State v. Figueras

644 A.2d 291, 1994 WL 321710
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedJuly 7, 1994
Docket93-149-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 644 A.2d 291 (State v. Figueras) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Figueras, 644 A.2d 291, 1994 WL 321710 (R.I. 1994).

Opinion

*292 OPINION

SHEA, Justice.

This matter is before the Supreme Court on the defendant’s appeal from his conviction of murder in the first degree. We affirm.

The defendant, Buenaventura Figueras, was charged by criminal indictment No. P1/91-3743-A with one count of first-degree murder in the killing of his brother-in-law, Jose Burgos (victim). 1 He was convicted after a jury trial and moved for a new trial. The motion for new trial was denied, and defendant filed a timely appeal. The defendant first argues that the trial court erred by improperly questioning two witnesses. He also asserts that the trial court committed reversible • error by failing to honor defendant’s request for an instruction to the jury on the elements of second-degree murder.

The relevant trial testimony is as follows. On May 6, 1991, the Providence police department received an emergency call that a possible shooting had occurred at 52 Erastus Street, Providence. Officer Katherine Simo-neau (Simoneau) responded and arrived at the scene minutes later where she found a man with multiple gunshot wounds, later identified as the victim, lying across the front seat of a vehicle. The officer was approached by Brunilda Pagan (Pagan), the victim’s wife, who through an interpreter told Simoneau that defendant had shot her husband.

Delvis Figueras (Mrs. Figueras), defendant’s wife and the sister of the victim, testified that on May 1, 1991, she telephoned the victim and told him that she wanted to leave defendant and return permanently to her native Puerto Rico with her three children. That evening Mrs. Figueras and her children went to the victim’s house in Providence, and from there the victim and his wife drove Mrs. Figueras and her children to a cousin’s home in Boston, Massachusetts. The victim and his wife then returned to Providence. The victim and his family returned to Boston on May 3,1991. On May 4,1991, the victim and the cousin drove Mrs. Figueras and her children to Logan Airport where they boarded a flight to Puerto Rico. The victim and his family then returned to Providence.

Evangelina Lugo Vega (Vega), the mother of the victim and a resident of Puerto Rico, testified that on May 2, 1991, she received a telephone call from defendant. The defendant asked Vega for the phone number of the cousin in Boston with whom his wife was staying. Fearing for her daughter’s safety, Vega told defendant that she did not have the number. She testified that defendant then told her that “Jose [victim] had done something, did something to him. That even if he would be six feet underground he had to pay for it.” Vega further testified that she later received a telephone call from defendant’s sister, who told Vega “to warn [her] son that he should be careful because [defendant] was looking for a cannon to find him.”

Pagan testified that on May 2,1991, defendant came to their apartment looking for his wife’s belongings. He said that he knew that Pagan and the victim had helped his wife leave, and told Pagan'that “[she] and Jose are going to have to pay for it.” The defendant left the premises after she threatened to call the police.

Pagan further testified that on May 6, 1991, she and her husband awoke at 6:30 a.m. and that her husband left for work as usual at 6:50 a.m. Pagan returned to bed and subsequently heard three gunshots. She looked out her bedroom window and saw defendant shooting into the driver’s side window of her husband’s automobile, which was in the parking lot across the street. The defendant then fled the scene, and Pagan ran to her husband who lay motionless across the front seat of the vehicle. The police arrived shortly thereafter.

Leyda Gonzalez (Gonzalez), a life-long friend of defendant, testified that defendant arrived at her home around 6 a.m. on May 6, 1991. He told Gonzalez that he was going out to speak with the victim. The defendant returned to the apartment at approximately

*293 7 a.m. and told Gonzalez that he had killed the victim. Gonzalez heard defendant telephone two of his relatives and tell both that he had killed the victim. After the telephone calls and at defendant’s request, Gonzalez drove him to New York City, where he took a cab to Atlantic City, New Jersey. Gonzalez denied any knowledge of the shooting when police first interviewed her on May 14, 1991, but eight days later she gave police a statement consistent with her trial testimony implicating defendant in the murder.

The defendant presented no witnesses and did not take the stand. The defense strategy and the clear intent behind the cross-examination of each of the witnesses was to show mistaken identification, or intentional false implication of defendant. At no time did defendant present, or try to elicit through cross-examination, any evidence tending to show that he had suffered from diminished capacity, acted in the heat of passion, or acted without premeditation.

I

The defendant argues that questions posed by the trial justice to two witnesses called by the state warrant reversal of defendant’s conviction. The defendant contends that the questions had a prosecutorial tone that deprived him of a fair trial. The trial court interjected the first disputed question during the state’s direct examination of Pagan. Pagan was testifying about what she witnessed on the morning her husband was killed when the trial court asked:

“How many times did you see Buenaventu-ra Figueras shoot the gun into the driver’s side window of that car?”

The second trial court interrogatory upon which defendant bases his appeal occurred during the cross-examination of Gonzalez. Defense counsel was attempting to impeach Gonzalez by identifying inconsistencies between two statements she gave to police when the trial court asked:

“What you told them on the 22nd of May, was that the truth?”

Defense counsel’s objections to both of these questions were overruled. 2

This is not the first case that has required us to review a trial court’s examination of witnesses. Long ago this court recognized that “it is sometimes proper and commendable for a judge presiding in a jury trial to interrogate a witness as to relevant matters proper to be presented to the jury.” State v. Amaral, 47 R.I. 245, 249-50, 132 A. 547, 549 (1926). The Amaral court, however, warned judges to exercise caution when questioning witnesses in order to “guard against even the appearance of changing * * * position from that of a judicial officer impartially presiding at the trial to that of a partisan advocate interested in establishing the position of either party.” Id. at 250, 132 A. at 550. An even earlier opinion of this court stated that the trial justice’s duty is “to exercise scrupulous care that the jury should not be influenced in their finding of fact by what they believed to be the opinion of the judge.” State v. Fenik, 45 R.I. 309, 316, 121 A. 218, 222 (1923).

Our more recent decisions have echoed the same concerns regarding the danger of judicial interrogation of witnesses. See State v. Evans,

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Bluebook (online)
644 A.2d 291, 1994 WL 321710, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-figueras-ri-1994.