G.R. No. 135981. January 15, 2004. People of The Philippines, Appellee, vs. Marivic GENOSA, Appellant
G.R. No. 135981. January 15, 2004. People of The Philippines, Appellee, vs. Marivic GENOSA, Appellant
G.R. No. 135981. January 15, 2004. People of The Philippines, Appellee, vs. Marivic GENOSA, Appellant
*
G.R. No. 135981. January 15, 2004.
_______________
* EN BANC.
538
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540
541
542
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PANGANIBAN, J.:
The Case
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544
‘Cadaveric spasm.
‘Body on the 2nd stage of decomposition.
‘Face, black, blownup & swollen w/ evident
postmortem lividity. Eyes protruding from its
sockets and tongue slightly protrudes out of the
mouth.
‘Fracture, open, depressed, circular located at the
occipital bone of the head, resulting [in] laceration
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The Facts
Version of the Prosecution
_______________
4 Rollo, p. 9.
5 Atty. Joventino Isidro. The accused was also represented later by
Atty. Gil Marvel P. Tabucanon.
6 Records, p. 65.
545
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home passing the side of the Genosas’ rented house, he heard her
say ‘I won’t hesitate to kill you’ to which Ben replied ‘Why kill me
when I am innocent?’ That was the last time Arturo saw Ben
alive. Arturo also noticed that since then, the Genosas’ rented
house appeared uninhabited and was always closed.
“On November 16, 1995, appellant asked Erlinda Paderog, her
close friend and neighbor living about fifty (50) meters from her
house, to look after her pig because she was going to Cebu for a
pregnancy check-up. Appellant likewise asked Erlinda to sell her
motorcycle to their neighbor Ronnie Dayandayan who
unfortunately had no money to buy it.
“That same day, about 12:15 in the afternoon, Joseph Valida
was waiting for a bus going to Ormoc when he saw appellant
going out of their house with her two kids in tow, each one
carrying a bag, locking the gate and taking her children to the
waiting area where he was. Joseph lived about fifty (50) meters
behind the Genosas’ rented house. Joseph, appellant and her
children rode the same bus to Ormoc. They had no conversation
as Joseph noticed that appellant did not want to talk to him.
“On November 18, 1995, the neighbors of Steban Matiga told
him about the foul odor emanating from his house being rented by
Ben and appellant. Steban went there to find out the cause of the
stench but the house was locked from the inside. Since he did not
have a duplicate key with him, Steban destroyed the gate padlock
with a borrowed steel saw. He was able to get inside through the
kitchen door but only after destroying a window to reach a hook
that locked it. Alone, Steban went inside the unlocked bedroom
where the offensive smell was coming from. There, he saw the
lifeless body of Ben lying on his side on the bed covered with a
blanket. He was only in his briefs with injuries at the back of his
head. Seeing this, Steban went out of the house and sent word to
the mother of Ben about his son’s misfortune. Later that day,
Iluminada Genosa, the mother of Ben, identified the dead body as
that of [her] son.
“Meanwhile, in the morning of the same day, SPO3 Leo
Acodesin, then assigned at the police station at Isabel, Leyte,
received a report regarding the foul smell at the Genosas’ rented
house. Together with SPO1 Millares, SPO1 Colon, and Dr.
Refelina Cerillo, SPO3 Acodesin proceeded to the house and went
inside the bedroom where they found the dead body of Ben lying
on his side wrapped with a bedsheet. There was blood at the nape
of Ben who only had his briefs on. SPO3 Acodesin found in one
corner
546
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at the side of an aparador a metal pipe about two (2) meters from
where Ben was, leaning against a wall. The metal pipe measured
three (3) feet and six (6) inches long with a diameter of one and
half (1 1/2) inches. It had an open end without a stop valve with a
red stain at one end. The bedroom was not in disarray.
“About 10:00 that same morning, the cadaver of Ben, because
of its stench, had to be taken outside at the back of the house
before the postmortem examination was conducted by Dr. Cerillo
in the presence of the police. A municipal health officer at Isabel,
Leyte responsible for medico-legal cases, Dr. Cerillo found that
Ben had been dead for two to three days and his body was already
decomposing. The postmortem examination of Dr. Cerillo yielded
the findings quoted in the Information for parricide later filed
against appellant. She concluded that the cause of Ben’s death
was ‘cardiopulmonary arrest secondary to severe intracranial
hemorrhage due to a depressed fracture of the occipital [bone].’
“Appellant admitted killing Ben.She testified that going home
after work on November 15, 1995, she got worried that her
husband who was not home yet might have gone gambling since it
was a payday. With her cousin Ecel Arano, appellant went to look
for Ben at the marketplace and taverns at Isabel, Leyte but did
not find him there. They found Ben drunk upon their return at
the Genosas’ house. Ecel went home despite appellant’s request
for her to sleep in their house.
