1. To warrant reversal of a decision of the Supreme Court of
Puerto Rico on construction of local statutes the error must be
manifest; the interpretation must be inescapably wrong; the
decision must be patently erroneous. P.
308 U. S.
470.
2. The Circuit Court of Appeals erred in overruling the
following conclusions of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico,
construing Island statutes,
viz.,
(a) That under § 9 of Act No. 102, 1925, an uninsured
employer could have an award of the Workmen's Relief Commission
reviewed, including the issue whether or not he was insured. Pp.
308 U. S. 465,
308 U. S.
471.
Page 308 U. S. 464
(b) That in place of the provision of § 7 of that Act for
collection by the Attorney General of awards made against uninsured
employers, amendatory legislation had substituted collection by the
Treasurer. Pp.
308 U. S. 466,
308 U. S.
472.
(c) That the Treasurer had power of distraint. Pp.
308 U. S. 468,
308 U. S.
472.
102 F.2d 710 reversed; 52 P.R.Dec. 658; 53
id. 475,
affirmed.
Review by certiorari,
post, p. 538, of a judgment of
the Circuit Court of Appeals which reversed the Supreme Court of
Puerto Rico in a suit to enjoin the Treasurer of the Island from
enforcing by distraint orders of the Puerto Rico Workmen's Relief
Commission.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
Respondent brought this action in a Puerto Rico court to enjoin
the Treasurer of Puerto Rico from enforcing by distraint, orders of
the Puerto Rico Workmen's Relief Commission awarding compensation
for the death of each of three laborers while in the employ of
respondent. The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico interpreted the
Workmen's Accident Compensation Act of Puerto Rico [
Footnote 1] as not permitting such collateral
attack on orders of the Commission and affirmed a judgment
dismissing the bill. 52 D.P.R. 658, 53 D.P.R. 475. On appeal (43
Stat. 936), the Circuit Court of Appeals vacated that judgment and
remanded the cause with directions to issue the injunction.
Page 308 U. S. 465
102 F.2d 710. We granted certiorari, 308 U.S. 538, because of
the asserted violation by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the well
established rule that Puerto Rican tribunals must not be overruled
on their construction of local statutes in absence of "clear or
manifest error."
Bonet v. Yabucoa Sugar Co., 306 U.
S. 505,
306 U. S. 307
U.S. 613.
The theory underlying respondent's bill was that it was an
insured employer, and therefore the awards should have been said
out of the state fund, [
Footnote
2] and that its remedy at law was not adequate. The bill so
alleged, and attacked the orders of the Commission adjudging that
it was not an insured employer. The cause was submitted, without an
answer, on a stipulation which included,
inter alia, an
admission by petitioner of "the ultimate facts of the bill, except
the conclusions of fact or of law that it might contain." The
Supreme Court of Puerto Rico in effect treated this stipulation as
a demurrer and concluded that petitioner had not thereby admitted
that respondent was an insured employer. This seems to have been a
reasonable construction -- certainly not manifest error.
Treating the bill then as one brought by an uninsured employer,
the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico construed the Act on two points:
(1) the right of respondent to appeal; (2) the power of petitioner
to distrain.
Right to Appeal. It held that respondent had an
adequate remedy at law under § 9 of the Act which provided
that
"the employer may appeal from any decision of the commission
when such decision is to the effect that the accident is one for
which compensation is granted under this Act. [
Footnote 3]"
And it indicated that, on such appeal the
Page 308 U. S. 466
question of whether or not respondent was uninsured was among
the issues which could have been reviewed. [
Footnote 4] The Commission, however, had directed the
awards to the Attorney General on April 24, 1928, for collection
under § 7 of the Act, a section providing for collection of
awards against uninsured employers. [
Footnote 5] But eight years passed, and the Attorney
General made no attempt to collect. Respondent contended that it
did not appeal under § 9 since it was waiting to defend, on
the ground that it was insured, an action by the Attorney General
under § 7. And though a new method of collection of such
awards was created within a few months after these awards were
made, [
Footnote 6] respondent
contended that the new law, in providing
Page 308 U. S. 467
that pending litigation was not to be affected, [
Footnote 7] preserved its former opportunity
to defend under § 7. To this the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico
replied that the purpose of the saving clause in the new act
[
Footnote 8] was merely to
preserve the rights of workmen to compensation, not to make the new
procedure inapplicable to pending cases in contradiction to the
well settled rule that procedural statutes are immediately
applicable. It also added that, in any event, the procedure of
§ 7 had not survived the issuance of the order by the
Commission since by the 1935 amendment that procedure was to be
"followed in such litigations or claims, until their termination"
[
Footnote 9] -- the issuance of
the orders of the Commission having terminated the case within the
meaning of the amendment.
