Rodríguez v. People

16 P.R. 537
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 17, 1910
DocketNo. 556
StatusPublished

This text of 16 P.R. 537 (Rodríguez v. People) 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
Rodríguez v. People, 16 P.R. 537 (prsupreme 1910).

Opinion

Me. Justice del Toko

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant, Juan Z. Rodriguez, brought an action in the District Court of San Juan against The People of Porto Rico for the recovery of 70,000 pesos, alleging in his complaint that in the year 1872 he had been appointed by the Governor General of Porto Rico a provisional notary of the town of Sabana Grande. On January 24, 1874, the Central Governemnt of the Republic of Spain confirmed the appointment and directed the issue in his favor of a certificate as a notary public of Sabana Grande. In April, 1880, he was appointed a notary of Yauco and continued in said office until 1894, when, by reason of exchange he was appointed a notary of Mayagiiez, which office he held until the year 1899, when he was appointed a notary of Arecibo..

In order to enter as notary in the town of Sabana Grande, he had been compelled to pay to the owner of said office alienated by the Crown of Spain, the sum of 7,000 pesos, and in addition, to the Public Treasury 3,000 pesetas, one-half the [539]*539officially estimated value of tlie office, 150 pesetas as tlie media anata tax, and 27 for tlie 18 per cent of the transportation to the Peninsula. In order to exchange with the notary at Mayagüez, he was further obliged to give him, in addition to the notarial office in Yanco, the sum of 5,000 pesos. -The notarial office in Mayagüez was appraised by the Audiencia of Porto Rico at the sum of 12,000 pesos.

In accordance with the law that guaranteed it, he exercised the notarial profession alone in Sabana Grande, in Yauco, in Mayagüez with Mariano Riera Palmer, and finally, in Arecibo, until the Legislative Assembly of Porto Rico, on January 31, 1901, decreed that “all lawyers, citizens of Porto Rico, in the exercise of their profession before the insular courts, may act as notaries without any limited territorial demarcation,” by which the former notaries, who had secured their offices for a valuable consideration, were deprived of the right to enjoy their notarial offices within their district to the exclusion of any other notdr'y.

The plaintiff further alleges that when this reform was adopted that no indemnity whatsoever was granted to the notaries who had acquired their notarial office for a valuable consideration, and that said notaries having made a petition to the Legislative Assembly of Porto Rico for indemnity for the damages they had suffered, in declaring the exercise of the notarial profession in Porto Rico to be free, in violation of the Treaty of Paris, inasmuch as their rights of ownership had been guaranteed by said treaty, had not been respected, the Assembly enacted a law on March 9,1905, creating a commission to investigate such claims, etc. This act not having been executed, the notaries again addressed the Assembly, and in the year 1907 the House of Delegates passed a joint resolu-lion appropriating the sum of $69,000 to indemnify the claimants for the losses suffered by them; and when said resolution was sent to the Executive Council, the latter resolved that the claim of the notaries was not worthy of the favorable [540]*540Consideration of the Legislature and that, if they had any legal right, their claims should be enforced through the courts.

And the plaintiff finally alleges in his complaint that the real value of the notarial office in Mayagüez was $25,000, and that the income lost by the plaintiff from January 31,1901, to the date of the complaint, amounts to $45,000.

The defendant appeared and alleged in the demurrer: (a) That the court did not have jurisdiction because The People of Porto Rico could not be sued without its consent, and (&) Because the facts stated were insufficient to constitute a cause of action, “inasmuch as the office of notary is not property and, consequently, is not guaranteed by the provisions of article 8 of the Treaty of Peace between Spain and the United States, because the right to 'engage in the notarial profession is dependent on a political law which terminated and the powers created by that law terminated with the change of sovereignty.”

And the District Court of San Juan rendered the judgment from which this appeal is taken.

“On March 19, 1910, in open court, this cause was called for hearing on the demurrer to the complaint, and both parties appeared through their attorneys, who read their allegations and made oral arguments in favor thereof. The same day the court made an order on motion of the plaintiff, granting him six days in which to amend the complaint with respect to the allegations relating to the jurisdiction of this court, under the penalty of entering judgment against the plaintiff if he should fail to do so.
“And the period allowed for the purpose having expired without ■the plaintiff having filed any amendment, the demurrer of the defendant, on the ground that the court lacked jurisdiction in this case, was sustained, and, consequently, said complaint is dismissed with the costs against the plaintiff. The secretary will strike out the assignment from the calendar and issue the proper writ of execution. Pronounced in open court March 31, 1910, and entered on that date. ’ ’

In the case of Rosaly v. The People of Porto Rico et al., decided June 14, 1910, this Supreme Court held that The [541]*541People of Porto Eico could loe sued without its previous consent, and this being the case we should, on this ground alone, reverse the judgment appealed from, inasmuch as our decision destroys the only reason the trial judge apparently had to render it.

But, as a matter of fact, that was not the only question raised in the district court and argued in the Supreme Court, and, furthermore, it has been held, “that an appellate court is not confined to the grounds adduced by the lower court in support of its decision, but may affirm a judgment on other grounds different from those of the lower court.” (3 Cyc., 221.)

In the case of Rosaly v. Graham (16 P. R. Rep., 156), decided March 11,1910, this court said: “If this Supreme Court arrives at the conclusion that a judgment is just and proper, it is not necessary to refer to the grounds which the trial judge may have set forth in his opinion; because even though such grounds were well taken, the judgment would be properly affirmed if the judgment was, as it is in this case, supported by the allegations and the evidence, and by the facts and the law. ’ ’

The respondent alleged in the district court, as we have stated above, that the complaint does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, “inasmuch as the office of notary is not property and, consequently, is not guaranteed by the provisions of article 8 of the Treaty of Peace between Spain and the United States; because the right to engage in the notarial profession is dependent on a political law which terminated, and the powers created by that law terminated with the change of sovereignty.”

The allegation of the defendant and respondent is clearly sustained by the authorities cited by him and especially, by the jurisprudence established by the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Sánchez v. The United States, decided February 21, 1910. In that case Mr. Justice Harlan, [542]*542in delivering the opinion of the court, expressed himself in the following terms:

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 P.R. 537, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodriguez-v-people-prsupreme-1910.