Pérez Vázquez v. Heirs of Amill Rodríguez

89 P.R. 363
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedOctober 28, 1963
DocketNo. R-62-9
StatusPublished

This text of 89 P.R. 363 (Pérez Vázquez v. Heirs of Amill Rodríguez) 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
Pérez Vázquez v. Heirs of Amill Rodríguez, 89 P.R. 363 (prsupreme 1963).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Rigau

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The conflict in the evidence turns on a single substantial point which we shall timely point out. Defendants’ farm is devoted in part to the cultivation of sugarcane. As an incidental element of their agricultural enterprise during the harvesting of cane defendants operate a crane which is used to load the cane from the oxcart, which hauls it from the plantation, into the trucks which deliver it to the mill. On the day of the events at about noontime the workers finished the harvesting of cane at defendants’ plantation which is near the highway from Yauco to Lares, and after lunchtime they were ready to dismantle the crane to take it to another place. One of said employees was Alfredo Pacheco, to whom the child Andrés Pérez, eight years old, brought his lunch to work. Minor Andrés and his family live, or lived at that [365]*365time, near Alfredo Pacheco. As a rule, after having his lunch at his house, the child went to Pacheco’s house, where the latter’s wife gave him a picnic pack with the lunch and Andrés took it to Pacheco’s work. He paid the child ten cents for the service.

The day of the occurrence, Andrés, accompanied by his twelve-year-old brother Luis, brought Pacheco’s lunch. Pacheco and the other laborers which were working there, left the plantation when the whistle blew at noon, at which time it is sounded in that neighborhood by a plant of the Puerto Rico Water Resources Authority, and went to a nearby highway, where they had their lunch by the roadside and under the shade of the trees. At the time of resuming their work the laborers went back to defendants’ land and, as we said, began to dismantle the crane. Here we come to the conflict in the evidence. Pacheco testifies that when he saw that the boys Andrés and Luis were going to the place where the crane was standing, he told them that it was dangerous there, that he sent them away from there, and that they went away. Witness Francisco López Ruiz testified to the same effect. On the contrary, Luis, Andrés’ brother, testified that after lunch they took water to the laborers and then they went to rest under an iron cart, one of those used to carry cane, which was there near the crane. According to the version to which the trial court gave credit, Pacheco ordered the boys to go away from that place because it was dangerous and they went away, but while the laborers were dismantling' the crane, the boys came back without being seen and slipped under the iron cart which was there.

Coming back to the uncontroverted facts, the boys were watching the dismantling of the crane from underneath the iron cart. When the work was almost finished a cable or guy of the kind attached to a pole or post became loose and it was evident that the pole would fall. The laborers gave [366]*366the alarm so that everyone should take shelter. The boys, instead of staying under the iron cart where they were protected and safe, started to run and the pole as it fell down reached Andrés and struck him on the head, killing him. As soon as the boy fell down Alfredo Pacheco picked him up and carrying him on his back ran toward the highway, stopped the first vehicle which passed by and took him to the Municipal Hospital. Unfortunately, the blow had been fatal.

Plaintiffs are the parents of minor Andrés Pérez and his seven brothers and sisters. The parents request compensation of $50,000 and the brothers and sisters three items of $20,000, two of $10,000, and two of $5,000, making a total of $140,000. The Superior Court, Ponce Part, after making the pertinent findings of fact and conclusions of law dismissed the complaint, with costs, and imposed on plaintiffs $1,000 for attorney’s fees. Plaintiffs-appellants assign three errors. The first two challenge the weighing of the evidence made by the Superior Court and the third one challenges the order to pay attorney’s fees.

We timely ‘issued the writ of review and we have carefully examined the transcript of the evidence and have given due attention to the briefs of the parties. The evidence is clear, and except for what was previously indicated, there is no conflict of importance therein. The trial court settled the conflict as to whether the boys stayed at the place where the laborers were dismantling the crane with their consent or whether, on the contrary, they were sent away from the place and then returned without being seen against the instructions which they had received. Both versions are entirely plausible and since the findings of the lower court are supported by the evidence, and the record does not show that said finding is clearly erroneous, we shall not disturb [367]*367it. Rule 43.1 of the Rules of Civil Procedure; Sánchez v. Soler, 87 P.R.R. 409 (1963).

Plaintiffs argue in their brief that even considering the boys as trespassers, as we must consider them in the light of the evidence believed by the lower court and accepted by us, the doctrine of attractive nuisance would be applicable. As it is known, the general rule is to the effect that a property owner owes no legal duty to a trespasser whose presence is not reasonably anticipated, other than to refrain from inflicting wilful injury or to take reasonable precautions after his presence becomes known. Díaz v. Central Lafayette, 66 P.R.R. 780, 783 (1947); Ramos v. Sucesión J. Serrallés, 51 P.R.R. 332, 341 (1937); Restatement, Torts, 901, § 333; Prosser, Torts 432 et seq., § 76. In regard to children of tender age the courts, which have adopted the doctrine of attractive nuisance, have held that where a person maintains in his own, or in another’s property, or at a public place a dangerous condition capable of attracting children of tender years, that person should take all due precaution commensurate with ordinary prudence to save harmless the children that come or may come to the place of danger. Ramos v. Sucesión J. Serrallés, supra at 335. This doctrine mitigates the application of the general rule on trespassers stated before, bearing in mind that children of tender age generally do not realize the dangers around them. In Rivera v. Porto Rico Drug Co., 32 P.R.R. 470 (1923), we accepted, said doctrine in this jurisdiction and ratified said acceptance in Ramos v. Sucesión J. Serrallés, supra. As we said in Díaz v. Central Lafayette, supra at 781, the doctrine of attractive nuisance “requires property owners to take affirmative precautions to protect children who, even though they are trespassers, do not realize the dangers to which they are subjecting themselves. But opposed to this doctrine, is the policy against, unduly interfering with or placing unreasonably [368]*368burdensome restrictions on the use of property. We therefore have the interest of society in preserving the safety of children as against the legitimate interest of property owners to use their own property with reasonable freedom. The effort to determine which of these two competing considerations will prevail in a given case has engendered considerable litigation.”

In Díaz v. Central Lafayette, supra, and in Vargas v. Water Resources Authority, 86 P.R.R. 99 (1962), we set forth the essential requirements for the application of said doctrine, adopting those stated in Restatement, Torts, 920, § 339. Since said requirements are brief, instead of paraphrasing them we prefer to quote them for the sake of accuracy: ,-

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