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People V Angelita Ramos

The document summarizes a court case involving Angelina Mendoza y Ramos who was accused and convicted of kidnapping a minor child, Edward Policarpio. The prosecution argued that Mendoza befriended the child's parents in a park, lured the child away from his mother, and attempted to sell the child. The defense claimed that the child's father asked Mendoza to care for the child temporarily and that she did not kidnap him. The court upheld Mendoza's conviction for kidnapping.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
294 views6 pages

People V Angelita Ramos

The document summarizes a court case involving Angelina Mendoza y Ramos who was accused and convicted of kidnapping a minor child, Edward Policarpio. The prosecution argued that Mendoza befriended the child's parents in a park, lured the child away from his mother, and attempted to sell the child. The defense claimed that the child's father asked Mendoza to care for the child temporarily and that she did not kidnap him. The court upheld Mendoza's conviction for kidnapping.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

THIRD DIVISION

[G.R. No. 67610. July 31, 1989.]

PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. ANGELINA MENDOZA


Y RAMOS, Accused-Appellant.

SYLLABUS

1. REMEDIAL LAW; APPEAL; GENERALLY, APPELLATE COURTS WILL NOT


DISTURB FACTUAL FINDINGS OF TRIAL COURT CONSIDERING THAT IT IS IN A
BETTER POSITION TO DECIDE THE CONCLUSION. — We see no cogent reason to
deviate from the well-settled rule that appellate courts will generally not disturb
the factual findings of the trial court considering that it is in a better position to
decide the question, having heard the witnesses themselves and observed their
department and manner of testifying during the trial.

2. ID.; CRIMINAL PROCEDURE; PROSECUTION OF OFFENSES REAL NATURE OF


CRIMINAL CHARGE REMIND BY ACTUAL RECITAL OF FACTS IN COMPLAINT OR
INFORMATION. — It is well-settled that the real nature of the criminal charge is
determined not from the caption or preamble of the Information nor from the
specification of the provision of law alleged to have been violated, they being
conclusions of law, but by the actual recital of facts in the complaint or
information. Only recently, this principle was reiterated in People v. Torres &
Salas, G.R. No. 76711, September 26, 1988, wherein this Court again held that
it is not the technical name given by the Fiscal appearing in the title of the
Information that determines the character of the crime but the facts alleged in
the body of the Information.

3. ID.; ID.; RIGHTS OF DEFENDANT; RIGHT TO BE INFORMED OF THE NATURAL


AND CAUSE OF ACCUSATION; WHERE INFORMATION CLEARLY SETS FORTH
ESSENTIAL ELEMENTS OF CRIME CHARGED, SUCH CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT
ACCUSED NOT VIOLATED. — Finally, as to the contention of the accused-
appellant that she has been deprived of her constitutional right to be informed of
the nature and cause of the accusation against her, we re-emphasize the
doctrine that where the information clearly sets forth the essential elements of
the crime charged as in the instant case, the constitutional right of the accused
to be informed of the nature and cause of his accusation is not violated.

DECISION

FERNAN, J.:

To a parent, the anguish of losing a child under any circumstance is


indescribable. If death, or any other disastrous event which a parent cannot
foresee or control be the cause of such loss, the pain may be assuaged by the
thought that fate’s overpowering hand intervened. chanrobles law library : red

But if such loss be brought about by anyone with the sinister intent of taking
away the child from his or her parents against the latter’s will to derive personal
gain by selling the child like a commodity in callous disregard of the child’s well-
being, it is not the parents alone but society as a whole that bears the anguish
and the outrage caused by such evil deed. The perpetration of this evil deserves
severe punishment.
Angelina Mendoza y Ramos alias "Rosalinda Quintos’ was convicted of the crime
of kidnapping a minor as defined in Article 270 of the Revised Penal Code, and
meted the penalty of reclusion perpetua by the Regional Trial Court of Manila,
Branch XVI. 1 She now appeals from said conviction on a lone assignment of
error, to wit: chanrob1es virtual 1aw library

