People v. Collazo
People v. Collazo
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The appellant was accused of murder in the first-degree. He was convicted of voluntary manslaughter. Similarly to the case of People v. Vélez, 32 P.R.R. 355, decided July 28, 1923, the appellant has filed no real statement of the case. He contents himself with mentioning facts like the information, the conviction and the like, but he does not set forth the theory of the defense, nor does he sum up in this part of his brief the evidence tending to show the theory or an equivalent statement. To obtain a notion of this defense we have had to refer to the instructions of the court, the transcript of the evidence itself and -particularly the testimony of the defendant.
At the hearing in this court the appellant abandoned his first assignment of error, but relied very strongly on the second, namely, that the court erred in refusing to grant a change of venue on the ground of local prejudice. To support his motion for a change of venue the appellant filed his own affidavit and twenty-nine others. In so far as the affidavit of the appellant was not contradicted by a counter affidavit of the government or was insisted upon in the brief, the thirty affidavits may be considered together. The other twenty-nine are in form and contents exactly alike. They only differ among themselves inasmuch as they proceed from different towns in the districts of Aguadilla and Arecibo. The appellant says that these affidavits were made by good or prominent citizens of the respective municipalities or cities, and, of course, in the absence of any showing or indication to the contrary, these affidavits are entitled to all
“I, Carlos F. Torregrosa, tinder oath, state:
“That I am of age, Postmaster and resident of Aguadilla, which forms part of the judicial district of Aguadilla, where I now live and have lived continuously for more than fifteen years.
“2. — That I am personally acquainted with José Collazo, the defendant herein, and I am likewise informed that a charge of murder is being prosecuted against him in the Judicial District of Agua-dilla.
“3. — That I know of my own knowledge that said defendant cannot obtain a fair and impartial trial in the district of Aguadilla because of the ‘great prejudice and strong feeling against him in this district, his enemies having insistently circulated the report that he is guilty of the crime charged, thus creating the general impression of his guilt that prevails in this municipal district, and .also because, by reason of the investigation made by order of the Department of Justice in the case of the .then Secretary of the District Court of Aguadilla and his discharge for irregularities in drawing the jury that was to sit in this and other cases in the month of July, 1921, this process has attained such a resounding notoriety in this district that I truly believe that there is no jury in this municipal district that has not already formed an opinion in advance, and still further, because great numbers of the journal Pica Pica, containing an'article derogatory to the defendant wherein he is held up as a hardened and common criminal, have been circulated throughout this municipal district.”
In regard- to the law applicable to a change of venne, we have -examined, among others, the following authorities: People v. Suesser, 132 Cal. 631; People v. Congleton, 44 Cal. 92; People v. Yoakum, 53 Cal. 566; State v. Hillman, 42 Wash. 615; State v. Dwyer, 91 Pac. 314; State v. Bess, 199 Pac. 426; State v. Davis, 199 Pac. 421; People v. Fuski, 192 Pac. 552; People v. Kromphold, 157 Pac. 599; 27 Ruling Case Law, 815; 16 Corpus Juris, 206. The deduction from them is that the concession of a change of venue is a matter that rests within the sound discretion of the trial court and the appellant must make a strong showing on ap
'“(1,2) — The Constitution guarantees to everyone charged with a crime a fair trial before an impartial jury, and it is settled law in this jurisdiction that an application for change of place of trial is addressed .to the sound discretion of the trial court, and, unless an abuse of this power - is shown, its ruling will not be disturbed. State v. Spotted Hawk, 22 Mont. 33, 55 Pac. 1026, and cases there cited. No extracts from the newspapers were attached to the affidavits, and the record is silent as to what the stories contained. The bald statement that the tale of the crime was printed in newspapers and generally read by the inhabitants of the country, and that therefore the defendant would be deprived of his constitutional right of fair trial by an impartial jury, is a flat "conclusion and was properly disregarded by the trial court. State v. Spotted Hawk, supra; Territory v. Manton, 8 Mont. 95, 19 Pac. 387. No fact in the affidavits or testimony appears to move judicial discretion, save the statements that there had been talk of lynching the defendant, and its effect upon the popular mind.