Page 308 U. S. 468
The Circuit Court of Appeals disagreed with this construction of
the Act. It held that § 9 gave an appeal only to insured
employers and that only § 7 provided for review of orders
issued against those who were uninsured. It said that, when §
9 stated that
"the employer may appeal from any decision of the commission
when such decision is to the effect that the accident is one for
which compensation is granted under this Act,"
it meant that only insured employers could appeal since the
compensation granted by the Act was payment out of the state fund.
[
Footnote 10] Hence, in its
view, the orders of the Commission here in question were "to the
effect" that the accident was not one for which compensation was
granted under the Act, since the Commission had adjudged respondent
to be uninsured. Consistently with that construction it held that
the remedy of an aggrieved uninsured employer was to defend any
suit brought under § 7. For, in its view, the procedure under
§ 7 was not abolished by the amendments, the issuance of the
orders of the Commission not having terminated the case within the
meaning of the saving clause quoted above. Accordingly, it held
that, unless petitioner were restrained from collecting the awards,
respondent would be deprived of its day in court.
Power of Petitioner to Distrain. The Supreme Court of
Puerto Rico concluded that petitioner had the power
Page 308 U. S. 469
to distrain by virtue of the amendments to the Act made
subsequent to the issuance of the orders of award. By the 1928
amendments, [
Footnote 11]
summary procedure was authorized for collection of a claim "as if
it were a tax levied on such property." § 25. Although that
phrase was eliminated by the 1935 amendments, § 15 of the
latter made such claims "liens preferred over any other charge or
lien for taxes or any other cause" with specified exceptions.
[
Footnote 12] The court held
that since, under both the 1928 and 1935 amendments, petitioner had
the duty to collect the claims, and since, under both, the claim
had the status or legal effect of a tax, the power to distrain
survived.
But the Circuit Court of Appeals disagreed with that conclusion.
It reasoned that petitioner had no power to collect in that manner,
since, by § 15 of the 1935 amendments, the person who was to
"determine" the amount of the claim and "certify its decision"
[
Footnote 13] to petitioner
was the Manager of the State Fund created under that law. [
Footnote 14] That person not being
the same as the Workmen's Relief Commission which had issued the
orders in question, § 15 was not operative as respects
respondent. This reasoning
Page 308 U. S. 470
was interwoven with the conclusion of that court that the new
procedure provided by the 1928 and 1935 amendments [
Footnote 15] did not reach back to touch
pending cases, a result contrary to the opinion of the Supreme
Court of Puerto Rico, as we have noted.
The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, on the other hand, did not
reach the precise point determinative of the power of the Manager
of the State Fund to certify an award of the former Workmen's
Relief Commission, apparently because it was tacitly admitted that
that power existed, [
Footnote
16] if the remedy provided by former § 7 had been
abolished. But however that may be, it did conclude that the Act,
as amended, though not clear, was designed to give the petitioner
power to distrain, and that the procedure followed was authorized
by law.
For over sixty years, this Court has consistently recognized the
deference due interpretations of local law by such local courts
unless they appeared to be clearly wrong. From
Sweeney v.
Lomme, 22 Wall. 208, to
Bonet v. Yabucoa Sugar
Co., supra, decided in 1939, repeated admonitions to that
effect have been given. That rule is founded on sound policy.
[
Footnote 17] As this
Court
Page 308 U. S. 471
recently stated,
"Orderly development of the government of Porto Rico as an
integral part of our governmental system is well served by a
careful and consistent adherence to the legislative and judicial
policy of deferring to the local procedure and tribunals of the
Island."
Bonet v. Yabucoa Sugar Co., supra, p.
306 U. S.
510.
