delivered- the opinion of the court.
In this canse, the appellant, José de Thomas, was charged in the District Court of Hum'acao with the crime of murder in the first degree, committed as follows:
“On or about the night of November 21, 1904, in the city of Humacao, the seat of the district of the same name, the defendant, José de Thomas, with malice aforethought and treachery, unlawfully killed Angel Romero alias Nini by shooting him in the left orbitary region with a revolver.”
This information was duly sworn to' by the fiscal, who signed it, on January 9th of the current year, and upon arraignment José de Thomas entered a plea of not guilty.
The trial having been held before a jury, the latter returned a verdict of guilty against José de Thomas as an accessory to the crime of voluntary manslaughter, and the Huma-cao court, on March 25th last, pronounced judgment sentencing the defendant, José de Thomas, convicted as an accessory to the crime of voluntary manslaughter to be confined in the penitentiary of San Juan, Porto Eico, for seven years, at hard labor, and to pay the costs of the trial.
Counsel for the defendant took an appeal from this judgment, which was perfected in this Supreme Court by his attorney, José de G-uzmán Benitez who expressly stated that he did not attack the trial, nor the evidence introduced, nor the verdict; the appeal being based solely upon an error of law committed in imposing on the defendant the maximum penalty prescribed by section 18 of the Penal Code for accessories of all kinds; that is to say, imprisonment in the penitentiary for seven years, thus violating the letter and spirit *512of sections 3, 11, 12, 18 and 28 of tlie Penal Code, 284 and 286 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, and the principles established in the jurisprudence of the courts of the United States in the matter of judicial discretion.
The following grounds are alleged in support of the appeal:
“1. That the responsibility of the accessory, José de Thomas, should be weighed in relation with the acts of Policeman Pedro Maria Rodriguez, who caused the death of Angel Romero, and in relation with the intent and acts of José de Thomas himself, which determine his complicity in the crime, it is neither just nor equitable to attribute to the liability of the accessory a greater scope than that given to the liability of the principal — that is to say, Policeman Rodriguez; ,and as the homicide of which the latter was convicted was excusable, according to the evidence heard at the trial, owing to his having acted in the exercise of his functions as a guardian of the public peace, in the' defense of his person and in the performance of his duties, the complicity of José de Thomas was excusable also, he having done nothing but to exchange his revolver for that of the policeman and conceal said policeman’s revolver in the water closet of the house of Jova González, prompted by an impulse of generous inexperience and without any intention of prejudicing the interests of any person whatsoever.
“2. That section 18 of the Penal Code establishes a scale of penalties under which accessories to felonies are punishable by one to seven years’ confinement in the penitentiary, and it is the intention of the law that the penal liability of an accessory be governed by the gravity of the crime, said article is not properly construed when it applies to the accessory to the crime of voluntary manslaughter the maximum penalty applicable .at the utmost to an accessory to a murder in the first degree, because section 3 of the Penal Code provides that all the provisions and sections thereof are to be construed according to the fair construction of their terms, with a view to effect its object and to promote justice. Nor is it equitable to apply to an accessory to an excusable homicide, as was that of Angel Romero, a penalty almost equal to the maximum fixed by the law for a principal to the crime of voluntary manslaughter without extenuation of any kind.
“3. That the jury, having the power, according to sections 284 and 286 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, to find the degree of guilt of a defendant, courts of justice cannot ignore the classification *513made in the verdict of the jury, nor can they impose a penalty differing from that which it was the intention of the jury should be imposed on the defendant, and much less aggravate the liability of the latter by sentencing him to suffer a punishment corresponding to a higher classification or degree than that fixed in the verdict, as has occurred in this case, in which, against the intention of the jury that José de Thomas should be punished as an accessory to the crime of voluntary manslaughter, he was' punished as an accessory to the crime of murder in the first or second degree, and sentenced to suffer the maximum penalty fixed in the scale of section 18 of the Penal Code; for this reason the sentence does not conform to the verdict of the jury: it punishes the defendant as guilty of a more serious crime than that of which he had been cleared by said verdict; it controverts the constitutional principle that trials for all crimes, excepting cases in which public officials are defendants, shall rest with the jury; and it contravenes the principle recognized by the jurisprudence of almost all of the States of the American Union, that when the verdict of the jury finds a defendant guilty of a crime in a lower degree than that charged in the information, the defendant is cleared of any degree higher than that found in the verdict, and cannot be guilty of a more serious crime involving the same act, or be again put in jeopardy, and still less punished for the crime or classification of liability of which he has been cleared.
