- Title
- Diaz vs. People
- Case
- G.R. No. 65006
- Decision Date
- Oct 31, 1990
- A senior clerk at a high school is found guilty of perjury for falsely claiming to have a Bachelor of Arts degree in his official documents, leading to a conviction and penalty of imprisonment.
269 Phil. 90
SECOND DIVISION
[ G.R. No. 65006. October 31, 1990 ] REOLANDI DIAZ, PETITIONER, VS. PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES AND INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT, RESPONDENTS.
D E C I S I O N
D E C I S I O N
PARAS, J.:
In Criminal Case No. 934 of the Court of First Instance of Pampanga, Fifth Judicial District, Branch VI,
After trial following a plea of not guilty upon arraignment, petitioner was found guilty as charged. The dispositive portion of the trial courts decision is as follows:
WHEREFORE, and in view of all the foregoing, this Court finds the accused Reolandi M. Diaz guilty as charged of the crime of falsification of official document penalized under Article 171, paragraph 4, of the Revised Penal Code, and he is therefore sentenced to suffer the indeterminate penalty of imprisonment of two (2) years, four (4) months and one (1) day of prision correccional, as minimum, to six (6) years and (1) day of prision mayor, as maximum, and to pay a fine of ONE THOUSAND (P1,000.00) PESOS without subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency. Costs against the accused. (pp. 55-56, Rollo)Petitioner appealed the aforesaid judgment of conviction to the intermediate Appellate Court, said appeal being docketed thereat as CA-GR No. 24580-Cr.
In its Decision promulgated on
Petitioners motion for reconsideration was denied, hence, the present recourse.
It is the contention of petitioner that he is entitled to an acquittal because -
Upon the following facts, found by both the trial court and respondent Intermediate Appellate Court, to have been sufficiently and satisfactorily established by the evidence on record, it appears that petitioner Reolandi Diaz was a senior clerk at the
In 1972 he sought appointment as School Administrative Assistant I of the same school and as one of the requirements for appointment to said position, filled up the prescribed personal information sheet, Civil Service Form 212, and swore to the truth and veracity of the data and information therein furnished by him before the proper administering officer. As one of the required informations, he indicated in Exh. A that his highest educational attainment was Fourth Year A.B. (Liberal Arts) allegedly pursued or obtained at the Cosmopolitan and
But contrary to petitioners claim that his highest educational attainment was Fourth Year A.B. which he allegedly took at the Cosmopolitan and Harvardian Colleges during the years 1950 to 1954, he was never enrolled at the Cosmopolitan Colleges - which later became the Abad Santos Educational Institution and still later the Ortanez University - at any time during the period covering the years from 1950 to 1954, inclusive as certified to by the Registrar of Ortanez University, Mr. Atilano D. Solomon. Likewise, petitioner was never a student at the
Neither did petitioner ever enroll as a collegiate student at the Harvardian Colleges in
Also, the name of petitioner was not included in all the enrollment lists of college students submitted to the then Bureau Private Schools of the Department of Education by the Harvardian Colleges at San Fernando, Pampanga and at Tondo, Manila, during the period during which petitioner claimed to have been enrolled. The same thing is true with the lists submitted by the Cosmopolitan Colleges to the said bureau.
The petitioner did not take the witness stand. He only presented in evidence an alleged transcript of record (Exh. 1) purporting to show that he took up collegiate courses at the Philippine Harvardian College in Tondo, Manila, beginning from the first quarter of the school year 1951-1952 up to the first quarter of school year 1953-1954 which transcript of record was allegedly signed by Mrs. Virginia King Vda. de Yap, for and in behalf of the then President of the school, lldefenso
Contrary to petitioners posture, there was ample, solid and conclusive evidence adduced by the prosecution to prove that he was not a fourth year A.B. undergraduate.
It was clearly established that the statement made by the accused -- that he reached fourth year A.B. and that he studied for this course (Liberal Arts) at the
While the petitioner in his defense presented an alleged transcript (Exh. 1) purporting to show that he took up collegiate course at the Philippine Harvardian College in Tondo, Manila, beginning from the first quarter of the school year 1951-1952 up to the first quarter of the school year 1953-1954, both the trial court and the respondent court correctly disregarded said transcript as having emanated from a spurious source. The transcript presented lacks the authenticating marks -- the imprint of the college seal and the signature of the President of the college.
As correctly observed by the trial court -
It is also quite significant to note in this score that the accused in his defense failed to present any corroborating piece of evidence which will show that he was indeed enrolled in the Philippine Harvardian Colleges from the first quarter of the school year 1953-1954. If he had enrolled as a student during this period of time and he was positive that the transcript of records issued to him and in his possession is genuine and valid, it could have been easy for him to introduce corroborating evidence, i.e., the testimony of any of his classmates or teachers in the different subjects that he took to support his claim that he studied and passed these collegiate courses at the said school. But this he failed to do despite all the opportunities open to him and in the face of damning evidence all showing that he had not really enrolled in this school or in the other school mentioned by him in the personal information sheet that he filed up as requirement for his appointment. (p. 53, Rollo)Following the doctrine laid down, however, in the case of People v. Rufo B. Cruz, No. L-15132,
In that case of People v. Cruz supra, the accused Rufo B. Cruz filled up an application form (Civil Service Form No. 2) for the patrolman examination. He stated therein that he had never been accused, indicted or tried for violation of any law, ordinance or regulation before any court, when in truth and in fact, as the accused well knew, he had been prosecuted and tried before the Justice of the Peace of Cainta, Rizal, for different crimes. The application was signed and sworn to by him before the municipal mayor of Cainta, Rizal.
This Court in that case held:
This article is similar to section 3 of Act No. 1697 of the Philippine Commission, which was formerly the law punishing perjury. Under said section 3 of that Act, this Court, in the case of United States v. Tupasi Molina (29 Phil. 119), held that a person, who stated under oath in his application to take police examination that he had never been convicted of any crime, when as a matter of fact he has previous convictions, committed perjury. The facts in that case are almost exactly analogous to those in the present, and we find no reason, either in law or in the arguments of the Solicitor General to modify or reverse the conclusion of this Court therein. More so, because all the elements of the offense of perjury defined in Art. 183 of the Revised Penal Code concur in the present case.The elements of the crime of perjury are -
(a) That the accused made a statement under oath or executed an affidavit upon a material matter.
(b) That the statement or affidavit was made before a competent officer, authorized to receive and administer oath.
(c) That in that statement or affidavit, the accused made a willful and deliberate assertion of a falsehood.
(d) That the sworn statement or affidavit containing the falsity is required by law or made for a legal purpose.
All the foregoing elements are present in the case at bar.
Perjury under Art. 183 of the Revised Penal Code carries a lesser penalty. The penalty for this crime is arresto mayor in its maximum period to prision correccional in its minimum period. Since there is no mitigating and aggravating circumstance the penalty should be imposed in its medium period. Applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law, the penalty should be from four (4) months of arresto mayor as minimum to one (1) year and one (1) day of prision correccional as maximum.
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing considerations, the decision appealed from is modified as follows:
(a) The accused Reolandi Diaz is found guilty of the crime of perjury defined and penalized under Art. 183 of the Revised Penal Code; and
(b) The accused is hereby sentenced to suffer the penalty of from four (4) months of arresto mayor as minimum to one (1) year and one (1) day of prision correccional as maximum.
SO ORDERED.
Melencio-Herrera, (Chairman), Padilla, Sarmiento, and Regalado, JJ., concur.