We now repeat once more that admonition. And we add that mere
lip service to that rule is not enough. To reverse a judgment of a
Puerto Rican tribunal on such a local matter as the interpretation
of an act of the local legislature, it would not be sufficient if
we or the Circuit Court of Appeals merely disagreed with that
interpretation. Nor would it be enough that the Puerto Rican
tribunal chose what might seem, on appeal, to be the less
reasonable of two possible interpretations. And such judgment of
reversal would not be sustained here even though we felt that of
several possible interpretations that of the Circuit Court of
Appeals was the most reasonable one. For, to justify reversal in
such cases, the error must be clear or manifest; the interpretation
must be inescapably wrong; the decision must be patently
erroneous.
Measured by such a test, the judgment of the Supreme Court of
Puerto Rico should not have been reversed. In concluding that,
under § 9, an uninsured employer could have an award of the
Commission reviewed, including the issue of whether or not he was
insured, the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico did not take a patently
absurd position.
Page 308 U. S. 472
The most that can be said is that the contrary position is a
tenable one. In holding that the amendments substituted collection
by the petitioner for collection by the Attorney General even in
case of pending claims, that tribunal did not commit manifest
error. The conclusion that the latter procedure survived the
amendments is merely another possible view. And the decision of
that tribunal that the petitioner had the power to distrain
[
Footnote 18] cannot be said
to be inescapably wrong in view of the legislative design to leave
no hiatus in the statutory scheme as a result of cumulative
amendments. The contrary conclusion, though it might seem wholly
reasonable, would not warrant a reversal.
Intimations that respondent was not accorded due process of law
and that the question of whether or not it was insured was a
jurisdictional fact open to collateral attack are untenable.
According to the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, respondent had not
only an opportunity to be heard before the Commission, but also a
right of appeal. The fact that the period for review by appeal was
very limited, and that, on respondent's interpretation of the law,
its right to appeal was uncertain are immaterial. Here, as on other
aspects of this case, we cannot say that the conclusion of the
Supreme Court of Puerto Rico that, under this statute, the remedy
of respondent at law was adequate is obviously erroneous.
The judgment of the Circuit Court of Appeals is reversed, and
the judgment of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico is affirmed.
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE STONE did not participate in the consideration or
disposition of this case.
[
Footnote 1]
Act No. 102, 1925, as amended by Act No. 85, 1928 and Act No.
45, 1935.
[
Footnote 2]
As to the creation of that fund,
see §§ 11,
27 of Act No. 102, 1925.
[
Footnote 3]
Act No. 102, 1925, § 9. Thirty days were allowed for
perfecting the appeal.
Id. A comparable provision for
review is found in Act No. 85, 1928, § 15, where ten days were
allowed, and in Act No. 45, 1935, § 11, where fifteen days are
granted.
[
Footnote 4]
This point seems to have been first decided by the Supreme Court
of Puerto Rico on a writ of certiorari brought by respondent to
nullify the orders of the Commission here involved. The court held
that the writ did not lie, since it applied only to review the
actions of courts. 40 P.R. 456.
[
Footnote 5]
Sec. 7 of Act No. 102, 1925, provided in part:
"In the case of an accident to a laborer while working for an
employer who in violation of the law is uninsured, the Workmen's
Relief Commission shall determine proper compensation, plus
expenses incurred by it, and shall report the same to the Attorney
General for institution of proper action, in a court of competent
jurisdiction, against said employer to recover the aforesaid sum;
Provided, however, That the commission shall grant the
employer as well as the laborer in the case an opportunity to be
heard and to defend themselves, and shall conform, as far as
possible, to the practices observed by the courts of justice."
[
Footnote 6]
Act No. 85, 1928, became effective ninety days after its
approval on May 14, 1928. § 58. This Act, by § 7, created
an Industrial Commission to administer the Act. And, by § 25,
collection of claims against uninsured employers was provided as
follows:
"In case of an accident to a laborer while working for an
employer who in violation of the law is uninsured, the Industrial
Commission shall determine proper compensation, plus expenses
incurred by it, and shall certify its decision to the Treasurer of
Porto Rico who shall assess said compensation, plus expenses, on
the employer and collect them from him, and both such compensation
and such expenses shall constitute a lien on all the property of
said employer, with the same legal effect and priority as if it
were a tax levied on such property;
Provided, however,
That the Commissioner shall grant both the employer and the laborer
in the case an opportunity to be heard and to defend themselves,
and he shall conform, as far as possible, to the practices observed
by the district courts."