“Then, Ben purportedly nagged appellant for following him,
even challenging her to a fight. She allegedly ignored him and
instead attended to their children who were doing their
homework. Apparently disappointed with her reaction, Ben
switched off the light and, with the use of a chopping knife, cut
the television antenna or wire to keep her from watching
television. According to appellant, Ben was about to attack her so
she ran to the bedroom, but he got hold of her hands and whirled
her around. She fell on the side of the bed and screamed for help.
Ben left. At this point, appellant packed his clothes because she
wanted him to leave. Seeing his packed clothes upon his return
home, Ben allegedly flew into a rage, dragged appellant outside of
the bedroom towards a drawer holding her by the neck, and told
her ‘You might as well be killed so nobody would nag me.’
Appellant testified that she was aware that there was a gun
inside the drawer but since Ben did not have the key to it, he got
a three-inch long blade cutter from his wallet. She however,
‘smashed’ the arm of Ben with a pipe, causing him to drop the
blade and his wallet. Appellant then ‘smashed’ Ben at his nape
with the pipe as he was about to pick up the blade and his wallet.
She thereafter ran inside the bedroom.
“Appellant, however, insisted that she ended the life of her
husband by shooting him. She supposedly ‘distorted’ the drawer
where the gun was
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547
and shot 7Ben. He did not die on the spot, though, but in the
bedroom.” (Citations omitted)
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_______________
7 Appellee’s Brief, pp. 5-13; Rollo, pp. 435-443. Signed by Solicitor General
Alfredo L. Benipayo, Assistant Solicitor General Karl B. Miranda, and Solicitor
Ma. Ana C. Rivera.
548
Benon the forehead ‘using a sharp instrument until the eye was
also affected. It was wounded and also the ear’ and her husband
went to Ben to help; and the third incident was in 1995 when the
couple had already transferred to the house in Bilwang and she
saw that Ben’s hand was plastered as ‘the bone cracked.’
“Both mother and son claimed they brought Ben to a Pasar
clinic for medical intervention.
“5. Arturo Basobas, a co-worker of Ben, testified that on
November 15, 1995 ‘After we collected our salary, we went to the
cock-fighting place of ISCO.’ They stayed there for three (3) hours,
after which they went to ‘Uniloks’ and drank beer—allegedly only
two (2) bottles each. After drinking they bought barbeque and
went to the Genosa residence. Marivic was not there. He stayed a
while talking with Ben, after which he went across the road to
wait ‘for the runner and the usher of the masiao game because
during that time, the hearing on masiao numbers was rampant. I
was waiting for the ushers and runners so that I can place my
bet.’ On his way home at about 9:00 in the evening, he heard the
Genosas arguing. They were quarreling loudly. Outside their
house was one ‘Fredo’ who is used by Ben to feed his fighting
cocks. Basobas’ testimony on the root of the quarrel, conveniently
overheard by him was Marivic saying ‘I will never hesitate to kill
you’, whilst Ben replied ‘Why kill me when I am innocent’
Basobas thought they were joking.
“He did not hear them quarreling while he was across the road
from the Genosa residence. Basobas admitted that he and Ben
were always at the cockpits every Saturday and Sunday. He
claims that he once told Ben ‘before when he was stricken with a
bottle by Marivic Genosa’ that he should leave her and that Ben
would always take her back after she would leave him ‘so many
times’.
“Basobas could not remember when Marivic had hit Ben, but it
was a long time that they had been quarreling. He said Ben ‘even
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had a wound’ on the right forehead. He had known the couple for
only one (1) year.
“6. Marivic testified that after the first year of marriage, Ben
became cruel to her and was a habitual drinker. She said he
provoked her, he would slap her, sometimes he would pin her
down on the bed, and sometimes beat her.
“These incidents happened several times and she would often
run home to her parents, but Ben would follow her and seek her
out, promising to change and would ask for her forgiveness. She
said after she would be beaten, she would seek medical help from
Dr. Dino Caing, Dr. Lucero and Dra. Cerillo. These doctors would
enter the injuries inflicted upon her by Ben into their reports.
Marivic said Ben would beat her or quarrel with her every time
he was drunk, at least three times a week.
549
to by Arturo Busabos. )
‘7.2. Mr. Junnie Barrientos, also a fisherman, and the brother of Mr.
Joe Barrientos, testified that he heard his neighbor Marivic shouting on
the night of November 15, 1995. He peeped through the window of his
hut which is located beside the Genosa house and saw ‘the spouses
grappling with each other then Ben Genosa was holding with his both
hands the neck of the accused, Marivic Genosa’. He said after a while,
Marivic was able to extricate he[r]self and enter the room of the children.
