Capeles Rivera v. Delgado

83 P.R. 668
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedOctober 13, 1961
DocketNo. 12899
StatusPublished

This text of 83 P.R. 668 (Capeles Rivera v. Delgado) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Capeles Rivera v. Delgado, 83 P.R. 668 (prsupreme 1961).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blanco Lugo

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Félix Capeles Rivera filed in his own right a petition for habeas corpus in the Superior Court, Caguas Part, alleging substantially that he is deprived illegally of his liberty since the sentence which he is serving in the State Penitentiary was entered without jurisdiction because he did not have adequate assistance of counsel during the proceeding which culminated in his conviction. He alleged specifically that although he was represented by attorney Julio de Jesús Garcia, his assistance did not comply with the applicable constitutional provisions inasmuch as the designation made by the court “was pro forma” and he was deprived of the opportunity to confer with him.

[670]*670The petitioner and the district attorney appeared personally at the hearing of the petition. The following proceedings took place:

“Hon. Judge:
Your name?
A. Félix Rivera, Félix Capeles Rivera.
Q. What reason or motive do you have to believe that you can be discharged and the sentence annulled?
A. I allege that I made a motion for continuance which was filed by Lie. Mimoso the day before the trial. Lie. Mimoso told me to go and the court denied the motion. Lie. Gloria Mimoso told me she had filed it and that it had been denied, and told me to appear and see what happened. In the afternoon they sent a policeman to notify me that they were not going to continue the case.
Q. The day before the hearing?
A. Yes, sir, at 6:00 p.m.
Q. You did not come to see Lie. De Jesús?
A. The office was closed and I did not know where he lived. The next morning, at 8:30 a.m., he represented me here. They sent for him and he conferred with me for about five or ten minutes, and I told him I was not satisfied with the defense because he had conferred with me five or ten minutes. That is what I allege.
Q. You said that to the attorney?
A. Yes, sir.
Q. Sir, why did you not tell me? Why did you not say to me: Your Honor, I believe he is in no position to handle the case because I conferred with him only five or ten minutes? I asked, are the parties ready? And they answered, yes, we are ready.
Hon. Judge:
This case was filed on August 4, 1959. It was set for hearing on October 5, 1959. Your attorney was Lie. Peña. He made a motion for continuance.
Petitioner :
But it was not for me. I made the request only once.
Hon. Judge:
[671]*671On that occasion the case was continued. That was one year ago. It was then set for December 16. On December 16 you appeared with a smiling face and said: T do not have a lawyer.’ ‘Alright, since you do not have an attorney the case will be continued.’ The minutes read, ‘defendant Félix Capeles Rivera having informed that he does not have an attorney to represent him, that was on December 16, and in order to give him another opportunity to engage the services of an attorney, because he had previously said that he had an attorney, the case was continued on February 10, I960.’ You said, T want to spend Christmas out of jail.’ December and January passed and the case was set for February 10 and you were summoned as required by law. You were on bail. You were summoned on December 16 to appear on February 10, not five or ten days before. You were summoned for February 10; you appeared on the 9th with a motion for continuance.
Plaintiff :
What happened was that I was very ill in Fajardo as a result of an accident.
Hon. Judge:
On February 9 you went to see the attorney. Why did you not go before?
Plaintiff :
He had all the papers of my case.
Hon. Judge:
A motion for continuance of the case has to be made at least five days in advance. On February 9, when you made the motion, I entered an order: ‘In this case it was necessary to bring a witness from the U.S. and The People of Puerto Rico had to pay the expenses, $15 daily and the traveling expenses of the witness.’ The motion is denied. ‘In the event the defendant can not be represented by Lie. Mimoso because he is busy in his duties of House Representative, Lie. Julio de Jesús García is appointed as attorney for the defendant in this case.’
That was on February 9. You were the one who brought the motion.
Plaintiff :
The attorney.
Q. At what time did you file the motion?
A. The previous day.
[672]*672Q. Who was supposed to look after your case?
A. I was.
Q. Who told you the case would be continued?
A. She told me to appear the next day and to explain the reasons to you.
Q. On February 10 the case of Efrain Rivera Plaza and Félix Capeles was called. The court asked, ‘are the parties ready?’ They said, ‘we are ready.’ Their attorney said, ‘we are ready.’ The jury was then drawn. At the opening of the evidence Lie. De Jesús informed that his client’s theory would appear from the evidence. At the close of the evidence the case was submitted to the jury and you were unanimously found guilty. The verdict was accepted and judgment was rendered on February 16. The court does not believe the defendant’s testimony, and considering that he was duly represented by Lie. Julio de Jesús García, who had stated that he was ready to hear the case, the petition for habeas corpus is denied . .

Appeal was taken from the judgment quashing the writ issued. The error assigned is the failure of the trial court to appoint an attorney to represent the petitioner at the hearing of the petition for habeas corpus.

The Constitution of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico establishes the right of the accused to have assistance of counsel. In this connection, Art. II, § 11, of the Constitution provides that “in all criminal 'prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right ... to have assistance of counsel ...” (Italics ours.) Prior to 1952, an identical right was recognized under Amendments Y and VI to the Federal Constitution ; § 2, par. 2, of the Organic Act of 1917; and § 141 of the Code of Criminal Procedure. Since Ex parte Hernández Laureano, 54 P.R.R. 396, 399 (1939), and cases which followed,1 the right of the accused to have assistance of counsel at the trial and to appear for arraignment and for sentence has been unconditionally recognized. And in Rivera v. Warden, 80 P.R.R. 800 (1958), we held that the [673]

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83 P.R. 668, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/capeles-rivera-v-delgado-prsupreme-1961.