SECOND DIVISION
[G.R. No. 132470. April 27, 2000]
PEOPLE OF THE
PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. FERNANDO SULTAN y
LATO, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
BELLOSILLO, J.:
FERNANDO SULTAN y LATO appeals from the
Decision of the trial court finding him guilty of the special complex crime of
robbery with rape, sentencing him to reclusion perpetua and ordering him
to return to his victim one (1) wrist watch, one (1) ring, one (1) pair of
earrings, and one (1) necklace valued at P1,600.00, P850.00, P500.00,
and P2,100.00, respectively, and cash of P130.00; otherwise, to
pay P5,180.00 if restitution be no longer feasible. He was further
ordered to pay P50,000.00 for moral damages.[1] Newmiso
The evidence for the prosecution was based
principally on the testimony of complaining witness Juditha M. Bautista.
According to her, on 2 June 1997 at 9:00 o’clock in the evening she was on her
way home from a visit to her cousin Cristina Mansilongan in Novaliches, Quezon
City; when she passed the dark alley in her cousin's compound she was accosted
by someone, later identified as accused-appellant Fernando L. Sultan, who
pointed a sharp instrument at her neck and announcing it was a
"hold-up." He grabbed her and brought her to a house along the alley
which turned out to be his. Once inside the house, he made her sit down. He
offered her a drink; she refused it. Then he started divesting her of her
watch, ring, earrings, and necklace the values of which are now reflected in
the Decision of the court a quo, and her cash of P130.00. After
taking her valuables, he started kissing her on the lips and cheeks. As if to
discourage him from making further sexual advances, she told him that she was
married with two (2) children but accused-appellant was not dissuaded from
pursuing his intentions. While pointing an ice pick at her he ordered her to
undress. She acceded for fear that he would kill her as she was under constant
threat. After she had completely undressed, accused-appellant ordered her to
lie down on the floor. He then kissed her again from head down. Still she could
not resist him because of fear. He went on top of her, held her two (2) hands
on the level of her head, spread her thighs and inserted his penis into her
vagina. The coital encounter lasted for ten (10) to fifteen (15) minutes.[2]
After satisfying his lust, he ordered her to
put on her bra and panty, tied her hands and went out of the room to smoke.
After ten (10) to fifteen (15) minutes, he came back, untied her, and once
again with threat and intimidation sexually abused her. Thereafter, he tied her
hands to a protruding piece of wood in the room and held her in his arms. She
cried. He told her that he loved her and that he would answer for what he had
done to her. They talked until noon the following day without sleeping.[3]
In her effort to release herself from his
clutches she "agreed" to elope with him. Perhaps convinced that she
was going to run away with him, he allowed her to go home at noon to get her
things. She was then staying with her cousin Nita del Rosario, at No. 9 Sta.
Eleuteria Street, Gulod, Novaliches, Quezon City. He even accompanied her to
the highway to get a ride home.[4] Acctmis
When Juditha arrived home she saw her sister
Antonette in the house. She was not actually residing there but went there only
that day. Juditha lost no time in narrating her harrowing experience to her
sister. Immediately Antonette called her brother SPO1 Fernando M. Bautista who
resides in Bulacan.[5] SPO1 Bautista arrived at around 3:00 or 4:00 o’clock
in the afternoon and was told about what happened.[6] He then advised Juditha to go back to the house of
accused-appellant for the "planned elopement" so that he and his two
(2) companions[7] could stage an arrest.[8]
On their way to the house of
accused-appellant, Juditha rode in a passenger jeep with her sister Antonette
and cousin Nita while her brother and his two (2) companions followed them on
board an XLT Van. Juditha alighted near the house of accused-appellant while
her companions waited for her and accused-appellant along the highway. When she
arrived at accused-appellant’s place, he was already waiting for her outside
the store nearby. They went inside his house and came out twenty (20) minutes
later. They boarded a passenger bus while SPO1 Bautista and his companions trailed
them. When the bus reached the corner of Forest Hill Subdivision, Gulod,
Novaliches, it slowed down because of the traffic thus making it easier for
SPO1 Bautista and his companions to board the bus. Upon seeing her brother and
his companions, Juditha motioned to them. They immediately approached
accused-appellant and boxed him before they could arrest him. The other
passengers of the bus joined in hitting accused-appellant. This caused a
commotion in the bus. Some policemen who were in the barangay hall across the
street saw the disturbance. They boarded the bus to find out what happened.
Then they assisted in facilitating the arrest of accused-appellant and brought
him to the barangay hall. He was later on transferred to the police
headquarters for further interrogation.
