Title
People vs. Balmes y Cleofe
Case
G.R. No. 203458
Decision Date
Jun 6, 2016
Quirino Balmes convicted of raping his daughter AAA in 1992 and 2002; Supreme Court upheld reclusion perpetua and awarded P100,000 damages per count, citing credible testimony and fear-induced delay in reporting.
A

Case Summary (G.R. No. 203458)

Factual Background

AAA was born on December 1, 1969. Her father, Quirino, was a widower whose wife died on May 6, 1983. AAA had siblings named EEE, FFF, GGG, HHH, and BBB. The prosecution alleged that the first rape occurred in the evening of July 1992 at their two-storey house in Barangay Sto. Nino, Calapan City, Oriental Mindoro. At the time, AAA was asleep in the upper room. She testified that she was awakened when her father lay beside her while holding a balisong. She said Quirino ordered her not to make noise because her siblings were also sleeping. AAA claimed that Quirino touched her body, including her breasts, then lifted her T-shirt, lowered her pajama, and removed her underwear. When she begged “[h]uwag po itay, maawa ka sa akin,” Quirino allegedly ignored her. She narrated that Quirino undressed himself, separated her legs, placed himself on top of her, inserted his penis into her vagina, and made a “pumping motion.” After she felt a warm substance, Quirino allegedly got up and warned her against reporting the incident, threatening that AAA and her siblings would be killed if she did so. Because of this threat, AAA testified that she remained silent.

AAA further alleged that the second rape happened around 1:00 p.m. in September 1992, when she was resting upstairs while her siblings were attending school. She stated that Quirino approached her again, warned her not to make noise, touched her body parts, removed her lower garments, kissed her, and licked her private organ. She testified that Quirino stood up, removed his shorts, placed himself on top of her, and inserted his penis into her vagina while a balisong allegedly poked at her neck. She claimed she pleaded for mercy and, after the assault, Quirino repeated the threats, prompting her silence.

As for the third rape, AAA testified that on May 23, 2002 at around 7:30 p.m., Quirino raped her again while she was inside their house in a room where her three-year-old daughter was present. She stated that Quirino wanted sexual intercourse, but she refused. She testified that Quirino threatened to kill her and her siblings and her daughter if she persisted in refusing. She narrated that Quirino touched her body, forcefully pulled her pajama and underwear, separated her legs, placed himself on top of her, inserted his penis into her vagina, and “nagparaos.” She again said she remained silent out of fear.

AAA claimed that she was in Manila and worked as a saleslady from 1994 until 1998, but she ran away because she did not like her father’s strict administration and because she did not want him to rape her again. She also testified that after confiding to her paternal grandmother, she was advised to go away because it would bring shame to the family. She returned to Calapan when her father and brother fetched her after learning that she had become pregnant by her boyfriend. She later said that she revealed the sexual assaults after a week, first to GGG, and subsequently to BBB on November 22, 2002, while her daughter underwent a check-up at Ma. Estrella Clinic. On the same day, AAA, BBB, and GGG allegedly agreed to go to their maternal grandmother CCC in Barangay Loyal, Victoria, Oriental Mindoro. When Quirino failed to give a satisfactory explanation, they went to the Victoria Police Station, which referred them to the PNP Provincial Headquarters. Sworn statements of AAA, BBB, and CCC were then taken, and Quirino was later apprehended.

Procedural History and Conviction by the RTC

On January 20, 2003, the prosecution filed three separate Informations charging Quirino with rape on the three dates and circumstances corresponding to the alleged acts in July 1992, September 1992, and May 23, 2002. Each Information alleged that the accused acted “while armed with a bladed instrument,” motivated by lust and unchaste design, and by force and intimidation, thereby having carnal knowledge of his daughter AAA against her will and without her consent.

At his arraignment on May 14, 2003, Quirino entered a plea of not guilty, and the cases were tried jointly while he was detained. The prosecution presented AAA, BBB, CCC, and the rural health physician who examined AAA, Dr. Angelita C. Legaspi. Quirino testified for the defense.

