People v. Marrero Laffosse
People v. Marrero Laffosse
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In Marrero Laffosse v. Marshal, Superior Court, 89 P.R.R. 553 (1963), we had the opportunity to refer to the more important antecedents of this appeal related to the contention of lack of adequate legal assistance which was invoked as grounds in a habeas corpus proceeding to challenge the sentence of life imprisonment imposed on appellant for the crime of murder in the first degree. Relying on Chamberlain v. Delgado, Warden, 82 P.R.R. 287 (1961), we then held that the present appeal filed by Marrero constituted an adequate remedy to resolve said matter, especially considering that “the best way to show that the petitioner did not have an adequate legal assistance should arise from the actions of the attorney [appointed by the court] that was designated, as they appear from the transcript of the evidence.” We specifically set forth that the evidence aliunde of the record of the criminal case, that is, proofs of the proceedings had in the trial court in the habeas corpus proceeding, in its fundamental aspects, and particularly in those in which there
1 — The • basic grounds which are now alleged to süpport the error of inadequate defense, not only reproduce what was previously alleged in the habeas corpus, but they further elaborate specific incidents of the transcript. A close examination of the records of both proceedings, convinces us that this.assignment is untenable.
Reference is made to various isolated incidents as examples of the lack of capacity and preparation of the attorney who defended appellant. We have examined them. They are mere trivialities in the majority of the situations, and in the others, it cannot be said that any one of them
At the bottom of everything lies appellant’s pretention of having been defended by an attorney of his own choice. We have always shared this view, but it cannot be used to obstruct the normal prosecution of a criminal proceeding, People v. Rodriguez Correa, 88 P.R.R. 635 (1963), particularly when, as in the present case, said fact did not prejudice the defendant because he had an adequate defense. Moreover, there is present here the additional circumstance that, at the request of the attorney appointed by the court, the lawyer chosen by the defendant was summoned and both conferred for more than an hour during a recess decreed by the court for that purpose. Although it is true that this conference took place before the hearing on the second day commenced, during the first day the jury was impaneled, and the only witness was the doctor who performed the autopsy of the victim. The evidence as to how the crime was committed had not yet been presented.
Let us now examine briefly the other errors assigned by appellant.
2 — During the voir dire of one of the members of the jury, counsel for the defense asked him: “. . . Do you believe that the appellant should prove self-defense, or that it is incumbent upon the prosecutor to show that the death is unjustified?” When the prosecutor objected, the judge instructed the members of the jury present that it was incumbent on the State to establish free of reasonable doubt the guilt of appellant, and that the latter had nothing to prove.
It is set forth that the action of the court in not permit
3 — The fourth error refers to the ruling of the court permitting the widow of the victim to testify that in her presence another witness — Joseph Berrios — told the defendant: “You have killed this man, hand in your weapon.” It maintains that it involves hearsay evidence, and that it did not correspond accurately with the statements of Berrios. It is not necessary to elaborate on this assignment, for Be-rrios himself testified substantially the same, and in any event, it did not prejudice appellant.
4 — Section 261 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, 34 L.P.R.A. § 740, required that “the jury must also, at each adjournment of the court, whether permitted to separate or kept in charge of officers, be admonished by the court that it is their duty not to converse among themselves, or with anyone else, on any subject connected with the trial, or to form or express any opinion thereon until the cause is finally submitted to them.” Appellant maintains that on four different occasions the court failed to discharge its duty, which is imposed by the above-copied provision, in ordering adjournment without properly instructing the jury. It expressly refers to situations which appear on pp. 126, 168, 257, and 360 of the transcript of evidence.
