delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal taken by Benigno Colón Pacheco and Carlos Ferrer Rodriguez from a judgment of the District Court of Ponce convicting them of the crime of conspiracy and sentencing the former to pay a fine of $500 or, in default thereof, to imprisonment for six months, and the latter to pay a fine of $200 or, in default thereof, to imprisonment for three months.
The pertinent part of the information upon which the prosecution is based reads as follows:
“The fiscal charges Francisco Alsina, Benigno Colón Pacheco and Carlos Ferrer Rodriguez with the crime of conspiracy, a misdemeanor, committed in the following manner: In or about the month of July, .1913, the said accused Francisco Alsina, Benigno Colón Pacheco and Carlos Ferrer Rodriguez, in the city-of Ponce of this judicial district, unlawfully, maliciously and wilfully conspired to commit the crime of fraudulent destruction of insured property, a felony, by destroying by fire the insured stock of merchandise belonging to a commercial firm composed of the accused Alsina and Colón Pacheco and styled F. Alsina & Co., Ltd., which stock of'merchandise was insured against loss by fire in- the London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Company and the Guardian Assurance Company, Ltd., both with headquarters in London, England, and offices in San Juan, Porto Rico, and legally authorized to do business in this Island of Porto Rico, for the sums of $5,000 and $10,000 respectively, or a total in both companies of $15,000. The. policies were issued on June 6, 1913, for one year — that is, to expire on June 6, 1914 — and it was the intention of the said defendants in conspiring to commit the said crime to cheat and defraud the said companies, as civil persons, of their property, amounting in the case of the London and Lancashire Fire Insurance Company to $5,000 and of the Guardian Assurance Company, Limited, to $10,000, for which purpose they placed tins of *429gasoline and petroleum in tbe said 'commercial establishment and set fire to tbe said stock of merchandise; likewise with the deliberate, malicious, unlawful and wilful intention of cheating and defrauding the said companies, or civil persons, they removed beforehand and conveyed a part -of the said insured merchandise to the commercial establishment of the other defendant, Carlos Ferrer Rodriguez, in Juana Diaz.”
From the transcript of the record brought up to this court it appears, that the information was demurred to on the following grounds: (1) That it was" vague; (2) that the facts stated therein did not constitute a public offense; (3) that the court had no jurisdiction of the' case because the information had not been filed within the time prescribed by law; (4) that the defendants were charged with more than one offense; (5) that the information was ambiguous; and (6) that as it is inferred from the information that the accused .committed the greater crime of felony, the lesser crime of conspiracy, a misdemeanor, should be considered as merged therein.
The ruling of the court on the demurrer is not shown in the transcript of "the record, but as the case went on to trial we must presume that it .was adverse to the contentions of the accused.
1 and 2. The first and second grounds of demurrer clearly are without foundation. Under the title “Conspiracy” the Penal Code in force in Porto Eico provides in section 62 that if two or more persons conspire, among other things, to cheat and defraud any person of any property by any means which are in themselves criminal, they are punishable by imprisonment in jail not exceeding one year or by a fine not exceeding $1,000, or both, and a perusal of the information is sufficient to show that it charges the defendants in a specific and not in a vague manner with an act which is clearly comprised within the penal statute .cited — that is, of having conspired to defraud certain insurance companies, *430or juridical persons, of their property by removing and setting fire to insured merchandise.
3. We have not sufficient data upon which to decide the third ground of demurrer. The date on which the defendants were arrested is not shown and, in the absence of proof to the contrary, we must presume that the information was filed within the time fixed by law.
4 and 5. Regarding the fourth and fifth grounds of demurrer, we will say that although the information alleges facts which of themselves alone tend to establish the crime of incendiarism, it is deduced from the information as a whole that the fiscal charged the defendants with the offense of conspiracy only.
6. The sixth and last ground of demurrer raises a question of law which Jias been the subject of the broadest and most careful study in England and the United States and on which the decisions of the courts are conflicting.
