Flores Valentín v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico

91 P.R. 782
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedFebruary 26, 1965
DocketNo. C-64-36
StatusPublished

This text of 91 P.R. 782 (Flores Valentín v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico) 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
Flores Valentín v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico, 91 P.R. 782 (prsupreme 1965).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hernández Matos

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a review of an order denying a motion for suppression of evidence.

On April 11, 1963, Juan Flores Valentín and his wife Margarita Vega Matos were charged before the San Juan Part of the Superior Court with two violations of § 29 of the Narcotics Act of Puerto Rico, approved June 18, 1959.1 They were charged that on or about February 13, 1963, and in San Juan . . . acting jointly and in common concert, they had in their possession and control the narcotic drug known as marihuana.

Six days prior to the day set for trial, they filed a motion for suppression of evidence. They alleged that the narcotic drug object of the information — cigarettes and cut marihuana — had been seized by police officers in the course of an illegal search and seizure of their “business-residence” situated in the ward of Puerta de Tierra, of San Juan, carried out at 4:30 a.m. of February 13, 1963, the illegality of which consists in that the search and seizure was carried out under the authority of a warrant which had been definitively served and executed a few hours before, in the town of Vega Baja, by the seizure of the revolver for which search and seizure the warrant had been exclusively requested and issued.

A hearing was held on that motion. Both parties offered oral and documentary evidence. On April 22, 1964, after briefs were filed, the incident was decided in open court against appellants in the following terms:

“A search warrant valid on its face, based on probable cause, having been issued, the court is of the opinion that the search [785]*785of the house of Juan Flores Valentín and Margarita de Flores was not unreasonable, and it decides to deny, and does hereby deny, the Motion for Suppression of Evidence.
“The defense has moved for reconsideration and the court ratifies its order.”

Petitioners assign the commission of two errors. The first is based on the trial court’s refusal to give “evidentiary weight to a search warrant executed and returned to the issuing judicial authority, giving weight in turn to an oral testimony which varies the content of such warrant or return.” The second is based on the fact that a search which is illegal, void, and unreasonable, and which constituted “transgression of the power invested by a search warrant in some public officers who already had in their possession the weapon object of such warrant,” was held valid.

Since the two errors assigned are closely related, we shall discuss them jointly. We shall recite in the first place certain facts appearing from the evidence presented, documentary as well as oral.

On the morning of February 8, 1963, a triumvirate of our underworld formed by one “Jessie James,” one “Charlie,” and another individual named José Enrique Díaz Guíñales, burglarized a certain residence of the metropolitan area. They stole a Smith & Wesson revolver and the sum of $11 in cash. The owner of the residence notified the police and the latter commenced an investigation.

Three days later, namely, February 11, Díaz Guíñales made before a justice of the peace the following affidavit:

“I hereby declare that on February 8, 1963, around 7 a.m., Ángel Luis Torres Suárez, known as ‘Jessie James,’ and another whom I know as Charlie, called at my house. That they invited me to accompany them to 33d Street, block AA-3, Embalse, San José, and told me that they were going to break into a house to steal. That when we arrived at the house of Luis Diaz Horta, Jessie ordered Charlie to break open the carport padlock with a screwdriver. That Charlie broke the padlock [786]*786and entered the yard, and there broke-open the kitchen door. That then they invited me to go inside and I went in with them. That we went into a room where there was a safe,, and while I watched they broke it open with a crowbar and a screwdriver, but did not find any money. That then the friend, Charlie, went into an adjoining room and looked around the bed and found a revolver and a plastic bag containing $11 in quarters. That we took the revolver and -the money and left for Puerta de Tierra. That Jessie James then ■ threatened to kill me if I said anything to the police. That he .distributed the money and gave $3 to me, $3 to Charlie, and Jessie kept $5 for himself. That Jessie took the revolver and afterwards gave it to me to sell it to one Marco Polo for $40. That now I know that Marco Polo’s name is Juan Flores Valentin. That I gave the $40 to Jessie James, and he gave $12 to me and kept $28 for himself.”

Juan Flores Valentin, married to Margarita Vega Matos —codefendant under the name of Margarita de Flores— occupied at that time a building situated on San Agustín Street, of Puerta de Tierra, which he devoted to dwelling, a barber shop, and a small business called “Marco Polo.”

The following day detective Joaquín Peña made another affidavit before the same judge, describing the building and stating that he had frequented the business of Juan Flores Valentin which the latter operated “jointly with a white woman,” and that “that business is frequented by individuals of ill reputation, particularly by one known as Jessie James.”

On the basis of these affidavits, another detective named Luis Rodriguez Collazo applied to the Justice of the Peace of Guaynabo for a warrant to search those premises — the Marco Polo business — “for the weapon in question in order to produce it as evidence before the proper court” on the day set for the trial of the burglary case, and “to seize any other evidence or objects possessed in violation of the law.” Thereupon the following search warrant was issued:

[787]*787“The People of Puerto Rico, to any public peace officer in the district of the Capital City of San Juan, P.R.:
“Evidence having been presented this day, by means of an affidavit subscribed by José Enrique Díaz Guiñales, Joaquín Peña Peña, and Luis Rodríguez Collazo (copies of which are enclosed), to the effect that in an unnumbered house situated on the street known as Antigua Via, of Puerta de Tierra, P.R., constructed of concrete and wood, zinc-roofed, with two gables, painted light gray, pink, and blue on the outside, and light gray, black, and green on the inside; bounded on the front by the street known as Antigua Via and the housing project of the same name; on the right by an unoccupied lot where there is an unpainted concrete plant; on the rear by a two-story apartment house owned by the Méndez family; it has three doors on the front, two windows on the left, one on the right, and one on the rear; on the right and as part of the house there is a small concrete and wooden room which is locked with a padlock; on the rear there is a back room connected by a door to the cafetín which is installed in the front of the house; that the back room is joined to the structure of the house where the business is located; that in the upper front part of the business there is a ‘Marco Polo’ sign and another ‘Marco Polo Barber Shop’ sign in red and blue letters; that this business and back room belong to and are operated by Juan Flores Valentin, known as Marco Polo, and that a white woman, with black hair, about 21 years of age, 5 feet tall and weighing 110 pounds, helps in its administration.

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Bluebook (online)
91 P.R. 782, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flores-valentin-v-superior-court-of-puerto-rico-prsupreme-1965.