Sierra Núñez v. Construction Equipment Corp.

90 P.R. 136
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedFebruary 27, 1964
DocketNo. CE-63-13
StatusPublished

This text of 90 P.R. 136 (Sierra Núñez v. Construction Equipment Corp.) 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
Sierra Núñez v. Construction Equipment Corp., 90 P.R. 136 (prsupreme 1964).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hernández Matos

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On September 22, 1961, worker Ángel Sierra Núñez appeared in the District Court, Río Piedras Part, and filed a complaint against his employer, Construction Equipment Corporation in which, insofar as pertinent, he alleged:

“Second: That the above-entitled respondent is engaged in a profitable construction business in Puerto Rico, and contracted and used petitioner’s services from approximately February 1960 to August 1961 as transit mix operator, having paid him wages of $1.05 per hour during all that time.
“Third: That respondent owes petitioner the amount of $533 resulting from the difference in wages because it paid him wages lower than the minimum and failed to pay him at double time for the 15 minute coffee break during which he was compelled to work in violation of decrees Nos. 11 and 14.
“Fourth: That in addition to the aforestated amount petitioner claims from respondent an equal amount as penalty of law for the total amount of $1,066.”

In its answer respondent stated:

“It accepts the second paragraph of the complaint insofar as respondent paid petitioner a wage of $1.05 per hour, and that it used petitioner’s services from May 18, 1960 to August 22, 1961, and on the contrary, it alleges that the wage paid to said petitioner of $1.05 per hour conformed to the provisions of the law and particularly to the provisions of Mandatory Decree No. 36 of the Minimum Wage Board applicable to the stone, glass, and related products industry for the local trade of Puerto Rico. That in Art. II, § 8, subd. 5 ‘ready-mixed concrete’ is included. That said petitioner was a driver within the meaning of said Mandatory Decree No. 36 and he was only entitled to the minimum wage of $1.05 per hour which was paid to him.”

After a trial on the merits, on September 7, 1962, the District Court, Río Piedras Part, rendered judgment “dismissing the complaint.” The judgment was mainly grounded on the conclusion that respondent “was not engaged in the [139]*139construction business during the employment period in question and that petitioner was not an employee of the construction business as defined by Mandatory Decree No. 44 which covers the construction industry.” In its findings it also held that Mandatory Decree No. 36 was the one applicable to petitioner and that the same did not grant the 15 minute coffee break to which the complaint referred. Petitioner appealed.

On February 1, 1963 the Superior Court, San Juan Part, affirmed the decision of the district court in the following terms:

“The only question to decide is whether' the decree applicable in this case is Mandatory Decree No. 44 of September 6, 1960 or Mandatory Decree No. 36 of March 5, 1960.
“Ángel Sierra Núñez worked as driver of a truck belonging to defendant Construction Equipment Corporation in a ready-mixed concrete plant serving the Metropolitan Construction Corporation, builder of a public housing project.
“Defendant was not the builder of the project. It served ready-mixed concrete to the builder. Mandatory Decree No. 36, which comprises all the necessary operations or those related with the manufacture of ready-mixed concrete, is applicable to defendant.
“The error alleged was not committed. The judgment appealed from is affirmed.”

At the request of the worker, under the authority conferred upon us by §§ 7(a) and 14(d) of Act No. 11 of July 24, 1952 now in force, we issued a writ of certiorari to review the judgment of the Superior Court.

The commission of a single error is assigned: the improper application of Mandatory Decree No. 36 which governs the stone, glass, and related products industry approved by the Minimum Wage Board on November 29, 1957, as it was first revised in 1960.

After an examination of all the points raised and discussed, we decide that the worker-petitioner is correct in [140]*140maintaining that Mandatory Decree No. 44 is the one applicable in his case and his wage should be computed and paid, including the coffee break, according to said Decree No. 44, related to the construction industry of 1958, according to its first revision effective September 6, 1960, which fixes a minimum wage of $1.25 per hour of work.1

Let us turn to the decrees in question. The part of the definition offered by Decree No. 44 for the Construction Industry with which we are concerned is the following:

“The Construction Industry for the Local Trade shall comprise: without limitation, every act, process, operation, work or service necessary or incidental, or related to the designing, project, fabrication, reconstruction, alteration, repair, conservation or maintenance of buildings, works or constructions.” (Italics ours.)

Let us examine, on the other hand, the definition for the industry in question contained in Decree No. 36:

“The Stone, Glass and Related Products Industry comprises the mining, quarrying, or other extraction and the further processing of any mineral (other than clay, metal ores, chemical and fertilizer minerals, coal, petroleum, or natural gases). It shall also comprise the manufacture of products from such minerals, including, but without limitation, glass and glass products; dimension and cut stone; crushed stone, sand and gravel, abrasives ; lime, concrete, gypsum, mica, plaster and asbestos products; and the manufacture of products from bone, horn, ivory, shell and similar natural materials.
“Likewise it shall comprise any work or service necessary or related to the activities already mentioned.”

Petitioner’s work consisted in taking the truck to the manufacturing plant where he received the ready-mixed concrete and transported it to the construction site. It will [141]*141be noticed that when petitioner’s intervention starts in the place of operations the manufacture of the ready-mixed concrete has been completed, there remaining only its delivery to the construction enterprise. From the pertinent part of Decree No. 36 copied above, it shall be understood that the application thereof presupposes a manufacturing activity, that is, the exclusive manufacturing process of any of the products therein stated. It is confirmed by the following meaning prescribed by Decree No. 36 for the 5th classification of said industry:

“(5) Ready-Mixed, Concrete: Shall comprise all the operations necessary or related to the manufacture of ready-mixed concrete.” (Italics ours.)

The delivery of the ready-mixed concrete from the plant of manufacture to the, site of the construction is comprised in the definition of the construction industry provided by Mandatory Decree No. 44. It is an act, process, operation, work, or service necessary or related to the construction of buildings.

Other parts of said decrees lead us to the inevitable conclusion that the applicable decree is No. 44 and not No. 36, as the trial courts understood.

In the groups of occupations pointed out in Mandatory Decree No. 44 there is one designated “Group C” within which there appears the category designated as “transit mix operator.”2

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90 P.R. 136, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sierra-nunez-v-construction-equipment-corp-prsupreme-1964.