Quirós Santiago v. Board of Pharmacy

48 P.R. 661
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 14, 1935
DocketNo. 6088
StatusPublished

This text of 48 P.R. 661 (Quirós Santiago v. Board of Pharmacy) 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
Quirós Santiago v. Board of Pharmacy, 48 P.R. 661 (prsupreme 1935).

Opinion

Mr."Justice Wole

delivered tlié opinion of the Court.

Antonio- Quirós Santiago - filed a- petition for a writ of mandamus whereundér -the-Board of- - Pharmacy -should -be ordered to recognize -the right of- the:petitioner do-practice the profession-of pharmacy and to deliver to him his license as a pharmacist. The- court issued an-.alternative writ. The defendant, through- the office • of the Attorney - General, answered, but ■ after a-hearing the-• District Court-of San Juan dismissed the petition. - ■-

Various -were the clefen-ses- -set tip-; - namely,' for several reasons lack of power or authority in the Board to comply, res acljuclicata and l-ach.es.> •.-The- appellant-relies-on several acts of the • Legislature* on having qualified as pharmacist many years ago and we may say, in effect, given such qualification and the various acts, specially that of 1931, on the fact that the Board of Pharmacy is the only entity in Puerto [663]*663Rico- that can set the petitioner on Ms feet to practice his profession.

In 1913 or in 1914, the petitioner took his examinations before- the- then Boafd. of Pharmacy: ' It transpires that the individual members of the Board of Pharmacy in that period decided that' the petitioner was entitled- to practice the profession of pharmacy. Accordingly, the petitioner was asked to pay' $25.00 ‘for the issuance of a diploma or license, as the case may be. This he did. Then it'was that frauds and irregularities were discovered in the issuance of diplomas by the Board of Pharmacy and various. measures taken to suppress them. Thereupon the treasurer of the Board returned the $25.00 to the petitioner! Meanwhile, five members of the Board had signed a paper writing without date which said that Antonio Quirós Santiago1 had complied with the law and wás thereby granted a license' to practice pharmacy in accordance with the Act of March 8, 1906. This so-called diploma was not dated nor enrolled and was never delivered to the petitioner. .. •

Among other things, Mr. Daubón, who was then part of the Board and also was a part of the board at the time of the trial in' this case, testified that the petitioner had taken his examinations and passed them well, at least for the ones in which- Daubón had examined him, and that also the Board had- agreed that he, the petitioner, was complete. Nevertheless, thereafter -a subsequent board examined this ease and decided, more or less in accordance with the decision of this court, Monclova v. Board of Pharmacy, 24 P.R.R. 42, that the petitioner was not entitled to his license because he had not duly matriculated.

'Section 9 of the Act of 1921 provides (Session Laws, p. 138):

“That any person to whom a license of pharmacist shall have been issued without first complying with the requirements provided for by law and shall have practiced' consecutively for a period of not less than three years, shall be entitled to practice -or tó continue [664]*664practicing the profession of pharmacy, provided such person shall not have been convicted of fraud for the purpose of securing the issuance of such license.”

Petitioner cites this act in the course of Ms brief and to a certain extent relies on tMs act to show that it was unnecessary for Mm to matriculate. As we understand it, however, the right to the mandamus in this case does not depend upon said section 9, and we shall refer to this again.

What the petitioner does rely on is the Act of 1931 which provides as follows (Session Laws, p. 594):

“An Act to authorize the delivery, of certain diplomas withheld by the Board of Pharmacy of Puerto Rico, and for other purposes.
“Be it enacted by the Legislature of Puerto Rico:
“Section 1. — Every person in whose favor a pharmacist’s diploma, signed by four or more members of the Board of Pharmacy, has been filled out, or who appears in the official registers as having passed in all the subjects of the pharmaceutical profession, shall have the right to practice pharmacy in Puerto Rico, if he has not committed fraud in the examination; Provided, That the Board of Pharmacy shall register such diplomas after they are issued.
“•Section 2. — This laws or parts of laws in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.
“Section 3. — This Act shall take effect ninety days after its approval. ’ ’

The court below pointed out that according to the said act a person who had fulfilled any of the requisites of the said act would have a right to practice pharmacy in Puerto Rico, provided he had committed no fraud. Then the court held that the first part of the Act of 1931 imposed no duty on the board, that the only duty that was imposed on the board thereafter was to record the diplomas after they had been issued. The court went on to say that the act does not express what diplomas should be recorded nor who should issue them; that it did not appear that the board was under any obligation to deliver a diploma, etc.; that a license was not a diploma and that the license (sic) that they issued in this case had no value or efficacy or any legal [665]*665■effect because no dale was expressed therein; that the only-place where the delivery was spoken about was in the title, and that the title was not the act.

The law is not at all clear. Reading it, however, we are quite convinced that neither by it nor by any other act in Puerto Rico is the Board of Pharmacy bound to issue licenses except where the candidate has complied with certain prerequisites and has matriculated in accordance with the general law. In other words, the duties of the board under the ■various pharmacy acts of Puerto Rico are limited. The petitioner does not convince us that the Board of Pharmacy was under a duty to issue him a license by virtue of the Act of 1931.

Giving’ to the petitioner full color in benefit of his claim it would appear that what the Legislature of Puerto Rico •did, was to authorize the petitioner to practice his profession in Puerto Rico under the conditions established in the said act, but the said act did not order the board to authorize the petitioner to practice. We may repeat that this •authorization would come from the act itself.

The petition for mandamus in this case does not ask that the board should issue to the petitioner the so-called license signed years ago by the five members of the board, but asks in part that the court below order the board to issue the petitioner a license. If any rights the petitioner had, they proceeded from the act of the Legislature itself and he needed no further action from the board.

The petitioner says in his brief that a pharmacist would have to exhibit his license in order that he may practise. Section 5 of the Act of March 10 of 1910 provides as follows (Comp. Stat. 1911, sec. 1755):

‘ ‘ To insert between section fourteen and the following a paragraph reading as follows: ‘All certificates issued by this board or previous boards shall be placed in any corresponding drug stores in which their respective possessors are employed.’ ”

[666]*666This act would require the petitioner to exhibit-a'license if he had obtained one;, but if' the- Legislature expressly authorized him to practice his. prof ess-ion he-would not need to exhibit a. license.

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48 P.R. 661, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quiros-santiago-v-board-of-pharmacy-prsupreme-1935.