Property Owners' League v. City of San Juan

14 P.R. 85
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedFebruary 12, 1908
DocketNo. 187
StatusPublished

This text of 14 P.R. 85 (Property Owners' League v. City of San Juan) 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
Property Owners' League v. City of San Juan, 14 P.R. 85 (prsupreme 1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice MacLeary

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was a suit brought by the Landlords ’ League of San Juan, through A. Sarmiento, esq., its attorney, against the City of San Juan, seeking a judgment or decree of the district court declaring null and void some of the provisions of the ordinance passed and approved by the City of San Juan on the 10th day of November, 1906, regulating the service óf collecting garbage and waste matter, and the manner in which they should be exposed by the inhabitants of the city, in so far as article 5 of said ordinance orders that the cans in which the inhabitants of the houses of San Juan should deposit their garbage should be supplied by the proprietors of the real estate, and in so far as article 6 concedes to the said owners of the houses a term in order to provide the said cans, to which the former article refers.

The complaint in this case was filed on the 8th day of February, 1907. On the 18th of the same month Ramón Falcon, acting as attorney for the said city, filed a demurrer to the said complaint, founded on paragraph 6 of article 105 of the Code of Civil Procedure, because the said complaint does not set forth facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The attorney for the plaintiff made a motion to dismiss the exception, because it was not founded in accordance with the Code of Civil Procedure, which motion, was denied by the court, and the plaintiff took an exception to the said ruling. The court took the demurrer under consideration on the 9th [87]*87of August, 1907, and made the following ruling in regard thereto:

“The Landlords’ League of city property of the city of San Juan has filed in this court a suit against the municipality of San Juan, seeking the annulment of two points set out in an ordinance passed by the City Council on the 10th of November, 1906, to regulate the service of collecting garbage and waste matter, and the manner in which the same should be exposed by the residents of the city, in which it is "provided that the galvanized iron cans in which the tenants of houses should deposit the garbage should be furnished by the owners of the real estate, and grant them a term within which to provide their houses with the aforsaid receptacles; alleging further that these two last-named provisions are contrary to law and abridge the right of the plaintiff league.
‘ “This complaint was excepted to by the Alcalde of the municipality of San Juan, alleging that it does not set forth facts sufficient to constitute an action, paragraph 6 of article 105 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and which exception was argued in open court by counsel for the parties.
“As will be seen from the complaint, a municipal ordinance is involved, which regulates the service for the collection of - garbage and waste matter, and the manner in which the same shall be exposed; so that object of such ordinance being to regulate a matter which affects the public health and sanitation, the municipality of San Juan was within its powers in passing the same, as it is authorized to do by section 25, paragraph 12 of the law of the 8th of March, 1906, which provides for the establishment of a system of local government and other matters, which right is acknowledged by the complainant in asking for the annulment of such ordinance, only with respect to the matters which require that the receptacle of galvanized iron be supplied by the owners of the properties, and with respect to the term fixed within with such provisions shall be' complied with.
“It being admitted then by the plaintiff that the city may make regulations affecting sanitation and the public health, it must admit also that it may choose, without violating the law, the means by which its ordinances shall be complied with. And, indeed, we do not see that any law is violated by imposing upon owners of city real estate the obligation of furnishing the receptacles of galvanized iron, in which the tenants shall place the garbage, and in such respect we are of ' opinion that the ordinance attacked was properly passed by the municipality of San Juan, acting within its powers.
[88]*88" Therefore we are unable to see how the complainant in this case can bring about the annulment of two of its provisions, and consequently that the facts of the same do not constitute a cause of action, or in other words a right to the' remedy sought.
“For these reasons thé exception taken by the defendant is sustained by the court,, and the complaint dismissed with costs. "

On the 19th. of August the plaintiff took an appeal from the judgment of the district court to this Supreme Court. He presented, together with the judgment roll, what is called a bill of exceptions and a statement of the case, all of the record being filed in this court on the 8th of September last. A written brief was also filed by the attorney for the plaintiff and appellant. On the 3d day of December the case was submitted to this court on the record and on oral arguments, and duly taken under consideration.

Let us first consider the ruling of the trial court made on the demurrer in the decision quoted at large above. We are clearly of the opinion that the ruling made by the court below sustaining the demurrer to the complaint was correct and founded on sound legal principles and precedents. The objection presented by the plaintiff that the demurrer is not sufficiently explicit cannot be sustained by the authorities which we have consulted. As our Code of Civil Procedure is derived, at least indirectly through that of Idaho, from the similar statutes in the State of California, we follow on ques-' tions of that nature, the decisions of the Supreme Court of that State.

A demurrer on the grounds “that the court has no jurisdiction, either of the persons of the defendants, or of the subject of the action” and “that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action,” is sufficiently explicit under the rules of construction adopted by the courts of California. (Ellissen v. Halleck, 6 Cal., 387.)

The objection that the demurrer does not “distinctly specify the grounds on which the objections of. the complaint are [89]*89taken” would perhaps have been maintained were it not for the fact that the courts of California, following the analogies' of the New York Code, have adopted the construction of her courts upon that subject, and maintained the sufficiency of such a demurrer.

That eminent court goes on to say:

“In mere matters of practice involving no principle, it would be safer to acquiesce in a rule which has been established for several years in the inferior courts of this State, the abrogation of which might introduce confusion and operate hardly on litigants.” (Ellissen v. Halleck, 6 Cal., 394.)

Section 106 of the Code of Civil Prorecdure of Porto Eico is identical with section 431 of the Code of Civil Procedure of California. See note on said section on page 215 of Pome-roy’s Code of Civil Procedure, and the authorities there cited, which we are constrained to follow in the case at bar. The ordinary distinctions formerly in vogue between general and special demurrers are done away with by the California Code. Under that Code all the statutory grounds of demurrer are classed alike as grounds of general demurrer.

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Bluebook (online)
14 P.R. 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/property-owners-league-v-city-of-san-juan-prsupreme-1908.