THIRD DIVISION
[G.R. No. 134562.
April 6, 2000]
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee,
vs. FEDERICO LUSTRE Y ENCINAS, accused-appellant.
D E C I S I O N
VITUG, J.:
A far cry from a
“May-December” affair, this case involves an alleged sexual molestation of a
barrio lass on the threshold of womanhood by a seventy-six year old man who
happened to be the common-law husband for over two decades of the young
victim's grandmother.
Appellant was
charged with rape defined and penalized under Article 335 of the Revised Penal
Code in an Information that read:
“That on or about 8:00 o'clock in
the evening of June 5, 1994 at Barangay Matacong, San Lorenzo Ruiz, Camarines
Norte, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the
above-named accused did, then and there, willfully, unlawfully, and feloniously
have carnal knowledge of his step-granddaughter, Lilibeth S. Hotamares, against
the latter's will and by means of force and intimidation, to her damage and
prejudice.
"CONTRARY TO LAW.”[1]
When arraigned, appellant pleaded not guilty to the charge, thereby
warranting the trial on the merits to proceed.
The events of 05
June 1994 and thereabouts are recalled by the prosecution and the defense from
the testimony of their respective witnesses.
Lilibeth Hotamares -
In the evening
of 05 June 1994, Lilibeth was lying down when the accused, whom she identified
to be her Lolo Federico, knocked at the door. Wildly kicking the door,
the accused uttered, "Lilibeth, Lilibeth, magluwas ka diyan ta kung dai
ka magluwas ako ang malaog at kakastahan kita."[2] Out of fear, Lilibeth felt constrained to come out of
the house. With the accused tightly
gripping her right hand, she was dragged all the way to her Lolo's house
approximately 10 to 15 meters away. She
was too afraid to yell for help. Once
inside the house, she was made to lie down on the kitchen bench with her hands
on the sides. Her shirt still on but
her panty pulled down, the accused, who by then was already naked, licked her
private parts. Thereafter, the accused
mounted her and began the pumping motion to consummate the carnal assault. She could only cry in pain while the accused
was gratifying himself.
Before returning
home, the accused warned her not to tell on him, otherwise he would
"hack" her. She said that
this warning precluded her from reporting the incident to anyone, and had it
not been for the insistence of her mother, Lourdes Hotamares, she would not
have filed the rape charge. She was not
aware of any previous misunderstanding or discord between the accused and her
mother.
Maria Hotamares -
On 05 June 1994,
at around 8 o'clock in the evening just as when Maria and the other siblings,
including her elder sister Lilibeth, were in bed, the accused knocked at their
door, kicking it and forcibly trying to open it. He ordered Lilibeth to come out of the house, saying "Lilibeth,
Lilibeth, magluwas ka, kung dai ka magluwas, kakastahan taka!”[3] Out of fear, Lilibeth did just as she was told, It occurred
to her to follow her sister at a distance.
Later peeping through the open window of the house of the accused, she
saw half-naked Lilibeth lying down on the kitchen bench while the accused was
performing cunnilingus on her until shortly thereafter when he placed himself
on top of her and began the sexual congress.
Lilibeth came
back home crying, but Maria did not dare ask her about the incident. She simply
thought of telling her mother everything that she had witnessed at some
opportune time. In open court, she
identified the accused as being her sister's ravager.
Lourdes
Hotamares -
On 05 June 1994,
Lourdes was with Remedios Lustre, her mother-in-law, in Mandulongan attending
the wake of the latter's sister. Her
daughter Maria divulged to her sometime in the same month of June 1994 the
assault on Lilibeth's honor by the accused, the common-law-husband of her
mother-in-law. She decided not to
confront the accused because she was afraid that he might attempt to
escape. Instead, she brought Lilibeth
to the Camarines Norte Provincial Hospital for medical examination.
She did not have
any personal grudge or harbor any ill feelings against the accused before the
incident.
