Banco Popular de Puerto Rico v. Superior Court
Banco Popular de Puerto Rico v. Superior Court
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Margarita Dominguez filed an ordinary complaint in the Superior Court, San Juan Part, against Banco Popular de Puerto Rico, alleging that on February 1, 1952 she rented an apartment for a dwelling on the third floor of building 258 San Justo Street, administered by the Bank, for a monthly rental of $50; that the defendant charged her a rent of $75
Banco Popular answered the complaint accepting that the plaintiff had paid a rent of $75 from February 1, 1952 to July 31,1955, but denied that the property had been rented as a dwelling and that any amount in excess of the maximum legal rent had been collected, claiming, on the contrary, that it had rented to the plaintiff “the commercial premises to which the complaint refers, for commercial or professional purposes and use, for a monthly rental of $75, authorized by the Office of Price Administration of Puerto Rico.” The Bank accepted that the plaintiff had requested the reimbursement of the rents allegedly overcharged, which it did not reimburse, 30 days having elapsed since said request was made. Finally, the defendant invoked as a defense that the action for treble damages was barred regarding any overcharge collected prior to November 10, 1954, pursuant to the provisions of § 8(h) of the Reasonable Rents Act. The complaint was filed in the Superior Court on November 10, 1955.
The case having been heard on its merits, the trial court rendered judgment on December 28, 1956 and decreed that the defendant Bank had charged the plaintiff $25 monthly in excess of the maximum price fixed for the afore-mentioned apartment as dwelling, but decided that the action for treble damages was barred regarding the overcharge collected prior to November 10, 1954, that is, prior to the year immediately preceding the day on which the complaint was interposed.
On February 26,1957, after the judgment had been satisfied by the Bank, the plaintiff filed a motion in the Superior Court, asking for a correction of the judgment. She claimed that there was an error in the said judgment because if the court decided that the plaintiff could claim treble damages only insofar as the overcharges included in the period of 9 months, not barred, it had decided that the plaintiff paid overcharges from February 1, 1952 until July 31, 1955, and that therefore, she could recover at the regular rate for the period between February 1, 1952 and October 1, 1954. The plaintiff argued that the Bank owed her, on that account, the additional sum of $825, that is, the overcharge collected each month during said period. On March 19, 1957 the court rendered an order (Correction of Judgment) stating the following:
“The plaintiff, in her motion holds that our judgment of December 28, 1956 should be corrected, in conformity with Rule 60 of the Rules of Civil Procedure, and order the defendant to reimburse the overcharge of $25 charged by it from February 1, 1952 until October 31, 1954, that is during 33 months.
“The plaintiff is correct.
“In our afore-mentioned judgment we concentrated our attention on the specific issue of triple damages; and, due to inadvertence, we made no 'provision regarding the overcharge of $25 a month, that is, (33 X 25.00=) $825.00, which was*239 collected by the defendant, ut supra, and was claimed by the plaintiff in her complaint of November 7, 1955.
“By virtue thereof, our judgment is amended in order to require the defendant to return to the plaintiff the aforesaid $825 charged in excess.” (Emphasis added.)
By reason of the proceedings had, on April 8, 1957 the judge himself set aside the aforesaid decision and afterwards, on August 23,1957, he entered an order reinstating the same. The defendant then asked him to make clear whether the decision of March 19, 1957, by virtue of which he corrected the original judgment of December 28, 1956, was effective or not as of September 6, 1957, when he received notice of the order of August 23, and the plaintiff having objected, the judge, on September 17, 1957, dismissed the aforesaid motion thus:
“If it were only a matter of correcting a judgment for excusable inadvertence in calculating mathematically a specific number of rentals to be reimbursed, we do not see how it is possible to regard the judgment prospectively, like a fresh judgment and consequently render its conclusiveness operative as of September 6, 1957.” (Emphasis of the Judge.)1
In order to review the order entered by the lower court on March 19, 1956, reinstated by that of August 23, in which the judgment is corrected granting plaintiff the additional sum of $825, we issued certiorari at the request of the Bank, which maintains before us that the afore-mentioned order is erroneous on the merits, and besides, that the trial court did not have any legal authority to render it. Logically, we should decide, in the first place, this last aspect of the case.
Section 8(a) of the Reasonable Rents Act (Act No. 464 of April 25, 1946, as amended by Act No. 421 of May 14, 1947, 17 L.P.R.A. § 188) provides that: “The landlord who charges or receives from his tenant an amount
According to the record, the plaintiff did not employ the' administrative remedy to obtain reimbursement, but in the light of subdivision (a) she directly required the defendant to refund the alleged excess. Thirty days having elapsed without the defendant having made the reimbursement, the plaintiff filed the action for three times the proceeds of the reimbursement pursuant to subdivision (d).
