Cortijo Walker v. Puerto Rico Water Resources Authority

91 P.R. 557
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 18, 1964
DocketNo. R-64-11
StatusPublished

This text of 91 P.R. 557 (Cortijo Walker v. Puerto Rico Water Resources Authority) 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
Cortijo Walker v. Puerto Rico Water Resources Authority, 91 P.R. 557 (prsupreme 1964).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Santana Becerra

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On May 13, 1960, workman Julio Eduardo Cortijo Walker was electrocuted in the course of his employment. The State Insurance Fund considered the case as a labor accident covered by the Workmen’s Accident Compensation Act, and on January 17, 1961 it entered a decision awarding compensation in the amount of $5,184 to minor Víctor Lanzó, brother of the deceased laborer. It ruled that the said minor was the only person entitled to receive the benefits of the Act by reason of dependence. The Fund held that the workman’s death occurred in the course of the normal and regular duties of his employment when he was electrocuted by an uninsulated galvanized wire which he was carrying in his hands and made contact with high-voltage electric current.

[559]*559On August 29, 1961, plaintiffs Julia, Pablo, Edwin, Victoria, Isolina, José Amalio, Ángel and Victor Vicente, all surnamed Cortijo Walker, filed a claim for damages for this death against the Water Resources Authority. They alleged that the workman died without leaving any ascendants or descendants and was survived by plaintiffs, some of whom “depended for their subsistence” on what the laborer provided to them; that his death was due to the sole and exclusive negligence of defendant Water Resources Authority by its failure to adopt due precautions and to foresee, as it should have, that uninsulated high-tension wires endanger the lives of third persons; and that as a result of the accident plaintiffs have suffered damages and mental and moral anguish.1 The Authority answered and admitted the occurrence of the accident and denied the other facts. It alleged as a defense that the accident was due to the exclusive negligence of the workman, or of the workman and third persons, and if no negligence was committed, that this was a fortuitous and unfortunate accident.

Approximately two years later, on August 26, 1963, defendant filed a third-party claim against employer Anastacio Rodríguez Cubano alleging that he was negligent and holding him responsible for the accident. It alleged that the employer permitted the construction of works near defendant’s power lines without taking due precautions so that no one would come in contact with them, knowing or being bound to know, the hazard involved, and without notifying the Authority of the construction of such works near the power lines in order that it could take action in such a situation; and that he acted in violation of an independent, express or implied duty imposed by law toward the Authority. It prayed for judgment against the third-party defendant to indemnify [560]*560plaintiffs, or to pay to the Authority any amount which the latter would be bound to pay to the former.

The employer and third-party defendant filed a motion to dismiss and a motion for summary judgment alleging nonliability in law. He attached to his motion for summary judgment a sworn statement to the effect that he was an employer insured with the Fund under a policy which covered the workman, and that in addition to the amount of $5,184 awarded by the Fund an additional amount of $5,000, the product of a group policy which the employer carried for his employees, was paid to the beneficiaries. He included a certified copy of the decision of the Fund ruling that this was a labor accident covered by the Act. The defendant objected to the motion for summary judgment, but did not enclose any statement or evidence. The court rendered summary judgment dismissing the third-party claim against the employer. That summary judgment is here on review.

The Workmen’s Accident Compensation Act of 1935 (Sess. Laws, p. 250) provides in its § 20 that when an employer insures his workmen or employees in accordance with that Act, the right to compensation therein established “shall be the only remedy against the employer,” and in those cases not covered by the Act the liability of the employer shall continue to be the same as if that Act did not exist. Section 16 of the Act is to the same effect as to the employer’s liability when the accident is not covered by that special statute, and refers such liability to the Civil Code, § 1802.2

Section 31 provides that in cases in which the injury, disease or death entitling the workman, employee, or his beneficiaries to compensation under the provisions of the Act has been caused under circumstances making a third party liable for such injury, disease or death, the workman [561]*561or employee or his beneficiaries may claim and recover damages from the third party liable for such injury, disease or death. This same section subrogates the State Insurance Fund in the rights of such workman or employee or of his beneficiaries in those cases, and it may bring action in behalf of the workman or employee or his beneficiaries against the third party. If the Fund does not subrogate itself and fails to bring action against the third party, the workman or employee or his beneficiaries shall nonetheless be at liberty to bring such action of damages.

Under the system of our Workmen’s Accident Compensation Act, it has been held in this jurisdiction that the injured workman or employee or his beneficiaries may not demand compensation from the employer under the common-law liability rules, in our case, the Civil Code. The compensation provided by the statute is the only remedy against his employer available to the workman or his beneficiaries, provided the case comes within the ambit of the Act. De Jesús v. Osorio, 65 P.R.R. 601, 603 (1946); Onna v. The Texas Co., 64 P.R.R. 497, 500 (1945); Rivera v. Industrial Commission, 67 P.R.R. 526, 528 (1947); Fonseca v. Prann, 282 F.2d 153, 157, cert. denied, 365 U.S. 860. When the compensation statute does not cover the case, see Arroyo v. Plaza Provision Co., 68 P.R.R. 889, 892 (1948).

In view of the historical experience of the workmen’s difficult uphill strife to obtain compensation in labor accidents, when he was bound to establish convincingly acts of negligence of his employer or of another fellow workman and the employer could in turn allege as a defense his own negligence or carelessness, a historical situation which has so often forsaken the workman or his family, the lawmaker elected in this case an integrated system on the basis of a social, objective liability in this sphere of labor-management relationship. It could have been at the expense of subjecting the workman or his family as respects the employer to reason[562]*562able recovery of statutory compensation solely on the basis of a criterion of dependence, as compared with a greater compensation and a greater relationship under the general civil-law rules, and of depriving him of the latter. The lawmaker made his selection from among factors of convenience, and applied an integrated social system of objective liability. The immunity afforded to the employer against other acts or remedies — § 20-^-in the cases covered by the statute should have been essential to the objective liability system adopted as a means of encouraging every employer to take out insurance, without which the system could not be effective.

This legislative criterion of granting to the employer immunity from remedies other than the compensation became even more evident in 1935 when the present statute was enacted.

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Bluebook (online)
91 P.R. 557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cortijo-walker-v-puerto-rico-water-resources-authority-prsupreme-1964.