- “It must be borne in mind that, while the defendant had been arrested^ by an armed posse, and at a time when feeling was intense, the inviolability of his person was observed, and in accordance with the high concept of respect for justice the law was permitted, without let or hindrance, to take its course. Naturally, whenever a brutal crime has been committed, there are many whose unbridled tongues vent emotion, but it does not follow that a community’s judgment is warped. The record does not disclose the voir dire*52 examination of the jurors, but it suffices to say that, when a jury is obtained on a homicide case after the examination of but 56 men, and no unusual condition is apparent, the statement as to prejudice and the impossibility of securing a fair and impartial jury falls. The showing is entirely insufficient to permit this court to disturb the ruling of the lower court in denying the motion.
“ ‘The trial judge is generally familiar with the local situation; he knows the prevailing sentiment of the people, in so far as it finds oft-repeated expression; he knows all the facts and circumstances proper to be considered in determining the matter; he may know the persons who make affidavits ’suggesting undue excitement or prejudice, and can properly estimate the weight to be given such affidavit. A judicial discretion exercised under such circumstances should not be interfered with, unless its abuse is so clearly manifest as to call for a reversal.’ State v. Welty, 65 Wash. 244. 118 Pac. 9.”
Furthermore, as the fiscal points out and as we said in Fajardo v. Soto Nussa, 23 P.R.R. 71, the court or defendant may supplement affidavits by oral proof, giving the other side a chance to cross-examine. "Where testimony is given stating principally the conclusions of the witnesses and no tangible facts are presented, the court is justified in refusing to grant a change of venue and, on appeal, as pointed out supra, it may be supposed that the court had some idea of the value of the affidavits of its own knowledge.
It would also appear from some of the authorities that we have examined that a showing of actual prejudice, should be made. It does not suffice that there was once a prejudice, because frequently this will subside before the time of the trial. The shooting took place in December, 1920. The trial was had in December, 1921. While the affidavits were taken in 1921, cross-examination might have revealed that the affiants had made no recent fresh investigation. Moreover, these affidavits were apparently prepared by, and certainly sworn to before, the attorney for defendant.
As a mere matter of law, perhaps an attorney has a right to take affidavits of this kind, but it is a practice that we have deplored. The affidavits, as we have seen, are all of
The principal thing to he considered, it seems to us, is whether the defendant had in fact a fair and impartial trial. We have gone carefully through the record and we find no evidence of anybody having been challenged or excused on account of a prejudice against the defendant nor that the defendant exhausted his peremptory challenges. No showing was made, barring a single affidavit presented with the motion for a new trial that we shall consider hereafter, that the defendant was tried by twelve men any of whom were prejudiced against him. It should he borne in mind, too, that we think the evidence was sufficient to have convicted the defendant of murder in the first degree, and the jury, as we have seen, found him guilty of voluntary manslaughter.
At the hearing in this case something was said that the fiscal of the district of Agnadilla consented to a change of venue, but it is evident that the responsibility to the public in regard to this matter rests with the judge and not with the fiscal. It is the judge who is responsible to the public for the place at which a crime should be tried. At the hearing, however, the fiscal appeared and opposed a change of venue.
The next assignment of error relates to the manner in which the jury was chosen, whether there was a sufficient number of jurymen present or whether the court had a right to excuse certain jurymen, but we have disposed of considerations of this kind in the case of People v. García, 31 P.R.R. 861, and we find no prejudicial error in the selection of the jury.
Another point strongly insisted upon by the appellant is
The authorities that the appellant cites, People v. Bush, 68 Cal. 623, 10 Pac. 169; People v. Milner, 122 Cal. 172, 184, to the effect that the defendant or the judge should have accompanied the jury, were, eases in which the defendant made some objection or. reservation- in the court below. There was one case, not thoroughly considered, in which it does not appear whether objection was made or not. People v. Yut Ling, 74 Cal. 569. On the other hand, the fiscal cites us to authority that the failure to reserve such an objection or exception waives the right to have either the court or defendant present. People v. White, 5 Cal. App. 329, 90 Pac. 471; People v. Bonney, 19 Cal. 427. See also note to Scott v. State, 122 A. S. R. 727. We are inclined to agree with the fiscal, besides, that as the only object was to determine a single thing, namely, the possibility of the witness
The fourth error is as follows:
“Fourth. — The Court erred in deciding that the medical expert Dr. Sein could testify regarding the distance at which the shot might have been fired and the nature of the weapon used, establishing a theory as to the position of the person attacked when he received the wound and the position of the assailant with regard to him.1 ’
Dr. Sein testified that he was a physician and surgeon; that he attended the deceased before he died and examined the wounds, and that he performed the autopsy on the body of the deceased. The doctor described the examination and operation he made and the course of the bullet, and said that the wound produced by the bullet was the cause of the death. He then testified that the orifices of the wound were clean and that the powder had' produced no burnings. Then the fiscal asked the witness if he could determine the distance away the revolver was that caused the death. The defendant objected on the ground that the witness was a doctor and not an eye-witness; that the distance at which the shot was fired was a pure question of fact which should be proved by eye-witnesses and not by experts, doctors, and because the matter was a question for the jury. It should be noted that there was no objection at the time that Dr. Sein was not sufficiently qualified as an expert. The fiscal said that a doctor could testify in accordance with the knowledge he had and the court agreed, although the testimony might enter into the field of human affairs.
