Barreto v. District Court of Mayagüez

59 P.R. 810
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJanuary 29, 1942
DocketNo. 8447, 8434, and 80
StatusPublished

This text of 59 P.R. 810 (Barreto v. District Court of Mayagüez) 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
Barreto v. District Court of Mayagüez, 59 P.R. 810 (prsupreme 1942).

Opinion

Mr. Justice De Jesús

delivered the opinion of the court.

The questions submitted for determination in the three above-entitled cases are so intimately connected with each other that we have decided to consider them jointly in a single opinion herein.

Acting npon certain charges bronght by Zoilo Rivera, Jr., against Fernando R. Colón and José A. Zapata, Commissioners of the Municipal Housing Authority of Mayagüez, Manuel A. Barreto, in his capacity as mayor of said city, [812]*812suspended them from their offices until the final determination of the charges, served them with copies of the same, allowed them ten days to file their answers, and advised them that upon snch filing a hearing would he held where they could appear personally and assisted by counsel for the taking of the evidence.

Thereupon, the Officers in question filed in the District Court of Mayagfiez, on September 2, 1941, two petitions directed against the mayor, one for certiorari and another for injunction, both being based on the ground that Barreto was without authority to hear the charges in question, because the ordinance consolidating the offices of mayor and school director, to which respondent had been appointed, is void, as the municipal assembly was without power to effect such consolidation. In the certiorari petition the court was requested to order the sending up of the originals or, if not, certified copies of the minutes of the Municipal Assembly of Mayagfiez which contained all the proceedings had in connection with the appointment of Barreto to the office of Mayor and School Director of Mayagfiez, and of other specified minutes, for the purpose of reviewing the acts of the respondent in prosecuting and suspending the petitioners from their offices, and finally to sustain the petition, setting aside the acts of the respondent; and that, pending the final determination of the certiorari proceeding, the respondent should be enj-oined from taking any further action against the petitioners in connection with the said charges and suspension from office.

The petition for injunction was predicated on the same facts as those alleged in the petition for certiorari. In the former, the court was requested to issue a permanent injunction restraining the defendant, his agents, etc., from further prosecuting said charges, and directing him to vacate the order suspending the plaintiffs from their offices; and, pending a decision as to the permanent injunction sought, to issue an order to show cause why a preliminary injunction [813]*813should not be issued restraining the defendant pendente lite from executing the above-mentioned act.

In the certiorari proceeding instituted in the lower court as above stated, a writ was issued by said court on the same day, September 2, 1941, also ordering the respondent to refrain from taking any further action in connection with the charges against, or suspension from office of, the petitioners until the final determination of said proceeding, and setting the hearing thereof for the 15th of the same month. After the writ had been served on the respondent, the latter, on September 4, 1941, instituted the present certiorari proceeding in this court by applying to Hon. E. H. Todd, Jr., Acting Judge in Vacation, and prayed that the writ of cer-tiorari issued by the lower court on September 2, 1941, be reviewed and that the same be finally set aside “as it contained directions that are void, arbitrary, and unlawful issued in excess of the jurisdiction of the court and in contravention of the procedural laws, the Organic Act, and the Municipal Law in force.”

The provisions complained of by the petitioner relate to the stay of the hearing, on the charges, and to that part of the order, setting aside the suspension of the petitioners from their offices as members of the Municipal Housing Authority.

Mr. Justice Todd issued the writ on September 9, 1941, and allowed Colón and Zapata to intervene in order to oppose the petition for certiorari on September 30. On the latter date the hearing of the writ was held with only the appearance of Attorney Eamirez Silva on behalf of the interveners. Briefs were filed by both parties and Mr. Justice Todd rendered an order dismissing the petition and quashing the writ which he had issued. An appeal from that order was taken by Barreto on September 27, 1941, to the full court.

In the meantime the judge of the lower court, after hearing the parties in the injunction proceeding, rendered on September 24, 1941, a lengthy decision denying both the [814]*814preliminary and permanent injunctions sought. The plaintiffs Colón and Zapata appealed from said decision to this court on September 29, 1941, and, in aid of the jurisdiction of this court which was still in vacation, they requested and obtained from Mr. Justice Todd, after a hearing of the parties, and the furnishing of a proper bond, a writ of injunction granting relief in the following terms:

"... the motion of the defendant seeking to set aside the restraining order is hereby denied, and as the case has been submitted on the merits, for the same reasons, the petition in this case is sustained, and, consequently, the Secretary is directed to issue, upon the furnishing of a bond for $200 by the petitioners, in aid of the jurisdiction of this court in the above-mentioned case No. 8434, a writ or injunction directed to defendant Manuel A. Barreto restraining him, during the pendency of said case No. 8434 and until the further order of the Supreme Court, from taking further action, by himself or through his agents, employees, subordinates, or representatives in the prosecution or determination of the charges preferred against petitioners Fernando R. Colón and José A. Zapata, and likewise from continuing in the meantime their suspension from office.”

No appeal was taken from the writ of injunction issued by the acting judge in vacation of this court in aid of its jurisdiction.

The appeal taken from the order of the District Court of Mayagiiez denying both the preliminary and the permanent injunctions was, on motion of the respondent, dismissed by this court as being frivolous on the 15th of last month, and on the 13th instant a motion for reconsideration filed by the plaintiffs was denied, the suit for injunction being thus finally decided against the plaintiffs.

After the appeal taken by Zapata and Colón in the proceeding against Barreto had been dismissed on December 15th last, .Barreto proceeded, on the 9th instant, to serve these gentlemen with notices of the hearings, on the charges, which were set for the 15th and 16th instant, respectively. The said gentlemen thereupon filed in this court two motions seeking to have Barreto punished as for contempt, by reason [815]*815of his disobedience to the order of tMs court, not only in the appeal respecting the certiorari proceeding which was pending, bat also in the writ of injunction which had been issued in aid of the jurisdiction of this court. They alleged in said motions that, as they had requested a reconsideration of the decision of this court in the injunction proceeding, and such request was still undetermined, the same operated to revive the injunction in aid of the jurisdiction, and a violation of the latter constituted contempt.

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59 P.R. 810, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barreto-v-district-court-of-mayaguez-prsupreme-1942.