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FIRST DIVISION

[G.R. No. 116294.  August 21, 1997]

PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs. ANTONIO CHAVEZ y ESTAMANTE alias “TONY,” accused-appellant.

D E C I S I O N

KAPUNAN, J.:

This is an appeal from the February 24, 1994 Decision of the Regional Trial Court of Dumaguete City, Branch 32,[1] in Criminal Case No. 10499 finding herein appellant Antonio Chavez y Estamante alias “Tony” guilty of the crime of murder committed against the person of one  Bernabe Jaos and imposing on him the penalty of reclusion perpetua and the payment of civil indemnity in the amount of  P50,000.00, interment expenses of P10,000.00, moral damages of  P16,000.00 and  the costs of suit.

The information[2] for murder was filed against appellant on November 26, 1992.  Appellant pleaded not guilty to the murder charge.[3] As the accused was then on probation for the crime of robbery,[4] his probation was  revoked by the trial court.[5]

The prosecution, through its principal witness Agripina Ablejina, sought to establish the following facts:

The victim, Bernabe Jaos, 23 years old,[6] lived with his common-law wife, Agripina Ablejina, in Sitio Tampaga, Barrio Mantiquel, Siaton, Negros Oriental.  Their nearest neighbor was Efraim Navarez whose wife was the sister of Jaos.  The house of Jaos was about two (2) meters away from that of Navarez so that from there, one could look down on the front door of  Navarez who sold goods to his neighbors.

At around 8:00 o’clock in the evening of  October 18, 1992, Agripina was standing by the window of her home, where she could observe the Navarez household.  Her husband Jaos was buying cigarettes at the house cum store of Navarez.  Agripina saw that Efraim Navarez was with his wife and younger brother.  Navarez and Jaos were smoking and conversing with each other when appellant, first cousin of Navarez, arrived and stabbed Jaos with a knife.  Jaos was stabbed above his umbilical cord, causing his blood to spurt and his intestines to come out.  The victim was then squatting near the door inside the house of Navarez.  Chavez  pushed  Jaos, who  fell to the ground.  Chavez then ran to the house of his mother.

Agripina went to Jaos and removed the knife which was left sticking out of his body.  She delivered the knife to the PNP station in Mantiquel.  When she was investigated at the police station, Agripina could not finish her statement[7] because her child was crying.  She then requested Navarez to “finish” her statement.[8] His body was brought to the Siaton morgue.[9]

Dr. Mitylene B. Tan, municipal health officer, was also presented as a witness.  Dr. Tan testified that she conducted a postmortem examination on the body of  Jaos at the morgue of the Siaton District Hospital at 8:00 p.m. of October 19, 1992.  She found the body rigid and had been dead for approximately fifteen (15) hours.  Her examination  revealed that the victim had  sustained a perforating 2 1/2 inches long stab wound with intestinal herniation at the mid-upper abdominal region.[10]

PO3 Marcial Dingal in his testimony stated that he reflected the stabbing incident on the police blotter[11][12] which was surrendered by CAA[13] Atanacio Caminade who was also a member of  the  CAFGU.[14] in the afternoon of October 19, 1992.  He identified the weapon used, a 10-inch long bolo,

The defense  interposed denial.

Appellant testified on his behalf, and his version of the events that transpired on October 18, 1992 is as follows:

At around  6:30 in the evening of October 18, 1992, he went to Navarez’s place to buy bread.  With Navarez then were Melvin and Henry Jaos, a first cousin of the victim.  Navarez invited appellant to take a meal. While appellant was eating, Jaos arrived and, addressing Navarez said,  “It’s good that you are here, let us finish each other.”

Having heard Jaos’ utterance, Navarez pulled out a weapon and stabbed Jaos’ stomach.   As  Jaos fell downstairs, appellant stood up and at this juncture,  Navarez faced him and stabbed him in the right arm.  Appellant leaned on the wall, parried the blows and kicked Navarez, hitting his chest.  Then appellant jumped downstairs and ran to the house of  his elder brother, Sebastian Chavez, Jr., who was at home with their sister, mother and appellant’s wife.   Appellant told his brother,  “Nong, please help me because Bernabe was killed.”   However, appellant did not report the incident to the police  “because it is very far.”

