Cartagena v. Mayagüez Light & Ice Co.

21 P.R. 167
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 18, 1914
DocketNo. 1069
StatusPublished

This text of 21 P.R. 167 (Cartagena v. Mayagüez Light & Ice Co.) 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
Cartagena v. Mayagüez Light & Ice Co., 21 P.R. 167 (prsupreme 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice del Toro

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action for damages. Both parties having filed their pleadings and the case having been tried, the District Court of Mayagüez rendered judgment on May 9, 1913, adjudging that the defendant company pay to its employee, the plaintiff, the sum of $1,000 as an indemnity for the damages [168]*168which he suffered by the accident described in the complaint, together with costs, disbursements, and an attorney’s fee.

After considering the evidence introduced the trial court made the following findings of fact:

“That the defendant, the Mayagiiez Light, and Ice Company, is a company incorporated under the laws of Porto Eico for the purpose, among other things, of furnishing light and power in the city of Mayagiiez where it maintains an electric plant for the public lighting service. That the plaintiff, Cándido Cartagena, had been working in the electric plant of the defendánt company in this city of Mayagiiez since its foundation, the said plant having been in operation since the year 1895.
‘ ‘ It was proven also that the electric plant referred to in the complain! belongs to Eamón Valdés and that on March 8, 1911, the plaintiff, Cándido Cartagena, who had been employed in the said plant since its foundation, was working as a machinist in the electric plant situated on Candelaria Street, Mayagiiez, and belonging to the defendant; that on the morning of said March 8, 1911, while he was adjusting the clutch of engine No. 2 a piece of iron flew off and struck him a severe blow in the left eye, which caused him great physical pain, compelling him to keep to his bed, and prevented him from doing any work whatever for four months after the accident; that he has become totally blind of the said left eye and is still partly in- ■ capacitated from working at the trade by which he earned his living, and that, in addition, he has suffered severe physical pain and spent large sums of money in his efforts to be cured.
“It was proved also that the said plaintiff, Cándido Cartagena, as such machinist, earned, while in the employ of the defendant and up to the time of the accident, $60 monthly.
“It was proven by the testimony of the witnesses for the plaintiff and for the defendant that the clutch of said engine No. 2 had been defective since its installation, for, according to defendant’s witness Pastor Carrero, said clutch had been out of order ever since it was placed on said engine and always had to be adjusted with a hammer.
“As to this point it has been proved, as before stated, that the clutch was always out of order even before the engine belonged to the present owner, Eamón Valdés, and that notwithstanding the fact that he was told of the said defect after the Mayagüez Light and Ice Company had taken charge of the machinery or electric plant, as has been proven, the said defect has never been properly and com[169]*169pletely repaired by tbe defendant, by Ramón Yaldés, wbo owns tbe plant, or by any person' by order of tbe defendant.
“It was proven satisfactorily that Wenceslao Sifre was tbe superintendent and manager of tbe said plant at tbe time the accident occurred, having been placed in that position and charged with its ■obligations and duties by the owner, Ramón Valdés; that said superintendent Sifre inspected the plant twice a day and once at night to see how it operated; that every morning the machinist on duty ■submitted to the superintendent or manager, Wenceslao Sifre, a report of all the adjustments or repairs requiring immediate attention in the said electric plant; that on various and repeated occasions, as was proved sufficiently, the clutch became loose and it was necessary to adjust it with a hammer. This was proved both by the witnesses for the plaintiff and for the defendant, including the engineer who is now in charge of the said plant.
“Moreover, witness Pastor Carrero, who was called by the defendant and is the present machinist of the electric plant, testified to the fact that since the electric plant has belonged to the defendant, the Mayagüez Light and Ice Company, the clutch has been adjusted about eight or ten times.
“It has also been proven that one of the duties of the machinist, which position was held by Cándido Cartagena in the said plant, was .to adjust these defects of the clutch. ’ ’

After the foregoing findings of fact the trial court reached the following conclusions on which it based its said judgment:

“1. That the plaintiff has suffered serious injuries as a consequence of the accident which gave rise to this action.
“2. That the plaintiff was discharging his duty with proper care and diligence when he received the said injuries.
“3. That the injuries to the plaintiff were caused by a defect in engine No. 2 used in the electric plant, which defect was known pf and was not remedied owing to the negligence of the employer .or of his superintendent, Wenceslao Sifre, whose sole and principal duty was shown to be the management of the electric plant.
“4. That the injury was due solely and exclusively to the negligence of the defendant, the Mayagüez Light and Ice Company.”

The attorney for the defendant-appellant assigned and argued eleven errors in Ms brief. We will disregard the first [170]*170ten and, in view of the attendant circumstances, consider only the last, which covers the whole case, and which reads as follows: “The judgment rendered by the court is not in conformity with the evidence nor supported thereby, nor is it in accordance with the law. ’ ’

We have considered carefully the evidence introduced and in our opinion it has been correctly weighed by the trial court. The question to be decided is whether or not the findings of fact sustain the conclusions of the district court and support the judgment appealed from.

First, we will examine the case in the light of the act in relation to the liability of employers for injuries sustained by their employees while in their service, approved March 1, 1901. Section 1 of the said act (section 322 of the Revised Statutes) provides that the right to maintain an action for damages against the employer shall exist, among other eases, when personal injury is caused to an employee who is himself in the exercise of due care and diligence in the line of his duties by reason of any defect in the machinery connected with, or used in, the business of the employer, which defect originated or had not been discovered or remedied owing to the negligence of the employer or of any person in the service of the employer and entrusted by him with the duty of seeing that the said machinery was in good condition.

According to the findings of fact of the trial court, the relation of employer and employee existed between the plaintiff, and defendant in the present ease, and it was proved also that the employee received a personal injury while engaged in the service of the employer. Up to this point all the statutory requirements for maintaining an action for damages have been shown, but was the accident due to any defect in the machinery of the employer?

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Bluebook (online)
21 P.R. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cartagena-v-mayaguez-light-ice-co-prsupreme-1914.