The theory of the defendant was, as we have indicated, that the deceased started the attack and that after their
The ordinary rule is that if the jury could make a certain inference from the facts, no expert testimony is necessary and should be excluded. The cases that we shall cite hereafter make it evident that the distance away of the revolver, as judged by the appearance of the wound, is not generally a matter within the ordinary cognizance of jurymen. That experts may testify from the appearance of the wounds as to the distance between the muzzle of the revolver and the bullet’s first contact with the body, the following authorities will show: State v. Asbell (Kansas), 46 Pac. 770, where it was held that a qualified witness may testify as to whether a wound was produced by a near shot or one fired from a distance. This case, among others, was cited in approval by the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, Commonwealth v. Santos, 119 Atl. 600. There the witness was a little uncertain in his testimony and at one time said that the muzzle must have been sixteen inches away and at another at least two feet away. Despite the uncertainty of the testimony, the court had no doubt of the right of an expert to testify as to distance, of course, from the appearance of the wounds. Other authorities are State v. Johns, 132 N. W. 835; Boyd v. State, 82 Tenn. 172, 173; Phillips v. State (Ala.), 54 Southern, 112; People v. Hawes, 98 Cal. 648, 33 Pac. 791, where the court pointed out that the subject was a proper one for expert testimony and could not be classed with such matters as were discussed in People v. Smith, 93 Cal. 445, e.g., the position of two persons; Bearden v. State (Texas), 73 S.W. 17, where the witness testified as
In this case Dr. Sein then said the distance conld not he less than four feet. The fiscal then asked, “On what do you base your answer?” Then the witness said, or began to say, “Because a gunshot, especially when it is within four feet and especially for weapons of small calibre” — whereupon the defendant objected to further examination on this line because it was not shown that the witness had knowledge in firearms (balística). The court overruled the objection and the witness testified to the effect that shots at short distances made powder marks and spotted the borders of the wound.
The principal insistence in this court is that Dr. Sein did not show himself to be a qualified witness in the handling and effect of firearms. Before such an objection was made the witness had testified, without due objection on the ground of his not being sufficiently expert, and he had said that the wound so produced was by a. pistol more than four feet away. This may have been an erroneous conception or a mistake, and one other witness, at least, testified to the contrary. The subsequent testimony of Dr. Sein, made after objection, was clearly within the experience of an ordinary doctor with any extended practice, or perhaps without extended practice, namely, that near shots produce powder marks or burns and that distance shots do not. Before testifying to a definite distance, the doctor should have been made to show his experience with firearms, but he was allowed to testify as to the appearance of the wound and the distance without due objection, and no motion to strike.was made. At least one medical expert of the defendant gave similar testimony without being duly qualified. We are satisfied, moreover, that in Porto Rico the training of a doctor includes a knowledge of firearms. In general, when a defendant in a criminal case fails to make an objection in due season, but makes it later, if the evidence admitted had a prejudicial tendency, we might permit the objection to be
Furthermore, the question of whether an expert is sufficiently expert is a matter within the discretion of the court. Most physicians of long standing have sufficient experience in this line. Here is what Wigmore says on the general subject (Yol. 1, Second Edition, para. 561):