Undoubtedly, the trial court believed that it was correcting a mere inadvertence on its part regarding a mathematical' calculation of certain rentals to be returned. Such was its; belief, apart from expressing it, that its decision of September 17, 1957 rendered the correction of March 19 “nunc pro tunc” to the date of the original judgment. Nevertheless,, the situation was completely different as a question of law.
It is true that the complaint covered a claim for treble damages for the period from February 1, 1952 until July 31, 1955, and that the trial court stated that the action was barred regarding the rentals collected prior to November 1954, and rendered a judgment for treble damages only insofar as those rentals which were collected after that date
“In this case the Superior Court had before its consideration, as we do now, the direct review of the administrative order and not an action for liquidated damages. It is advisable to note that we are not deciding now nor anticipating any judgment, which shall be left for the proper occasion, as to whether or not under the provisions of paragraphs (a) and (6) of § 8 the tenant may claim judicially the simple reimbursement of the overcharges, or file the action for damages, whether or not he may claim the simple excess paid after the one-year limitation as a second cause of action, or whether, on the contrary, in case that the owner declines to return administratively, his sole relief is triple judicial reimbursement, but with the limitation provision.”2
Having explained the nature of the matter which was submitted to the trial court, let us examine its legal power in disposing of the same in the way it did.
Rule 60 of Civil Procedure (1943) which was in force on March 19, 1957, when the trial judge corrected the judgment, provided in its subdivision (a) that “clerical mistakes in judgments, orders, or other parts of the record and errors arising from oversight or omission” could be corrected by the court at any time of its own initiative upon previous-notice or on the motion of any party. — 32 L.P.R.A., App. R. 60 — We have seen that it was not a matter of a mere
We will examine then the situation in the light of subdivision (6) of Rule 60, which provides that on motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party
Pursuant to the procedural situation which prevailed here on March 19, 1957, and to the applicable doctrine, and plain
For the reasons previously stated, the decision rendered by the Superior Court, San Juan Part, on March 19, 1957, as it was reinstated by that of August 23 of said year, is hereby set aside and the case remanded to the trial court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Mr. Chief Justice Negrón Fernández did not participate in the discussion nor in the decision of this case.
The importance which this entailed for the defendant is that if the corrected judgment had a prospective effect as of September 6, 1957, it would have been entitled to the term of appeal.
As it will be observed later on, the decision of this case does not require either that we decide this question now.
Rule 49.1, identical to federal Rule 60(a) after the latter was amended in 1946, provides that in that whidh is relevant to mistakes in the forms of judgments, orders, or other parts of the record and errors therein arising from oversight or omission, may be corrected by the court at any time, of its own initiative, or on the motion ,of any party, and after such notice, if any, as the court orders. 32 L.P.R.A., Cum. Supp. (1959), R. 49.1.
In effect, Federal Rule 60(b), as it was enforced originally in September 16, 1938, and as it prevailed in 1943 when we adopted ours, provided that the court may relieve a party or his legal representative from a judgment, order, or proceeding taken against him through his mistake, inadvertence, etc. Rule 60 (b) which we adopted provided in an identical manner in its English text. 32 L.P.R.A. App., R. 60(b). In that part of the rule, the federal rule literally followed § 473 of the Code of Civil Procedure of California, and by its own text as well as by the case law of that state, it was always interpreted and applied in the sense that it referred to the error of the party, whether it was an error of
Nevertheless, since 1946 subdivision (b) of the federal rule was substantially modified by removing the words “taken against him” and “his” it being provided then that the court may relieve a party or his legal representative from a final judgment, order or proceeding for the following reasons: (1) mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect; (2) ... 28 TJSCA, R. 60(b), p. 310. For an extensive exposition, see Moore, op. cit., vol. 7, pp. 6 to 31 and 73 to 94.
By way of illustration and without it being understood that the Court is expressing its own view, it may be noted that in the light of the 1946 version of Federal Rule 60(6), which insofar as pertinent is equivalent to our Rule 49.2 since 1958, the situation would be as follows: In the report of 1945 of the Advisory Committee which prepared the amendments of 1946, 28 TJSCA Rules, p. 312, it was stated that the adjective pronoun “his” (ante, footnote 4) had been eliminated on the basis that it was too restrictive, and that subdivision (b) should include the mistake or negligence “of others” which may be likewise pertinent and call just as much for supervisory jurisdiction, as in those cases where the judgment is taken against the party through his mistake, inadvertence, etc. In the light of this report and the change effected, Moore states that relief can be had under this subdivision after the 1946 amendment, not only for the mistake of the moving party but also for the mistake, inadvertence, etc. of other parties to the action, the secretary, and even the court. — Vol. 7 at 230. — Further on, referring specifically to the relief against a judicial error (pp. 235 to 238), Moore asks himself if this extension of Rule 60(b) (1) authorizes relief from a substantive error of law by the court, and he is inclined to believe that the answer is in the affirmative, although
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.