Quintero Jiménez v. Isabela Irrigation Service

66 P.R. 887
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedFebruary 24, 1947
DocketNo. 9339
StatusPublished

This text of 66 P.R. 887 (Quintero Jiménez v. Isabela Irrigation Service) 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
Quintero Jiménez v. Isabela Irrigation Service, 66 P.R. 887 (prsupreme 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Justice De Jesús

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action of damages brought against the Isabela irrigation Service. As a cause of action it is substantially alleged: That plaintiff is the owner of a property of fifteen acres of land situated in the ward of Montaña, Aguadilla, along the north side of which runs a canal belonging to the Isabela Irrigation Service; that this canal frequently floods a large part of plaintiff’s property, having caused him damages amounting to $825; that these damages have been caused solely and exclusively through the fault and negligence of the Isabela Irrigation Service, its agents or employees," by reason of having unduly neglected the canal and having failed to take the necessary steps to avoid such floods, notwithstanding plaintiff’s repeated requirements and demands.

The Commissioner of the Interior appeared in this action in the name and on behalf of the Irrigation Service and filed a motion for dismissal. He rested his motion on lack of jurisdiction and on the insufficiency of the complaint.

The order granting the motion for dismissal is predicated on Banuchi v. Irrigation District, 43 P.R.R. 751. The lower court interpreted this decision as holding that the Isabela Irrigation District is a corporation that partakes of a dual character, it being a public corporation in some cases and a private corporation in others, and that it may be sued for damages in actions ex contractu but not in actions ex delicto and that, since the action brought here is of the latter character, the Irrigation System can not be sued. Another ground set forth by the lower court, although inconsistent with the ruling in Banuchi v. Irrigation District, supra, 'was [889]*889that the Isabela Irrigation District is not a public corporation but an agency of the Government of Puerto Eico which may not be sued without the consent of the sovereign and that the latter has never given it.

Appellant bases his appeal on the failure to follow the cases of Banuchi v. Irrigation District, 43 P.R.R. 751, and 52 P.R.R. 354, and to apply Joint Resolution No. 38 of May 11, 1937.1

What this court really held in the first Banuchi case was that the Isabela Irrigation District was a corporation which partook of a dual character; and that in addition to the remedy provided in § 34 2 of Act No. 63 of 1919 (Laws of 1919, p. 348), it is liable for damages when it acts as a corporation but not in its public capacity. And as to the case which it had under consideration it held that although the complaint was not sufficient, it might be amended and remanded the ease for further proceedings. This court did not decide in that case, as alleged by the court a quo and the appellee, that the Irrigation Service was not liable for damages arising out of actions ex delicto.

The second Banuchi case dealt with an action for damages brought by a landowner whose land had been included within the temporary irrigation district. There plaintiff alleged that the Isabela Irrigation Service offered to furnish water; that relying on this offer he planted 34 acres of cane; that after some time the defendant discontinued the irrigation service, that by reason of this dicontinuance he suffered damages because the production was less than if the land [890]*890would have enjoyed the drainage until the cane had been cut ; that he also suffered damages bécause, as he claimed, upon soiling the property to the Central Cambalache the selling price was less than what he would have received for the same land if it had still enjoyed the benefits of the Irrigation Service. The district court held that Banuchi should have first exercised the right of review granted him under § 34 of Act No. 63 of June 19, 1919, and that the amount to be recovered for damages could not exceed those which he would have suffered had he timely availed himself of that remedy. It dismissed the complaint, without prejudicing plaintiff’s right to bring another suit confining his evidence to those damages which the court had deemed recoverable. This court admitted, without discussion, that the Irrigation District can be sued for damages and that the remedy granted under ■§ 34 does not exclude the action for damages, as we held in the first Banuchi case. The judgment was reversed and another entered in favor of the plaintiff for $1,000 as damages.

The decision in the first Banuchi case is predicated upon a citation of Long on Irrigation, which in turn was taken from the opinion in City of Nampa v. Nampa & Meridian Irr. Dist., 115 Pac. 979, 982 (Idaho 1911), wherein Mr. Justice McLane speaking for the court said:

“An irrigation district is a public quasi corporation, organized, however, to conduct a business for the private benefit of the owners of lands within its limits. They are the members of the corporation, control its affairs, and they alone are benefited by its operations. It is, in the administration of its business, the owner of its system in a proprietary rather than in a public capacity, and must assume and bear the burdens of proprietary ownership.”

The character of a legal institution does not depend on how it has been labeled but on its features as expressed in the law creating it. Consequently, we must examine and compare both statutes, the one from Idaho to which we re-[891]*891Eerred above and that of Puerto Rico, in order to determine whether both irrigation districts have similar features.

Upon examining the Idaho statute we shall see that $ 2444 et sec¿. of the Political Code establishes the prerequisites in order to organize a drainage district. Section 2444 says that five or more inhabitants and landowners of any portion of a county, may be organized into a drainage district ; that the organized district, shall be entitled to sue and be sued, not in the name of the State of Idaho, but on that of the Board of Commissioners of the district; that it shall have perpetual succession and shall adopt and use a seal; that the commissioners of the district shall have the power and it shall be their duty to manage and conduct the business and affairs of the district, make and execute all necessary contracts, appoint such agents, officers and employees as may be required, prescribe their duties and perform such other acts as hereinafter provided by law.

It seems clear that a drainage district organized under the Idaho statute is a public corporation and as sueh may be sued in connecion with its corporate acts.

On the other hand, Act No. 63 of June 19, 1919, creating the Isabela Irrigation District, does not empower the district to sue or be sued ; it does not authorize it to adopt or use a seal or to have perpetual succession, which powers are typical in a corporation, whether public or private. On the contrary, once the Irrigation Service has been organized and the lands which are included within the irrigation district determined, the Irrigation Commission disappears by provision of law and the Commissioner of the Interior and the Chief Engineer are in charge of the management and supervision of the Irrigation District. It is the Commissioner of the Interior, pursuant to § 36, who, subject to the approval of the Executive Council, shall fix the terms under which the water shall be supplied to municipalities and manufacturing and industrial enterprises and the price thereof.

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Related

City of Nampa v. Nampa & Meridian Irrigation District
115 P. 979 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1911)

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Bluebook (online)
66 P.R. 887, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quintero-jimenez-v-isabela-irrigation-service-prsupreme-1947.