Although it can be said that on the occasions indicated the court failed to make the warnings, it does not constitute a ground for reversal unless it is shown that the defendant suffered any prejudice. It has thus been invariably held .in California in interpreting § 1122 of the Penal Code, 50 West, Annotated California Codes 19, from which our § 261 was taken, People v. Linden, 338 P.2d 397, 411 (1959); People v. Williams, 275 P.2d 513 (1954); People v. Leavitt, 279 Pac. 1056 (1929); Stout, Appellate Review of Criminal Convictions, 43 Cal. L. Rev. 381, 403 (1955). The same rule prevails in other jurisdictions, State v. Thompson, 117 N.W.2d 514 (Iowa 1962). Furthermore, the trial was prolonged for four days, and there were decreed at least seventeen adjournments. In all the other thirteen adjournments the court complied with the pertinent legal warnings, and it is easy to conclude that the jury was already sufficiently warned of the limitations which are prescribed for these situations. Cf. People v. Goitía, 41 P.R.R. 929 (1931), in which we de
5 — While the testimony of the defendant himself was' being heard, the court refused to admit certain statements the latter made to a detective several hours, after the facts occurred. The shots were fired about 9:00 p.m. The defendant was conducted, accompanied by Lydia Rios, to a nearby police station, and from there he was conducted to the Municipal Hospital where he was'offered medical attention. Again he was conducted to the police station in Loiza Street and after-wards he was moved to Police General Headquarters in Hato Rey. The defendant conversed with Mrs. Rios, while he waited for the prosecuting attorney. The prosecutor and the detective arrived together. It was then when Marrero made the statements to the detective, which were excluded, and which were obviously of an exculpatory nature.
The guarantees of contemporariness and spontaneity,which could have justified his admission in evidence, are not present.
-6 — The other errors assigned lack merit. An examination of the record shows that the intervention of the judge sought to clear up certain points in the testimonies offered in his legitimate function of seeing that the proceedings were conducted in an orderly manner. The objections -to the instructions lack ground because the ones transmitted followed substantially the pronouncements of this Court in
The errors assigned not having been committed, the judgment rendered by the Superior Court, San Juan Part, on November 7, 1961, will be affirmed.
Among the facts that we then considered we find the allegations that, counsel for the defendant expressly admitted that he was unprepared for the hearing and was ill during the trial, as well as his statements relating to his professional capacity. See footnote 8 of the opinion delivered in Marrero Laffosse v. Marshal, Superior Court, supra.
For a better understanding of this assignment, we summarize below the salient facts of the action in relation to the information presented against the appellant.
' The information which was filed on January 10, 1961, charged the defendant with having caused the death of a fellow creature on November 20, 1960. The arraignment took place on February 7, at which defendant appeared assisted by Mr. César Andreu Ribas. A term of fifteen days was granted to him to make his plea, and the hearing of the case was set' for June 5, 1961. Since no plea was made, the court ordered that the' plea of not guilty and a petition for a trial by jury be entered, confirming also the date set for hearing. On June 5, by stipulation of the j>arties and because the defense was not ready to enter trial, the hearing wag suspended and it, was provided that a new hearing be set by the
See People v. Meléndez Burgos, 90 P.R.R. 771 (1964) for the separation''of the jurors after submitting the case for deliberation:
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
San Juan, Puerto Rico, June 30,1967
In Marrero Laffosse v. Marshal, Superior Court, 89 P.R.R. 553 (1963), we dismissed the appeal brought against a judgment which denied a petition for habeas corpus, this Court relying on the ground that the allegation of lack of adequate legal assistance should be substantiated within the appeal taken from the verdict of guilty in the principal cause. In my dissent on said occasion, I indicated that the question referred to did not rest “exclusively on the record of the proceedings had in the trial of the criminal case from which an appeal was taken,” but also on evidence, aliunde of the record, introduced at the hearing of the habeas corpus, which we would not have before us in considering the appeal from the judgment in the criminal case.
In his appeal from the judgment in the criminal case appellant now confronts the decision of Marrero Laffosse
As readily seen, the allegation relating to the adequate legal assistance has been fragmented and the question, which could have been considered in full within the habeas corpus, is now reduced to the showings in the record of appeal.
The cause of action taken then limited the consideration which is given to said question in this appeal. Without prejudging it in its merits the reiteration of what, in my opinion, constitutes a double error, makes me dissent.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.