After that, he went back to work as he was to go fishing that evening. He
returned at 8:00 the next morning. (Again, please note that this was the
same night as that testified to by Arturo Basobas).
‘7.3. Mr. Teodoro Sarabia was a former neighbor of the Genosas while
they were living in Isabel, Leyte. His house was located about fifty (50)
meters from theirs. Marivic is his niece and he knew them to be living
together for 13 or 14 years. He said the couple was always quarreling.
Marivic confided in him that Ben would pawn items and then would use
the money to gamble. One time, he went to their house and they were
quarreling. Ben was so angry, but would be pacified ‘if somebody would
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come.’ He testified that while Ben was alive ‘he used to gamble and when
he became drunk, he would go to our house and he will say, Teody’
because that was what he used to call me, ‘mokimas ta,’ which means
‘let’s go and look for a whore.’ Mr. Sarabia further testified that Ben
‘would box his wife and I would see bruises and one time she ran to me, I
noticed a wound (the witness pointed to his right breast) as according to
her a knife was stricken to her.’ Mr. Sarabia also said that once he saw
Ben had been injured too. He said he voluntarily testified only that
morning.
‘7.4. Miss Ecel Arano, an 18-year old student, who is a cousin of
Marivic, testified that in the afternoon of November 15, 1995, Marivic
went to her house and asked her help to look for Ben. They searched in
the market place, several taverns and some other places, but could not
find him. She accompanied Marivic home. Marivic
_______________
550
wanted her to sleep with her in the Genosa house ‘because she might be
battered by her husband.’ When they got to the Genosa house at about
7:00 in the evening, Miss Arano said that ‘her husband was already there
and was drunk.’ Miss Arano knew he was drunk ‘because of his
staggering walking and I can also detect his face.’ Marivic entered the
house and she heard them quarrel noisily. (Again, please note that this is
the same night as that testified to by Arturo Basobas) Miss Arano
testified that this was not the first time Marivic had asked her to sleep in
the house as Marivic would be afraid every time her husband would come
home drunk. At one time when she did sleep over, she was awakened at
10:00 in the evening when Ben arrived because the couple ‘were very
noisy in the sala and I had heard something was broken like a vase.’ She
said Marivic ran into her room and they locked the door. When Ben
couldn’t get in he got a chair and a knife and ‘showed us the knife
through the window grill and he scared us.’ She said that Marivic
shouted for help, but no one came. On cross-examination, she said that
when she left Marivic’s house on November 15, 1995, the couple were still
quarreling.
‘7.5. Dr. Dino Caing, a physician testified that he and Marivic were co-
employees at PHILPHOS, Isabel, Leyte. Marivic was his patient ‘many
times’ and had also received treatment from other doctors. Dr. Caing
testified that from July 6, 1989 until November 9, 1995, there were six (6)
episodes of physical injuries inflicted upon Marivic. These injuries were
reported in his Out-Patient Chart at the PHILPHOS Hospital. The
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551
ing, but he did not hear from her again and assumed ‘that they might
have settled with each other or they might have forgiven with each
other.’
x x x x x x x x x
“Marivic said she did not provoke her husband when she got
home that night it was her husband who began the provocation.
Marivic said she was frightened that her husband would hurt her
and she wanted to make sure she would deliver her baby safely.
In fact, Marivic had to be admitted later at the Rizal Medical
Centre as she was suffering from eclampsia and hypertension,
and the baby was born prematurely on December 1, 1995.
“Marivic testified that during her marriage she had tried to
leave her husband at least five (5) times, but that Ben would
always follow her and they would reconcile. Marivic said that the
reason why Ben was violent and abusive towards her that night
was because ‘he was crazy about his recent girlfriend, Lulu x x x
Rubillos.’
“On cross-examination, Marivic insisted she shot Ben with a
gun; she said that he died in the bedroom; that their quarrels
could be heard by anyone passing their house; that Basobas lied
in his testimony; that she left for Manila the next day, November
16, 1995; that she did not bother anyone in Manila, rented herself
a room, and got herself a job as a field researcher under the alias
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‘Marvelous Isidro’; she did not tell anyone that she was leaving
Leyte, she just wanted to have a safe delivery of her baby; and
that she was arrested in San Pablo, Laguna.
‘Answering questions from the Court, Marivic said that she threw the
gun away; that she did not know what happened to the pipe she used to
‘smash him once’; that she was wounded by Ben on her wrist with the
bob; and that two (2) hours after she was ‘whirled’ by Ben, he kicked her
‘ass’ and dragged her towards the drawer when he saw that she had
packed his things.’
