People v. Alarcon

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EN BANC

[G.R. No. L-407. July 28, 1947.]


THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellee, vs.
DANIEL ALARCON, defendant-appellant.
Jose H. Tecson for appellant.
Assistant Solicitor General Ruperto Kapunan, Jr. and Solicitor Guillermo E.
Torres for appellee.
SYLLABUS
1. CRIMINAL LAW; TREASON; EVIDENCE; EXTRAJUDICIAL
CONFESSION, WHEN ADMISSIBLE AS CORROBORATIVE PROOF OF
OVERT ACT OR OF ADHERENCE TO ENEMY; CONFESSION WHEN
SUFFICIENT FOR CONVICTION; CASE AT BAR. An extrajudicial confession
or admission made by a defendant of having committed an overt act charged is a proof
of the said act or fact, and as such it must be proved by two witnesses to be admissible
as evidence by way of corroboration only. Although proved by two witnesses is not
sufficient to support a conviction, because according to law a confession in order to
sustain a conviction must be a judicial confession or made in open court. As there was
only one witness, S. S., who testified to the making of the admission, it is not
admissible even as a corroborative evidence of an overt act, but it may be admitted to
corroborate the proof of appellant's adherence to the enemy, implied in the overt acts
committed by him, and it is here considered as such.
2. ADHERENCE TO ENEMY GIVING HIM AID AND COMFORT;
SEARCH FOR AND LIQUIDATION OF GUERRILLAS; CASE AT BAR. There
is no doubt that, under the law, the overt acts alleged in the second count and borne
out by the testimony of two witnesses, constitute adherence to the enemies giving
them aid and comfort. Because the appellant in furtherance of the hostile design of the
enemies aided them to look for and liquidate the guerrillas, to the extent of torturing
and detaining civilians, among them one M. V., who never returned to his home and
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whose whereabouts until the date of the trial, was still unknown.
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; JOINING OF MAKAPILI ORGANIZATION; SUCCESS
OF AID IMMATERIAL; CASE AT BAR. Unless the appellant was forced to join
or joined the Makapili organization which was created to "accomplish the fulfillment
of the obligation assumed by the Philippines in the Pact of Alliance with the Empire
of Japan, to shed blood and sacrifice the lives of our People in order to eradicate
Anglo-Saxon influence in East Asia, to establish unreservedly and uninterestedly with
the Imperial Japanese Army and Navy in the Philippines, and to fight the common
enemies", against his will, of which there is no evidence in the record, by joining and
acting as a member thereof he adhered to and gave the enemy aid and comfort,
regardless of whether the motive prompting him to do so was merely sympathy or
pecuniary gain. As rightly stated by Lord Reading in the Casement trial "an act which
strengthens or tends to strengthen the enemies of the King in the conduct of war
against the King, that is, in law giving of aid and comfort," and "an act which
weakens or tends to weaken the power of the King and the country to resist or to
attack . . . is . . . giving aid and comfort." It is not essential that the effort to aid be
successful, provided overt acts are done which if successful would advance the
interest of the enemy. (See Cramer vs. United States, 65 Sup. Ct., 918.)

DECISION

FERIA, J :
p

This is an appeal by appellant Daniel Alarcon from judgment of the third


division of the People's Court, convicted the appellant of the crime of treason and
sentenced him to reclusion perpetua, with the accessory penalties of the law, and to
pay a fine of P10,000 and the costs.
After a careful consideration of the facts and the law the case, we are of the
opinion and hold that the trial court did not err in finding the appellant guilty of the
crime charged and in sentencing him to suffer the penalty imposed in its judgment.
As to the first count, the finding of the lower court that during the month of
December, 1944, the defendant joined the military organization called Makapili,
which had its headquarters in Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija; received an army rifle from
the enemy; stood guard every morning at said headquarters; underwent military
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training under a Filipino and a Japanese instructors; and accompanied patrols of


