Colonos de Caña de Santa Juana, Inc. v. Sugar Board
Colonos de Caña de Santa Juana, Inc. v. Sugar Board
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a petition filed by certain colonos under § 33 of the Sugar Act of Puerto Rico — Act No. 426, Laws of Puerto Rico, 1951 — to review that part of an order of the Sugar Board which holds that when Eastern Sugar Associates, the owner and operator of Central Santa Juana, takes physical possession of cane of colonos on the latter’s farms or immediately adjacent thereto, the central is not required under § 6 of Act No. 426 to furnish free hoisting services to the colonos on their farms or immediately adjacent thereto.
We agree with the Board that the Legislative Assembly did not intend to provide in § 6 that free hoisting service and personnel shall be supplied by the centrals to the colonos on their farms or immediately adjacent thereto. We held in Eastern Sugar Associates v. Sugar Board, No. 2, decided today, that under § 6 the controlling factor in determining the point of delivery, for purposes of free hoisting service, is where the central actually takes physical possession of the cane token the choice is between characterizing the mill or an intermediate site as the point of delivery. But in that situation the colono loads his cane and transports it himself, either all the way to the mill or to an intermediate point. When the colono transports the cane himself from his farm to the mill, there is really no need to require free hoisting service as the centrals always have operated — and in the nature of things always will operate — their own cranes at their mills. It follows that, in providing for free hoisting service in § 6, the Legislative Assembly was focusing its attention on the intermediate point — not on the mill except incidentally and certainly not on the colono’s farm' If a colono takes his cane to an intermediate point, it is neces
There is some force in the petitioners’ argument that § 6(a) provides that free hoisting service shall be supplied to all colonos “... at each point designated by the central for the delivery of cane.” But for the reasons stated herein, “all” in this context means all colonos who deliver their cane at intermediate points. We should, wherever possible, avoid an interpretation of a statute which would lead to an unreasonable result. Lozada v. Antonio Roig, Sucrs., 73 P.R.R. 255, 259; People v. Mantilla, 71 P.R.R. 35, 41, and cases cited. Here the Board rejected the petitioners’ contention that under § 6 the mills must furnish free hoisting service on the colonos’ farms and immediately adjacent thereto as “.. .completely unreasonable since it would impose on the respondents excessively burdensome obligations.”
The order of the Sugar Board will be affirmed with costs and expenses imposed on the petitioners pursuant to § 33 of Act No. 426.
Section 6 is set forth verbatim in footnote 1 of Eastern Sugar Associates v. Sugar Board, No. 2, decided today. The particular provision involved herein is the sentence reading as follows: “The central shall be bound to provide gratuitously to all its colonos hoisting service and the necessary personnel for the operation thereof at each point designated by the central for the delivery of cane.”
Colonos de Caña de Santa Juana, Inc., a non-profit association whose members are colonos of Santa Juana Central, was also one of the complainants before the Board and is also one of the petitioners here. The order of the Board, together with findings of fact, was entered after a hearing at which testimony was taken.
In Eastern Sugar Associates v. Sugar Board, No. 7, decided today by a per curiam opinion, we affirm that part of the order of the Board to which the central objected: (1) payment of per ton of cane under § 6 to certain colonos for transportation and hauling expenses; (2) furnishing-free hoisting service under § 6 to certain colonos who, like the colonos in Eastern Sugar Associates v. Sugar Board, No. 2, decided today, deliver their cane to the central after transporting it themselves to an intermediate point .between their farms and the- mill.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.