There is conflict of authority as to whether conspiracy to commit a felony is merged in the greater offense when the object of the conspiracy is accomplished. According to a number of decisions, when the felony which is the object of the conspiracy is committed, the conspiracy, being a misdemeanor, is merged in the felony. There are, however, many decisions which reach a contrary conclusion and hold that a misdemeanor which is a part of a felony may be punished as a misdemeanor although the felony is accomplished. 8 Cyc., 644.
One of the most interesting cases in support of the latter theory which we have consulted is that of State v. Setter (Connecticut), reported in 14 A. S. R., 121.
The only question argued before the court in that case was whether the' crime of conspiracy to commit larceny, as charged in the information, was merged in the crime of larceny which was actually committed as shown by the evidence introduced at the trial. The court held that notwithstanding the result of the evidence, the crime of conspiracy could *431be prosecuted and punished, as in fact it was. In the course of its opinion the court said:
“Mr. Bishop, in bis treatise on the criminal law (7th ed., sec. SI 4), after ■ discussing the rule that a conspiracy merges in a felony, remarks: ‘The doctrine, the reader perceives, is contrary to just principle; it has been rejected in England, and though there may be states in which it is binding on the courts, it is not to be deemed the general American law.’ Professor Wheaton (Criminal Law, 8th ed., sec. 1344) says: ‘The technical rule that a misdemeanor always sinks in the felony when the two meet has in some instances been recognized' in this country, though without good reason * * *.’ And in several of our courts a disposition has been exhibited to reject the doctrine in all eases. See eases cited below.
“In England, the doctrine that a conspiracy to commit a felony is merged in the felony itself has been expressly rejected. Lord Den-man, in rendering the judgment of the court of queen’s bench in Regina v. Button, 11 Q. B., 929, said: ‘Misdemeanor which is a part of a felony may be prosecuted as a misdemeanor, though the felony has been completed.’ The case was one where the defendants were charged with a conspiracy to commit a theft, and the evidence tended to show that the theft had been actually committed. Regina v. Neale, 1 Den. C. C., 36, is to the same effect.” 14 Am. St. Rep., 124-125.
The opinion of this court on the point was clearly stated in the case of The People v. Díaz et al., decided March 27, 1915, where it was held that conspiracy may be punished although the crime which was the object of the conspiracy was committed. We ratify the opinion delivered in the said case and hold, therefore, that the district court did not err in overruling the sixth and last ground of demurrer.
Having disposed of the said grounds of demurrer in the manner set forth, we will proceed to the consideration and decision of the exceptions taken during the trial and set out in the bill of exceptions which forms a part of the transcript of the record, confining our reasonings herein to those which were argued before this court by counsel for the defendants..
A. At the beginning of the trial defendant Colón, by his attorney, moved for a peremptory dismissal of the prosecution on the ground that more than the 120 days prescribed *432by subdivision 2 of section 448 of tbe Code of Criminal Procedure bad' elapsed, and tbe court overruled tbe motion on tbe ground that although tbe said 120 days bad expired there was good cause for delaying tbe trial of tbe case.
It appears from tbe transcript of tbe record that after tbe information bad been filed tbe case was set for trial within the period of 120 days, but at tbe moment of beginning tbe trial tbe fiscal specially in charge of tbe prosecution of the case received a telegraxh informing him that a fire had occurred in one of tbe towns within bis district. Tbe fiscal brought this to tbe attention of tbe court and moved that tbe trial be suspended. One of tbe defendants acquiesced but the other two opposed tbe motion, which tbe court sustained": Such was tbe reason for delaying tbe trial.
We are of tbe opinion that tbe court did not abuse its discretion in finding tbe said cause to be a goojl ground for a continuance, for of tbe "two duties of tbe fiscal it could conclude that tbe investigation of tbe fire required tbe most immediate attention. As a general rule it is very difficult to discover evidence in crimes of incendiarism and experience teaches that in many instances it has been possible to secure said evidence by active, intelligent and immediate investigation of tbe case.
