De Diego v. Rovira

9 P.R. Fed. 17
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 14, 1916
DocketNo. 969
StatusPublished

This text of 9 P.R. Fed. 17 (De Diego v. Rovira) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
De Diego v. Rovira, 9 P.R. Fed. 17 (prd 1916).

Opinion

EamiltoN, Judge,

delivered tbe following opinion:

In this case a temporary injunction bas heretofore been granted on the bill and affidavits. (See opinion Neb. 26, 1916.) The cause afterwards came on for final hearing; a large amount of oral and documentary evidence was introduced, it was argued by counsel, and by agreement of parties the judge visited the locus in quo.

1. The subject of irrigation is governed in Porto Rico by two laws: first, the Civil Code, and second, what is called the Law of Waters.

The Civil Code was adopted in its present form in 1889, both for Spain and Porto Rico. Book 2 thereof relates to property and ownership, and title 4 under this head is concerned with waters. Sections 414, 415 determine what are of public and what private dominion, as follows:

“Sec. 414. To the public domain belong:
“1. Eivers and their natural beds.
“2. Continuous or intermittent waters from sources or brooks running in their natural beds, and the beds themselves.
“3. Waters rising continuously or intermittently in lands within the same public domain.
“4. Lakes and marshes formed by nature on public lands, and also their beds.
“5. Eain water funning through ravines or sandy beaches, the beds of which may also belong to the public domain.
“6. Subterranean waters existing on public lands.
“7. Waters found within the zone of operation of public works, even when they are executed .by a grantee.
“8. Waters flowing continuously or intermittently from tene[20]*20ments belonging to private parties, to the People of the United States, to the People of Porto Eico, or to the municipalities thereof, from the moment they leave such tenements.
“9. The waste waters of fountains, sewers, and public institutions.
“Sec. 415. To private dominion belong:
“1. Waters, either continuous or intermittent, rising on private tenements, as far as they run through the same.
“2. Lakes and marshes, and their beds, when formed by nature on the said tenements.
“3. Subterranean waters found on the same.
“4. Bain water falling on private tenements, as long as they remain within the boundaries of the same.
“5. The beds of flowing waters, continuous or intermittent, formed by rain water, and those of brooks crossing tenements which do not belong to the public domain.
“In every drain or aqueduct, the water, the bed, the sloping bank, and the sideways are considered as an integral part of the tenement or building for which the waters are intended. The owners of tenements through which, or along the boundaries of which the aqueduct passes, cannot allege ownership over the same nor any right to profit by its beds or sideways, unless they base their claims on title deeds, specifying the right or the ownership claimed by them.”

Chapter 2, on the use of public waters, is composed of three sections, as follows:

“Sec. 416. The use of .public waters is acquired:
“1. By administrative concession.
“2. By prescription after twenty years.
“The limits of the rights and obligations of these uses shall [21]*21be those shown, in the first ease, by the terms of the concession; and in the-second case, by the manner in which the waters have been used.
“Sec. 417. Every concession of the use of waters is understood to be without injury to third persons.
“Sec. 418. The right to make use of public waters is extinguished by the lapse of the concession and by nonusage during twenty years.”

Chapter 3 relates to the use of waters of private ownership. Its five sections are as follows:

“See. 419. The owner of a tenement in which a spring or brook rises, be it continuous or intermittent, may use its waters as far as they run through the said tenement; but after the said water leaves the tenement it shall become public and its use Is governed by the special Taw of Waters.
“Sec. 420. Private ownership of the beds of rain waters does not give a right to make works and constructions which may divert the course of such waters to the injury of a third person, nor those, the destruction of which by the force of floods, may cause such injury.
“Sec. 421. No one may enter private property in search of waters or make use of them without permission from the owners thereof.
“See. 422. The dominion which the owner of a tenement has over the waters rising thereon does not injure the rights which the owner of a lower tenement may have legally acquired to the use thereof.
“Sec. 423. Every owner of'a tenement has a right to construct within his property receptacles for rain water, provided he does no damage thereby to the public or to a third person.”'

[22]*22Chapter 4 relates to subterranean waters, and tbe concluding chapter 5 of the title contains general provisions, more or less apposite, as follows:

“Sec. 427. The owner of a tenement on which there are defensive worhs to check waters, or on which, by the variation of their course, it may be necessary to reconstruct them anew, is bound, at his option, either to make the necessary repairs or constructions, or to permit that, without damage to him, the owners of the tenements who suffer or are clearly exposed to suffer damages, should make such works.
“Sec. 428. The provisions of the preceding section apply to the cases in which it may be necessary to clear a tenement from the material, the accumulation or fall of which may obstruct the course of waters, to the injury or danger of a third person.
“Sec. 429. All the owners who participate in the benefits arising from the works to which the preceding sections refer shall be bound to contribute to the expenses of their several interests. Those who by their own fault may have caused the damages, shall be liable for such expenses.
“Sec. 430. The ownership and use of waters belonging to corporations or private persons are subject to the law of eminent domain for reasons of public utility.
“Sec. 431. The provisions of this title shall not cause injury to rights previously acquired, nor to the private dominion of the owners of waters, drains, fountains, of springs by virtue of which they use, sell, or barter them as private property.
“Sec. 432. Auything not expressly determined by the provisions of this chapter shall be governed by the special Law of Waters.”

The general Law of Waters, therefore, is contained in the see-[23]*23tions above quoted so far as they are applicable, and anything not expressly so determined shall be governed by the special Law of Waters.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
9 P.R. Fed. 17, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-diego-v-rovira-prd-1916.