G.R. No. 70556 - People of the Philippines vs. Mario Ablao
Manila
FIRST DIVISION
G.R. No. 70556, December 26, 1990
PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES,Plaintiff-Appellee,
vs
MARIO ABLAO, ISAGANI SACOP, LEOPOLDO DE GUZMAN, PEDRO LADIANA, ZENON SAMONTE, ALFREDO DEL MUNDO, BRUNO ABLAO, ISIDORO GALEMA, DANILO MERCADO, RUSTICO LIWANAG, FRANCISCO BALDEMECA, HECTOR SAMONTE and DAVID ABLAO, accused, MARIO ABLAO, ISAGANI SACOP, LEOPOLDO DE GUZMAN, PEDRO LADIANA, ZENON SAMONTE, and ALFREDO DEL MUNDO,Accused-Appellants.
D E C I S I O N
NARVASA,J.:
In the evening of July 6, 1980, Hon. Lotus Sobejana, Sr., Municipal Judge of Lumban, Laguna, and his seven-year old son, Lotus, Jr., were shot and killed. They died almost instantly from multiple gunshot wounds sustained on different parts of their bodies. Thirteen (13) persons were indicted in the then Circuit Criminal Court, Laguna, as co-conspirators in the two killings, categorized by the Provincial Fiscal as double murder qualified by treachery and evident premeditation.
The persons indicted were the six (6) appellants herein — Mario Ablao, Isagani Sacop, Leopoldo de Guzman, Pedro Ladiana, Zenon Samonte and Alfredo del Mundo — and seven (7) others: Hector Samonte, David Ablao, Bruno Ablao, Isidro Galema, Danilo Mercado, Rustico Liwanag and Francisco Baldemeca. All pleaded innocent on arraignment.
On September 17, 1982, in the course of trial, Judge Jose M. Aguila, then presiding over the Circuit Criminal Court, dismissed the case as against three of the defendants: Isidro Galema, Danilo Mercado and Rustico Liwanag for insufficiency of evidence and with the conformity of the prosecution.
After the prosecution had rested, Judge Maximiano C. Asuncion succeeded Judge Aguila and received evidence for the defense. On February 1, 1985, he rendered judgment:
(1) ACQUITTING Hector Samonte and David Ablao "(f)or lack of sufficient evidence;"
(2) CONVICTING —
(a) "MARIO ABLAO, as principal by direct participation, PEDRO LADIANA, LEOPOLDO DE GUZMAN and ISAGANI SACOP AS PRINCIPALS by conspiracy with Mario Ablao . . . of Two (2) separate MURDERS for the killing of Lotus Sobejana and Lotus Sobejana, Jr. with the qualifying circumstances of treachery and evident premeditation, and the aggravating circumstances of nocturnity, disregard of rank, respect and age respectively due the victims and with the use of unlicensed firearm," and SENTENCING "each of them . . . to suffer the maximum and supreme penalty of Two (2) separate DEATH PENALTY," and
(b) "Atty. ZENON SAMONTE and ALFREDO DEL MUNDO . . . as Accessory after the fact to the crimes of Two (2) Separate MURDERS perpetrated by MARIO ABLAO in harboring and assisting in the escape of the latter," and SENTENCING "each of them to suffer imprisonment of two (2) indeterminate penalties of Twelve (12) Years and One (1) day of the maximum of Prision Mayor to Twenty (20) Years of the maximum of Reclusion Temporal; and
(3) further SENTENCING all the accused "to pay, jointly and severally, the heirs of Judge Lotus Sobejana and his son, Lotus Sobejana, Jr. the sum of P200,000.00 as actual and compensatory damages and P500,000.00 by way of moral damages with all the accessory penalties provided for by law and to pay the costs."
In these appellate proceedings, all the convicted defendants pray that the judgment of conviction be reversed and they be acquitted.ℒαwρhi৷They contend that the Trial Court erred:
(1) in according credit to the identification of Mario Ablao by Leoncia Alarcon y Osorio, Judge Sobejana's mother-in-law;
(2) in giving credence to the testimony of prosecution witnesses Pedro and Jose de los Reyes;
(3) in making certain findings and conclusions of fact not borne out by the evidence; and
(4) in holding that there was conspiracy among the accused.
Having reviewed the record, the Court finds merit in these pleas sufficient to justify a reversal.
First, on the question of identification: Based on the version offered by the prosecution, besides the killer himself, two persons actually witnessed the double murder — Felisa Alarcon, the wife of Judge Sobejana, and her mother, Leoncia Osorio Alarcon. The latter provided what the Trial Court described as "explicit and positive" testimony identifying appellant Mario Ablao as the triggerman, the decision pointing out that she identified Ablao no less than four (4) times: at the crime scene moments after the shooting, then twice in the course of the investigation conducted by the Philippine Constabulary, and finally during the trial when she picked him out from among the persons then present in the courtroom.
