dissenting.
San Juan, Puerto Rico, June 6, 1968
I dissent from the majority conclusion to the effect that it was not proper to dismiss the counterclaim against the municipality because it was filed beyond the period prescribed by § 96 of the Municipal Law of 1960 (21 L.P.R.A. § 1603). My reasons for dissenting are the following:
(1) The record of the case reveals that the accident occurred on July 14, 1964. The municipality’s complaint was *176filed on September 9, 1964. The appellant requested an extension of 15 days to answer it, on September 25, 1964, because he “had to make certain investigations to be able to make the corresponding allegations correctly.” Instead of acting within said extension, appellant filed his answer and counterclaim on October 23, 1964, that is, 101 days after the accident occurred. The counterclaimant had, therefore, 33 days from the time the municipality’s complaint was filed to the end of the period, for the aggrieved party to serve notice on said municipality of the accident and of its damages, that is, he had ample opportunity to comply with the notice requirement of the aforementioned § 96 of the Municipal Law.
(2) Notwithstanding the purposes of the notice requirement set forth by the colleague Mr. Justice Blanco Lugo in the majority opinion in this case and in his opinion in Mangual v. Superior Court, 88 P.R.R. 475, 478 (1963), said Justice, in Mangual, supra, concluded that “in Puerto Rico, compliance with the notice requirement is a condition precedent of strict compliance” (Italics ours.) In accordance with this rule it is obvious that § 96 clearly limits said notice requirement to cases of accidents or other actions which cause injuries to the person or to another person’s property for which a municipality can be held liable, and that the aforesaid requirement only benefits the municipality which is sought to be held liable for the damages caused. Hence, in Rosario Quiñones v. Municipality of Ponce, 92 P.R.R. 571 (1965), we refused to apply said requirement to a suit for damages for the breach of a contract and in García v. Northern Assurance Co., 92 P.R.R. 236 (1965), we held that the requirement in question favors the municipality only, but not its insurance company.
(3) The notice requirement to which § 96 of the Municipal Law refers covers “all kinds of claims.” It does not contain any authority to extend the period of 90 days as *177does the act of New York, from which we adopted this legislation, nor does it contain authority to waive the notice requirement as is provided by the legislation in other jurisdictions. I understand it covers a counterclaim for the latter is but another manner of making a “claim” to the municipality and is governed by the same rules as a complaint. Bank of United States v. Frost, 255 N.Y.S. 763 (N.Y. 1932).
(4) The cases of Guzmán v. Industrial Commission, 85 P.R.R. 674 (1962) and Faulkner v. Nieves, 76 P.R.R. 407 (1954), are not applicable to the situation we are considering because, as Mr. Justice Blanco Lugo states in footnote 8 of his opinion in Mangual, supra, these cases “raise a different problem, since they involved notice requirements in connection with insurance policies in which the interpretation must be favorable to the insured.” See also, Cuebas v. P.R. & American Insurance Co., 85 P.R.R. 601 (1962); Pons v. Rivera, 85 P.R.R. 502 (1962).
(5) Only in exceptional cases have the courts concluded that the municipality is estopped, because of its conduct, from invoking the right of notice. They are the following:
(a) Tillman v. City of Pompano Beach, 100 So.2d 53 (Fla. 1957).
In this case the claimant sued the city for damages to his automobile. The act provided, as condition precedent to the maintenance of suit against thé city, written notice to the city commission or city manager within the 30 days after the receiving of the injury alleged. The plaintiff alleged that at the time of the accident the city manager and members of the city commission were in the immediate vicinity, they visited the scene, interrogated the plaintiff, and made a full investigation of the collision. Later the city manager discussed the matter with him, conceded the liability of the city, and only the question of the damages remained to be settled. Relying on that, the plaintiff did *178not serve notice on the municipality within the prescribed period.
The court decided that under those circumstances the city was estopped from invoking the defense.
However, the court states that they are conscious that the majority of the jurisdictions do not agree with that position, but that in view of the peculiar facts of the case it is more just to decide thus. Three of the seven judges of the court dissented.
(b) Phillips v. City of Abilene, 195 S.W.2d 147 (Texas 1946).
This case decides that the notice requirement is of strict compliance.
(c) Cawthorn v. City of Houston, 231 S.W. 701 (Texas 1921).
In this case, after the accident, plaintiff was visited by one of the city commissioners, and offered him a written instrument concerning plaintiff’s injuries and compensation, which the plaintiff signed. He was invited by said commissioner to appear before the commissioners with a view to adjusting and settling the claim; that they agreed to take up the plaintiff’s claim and would “see what could be done for himthat he believed that the city had waived the notice requirement. (Italics ours.)
The court analyzed the situation and reached the conclusion that in this case the municipality was estopped from invoking the defense. As to the question of waiver, it stated that since the statute does not prohibit waiver, the mayor or the commission can, if they so desire, waive the notice requirement.
