People v. Sabater Mangual

95 P.R. 586
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 14, 1967
DocketNo. CR-66-305
StatusPublished

This text of 95 P.R. 586 (People v. Sabater Mangual) 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. Sabater Mangual, 95 P.R. 586 (prsupreme 1967).

Opinions

PER curiam:

Appellant, Luz María Sabater Mangual, was prosecuted and convicted of the offense of grand larceny, subsequent offense. She was sentenced to serve from 10 to 15 years in the penitentiary.

In support of her appeal she assigns that:

(1) The trial court committed error in refusing to accept the verdict of guilty of petit larceny returned by the jury.

The evidence for the prosecution was to the effect that appellant asked the victim for a dollar while the latter was in a cafetín. When he drew out his wallet containing $25, appellant snatched it from him and fled with it, the empty wallet appearing later on the patio of the cafetín. The evidence of the defense was alibi.

The jury returned a verdict of petit larceny. When the trial judge indicated that he did not remember “having said possibility of verdicts,” the prosecuting attorney requested that the jury be charged with a new instruction on the possible verdicts and an opportunity to retire to deliberate. Then, said judge informed that “So there were only two possibilities of verdict, guilty of grand larceny or not guilty.” He ordered the lady and gentlemen of the jury to retire again for deliberation and that a new verdict slip be prepared. At the request of the prosecuting attorney, the trial court instructed the jury thus:

“Larceny is the act of taking with criminal intent, personal or movable property belonging to another person. Larceny is divided into two degrees: the first is termed Grand Larceny and the second, Petit Larceny. Grand Larceny is the larceny committed in either of the following cases: when the value of the property taken is of one hundred dollars or more; and when the property is taken from the person, even if it is one cent.
“The evidence of the defense was that of alibi. If you believe the evidence for the defense, you have to acquit the defendant. If you give credit to the evidence for the prosecution, you must return a verdict of guilty of Grand Larceny. There is no other possibility on the basis of the evidence.
[588]*588„■ “Therefore, meditate again and bring the verdict which corresponds to tlie evidence and to law.
U
“The theory of alibi, as I had already ■ told • you, is that the fact of the presence of the defendant, male- or -female, as in this case, in a different place, is essentially inconsistent with the presence of the defendant' in the scene of the crime on the date and time alleged'in the information.- The defense of alibi does not require the; absolute impossibility that the defendant would be present at the place of the occurrence, but- only a great improbability that it was so. .
. “The defendant does not have to establish the alibi beyond a reasonable doubt. If she establishes with her evidence a reasonable and well-founded doubt of' her alibi she should be acquitted, for, requiring her to establish it beyond a reasonable doubt is tantamount to requiring her to establish her innocence.
“You have here two possible verdicts: guilty of grand.,larceny or no.t guilty and acquit.her.
.“In other words: if you believe that this lady was not at the place of the óccúrrence, but that she was home sleeping with her husband and not as it is alleged in the information, your verdict must be of acquittal. If oh the contrary you' consider that these alleged facts were committed, and that she .took the wallet from .don Pedro Vega Santos when he was- going .to give her some, money, then the offense of Grand Larceny .was committed.
“Therefore, you shall return to the deliberation room. The Marshal shall again take the oath before the court!”

After haying deliberated again, the jury rendered a. verdict of grand larceny.

Appellant argues that pursuant-to Rules 1471-and 148 of the Rulés of Criminal Procedure, the verdict of petit [589]*589larceny is tantamount to a verdict of acquittal for the greater offense,. although the verdict does not conform-to the evidence.

■ We do not agree. The original verdict was erroneous because it is contrary to the evidence and to law, for which the trial judge acted correctly in not accepting it and in ordering the jury to deliberate again after charging it in the manner previously indicated. Rule 148 of the Rules of Criminal Procedure.2 Cf. People v. Rodríguez, 69 P.R.R. 507 (1949).

■ We agree with the Solicitor General in that:

“In the instant case the jury rendered originally a verdict of guilty, which was repugnant to law. The cases of Pérez [84 P.R.R. 173] and Green [Green v. U.S., 335 U.S. 184] supra, are not applicable because what these cases decide is that ‘where an accused of murder in the first degree is convicted of murder in the second' degree and afterwards at his request, the verdict is -set aside and a new trial ordered, the accused cannot be convicted of the original crime of murder in the first degree and that a conviction for this crime at the new trial violates the principle of former jeopardy.’
. “Further, nor can it be considered in this case a verdict of guilty for petit larceny as a verdict of acquittal of the offense of grand larceny for the purposes of Rule 148, for the verdict rendered was not final since it had not yet been accepted by the court pursuant to Rule 145 of the Rules of Criminal Procedure. See, also, Wharton’s, op. cit., vol. 5, §§ 2147 and 2148, pages 339-340.”

(2) “The trial court erred in charging the jury that they could only render one of two verdicts: Guilty of Grand Larceny or not Guilty; which would depend on whether they [590]*590believed the evidence of the People or on whether they gave credit to the evidence for the defense; excluding thus the possibility that without the need of believing that things happened as they were revealed by the evidence for the defense, they had a reasonable doubt that they had happened as the evidence for the People maintained.”

The Solicitor General argues, correctly, that:

“We believe that this error was. not committed because the judge instructed the jury in the sense that the prosecuting attorney is under the obligation to establish defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt. (Tr. Ev. 151.) . . . The fact that the judge explained afterwards the possible verdicts which the jury could render, does not mean that the possibility that the jury had a reasonable doubt of defendant’s guilt was excluded.
“At any rate, at ho time did the defense request additional instructions on this particular, for which reason it is precluded now from pointing out any possible omission as an error on appeal. Rule 137 of the Rules of Criminal Procedure.” (Italics in the original.)

(3) “Because of its inherent weakness, the evidence of the People was not sufficient to defeat the presumption of innocence and to establish defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.”

We agree with the Solicitor General when he informs, with respect to this charge, that:

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