“4. That although there exists the principle of judicial discretion which empowers the adjudging court to impose the penalty it may deem proper within the limits prescribed for each crime by the Penal Code, such principle cannot be carried to extremes without unsettling the stability of the law, the administration of justice and the rights of citizens, and it never authorizes an abuse of such discretion, which must be exercised while taking into consideration the provisions established in the law, and respecting the mandates of the latter and. not the will of the judge.
Counsel for the appellant closes his brief with the allegation that the judgment appealed from violated the Constitution and the legal provisions above cited; that this court has jurisdiction to hold, under the verdict of the jury, and in view of the record of the trial that the voluntary manslaughter of Angel Romero is justifiable and is justified on account of being included under the cases specified by sections 207 and 208 of the Penal Code; that as the principal to the crime, the *514policeman, Pedro Maria Rodriguez, lias not even been accused, not being punishable under the circumstances, the accessory to said crime cannot be pnnisbed either ■ and lie prays for the reversal of the judgment rendered and alleges that the voluntary manslaughter of Angel Romero being justified, no penal liability attaches to the defendant José de Thomas on account of his complicity therein, and that, therefore, the latter has not committed a punishable act and should be set at liberty forthwith.
The fiscal opposed the appeal both by brief and oral argument, and prayed for its dismissal on the ground that the application of section 18 of the Penal Code is within the discretion of the judge, and that there is no law whatsoever restricting that discretional power.
The transcript of the record before us does not contain any bill of exceptions, or statement of facts, the result of the evidence heard at the trial being shown only in a summarized form by the verdict of the jury.
Let us now examine the legal questions submitted to judicial decision in the brief submitted to this court by the appellant.
To ascertain the facts which led to the judgment appealed from by José de Thomas, we must go to the information by which said de Thomas was charged with the crime of murder in the first degree committed on the person of Angel Romero. In this information no mention is even made of the insular policeman, Pedro María Rodríguez, and as the transcript of the record which the court has before it does not contain any statement of facts fixing and determining the result of the evidence heard at the trial, we do not know whether Pedro Maria Rodriguez had any punishable or excusable intervention in the death of Angel Romero, and, what is more, neither ■do we know the acts which implicated José de Thomas in said •death. Therefore we cannot discuss whether the killing of Angel Romero was excusable on the part of the author thereof to us unknown, but, on the contrary, in view of the verdict *515of the jury, we must assume that it was punishable, because there can he no punishable complicity in an excusable homicide. Nor is it possible to discuss whether or not the complicity of José de Thomas was excusable, because apart from the fact that the jury found him guilty of voluntary manslaughter as an accessory, and that its verdict has not been attacked on the ground that it was contrary to the law or the evidence, the appellant himself has stated in this court that he has no objection to make to the trial, the evidence or the verdict, and that he had appealed from the judgment only on account of the sentence imposed, although this statement is in contradiction of the prayer he makes in his brief that the crime of voluntary manslaughter committed upon the person of Angel Eomero be held to have been justified, and, consequently, that he be set at liberty on the ground that he had not committed any punishable act.
José de Thomas, having been found guilty of being an accessory to the crime of voluntary manslaughter committed on the person of Angel Eomero, there is a legal presumption that the jury, so held him to be an accessory in accordance with section 37 of the Penal Code, which reads as follows:
“All persons who, after full knowledge that a felony has been committed, -conceal it from the proper authorities, or harbor and protect the person charged with or convicted thereof, are accessories.”
The punishment which may be imposed upon accessories is fixed in section 18 of said Code, as follows:
“Except in'cases where a different punishment is prescribed, an accessory is punishable by imprisonment in the penitentiary not exceeding seven years, or in jail not exceeding two years, or by fine not -exceeding $5,000.”