B. In introducing bis evidence tbe fiscal offered two certificates issued by tbe Secretary of Porto Eico attesting that tbe fire insurance companies, tbe London and Lancashire Insurance Company and the Guardian Assurance Company 7 Limited, bad been registered in bis office as companies organized and doing business in Porto Eico, without stating the date of their registration. Counsel for defendants Colón and’ Ferrer objected, contending that tbe said certificates did not establish tbe fact that said companies were authorized to do business in the Island on tbe date when tbe offense was committed. Tbe court admitted tbe certificates as prima facie evidence of tbe existence of tbe companies.
According to tbe opinion which we have formed in this-*433case, the allegation in the information that the companies were registered in the office of the Secretary of Porto Rico was -superfluous, but even if it were not it cannot be sustained, in our opinion, in view of all the circumstances, that the district court committed any fundamental error in admitting the certificates in evidence. This is a prosecution for a public offense and in such a case the principal element which should be proven is the intention of the accused. If the defendants conspired to defraud the insurance companies and by their own acts acknowledged their existence, they cannot evade criminal liability by shielding themselves later behind the fact that no direct evidence was introduced at the trial to show that said companies were registered in the office of the Secretary of Porto Rico when the policies of insurance were issued. In the case of Lamas & Méndez v. Betancourt, 16 P. R. R., 265, this court held that “Where a defendant denies in his answer the existence of the plaintiff firm and during the introduction of evidence he acknowledges that he had transacted business with the firm and had an account on the books thereof, he cannot continue to deny its existence and allege that it has not been proven that such a firm did exist on the ground that no public instrument showing its constitution was presented.” (Syllabus.)
Observe what witness Rodolfo del Valle said regarding the attitude of defendant Colón, attorney in fact of Alsina- & Company, in relation to one of the insurance policies. He testified as follows:
“That when the fire occurred the policy was in force; that he received a telegram from San Juan instructing him to cancel the policy and as he was in the country at the time he received it, he called up Tristani by telephone and asked hi,m to do him the favor of making an examination of the stock of merchandise of F. Alsina & Company, and in view of the report which Tristani gave him he replied to the general agent in San Juan that 'he thought the report received by the said agent was somewhat exaggerated, but was of the opinion that in the interest of the company the policy should be canceled forthwith by telegraph; that by reason of his report he *434received a letter from San Juan ordering the cancellation, which reached him the same day after the fire had taken place; that on the strength of the letter he had an interview with defendant Benigno Colón and said to him that in accordance with his instructions to tell him that' the policy had been canceled, it was no longer in force, and that he should admit the cancellation although the fire had taken place; whereupon Colón replied that he did not admit it because he regarded the policy as still'in force; that the said interview took place on the day of the fire at 9 a. m.; that he also told him to look at the date of the letter of cancellation and Colón replied that he considered the policy to be in force and that the cancellation had arrived too late; that he handed the letter of cancellation to Colón with the balance of the premium due him, but he refused to accept it. ”
In our opinion the conclusions which we shall reach in considering the error assigned in the appellants’ brief under letter C may be applied also in support of the opinion that the district court, in view of all the attendant circumstances, did not commit the error assigned under letter B.
C. The appellants maintain that the court erred in admitting in evidence the two insurance policies referred to in the information, basing their contention on the ground that the policies were not properly authenticated because the capacity of the insurance companies had not been proved.
The policies were admitted in the following manner: The fiscal offered in evidence the record of habeas corpus proceeding No. 1330, instituted by Francisco Alsina in the District Court of Ponce, the policies having been made a part of said record at the instance of counsel for the petitioner, who was one of the defendants in this action. If this fact be taken into account and also the fact that Félix Tristani, the representative in, Ponce of the firm of Villar & Company nf San Juan, the agents of the Guardian Assurance Company, identified at the trial one of the policies as showing the contract entered into between the insurance company and the firm of Alsina & Company, and that Rodolfo del Valle, the agent in Ponce of The London and Lancashire Insurance *435Company, also identified the other policy at the trial as showing the contract entered into between the company which he represented and the firm of Alsina & Company, it must be concluded that the policies were sufficiently authenticated and that the court committed no error in admitting them in evidence in this action.
