Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1910

In re Balbás

In re Balbás
Supreme Court of Puerto Rico · Decided February 17, 1910 · Figueras, Hernández, Leary, Mac, Toro, Wolf
16 P.R. 104

In re Balbás

Opinion of the Court

The fiscal of the Supreme Court has filed an information herein against Vicente Balbás Capó charging him with the crime of contempt of this court committed in the following manner:

“First. That Vicente Balbás Capó is the editor of a newspaper issued and published in the city of San Juan, Island of Porto Rico, under the name of ‘ Heraldo Español. ’
“Second. That during the public sessions of this honorable court, in connection with the disbarment proceedings brought against Attorney Herminio Díaz Navarro, and before the case had been decided by the court, the said Vicente Balbás Capó published and caused to be circulated, in No. 16 of said newspaper, the ‘-Heraldo Español,’ for January 20,1910, on the first page thereof, under the title of ‘Actuali-dad Gráfica,’ a caricature which referred to the proceedings being held in this honorable court, in which the defendant in said proceedings was represented by means of a drawing or picture hanging by a rope, the other end of which was in the hands of another person, also represented by means' of another drawing or picture.
“That the said Vicente Balbás Capó likewise, at the left of said caricature, within the space intended therefor in the aforementioned *106newspaper, wrote, published, and placed in cirenlation, under the 1 itle of 'Popular Couplets,’ the following doggerel:
Translation.
POPULAR COUPLETS.
“The accused is hanging above,
The accuser below is he.
Is the day very far distant
When the contrary shall be?
“When in the court I observe
In black gowns the lawyer gang,
It seems to me that I’m seeing
Cassocks of those doomed to hang.
“At sight of him who accuses,
With the accused so hard indeed,
I cry: ‘What things in the world
A man can do for his “feed”!’
“The accuser, why does he smile
With such rapturous effusion,
When examining the witnesses
Brought in by the prosecution
“Whene’er I challenge a judge
It is because, with alarm,
I see that the judge I -challenge
Is bent upon doing harm.
“Do not tell me that the hangman
Should be, as hateful, berated;
For the man who pulls the rope
Is no hangman, but is hated.
“At the railing of the jail
Messages for me don’t bear
From the man 'who did accuse me,
For I shall forgive him ne’er.
“Of two hangmen who together
Sitting on the bench I view,
The one who’s talking is hateful,
T’other is repellant, too.
*107“When on the prisoner,’s stool
A man being accused I see,
I ask myself if .the accuser
From sin has ' himself been free. ’ ’

The fiscal applied to this court for the issue of au ordei to Vicente Balbás Capó to appear and show cause why he should not be adjudged in contempt, which prayer was granted on February 1 of the current year, the order having issued on the same date.

The said hearing took place in this court on the 14th instant. the defendant appearing with his counsel, Eugenio Beni-tez Castaño, while the Attorney G-eneral’s office was represented by the fiscal of this court, Vicente Balbás Capó alleging that there was no reason whatsoever to adjudge him in contempt, because he had not the remotest intention of referring either in the caricature or in the doggerel, in the section of the newspaper entitled “Actualidad gráfica” to the matter of Herminio Díaz Navarro, at that time pending before this high court, but he had referred to proceedings which were being prosecuted in Mayagüez against Father Pedro Dietrich ; and for this purpose he had ordered the caricature which he had not seen until after the newspaper was in circulation, and that the doggerel related to nothing but general ideas on human justice and that their purpose had never -been either to disturb or offend this Supreme Court, for which he has the highest respect and consideration, and holds each of tbe justices thereof in the highest esteem.

The newspaper presented by the fiscal was admitted in evidence and a number of witnesses presented by both parties testified, the testimony of Libertad Torres- G-rau being particularly worthy of note to the effect that he had acted as fiscal in Mayagüez in the proceedings against Father Pedro Dietrich, and that he saw the “Heraldo Español” in thát city, that the caricature, did not resemble , said priest because the latter did not have a. beard, nor did he wear glasses; that it rather ap*108peared like Attorney Hermino Díaz Navarro, even to the ring which he wears in the carricature, and that in the action prosecuted in the Mayagüez court against Father Pedro' the only judge presiding at- the trial had not been challenged. Her-minio Díaz Navarro, a witness for the defendant, testified that when he saw the caricature for the first’time he felt hurt, -and being put out he- asked Balbás why he had caricatured him in that form and that said gentleman replied that the caricature did not refer to him but symbolized a matter in Mayagüez in which a Catholic priest was involved.

The same, newspaper which contains the caricature and the doggerel gives an account of the incident of the challenge of one of the Justices of this Supreme Court by one of the attorneys for the defendant, Diaz Navarro, in the disbarment proceedings against him, which challenge had been overruled.

The fiscal made an oral argument in support of his complaint and the defense moved for acquittal of the defendant on the ground that it had not been his intention to allude to the Supreme Court.

The right of a journalist to censure public and official acts of any officer or functionary is indisputable, as well as his right to criticise and discuss, iii a reasonable manner, the decisions of any court of justice, however high it may be, after the termination of the action or proceedings, but without violating, by the words and terms used and employed in the newspaper, the penal laws to which he is subject, like any other citizen having free and sound mental faculties.

The evidence shows that the doggerel and the caricature refer to the disbarment proceedings pending at that time before this court against Herminio Díaz Navarro, and that the latter, and no other, is the man who appears hanged in said ■caricature.

If that picture signifies anything it must be that this court had prejudged the question before all the evidence had been heard and the proceedings terminated, as it had condemned the defendant, Diaz Navarro, in pectore without further pro-*109ceeclings, this affirmation of the newspaper being corroborated by the doggerel, a dispassionate perusal of which reveals the fact that such was the intention of the journalist manifested by the circumstances related with the crime and a sound judgment and discretion therein.

The doggerel as well as the caricature together constitute an offense amounting to a contempt of this Supreme Court, because they involve defamatory, malicious and incorrect imputations published in a graphic form in a newspaper which was put into circulation, tending thereby to discredit this court unjustly.

The gravity of the act committed is evident because it tends to engender lack of confidence among the people, leading them to believe that the court which was trying Attorney Herminio Díaz Navarro at the time was not impartial and just.

In view of the third paragraph and second section of the act defining the offense of contempt of court and providing for the punishment thereof, approved March 1, 1902, Vicente Baibas Capó is found guilty of the crime of contempt and is, consequently, sentenced to pay a fine of $200, which he will pay within three days, and in default of payment, to be imprisoned in the district jail of San Juan for 30 days, and to pay the costs.

Accordingly decided.

Chief Justice Hernández and Justices Figueras, Mac-Leary, Wolf and del Toro concurred.

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