People v. Pérez Escobar

91 P.R. 9
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedOctober 6, 1964
DocketNo. CR-63-334
StatusPublished

This text of 91 P.R. 9 (People v. Pérez Escobar) 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. Pérez Escobar, 91 P.R. 9 (prsupreme 1964).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Pérez Pimentel

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellant was convicted of driving a motor vehicle under the influence of intoxicating liquor and sentenced to six months in jail, and his driver’s license was suspended for a period of one year.

The brief for appellant, prepared by the attorney designated by this Court to represent him in this appeal and which reveals a painstaking study of the questions raised, assigns the commission of three errors. The first one is as follows:

“The trial court erred in evaluating and weighing the evidence since the latter is conflicting and insufficient to establish the commission of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.”

He maintains that the prosecution evidence is insufficient to establish that defendant was in a drunken condition when he was driving the vehicle. This contention calls for a summary of the evidence.

In the afternoon of December 8, 1961, while policeman Santos García and Sergeant Navarro were patrolling the Isidro Cora housing project of Arroyo, and as they came out in the direction of Morse Street, defendant’s car over[12]*12took them near the comer. As they reached the corner, Alejandro Cora and a girl said to them that “that car going there had collided with the car of her father which was on the street.” According to Cora’s testimony, the vehicle operated by defendant was the one which collided with the automobile belonging to the girl’s father. The police pursued defendant. Policeman Garcia headed the jeep in one direction and the sergeant went on foot in another direction. They found defendant’s vehicle in front of a house in Isidora Cora housing project. About 5 or 10 minutes later, according to the testimony of policeman Garcia, or 15 or 20 minutes, according to the sergeant, they found defendant on the street of the housing project where his vehicle was standing. Garcia testified: “He was completely drunk, he could not hold himself up, staggered, the eyes (sic), he talked incoherently, could hardly talk, was completely drunk.” They took him to police headquarters. He was seen there by Cora, who testified that defendant was “quite drunk,” which means that apparently he was intoxicated and zigzagged as he walked. Defendant refused to have a blood sample taken.

The defense evidence tended to establish that defendant consented to have a urine sample taken, but that he could not void a sufficient amount for analysis. It also tended to show that the defendant was not driving the vehicle either before or after the accident, but that it was operated by another person named Carmelo Rosario, who did not testify at the trial; that after the accident they parked in front of the house of Eduvigis Lebrón in the housing project and the driver of the vehicle waited for the owner of the car because he was not home; that defendant went into the house of Eduvigis Lebrón and each one had three or four beers and a half-pint of rum; that about three-quarters of an hour later they came out and did not find the vehicle nor the driver; that thereupon defendant went to police headquarters [13]*13where he was detained because he was driving a vehicle in a drunken condition; that they took him to the hospital and he refused to have a blood sample taken because he had not committed any offense, that he tried to give a urine sample but the amount voided was insufficient.

In discussing the insufficiency of the evidence, appellant argues: “Since the presumption of continuity established by subd. 3, 32 L.P.R.A. § 1887, cannot arise since it does not apply retrospectively, only defendant’s intoxication at the time of the arrest may be considered as circumstantial evidence of his condition at the time of the accident. See State v. Hamer, 274 N.W. 885 (Iowa 1937). There being no other evidence to buttress that inference, and there being, on the contrary, uncontroverted testimony that defendant had access to liquor, that he imbibed liquor, and also evidence that a substantial period of time elapsed between the accident and the arrest, it is evident that the evidence offered by The People is insufficient to establish that defendant was operating an automobile under the influence of intoxicating liquor.” He maintains further that although the rule in some jurisdictions is that circumstantial evidence should rule out any reasonable hypothesis of defendant’s innocence, the evidence necessary to establish the offense beyond a reasonable doubt both in those jurisdictions and in Puerto Rico is the same.

The doctrine that circumstantial evidence should be not only consistent with defendant’s guilt but also inconsistent with any other reasonable hypothesis of innocence was expressly abandoned in our jurisdiction in deciding the case of People v. Bonilla, 78 P.R.R. 144, 153 (1955). Since then the problem narrows down to a determination of whether the evidence — whether circumstantial or oral — establishes defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. What we must decide in the present case is precisely whether the evidence is sufficient to establish beyond a reasonable doubt that on [14]*14the date stated in the information appellant was driving a motor vehicle under the influence of intoxicating liquor.

It is correct that there is no direct evidence on defendant’s drunken condition at the time of the accident with the exception of the testimony of witness Cora, who when asked on defendant’s condition when he was driving the automobile, answered: “He was quite drunk.” Although such statement would not establish by itself defendant’s drunken condition at that moment, we believe that the other evidence does.

Defendant was arrested from 5 to 20 minutes after the occurrence of the accident. It does not seem that the place where he was arrested was far from the scene of the accident, since the police sergeant headed on foot to that place. At the time of his arrest defendant was completely drunk, could not hold himself up, staggered, talked incoherently, could hardly talk, was completely drunk, according to the testimony of a prosecution witness. At police headquarters to which he was taken he was seen by witness Cora “quite drunk,” in apparent drunken condition. Defendant maintains, however, the he imbibed liquor after the accident and that the evidence in this connection was not controverted. Although it is true that no witness testified that defendant had not imbibed liquor between five and six in the afternoon of that day, namely, after he was seen driving a motor vehicle, it cannot be asserted that the trial judge was for that reason bound to believe that such fact was true and that defendant was telling the truth. In the first place, defendant maintained that he had been taking liquor for about 45 minutes. This would indeed point to the probability of his drunken condition at the time of his arrest; but the fact is that, as to the time elapsed between the accident and the arrest, the defense evidence was controverted by the prosecution evidence which established the lapse of time between 5 and 20 minutes. Defendant denied that he operated the motor vehicle; he denied that he was arrested in [15]*15Isidro Cora housing project and taken to police headquarters; he denied that he kept going and did not stop after the accident. All this evidence is in conflict with the prosecution evidence which undoubtedly was believed, correctly in our opinion, by the trier of facts.

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Bluebook (online)
91 P.R. 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-perez-escobar-prsupreme-1964.