Board of National Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States v. Robles

58 P.R. 223
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 13, 1941
DocketNo. 8041
StatusPublished

This text of 58 P.R. 223 (Board of National Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States v. Robles) 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
Board of National Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States v. Robles, 58 P.R. 223 (prsupreme 1941).

Opinion

Me. Chief Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Board of National Missions of the Presbyterian Church in the United States of America brought an action in the District Court of Aguadilla against Santiago E. Eobles and the Treasurer of Puerto Eico in which it prayed for a judgment holding that a certain house located in the city of Aguadilla which belonged to it was and is exempt from the levying and payment of taxes, due to the fact that it is dedicated to religious services, and that as a consequence, the attachment and sale of said house for taxes was null and void; that the defendant Eobles should receive the amount deposited for taxes, surcharges and interest and in turn should deliver the certificate of sale issued by the other defendant, The Treasurer of Puerto Eico. The judgment prayed for should also provide that the Treasurer return the amount deposited, $130.06, with interest, in accordance with Act No. 8, of 1927, p. 122, concerning the payment of taxes-under protest.

[225]*225The defendant Robles did not answer and Ms default was duly recorded. The other defendant, the Treasurer of Puerto Rico, filed a demurrer to the complaint on September 4, 1936, alleging that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

At this stage of the proceedings, the plaintiff filed, in May, 1938, a motion entitled “ concerning the postponement of this ease”, alleging that an act had been approved providing for the cancellation of certain receipts for taxes illegally levied on church buildings belonging to religious institutions, and requesting that the case be postponed and the sum of $130.06 which it had deposited in the Clerk’s office be returned to it, the Treasurer to be ordered to decide himself what should be done with respect to the defendant Robles.

The court by an order of May 19, 1938, decreed the postponement of the case and the return of the deposit.

The defendant treasurer opposed the motion, alleging in substance that the statute relied upon by the plaintiff was not applicable. His opposition was filed a day after the motion had been decided, but the decision was set aside at the instance of the plaintiff itself.

- Some time afterwards the district court rendered a decision which reads in part as follows:

“The complaint in the present case alleges that on March 20',. 1936, the Collector of Internal Revenue of Aguadilla, acting under orders of the defendant, the Treasurer of Puerto Rico, sold at public auction and adjudicated to the codefendant Santiago R. Robles, a house situated on José de Diego Street of this city, which belonged to the plaintiff; that said sale was carried out in order to levy and collect taxes, surcharges and costs which the defendant Treasurer alleges the plaintiff owed to the amount of $123.48, and that by virtue of a decision of the Board of Review and Equalization, dated February 8, 1934, said property was exempted from the payment of taxes, because it was dedicated to religious services, in spite of which the defendant, the Treasurer of Puerto Rico, ordered that the above mentioned house be attached and sold, as it was in effect sold and adjudicated to the codefendant Santiago R. Robles.
[226]*226“The defendant, Treasurer of Puerto Rico, filed a demurrer to the complaint on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. In his brief, after invoking Act No. 8 of April 19, 1927, he argues that in the case at bar it does not appear that the plaintiff has paid under protest any amount to the Treasurer of Puerto Rico; that if its right not to pay was clear, the plaintiff could have prevented the collection, availing himself of the remedy of injunction; that the fact that the tax was Illegal does not justify his failure.to pay under protest; that the present action is in truth one against the People of Puerto Rico concerning an alleged nullity of proceedings and the People not having given its consent to be sued, the action does not lie. And lastly he alleges that as there does not appear from the face of the complaint that the requirement of the payment of taxes under protest in the manner established by law was complied with, the complaint does not allege facts sufficient to establish a cause of action.
“On the other hand, the plaintiff asserts in its brief that as the property in question has been exempted from the payment of taxes by the Board of Review and Equalization, the defendant Treasurer of Puerto Rico performed an ultra vires act not within his faculties and powers, and that the case does not have to do with a taxpayer who thinks that he should not pay a tax or part of it.
“With respect to the Treasurer of Puerto Rico the complaint has as its sole objective the return of the amount deposited under protest, at the disposal of the codefendant Santiago R. Robles, with the condition that the latter surrender the purchase certificate issued to him by the Treasurer of Puerto Rico.
“The first section of the act invoked by the plaintiff provides that when a taxpayer believes that he should not pay any tax or part of it, he shall be compelled nevertheless to pay it in its totallity, when requested to do so by the Collector of Internal Revenue of his district or by the official charged with the collection, and if he wishes to establish any claim, when he makes the payment he shall request said collector or official to set out his protest on the back of the receipt, stating specifically that the protest has to do with the entirety or with part of the tax, which has been paid under protest, and indicating the precise amount object of the protest. Said note must be signed by the taxpayer and by the collector, or official charged with the collection.
[227]*227“The remedy established by said, statute is exclusive and the rule is well established that taxpayers, in the exercise of the rights granted to them by statutes similar to the one involved in this case, must follow strictly their provisions.
“The payment under protest, in the manner established by law, is the only procedure which will give the taxpayer the right to have the tax thus paid returned.
“The demurrer filed by the codefendant Treasurer of Puerto Rico is- granted, because the complaint in this case does not allege facts sufficient to establish a cause of action.”

In order to appeal from the same, the plaintiff moved that the order be entered as a judgment. This was done and the appeal having been filed, the record was brought to this Court.

Only one error is charged committed, according to the appellant, by the lower court when it decided the demurrer filed by the defendant Treasure?." in a manner contrary to the law and the facts.

Accepting as a basis the truth of the facts alleged in the complaint, we find that we are concerned with a case of a tax sale in distraint proceedings to collect taxes on a house.

The sale took place on March 20, 1936. The owner of the house that was sold — the plaintiff- — did not pay the taxes under protest nor tried to prevent the collection thereof through an injunction. "When notified of the sale it did not exercise the right of redemption. It filed this suit in the manner aforesaid.

To bring the ease to the real issue we must set aside Act No.

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Bluebook (online)
58 P.R. 223, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/board-of-national-missions-of-the-presbyterian-church-in-the-united-states-prsupreme-1941.