Moreover, there seems to be nothing in the record to show that Ablao fitted Alarcon's later and more detailed physical description of the killer, to wit and as already stated: slim, fair-skinned, five feet five, etc., which was given two weeks after the event.
Identification evidence of this kind — at best, inconclusive — cannot, standing alone, provide sufficient basis for a conviction. Yet, it is not supported by any other evidence, not even by that of the other eyewitness, Alarcon's own daughter, the widow Sobejana. The latter, according to investigators, was in a state of shock and too distraught to give any statement at the crime scene. But even after she had recovered sufficiently, she failed to identify the assailant, though as she latter testified, she had known all the accused for a long time.
Advertence is made to the extrajudicial statement of Eduardo Mercado that he saw Ablao pass by the Lumban Academy on General Luna Street near the scene of the crime a few minutes after the killings as corroborative of the testimony identifying Ablao as the killer.
The failure of the identification evidence against Mario Ablao is equally fatal to the prosecution's theory of conspiracy which hinges upon, and has for an essential ingredient, the alleged association of the other accused with Ablao in the planning and commission of the double killing. The fact that the proof has failed to tag Ablao as the one who did the actual killing rendersipso factosuspect evidence the thrust and intendment of which is to show a conspiracy in which Ablao, and not any one of the other alleged conspirators, was assigned and agreed to carry out the part of killer. And, running true to the form that the other proof for the prosecution in this case has taken, such evidence (of conspiracy) is similarly difficult to credit, both intrinsically and because coming from hardly pristine sources.
It was attempted to prove conspiracy among the accused through the testimony of Pedro de los Reyes and Jose de los Reyes, father and son, which imputed to said accused acts and conduct such as: (a) their entering the office of Judge Sobejana in the Lumban municipal hall on June 10, 1980 (not June 9, as erroneously stated in the appealed decision) and uttering threats against his life; (b) their reconnaisance of the place where the killing took place two days before that event; (c) their having engaged in an all-day drinking spree on the day of the killing in a nearby house belonging to one of them (Zenon Samonte); (d) their furtive, unusual and suspicious movements in or about the vicinity of the crime scene on that same day before and after the killings; and (e) overheard utterances like "nayari din," indicative of guilty knowledge.
Judge Asuncion, who wrote the appealed decision, never heard these witnesses testify — as already observed, it was his predecessor, Judge Jose M. Aguila, who heard the entire case for the People — had little basis for approvingly adjudging their testimony as given ". . . in a straightforward and simple manner . . ."
Apart from these indicia of the Reyeses' possible bias and motive to testify falsely, it simply is difficult to believe that parties bent on a common felonious purpose would so recklessly advertise their intentions and call attention to themselves by holding a day-long drinking spree within plain sight of the place where they planned to kill their victim that very same day, their actions visible to every curious eye; and when not huddled together in drink, conspicuously skulking about the vicinity and generally acting as if they were waiting for something out of the ordinary to happen or were helping make it happen — actions that observers would in hindsight equate with guilt. The more natural tendency of conspirators who had planned a killing and agreed to let one of their number carry it out is for the rest to arrange to be somewhere other than at the scene of the crime at its planned time of commission to avoid any suspicion fastening upon them or provide themselves with alibis in case it did.
The credibility of the appealed decision is not helped any by indications that the Trial Judge had reached his own adverse conclusions about appellant Ablao's character, if not his guilt, even before all the evidence was in and by the presence therein of findings to which the recorded proofs offer no support except upon loose inferences. It describes Ablao's alleged actions after the killing as those of a "professional killer"
Error was further committed in giving weight and credence to the alleged confession of Francisco Baldemeca, one of the original accused who escaped from detention and has since remainded at large, as evidence against Mario Ablao. There having been no opportunity on the part of the defense, which objected to its presentation,
On the whole and in view of the conspicuous deficiencies and shortcomings of the evidence for the prosecution, whatever suspicions about the complicity of the appellants in the killing of Judge Sobejana and his son are not promoted to any reasonable certainty. Said evidence, insufficient, in the Court's considered view after due examination and evaluation, to pinpoint Mario Ablao as the gunwielder or to establish the existence of a conspiracy among the appellants to take the lives of said victims, fails to overcome the presumption of innocence and erase all reasonable doubts of guilt. The verdict of the Trial Court and the respect and acceptance that by precedent its findings of fact would otherwise ordinarily command notwithstanding, the appellants are entitled to an acquittal.
WHEREFORE,the appealed decision isSET ASIDEandREVERSED,and the appellants areACQUITTED,with costs de oficio.
SO ORDERED.
Cruz, Gancayco, Griño-Aquino and Medialdea, JJ., concur.
Footnotes