Title
People vs. Herrick y Beck
Case
G.R. No. 85137
Decision Date
Jul 12, 1990
An American, Michael Herrick, was acquitted of raping a 17-year-old due to lack of physical evidence, inconsistent victim behavior, and insufficient proof beyond reasonable doubt.

Case Summary (G.R. No. 85137)

Guiding Framework for Rape Prosecutions

The Court emphasized that rape charges demanded judicial caution and circumspection. It recognized two human reactions to rape allegations: sympathy for the complainant and condemnation of the accused. Still, the Court stressed that courts must examine a rape charge without prejudice, consistent with the constitutional presumption of innocence. The Court underscored that the status created by a rape accusation is severe and stigmatizing, and it compared the social exclusion produced by the charge to the lifelong consequence of conviction. It therefore required prosecution proof beyond reasonable doubt.

At the same time, the Court clarified that the defense need not present evidence strong enough to secure acquittal in its own right. The decisive matter was the sufficiency of the prosecution evidence; the defense evidence would matter only insofar as it undercut the strength of the State’s case.

Factual Background: The Alleged First Rape in Manila

The Court related that Czarina filed the rape complaint against Michael Herrick after the events of March 1983. The alleged first rape occurred at approximately 2:00 o’clock in the morning of March 26, 1983, inside a private room at the Las Palmas Hotel in Ermita, Manila. According to Czarina, this was the first of four purported rapes, with the remaining incidents occurring during three succeeding nights in Lapu-Lapu City.

The Court described the circumstances leading to the first incident. The parties met on February 15, 1983, when Herrick interviewed Czarina about possible employment related to an outlet planned at the Pistahang Pilipino, situated diagonally across the street from the Las Palmas Hotel. They met again when Herrick attended Czarina’s high school graduation and later attended a “blow-out” dinner at a Chinese restaurant in Binondo with Gerosa Jordan and others. The Court noted additional contact at the C.A.T. closing rites on March 25, 1983, followed by lunch at the Jordan residence.

On the evening of March 25, the complainant’s mother disapproved of her going out with Gerosa. The Court stated that this ended with Czarina being slapped by her mother, after which Czarina left home and met Gerosa at the Las Palmas Hotel lobby. Gerosa comforted her and allegedly told her that Michael Herrick might help her because he was generous and “could be easily trusted.” Czarina later went out to dance with Gerosa, Mildred, Michael Herrick, and two other girls.

Czarina claimed that after buying a plane ticket at the Manila Domestic Airport around midnight, she returned to the hotel where Herrick allegedly raped her for the first time. On cross-examination, Czarina testified that she was awakened because she felt “somebody was on top of me, kissing me,” and she saw Herrick on top of her. She said she pushed him, wiggled, pleaded for him to stop, and shouted, but Herrick allegedly covered her mouth and even her nose and threatened to kill her if she resisted or told anyone. She claimed he undressed her and placed his penis on top of her vagina, after which she felt searing pain and lost consciousness. She testified that she regained consciousness in the morning, saw Herrick still hugging her, cried, tried to free herself and stand, and then dressed after Herrick ordered her to do so.

Post-Allegation Behavior and Inconsistencies Highlighted by the Court

The Court focused on multiple features of Czarina’s narrative that it found inconsistent with credible conduct expected from a true rape victim. It observed that Czarina stated Herrick was not armed with a deadly weapon. It then emphasized a striking sequence: after the alleged rape, Czarina put on her clothes as directed by the accused and, together with Mildred, accompanied Herrick to the domestic airport where he took an 8:00 o’clock morning flight to Cebu.

After Herrick’s departure, Czarina waited at the airport for an 11:00 o’clock flight to Cebu, boarded it, and arrived at the southern airport where she was met by Josephine “Gigi” Egot, a secretary of Herrick. Josephine took her to Herrick’s apartment in Lapu-Lapu City. In the evening, Czarina allegedly went disco-dancing with the accused and companions. During the four nights she stayed in Lapu-Lapu City, she claimed she was raped again three times by Herrick.

The Court also recounted the family’s reaction. It stated that Czarina’s parents were upset by her disappearance and on March 28, 1983 reported her missing to the Malabon Western Police District. The search led to a phone call from Manila by Mildred to Herrick in Cebu stating that Czarina had run away from home. When Herrick confronted Czarina, she admitted she ran away and was afraid to return because of what her father might do. The father insisted on her return and bought a plane ticket. The Court noted that the ticket was not used because Josephine borrowed money to purchase two tickets—one for Czarina and another for herself.

