DISSENTING OPINION OE
MR. JUSTICE HUTCHISON.Inasmuch as I do not question the general principles announced in the majority opinion and am even more heartily in sympathy with the spirit that inspires the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice del T.oro and the concurring opinion in the case of Orama v. Oyanguren, and yet, in view of all the circumstances, I felt constrained to vote against the proposition contained in such dissenting opinion when the sugges*161tion was first made to the court, upon the one hand, and upon the other, to dissent from the conclusion reached by the court herein and from the final disposition made of this case, — a brief statement of the reasons that may or may not justify my action is due both to the court and to myself. I fully concur in the doctrine of the majority opinion that an appellate-court has only authority to consider the record; that the-fiscal cannot add to or subtract from the record; that the secretary of the court below has no power of his own initiative to add to a statement of the case, and that it is the judge of the court below who, through a statement of the case or a bill of exceptions, must certify to the facts of the trial. The application actually made of these abstract propositions to the facts of this case, however, is quite another matter.
Rules 40a and 40b of this court were adopted as amendments by order of June 25, 1910. Section 299 of the Code of Civil Procedure was amended along the same lines in 1911, but the legislative amendment does not follow the language of the amended rules. There are certain noteworthy and more ..or less significant distinctions to be drawn, but this is a point which need not be emphasized at the present time. It will suffice to suggest that, in so far as any real conflict may be found to exist, the rule must yield to the statute unless the latter be ultra vires and void. Moreover, neither the court rule nor the statute referred to has any application to a criminal case save by analogy, upon general principles of good practice, and by virtue of rule 94 providing that “These rules shall govern in criminal cases as well as civil so far as they are applicable.”
For the purposes of this opinion it may be conceded that rule 40b points out the proper practice to be observed in both civil and criminal cases. It does not necessarily follow that this court or any court is so “cabin’d, cribb’d, confin’d” by its own rules, made by it presumably to promote rather tlian to frustrate the ends of even-handed justice, that it must close its eyes to the light of truth evidenced by undisputed *162and unquestionable facts and, in blind subservience to tbe letter and wholly without regard to the spirit of such rules, convict of crime a man whom, as a matter- of common, everyday horse sense, it knows in all human probability to be innocent of any offense, whatever it may judicially know or ignore from a technically legal- standpoint. That,, with all deference and respect, and without reference of course to motives the absolute sincerity and purity of which are above all suspicion, is, in my humble opinion, to all practical intents and purposes, what this court has done in this case. Such being my firm conviction, any effort to gloss over the true reason for my dissent or to minimize the far-reaching importance and the pernicious character of the precedent established, as I view it, would involve a certain degree of moral cowardice, if not a flagrant violation' of my oath of office and of my duty as a judge.
The object and purpose of the requirement contained in rule 406, that a description of the original exhibit sought to be brought up shall be made in the statement of facts, is -expressly stated therein to be the proper identification of ■such exhibit. Rules 55 and 56 expressly recognize that on motion to correct a transcript the secretary, in a proper case, .as well as the judge when circumstances require, may certify the whole or any part of the record, or the same may be produced duly. certified without previous,, order of this court. A distinction between cases in which the alleged error is disputed and those in which there is no controversy in this regard is also drawn.
None of the reasons underlying the general rule that all ■of the evidence should he incorporated in the record by a bill ■of exceptions, or its equivalent, in order to enable the appellate court to pass upon its weight and sufficiency; none of the reasons which ordinarily would require an exercise upon the part of the trial court of the discretion mentioned in rule 406, beyond the degree to which such discretion appears to have been exercised herein, are shown to exist in the,in*163stant case. There was but one exhibit before the trial court and there was but one exhibit ever offered or sought to be introduced in evidence. All the evidence adduced is before us, save only and except, under the view taken in the majority opinion, such single exhibit. A consideration thereof by the court could produce no possible miscarriage of justice in this particular case, nor could it possibly involve any actual unfairness to the trial judge.
If that exhibit had. been described in the statement of facts independently of the testimony of witnesses and of the ¡complaint, as in fact it is described in such' complaint and by such witnesses, and if the trial judge, upon request, had refused to allow the same to be sent up, most assuredly such abuse of discretion would have been promptly corrected by proper order of this court. And had the appellant, the judge and the secretary all religiously observed each and every detail of the provisions of rule 405, then, although the exhibit in question would unquestionably have been more regularly identified, yet it could hardly be said to have been more thoroughly identified than it actually is.
The sole question raised and submitted by the defense in the court below, the only point involved in the appeal, is whether or not the stick taken from the defendant; introduced in evidence at the trial; marked for identification ! £ Cause No. 2399, appealed Supreme Court, Lucas Julián, 248;” securely wrapped in official jury payroll blanks (Auditor’s Form No. 167, R 3804, Dec. 6, 1912, 1000); sent by mail by the secretary of the district court to the secretary of this court accompanied by a letter typed on an official letter-head of the Guayama court, in which assurance is given that it is the identical stick alleged to have been taken from the defendant and the carrying of which by him resulted in this prosecution; delivered by the secretary of this court to the jfiscal thereof at his request and in the presence of this court at the hearing and presented by such prosecuting offi*164cer himself to our consideration with commendable frankness and, I thought, plainly without serious expectation that the conviction could stand, is a cane or a clnb.