Japanese and Makapili soldiers in search of guerrillas, is supported by two witnesses,
Pedro 13. Tolentino (pages 2, 3, 4, 5, 9, and 10, t. s. n.) and Sotero Domingo (pages
16, 17, 18, 22, 23, 29 and 37, t. s. n.) . The appellant upon being asked "what he had
to say to the charge of the government's witnesses that he was a member of the
so-called Makapili, instead of denying it, he merely said 'I have nothing to say about
that' " (p. 11, t. s. n.).
With respect to the third count, the testimony of two witnesses Lorenzo
Sampang (80-83, t. s. n.) and Felizardo Sampang (95 to 98, t. s. n.) support the
conclusion of the trial court to the effect that, on January 11, 1945, a group of
Japanese and Makapili soldiers arrested Lorenzo' Sampang, his two sons Benedicto
and Felizardo, and his son-in-law Manuel Villar, and took all of them to the Makapili
headquarters in Cabanatuan; that the persons arrested met the accused with other
Makapilis at said headquarters and were submitted by the latter to a rigid examination
about their connection with the guerrillas; that, as Manuel Villar refused to answer
questions propounded to him by the appellant, the latter took him to a room, and so
maltreated tortured him that when Villar came out of the room, face was bloody, his
arms swollen, and he could hardly walk; and that they were released on January 13,
except Villar whose whereabout until the date of the trial was unknown.
And the finding of the trial court, in connection with the forth count that the
accused in the month of December, 1944, retreated with the Japanese forces towards
Bongabon Nueva Ecija, before the arrival of the American Forces in Cabanatuan, is
also supported by the testimony of two witnesses, Pedro B. Tolentino (p. 12), and
Sotero Domingo (pp. 18 and 19, t. s. n.). But the conclusion of of the trial court that
the appellant with some other Makapilis and Japanese soldiers went to the market
place of Cabanatuan, and there commandered vehicles, foodstuffs and animals for the
Japanese, can not be taken into consideration, because it was not alleged in the
information, and only one witness testified to the said fact. Sotero Domingo (p. 18, t.
s. n.). And the other conclusion of the lower court that while the appellant was coming
down from the mountain, he was apprehended by the witness Simeon Sami, is
supported only by the latter's testimony (pp. 117,118, t. s. n.).
The trial court did not err in not giving any weight to the testimony of the
witnesses for the defendant, Leoncio Ramos, Juan Esteban, and Bernardo Hilario,
because their testimonies consist in merely denying to have seen the acts attributed to
the appellant by the witnesses for the prosecution, and at dates different from those
referred to by the latter (pp. 130, 133, and 138, t. s. n.).
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Attorney for appellant contends that the testimonies of the witnesses Pedro
Tolentino and Sotero Domingo are incredible, because they say that the appellant was
the only one recognized and pointed out by them among those who had been drilling
in front of the Kempei's and Makapili's headquarters, and who retreated with the
Japanese forces to Bongabon before the arrival of the American force There is nothing
incredible in that said witnesses were unable to tell who were the other persons, and
recognized only the appellant among them, because the appellant was formerly a
friend of Domingo (p. 22, t. s. n.) and a leader in the neighborhood association ' under
the control and supervision of Pedro Tolentino (p. 13, t. s. n.).
The so-called discrepancies and contradictions of the witnesses for the
prosecution pointed out by the attorney for the appellant, are not real contradictions
and discrepancies, and therefore they can not affect in any way their credibility.
In effect, attorney for defendant says that Domingo asserted that when he saw,
"the group of Filipino and Japanese with the accused going toward Bongabon, they
carried carts, foodstuff, animals together with their relatives ;" while "Tolentino
testified they only carried rifles when he saw them going to Bongabon on the same
occasion." In the first place, Domingo did not say that the accused and Makapili
soldiers were carrying those things while going to Bongabon; what he testified is that
when the Americans were approaching, the Makapilis went to the market and carried
them away. And in the second place, Tolentino did not testify that the accused and the
Makapilis did not take with them carts, foodstuffs, and animals in going toward
Bongabon (p. 12), because he was not asked about it; what was asked of him was
"When the Americans were approaching Cabancalan, do you know what the accused
did?", and he answered: "Yes, sir, I saw him together with the Makapilis and the
Japanese going toward Bongabon, they had rifles with them" (p. 12, t. s. n.).
It is true that Domingo assured that in the vicinity of Sangitan there was only
one headquarter (referring to Makapili headquarter) where the appellant and his
companions used to drill (p. 25, t. s. n.), but said testimony is not in contradiction, as
contended by attorney for the appellant, with that of Tolentino to the effect that there
were two headquarters in Sangitan: one where the Makapilis were drilling, and the
other is the headquarter of the Philippine Constabulary (p. 11, t. s. n.). And the
testimony of Lorenzo Sampang that he woke up his sons and son-in-law when he
heard the Japanese and Makapili soldiers shout this is the house, this is the house,
open the door" (p. 78, t. s. n.), is not necessarily contradictory to that of his son
'Tolentino Sampang who said he woke up because of Japanese soldier gave him a kick
(p. 99, t. s. n.), for the words or act of his father might not have been sufficient to
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wake him up.


