American Railroad v. Municipal Court

16 P.R. 227
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedApril 4, 1910
DocketNo. 442
StatusPublished

This text of 16 P.R. 227 (American Railroad v. Municipal Court) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Railroad v. Municipal Court, 16 P.R. 227 (prsupreme 1910).

Opinion

Me.. Justice del Toko

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the District Court of Ponce dismissing an application for a writ of certiorari.

The record having been transmitted to this Supreme Court the appellant filed his brief and the plaintiff in the civil action to which the application refers, with whose intervention the proceedings thereon were had and who is really a party interested therein, also filed his brief entitled “in opposition”’ and he alleged that the writ did not lie on the following grounds:

(a) Because a copy of the record of the proceedings filed in the office of the secretary of this Supreme Court had not been delivered to him.

(5) Because the said transcript was certified only by the attorneys for the appellant, and

(c) Because this Supreme Court lacks jurisdiction'.

The hearing on the appeal was had on the day set therefor, without either of the parties interested appearing thereat.

In the first place we. will examine the second of the questions raised — that is to say, that the transcript of the record is not certified in accordance with the law.

The certification reads as follows:

“The undersigned attorneys of the American Railroad Co. of Porto Rico certify: That the foregoing is a true and faithful copy of the original record of the case prosecuted by the American Railroad [229]*229Co. of Porto Rico against the municipal judge of the municipal court of Ponce, relating to an application for a writ of certiorari.
“And for transmission to the Supreme Court on the appeal taken, we sign these presents in Mayagüez on August 30, 1909. F. L. Corn-well, Fernando Vázquez, Attorneys for the Appellant.”

And section 302 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides as follows:

“The copies provided for in the last three sections must be certified to be correct by the secretary or the attorneys.”

Do the words “the attorneys” employed in said section refer to the attorneys of the parties or to the attorneys of the appellant? This is the question we have to decide.

The Supreme Court of California in construing section 953 of the Code of' Civil Procedure, which is identical with section 302 of our Code, excepting in the part relating to the bond required in California and not in Porto Rico, in the case of In re Medbury, 48 Cal., 83, established the following doctrine:

“The transcript in an appeal must be made with the concurrence of all the parties or their attorneys, or certified to by the secretary. A stipulation accepting the transcript signed by the attorneys of all the parties with the exception of one, is insufficient.”

This doctrine is in harmony with the letter and spirit of the law. The copy of the record transmitted to this Supreme Court in eases of appeals, is considered as the real original and this court bases its decision thereon. It is necessary that such copy be true and complete and that there be not the slightest doubt of its authenticity. It may be certified to:

(a) By the secretary who is a judicial officer without interest in the action and who has the original in Ms custody, or

(b) By the attorneys of all the parties interested in the proceedings, in which case it must appear that all of said interested parties had intervention therein at the proper time [230]*230and were enabled to assure themselves not only of its correctness but that it contained tbe entire record or that part of it which was submitted to the examination and decision of the Supreme Court.

In this case the transcript is not certified to by the secretary nor by the attorneys of the parties, but only by the attorneys for the appellant; and this question having arisen as far back as October 27, 1909, and the appellant not having corrected nor attempted to correct this defect, the appeal should be dismissed; but taking into consideration that it has long-been the practice of this Supreme Court to admit transcripts of records certified to by the attorney or attorneys of the appellant, we shall here confine ourselves to setting down our opinion so that it may be observed hereafter, and proceed to a consideration of the other questions involved in this matter and decide them on their own merits.

The first of the questions raised by the plaintiff, Torruella, is of no importance in our opinion. The third — that is to say, the question of jurisdiction — is worthy of careful study.

Section 295' of our Code of Civil Procedure provides that an appeal may be taken to this Supreme Court from a judgment rendered by a district court in a special proceeding. A writ of certiorari is a special proceeding and when it originates in, and is decided by, a district court, it is very clear that an appeal to this Supreme-Court lies from the final decision Or judgment of said district court.

In the case of Morley v. Elkins, 37 Cal., 454, the Supreme Court held that an appeal could be taken to said Supreme Court in certiorari cases. And in Trustees, etc., School Directors, 88 Ill., 100, the Supreme Court of Illinois'held that “the right of appeal from all final judgments of circuit courts to this Supreme Court is granted by the law. And it lies from a final judgment of a circuit court in a case of certiorari.”

But the question, as raised, is whether a case originating in a municipal court in which the amount of the judgment did not exceed $300, taking into consideration the provisions of [231]*231the second paragraph of the said section 295 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended by the Act of March 9, 1905, (Laws of 1905, p. 136), can be appealed from.

Under this act an appeal wonld not ]ie to this Supreme Court from the judgment rendered by a district court if it had taken cognizance of the case in question on appeal. And this being the case, it appears logical that neither wonld an appeal lie from a judgment rendered by said district court on the application for a writ of certiorari.

This opinion has been maintained by the Supreme Court of California not only in the case of Bienenfeld v. Fresno Milling Co., 82 Cal., 425, but in that of The People v. Carman, 18 Cal., 693. In the former ease the following doctrine was'established: “The appellate jurisdiction of the Supreme Court does not extend to an appeal from a judgment and order of an inferior court denying a writ of certiorari and affirming a judgment of a justice court, the amount of which is less than $300. The appellate jurisdiction is the same as if the original case had been appealed to the higher court. ’ ’ And in the latter: “A district court having affirmed certiorari proceedings the judgment of a justice court against the appellant for $164 and $14 for costs, the appellant appealed to the Supreme Court and it was held that the appeal should be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction.”

But the Supreme Court of California in the case of Winter v. Fitzpatrick, 35 Cal., 272, expressed itself in the following terms:

“The jurisdiction of this court in proceedings of this nature, does not depend on the amount in controversy.

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Related

Hart v. Vidal
6 Cal. 56 (California Supreme Court, 1856)
People ex rel. Morehouse v. Carman
18 Cal. 693 (California Supreme Court, 1861)
Dentzel v. Waldie
30 Cal. 138 (California Supreme Court, 1866)
Morley v. Elkins
37 Cal. 454 (California Supreme Court, 1869)
In re Estate of Medbury
48 Cal. 83 (California Supreme Court, 1874)
Dalzell v. Superior Court of San Benito County
7 P. 910 (California Supreme Court, 1885)
Bienenfeld v. Fresno Milling Co.
22 P. 1113 (California Supreme Court, 1890)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 P.R. 227, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-railroad-v-municipal-court-prsupreme-1910.