Case Summary (G.R. No. 97471)
Factual Background
The complainant was Maria del Socorro Mutuc Sarmiento, owner of a bakeshop in Araneta Avenue. On January 13, 1988, Isabelo Puno, acting as the driver, told the complainant that her own driver had an emergency and that he would drive her home. While en route, Enrique Amurao boarded the vehicle, produced a firearm, and threatened the complainant. The assailants took P7,000.00 in cash from her bag and demanded an additional P100,000.00. The complainant drew three checks, two for P30,000.00 and one for P40,000.00, under duress. She later escaped by jumping from the vehicle along the North Superhighway, sustained injuries, and reported the incident to authorities. The two accused were arrested the following day; Enrique Amurao was apprehended while attempting to encash the P40,000.00 check.
Trial Court Proceedings
An information dated May 31, 1989 charged the accused with kidnapping for ransom. The accused pleaded not guilty and were tried. The trial court found both guilty of robbery with extortion committed on a highway and convicted them under Presidential Decree No. 532, sentencing each to reclusion perpetua. The trial court ordered joint and several payment of P7,000.00 as actual damages and P3,000.00 as temperate damages. The judgment was rendered by Judge Jaime N. Salazar, Jr.
Issues on Appeal
The central issue on appeal was the proper characterisation of the offense proved. The Court framed three competing characterizations: (a) kidnapping for ransom as charged in the information; (b) highway robbery/brigandage punishable under Presidential Decree No. 532, as found by the trial court and urged by the Solicitor General; or (c) simple robbery as defined in Article 293 and punished under Paragraph 5, Article 294 of the Revised Penal Code, as contended by the defense. Ancillary issues concerned the applicability of Sections 4 and 5, Rule 120 regarding conviction of an offense necessarily included in the offense charged.
Parties’ Contentions
The accused-appellants maintained that the trial court erred in convicting them under Presidential Decree No. 532 because they were not expressly charged with that decree and because the offense proved was not highway robbery/brigandage. The Solicitor General supported the trial court’s disposition and argued that the repealing clause of Presidential Decree No. 532 rendered it a modification of the provisions of the Revised Penal Code inconsistent therewith, such as Article 267.
Court’s Analysis on Kidnapping
The Court agreed with the trial court and the defense that kidnapping for ransom was not proven. The Court emphasized that proof of kidnapping requires clear proof of an intent to deprive the victim of liberty as the primary objective. The record showed that the accused’s motive and specific intent were to obtain money by means of threats and intimidation. The accused’s own testimony reflected an intent to extort money and to return the victim to her residence after obtaining the funds. The sums taken were immediately obtained from the victim and thus did not constitute ransom in the sense of payment for redemption from captivity. Consequently, the incidental restraint of liberty did not transform the act into kidnapping.
Court’s Analysis on Presidential Decree No. 532
The Court rejected the trial court’s application of Presidential Decree No. 532. It held that P.D. No. 532 is a modification of Articles 306 and 307 on brigandage and not of Article 267 on kidnapping. The Court explained the qualitative distinction between ordinary robbery and brigandage or highway robbery/brigandage. Brigandage contemplates the formation of bands that commit indiscriminate acts of depredation against travelers on highways. The decree’s text and its preambular clauses manifest an intent to punish such indiscriminate highway depredations that affect the traveling public generally. A single targeted attack on a predetermined victim does not fit the description of acts against the “innocent and defenseless inhabitants who travel from one place to another,” in the decree’s preamble. Therefore, a literal application of the decree to any taking that merely occurred while a vehicle was on a highway would be inconsistent with the legislative purpose.
Statutory Construction and Policy Considerations
The Court invoked contemporaneous construction as an aid to interpretation. It warned against a literal reading of P.D. No. 532 that would yield absurd results or render other penal statutes nugatory. The Court illustrated that if mere location on a highway were determinative, then the Anti-Carnapping Act (Republic Act No. 6539) or the Anti-Cattle Rustling Law (Presidential Decree No. 533) could be displaced improperly. The Court concluded that the essence of brigandage under the Code remains the same in the decree: indiscriminate highway depredation against whoever may be encountered on the highway, not a targeted single-victim robbery.
