Appellee Vs Vs Appellant: Third Division
Appellee Vs Vs Appellant: Third Division
Appellee Vs Vs Appellant: Third Division
DECISION
YNARES-SANTIAGO , J : p
In an Information 1 dated January 19, 1994, appellant Isaias Castillo y Completo was
charged with the crime of parricide, committed as follows:
That on or about November 5, 1993, in the Municipality of Cabuyao, Province of
Laguna and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, accused Isaias
Castillo y Completo, while conveniently armed with illegally possessed sling and
deadly arrow, with intent to kill his wife Consorcia Antiporta with whom he was
united in lawful wedlock did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously
shot and hit his wife Consorcia Antiporta with the aforesaid deadly arrow, hitting
the latter on the right side of her neck causing the laceration of the jugular vein
which caused her instantaneous death.
CONTRARY TO LAW. 2
The case was docketed as Criminal Case No. 8590-B and raffled to Branch 24 of the
Regional Trial Court of Biñan, Laguna.
Appellant entered a plea of not guilty when arraigned on April 15, 1994. Trial thereafter
ensued.
The facts as found by the trial court are as follows:
There is no dispute that the victim, Consorcia Antiporta Castillo, died violently in
the evening of November 5, 1993. The cause of her death was massive
hemorrhage due to "laceration of the jugular vein of her neck". According to Dr.
Solita P. Plastina, Municipal Health Officer of Calamba, Laguna, who conducted
the autopsy on the victim's body, the fatal weapon could have been a "pointed
instrument like a nail". There is no dispute likewise that the accused shot with a
dart from a rubber sling, his wife hitting her at the neck and causing her
instantaneous death. The letters written by the accused from his detention cell
addressed to his mother-in-law, to his father-in-law, and lastly, the victim's sister,
speak so eloquently of someone who accepts the fault for the early demise of the
victim. Asking forgiveness from the close relatives of the victim is a clear
admission of authorship of the fatal act. CAHTIS
In the same letters, the accused raised as an issue his lack of intent to do the fatal
harm to his wife. This is the same issue to be resolved by this Court. Whether or
not the fatal injury sustained by the victim was accidental.
xxx xxx xxx
Guillermo Antiporta, father of the victim, narrated in Court that in the evening of
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November 5, 1993, between 9:00 o'clock to 10:00 o'clock, the accused came home
drunk and was in an angry mood. The accused kicked the door and table, and
then threw the electric fan away. He was prevailed upon by Guillermo to take a
rest. But the accused did not heed the advice of Guillermo as he took instead his
sling and arrow from the house ceiling where he was keeping them. Dejectedly,
Guillermo transferred to the adjacent house of her . . . daughter [in-law] Yolanda.
From there, Guillermo heard the victim crying and, afterwards, shouting at the
accused. Guillermo concernedly ordered Yolanda to see what was happening
inside the house of Consorcia, and Yolanda obeyed. On her way, Yolanda met the
accused carrying the bloodied body of Consorcia. Guillermo, the accused, and
Yolanda brought Consorcia to the hospital but to no avail.
From all the circumstances gathered, the infliction of the fatal injury upon
Consorcia was preceded by a quarrel between her and the accused. This spat
negated the accused's version that he was practicing the use of the weapon when
Consorcia was hit by the arrow, and lends credence to the prosecution's
contention that the shooting was intentional. . . . To sustain the accused's
assertion that he was practicing the use of said weapon at the time of the
incident is patently absurd. The defense even failed to rebut Guillermo Antiporta's
testimony that the accused was keeping said sling and arrow inside his house.
