Pepín Delgado v. Ready-Mix Concrete, Inc.

70 P.R. 723
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJanuary 10, 1950
DocketNo. 10006
StatusPublished

This text of 70 P.R. 723 (Pepín Delgado v. Ready-Mix Concrete, Inc.) 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
Pepín Delgado v. Ready-Mix Concrete, Inc., 70 P.R. 723 (prsupreme 1950).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Marrero

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff as well as the defendants have appealed from the judgment rendered by the District Court of San Juan ordering the latter to pay to the former the sum of $5,000 for damages, plus costs and $500 as attorney’s fees. Since plaintiff’s appeal is confined to maintaining that the amount awarded as compensation and as attorney’s fees is exceedingly low, while that of the defendants challenges the judg[725]*725ment as a whole, we shall discuss first the errors assigned by the latter.

Upon the case being called for trial on November 9, 1948, the defendants moved the court for the dismissal of the complaint because the plaintiff had not answered the interrogatory served on him. The court refused to do this, or to grant a continuance. These refusals gave rise to the first assignment of error. It''appears, from the record that on October 18, 1948 the defendants filed in. the office of the clerk of the lower court an interrogatory addressed to the plaintiff. At the commencement of the trial the defendants maintained that they had served by mail said interrogatory on the plaintiff who insisted that he had not received it, although he remembered having.met by chance the attorney for the defendants and having talked about it and pointed out to him that he would attend to it as soon as he saw it and as soon as he got ready to prepare the case for trial. We do not believe that the error charged was committed. Interrogatories to the parties are authorized by Rule 33 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. They must be answered separately and fully, in writing and under oath, within fifteen days after delivery thereof. The deponent may make objections to such interrogatories within ten days after service thereof, the answers being deferred until the objections are determined by the court. Rule 37 (a) provides, on the other hand, that upon the refusal of a party to answer any interrogatory submitted under Rule 33, the proponent may apply to the court for an order compelling the deponent to answer; Rule 37 (b) provides that if a party refuses to answer a question after being directed to do so by the court, such refusal may be-considered as a contempt of court; and Rule 37(d) provides that if a party “wilfully. . . fails to serve answer to interrogatories submitted under Rule 33, after proper service of such interrogatories, the court on motion and notice may strike out all or any part of any pleading of that party, or dismiss the action or proceeding or any part thereof, or [726]*726enter a judgment by default against that party.” (Italics ours.) In the present case, however, the fifteen-day period referred to by Rule 33 expired several days before the date set for the trial to begin. Nevertheless, the defendants did not act immediately after said term expired and delayed their motion until the very moment that the case was called for tri-al. We do not think that in so acting the defendants-were diligent, nor that the record shows that the plaintiff wilfully failed to answer the interrogatories which the former alleged having served by mail on the plaintiff and which the latter repeatedly insisted he had not received.

It is also evident from the record that after the complaint was filed on December 8, 1947, the defendants filed, seven days later, a motion requesting a bill of particulars and that said motion was denied in a lengthy order dated the following February 9 and that it is therein clearly suggested to the defendants to resort to the discovery of evidence, examination of witnesses and parties or to interrogatories,1 which procedures, it was the trial court’s belief, had substituted the bill of particulars currently used prior to the effective date of the rules. Nevertheless, it was not, as we have already said, until October 18, 1948 that the defendants filed their aforesaid interrogatory. It likewise appears from the record that although the trial began on November 9, said trial, after most of plaintiff’s witnesses had testified and part of defendants’ evidence had been presented, was postponed for three days later. During that interval the defendants could easily have obtained from the court an order to subject the plaintiff to a physical examination,

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70 P.R. 723, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pepin-delgado-v-ready-mix-concrete-inc-prsupreme-1950.