Ruiz Guardiola v. Sears Roebuck of Puerto Rico, Inc.

100 P.R. 816
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedSeptember 25, 1972
DocketNos. R-70-225, R-70-226
StatusPublished

This text of 100 P.R. 816 (Ruiz Guardiola v. Sears Roebuck of Puerto Rico, Inc.) 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
Ruiz Guardiola v. Sears Roebuck of Puerto Rico, Inc., 100 P.R. 816 (prsupreme 1972).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Martín

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff spouses,1 Arturo Ruiz Guardiola and Emma Luz Guardiola, filed an action before the Superior Court, San Juan Part, against defendants,2 Sears Roebuck of Puerto Rico, Inc. and against the latter’s employee, Luis Morales, claiming the payment of the damages which they allegedly sustained as a result of an automobile accident which occurred at the intersection of Highway No. 1 from Caguas to Río Piedras and Highway No. 176 of Cupey Ward of San Juan, on August 28, 1965.

The trial court sustained the claim of plaintiff-spouses, upon concluding that the accident was exclusively due to the guilt and negligence of the codefendant-driver Luis Morales, whose negligence was imputable to the other codefendant Sears Roebuck of Puerto Rico, Inc., who was said driver’s employer and owner of the vehicle which he was driving, upon hurling himself to cross a heavy traffic highway without taking the due precautions, especially not having any visibility to the left side; and in view of the fact that it was raining at the time and that the traffic was heavy. Consequently the trial court ordered defendant to pay the plaintiff-[818]*818spouses the following amounts for damages: medical expenses and medicines, $2,038.07; loss of income of plaintiff Emma Guardiola Ruiz during the 4 years and 1 month which elapsed from the date on which she quit working until the date on which judgment was rendered, $19,600; sufferings, pains, and anguishes of plaintiff Emma Guardiola Ruiz and her 50% physical disability, $25,000; suffering and mental anguish of plaintiff Arturo Ruiz Guardiola, $4,500, and $4,083 for the loss of the latter’s income. The claim of the sons of spouses Ruiz-Guardiola was dismissed because their causes of action had prescribed.3

Both parties have requested review against said judgment.

Plaintiffs assign as sole error the fact that the trial court did not grant any compensation whatsoever to plaintiff, Mrs. Ruiz, for the decrease of her earning capacity in view of the resulting 50% disability of her general physiological functions, despite having granted compensation for the loss of income until the date on which judgment was rendered.

Defendants, on their part, assign ten errors committed by the trial court. Three of them concern the determination of negligence, four of them to the amounts of compensation granted, another which involves that a previous and pre-existent condition of plaintiff-spouse was ignored (which in essence is directed to the determination of compensation), another as to the weighing of the collision between the two vehicles which they do not consider to have been sufficiently strong to cause the physical damage suffered by plaintiff, and, the last, resulting from the fact that the court denied a motion for reconsideration filed by defendants.

We agree with the trial court’s conclusion in the sense that the accident was exclusively due to the guilt and negli[819]*819gence of codefendant-driver while performing duties of his employment with codefendant Sears Roebuck of Puerto Rico, Inc.

We have previously decided that the signal to cross, whether through a mechanical device or from a police officer, is not a command to go, but a qualified permission to proceed according to the provisions of law, as a prudent man would do under such circumstances, which certainly requires to look to both sides before entering the intersection. Damiani v. Donatiu, 95 P.R.R. 809 (1968); Pereira v. Commonwealth, 91 P.R.R. 728 (1965); Briales Aldrich v. Torres, 89 P.R.R. 797 (1964). The errors assigned by defendants in relation to the determination of negligence or the weighing of the collision between the vehicles were not committed.

Let us discuss the challenge made by defendants as to the amount of the damages granted to plaintiffs.

Defendants first point out that the damages granted to Mrs. Ruiz Guardiola on account of the loss of income are speculative, unjust, and in conflict with the evidence presented. It should be clarified that the court did not grant damages to plaintiff for loss of income during the six months following the occurrence of the accident because she admitted that she continued working during that period of time. But it granted damages based on the subsequent 4 years and 1 month which elapsed until the day of the trial.

The specific circumstances of this case having been examined, we understand that the trial court, upon fixing the compensation for said loss of income of Mrs. Ruiz Guar-diola, should have taken into consideration the nature of the work which she carried out in view of her physical condition during said period of time that culminated with the date of the trial. Let us see:

It appears from the record that her work was a part-time job as pharmacist to which she devoted one or not more than four days each month. (Tr. Ev. p. 20.) (Italics ours.)

[820]*820In her testimony in the deposition taken September 26, 1968, plaintiff describes her job in the factory in the following manner:

“This gentleman [the owner] has a factory and he asked me to give my name . . . and is a part-time job very comfortable because I could do my chores and go once or twice, one or two days each month.'’ (Page 26.) (Italics ours.)
“. . . as soon as that stock decreased [the owner] gave me a call ‘At your best convenience.’ ” (Page 27.) (Italics ours.)
“. . . my duty was only to supervise while they manufactured.” (Page 28.) (Italics ours.)
“My job consisted in weighing the tragacanth, that is, the emulsifying agents . . . you pour in the tragacanth, you push a button and the electric beating vanes start to beat that product. After the product becomes incorporated, for about fifteen or twenty minutes, you pour the ipecacuanha tincture that’s the only thing it takes .... That was my duty and I sat down to wait for three hours in order to be able to manufacture. If I felt like going to the house of [the owners], I went there and had a cup of coffee with Mary [the owner’s wife], I kept her company....” (Pages 32, 33.) (Italics ours.)

Then, in her testimony during the trial, plaintiff stated the following:

“. . . my duty was limited to measure with a measuring-device fifty c.c. of fluid ipecacuanha extract, which is the drug that you have to measure, and take some weights; that I did not do it, I supervised what \two workers] weighed.” (Tr. Ev. p. 26.) (Italics ours.)
“. . . That factory is established in such a manner that everything is manipulated through keys . . . And I did not do that but two workers did it. . . .” (Tr. Ev. p. 26.) (Italics ours.)

Plaintiff, Mrs. Ruiz Guardiola, did not even have to drive an automobile to reach her place of work inasmuch as she did not know how to drive, and depended on her husband to take her to the factory. Said fact arises from her own testimony in the above-mentioned deposition at page 31:

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