THE COURT A QUO ERRED IN CONVICTING THE ACCUSED-APPELLANT OF


KIDNAPPING AND FAILURE TO RETURN A MINOR UNDER ARTICLE 270 OF THE
REVISED PENAL CODE. 2

The information dated October 19, 1982 charged Angelina Mendoza y Ramos
with the crime of Kidnapping and Failure to Return a Minor allegedly committed
as follows:
jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"That on or about September 28, 1982, in the City of Manila, Philippines, the
said accused, being a private individual and without authority of law did then and
there wilfully, unlawfully, feloniously and illegally kidnap and carry away
EDWARD POLICARPIO, a one year and three months old baby boy, for the
purpose of selling him and separating him from his mother, Mrs. EUGENIA T.
POLICARPIO, by then and there, befriending the said child and his parents at the
Luneta Park, this City, carrying him away without the knowledge and consent of
his said parents, and deliberately failing to return him to said Eugenia T.
Policarpio, his mother. 3

A plea of "not guilty" having been entered by accused-appellant on arraignment,


4 trial ensued.

The prosecution version is summarized in the appealed decision, thus: jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

". . . At 8:00 o’clock in the morning of September 28, 1982 spouses Ernesto and
Eugenia Policarpio along with their two children, Ferdinand and Edward, seven
years old and one year and three months old respectively, were at the Luneta
Park near the Rizal Monument in Manila. Having just arrived from Nueva Ecija,
the family was resting at the park. Then and there, a woman who turned out to
be accused Angelina Mendoza, but who had introduced herself as ‘Rosalinda
Quintos’ accosted them. She struck a conversation with the spouses and even
offered them food particularly to Edward. Mr. Policarpio, a Pampango, recognized
the accused. He recalled having seen her at a club in Angeles City. During their
conversation, the accused gave the spouses her address at 2526 Dallas Street,
Makati, Metro Manila. At one point, she even half-seriously asked the spouses to
give the boy Edward to her. They of course did not take the request seriously.
Then while Mr. Policarpio had apparently gone somewhere away from the group
and while Mrs. Policarpio was not looking, the accused began playing with
Edward and, offering him food, lured him away from his mother. Shortly, the
accused carried Edward and took him away with her.

"The spouses lost no time in reporting the incident to the police at the station in
Luneta Park. The police officers there showed them photographs from among
which they were able to identify the accused. Police records also disclose that the
accused had been arrested a number of times for vagrancy and that her
occupation appeared to be that of a hooker.

"It developed that from the Luneta the accused brought the child to Tramo
Street, Pasay City where she claimed before some residents that the child was
that of a hostess friend of hers who being gravely ill of leprosy was in dire need
of money, and that she was asked to sell the child for P250.00. This unusual
sales officer happened to take place in front of the house of Mrs. Delia Navarette,
a barangay councilwoman whose attention was attracted by the number of
people who had gathered outside her house. The accused offered to sell the child
to Mrs. Navarette. The latter felt the proposition distasteful, saying that it was
not right that a child should be sold and that what accused was doing was illegal.
Nonetheless, the accused insisted on momentarily leaving the child with Mrs.
Navarette. Intending to have the child returned to his mother, Mrs. Navarette
asked her sister to go with the accused to the National Orthopedic Hospital
where according to the accused the boy’s mother was confined. But when Mrs.
Navarette’s sister and the accused were on their way to the hospital, the latter
changed her story. She said that the boy’s mother was at the Philippine General
Hospital instead. So they proceeded to the PGH and went up to the third floor
where the accused said the boy’s mother was. But it turned out that all the
patients on that floor were males. To make the long story short, the accused had
given Mrs. Navarrete’s sister the run around. And when the latter finally got fed
up she phoned Mrs. Navarette to report what had happened. Mrs. Navarette
instructed her sister to bring the accused to her as she had now decided to
report the matter to the police. While the accused and Mrs. Navarette’s sister
were waiting for a taxi at PGH, the former disappeared. Since the child had been
left with her, Mrs. Navarette felt obliged to take care of him. She also made it a
point to report the incident to the police to alert them in case there should be
reports of a missing child.

