People v. Segarra

70 P.R. 458
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedNovember 15, 1949
DocketNo. 14169
StatusPublished

This text of 70 P.R. 458 (People v. Segarra) 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. Segarra, 70 P.R. 458 (prsupreme 1949).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Todd, Jr.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Seven years ago a murder was committed by María Lugo and Juan Segarra. The events occurred, according to the information, on March 5, 1942. Nevertheless, the information was not filed in the District Court of Mayagiiez until more than two years later, on September 19, 1944. On October 13,1944, both defendants pleaded not guilty and prayed for separate trials and by jury. On July 24, 1945 defendant Juan Segarra prayed for a bill of particulars. Another year is allowed to pass and on June 5, 1946, said defendant abandons previous petition for a trial by jury and prays for trial by the court. The court agrees and holds the trial on said day. On August 19, 1946 the court finds him guilty of the crime of murder in the second degree and sentences him, on September 9, 1946, to from ten to thirteen years’ imprisonment in the penitentiary at hard labor. The defendant appealed and requested the transcript of the evidence, which was ordered by the court on September 19, 1946. .Two years and eight months went by and it is at that time that the stenographer files the transcript on May 20, 1949, which vis approved by the court on June 3 and filed in this Court on June 28, the case being submitted on August 11, 1949, after the vacation term had commenced. That is, it took two years to file the information, another two to hold the trial and three years more to prepare the transcript of the evidence.

We have detailed these facts in order to censure them. We find nothing in the record to justify a delay of more than seven years in the prosecution of a case like the one at bar. We say a case like the one at bar because a sordid crime is involved in which Trinidad Padin, wife of Juan Segarra, is [460]*460shot to death by María Lugo, lover of the husband, abetted and advised by the latter. The lover, Maria Lugo Acosta, and the husband Juan Segarra were jointly accused of the crime of murder. After a trial, separate and by jury, was held, the former was found guilty of murder in the second degree. Segarra was found guilty of the same crime by the court, and he was sentenced as aforesaid. He appealed and on appeal he contends that the court erred: (1) in finding that there was suificient corroborative evidence in regard to the testimony of Maria Lugo, who is an accomplice, (2) in considering that the evidence is suificient to establish the crime of murder in the second degree, and (3) that it acted under the influence of passion, prejudice and partiality.

After the death of Trinidad Padin was established as caused by pulmonary hemorrhage in consequence of a shot wound, Maria Lugo testified in brief, the following:

That she is serving sentence for having killed Trinidad Padin; that for five years she had been Juan Segarra’s lover, knowing that he was married to Trinidad Padin; that on March 4, 1942, she, the defendant and Angel Zapata, took a trip from Mayagüez to San Juan in the defendant’s automobile, returning on the 5th to Mayagüez; that all the way from San Juan to Mayagüez, she and the defendant were arguing because she complained that Trinidad' Padin hounded her, insulted her and did not let her live in peace, and she was asking the defendant to take her out of Mayagüez and he replied that she had a weapon in her house to defend herself ; that she told him that she did not want to kill Trinidad Padin and the defendant told her: “You’re a fool, you are a housewife and you can defend yourself. You must act.” (Transcript of the evidence, p. 25). She replied then that she would never kill her, that she wanted him to remove her from the town, and that they kept arguing until they reached Arecibo and then Mayagüez; that they left her near her house; that the defendant arrived an hour later and when [461]*461he was dining Trinidad Padin arrived and insulted her from the sidewalk; that she came out to the porch and told her to go away and not to insult her in the house, to which Trinidad Padin answered: “You’re a whore,'and you live with that scoundrel, let him come out so I can kill him too”- — -transcript of evidence, p. 28 — that she went inside and then the defendant came from the dining room to the living room and told her: “Take this, kill her, she is a bitch” and. gave her the gun, saying: “You should kill her. We must defend ourselves,” (id., id.) while she answered that she would not kill her and then he took her by the arm, squeezed her strongly and told her: “If you do not kill her, I’ll kill you,” (id., p. 29) ; that then, fearful and nervous, she shot at Trinidad Padin through the grating of the porch; that she bought the revolver from Gonzalo Almodovar with money that, the defendant gave her; that she gave it to the defendant because she did not want to have it but he brought it back to her, telling her that she should use it to defend herself if that woman came to annoy her; that she killed Trinidad Padin because the defendant made her do it. On cross-examination she testified that she and Trinidad Padin had quarreled several times and that Trinidad Padin had attacked and wounded her; that on the very day of the occurrence she testified before the district attorney assuming responsibility for the occurrence, because the defendant had threatened, gun in hand, to kill her if she did not defend him, but that six days later, she asked voluntarily to be taken to the district attorney and without promises or offers of any kind, she testified the truth of the facts; that she did not shoot Trinidad Padin with the intention of killing her; that after the occurrence, her relations with the defendant ceased; that she did not testify during the trial of her case; that she believes that the defendant should be punished because he is the really guilty party.

We shall now examine the evidence which served as a basis to corroborate the testimony of María Lugo: Nicolás Pérez [462]*462Millán testified that on the day of the crime he was coming from work and when passing by the house of María Lugo he saw Trinidad Padin with a foot on the porch and the other on the sidewalk, calling her husband; that Maria Lugo came out of the house to the porch with a revolver in her hand and fired two shots at her and then another, Trinidad Padin falling on the sidewalk. The witness went to pick her up and then the defendant came down from the house and told his wife: “Did they kill you? If they killed you there is nothing I can do”; that he then tried to put a knife in his wife’s purse and upon realizing that it did not fit, he returned to his lover’s house, telling her: “See what Trinidad was bringing.” The witness denied that the victim uttered any insults, but that he heard María Lugo say: “I’ve killed you, so that you won’t call me a whore any more.”

Angel Zapata, the person who. accompanied the appellant and his lover during the trip to San Juan testified that he had heard María Lugo and the defendant arguing and that she begged him to take her out of Mayagiiez because his wife insulted her constantly; that he answered that she had the revolver which he had purchased for her; that she should kill her and he would furnish bond to take her out of jail, inasmuch as he had money; that he told her this several times and that he, the witness, left the appellant at his wife’s house on his return from San Juan; that when he left him, he heard when she insulted him, while the latter replied that he was leaving her house because no one could live there.

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70 P.R. 458, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-segarra-prsupreme-1949.