“9. The body of Ben Genosa was found on November 18, 1995
after an investigation was made of the foul odor emitting from the
Genosa residence. This fact was testified to by all the prosecution
witnesses and some defense witnesses during the trial.
“10. Dra. Refelina Y. Cerillo, a physician, was the Municipal
Health Officer of Isabel, Leyte at the time of the incident, and
among her responsibilities as such was to take charge of all
medico-legal cases, such as the examination of cadavers and the
autopsy of cadavers. Dra. Cerillo is not a forensic pathologist. She
merely took the medical board exams and passed in 1986. She
was called by the police to go to the Genosa residence and when
she got there, she saw ‘some police officers and neighbors around.’
She saw Ben Genosa, covered by a blanket, lying in a semi-prone
position with his back to the door. He was wearing only a brief.
x x x x x x x x x
552
“Dra. Cerillo said that ‘there is only one injury and that is the
injury involving the skeletal area of the head’ which she described
as a ‘fracture’. And that based on her examination, Ben had been
dead 2 or 3 days. Dra. Cerillo did not testify as to what caused his
death.
“Dra. Cerillo was not cross-examined by defense counsel.
“11. The Information, dated November 14, 1996, filed against
Marivic Genosa charged her with the crime of PARRICIDE
committed ‘with intent to kill, with treachery and evidence
premeditation, x x x wilfully, unlawfully and feloniously attack,
assault, hit and wound x x x her legitimate husband, with the use
of a hard deadly weapon x x x which caused his death.’
“12. Trial took place on 7 and 14 April 1997, 14 May 1997, 21
July 1997, 17, 22 and 23 September 1997, 12 November 1997, 15
and 16 December 1997, 22 May 1998, and 5 and 6 August 1998.
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“13. On 23 September 1998, or only fifty (50) days from the day
of the last trial date, the Hon. Fortunito L. Madrona, Presiding
Judge, RTC-Branch 35, Ormoc City, rendered a JUDGMENT
finding Marivic guilty ‘beyond reasonable doubt’ of the crime of
parricide, and further found treachery as an aggravating
circumstance, thus sentencing her to the ultimate penalty of
DEATH.
“14. The case was elevated to this Honorable Court upon
automatic review and, under date of 24 January 2000, Marivic’s
trial lawyer, Atty. Gil Marvel P. Tabucanon, filed a Motion to
Withdraw as counsel, attaching thereto, as a precautionary
measure, two (2) drafts of Appellant’s Briefs he had prepared for
Marivic which, for reasons of her own, were not conformed to by
her. “The Honorable Court allowed the withdrawal of Atty.
Tabucanon and permitted the entry of appearance of undersigned
counsel.
“15. Without the knowledge of counsel, Marivic Genosa wrote a
letter dated 20 January 2000, to the Chief Justice, coursing the
same through Atty. Teresita G. Dimaisip, Deputy Clerk of Court
of Chief Judicial Records Office, wherein she submitted her ‘Brief
without counsels’ to the Court.
“This letter was stamp-received by the Honorable Court on 4
February 2000.
“16. In the meantime, under date of 17 February 2000, and
stamp-received by the Honorable Court on 19 February 2000,
undersigned counsel filed an URGENT OMNIBUS MOTION
praying that the Honorable Court allow the exhumation of Ben
Genosa and the re-examination of the cause of his death; allow
the examination of Marivic Genosa by qualified psychologists and
psychiatrists to determine her state of mind at the time she killed
her husband; and finally, to allow a partial re-opening of the case
a quo to take the testimony of said psychologists and
psychiatrists.
553
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at the same time she still has the imprint of all the abuses that
she had experienced in the past.’
x x x x x x x x x
“Dra. Dayan said Marivic thought of herself as a loving wife
and did not even consider filing for nullity or legal separation
inspite of the abuses. It was at the time of the tragedy that
Marivic then thought of herself as a victim.
x x x x x x x x x
“19. On 9 February 2001, Dr. Alfredo Pajarillo, a physician,
who has since passed away, appeared and testified before RTC-
Branch 35, Ormoc City.
“Dr. Pajarillo was a Diplomate of the Philippine Board of
Psychiatry; a Fellow of the Philippine Board of Psychiatry and a
Fellow of the Philippine Psychiatry Association. He was in the
practice of psychiatry for thirty-eight (38) years. Prior to being in
private practice, he was connected with the Veterans Memorial
Medical Centre where he gained his training on psychiatry and
neurology. After that, he was called to active duty in the Armed
Forces of the Philippines, assigned to the V. Luna Medical Center
for twenty six (26) years. Prior to his retirement from government
service, he obtained the rank of Brigadier General. He obtained
his medical degree from the University of Santo Tomas. He was
also a member of the World Association of Military Surgeons; the
Quezon City Medical Society; the Cagayan Medical Society; and
the Philippine Association of Military Surgeons.