The waiver, at law, is tantamount to refusing to voluntarily allege or defend a right which one has. The case does not decide whether, in accordance with the peculiar facts of this case, a waiver actually took place. It only decides that if the conduct of the municipality (city) was tantamount *179to giving plaintiff a certain amount of security, motivating him to believe that the municipality had waived the notice requirement and that a prudent and normal person would have believed the same thing under similar circumstances, then the city would be estopped from invoking the defense.
The peculiar facts to which the previous cases refer do not prevail in the case at bar, for on the contrary, the counter-claimant had ample opportunity and sufficient time to comply with' § 96 of the Municipal Law, notifying the municipality of the damages which the accident caused before the 90 days after it occurred, and before filing his counterclaim. Also, this doctrine of estoppel has been adopted only in a minority of the jurisdictions in which the notice requirement has been prescribed. Municipality — Notice of Injury — Waiver, 65 A.L.R.2d 1278.
In the case at bar, no municipal official made any representation to appellant indicating that the municipality admitted its liability, that there was no need to litigate, and that the question of damages would be attended to when the amount was determined. In Tillman (the court was divided four to three) it was concluded that the aggrieved party was induced by these representations not to serve notice. In the case at bar, on the contrary, the municipality eloquently demonstrated an adversative attitude in filing its complaint against appellant. Three of the seven judges in Tillman concluded that the city officials do not have the authority to bind it by way of waiver or estoppel to invoke a statutory defense. The circumstances in Cawthorn are very similar to those of Tillman and, therefore, are very different to those of the case at bar. Contrary to Tillman and Caw-thorn, the court of New York said in Rudolph v. New York, 77 N.Y.S.2d 788 (1947), that the purpose of the statute requiring notice of tort claims against municipality is to protect municipality against fraud arising out of stale claims and against the possible connivance of corrupt public officials; *180and therefore, the statutory requirements of notice cannot be waived.
(6) It is certain that we are at liberty to adopt those rules which are best adapted to our local situation. But the rule adopted by the great majority of the jurisdictions under similar circumstances, and by the jurisdiction from which our statute proceeds, must have a persuasive value for us.
Our § 96 was originated in § 50e of the General Municipal Law of New York, McKinney’s Consolidated Laws of New York, book 23, pp. 97-99, which expressly contains a provision which permits the courts to grant authority to serve notice even after the period of 90 days has expired after showing of just cause for the delay. It is significant that this paragraph was not incorporated to our Act.
Interpreting that provision, it has been decided in New York that the noncompliance with the notice requirement within the established period renders the claim dismissable for not alleging a cause of action. Its requirements cannot be waived. The notice has to be interpreted strictly in the sense that it is a condition precedent to be able to sue. Rudolph v. New York, supra. The municipal body’s or its officials’ knowledge of the damage, or facts, which are required to be established in the notice, does not preclude, nor can it be understood as being, a waiver of the notice requirement. Broome County v. Binghamton Taxicab, 75 N.Y.S.2d 423 (1947). See also, 40 New York Jurisprudence, §§ 1060-1077.
In New York, under § 50e of the General Municipal Law it has been decided that the fact that the municipality files the suit does not release a counterclaimant from the requirement notice. County of Nassau v. Wolfe, 273 N.Y.S.2d 984 (1966). Mr. Justice Blanco Lugo sustains that said case is distinguishable from the case at bar inasmuch as in the New York case the municipality filed the suit after the period *181had elapsed and that in the case at bar the suit was filed by the Municipality of Bayamón 52 days after the events.
We believe that in Wolfe, the circumstances warranted with more reason than in the case at bar, having estopped the municipality from invoking the defense of lack of notice, for the municipality waited for the period of notice to elapse to file its claim, and yet it was said that the counter-claimant was not released from notifying his claim within the period established by law. In the case at bar, on the contrary, the counterclaimant had ample opportunity, after the municipality’s complaint was filed within the prescribed period, for notifying the municipality of the damages caused by the accident in question, and he did not do so.
In the Broome County case, supra, the state filed the suit against the owner and driver of a vehicle. Both were counter-claimants against the municipality. It was dismissed because the notice they served on time did not comply with the requirements established in § 50e. It was said therein that the fact the claim is asserted by way of counterclaim is immaterial.
(7) Let us now consider the purposes for which the notice is required, and which are enumerated by Mr. Justice Blanco Lugo in Mangual, supra.
First purpose set forth: Investigation of the facts which give rise to the claim.
The fact that the claim contained in a compulsory counterclaim arises from the same event which originated the complaint of the opposing party, in this case the Municipality of Bayamón, does not necessarily imply that as a result thereof said opposing party has been able to investigate all the facts surrounding the claim alleged by way of counterclaim. The compulsory counterclaim may raise questions which make necessary further investigation, investigation of facts which possibly the plaintiff municipality did not have before it when it filed its suit.
*182' Second purpose: To discourage unfounded claims. The counterclaim is a pleading which sets forth a claim for relief, such as a complaint is. Rule 6.1 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. The counterclaim contains a claim against the opposing party. Rule 11.1 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. Therefore it is possible for a compulsory or permissible counterclaim to contain an unfounded claim. These unfounded claims are discouraged by the written notice previously served by the claimant in which he states date, place, cause, and nature of the damage, the amount of compensation or the type of remedy which is adequate for the damage suffered, the witnesses, the claimant’s address, and the place where he first received medical treatment.