Remedios Lustre -
On 04 June 1994,
Remedios and her daughter-in-law, Lourdes Hotamares, went to Mandulongan to
attend the wake of her sister. The
accused followed her in the afternoon but sought her permission the next day to
get palay in Awitan and to later proceed to their house in San Lorenzo Ruiz,
Camarines Norte. The accused went back
to Mandulongan in the afternoon of 06 June 1994. She came to know of the sexual
molestation of her granddaughter by the accused only the following month of
July 1994.
She started
living with the accused in 1973 but ended the affair sometime in 1995.
Dr. Marcelito Abas -
A medico legal
officer, he examined the victim on 08 July 1999. He found her to have sustained multiple hymenal lacerations at
12, 3, 7, 8, and 9 o' clock positions. He opined that these lacerations could
have been caused by the penetration of any blunt, round, or smooth instrument.
Federico Lustre -
On 03 June 1994,
the accused went to Mandulongan, Daet, Camarines Norte, arriving thereat at
around 1 o'clock in the morning to attend the wake of his sister-in-law. He was with Remedios and Lourdes. Although he considered Remedios as his wife
who eventually used his family name, he, however, was not really married to
her. On 05 June 1994, he went back to
Matacong, San Lorenzo Ruiz, for a two-night stay to attend to his fighting
cocks. He arrived at Barangay Matacong
at around 3 o'clock in the afternoon.
As soon as he had taken his meal, he laid on the sofa due to a
persistent stomach trouble. His son
Ernesto arrived and invited him to stay at the latter's house. He accepted the invitation. After taking some herbal medicines his son
had provided, he slept on a floor mat at around 7 o' clock in the evening and
woke up at or about 5 o'clock the next morning.
He vehemently
denied the accusation against him.
He confessed to
having had a very healthy sexual life with his common-law-wife although his
penis was incapable of being as stiff as before, i.e., prior to an
operation on his testicles, and that his sexual appetite had dwindled by reason
of age. He was confined at the
Camarines Norte Provincial Hospital from 24 June 1988 to 08 July 1988 due to
swollen testicles. Dr. Ramon P. Odiamar
performed the operation on him.
Ernesto Lustre -
Ernesto, son of
the accused, was in his house on 05 June 1994 at about 6:30 in the
evening. He was in the coconut
plantation from 6 o'clock in the morning until 4 o'clock in the afternoon of 05
June 1994. He got home at around five
and from there proceeded to his father's house. He saw that his father was suffering from stomachache. Ernesto invited his father to his house if
he thought he could no longer put up with the pain. His father acceded. At
home, Ernesto applied herbal medicine on his father. He slept from 11 o'clock in the evening to 4 o'clock the
following morning.
Marilyn Susano -
Marilyn was the
Record Officer II of the Camarines Norte Provincial Hospital charged with,
among other things, signing medical certificates for record purposes. She identified in court her signatures
appearing on the medical certificate issued to Federico Lustre. Dr. Ramon
Odiamar, who conducted the operation on the appellant's testicles, later ceased
to be connected with the hospital following his resignation sometime in 1993.
After the trial,
the Regional Trial Court, Branch 36, Daet, Camarines Norte, rendered its
decision on 21 April 1997; it adjudged:
“WHEREFORE, premises considered,
the guilt of the accused Federico Lustre y Encinas for the crime charged having
been proven beyond reasonable doubt, he is hereby sentenced to suffer the
extreme penalty of death. However,
considering that Art. 83 of the Revised Penal Code provides that the death
sentence shall not be inflicted upon any person over SEVENTY YEARS OF AGE and
accused Federico Lustre y Encinas is already 76 years old, the DEATH SENTENCE
is ordered COMMUTED to the penalty of RECLUSION PERPETUA. Furthermore, accused is ordered to pay the
offended party the amount of P50,000.00 as indemnity.”[4]
Insisting on his
innocence and pleading for his acquittal on the ground of reasonable doubt,
appellant ascribes to the lower court the following errors:
“1. The trial court erred in giving full faith and credence to the
testimony of the prosecution witnesses and disregarding the theory honestly
advanced by the defense.
