People v. Méndez

67 P.R. 772
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 27, 1947
DocketNo. 11989
StatusPublished

This text of 67 P.R. 772 (People v. Méndez) 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. Méndez, 67 P.R. 772 (prsupreme 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Travieso

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Irma Santiago filed, in the Municipal Court of San Juan, a criminal complaint against José Mendez for abandonment of children, and alleged that the defendant was the natural father of Luz Selenia Santiago, her daughter. After a trial was held, judgment was rendered against the defendant, whereupon he appealed to the district court, which found him guilty, sentenced him to three months in jail, and provided that the sentence would be suspended if the defendant furnished the sum of $20 weekly for the support of his child. Feeling aggrieved by that judgment, the defendant took an appeal to this Court on January 31, 1946. On June 3, 1946, [774]*774while the approval of the transcript of evidence was pending, the appellant filed a motion for a new trial in the district court, and alleged that said judgment had been obtained through the perjury and fraud of the complainant, Irma Santiago, and of her foster father Sergio Gálvez Díaz, and as the result of a conspiracy between them and the witnesses Ar cilia Vargas de Juarbe, Luz María Rodríguez, Sixto Figueroa Martínez, and Natalio Robles Córdova. The lower court denied the motion for a new trial because “it considered that it lacked jurisdiction, since, once the case was appealed to the Supreme Court, the District Court of San Juan lost its jurisdiction,” and, furthermore, because “if the judgment entered were set aside in order to render another one, it would be necessary to hold another trial and the grounds alleged by the defendant to annul the judgment are the same reasons which the statute contemplates for the granting of a new trial, to wit: evidence discovered subsequent to the holding of the trial.” From said decision, which denied the motion for a new trial, the defendant has also appealed.

We do not deem it necessary to make a summary of the testimony given by the witnesses introduced by the district attorney and by the defense. The evidence, considered as a whole, is conflicting. The lower court decided the conflict by giving full credit to the evidence for the prosecution. As that evidence is sufficient to justify the judgment, and as it was not shown that the trial judge was moved by passion, prejudice, or partiality in weighing the evidence, the error assigned has not been committed. People v. Bernabe, 63 P.R.R. 385.

In the second and third assignments the defendant urges that error was committed, first, in admitting as evidence an instrument which was said to be a deed of purchase of a house, handwritten by a person who did not appear to testify at the trial, the signature on said document having been made by him; and second, in permitting the [775]*775comparison of the features of such a small child with those of the defendant, in order to show their resemblance.

At the trial an instrument written by Juan Juarbe was admitted in evidence, which document represented the trans1 action carried out by Méndez and Arcilia Vargas de Juarbe in the purchase of a house. Said instrument, as was shown by the evidence for the prosecution, was written in the presence of Méndez, Arcilia Vargas, Irma Santiago, and of the witnesses Sixto Figueroa Martínez and Natalio Eobles Cor-dova, who signed it. Sufficient additional evidence was introduced to show the purchase of the house by the defendant in order to donate it to Irma Santiago. This question has already been decided by this Court in the case of People v. Avilés, 66 P.R.R. 278, where we held that: “The first error assigned was not committed and as to the second, accepting without deciding, that the court erred in admitting in evidence the alleged letters of the defendant, said error was harmless for there was ample additional evidence which the court believed, that tended to prove the same facts referred to in the letters, that is, the relations existing between the defendant and the complainant and her children.”

Eegarding the second part of this assignment, the defendant-appellant is not right either. The evidence for the prosecution amply showed that the defendant had intimate relations with the mother of the minor since October 6, 1944, and as a consequence of said relations the child Luz Selenia Santiago was born on June 30, 1945, that is, nine months less six days from the date, on which said relations started. This evidence was believed by the trial judge, who held that Méndez is the natural father of the above-mentioned child. This being so, the fact that the court permitted the comparison of the features of the girl with those of the defendant to show the resemblance, was not prejudicial to the defendant-appellant, since, as we have said, there was evidence, not merely of the resemblance between the child and the defendant, but that the latter was her natural father and [776]*776it was so believed by the court. Moreover, in the case of People v. Pérez, 55 P.R.R. 655, in which a similar question was considered, we held: “The evidence in regard to the resemblance or non-resemblance between the parent and the child is admissible in proper cases, to be weighed by the trial judge — the court or the jury — as an element to be considered which is not decisive.”

As a fifth assignment it is urged by the defendant-appellant that error was committed in sentencing the defendant to furnish the child Luz Selenia Santiago an allowance of $20 weeldy for support without having any evidence as to the needs of the minor or as to what would be a reasonable amount required for her support. This contention of the defendant-appellant is not correct. Pursuant to the provisions of § 263 of the Penal Code, 1937 ed., the court is empowered to suspend the sentence under such conditions it may deem convenient to the welfare of the child. In the case at bar, the court sentenced the defendant to three month’s in jail, but suspended said sentence under the condition that the defendant provide for his natural daughter Luz Selenia Santiago the sum of $20 weekly. In suspending the sentence under the condition already mentioned, the court did nothing else than exercise its discretion, as authorized by § 263, supra. Prom the transcript of the evidence it appears that Méndez earns a monthly salary of $300; that he owns real property, and in addition has an interest in a hardware store, which shows that the defendant is able to furnish the child with the sum fixed by the court. It has not been shown to us, nor does it appear from the record, that the lower court abused its discretion in fixing the weekly sum of $20, and in the absence of such showing, we consider that it properly exercised its discretionary power. The error assigned has not been committed.

In his second appeal the defendant-appellant alleges as an only assignment, that the court erred in denying his motion to set aside the judgment rendered against him.

[777]*777The defendant-appellant prayed, on Jnne 4, 1946, through the motion for a new trial, that the judgment be set aside and vacated. To this motion there was attached an affidavit of Irma Santiago in which she stated that she had been deflowered on the 6th or 7th of Jnne 1944, by Pedro Posado Ayala. In addition, there was also attached to that motion a certificate by Dr. Emilio Vadi, dated Jnne 23, 1944, to the ■effect that Irma Santiago had been deflowered at no recent date. The lower court denied the motion for a new trial because it lacked jurisdiction, as an appeal in the case was pending before this Court since January 30, 1946.

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Bluebook (online)
67 P.R. 772, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-mendez-prsupreme-1947.