Said section 18 is applicable to this case, as we do not find in the Code any special punishment fixed for accessories to the crime of voluntary manslaughter. Nor do we find any legal provision whatsoever regulating the extent or amount *516of the punishment, which could serve as a guide to the courts in applying section 18, although sections 27 and 28 impose upon courts the obligation of fixing the penalty corresponding to each case.-
These two articles read as follows:
“The several sections of this Code which declare certain crimes to be punishable as therein mentioned, devolve a duty upon the court authorized to pass sentence, to determine and impose the punishment prescribed. ■
“Whenever in this Code the punishment for a crime is left undetermined between certain limits, the punishment to be inflicted in a particular case must be- determined by the court authorized to pass ■sentence, within such limits as may be prescribed by this Code.”
The District Court of Humacao, in fixing the punishment of José de Thomas as an accessory to the crime of voluntary manslaughter at seven years in the penitentiary, applied the two legal provisions cited, and acted within the limits prescribed by section 18, above transcribed.
We do not doubt that judges in each special case, in exercising the discretional power which the law vests in them, must consider the greater or lesser gravity of the case and the attendant circumstances, and endeavor to secure the greatest equality possible between the punishable act and the penalty, in order that the scales of justice may remain evenly balanced.
We understand that cases may arise in which an abuse of such discretional power may be revealed in an evident manner, as would be the case if the accessory to the crime were given a punishment equal or greater than that inflicted upon the principal thereof, and if, extenuating circumstances being-proved, the maximum penalty were imposed on the accused.
But in this case, the punishment imposed upon José de Thomas is lower than the maximum of ten years established for the crime of voluntary manslaughter of which he was. found guilty as an accessory, and the circumstances of the complicity of Thomas not having been shown in this Supreme *517Court, we have no ground npon which to base an affirmation to the effect that the Humacao judge abused the discretional power vested in him by law.
It is not that this appellate court lacks jurisdiction to correct abuses of discretional power, but such abuses must be manifest, clear and tangible, in order that such jurisdiction may be exercised, which is not the case herein.
It is true that it is the duty of the jury to convict or acquit the defendant of the crime with the commission of which he is charged in the information, and to determine, in a proper case, the degree of the crime committed, and it is also clear that the judge cannot go beyond the verdict of the jury in imposing the penalty; but it is no less true, according to the sections of the Penal Code transcribed, that it is the duty of the judge, and not of the jury, to fix the punishment within the limits prescribed by the law, and that the Humacao judge did fix the punishment taking as a basis the verdict of the jury, without going beyond such limits.
Before concluding, we must quote in support of our opinion section 320 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which reads as follows:
“After a plea or verdict of guilty, where a discretion is conferred upon the court as to the extent of the punishment, the court, upon the oral suggestion of either party that there are circumstances which may be properly taken into view either in aggravation or mitigation of the punishment, may, in its discretion, hear the same summarily, at a specified time, and upon such notice to the adverse party as it may direct.”
If there were any extenuating circumstances to submit to the Humacao court for the imposition of the punishment, counsel for the defendant should have made use of the right given him by the section transcribed, and then the provisions of the following section could have been applied for the establishment of such extenuating circumstances, thus affording *518an adequate means of bringing them before this court by means of a statement of facts.
Counsel for José de Thomas did not do this, and under these circumstances the discretional power must be held to have been exercised properly and wisely, in the absence of any indication in the record that an improper use of such power was made.
The information against José de Thomas, the verdict of the jury, and the sentence pronounced in relation with sections 18, 27 and 28 of the Penal Code, do not prove an abuse of the discretional power.and the record does not show in an authentic manner the evidence adduced at the trial which was taken into consideration by the trial judge to determine the greater or lesser perversity shown by José de Thomas, the accessory to the crime of voluntary manslaughter.
It is true that upon an accessory to a murder in the first or second degree a heavier penalty than that imposed on J osé de Thomas could not be imposed; but in the same way as extenuating circumstances might be present with regard to an accessory to the said crime, of such character as to lead the judge under his discretional power, to reduce the punishment of seven years in the penitentiary, so also could there have been present in the case at bar such aggravating circumstances as to justify the application of the penalty imposed.
We repeat that no abuse of the discretional power has been shown in this appellate court, and the burden of such proof is on the appellant.
For the reasons stated, in our opinion, the judgment rendered by the Humacao court on March 25th last should be affirmed, with the costs of the appeal against the appellant.
Affirmed.
Chief Justice Quinones, and Justice Wolf concurred.