People v. García

98 P.R. 837
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 17, 1970
DocketNo. CR-69-88
StatusPublished

This text of 98 P.R. 837 (People v. García) 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. García, 98 P.R. 837 (prsupreme 1970).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ramírez Bages

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellants were accused of malicious mischief, and all of them, except Ramón García, of assault with intent to commit murder, in agreement and with common accord, and the jury found them guilty of the first offense and of aggravated assault and battery. They were ordered to serve one year in jail for each case except Vigió Rodríguez, who was ordered to serve one year and a half in jail.- These sentences were suspended pursuant to Act No. 259 of April 3, 1946 on suspended sentences.

On appeal they assign that the trial court erred in finding guilty (1) Ramón García, known as Ramón Vélez Trinidad, of the offense of malicious mischief when the evidence for the prosecution was of exculpatory nature as to this appellant; (2) the other appellants, of the offense of aggravated assault and battery, when from the same evidence it appears that if anyone committed any offense, it was assault and battery, in view of the nature of the wounds; (3) appellants Pagán, Ji-ménez, Vigió, and Serrano, of an offense of aggravated assault and battery without having established their guilt beyond a reasonable doubt; (4) appellants, of the offense of malicious mischief without having established, beyond a reasonable doubt, the commission of said offense by appellants; (5) in instructing the jury that Ramón García said “do not hurt him or do not kill him, but take the car away, burn the car,” words which were not subject to proof.

The facts of the case are correctly summarized by the Solicitor General as follows:

[839]*839“Guillermo Pastrana Rodriguez occasionally engaged himself in driving, for pay, one of the American Taxi Cab’s taxis. On the date of the events which occurred in this case a certain taxi-drivers union was on strike and mounted pickets in front of the American Taxi Cab. On the night of June 13, 1966, Pastrana Rodriguez was driving one of the taxis belonging to said Company and at about 9:45 p.m. he picked up passenger Iris Selenia Flores in front of the University of Puerto Rico in Río Piedras and took her, according to her indication, to Eduardo Conde Avenue in the corner of the Cemetery in Villa Palmeras. When he stopped in said place to let the passenger off defendants-appellants arrived in a ‘station wagon’, parked it in front of the taxi, alighted from it and immediately all the defendants-appellants, except Ramón García k/a Ramón Vélez Trinidad, started to beat Pastrana Rodriguez assaulting him with bats, sticks, the fists and the feet. Thus, they put him in the rear seat of the taxi and drove him in the latter to the Isla Verde area, followed by some of the defendants-appellants in the ‘station wagon.’ In that area they poured gasoline on the taxi, set fire to it, destroying it entirely and after beating Pastrana Rodriguez for a second time they left him there unconscious. The latter had to remain confined in Hospital Universitario for three days and for over a month in the Professional Building under the State Insurance Fund.”

1-5. We shall consider jointly the first and last assignments since they refer to appellant Ramón García.

Appellant argues that finding him guilty of malicious mischief does not lie because the evidence showed that he was not present when the other appellants burned the vehicle in Isla Verde area.

He also argues that the trial judge erroneously referred to said appellant’s remarks when the first encounter between the prejudiced party Guillermo Pastrana and the appellants occurred on Eduardo Conde Avenue, in the corner of the Cemetery. The trial judge charged the jury that appellant told the others “do not hurt him or do not kill him, but take the car away, burn the car, destroy the car,” when Pastrana’s testimony on cross-examination was to the effect that appel[840]*840lant said “take the- car away and do- not beat him/' that such instruction seriously impaired appellant and his right to' a fair trial since it was not subject to proof during the trial.

It is true that Pastrana testified that Garcia was, not among the appellants when they poured gasoline over his vehicle and set it-on fire in Isla Verde. But it is not less true that Pastrana'testified that prior' to the events at Eduardo Conde Avenue he knew appellants because they were going “to go on a strike, to mount pickets” at the premises of their employer, Rafael Cerra, owner of a fleet of taxis, one of which Pastrana was driving on the night of the occurrence which gave rise to this action; that there, “sure I saw them there and I know them all”; that “almost always they were together .... Imagine when they were traveling in a bus together”; that when Pastrana stopped the taxi so that the passenger Iris Selenia Flores could alight therefrom on Eduardo Conde Avenue, all the appellants alighted from a station wagon which they parked in front of the taxi and started-to beat him, with sticks, except Garcia, who sometime later told the others, according to Pastrana’s testimony, “take the car away and do not beat him”; that Garcia did not participate in the beating and he did not accompany the other appellants.

It is inferred from the evidence that the gasoline used to burn the taxi driven by Pastrana was taken there in the station wagon where appellants were traveling because as soon as the appellants seized Pastrana in Eduardo Conde Avenue, they drove his taxi followed by the aforementioned station wagon to a solitary passage in Isla Verde and after removing Pastrana to a distance from the taxi appellant Pagán yelled “bring the gasoline” and then all of them, except one, “were pouring the gasoline from cans and gallon containers all over the taxi.” Evidently the gasoline in question had to be transported there in the station wagon where the appellants were traveling and undoubtedly said material was in the station wagon when Garcia arrived in it at Eduardo Conde Avenue [841]*841where he alighted together with the other appellants to approach the taxi driven by Pastrana for the purpose of beating and seizing the latter.

It seems evident from the foregoing that the appellants’ actions responded to a plan previously agreed upon by them in which Garcia participated to the point of being connected with the offense of malicious mischief although he was not physically present. Penal Code, § 36 (33 L.P.R.A. .§ 82); People v. Aponte-González, 83 P.R.R. 491, 499 (1961); People v. Méndez, 39 P.R.R. 841, 843 (1929); People v. Paz, 12 P.R.R. 98, 107 (1907).

As to the error in the instructions to the jury with respect to what García' said during Pastrana’s seizuie on Eduardo Conde Avenue, we believe that appellant’s substantial rights were not impaired. Said instruction was as follows:

“. . . In this case, for example, the evidence shows that one of the defendants, Ramón García, known as Ramón Velez Trinidad, who is charged with malicious mischief, the evidence shows that he was not present there in Isla Verde, where it is alleged that the offense occurred or that the offense of malicious mischief was committed, now, there is evidence,, and you are going to determine whether or not it deserves credit, you are-going to weigh it in the sense that this defendant said there on the first occasion during the occurrence on Eduardo Conde Avenue, more or less, the words, not to hurt him or not to kill him, but take the car aivay, destroy the ear.

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Bluebook (online)
98 P.R. 837, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-garcia-prsupreme-1970.