Valdés y Cobián v. Grahame

3 P.R. Fed. 417
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 7, 1908
DocketNo. 522
StatusPublished

This text of 3 P.R. Fed. 417 (Valdés y Cobián v. Grahame) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valdés y Cobián v. Grahame, 3 P.R. Fed. 417 (prd 1908).

Opinion

Rodey, Judge,

delivered the following opinion:

This is a suit in equity by which complainant seeks to enjoin-, the respondent, as commissioner of the interior of Porto Rico, from carrying out the instructions of the executive council of the island, to prevent the landing of the complainant’s ferryboats at San Juan, Porto Rico, as they have heretofore for many-years been accustomed to do, and asking that the court shall, decree that complainant is possessed of a franchise granted to-[419]*419bim by tbe King of Spain in the year 1881, which he alleges entitles him to continue landing his ferryboats at a particular place on the water front at San Juan, and to the use of 12 meters of space of the bulkhead at such place for such purpose.

The bill prays for a decree that neither the executive council of Porto Pico, nor any other authority, executive or legislative, can deprive him of his alleged vested rights under such alleged franchise, so long as he complies with the conditions imposed on him at the time it was granted; and further, that respondent be prevented from advising or permitting other craft to land at said same place, to the exclusive use of which complainant, by reason of the premises, claims he is entitled.

Allegations are made that such action is threatened, and an injunction, as is usual, pendente lite, to be made permanent after full hearing, is prayed for. The bill was filed on the 4th day of January, 1908. On the 8th of that month an amendment to the bill was filed, alleging, in substance, that, under an act of Congress of July, 1902, the President of the United States,, on June 30, 1903, issued a proclamation reserving to the government of the United States, for the purpose of the customs-house division of the Treasury Department of the United States, certain property and water frontage which included the frontage in question; and that, for such reason, the said landing place belongs to and can be controlled only by that government, and even then only subject to the rights of the complainant; and that therefore the insular government has nothing to do with the same. Several exhibits were filed with the bill with a view of showing the granting and existence of this alleged franchise and for the purpose of otherwise sustaining the allegations of the bill.

On that same day, January 8, 1908, a complete answer to the-[420]*420bill was filed, which in substance denies specifically that complainant ever obtained or now has any franchise of any kind or character, either to run a line of ferryboats or to land the same on the San Juan water front, as aforesaid, and denying any illegal action on the part of the executive council of Porto Pico, or on the part of the respondent, Grahame, as commissioner of the interior thereof, but, on the contrary, in substance alleging the legality of all the acts of both in that behalf; and further in substance alleging that complainant is not now and never has been possessed of any irrevocable or other franchise in the premises. The answer further sets out that the only right, if any, in this regard, which complainant is possessed of, is an ordinary permit, or revocable license, which the said executive council, as it is claimed, can, at any time it sees fit, revoke; and further alleging that any so-called right which complainant ever possessed, terminated with the change of sovereignty from Spain to the United States under the treaty of Paris. The answer then alleges that, if complainant ever possessed any franchise (which is denied), he has long since forfeited the same for failure to comply with the conditions thereof, and because of the alleged unsatisfactory and dangerous condition of the ferryboats in question; and further asserts the power of the insular government to, in any event, control the landing place in question, and regulate the landing of all craft thereat under its general police and other powers, and that it alone has power to grant public-ferry franchises, and regulate the same, and asserts that even if the complainant possesses any franchise, which, as stated, is denied, the government of Porto Rico under the law has full power to regulate and control, or to revoke and annul, the same, as it may deem proper. It further alleges that even though the ferry in question is across navigable waters of [421]*421the United States in the bay of San Juan, that still such ferrying is intrainsular and is essentially a local enterprise, between two local points on the island of Porto Eico. That it is therefore, under the law, entirely under the regulation police power and control of the local government. That the acts of the local government complained of are a legitimate exercise of the granted and inherent power which it possesses to provide for the public safety, which it alleges is threatened by the dangerous and unsanitary condition of complainant’s ferryboats, which, it claims, is shown by numerous affidavits and exhibits filed with the answer.

A rather extensive hearing was then had on the pleadings as thus far exhibited, and on the application for the temporary restraining order. The court, however, not being ready at that time to give the attention to the matter which its importance deserved, secured an agreement of counsel and the parties in open court, that matters should remain in statu quo, as though a restraining order ‘pendente lite had been issued, until the further order of the court.

On the 22d of January, the complainant filed a set of specific exceptions to all of those portions of the answer other than the mere denials of complainant’s allegations, which it is claimed set up mere legal conclusions as to the character of complainant’s rights, and as to the powers of the local government of Porto Eico and the respondent, the commissioner of the interior. Both at the hearing on the 8th of January and after the filing of these exceptions, additional briefs of the parties were filed and considerable proofs taken and exhibits introduced on the issues up to that time.

After examining the question for a short time, the court concluded that any decision it might render on the issues as [422]*422then made would he unsatisfactory to both sides; and hence, on the 7th of February, called counsel before it, and requested them to submit all the proofs on all the issues they expected to raise under the bill and the answer on the merits, so that the court might consider all of the same, or such parts as might be material, and take such action on the exceptions to the answer, and as to all the pleadings, as might be proper, and make its ruling thereon even nunc pro tunc as to the exceptions, if that should become necessary, and that the whole cause should be finally submitted on the merits, so that an appeal from the decision would lie to the Supreme Couft of the United States, with the right to either party believing himself or itself aggrieved, to give a supersedeas bond as is usual. To this proposition, after due argument in that behalf, counsel on both sides agreed, without, however, waiving any of their rights, but without objecting to the submission of the whole cause on the merits. The court thereupon entered an order setting out this agreement and fixing the 11th day of February for the submission of the final proof, which, on said day and the following days, was duly submitted. After which, arguments of counsel were heard and additional briefs were filed by each side. The cause is thus now finally submitted.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
3 P.R. Fed. 417, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valdes-y-cobian-v-grahame-prd-1908.