People v. Belén

96 P.R. 654
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedNovember 14, 1968
DocketNos. CR-68-50, CR-68-53
StatusPublished

This text of 96 P.R. 654 (People v. Belén) 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
People v. Belén, 96 P.R. 654 (prsupreme 1968).

Opinion

per curiam :

In the above-entitled cases we allowed appellants to submit one brief for all the cases because they are interrelated; because the conviction of all the appellants is based on the testimony of the same undercover agent; because the same offense is involved in all the cases.

Informations for violation of § 4 of Act No. 220 of 1948 (Bolita Act — 33 L.P.R.A. § 1250) were filed against defendants. They were tried and convicted on April 28, 1967 in the Superior Court, Mayagiiez Part, and sentenced to serve six months in jail in each case. Ramón Belén, Fausto Jusino, and José A.' López, were charged with one violation each. Two violations were charged against Miguel Jusino.

Appellants allege that the trial court erred (1) in finding defendants guilty with insufficient evidence and in not granting them the benefit of a reasonable doubt; (2) in finding Ramón Belén, José A. López, and Miguel Jusino guilty on the basis of an amended complaint not ordered or authorized by the court; and (3) in not complying with Rule 38(b) of the Rules of Criminal Procedure which orders a new arraignment when the information is amended, thus depriving appellants of their right to make the corresponding pleas.

In the cases of appellants Belén, Jusino, and López, infor-mations were filed for the possession of bolita material and for the sale of a certain number to be used in said unlawful game. After arraignment and after appellants pleaded not guilty, the prosecuting attorney filed a motion alleging that his evidence only established the sale of the bolita number. The amended information charging each one with the sale in question appears in the record of each case.

The two assignments based on the fact that the amended information was not authorized by the court and on non[656]*656compliance with Rule 38(b) of the Rules of Criminal Procedure lack merit.

In the original information the aforesaid three appellants were charged with possession and sale and in the amended information they were charged with the sale only. Therefore, from the very original information appellants were informed that they were accused of the sale of bolita numbers. So that the amendment was not a cure of a substantial defect, since there was no omission of something-essential or a new offense. Actually appellants were being benefited since under the amended information they were being charged only with the sale, and not the sale and possession alleged in the original information. Section 4 of the Bolita Act contains several modalities on the commission of the offense. Two of the modalities having been charged against them in the original information, the evidence on one of the modalities charged was sufficient to support a conviction. People v. Matos Pretto, 93 P.R.R. 111, 116 (1966).

In connection with the previous authorization, although in the record there is no pronouncement of the magistrate to that effect, it appears from the record that the prosecuting attorney filed a motion requesting leave to file the amended informations; that they were assigned the same number as the original informations and that the court continued the proceedings without any objection of the interested party. It is inferred therefrom that the court authorized the filing of the amended informations. People v. Morales, 79 P.R.R. 569 (1956). Since it was not a question of a substantial amendment, a new arraignment was not needed. Rule 38 (b) of the Rules of Criminal Procedure makes mandatory the new arraignment only if a substantial amendment to the information is involved. As we have shown, the amendments to the informations were not of a substantial nature [657]*657but only the elimination in the information of one of the two modalities originally charged.

As to the case against Ramón Belén, the undercover agent testified that the purpose of undercover agents is to obtain evidence against the violators of the Bolita Act; that he has worked in the area of San Germán, Sabana Grande, Yauco, and Guánica, for three years; he has filed 186 cases; that on November 25, 1966 at about 2:30 p.m. he was travel-ling in the vehicle driven by appellant Ramón Belén, from Maginas Ward of Sabana Grande, to the town of Sabana Grande; that said automobile is a 1966 Ford, beige top and the rest brown, public license plate 200-787; that other persons travelled in the automobile; that the witness was in the front seat by the side of appellant; that when they were going by kilometer 217.6 of Road No. 2, appellant told him that he had 29 fractions of number 573; that the witness told him that he was going to wager 13 fractions of that number; that then they arrived at Sabana Grande; that he paid 15 cents for the trip and appellant collected $1.04 for the fractions he had sold to him; that appellant did not show any list nor the witness request any receipt because his identity would be discovered. Upon alighting from the car the witness went to the men’s room of a restaurant and took notes in a small notebook. He had the small notebook at the trial. Then he submitted a report of the violation of the law. He testified that he was wagering in connection with the last three numbers of the first prize of the lottery.

Appellants invoke People v. García, 92 P.R.R. 557 (1965), where in a footnote at page 561 we said:

“In the cases generally prosecuted against the sales agents of numbers of the bolita game, the bolita agent jots down in his list the number gambled. Usually the undercover agent sees when the number is jotted down and sometimes he receives a receipt of the bet. When he testifies at the trial, he either presents the receipt or states that he saw the agent jotting down the number in his list. But in the present case the police officer does not [658]*658testify that defendant had jotted the number down. He only avers that defendant told him that he had gambled No. 413 and that by virtue of the exchange agreed upon the undercover agent obtained the ‘right’ to receive the bolita prize in the event the number turned out to be the winning number. ...”

The footnote of People v. García, supra, refers to the fact that we did not decide in that case, because there was no need, whether that evidence was sufficient to punish.

In the case of appellant Ramón Belén, the witness not only identified the automobile where he was travelling but also testified about other persons who travelled there and about the position he occupied with respect to appellant; the place where the offer took place and the place where the transaction was performed, the details of the offer; the payment for the trip and the fact that the witness forgot to pay for the numbers wagered, as well as the collection, on the part of appellant, of the money ($1.04) and the notes he took when he went to the men’s room of the restaurant. It should be noted that in this case substantial evidence was produced in excess to that mentioned in footnote 1 of People v. García, supra, for which reason we are not confronting in this case an evidentiary situation similar to that indicated in the said footnote.

Two informations were filed against Miguel Jusino, one for the possession of the material and sale of bolita number on September 25, 1966; the other as to the sale of bolita number on October 11, 1966.

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96 P.R. 654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-belen-prsupreme-1968.