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Marrero-Garcia v. Irizarry

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1994-08-24
Citations: 33 F.3d 117
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19 Citing Cases

                  UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                      FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                           

No. 93-2098

                  FRANCISCA MARRERO-GARCIA, THE
                   OTHER PLAINTIFFS THAT APPEAR
                  IN ADDENDUM NUMBER I ATTACHED
                      TO THE COMPLAINT WHICH
                       NUMBER 367 PERSONS,

                     Plaintiffs - Appellants,

                                v.

                MARIA MARGARITA IRIZARRY, ENGINEER
                  AND EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR OF THE
                     PUERTO RICO ACUEDUCT AND
                 SEWAGE AUTHORITY IN HER PERSONAL
                  AND OFFICIAL CAPACITY, ET AL.,

                     Defendants - Appellees.

                                           

           APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                 FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO

       [Hon. Jaime Pieras, Jr., Senior U.S. District Judge]
                                                          

                                           

                              Before

                      Breyer,* Chief Judge,
                                          

               Torruella and Selya, Circuit Judges.
                                                  

                                           

     Jes s  Hern ndez S nchez,  with whom  Hern ndez S nchez  Law
                                                                 
Firm, Ariel  O. Caro P rez and Law Offices of Alvaro R. Calder n,
                                                                 
Jr., were on brief for appellants.
   

                    

*  Chief Judge Stephen Breyer heard oral argument in this matter,
but did not  participate in the drafting  or the issuance  of the
panel's  opinion.   The remaining  two panelists  therefore issue
this opinion pursuant to 28 U.S.C.   46(d).

     Georgiana S. Col n, with whom Edgardo Col n Arrar s, Goldman
                                                                 
Antonetti  C rdova &  Axtmayer,  Enrique J.  Mendoza-M ndez,  Law
                                                                 
Offices of  Enrique J. Mendoza  M ndez, Mirta E.  Rodr guez Mora,
                                                                
Department of  Justice, Federal  Litigation  Division, Manuel  E.
                                                                 
Izquierdo, Arturo Tr as, and Tr as, Acevedo & D az, were on brief
                                                  
for appellees.

                                           

                         August 24, 1994
                                           

                               -2-

          TORRUELLA,  Circuit Judge.  Plaintiffs-appellants are a
                                   

group of residents  of Condominium Bah a-A, located  at Calle Las

Palmas in Santurce, Puerto Rico ("the residents").  The residents

brought  this 42 U.S.C.    1983 action for  injunctive relief and

damages after the defendants-appellees, the Puerto Rico  Aqueduct

and Sewer  Authority ("PRASA") and its  officers, suspended water

services to the Condominium for a period of ten days.  Plaintiffs

allege  that by suspending water services, PRASA deprived them of

their property without due process of law.

          The district court  found that under the  circumstances

of this case,  the residents  did not have  a protected  property

interest in continued water service and, therefore, dismissed the

suit  on summary judgment.  This appeal  followed.  We affirm the

district court's decision.

                                I.

                        STANDARD OF REVIEW
                                          

          Federal  Rule  of Civil  Procedure  56(c)  provides for

entry  of  summary  judgment  when  "the pleadings,  depositions,

answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with

the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to

any  material fact  and  that the  moving  party is  entitled  to

judgment  as a  matter of law."   A  party opposing  a motion for

summary  judgment "must  set  forth specific  facts showing  that

there is a genuine issue for trial."  Fed. R. Civ. P. 56(e); Mack
                                                                 

v. Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea Co., 871 F.2d 179,  181 (1st Cir.
                                   

1989).

                               -3-

          We review a district  court's grant of summary judgment

de novo, viewing the  record in the light  most favorable to  the
       

nonmoving  party and  drawing  all reasonable  inferences in  the

nonmoving party's favor.   LeBlanc v. Great American Ins.  Co., 6
                                                              

F.3d  836, 841 (1st  Cir. 1993).   "[W]e must reverse  if we find

that issues of fact which were adequately raised below need to be

resolved  before the related legal issues can be decided."  Mack,
                                                                

871 F.2d at 181.

                               II.

                            BACKGROUND
                                      

          The  facts of this case  are set forth  in the district

court's opinion,  Garc a  v.  Irizarry,  829 F.  Supp.  523,  525
                                      

(D.P.R. 1993).  Here,  we quote only those facts relevant to this

appeal.