It might be true that the accused was one of those who rushed the victim to the
hospital and while on the way, he sounded remorseful. But Guillermo Antiporta
further testified that while the victim was being attended to by the medical
personnel of said hospital, the accused stayed outside the hospital premises, then
he disappeared. He was later on apprehended by police authorities while hiding
inside the comfort room of a premises in an adjoining barangay. The accused's
omission to surrender himself to the authorities is a clear indication of guilt. 3
After several hearings, the trial court rendered on October 5, 1998, a decision, 4 the
dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE, this Court hereby finds accused ISAIAS CASTILLO Y COMPLETO
GUILTY beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of PARRICIDE and hereby
sentences him to a penalty of RECLUSION PERPETUA and to indemnify the heirs
of the victim in the sum of P50,000.00, as moral damages. aSTAHD
SO ORDERED. 5
Appellant filed an appeal with the Court of Appeals, alleging that the prosecution failed to
sufficiently establish his guilt beyond reasonable doubt. However, in a Decision 6 dated
February 28, 2005, the Court of Appeals denied appellant's appeal and affirmed with
modification the decision of the trial court, to wit:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the decision dated October 5, 1998 of the
Regional Trial Court, Branch 24 of Biñan, Laguna is hereby AFFIRMED with the
modification that accused-appellant Isaias Castillo y Completo is further ordered
to indemnify the heirs of the victim the amount of P50,000.00 as civil indemnity.
SO ORDERED. 7
Appellant filed a motion for reconsideration but it was denied in a Resolution dated June
16, 2005.
Hence, this appeal.
Furthermore, he claimed that his presence at the crime scene did not establish his guilt
beyond reasonable doubt. His arrest while hiding inside a toilet in the adjoining barangay,
while his wife was being treated in the hospital, likewise does not prove his complicity
since the prosecution did not prove that he deliberately hid inside the toilet.
Finally, the letters he sent to his father-in-law, mother-in-law and sister-in-law where he
asked for forgiveness should not be considered as admission of guilt.
The petition lacks merit.
Direct evidence of the commission of the offense is not the only matrix wherefrom a trial
court may draw its conclusions and finding of guilt. Conviction can be had on the basis of
circumstantial evidence provided that: (1) there is more than one circumstance; (2) the
facts from which the inferences are derived are proven; and (3) the combination of all the
circumstances is such as to produce a conviction beyond reasonable doubt. While no
general rule can be laid down as to the quantity of circumstantial evidence which will
suffice in a given case, all the circumstances proved must be consistent with each other,
consistent with the hypothesis that the accused is guilty, and at the same time
inconsistent with the hypothesis that he is innocent, and with every other rational
hypothesis except that of guilt. The circumstances proved should constitute an unbroken
chain which leads to only one fair and reasonable conclusion that the accused, to the
exclusion of all others, is the guilty person. 8 Proof beyond reasonable doubt does not
mean the degree of proof excluding the possibility of error and producing absolute
certainty. Only moral certainty or "that degree of proof which produces conviction in an
unprejudiced mind" is required. 9
In the instant case, all the essential requisites for circumstantial evidence to sustain a
conviction, are present. As correctly found by the Court of Appeals, the following pieces of
circumstantial evidence indubitably established that appellant was the perpetrator of the
crime, to wit:
1. Consortia would often confide to her sister Leticia about the violent
behavior of her (Consortia) husband, herein accused-appellant. And even if
Consortia would not tell Leticia about the beatings, the latter would see her
face with black eyes as evident proofs of maltreatment.
2. On the night of the incident, accused-appellant arrived at their house drunk
and displaying violent behavior, kicking the door and table.
3. Accused-appellant was last seen holding and practicing his sling and
arrow.
There is no merit in appellant's contention that the prosecution failed to prove motive in
killing his wife. Intent to kill and not motive is the essential element of the offense on which
his conviction rests. 1 1 Evidence to prove intent to kill in crimes against persons may
consist, inter alia, in the means used by the malefactors, the nature, location and number of
wounds sustained by the victim, the conduct of the malefactors before, at the time, or
immediately after the killing of the victim, the circumstances under which the crime was
committed and the motives of the accused. If the victim dies as a result of a deliberate act
of the malefactors, intent to kill is presumed. 1 2
Third: The location of the wound and its extent likewise proved appellant's intent to kill the
victim. The autopsy report revealed that the victim sustained a punctured wound in the
neck, a vital organ, which fatally lacerated her jugular vein causing massive hemorrhage.