On May 7, 2009, the RTC issued a joint decision convicting Quirino of three counts of rape. The RTC found that AAA’s testimony was positive, clear, and convincing, and that it contained no serious contradictions. The RTC regarded Quirino’s denial as uncorroborated and self-serving. It also treated the defense’s failure to present any child or relative of Quirino to support the denial as an indication that even his family was ashamed of what he had done. The RTC imposed the penalty of reclusion perpetua for each count and ordered civil damages in the amounts of Php100,000.00 (civil indemnity), Php75,000.00 (moral damages), and Php50,000.00 (exemplary damages), plus costs.

Appellate Review by the CA and Modification

Quirino appealed to the CA. The CA upheld the RTC’s credibility assessment and its findings as to AAA’s testimony, while noting no compelling reason to depart from the trial court’s evaluation of the witnesses. However, adopting the recommendation of the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG), the CA modified the penalties and the amounts of civil damages.

In its February 6, 2012 decision, the CA affirmed the findings of guilt beyond reasonable doubt but modified the penalties to reclusion perpetua for each count without eligibility for parole, pursuant to Republic Act No. 9364. The CA also directed indemnification with civil indemnity of Php75,000.00 per count, moral damages of Php75,000.00 per count, and exemplary damages of Php30,000.00 per count.

Issues Raised and Appellant’s Position

Before the Supreme Court, Quirino manifested that he would no longer file a supplemental brief, stating that he had exhaustively discussed the assigned errors in his appellant’s brief in the CA. The Supreme Court, therefore, proceeded on the record and the arguments already raised.

In substance, the defense position remained that Quirino denied the accusations. The Supreme Court decision also reflected Quirino’s contentions that he had no good relationship with his children because he had castigated them for leaving the house without permission, and he claimed he did not know how many times AAA left the house from 1992 to 2002.

Supreme Court’s Ruling on Credibility and Guilt

The Supreme Court dismissed the appeal and affirmed the CA’s conviction with modification as to civil damages and related monetary awards. The Court emphasized the established rule that trial courts’ assessment of witness credibility in rape cases receives great weight and is generally binding on appeal absent a showing that the evaluation was arbitrary or that material facts of substance and value were overlooked or misapprehended.

The Court reiterated that, in rape cases, courts apply three settled principles: first, that rape may be accused with facility even while proof is difficult, so it is even more difficult for an innocent accused to disprove; second, since only two persons are usually involved, the complainant’s testimony must be scrutinized cautiously; and third, the prosecution evidence must stand or fall on its own merit and cannot draw strength from weaknesses in the defense. The Court further underscored that the victim’s testimony normally receives paramount consideration, and when credible, it may suffice for conviction even as the nature of the offense often leaves the complainant’s testimony as the principal evidence.

The Supreme Court treated AAA’s accusations against a close relative—her father—as deserving heightened weight, and it held that there was no reason to reverse or modify the RTC and CA findings on credibility. It ruled that AAA’s failure to shout or wake her siblings during the assaults and her continued silence did not undermine her testimony. It explained that victims of sexual assault may remain silent due to fear rather than reason, and that the perpetrator’s use of psychological terror can numb the victim into submission. Incestuous rape, the Court said, magnifies fear because the father is a person expected to provide protection, and the blood relationship guarantees access, increasing helplessness and terror.

The Court found that AAA’s fear was not implausible. It referenced BBB’s testimony that, even before November 2002, he had already noticed signs that AAA was being sexually molested because she cried whenever her father approached. It also noted that BBB confirmed AAA did not file a complaint because she was afraid, and that AAA stated GGG did not intervene due to fear. The Court held that delay in reporting rape due to death threats does not affect credibility and should not be held against the complainant unless the delay is unreasonable and unexplained.

The Court analyzed the reporting timeline and the circumstances preventing earlier disclosure. It found that AAA testified she took almost a year to report the July and September 1992 incidents to her paternal grandmother because she could not go to that house while Quirino was always guarding her. It also recognized that Quirino fetched her from work even when she worked in Manila as a saleslady, and that BBB corroborated restrictions on her movements. The Court further ruled that AAA’s decision to remain under the same roof did not weaken the prosecution case because other factors, such as the temporary presence of sibling EEE, could have provided some security, and because Quirino’s threats posed a real danger to younger siblings, which AAA did not disclose due to their minority. Finally, the Court stated that after running away for four years, AAA returned because she believed Quirino had reformed, and because the recurrence disproved that assumption.

On the defense side, the Court treated Quirino’s denial as weak and unconvincing. It reiterated that denial is an inherently w

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