G.R. No. 255740
G.R. No. 255740
255740
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Manila
SECOND DIVISION
PASTOR CORPUS, JR. Y BELMORO, PETITIONER VS. PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, RESPONDENT.
DECISION
The accused cannot be convicted of an offense lesser than that charged if the lesser offense had already
prescribed at the time the information was filed. To hold otherwise would be to sanction the circumvention of the
law on prescription by the simple expedient of accusing the defendant of the graver offense.1
This Court resolves the Petition for Review on Certiorari2 under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court assailing the
Decision3 and the Resolution4 of the Court of Appeals (CA), which affirmed the conviction of Pastor B. Corpus,5 Jr.
(Pastor) for slight physical injuries under Article 263 of the Revised of the Penal Code (RPC).
The case stemmed from the Complaint-Affidavit6 dated April 30, 2018 executed by Roberto Amado Hatamosa
(Roberto) for the purpose of instituting a criminal action against Pastor, Resurecion Zamora (Resurecion), and
Felix Corpus (Felix). Roberto alleged that on November 25, 2017, at around 10:45 a.m., he was on his way to work
in the barber shop when the three accused intercepted his way and shouted "Ang yabang mong tumingin hindi pa
tayo tapos." For his part, Roberto replied "Tigilan mo ako tapos na tayo." It was at this juncture that Pastor
allegedly punched Roberto in the face and was later joined by the two other accused, ultimately resulting in the
infliction of physical injuries upon Roberto.
In its Resolution7 dated April 30, 2018, the Senior Assistant City Prosecutor noted that, although the Medico-
Legal Report of Roberto shows a period of three to nine days of treatment or incapacity, the Report likewise states
that ''there is a complete fracture at the proximal end of the fifth (5th) digit of the right hand."8 Based on the
premise that a fracture constitutes a disfigurement of the finger, the Senior Assistant City Prosecutor
recommended that the accused be indicted instead for serious physical injuries, and the case for slight physical
injuries be dismissed for lack of merit.
Pastor and the two other accused were charged with the crime of serious physical injuries in an Information9
dated April 30, 2018, the accusatory portion of which reads:
That on or about the 25th day of November. 2017, in the City of Parañaque, Philippines, and
within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the above-named accused, conspiring and
confederating together and all of them mutually helping and aiding one another, did then and
there willfully, unlawfully and feloniously attack, assault, and employ personal violence upon the
person of complainant ROBERTO AMADO HATAMOSA, by then and there mauling him, which
caused a fractured right finger, a disfigurement to the complainant.
CONTRARY TO LAW.10
In its Decision,13 the Metropolitan Trial Court (MeTC) found that the evidence presented did not show the
participation of the two other accused, Resurecion and Felix, in the mauling of Roberto. In contrast, all the
testimonies of the prosecution witnesses were consistent that it was Pastor who punched Roberto in the face which
caused the latter's bloody nose and required not less than three, but more than nine days to heal. Moreover, the
MeTC held that it cannot hold Pastor accountable for the fracture on Roberto's finger considering that there is no
evidence pointing to any of the accused as the cause of the said injury. Thus, the MeTC found Pastor guilty of
slight physical injuries and disposed the case as follows:
Premises considered, the Court holds accused PASTOR CORPU[S], JR. y BELMORO GUILTY
BEYOND REASONABLE DOUBT for the commission of the crime of SLIGHT PHYSICAL INJURIES and
is hereby sentenced him (sic) to suffer the penalty of imprisonment of ARRESTO MENOR or 30 days.
He is likewise ordered to pay the private complainant the amount of Ten Thousand Pesos
(Php10,000.00) as moral damages.
For failure of the prosecution to present evidence beyond reasonable doubt, accused
RESURECION ZAMORA y ESPANOLA and FELIX CORPUS y BELMORO are ACQUITTED.
