People v. Morales Romero

100 P.R. 434
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedFebruary 29, 1972
DocketNo. CR-70-75
StatusPublished

This text of 100 P.R. 434 (People v. Morales Romero) 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. Morales Romero, 100 P.R. 434 (prsupreme 1972).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Martín

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The prosecuting attorney filed a complaint against appellant herein for the offense of grand larceny. He was charged that on May 3, 1969, while Felicita Hernández Estrella was waiting for a change of light at Providencia Street, in San-turce, he took from the automobile she was driving a ladies handbag which contained jewels valued at more than $100 and the amount of three hundred thirty-seven dollars belonging to Mrs. Estrella.

Three days after the events which gave rise to appellant’s conviction, and without any information having been filed against him, the prejudiced party identified appellant as the perpetrator of the facts, from among seven or eight photographs which were shown to her. Moments later she personally identified him in a lineup where there were “five or six youngsters.”

At the hearing of the case appellant waived his right to be tried by a jury. The court accepted his waiver. The evidence having been presented, the court found defendant guilty and sentenced him to serve an indeterminate sentence of from three to six years in the penitentiary.

[436]*436h — i

The first error assigned is that the judgment rendered is null and void because the defendant did not waive his right to trial by jury in an express and intelligent manner.

The assignment lacks merit. Appellant accepts that the trial judge extensively explained to him the difference between a trial by jury and a trial by the court without a jury. In addition, the judge asked him several questions to make sure of the voluntariness of the waiver.1

[437]*437There is no doubt that the waiver of the right to a trial by jury should be made by the defendant voluntarily and intelligently. People v. Juarbe de la Rosa, 95 P.R.R. 736 (1968). See, also, People v. Delgado Martínez, 96 P.R.R. 703 (1968); People v. Colón Báez, 96 P.R.R. 618 (1968). That notwithstanding, our decision in the Juarbe de la Rosa case is not applicable to the case at bar. -In said case, contrary to the instant case, the record did not contain any element which would allow the trier to determine the intelligence, spontaneity, and voluntariness of the waiver.

Appellant assigns that it does not appear from the record that the magistrate asked him about his age, education, and about his mental faculties. Although said particulars [438]*438may be useful in order to determine whether the waiver is made voluntarily and intelligently, we do not think that they are indispensable to achieve that end. We already said in People v. Llanos Virella, 97 P.R.R. 91 (1969), that in the absence of circumstances which justify it, the court is not bound to investigate the age, education, and certain background of the defendant.

We understand that the record in the instant case contains sufficient elements of judgment which allowed the trial court to conclude that the same was intelligently, voluntarily, and fully understood.

J — i HH

It is assigned that the evidence does not show that the defendant-appellant is guilty of the offense charged against him beyond reasonable doubt.

We do not agree. The victim testified that while she was waiting for the change of light at Providencia Street, she felt that somebody thrust his hand through the right-hand window of the automobile and took thp handbag she had at her side. That when she saw defendant’s face it became engraved on her memory. That the handbag contained two bracelets, a watch, a ring, two pens, and cash in the amount of $380 which she had collected two days before. That later she went to the police station and advised them of what had happened. That after two or three days she was called to the police station. That there they showed her seven or eight photographs, among which she identified the defendant. Moments later, “from among five or six youngsters” which the police had arrested, she. again identified the defendant. She testified that she had no difficulty in identifying the defendant, since his face had been engraved on her memory.

The.prosecuting attorney waived the remaining evidence because it was cumulative and he made it available for the defense. The defense used the witness Pedro Manuel Hernán-[439]*439dez. This witness, a minor and confined at the time of the trial in the Anexo Miramar para Adultos Jóvenes, testified that he had taken the handbag from Mrs. Estrella’s automobile, that when the light changed he took the handbag and ran with it. That the handbag contained several jewels and about $31. That he sold a watch and gave the rest of the jewels to “El Ratón.” He also said that he had committed this type of act on other occasions, and that the day of the events he had seen the defendant playing basketball.

The testimony of this witness was impeached by the prosecuting attorney on the basis of a sworn statement given before another prosecuting attorney by the same witness, where the latter assigned the commission of the facts to defendant-appellant. The witness tried to explain these contradictions, claiming that the original statement was induced by the blows that the detectives gave him.

The court, in its inherent function to weigh and settle conflicts in the evidence, chose to believe the testimony of the victim and to reject that of the above-mentioned minor. The testimony of the victim believed by the court is sufficient to . find the defendant guilty of the offense charged against him.

I — I H — f 1 — !

The third error assigned is that the judgment rendered in the instant case is void because the defendant-appellant was deprived of his right to legal assistance in the act of identification of the photographs among which appellant’s photograph was. This assignment relies on the doctrine of the ease of United States v. Wade, 388 U.S. 218 (1967). This error was not committed either.

The question raised in the Wade case, supra, in the words of Mr. Justice Brennan, was whether a courtroom identification of an accused at trial is to be excluded from evidence because the accused was exhibited to the witness before trial at a post-indictment lineup conducted for identification pur[440]*440poses, without notice to and in the absence of the accused’s appointed counsel.

The Supreme Court of the United States made a study in that case of the right to counsel in the pretrial stages, and it concludes at p. 227, that the case of Powell v. Alabama, 287 U.S. 45, and succeeding cases2 dealing with this matter require that any pretrial confrontation of the accused should be scrutinized to determine whether the presence of his counsel is necessary to preserve defendant’s basic right to a fair trial. The criterion to determine the need of counsel in pretrial stages is grounded on the actual possibility that a substantial prejudice may be caused to the defendant.

On the basis of the foregoing statements, the Supreme Court of the United States upon examining the facts of the Wade case concludes, at p.

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100 P.R. 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-morales-romero-prsupreme-1972.