People v. Quiles Albino

83 P.R. 61
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 23, 1961
DocketNo. 16288
StatusPublished

This text of 83 P.R. 61 (People v. Quiles Albino) 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. Quiles Albino, 83 P.R. 61 (prsupreme 1961).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Davila

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Has the constitutional clause of due process of law been violated by holding the trial of appellant herein before the same judge who determined probable cause for his arrest? This is the fundamental question raised in the present appeal.

A police officer made a sworn deposition before the trial judge in order to obtain a search warrant for appellant’s home. Supported by this sworn deposition the judge determined the existence of probable cause for the search and issued the corresponding warrant. The preliminary investigation having been executed and in view of the evidence obtained by the prosecuting attorney, the judge determined that there was probable cause for arrest. Finally, the case having been called for trial, the same judge presided the hearing in which defendant was found guilty of a violation of Act No. 220 of May 15, 1948, commonly known as the Bolita Act, and sentenced her to six months’ imprisonment. Such is the state of facts on which appellant bases her contention that her civil rights have been violated upon being deprived of the fair trial to which she is entitled pursuant to the constitutional clause of due process of law.1

[63]*63This is not the first time that we have before our consideration the constitutional problem involved herein. Previously, in In re Marín, 81 P.R.R. 267 (1959), we already had the opportunity to render judgment as to the constitutionality of our own action — in a proceeding for the removal of a judge — which consisted in entertaining a proceeding for removal despite the fact that we had already determined the existence of probable cause for the filing of the complaint.2 We decided that our action does not transgress the safeguards of the due process of law and in doing so we stated the following:

“In short, it is not and has never been the constitutional standard that any prior contact with the evidence, regardless of its scope and effect, disqualifies a judge from deciding subsequently the merits of a controversy. In each situation where that constitutional defect is alleged we must consider the nature of the procedure, the degree of connection between the judge and the evidence, and the probable influence of that connection on his disinterestedness and impartiality, and weigh those factors in the light of the moral integrity and professional discipline essential to any judge worthy of the name.”

[64]*64Pursuant to the rule previously set forth we decided in In re Marín, supra, that under the specific situation of facts and of law which said case presented, we were not transgressing due process of law when entertaining the hearing on the merits of the proceeding for removal. What we stated and decided therein is equally applicable in the case at bar.

Is the impartiality of a judge truly impaired because of the fact that he examined certain sworn statements in which a person is charged with the commission of certain acts which according to law constitute a public offense? Is his impartiality impaired then because he learns of the details of the accusation before the trial or because on the basis of certain sworn statements he makes a determination of probable cause for defendant’s arrest?

In the case before the bench the judge a quo did not examine any witnesses. His participation consisted in examining a sworn deposition to determine whether there was probable cause to issue an order for search, and later another deposition to determine whether there was cause for arrest. Since he examined no witnesses there was no possibility that anything became etched on his mind that might influence a judge such as when he hears and sees a person testifying. His preliminary intervention in the proceedings is confined to the essentially passive participation as a judge, who in a completely impersonal manner examines some documents for purposes of determining whether the same are of sufficient weight to justify the order of arrest. His was not the active and zealous conduct of an accuser invested with the duty of bringing an offender before the court of justice, who devotes himself fully, with the vivacity and dynamic action required of his office of public prosecution, to the task of gathering the necessary evidence to support the charge which he is to file. On the other hand, in its philosophical concept, the absolute fairness of a judge is merely an ideal. This has [65]*65been set forth with typical clearness by Justice Frank in In re J. P. Linahan, 138 F.2d 650, 651 (C.A. 2, 1943) : “Democracy must, indeed, fail unless our courts try cases fairly, and there can be no fair trial before a judge lacking in impartiality and disinterestedness. If, however, ‘bias’ and ‘partiality’ be defined to mean the total absence of preconceptions in the mind of the judge, then no one has ever had a fair trial and no one ever will.” In In re Marín, supra, we referred to the point of view held by Justice Frank and we mentioned several situations wherein a judge who has previous knowledge of the facts and has reached conclusions grounded on the same, takes cognizance of them again in order to render judgment. To that effect we stated the following at p. 278:

“... In civil and criminal procedures there are numerous occasions when the judge who is going to decide the suit on the merits acquires in some way, to a greater or lesser extent, initial knowledge of the facts, or is required to accept a particular appraisal of the pleadings on which to base his determinations. Aside from the elementary question of the ‘image’ that the judge may build upon examining well or poorly drafted allegations, we cite, by way of example, a judge’s rulings on motions for dismissal, petitions for restraining orders, motions for summary judgment and new trial, and his participation in pretrial conferences, in the acts of reconciliation of certain divorce cases, and in the innumerable incidents resulting from the modern methods of discovery of evidence. More so, in administrative as well as in criminal and civil procedure, the action of a judge who retries a case after his judgment in the former trial was reversed, when he had the opportunity to know all the details of the evidence, is not void as unconstitutional.”

A situation of facts similar to that of the case at bar was raised before this Court in People v. Ruiz, 58 P.R.R. 641 (1941), and in deciding the same we stated at pp. 643-44:

“Let us examine the incident on which the second assignment of error is based. It appears from the instructions given by the judge to the jury that the defendant Maximino Piazza [66]*66came to the district jail in the night of the crime, declaring that he had killed Serrano, and that the following day, which was a Sunday, in the morning, Piazza was taken by two detectives to Mr. Todd, Jr., District Judge, because at that moment there was no other judge or judicial officer who could fix the provisional bail and said judge ordered his arrest and fixed bail. It also appears that since the detectives told the judge that Piazza had issued a statement, the judge took the proper oath.
“None of the facts and circumstances that we have related incapacitated Judge Todd, Jr. to try the case, nor imposed on him the obligation to disqualify himself.

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83 P.R. 61, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-quiles-albino-prsupreme-1961.