Peña y Balbas v. Municipal Court of San Juan

55 P.R. 677
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedNovember 30, 1939
DocketNo. 7789
StatusPublished

This text of 55 P.R. 677 (Peña y Balbas v. Municipal Court of San Juan) 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 y Balbas v. Municipal Court of San Juan, 55 P.R. 677 (prsupreme 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolf

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from part of a judgment in mandamus proceedings obtained by Peña y Balbás against the Municipal Conrt of San Juan, M. Graetán Barbosa, Judge, and Ramón Zeno, Marshal.

In an action to rescind a contract of lease and recover the possession of real property, Peña y Balbás obtained judgment in the Municipal Conrt of San Juan, First Section, against one Crescendo Marcano. The property in question was a lot of land and Marcano bad bnilt a bouse therein. The judgment ordered that Peña y Balbás be pnt in possession of the lot. On June 15th, 1937, on motion of the executing plaintiff, the conrt issued a writ to the marshal ordering him to execute the judgment by removing from the bouse the defendant with all bis furniture and chattels. On July 8th the court modified the writ and the marshal received it the same day. On July 29th the plaintiff not being satisfied with the actions of said marshal, moved that be be punished for contempt and requested that some other person be deputized to execute the writ. The motion was set for August 6th. On August 5 the marshal filed a return wherein he said he had attached the house. Plaintiff still not being satisfied filed a new motion asking that some other person he authorized to execute the writ.

[679]*679On August 9th the motion was denied. On August 11th the plaintiff asked the court to quash the return. This the court ordered, on August' 14, and on August 16 issued a fresh writ. On August 27th the marshal went to the premises and notified the tenants that the property was in the possession of the plaintiff, but refused to eject the defendants and maintained that the plaintiff had to sue in unlawful detainer to obtain the ouster. The plaintiff refused to accept this action or report' as a return to the writ and on the same day again asked the court for a new writ, and to punish , the marshal in contempt. The court set the motion for September 10. The judge went on vacation and Luis G. Trigo, Acting Judge, decided, on October 4, that the marshal had obeyed the writ, and denied the motion.

On October 7 the executing plaintiff asked the District Court of San Juan for a writ of mandamus against the municipal court, ordering the judge to issue a writ, and the marshal to execute it, in such a way that the petitioner could come in possession of his property. The writ of mandamus so ordering was issued, with costs, without an award of damages or of attorney’s fees.

The petitioner had asked:

(1) That the marshal be ordered to jjay him $210 damages which he had suffered up to September 30, and which he assessed as follows: $200 attorney’s fees in the mandamus case; $10 damages he suffered by loss of the rent of the property from July 15 to September 30, at the rate of $4.00 per month; and also to pay him as damages $4.00 per month for every month from October 1 up to the day when the petitioner came in possession of the property.

(2) That the marshal be ordered to pay to him the statutory penalty directed by Section 6 of the Law of March 10, 1904 (Laws, p. 112) which amounts to $200.

(3) That costs be imposed on the defendants and that if the court did not concede the attorney’s fees as damages that they be granted with the costs.

[680]*680The 'lower court held that in a case of mandamus the damages to he recovered are those of the proceedings themselves and not those arising of the acts which give origin to the petition, and decided that the petitioner could not recover for the rents of the property, nor for that same reason, the statutory penalty imposed on the marshal by the Act' of 1904, supra.

The lower court also held that where the writ was issued against a judge he was never mulcted in damages, and that it could not impose attorney’s fees against the judge, or on the marshal in the absence of bad faith on his part. It thought that the acts of the marshal were not arbitrary inasmuch as his errors were sustained by two judges of the municipal court. The district court awarded no damages and imposed costs without attorney’s fees upon the appellee court, to be paid by the respondents in equal shares, but considered it against public policy to impose upon a judge the payment of costs. It ordered that his share was to be paid by Crescendo Marcano, the defendant in the original cause.

The petitioner has appealed from the judgment and assigns three errors, to wit:

1. — Error committed in deciding that in mandamus proceedings the petitioner can collect as damages only attorney’s fees, but not the use of the property which is recovered through the mandamus, nor the statutory penalty imposed on the marshal.

2. — Error committed in dee'ding that the respondent marshal should not be sentenced to pay attorney’s fees as damages.

3. — Error committed in not making the due use of its discretion as to an imposition of payment of the attorney’s fees, as part of the costs.

Appellant argues that in the cases cited from the States mandamus is not a civil action; a jury is called only at. the discretion of the court and the right to a jury is not absolute; and that by that reason the question of damages cannot be decided in a mandamus proceeding. In Puerto Rico, he says, .there is no such bar to a plea of damages in [681]*681an action for mandamus. Here civil actions and mandamus are both, tried before tbe court. There is no question of a jury. A proceeding of mandamus is in all effect, a civil action. Damages can be proved in it as in any other kind of action. He says, that he should not be compelled to establish a separate action to recover damages.

He also maintains that the statutory penalty imposed on the marshal — to pay $200 to the injured party when he does not return a writ without delay — should have been imposed in the mandamus proceeding and that the petitioner should not be forced to bring a separate proceeding to recover it.

As to the second assignment, the appellant says that the marshal should have been fined in costs. The reasoning of the lower court was that the marshal’s acts were upheld by two judges of the municipal court; that he made a mistake, but he acted under the impression that he was doing right. The marshal’s impression was fostered by the fact that his superiors approved his acts. There was nothing in the mind of the lower court to show that the marshal acted in bad faith. In the opinion of the lower court, a finding that the marshal acted in bad faith would be followed by the conclusion that the court also acted in bad faith. The district judge thought it would be unjust to punish the marshal for doing that which the municipal judge thought right when the latter was not liable.

The appellant argues that he has not claimed damages against the judge but against the marshal. He says that the marshal had discretion to act and that he did not have logo to the judge for counsel, and that his acts show an obstinate refusal to do his duty.

As to the third assignment, the appellant maintains the court should have used its discretion to impose the payment of attorney’s fees 'as part of the costs. As a proof of the respondents’ rashness he points out that not only did they consistently refuse to do their legal duty, but they made a return to the petition in the district court.

[682]

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Bluebook (online)
55 P.R. 677, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pena-y-balbas-v-municipal-court-of-san-juan-prsupreme-1939.