That same evening, PNP members came for appellant.  They told him that he was responsible for the death of Jaos.  Appellant informed the police that it was Navarez who killed Jaos  but the police replied,  “Just go with us and relay the incident to our higher up.”[15]

Appellant’s story was corroborated by  Melvin Quimada. Quimada, who was from Sitio Saksak, Malabuhan,  claimed that he had gone to Mantiquel to help out in the harvest of crops  and was staying with his uncle, Agapito Quimada.   In the evening of  October 18, 1992,  Melvin was in the house of  Navarez when he heard  Jaos shout at  Navarez, “You have eluded before and ran away but now I will  kill you.”   Jaos made one step and shouted,  “I will kill you.”   Navarez got a knife, went to the front door and stabbed  Jaos.  As  Jaos fell to the ground, appellant and Melvin both tried to jump from the house.  However, appellant was stabbed by  Navarez so  that  Melvin stepped back to hide behind the door.  When he noticed that he had a way out, Melvin jumped out of the door and ran to the house of  his uncle.  He learned the following day that Jaos was dead.    Melvin did not report the incident to the police because he knew that they would not believe him.[16]

Appellant’s brother, Sebastian Chavez, Jr., testified that he let appellant into his house and applied herbal medicine to his right arm.  Later, CAFGU members fetched appellant because  Navarez  had reported that appellant was responsible for the stabbing of Jaos.  Sebastian protested that his brother was even wounded during the incident but the  CAFGUs  did not listen to him.   Instead, they took appellant to the CAFGU headquarters.  Sebastian, who accompanied his brother, saw  Navarez at the  headquarters,[17] sitting with Agapito Quimada.

Agapito investigated  Navarez and then, after the investigation, informed everyone that since appellant had run away from the crime scene, the matter should be investigated by the police.   Sebastian reiterated that it was Navarez who stabbed the victim but Agapito repeated the  “standing order” that both appellant and Navarez should be brought to the police station.  He did not accompany appellant to the police station because he had fever then.[18]

On rebuttal, the prosecution presented Agapito Quimada, father-in-law of Sebastian Chavez, Jr., Agapito testified that it was Antonio Merlo and Navarez who had requested for appellant’s arrest at around 10:00 o’clock in the evening, as they had presented  to him  the letter[19] of  Serafin  Sibol, a barangay councilman, requesting such arrest.  Agapito arrested appellant at the house of his brother and  later conducted an investigation at the crime scene.  He saw the body of the deceased near the house of Navarez which was around one (1) meter away from the  house of  the victim.  Agapito even made a  sketch of the two  houses.[20]

Agapito likewise denied that his nephew, Melvin Quimada, went to his place in Mantiquel.

When Agapito went to the crime scene, the victim’s wife and Serafin  Sibol were around.  A double-bladed knife, the weapon used in the crime, was surrendered to him by Agripina  but it was  Tating (Atanacio Caminade) who gave it up to the police.  According to Agapito, the bolo marked as Exhibit E was not the murder weapon.

On his own volition,  Agapito drew the sketch[21] of the crime scene showing the victim lying between the houses of Jaos and Navarez.  At the house  of  Sebastian Chavez, Jr., Agapito asked appellant why he stabbed Jaos.  Appellant answered that he was “ganged up.” It was in the house of  Sebastian that he arrested appellant.

On the trial court’s initiative,  Agripina was recalled to the witness stand.   The court verified from her as to whom she surrendered the knife she had pulled out of the victim’s body.  Agripina told the court that she gave the knife to Agapito Quimada and that the bolo labelled as  Exhibit E  was not the murder weapon.[22]

Atanacio Caminade, a member of the CAFGU, surrendered the weapon to the police.   Another CAFGU member, Antonio Fabillar, had given it to him.  The weapon that he surrendered was not a bolo but a hunting knife.  Upon learning that a bolo was brought to the court and identified as the murder weapon, he confronted policeman Marcial Dingal.  According to Caminade, the weapon wrongly brought to the court by Dingal  was the bolo used in the killing of a certain Sayson in Mantiquel.  Caminade saw how the killer in that case himself surrendered the bolo but it was he (Caminade) who surrendered the hunting knife used in killing Jaos.[23]

Once again recalled to the witness stand, Agripina testified that she pulled the  knife  out  of  Jaos’  body in the presence of the barangay councilman, Serafin Sibol and Elsa Quitay.  She gave the knife to Agapito Quimada, a CAFGU, who was then in the company of  Nelson Apostol,  Benedicto Trumata and Antonio Sombilon.[24]

As a  surrebuttal  witness, Sebastian Chavez, Jr. claimed that while it was true that he and his father-in-law, Agapito Quimada, used to be in good terms with each other, their relationship turned sour when Agapito sided with his son, Toribio, with whom Sebastian had an altercation when Toribio’s horse nibbled Sebastian’s rice and corn plants.