This procedure, according to the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico,
took the place of that provided by § 7 of the 1925 Act,
supra, note 5 by
reason of § 57, "all laws or parts of laws in conflict
herewith are hereby repealed."
On September 14, 1936, the Industrial Commission issued an order
requesting the petitioner to levy an attachment on properties of
respondent.
[
Footnote 7]
Act No. 85, 1928, § 48, provided: "The provisions of this
Act shall in no way affect pending litigation relative to workmen's
compensation under previous laws."
[
Footnote 8]
Act No. 45, 1935, § 34, also provided:
"The provisions of this Act shall in no way affect pending
litigations or claims relative to workmen's compensation under
previous laws. The procedure followed in such litigations or
claims, until their termination, shall be in accordance with the
laws in force on the date of the accident, and the workmen shall be
entitled to such sum of money as may be prescribed by said
laws."
[
Footnote 9]
Supra, note 8
[
Footnote 10]
The Circuit Court of Appeals referred to § 2 of the 1925
Act, which provided in part:
"This Act shall apply to every employer who employs any laborer
or employee whose wages do not exceed the sum of fifteen hundred
(1,500) dollars computed annually;
Provided, That pursuant
to the provisions of this Act, compensation shall be paid to
injured laborers who become disabled or who lose their lives
through accident originating from any act or function inherent in
their work or employment and occurring during the course of their
employment as a consequence thereof or from occupational diseases
or death due to such occupation contracted in any work performed by
administration under the direction of the Insular Government,
payable from the government trust fund."
[
Footnote 11]
Supra, note 6
[
Footnote 12]
Sec. 15 of Act No. 45, 1935, provided in part:
"In case of an accident to a workman or employee while working
for an employer who, in violation of law, is not insured, the
Manager of the State Fund shall determine the proper compensation
plus the expenses in the case, and shall certify its decision to
the Treasurer of Puerto Rico, who shall collect from the employer
such compensation and expenses, both of which shall constitute a
lien on all the property of the employer;
Provided, That
said compensation and expenses are hereby declared to be liens
preferred over any other charge or lien for taxes or any other
cause, with the exception of the mortgage credits, crop loans, and
property taxes on the encumbered property for three years and the
current year, burdening the property of the employer when it is
attached to secure the said compensation and expenses."
[
Footnote 13]
Supra, note
12
[
Footnote 14]
Act No. 45, 1935, § 6.
[
Footnote 15]
Supra, notes
6
12
[
Footnote 16]
In its motion for reconsideration, respondent stated:
"As taxes can be collected by distraint, it is clear that, under
the law of 1928, the compensations, which were given the same legal
priority and effect of taxes, could be collected by distraint. But
the Act of 1935 does not give them such legal effect or priority,
and only states that the Treasurer shall collect them. That being
the case, it shall be taken that he can only collect them by an
ordinary action."
[
Footnote 17]
In
Diaz v. Gonzalez, 261 U. S. 102,
261 U. S.
105-106, another Puerto Rico case, Mr. Justice Holmes
observed:
"This Court has stated many times the deference due to the
understanding of the local courts upon matters of purely local
concern. It is enough to cite
De Villanueva v. Villanueva,
239 U. S.
293,
239 U. S. 299;
Nadal v.
May, 233 U. S. 447,
233 U. S.
454. This is especially true in dealing with the
decisions of a Court inheriting and brought up in a different
system from that which prevails here. When we contemplate such a
system from the outside, it seems like a wall of stone, every part
even with all the others, except so far as our own local education
may lead us to see subordinations to which we are accustomed. But,
to one brought up within it, varying emphasis, tacit assumptions,
unwritten practices, a thousand influences gained only from life
may give to the different parts wholly new values that logic and
grammar never could have gotten from the books."
[
Footnote 18]
The Supreme Court of Puerto Rico also held that § 243 of
the Code of Civil Procedure, barring execution of a judgment for
the payment of money after five years from the date of its entry,
does not apply to orders of the Commission covering compensation
awards, a construction which does not seem to be manifest
error.