“He authored ‘The Comparative Analysis of Nervous
Breakdown in the Philippine Military Academy from the Period
1954 - 1978’ which was presented twice in international
congresses. He also authored The Mental Health of the Armed
Forces of the Philippines 2000’, which was likewise published
internationally and locally. He had a medical textbook published
on the use of Prasepam on a Parke-Davis grant; was the first to
use Enanthate (siquiline), on an E.R. Squibb grant; and he
published the use of the drug Zopiclom in 1985-86.
“Dr. Pajarillo explained that psychiatry deals with the
functional disorder of the mind and neurology deals with the
ailment of the brain and spinal cord enlarged. Psychology, on the
other hand, is a bachelor degree and a doctorate degree; while one
has to finish medicine to become a specialist in psychiatry.
“Even only in his 7th year as a resident in V. Luna Medical
Centre, Dr. Pajarillo had already encountered a suit involving
violent family relations, and testified in a case in 1964. In the
Armed Forces of the Philippines, violent family disputes abound,
and he has seen probably ten to twenty thousand cases. In those
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x x x x x x x x x
“Dr. Pajarillo said that a woman suffering post traumatic
stress disorder try to defend themselves, and ‘primarily with
knives. Usually pointed weapons or any weapon that is available
in the immediate surrounding or in a hospital x x x because that
abound in the household.’ He said a victim resorts to weapons
when she has ‘reached the lowest rock
557
bottom of her life and there is no other recourse left on her but to
act decisively.’
x x x x x x x x x
“Dr. Pajarillo testified that he met Marivic Genosa in his office
in an interview he conducted for two (2) hours and seventeen (17)
minutes. He used the psychological evaluation and social case
studies as a help in forming his diagnosis. He came out with a
Psychiatric Report, dated 22 January 2001.
x x x x x x x x x
“On cross-examination by the private prosecutor, Dr. Pajarillo
said that at the time she killed her husband Marivic’c mental
condition was that she was ‘re-experiencing the trauma.’ He said
‘that we are trying to explain scientifically that the re-experiencing
of the trauma is not controlled by Marivic. It will just come in
flashes and probably at that point in time that things happened
when the re-experiencing of the trauma flashed in her mind.’ At
the time he interviewed Marivic ‘she was more subdued, she was
not super alert anymore x x x she is mentally stress (sic) because
of the predicament she is involved.’
x x x x x x x x x
“20. No rebuttal evidence or testimony was presented by either
the private or the public prosecutor. Thus, in accord with the
Resolution of this Honorable Court, 9
the records of the partially re-
opened trial a quo were elevated.”
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558
Supervening Circumstances
_______________
10 Qualifying her expertise, Dra. Dayan stated that she had been a
practising clinical psychologist for over twenty (20) years. Currently, she
is a professor at the De La Salle University. Prior thereto, she was the
head of the Psychology Department of the Assumption College; a member
of the faculty of Psychology of the Ateneo de Manila University and St.
Joseph’s College; and the counseling psychologist of the National Defense
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559
The Issues
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560
In the main, the following are the essential legal issues: (1)
whether appellant acted in self-defense and in defense of
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561
accused. While she, or even this Court, may not agree with
the trial judge’s conclusions, we cannot peremptorily
conclude, absent substantial evidence, that he failed to
reflect on the evidence presented.
Neither do we find the appealed Decision to have been
made in an “obviously hasty” manner. The Information had
been filed with the lower court on November 14, 1996.
Thereafter, trial began and at least 13 hearings were held
for over a year. It took the trial judge about two months
from the conclusion of trial to promulgate his judgment.
That he conducted the trial and resolved the case with
dispatch should not be taken against him, much less used
to condemn him for being unduly hasty. If at all, the
dispatch with which he handled the case should be lauded.
In any case, we find his actions in 15
substantial compliance
with his constitutional obligation.
Second, the lower court did not err in finding as a fact
that Ben Genosa and appellant had been legally married,
despite the non-presentation
16
of their marriage contract. In
People v. Malabago, this Court held:
_______________
“Sec. 15. (1) All cases or matters filed after the effectivity of this Constitution must be
decided or resolved within x x x three months for all other lower courts.
“(2) A case or matter shall be deemed submitted for decision or resolution upon the filing
of the last pleading, brief, or memorandum required by the Rules of Court or by the court
itself.”
16 333 Phil. 20; 265 SCRA 198, December 2, 1996, per Puno, J.
562
_______________
17 TSN, September 23, 1997, pp. 11-12 & 14; TSN, November 12, 1997,
pp. 29 & 33.
