People v. Morales Silva

99 P.R. 464
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 16, 1970
DocketNo. CR-68-224
StatusPublished

This text of 99 P.R. 464 (People v. Morales Silva) 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 Silva, 99 P.R. 464 (prsupreme 1970).

Opinion

per curiam :

Appellant having been convicted' of the offenses of involuntary manslaughter (33 L.P.R.A. § 635 (2)), and of driving in a state of intoxication (9 L.P.R.A. § 1041), challenges the judgments rendered in this case which punished him to serve the sentences of one year in jail plus the suspension of his driver’s license for a term of two years as of the date when his jail term ends, and three months in jail plus the suspension of his driver’s license for a year, to be served concurrently.

At the threshold it is necessary to indicate that the defense did not object to the instructions of the trial judge. When he was asked whether he had any to offer he answered no.

A. — Appellant assigns that the trial court erred

1. — In not instructing about sudden emergency.

The evidence clearly shows that while appellant was driving a motor vehicle along Baldorioty de Castro Avenue at a rate of about 40 miles per hour, in a state of intoxication, he swerved towards a safety isle which divides the opposite traffic lanes and ran over two girls. The automobile, after colliding against and bending a traffic sign, overturned into the contiguous lane in the opposite direction, unfortunately falling over one of said girls causing her death.

Appellant testified that when he arrived at Aponte Street a girl suddenly appeared in his way and he applied the brakes and turned the steering wheel toward the left side, towards the fence, and lost control there and turned upside down “with the wheels up, the car remaining in this manner on the other avenue”; that said avenue was somewhat dark, did not have much visibility. On cross-examination he admitted that near the place there were about 12 mercury lampposts. Although he said that he was going along the left lane of Baldo-rioty de Castro Avenue towards the airport, he admitted that [467]*467near there, at Tapia Street, he had to turn to the right to go up Puerto Rico Avenue.

Appellant’s testimony that a girl “suddenly appeared in his way” is in conflict with the reality which is that when the accident occurred the girls had already crossed the traffic lanes of Baldorioty de Castro Avenue in the direction from San Juan towards the airport, along the place where appellant alleges he was going, and they were on the grass in the safety isle walking towards a path which would lead them from there to cross the lanes in the direction from the airport towards San Juan.

Therefore, the evidence did not justify any instruction whatsoever about sudden emergency occasioned because one of the girls “suddenly appeared in his way.”

2. — In not charging the jury that the prosecuting attorney had to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that defendant’s intoxication or drunkenness was the cause of the accident.

In support of this assignment appellant only offers us two citations from American Jurisprudence. The prosecuting attorney does not discuss it.

Such instruction was not necessary as the judge included in his extensive instructions the definition of the offense, the fact that lack of circumspection while driving a motor vehicle constitutes negligence, a term which he also defined, and that if the jurors understood that there was negligence on appellant’s part and that this was the proximate cause of the accident which brought as a result the death of the victim, it was the jury’s duty, if they were satisfied that that has been established beyond any reasonable doubt, to return a verdict of guilty.

3. — In not giving instructions about the term of proximate cause.

Neither appellant nor the Solicitor General discussed this assignment. Our reading of the record convinces us that in effect, although without defining what is proximate cause, [468]*468the instructions indicate the necessary standards about this issue in discussing the possible negligence of one or more of the girls.

4. — In charging the jury that defendant had to establish and that he had the burden of proof to show that the negligence of the victim was the only cause of the accident.

The instruction in question was not given in those terms. On the contrary the trial court correctly charged, concerning the victim’s negligence, that although the evidence should establish the existence of contributory negligence as the proximate cause of the accident, “[Tjhis does not mean, ladies and gentlemen of the Jury, in any manner that when defendant alleges the defense that the accident was due to the victim’s negligence or to a third person’s negligence and does not establish that defense to your satisfaction, you have, then, the obligation of finding defendant guilty, because then, you would be requiring defendant to establish his innocence beyond reasonable doubt, when it is the prosecuting attorney in representation of the People of Puerto Rico in this case, as in any other criminal cause, upon whom it is incumbent to establish defendant’s guilt beyond reasonable doubt.”

5. — In its instructions about speed.

After the trial judge indicated to the jury that the maximum speed at the place of the accident was 25 miles per hour, as there was no sign allowing a greater one, he informed them that the reasonable speed at which a vehicle should be driven may vary according to the circumstances, giving as an example, visibility and the amount of vehicles or pedestrians that is, “that everything depends on the specific circumstances present at the moment and place of the accident.”

The judge did not give specific instructions about slowing down on approaching an intersection but he read to the jury the provisions about speed of the Vehicle and Traffic Law (9 [469]*469L.P.R.A. § 841) where the slowing down on approaching an intersection, rail crossing, curve, and other specific circumstances is provided.

6. — About the degree of negligence required.

Appellant argues that “in involuntary manslaughter gross negligence should also be established.” We do not agree. The statutory definition of the offense does not require it. We have already held that if the evidence establishes that the death occurred as a result of the negligent driving of a motor vehicle an offense of involuntary manslaughter has been committed. People v. Olmo, 89 P.R.R. 80, 83 (1963).

B. — Appellant assigns to us, also, that the trial court erred in allowing evidence of appellant’s statements before some policemen and other persons in presence of the police.

This assignment is based on the testimony of eyewitness Orestes Calzada to the effect that when he arrived at the scene of the events he heard appellant say that “he was the one driving that car”; that he said this at the time when he was asking where there was a public telephone, to which the witness answered that he did not know but that he could use the one in his house. At that moment the nearest policeman was Policeman Rivas who was “at the other side of the avenue.” Appellant then, went towards where said policeman was and informed him that he was going to Orestes Calzada’s house to use his telephone. Rivas as well as Calzada accompanied him during this act.

The foregoing evidence was clearly admissible for the case had not reached a critical stage of the investigation nor was appellant under police custody and at that time he was not considered as a suspect so that the doctrine which we established in

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99 P.R. 464, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-morales-silva-prsupreme-1970.