Municipality of Gurabo v. District Court of Humacao

60 P.R. 167
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 29, 1942
DocketNo. 1278
StatusPublished

This text of 60 P.R. 167 (Municipality of Gurabo v. District Court of Humacao) 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
Municipality of Gurabo v. District Court of Humacao, 60 P.R. 167 (prsupreme 1942).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Thavieso

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ramón Mercado instituted, in the District Court of Hu-macao, an injunction proceeding to recover possession of a certain lot. He alleged that within the year next preceding the filing of the complaint he was in the actual possession of said lot and that the defendant Municipality of Gurabo, through its employees, entered upon the property, destroyed the fence, and opened a street over the lot 'for public traffic. He prayed for a judgment directing that the possession of the lot be restored to him and “ ordering the defendant to abstain in the future from performing any act with the manifest purpose of disturbing the plaintiff in the possession, occupancy, and enjoyment of the lot described in the within complaint, under penalty of punishment as for contempt.”

After the complaint had been answered by the Municipality of Gurabo and the case tried, the District Court of Humacao rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, in the following terms:

“JUDGMENT”
“For the reasons set forth in the opinion filed in the ease at bar, this court renders judgment sustaining the complaint and directing that the plaintiff recover possession of the following property:
“ ‘URBAN: Lot situated on Flores Street, in the town of Gurabo, having a frontage of eight meters and a depth of thirty-one meters, equivalent to two hundred and forty-eight square meters, and bounded on the north by land of Ramón Mercado; and on the south by land of Alejandro Cruz; on the east by Diente de Caballo Brook; and on the west by Flores Street.
“The defendant is further ordered to deliver possession of the said property to the plaintiff, and in the future to refrain from committing any act with the manifest purpose of disturbing the plaintiff in the possession of the lot described in the within judgment, all under penalty of punishment as for contempt.
“The defendant is further adjudged to pay the costs and the additional sum of $50 as attorney’s fees. Let notice hereof be served.
“Humacao, P. R., September 12, 1941.
“Benjamín Oetiz,
District Judge.”

[169]*169On September 16, 1941, the defendant mnnieipality appealed to the Supreme Court, the notice of appeal being served and filed on that same day.

On December 12, 1941, the plaintiff Mercado filed in the lower court a motion in which he alleged that, notwithstanding the terms of the judgment, Doña Manuela Gómez, with the authorization of the defendant municipality, was building a house on the lot in question; and that the acts done by the municipality and Mrs. Gómez constituted a-violation of the judgment and a contempt of court.

After a rule to show cause had been issued, the municipality and the mayor, Mr. José Casellas, appeared and were heard. On January 26, 1942, the lower court rendered judgment finding them guilty of contempt, and sentencing the former to pay a fine of $10 and the latter a fine of $5.

Upon a reconsideration of the judgment being requested, the trial court denied the same by the following order:

“ORDER
“On reading the motion for reconsideration as to the contempt proceeding; in view of the case of Muñoz v. Montañez, 37 P.R.R. 298; and in view of the fact that an appeal from a prohibitory injunction does not operate as a stay of the prohibitory injunction granted, as otherwise the judgment entered by this court would be rendered academic and ineffective, since if the acts prohibited by the injunction and alleged in the motion for contempt (that is, the building of the house on the lot, the subject matter of this suit) were executed, an affirmance of the judgment by the Supreme Court would be academic, as the house would have already been built; and in view of the settled doctrine laid down by the Supreme Coiirt of the United States and by the courts in almost all the States of the Union, to the effect that a prohibitory injunction is not stayed by an appeal (93 A.L.R. 710; Byington v. Superior Court, 14 Col. (2d) 68); and in view of the fact that the rules applicable to injunction proceedings are separate and apart from the provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure which relate to the stay of judgments appealed from; and in view of the decisions and legal logic applicable to the case, this court feels constrained to respectfully express its opinion, [170]*170that the case of Muñoz v. Montañez, supra, should be overruled by our Supreme Court, and the court does hereby deny the motion for reconsideration. Let notice hereof be served.
“TIumacao, P. K, February 20, 1942.
“BENJAMÍN ORTIZ,
District Judge.”

In the petition for certiorari filed in this Supreme Court, the municipality and the mayor allege that the facts set forth in the motion for contempt áre insufficient to justify the judgment, and that the trial court lacked jurisdiction to punish them as for contempt, because the appeal taken from the judgment in the injunction proceeding operated as a stay of all proceedings in the lower court, in accordance with the provisions of §§ 297 and 298 of the Code of Civil Procedure, 1933 ed.

The object of the action brought by Ramón Mercado was to recover the possession of an immovable of which he had been deprived. The possessor of the immovable, both at the time of the filing of the complaint and throughout all the subsequent proceedings taken, was and is the defendant municipality.

Section 6 of the “Act providing proceedings for the recovery of possession of real property,” approved March 13, 1913 (§695, Code Civ. Proe., 1933 ed.), reads as follows:

“That such injunction shall direct that the plaintiff be restored to possession and shall require the disturber to abstain in future from the commission of such acts, or of others which show the same intent, and shall warn him that disobedience of such injunction shall constitute contempt of court.”

According to § 1 of said act (§ 690, Code Civ. Proc., 1933 ed.), an injunction may be granted in two specific eases, to wit: (a) for the retention of possession, where the interested party shows “that he has been disturbed in his possession or tenancy of said property by acts showing intention of disturbing or depriving him of such possession”; [171]*171and (6) for the recovery thereof, where the interested party has already been deprived of the possession of- tenancy of the immovable, provided such deprivation has taken place within the year preceding the filing of the complaint. The case at bar falls within subdivision (b)supra.

The judgment of the lower court contains the following pronouncements:

1. That the possession of the lot be restored to the plaintiff.

2. That the defendant deliver possession of the property to the plaintiff.

3. That the defendant in the future refrain from committing any act with the manifest purpose of disturbing the plaintiff in the possession of the lot.

4. All with a warning of punishment as for contempt of court.

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60 P.R. 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/municipality-of-gurabo-v-district-court-of-humacao-prsupreme-1942.