
records were forwarded on September 14, 1962 to the trial court, the murder
information was led on November 29, 1962.
There clearly can be no double jeopardy, because the murder of Laxamana on
March 30, 1961 could not have been possibly included as one of the specic
counts in the information for rebellion led against the accused on October 17,
1960, as the murder had not yet been committed then. Furthermore, the acts
constituting the crime of rebellion were committed in the province of Pampanga
where the accused was charged therefor, while the murder of Laxamana for
which the accused is charged in the present case was committed in the province
of Tarlac over which the Pampanga court had no jurisdiction. 16 Finally, as the
murder here had been shown to have been committed not in furtherance of the
rebellion but for personal vengeance, it could not be deemed absorbed by the
crime of rebellion but had to be separately charged and punished. 17

In resum, even going upon the accused's own version at the trial that he merely
stood guard while his companion Salonga went inside the store and killed the
victim, and that thereafter he red three shots in the air as a signal for them to
depart and return to their camp, the trial court correctly held this to constitute
more than adequate proof of his participation as conspirator and of his
responsibility as co-principal in the murder. 18 In the absence of evidence that the
killing, qualied by treachery, was attended by any aggravating or mitigating
circumstances, the trial court correctly imposed the penalty of reclusion
perpetua. The indemnity to the heirs of the victim is increased to P12,000.00. 19
WHEREFORE, the judgment appealed from is hereby armed, with the
modication that the indemnity to the heirs of the deceased Bienvenido
Laxamana is increased to P12,000.00. With costs against the accused-appellant.
Concepcion, C.J., Reyes, J.B.L., Dizon, Makalintal, Zaldivar, Fernando and Villamor,
JJ., concur.
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JJ., concur.
Castro, J., is on leave.
Barredo, J., took no part.
Footnotes

1. Exhs. F, F-1. F-2 and F-3.


2. Exhs. D, D-1 and D-2.
3. T.S.N., Junio, pp. 75-107.

4. Exhs. A, A-1, to A-22.


5. Criminal Case No. 4119 entitled "People of the Phil. vs. Filemon David, et al." of
the Court of First Instance of Pampanga.

6. See People vs. Egual, L-13469 and L-14240 and People vs. Hernandez, L-
14209; May 27, 1965; 14 SCRA 89.

7. L-17320, May 31, 1965; 14 SCRA 132.


8. People vs. Regado, L-13025, Dec. 29, 1959, cited in Paz, fn. 7.
9. Fn. 6.
10. Art. 12, pars. 5 and 6, Revised Penal Code; Appellant's brief, p. 4.
11. U.S. vs. Elicanal, 35 Phil. 209 (1916), italics supplied. See also People vs.
Cabasa, 85 Phil. 758, (1950); People vs. Semaada. 103 Phil. 790 (1958).
12. T.S.N., Junio, p. 76.

13. Exh. D-1.


14. Exh. D-2.
15. Supra, fn. 5.
16. People vs. Egual, supra, fn. 6.
17. People vs. Kamlon, L-12686, Oct. 24, 1963; 9 SCRA 252; People vs. Geronimo,
100 Phil. 90 (1956).
18. People vs. Paz, supra, fn. 7.

19. People vs. Pantoja, L-18793, Oct. 11, 1968; 25 SCRA 468.

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