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She had her last payment on July 2003, barely four (4) months from the
constitution of the Kasunduan. In pursuant to the Kasunduan, Zennie Aguirre,
the accounts officer of BDC, pulled-out the subject tricycle from
Lacsamana,the latter being in default in the payment of her loan. Said tricycle
then was placed under the custody of the treasurer of the Samahan. BDC,
through Aguirre, gave Lacsamana a chance to redeem the tricycle and set a
period within which the latter must settle her obligation, however, she was
unable to pay the amount on the date agreed upon.
So that five days thereafter, Lacsamana, together with her live-in partner,
Romulo Takad, went to Aguirre and pleaded that they be allowed to redeem
the tricycle but Aguirre, as instructed by her superior, denied their plea.
In the said incident, Takad, who was with Lacsamana at that time, uttered,
“Huwag na huwag kong makikita ang tricycle sa Pasig. ” Subsequently, the
tricycle was seized from the treasurer of the Samahan. So that on November
20, 2003, the subject tricycle was given to a new assignee, Carlos Parlade.
Before a contract could be executed, Parlade notified Aguirre that the tricycle
was stolen at 1:00 in the morning of November 21, 2003 near the house of
Parlade. During investigation, Parlade, and another witness, Mario Mankas,
identified the accused as the perpetrator.
Both alleged that they saw Takad driving the tricycle away from Parlade’s
residence. ISSUE/S: WHETHER OR NOT ROMULO TAKAD COMMITTED
THE CRIME OF CARNAPPING. ARGUMENTS/DISCUSSIONS: Romulo
Takad committed acts in violation of the Anti-Carnapping Act. Republic Act
No. 539, otherwise known as “An Act Preventing and Penalizing Carnapping”,
defines carnapping as the taking, with intent to gain, of a motor vehicle
belonging to another without the latter’s consent, or by means of violence
against or intimidation of persons, or by using force upon things.
The anti-carnapping law is a special law, different from the crimes of robbery
and theft included in the Revised Penal Code. The anti-carnapping law
particularly deals with the theft and robbery of motor vehicles. The elements of
the crime of carnapping are:[3] • • • • 1. That there is an actual taking of the
vehicle; 2.
That the offender intends to gain from the taking of the vehicle; 3. That the
vehicle belongs to a person other than the offender himself; 4.
That the taking is without the consent of the owner thereof; or that the taking
was committed by means of violence against or intimidation of persons, or by
using force upon things. Unlawful taking, or apoderamiento, is the taking of
the vehicle without the consent of the owner, or by means of violence against
or intimidation of persons, or by using force upon things; it is deemed
complete from the moment the offender gains possession of the thing, even if
he has no opportunity to dispose of the same. Luis B. Reyes, The Revised
Penal Code, Book Two, 14th ed. (1998), p. 619.
Such acts f the accused constitute the crime of carnapping, therefore, he must
be held liable for violation of the Anti-Carnapping Act. Positive identification of
witnesses Witnesses, Carlos Parlade and Mario Mankas, positively identified
the accused as the person who unlawfully took the tricycle, subject of herein
case.
In People vs dela Cruz (GR No. 141162-62, july 11, 2002), the Court declared
that categorical and consistent positive identification, absent any showing of ill
motive on the part of the eyewitness testifying on the matter, prevails over the
defense of denial.
In the present case, the accused, Romulo Takad, was positively and
categorically identified by the witnesses. No improper motive was imputed on
these witnesses who positively identified accused as the perpetrator of the
offense. Their testimonies were not moved by any ill will and bias stands, and,
therefore, their testimonies are entitled to full faith and credit.
They have no reason to perjure. Said witnesses were moved by their desire to
see that justice is to be done.
It is not enough that the he was somewhere else when the crime transpired. e
must likewise duly establish that he was so far away that it was not physically
possible for him to be present at the crime scene or its immediate vicinity at or
about the time of its commission. Moreover, he failed to present witnesses
who may corroborate his statement. It is a time-honored principle that the
defense of alibi cannot prevail over the witnesses’s positive identification of
the accused as the perpetrator of the crime. For it to prosper, the court must
be convinced that there was physical impossibility on the part of the accused
to have been at the locus criminis at the time of the commission of the crime.