People ex rel. Zayas v. Santiago

38 P.R. 627
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 24, 1928
DocketNos. 4635, 4636, 4637
StatusPublished

This text of 38 P.R. 627 (People ex rel. Zayas v. Santiago) 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
People ex rel. Zayas v. Santiago, 38 P.R. 627 (prsupreme 1928).

Opinion

Mb. Chief Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the court.

Julio Zayas, José Inocencio Colón and José Santiago Rivera, members of the Municipal Assembly of Santa Isabel elected in the general election of 1924, informed the district attorney of Guayama that Hermenegildo Santiago, José Díaz Robledo and Manuel Valle were usurping, respectively, the offices of the relators, whereupon the district attorney petitioned the district court to allow and order three informa-tions in the nature of quo warranto in order to determine tbe rights of the relators to their said public offices.

In each case the petition of the district attorney was accompanied by a complaint signed by the district attorney and by the attorney for the relator and sworn to by the relator. The court ordered the summoning of the defendants and sot May 4, 1928, for hearing the information. The defendants were summoned in due form.

At this stage the district attorney presented to the court three similar motions for dismissal. The following is a transcription of one of them:

"Now comes tbe district attorney of Guayama to withdraw the petition filed in this court on April 20, 1928, for an information in the nature of quo warranto in this case in order to settle finally the right of the relator to the office of municipal assemblyman of Santa Isabel and to oust Hermenegildo Santiago therefrom. This with[629]*629drawal is based on tbe following: Prior to filing the petition in this court the relator and his attorney, Leopoldo Tonnes Garcia, called at the office of the Attorney General of Porto Rico and requested him to authorize the petition and others of the same kind, which request was denied. As section 2 of the Act establishing q%(,o war-ranto proceedings of March 1, 1902, authorizes the Attorney General or any district attorney of the respective district court, either of his own accord or at the instance of any individual relator, to institute these proceedings, and as the undersigned district attorney is a delegate in this district of the Attorney General who refused such authorization, he respectfully prays the court to grant the motion to withdraw and order the stay of all proceedings in the present case.”

The court forthwith sustained the motions in the three cases. The following is a copy of one of the orders:

“In view of the motion of the district attorney for dismissal of this ease because when he authorized the proceeding he was not aware that this same question had been submitted to the Attorney General who refused to authorize it and that as he is a delegate of the Attorney General, he does not desire to go on with the case, but on the contrary moves to wdthdraw his petition, in conformity with section 2 of the Act establishing quo warranto proceedings of March 1, 1902, and section 192 of the Code of Civil Procedure, the court sustains the motion of the district attorney and quashes the summons served on the defendant to appear on the 4th of nest May and orders the dismissal of this case without special imposition of costs.”

The relators appealed to this Supreme Court and in their briefs assign as errors that the district court committed error in ruling on the motions of the district attorney without notifying the relators and in dismissing the proceedings as definitely abated.

Briefs were filed by the relators, by the defendants and by the Attorney General. No jurisprudence bearing directly on the question has been cited.

The relators cited a note to the case of People ex rel. Rasten v. Healy, 15 L.R.A. (N.S.) 604, to the effect that when the information has been filed and proceedings have been commenced they can not he dismissed or stayed without the [630]*630consent of the relator; bnt the note shows that that is a statutory provision of Missouri and not a conclusion reached by courts by considering the nature of the writ of quo war-ranto in the absence of such a statutory provision, as is the case in Porto Eico.

In Santiago v. Feuille, 10 P.R.R. 408, the following jurisprudence was established:

“Id. quo warrwnio proceedings the object o£ which is to recover an office, the petitioner is the real party in interest; but where the suit is in regard to the usurpation of a franchise by a corporation, The People of Porto Eico is the proper party and must be represented by the Attorney Genei'al or one of the district fiscals.
“Quo warranto proceeding’s are considered as civil actions.
“In quo warranto proceedings, where the Attorney General has signed the application or where the court has authorized the institution of the proceeding either at the instance of the Attorney General or of any of the district fiscals, the petitioner may continue the proceeding through his own attorney until final decision; and when the Attorney General has once signed the application it is unnecessary for him to sign any other document or to intervene in any other proceeding relative to the case, although he has a right to do so.”

As these eases involve the right to public offices the real party in interest is the relator, and consequéntly, as the action is a civil one, it would have been good practice at least to give notice to the relator of the motion to dismiss.

The People of Porto Eico undertakes to show in its brief that the complaints are without merit and says that prior to their presentation by the district attorney of G-uayama the attorney for the relators went to the office of the Attorney General in the name of Eamón Eodriguez and asked him to authorize an information involving the question of the illegal constitution of the Municipal Assembly of Santa Isabel and the Attorney General, exercising his discretion, refused to give hi s consent. And it continues as follows:

‘‘These facts having been stated, the only question involved herein to be then considered, since the right of the assembly to declare the offices vacant for failure to perform on the part of the relators, has [631]*631not been attacked, is whether the district attorney or the Attorney General, as a rule, is empowered by our law to withdraw a petition in quo toarranto authorized by these officials for the benefit of a third person, if they are convinced that the authorization was obtained by deception, bad faith, surprise or insufficiency of facts,' as disclosed by subsequent inquiries. If it be concluded that the granting of a petition of quo toarranto is discretional with the Attorney General or the district attorney and that rule has been sustained by this court in the case of Santiago v. Feuille, 10 P.R.R. 408, and in the recent mandamus case of Rodríguez v. López Acosta, in which it was held that if there is no abuse of discretion the court will not intervene by mandamus, then there is no doubt that the district attorney, or the Attorney General, may retire that authorization if sufficient reasons are given to show that the authorization was improvidently granted.
“We also maintain that the court had full authority under the law to deny the petition in quo warranto as soon as it, was cognizant of the fact that the district attorney who auhorized the information had withdrawn his authorization to continue said special proceeding.

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Bluebook (online)
38 P.R. 627, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-ex-rel-zayas-v-santiago-prsupreme-1928.