People v. Nieves Santana

57 P.R. 769
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 19, 1940
DocketNo. 8312
StatusPublished

This text of 57 P.R. 769 (People v. Nieves Santana) 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. Nieves Santana, 57 P.R. 769 (prsupreme 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the court.

The District Attorney of Areeibo brought an information against Zoilo Nieves, charging him with the crime of murder in the first degree, committed on the person of Pascual Nieves Camacho, in IJtuado, on June 17, 1937.

The defendant pleaded not guilty and asked for a jury trial. The trial was held in April 1939, and the jury returned a verdict of guilty of- voluntary manslaughter. After a new trial had been requested and refused, the court, in May following, rendered judgment sentencing the defendant to seven years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary at hard labor.

[771]*771Feeling aggrieved by tbat judgment, Zoilo Nieves broug’bt the present appeal, and in bis brief be has assigned ten errors commiited, as he claims, by the court in allowing the district-attorney to change the designation of the offense; in permitting the witness Angelino Alvarez to testify as to the statements made by the deceased several hours before the occurrence; in permitting the witness Juan B. Molina to testify as to immaterial facts; in unduly interfering with the examination of witnesses; in prohibiting the defense from introducing in evidence certain records of proceedings for declaration of heirship and for judicial administration; in refusing to give certain instruction's to the jury, and in giving others; and in denying the motion for a new trial.

It seems advisable to begin by analyzing the evidence which served as a basis for the verdict. After that analysis we will be in a better position to consider and determine the-'assignments of error.

The first witness to testify was Dr. Miguel Peregrina. He made a post-mortem examination of the body of Pascual Nieves. The latter exhibited three bullet wounds: a slight one in the forehead; another, serious but not fatal, in the mouth; and still another which was necessarily fatal, piercing the aorta and the lower lobe of the left lung. The internal hemorrhage must have been a violent one, and death must have ensued one or two minutes after the third wound was inflicted.

He stated that he had been called to treat a lady who was supposed to have swallowed poison. He arrived at the house when there was a very great excitement. He went into the room, examined the patient, and ordered that she be removed to the hospital, as he realized the gravity of the case. That was at about eleven o’clock in the evening of June 16, 1937. At the hospital he attended her until half past two or three o’clock in the morning. When he came out of the room he met the young man Armindo Nieves, who asked him whether his mother was out of danger. He answered that he re[772]*772gretted to tell liim that it was a hopeless case, and then entered his office in order to give some instructions to the nurse. Two or three minutes afterward he heard several shots, hut he was unable to determine how many or Whether the intervals between them were of the same duration. Shortly thereafter the janitor came in and handed to him two revolvers which he kept. He shut the door. ITe had the police called. Pascual Nieves, who, he thinks was the husband ot the patient, asked him to try to save her, and not to worry about the money — as if wishing to encourage him. Some of the relatives went to the hospital; among them he saw the defendant at first; later he did not see him; the defendant was not the one who had asked him about the condition of the patient.

Casimira Nieves, known as Camila, married, twenty-one years of age, a sister of the defendant, upon being called to testify, stated that she had learned of the death of her parents through the newspapers, while she was in New York. She came to Puerto Kico and went to live in the house that had belonged to her parents, where some of her brothers were, including the defendant. Next day while she was in her room praying for her deceased mother, her brother the defendant, lold her “that when my mother took poison he called my brother Armindo and told him that if the latter did not kill my father he would do it himself, and said that if my father killed him, he would kill my father . . . "When Zoilo said this, Mindo told him that if my father killed him, Mindo, then Zoilo should kill my father, and as they agreed to this, Mindo went on to the place and he stayed behind but watching the other’s steps, and when Mindo entered the place where my father was, giving him a revolver, he arrived in a little while, and when he arrived he found his father on top of Armindo, about to strike him, and as my father was a strong man, with one hand he seized my father’s hand as he struck and with the other he shot at him and killed him; that the last shot was the one that killed him and that he had fired it.

[773]*773Upon being cross-examined as to whether she had any quarrel with her brother, the defendant, over a small café, she answered in the negative; as to whether she had any interest in having her brother convicted so that her hereditary share should be increased, she also answered in the negative;when asked to explain to the jury why she had waited over five months after her brother’s confession before reporting it to the district attorney, she answered: '“Because he did not want me to tell the truth, and he was always quarreling with me ... he threatened to strike me, as he did not wish that I should tell the truth, and I could not permit this, and I did it and told the truth”; it was insisted that she should explain how “was it possible that a man who was ready to object, and did object tenaciously, even to the extent of threatening and striking her, if she went to denounce him, should spontaneously make those statements,” and the witness answered: “He went out of the house, and then I came here and told the district attorney, and when I returned to my house he was not there; and he became angry and he was going to beat me and when he was about to strike me the chief heard the words: I killed my father, and just like I killed my father I will kill you between now and this afternoon. ’ ’

The defense stated that the witness had not understood its question, and asked it anew. The witness answered, reasserting that the defendant had made the confession. The defense insisted again, and thereupon the court intervened, thus: “I think that is rather argumentative, as she could not explain that attitude of his. She could testify as to facts, and if the latter are improbable she might explain them, by her comments; but she could not explain the motives which he had.” Roberto Edwin Nieves was the next witness. He is a boy twelve years of age. He stated that when his poisoned mother was taken to the hospital, he went there with his father and while both of them were in the room with her, his brother Mindo came in'“with two revolvers, and he gave one to his father and said: 'Take this and defend yourself,’ [774]*774and father grabbed the revolver and when he opened it the cartridges fell down, and then Mindo fired two shots. I got under the bed. I continued to look and saw my father jump on him, and Mindo fired another shot and missed and I went out of the hospital. ’ ’ He saw the defendant as the latter came riding on a bicycle near the hospital, and after seeing him he heard another shot.

Angelinp.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

People v. Sprague
53 Cal. 491 (California Supreme Court, 1879)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 P.R. 769, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-nieves-santana-prsupreme-1940.