Buscaglia v. District Court of San Juan

64 P.R. 11
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 28, 1944
DocketNo. 18
StatusPublished

This text of 64 P.R. 11 (Buscaglia v. District Court of San Juan) 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
Buscaglia v. District Court of San Juan, 64 P.R. 11 (prsupreme 1944).

Opinions

Mr. Chief Justice Travieso

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is perhaps one of the most important cases ever submitted for decision by this court in the history of this court. It involves serious social problems and legal questions which are intimately related. Among them is the determination of the rule which shall prevail in this jurisdiction as to the standing of a taxpayer to bring an injunction proceeding such as that involved herein.

Before stating, considering, and deciding the three fundamental questions involved in this suit, it is desirable to make a resumé of the facts about which there is no controversy.

On November 27, 1942, the Legislature of Puerto Eico approved Act No. 16 (Second and Third Special Sessions of 1942, p. 50), the essential purposes of which, as they appear in its title and statement of motives (§ 1), were: to declare the existence in Puerto Eico of a state of grave emergency created by the war; to authorize work emergency programs; to give work to the unemployed; to authorize projects of unemployment compensation, relief, lowering of prices and the planting and distribution of food products, etc. The management and supervision of the emergency program were entrusted to an Insular Emergency Council composed of the Governor and the Chiefs of the eight Departments of the Insular Government, including the Auditor of Puerto Eico.

To carry out the aforesaid purposes, § 14 of said Act appropriated “the sum of $10,000,000 out of any funds in the Treasury of Puerto Eico not otherwise appropriated, plus seventy (70) per cent of the revenues of the Insular Treasury from the proceeds of the Federal Internal-Eevenue Tax on distilled spirits shipped or which may be shipped from [13]*13Puerto Eico to the United States from and after November 1, 1942.” According to said § 14, .the ten million dollars of the general funds of the Insular Treasury were to he spent as follows:

In the emergency work program-$4, 000, 000
In the work projects in connection with the planting and cultivation of food products- 4, 000, 000
In unemployment compensation, relief, lowering of prices, subsidies, etc_ 1,100, 000
To increase distribution facilities--— 900, 000

The funds obtained from the excise tax on alcohol should be dedicated to the following purposes:

In the emergency work program and in the planting and cultivation of food products, not less than 50 per cent of the total revenues of the Insular Treasury from the above source.

In the projects of unemployment compensation, relief, lowering of the prices of commodities, subsidies, etc., not less than 20 per cent of the total revenues of the Treasury from the aforesaid federal tax..

The aforesaid Act No. 16, being of an urgent nature, became effective immediately after its approval, to wit, November 27, 1942. Six months later, on May 15, 1943, there was approved Act No. 181 (Laws of 1943, p. 654), by virtue of which the title of Act No. 16 of 1942 was amended, in order “to appropriate funds for the Public Welfare Division of the Department of Health, for school lunch-rooms for nursery schools, and for free surplus fund distribution.” Section 14 of Act No. 16 was amended and drafted to read as follows:

“Section 14.- — To carry out the purposes of this Act, the sum of sixteen million (16,000,000) dollars, or such part thereof as may he necessary in any fiscal year, in the judgment of the Insular Emergency Council, is hereby appropriated out of any funds in the Treasury of Puerto Rico, not otherwise appropriated; Provided, That [14]*14of the total amount of this appropriation, the sum of four million (4,000,000) dollars shall not be available until July 1, 1943, etc.” (Italics ours.)

Section 14, as amended, provides that the $16,000,000 are to be allocated as follows:

For the emergency work program — not less than 50 per cent of the total 'amount of the appropriation to be devoted to work projects connected with the planting and cultivation of food-$11, 500, 000
For the projects of unemployment compensation relief, lowering'of the prices of articles, subsidies, loans and general financial assistance- 2, 300, 000
For the “Public Welfare Fund — Trust Fund” of the Public Welfare Division in the Department of Health 1, 500, 000
For school lunch-rooms_ 350, 000
For free surplus-food distribution_ ’ 200, 000
For nursery schools_ 50, 000

Act No. 182 of 1943 ends by providing in § 3 that its provisions “are made retroactive to the date on which said Act No. 16, approved November 27, 1942, became effective,' the same as if said Act had been originally approved in the form in which it has been amended by this Act; Provided, That any amount which has been set up on the appropriation books in accordance with said Act No. 16, approved November 27, 1942, shall be considered as part of the total amount appropriated by this Act.” (Italics ours.)

On June 29, 1944, Mr. Celestino Triarte Miró, as a taxpayer, filed in the District Court of San Juan a petition for injunction against Mr. Rafael Buscaglia, in his capacffy as Treasurer of Puerto Rico, and Mr. Rafael de J. Cordero, in his capacity as Auditor of Puerto Rico, and against Messrs. Antonio Fernós Isern, Jesús A. González, José M. Gallardo, Rafael Buscaglia, Sergio Cuevas, Luis A. Izquierdo, Manuel A. Pérez, and Rafael de J. Cordero, as members constituting the Insular Emergency Council. The petition, after making detailed allegations with regard to the approval and eon-[15]*15tents of Act No. 16 of 1942 and Act No. 181 of 1943, alleged, in short, as follows:

That on February 15, 1944, dne to a report rendered to the Legislature of Puerto Eieo by the Treasurer and Auditor of Puerto Rico, a bill was presented in the Senate, as S. B. No. 28, to appropriate from any funds available in the Insular Treasury of Puerto Rico, not otherwise disposed of, the sum of $21,500,000, which sum would be placed at the disposal of the Insular Emergency Council for the purposes specified in Act No. 16 of 1942, as amended; that said bill provided that the sum of $21,500,000 was appropriated in addition to the $16,000,000 appropriated by Act No. 181 of 1943; and that said bill was not passed by the Legislature of Puerto Rico.

That on March 7, 1944, H. B. No. 130 was presented in the House of Representatives of Puerto' Rico, drawn sub-tantially in identical terms and for the same purposes as S. B. No. 28 to which we have already referred; and that said H. B. No. 130 was likewise not passed by the Legislature.

That the sum of $16,000,000 appropriated by Acts No. 16 of 1942 and No. 181 of 1943, is completely exhausted, the same having been allocated by the Insular Emergency Council to projects and disbursements already approved, for which reason the Insular Emergency Council, from and after July 1, 1944, will not have at its disposal any money coming from said appropriation of $16,000,000.

That the defendants intend and propose to utilize an additional sum of $16,000,000 from the ordinary funds of the Insular Treasury, from and after July 1, 1944, and to allocate said sum to the aims and purposes of Act No.

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Bluebook (online)
64 P.R. 11, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buscaglia-v-district-court-of-san-juan-prsupreme-1944.