“2. The trial court erred in finding accused guilty beyond reasonable
doubt of the crime charged.”[5]
Appellant submits that the actuation of Lilibeth during the alleged rape
is incongruous with the deportment of a virtuous and inexperienced girl about
to be sexually violated. She did not
voice any alarm or objection nor did she show any sincere struggle to resist or
fight the alleged carnal assault. If at
all, Lilibeth has but manifested total acquiescence or resignation, thereby
rendering the alleged sexual act voluntary.
The Court is not
convinced. It bears stressing that the
absence of struggle on the part of the victim does not necessarily negate the
commission of rape. Appellant
undoubtedly exercises moral ascendancy and influence over 13-year old Lilibeth,
the latter having considered the former as her grandfather, a state that should
be enough to cow her into submission to his depraved and demented lust. Intimidated indeed, she has been left with
no choice but to fearfully succumb to the pleasure and will of her rapist. Verily, her failure to shout for help or
fight back cannot be equated as being one of voluntary submission to the
criminal intent of the accused.[6] Fear, in lieu of force or violence,
is subjective. Addressed to the mind of
the victim of rape, its presence cannot be tested by any hard-and-fast rule but
must instead be viewed in the light of the perception and judgment of the
victim at the time of the crime.[7] In addition, the Court has
repeatedly observed that different people act differently to a given stimulus
or type of situation, and there is no standard form of behavioral response that
can be expected from those who are confronted with a strange, startling or
frightening experience.[8]
Appellant would
want the Court to believe that his advanced age and previous operation has
rendered him sexually inutile. The
Court is not impressed. Advanced age is
not known to render sexual intercourse impossible nor to deter sexual interest
and capability.[9] In fact, Lilibeth's credibility is
strengthened by appellant's own admission in the course of the trial that since
undergoing the medical operation on his testicles sometime in 1990, he has
seldom experienced sustained erection which could have prompted him to resort
to oral sex. Lilibeth, in her testimony
on 26 October 1995, narrates:
“Q When
he was on top of you, what did the accused do to you?
“A He
was moving his buttocks.
“Q Aside
from his buttocks moving, what did he do to you?
“A He
licked my vagina.
“Q What
did you feel when the accused was moving his buttocks and licking your vagina?
“A It
was painful.[10]
On 01 April
1996, accused Federico Lustre testified, thus:
“FISCAL ESCARO:
"Q You will agree with me that since your operation in 1988, your
testicles did not bother you anymore.
“ATTY. BARANDON:
The Accused is incompetent.
"FISCAL ESCARO:
No.
"ATTY. BARANDON:
We withdraw our objection.
"WITNESS:
"A No longer, Sir.
"FISCAL ESCARO:
"Q And you have a very healthy sexual life with your wife, your
live-in partner.
"A Yes, Sir, but it does not become very stiff anymore.
"FISCAL ESCARO:
"Q But you could still do it with your wife, am I correct?
"ATTY. BARANDON:
Already answered.
"COURT:
He could do it but "hindi na masyadong
matigas", that was the answer.
"FISCAL ESCARO:
"Q In other words, you could still do it despite the fact that your
penis would not erect so well.
"WITNESS:
"A No more, Sir.
"Q But prior to 1988, you have a very healthy sex life with your
live-in wife.
"A Yes, Sir, but seldom already because I am already old.
"Q But there are times that this penis of yours would go erect in the
early morning?
"ATTY. BARANDON:
The question is not specific. What date?
"FISCAL ESCARO:
After 1988, after the operation.
"WITNESS:
"A There are times that my penis also get some erection but for a
short time only so I do it with the use of my tongue.”[11]
Appellant has
interposed alibi. Obviously, his alibi must fail since this form
of defense, like a manuscript cautiously worded, is quite easy to contrive. The Court has steadfastly ruled that for an alibi
to prosper, the defendant must prove not only (1) that he has been
somewhere else when the crime is committed but also (2) that the place he
claims to be has made it impossible for him to be physically present at the
crime scene at the time of its commission.[12] These elements do not obtain in
this case. Moreover, alibi deserves
scant consideration in the face of the positive identification made by the
victim and her sister who are not shown to have entertained such evil or
ulterior motive as to testify falsely against appellant.