Conviction for the Offense Proved and Sentence
Applying the foregoing analysis, the Court held that the offense proved was simple robbery as defined in Article 293 and punishable under Paragraph 5, Article 294, with aggravation under Article 295 by reason of the use of a firearm. The Court found conspiracy between the accused and recognized the aggravating circumstance of craft against both and abuse of confidence against Isabelo Puno. The Court also held that there was no procedural bar to convicting the accused of robbery when they were charged with kidnapping for ransom, because robbery was necessarily included i
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Case Syllabus (G.R. No. 97471)
Parties and Procedural Posture
- People of the Philippines prosecuted the case in the Regional Trial Court of Quezon City, Branch 103, as Criminal Case No. Q-57404 based on an information filed May 31, 1989.
- Isabelo Puno y Guevarra and Enrique Amurao y Puno were charged in the information with kidnapping for ransom under Article 267 of the Revised Penal Code.
- The accused pleaded not guilty and were tried, convicted by the trial court on September 26, 1990, and thereafter appealed to the Court.
- The trial court convicted the accused of robbery with extortion committed on a highway and sentenced them under Presidential Decree No. 532 to reclusion perpetua and awarded damages.
- The accused appealed, contending that they were not charged with the offense under P.D. No. 532 and that the court erred in applying Sections 4 and 5, Rule 120 of the Rules of Court.
Key Factual Allegations
- The offended party owned a bakeshop in Araneta Avenue and was driven by Isabelo Puno who falsely represented that he would temporarily replace her driver.
- During the trip a second accused, Enrique Amurao, boarded the car, displayed a firearm, and threatened the victim while demanding money and checks.
- The victim surrendered PHP 7,000 in cash and executed three checks amounting to PHP 100,000 after threats and being told to produce more funds.
- The victim was taken along areas including Sta. Mesa and the North Superhighway and ultimately escaped by jumping from the car and reported the incident to CAPCOM at Balintawak.
- Enrique Amurao was later arrested while attempting to encash one of the victim's checks at PCI Bank, Makati.
- The accused later brought the vehicle to Dolores, San Fernando, Pampanga where, according to their testimony, they divided the proceeds and ate at a restaurant.
- Isabelo Puno testified that he allowed the victim to get out at an exit and attributed his conduct to financial need for medical treatment.
Issues Presented
- Whether the accused committed kidnapping for ransom punishable under Article 267 of the Revised Penal Code as charged in the information.
- Whether the crime committed was highway robbery/brigandage punishable under P.D. No. 532 as found by the trial court and urged by the Solicitor General.
- Whether the proved offense was simple robbery punishable under Paragraph 5, Article 294 of the Revised Penal Code as argued by the defense.
- Whether conviction for the necessarily included offense of robbery was permissible though the information charged kidnapping for ransom in view of Sections 4 and 5, Rule 120.
Contentions
- The accused contended that conviction under P.D. No. 532 was improper because they were not specifically charged thereunder and that the trial court erred in invoking Sections 4 and 5, Rule 120.
- The Solicitor General and the trial court contended that the facts showed robbery accompanied by extortion on a highway and thus fell within P.D. No. 532.
- The defense maintained that the acts constituted simple robbery and not kidnapping for ransom nor the brigandage/highway robbery penalized by P.D. No. 532.
Statutory Framework
- Article 267, Revised Penal Code governs kidnapping and serious illegal detention and requires proof of intent to deprive liberty.
- Article 293 and Paragraph 5, Article 294, Revised Penal Code define and punish robbery and provide for penalties based on attendant circumstances.
- Article 295, Revised Penal Code prescribes increased penalties for robbery committed with use of a firearm.
- Articles 306 and 307, Revised Penal Code originally defined brigandage and related offenses which the Court contrasted with P.D. No. 532.
- Presidential Decree No. 532 provided for punishment of highway robbery/brigandage and contained a repealing clause allegedly modifying inconsistent provisions of the Revised Penal Code.
- Section 2(e) of P.D. No. 532 defines the terms "highway robbery/brigandage" used in the decree.
- Section 4