Petitioner Vs Vs Respondents Conrado P. Aoanan Jose M de Vera
Petitioner Vs Vs Respondents Conrado P. Aoanan Jose M de Vera
Petitioner Vs Vs Respondents Conrado P. Aoanan Jose M de Vera
SYNOPSIS
Petitioner was charged with the crime of homicide through reckless imprudence.
After trial, petitioner was acquitted, but the trial court did not rule on his civil liability. On
appeal, the appellate court found petitioner civilly liable and ordered him to indemnify
private respondents Marcelino Nicolas and Maria Nicolas the sum of P104,400.00
representing loss of support, P50,000.00 as death indemnity, and moral damages of
P20,000.00, or a total of P174,400.00 for the death of their son, Ruben Nicolas. Hence, the
present petition. Petitioner insisted that he was acquitted on a nding that he was neither
criminally negligent nor recklessly imprudent. Inasmuch as his civil liability is predicated on
the criminal offense, he argues that when the latter is not proved, civil liability cannot be
demanded. He concludes that his acquittal bars any civil action.
The Supreme Court dismissed the petition. According to the Court, the trial court's
decision supported the conclusion of the appellate court that the acquittal was based on
reasonable doubt; hence, petitioner's civil liability was not extinguished by his discharge.
The Court noted the trial court's declaration that did not discount the possibility that "the
accused was really negligent." However, it found that "a hypothesis inconsistent with the
negligence of the accused presented itself before the Court" and since said "hypothesis is
consistent with the record . . . the Court's mind cannot rest on a verdict of conviction." Said
pronouncement by the appellate court clearly showed that petitioner's acquittal was
predicated on the conclusion that his guilt had not been established with moral certainty.
Stated differently, it is an acquittal based on reasonable doubt, and a suit to enforce civil
liability for the same act or omission lies. ASTcEa
SYLLABUS
DECISION
QUISUMBING , J : p
This is a petition for review of the decision dated January 31, 1992 of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 19240, modifying the judgment of the Regional Trial Court of
Santiago, Isabela, Branch 21, in Criminal Case No. 066. Petitioner George Manantan was
acquitted by the trial court of homicide through reckless imprudence without a ruling on
his civil liability. On appeal from the civil aspect of the judgment in Criminal Case No. 066,
the appellate court found petitioner Manantan civilly liable and ordered him to indemnify
private respondents Marcelino Nicolas and Maria Nicolas P104,400.00 representing loss
of support, P50,000.00 as death indemnity, and moral damages of P20,000.00 or a total of
P174,400.00 for the death of their son, Ruben Nicolas.
The facts of this case are as follows:
On June 1, 1983, the Provincial Fiscal of Isabela led an information charging
petitioner Manantan with reckless imprudence resulting in homicide, allegedly committed
as follows:
That on or about the 25th day of September 1982, in the municipality of
Santiago, province of Isabela, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this
Honorable Court, the said accused, being then the driver and person-in-charge of
an automobile bearing Plate No. NGA-816, willfully and unlawfully drove and
operated the same while along the Daang Maharlika at Barangay Malvar, in said
municipality, in a negligent, careless and imprudent manner, without due regard to
tra c laws, regulations and ordinances and without taking the necessary
precaution to prevent accident to person and damage to property, causing by
such negligence, carelessness and imprudence said automobile driven and
operated by him to sideswipe a passenger jeep bearing plate No. 918-7F driven by
Charles Codamon, thereby causing the said automobile to turn down (sic)
resulting to the death of Ruben Nicolas a passenger of said automobile.
CONTRARY TO LAW. 1
On arraignment, petitioner pleaded not guilty to the charge. Trial on the merits
ensued.
