Havemeyer v. Public Service Commission

45 P.R. 677
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedNovember 9, 1933
DocketNo. 5401
StatusPublished

This text of 45 P.R. 677 (Havemeyer v. Public Service Commission) 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
Havemeyer v. Public Service Commission, 45 P.R. 677 (prsupreme 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Aldrey

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The civil agricultural partnership Russell & Company, Sucrs., S. en C., by its partners Horace Havemeyer and others, as grantee of certain rights which the Guánica Land Company had in a franchise, appealed to the District Court of San Juan from a decree of the Public Service Commission of Puerto Rico canceling the said franchise, in so far as it referred to the right of taking a certain amount of water from Guánica Lake. The district court affirmed this decree of the commission and dismissed the appeal taken therefrom. Russell & Company appealed from that judgment to this court. The partnership based its appeal to the district court on section 78 of Act No. 70 of 1917, the short title of which is “The Public Service Act of Porto Rico”; its appeal to this court being based on section 90 of said law.

The above cited law provides that the District Court of San Juan, to which exclusive jurisdiction is granted, shall decide such appeals upon the record certified to it by the commission; that the question to be determined is whether or not the order appealed from is reasonable, in conformity with the law and based on competent evidence; that in all such eases the orders of the commission shall be prima facie evidence of the reasonableness thereof; that the burden of proving the contrary shall be upon the appellant or appellants, and that if the court shall upon the record find that the order appealed from is reasonable and in conformity with law, it shall enter a decree dismissing the appeal and affirming the order of the commission.

From a certified copy of the record of the commission which was presented to the district court and is now before us, the following appears:

The Executive Council of Puerto Rico granted in 1901 to the corporation Guánica Land Conmpany, and to its grantees, franchise number 5, whereby it was authorized to construct a private railway over public lands and a, wharf in the port [679]*679of Guánica, and to nse twenty million gallons of water daily from Gnánica Lake for the proper irrigation of the lands owned or leased by it. We quote some of the clauses of this franchise, to wit:

“1. That the Guánica Land Company, (a corporation organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the State of New Jersey), and its successors and assigns be and they are hereby authorized and empowered to erect, construct, maintain and operate a dam of masonry work or other proper materials across the Caño Negro, or outlet from the Lake of Guánica, in the Municipality of Yaueo and upon such lands of abutting owners as may have been acquired by consent or by process of law, for the purpose of retaining, storing, and conserving the waters of the said Lake of Guánica, and of restraining and regulating the flow of the water from said Lake, through the said Caño or otherwise, for the purposes hereinafter set forth.
“2. That the said Company and its successors and assigns be and they are hereby authorized to take from the said Lake of Guá-nica, or from the said Caño or outlet, such quantity of water, not exceeding 20,000,000 gallons during each day, as shall be necessary or sufficient for the .proper irrigation of the lands now or hereafter owned or leased by the said company, or by its successors or assigns, or any of them. The water so to be taken from the said Lake or Caño may be taken from such part or parts thereof, adjacent or contiguous to said lands, as the said Company or its successors or assigns may see fit, and may be taken by gravity through proper channels, or by pumps, or by any other method that may'be advisable, or by any two or more of such methods.
"3. That the said company and its successors and assigns may erect, construct, operate and maintain upon those parts of the lands now or hereafter owned' or leased by it or them, which lie within six meters of the bank of the said Caño, or within twenty meters of the shore of the said Lake or of the harbor or bay of Guánica, such pumping station, channels and pipe lines as may be necessary or proper for the taking or conveyance of said waters; Provided that no public road lying within or partly within said limits shall be obstructed to any extent whatever thereby.
“4. That nothing herein contained shall be held or construed.to authorize or permit the said Company or its successors or assigns to raise or maintain the level of the waters of said lake of Guánica above the customary level thereof during the rainy season, as the [680]*680same exists in years of average and usual rainfall; and all damage sustained by abutting owners by reason of unduly raising the level of the waters of said Lake, shall be borne by the said Company, its successors and assigns and action for damages shall lie against said company, its successors and assigns for such damage by such abutting owners, in any court of competent ¡jurisdiction.”

Twenty-seven years after said franchise was granted, the Municipal Assembly of Lajas adopted a resolution whereby it complained before the Public Service Commission and before the Commissioner of the Interior that the engineering work carried on in Caño Negro of Guánica Lake are causing irreparable injury to the Municipality of Lajas by throwing the waters of Guánica Lake beyond its highest level, by flooding municipal roads, and by making the life of abutting neighbors and landowners in the wards of Costa and Plata impossible. In view of this complaint and after a certain investigation was made by the president of the commission, the latter ordered that the holders of said franchise appear before the commission to show cause why the same should not be canceled. The civil agricultural partnership Russell & Company appeared by its members Horace Havemeyer and others,- as sole owners, by purchase, of that part of the franchise which refers to the use of the waters of Guánica Lake, objected to its cancellation or modification and alleged also that the commission lacked jurisdiction to cancel or -modify the said franchise.

It appears, moreover, that Guánica Lake had a pond known as “Negro” or “Los Negros”, 3,900 meters or 12,792 feet long, which connects it with the sea; that in 1928 this pond, was. entirely shut off for a length of three hundred meters, beginning from the lake, and that the remainder of the pond up to the sea was perfectly visible; that the bottom of the lake is higher than the level of the high tides of the sea; that there is in the valley of Lajas a place known as “El Anegado”, the bottom of which is higher than that of the lake, and that there exists between El Anegado and the [681]

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Bluebook (online)
45 P.R. 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/havemeyer-v-public-service-commission-prsupreme-1933.