"Sometime later, the accused reappeared at the Luneta Police Station


obstensibly in visit a detainee thereat. It was then that the police officer on duty
recognized her. She was questioned regarding the whereabouts of the boy.
Threatened with arrest, she revealed that she had left the boy with Mrs.
Navarette in Pasay City. That led to the recovery of Edward Policarpio and his
eventual return to his parents twenty days after the accused took him away." 5

The defense version, on the other hand, is capsulized in the Brief for the
Accused-Appellant as follows: jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"The defense presented the accused, ANGELINA MENDOZA, 36 years old, single,
store keeper, and residing at 2526 Dalin, Makati, Metro Manila, who testified that
she did not kidnap a minor named Edward and failed to return (sic) to his
parents. After arriving from Angeles City, she went to Luneta to eat and rest.
She was approached by the couple and asked if they could share in her food.
She asked them where they come from and the couple replied that they slept
there at Luneta because they have been robbed. She also gave P54.00 to the
husband who told her that he was hungry. Subsequently, she was told by the
man to take care of the child considering that said child is sickly and it is
drizzling. She then went to her aunt’s place in Pulang Lupa. Finding no persons,
she went to the place of a friend in Tramo and left the child. She told her friend
that she will come back after her operation. Later she found herself confined at
San Lazaro Hospital for at least two months. While in the hospital she was
informed by a friend who visited her that she is wanted by the police. She
escaped from the hospital and went to Precinct 5 and two policemen arrested
her. She was informed of having kidnapped a child but she denied (sic). She
informed Pat. Bacobo where to get the child and the latter said that she will be
charged only for vagrancy. When the child was recovered, she was instead
jailed. (TSN, pp. 1 to 8, August 17, 1983, TSN, pp. 2 to 4, September 7, 1983)."
6

Giving full credence to the prosecution version and rejecting as incredible and
unacceptable the defense of accused-appellant that the minor child Edward was
voluntarily given to her by his parents to take care of, the trial court, as earlier
stated, convicted accused-appellant of the crime of Kidnapping of a Minor in
violation of Article 270 of the Revised Penal Code. The dispositive portion of the
decision reads thus: jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered finding that the prosecution has


established the guilt of the accused beyond reasonable doubt of the offense of
kidnapping of a minor in violation of Article 270 of the Revised Penal Code.
Accordingly, she is hereby sentenced to suffer the penalty of reclusion
perpetua as well as to pay the costs.

SO ORDERED." 7

Hence, this appeal.

Accused-appellant contends that the trial court erred in convicting her of the
crime of Kidnapping and Failure to Return a Minor as defined and penalized
under Article 270 of the Revised Penal Code, as it was not proven that the
custody of the minor victim Edward Policarpio had been entrusted to her and
that she deliberately failed to return or restore said minor to his parents or
guardians. 8 She alleges that on the contrary, based on the Information, sworn
statement and testimony of the complainant-witness, Mrs. Eugenia Policarpio,
the crime committed was Kidnapping and Serious Illegal Detention under par. 4
of Article 267 of the Revised Penal Code. She, however, argued that she cannot
be convicted of Kidnapping and Serious Illegal Detention under Article 267
because said crime is not included in the crime charged (Art. 270). She cites
Sections 4 and 5 of Rule 120 of the Rules of Court in support of her contention,
to wit:
jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"Sec. 4. Judgment in case of variance between allegation and proof. — When


there is variance between the offense charged in the complaint or information,
and that proved or established by the evidence, and the offense as charged is
included in or necessarily includes the offense proved, the defendant shall be
convicted of the offense proved included in that which is charged, or of the
offense charged included in that which is proved.

"Sec. 5. When an offense includes or is included in another. — An offense


charged necessarily includes that which is proved, when some of the essential
element or ingredients of the former, as this is alleged in the complaint or
information, constitute the latter. And an offense charged is necessarily included
in the offense proved, when the essential ingredients of the former constitute or
form a part of those constituting the latter." cralaw virtua1aw libra ry

She further invokes Section 19, Article IV 9 of the 1973 Constitution which gives
an accused the right to be informed of the nature and cause of the accusation
against him as barring her conviction under Article 267 of the Revised Penal
Code. Accused-appellant would likewise insist on her innocence, arguing that it
was highly improbable that she could have taken the child without the
knowledge and consent of the father, Ernesto Policarpio, who was then taking
care of the child.

After a careful review of the evidence on record, we are convinced beyond


reasonable doubt that accused-appellant is guilty of Kidnapping and Serious
Illegal Detention as defined and penalized under Article 267 of the Revised Penal
Code. It has been established by the clear, strong and positive evidence of the
prosecution that the taking of the minor child Edward was without the knowledge
and consent of his parents. Said criminal act was perpetrated while Mrs.
Policarpio had her back turned to the child and accused-appellant and while Mr.
Policarpio was temporarily away from the group. The contention of the defense
that the child was taken with the consent of the father is unworthy of belief for
the same is inconsistent with the immediate reaction of Mr. and Mrs. Policarpio
of reporting the incident to the police as soon as they realized that Edward was
missing. Furthermore, it is incredible that a parent would entrust his child to a
person not very well known to him and with no visible means of livelihood. The
seeming lack of protest from Mr. Policarpio did not signify consent to the taking
of the child but was due to the lack of opportunity to do so. As testified to by
Mrs. Policarpio: chanrob1es virtual 1aw library
Q When you first noticed that you — when you were informed by your other son
that Edward was no longer there did you notice where your husband was at that
time?

