Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1920

People v. Salcedo

People v. Salcedo
Supreme Court of Puerto Rico · Decided March 2, 1920 · Aldrey, Hernandez, Hutchison, Toro, Wolf
28 P.R. 137

People v. Salcedo

Opinion of the Court

Mr. Justice Wolf

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a prosecution for an assault with intent to hill and the jury found the defendant guilty of assault and battery with aggravated circumstances. Some words or supposed words of censure made by the prosecuting witness, a doctor in a Red Cross Hospital, to the defendant, likewise working there, made the latter sullenly furious, and he stole *138up on the said prosecuting witness on the street and with a blunt iron instrument and a club caused very serious injuries to the said prosecuting witness. On conviction the defendant was sentenced to nine months in jail.

There are six assignments of error but some of them may be grouped together. It was not error to permit an expert witness to testify as to the actual state of the wounds or to the kind of weapon which probably produced them. This disposes of the first two assignments.

The alleged fourth assignment says that the court committed error in admitting the testimony of the prosecuting witness, as it was argumentative, remote and irrelevant. Without more specification of the evidence actually admitted, the assignment is worthless. We do not find that the testimony of the prosecuting witness in relating the quarrel and the attack was too remote or irrelevant.

Similar considerations apply to the fifth assignment of error, namely, that the testimony of a witness who saw the attack was impertinent and irrelevant.

The third and sixth assignments of error relate to the undue admission of a club and of an iron weapon or monkey-wrench, purporting to be the instruments with which the attack was made. We find no proof of the admission of the club and the only thing in the record which justifies these assignments is on page 26, where the fiscal offers in evidence the iron with which the attack was made, saying that it had been identified by the prosecuting witness. The defense objected on the ground that the weapon had been identified neither by the prosecuting witness nor by anyone else. The prosecuting witness, in point of fact, did not identify the weapon, but he did testify to being struck by a club or iron. He did not recognize the weapon when it was shown to him. A policeman, however, said that he took the weapon shown him from a bystander, Benito Soler; another witness says that a person picked up the object shown the witness and he thinks that person was Benito Soler, who also picked up a medical *139instrument belonging to tbe prosecuting witness, and still another witness says that be saw Benito Soler when be picked up tbe iron. Tbis would seem to be identification enough.

Tbe judgment must be

Affirmed.

Chief Justice Hernandez and Justices del Toro, Aldrey and Hutchison concurred.

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