People v. Ortiz

42 P.R. 130
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedApril 21, 1931
DocketNo. 4238
StatusPublished

This text of 42 P.R. 130 (People v. Ortiz) 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. Ortiz, 42 P.R. 130 (prsupreme 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hutchisow

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Mercedes Ortiz was convicted of voluntary manslaughter and says that the district judge erred in admitting the testimony of the district chief of police as to a certain confession or certain admissions made in the course of a preliminary investigation.

The gist of the argument is: That whether or not a confession was voluntary is a question for the court, not for the jury; that in the instant case there was no preliminary examination concerning the character of the confession; and that the testimony upon this point was given in the presence of the jury.

The.first question and answer as to any admission or confession were as follows:

“Q. — If Mercedes Ortiz of Ms own accord made any statement to yon, please tell tbe gentlemen of tbe jury tbe statements wMch be made.
A. — On tbe night of tbe 6th or at dawn on tbe 7th of January of this year, in the office of Dr. Agustín Sánchez in Isabela, Eugenio Gra jales being on tbe operating table, Mercedes Ortiz was in tbe same office with a wound on one arm. There I showed him two knives which bad been seized by tbe policemen who went to tbe ward of Bajura with tbe idea of investigating a certain bloody crime that bad been committed in said ward of Bajura of Isabela; I asked him which of tbe two knives belonged to Mm.”

The defense objected, and moved to strike the question and answer. The district attorney stated that, if Ortiz was speaking freely and spontaneously to the public when his narrative of what had occurred was interrupted by the chief of police, the evidence was admissible. The district judge remarked that this should appear from the testimony of the witness. The defense said that the district attorney was leading the witness by making statements that the witness had not made and suggesting to him what he should say. In reply to a question from the bench, the witness said: that Ortiz and Gra jales, both of whom had been wounded, [133]*133were in the office of Dr. Sánchez and there was a crowd present; that Ortiz was telling the crowd how he and Or a jales had wounded each other; that when witness mentioned the fact that Grajales’ knife had been fonnd in the possession of Ortiz, and Ortiz’s knife in the possession of Grajales, Ortiz explained that Grajales’ knife, with which he had been wonnded, remained in the wound until he arrived at his home; and that Ortiz identified as his own the knife found in the possession of Grajales.

On cross-examination it transpired that Ortiz made his statement in the office of Dr. Sánchez on the night of the quarrel, that he had not been taken to police headquarters, that the two knives had been delivered to the chief of police in the office of Dr. Sánchez, and that there were fifteen or twenty people present at the time of the conversation between Ortiz and the chief of police.

The voluntary character of the statement attributed to Ortiz was fairly well established by the foregoing circumstances, notwithstanding the unusual manner in which they were brought to light. Whether or not the district judge erred in admitting the testimony on this point without further preliminary investigation, and in the absence of objection at the time of such admission, is not now important. The same may be said of such preliminary investigation as was made in the presence of the jury. The better practice however is to permit the jury to retire.

Appellant also says that the court erred in admitting a dying declaration attributed to Grajales.

After testifying to the dying condition of Grajales and to circumstances indicative of such condition, the district chief of police said that he told Grajales of his condition and asked him to explain what had occurred. The defense objected on the ground that no sufficient basis for the admission of the dying declaration had been established. The district judge asked some further questions as to Grajales’ [134]*134condition and then announced that the statement made by Grajales would be admitted. The defense again objected on the same ground as before. In response to a request by the judge for more specific reasons, counsel explained that the prosecution must first show that the wounded man was aware of his condition and that he made his declaration in the belief that he was about to die. The district attorney answered that the witness had already testified to that effect. In this he was mistaken. The court then overruled the objection. This, of course, was error.

When the witness began his narrative of what Grajales had said, namely, that on the night in question he had attended a wake and that he and Ortiz had left together, the judge interrupted with an inquiry as to whether this was the first statement that Grajales had made. The witness answered in the affirmative, but the district attorney then asked whether Grajales, before telling his story, had said anything about his physical condition. The answer was that when witness told Grajales of his serious condition he replied that he knew it, that he knew he would never recover. This was followed by a leading question in the form of a conclusion and an affirmative answer to the effect that Grajales realized that he was about to die.

It is unfortunate that counsel for the defense in a criminal case should be required to inform the court and the district attorney in the presence of a witness for the prosecution as to what that witness must state before a dying declaration can be admitted in evidence. A foundation for the admission of that declaration was finally laid, however, and the haphazard fashion in which it was laid does not, without more, constitute a sufficient ground for reversal.

Next appellant says that the court erred in admitting the testimony of a witness whose name did not appear among those listed on the information, and in permitting the district attorney to take the stand and. to explain in the presence of [135]*135the jury why the name of such witness had not been included in the list. This question as developed in the brief for appellant does not demand serious consideration.

Another contention is that the court erred in permitting a policeman to testify to statements made by the accused without first showing that these statements were voluntary. The voluntary character of these admissions was clearly established before the witness was permitted to state what •the accused had said. They were made by the accused in his own home on arrival of the policeman shortly after the fight. The accused was not under arrest. The fact that he was speaking to a policeman or in response to questions asked by the policeman did not render his statements inadmissible as evidence.

Appellant also complains of certain instructions. One objection is that the judge assumed that the fact of a quarrel and the use therein of two daggers had been established by the evidence.

The judge said in part:

“The fiscal, in order to sustain this complaint, presented two daggers which were admitted in evidence as the instruments used by the victim and the accused in the quarrel; he also examined several witnesses and the theory of their testimony, that is, what it tended to show, is more or less as follows: — ”

This was the preface to a résumé of the evidence for the prosecution. After setting forth this evidence the judge stated the theory of the defense and summed up the evidence in support thereof.

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 P.R. 130, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-ortiz-prsupreme-1931.