The first question of law to be determined in this appeal refers to the
admissibility of Exhibit A for the prosecution as corroborative evidence of the overt
act alleged in count No. 4. Said exhibit is a confession or rather an admission in
writing signed by appellant that "he went with the Japanese when they retreated from
Cabanatuan, Nueva Ecija as a soldier of the Japanese Army." The lower court
admitted it as a corroborative evidence of the testimonies of Domingo and Tolentino
which established the overt act charged in the fourth count, and we agree with the
defense at the trial court erred in this regard. An extrajudicial confession or admission
made by a defendant of having committed an overt act charged is a proof of the said
act or fact, and as such it must be proved by two witnesses to be admissible as
evidence by way of corroboration only. Although proved by two witnesses is not
sufficient to support a conviction, because according to law a confession in order to
sustain a conviction must be a judicial confession or made in open court. As there was
only one witness, Simeon Samin, who testified to the making of the admission, it is
not admissible even as a corroborative evidence of an overt act, but it may be admitted
to corroborate the proof of appellant's adherence to the enemy, implied in the overt
acts committed by him, and we consider it as such. (Respublica vs. Roberts, 1 [U. S.],
Law. ed., 39; 3 Wharton Criminal Evidence, 2d ed., section 1396.) The testimonies of
Domingo and Tolentino are sufficient to prove the above act of having the appellant
joined the Makapili organization charged in the first and fourth counts, and there fore
the error of the lower court is not a reversible one.
There is no doubt that, under the law, the overt acts alleged in the second count
and borne out by the testimony of two witnesses, constitute adherence to the enemies
giving them aid and comfort. Because the appellant in furtherance of the hostile
design of our enemies aided them to look for and liquidate the guerrillas, to the extent
of torturing and detaining civilians, among them one Manuel Villar, who never
returned to his home and whose whereabouts until the date of the trial, was still
unknown. Of course this overt act is independent from that charged in counts one and
four, for it could have been committed without committing the latter.
The facts alleged in the fourth count and established by the evidence or
testimony of two witnesses, constitute only a part of the act charged in the first count
against the appellant, of having joined and acted as a member of the military
organization called Makapili, since the appellant, as one of the members of said
organization, had to retreat with the Japanese soldiers and other Makapilis to the
mountains. Said organization was created, according to Exhibit D, to "accomplish the
fulfillment of the obligation assumed by the Philippines in the Pact of Alliance with
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the Empire of Japan, to shed blood and sacrifice the lives of our People in order to
eradicate Anglo-Saxon influence in East Asia, to establish unreservedly and
uninterestedly with the Imperial Japanese Army and Navy in the Philippines, and to
fight the common enemies;" and therefore, unless the appellant was forced to join or
joined the Makapili organization against his will, of which there is no evidence in the
record, by joining and acting as a member thereof he adhered to and gave the enemy
aid and comfort, regardless of whether the motive prompting him to do so was merely
sympathy or pecuniary gain. As rightly stated by Lord Reading in the Casement trial
"an act which strengthens or tends to strengthen the enemies of the King in the
conduct of war against the King, that is, in law giving of aid and comfort," and "an act
which weakens or tends to weaken the power of the King and the country to resist or
to attack . . . is . . . giving aid and comfort." It is not essential that the effort to aid be
successful, provided overt acts are done which if successful would advance the
interest of the enemy. (See Cramer vs. United States, 65 Sup. Ct., 918.)
In view of all the foregoing the judgment appealed is affirmed with costs
against the appellant. So ordered.
Moran, C.J., Pablo, Perfecto, Hilado, Bengzon, Briones, Hontiveros, Padilla
and Tuason, JJ., concur.
Paras, J., I reserve my vote. The decision in the Laurel case is not as yet final.

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