The prosecution's evidence, as summarized by the trial court and adopted by the
appellate court, showed that:
[I]n the morning of September 25, 1982, Fiscal Wilfredo Ambrocio . . .
decided to catch shrimps at the irrigation canal at his farm. He invited the
deceased who told him that they (should) borrow the Ford Fiera of the accused
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George Manantan who is also from Cordon. The deceased went to borrow the
Ford Fiera but . . . said that the accused also wanted to (come) along. So Fiscal
Ambrocio and the deceased dropped by the accused at the Manantan Technical
School. They drank beer there before they proceeded to the farm using the Toyota
Starlet of the accused. At the farm they consumed one (more) case of beer. At
about 12:00 o'clock noon they went home. Then at about 2:00 or 3:00 o'clock that
afternoon, (defense witness Miguel) Tabangin and (Ruben) Nicolas and the
accused returned to the house of Fiscal Ambrocio with a duck. They cooked the
duck and ate the same with one more case of beer. They ate and drank until
about 8:30 in the evening when the accused invited them to go bowling. They
went to Santiago, Isabela on board the Toyota Starlet of the accused who drove
the same. They went to the Vicap Bowling Lanes at Mabini, Santiago, Isabela but
unfortunately there was no vacant alley. While waiting for a vacant alley they
drank one beer each. After waiting for about 40 minutes and still no alley became
vacant the accused invited his companions to go to the LBC Night Club. They had
drinks and took some lady partners at the LBC. After one hour, they left the LBC
and proceeded to a nearby store where they ate arroz caldo . . . and then they
decided to go home. Again the accused drove the car. Miguel Tabangin sat with
the accused in the front seat while the deceased and Fiscal Ambrocio sat at the
back seat with the deceased immediately behind the accused. The accused was
driving at a speed of about 40 kilometers per hour along the Maharlika Highway
at Malvar, Santiago, Isabela, at the middle portion of the highway (although
according to Charles Cudamon, the car was running at a speed of 80 to 90
kilometers per hours on [the] wrong lane of the highway because the car was
overtaking a tricycle) when they met a passenger jeepney with bright lights on.
The accused immediately tried to swerve the car to the right and move his body
away from the steering wheel but he was not able to avoid the oncoming vehicle
and the two vehicles collided with each other at the center of the road.
xxx xxx xxx
As a result of the collision the car turned turtle twice and landed on its top
at the side of the highway immediately at the approach of the street going to the
Flores Clinic while the jeep swerved across the road so that one half front portion
landed on the lane of the car while the back half portion was at its right lane ve
meters away from the point of impact as shown by a sketch (Exhibit "A") prepared
by Cudamon the following morning at the Police Headquarters at the instance of
his lawyer. Fiscal Ambrocio lost consciousness. When he regained consciousness
he was still inside the car (lying) on his belly with the deceased on top of him.
Ambrocio pushed (away) the deceased and then he was pulled out of the car by
Tabangin. Afterwards, the deceased who was still unconscious was pulled out
from the car. Both Fiscal Ambrocio and the deceased were brought to the Flores
Clinic. The deceased died that night (Exhibit "B") while Ambrocio suffered only
minor injuries to his head and legs. 2
The defense version as to the events prior to the incident was essentially the same
as that of the prosecution, except that defense witness Miguel Tabangin declared that
Manantan did not drink beer that night. As to the accident, the defense claimed that:
. . . The accused was driving slowly at the right lane [at] about 20 inches
from the center of the road at about 30 kilometers per hour at the National
Highway at Malvar, Santiago, Isabela, when suddenly a passenger jeepney with
bright lights which was coming from the opposite direction and running very fast
suddenly swerve(d) to the car's lane and bumped the car which turned turtle twice
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and rested on its top at the right edge of the road while the jeep stopped across
the center of the road as shown by a picture taken after the incident (Exhibit "1")
and a sketch (Exhibit "3") drawn by the accused during his rebuttal testimony. The
car was hit on the driver's side. As a result of the collision, the accused and
Miguel Tabangin and Fiscal Ambrocio were injured while Ruben Nicolas died at
the Flores Clinic where they were all brought for treatment. 3
In its decision dated June 30, 1988, promulgated on August 4, 1988, the trial court
decided Criminal Case No. 066 in petitioner's favor, thus:
WHEREFORE, in the light of the foregoing considerations, the Court nds
the accused NOT GUILTY of the crime charged and hereby acquits him.
