Flores Irizarry v. District Court of Mayagüez

49 P.R. 118
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedNovember 27, 1935
DocketNo. 1047
StatusPublished

This text of 49 P.R. 118 (Flores Irizarry v. District Court of Mayagüez) 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
Flores Irizarry v. District Court of Mayagüez, 49 P.R. 118 (prsupreme 1935).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Córdova Dávila

delivered the opinion of the court.

José López Fernández petitioned the District Court of Mayagiiez through a dominion title proceeding to declare his ownership of a certain rural property. Venancio Flores Iri-zarry objected to this petition, which the court, after hearing the parties, granted on May 17, 1935. Thereupon the opposing party, the petitioner herein, feeling aggrieved by that decision took an appeal therefrom on May 21, 1935. On June 1st of the same year, the petitioner requested an extension of time to file a statement of the case. The district court refused to grant such request; whereupon, and the term of thirty days to take an appeal not having expired, the petitioner filed a second notice of appeal in the district court. Five days after such filing, he presented a statement of the case in the lower court and requested its approval. The district court refused to approve "it on the grounds that there was an appeal pending which precluded the taking of another appeal, and that, in its view, it lacked jurisdiction to take any action in regard to a second appeal while the first was still pending. The petitioner seeks through the certiorari proceeding- herein to have this last decision set aside, and maintains that the lower court erred in denying him the right to take the second appeal after refusing to grant him the extension requested in the first appeal.

The doctrine that permits the taking of a second appeal, when the time for taking an appeal has not expired and the first appeal has not been dismissed, has been recog[120]*120nized by this court and in numerous decisions. Orellana v. People, 46 P.R.R. 200, and cases cited therein. The doubt arises, where, as in the case at bar, the first appeal has not been abandoned. On this point there exists a marked divergence of opinion among the courts. In some jurisdictions it is maintained that a second appeal can not be prosecuted until a voluntary dismissal of the first has been effected. In others the contrary view is held.

In Reichenbach v. Lewis et al., 5 Wash. 577, 32 Pac. 460, the Supreme Court of Washington declared that an appeal does not lie during the pendency of a motion to dismiss a prior appeal, on the ground that no transcript had been filed within the required time. However, that same court in a subsequent case, which we shall cite further on in this opinion, upheld a contrary doctrine.

In the case of Cruzen v. Merchants' State Bank of St. Hilaire, 109 Minn. 303, 123 N. W. 666, the Supreme Court of Minnesota held, in effect, that an appellant can not, by himself, dismiss an appeal in the district court and then prosecute a second appeal. In order that a new appeal may be taken the party must wait until the Supreme Court has dismissed the first. See also the case of Newbury v. Getchell & Martin Lumber S Mfg. Co., 106 Iowa 140, 76 N. W. 514.

In Brown v. Plummer, 70 Cal. 337, 11 Pac. 631, the court decided that where there is a good and valid appeal from a judgment of the lower court pending in the Supreme Court, a second appeal from the same judgment is a nullity, for the reason that after the taking of the first appeal there would be nothing in the court below from which another appeal could be taken. The court, however, said: “When the second appeal was taken, the time for filing the transcript on the first appeal had not expired. The first appeal was then a valid, existing appeal to this court.” These words of the court seem to indicate that its decision would have been different if at the time the second appeal was taken the term [121]*121granted to file the transcript of the court in the original appeal had expired.

In Bornheimer v. Baldwin, 42 Cal. 27, a second appeal was allowed before the dismissal of the first, which had been perfected. That case was cited with approval in Keaton v. Municipal Court, 209 Cal. 52, decided in 1930.

In the ease of Groendyke v. Musgrave, 123 Iowa, 535, 99 N. W. 144, the appellant filed in the district court a dismissal of the appeal taken. After the dismissal had been thns effected the appellant at once filed a second appeal. The ap-pellee urged that the appellant had exhausted his right to a review of the case by appeal. In deciding the question thus raised, the Supreme Court of Ohio said:

“Stated briefly, the question is, may an appellant voluntarily dismiss an appeal once perfected, and thereafter, and within six months from the date of the judgment sought to bé reviewed, take a second appeal? We are inclined to hold in the affirmative. There would seem to be no good reason for denying such right, and, as we shall see, the practice finds much support in the decisions of the courts. The statute allows a party six months in which to take an appeal. Experience has demonstrated that lawyers are not wholly exempt from liability to mistakes, and if, having attempted to effect an appeal, counsel find that by some error or oversight their appeal is likely to be lost without a hearing-upon its merits, and the statutory limitation has not yet run, why should they not be allowed to take advantage of this locus poenitentiae to dismiss the ineffectual appeal and begin anew? By analogy with the right freely exercised to dismiss an original action and to renew the same, it would seem that such practice is entirely legitimate. (Citations.)”

Although in the case just cited the appellant voluntarily dismissed the first appeal taken, however, the reasoning of the court can very well be applied to the case where an appellant voluntarily abandons the first appeal because he incurred in an error, or because he finds himself in a position which precludes him from prosecuting said appeal in a manner that will duly protect all his rights.

[122]*122Among the above-cited decisions, there are some which have expressed themselves openly against the granting of a second appeal until the first has been dismissed, and others which favor the taking of a second appeal even though the first has not been formally dismissed. The decisions which we will proceed to cite deal directly with that question and without any reserve whatsoever uphold the latter doctrine.

In the ease of Evans v. State Bank, 134 U. S. 330, the Supreme Court of the United States said:

“The decree in this case was rendered on the 19th of June and a rehearing refused on the 6th of July, 1885. On the 8th of July of that year an order was entered allowing Mrs. Evans and her husband, who were complainants below, an appeal to this court upon giving bond with security as directed; and upon the same day the bond was filed and approved. Nothing further was done, and the record not having been filed in this court during the succeeding term the appeal became of no avail, because not duly prosecuted. Credit Company v. Arkansas Central Railway Co., 128 U. S. 258. On the 21st of May, 1887, Mr. and Mrs. Evans petitioned the Circuit Court to allow an appeal from said decree, which was on that day allowed and entered of record, on the petitioners furnishing bond conditioned according to law.

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Related

Credit Co. v. Arkansas Central Railway Co.
128 U.S. 258 (Supreme Court, 1888)
Evans v. State Bank
134 U.S. 330 (Supreme Court, 1890)
Keaton v. Mun. Court of L.A.
285 P. 696 (California Supreme Court, 1930)
Noble v. Whitten
76 P. 95 (Washington Supreme Court, 1904)
Reichenbach v. Lewis
32 P. 460 (Washington Supreme Court, 1893)
Bornheimer v. Baldwin
42 Cal. 27 (California Supreme Court, 1871)
Brown v. Plummer
11 P. 631 (California Supreme Court, 1886)
Turner v. Tapscott
29 Ark. 318 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1874)
Rice v. Reed
29 Ark. 320 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1874)
Kinner v. Dodds
35 Ark. 29 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1879)
Robinson v. Arkansas Loan & Trust Co.
81 S.W. 609 (Supreme Court of Arkansas, 1904)
Newbury v. Getchell & Martin Lumber & Manufacturing Co.
76 N.W. 514 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1898)
Groendyke v. Musgrave
99 N.W. 144 (Supreme Court of Iowa, 1904)
Cruzen v. Merchants State Bank
123 N.W. 666 (Supreme Court of Minnesota, 1909)

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Bluebook (online)
49 P.R. 118, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flores-irizarry-v-district-court-of-mayaguez-prsupreme-1935.