People v. Muñiz Santos

77 P.R. 808
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJanuary 25, 1955
DocketNo. 15704
StatusPublished

This text of 77 P.R. 808 (People v. Muñiz Santos) 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. Muñiz Santos, 77 P.R. 808 (prsupreme 1955).

Opinion

Me. Justice Pérez Pimentel

delivered de opinion of the Court.

Melitón Muñiz Santos, Etanislao Lugo and fourteen other persons were jointly charged with six crimes of assault with intent to commit murder, in that on or about October 30, 1950, in Peñuelas, Puerto Rico, and when a group of policemen from the Insular Police was going to ward Macaná of that town to execute a search warrant, the aforesaid defendants “acting in concert and in common agreement, unlawfully, wilfully, with malice, premeditation, deliberation and with the resolute and deliberate intent of killing them unlawfully ... by means of ambush and by using incendiary bombs, revolvers and pistols, and deadly weapons, assaulted the aforesaid insular policemen,” wounding six of them.1

They were jointly tried before a jury, which found them all guilty on six charges of assault with intent to commit manslaughter. Melitón Muñiz Santos and Etanislao Lugo took the present appeal.

In the first place, appellants allege that the trial court erred seriously in limiting each and every one of the [810]*810defendants to only six peremptory challenges when they were six different defendants with adverse interests and represented by different attorneys. We do not agree. Section 209 of the Code of Criminal Procedure provides that “When several defendants are tried together they can not sever their challenges, but must join therein.” Since this is a case of a crime not punishable with life imprisonment in the penitentiary, appellants were entitled solidarily to only six peremptory challenges. Section 223 of the Code of Criminal Procedure; People v. McCalla, et al., 8 Cal. 301; Annotation in 136 A.L.R. 450.

The amendment to § 238 of the Code of Criminal Procedure 2 does not help appellants at all. It had no other purpose than to deprive defendant, who is jointly charged with others with having committed a felony, of the right to demand a separate trial and, on the contrary, to provide that all the defendants — in felony as well as misdemeanor cases— should be tried jointly except where the court orders separate trials. The interpretation of a provision identical to §238 of our Code of Criminal Procedure, as amended by the aforesaid Act No. 1 of November 10, 1950, was considered in People v. Dowell, (1928) 204 Cal. 109, cert. den. 278 U. S. 660. It was decided in that case that if the court denied a separate trial, the fact that defendants were compelled to make peremptory challenges collectively in the joint trial did not have the effect of denying defendants their proper quota of challenges, or of unconstitutionally depriving them of any other right. It is clear to us that if the Legislature had the intention of grant[811]*811.ing a defendant the right of separate peremptory challenges when tried jointly with other defendants, it would have so provided by amending the aforesaid § 209. It did not do so. Therefore, it is the law, and such is the will of the Legislature, that when several defendants are tried jointly they can not .make separate challenges, but must join in their challenges. The right of peremptory challenges is a purely legislative privilege which may be regulated by the Legislature in the manner that it deems best. 50 C.J.S. 1070; Estep v. State, 245 S. W. 2d 623; People v. Lobel, 82 N. E. 2d 142; Hayes v. State of Missouri, 120 U. S. 68; State v. Springer, 239 P. 2d 944. Our Legislature has regulated the exercise of that right in the manner indicated above.

Defendants go still further and allege that since they were charged with six crimes in the information, they had a right to six peremptory challenges for each crime. Again we do not agree. The fact that an information contains several counts does not entitle accused to any additional peremptory challenges even though the different counts charge separate and distinct offenses which may be joined in the same information. 50 C.J.S. § 281 (4), p. 1077; 3 Wharton’s Criminal Procedure (10th. ed.) § 1549; State v. Compton, 257 P. 2d 915; People v. Vorio, 2 N.Y.S. 2d 611.

In the second assignment of error the verdict is attacked as being contrary to law. Defendants assume the position that since one of them, Etanislao Lugo, was not present at the place of the occurrence and the other, Melitón Muñiz, arrived at said place after the six members of the police mentioned in the information had been wounded, they could not be convicted of the charge of assault with intent to commit manslaughter. They argue that “. .. common agreement, malice, premeditation, and deliberation are elements which are at play and always present in a case of murder” .but not so in manslaughter which is committed without malice and in heat of passion or a sudden quarrel, and that the absence of defendants from the place of the occurrence fore[812]*812closes the possibility of heat of passion or a sudden quarrel. They conclude that the verdict against Lugo should be one of assault with intent to commit murder or one of acquittal and that the only verdict that lies against Muñiz is aggravated assault or acquittal.

The fallacy of this argument lies in that appellants were not accused of assault with intent to commit manslaughter, but of assault with intent to commit murder. If the People introduced sufficient evidence to warrant a verdict of conviction of the crime charged in the information and assuming that the judge erred in instructing the jury on the lesser offense of assault with intent to commit manslaughter and, as a result, the jury rendered a verdict for the lesser offense, it is not a prejudicial error which would render the verdict void or entail the reversal of the judgment. People v. Blanco, ante, p. 726.

This brings us to consider the third and fourth errors, which relate to the sufficiency of the evidence. This, in general terms and as summarized by the Fiscal of this Court, is as follows:

“The evidence of the prosecution presented at the trial showed that the justice of the peace of Peñúelas issued a search warrant to search the residence of Mrs. Tomasa widow of Muñiz in the ward Macana of said town, (T. E. 163). In order to execute the warrant several policemen on October 30, 1950, about 4:00 and 4:30 a.m. went towards said ward; (T. E. 163, 192, 218, 235, 252, 267, 308, 309) ; that upon arriving at the place known as ‘El Culto’ the policemen alighted from their vehicles and when they started to descend by foot, ‘in a single line’ through a small path which leads to the house about to be searched, defendants, (except the two appellants herein who were not present) who were lying in ambush at the left-hand side of the path, protected by the darkness of the night and a sugar cane plantation, started shooting at the policemen. (T. E. 179, 195, 218, 219, 235, 236, 252, 253, 267, 268, 269, 309, 310, 311.) As a result of those shots the following policemen were wounded: Hipólito Ortiz, Ismael Lugo, José A. Garcia, Enrique Alvarado, Ignacio Ortiz (sic) and Francisco Miranda.
[813]*813“With regard to appellants herein, the evidence of the prosecution tended to show that although they were not at the place of the occurrence and did not participate in the physical consummation of the crime charged, they were its intellectual authors.”

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Related

Hayes v. Missouri
120 U.S. 68 (Supreme Court, 1887)
State v. Springer
239 P.2d 944 (Supreme Court of Kansas, 1952)
State v. Compton
257 P.2d 915 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1953)
People v. Dowell
266 P. 807 (California Supreme Court, 1928)
People v. McCalla
8 Cal. 301 (California Supreme Court, 1857)
People v. Vario
165 Misc. 842 (New York County Courts, 1938)
Estep v. State
245 S.W.2d 623 (Tennessee Supreme Court, 1951)

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77 P.R. 808, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-muniz-santos-prsupreme-1955.