At the police station the authorities
investigated Juditha who readily identified accused-appellant as her robber and
rapist. The police then requested for physical examination to find signs of
sexual abuse. Medico-Legal Inspector Dr. Dennis G. Bellin found no external
signs of violence although there was a deep fresh laceration at 5 o’clock
position in Juditha’s hymen. He also discovered other lacerations, deep healed,
at 3, 7 and 9 o’clock positions. Dr. Bellin also observed that Juditha’s
external vaginal orifice offered moderate resistance to his examining index
finger and virgin-sized vaginal speculum. She was no longer a virgin when the
alleged rape transpired.[9]
On 5 June 1997 an Information[10] for the special complex crime of robbery with rape
was filed against accused-appellant Fernando Sultan y Lato, docketed as Crim.
Case No. Q-97-71353. But accused-appellant brushed aside the charge and claimed
that it was simply a sexual congress of consenting adults.
Finding the complaining witness’ version
more credible, the trial court, on 5 June 1998, found accused-appellant guilty
as charged and sentenced him to reclusion perpetua. He was ordered to return to
Juditha Bautista one (1) wrist watch valued at P1,600.00, one (1) ring
worth P850.00, one (1) pair of earrings worth P500.00, one (1)
necklace worth P2,100.00 and cash in the amount of P130.00, or
the payment of P5,180.00 if return was not possible. Accused-appellant
was further directed to pay his victim P50,000.00 for moral damages.[11] Misact
In this appeal, accused-appellant submits
that there is no convincing proof that he is guilty of the crime charged.
As to the robbery, he contends that the
testimony of complainant that she was robbed of her personal valuables should
not be given weight and credence as (a) no evidence was presented in court to
prove her claim and that (b) if he had really robbed her, why did she not ask
him for restitution of her valuables after the alleged threat had ceased, i.e.,
when there was already an agreement between them to elope?
These arguments fail to persuade us. The
testimony of complainant as to the taking of her cash and valuables is evidence
enough to sustain a conviction for robbery considering that we find no fault in
the pronouncement of the trial court that her testimony is credible. The
persuasive value of the declaration of credibility is bolstered by our own
scrutiny of the testimony of complainant showing her answers to the incisive
questions propounded to her to be firm and straightforward.
While there may have been no effort on the
part of complainant to retrieve her personal belongings from accused-appellant
even after all threats had ceased, her failure to do so does not under the
circumstances necessarily dispute the commission of robbery. Article 293 of the
Revised Penal Code provides that "[a]ny person who, with intent to gain,
shall take any personal property belonging to another, by means of violence
against or intimidation of person, or using force upon anything, shall be
guilty of robbery." When accused-appellant divested complaining witness of
her personal belongings he committed the crime of robbery. All the elements
necessary for its execution and accomplishment were present, i.e., (a)
personal property belonging to another, (b) unlawful taking, (c) intent to
gain, and (d) violence or intimidation. It is therefore immaterial that she
failed to ask for the return of her personal things. Moreover, her actuation
could only be fairly interpreted to mean that she did not want
accused-appellant to be suspicious of her moves.
As for the charge of rape, accused-appellant
maintains that the requisite force or intimidation was not proved by the
prosecution beyond reasonable doubt; that there was some form of consent to the
sexual intercourse as complainant did not put up tenacious resistance despite
lack of threat on her life during the alleged rape; and, that complainant on
cross-examination was not certain whether accused-appellant was armed at the
commencement of the rape. Sdjad
We likewise find these contentions of
accused-appellant unconvincing. The prosecution for rape in the instant case is
based solely on the testimony of complaining witness. Thus, the basic issue
that must be addressed is her credibility. Doctrinally, the trial court’s
assessment of the credibility of witnesses is accorded the highest respect and
weight by the appellate courts. It is normally sustained unless material facts
and circumstances have been overlooked, misunderstood or misapplied.[12] There is no such showing in this case.
Accused-appellant might not have employed
force in committing the rape but he definitely used intimidation which was
sufficient to make complainant submit herself to him against her will for fear
of life and personal safety. Accused-appellant grabbed her and dragged her to
his house. He was armed with an ice pick and threatened to kill her with it if
she did not follow his wishes. She was naturally intimidated and her
intimidation started from that moment on, and subsisted in her mind when the
rape was started until its consummation. Intimidation is subjective so it must
be viewed in the light of the victim’s perception and judgment at the time of
the commission of the crime, and not by any hard and fast rule. It is enough
that it produces fear, as in the present case, fear that if the complainant
does not yield to the bestial demands of accused-appellant something would
happen to her at that moment or even thereafter. Thus, it is irrelevant that
she was not certain when cross-examined that accused-appellant was armed with
an ice pick when the rape commenced; it was enough that he was holding
something that looked like an ice pick which engendered fear in her. With fear
instilled in her mind, it is understandable that she did not offer any
resistance since any attempt to do so would only be futile. Such failure on her
part should not be taken to mean consent so as to make her a willing
participant in the sexual confrontation.
