Saldaña v. Municipal Council

15 P.R. 36
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJanuary 22, 1909
DocketNo. 267
StatusPublished

This text of 15 P.R. 36 (Saldaña v. Municipal Council) 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
Saldaña v. Municipal Council, 15 P.R. 36 (prsupreme 1909).

Opinion

Me. Justice MacLeaet

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this case, the Chief Justice being absent, the four associate justices are equally divided in opinion, leaving the judgment of the district court to remain in force, as therein rendered.

This action was brought, in the District Court of San Juan, First Section, by the following citizens of the said capital [38]*38city of San Juan to wit: José E. Saldaña, Eduardo Villar, attorney in fact for Alejandro Villar, C. Fredericksen, Isidro Lniña, and Bamón Daubón, against tlie municipal council of San Juan and Antonio Pérez Pierret, seeking a decree of the said court to revoke and annul a resolution passed by the municipal council of San Juan which grants a privilege to Antonio Pérez Pierret to construct and erect a three-story building on the west side of the Municipal Theater, as an annex thereto, situated at the junction of Tetuán Street and Allen Street, having its main front on Plaza Colón, in the said city of San Juan, and contract made by virtue and authority of said resolution, and also praying that a temporary injunction might issue against the defendants, the municipal council of San Juan and Antonio Pérez Pierret, restraining them from proceeding with the construction of the said building, and that the court should finally order the demolition of said structure, and that the sidewalk abutting on the west side of the theater, upon which said annex is being erected should be restored to the same condition in which it was before said license was granted to defendant Pierret.

The complaint alleged, among other things, substantially that on the 14th day of December, 1907, Antonio Pérez Pierret entered into a contract with the municipal council of San Juan to erect, without cost to the said city, a three-story annex building and cafe restaurant on the west side of the Municipal Theater Building, on Tetuán Street, according to plans and specifications approved by the Department of Public Works; that immediately upon the completion of said annex and cafe, Pierret was required by the terms -of said contract, to transfer said building and cafe, by deed of conveyance, to the said city of San Juan; and in consideration for said transfer the said Pierret was to have the free use of said building and cafe, for the exclusive purpose of operating a restaurant therein, for the period of'25 years from the date of the delivery of said building by him to the city of San Juan.

[39]*39And further, that the annex which Pierret was constructing under and by the authority of said agreement, with the municipal council of San Juan, is on the west side of the municipal Theater Building upon the sidewalk that had theretofore formed a part of Tetuán Street between the roadway of the street and the said theater building.

And further, that the said sidewalk and the ground upon which Pierret was constructing said building has been previously used for many years, or from time immemorial, as a public highway for public use, and forms part of Tetuán Street, and had theretofore been used for the convenience of the public and all persons who attended the theater, thereby providing ample space for entrance thereto and exit therefrom.

The complaint further alleged that plaintiff, José E. Salda-ña, was the owner of house No. 89 situated on Allen Street in the said city, with the front doors, windows and rooms facing-on Tetuán Street and directly in front of the sidewalk upon with the building heretofore mentioned was being erected; and that plaintiff Alejandro Villar was the owner of the house situated on Tetuán Street in said city that is contiguous with or next to the Municipal Theater Building, being in a southwestern direction therefrom — that is to say, that after the end of the sidewalk of the theater ceases the sidewalk fronting the house of the plaintiff begins — and that plaintiff, C. Frederick-sen was the owner of the house No. 74 situated on Tetuán Street in said city, adjoining the house owned by Saldaña and directly, in front of the Municipal Theater and the proposed annex which is being constructed adjoining to said theater; and that plaintiff, José Antonio Daubón, was the owner of house No. 94, situated in front of the Municipal Theater, on the west side, and forms the corner with Plaza Colón; and that the land upon which the said annex building is being erected was, prior to the said construction, in the same condition as all the other sidewalks in the said city of San Juan.

[40]*40The complainants made a special application for an injunction, pending the suit, reiterating the facts set forth in the complaint and especially setting forth the illegality of the ordinance granting the concession and the great injustice that would result therefrom.

The trial court granted an injunction, to be issued after filing the required bond, temporarily restraining the defendant, Pierret, from continuing to build the annex, and in like manner restraining the other defendant, the municipality of San Juan, from proceeding under the contract; whereupon, from this order both defendants took an appeal to this Supreme Court.

In this court the citjr council of San Juan and the defendant, Pierret, appear as appellants, by their respective counsel, and propound five propositions on which they claim a reversal of the judgment. These will be considered in their order.

1. Appellants claim a want of jurisdiction in the trial court of the subject matter which forms the basis of this suit, contending that it is indisputable that the resolutions of the municipal council have the character of laws and they have the same-value and equal efficacy as those laws which emanate or proceed from the legislative assembly, and that the court has no jurisdiction to declare their nullity unless there is a previous litigation instituted between the parties in which these resolutions appear in conflict with other laws or constitutional provisions. It is further claimed that it is the function of courts to adjudge cases pending between parties of whom one claims a right which is denied by the other, and that it is always necessary that a controversy should exist in which one refuses to recognize rights which the other claims, the same being a controversy which involves one or some of the questions which are submitted to the decision of the tribunal. Appellants cite in support of this proposition the opinion of this court in the case of the Property Owners’ League v. Municipal Council of San Juan, (12 P. R. Rep., 346) involving the validity of a municipal ordinance.

[41]*41The case at bar differs very materially from that pending between the Property Owners ’ League and the municipal council of San Juan, because in that case the suit was brought directly in the district court to annul an ordinance passed, regulating the disposition of garbage by the proprietors of houses and the occupants thereof, and providing means by which such garbage should be disposed of. The object of said ordinance being to promote the public health and to prevent the spread of disease in the city.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 P.R. 36, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/saldana-v-municipal-council-prsupreme-1909.