Heirs of Rodríguez v. Industrial Commission

54 P.R. 274
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedFebruary 14, 1939
DocketNo. 153
StatusPublished

This text of 54 P.R. 274 (Heirs of Rodríguez v. Industrial 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
Heirs of Rodríguez v. Industrial Commission, 54 P.R. 274 (prsupreme 1939).

Opinion

Me. Justice Hutchisoh

delivered the opinion .of the Court.

Section 18 of the Workmen’s Accident Compensation Act (Laws of 1935, 252, 296) makes it obligatory upon certain employers to insure their workmen or employees in the State Insurance Fund. By the terms of section 25, the Manager of the State Fund is authorized, empowered and directed to assess and levy upon such employers “annual premiums” based on the total amount of wages during the preceding year. It provides for the collection of such premiums “semi•annually, in advance” and for the disposition to be made of the money so collected. It authorizes an extension of thirty days in case the employer should fail to pay the total amount of the premiums legally levied on him within the time fixed by the Manager. Payment is made “an indispensable requirement so- that the Manager may make any insurance policy effective”. Any employer who, prior to July ■ 1st or January 1st of any year ceases to be subject to the provisions of the Act, “may be excused from the payment of premiums for the following semester or semesters by giving the notice and proof required by the Manager of the State Fund that he will not be subject to” such provisions. Every employer subject to the provisions of the Act must pay the premiums for the whole of a semester, but may be entitled to certain partial reimbursements. There is a proviso “that in such cases, reimbursements may be made at the expiration of the semester for which said premiums were paid”.

Section 27 makes it the duty of every employer “to file with the Manager, not later than July 15 of each year, a duplicate statement, under oath, showing the number of workmen employed by said employer, the kind of occupation or industry of said workmen, and the total amount of wages paid to said workmen or industry during the preceding fiscal year”. The premiums are to be computed “on the total amount of wages declared in said statement; Provided, That every employer employing workmen covered by this Act for any term or part of a semester shall file the aforesaid duplr-[276]*276cate statement under oath, showing the number of workmen or employees employed, the kind of occupation, and the estimated wages to be paid to said workmen or employees, and on such sum the premiums to be paid by the employer shall be computed; and upon the termination of the work of said workmen or employees the employer shall file a sworn statement like the one above mentioned, showing the total amount of wages paid, on which sum the corresponding liquidation shall be made; and if this payroll is greater than the previous one, the Manager shall assess and levy, and the Treasurer shall collect, as provided in this Act, additional premiums on the difference, in the same form as that here-inbefore prescribed.” Failure to file such statements on the dates so specified is made a misdemeanor. “Any district court, on motion of the Manager of the State Fund, shall order the employer to present the aforesaid statements within a peremptory term; and if he fails to present such statement, the disobedience to said order shall constitute contempt and shall be punished as such”. The last two paragraphs of section 27 read as follows:

“The insurance of each employer by the State shall be in force-immediately after this payroll or duplicate statement has been filed in the office of the Manager of the State Fund, together with the amount of the premiums corresponding to the percentage of the wages-declared in said statements, in accordance with the rates fixed by the Manager; Provided, That any accident that occurs before payment of said premiums is made shall be considered as a case of an uninsured empffiyer, unless the employer pays within the term fixed by the Manager of the ¡State Fund, in which case, the insurance shall begin to run from the date on which the employer filed the payroll or statement in the office of the Manager.
“On receipt of payment from an employer, the Manager of the-State Fund shall forward to said employer the receipt for such payment, which receipt shall be prima facie evidence of said payment of the premium and of said employer’s compliance with the provisions of this Act. Until such payment is made by the employer, he shall not be entitled to the immunities provided by this Act in regard to such injuries, diseases, or deaths as.may be suffered by [277]*277tbe workmen or employees of sucb employer during tbe period covered by tbe payment of sucb premiums, and tbe workmen or employees of sucb employer shall not be entitled to tbe benefits granted by tbis Act when they suffer sucb injury, disease, or death, but they shall have tbe right to file sucb claims against tbe employer in accordance with tbe procedure established for cases of uninsured ■employers.1 ’

An attorney-at-law, .representing the heirs of Joaquín Rodríguez, addressed to the Manager of the Insurance Fund, a letter dated February 18, 1938, in which he enclosed a •certificate of deposit to be applied in payment of the premium for the second semester of the fiscal year 1937-38. In this letter, the attorney stated that his clients had not paid the premium for the first semester because during that semester the Manager had declared them to be uninsured. The Manager was thus confronted with a question as to whether an employer who has not been insured during the first semester of a fiscal year and has not paid the premium for that semester, can obtain insurance for the second semester by payment of the premium for that semester only. The Manager took the matter under advisement and did not forward the receipt referred to in the final paragraph of section 27, supra. An accident occurred February 28, and was promptly reported by the Rodriguez heirs. The claim was rejected by the Manager and his ruling was affirmed by the Commission. The Rodriguez heirs then moved for a rehearing on the following grounds:

(A) -Because the Commission had erred in its construction of the sixth paragraph of section 27 of the Law when it held that an employer cannot insure bis employees for less than a year.
(B) Beeaiise after expiration of tbe first semester of tbe fiscal year during which an employer was not insured, 'such employer, if be has violated tbe law, may incur tbe penalties specified in sections 16 and 17, but the premium cannot be collected without giving effect to the policy.
(C) Because on acceptance of tbe premium paid by tbe employer to be applied to tbe second semester, the contract of insurance was perfected.
[278]*278(D) Because the Commission, by bolding tbe employer to be uninsured and condemning tbe employer to payment of indemnity to tbe workmen, by bolding that in addition to sueb indemnity, tbe employer must pay tbe premium without any right to tbe protection of tbe policy, bad deprived tbe employer of bis property without due process of law.
(E) Because tbe Manager of tbe Insurance Fund, by bis acceptance of the premium for tbe second semester, was estopped to deny acceptance of such payment, and tbe policy went into effect February 18th.
(F) Because tbe commission erred in bolding that tbe quotas are imposed by tbe year and not by semesters.

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54 P.R. 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heirs-of-rodriguez-v-industrial-commission-prsupreme-1939.