The Court added that after confrontation, Herrick returned to Manila on March 29, 1983, and the next day Czarina and Josephine took a 6:00 A.M. PAL flight for Manila. At arrival, AVSECOM personnel brought them to a police precinct, and when Czarina saw her parents, she broke down. The Court later recited that a medico-legal officer examined Czarina and found “deep old lacerations” of the hymen at 3:00 and “past 6:00 o’clock positions,” with rounding of edges, and that Dr. Marcial G. Cenido interpreted the findings as the result of a previous sexual intercourse or earlier introduction of the penis into the vagina prior to the incident alleged to have occurred on March 26, 1983.

Defense Evidence and Its Corroboration

Turning to the defense, the Court described witnesses who, it found, corroborated their testimonies and attacked the prosecution narrative’s core factual predicates. Defense witness Mildred Caoile, the accused’s secretary, testified that she and Czarina slept at the Romansa Lodge on Monica Street, Ermita, on March 26, 1983, and not at the Las Palmas Hotel as Czarina claimed. Mildred stated they checked in just after 2:00 A.M. and checked out after 5:00 A.M. Caoile’s testimony was corroborated by Andres E. Baltazar, a receiving clerk, who stated that the two stayed at the lodge from 2:25 A.M. to 5:45 A.M.

The Court also recounted that after the alleged rape, Czarina dressed up, accompanied Mildred to the Las Palmas Hotel, and went with Herrick to the Manila Domestic Airport. Herrick took the 8:00 o’clock flight, while Czarina could not join him because she could not secure a ticket for the fully booked flight. After Herrick left, Czarina and Mildred returned to the Las Palmas Hotel for breakfast, and Juliet Navarro, an AVSECOM civilian employee, escorted Czarina back to the MIA. While waiting, Czarina chatted with AVSECOM security personnel assigned at the airport and when Czarina’s flight was announced, she boarded alone and arrived in Cebu at 1:30 P.M. on March 26.

In Cebu, Josephine “Gigi” Egot met Czarina and brought her to Herrick’s apartment. Czarina rested and later went to Marigondon Beach and went out for dinner and to a discotheque with Michael and Josephine. Josephine testified as well that Czarina asked whether she could win Michael’s love through “gayuma” or “muscle control,” and Josephine said she disapproved and stopped such conversation. Josephine further stated that Czarina arrived at the Manila Domestic Airport on March 30, 1983, and upon seeing her parents, she broke down and only then confessed that she had been raped by Herrick.

The Court’s Assessment of Credibility: Five Central Doubts

The Court articulated several reasons for distrusting the complainant’s testimony and for concluding that moral certainty was not reached.

First, the Court found it convinced that Czarina did not seriously resist the alleged sexual advances. It relied on the medico-legal examination performed on March 31, 1983, which, according to the Court, showed no extra-genital injuries and no fresh hymenal lacerations. The Court treated the presence of “deep old lacerations” as inconsistent with the claim of a recent rape occurring on March 26, especially given the allegation of rape repeated four times. It reasoned that the absence of signs of recent rape and of injuries indicating violent struggle, despite the claim of repeated assaults, seriously questioned the probability of the accusation.

Second, the Court invoked an evidentiary rule in crimes against chastity: the testimony of the injured woman must not be received with “precipitate credulity,” particularly when conviction depends on her uncorroborated testimony; the testimony should not be accepted unless the complainant’s sincerity and candor were free from suspicion. Applying this standard, the Court found implausible the complainant’s claim that “stinging pain” knocked her unconscious for four hours. It also questioned why Herrick allegedly stayed by her side for long after the rape, stating that it was unnatural for a man to remain closely by the woman he raped.

Third, the Court emphasized the complainant’s conduct immediately after the alleged assault. It stated that a rape victim’s natural reaction upon regaining consciousness would be to dress and rush for help. It found that Czarina did neither. It further noted that she did not contact her parents or tell her best friend Gerosa about the defloration. She also did not leave the room where she claimed the rape occurred.

Fourth, the Court found it even more incredible that the complainant voluntarily accompanied her alleged violator to the domestic airport and later flew to join him in Cebu. It reasoned that a rape victim would not agree to rendezvous with her abuser. It noted that while waiting she chatted with people and read the papers, but she did not start vindication efforts by complaining to security personnel nearby.

Fifth, the Court found her testimony inconsistent with itself and with human behavior. On cross-

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