The Information charges accused-appellant
with the special complex crime of robbery with rape. The record shows that the
prosecution has established that he committed both robbery and rape with the
intent to take personal property of another preceding the rape. Under Art. 294,
par. (1), of the Revised Penal Code, "x x x [a]ny person guilty of
robbery with the use of violence against or intimidation of persons shall
suffer: 1. The penalty of reclusion perpetua to death, x x x when the robbery
shall have been accompanied by rape x x x x" Complaining witness
Juditha Bautista was raped twice on the occasion of the robbery. In this
regard, this Court had declared in some cases that the additional rapes
committed on the same occasion of robbery would not increase the penalty.[13] There were also cases, however, where this Court
ruled that the multiplicity of rapes committed could be appreciated as an
aggravating circumstance.[14] Finally, in the recent case of People v. Regala,[15] the Court held that the additional rapes committed
should not be appreciated as an aggravating circumstance despite a resultant
"anomalous situation" wherein robbery with rape would be on the same
level as robbery with multiple rapes in terms of gravity.[16] The Court realized that there was no law providing
for the additional rape/s or homicide/s for that matter to be considered as
aggravating circumstance. It further observed that the enumeration of
aggravating circumstances under Art. 14 of the Revised Penal Code is exclusive,
unlike in Art. 13 of the same Code which enumerates the mitigating
circumstances where analogous circumstances may be considered, hence, the
remedy lies with the legislature. Consequently, unless and until a law is
passed providing that the additional rape/s or homicide/s may be considered
aggravating, the Court must construe the penal law in favor of the offender as
no person may be brought within its terms if he is not clearly made so by the
statute. Under this view, the additional rape committed by accused-appellant is
not considered an aggravating circumstance. Applying Art. 63, par. (2), of the
Revised Penal Code which provides that "(i)n all cases in which the law
prescribes a penalty composed of two indivisible penalties, the following rules
shall be observed in the application thereof x x x x 2. (w)hen there are
neither mitigating nor aggravating circumstances in the commission of the deed,
the lesser penalty shall be applied," the lower penalty of reclusion
perpetua should be imposed on accused-appellant. Sppedsc
As to the award of damages to the
complaining witness, an additional amount of P50,000.00 may be given as
damages ex delicto in line with recent jurisprudence.[17]
WHEREFORE, the Decision of the court a quo finding
accused-appellant FERNANDO SULTAN Y LATO GUILTY of the special complex crime of
robbery with rape and sentencing him to reclusion perpetua, to pay
Juditha M. Bautista P50,000.00 for moral damages, P5,180.00 for
actual damages representing the value of the personal properties plus the cash
amount of P130.00 taken from her is AFFIRMED with the MODIFICATION that
the amount of P50,000.00 be added as civil indemnity in conformity with
prevailing jurisprudence. Costs against accused-appellant.
SO ORDERED.
Mendoza, Quisumbing, Buena, and De Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.
[1] Decision penned by Judge Diosdado M. Peralta, RTC-Br. 95, Quezon City.
[2] TSN, 15 September 1997, pp. 3-19.
[3] Ibid.
[4] Ibid.
[5] Ibid.
[6] TSN, 8 September 1997, pp. 3-11.
[7] Bong Coronel and policeman Agustin Bautista, Jr.
[8] See Note 6.
[9] TSN, 15 September 1997, pp. 3-10.
[10] Rollo, p. 4.
[11] See Note 1.
[12] People v. Cristobal, G.R. No. 119218, 29 April 1999, citing People v. Banela, G.R. No. 124973, 18 January 1999.
[13] People v. Cristobal, G.R. No. 119218, 29 April 1999; People v. Martinez, G.R. No. 116918, 19 June 1997, 274 SCRA 259; People v. Lutao, G.R. No. 107798, 16 November 1995, 250 SCRA 45; People v. Precioso, G.R. No. 95890, 12 May 1993, 221 SCRA 748, cited in People v. Regala, G.R. No. 130508, 5 April 2000.
[14] People v. Candelario, G.R. No. 125550, 28 July 1999; People v. Pulusan, G.R. No. 110037, 21 May 1998, 290 SCRA 353; People v. Salvatierra, G.R. No. 111124, 20 June 1996, 257 SCRA 489.
[15] G.R. No. 130508, 5 April 2000.
[16] Citing People v. Pedroso, No. L-32997, 30 July 1982, 115 SCRA 599; People v. Mabilangan, No. L-48217, 30 January 1982, 111 SCRA 398.
[17] People v. Cristobal, G.R. No. 119218, 29 April 1999.