The extent of the physical injury inflicted on the deceased manifests appellant's intention
to extinguish life. 1 8
Fourth: As regards appellant's act of carrying the body of his wounded wife and bringing
her to the hospital, the same does not manifest innocence. It is merely an indication of an
act of repentance or contrition on the part of appellant. 1 9
In fine, all these circumstances prove appellant's intent to harm his wife.
There is likewise no merit in appellant's contention that he was not the one who shot the
deadly arrow because at the time of the incident, he and his drinking buddies were all
playing and practicing target shooting with the use of the sling and arrow.
Prosecution witness Guillermo Antiporta categorically testified that appellant was alone
with his wife inside their house when the incident happened. This completely discounts the
possibility that other than appellant, there could be another person or persons who could
have perpetrated the crime. There is no paucity of evidence because the time when
Guillermo left the appellant and the victim up to the time Yolanda saw him carrying his
wife, were all accounted for. Moreover, the testimony of defense witness Galang supports
the prosecution's contention that appellant was alone with his wife at the time of the
incident. As noted by the Court of Appeals:
Defense witness, Jose Nelson Galang, testified that he left his drinking buddies
and headed home at about 9:00 p.m., as in fact he was already in bed at about
10:00 p.m. when he saw that Consortia was being rushed to the hospital. Instead
of weakening the evidence for the prosecution, Galang's testimony even supports
the prosecution's version that between 9:00 p.m. and 10:00 p.m. of that fateful
night, accused-appellant arrived at their house drunk, presumably going home
from that drinking session with his friends. . . . 2 0
THAICD
There is likewise no merit in appellant's contention that assuming he was the one who
killed his wife, the same was accidental and not intentional. The exempting circumstance
of accident is not applicable in the instant case. Article 12, par. 4 of the Revised Penal
Code, provides:
ART. 12. Circumstances which exempt from criminal liability. — The
following are exempt from criminal liability:
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4. Any person who, while performing a lawful act with due care, causes an
injury by mere accident without fault or intention of causing it.
"Accident" is an affirmative defense which the accused is burdened to prove, with clear and
convincing evidence. 2 1 The defense miserably failed to discharge its burden of proof. The
essential requisites for this exempting circumstance, are:
1. A person is performing a lawful act;
2. With due care;
3. He causes an injury to another by mere accident;
By no stretch of imagination could playing with or using a deadly sling and arrow be
considered as performing a "lawful act." Thus, on this ground alone, appellant's defense of
accident must be struck down because he was performing an unlawful act during the
incident. As correctly found by the trial court:
Furthermore, mere possession of sling and arrow is punishable under the law. In
penalizing the act, the legislator took into consideration that the deadly weapon
was used for no legal purpose, but to inflict injury, mostly fatal, upon other
persons. Let it be stressed that this crude weapon can not attain the standards as
an instrument for archery competitions. To sustain the accused's assertion that
he was practicing the use of said weapon at the time of the incident is patently
absurd. The defense even failed to rebut Guillermo Antiporta's testimony that the
accused was keeping said sling and arrow inside his house. 2 3
Furthermore, by claiming that the killing was by accident, appellant has the burden of proof
of establishing the presence of any circumstance which may relieve him of responsibility,
and to prove justification he must rely on the strength of his own evidence and not on the
weakness of the prosecution, for even if this be weak, it can not be disbelieved after the
accused has admitted the killing. 2 4 Other than his claim that the killing was accidental,
appellant failed to adduce any evidence to prove the same.
Likewise, we cannot lend credence to appellant's contention that the letters he wrote to his
parents-in-law and sister-in-law, where he asked for forgiveness, should not be considered
as an implied admission of guilt. He claimed that he wrote the letters in order to explain
that what happened was an accident and that he was to be blamed for it because he
allowed his drinking buddies to play with the sling and arrow.