                Condominium Bah a-A (hereinafter "the
            Condominium")   is  a   234-unit  housing
            project  which  was originally  owned and
            developed    by   the    Corporaci n   de
            Renovaci n Urbana y Vivienda  ("CRUV"), a
            now-defunct public housing agency  of the
            Puerto Rican Government.  On November 11,
            1972, CRUV  opened  an account  with  the
            Puerto Rico Aqueduct and  Sewer Authority
            ("PRASA")  for  water and  sewer services
            for the Condominium.1  The  PRASA account
            served   all  of   the   units   of   the
            Condominium   through  a   single  meter.
            PRASA  thereafter  billed  and  collected
            from  CRUV for  water and  sewer services
            provided to the Condominium.

                In  early  1973,  ownership   of  the
            Condominium was passed to  its residents.

                    

1  PRASA  is the sole  provider of water  services within  Puerto
Rico.   It is a public  corporation created by virtue  of Law No.
33, of June 27, 1985, P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 27,   262 et seq.
                                                          

                               -4-

            A  Council of  Owners of  the Condominium
            Bah a-A  ("the Council")  was constituted
            to, among other  things, "administer  all
            phases  and  aspects" of  the Condominium
            including  "contract[ing]  all  necessary
            services."   On  February 14,  1973,  the
            Council and the Board of Directors of the
            Condominium  notified Banco  de Vivienda,
            the mortgagor of the property,  that they
            had  taken over the administration of the
            Condominium.

                [The  residents]  have  alleged  that
            when they purchased their properties from
            CRUV they  were  told, as  an  incentive,
            that CRUV  would continue to  pay for all
            water and  sewer services.  CRUV  in fact
            continued to  be billed  and  to pay  for
            these  services until October 1, 1981, at
            which time CRUV  requested to [sic] PRASA
            that  it  cancel  the  account   for  the
            Condominium.

                For almost four years after  the CRUV
            account for the Condominium was canceled,
            PRASA made no effort to  collect from the
            Condominium's  residents  for  water  and
            sewer services provided.   No explanation
            has been provided for this situation.  On
            July 12, 1985, PRASA requested in writing
            that the Condominium,  through its  Board
            of  Directors, place a bond with PRASA to
            register an account  in its name.   PRASA
            warned  that the  failure to  register an
            account could lead to suspension of water
            services.  On July  22, 1985, the Council
            answered PRASA's request  by refusing  to
            pay  for  any  water and  sewer  services
            unless  individual meters  were installed
            for  each of the apartments."  (citations
            omitted).

829 F. Supp. at 524-25.

          Between September  of 1985 and December  of 1989, PRASA

officials  had  several  meetings  with  representatives  of  the

Council  and at  least  one meeting  with  the residents  of  the

Condominium to  discuss the situation.   See id.  at 525.   PRASA
                                                

                               -5-

repeatedly "requested  that the  Condominium register  an account

and place the  required bond  for the water  and sewer  services.

PRASA proposed a plan whereby  the pending debt could be paid  in

installments.  The residents rejected PRASA's proposals and again

insisted on the installation of individual meters, to be paid for

by PRASA or CRUV."   Id. 
                        

                On July 24, 1990,  PRASA unilaterally
            opened  an  account   on  behalf  of  the
            Condominium  and  began  issuing  monthly
            bills.  The account was not requested  by
            the Condominium and  the Condominium  did
            not  place a  bond with  PRASA.   None of
            these bills were paid or  responded to in
            any  fashion  by  the  Condominium.    On
            April 3,    1991,   through    a   letter
            personally    delivered    to   Francisca
            Marrero, the  new President of  the Board
            of  Directors  of the  Condominium, PRASA
            requested  a payment  in  the  amount  of
            $448,872.08  for services  rendered under
            the  account.    PRASA  stated  that  the
            failure  to pay or  submit a proposal for
            payment would result in the suspension of
            the water services after 20 days.  A copy
            of the letter to Marrero was delivered to
            each  unit  along  with   another  letter
            urging  the residents  to take  action to
            avoid suspension of services.

