Ex parte Usera

52 P.R. 113
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 30, 1937
DocketNo. 7545
StatusPublished

This text of 52 P.R. 113 (Ex parte Usera) 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
Ex parte Usera, 52 P.R. 113 (prsupreme 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Two motions have been filed praying for the dismissal of the appeal in the instant case; one by the petitioner, and the other by the district attorney.

This is a proceeding commenced under Section 107 of the Civil Code, which, as amended by the Act of April 18, 1935, (Laws, page 250), reads as follows:

“Section 107.— In all cases of divorce the minor children shall be placed under the ‘patria potestas’ of the party who has obtained the decree; but the other spouse shall have the right to continue family relations with his or her children, in such manner and extension as the court may determine when rendering judgment, as the case may be. ‘The spouse deprived of the “patria potestas” shall have the right to recover the same by judicial decree, if there is duly accredited before any competent district court the death of the innocent spouse and the circumstance that the divorce was granted upon grounds other than those' determined by paragraphs 7 and 8 of Section 96 of the Civil Code of Puerto Rico, 1930 edition, as amended by Act No. 46 of May 9, 1933, (Section 164, 1902 edition), provided that it is also shown, to the satisfaction of the court, that the recovery of the “patria potestas” by the surviving spouse is for the best interest and welfare of the child’ ”.

It is urged in petitioner’s motion that the appeal should .be dismissed because the judgment is not appealable and because the appeal is frivolous, for the following reasons:

“(a) Because the statement of the case, opinion, and judgment transcribed in this motion, do not reveal any conflict in the evidence that might be adjusted on appeal.
“(5) Because the questions of law raised by the intervener before the court a quo and determined by the judgment, have already [116]*116been settled by this Honorable Supreme Court adversely to the contentions of said intervener, in Enjuto v. People, 49 P.R.B. 13 and Enjuto v. District Court, 49 P.R.R. 358; and there is no need of any further argument therein.
“(c) Because the question of law concerning the retroactive operation of the Act the' basis of the judgment, which question was raised by the intervener and decided by the court in the order appealed from, does not need any further determination, either, since it is evident from the very language of Act No. 44 of April 18, 1935, creating the right of your petitioner to the recovery of the patria potestas.
“(d) Because, furthermore, it appears from the foregoing that the intervener and appellant, by her appeal, only seeks to delay the proceedings in the instant case, well knowing that her interest in this matter, wlrch she invoked in order to intervene, has ceased to exist, a question which was determined by this Honorable Court when it definitely established the incapacity of the intervener to act as tutrix, as appears from the cited cases of Enjuto v. People and Enjuto v. District Court, supra.- Therefore, the question on which this appeal might depend is so unsubstantial that it does not require any further determination”.

To the district attorney’s motion there were attached certified copies of the statement of the case and opinion, of the judgment, and of the notice of appeal. The motion is based on the grounds that the judgment is not appealable, that the notice of appeal was not served on the prosecuting attorney nor on the appointed guardian of the minor, and that the appeal is frivolous.

The intervener filed two writings in opposition to both motions.

In attacking the petitioner’s motion, she maintains that, although it is true that there is no conflicting evidence, she will rely for her appeal on the failure to weigh uncontradicted evidence establishing essential facts alleged by the intervener; on the ground that it is not true that the questions of law raised have" already been decided by this Court, and on the additional ground that the question of the retroactive operation of the amendment to Section 107 of the [117]*117Civil Code is not frivolous because there is involved the loss by the son of the usufruct of his property, and because the Act does not say expressly that it shall have retroactive effect, the rule being in such a case that it does not have such effect. She specifies some of the questions involved, as follows:

(1) Lack of extra—territorial power on the part of the People of Puerto Eico over persons outside of its territory, Section 1 of the Organic Act and Sections 3 and 4 of the Political Code; (2) lack of power of the People of Puerto Eico to govern the person of a minor who is outside of its territory, said minor having been born in Spain, where his mother and legal guardian were both domiciled and where the minor is still residing, Sections 3, 4 and 11 of the Political Code, 13 Cal. Jur. 147; (3) lack of power in the district court’to appoint a guardian (tutor dativo) for a minor who was born and has always been domiciled in Spain; (4) present capacity of Miss Enjuto to act as guardian, since by her having acquired residence in this island, the incapacity referred to in the decision of this Court in Enjuto v. District Court, 49 P.R.R. 358 has ceased to exist; (5) ineffectiveness of the judgment of the district court with respect to the custody of a non-resident minor, because of.its lack of coercive extra—territorial force, the minor residing as he does reside, in Spain where the will executed by his mother, appointing Miss Enjuto tutrix and sole legal guardian of her minor son, remains in full force; (6) the remarriage of petitioner, Section 164 Civil Code, as amended in 1931 (Laws, p. 576); (7) lack of service of process on the minor, who is over fourteen years of age; .(8) that there is not involved the determination of real rights, but of personal rights; and (9) lack of due process of law.

And in answer to the district attorney’s motion, she maintains that it should be denied, because the district attorney is not the representative of The People- of- Puerto Eico in [118]*118the proceeding; because the judgment rendered is appeal-able ; because the notice of appeal did not have to be served on the prosecuting attorney nor on the appointed guardian, who are not adverse parties to the proceeding, and because the appeal is not frivolous.

This was the question of dismissal of the appeal submitted to our consideration and decision last June 21.

We have before us in a duly authenticated form only the copies of the statement of the case and opinion, of the judgment, and of the notice of appeal. By the first, it is shown that the ease was begun by Rafael Hernández Usera, alleging his marriage to Mercedes González Garriga, the birth of his son, the minor -Rafael, the divorse sought by his wife and decreed by the court because of cruel treatment and grave injuiies, the boy remaining under the care and patria potestas of the mother, her death in Spain, and his right to recover the patria potestas,

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Bluebook (online)
52 P.R. 113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ex-parte-usera-prsupreme-1937.