People v. González Alers

66 P.R. 193
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 29, 1946
DocketNo. 11137
StatusPublished

This text of 66 P.R. 193 (People v. González Alers) 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. González Alers, 66 P.R. 193 (prsupreme 1946).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Todd, Je,.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant appeals from a judgment rendered by the District Court of Aguadilla sentencing him to one year in the penitentiary upon being convicted by a jury of the infamous crime against nature. He alleges in his appeal that the lower court erred in permitting witness Bienvenida Bonet Bios, mother of Casiano Bonet, the injured child, five years and a half of age, to testify as to the statements made by the latter and which tended to inculpate the defendant, after said ehilj had already died at the time of the trial; in permitting said witness to testify in order to qualify the child as to his capacity and degree of intelligence and receive his testimony as part of the res gestae, and in overruling the motion for nonsuit and finding the defendant guilty on hearsay evidence, since even under the theory that it was admissible as part of the res gestae, the same was insufficient for a conviction in the absence of some essential fact established by evidence aliunde. The three assignments of error involve pne main question, that is, whether the evidence for the prosecution, the only one presented at the trial, is sufficient to support the conviction. Let us see.

[195]*195 Dr. Luis A. Sánchez testified that he examined the boy Casiano Bonet and fonnd that his rectum was lacerated; that said lacerations may have been caused by any foreign body, specifying a number of them.

Bienvenida Bonet Rios, mother of the child, testified that the latter died several months before the trial; that he was born on January 4,1938 (the occurrence took place, according to the information, on October 25, 1943, so that the child was five years and nine months of age); that she lived with her husband and her children in the ward of Guaniquilla, Aguada; that she knew the defendant who was her neighbor; that on the day of the occurrence, about four or five o’clock in the afternoon, her son Casiano was playing with other children in the house of the defendant; that she saw when the defendant sent her son to ask permission to go swimming with him in the brook and she consented because she trusted .the defendant, who was her neighbor; that she saw when they left for the brook and the defendant prevented another child who wanted to go from accompanying them; that about an hour later her son returned crying, took off his clothing and lay down; that she asked him what had happened and he told her that the defendant had taken hold of him, thrown him to the ground and told him to keep quiet, that he should not say anything because she would spank him, that he offered to cut a piece of cane for him and gave him a penny; that he threw him down on a tin can and then the defendant introduced his member in the rectum; that the clothing of the child was stained with blood and that he had the rectum bruised and completely lacerated; that she then called defendant’s mother and the boy repeated what had happened but the defendant denied it and stated that the boy had fallen ■down, but the boy insisted that he had committed those immoral acts; that on the next day her husband took the child .to the hospital where Dr. Sánchez examined him and later they [196]*196all went to the office of the district attorney where they told the latter what had happened. Is this evidence sufficient?

The testimony of the physician established the fact that some one had committed the crime against nature on the person of the child.

That of the mother has two aspects: The first, direct, as to the facts which she herself saw,, to wit: she saw her child playing at defendant’s house and when the latter sent him to ask permission to go swimming in the brook and when they both left and the defendant prevented the other child from going with them. Also the fact that she saw the physical condition of her child and his clothes immediately after he returned to his home, and she was present when her son insisted before the defendant that he had committed immoral acts with him, which the defendant denied by saying that he had fallen down.

This evidence was clearly admissible. Although circumstantial, it. tended to connect the defendant with the commission of the crime. Was the rest of the mother’s testimony admissible as to what her son told .her? We are of the opinion that under the doctrine of res gestae it was admissible.

These statements were made immediately after the boy’s, return from'the brook, when he was still suffering from the injury caused him and under fear of what might happen to him if, according to the defendant, he should say anything. The fact that the mother had to 'ask the child what was the-matter with him before he narrated the .criminal assault committed against him, does not lessen the spontaneity of his statements if we take into account his age and defendant’s, threats. In People v. Fuentes, 63 P.R.R. 42, we held that the complaint of the prosecutrix to her mother, in response to the latter’s inquiries, five days after the commission of the act, was admissible as corroboration or as part of the res gestae, as the prosecutrix feared the threats of the perpetrator of the assault. We statefi then, and repeat now, that [197]*197whether a rule allowing the admission of this kind of evidence is applied with more or less rigidity depends on the special circumstances of each case. In turn, our holding in the Fuentes case was hut a repetition of the principle set forth by Wigmore, copied in People v. Calventy, 34 P.R.R. 375-377, to the effect that: “It is to be observed that the statements need not be strictly contemporaneous with the exciting cause; they may be subsequent to it, provided there has not been time for the exciting influence to lose it sway and to be dissipated. . . . Furthermore, there can be no definite and fixed limit of time. Each case must depend upon its own circumstances.” Wigmore on Evidence, vol. VI, p. 142, § 1750.

In the Calventy case we copied another paragraph of the same author in the course of which he stated that: “There is a lamentable waste of time by Supreme Courts in here attempting either to create or to respect precedents. Instead of struggling weakly for the impossible, they should decisively insist that every case.be treated upon its own circumstances.They should, if they are able, lift themselves sensibly to the even greater height of leaving the application of the principle absolutely to the determination of the trial court. ...” To such recommendation this court answered, through Mr. Justice Hutchison, as follows:

‘ ‘ We need not speculate as to whether or not it would be entirely safe, or premature or perilous, at this time and in this jurisdiction, to attempt an Elysian flight through the altitudinal zone of the penultimate statement last above quoted. For the present, it will.suffice to say that unless and until an appellant can show an open disregard or plain departure from the principle involved, we shall not be disposed to interfere with the exercise of a sound discretion by the trial judge. ’ ’ ~

This same principle is expressed by Underhill in the fol-' lowing terms: “Whether utterances may be admissible as res gestae, though separated by time or distance from the principal transaction, depends on the circumstances of the [198]*198particular case. Whether evidence is admissible as a part of the res gestae

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Bluebook (online)
66 P.R. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gonzalez-alers-prsupreme-1946.