Settled is the rule that in criminal cases, except those involving quasi-offenses or those
allowed by law to be settled through mutual concessions, an offer of compromise by the
accused may be received in evidence as an implied admission of guilt. Evidently, no one
would ask for forgiveness unless he had committed some wrong and a plea for
forgiveness may be considered as analogous to an attempt to compromise. 2 5 Under the
present circumstances, appellant's plea for forgiveness should be received as an implied
admission of guilt. Besides, contrary to appellant's assertion, the killing of Consorcia was
deliberate, and not by accident. HIaAED
Finally, we find no cogent reason to review much less depart now from the findings of the
lower court as affirmed by the Court of Appeals. When the trial court's factual findings
have been affirmed by the appellate court, said findings are generally conclusive and
binding upon this Court, for it is not our function to analyze and weigh the parties' evidence
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all over again except when there is serious ground to believe a possible miscarriage of
justice would thereby result. Our task in an appeal via certiorari is limited, as a jurisdictional
matter, to reviewing errors of law that might have been committed by the Court of
Appeals. 2 6
Parricide under Article 246 of the Revised Penal Code is punishable by reclusion perpetua
to death. The trial court and the Court of Appeals correctly imposed the penalty of
reclusion perpetua. Likewise, civil indemnity in the amount of P50,000.00 and moral
damages in the amount of P50,000.00 were properly awarded by the courts below.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED. The Decision of the Court of Appeals dated February
28, 2005 which affirmed with modification the judgment of the Regional Trial Court of
Biñan, Laguna, Branch 24, finding appellant Isaias Castillo y Completo guilty of parricide
and sentencing him to suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua and ordering him to pay the
heirs of his victim P50,000.00 as moral damages and P50,000.00 as civil indemnity, is
AFFIRMED. IacHAE
With costs.
SO ORDERED.
Austria-Martinez and Chico-Nazario, JJ., concur.
Nachura, J., took no part. Former law office counsel de officio.
Footnotes
1. CA rollo, p. 9.
2. Id.
3. Id. at 20-25. Citations omitted.
4. Penned by Judge Pablo B. Francisco.
5. CA rollo, p. 25.
6. Id. at 141-149. Penned by Associate Justice Rosalinda Asuncion-Vicente and concurred
in by Associate Justices Godardo A. Jacinto and Bienvenido L. Reyes.
7. Id. at 148-149.
8. Dissenting Opinion of Associate Justice Consuelo Ynares-Santiago, People v. Galvez,
G.R. No. 157221, March 30, 2007.
9. People v. Operaña, Jr., G.R. No. 120546, October 13, 2000, 343 SCRA 43, 45-46.
10. CA rollo, pp. 144-145.
11. Dissenting Opinion, supra note 8.
12. Rivera v. People, G.R. No. 166326, January 25, 2006 480 SCRA 188, 197.
13. People v. Operaña, Jr., supra note 9 at 64.
14. People v. Sabalones, G.R. No. 123485, August 31, 1998, 294 SCRA 751, 798.
15. CA rollo, p. 90.
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16. Id.
17. Id.
18. People v. Nepomuceno, Jr., G.R. No. 127818, November 11, 1998, 298 SCRA 450, 461.
19. Id. at 462.
20. CA rollo, p. 147.
21. Toledo v. People, G.R. No. 158057, September 24, 2004, 439 SCRA 94, 104.
22. Id. at 105.
23. CA rollo, p. 24.
24. People v. Nepomuceno, Jr., supra note 18 at 464.
25. People v. Abadies, G.R. Nos. 139346-50, July 11, 2002, 384 SCRA 442, 449.
26. Danofrata v. People, G.R. No. 143010, September 30, 2003, 412 SCRA 357, 364. AcSHCD