People v. Torres

Mr. Justice Wolf

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant, José Gregorio Torres, by virtue of a complaint filed in the Municipal Court of Bio Piedras, was charged with having* violated section 328 of the Penal Code as amended, it being alleged therein that the said defendant on the 10th of February, 1919, in Hato Bey, Bio Piedras, drove an automobile so negligently and illegally that it struck a truck, wounding José Visearán and the defendant himself by the impact.

The errors alleged are two:

First, that the court should have granted a motion for nonsuit and,

Second, that the proof- was insufficient to convict the defendant.

With respect to the first assignment of error we may simply say that there was sufficient prima facie proof to convict defendant, as will appear by a discussion of the whole evidence. Furthermore, a defendant who goes on and presents *103his own proof, as here, waives his.'motion for nonsuit. People v. Ojeda, 26 P. R. R. 391.

' To support his contention that the proof in the district court did not justify a judgment against him, the defendant. maintains that his speed at the point of the accident was not excessive, being only 25 or 30 miles an hour, and to justify that the defendant was so going- within the speed limit fixed by the law the appellant attempts to show that within a hundred feet of the place where the accident happened the machine that he was driving was compelled to stop and that it was impossible for a machine of this kind that he was driving to develop a greater speed than 25 or 30 miles an hour.

A policeman, who gave no direct evidence of the speed, testified that the truck turned into the principal road from San Juan to Río Piedras at Stop 27%, going to Río Piedras; that it entered from the right-hand side of the road; that the truck was fully in the road when the machine of the de fendant struck the right hind wheel of the truck, causing the heavy truck to turn completely so that its front was towards San Juan, and damaging very severely both the truck and the automobile.

One of the men who was working in the truck gave testimony tending to show that the truck came out of a lane on the right-hand side of the road going to Río Piedras and turned toward Río Piedras and was fully on the road when the automobile of the defendant came along and struck the right hind wheel of the truck; that the occupants of the truck looked both ways before entering on the road and that they saw nothing either way for some distance; that the blow was so great that it turned the machine completely around with its front toward San Juan.

The only other witness for the Government was someone who testified that he had lived along the road for three years; that he witnessed the collision; that the machine of the defendant was proceeding along at a terrific (espantosa) rate; *104that his attention was drawn to the machine by some of his neighbors calling out, “Look at this machine coming!”; that in all his experience on the road he had never seen a machine go so rapidly.

All of these witnesses gave evidence tending to show that two of the occupants of the defendant’s automobile were hit and fairly severely injured.

We think this evidently was a prima facie case of negligence under section 328 of the Penal Code.

One of the witnesses for the defendant, the man who was most injured, gave testimony tending to show that the machine was going at a rate of 40 or 50 miles an hour. It is true that when further questioned he said that his memory of the event was not very clear, hut the court had a right to believe from his testimony, as corroborated by the other proof, that his estimate of the rate of speed was reasonable.

The defendant and other witnesses also gave testimony tending to show that the defendant was only going at the rate of 25 or 30 miles at about the time of the accident. The defendant also testified that the truck had stopped when he saw it; that, as the truck driver must necessarily have beard his klaxon, he thought he had a right to go by, and also that he saw the truck in advance.

• One of the principal theories of the defense was, as brought out by their expert witness, that, as the machine of the defendant had to stop for an automobile passenger coach and as the distance between the place where the defendant had to stop and the place of the accident was so short, it would have been impossible for the defendant to develop the speed of 40 or 50 miles an hour.

It is to be noted, however, that the first witness for the defense says that the driver of the passenger coach said that the defendant, whether he stopped or not, went by him at a speed of eight or ten miles an hour.'

The answer to this theory of the defendant is that the court had a right to believe from the testimony that the *105defendant was going forty or fifty miles an hour, if not more, independently of whether the defendant’s proof was inconsistent with this theory; that the distance between the two points might have been greater than the witness for the defense thought; that the defendant might have inadequately reduced his speed to avoid a collision when he saw the truck; that the defendant might not have stopped, but only reduced the speed to pass the passenger coach, and even that the witnesses were entirely mistaken.

The physical facts and the testimony of the government’s witnesses make out such a strong case that any inconsistent theories of the defense would be bound to yield even without applying the familiar practice _'of this court in refusing to reverse the finding of the court below in the absence of a conviction that its decision was very clearly against the weight of the evidence or that the defendant did not have a fair trial.

As this theory of defendant cannot be successfully maintained, we have no doubt that the defendant, although admitted to be generally a careful driver, was violating the law.

Without any particular reference to this defendant, we cannot too strongly combat the idea that because the defendant saw,- or thought he saw, a clear way ahead of him he might go ahead regardless of speed. Every one has an equal right to the road, as set forth in People v. Blandford, 23 P. R. R. 580, and the cases cited. There seems to be a notion in the minds of a good many chauffeurs that an apparently clear road justifies any speed. In State of Ohio v. E. E. Schaefer, L. R. A., 1918-B, 951, a ease of alleged manslaughter for the undue operation of an automobile, the court said:

"Statisticians have calculated that when you vest-average men with large power, you make either a tyrant or fool out of 10 per -cent of them. The estimate is very conservative. Indeed, if it err at all, it is upon the ground that it is too low, and it may well *106be doubted, if tbe ratio is appreciably reduced in ease of putting 300,000 automobiles, with their tremendous speed, power, and impact, under the direction and control, or lack thereof, of the usual drivers. Ten per cent of the 300,000 would make 30,000 that are in the hands of tyrants, fools, or incompetents, speed maniacs, that are a constant menace and danger to the safe and conservative 90 per cent of' automobile drivers, to other vehicle drivers, and to the millions of foot passengers. ‘Safety first’ must not be sacrificed for ‘speed first.’ The daily press is full of hairbreadth escapes and easualities, from slight injuries on the one hand to instant death on the other. It may well be said ‘that the railroad locomotive has killed its hundreds, but the automobile is killing its thousands.’ ”

Forty or fifty miles an hour, although in excess of the limits fixed by law, may be all right if no accident occurs. A man who goes at this speed, and especially one who exceeds it, must be entirely sure that he is not interfering with the rights of others. Anybody who looks for a reasonable distance up and down the road and sees nothing coming has a right to cross it. A chauffeur must have his machine under such control that he can avoid doing injury to vehicles or foot passengers who have a right to cross the road and are doing so decorously.

The judgment must be

Affirmed.

Chief Justice Hernández and Justices del Toro, Aldrey and Hutchison concurred.