SC Recognizes Long-Term Abuse as Mitigating Factor in Parricide Case

OCTOBER 08, 2019 The Supreme Court of the Philippines along Padre Faura street in Ermita, Manila. EDWIN BACASMAS

The Supreme Court (SC) recognized that a sudden outburst of uncontrolled emotions, triggered by years of abuse from the accused’s father, qualifies as passion or obfuscation – a mitigating circumstance that can reduce the penalty for parricide.

In a Decision written by Associate Justice Ramon Paul L. Hernando, the SC’s First Division upheld Leopoldo Singcol’s (Singcol) conviction for killing his father but lowered the penalty due to the presence of this mitigating factor.    

Singcol was having breakfast when his father arrived, carrying a bolo. An argument broke out, and his father attempted to attack him but stumbled and fell.  Singcol grabbed the bolo and stabbed his father in the chest, killing him. Shocked by what he had done, he held his father, asked for forgiveness, and then cut his own throat and abdomen.

On his way to a nearby spring afterward, Singcol encountered his sister-in-law and her two-year-old son. He attempted to stab her but injured the child instead. The mother lost her grip on the boy, and Singcol fatally stabbed her. The child survived.

During trial, Singcol admitted to stabbing his father, his sister-in-law, and the child. He said he had suffered abuse from his father since childhood and was not thinking clearly when he attacked the others. 

Both the Regional Trial Court (RTC) and the Court of Appeals convicted Singcol of parricide for killing his father. While the Supreme Court agreed with them that self-defense was not applicable in this case, it ruled that passion or obfuscation should be considered as a mitigating factor or circumstance that lessens the penalty.

Under the Revised Penal Code, parricide is committed when the accused kills their parents or child, whether legitimate or illegitimate, or any of their ascendants or descendants, or legal spouse.

On the other hand, passion or obfuscation is a state of mind present when a crime is committed due to an uncontrollable burst of emotions triggered by previous unjust or improper acts.

The SC considered the parricide a result of “a sudden surge of the accused’s bottled-up feelings caused by paternal neglect since childhood,” as shown by Singcol’s narration and his extreme, irrational acts of self-harm immediately after the killing.

Singcol was sentenced to reclusion perpetua, or a maximum of 40 years in prison, for the parricide and the murder of his sister-in-law, and ordered to pay the heirs of each victim PHP 275,000 in damages.

The RTC dismissed the charge against Singcol for injuring his sister-in-law’s son due to prescription, as over 15 years had passed since the crime.

This press release is prepared for members of the media and the general public by the SC Office of the Spokesperson as a simplified summary of the SC’s Decision. For the SC’s complete discussion of the case, please read the full text of the Decision in G.R. No. 275139 (People of the Philippine v. Leopoldo SingcolMay 7, 2025 

Originally published by the Supreme Court Public Information Office.

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