When he himself returned to the witness stand, Melvin Quimada insisted that he was in Mantiquel in the month  of  October, 1992, harvesting rice.  He had gone there to harvest several times already.  When he returned to Cama after the incident which resulted in the death of Jaos, Agapito went to his house.  Agapito “murmured”  to him, asking why  he  (Melvin)  had become a witness in this case.  Melvin answered that he only wanted to tell the truth.[25]

Not satisfied with the trial court’s decision, appellant appealed to this Court assigning the following errors:

I

THE TRIAL COURT GRAVELY ERRED IN NOT GIVING FULL FAITH AND CREDIT TO THE TESTIMONY OF THE PROSECUTION WITNESSES AND IN TOTALLY DISREGARDING THAT OF THE DEFENSE.

II

THE TRIAL COURT GRAVELY ERRED IN FINDING THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT ANTONIO CHAVEZ Y ESTAMANTE GUILTY BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT OF THE CRIME OF MURDER.[26]

Considering that the parties presented contradictory facts, the issue in this appeal boils down to  credibility.  As this Court has time and again said, the trial court’s evaluation on the credibility of witnesses is viewed as correct and entitled to the highest respect by appellate courts.  The trial court is more competent to so conclude, having had the opportunity to observe the witnesses’ demeanor and deportment on the stand, and the manner in which they gave their testimonies.[27] Its findings on the issue  of credibility of witnesses and its consequent findings of fact must be given great weight and respect on appeal, unless certain facts of substance and value have been overlooked which, if considered might affect the result of the case.[28]

After a careful scrutiny of the records and evidence of the case, we find no persuasive reason to depart from this well entrenched rule on credibility as to warrant a reversal of the decision of the trial court.   Nevertheless, the issues raised by the appellant should be faced squarely.

Appellant bewails the fact that the trial court accorded great weight to the testimony of  the common-law wife of the victim.  Appellant posits that she could hardly be considered as an eyewitness as she was in her house at the time of the killing, while there were  other persons at the scene of the crime, who were not even presented as witnesses.[29]

This is argument has no basis in fact and in law.   In the first  place,  it  is  the  prosecution which determines who among  the witnesses to a crime should testify in court.  The prosecutor handling the case is given a wide discretion on this matter.  It is definitely not for the courts, much more the defense, to dictate what evidence to present or who should take the witness stand at the trial of a case.[30]

Secondly, the trial court did not err in finding that Agripina was a credible witness whose  testimony should be deemed as nothing but the truth.  The appellant himself admitted that there was no reason why she should testify  against him.[31] Well-settled is the rule that when there is no evidence to indicate that the principal witness for the prosecution was moved by improper motive,  the presumption is that such witness was not so moved and that his testimony is entitled to full faith and credit.[32]

Thirdly, simply because Agripina was a common-law wife of the victim, it does not necessarily follow that her testimony is biased, incredible or self-serving.   This Court has held that there is no legal provision that disqualifies relatives of the victim of a crime from testifying, being otherwise competent, regarding the facts and circumstances of the crime.  Mere relationship of witnesses to the victim of a crime, whether by consanguinity or affinity, does not necessarily impair their credibility as witnesses.  This is specially so when the witnesses were present at the scene of the crime.[33]

Lastly, the defense further attacks Agripina’s credibility on the ground that her affidavit before the police,  does not even  mention the stabbing incident itself.[34] This  omission  was, however, explained by  Agripina when she testified that she could not finish her statement  because  she  had  to  attend to her crying child.[35] Affidavits, being taken ex-parte, are almost always incomplete and inaccurate.[36]

Appellant points out that Agripina’s testimony is not credible because her claim that her house was elevated and therefore  higher than that of  Navarez, was contradicted by prosecution witness  Agapito  Quimada.  However, both the testimony of Agripina and Agapito’s sketch  show that the window of the victim’s house  faced the front door of  the Navarez residence.   In other words,  Agripina had an unobstructed view of the incident.  This is the material aspect of the prosecution’s case which the defense failed to disprove satisfactorily.

