Municipality of San Lorenzo, ex rel. Borges v. Puerto Rico Planning, Urbanizing, & Zoning Board

68 P.R. 600
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedApril 22, 1948
DocketNo. 1
StatusPublished

This text of 68 P.R. 600 (Municipality of San Lorenzo, ex rel. Borges v. Puerto Rico Planning, Urbanizing, & Zoning Board) 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 San Lorenzo, ex rel. Borges v. Puerto Rico Planning, Urbanizing, & Zoning Board, 68 P.R. 600 (prsupreme 1948).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Travieso

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On April 9, 1947, the Puerto Eico Planning, Urbanizing, and Zoning Board adopted a Eesolution declaring “slum district” a parcel of land situated in the urban zone of the Municipality of San Lorenzo, which contains an area of 41,700 square feet and in which are located 33 constructions. Prior to the date of said resolution, the Board notified all the owners of the lands, houses, and other buildings within the area, and also the Mayor of San Lorenzo, of its intention to declare said area of the municipality a slum district and called them to a public hearing which was held on March 14, 1947.

Peeling aggrieved by the decision of the Board, the Mayor and three^ other persons took the present appeal, pursuant to the provisions of § 6 of Act No. 264 of May 14, 1945.

The appellants contend (1) that the cited Act No. 264 is unconstitutional, as it was passed by the Legislature in excess of the powers granted to it by the Organic Act; (2} [602]*602that the actions of the Board were not in accord with the constitutional guaranty of due process of law, nor with the standards established by the same Act No. 264; and (3) that the evidence received by the Board was not sufficient to support the resolution appealed from.

The alleged unconstitutionality of Act No. 264 of May 14, 1945 (Laws of 1945, p. 910) consists in that, in the opinion of the appellants, it deprives them of their property without due process of law and without due compensation, in contravention of the express provisions of the first and ninth paragraphs of § 2 of the Organic Act.

The appellants especially challenge § 9 of the Act, which provides:

“Hereafter it shall be illegal to erect any building or structure in a zone declared ‘slum district’ under this Act, and it shall likewise be illegal to sell, lease, or otherwise cede lands in said zones for purposes of constructing thereon; and it shall likewise be illegal to make repairs or improvements to houses located in a ‘slum district,’ without previous permission or authorization m writing of the Puerto Rico Housing Authority; Provided, however, That in no case may improvements be allowed which consist in extensions to any house, building, or structure located in a ‘slum district,’ and no registrar of property may investigate or enter any sale of conveyance of land or dwelling in a ‘slum district’ without the consent of the Puerto Rico Housing Authority.”

The contention of the appellant is that the procedure established by the above-transcribed Section is one of condemnation, since it deprives the citizen of the right to enjoy and dispose of his property; that said procedure is unconstitutional because it omits the intervention of judicial bodies and does not guarantee a just compensation to the person whose property is condemned; and, lastly, that the Act is void for the additional reason that it confers.on the Housing Authority absolute power ‘Ho determine the manner to which the owner should conform the enjoyment of his property.”

[603]*603The clearance of slums which are prejudicial to the safety, health, welfare, and morals of its inhabitants,-is a public purpose for the execution of which the state is bound to exercise two of its most extraordinary powers — the police power and the power of eminent domain. In the exercise of the- police power, and with the purpose of protecting the health and welfare of the community, the state can regulate and restrict all that which may constitute, or which if unrestricted may become, a menace to the health and safety of its citizens.

There are numerous decisions which hold that, when in a certain district of a city the sanitary conditions and the dwelling accommodations are so deficient that they are a menace to the health, safety, and morals of its inhabitants, the state may condemn the zone where such conditions exist, upon the payment of due compensation; or it may, in the exercise of its police power, order that reasonable changes be made in the buildings existing therein for the protection of the community. In the latter case, the expenses incurred by the owner of the property shall be considered as damnum absque injuria.1

In several decisions,2 it has been held that the fact that an Act or regulation promulgated in the exercise of the police power prevents or restricts the enjoyment of certain individual rights over a property, without providing for the payment of compensation, does not necessarily render the Act or regulation unconstitutional on the ground that it violates the due process clause or condemns private property for public use without compensation. Those enactments, when they are reasonable and do not transcend the limits and purposes of the police power of the state, are not considered as taking [604]*604private property for public use but as regulating the use and enjoyment of the property by its owner. If the latter suffers any prejudice, the same is damnum absque injuria or is considered as compensated by the share which the owner of the property will have in the benefits that the statute seeks to bestow upon the whole community.

In the case at bar, the Planning Board, acting’ within the powers conferred on it by said Act No. 264, confined itself to a declaration of “slum district,” by following the procedure authorized by ■§§ 3, 4, and 5 of said Act,' and it proceeded to place the zone under the supervision and inspection of the Housing Authority, as provided by :§ 7. There is not involved, therefore,- the clearance of a slum, for the accomplishment of which the Authority would have to comply with the provisions of ■§ 8 of the Act, by acquiring by voluntary purchase or by condemnation proceedings the land and the properties within said zone.

• The objection of iinconstitutionality of the Act must be ■dismissed.

In these two assignments the appellants contend that the Planning Board “as a matter of fact, in taking the whole proceeding herein did not guarantee to the appellants a due process of law”; and that the Board erred in deviating from the procedure fixed by the Act which it should have followed in order that its declaration might be valid.

The appellants complain that the notice served on the Mayor and the owners did not comply with the provisions of Act No. 264 of 1945, and they contend that the same is fatally defective. The respondent Board on the contrary maintains that the form and contents of the notice were in accord with the provisions of § 4 of the cited Act.

Section 4 of Act No. 264 of 1945 provides that, before making the declaration of “slum district,” the Board shall give notice of its intention of making such declaration to the Mayor of the municipality and to all the owners of the [605]*605lands or buildings; that said notice shall include a detailed description of the affected zone, clearly indicating the limits thereof, as well as the streets and alleys comprised in the said district; that the persons notified shall be called in the-notice itself to a public hearing, which shall be held in the city hall, on a date and at an hour fixed, so that they may set forth the reasons they may deem pertinent in opposition to the declaration of the proposed “slum district.” We have examined a copy of the notice served on the appellants herein and we find that the same complies with the requisites of the cited § 4.

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Bluebook (online)
68 P.R. 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/municipality-of-san-lorenzo-ex-rel-borges-v-puerto-rico-planning-prsupreme-1948.