People v. Couret Martínez

89 P.R. 56
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedSeptember 30, 1963
DocketNo. CR-62-160
StatusPublished

This text of 89 P.R. 56 (People v. Couret Martínez) 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. Couret Martínez, 89 P.R. 56 (prsupreme 1963).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Blanco Lugo

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The first two errors assigned by appellant to request the reversal of the sentence imposed on him of 10 to 30 years imprisonment in the penitentiary for murder in the second degree are related to (a) the voluntary character of the confessions offered by him during the prosecuting attorney’s investigation; and (b) the action of the court in permitting, the jury to have, during the deliberations, the written document of his confession. Couret Martinez was prosecuted for having attacked with a stone Leticia Torres, an old lady — : she was an octagenarian who lived in the rural area of Yauco — causing her death.

1. The procedure followed by the trial court in relation to the determination of the voluntary character of the confessions offered by defendant — one oral and the other, written — strictly conformed to the ruling prevailing in this, jurisdiction. People v. Santos, 87 P.R.R. 593 (1963); People [58]*58v. Andrades, 83 P.R.R. 818, 824 (1961); People v. Fournier, 77 P.R.R. 208, 243-244 (1954); People v. Medina, 72 P.R.R. 241 (1951); People v. Otero, 67 P.R.R. 376 (1947) ; People v. Declet, 65 P.R.R. 22 (1945), because when the prosecuting attorney sought to introduce the written confession as evidence, the presiding judge ordered the jury to withdraw, and in its absence he received evidence as to the circumstances under which the testimony was offered. The prosecuting attorney offered the testimony of a number of witnesses to establish the voluntariness of the confession; appellant relied solely on his own testimony. After the introduction of the evidence, the judge — in the absence of the jury— stated that since the evidence was contradictory, it was proper to submit the question to the triers of the facts. It was done immediately, except that before the jury only the testimonies offered by the witnesses for the State were reproduced, for the defendant abstained from testifying. Summing up, the only evidence before the jury, as we shall see, leads to the inevitable conclusion that the confessions offered were voluntary.

Said evidence was to the effect that while appellant was in the company of several persons in a coffee shop near the place of the events, he was asked by a policeman to accompany him, to which he consented; that they went to police headquarters in Yauco, where they stayed for about an hour and a half, until 7:30 p.m.; that then he was taken to Ponce, and from there to Yauco about 11:00 p.m.; that in Ponce he was questioned by Prosecuting Attorney Pérez Regis in the District Hospital; that on returning to Yauco he was given bread and cigarettes; that next day defendant ate breakfast and lunch; that he was again taken to Ponce; that when detective Mercedes Rivera informed him at police headquarters of said city that Mrs. Torres had died, defendant said: “If she died I am going to tell the truth,” and immediately afterwards, he admitted he had struck her with [59]*59a stone, because the victim had insulted him when he attempted to collect some money which she owed him, but he denied he had raped her; that immediately he was taken to the office of the prosecuting attorney and there, after the legal warnings, he narrated the facts in a similar way on examination by Prosecuting Attorney Pérez Regis. By the testimony of the police officers who intervened at this stage of the investigation — Lieutenant Rafael Irizarry, policeman Rómulo Alvarado, and detective Mercedes Rivera — of the stenographers who witnessed the examination and of a newspaper reporter of El Imparcial who was in said prosecuting attorney’s office, it was established that no violence, physical or psychological coercion, threats or promises were used at any time to obtain the confessions.

In the light of the foregoing, it clearly appears that both confessions were voluntary. There is a complete absence of the conditions necessary to support the illegality Of the confessions offered because of their involuntariness. People v. Amador, (decided June 19, 1963); People v. Martínez, 86 P.R.R. 390 (1962); People v. Ramos, 84 P.R.R. 542 (1962); People v. Pérez, 84 P.R.R. 173 (1961); People v. Meléndez, 80 P.R.R. 759 (1958); People v. Fournier, 80 P.R.R. 376 (1958); People v. Fournier, 77 P.R.R. 208 (1954).

2. Contrary to the provisions of § 274 of the Code of Criminal Procedure then in force, 34 L.P.R.A. § 783, the trial court permitted the written confession offered by defendant to go to the jury.1 In so doing it erred, People v. Ramos, supra, but pursuant to the ruling therein — affirmed in People v. Cruz, 87 P.R.R. 124 (1963) and People v. Santos, supra, — this action does not indefectibly entail the reversal of [60]*60the judgment, unless it is shown that the error committed was evidently prejudicial. In Ramos we pointed out that the fact that defendant had admitted orally to several persons the commission of the offense, according to the testimonies presented, cured the error committed because “the written confession could hardly remind the jury more than several testimonies offered at the trial by persons to whom defendant confessed the fact.” And in Cruz, we considered that defendants did not introduce defense evidence and that the prosecution evidence on the facts was very simple and brief, and did not involve problem of conflict. In the present case we have examined the transcript of the evidence of the proceeding — which, incidentally, was held before we rendered our opinion in Ramos — and although it was lengthy, it was simple evidence, and for all purposes, incontrovertible, for the only witness presented by the defense limited himself to placing the defendant until noon in a place distant from the scene of the crime, when the offense occurred after 1:30 p.m. Furthermore, the written confession is an exact reproduction of the terms of the oral confession, which the jury received through the testimony of detective Rivera. Considering the facts as a whole, the error committed is not reversible on said grounds.

3. The incident which gave rise to the third assignment of error occurred as follows:

“Can you say whether you talked to him at any time?
Yes, sir.
What, if anything, did you tell him?
Defense:
Objection. He should not say what the witness told defendant.
Hon. Judge:
What this man told defendant is admitted.
Defense:
Exception.
[61]*61Hon. Judge:
Is it your purpose to discuss any kind of reaction on the part of defendant?
Prosecuting Attorney:
Yes, Your Honor.
Hon. Judge:
It is admitted.
Prosecuting Attorney:
At that time, did defendant tell you anything?

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