SO ORDERED.14
Later, Pastor filed an appeal with the Regional Trial Court (RTC). However, the RTC affirmed the conviction of
Pastor in its Decision15 dated March 20, 2019, to wit:
SO ORDERED.16
Aggrieved, Pastor elevated the matter to the CA. Before the CA, Pastor argued that the Information charging
him with slight physical injuries had prescribed since it was filed two months from the time of the alleged
commission or discovery of the offense.17 However, the CA affirmed Pastor's conviction, viz.:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Appeal filed by Pastor Corpus, Jr. y Belmoro on 29
April 2019 is DENIED. The Decision rendered by the Regional Trial Court, Branch 257, Parañaque
City on 20 March 2019 in Criminal Case No. 2019-0059 is AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.18
Anent the issue of prescription, the CA reasoned that the Information filed against Pastor alluded to the crime
of serious physical injuries, and not slight physical injuries as Pastor alleges.19 Since the crime of serious physical
injuries is punishable by prision mayor, prision correccional or arresto mayor, the said crime prescribes in fifteen
(15), ten (10), or five (5) years, as the case may be.20 Hence, the CA concluded that Pastor's criminal liability was
not extinguished by reason of prescription since the Information was filed in court just less than half a year after
the commission of the crime.21
Pastor filed a Motion for Reconsideration of the CA's Decision, but the same was denied by the CA in its
February 10, 2021 Resolution.22
Before this Court, Pastor insists that the crime he allegedly committed had already prescribed.23 He also
argues that it was private complainant Roberto who initially attacked his wife, and he only acted in her defense.24
In its Comment,25 the Office of the Solicitor General prays that the instant Petition be dismissed for lack of
merit.1 a ш p h i1
Whether the factual issues raised by Pastor Corpus, Jr. y Belmoro are beyond the ambit of a Petition for
Review on Certiorari Under Rule 45 of The Rules of Court
II
III
Whether the CA correctly affirmed Pastor Corpus, Jr. y Belmoro's conviction for the crime of slight physical
injuries
The variance doctrine, which allows the conviction of an accused for a crime proved which is different from, but
necessarily included in the crime charged, is embodied in Section 4, in relation to Section 5 of Rule 120 of the
Rules of Court, which reads:
Section 4. Judgment in case of variance between al legation and proof. — When there is
variance between the offense charged in the complaint or information and that proved, and the
offense as charged is included in or necessarily includes the offense proved, the accused shall be
convicted of the offense proved which is included in the offense charged, or of the offense
charged which is included in the offense proved.
At surface level, it appears that the lower courts validly affirmed the conviction of Pastor for committing the
crime of slight physical injuries against Roberto. Although the Information charged Pastor with serious physical
injuries, the lower courts may validly find him guilty of slight physical injuries in accordance with the variance
doctrine.
Be that as it may, a closer examination of the records reveals that although Pastor has been found to have
committed the lesser crime of slight physical injuries, his criminal liability for the same has been extinguished by
way of prescription.
In Francisco v. Court of Appeals,26 the petitioner therein was charged with the crime of grave oral defamation.
The trial court convicted the petitioner of the crime as charged. However, on appeal, the decision of the trial court
was modified by the CA, finding the petitioner guilty of simple slander. Before this Court, the petitioner argued that
since the CA had found that the offense committed was the lesser offense of simple slander, which prescribed in
two months, the said court should have dismissed the case and sustained his acquittal on the ground that said
crime had already prescribed. He pointed out that the alleged defamatory remarks were committed four months
prior to the filing of the Information charging him of the greater offense of grave oral defamation. In acquitting the
petitioner, this Court ruled that the accused cannot be convicted of an offense lesser than that charged if the
lesser offense had already prescribed at the time the Information was filed:
Where an accused has been found to have committed a lesser offense includible within the
offense charged, he cannot be convicted of the lesser offense, if it has already prescribed. To hold
otherwise would be to sanction the circumvention of the law on prescription by the simple expedient of
accusing the defendant of the graver offense. The principle has the support of overwhelming
authorities in American jurisprudence:
"The general rule, as stated in 22 CJS, Criminal Law, sec. 225b, is 'as a general
rule, one indicted for an offense not barred by limitation, but convicted of a lesser
included offense which is so barred, is entitled to discharge', and in 15 Am. Jur.,
Criminal Law, Sec. 343; 'It frequently happens that a change of felony includes an
offense of a lower grade with a different period of limitation, so that, while the felony is
not barred, the statute has run as to the lesser offense. In this situation, the rule is
that if the statute has not run against the felony, while the lesser offense is barred,
the bar cannot be evaded by indicting the defendant for the felony and convicting him
of the lesser offense.27" (Citation omitted)
To reiterate, the Information against Pastor charged him with unlawfully and feloniously attacking and
employing personal violence upon Roberto, causing a fractured right finger, a disfigurement to the latter. This
allegation constitutes the crime of serious physical injuries under Article 263 (3) of the RPC:
....
3. The penalty of prision correccional in its minimum and medium periods, if in consequence of the
physical injuries inflicted, the person injured shall have become deformed, or shall have lost any
other part of his body, or shall have lost the use thereof; or shall have been ill or incapacitated for
the performance of the work in which he as habitually engaged for a period of more than ninety days.
(Emphasis supplied)
Since serious physical injuries is punishable by prisión correccional, a correctional penalty,28 it prescribes in 10
years.29 Meanwhile, what was ascertained from the evidence adduced during trial is the lesser crime of slight
physical injuries under Article 266 of the RPC.30
Clearly, the crime of slight physical injuries falls under light offenses which prescribe in two months.31
Article 89(5) of the RPC expressly provides that "criminal liability is totally extinguished by prescription of the
crime."32 Thus, when the MeTC rendered its Decision on November 20, 2018 and found Pastor guilty of slight
physical injuries, it had no jurisdiction to sentence Pastor to suffer the penalty of imprisonment of arresto menor or
30 days since his criminal liability therefor had been totally extinguished.