“Just how far this extends in each jurisdiction is difficult to say. In some, the ruling is not reviewable at all; in others, it is reviewable on certain conditions; in others, the matter is left ‘largely! to the trial Court’s discretion. But the language of the principle varies in different opinions; and, in practice, the rulings below are constantly reconsidered above, under the guise of ascertaining whether the ‘discretion’ has been ‘abused.’ But the reform of the future will find in this principle the nucleus for a beneficent extension of the doctrine of judicial discretion {ante, para. 16). Looking at the complication of facts often entering into a witness’ competency and best understood by the trial judge alone, — looking at the comparatively trifling character (in relation to all the issues of a trial) of the topics over which controversy arises, — looking at the ample and sure safeguard of cross-examination to reveal the witness’ real qualifications, — looking at the injustice of requiring the busy judges of the 'Supreme Courts to investigate such - trifles,' — in view of all these considerations, it cannot be doubted that the rule of the future ought to be: The experiential qualifications of a particular witness are invariably determined by the trial judge, and will not be reviewed on appeal
Tbe defendant might have cross-examined Dr. Sein and shown that he was mistaken. He might have shown that the clothes of the defendant would have prevented, if not burn
The fourth assignment that we are considering is complex in form and very unsatisfactory. It sequesters several objections. Assignments should be single and specific, and as the brief principally discussed the sufficiency of Dr. Sein as. an expert, the defendant would have no real cause of complaint if we gave this assignment no further attention. The appellant complains also that Dr. Sein, over objection, testified to the relative position of the two men. In this regard the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania resumes the jurisprudence as follows:
“There is a divergence of view among the authorities as to whether or not, in a murder trial, opinion testimony concerning the distance covered by a bullet which killed the deseased, the direction from which it came, and the position of the body of the victim, when struck, may be introduced in evidence. Some courts have ruled such proofs to be inadmissible (citing cases). Other courts permit a physician, who has examined the wound, to give his opinion concerning the direction from which the' blow or shot came, but not the probable position of the parties (citing cases). The weight of authority seems to be that the examining physician, who has qualified as an expert, may give his views both as to the direction and distance of the shot, as well as the position of the parties (on direction, see Hopt v. Utah, 120 U. S. 430, 7 Sup. Ct. 614, 30 L. Ed. 708, and New York and Ohio cases next above; as to distance, see State v. Asbell, 57 Kan. 398, 409, 46 Pac. 770; Boyd v. State, 82 Tenn. [14 Lea] 161, 169, 173; Preeper v. The Queen, 15 Can. Sup. Ct. Rep. 401; as to position of the body, see Com. v. Dorr, 216 Mass. 314, 317, 103 N. E. 902; "Wharton on Homicide [3d Ed.] see. 609 and cases there cited; on all three points, see 12 Am. & Eng. Enc. Law [2d Ed.] p. 449); but even those courts which consider proofs of this character admissible recognize that it is the province of the jury to determine what weight shall be given to such opinion evidence (see authorities last cited), which, of course, must be the case.” Commonwealth v. Santos, supra, 275 Penn. St. Rep. 515.
“While there are some authorities which hold that under no circumstances will expert evidence be admitted as to the position of the body of the deceased at the time when the wound was inflicted, nor as to the position of the person inflicting it, these being considered subjects upon which the jurors are competent to form independent opinions, and that a medical expert can form no better opinion or conclusion from the facts than can the jurors themselves, there are other cases in which the opinions of experts have been received in respect to such matters. Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law (2d Ed.) vol. 12 p. 449, and cases cited. But, if error, we are unable to see how it could have prejudiced the defendant. He was the only witness to the homicide, admitted the shooting, and his statement of the position and attitude of the deceased at the time he fired the fatal shot in no way conflicts with the opinion of the doctor. There is nothing in his opinion inconsistent with the defendant’s evidence or theory of defense. Therefore there was no issue upon which the admitted evidence could have exerted any prejudicial influence with the jury. It was manifestly harmless, and, if error, would afford no ground for reversal. People v. Lemperle (Cal.) 29 Pac. 709; People v. Hill (Cal.) 48 Pac. 711.’’