D. The appellants also maintain that the court erred in overruling the motion made by defendant Colón to strike out the testimony of witness Aurelio Fernández because it referred to acts which took place after the fire and not to acts committed for the purpose of carrying out the alleged conspiracy. Witness Fernández was called by the prosecution to prove that defendant Colón, who moved later to strike out his testimony, absented himself from Ponce at the moment of the fire, the prosecution considering that that act was an indication of the guilt of Colón. The court ruled that' "the testimony should remain in the record in order that it might be 'considered for what it was worth in connection with the other evidence in this case.”
These being the facts, we cannot, see that the court erred in ruling that the testimony of Fernández should not be stricken out. The jurisprudence cited by the appellants in their brief is not applicable. All of it refers to the acts and testimony of a conspirator admitted in evidence against a co-conspirator, while in this case the act of Colón was testified to as direct evidence of the guilt of the principal and not of that of another person.
E. The appellants also maintain that the court erred in admitting in evidence an extract of the account current of Noriega, Alvarez & Company against F. Alsina & Company. In stating the ground of the exception it is said in the brief that it was because the said evidence was secondary and it was. not shown that the best evidence,. namely, the original books of the firm, could not be produced. However, it appears from the bill of exceptions prepared by the appellants and approved by the trial court that defendant Colón objected *436“because the witness himself (the partner of Noriega who was being interrogated regarding the account at. the time it was presented in evidence) testifies that he is not a bookkeeper and cannot swear that it is absolutely correct,” and defendant Ferrer further objected “because even admitting it (the account) the fiscal would have to prove that the books kept by the firm of Noriega are well kept and that those of the firm of Alsina are not.”
The idea of the prosecution in introducing the said account was to show that differences existed between the books of F. Alsina <& Company and those-of Noriega, Alvarez & Company and that such differences were due to the purpose of F. Alsina & Company to make such fictitious entries in their books as were necessary to carry out the scheme adopted for the better accomplishment of the fraud which was intended to be committed upon the insurance companies.
An appellate court can consider only the grounds of objection which are stated at the proper time in the trial court (Falero et al. v. Falero, 15 P. R. R., 111; The People v. Asencio, 16 P. R. R., 337), hence we cannot rule upon the exception under consideration on the basis that the secondary character of the evidence offered was alleged. And as to the grounds actually alleged, we will say that they are entirely without merit.. That Noriega was not a bookkeeper is immaterial. He was a member of the firm of Noriega, Alvarez & Company and was clearly in a position to testify concerning the • business transactions between his firm and that of Alsina. It is chstomary to render accounts current with the warning, E. and O. E., which means, errors and omissions excepted; and undoubtedly that was the significance of the words of the witness when he said that he could not swear that the account was absolutely correct. Nor was it necessary to prove before admitting the account- that the books of Noriega were well kept and that those of Alsina were not. The evidence of itself was one of the mediums through which the judge might reach that conclusion and *437ascertain the motive which F. Alsina & Company had’ for not keeping their hooks correctly — that is, for falsifying the facts in the accounts contained therein.
F. The appellants contend that the court erred in allowing co-defendant Francisco Alsina to testify as a witness for the prosecution after Matías Vidal had testified for the defense and after the admission in evidence for the defense of a circular of the firm of F. Alsina & Company, when the defense had made no stipulation with the fiscal and the latter had not objected to the introduction of said evidence for the defense.
The facts occurred in the following manner: The prosecution was examining its evidence and witness Matías Vidal was testifying as a mercantile expert. When he concluded the defense asked the court to allow them to examine him at that time as their witness because he was urgently needed elsewhere. The prosecution made no objection and the court granted the request. Then the witness testified that he had not known defendant Colón as a member of the firm of F. Alsina & Company but as its. attorney in fact, and to that effect he identified a circular of F. Alsina & Company wherein it appeared that Colón was really an attorney in fact and not a partner. After that interrogation the remainder of the evidence for the prosecution was examined.
