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PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

EN BANC

[G.R. No. 35442. March 4, 1932. ]

THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. FLORO TUMAYAO, SIMEON TUMAYAO, TOMAS CAÑETE and SERGIO CAÑETE, Defendants-Appellants.

Quirino S. Lizardo, for Appellants.

Attorney-General Jaranilla, for Appellee.

SYLLABUS


1. CRIMINAL LAW; HOMICIDE; VARIOUS AGGRESSORS; COMMUNITY OF DESIGN NOT SHOWN. — Although four persons were present when a fatal assault was made upon another and each of the four contributed somewhat to the unlawful aggression, nevertheless, in view of the fact that no prior conspiracy was shown and the acts done did not clearly show community of purpose, it was held that the individual who inflicted the fatal blow was alone responsible in the character of principal. The others were held to be separately responsible for their own particular acts.

2. ID.; ID.; ACCOMPLICE. — Where S began an unlawful assault on T and, after the latter had been struck down by a fatal blow from a bolo in the hands of F, continued the attack by cutting T in the stomach with the bolo, though inflicting no serious wound, he was held to be an accomplice in the homicide, his intention to collaborate with F in doing bodily harm to T being sufficiently evinced by his previous and simultaneous acts, but without any direct participation in the act that caused death (People v. Tamayo, 44 Phil., 38).


D E C I S I O N


STREET, J.:


This appeal has been brought to reverse a judgment of the Court of First Instance of the Province of Cebu, finding the appellants, Floro Tumayao, Simeon Tamayo, Tomas Cañete, and Sergio Cañete, guilty of the offense of homicide, committed upon the person of Mariano Tundag, and sentencing each of them to undergo imprisonment for fourteen years, eight months and one day, reclusion temporal, with the accessories prescribed by law, and requiring them jointly and severally to indemnify the heirs of the deceased in the amount of P1,000, as well as to pay the costs of prosecution.

The appellants in this case, as well as the deceased, were residents of the barrio of Canagahan, municipality of Liloan, Cebu. In 1928 one Isidoro Ontong, a resident of the same barrio, informally mortgaged a piece of land to Tomas. Cañete, one of the appellants in this case, as security for a loan of P20. It was agreed that the land might be redeemed by payment of the loan at the expiration of three years. When the time for redemption had about arrived, Isidoro Ontong went to the house of Tomas Cañete for the purpose of redeeming the property. Cañete refused to receive the money, asserting that the money loaned belonged to his neighbor, Floro Tumayao. Disconcerted by this attitude on the part of Cañete, Isidoro Ontong proceeded to the house of Mariano Tundag for the purpose of obtaining advice from him. Upon being informed of the incident, Tundag sent for Tomas Cañete and, upon his arrival, inquired the reason why he had refused to permit Ontong to redeem the land. Cañete became angry and threatened Tundag with a beating, at the same time advising him that he should not meddle in the business of other people. The next day, which was December 18, 1930, Mariano Tundag, accompanied by Floro Tumayao, was proceeding across an open field in the direction where Simeon Tumayao, the son of Floro Tumayao, was standing. As the two neared the point where Simeon was at work, the latter ran to a group of banana trees, picked up a spear (lanza), and, as his father and Tundag approached, he raised the spear in a threatening manner as if to hurl it at Tundag, at the same time saying: "Now what is it? You pretend to be smart, and teniente; that money loaned to Isidoro Ontong belongs to us." About the same time Sergio Cañete and Tomas Cañete appeared on the scene, and Sergio threw a stone at Tundag, hitting him on the left breast. Immediately thereafter Floro Tumayao, who was standing somewhat behind Tundag, and apparently to his right, struck Tundag on the right arm with a bolo, thereby inflicting a serious wound. Tundag thereupon raised a sickle in his left hand and advanced upon Simeon Tumayao. The latter, however, retreated, while Tomas Cañete struck Tundag on the left hand with a bolo, inflicting a slight cut and causing Tundag to drop the sickle. It is also claimed that Tomas Cañete gave Tundag a second blow on the left leg, but if any such blow was delivered, it resulted in no flesh wound. Mariano Tundag fell to the ground, and while he was in this position Simeon Tumayao approached and, with his spear, stabbed Tundag in the abdomen. The defendants then ran away.

The facts above related are deduced mainly from the testimony of Crestituto Tundag, a boy of the age of 10 years, or more, who viewed the scene from a nearby point. This boy’s testimony shows that he was an intelligent observer and alert in taking in the scene that was transacted before him. Victoria Tundag, a married woman of the age of 32 years, and a daughter of Tundag, was also an eyewitness to the trouble. But she failed to take any note of the presence of Sergio and Tomas Cañete and apparently failed to see the part which Simeon Tumayao took in the affair. We have no hesitancy in declaring that the facts, as above stated and found by the trial court, correctly state the material incidents of the trouble.

Tundag died in a few days from infection and loss of blood. The doctor who attended upon him testified that he found three wounds upon the deceased, one upon the right arm, another upon the left hand, and another in the abdomen, but the death evidently resulted from the more serious wound on the arm.

The evidence fails to show that there was any conspiracy on the part of the four accused to kill the deceased or to do him grave bodily harm. The fact that the four had, as they seem to have imagined, a cause of grievance against the deceased arising from his intervention in the misunderstanding that had arisen between Tomas Cañete and Isidoro Ontong over the redemption of a piece of land, and that the four were somewhat incensed against Tundag on that account, does not prove a conspiracy to take his life or inflict upon him bodily injury. Furthermore, the fact that Simeon was not armed with a dangerous weapon when his father and Tundag approached him in the field, and that Sergio Cañete used no weapon, indicates sufficiently that the homicide was probably the result of an unexpected encounter. The fatal blow was that given by Floro Tumayao.

Sergio Cañete and Tomas Cañete, in our opinion, are not guilty of participation in the homicide, but are more properly subject to punishment for assault and battery. Sergio Cañete, it is true, threw a stone at Tundag and struck him on the left shoulder, and Tomas Cañete intervened for the protection of Simeon Tumayao, inflicting the slight wound on Tundag’s hand, already mentioned. There is no proof that either of these two participated in the criminal design of the principal, Floro Tumayao, nor that there had been any concert between them with respect to making the unlawful aggression.

As to the part taken by Simeon Tumayao, the same favorable inference cannot be drawn, for he was the first person to commit himself to the unlawful assault upon Tundag, and after the latter had been struck down he attacked the prostrate man with his bolo, inflicting a wound in the abdomen; and while the wound thus inflicted was not of a character that would have resulted in death, it shows an intention to co
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