González v. Court of Tax Appeals of Puerto Rico

60 P.R. 877
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 31, 1942
DocketNos. 1296, 1297, and 1298
StatusPublished

This text of 60 P.R. 877 (González v. Court of Tax Appeals of Puerto Rico) 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
González v. Court of Tax Appeals of Puerto Rico, 60 P.R. 877 (prsupreme 1942).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Todd, Jr.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the cases at bar the Court of Tax Appeals of. Puerto Rico rendered judgment on April 30, 1942, declaring itself to he without jurisdiction and therefore “affirming the deficiencies notified by the Treasurer of Puerto Rico,” and issued an order on May 1, 1942, addressed to the Treasurer of Puerto Eico ordering him “to levy the tax in accordance with the pronouncements of said judgment.”

On May 29, 1942, Guillermo E. González filed in this Supreme Court three notices of appeal from the judgment ren[879]*879dered by the Court of Tax Appeals in each case, and we .granted the writs of certiorari prayed for. The Treasurer of Puerto Rico filed motions praying for the dismissal of these writs alleging that this court is without jurisdiction (1) because the appeal by way of certiorari is not the proper remedy and (2) because the appellant has not paid the tax as required by §76 (a) of the Income Tax Act (No. 74 of 1925, p. 400) as amended by Act No. 23 of November 21, 1941 (Spec. Sess. Laws, p. 72). After hearing the parties the cases were submitted for decision.

The first jurisdictional issue raised by the Treasurer has already been decided by this court against him in the case of Mayagüez, Sugar Co., Inc. v. Court of Tax Appeals, ante, p. 737.

Let us proceed to examine the second question.

Section 5 of the Act which creates the Court of Tax Appeals (Act No. 172, approved May 13, 1941, p. 1038) provides that the decisions of said court will be final but “the aggrieved party may, within thirty (30) days after the decision has been rendered, appeal therefrom to the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, through a writ of certiorari for a revision of the proceedings.”

Section 57 (b) of the Income Tax Act, as ainended by Act No. 23, approved November 21, 1941, provides, in 'part, as follows:

. . If an appeal is taken to the Court of Tax Appeals of Puerto Rico in the manner provided by this Aet, and said court determines that ther’e is a deficiency, the. amount determined by the court shall he levied hy the Treasurer with interest at the rate of six (6) per cent per annum from the date prescribed fo:r the payment of the first instalment of the tax, and shall be fully paid by the taxpayer upon order of the Treasurer.” (Italics ours.)

And §76 (a) in its pertinent part reads thus:

“Section 76.— (a) Whenever a taxpayer should not agree, with a deficiency or part of a deficiency determined hy the Court of Tax Appeals of Puerto Pico under Section 57 (b) of this Act, he shall [880]*880be obliged, nevertheless, to pay it in full, and if he should desire to appeal to the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico in the manner provided by law, in making the payment he shall protest of the part of the deficiency with which he does not agree and he shall request the collector or official making the collection to endorse his protest on h'is receipt, specifically setting forth the part of the tax which is paid under protest, and said receipt, or a certified (copy) thereof, shall form part of his appeal to the Supreme Court, without which requwement the said court shall not have jurisdiction. . . (Italics ours.)

The appellant in these eases alleges in his petitions that “until now the Treasurer has not levied any tax whatsoever nor has he complied with the provisions of the Eules of the Court of Tax Appeals in regard to the manner of levying said tax for which reasons the appellant has not been and is not able to pay any tax whatsoever under protest, as required by §76 of the Income Tax Act, as amended by §9 of Act No. 23 of November 21, 1941.”

As we have said before, from the record sent to us by the Court of Tax Appeals it only appears that the judgment rendered on April 30 affirmed the deficiencies assessed by the Treasurer and that on the 1st of May said officer was ordered to levy the tax.

However, §3 of Act No. 172, supra, grants to the Court of Tax Appeals the power to promulgate rules of procedure and at the end of said section it is provided that: “After the complaint has been filed, the subsequent procedure, including the hearing of the evidence which may be necessary to arrive at a decision, shall be determined by the court in its rules of procedure.” To that end said court approved on October 27, 1941, a set of Eules of Practice and among these Eules 42 and 43 which expressly provide the following:

Rule 42. — Decisions. After the introduction of the evidence and when the case is pending an examination by the court the same will be prosecuted to a decision in conformity with the rules of the court. Every decision will consist of the following parts:
[881]*881“(a) Opinion delivered by the member to whom the ease has been assigned with the approval of the concurring members and the recording of any member dissenting, absent or disqualified;
“(b) Dissenting opinion, if any;
“(c) Order of the President based on the opinion of the court which is attached pursuant to subdivisions (a) and (b);
“(d) Computation of the tax, deficiency, or liability which will be filed with the decision of the case pursuant to Rule 43.
“Every order of the President which involves a decision of the court will be addressed to the Treasurer of Puerto Rico and notified to the appellant to the effect that the tax, deficiency or liability be calculated, fixed, or assessed in accordance with the decision of the court.” (Italics ours.)
“Rule 43. — Computation op the Tax, Deficiency, OR Liability. Upon the decision of each case by the court such decision will be recorded by the clerk when he notifies the parties. The Treasurer of Puerto Rico will compute the tax, impose the deficiency or liability, in accordance ivith the-decision of the court, file an original with 6 copies of said computation or assessment with the clerh of the court, certifying that he has notified said computation or assessment to the appellant on the same day. The clerk will leave pending registration said computation during 10 days counted from the date of said document and if during that term the appellant does not file his opposition to the computation or assessment, the. clerh shall record said computation and shall file it as part of the decision of the court pursuant to Ride No. 42.
“The parties may stipulate the computation of the assessment of the tax, deficiency, or liability, in accordance with the decision of the court and in sv,ch case the clerh may immediately record said computation as part of the decision. Where an opposition to the computation of the assessment of the tax, deficiency or liability is filed by the Treasurer of Puerto Rico, the court wiU set a hearing in order to hear the parties and in such a case the court will directly compute the tax, deficiency, or liability.
“In cases where an opposition to the computation made by the Treasurer of Puerto Rico exists, the opposing motion will contain, besides the assignment of errors committed by the Treasurer of Puerto Rico, a proposal for a computation.

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60 P.R. 877, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gonzalez-v-court-of-tax-appeals-of-puerto-rico-prsupreme-1942.