People v. Gelpí

59 P.R. 36
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 25, 1941
DocketNo. 8009
StatusPublished

This text of 59 P.R. 36 (People v. Gelpí) 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 v. Gelpí, 59 P.R. 36 (prsupreme 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Todd, Jr.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Attorneys José Rosario G-elpí and José Rafael Gelpi have taken this appeal from a judgment of the District Court of Mayagüez, sentencing them to pay a fine of $100 and in default of such payment, to be confined in jail one day for each dollar left unpaid, for contempt of court by reason of certain statements made in a motion filed by them in the lower [37]*37court for recusation of the judge of that court and for transfer of civil case No. 783, Neftalí Vidal Garrastazu and Juana Garrastazu against Juan A. Monagas et al.; a suit for nullity and other relief. The appellants in their brief assign twenty-nine errors as committed by the lower court. The prosecuting attorney of this court in his brief discusses only the second and third assignments, as he considers that the questions of fact and of law raised by those two errors assigned in connection with the conduct of the court, compel him to state to the court that in his opinion the judgment appealed from should be reversed and the case remanded to the lower court so that the transfer of the case sought by the appellants be granted. In their supplemental brief the appellants request that this court decide the case after considering not only the second and third assignments but also the ninth, tenth, eleventh, and thirteenth, wherein the demurrer interposed to the accusation is discussed, and the sixteenth assignment in which the denial of a motion for nonsuit is argued.

In the second and third assignments it is urged that the lower court abused its discretion in denying appellants’ motion for the transfer of the contempt proceedings to another court and in not allowing them to introduce evidence in support of said motion.

In the assignments ninth to thirteenth it is claimed that it was error for the lower court to overrule the demurrer whereby the defendants sought a dismissal of the accusation or order to show cause, on the ground that the facts charged against them do not constitute contempt as the same are not comprised in any of the subdivisions of Section 1 of the Law on Contempt in force.

Obviously, the question of whether the statement .or order to show cause contains sufficient facts is a fundamental one which we must decide even though the procedural errors regarding the transfer of the case and the refusal of the [38]*38judge to permit the introduction of evidence in support thereof had been committed. The determination of the second and third assignments would not conclude the matter and we should not prolong the same unnecessarily if the fundamental question raised can serve to finally dispose thereof.

The facts which gave rise to these contempt proceedings are as follows:

During the pendency of a motion to strike out filed by the defendants in civil case No. 783, supra, Attorneys Gelpi & Gelpi, counsel for the plaintiffs, filed a motion in the lower court recusing Judge Francisco Navarro Ortiz of said court requesting the transfer of the case to another court. Said motion, in so far as it refers to the judge of the lower court, reads as follows:

“The plaintiffs appear by their undersigned attorneys, before the Hon. Judge of this district court, and respectfully allege:
“First: That the defendant Juan A. Monagas, the defendants Rebecca, Aníbal, and Eva Monagas de la Rosa, and the minors Jorge, Giselda, and Diego García y Monagas, the latter represented by their legitimate father Jorge García Cabassa, have filed in the present action motions to strike out so sweeping and of such a character that, should they be sustained, plaintiffs would be prevented from proceeding with their case, since it is thereby sought to defeat the present case. Said motions have been set for hearing on the 20th instant, at the request of the defendants themselves, who thus show their great eagerness and interest in having the same decided by Hon. Francisco Navarro Ortiz, Judge of this court.
“Second: That Messrs. Gelpi & Gelpi, plaintiffs’ attorneys, and Hon. Francisco Navarro Ortiz, Judge of this court, are irreconcilable enemies, owing to the fact that one of said attorneys personally brought charges against said judge, seeking his removal as Judge of the District Court of Mayagüez, and that said Judge testified as a witness for the prosecution in certain administrative charges brought by the Governor of Puerto Rico against Emma V. Gelpi de Nieva, as clerk of this district court for the purpose of removing her, which charges, according to plaintiffs’ information and belief, were brought at the instigation and with the intervention of said Judge, Hon. ■ Francisco Navarro Ortiz.
[39]*39“Third: That plaintiffs reasonably fear that, because of the open personally enmity existing between Hon. Francisco Navarro Ortiz, Judge of this court, and Gelpi & Gelpi, plaintiffs’ attorneys, which is known to the defendants and to their attorney José Sabater, such animosity may and surely will influence the decision of said judge upon said motions to strike out, as the prejudice and partiality of said judge against plaintiffs’ attorneys (who are not friends of said judge, either) are public and well-known, such prejudice and partiality being noticeable in the decisions of the aforesaid judge in suits wherein the same attorneys who now represent the plaintiffs have acted as counsel.
“Fourth: That the plaintiffs had not heretofore sought to recuse the said Judge nor to transfer the case, because plaintiffs expected that the Judge himself, on his own initiative, knowing as he does the existence of this state of things, would disqualify himself or provide for such transfer, without waiting for the plaintiffs to request it, as they have been compelled to request it, through the present motion.
“Fifth: That according to the information and belief of plaintiffs’ attorneys, Attorney Miguel A. Garcia Mendez, who does not appear as attorney of record for any of the parties herein, has been intervening, behind the back of plaintiffs’ attorneys, and personally working on said plaintiffs for the purpose of compelling them to settle with the defendants, to the great prejudice of the former, morally coercing them by threats such as that said attorney, Mr. García Méndez, is going to intervene in the ease in favor of defendants; that Gelpi & Gelpi, counsel for plaintiffs, are not qualified to win this suit; that the allegations of the complaint are defective; that he (García Méndez), by using his influence, should the plaintiffs refuse to settle the case as suggested by him o'* to take the case away from attorneys Gelpi & Gelpi, will cause them to lose the suit; all of which tends to arouse in plaintiffs’ mind a strong distrust of their attorneys.
“Sixth: That all of the above circumstances together with the predominant influence which is exerted by Attorney Miguel A. Garcia Méndez on the mind of the district judge, and which has' been publicly commented on, the interest of said attorney to injure the undersigned attorneys, and the manifest hostility of Judge Francisco Navarro Ortiz of this court towards the latter, afford more than a reasonable basis for the sincere belief on the part of plaintiffs that they can not obtain in this court a fair and impartial trial. ’ ’

[40]

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P.R. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-gelpi-prsupreme-1941.