The modern tendency is to overlook errors that do not 'affect tfie substantial rights of the parties. In People v. Alvarez, 21 P.R.R. 82, we cited section 362 of the Code of Criminal Procedure and the Act of May 30, 1904, to that effect, as follows:
*63 “Section 362. After Rearing the appeal, the Supreme Court must give judgment without regard to technical errors or defects, or to exceptions, which do not aifect the substantial rights of the parties. ’ ’
“Section 1. (Act of May 30, 1904.) Whenever it appears from the record in any criminal case upon appeal in the Supreme Court, that any requirement of the law has beeiq disregarded by the trial court, the judgment shall not be reversed, unless the error appearing from the record was calculated to injure the rights of either of the parties, and was duly excepted to in the trial court: Provided, however, That the appellate court may take cognizance of fundamental errors, appearing in the record, although not excepted to, and render such judgment thereon as the facts and the law may require.”
We also drew attention to the decisions of Oklahoma and Texas. Montana, with only the equivalent of section 362, decided in State v. Byrd, 41 Mont. 586, not to reverse for non-prejudicial error and held that under such section it should no longer be the rule that prejudice would he presumed. See also People v. Fearly, 33 Cal. App. 618, and cases; 17 Corpus Juris, 317 et seq.
With respect to the sixth to fourteenth assignments, we agree with the fiscal and his quotation from Wharton on Homicide, Third Edition, page 914, that when the corpus delicti has been proved and the circumstances indicate that the accused man was the perpetrator of the homicide, facts tending even remotely to show a motive are admissible. Therefore the evidence of Antonia Gómez who testified that she was the mother of the deceased and sister of the defendant,'was admissible to show the state of the family relations and the alleged hard feeling that the defendant had towards the' deceased.
Some complaint is made of the instructions. One specific error is that the court, in speaking of the various degrees of crime of which the defendant could be convicted, said nothing at the moment of an acquittal. However, the instructions as a whole made the duty of the jury to acquit
The appellant also filed a motion for a new trial and the overruling of that motion is assigned as error. There was no appeal from the order overruling the motion, but as it was presented before judgment we shall assume the right to consider it. Most of the matters raised in this motion have been disposed of in considering the other assignments. In a supplement, however, to the motion for a new trial it was alleged that there had been passion, prejudice or partiality at the trial, inasmuch as a certain juryman had made public manifestations that the defendant was not guilty. To this supplemental motion the following affidavit was subjoined:
“I, Agustín E. Pont, of age, married, attorney and resident of Ponce, under oath, aver:
“That I have personally known Urbino Vargas for many year; that one day in July, 1921, I was talking with the said Urbino Vargas in the town of San Sebastián about the case of José Collazo Bracero and Antonio Gómez when he told me there was no justification for the death of Gómez and that, in his opinion, Collazo had acted imprudently, (sd.) Agustín E. Pont.”
While the appellant assigned as error the overruling of the motion for a new trial, in the argument of this assignment no reference is made to the affidavit of Font. Mention is made of it exclusively in discussing the failure of the court to grant a change of venue. In the motion for a new trial the failure of the court to order a change of venue is not assigned as error. Also while the court disposed of the motion for a new trial in a reasoned opinion, no mention was made of this affidavit and it probably was not
No attempt was made to transcribe the examination of the juror Urhino Yargas at the trial. It must be presumed that on his examination under oath he. said that he did not have a formed opinion, or something equivalent. Under section 227, par. 7, of the Code of Criminal Procedure the opinion formed from newspapers, rumors and the like will not disqualify a juror and there is nothing in the affidavit of Pont showing how the opinion of Yargas was formed. .The presumption, then, would remain that he was not disqualified.
In Territory v. Emilio, 89 Pac. 242, New Mexico, a carefully considered opinion cited by the fiscal, the court in a similar case said that so far as the motion related to the disqualification of a juror it was addressed to the sound legal discretion of the trial court. We are convinced also that the overruling of the motion was a matter within the sound discretion of the trial court and no abuse was shown. In general, where the forming of an opinion was alleged as a disqualification the objection was made at the time the juror was presented and so raised on appeal. People v. Wills, 100 Cal. 459, and it's citations. After the trial the showing made would have to be a strong one.
The remaining errors are matters relating to the discretion of the court in allowing supposed leading questions and other matters of the admission or rejection of evidence which we do not find to be erroneous or, if erroneous, they were clearly not prejudicial, so that we shall not discuss them.
The evidence that we have reviewed succinctly showed that there was ample proof to justify the jury in returning a verdict of voluntary manslaughter, and we rather think it
The judgment appealed from should he
Affirmed.
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