A perusal of the records of the case reveals that the incident between Pastor and Roberto took place on
November 25, 2017.33 Roberto executed his Complaint-Affidavit before the prosecutor's office on January 8,
2018.34 However, the Information against Pastor was filed only on May 21, 2018.35 In this regard, Article 91 of the
RPC provides:
We are not unmindful of the rulings of this Court in Perez v. Sandiganbayan36 and People v. Pangilinan37 when
we declared that the commencement of the proceedings for the prosecution of the accused before the
prosecutor's office effectively interrupts the prescriptive period for the subject offense. In Panaguiton, Jr. v.
Department of Justice,38 (Panaguiton) this Court explained the rationale for the rule:
Indeed, to rule otherwise would deprive the injured party the right to obtain
vindication on account of delays that are not under his control. A clear example would be
this case, wherein petitioner filed his complaint-affidavit on 24 August 1995, well within the four (4)-
year prescriptive period. He likewise timely filed his appeals and his motions for reconsideration on
the dismissal of the charges against Tongson. He went through the proper channels, within the
prescribed periods. However, from the time petitioner filed his complaint-affidavit with the Office of
the City Prosecutor (24 August 1995) up to the time the DOJ issued the assailed resolution, an
aggregate period of nine (9) years had elapsed. Clearly, the delay was beyond petitioner's control.
After all, he had already initiated the active prosecution of the case as early as 24 August 1995,
only to suffer setbacks because of the DOJ's flip-flopping resolutions and its misapplication of Act
No. 3326. Aggrieved parties, especially those who do not sleep on their rights and
actively pursue their causes, should not be allowed to suffer unnecessarily further
simply because of circumstances beyond their control, like the accused's delaying
tactics or the delay and inefficiency of the investigating agencies. (Citation omitted and
emphasis supplied)
Nonetheless, this Court clarified in the more recent case of Republic v. Desierto39 (Desierto) that for crimes
falling under the Rules of Summary Procedure and within the jurisdiction of Metropolitan Manila, the complaint or
information referred to in Article 91 of the RPC is that which is filed in the proper court and not the complaint
lodged by the offended party before the prosecutor's office:
Patently, the phrase "without need of a prior preliminary examination or preliminary investigation"
found in Sec. 9 of the 1983 Rules on Summary Procedure is now deleted in the above-quoted
provision. Jadewell declared that "[a]s provided in the Revised Rules on Summary Procedure, only
the filing of an Information tolls the prescriptive period where the crime charged is involved in an
ordinance." Notably, the offense involved in Jadewell is a violation of city ordinance which, as
Hence, for special laws within the scope of the Revised Rules on Summary Procedure, the
principle laid down in Zaldivia and Jadewell is controlling, i.e., violations of municipal or city ordinance,
and BP 22. Accordingly, the ruling in Panaguiton with respect to interruption of prescription of BP 22
shall govern only those acts committed when BP 22 is not yet covered by the Revised Rules on
Summary Procedure, i.e., before the effectivity of A.M. No. 00-11-01-SC on April 15, 2003. Thus, for
acts committed on April 15, 2003 onwards, the filing of complaint or information in court shall interrupt
the running of the prescriptive period and not the institution of the preliminary investigation by
investigating agencies or the filing of a complaint before such investigating agencies. However, in
Metropolitan Manila and Chartered Cities, only the filing of Information in court shall toll
the running of the prescriptive period.40 (Citations omitted and emphasis supplied)
As a crime punishable by arresto menor, slight physical injuries is clearly governed by the Rules on Summary
Procedure which provides:
SECTION 1. Scope. — This rule shall govern the summary procedure in the Metropolitan Trial
Courts, the Municipal Trial Courts in Cities, the Municipal Trial Courts, and the Municipal Circuit Trial
Courts in the following cases falling within their jurisdiction:
....
B. Criminal Cases:
.... 1 a ш p h i1
(4) All other criminal cases where the penalty prescribed by law for the offense charged
is imprisonment not exceeding six months, or a fine not exceeding (P1,000.00), or both,
irrespective of other imposable penalties, accessory or otherwise, or of the civil liability
arising therefrom: Provided, however, that in offenses involving damage to property through
criminal negligence, this Rule shall govern where the imposable fine does not exceed ten thousand
pesos (P10,000.00). (Emphasis supplied)
Consequently, the ruling laid down in Desierto41 is relevant and appropriate in the case at bar, in that the filing
of the Complaint against Pastor did not toll the running of the prescriptive period. From the reckoning point of
November 25, 2017 until May 21, 2018 when the prosecutor's office filed the Information against Pastor, 177 days
have already lapsed. Clearly, the crime for which the petitioner was found guilty had already prescribed on the
basis of the absence of Information filed before the trial court.
