Padilla Díaz v. García de Quevedo
Padilla Díaz v. García de Quevedo
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Plaintiff sued for damages in the amount of $3,800. She 'obtained judgment for $600. The defendant appealed from this judgment, and has filed the necessary record on appeal, including the transcript of evidence. The plaintiff has also appealed. The defendant asks us in the motion before us to dismiss the plaintiff’s appeal on the ground that the latter has failed to file a transcript of the record in support of her appeal.
There is no right to prosecute an appeal in forma pauperis except as expressly authorized by statute. Such a statutory provision is found in an act approved March 10, 1904, Laws of Puerto Rico (Rev. Stat. 1911, §1281), as amended by Act No. 17, Laws of Puerto Rico, 1915. Section 5 of the Act approved March 10, 1904, after providing for the rate which the stenographer may charge for transcripts, reads as follows:
“. . . Provided, When such copy is requested on behalf of The People of Porto Rico or by a defendant in a criminal ease or his attorney, and where after conviction the defendant in a criminal, case shall satisfy the court'by affidavit or otherwise that he is unable, by reason of his poverty to pay for such copy so requested by him or his attorney, the stenographer shall issue such copy free of charge. And in all civil cases in which a party to an action shall file the required affidavit, showing his inability to pay the cost required by law, such person shall be entitled to the gratuitous services of the court stenographer on the same terms as .the same are given to indigent persons in criminal cases, and the fees of the stenographer*712 shall be included in the costs when the latter are imposed upon the party able to pay same. Such copy of the record shall constitute prima facie the minutes of the court and may be used on all motions for new trials, review, or appeal, when minutes of the court may be used.”.
This Section clearly requires an application to the lower court for an order requiring the stenographer to provide an indigent appellant with a copy of the transcript free of charge. Such an application has been invariably made in other cases considered by this court. Berríos v. Garáu, 44 P.R.R. 753; Aybar v. District Court, 48 P.R.R. 173.
We recognize the force of the plaintiff-appellant’s argument that the issuance of another copy of the same transcript would represent needless effort on the part of the stenographer. -But that difficulty could easily have been remedied by an order of the lower court that the transcript already filed by the defendant-appellant would also be considered as that of the plaintiff, provided the latter had made a satisfactory showing that she is unable to pay the cost required by law for the transcript. The plaintiff herein failed to move for a transcript and failed to allege and to prove that at the time she was seeking the transcript, she was indigent and could not pay the stenographer’s fees. In the absence of a finding by the lower court of such insolvency at that time and in the absence of an order of the lower court providing either (a) that the stenographer furnish the plaintiff with a free copy of the transcript or (b) that the plaintiff was entitled to use the transcript filed by the defendant for her appeal, the appeal of the plaintiff must be dismissed because she has failed to perfect it
The motion of the defendant to dismiss the appeal of the plaintiff will be granted.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.