18 TSN, August 6, 1998, pp. 7-8.
19 People v. Sarabia, 376 Phil. 32; 317 SCRA 684, October 29, 1999.
563
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20 Appellee’s Brief, p. 26, citing People v. De los Reyes, 229 SCRA 439,
January 21, 1994. See also §5 of Rule 110 of the New Rules of Criminal
Procedure and People v. Vergara, 221 SCRA 560, April 28, 1993.
21 People v. Rabanal, 349 SCRA 655, January 19, 2001; People v.
Carlo,351 Phil. 644; 288 SCRA 404, March 31, 1998; People v. Baniel, 341
Phil. 471; 275 SCRA 472, July 15, 1997.
22 People v. Peralta, 350 SCRA 198, January 24, 2001.
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564
23
of self-defense or, at the least, incomplete self-defense. By
appreciating evidence that a victim or defendant is afflicted
with the syndrome, foreign courts convey their
“understanding of the justifiably fearful state of mind of a
person who has been
24
cyclically abused and controlled over
a period of time.”
A battered woman has been defined as a woman “who is
repeatedly subjected to any forceful physical or
psychological behavior by a man in order to coerce her to do
something he wants her to do without concern for her
rights. Battered women include wives or women in any
form of intimate relationship with men. Furthermore, in
order to be classified as a battered woman, the couple must
go through the battering cycle at least twice. Any woman
may find herself in an abusive relationship with a man
once. If it occurs a second time, and she remains 25
in the
situation, she is defined as a battered woman.”
Battered women exhibit common personality traits, such
as low self-esteem, traditional beliefs about the home, the
family and the female sex role; emotional dependence upon
the dominant male; the tendency to accept responsibility
for the batterer’s actions; 26
and false hopes that the
relationship will improve.
More graphically, the battered woman syndrome 27
is
characterized by the so-called “cycle of violence,” which
has three phases:
_______________
23 See Ibn-Tamas v. US, 477 A.2d 626, 1979 DC App. LEXIS 457;
McLuckie v. Abbott, 337 F.3d 1193; 2003 US App. LEXIS 15240; DePetris
v. Kuykendall, 239 F.3d 1057; 2001 US App. LEXIS 1062; State v. Kelley,
478 A.2d 364 (1984); McMaugh v. State, 612 A.2d 725 (RI 1992); State v.
Frost, 577 A.2d 1282 (NJ Super. Ct. App. Div. 1990); State v. Gallegos, 719
P.2d 1268 (NM Ct. App. 1986); R v. Lavallee (1990) 1 SCR; Reilly v. The
Queen, (1984) 2 SCR 396.
24 Symposium on Domestic Violence. Article: “Providing Legal
Protection for Battered Women: An Analysis of State Statutes and Case
Law LEXSEE 21 Hofstra L. Rev. 801 (Summer 1993), 1161.
25 McMaugb v. State, 612 A.2d 725, 731, quoting L. Walker, The
Battered Woman, at XV (1979).
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earlier book, The Battered Woman (1979). In 1989, she also wrote
Terrifying Love: Why Battered Women Kill and How Society Responds
28 Walker, Terrifying Love: Why Battered Women Kill and How Society
Responds (Harper Perennial, 1989), p. 42.
29Ibid. See also R. v. Lavallee, supra;Ibn-Tamas v. US, supra.
566
“ATTY. TABUCANON
Q How did you describe your marriage with Ben Genosa?
_______________
30Ibid.
31Ibid.
567
568
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569
Q Now, going to your finding no. 3 where you were the one
who attended the patient. What do you mean by
abrasion furuncle left axilla?
A Abrasion is a skin wound usually when it comes in
contact with something rough substance if force is
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applied.
Q What is meant by furuncle axilla?
A It is secondary of the light infection over the abrasion.
Q What is meant by pain mastitis secondary to trauma?
A So, in this 4th episode of physical injuries there is an
inflammation of left breast. So, [pain] meaning there is
tenderness. When your breast is traumatized, there is
tenderness pain.
Q So, these are objective physical injuries. Doctor?
x x x x x x x x x
Q Were you able to talk with the patient?
A Yes, sir.
Q What did she tell you?
A As a doctor-patient relationship, we need to know the
cause of these injuries. And she told me that it was done
to her by her husband.
Q You mean, Ben Genosa?
A Yes, sir.
x x x x x x x x x
ATTY. TABUCANON:
Q By the way Doctor, were you able to physical examine
the accused sometime in the month of November, 1995
when this incident happened?
A As per record, yes.
Q What was the date?
A It was on November 6, 1995.
Q So, did you actually see the accused physically?
A Yes, sir.
Q On November 6, 1995, will you please tell this
Honorable Court, was the patient pregnant?
A Yes, sir.
Q Being a doctor, can you more engage at what stage of
pregnancy was she?
