Court Opinion

ID: 8522501
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 10:52:20.580905+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:51:33.259274
License: Public Domain

Mb. Chief Justice Quiñones
delivered the opinion of the court.
Attorneys Francis TI. Dexter, Juan Vías Ochoteco and José Hernández Usera, on behalf of Maria Rios, widow of Rubio, filed a petition in this Supreme Court for a writ of prohibition commanding Charles E. Foote, judge of the District Court of Humacao; Enrique Rincón, clerk of the same; and Attorney Rafael López Landrón to cease the prosecution, until further order .of the Supreme Court, of the proceedings instituted in said district court by the said Rafael López Lan-drón, for the recovery by compulsory process under the former law of civil procedure, of an account for fees earned by said attorney, as counsel for the Estate of Bustelo, in the proceedings prosecuted against it and Petronila Patricia Rios de Noya by Maria1 Rios, widow of Rubio, relating to the administration of property, in which proceedings this Supreme Court rendered judgment on December 24, 1904 (7 P. R. Rep., p. 584), affirming that of the lower court, with the costs of the appeal against the plaintiff, Maria Rios, widow of Rubio.
The writ of prohibition prayed for having issued and a day having been set for the hearing upon the application, such hearing was had with the attendance1 of the parties, each alleging, what he deemed proper.
The petitioners allege that the former Law of Civil Procedure having been repealed by the new Code of Civil Procedure which went into effect on July 1, 1904, the procedure established by the old law for the recovery of costs and counsel fees should also be understood as repealed since said date and substituted by the procedure 'established by the new Code, and, consequently, that the judge of the District Court of Humacao was without jurisdiction to order that the fees of *503Attorney López Landrón should be collected under the old laws of procedure which had already been repealed.
But it appears to us that this reasoning is wrong. The Humacao judge may have erred in adopting the old procedure instead of the modern procedure to enforce payment of the fees of Attorney López Landrón; but it could not be deduced therefrom that he lacked jurisdiction in the matter, which neither by reason of the subject nor of the persons ceases to be under his jurisdiction as was the principal matter from which the incidental question arose. It is a general rule that a judge who is of competent jurisdiction to take cognizance of an action is also competent to take cognizance of the execution of the judgment rendered in such action, and, consequently, to take cognizance of any incidental issue which may arise in connection with the execution of the judgment rendered.
The Act of March 10, 1904, authorizing writs of prohibition, defines such writ to be a writ issued by a superior court directed to the judge and parties to a suit in an inferior court, commanding them to cease from the prosecution of the same, upon a suggestion that the cause originally, or some collateral matter arising therein, does not belong to that jurisdiction, but to the cognizance of some other court; and as this is not under discussion now, but whether the judge of Humacao has erred in the prosecution of the proceedings for the recovery of the fees of Attorney López Landrón, by following the old instead of the modern procedure, we find that from this point of view the writ of prohibition sought by the petitioners does not lie.
Aside from this which appears to us beyond doubt, and passing to the main issue involved in this appeal, we find that this Supreme Court has, already established precedents in the matter.
By decisions of December 24, 1904 (7 P. R. Rep., p. 584), and February 19, 1906, rendered respectively in the cases of María Rios, widow of Rubio, v. Petronila Patricia Rios de *504Noy a and the Estate of Bustelo, involving the administration of property, which is exactly the matter from which appeal under consideration is derived, and in the case of Sobrino de Portilla v. Nicolas Quiñones Cabezudo (ante, p. 185) for the recovery of a sum of money, this Supreme Court held that the new Code of Civil Procedure having gone into effect on July 1, 1904, both the fees of counsel earned prior to that date and the costs incurred previous thereto, should be collected under the procedure established in articles 420 et seq. of the old law of procedure, as against those earned and incurred subsequently to said date, which were to conform to the provisions of the new Code of Civil Procedure; and as there is no plausible reason to modify this doctrine in this case, because no legal right is annulled thereby in this case, inasmuch as this court has already held as a ground for its doctrine, that the new Code of Civil Procedure cannot be applied to acts performed under the old law of procedure, because laws cannot have a retroactive effect, unless they should expressly provide otherwise; and because in any case if the petitioner had any objection to make to the account for fees presented by Attorney López Landrón, she’ had a right to do so at the incidental proceedings opposing the same which she had already instituted prior to thp filing of this petition, as appears from the order of Judge Foote, directing the reference of the matter to Messrs. Rossy and Texidor, whom he appointed experts to settle the objection made by the said widow of Rubio; for all these reasons, the undersigned is of the opinion that the application of Maria, widow of Rubio, should be denied,- with, the costs against the petitioner.

Dismissed.

Justices Hernández, MacLeary and Wolf concurred.