People v. Sociedad Agrícola Mario Mercado e Hijos

72 P.R. 740
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedAugust 13, 1951
DocketNo. 10441
StatusPublished

This text of 72 P.R. 740 (People v. Sociedad Agrícola Mario Mercado e Hijos) 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. Sociedad Agrícola Mario Mercado e Hijos, 72 P.R. 740 (prsupreme 1951).

Opinion

Mr. Acting Chief Justice Todd, Jr.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On June 20, 1947, the complaint in this case, together with a declaration of taking and material delivery of the condemned property, was filed in the District Court of Ponce. Although the complaint was addressed against numerous defendants, the appeal before us only involves the defendant Arturo Picó Santiago, appellant herein, whose parcel of land of 1.56 cuerdas, equivalent to 6143.7889 square meters, to be segregated from a farm of 6.97 cuerdas, was taken. Four structures stood on the condemned parcel, wherein the appellant operated an industry for the manufacture of cement blocks. The plaintiff deposited the amount of $16,568.76 as compensation to the defendant, for the parcel of land as well as for the structures.

On the same day that the complaint was filed, the court entered an order vesting title over the properties involved in the proceeding in The People of Puerto Rico, and ordering the defendants to deliver material .possession thereof within a term not to exceed 20 days from the date said order was served on them. The defendant Arturo Picó Santiago was not summoned until January 5, .1948, being served with a copy of the complaint, of the declaration of taking and of [744]*744the order of possession. This notwithstanding, and for the reasons hereinafter set forth, it was not until June 30, 1949, that defendant Picó surrendered the condemned parcel.

Upon answering the complaint, the defendant alleged that the parcel of land and structures taken were worth $40,010.68 and, furthermore, that because the land in question was to be condemned for the purpose of a public highway known as “Ponce By Pass,” he suffered damages amounting to $10,500.

When Act No. 223 of May 15, 1948 (Sess. Laws, p. 774)., created the Court of Eminent Domain of Puerto Rico this case was removed to and heard in said court. By stipulation of the parties, approved by the court, it was agreed that the structures taken were worth $14,893.75, and pursuant to the evidence introduced at the trial, said court entered judgment granting the complaint and fixing definitively the value of the condemned property at $24,885.43. Therefore, the plaintiff had to pay to the defendant the sum of $8,316.67 plus legal interest from July 1, 1949, that is, from a day after the defendant had surrendered the property.

Both parties appealed. We shall now consider the appeal taken by the People of Puerto Rico and thereby decide some of the errors assigned by the defendant in his appeal.

The plaintiff maintains in the first place that the court a quo erred in granting the defendant $600 to cover the expenses he incurred in removing the machinery for the manufacture of blocks which was located in the condemned parcel. There is no discussion as to the amount of this item for the parties stipulated that, if its award lay, the defendant had incurred in said expenses.

The lower court stated in its conclusions of law that the question involved was rather dubious inasmuch as neither Federal nor state courts have established a uniform doctrine and this Court has not had the opportunity to express its views. It decided, however, that without having to declare which is or should be the legal doctrine in point, in the case [745]*745at bar, “the machinery was attached to the floor of the structures and in order to remove said machinery some of the walls would have to be torn down. All the circumstances lead us to the conclusion that said machines were immovables. And since they were not condemned, it is only fair and sensible, in our judgment, for the plaintiff to pay the cost of removing said machinery from the real property it condemns. If in certain cases it is proper for the plaintiff to pay severance damages, that is, the damage or depreciation suffered by the remainder of an immovable when by condemnation part thereof has been segregated, we fail to see how in the instant case the immunity of the Government could be upheld to segregate one part of an immovable (the structure) without compensating, at least, the owner’s expense in removing the other part of the immovable (the machinery) in order to use it somewhere else.”

In our judgment, the court a quo did not err in deciding that the machines of the block factory, because of the manner it was proved that they were affixed to one of the condemned structures, constituted immovables. Subdivision 3 of § 263 of the Civil Code, 1930 ed., recites that immovables are: “Everything attached to an immovable in a fixed manner, in such a way that it cannot be separated from it without breaking the matter, or causing injury to the object,” and subdivision 5 of the same Section: “Machinery, vessels, instruments or implements intended by the owner of the tenement for the industry or works that he may carry on in any building or upon any land and which tend directly to meet the needs of the said industry or works.” (Italics ours.)

The evidence showed, also, that the machinery could not be removed without tearing down the structure in which it is located and that in order to do so the defendant obtained permission from the Assistant Commissioner of the Interior to tear down, at his expense, all the condemned structures, binding himself, moreover, to remove the rubbish in exchange for the material which he might be able to obtain therefrom [746]*746—see defendant’s exhibit 4, letters of May 7, 1949, and June 9, 1949 — and that in fact, the defendant proceeded to demolish them.

The question for decision is whether under these circumstances the plaintiff was bound to pay for the expenses incurred by the defendant in removing the machinery from his factory to install it somewhere else in his property in a new structure he built.

The plaintiff argues that the just compensation for the condemned properties to which § 2 of the Organic Act refers,1 must include only their reasonable value in the market, pursuant to § 2 of Act No. 479, “To prevent speculation in the sale of real estate to The People of Puerto Rico and the agencies and instrumentalities thereof for purposes of public utility or social benefit; to fix standards for the fair and reasonable compensation to the owner in case of condemnation, and for other purposes,” approved April 26, 1946.2

The limitation included in § 2 of Act No. 479 neither has nor can it have the scope attributed thereto by the plaintiff in view of the provision of § 2 of the Organic Act which [747]*747includes, not only just compensation for the condemned property but also just compensation for the damages to the property of the condemnee as a result of the taking. We have held this already in People v. García, 66 P.R.R. 478, laying stress on the fact that the phrase “or damaged” contained in our Organic Act does not exist in the Federal Constitution. That is why the federal cases cited by the plaintiff and which only involve the taking of the property, without including machinery, improvements, etc., are not applicable to the facts of the instant case.

In situations like this, both in Federal and in state jurisdictions, it has been held that when the improvement is attached to the condemned realty,. compensation must be granted to cover the costs of removal, under the theory of a partial taking. See Potomac Electric Power Co. v. United States, 85 F. 2d 243; United States v. Becktold Co., 129 F. 2d 473;

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Bluebook (online)
72 P.R. 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-sociedad-agricola-mario-mercado-e-hijos-prsupreme-1951.