SO ORDERED. 4
On August 8, 1988, private respondents led their notice of appeal on the civil
aspect of the trial court's judgment. In their appeal, docketed as CA-G.R. CV No. 19240, the
Nicolas spouses prayed that the decision appealed from be modi ed and that appellee be
ordered to pay indemnity and damages.
On January 31, 1992, the appellate court decided CA-G.R. CV No. 19240 in favor of
the Nicolas spouses, thus:
WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is MODIFIED in that defendant-
appellee is hereby held civilly liable for his negligent and reckless act of driving
his car which was the proximate cause of the vehicular accident, and sentenced
to indemnify plaintiffs-appellants in the amount of P174,400.00 for the death of
Ruben Nicolas,
SO ORDERED. 5
In nding petitioner civilly liable, the court a quo noted that at the time the accident
occurred, Manantan was in a state of intoxication, due to his having consumed "all in all, a
total of at least twelve (12) bottles of beer . . . between 9 a.m. and 11 p.m." 6 It found that
petitioner's act of driving vehicle intoxicated was a clear violation of Section 53 of the Land
Transportation and Tra c Code (R.A. No. 4136) 7 and pursuant to Article 2185 of the Civil
Code, 8 a statutory presumption of negligence existed. It held that petitioner's act of
violating the Tra c Code is negligence in itself "because the mishap, which occurred, was
the precise injury sought to be prevented by the regulation." 9
Petitioner moved for reconsideration, but the appellate court in its resolution of
August 24, 1992 denied the motion.
Hence, the present case. Petitioner, in his memorandum, submits the following
issues for our consideration:
FIRST — THE DECISION OF THE TRIAL COURT ACQUITTING THE PETITIONER OF
THE CRIME OF RECKLESS IMPRUDENCE RESULTING TO HOMICIDE
FORECLOSED ANY FURTHER INQUIRY ON THE ACCUSED'S (PETITIONER'S)
NEGLIGENCE OR RECKLESS IMPRUDENCE BECAUSE BY THEN HE WILL BE
PLACED IN "DOUBLE JEOPARDY" AND THEREFORE THE COURT OF APPEALS
ERRED IN PASSING UPON THE SAME ISSUE AGAIN.
SECOND — THE COURT OF APPEALS DID NOT HAVE JURISDICTION TO AWARD
DAMAGES AND INDEMNITY TO THE PRIVATE RESPONDENTS CONSIDERING
THAT THE NON-DECLARATION OF ANY INDEMNITY OR AWARD OF DAMAGES
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BY THE REGIONAL TRIAL COURT OF ISABELA, BRANCH XXI, WAS ITSELF
CONSISTENT WITH THE PETITIONER'S ACQUITTAL FOR THE REASON THAT
THE CIVIL ACTION WAS IMPLIEDLY INSTITUTED WITH THE CRIMINAL ACTION
AND THERE WAS NO EXPRESS WAIVER OF THE CIVIL ACTION OR RESERVATION
TO INSTITUTE IT SEPARATELY BY THE PRIVATE RESPONDENTS IN THE TRIAL
COURT.
The foregoing were the applicable provisions of the Rules of Criminal Procedure at
the time private respondents appealed the civil aspect of Criminal Case No. 066 to the
court a quo in 1989. Being in the nature of a curative statute, the amendment applies
retroactively and affects pending actions as in this case.
