Successors of Fantauzzi v. Municipal Assembly of Arroyo

30 P.R. 390
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedApril 28, 1922
DocketNo. 2558
StatusPublished

This text of 30 P.R. 390 (Successors of Fantauzzi v. Municipal Assembly of Arroyo) 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
Successors of Fantauzzi v. Municipal Assembly of Arroyo, 30 P.R. 390 (prsupreme 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolf

delivered the opinion of the court.

The Municipal Assembly of Arroyo passed an ordinance as follows:

“An Ordinance for imposing á special tax on every quintal of , sugar manufactured in the Municipality of Arroyo, P. R., and for other purposes.
[392]*392“Whereas, the Municipal Government of Arroyo, P. R., finds it -necessary to devise ways and means for developing a plan of public improvements and constructing buildings suitable for school purposes for the better development and protection of public instruction ;
“Therefore, be it resolved by the,,Municipal Assembly of Arroyo, P. R.:
“Section 1. — On and after the date on which this ordinance takes effect and during the remainder of the present sugar season of 1921 and subsequent seasons, a 'special lax of six cents on each quintal of siogar or fraction thereof is hereby levied and shall be collected by the municipal treasurer on all sugar manufactured in any sugar factory within this municipality. Provided, that the said tax shall be invariable while the market price of sugar does not exceed five dollars the quintal; but for each dollar or fraction of a dollar of increase above five dollars in the price of a quintal of sugar the said treasurer shall collect one and one-fourth cents additional.
“Section 2. — All factories engaged in the manufacture of sugar within the Municipality of Arroyo, P. R., shall present to the treasurer of this municipality within the first ten days of the month following that in which this ordinance takes effect and of each month thereafter until the termination of the present sugar season and subsequent seasons, exact statements of the number of quintals manufactured by each of them monthly.
“Section 3. — The statements referred to in the preceding section shall be made or presented under oath.
“Section 4. — The municipal treasurer of Arroyo, P. R., is hereby authorized, either personally or by any employee of his department, to investigate from time to time and ascertain whether the statements agree faithfully with the number of quintals of sugar manufactured by each factory.
“Section 5. — The money covered into the municipal treasury from these taxes shall be expended for public works and improvements. Provided, That fifty per cent of the total shall be used for the construction and enlargement of school buildings and one-tenth per cent shall be added to the ordinary municipal funds in order to increase the general items of expenses of the municipality.
“Section 6. — The council of administration of Arroyo, P. R., is hereby authorized to promulgate the necessary regulations for putting this ordinance into effect.
[393]*393“Section 7. — Any person, partnership, association or corporation who violates the provisions of this ordinance, or causes them to be violated, or attempts to evade them by false propaganda or malicious insinuations, or by any other unlawful means, or furnishes false statements for the collection of the tax created by this ordinance, shall be prosecuted and upon conyiction shall be fined not less than fifty dollars or imprisoned not less than fifteen days, or shall be both fined and imprisoned at the discretion of the court.
“Section 8. — All ordinances or resolutions in conflict with this ordinance are hereby repealed.
“Section 9. — This ordinance shall take effect as soon as it is approved and published in a newspaper of general circulation according to law.
“I certify that the foregoing ordinance was approved by the Municipal Assembly of Arroyo, P. R., by the affirmative vote of five of its members at its session of March 9, 1921, and that this is a true and exact copy of the original. I certify also that the said ordinance has been published in the newspaper called El Mundo. At the request of José M. Fantauzzi I issue this certified copy this first day of April, 1921, under the seal of this municipality. — Juan C. Davila, Secretary of the Assembly.' — Rodolfo Burgos, President.”

The appellants, complaining of this ordinance, made an application to the District Court of Guayáma for a writ of certiorari, which was issued. The petitioners set up, in substance, that they were a partnership and owners of a factory for manufacturing sugar known as the Central Lafayette; that the petitioners paid a license tax for the industry of manufacturing sugar; that the petitioners had paid taxes on $1,700,000, its volume of business, and are included in Group C of Act No. 26 of 1914, p. 176, laws of‘that year. Petitioners do not set forth that they are injured-by the ordinance, but this was assumed both by the petitioners and by the court in rendering judgment. The court, in its judgment of the 26th of July, 1921, declared the ordinance in effect, one paragraph excepted. This exception has no bearing on the questions raised.

This case, along with a number of others that we shall [394]*394consider contemporaneously, involves a right of the municipality to impose taxes by virtue of the Municipal Law, as amended by Act No. 9 of May 12, 1920, and particularly section 49 of that law, although section 26 is also applicable.

“Section 49. — That the municipal revenues shall consist of:
“(a) The revenues and proceeds from municipal property;
“(b) The proceeds of any tax on real and personal property in the municipal district levied under proper authorization of the Legislative Assembly; Provided, That such property is not exempt from taxation by the laws of the United States or by any law enacted by the Legislative Assembly;
“(c) Any' surcharge of the tax on taxable property of the municipality, provided it shall be so decided by two-thirds of the municipal assembly. Said surcharge shall not exceed one (1) per cent, computing therein any additional tax at present or hereafter authorized ;
“Said surcharge shall be devoted solely to the redemption of loans heretofore or hereafter contracted; to the development of ele-, mentary education; to the construction of municipal or intermu-nicipal roads, aqueducts, electric plants, sewerage systems, construction of hospitals, cemeteries, asylums for the aged and orphans, tuberculosis sanatoriums, asylums for the insane and reform schools, market places, and to paving, asphalting and planting of trees on streets; docks and bulkheads, school houses and houses for teachers, agricultural farms; houses for sale on long terms to workmen, the erection of villages, dikes to prevent inundations, public laundries, and buildings for municipal offices. Said ¿property sur-tax shall be collected by the Treasurer of Porto Rico, a certified copy of the ordinance adopted by the municipal assembly to serve as authorization for the purpose. This sur-tax shall be levied on the basis of the assessment made by the Department of Finance, for collection solely during the following fiscal year, except in cases of loans, when it shall be in force for the time necessary until payment of the principal and interest shall have been covered.

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30 P.R. 390, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/successors-of-fantauzzi-v-municipal-assembly-of-arroyo-prsupreme-1922.