People v. García
People v. García
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
In this case the defendant was indicted for seduction. He pleaded “not guilty” and a trial was had on April 23 last, which proceeded in the usual course. The case was submitted to the court without a jury, and after hearing the evidence the court found the defendant guilty, setting the 26th of the same month in order to pronounce sentence. On that day, prior to the sentence being pronounced, the accused presented a motion in arrest of judgment based on the allegation that the court lacked jurisdiction of the case because the crime was consummated in the Judicial District of San Juan, and
Mr. Muñoz Morales appeared in court on behalf of the appellant, filed a brief, and made an oral argument based on the point that the offense was not consummated within the Judicial District of Guayama and consequently the trial court was without jurisdiction. In this contention the fiscal agrees with the attorney for the appellant. However, he cites a New York case—The People v. Crotty, 9 N. Y., Supp., 937 — which holds that such a case could be prosecuted, tried, and decided in either of the districts, but calls attention to the fact that this decision was based on a special statute of the State of New York and that we have no such statute in Porto Rico. The fiscal also cites section 8 of our Code of Criminal Procedure, alleging that this is the only legislation which we have on the subject, and which says that the jurisdiction of an offense is in the district court of the district where the offense has been committed.
The question arises in this case whether or not the crime was committed in Cayey or in San Juan. To complete the offense it is necessary not only to make a promise of marriage but to have carnal intercourse based on that promise. It may be truly said that the offense is not entirely complete,
At common law, as was stated by Lord Chief Justice Hale, where a mortal stroke is given in one county and the victim dies in another, the crime was held to be committed in the county where the stroke was given, the death being merely a consequence of the stroke. (Ball v. U. S., 140 U. S., 134.)
It is provided in the Constitution of the United States and in various State constitutions that in all criminal prosecutions the accused shall have the'right to be tried in the State and district wherein the crime shall have been committed, but there are many statutes which provide that when an offense against the law is begun in one district and completed in another it shall be deemed to have been committed in either one or the other and may be dealt with, tried, determined, and punished in either district, in the same manner as if it had been actually and wholly committed therein (Be-vised Statutes of the United States, sec. 731).
And it has been held that the offense of tendering a contract for the payment of money in a letter which is mailed in one district and addressed to a postmaster in another, seeking to induce him to violate his official duty, may be' tried in the district in which the letter is received by the officer (In re Palliser, 136, U. S., 257).
This case is cited with approval in the Ball case, above referred to, and also in the cases of Horner v. U. S., 143 U. S., 214, and Dealy v. U. S., 152 U. S., 546.
But all of these cases, like the Crotty case, referred to above, were tried and decided under special statutes, and we are left to general principles in the determination of the case at bar.
We may revert to the fact that in our Code of Criminal
Then, the District Court of Gfuayama not having jurisdiction of the case at bar, the judgment of that court, rendered on April 29, 1912, must be set aside and the prosecution dismissed.
Reversed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.