                [The  residents]  have  alleged  that
            Marrero  requested  on several  occasions
            that  a  meeting  be  arranged  with  the
            Executive  Director  of PRASA,  defendant
            Mar a Margarita Irizarry, to  discuss the
            situation  and  that  her  requests  were
            refused.  [The residents] charge that the
            failure to grant the  requests for such a
            hearing violated their due process rights
            as established under Puerto Rico law.2

                    

2  Under  the Act  to Establish Procedural  Requirements for  the
Suspension of Essential Public Services, P.R.  Laws Ann. tit. 27,
  262, all public agencies providing essential services must have
an administrative  procedure for the suspension  of such services
for nonpayment.  PRASA is one  of the agencies which must  comply

                               -6-

                On April 24, 1991,  21 days after the
            delivery  of  the  Marrero letter,  water
            service to the Condominium was suspended.
            On  May  3, 1991,  after  the Condominium
            agreed to  place a bond in  the amount of
            $5,000.00 to cover current monthly bills,
            the service was  reinstated.  Two  months
            later,  PRASA filed  a  complaint in  the
            Superior Court  of  Puerto Rico  for  the
            collection  of the amounts owed for water
            and  sewer  services  since 1981.    This
            complaint  was  thereafter filed  seeking
            relief    based    on    the    allegedly
            unconstitutional  10-day  deprivation  of
            water and sewer services.

Id. at 525-26.
   

          The only  issue before the district  court was "whether

[the residents]  suffered a  deprivation of their  procedural due

process rights resulting from  PRASA's 10-day suspension of water

service  to the Condominium Bah a-A."  Id. at 527.   The district
                                          

court  stated that "[t]he  procedural due  process clause  of the

Fourteenth  Amendment   guarantees  citizens  with   a  protected

property  interest the right to  notice and an  opportunity to be

heard  prior to a deprivation of  such a property interest by the

government" and that "[a] threshold issue in this case is whether

[the residents] enjoyed a  protectable 'property' interest in the

water  service which  was suspended."   Id.   The  district court
                                           

                    

with this statute.   P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 2,    262a.  The statute
requires  that the  agency allow  a consumer,  upon receiving  an
adverse  decision by a  regional official within  the agency, the
opportunity to have  a hearing before  the executive director  of
the agency.   P.R. Laws  Ann. tit. 27,    262b(c); see  also P.R.
                                                            
Laws Ann. tit. 27,   262b(e)(if  such a hearing is requested, the
consumer must pay  an amount  equal to his  average monthly  bill
before the hearing is held).   In addition, at no time while such
administrative  procedures are  being  developed may  the  agency
suspend the service.  P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 27,   262b(d).

                               -7-

indicated that "if such  a property interest does not  exist, the

due  process clause provides no  protection."  Id.   Finding that
                                                  

"plaintiffs had no property interest in the continued  receipt of

water  services for  which they  never contracted,"  the district

court dismissed the case.  Id. at 529.
                              

                               III.

                            DISCUSSION
                                      

                   A.  Issues of Material Fact

          The  residents first  argue  that  this case  presented

unresolved issues  of material fact, which  rendered the district

court's  grant  of  summary  judgment   erroneous.    A  fact  is

"material"  when it has "the  potential to affect  the outcome of

the suit under  the applicable law."  Nereida-Gonz lez v. Tirado-
                                                                 

Delgado, 990  F.2d 701, 703 (1st Cir. 1993).  While this case may
       

present  unresolved   issues  of  fact,  we   disagree  with  the

residents'  contention that  these disputes  are material  to the

resolution  of this action.  In particular, the residents contend

that  a  determination  of  whether CRUV  owed  the  residents  a

contractual  duty to pay the  water services is  material to this

dispute.   The residents also  contend that the  issue of whether

the residents were "clandestine users" of the water  services was

an unresolved issue of material fact.

          We disagree  with the residents' conclusion  that these

matters  are material  to the  resolution of  this dispute.   The

existence  of  any contractual  agreement  between  CRUV and  the

residents  is irrelevant to the issue before us, that is, whether

                               -8-

at the  time PRASA disconnected the water  service, the residents

had a  protected property  interest in  the continued  receipt of

water services.   A determination  of whether the  residents were

"clandestine users" is also unnecessary to the resolution of this

case as  regardless  of whether  or  not they  were  "clandestine

users,"  they still have not claimed  any facts that, if taken as

true,  would establish that they  had a property  interest in the

continued service of water.  Other allegedly unresolved issues of

fact  raised by  the  residents are  equally  immaterial to  this

dispute.

