Lopez Laborde v. Laborde

2 P.R. Fed. 493
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedApril 2, 1907
DocketNo. 386; No. 407
StatusPublished

This text of 2 P.R. Fed. 493 (Lopez Laborde v. Laborde) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lopez Laborde v. Laborde, 2 P.R. Fed. 493 (prd 1907).

Opinion

Rodey, Judge,

delivered tbe following opinion:

These two suits involve tbe same contention, and, by consent of counsel for both parties, are considered together. Tbe question is raised by a verified motion made in each case, in behalf of defendant and respondent, Rufino Ubarri Yramategui, to dismiss tbe declaration in tbe suit at law and the bill in tbe suit in equity for want of jurisdiction. Said defendant and respondent alleges that be is a Porto Rican, and that, all of tbe plaintiffs and complainants being also Porto Ricans, tbe cases come within tbe exclusion rule laid down in tbe Vallecillo-Bertran Case heretofore decided by this court.

Tbe unfortunate wording of § 3 of the act of Congress (31 Stat. at L. 953, chap. 812) approved March 2, 1901, amending tbe Foraker act, which declares that tbe jurisdiction of this court shall “extend to and embrace controversies where the parties or either of them are citizens of the United States or citizens or subjects of a foreign state or states,” is causing this court a lot of trouble and annoyance. The neglect of the recent Congress to amend this act, as requested by the bar of the island, but adds to the difficulty. Hardly a case can arise but what Porto Ricans will be found to be necessary parties on both sides, and hence usually the jurisdiction is found to be in the local courts, which all counsel contend, whether with or without reason, afford no proper equitable remedy in such cases. This condition of things results in an almost continuous effort to dispense with all save -absolutely necessary parties, so as to cure jurisdictional requirements, and the efforts to claim or disclaim Spanish or Porto Rican citizenship, either to assert [495]*495equitable rights, or avoid liability, is continuous, embarrassing, and annoying. However, until Congress sees fit to act in tbe premises, we must consider tbe question referred to as stare decisisj our decision of tbe matter was made advisedly, after full bearing, and we see no reason to change it. Courts do not make law (or at least ought not) ; their duty is to administer it as they find it to be.

We have also heretofore ruled in another branch of one of these same cases, that this court is not vested in plain proceedings in rem, with power to acquire jurisdiction by means of substitute service based upon what is known as a “foreign attachment.” In the decision making this holding, we took occasion to set forth the necessity for additional legislation in that regard.- It transpires, as we then stated, that after the American occupation of this island, many Spaniards who, as it is said, through influence or by direct frauds and otherwise, had done great wrongs to people on the island, immediately left for Spain and have ever since continued to reside there without any power existing in this court to bring them to account for their fraudulent doings while here, although they are possessed in many cases of large amounts of property in the island, from which they are continually receiving revenue. These conditions, in a manner, excuse the efforts that are being* made, as above stated, to right these wrongs, and certainly are sufficient reason in themselves as an argument for additional legislation by Congress.

While considering this matter, it may not be amiss to call' attention to the fact that it is probably no part of our duty to resolve doubts in favor of our jurisdiction. As the court’ is of limited jurisdiction, the contrary should be the rule. Neither do we think that this tribunal was instituted to af[496]*496ford expectant litigants an easy mode of uprooting proceedings, decisions, and titles that were settled long years ago, under Spanish sovereignty, through what was then, prima facie, at least, due process of law, in the Spanish courts, or that it ought, without the fullest showing and the gravest reasons, to attempt to do so. On this subject it may be well to hark back to a warning statement made by the Supreme Court of the "United States in 1898, in Cessna v. United States, 169 U. S. 165, 42 L. ed. 702, 18 Sup. Ct. Rep. 304, where an effort was made to induce the courts of the United States to correct a wrong claimed to have been done previous to the treaty of •cession between the countries, by the Mexican government regarding lands now situated within the boundaries of the United States. Mr. Justice Brewer in that opinion used this language: “It is the duty of a nation receiving a cession of territory to respect all rights of property as those rights were recognized by the nation making the cession; but it is no part of its duty to right the wrongs which the grantor nation may have theretofore committed upon every individual. There may be an exception when the dispossession and wrong of the grantor nation were so recently before the cession that the individual may not have had time to appeal to the courts or authorities of that nation for redress. In such a case, perhaps, the duty will rest upon the grantee nation; but such possible exception has no application to the present case and in no manner abridges the general rule that among the burdens assumed by the nation receiving the cession is not the obligation to right wrongs which have for many years theretofore been persisted in by the grantor nation.”

While this language of the Supreme Court was used with reference to wrongs of the former government against its own [497]*497then citizens, we think it is equally applicable to all stale demands which were settled by the courts of the former sovereignty, and in which plenty of time had elapsed before the change, in which the injured parties could have made an effort to obtain relief. .In our opinion, neither international law, the comity of sovereign states, nor the treaty between this country and Spain, requires or even contemplates that the new sovereign shall expend money or the time of its courts in such work, save in the exceptional instances pointed out by the Supreme Court, supra, and perhaps some few others, in which exist such surrounding facts and circumstances as to call for such intervention.

In one of these cases now being considered, an examination •of the files shows that it arose out of an alleged defrauding of an estate which one Jacinto Lopez y Martinez left in the year 1884, fifteen years before the change of sovereignty. The chief wrongdoer, according to the allegations of the declaration, was •one Pablo Ubarri y Capetillo, the father of this present defendant and mover, who, it seems, was a very influential and powerful person of title here at the time, and who, if the allegations ■of the bill are true, procured the widow of the deceased to make him manager of the whole vast estate, said to have been worth about a quarter of a million dollars. He proceeded by his agents to divide it in the proper surrogate or probate courts, or at least the courts which had such jurisdiction here at the time, and it seems, because the widow, who was presumably an independent person and of full age, refused to pay a large claim -of his against the estate, brought a suit against her and all the infant heirs for the collection of it, and supplemented it' by an attachment. He then, as it is said, for several year's neglected the payment of .the taxes, and had the different municipalities [498]

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Related

Cessna v. United States
169 U.S. 165 (Supreme Court, 1898)
Gonzales v. Williams
192 U.S. 1 (Supreme Court, 1904)

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Bluebook (online)
2 P.R. Fed. 493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lopez-laborde-v-laborde-prd-1907.