Peña de Balbás v. Municipal Court of Mayagüez

48 P.R. 801
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 8, 1935
DocketNo. 6642
StatusPublished

This text of 48 P.R. 801 (Peña de Balbás v. Municipal Court of Mayagüez) 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
Peña de Balbás v. Municipal Court of Mayagüez, 48 P.R. 801 (prsupreme 1935).

Opinion

MR. Justice Hutchison

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Municipal Court of Mayagüez rendered judgment for $140.79, in favor of certain plaintiffs. Two days thereafter those same plaintiffs filed, in the District Court of Maya-güez, a petition for a writ of mandamus to compel the municipal judge to render judgment. Both the District Court of Mayagüez and the Municipal Court of Mayagüez are located in the Municipality of Mayagüez. The District Court of Mayagüez issued an order to show cause, dated January 8, 1934, wherein the municipal judge was ordered to appear in the court room of the District Court of Mayagüez, January 12, 1934, at 9 o ’clock in the morning to show cause why a writ of mandamus should not issue. The municipal judge appeared at 9 o’clock in the morning, January 12th, filed his return and introduced in evidence the record of the action in the municipal court which showed that judgment had been rendered, December '6, 1933. The district court, thereupon quashed the order to show cause and dismissed the petition for mandamus, with an award of costs, disbursements and attorney’s fees to defendant. Plaintiffs appealed and assigned as error: First, that the district court erred in permitting defendant to introduce evidence at the time of his appearance to show cause in the absence of plaintiffs; and second, that the district court abused its discretion in awarding costs, disbursements and attorney’s fees to defendant.

[803]*803After a hearing at which neither of the parties appeared, this court, in a per curiam judgment, affirmed the judgment of the district court. Plaintiffs now move for a reconsideration of the action so taken.

The only authorities cited in the brief for appellants in support of their first assignment of error were sections 8, 9, and 10 of “An Act to establish the writ of mandamus,” approved March 12, 1903, (Comp. Stat. 1911, sections 1335, 1336 and 1337); Pacheco v. Cuevas Zequeira, District Judge, 27 P.R.R. 192; Conde v. Rivera, 43 P.R.R. 926; and 18 R.C.L. 354, sections 312. The gist of the argument was: That section 8 does not impose upon plaintiffs any duty to appear on the day specified in the alternative writ; that if, as ordained by section 9, new matter in the answer does not preclude plaintiffs, “. . . who may, on the trial or other proceeding, avail himself of any valid objections to its sufficiency or may countervail it by proof either in the direct denial or by way of avoidance,” it follows that a later day should be fixed for the trial, inasmuch as it would be impossible for plaintiffs to anticipate new matter in the answer and prepare to meet the same at the time of defendant’s appearance; and that the wording of section 10 to the effect that the issue joined by the writ and answer “must be tried and the further proceedings thereon had in the same manner as in a civil action,” is tantamount to a provision that the trial must be set for a day subsequent to the date of defendant’s appearance because in civil actions the case is never tried on a day when the answer is filed, inasmuch as the parties would not be prepared to meet the issues so joined.

The motion for reconsideration adds little to the brief in the way of argument or the citation of authorities. Appellants ’ principal complaint is that the per cioriam judgment was not a sufficient answer to the argument contained In appellants ’ brief. The judgment sets forth the assignment of errors and the essential facts. Any elaboration of the ratio [804]*804decidendi would defeat the purpose of a per curiam judgment.

Appellants also point out that opinions have been written in cases which were not so meritorious as is the case at bar. That is probably true. Every appellant who in good faith submits in proper form a brief which is not wholly without merit, is entitled to know why his argument has not resulted in a reversal. Conditions which are too well known to require re-statement here, have made it increasingly difficult to answer in-detail the argument of the appellant in every case of minor importance. Because of the earnestness with which the motion for reconsideration has been presented, however, we shall state briefly the reasons for our affirmance of the judgment.

It might well be argued: that sections 8, 9 and 10 should be construed in connection with section 4, and in the light of the fact that a mandamus proceeding is a summary special proceeding, not a. civil action; that section 4, by requiring the defendant to “show cause before the court whence the writ issued at a specified time and place,” apparently contemplates a hearing at' the specified time and place and that while section 8 permits the defendant to “show cause by answer under oath,” it does not militate against the idea of a hearing at the time and place specified in the alternative writ; that inasmuch as plaintiff may ask for time in which to formulate his objections to the return or may request a postponement of the trial if necessary, section 9 does not necessarily imply that in the absence of any request by either of the parties the trial must be set for a day subsequent to that specified in the alternative writ; that section 10 refers to the manner of trial, not to the time thereof, and that, in the absence of objection by either of the parties the issues may be tried “in the same manner as in a civil action” at the time of defendant’s appearance as well as at any time thereafter; and that if plaintiff does not appear at the time and place specified in the alternative writ the court may, at the [805]*805instance of defendant, dismiss the proceedings as provided in subdivision 3 of section 192 of the Code of Civil Procedure.

In Zavala et al. v. Executive Council of P. R., 9 P.R.R. 191, 192, it was said:

“An alternative writ of mandamus was issued on the 29th of May, returnable before this court on the 5th day of June thereafter, and on that day, and from day to day thereafter, proceedings were had in this ease, and orders made and testimony taken and arguments heard until the 20th clay of June, the present month, when the case was finally terminated and submitted to the court for decision.”

See also López v. Insular Police Commission, 30 P.R.R. 794, aud Shibley v. Hart 110 Cal. App. 759.

For the purposes of this opinion it may be conceded, without holding, 'that when the alternative writ specifies the return day without any indication that defendant is to appear in open court at a specified hour, the court should not proceed to an immediate hearing in the absence of either of the parties, provided, of. course, that defendant has filed the return. Certainly, that would be the better practice where, as in Pacheco et al. v. Cuevas Zequeira, supra, the defendant is ordered “to state within 10 days the causes” why the writ should not issue. On the other hand there is nothing in our statute which forbids the fixing of the return day as the day of the hearing, or which forbids the trial of the issues on the day so fixed, in the absence of objection by either of the parties. When, as in the case at bar, the order to show cause specifies not only the day but also the hour at which the defendant is to appear and further specifies the court room itself as the place for such appearance, the intention of the court to fix the day and hour so specified as the time for a hearing as well as the time for defendant to make his return is quite clear.

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Related

Shibley v. Hart
295 P. 79 (California Court of Appeal, 1931)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 P.R. 801, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pena-de-balbas-v-municipal-court-of-mayaguez-prsupreme-1935.