People v. Torruella Cortada

63 P.R. 910
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 10, 1944
DocketNo. 10441
StatusPublished

This text of 63 P.R. 910 (People v. Torruella Cortada) 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. Torruella Cortada, 63 P.R. 910 (prsupreme 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Todd, Jr.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

The District Court of Ponce, on appeal, found Rafael To-rruella Cortada guilty of a violation of Act No. 17 of 1931, in relation with §36 of the Penal Code, which violation, according to the complaint, was that he “illegally and voluntarily, and acting as Manager of the Municipal Pier of Ponce which was created by an ordinance or franchise granted by the Executive Council of Puerto Rico to the Municipal Government of Ponce, and acting for the Governing Board of said Municipal Pier of Ponce, which is the employer of the ■workers that worked therein, then and there helped to discount and discounted ten per cent (10%) of the wages earned by the workers, to be paid to another person.”

Upon being sentenced to pay a fine of $50 or to be confined in jail one day for each dollar left unpaid, the defendant took the present appeal. He urges that the court below erred “in entering a judgment of conviction in this case, as the acts charged against the accused were never proved. ’ ’

Sections 1, 5, 6, and 7 of Act No. 17 “An Act to regulate labor contracts; to guarantee the payment of laborers’ wages; to fix certain penalties or violations hereof, and for other purposes,” approved April 17, 1931,1 provide as follows:

[912]*912“Section 1. — In all contracts entered into with laborers, their wages shall be paid exclusively in lawful money of the United States of America, and if, because of any special agreement, custom or other motive whatsoever, they receive any money advances before the regular pay day, it shall be lawful for the employer to deduct said advance. If it is stipulated in a labor contract that all or part of the wages shall be paid otherwise than in money, the said contract shall be null and void so far as it refers to the promise or engagement to pay the wages in any form other than in lawful money of the United Sta.tes of America.
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“Section 5. — Whenever the employer or his agent shall have advanced to the laborer any amount in lawful money of the United States of America, he shall have a right to deduct such sum from the wages of the latter. However, no amount shall be retained in excess of the total amount so advanced. No employer may, for any reason, deduct any part of the wages due to laborers in order to pay the same to any other person except in the cases provided in this section.
“Section 6. — For the purposes of this Act, the word ‘employer’ shall be understood to mean any person who uses or avails himself of -the work of any laborer for wages. The word ‘laborer’ shall mean the person who receives a salary or wages for his work.
“Section 7. — Any violation of any of the provisions of this Act shall constitute a misdemeanor, and recidivism in the violation of any of its provisions shall be punished by a fine of not less than fifty dollars or by confinement in jail for thirty days.”2

[913]*913The appellant contends that, since he is not the employer of the laborers who worked at the Pier of Ponce and that insofar as he acted as Manager of the Pier of Ponce, it was necessary, in order to hold him liable as an agent of the Administrative Board of the Pier of Ponce,3 which was the actual employer, to prove that there existed an agreement of said Board authorizing or ordering the deductions from the laborers’ wages. This contention lacks merit.

The evidence showed beyond a reasonable doubt that the appellant as Manager of the Pier gave orders to Mr. Sanes, the paymaster, to deduct 10 per cent from the laborers’ wages; that those laborers who objected to such deduction were discharged and not given any more work; that when acting in this manner, the appellant stated that he was not authorized to give work to any one who did not pay the 10 per cent discount. After appellant was convicted in the municipal court, the question was raised before the Administrative Board of the Pier by one of its members, Mr. Castro, [914]*914Jr., whether appellant should be discharged from employment. From the minutes of the Board’s meeting held on May 23,1940, it appears that the following incident occurred:

“The question was fully debated and all the members of the Board participated in the debate, after which it was unanimously agreed to leave the matter pending further consideration and subject to the turn that the case, now sub-judice might take in the future.
“When the Board was about to adjourn, the Superintendent, Mr. Torruella Cortada, asked to be heard and explained that the sentence passed on him by Judge Bartolomei was unjust and that he expected to show it in the District Court where he felt sure he would be acquitted. Mr. Torruella went on to explain tbat it was true that he had ordered the 10 per cent deductions but that .he did this because he had received orders from the Administrative Board which was acting at the time the deductions were made.
“The Board took notice of the Superintendent’s statement and after that it adjourned.”

From the minutes of the meeting of the Board held on May 27, 1940, it appears that when the minutes of the prior meeting were approved the following was stated:

“1. — The final paragraph of the minutes of the meeting of May 23, 1940, is hereby amended as regards the statement made by Mr. Torruella Cortada in relation to the 10 per cent discount made to the laborers, and it is here recorded that said statement was not taken in shorthand nor was it delivered in writing to the Board by Mr. Torruella Cortada.”

Notwithstanding the absolute denial that the appellant made in Ms own defense to the effect that during the eight years that he held the position of Manager of the Pier of Ponce, he did not even hear about 10 per cent being deducted from the laborers ’ wages, he introduced in evidence a letter4 [915]*915addressed to Mm on September 12, 1938 by the President of the Union of Pier Workers No. 18, Playa de Ponce, which indicates that the appellant not only had knowledge of the 10 per cent discount, but also of the political purposes to which it was applied.

It was also proved that because of the 10 per cent discount made from their wages, the Pier workers struck and a conciliation committee had to intervene to solve the strike. All the evidence showed that the discounts were made by the paymaster pursuant to appellant’s instructions and that when the workers came to him to protest he told them that if they were not satisfied no more work would be given to then;, as was done to many laborers, in such a manner that in order to get work they had to give a different name that their own. The evidence in the instant case shows that the situation that prevailed in the Pier of Ponce as regards the 10 per cent discount from the laborers’ wages was due to party politics interfering with the administration of the pier under the management of the appellant!

Notwithstanding that those facts were proved, the appellant contends that the existence of an official agreement of the Board not having been proved, which should appear from the records ordering him to make the discounts, he could be guilty of some other crime, but not of a violation of Act No. 17 of 1931.

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302 U.S. 540 (Supreme Court, 1938)

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Bluebook (online)
63 P.R. 910, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-torruella-cortada-prsupreme-1944.