People v. Reyes Acevedo

100 P.R. 702
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 15, 1972
DocketNo. CR-71-75
StatusPublished

This text of 100 P.R. 702 (People v. Reyes Acevedo) 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. Reyes Acevedo, 100 P.R. 702 (prsupreme 1972).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ramírez Bages

delivered the opinion of the Court.

After having been accused of the offenses of murder in the first degree and of the violation of § 4 of the Weapons Law, appellant Reyes Acevedo was convicted by a unanimous jury of the offense of murder in the second degree (33 L.P.R.A. § 633), and by the trial judge of a violation of the Weapons Law (25 L.P.R.A. § 414). He was sentenced to serve from 10 to 20 years in the penitentiary for the commission of the felony and one year in jail for the misdemeanor.

As a result of the fact that a not guilty verdict was no.t included among the possible verdicts that the trial judge instructed to the jury that it could return, we conclude, relying on the grounds hereinafter stated, that the judgment must be reversed and a new trial ordered.

The facts of the case, summarized, are the following:

Appellant and another individual surnamed Figueroa [705]*705Ramos, on June 5, 1965, at dawn, were in a bar at Villa Prades when one of the young ladies working there asked him to take her and a co-worker to her home in Santurce. Against their will, they took them through Cupey to “El Lago” Hotel at ward San Antonio, Caguas. The girls entered a warehouse to call a taxicab. The hotel’s owner, Carlos Quiñones Estrada, told them that they could not remain in the warehouse. When one of them got out, she heard Figueroa Ramos discussing with Quiñones. She heard a clash. She saw appellant coming out of some bushes. He grabbed her by an arm and told Figueroa: “Come, let us go.” They left without the other girl. She saw that appellant was carrying a pocketknife with a curved blade, about six inches long “of those that close, with a wooden handle.” His left hand was stained with blood. On the way she heard appellant when he said: “I think that I killed him.” They stopped at a business in Hato Rey where appellant drank a beer and Figueroa Ramos drank a shot of rum. She then took a taxi and went to Bolivar Hotel.

Roberto Rivera, an employee of the “El Lago” Hotel, testified that during the heated argument between Figueroa and Quiñones, the latter, upon gesticulating with his arms, accidentally spilled “a beer” which Figueroa had in his hand. After excusing himself because of that, Quiñones went for “another beer” and while handing it to him, appellant “jumped . . . took out a knife from his pant’s back pocket,” held the victim by the hair and “knifed him in the throat and continued knifing him throughout the body and then they went stumbling down a precipice that there is in front of the canteen”; that immediately Figueroa Ramos told defendant: “Quickly, get in the car and let us go.” Quiñones carried a revolver on his waist. He had a license to bear it.

Rafael Santiago Solá, the hotel’s barman, testified that appellant and Figueroa arrived at the hotel with the two young ladies in a commercial bus around four in the morning. Appellant asked for four beers and said that he wanted to [706]*706rent two cabins. One of the girls got into the bar protesting that she was not a prostitute and that she was not going to the cabin. At that instant Quiñones arrived and asked what was happening and said that “they could not be there because they were at the entrance to the bar.” The witness served the four beers. Quiñones remained talking to Figueroa. Later he came to the bar for another beer for Figueroa. Afterwards Roberto Rivera came and between the two of them they picked up Quiñones’ body and took him to a cabin.

According to the pathologist, Quiñones’ body had nine wounds, a six-inch one on the throat. Another one penetrated deeply and approached the heart at the level of the left ventricle of the fourth cavity, causing a severe hemorrhage that caused his death.

The assignments of appellant in support of his appeal are the following:

1. — That the trial court erred in not giving, and on the contrary, denying, instructions as to the offense of voluntary manslaughter.

Appellant argues that there was a heated and loud discussion between appellant and Quiñones who was the one to start the argument; that there was struggling between them; that they had become excited on account of the drinks.

As the Solicitor General correctly says: “. . . for the provocation to reduce the crime of murder to voluntary manslaughter, it must be of such a nature as to cause an ordinary man to lose control of himself and, impelled by such provocation, to act on the spur of the moment, without due reflection and without deliberate intent. People v. Saltari, 53 P.R.R. 850, 866 (1938).”

The evidence establishes that the argument in question was between Quiñones and Figueroa Ramos. Appellant did not participate in it, although he was • close to both of them. The argument could not have been so offensive when on [707]*707spilling “the beer” from Figueroa’s hand while gesticulating during the heat of the discussion, Quiñones excused himself and went to the bar and brought him another beer. There was no provocation on Quiñones’ part toward the appellant to compel the latter to act on the spur of the moment without due reflection and without a deliberate intent.

It was not proper, therefore, to instruct the jury about the offense of voluntary manslaughter. People v. Prados García, 99 P.R.R. 373, 384 (1970).

2. — That the trial court erred in the approach and treatment given to the defense of insanity.

3. — That the jury’s verdict is erroneous inasmuch as it denies to defendant the benefit of reasonable doubt and disregards vigorous technical evidence for the defense which at the same time is that of the court itself.

We will discuss these assignments jointly because they are closely related between themselves.

Appellant’s psychiatric examination having been ordered at his request, for the purpose of deciding whether he could distinguish between right and wrong on the date of the commission of the offenses charged against him, he was examined by a panel of four psychiatrists on several occasions, the first time, more than four months after the events which gave rise to the informations in this case. In its report of November 15, 1966, the panel concluded that at the time of the commission of the offenses “it was most probable” that appellant “could not distinguish between right and wrong,” because when he was examined he was suffering from schizophrenic reaction, paranoid type, of chronic development in remission of symptoms, for which reason it concluded that he could stand trial. On December 5, 1966, the trial court ordered that a copy of this report be sent to the defense and to the prosecuting attorney.

At the request of the prosecuting attorney appellant was submitted to another psychiatric examination by Dr. [708]*708Ramón Señeriz. The defense was denied the names of the witnesses for the prosecution which the prosecuting attorney contemplated to use to prove appellant’s mental soundness. There is nothing in the law imposing that obligation upon the prosecuting attorney. Neither did it lie to read to the jury the report of the psychiatrist panel inasmuch as it had not been admitted in evidence. The experts signing the report were available to the defense and in fact they testified at the latter’s request.

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Bluebook (online)
100 P.R. 702, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-reyes-acevedo-prsupreme-1972.