A Eight (8) months pregnant.
Q So in other words, it was an advance stage of
pregnancy?
A Yes, sir.
570
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Doctor?
A Yes, if it is emotionally related and stressful it can cause
increases in hypertension which is unfortunately does
not response to the medication.
Q In November 6, 1995, the date of the incident, did you
take the blood pressure of the accused?
571
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572
“ATTY. TABUCANON:
Q Please tell this Court, can you recall the incident in
November 15, 1995 in the evening?
A Whole morning and in the afternoon, I was in the office
working then after office hours, I boarded the service
bus and went to Bilwang. When I reached Bilwang, I
immediately asked my son, where was his father, then
my second child said, ‘he was not home yet’. I was
worried because that was payday, I was anticipating
that he was gambling. So while waiting for him, my
eldest son arrived from school, I prepared dinner for my
children.
Q This is evening of November 15, 1995?
A Yes, sir.
Q What time did Ben Genosa arrive?
A When he arrived, I was not there, I was in Isabel
looking for him.
Q So when he arrived you were in Isabel looking for him?
A Yes, sir.
Q Did you come back to your house?
A Yes, sir.
Q By the way, where was your conjugal residence situated
this time?
A Bilwang.
Q Is this your house or you are renting?
A Renting.
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573
574
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575
576
Q Is it a flexible blade?
A It’s a cutter.
Q How do you describe the blade, is it sharp both edges?
A Yes, because he once used it to me.
Q How did he do it?
A He wanted to cut my throat.
Q With the same blade?
A Yes, 38sir, that was the object used when he intimidate
me.”
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577
578
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579
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43Ibid.
44 In R. v. Lavallee, supra.
580
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45Ibid.
581
_______________
582
56
usually fail to leave the relationship. Unless a shelter is
available, she stays with her husband, not only because she
typically lacks a means of self-support, but also because
she fears that
57
if she leaves she would be found and hurt
even more.
In the instant case, we meticulously scoured the records
for specific evidence establishing that appellant, due to the
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583
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hope for Ben to reform? And that she was the sole support
of his emotional stability and well-being? Conversely, how
dependent was she on him? Did she feel helpless and
trapped in their relationship? Did both of them regard
death as preferable to separation?
In sum, the defense failed to elicit from appellant herself
her factual experiences and thoughts that would clearly and
fully demonstrate the essential characteristics of the
syndrome.
The Court appreciates the ratiocinations given by the
expert witnesses for the defense. Indeed, they were able to
explain fully, albeit merely theoretically and scientifically,
how the personality of the battered woman usually evolved
or deteriorated as a result of repeated and severe beatings
inflicted upon her by her partner or spouse. They
corroborated each other’s testimonies, which were culled
from their numerous studies of hundreds of actual cases.
However, they failed to present in court the factual
experiences and thoughts that appellant had related to them
—if at all—based on which they concluded that she had
BWS.
We emphasize that in criminal cases, all the elements of
a modifying circumstance must be proven in order to be
appreciated. To repeat, the Records lack supporting
evidence that would establish all the essentials of the
battered woman syndrome as manifested specifically in the
case of the Genosas.
BWS as Self-Defense
In any event, the existence of the syndrome in a
relationship does not in itself establish the legal right of
the woman to kill her abusive partner. Evidence
59
must still
be considered in the context of self-defense.
From the expert opinions discussed earlier, the Court
reckons further that crucial to the BWS defense is the state
60
of mind of the battered woman at the time of the offense —
she must have actually feared imminent harm from her
batterer and honestly believed in the need to kill him in
order to save her life.
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584
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Unlawful 63
aggression is the most essential element of self-
defense. It presupposes actual, sudden and unexpected
attack—or an imminent
64
danger thereof—on the life or
safety of a person. In the present case, however, according
to the testimony of Marivic herself, there was a sufficient
time interval between the unlawful aggression of Ben and
her fatal attack upon him. She had already been able to
withdraw from his violent behavior and escape to their
children’s bedroom. During that time, he apparently ceased
his attack and went to bed. The reality or even the
imminence of the danger he posed had ended altogether.
He was no longer in a position that presented an actual
threat on her life or safety.
Had Ben still been awaiting Marivic when she came out
of their children’s bedroom—and based on past violent
incidents, there was a great probability that he would still
have pursued her and inflicted graver harm—then, the
imminence of the real threat upon her life would not have
ceased yet. Where the brutalized person is
_______________
61 People v. PO3 Langres, 375 Phil. 240, 258; 316 SCRA 769, October
13, 1999.