                 B.  Protected Property Interest

          "The Fourteenth Amendment places procedural constraints

on the actions of government that work a deprivation of interests

enjoying the  stature of 'property' within the meaning of the Due

Process  Clause."  Memphis Light  Gas & Water  Division v. Craft,
                                                                

436 U.S. 1, 9 (1978).  In Board of Regents, the  Supreme Court of
                                          

the United States held that:

            To have a property interest in a benefit,
            a person  clearly must have more  than an
            abstract need for it.   He must have more
            than a unilateral expectation  of it.  He
            must, instead, have a legitimate claim of
            entitlement  to  it.  .  .  .    Property
            interests .  . .  are not created  by the
            Constitution.    Rather they  are created
            and  their  dimensions  are   defined  by
            existing rules or understanding that stem
            from an independent source such as state-
            law rules or  understandings that  secure
            certain benefits and that  support claims
            of entitlement to those benefits.

Board of Regents v. Roth, 408 U.S. 564, 577 (1972).
                        

          An interest becomes a  protected property interest when

                               -9-

recognized  by  state statute  or  a legal  contract,  express or

implied,  between the state agency and the  individual.  Id.  The
                                                            

residents  contend that  the district  court erred  in concluding

that  they "never  entered into  a contract  with PRASA,  for the

provision  of  water and  sewer services."    They argue  that an

implied contractual  arrangement existed  between  PRASA and  the

residents  by virtue of PRASA's  action of opening  an account on

behalf  of the residents, or in the alternative, as a consequence

of the provision  of water  services by PRASA  to plaintiffs  for

more than  20 years.   Plaintiffs do  not cite any  provisions of

Puerto  Rico  law  nor  any cases  to  support  their  position.3

Applying basic principles of contract law, we find their position

untenable.   Because Puerto Rico  is a civil  law jurisdiction we

also look to its substantive law to determine whether a different

outcome is forthcoming.

          Assuming,  for purposes  of this  appeal, that  PRASA's

action of opening an account and its continued rendition of water

services  to the  residents were  valid offers  to contract,  the

residents would still be  unable to establish the existence  of a

contract.   See Farnsworth at 135-136 ("One who begins to perform
                          

                    

3   In many jurisdictions  an offer does  not require formalities
and can  be made by  either written words  or other conduct.   E.
Allen Farnsworth,  Contracts    3.10, at 135  (2d ed.  1990).   A
                            
contract "implied in fact" is one that results from conduct alone
and  is distinguished  from an  "express" contract  which results
from  words.  Id.    3.10, at 135.   The residents in the present
                 
case  have  cited to  no  authority  establishing that  contracts
"implied  in fact" are valid  and binding under  Puerto Rico law.
See infra note 4.
         

                               -10-

services for another  in apparent expectation  of payment may  be

taken   to   be  offering   to   furnish   them  for   reasonable

compensation.").   Under  Puerto  Rico law,  the  consent of  the

contracting  parties  is an  essential  element  of a  contract.4

P.R. Laws  Ann., tit.  31,    3391.   "Consent  is  shown by  the

concurrence  of the  offer and  acceptance of  the thing  and the

cause which are to constitute the contract."  P.R. Laws Ann. tit.

31,    3401.     Hence,  an offer  standing  by  itself will  not

establish the presence of a binding contract.  Gonz lez Rodr guez
                                                                 

v. Fumero, 38 P.R.R. 497, 504,  507-08 (1928).  Rather, in  order
         

to have  a contract, acceptance must be made of that offer.  P.R.

Laws  Ann. tit. 31,    3401; see  also Jos  R.  V lez-Torres, Los
                                                                 

Contratos  at  45-47 (1986).     PRASA  repeatedly  requested the
         

Condominium  to place a  bond and to register  an account.  PRASA

also made  it  clear  to  the  residents  that  in  order  to  be

considered "registered users" with  PRASA, they had to  apply for

water   service  and  place   a  bond  in   accordance  with  the

requirements set  forth in  PRASA's rules  and regulations.   The

                    

4  Puerto Rico law establishes that:

          There is no  contract unless  the following  requisites
exist:

            (1)  The   consent  of   the  contracting
                 parties.
            (2)  A  definite object which  may be the
                 subject of the contract.
            (3)  The cause for  the obligation  which
                 may be established.

