People v. Fuentes

63 P.R. 42
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedFebruary 4, 1944
DocketNo. 10265
StatusPublished

This text of 63 P.R. 42 (People v. Fuentes) 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. Fuentes, 63 P.R. 42 (prsupreme 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Travieso

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant was convicted of the crime of rape and sentenced to six years imprisonment in the penitentiary. He bases his appeal on ten assignments of error which we will consider in the same order in which they appear in the brief.

1. In the first one he alleges that the lower court erred in dismissing the demurrer based on the allegation that in the information he was charged with the commission of two different crimes, that of “assault to commit rape” and that of “rape.”

The alleged error has not been committed. The information, in its pertinent part, reads thus:

“. . . illegally, voluntarily, maliciously, and criminally assaulted tbe girl under fourteen years of age named . . . with tbe intention of raping her and using force and violence realized with ber an act of sexual intercourse, without tbe consent -and against the will of the aforementioned girl . . . who then and there was not the wife of the defendant.”

[44]*44The assault to commit rape is necessarily included within the crime of rape. It is not possible to impute to a person the commission of the crime of rape when the act has been realized by means of force and violence without imputing at the same time that an attack was directed against the injured person with the intention of raping her. . Similarly when in an information for murder it is stated that the defendant assaulted his victim with the intention aforethought of depriving him of his life and that he shot him with a revolver causing his death, the commission of two crimes is not being imputed to the accused, but only that of murder. And this is so because the attempt to commit any crime merges with the crime attempted to be' committed as soon as the latter is perpetrated. There is no duplicity in the information in this case. People v. Vega, 20 P.R.R. 283, 286; People v. Tyler, 25 Cal. 553; De Beny v. State, 99 Tenn. 208; People v. Pia, 14 C.A. 131, 111 Pac. 105.

2-3. These two assignments- embrace but one question, that is, if the lower court erred in admitting as part of the res gestae the testimony of the mother of the prosecutrix. In order to decide it, it is necessary that we summarize the testimony of the girl and of her mother.

On the date she was raped, the girl was thirteen years of age and lived with her parents and minor brothers in a room of a house in the ward “La Perla” in San Juan. In an adjoining room, separated by a partition, lived the defendant, whom the girl knew by sight. The girl testified that while she was taking a bath; her mother and kid brother being at the time in the back yard, the defendant entered into her room. She tried to scream but defendant covered her mouth, carried her by force to his room, and threw her upon his bed, and threatened her so that she would not scream, by telling her he had a dagger. After describing in detail the act perpetrated on her person by the defendant, the girl continued testifying that the defendant threatened her. by telling her [45]*45that it would he worse for her if she told her parents about it; that the day on which the crime was committed was the first time that the defendant ever talked to her; that defendant lived in his room with a mistress he kept, but that she —the mistress — left due to an argument with him; that after the crime she saw the defendant again from a distance and that he motioned her to keep silent; that «she did not tell anything to her mother until six days after, because she' was afraid of the defendant, as he had threatened her; that her mother was the first person she ever told of what had happened to her.

The mother of the prosecutrix testified that on the day the crime was committed she saw the defendant on the window of his room while she was in the back yard, where she had gone while her- daughter took a bath; that when she returned to the house she found her daughter sitting in a corner reading and looking over some pictures; that on that and the folloiving days she noticed her daughter was sad, but did not see her crying; that on the 6th of July she started to wash some of the girl’s clothing and upon finding it stained with blood she asked her what had happened to her and the girl then told her. The witness related what her daughter had told her in the same terms as those used by the girl at the trial, and added that her daughter, after telling her everything, requested her not to say anything because defendant had threatened her with a dagger.

Dr. Antonio Martinez Alvarez testified-as to-the condition in which he had found the sexual organs of the girl in the examination he had practised on her on July 8; that the girl had been deflowered and that the defloration had taken place within a period of about ten days, being at the time of the examination in process of healing. The age of the girl was established by her certificate of birth and by the testimony of her mother.

[46]*46Irrespective of the statement made by the girl to her mother five days after the commission of the crime, we are of the opinion that the testimony of her mother and that of the physician are sufficient to corroborate the testimony of .the prosecutrix as to the criminal assault perpetrated upon her.

The rule that allows the admission of the complaint of the prosecutrix in corroboration of her testimony or as a part of the res gestae is not an inflexible one. Its application with moro or less rigidity depends on the special circumstances of each case. When, as in the case at bar, the prosecutrix is a girl of only thirteen years of age, legally incapable of consenting to the carnal act realized upon her person, and her silence during the following five days is the direct consequence of the fear awakened in her mind by the threats of the perpetrator of the outrage, the statement made by her to her mother when the latter, upon discovering the stains of blood, knew that something abnormal had occurred to the girl, is legally admissible. 44 Am. Jur., Eape, § 84, p. 955, note 1(1. That the girl kept silent due to fear of the threats made by the defendant at the time of the rape and afterwards is shown by the request of the girl to her mother, after telling her what had happened, not to tell anybody about it as defendant had threatened her with a knife.

4 — 6. The fourth, fifth, and sixth assignments relate to the incident we are going to explain and decide.

• A fter the' presentation of evidence by both parties the defense asked leave to withdraw the jury. The jury having been withdrawn, the defense moved for the peremptory acquittal of the defendant on the ground that no evidence had been presented to prove that the outraged girl was not the wife of the defendant. The court sustained the motion “in the understanding that the jury must be instructed that the evidence is insufficient according to law.” Thereupon the prosecution, alleging that the defense had reopened the case [47]*47when it made the motion after announcing to the court that it had finished with its evidence and was ready to address the jury, asked the court permission to introduce evidence to prove that the prosecutrix was not the wife'of the defendant. The defense objected, the court granted the request, and the defense noted an exception.

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Related

People v. Pia
111 P. 105 (California Court of Appeal, 1910)
Lay v. Neville
25 Cal. 545 (California Supreme Court, 1864)

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Bluebook (online)
63 P.R. 42, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-fuentes-prsupreme-1944.