The majority opinion tacitly admits that it is a cane and not a prohibited weapon, or, at least, carefully avoids classifying it as a club and expressly concedes that, beyond any reasonable doubt, it is the identical exhibit upon which conviction was had; yet for no other apparent reason than that appellant or his attorney or the trial judge failed literally to comply with the formalities prescribed, not by the Code of Criminal Procedure, but by a rule of this court, such opinion entirely eliminates the pivotal question and without consideration of the merits affirms the judgment and sentence of the court below.
The cane in question is a smooth, straight piece of white bitter orange, somewhat oval rather than round, about an inch by an inch and a quarter at one end, tapering slightly to' about one inch or perhaps less than one inch in diameter at the other and “knotted” in the sense that it has a number of small closely-trimmed, blister-shaped protuberances suggesting the former existence and removal of buds, thorns, or small twigs, the core of the larger of these “knots” being perhaps something more than one-eighth and less than one-fourth of an inch in diameter. If given a little extra polish, a metal head and a ferrule and carried by any well-dressed man without previous police court record or not already under suspicion or surveillance, it would not, even at election time, attract the attention of any policeman in the Island. It might be used with telling effect as a weapon of offense or defense in an emergency just as any serviceable cane might be so employed. Had this court held it to be a club rather than ■d cane, probably I would have dissented, but hardly would have felt obliged to file a dissenting opinion. But the majority opinion makes it quite clear that however light and flexible, however impossible of classification as a “club”' *165the exhibit in question might have been, it could not have been considered at all in the disposition of this case.
If we consider that the same. rule must, apply to felony as well as to misdemeanor cases, the importance of the decision rendered herein becomes more apparent. If in this case defendant had been convicted of murder in the first degree and sentenced to death; if the complaint had charged and the evidence had conclusively shown that death was produced by a 44-caliber firearm; if the guilt or innocence of the defendant depended solely and exclusively upon whether or not the weapon taken from him was in fact the instrument employed in committing the offense; if instead of a cane the only exhibit in the case were a 22-caliber rifle alleged to be and introduced in evidence as the weapon found upon the defendant, and the weapon with which the crime was alleged to’ have been committed, yet, according to the reasoning of the majority opinion, the judgment and sentence of death would inevitably have been affirmed. Whatever doubt might otherwise exist as to the possibility of a different result in a capital case would seem to be removed by a careful consideration of the case of People v. Concepción, 21 P. R. R. 296, in which a statute, the plain and unmistakable purposes of which is to provide that no man in this Island shall pay the death penalty until this court shall have passed upon the sufficiency of the evidence submitted to the jury, was construed away by a similar process of rigidly technical reasoning in an opinion which substantially admits on its face that the very words constituting the key to the legislative intent are “mere surplusage,” “anomalous” and inexplicable upon any other than the quite obvious theory rejected by the court, and at the same time holds that this court* is without jurisdiction to consider at all the statement of the evidence certified by the district judge pursuant to such legislative enactment.
In the case at bar only three witnesses testified — two for *166the prosecution and the defendant in Ms own behalf. There is no conflict in the testimony aside from the variation in terms employed by the witnesses in referring to the exhibit. The statement of the case is two pag*es in length. It is approved in the nsnal form by the district judge who certifies, among other things, that it is “a correct narrative of the particulars (hechos ocurridos) of the trial of said canse and that said statement contains all the evidence offered and admitted during the trial.” The'statement expressly recites* that “the fiscal offered the cane (bastón) as proof and the defense admitted that defendant was carrying the same and that it was taken from him by policeman Cruz on the date mentioned in the complaint.” And again, at the close of defendant’s testimony, that “the defense submits the case to the court with the request that it take into consideration the dimensions of the cane in order to determine whether or not it is a prohibited weapon under the law. ’ ’ The policeman testifies that “the club was of white bitter orange” and each and every witness identifies the stick.
Section 362 of the Code of Criminal Procedure provides that “After hearing the appeal, the Supreme Court must give judgment without regard to' technical errors or defects, or to exceptions, which do not affect the substantial rights of the parties.”
Section 1 of an Act relating to the reversal of judgments in criminal cases by the Supreme Court, etc., approved May 30, 1904, Acts of 1905, page 10, reads as follows:
“Whenever it appears from the record in any criminal case upon appeal to the Supreme Court, that any requirement of the law has been 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.”
*167Even if the proviso just quoted had been entirely omitted, it would seem inconceivable that the law which forbids the reversal of a criminal judgment for harmless error or disregard of statutory requirements should inexorably demand the affirmance of such a judgment even though it appear that no crime has been committed, merely because the conclusive evidence of such fact is more or less irregularly brought to the attention of this court.
In the. circumstances of this case, however viewed, the least this court should have done would have been to issue the order suggested in the dissenting opinion of Mr. Justice-del Toro. But such an order was wholly unnecessary. In such circumstances; in the light .of section 362, supra; in the absence of objection, and in view of the waiver by the fiscal of all irregularly, we very well might have' treated the statement of facts, together with the judge’s certificate thereto, as sufficient authority for the transmission of the exhibit by' the clerk and his letter as a sufficient certificate of identification, or, if not, then the clerk of this court might have been instructed to suggest to the clerk of the district court by letter or telegram a formal certificate in accordance with rule 40b or section 299 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
There was no need of any opinion at all herein nor of anything more than a mere per curiam order such as is daily made in matters of minor importance, adjudging the exhibit to be either a cane or a club and disposing of the case in accordance with such finding, and why this court, entirety of its own motion, should have gone so far out of its way in order to raise and argue the technical question discussed at such length in the majority opinion passes my understanding.
The judgment of the court below should have been reversed and the defendant discharged.