62 See also People v. Plazo, 350 SCRA 433, January 29, 2001; People v.
Cario, 351 Phil. 644; 288 SCRA 404, March 31, 1998; People v. Timblor,
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585
_______________
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65 State v. Gallegos, 104 NM 247, 719 P.2d 1268, citing Eber, The Battered
Wife’s Dilemma: To Kill or To Be Killed, 32 Hasting LJ 895, 928 (1981).
66Id., citing State v. Walker, 40 Wash. App. 658, 700 P.2d 1168 (1985).
67 People v. Saul, supra.
68 People v. Bato, 348 SCRA 253, December 15, 2000.
69 People v. Maquiling, 368 Phil. 169; 308 SCRA 687, June 21, 1999; People v.
Discalsota, G.R. No. 136892, April 11, 2002, 380 SCRA 583.
586
_______________
587
_______________
588
74 75
graphs 9 and 10 of Article 13 of the Revised Penal Code,
this circumstance should be taken 76
in her favor and
considered as a mitigating factor.
In addition, we also find in favor of appellant the
extenuating circumstance of having acted upon an impulse
so powerful as to have naturally produced passion and
obfuscation. It has been held that this state of mind is
present when a crime is committed as a result of an
uncontrollable burst of passion provoked by prior unjust or
improper acts or by
77
a legitimate stimulus so powerful as to
overcome reason. To appreciate this circumstance, the
following requisites should concur: (1) there is an act, both
unlawful and sufficient to produce such a condition of
mind; and (2) this act is not far removed from the
commission of the crime by a considerable length of time,
during which78
the accused might recover her normal
equanimity.
Here, an acute battering incident, wherein Ben Genosa
was the unlawful aggressor, preceded his being killed by
Marivic. He had further threatened to kill her while
dragging her by the neck towards a cabinet in which he
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589
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590
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81 People v. Cabande, 381 Phil. 889; 325 SCRA 77, February 8, 2000.
82 People v. Llanes, 381 Phil. 733; 324 SCRA 727, February 4, 2000.
83 People v. Albao, 383 Phil. 873; 327 SCRA 123, March 2, 2000; People
v. Aguilar, 354 Phil. 360; 292 SCRA 349, July 10, 1998.
591
COURT INTERPRETER
(At this juncture the witness started crying)
ATTY. TABUCANON:
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592
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593
Proper Penalty
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88 “Art. 64. Rules for the application of penalties which contain three
periods.
x x x x x x x x x
“5. When there are two or more mitigating circumstances and no aggravating
circumstances are present, the court shall impose the penalty next lower to that
prescribed by law, in the period that it may deem applicable, according to the
number and nature of such circumstances.”
x x x x x x x x x
89 People v. Narvaez, 206 Phil. 314; 121 SCRA 389, April 20, 1983;
Guevarra v. Court of Appeals, 187 SCRA 484, July 16, 1990.
90 Basan v. People, 61 SCRA 275, November 29, 1974.
594
Epilogue
_______________
595
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DISSENTING OPINION
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:
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597
_______________
598
ATTY. TABUCANON
Q So you said that he dragged you towards the drawer?
A Yes, sir.
Q What is there in the drawer?
A I was aware that it was a gun.
x x x x x x x x x
Q What happened when you were brought to the drawer?
A He dragged me towards the drawer and he was about to
open the drawer but he could not open it because he did
not have the key. [T]hen he pulled his wallet which
contained a blade about 3 inches long and I was aware
that he was going to kill me and I smashed his arm and
then the wallet and the blade fell. The one he used to
open the drawer I saw, it was a pipe about that long,
and when he was about to pick-up the wallet and the
blade, I smashed him then I ran to the room, and on
that very moment everything on my mind was pity on
myself, then the feeling I had on that very moment was
the same when I was admitted in PHILPHOS Clinic, I
was about to vomit.
6
x x x x x x x x x
Q What else happened?
A When I was in the room, I felt the same thing like what
happened before I was admitted in PHILPHOS Clinic, I
was about to vomit. I know my blood pressure has
raised. I was frightened I was about to die because of my
blood pressure.
x x x x x x x x x
_______________
599
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600
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601
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behavior.
x x x x x x x x x
A He was drunk again, he was yelling in his usual unruly
behavior.
x x x x x x x x x
A He was nagging . . . me at that time and I just ignore[d]
him because I want to avoid trouble for fear that he will
beat me again. Perhaps he was disappointed because I
just ignore[d]
602
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A Bolo.
Q Were you wounded or were there inflictions on your
body when he was holding and trying to frighten you
[with] that bolo?
A No, only here.
COURT INTERPRETER
(The witness pointed to her wrist).
COURT
To the witness
Q You were demonstrating a motion, whirling, did your
husband really whirl you?
A Yes, your Honor.
Q How did he whirl you?
A Whirled around.
_______________
603
_______________
604
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