People v. Beltrán

18 P.R. 908
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 3, 1912
DocketNo. 440
StatusPublished

This text of 18 P.R. 908 (People v. Beltrán) 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. Beltrán, 18 P.R. 908 (prsupreme 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolf

delivered the opinion of the court.

[909]*909This is an appeal from the District Court of Ponce where the canse was initiated by an information filed by the fiscal against Miguel and Desiderio Beltrán. The information set np substantially that on January 7, 1912, the defendants voluntarily, maliciously, and illegally conspired to commit the crime of fraudulent destruction of insured property, consisting in burning a house, the property of the defendant, Miguel Beltrán, situated in Ruiz-Belvis Street in said city, which deed they attempted to put into execution on the nights of January 7 and 8, 1912, the house being insured against fire in the Norwich "Union Insurance Company for $400, it being the intention of the said defendants to defraud said company; that to this end both defendants introduced gasoline into the said house on January 7, 1912, placing it there in different vessels, near to which they placed straw, bags, and other articles easy to burn, closing hermetically the doors of such house; that these preparative acts being concluded, both defendants, abandoned the house, and on the morning of the following" day, namely, January 8, 1912, the defendant, Desiderio Bel-trán, in a clandestine manner, and always in accord with the other defendant, Miguel Beltrán, entered the house of the latter with the intention of setting it on fire, at which moment he was surprised by the police.

The first and alleged principal ground of error is that the court erred in not granting the motion of the defendants made at the close of the Government’s proof to dismiss the ease. The defense set up that the corpus delicti had not been proved — namely, the conspiracy itself — and alleged that this essential part of the proof could not be supplied by acts or admissions emanating from the mouth of Miguel Beltrán, and that this element of proof being omitted there only remained the acts done by Desiderio Beltrán, frbm which not even remotely could the conclusion be reached that a conspiracy or agreement existed, which constitutes the corpus delicti in the present case; that even with the supposition [910]*910that to the words of Miguel Beltran, made to the fiscal, full force should be given as a confession, still that confession, the corpus delicti not being previously established, could not affect the other defendant, and, consequently, as it could not be proved by such confession that Desiderio Beltrán conspired to bring about any given act, such confession would have no value as against Miguel Beltrán, inasmuch as in every crime of conspiracy there must exist two or more guilty persons.

Independently of the admissions of Miguel Beltrán, there was evidence tending to show that Miguel Beltrán was the owner of a house situated in Buiz-Belvis Street in Ponce, which he insured against fire in the sum of $400 in the Norwich Union Piré Insurance Company, and that such house was only worth $250; that the house had been occupied by Miguel Beltrán, but that shortly before the alleged attempt to set it on fire he removed from it, taking his family to the country; that Miguel Beltrán and Desiderio Beltrán are brothers; that on January 7, 1912, at about 4 in the afternoon, the defendant, Desiderio Beltrán, was in the house accompanied by a son, the latter carrying a sack under his arm; that Desiderio Beltrán took off his coat, took a turn or two in the yard and placed the coat in the gallery; that Miguel Beltrán arrived also and attached a bolt on the outside part of the door leading to the yard, and afterwards entered the dining room, on January 7. In other words, on that particular day these three people were seen about this unoccupied house. That on the night of said 7th of January at about 11.30, several persons passing in front of the house caught a disagreeable odor of gasoline, which attracted their attention to such an extent as to cause them to notify the police; that the police came and entered the house, and as they opened the bolted door the odor became stronger, and that on lighting up with a candle they saw inside a great heap of straw, the line of which ran up to the centre of the room and dovetailed with a wfooden vessel covered with bags [911]*911or rags, and an empty box; that the wooden vessel was fnll of gasoline; that the pile of straw continned into another room, where there was another pail containing gasoline and that also covered with bags or other inflammable material, and there were other vessels containing gasoline; that the principal door of the main room was covered with a cnrtain of bags on the inside and the holes stopped np with rags and papers, and that all the cracks and hollows were also staffed with paper and rags; that about 5.30 of the morning of the 8th, Desiderio Beltrán leaped over a fence, went under the house, went up to the big door and pushed back the bolt, went up on the balcony, where he took off his coat and laid it on the rail, put a package inside of a barrel that was there, and when he was going to open the door to enter the house he was arrested by the police, who had stationed themselves there on the lookout; that the package which he placed inside of the barrel contained four pieces of candle and a box of matches.

While this recital of the evidence is not the strongest possible proof of a common design between the two brothers, yet it is strong circumstancial evidence tending to show that Miguel and Desiderio Beltran conspired to set the house on fire.

The motion to dismiss proceeded on the basis that the court had no right to take into consideration the admissions of, Miguel Beltrán, hence there was no explanation of the presence of the inflammable material in the house, the desertion of the house by Miguel Beltrán, the presence of the two brothers in the afternoon, and the early morning visit of Desiderio with the wherewithal to spread a fire. The whole chain of events was evidence tending to prove no other reasonable conclusion than that there was a design to set the house on fire, and that the two brothers jointly contrived the scheme to get the insurance money on an overinsured house.

It is evident from the authorities that, given the secret [912]*912nature of conspiracies, they must frequently, if not generally, be proved by circumstantial evidence.

People v. Donnolly, 143 Cal., 398; U. S. v. Sacia, 2 Fed., 754-757; U. S. v. Johnson, 26 Fed., 684; People v. Bentley, 75 Cal., 409; State v. Bingham, 42 W. Va., 234; 24 S. E., 883.

However, even if the two defendants bad not been seen together at a time so closely preceding the clandestine entrance of Desiderio Beltran, and the corpus delicti, revealing a common design, had not been proved, we think the court was still entitled to consider the evidence of the fiscal with respect to the admission or confession of Miguel Beltrán. This is not a case where it is sought to fasten on a defendant connection with a nefarious design by the statement of an accomplice describing the acts and doings of the said defendant. Desiderio Beltrán, from the evidence before the court, was already shown to have had a design to set fire to the house of his brother. Sufficient proof existed demonstrating that Desiderio Beltrán, either by himself or possibly with others, had laid a train to set the house on fire. The evidence up to that point was of such a nature as to be entirely consistent with the cooperation of other persons besides Desi-derio Beltrán.

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56 Cal. 229 (California Supreme Court, 1880)
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People v. Compton
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State v. Bingham
24 S.E. 883 (West Virginia Supreme Court, 1896)
United States v. Johnson
26 F. 682 (U.S. Circuit Court for the Southern District of Georgia, 1885)
United States v. Sacia
2 F. 754 (D. New Jersey, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
18 P.R. 908, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-beltran-prsupreme-1912.