People v. Márquez Rosa

45 P.R. 322
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 11, 1933
DocketNo. 4832
StatusPublished

This text of 45 P.R. 322 (People v. Márquez Rosa) 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. Márquez Rosa, 45 P.R. 322 (prsupreme 1933).

Opinion

Mu. Cheep Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a prosecution for mayhem. The information in its pertinent part reads thus:

“The said Juan Márquez and José Vázquez Acosta, on June 7, 1931, in the Municipality of Las Piedras, within the judicial district of Humaeao, P. R., unlawfully, wilfully, and maliciously assaulted and injured the person of Rafael López de Victoria, Jr., striking him in his left eye with a bat and a piece of board, as a result of which the said Rafael López de Victoria, Jr., has totally and permanently lost the use of his left eye.”

Defendants pleaded not guilty and asked to he tried by a jury. The trial took place on March 24, 1932, and the jury rendered a verdict of guilty. Six days afterward the court rendered judgment sentencing each of the . defendants to two year’s imprisonment in the penitentiary at hard labor. Thereupon the defendants took the present appeal.

The evidence for the prosecution consisted in the testimony of the injured person, of Doctor Bernabe, of a policeman, and of an eyewitness. It tends to prove that the accused committed the offense. The evidence for the defense consisted in the testimony of witnesses who were present at the place of the occurrence.

It tends to prove that the defendants did not assault the person injured. The jury adjusted the conflict against the accused.

Two errors have been assigned in support of the appeal. By the first assignment the instructions of the court to the jury are attacked on five grounds. By the second, it is maintained that the verdict of the jury is contrary to law and the evidence.

Before entering into a discussion of the errors assigned, it seems advisable to remember that the rule is that when the accused desires to object to any part of the instructions delivered by the court to the jury he must draw the atten-[324]*324ti on of the court so that it may have an opportunity to correct them. Otherwise only in cases involving fundamental questions will such an objection be considered on appeal.

The first objection to the instructions is that the words,, “If I am not to blame, why do you hit me? I am not to blame,” attributed by the judge to the injured person, and the following portion of his instructions, to wit: “the policeman on duty who testified having seen the occurrence stated that he saw someone standing in front of the automobile of López de Victoria, and that when he arrived at the place of the occurrence he saw Juan Márquez Eosa there; that Juan Márquez Eosa told him that nothing happened, that he was not hurt nor had he injured Eafael Ló-pez de Victoria,” aré not supported by the evidence and greatly influenced the minds of the jury, to the prejudice of the defendant.

The evidence of the Government was, in short, as follows r

Eafael López de Victoria, Jr., testified: That on June 7, 1931, he was driving his passenger car and “upon arriving at Las Piedras, there was a big fire ... in the house of the Muleros and the cars could not pass, and I backed . . . and stopped.” Policeman Calderón told him that he could pass if he hurried. While passing, á boy got in his way and to avoid killing him he deviated his car, and while he was still behind the steering wheel wondering whether he had injured the boy, there appeared the accused, Juan Márquez Eosa. He struck me in the back with a baseball bat ... I turned intending to run away and he hit me again with the bat here .... above the eye and crushed this . . . He flung the bat again and broke the steering wheel and moved to the front part of the car and dented a fender and went away; . . . and then this gentleman (pointing at the other accused Vázquez) came with a piece of board . . . and he struck and hit me in the same eye with the piece of board ...”

He further testified that when he deviated his car it seems that he collided with a table of Márquez. Tie ex[325]*325plained that he went to the hospital where they gave him first aid. Dr. Pressly attended him for four days. He came to San Juan where Doctor Bernabe rendered him professional services. He can not see anything with the left eye. Before the injury he could see.

Doctor Bernabe, an oculist, testified that he attended López de Victoria who has totally lost the use of his left eye, and that such loss might be due to a blow, which could have caused either -an intercerebral hemorrhage resulting in atrophy of the optic nerve and the conjuctiva, or a fracture of the orbit and pressure on the nerve bringing about the consequent atrophy.

Policeman Calderón was on duty at Las Piedras. He mentioned the fire and having authorized the car of López de Victoria to pass recommending that he do it quickly. López started and “after I had passed the fire, a man by the name of Otilio, I do not remember his surname, appeared from the corner; he was not one of the defendants, and when López saw him he tried to stop and deviated . . . the car stopped there and I saw these two gentlemen strike . . . the passengers of the car, I did not see whom . . . Márquez had a bat . . . José Vázquez the piece of board . . . López was sitting in the driver’s seat ... he had an injury above his left eye ... I took him to the hospital.

On cross-examination by the defense, he stated that the car of López had struck, besides Otilio, the defendant Már-quez, who fell to the ground and sustained bruises in one hand and in a leg. Regarding the defendant Vázquez, he stated that he himself had informed the witness that the ear had not struck him and that he had not done anything to the driver.

Bartolomé Arroyo, one of the passengers in López’ car testified last and stated: “When we were coming out of Las Piedras, policeman Calderón ordered us to stop, as there was a fire in the store of the Muleros, and when the police[326]*326man considered it convenient, he ordered us to pass, and as the car was getting speed, a man left the place of the fire to cross the road and the chauffeur in order to avoid running over him, reduced the speed hut the car eventually struck him, and at that moment the car swerved to the left and struck this gentleman who was sitting on a table with a bat in his hands, and then he took the bat and struck him.” He pointed at the defendant Márquez, and referring to Ló-pez he continued to testify thus: -“He was still in the car, and this gentleman (pointing at José Vázquez) took a piece of board and also struck Rafael López de Victoria two or three times.” Upon being asked, “Did López de Victoria or any of you attack these gentlemen?” he answered, “No, sir, what López de Victoria said was: ‘I am not to blame, why do you strike me so much?’ ”

The full testimony is much more explicit. We have only given a summary of it, while reproducing textually some statements of the witnesses. It can be seen from them that the words uttered by the injured person are similar to those attributed to him by the district judge, and that what happened as to the other question was that the judge confused the names of the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
45 P.R. 322, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-marquez-rosa-prsupreme-1933.