Thus, where the civil action is impliedly instituted together with the criminal action,
the actual damages claimed by the offended parties, as in this case, are not included in the
computation of the ling fees. Filing fees are to be paid only if other items of damages
such as moral, nominal, temperate, or exemplary damages are alleged in the complaint or
information, or if they are not so alleged, shall constitute a rst lien on the judgment. 2 1
Recall that the information in Criminal Case No. 066 contained no speci c allegations of
damages. Considering that the Rules of Criminal Procedure effectively guarantee that the
ling fees for the award of damages are a rst lien on the judgment, the effect of the
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enforcement of said lien must retroact to the institution of the criminal action. The ling
fees are deemed paid from the filing of the criminal complaint or information. We therefore
nd no basis for petitioner's allegations that the ling fees were not paid or improperly
paid and that the appellate court acquired no jurisdiction.
WHEREFORE, the instant petition is DISMISSED for lack of merit. The assailed
decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 19240 promulgated on January 31,
1992, as well as its resolution dated August 24, 1992, denying herein petitioner's motion
for reconsideration, are AFFIRMED. Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
Bellosillo, Mendoza, Buena and De Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.
Footnotes
1. Records, p. 1.
2. CA Rollo, pp. 53-55.
3. Id. at 56-57.
4. Records, p. 429.
5. CA Rollo, p. 60.
6. Id. at 57.
7. SEC. 53. Driving while under the in uence of liquor or narcotic drug. — No person shall drive
a motor vehicle while under the influence of liquor or narcotic drug.
8. CIVIL CODE, ART. 2185. Unless there is proof to the contrary, it is presumed that a person
driving a motor vehicle has been negligent if at the time of the mishap, he was violating
any traffic regulation.
13. Almeida, et al. v. Abaroa, 8 Phil, 178, 181 (1907). See also Almeida Chantangco and Lete v.
Abaroa, 40 Phil. 1056 (1910), 218 US 476, 54 L. Ed. 1116 (1910); Wise & Co. v. Larion, 45
Phil. 314 (1923), Francisco v. Onrubia , 46 Phil. 327 (1924). Article 29 of the Civil Code
serves only to limit and qualify the application of the Almeida doctrine.
14. RULES OF COURT, Rule 111, Sec. 2. Institution of separate civil action. —
xxx xxx xxx
(b) Extinction of the penal action does not carry with it extinction of the civil, unless the
extinction proceeds from a declaration in a nal judgment that the fact from which the
civil might arise did not exist. (stress supplied)
15. Manahan, Jr. v. Court of Appeals , 255 SCRA 202, 214 (1996), citing Padilla v. Court of
Appeals, 129 SCRA 558 (1984).
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16. CIVIL CODE, Art. 29. When the accused in a criminal prosecution is acquitted on the ground
that his guilt has not been proved beyond reasonable doubt, a civil action for damages
for the same act or omission may be instituted (stress supplied). Such action requires
only a preponderance of evidence. Upon motion of the defendant, the court may require
the plaintiff to le a bond to answer for damages in case the complaint should be found
to be malicious.
If in a criminal case, the judgment of acquittal is based upon reasonable doubt, the court shall
so declare. In the absence of any declaration to that effect, it may be inferred from the
text of the decision whether or not the acquittal is due to that ground.
17. Almeida Chantangco and Lete v. Abaroa, supra note 13, at 1061.
18. Supra note 4.
19. The subject of which reads: ALL COMPLAINTS MUST SPECIFY THE AMOUNT OF
DAMAGES SOUGHT NOT ONLY IN THE BODY OF THE PLEADINGS, BUT ALSO IN THE
PRAYER IN ORDER TO BE ACCEPTED AND ADMITTED FOR FILING. THE AMOUNT OF
DAMAGES SO SPECIFIED IN THE COMPLAINT SHALL BE THE BASIS FOR ASSESSING
THE AMOUNT OF THE FILING FEES.
20. Sec. 1. Institution of criminal and civil actions. — When a criminal action is instituted, the
civil action for recovery of civil liability arising from the offense charged is impliedly
instituted with the criminal action, unless the offended party expressly waives the civil
action or reserves his right to institute it separately.
21. People v. Escano, Jr., 193 SCRA 662, 665 (1991).