P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 31,   3391.

                               -11-

residents refused to do so, thereby rejecting PRASA's offer.  See
                                                                 

V lez-Torres  at 48-49  (an  acceptance should  be immediate  and

definitive,  should coincide in all its terms with the offer, and

should  be made  in  the manner  required  by the  offerer).   An

offeree's inaction or  "silence in the face of the  offer to sell

goods is not ordinarily an acceptance, because the offeror has no

reason to believe  from the  offeree's silence  that the  offeree

promises to  buy."  Farnsworth    3.15,  at 155; see  also V lez-
                                                          

Torres at 56-57 (silence  ordinarily cannot constitute acceptance

of an  offer); Coghlan  v. Starkey, 845  F.2d 566, 570  (5th Cir.
                                  

1988)  (neither the  mere receipt  of water  nor the  carrying of

plaintiff's  name   on  waterworks   rolls  as  user   created  a

contractual   relationship,  either  express  or  implied,  where

plaintiff refused to apply for water service).  

          The residents also argue  that the fact that PRASA  was

having meetings and conversations  with the residents in relation

to the  water  and sewer  services  being rendered  evidences  an

implied contract.   We disagree with  plaintiffs' contention that

those meetings suggested the existence of such a contract.  These

meetings  were merely  discussions or negotiations  regarding who

should pay for the installation of individual water meters in the

Condominium, whether the  residents were required to pay for past

services rendered, and conditions for future water  service.  See
                                                                 

Coghlan at  570  (negotiations  over backbill and  billing errors
       

alone could not establish the type of property interests required

to raise disconnection  of water  service to a  deprivation of  a

                               -12-

valuable property right).

          The  residents next  contend  that  the district  court

erred  in concluding that  Puerto Rico law did  not confer on the

residents a property interest in continued water service.

          We look  to Puerto  Rico statutes to  determine whether

Puerto Rico law conferred such a property interest.  See Coghlan,
                                                                

845 F.2d  at 569.    Plaintiffs argue  that  Section 159  of  the

Aqueduct and  Sewer Act of Puerto Rico, P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 22,  

141 et seq.,  establishes a property interest  in continued water
           

services.  Section  159 authorizes PRASA  to establish rules  and

regulations  concerning the  use  and conservation  of water  and

provides, in relevant part,  that the purpose for which  PRASA is

created is:

            that the health of the inhabitants of the
            Island  of Puerto Rico shall be attained,
            that the health of the inhabitants of the
            Island    shall  be  protected,  that the
            water  available shall be utilized in the
            fullest  measure  possible  and  that  it
            shall be made available to  the consumers
            with the greatest possible regularity and
            continuity.

P.R. Laws Ann. tit. 22,   159 (1989).

          The  residents contend that they are "consumers" within

the meaning  of Section  159 and  as such  have  a state  created

property  interest in regular and  continuous water services.  We

need  not  determine  whether  Section  159  creates  a  property

interest in consumers because  we do not believe that  plaintiffs

are "consumers."  The Aqueduct and Sewer Act  does not define the

term  "consumer."   Neither do  the  Regulations issued  by PRASA

                               -13-

provide  a  definition  of the  term.    The  residents have  not

proffered  any other  authoritative  interpretation  of the  term

"consumer"  which would  indicate they  were included  within the

meaning  of the word.   We interpret the  term "consumer" in this

context  to be  limited  to persons  who  pay or  otherwise  give

consideration for  goods or services  rendered.  We  believe this

interpretation is consistent with the common understanding of the

term.  It is also  consistent with a basic tenet of  the Aqueduct

and Sewer Authority, namely that "[t]he Authority shall render no

free Services."  P.R. Laws Ann.  tit. 22,   158.  In the  present

case,  the  residents  refused  to  comply  with  the  procedures

established by  PRASA that would  give them consumer  status with

respect  to PRASA.  They refused to  register an account, place a

bond  or  pay  for water  services.    Therefore,  they were  not

"consumers" as we interpret that term under Section 159.

          In the alternative, the residents contend that they are

"users"5  of the  aqueduct and  sewer services,  as that  term is

                    

5  In its definition section, the Regulations for Administrative-
Legal Procedures  of PRASA provides the  following definitions of
"users":

            User - Person who enjoys  the services of
            User
            aqueducts  and/or   sewer  including  any
            person  or entity  who discharges  in the
            sanitary system, whether said person is a
            subscriber or not.

