People v. Millán

35 P.R. 817
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 29, 1926
DocketNo. 2545
StatusPublished

This text of 35 P.R. 817 (People v. Millán) 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. Millán, 35 P.R. 817 (prsupreme 1926).

Opinion

Me. Justice Aldrey

delivered the opinion of the court.

Luis Millán was charged with having raped Elisa Velez, a girl under 14 years of age who was not his wife. It appears from the evidence that at about nine o’clock in the' evening of one of the days of the month of November, 1923, the girl Elisa Velez left the home of her godmother, Bosa [818]*818Marrero, where she was living, because the latter had scolded her, intending to go to the honse of an aunt of hers. As she was walking along’ a country road of a ward of Lares she was met by Luis Millán, Francisco Acevedo, Ade-lis Hernández and Lnis Acevedo, who were traveling on a truck, and they took her up with them. When the truck reached the place of its destination a little later Luis Millán let the girl down and carried her off to a small pasture where he had carnal contact with her. Thereafter Millán took the girl back to the truck, where he left her and then went away. That night Francisco Acevedo and Adelis Her-nández had carnal intercourse with Elisa Velez on the truck.

Luis Millán was convicted of the crime of rape, whereupon he took this appeal from the judgment and from the ruling denying him a new trial, alleging in support of his appeal that the court erred in allowing the district attorney to put leading questions to Elisa Vélez on direct examination at the trial in violation of section 153 of the Law of Evidence. But as the appellant does not point out those questions, we shall not search the record for such questions as he may consider leading. The only alleged leading question asked witness Adelis Hernández was whether “she was willing to go.” That witness was then testifying that Luis Millán assisted the girl down from the truck and took her to a small pasture, and although the question may be leading, it is not prejudicial to the accused, for as he was charged with rape on the ground that the girl was under 14 years of age, it was immaterial to the case whether or not the girl was willing to go with him.

The second assignment is that the trial court erred in allowing witness Domingo Quiles to repeat to the jury certain remarks made by Francisco Acevedo. These remarks were that . . . (consisting, in the opinion of the translator, of unprintable vulgarities which the degenerate speaker considered humorous) and were made, said the witness, by Francisco Acevedo in a loud tone of voice when [819]*819the accused was near and could hear them, adding that the accused did hear them and smiled.

The appellant contends that the remarks made by Acevedo and repeated by Quiles were not admissible, because they did not refer to him and were not made in his immediate presence. However, the record shows that the remarks were made by Acevedo in a loud tone of voice; that the appellant was near; that he could hear them, and that he smiled when they were made; consequently it can not be held that Acevedo’s remarks were not made in the appellant’s immediate presence. It is true that the speaker used the plural' and the words did not refer to himself alone, but Millán made no objection thereto, and, on the contrary, smiled, which may be taken as an acquiescence. And the said remarks made by Acevedo, who was also accused and convicted of raping the girl, were admissible also because they were not lacking in connection with the appellant’s demeanor when they were made by Acevedo. In the case of People v. Mallon, 103 Cal. 514, where two witnesses were permitted to testify to certain statements made by Foran, who had been accused with Mallon of an attempt to commit robbery, the court held as follows:

“This testimony, standing by itself and without any connection with the conduct of appellant when the alleged statements were made, would, no doubt, have been clearly hearsay and inadmissible. But it is established law that while a statement made in the presence of the accused is not admissible as being itself evidence of any fact narrated in such statement it is admissible, primarily, for the purpose of showing that the accused acquiesced in the statement either by express assent, or by silence, or by such conduct as fairly implied assent. (People v. McCrea, 32 Cal. 98; People v. Estrado, 49 Cal. 171.) Such testimony should, no doubt, be received guardedly; if not followed by any proof of the conduct of the accused it should be stricken out; and if requested by the defendant’s counsel (which was not done in the case at bar) the court should instruct the jury that such statement was limited as evidence to the purpose above indicated. But it is not error to admit such statements in the first instance. In the case at bar we think that it clearly appears what [820]*820the conduct of the defendant was when Poran was making his statements, and that he did not deny them. During the testimony of Crockett as to said statements, and after an objection had been made by defendant’s counsel, the court said: 'I assume that what the defendant at bar said and did in the course of that conversation will come out’; and the court then asked the witness: ‘What did the defendant here on trial — what did he say?’ to which the witness responded: ‘He didn’t say anything when he told him that,’ and the witness afterwards said: ‘We were all together in one group. The defendant, Mallon, said nothing.’ The witness Donovan, after testifying to certain statements made by Poran to defendant, said that ‘he didn’t answer at all.’ And, further, that when the witness asked the defendant, ‘you were there?’ he replied: !Do you suppose I was a damn fool to tell you I was there ? ’ ”

Another of the appellant’s contentions is that as there was no positive proof that the birth of Elisa Velez was not recorded in the civil registry of Lares, because of the insufficiency of the certificate of the registry to the effect that it was not recorded and also of the certificate of the parish priest of Lares to the effect that a record of her baptism did not appear in the parish books, which the appellant considers the best evidence of the age of the girl according to section 320 of the Civil Code, the testimony of witnesses as secondary evidence to prove the age of the girl should not have been admitted. However, in the case of People v. Díaz, 19 P.R.R. 497, a case of voluntary manslaughter, the same question was raised and the Supreme Court held that the testimony of the physicians who saw the corpse of the victim was the best evidence of his death independently of any certificate of the civil registry. In the case of People v. Ruiz, 31 P.R.R. 297, a case of assault and batlery, that same point was raised and we held that section 320 of the Civil Code was not applicable to cases of that nature and that the testimony of witnesses was admissible to prove that the accused was over 21 years of age. In Louisiana, where there is a Civil Code like ours, in the case of Slate v. Romero, 117 La. 1603, 42 So. 482, involving a [821]*821dime committed with a woman under 16 years of age, it is said in the syllabus that the testimony of witnesses as to the age of the woman is not secondary evidence, and that it is not snch secondary evidence because of the fact that there may exist a record of her baptism in some registry. In view of what has been stated, we conclude that the assignment of error is without merit and that the testimony of witnesses was sufficient to show that the .victim in this case was under the the age of 14 years when the crime charged against the appellant was committed. Dr.

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Related

People v. McCrea
32 Cal. 98 (California Supreme Court, 1867)
People V. Estrado
49 Cal. 171 (California Supreme Court, 1874)
People v. Mallon
37 P. 512 (California Supreme Court, 1894)
State v. Romero
42 So. 482 (Supreme Court of Louisiana, 1906)

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Bluebook (online)
35 P.R. 817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-millan-prsupreme-1926.