Like alibi, bare
denial cannot overcome the categorical testimony of a victim. Denial, if unsubstantiated by clear and
convincing evidence, is a negative and self-serving evidence which deserves no
greater evidentiary value than the testimony of credible witnesses who testify
on affirmative matters. Judicious logic
has it that when victims of rape are young and immature girls, courts are inclined
to lend weight to their version of what actually has taken place, considering
not only-their relative vulnerability but also the shame and embarrassment
concomitant with a court trial. It is
hardly persuasive that a young country girl, virtually innocent of mundane ways
and means would, for no reason at all, conjure a charge of defilement, undergo
a medical examination of her private parts, and willingly bring disgrace to her
family unless she is triggered by a righteous desire to seek justice for the
wrong committed.
Lilibeth's
testimony is corroborated in material respects by an eyewitness account given
by Maria Hotamares, peeping just a foot away from the scene. Antithetically,
the testimony of both Federico and Ernestro Lustre is attended with
inconsistencies, making quite obvious their vain attempt to exculpate appellant
from criminal liability.
Appellant
considers it quite improbable for rape to be committed at a place within a
well-lighted and fairly well-populated neighborhood. This argument does not hold water. Rape can be committed even in places where people congregate, in
parks, along the roadside, within school premises, inside a house where there
are other occupants, and even in the same room in the presence of other members
of the family. An overpowering wicked
urge has been shown not to be deterred by circumstances of time or place.
It would not
have been necessary for the Court below to "automatically" commute to
reclusion perpetua the death sentence it has imposed on the accused
because of his age. The penalty of
death cannot be properly imposed since the indictment has failed to indicate
the age of the victim and her correct relationship with appellant, concurrent
qualifying circumstances, essential in the imposition of that penalty. Furthermore, appellant is not a
"parent, ascendant, step-parent, guardian, relative by consanguinity or
affinity within the third civil degree, or the common-law spouse of the parent
of the victim.”[13] The latter's grandmother, Remedios
Lustre, herself acknowledges that appellant has just for a time been her
common-law husband.
Prevailing
jurisprudence allows an award of civil indemnity of P50,000.00 to the offended
party in addition to moral damages of an equal amount.[14] The crime of rape is not a simple
physical violation; it actually debases a woman's dignity, leaving a stigma on
her honor and scarring her psyche for life.[15]
WHEREFORE, accused-appellant Federico Lustre y
Encinas is found guilty beyond reasonable doubt of the crime of rape punishable
by the indivisible penalty of reclusion perpetua which is hereby
imposed. An award of P50,000.00 for moral damages is ordered to be paid by
accused-appellant to the victim, Lilibeth Hotamares, in addition to the sum of
P50,000.00 by way of civil indemnity already decreed by the trial court.
SO ORDERED.
Melo,
(Chairman), Panganiban, Purisima, and Gonzaga-Reyes, JJ., concur.
[1] Records, p. 1.
[2] TSN, 26 October
1995, p. 10.
[3] TSN, 15 June 1995,
p. 9.
[4] Ibid, p. 144.
[5] Rollo, p. 47.
[6] People vs.
Bantisil, 249 SCRA 367.
[7] People vs. Luzorata,
286 SCRA 487.
[8] Ibid..
[9] People vs. Topaguen,
296 SCRA 601
[10] TSN, 26 October
1995, p. 16.
[11] TSN, 01 April 1996,
pp. 15-16.
[12] People vs. Baniel,
275 SCRA 472.
[13] See R.A. No. 7659.
[14] People vs. Villamor,
297 SCRA 262.
[15] People vs. Delos Santos
295 SCRA 583.