Section 239 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, which is the law applicable to the question involved, reads as follows:
“When two or more persons are included in the same charge, the court may, at any time before the defendants have gone into their defense, on the application of the prosecuting attorney, direct any defendant to be discharged, that he may be a witness for the people.”
The language of the statute is clear. It is before the defendants enter upon their defense that the discharge may be ordered and not after; but, in our opinion, it cannot be held in this case that by reason of the fact stated the admission of evidence for the defense had formally begun. The testi*438mony in behalf of tbe defense given by tbe witness for tbe prosecution, Matías Vidal, was merely an interruption of tbe evidence for tbe prosecution allowed at tbe request of tbe defendants for tbe personal convenience of a witness, and therefore did not amount to a formal opening of tbe case for tbe defense. If tbe theory of tbe appellants were accepted, then we should have to conclude also that tbe introduction of tbe evidence for tbe defense bad begun within tbe meaning of section 239 of tbe Code of Criminal Procedure when, for example, one of its witnesses being obliged to absent himself before tbe trial, tbe defense asks for and obtains leave from the court to take bis testimony in accordance with law, and tbe inconsistency of such a conclusion is evident at first sight.
Gr.-The appellants finally maintain in their brief that tbe court erred in weighing the evidence, as it was not sufficient to sustain a verdict of guilty.
To narrate even in tbe most abridged form possible tbe testimony of tbe eighteen witnesses for tbe prosecution and tbe thirteen witnesses for tbe defense would be to extend this opinion unnecessarily.
We deem it sufficient to say that we have examined carefully all tbe evidence introduced and, in our opinion, tbe guilt of defendant Colón is so clear that it does not even admit of argument; and although tbe evidence is not so strong as regards defendant Ferrer, it cannot be held that it is insufficient to support tbe judgment rendered against him.
From all tbe evidence it appears that Francisco Alsina, managing partner of tbe firm of F. Alsina & Company of Ponce, and Benigno Colón, attorney in fact of tbe same firm, formed a conspiracy to defraud two fire insurance companies and for that purpose began by insuring tbe stock of tbe firm in tbe said companies. This done, tbe evidence tends to show that defendants Colón and Alsina falsified tbe books of tbe firm in such a way that an examination would convey *439tlie impression that tlie value of tlie stock corresponded to tlie amount for which the merchandise was insured, which is contrary to the facts, for the stock was being taken out of the store and sent to the stores of Luis Ojeda and defendant Ferrer, where the goods continued to be the property of F. Alsina & Company although apparently belonging to Ojeda and Ferrer.
Defendant Ferrer was aware of the conspiracy and took part in it by accepting the merchandise of F. Alsina & Company in the manner indicated and by purchasing a certain number of tins of gasoline which were taken to the store of F. Alsina & Company, opened and placed in such places, as would cause the' fire, after it had been started, to spread, rapidly and destroy the little stock which remained and -apparently the merchandise insured. The fire started but was. discovered by the neighbors in time to be extinguished before the evidence of the crime had been entirely obliterated. The testimony of the prosecuting attorney, Acosta Quintero, contains such full and precise details as to the appearance of the store after the fire that it is of itself sufficient to warrant the conclusion that it was an intentional and carefully prepared act.
The attorneys for the appellants objected to the testimony of accomplice Alsina and contended that it diet not deserve credence. We have considered it and find it logical and complete. Moreover, the trial judge who heard the defendant’s, testimony and who, therefore, had occasion to observe him personally, also gave it credence, and we must do so also in the absence, of clear proof that the trial court committed error.
The judgment appealed from should be
Affirmed.
Chief Justice Hernández and Justices Wolf, Aldrey and Hutchison concurred.