Buscaglia v. Tax Court of Puerto Rico
Buscaglia v. Tax Court of Puerto Rico
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
On July 14, 1947, for purposes of the property tax for 1947-48, the Treasurer sent Corporación dé Créditos e In-versiones a notice of assessment of its personal property, consisting of $20,000 of its stock. On October 16, 1947 the Treasurer sent the corporation a notice of imposition of a tax thereon in the amount of $434.
The Treasurer moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of jurisdiction on two grounds. Thereafter, it abandoned the first ground. The second ground was that the taxpayer had not paid* that part of the tax which it was willing to pay as required by § 309 of the Political Code, as amended by Act No. 222, Laws of Puerto Rico, 1942. The Tax Court overruled the motion to dismiss and a motion for reconsideration thereof. It then granted a series of motions of the Treasurer extending the latter’s time to plead or answer.
Before the last extension expired, the Treasurer filed a motion to dismiss the case as academic on the ground that pursuant to § 303 of the Political Code he had cancelled the notice of assessment of property dated July 14, 1947 and had issued a new notice of assessment and had notified the corporation of a property tax based on the new notice. After conducting a hearing on the motion, the Tax Court entered an order reciting that the Treasurer had failed to answer the complaint in time and that the motion to dismiss as academic was equivalent to consent to the prayer of the complaint. It therefore entered an order sustaining the complaint. We granted certiorari to review this order.
The Treasurer also urges us to hold that the Tax Court had no jurisdiction over the complaint because it shows on its face that the taxpayer had not paid that part of the tax which it was willing to pay as required by § 309. But once the Treasurer cancelled the original notice of assessment, the case became entirely academic, including the jurisdictional point the Treasurer pressed in the Tax Court and renews here. If the Treasurer desired a determination of this point, he should not have withdrawn the notice of assessment against which the suit was directed.
The order of the Tax Court will be reversed and a judgment will be entered dismissing the complaint as academic.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.