Zorrilla v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico

95 P.R. 134
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 28, 1967
DocketNo. C-66-37
StatusPublished

This text of 95 P.R. 134 (Zorrilla v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico) 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
Zorrilla v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico, 95 P.R. 134 (prsupreme 1967).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dávila

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Superior Court, San Juan Part, decided that petitioners’ cause of action had prescribed. We agreed to review the judgment decreeing the prescription. We affirmed, deciding that the period of three years established by § 32 of the Minimum Wage Act, Act No. 96 of June 1956, 29 L.P.R.A. § 246d(a) is one of extinguishment.1 The complaint had been filed on May 13, 1964. The petitioners [135]*135ceased in their employment on or before May 13, 1961. We entered judgment dismissing the complaint because the action had prescribed. In our decision we stated that “This is so because since the year must be reckoned as of 365 days —a construction which we adopted in relation to the computation of prescription terms in Ortiz v. Am. Railroad Co., 62 P.R.R. 171, 177 (1943), ratified in Sánchez v. Cooperativa Azucarera, 66 P.R.R. 330 (1946) and Escalera v. Andino, 76 P.R.R. 251 (1954) — and inasmuch as 1964 was a leap year the term expired May 12 of said year.”

This judgment is dated March 11, 1965. Five months later, on August 11, petitioners’ counsel filed a motion in this Court stating that according to the decision in Escalera v. Andino, 76 P.R.R. 251 (1954), petitioners’ action had not prescribed. Precisely in Andino we stated that “Proceeding from the last provision of § 8 of our Civil Code providing that if the months comprised within the period are determinable as independent units, they shall be computed by the days which they respectively contain, and considering the application of the Gregorian four-year period to our country for leap years, we adopt the local rule that legal year shall consist of 365 days, provided it is not a leap year, and of 366 days if the month of February of a leap year is comprised within the period.” Since the month of February 1964 was comprised within the three-year period which petitioners had, starting as of May 13, 1961, date on which they ceased in their employment, to file their claim, the action filed on May 13, 1964, was timely filed.

The motion, of August 11, 1965, was filed under the provisions of Rule 49.2 of the Rules of Civil Procedure of 1958. In deciding it we considered “the same as a motion to set aside the judgment rendered in the Superior Court and as a petition for this Court to grant leave to the respondent court to grant a relief under Rule 49.2, which is inconsistent with the mandate sent March 25, 1965, and in view of the [136]*136decision' in Escalera v. Andino, 76 P.R.R. 251, the petition is granted and the Superior Court, San Juan Part, is authorized to consider on the merits the question in issue in said motion of August 11 which motion will be withdrawn from the record and sent to said court to be filed through the Office of the Clerk with the same date on which it was filed in this Court.”

The question having been considered, on March 4, 1966, by the Superior Court, San Juan Part, it decided that taking into consideration the rule established in Escalera the complaint was filed within the three-year period established by law. The employer appealed from this decision. He assigns several grounds for attacking the power of the Superior Court to set aside our judgment of March 11, 1965. All of them are frivolous except one, but the conclusion we have reached as to how to decide this appeal renders its consideration unnecessary. We refer to the one which raises the question that since the action was prosecuted by the special proceeding established by Act No. 2 of October 17, 1961, the applicátion of Rule 49.22 in its full extent is incom[137]*137patible because it is in conflict with the summary nature of the proceeding for the claim of wages. We need not discuss it since the order of December 14, 1965, constitutes the “law of the case.” In said order we passed on the motion filed by petitioners under Rule 49.2 applied in its full extent. In deciding the same we admitted its applicability and' granted the trial court leave to entertain the motion, in view of the decision in Escalera v. Andino, supra, as to how to compute the years when a leap year falls within a term. This order actually constitutes the “law of the case.” It is a well-settled rule that the determinations of an appellate court constitute the “law of the case” in all questions considered and decided, and generally they bind the trial court as well as the court which entered them, if the case returns for reconsideration. We say generally because it is accepted that “when a court becomes convinced that its déclared law of the case is erroneous and would work a grave injustice, it should have the power to-apply a different rule of law in the interest of getting the very case before it settled in a just manner.” IB Moore, Federal Practice 405, § 404 [1] (2d ed. 1965). Evidently that is not the situation in this case. Here justice is to apply the “law of the case.” Commonwealth v. Ocean Park Development Corporation, 79 P.R.R. 149, 163-164 (1956); Tartak [138]*138v. District Court and Cruz, Int., 74 P.R.R. 805, 814 (1953); Fernstein v. McGuire, 312 S.W.2d 20 (Mo. 1958); Hall v. First Nat. Bank of Atlanta, 81 S.E.2d 522 (Ga. 1954); Chamberlain Co. v. Allis-Chalmers Mfg. Co., 170 P.2d 85 (Cal. 1946). In City of Hastings v. Foxworthy, 63 N.W. 955 (Neb. 1895), a recital is made of the historical development of the doctrine. See also, the study which appears in IB Moore, Federal Practice, supra, and which starts on page 401, Law of the Case, 5 Stanford L. Rev. 751 (1953). The doctrine of the “law of the case” is a necessary and convenient statement of the accepted principle that adjudications must have finality.

For the reasons stated the writ issued should be quashed and the case remanded for the hearing of the complaint. .

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95 P.R. 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zorrilla-v-superior-court-of-puerto-rico-prsupreme-1967.