People v. District Court of San Juan

Mr. Justice De Jesús

delivered the opinion of the court.

The information filed in the District Court of San Juan, in criminal case No. 4722 of that court, against Carmelo Bios-Cruz and Dolores Marrero Bosado for rape, reads in its pertinent part as. follows:

“Said Carmelo Ríos Cruz and Dolores Marrero Rosado, one-day in November 1941, in San Juan, Puerto Rico, which forms part of, and is within, the judicial district of San Juan, did unlawfully,, maliciously and criminally assault Elena Sierra, a woman, with whom each of said defendants had sexual intercourse or connection, using for such purpose force and violence and without the consent of said Elena Sierra who was not then and there the wife of either-defendant. ’ ’

Carmelo Bios Cruz filed a demurrer in which he alleged that the information charged him with more than one offense and that it was at the same time ambiguous, unintelligible,, and uncertain. In deciding the question thus raised the court, on February 4 last, sustained the demurrer upon the ground that each of the defendants was charged with two offenses: (1) the perpetration of the carnal act, and (2) the aiding of his partner in committing it also; and, therefore, each crime should be charged separately. The district attorney moved for a reconsideration and his motion was denied on the 19th of the same month, on similar grounds. In order to obtain a review of the order of the lower court the district attorney instituted the certiorari proceeding herein. After the writ had been issued, the defendant Carmelo Bios Cruz intervened and requested that the petition for certio-ari be denied on two grounds: (a) because certiorari is not the proper remedy, and (b) because the order complained of is correct.

The writ of certiorari, being an extraordinary remedy, should not generally be issued where there is available *219an adequate, speedy, and effective remedy in the ordinary eonrse of law. As the order involved herein is appealable (§348 of the Code of Criminal Procedure, and People v. Fajardo, 21 P.R.R. 429), and as an appeal would constitute as speedy and effectives remedy for the purpose of the case herein as a certiorari proceeding, we would be justified in discharging the writ issued on that ground alone. However, taking into account the fact that there is involved a question of practice, which is raised for the first time in this jurisdiction and which should be disposed of as soon as possible so that our decision might serve as a guide in future cases, we feel ourselves warranted in rendering now the proper decision instead of postponing it until the case were to come back to this court on appeal.

It is provided in §77 of the Code of Criminal Procedure that “the information must charge but one offense.’5. So that the question to be decided is whether the information herein complies with that requisite.

The charge against the defendants is that at a certain place and time they assaulted Elena Sierra, a woman, each of said defendants having had sexual intercourse with her,, etc. It appears from the pleadings that the acts perpetrated by the defendants were of a continuing nature, that they formed a single transaction, and that being so, notwithstanding the repeated carnal acts that they may have perpetrated, the offense thus committed by all of the defendants acting with a common purpose constitutes a single offense and, therefore, said §77 is not violated by the filing of a single information. If, on the contrary, a substantial interruption had occurred, if one or several carnal acts had been perpetrated on a certain date and subsequently further acts had taken place, after a sufficiently long time had elapsed and under circumstances constituting a distinct transaction or transactions, each one of such distinct transactions would constitute a separate offense and, under the above provision *220of the Code of Criminal Procedure, each -would require a separate information.

Of course, if in spite of a single information having been filed, it should appear from the evidence during the course of the trial that more than one transaction occurred, the defendants or the court motu proprio could compel the district attorney to elect the transaction on which to proceed.

In People v. Enright (1934 Cal.), 35 P. (2d) 1033, cited by the district attorney, the facts were substantially similar to those of the case at bar and a single information was filed. It was contended by the defendant that, although the information charged a single offense, the evidence showed the perpetration of two or more sexual acts, and therefore the district attorney should have been required to choose the transaction on which he would base his information. Disposing of this question the court said:

“The acts here complained of were perpetrated on the same occasion and within a few moments of each other, constituting one continuous felonious act. Inasmuch also as the three defendants were all present aiding and abetting in the commission thereof, they were all guilty as principals therein.” (Italics ours.)

See, to the same effect, People v. Fontana et al., (1934 Cal.), 32 P. (2d) 160, where the case of People v. Castro, 133 Cal. 11, 65 P. 13, cited by the intervener, is distinguished, on the ground that in the Castro case the different carnal acts were perpetrated by the defendant at different times, and that evidence of said distinct acts or transactions was introduced over the objection of the defendant.

In McManus et al. v. State (1931 Cal.), 297 P. 830, it was said:

“Where several persons pursuant to a common design and purpose and all present and acting together by force and violence commit a rape upon a female, and by a continuous uninterrupted use of force and violence continue until all of the participants have had .sexual intercourse with the female such acts constitute a single *221crime, . . . and all the- persons so participating may be jointly charged and convicted as and for a single crime.” Syllabus by the Court, .p. 830. (Italics ours.)

The same doctrine was applied in State v. Weitzel et al. (1937 Or.), 69 P. (2d) 958, dealing with the crime of sodomy.

The intervener argues that the above-cited cases from California are not in point because in them was applied §954 of the Penal Code of California, which at the time of those decisions already differed from §77 of our Code of Criminal Procedure.

The intervener is not correct. It is true that said §954 of the Penal Code, as amended, provides that an information may charge two or more distinct offenses between which there might be certain relation or connection in the perpetration thereof; however, both the California cases already cited and the Oklahoma and Oregon cases were based on the-theory that a single offense was committed, and as our statute provides that the information must charge but one offense, it is obvious that said doctrine is perfectly applicable in this jurisdiction.

For the reasons stated the petition for certiorari will be sustained and, consequently, the orders rendered by the District Court of San Juan in case No. 4722, on the 4th and 19th of last February, respectively, must be set aside and the case remanded to the lower court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.