A I did not notice my husband suddenly disappeared and afterwards I asked him
where my son was.

Q And what did he say?

A My husband informed me that he saw the woman took (sic) my son and that
he said also that the woman rode in a jeepney going towards Mabini. I asked him
why he was not able to ran after her, he said the woman boarded the jeepney
already. 10

Indeed, the factual findings of the trial court is that" (T)hen while Mr. Policarpio
had apparently gone somewhere away from the group and while Mrs. Policarpio
was not looking, the accused began playing with Edward and, offering him food,
lured him away from his mother. Shortly, the accused carried Edward and took
him away with her." 11

Finally, the trial court concluded that whatever doubt as to the culpability of the
accused is dissipated by her sworn statement, Exhibit "D", wherein she
confessed having taken Edward away from his parents without their knowledge
and consent. 12

We see no cogent reason to deviate from the well-settled rule that appellate
courts will generally not disturb the factual findings of the trial court considering
that it is in a better position to decide the question, having heard the witnesses
themselves and observed their department and manner of testifying during the
trial. 13

Counsel for accused-appellant laid stress on the fact that the latter cannot be
convicted of "Kidnapping and Failure to Return a Minor" under Article 270 of the
Revised Penal Code, there being no allegations to that effect in the information
much less evidence to support the conclusion that the elements of said crime are
present.chanrobles law library

While the Information against accused-appellant is captioned "Kidnapping and


Failure to Return a Minor", the allegations in the body thereof properly constitute
the crime of Kidnapping and Serious Illegal Detention. Thus, instead of alleging
the elements of Kidnapping and Failure to Return a Minor that the offender had
been entrusted with the custody of a minor person and that said offender had
deliberately failed to restore the latter to his parents or guardians, the text of the
Information alleged the elements of the crime of Kidnapping and Serious Illegal
Detention under Article 267 of the Revised Penal Code, to wit: jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

". . . did then and there wilfully, unlawfully, feloniously and illegally kidnap and
carry away EDWARD POLICARPIO, a one year and three months old baby boy,
for the purpose of selling him and separating him from his mother, Mrs.
EUGENIA T. POLICARPIO, . . . carrying him away without the knowledge and
consent of his said parents and deliberately failing to return him . . ." 14
(Emphasis supplied).

It is well-settled that the real nature of the criminal charge is determined not
from the caption or preamble of the Information nor from the specification of the
provision of law alleged to have been violated, they being conclusions of law, but
by the actual recital of facts in the complaint or information. 15 Only recently,
this principle was reiterated in People v. Torres & Salas, G.R. No. 76711,
September 26, 1988, wherein this Court again held that it is not the technical
name given by the Fiscal appearing in the title of the Information that
determines the character of the crime but the facts alleged in the body of the
Information.

Based on the foregoing, it is evident that accused-appellant can be convicted of


kidnapping and Serious Illegal Detention instead of "Kidnapping and Failure to
Return a Minor", and that there is no variance between the crime charged and
the crime proven, which would fall under Sections 4 and 5 Rule 120 of the Rules
of Court. Stated differently, said provisions relied upon by accused-appellant
have no application to the case at bar.

Finally, as to the contention of the accused-appellant that she has been deprived
of her constitutional right to be informed of the nature and cause of the
accusation against her, we re-emphasize the doctrine that where the information
clearly sets forth the essential elements of the crime charged as in the instant
case, the constitutional right of the accused to be informed of the nature and
cause of his accusation is not violated. 16

WHEREFORE, the accused-appellant Angelina Mendoza is found GUILTY beyond


reasonable doubt of the crime of Kidnapping and Serious Illegal Detention under
Article 267 of the Revised Penal Code. Accused-appellant is hereby sentenced to
suffer the penalty of reclusion perpetua and to pay the costs.

SO ORDERED.

Gutierrez, Jr., Feliciano, Bidin and Cortes, JJ., concur.

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