People v. La Costa

59 P.R. 178
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 21, 1941
DocketNo. 360
StatusPublished

This text of 59 P.R. 178 (People v. La Costa) 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. La Costa, 59 P.R. 178 (prsupreme 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Justice De Jesús

delivered the opinion of the court.

The People of Puerto Rico, through the Commissioner of ihe Interior, instituted in the lower court a condemnation proceeding against the P. R. Railway, Light & Power Co., a corporation. The defendant filed a motion to strike out ■certain particulars from the complaint, which was denied, and then it demurred to that pleading on several grounds which were also overruled, whereupon it filed an answer to the complaint. The plaintiff filed a motion to strike out certain allegations of the answer, which was sustained, and then the defendant filed an amended answer, the case being, subsequently tried and taken under advisement pending the filing of briefs. At this stage of the proceeding, the plaintiff, relying on Act No. 2, approved April 1, 1941, filed within •said proceeding two documents entitled, “Declaration of Acquisition” and “Motion for Physical Delivery,” respectively, which textually read as follows:

“Declaration of acquisition.
“Now comes Sergio Cuevas, Commissioner of the Interior of Puerto Rico, and states:
“1. The properties, rights, and privileges which will be described in the course of this statement are acquired under the authority of the provisions of Section 9 of Act No. 93, approved May 6, 1938; •of the Act of Eminent Domain, approved March 12, 1903, as subsequently amended, especially by Act No. 44 approved August 6, 1935, and by Act No. 2, approved April 1, 1941; and of Act No. 94, approved May 6, 1938; and, further, by virtue and under the authority of the Organic Act of Puerto Rico and the provisions •of the franchise which was granted by the Public Service. Commission of Puerto Rico to the Porto Rico Railway, Light .& Power Co., and which was approved by the Governor of Puerto Rico on January -4, 1928.
[180]*180112. Tbe aforesaid properties are acquired in order to merge them into the hydroelectric system established and operated by the People of Puerto Rico and known as the Utilization of Water Resources and the same are acquired to be immediately applied to the above purpose.
"3. A description of the properties so condemned and to be acquired appears in ‘Exhibits A and B’, attached to this declaration as integral parts thereof, the properties therein described being the same as those also described in the complaint, filed in the present condemnation proceeding and entitled like the present declaration.
“4. The interest acquired in said properties for the aforesaid public purpose is that of a full ownership title.
“5. The properties condemned and acquired under the present proceeding are shown in the plats which are attached to this declaration as part thereof, and marked .‘Exhibit C’.
“6. The sum estimated by the undersigned as a fair and reasonable compensation for such properties, including all rights, privileges, and holding's is $936,151.79, which has been deposited by the undersigned in the office of the clerk of this court prior to this date, that is, on the date of the filing of the complaint in the present condemnation proceeding. Said sum is at the disposal and for the benefit of the Porto Rico Railway, Light & Power Co., defendant herein, it being the opinion of the undersigned that the sum which will ultimately be fixed in the present suit as compensation for the said properties will be within the limits which according to law can and must be paid as the fair and reasonable value of said properties.
‘ ‘ In witness whereof, I sign the within Declaration of Acquisition and affix thereto the seal of the Department of the Interior at San Juan, Puerto Rico, this 27th day of May, 1941.
(Sgd.) ‘ ‘ Sergio Cuevas,
“Commissioner of the Interior.”
“Motion for actual delivery.
“To the Hon. Court:
“Now comes The People of Puerto Rico, represented by its Commissioner of the Interior, and through the undersigned the Attorney General and Deputy Assistant Attorney General, respectfully states and alleges:
“1. That on this day it has filed in the instant case a Declaration of Acquisition executed by Sergio Cuevas,- Commissioner of the Interior of Puerto Rico, pursuant to the provisions of Act No. 2, approved April 1, 1941.
[181]*181“2: The plaintiff has deposited in the office of the clerk of this Hon. Court the sum that he considers to be a fair and reasonable compensation for the properties involved in this proceeding, to wit, $936,151.79, which sum is at the disposal and for the benefit of the Porto Rico Railway, Light & Power Co., defendant herein.
“3. The People of Puerto Rico urgently needs to take possession of the properties the object of this proceeding so as to apply them to the purposes stated in its complaint and in the ‘Declaration of Acquisition’ above mentioned.
“4. It is the opinion of the plaintiff that the defendant may reasonably make the actual delivery of the said properties within sixty days at the most from the date of the service of any order that might be made in this case.
“5. Wherefore, the plaintiff prays this Hon. Court to fix a term not exceeding sixty days for effecting the actual delivery of the properties sought to be condemned in this proceeding, which shall begin to run from the date of the service of notice of the order of the court.
“San Juan, Puerto Rico, May 27, 1941.
“George A. Malcolm,
Attorney General.
“Pablo Defendini,
Deputy Assistant Attorney General. ’ ’

Those two documents were submitted to a new judge, and as his legal views differed ■ from those entertained by his colleagues, who had heard the previous pleadings, he rendered, on May 29, 1941, an extensive decision, the dispo-sitive part of which reads thus:

“As Sergio Cuevas, Commissioner of the Interior, is not em- ■ powered to represent The. People of Puerto Rico, plaintiff herein, in the present action, nor to prosecute the same, the motion of the plaintiff for the actual delivery of the properties of the defendant is denied, on the ground that the present proceeding was not brought by, in behalf of, or under the authority of the People of Puerto Rico.”

The People of Puerto Eico sought twice to have the above decision reconsidered and on both occasions such reconsideration was denied.

[182]*182In a lengthy petition setting forth a detailed statement of the above facts and in which there are literally transcribed the different orders already referred to, the People of Puerto Rico applied to this court for a writ of mandamus directed to the Hon. Ricardo La Costa, Jr., Judge of the District Court of San Juan, to compel said judge “to assume jurisdiction of the proceeding brought in the District Court of San Juan- by the People of Puerto Rico against the Porto Rico Railway, Light & Power Co., civil case No.

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

Related

Matter of Ford
116 P. 757 (California Supreme Court, 1911)
McLeod v. Graham, County Judge
1911 OK CR 285 (Court of Criminal Appeals of Oklahoma, 1911)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
59 P.R. 178, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-la-costa-prsupreme-1941.