Third purpose: To facilitate prompt settlement of the claims. This purpose would have been accomplished if the defendant-appellant had served the notice in question.
Fourth purpose: To permit the immediate inspection of the scene of the accident before conditions change.
It is reasonable to believe that said inspection was made by the plaintiff municipality as part of the search of evidence which supported its case.
Fifth purpose: To discover the names of persons who have knowledge of the facts and to interview them while their recollection is more trustworthy.
The opposing party can achieve this through interrogatories made to defendant-counterclaimant. Rule 30 of the Rules of Civil Procedure. The question is that in indicating the names of persons who have knowledge of the facts in the previous notice, the municipality has more time to prepare its defense and these persons have the events fresh in their mind.
Sixth purpose: To enable in due time to make the necessary reserve in the annual budget.
*183Seventh 'purpose: To minimize the amount of the damages sustained by prompt intervention offering proper medical treatment and providing hospitalization facilities to the injured party.
We have no doubt that these two last purposes would have been better and more effectively complied with if the municipality had received the required notice of the accident and of the damages sustained.
(8) The majority opinion sustains that the notice in question is not a jurisdictional requirement; that it is an essential element of plaintiff’s claim (the counterclaimant in the present case) which must be alleged and proven, but that the failure to allege and prove it must be raised as any other unprivileged defense; and finally, that such question cannot be raised for the first time on appeal as it was done in the present case.
Let us see the cases cited in support of this conclusion. .
Heck v. City of Knoxville, 88 N.W.2d 58 (Iowa 1958), involved a statute which provided that actions had to be filed within a fixed period, except those founded on injury to the person or property, which must be filed within three months after the cause of action arose, unless notice thereof is served upon the city within 60 days after the injury occurred. Said statute is clearly a statute of limitation, and therefore, the notice cannot be considered a jurisdictional requirement.
The cases of City of South Norfolk v. Bail, 47 S.E.2d 405 (Va. 1948) and Daniel v. City of Richmond, 100 S.E.2d 763 (Va. 1957) are pronouncements of the same court interpreting a statute which provides that “no action shall be maintained against a city for injury to any person or property' . . . unless the city is served notice thereof of the nature of the claim within 60 days after such causes of action shall have accrued.” (Italics ours.) These cases overruled the previous doctrine prevailing in the state of Virginia that the notice was a jurisdictional requirement because the court *184in Dail, supra, concluded that said doctrine was rigorous and unreasonable and should be modified.
In Hogan v. City of Beloit, 184 N.W. 687 (Wis. 1921), it was not decided that the requirement of said notice was not jurisdictional. On the contrary, in said case it was concluded that said requirement is a condition precedent to the commencement of the action, and if it is not complied with the action cannot prosper. The failure to comply with the notice requirement was alleged in this case by demurrer which was sustained.
On the contrary, in jurisdictions where a notice statute prevails in a language similar to § 96 of the Municipal Law, it has been said that a prescriptive period, within which the suit has to be filed, is not involved, but that the notice is a condition precedent to filing the suit, and that not alleging or proving that the notice was served is a fatal defect which can be adduced after the judgment. Galloway v. Winchester, 184 S.W.2d 890 (Ky. 1945); Thompson v. Charleston, 191 S.E. 547 (W. Va. 1937); Thompsons v. City of Chattanooga, 226 S.W. 184 (Tenn. 1920); Berry v. City of Helena, 182 Pac. 117 (Mont. 1919).
In the state of New York, from which we copied § 96 of the Municipal Law, its highest court has said that the statute’s language does not provide a mere defense to the city but it involves a condition precedent which prohibits every action until notice has been served; that it does not provide the city a defense which depends on being invoked but that it expressly prohibits the filing of any action until the preliminary notice requirement has been complied with. Said court also decided that the noneompliance with said requirement can be raised at any stage of the proceeding. Reinig v. City of Buffalo, 6 N.E. 792 (N.Y. 1886). See also, McLean v. City of Spirit Lake, 430 P.2d 670 (Idaho 1967).
From the foregoing it seems obvious that neither the language of § 96 of the Municipal Law nor its purpose are *185analogous to the defense of prescription of actions or of any other general or special defense subject to conditions subsequent to the filing of the cause of action, and which are susceptible of not being invoked and even of being expressly or impliedly waived. Under the assumption of the aforementioned § 96 in providing that “No judicial action may be instituted ... if notice thereof is not given . . the notice requirement is, undoubtedly, a condition precedent, an essential requirement, which if not complied with, the municipality cannot be made liable nor can any action against it be filed in the cases of claims for injuries to persons or property. Hence my conclusion, contrary to the majority opinion, that noncompliance with the notice requirement can be adduced for the first time on appeal, for it is necessarily a jurisdictional requirement.
In view of the foregoing, I believe that we should have affirmed the judgment of the trial court which dismissed the counterclaim in this case because it was filed after the period prescribed by § 96 of the Municipal Law had elapsed.