Another matter which  appellant stresses as indicative of  Agripina’s incredulous testimony is the fact  that  while she claimed that  the murder weapon was a knife,  the police presented a bolo.  The mistake on the part of witness Dingal in presenting the wrong murder weapon was satisfactorily explained by the prosecution.  That it was not Dingal himself who rectified the error on the stand[37] is of no moment.  It would not be amiss to point out that the production of the murder weapon is not even  essential for a conviction.  This, the Court emphasized in  People  v. Bello,[38] when it said:

“For the purposes of conviction,  it is enough that the prosecution establishes by proof  beyond reasonable doubt that a crime was committed and the  accused is the author thereof.   The production of the weapon used in the commission  of  the crime is not a condition  sine qua non for the discharge of  such  burden,  for the same may not have been recovered at all  from  the assailant  (People v. Florida, 214 SCRA 227 [1992]).”

Appellant attempts to support his denial of guilt by asserting that he informed the police that it was Navarez who killed  Jaos but the police appeared to have been bent on pinning him down as the culprit.[39] This bare assertion, unsupported as it is by other evidence, is simply  self-serving and deserves scant consideration.   Moreover, appellant’s claim that Navarez had a motive for  harming  Jaos because the latter allegedly  “disallowed (Navarez) to use the carabao in plowing the fields”[40] cannot be appreciated in the absence of  independent  proof thereon duly presented at the trial.   Furthermore, the positive identification  of  appellant as the perpetrator of the crime may not be overturned by his denial.   It is well-settled  that between the positive assertions  of the prosecution witnesses and the negative averments of the accused-appellant,  the former indisputably deserve more credence and are, therefore, entitled to greater evidentiary weight.[41]

Appellant’s  last-ditch effort towards exoneration is his allegation that the trial court was biased against him because  it was the same court which convicted him of robbery  in  Criminal Case No. 9958 and, hence, there  “existed in the mind of the court that the accused-appellant who is under probation would be prone to commit the act imputed against him.[42] The Court finds this assertion misplaced.  If indeed there was reason for the appellant to doubt the court’s impartiality,  his counsel could have sought the inhibition of the presiding judge from hearing the case.

The trial court correctly qualified the killing to the crime of murder as treachery was duly established by the prosecution.  The testimony of the prosecution eyewitness  is  significant  on  this   matter:

xxx

Q     And when Tony Chavez arrived at the store of  Ephraim (sic) Navarez, what happened next?

A     He then stabbed Bernabe  Jaos.

Q     Have you seen the act of  stabbing?

A     Yes,  I really saw it.

Q     And when you saw the act of  stabbing, what weapon was used by Tony Chavez in stabbing Bernabe  Jaos?

A     A knife.

xxx

Q.    Now, when Tony Chavez stabbed your common-law husband, was your common-law husband hit?

A.    Yes, he was hit.

Q.    Where was your common-law husband hit?

A.    He was hit above the umbilical cord.

Q.    And when your husband was hit above the umbilical cord, did you see blood spurting?

A.    Yes.

Q.    What else have you seen aside from blood spurting?

A.    His intestine.

Q.    And since you saw the act of stabbing, did you not warn your husband that there was an impending assault on his person?

A.    No, because the stabbing of Tony Chavez was so sudden.

Q.    When your husband was hit, blood spurting, the intestine came out, what happened to your husband?

A.    He died right away.

Q.    When Tony Chavez stabbed your husband, what was the position of your husband, was he sitting or he was standing.

A.    He was sitting.

Q.    On what was he sitting?

A.    He was squatting.

Q.    Was he talking with a friend Ephraim (sic) Navarez at that time?

A.    Yes, they were talking.

Q.    Was Ephraim (sic) Navarez also squatting?

A.    Yes, he was also squatting.

Q.    And when Tony Chavez delivered that stabbing blow on your common-law husband, where particularly in the store of Ephraim (sic) Navarez was your husband situated?

A.    Near the door.

Q.    When you said near the door, was he inside the store or outside the the store of Navarez?

A.    He was inside the store.

Q.    When your husband was sitting and he was on a squatting position, what happened to your husband, did he remain squatting of did he attempt to rise?

A.    He fell down because he was pushed by Tony Chavez.

Q.    Will you clarify that, he fell to the ground of he fell to the floor?

A.    He fell to the ground.

Q.    You mean to say the store at the house of Ephraim (sic) Navarez is elevated from the ground?

A.    Yes, about two (2) feet.

Q.    You have seen also how Tony Chavez pushed your common-law husband?

A.    Yes.

Q.    And when your husband fell to the ground, what happened?

A.    He was lying on the ground.

xxx

Q.    After  Tony  Chavez pushed your husband and your husband  fell to the ground, what did Tony Chavez do next?

A.    He ran.

Q.    Towards where did he ran?

A.    Towards their house.

xxx.[43]

