People v. Alfonso

Mr. Justice Figueras

delivered the opinion of the court.

This cause originated in the District Court of Iiumacao upon an information properly drawn against Arturo Alfonso, for embezzlement, a felony, because while the agent of the Singer Sewing Machine Co., in Fajardo,'on or about February 1, 1907, he unlawfully and fraudulently appropriated a sum exceeding $50, belonging to said company, which amount was in the custody of said defendant.

The latter was tried by a duly impanelled jury, which returned a verdict of guilty of embezzlement, a felony.

Before sentence was pronounced, a motion for a new trial was filed on the ground that the jury first found a verdict of guilty of embezzlement, a misdemeanor, which was withdrawn and changed for another of embezzlement, a felony, because the court called the attention of the foreman of the jury to the fact that only one of the two verdicts was possible, either guilty or not guilty of embezzlement, a felony.

These facts were established by two affidavits by two of the members of the jury and appear in the statement of facts duly approved by the trial judge.

The court denied the motion for a new trial and rendered judgment in due form on August 12, 1907, sentencing the defendant to imprisonment in the penitentiary at hard labor for three years, and to pay the costs.

An appeal was taken from both decisions on behalf of the defendant, which appeal is now awaiting determination by this Supreme Court.

Now then, the crime of embezzlement is punishable in the manner prescribed for feloniously stealing property of the value of that embezzled. (Section 455 of the Penal Code.)

So that embezzlement, like larceny, sections 430 and 431, may be grand or petit, constituting in the former case a fel*774ony, and in the latter a misdemeanor, the corresponding punishment varying consequently in each case.

.This being the case, it cannot be denied that petit embezzlement is a felony, which was charged in the information in this case and then we find section 286 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which reads as follows:

‘ ‘ The jury may find the defendant guilty of any offense, the commission of which is necessarily included in that with which he is charged, or of any attempt to commit the offense. ’ ’

And that the offense of embezzlement, a misdemeanor, is necessarily included in the crime of embezzlement, a felony, we have already observed; and clear questions may be confused, if unnecessary reasons are insisted on and accumulated.

The amount of the embezzlement is merely a question of fact and the evidence heard at the trial must surely have been in regard to the facts, and as the jury is the only authority which can weigh the evidence admitted in its various aspects, it is evident that it alone can decide whether the embezzlement was, on acount of the amount involved, a felony, or a misdemeanor, and when it returned its verdict with the latter classi-cation, it should have been accepted as good and legal and as the honest expression of its conscience, formed upon the facts brought out before it.

We have already observed that the' jury could do this under the Statutes of Porto Rico above cited, and we also refer in support of this affirmation to the case of The People of Porto Rico v. Manuel Llauger, ante 534, in Which the opinion was delivered by Mr. Justice MacLeary. Then, among other things pertinent and applicable to the case, it was said:

‘ ‘ The defendant was indicted for a felony, but it was such a felony as included within it certain misdemeanors under the Statutes of Porto Rico; and the jury after considering all the evidence and the charge of the court, could find the defendant not guilty of the felony but guilty of one of the misdemeanors, which are included therein, and *775they are not deprived of their function by the facts proven which require them to do so.”

And it is further added:

“The fact that the statute laws of Porto Eico do not provide for juries in misdemeanor cases does not prevent the jury from finding the defendant guilty of a misdemeanor when the court has acquired jurisdiction of this case.
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“If it turns out in the proof that he is not guilty of a felony, but only of a misdemeanor, included in the felony charged against him, there is no reason why the court should relinquish its jurisdiction of the case, and send it to another court to be tried; for the law authorizes the trial to proceed and provides that the defendant may be found guilty of the minor offense or acquitted according to the evidence. (See secs. 284 and 286 of the Code of Civil Procedure.)
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“The jurisdiction of the court having once attacked the presentation of the information, and the jury, having been properly and legally summoned and impanelled and sworn, the case must proceed to judgment. ’ ’

Upon applying these considerations to the case at bar, it must be conceded that the verdict finding the defendant guilty of a felony which served as a basis for the judgment appealed from, was not a spontaneous verdict, but one suggested on erroneous instruction of law, becoming thus also contrary to the law, and in such cases a new trial must be granted in accordance with the provisions of subdivisions five and sis of section 303 of the -Code of Criminal Procedure.

For all the reasons stated, we believe that the way of reestablishing the proper doctrine, is to set aside the judgment appealed from and to order a new trial.

Reversed.

Justices Hernández, MacLeary and Wolf concurred. Mr. Chief Justice Quinones did not take part in the decision of this case.