People v. Fernandez

12 P.R. 36
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedFebruary 5, 1907
DocketNo. 63
StatusPublished

This text of 12 P.R. 36 (People v. Fernandez) 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. Fernandez, 12 P.R. 36 (prsupreme 1907).

Opinion

Me. Justice MacLeaey

delivered the opinion of the court.

The proceedings which we have before ns, have been instituted by Felicia Fernández, being represented by the attorney Eafael López Landrón, in order that this court approve, on appeal'and by virtue of the proof offered to that effect, the bill of exceptions and the' statement of facts which the judge, Emilio del Toro, by resolutions of the 16th and 17th of November of last year, refused to approve in the terms in which said documents had been drafted at the time when they were filed. Far from approving the same, he virtually redrafted the bill of exceptions by means of innumerable and unjustified cancellations, omissions, amendments and additions, and he refused to admit the statement of facts and ordered that a new statement of facts be drawn up instead of the same.

[38]*38After an extension of time liad been granted for the presentation of the proof by which, to justify the bill of exceptions, in the form in which it had been filed in the court below, and after a day had been set for the hearing of the said proof which, however, was not presented for reasons which it is not necessary to state, the public prosecutor, by a written motion of the 5th of January last, has requested that the appeal taken by the attorney of the accused, be dismissed for the reason that said attorney has not prosecuted the proper proceedings, in order that this court may revise and approve the bill of exceptions and the statement of facts and, for that purpose, he alleges the following grounds:

“First. That it does not appear from the record that either the judge or the fiscal of the district court has been notified of this proceeding.
“Second. That on the face of the petition it appears that the proceeding itself should fail.”

The fiscal very properly argues that proceedings of this nature are the same in civil and criminal cases, referring to section 218 of the Code of Civil Procedure and section 298 of the Code of Criminal Procedure of Porto Pico, which are substantial copies of section 652 of the Code of Civil Procedure of California. There may be a slight difference1 in the wording of these sections, but they are not material in the consideration of this case. Reference is made by the fiscal also to numerous cases decided by the Supreme Court of California and to two cases decided by the Supreme Court of Massachusetts, and two by the. Supreme Court of Louisiana, and one by the Supreme Court of Ohio. Attention is also called by the fiscal to the fact that in the discussion of this case two distinct questions arise. First, the proceedings to settle a bill of exceptions which has been amended by the district judge, and second, a proceeding to settle a statement of facts which the judge refused to approve.

[39]*39This question came before the Supreme Court of California 49 years ago, in the case of The People v. Galvin, reported in 9 California, pages 19, 20 and 21. The proceeding in this case was dismissed on the district judge certifying to the Supreme Court that he had signed a true bill of exceptions and refused to sign the bill presented by the attorney because it was not in accordance with the facts. The court in the discussion of the case makes the following remarks:

“The power to determine every issue between parties, must be placed somewhere. There must be an end of controversies, or the system must fail to accomplish the very object intended. The district courts are courts of original jurisdiction, of the highest order known to our Constitution. They are courts of grave dignity, and are required to keep a record of all their proceedings, and after they have assumed to do so, can their records be corrected by any other power known to our law? The proceedings are known to these courts, because they take place in their presence. Can a jury be called in to decide as to what occurred in the presence of the court? Juries are used as instruments, to determine facts unknown to the courts. But a court does not require the verdict of a jury to inform it of facts occurring in the presence of the court itself. Courts of such extended jurisdiction and grave responsibility as the district courts must, from the very nature of the case, be trusted as to the fidelity of their own records. It would destroy all confidence in the verity of the records of these courts, were the rule once laid down that their truth could be questioned. We should soon be called upon to direct issues of fact to be tried by a jury, as to whether the statements settled by district judges, in civil cases, contained the whole truth or otherwise. Every criminal, convicted of murder in the first degree, could readily procure a lengthened stay of execution by raising an issue of fact with the district judge.”

The matter was again presented to the Supreme Court of California some two years later, in the case of The People v. Lee, which is reported in 14 California on pages 510-512. The court in that case says that so far as this proceeding is concerned, there is no difference between a bill of exceptions ahd a statement of facts, and that when -the judge cannot be found, the proposed statement of facts or bill of exceptions, [40]*40should be delivered to the clerk of the court for him, aud that ■the clerk should make a note on the document of the date of its receipt and hand it to the judge at the earliest opportunity. In this case a mandamus was issued to the court, first to settle the bill of exceptions, and after it had been settled correctly, to sign it.

Again in 49 California, on page 510, in the case of Gallardo v. The Atlantic and Pacific Telegraph Co., in commenting upon section 652 of the Code, the Supreme Court says:

“It is not the purpose of the section to require tbis court to discharge the duties of the judge of the court below, but only to provide a mode for the settlement of a bill, in case the judge of the court below, upon a proper application therefor, refuses to settle any bill of exceptions, or refuses to settle a bill in accordance with the facts. This court will not proceed to settle a bill which the judge of the court below properly refused to settle.”

The next California case in chronological order to which our attention has been called, is that of The People v. Hewill, reported in 56 California, pages 117-119, in which it is decided that:

“It is not necessary for the defendants in a criminal case, in making a motion for new trial, to have a bill of exceptions or statement prepared beforehand, nor in arguing and submitting their motion without such bill of exceptions or statement do they waive their right to have a bill of exceptions settled after the motion is determined, but they are entitled to a record of so much of the evidence, proceedings and decisions had on the trial as may be necessary to explain the grounds of their motion.”

In the case of The People v. Crane, 60 California, 279, in which the district judge refused to settle the bill of exceptions because it was improperly indorsed with the words “Plaintiff’s proposed statement on appeal,” instead of “Plaintiff’s bill of exceptions,” as should have been done, the court held that there was no substantial difference between a bill of exceptions and a statement on appeal, except that the latter followed the notice of a motion for a new trial.

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23 P. 126 (California Supreme Court, 1890)

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Bluebook (online)
12 P.R. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fernandez-prsupreme-1907.