Treachery clearly characterized the commission of the crime.  In this case, the assault was undoubtedly made not only suddenly but also while the victim was defenseless.  The fact that the victim was attacked frontally does not negate the existence of treachery.  The situation in this case is similar to that obtaining in People v. Saliling[44] where the victim was conversing with another person when the accused emerged from behind them, stabbed the victim twice and quickly ran away.  In holding that there was treachery, the Court brushed aside the appellant’s contention that by the location of the wounds inflicted upon the victim,  the attack was frontal and, therefore, not treacherous.  It held that even a frontal attack can be treacherous when it is sudden and unexpected and the victim was unarmed.[45]

In the absence of proof of other circumstances attending the commission of the crime, whether mitigating or aggravating, the penalty that should be imposed upon the appellant  for the crime of  murder is reclusion perpetua.

WHEREFORE,  based on the foregoing, the herein decision of the trial court finding Antonio Chavez guilty of murder is hereby AFFIRMED  in toto.

SO ORDERED.

Padilla, Bellosillo, Vitug, and Hermosisima, Jr., JJ., concur.



[1] Presided by Judge Eleuterio E. Chiu.

[2] The undersigned 2nd Asst. Provincial Prosecutor hereby accuses ANTONIO CHAVEZ y ESTAMANTE, alias “Tony,” a resident of Sitio Tampaga, Barangay Mantiquel Siaton, Negros Oriental, of the crime of MURDER, committed as follows:

That on or about 8:00 o’clock in the evening of October 18, 1992, inside the house of Efraim Navarez at sitio Pampanga, barangay Mantiquel, Siaton, Negros Oriental, Philippines, and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused who is a probationer, with intent to kill, and with treachery, did then and there wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously ATTACK and STAB with a knife, with which he was armed at that time, one BERNABE JAOS, hitting the latter on and causing a mortal wound at the abdomen, which injury caused the instantaneous death of said victim, to the damage and prejudice of the heirs of the same Bernabe Jaos.

[3] Record,  p.  24.

[4] Criminal Case No. 9958.   For the crime of robbery in this case, appellant was imposed the penalty of six (6) months to four (4) years, two (2) months and one (1) day imprisonment.

[5] Decision, p.  7.

[6] Exhibit  A.

[7] Record,  p.  10.

[8] Id.,  at  9.

[9] TSN,  January 21, 1993, pp.  11-12.

[10] Exhibit   “A;”  TSN, January 21, 1993,  pp.  3-7.

[11] Exhibit   “D.”

[12] Exhibits  “D” and  “E.”

[13] Citizen’s  Active  Auxiliary.

[14] TSN,  January 28, 1993,  pp. 3-7.

[15] TSN,  February 5, 1993,  pp.  3-6.

[16] TSN,  April 16, 1993,  pp.  3-8.

[17] Id., at  26-28.

[18] TSN,  June 4, 1993,  pp. 2-4.

[19] Exhibit  “F.”

[20] Exhibit  “G.”

[21] Ibid.

[22] Id., at  23-24.

[23] TSN,  August 26, 1993,  pp.  4-6.

[24] Id., at  12-14.

[25] TSN,  November  22, 1993,  pp.  8-10.

[26] Appellant’s Brief, p.1.

[27] People  v.  Gabris,  258 SCRA 663, 671 (1996).

[28] People  v.  Vallador,  257  SCRA  515,  522-523 (1996).

[29] See note  26.

[30] People  v.  Ballagan,  247 SCRA 535, 546  (1995).

[31] TSN,  February  5, 1993,  p. 17.

[32] People  v. Garcia,  258 SCRA 411, 419  (1996) citing People v. Cabuang, 217 SCRA 675 (1993).

[33] People  v. Patamama,  250 SCRA 603, 611 (1995), citing People v. De la Cruz, 207 SCRA 632; People v. Galendez, 210 SCRA 360; De Leon v. People, 210 SCRA 151.

[34] See note 26.

[35] TSN,  January 21,  1993,  pp. 21-22.

[36] People v. Fulinara, 245 SCRA 733, 743 (1995).

[37] See note 26.

[38] 237 SCRA 347, 352  (1994).

[39] See note 26.

[40] TSN,  February 5, 1993,  p. 16.

[41] People  v.  Padre-e,  249 SCRA 422, 427 (1995).

[42] See note 26.

[43] TSN,  January 21,  1993,  pp. 13-17.

[44] 249 SCRA 185 (1995).

[45] Id., at 188  citing  People v. Abapo, 239 SCRA  469 (1996).