To be clear, we are fully aware of the unfortunate outcome of this ruling to the private complainant who
rightfully seeks legal redress. Indeed, it is not the failure of the complainant, but that of the prosecutor's office to
timely file the Information before the court, which necessarily results in the dismissal of the case against Pastor.
This Court's ruling in Zaldivia v. Judge Reyes, Jr.42 is instructive in this regard:
At any rate, the Court feels that if there be a conflict between the Rule on Summary Procedure
and Section 1 of Rule 110 of the Rules on Criminal Procedure, the former should prevail as the
special law. And if there be a conflict between Act No. 3326 and Rule 110 of the Rules on Criminal
Procedure, the latter must again yield because this Court, in the exercise of its rule-making power, is
not allowed to "diminish, increase or modify substantive rights" under Article VIII, Section 5 (5) of the
Constitution Prescription in criminal cases is a substantive right.
Going back to the Francisco case, we find it not irrelevant to observe that the decision would
have been conformable to Section 1, Rule 110, as the offense involved was grave oral defamation
punishable under the Revised Penal Code with arresto mayor in its maximum period to prison
correccional in its minimum period. By contrast, the prosecution in the instant case is for violation of a
municipal ordinance, for which the penalty cannot exceed six months, and is thus covered by the Rule
on Summary Procedure.
All told, the MeTC committed reversible error in convicting Pastor of slight physical injuries. It is plain that the
case should have been dismissed as the light offense for which he was found guilty had already been extinguished
by prescription when the Information was filed. Consequently, the RTC and the CA likewise committed reversible
errors in affirming the conviction of Pastor.
As a final note, despite the filing of the Complaint-Affidavit by Roberto on January 8, 2018 before the
prosecutor's office, it took the latter more than four months, or only on May 21, 2018, to file the Information before
the MeTC. While this Court now acquits Pastor on the basis thereof, there is truth in the precept we have laid
down in Panaguiton44 that aggrieved parties, especially those who do not sleep on their rights and actively pursue
their causes, should not be allowed to suffer unnecessarily further simply because of circumstances beyond their
control, like the delay and inefficiency of the investigating agencies.45
In this connection, the court exhorts prosecutors to diligently discharge their functions by keeping in mind the
prescriptive period of the crimes contained in the complaints lodged before them, and on the basis thereof timely
file the necessary Information before the proper court.
ACCORDINGLY, the Petition is hereby GRANTED. The Decision and the Resolution of the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. CR No. 43154 are REVERSED. Pastor Corpus, Jr. y Belmoro is ACQUITTED of the crime of Slight
Physical Injuries on the ground of prescription.
SO ORDERED.
Leonen SAJ (Chairperson), Lazaro-Javier, M. Lopez and Kho, Jr., JJ., concur.
Footnotes
1
Francisco v. Court of Appeals, 207 Phil. 471, 477 (1983) [Per J. De Castro, Second Division].
2
Rollo, pp. 19-43.
3
Id. at 56-67. The March 13, 2020 Decision in CA-G.R. CR No. 43154 was penned by Associate Justice
Zenaida T. Galapate-Laguilles and concurred in by Associate Justices Ramon M. Bato, Jr. and Walter S.
Ong, Sixth Division, Court of Appeals, Manila
4
Id. at 45-46. The February 10, 2021 Resolution was penned by Associate Justice Zenaida T. Galapate-
Laguilles and concurred in by Associate Justices Ramon M. Baro, Jr. and Walter S. Ong., Former Sixth
Division, Court of Appeals, Manila.
5
Also spelled as Corpuz in some parts of the rollo.
6
Rollo, p. 143-144.
7
Id. at 133-136.
8
Id. at 135.
9
Id. at 149.
10
Id.
11
Id. at 154.
12
Id. at 152-153.
Scale
Principal Penalties
....
Correctional penalties:
Prisión correccional
....
29
ARTICLE 90. Prescription of Crimes.
....
Those punishable by a correctional penalty shall prescribe in ten years; with the exception
of those punishable by arresto mayor, which shall prescribe in five years.
30
Article 266 of the Revised Penal Code provides: "Art. 266. Slight Physical Injuries and Maltreatment. - The
crime of slight physical injuries shall be punished:
1. By arresto menor when the offender has inflicted physical injuries which shall incapacitate
the offended party for labor from one to nine days, or shall require medical attendance during
the same period
2. By arresto menor or a fine not exceeding 200 pesos and censure when the offender has
caused physical injuries which do not prevent the offended party from engaging in his habitual
work nor require medical attendance.
...