People v. Reyes Morales

93 P.R. 593
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 13, 1966
DocketNo. 16178
StatusPublished

This text of 93 P.R. 593 (People v. Reyes Morales) 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 Morales, 93 P.R. 593 (prsupreme 1966).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Belaval

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On November 28, 1955 an information against Catalino Reyes Morales was filed in the Superior Court, Arecibo Part, for the crime of murder in the first degree for having poisoned [594]*594his 2-year-old son. On February 24, 1956 the jury brought a verdict' of guilty of murder in the first degree and on February 29, 1956 the judge who sat in the case, Rafael Padró Parés, sentenced defendant-appellant to life imprisonment. Until then defendant-appellant was represented by attorney Diego E. Ramos. On March 2, 1956, when he no longer had professional assistance, defendant-appellant filed a notice of appeal before this Court.

Since then until now the most dramatic effort has been made so that the right of Catalino Reyes Morales to appeal reaches its reasonable effectiveness. The first motion of defendant-appellant, dated June 4, 1956, requesting a 30-day extension for the stenographer of the Arecibo Part to prepare the transcript of evidence for the appeal filed, was denied by the trial judge on the ground that no petition requesting said transcript had been filed. On September 20, 1956 this Court ordered the dismissal of the appeal because of abandonment of action.

On October 31, 1958 defendant-appellant, represented in his renewed effort by Attorney Guillermo S. Pierluisi, requested this Court to reinstate the dismissed petition for appeal alleging then that “in view of the serious nature of the offense for which he was accused and convicted and because of his insolvency and poverty to protect his right to appeal, lacking legal counsel to take care of the incidental steps to perfect the appeal, it was the duty of the court, in the exercise of its supervisory powers, to see that the transcript of evidence be prepared, particularly, in view of the very special circumstance that appellant is in prison, prevented from taking the necessary steps in defense of his rights . . . that his petition is meritorious inasmuch as he is not guilty of the offense charged, that of having poisoned his own two-year-old child ... that Dr. Roberto Vega’s testimony, who testified at the trial,' states that when the autopsy was performed on said minor, there were many [595]*595live worms in the abdomen and in his lungs, something for which he cannot account for considering what- is alleged herein against appellant in the sense that he had poisoned his own son with an insecticide and fungicide which necessarily had to kill said worms . . , that regarding appellant’s rights, he was deprived of the due process of law, as well as of the equal protection of the laws, in violation of Art. II, § 7 of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico.”

The petition having been referred to the Prosecuting Attorney of this Court, at that time Mr. William Fred Santiago, he stated the following: “We are aware of the fact that every litigation must come to an end because otherwise no judicial proceeding would be subject to prosecution, at the same time that the operation of the courts and the administration of justice are hindered, if time for litigations and judicial proceedings could not be delimited .... That we are also aware of the fact that the administration of justice must be done in the interest of man and society, predicaments of its raison d’etre. . . . That we are also aware of the fact that when a defendant appeals on his own right and without legal assistance and counsel, he does so at his own risk taking all the consequences which may stem from it. . . . That notwithstanding the foregoing and by virtue of the ruling of this Court in People v. Santos, 80 P.R.R. 591, 594 (1958) and in spite of the fact that in this case of Santos, because of a concession to the defendant, giving him the benefit of litigating in forma pauperis, which is not presént in the case' at bar, a situation which distinguishes them, it could be understood that the notice of appeal filed by defendant himself could be considered sufficient to comply with the requirement that an order for the transcript of evidence be requested. . . . (That) if it is’ understood that this request should be liberally interpreted, consonant with the-doctrinal context of the Santos-case, supra, in the use of the discretionary power, this Court could set [596]*596aside its order of September 20, 1956 and reinstate the appeal of defendant-petitioner herein. . .

In effect, on December 5, 1958, having considered defendant’s petition and the report of the Prosecuting Attorney of this Court, at that time Mr. William Fred Santiago, we set aside our previous order of September 20, 1956 dismissing the appeal, reinstated the petition for appeal, requested the return of the mandate, and the trial judge was instructed to allow appellant a new term to request the transcript of evidence.

Of very little help to defendant-appellant was our instruction to the trial judge to grant a new term to request the transcript of evidence. With the lapse of time the administrative picture of the court had changed, the stenographer who took down the testimonies was no longer employed in the court and although at first he agreed to accept a reasonable sum offered to him by defendant’s attorney from his own pocket to prepare said transcript, he afterwards asked for twice the amount for the same work. When he was summoned for contempt of court on April 13, 1961, he answered informing of his resignation as record stenographer, that he is working with the Federal Government in the War Department, Division of the National Guard, and alleging that he was under no obligation to comply with the showing of cause because he was not an employee of the judicial branch or of any other branch of the Government of Puerto Rico and because: “There is nothing in the text of the legal provision or in the other laws which regulates the court-stenographer profession to bind the latter to comply with an order for a transcript of evidence once he has resigned his office. ... In our opinion, in case of resignation the stenographer is .in the same position as when he is absent or disabled. In other words, the stenographer, as a court officer, is bound to render his- services free of charge when a party [597]*597is allowed to litigate in forma pauperis. Aybar v. Vara, 48 P.R.R. 176 (1935). That obligation, nevertheless, ceases when he is no longer an officer of the court. . . . But there is more. Section 12 of Art. II of the Constitution of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico provides that neither slavery nor involuntary servitude shall exist except in the latter case as a punishment for crime after the accused has been duly convicted . . . and by § 16 of the same Art. II of the Constitution, the right of every employee to choose his occupation freely and to resign therefrom is recognized, as is his right to equal pay for equal work, to a reasonable minimum salary. ... In view of these constitutional basic rights we have necessarily to conclude that it could not have been the intention of the framers of our fundamental law, that some human beings for reason of having occupied a public office be forced to discharge certain tasks after they have ceased in their employment, by resignation duly accepted, and without receiving remuneration, while others are covered by the protective pall of those constitutional guarantees.”

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93 P.R. 593, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-reyes-morales-prsupreme-1966.