            (a) Subscriber user -  Person who enjoys the aqueduct
                Subscriber user
            and  sewer services  registered  in the  name of  the
            Authority.
            (b)  Non-subscriber  user  -  Person  who enjoys  the
                 Non-subscriber  user
            aqueduct and sewer services registered in the name of
            another person.
            (c)  Clandestine user - Person who enjoys
                 Clandestine user

                               -14-

defined  in  PRASA  regulations  and  as  such,  have  a property

interest in continued  services.  The residents  have not pointed

to any  legal  authority  which  indicates that  "users"  have  a

property interest in water services.  Rather,the residents merely

argue that somehow PRASA's regulations defining "user" to include

"non-subscriber-users"  and  "clandestine-users"   give  them   a

property interest in water services.  They rely on the regulatory

definition of "Aqueduct Service" as "water supply for the benefit

of  a  subscriber  or user"  as  a  basis  for this  proposition.
                          

Regulation for Administrative-Legal Procedures of the Puerto Rico

Aqueducts and Sewer Authority, Chap. II (emphasis added).  

          The  residents  have cited  no  authority,  and we  are

unable to find any,  indicating that regulatory definitions alone

are  sufficient to establish  a property interest.   The relevant

case-law is  to the contrary  and suggests that  these regulatory

definitions cannot  establish a  constitutional right  to receive

water services.  See Coghlan, 845 F.2d at 570 n.3 (examination of
                            

charter  creating  waterworks  and  other  sub-statutory  sources

including regulatory  statements, for a  provision establishing a

right  to water services is unnecessary and improper);  Gorham v.
                                                              

Hutto, 667  F.2d 1146 (4th Cir.  1981) (administrative guidelines
     

are not a  sufficient basis  for the  creation of  a due  process

interest); Bills  v.  Henderson, 631  F.2d 1287  (6th Cir.  1980)
                               

                    

            the   aqueduct   and/or  sewer   services
            without being authorized for it.

Regulation for Administrative-Legal Procedures of the Puerto Rico
Aqueducts and Sewer Authority, Chap. II (1989).

                               -15-

(procedural rules  created by state administrative  bodies cannot

serve  as a  basis for  a separate  protected liberty  interest);

Sterling v. Maywood, 579  F.2d 1350, 1354 (7th Cir.  1978) (where
                   

"plaintiff has  neither a  contractual nor  a statutory basis  to

support her claim, . .  . [she] was not deprived of a due process

right by defendants [sic] termination of her water service").  We

therefore conclude  that the regulatory definitions  on which the

residents  rely do not provide  a sufficient basis  for finding a

property interest. 

          Finally, even  if the residents were  able to establish

that they  had a protected  property interest in  continued water

service, they were not deprived of due process.  The question  of

what  process is due is a question of federal constitutional law.

Cleveland  Brd. of Educ. v. Loudermill, 470 U.S. 532, 541 (1985).
                                      

Due  process  generally requires  "that  a  deprivation of  life,

liberty, or property  be preceded by  notice and opportunity  for

hearing  appropriate to  the  nature of  the case."   Id.  at 542
                                                         

(internal citation  and  quotations omitted).    "[T]o  determine

whether a constitutional violation  has occurred, it is necessary

to  ask what  process  the State  provided,  and whether  it  was

constitutionally adequate."  Zinermon v. Burch, 494 U.S. 113, 126
                                              

(1990).  

          First, we summarize the  procedures provided.  In 1986,

PRASA  began sending  the Board  of Directors of  the Condominium

notices warning that failure to  place a bond and to register  an

account on behalf of the Condominium could lead to the suspension

                               -16-

of water services.   PRASA officials also  met with the Board  of

Directors and  with the residents  of the Condominium  to discuss

the  situation and proposed a plan  whereby the Condominium could

pay  the pending debt in  installments.    The residents rejected

the proposed plan.  In 1990, PRASA unilaterally opened an account

on  behalf of  the Condominium  and began issuing  monthly bills.

The Condominium neither paid these bills nor responded to them in

any fashion.  On April 3, 1991,  PRASA  delivered a letter to the

President of the Board of Directors of the Condominium requesting

a payment  in the  amount  of $448,872.08  for services  rendered

under  the  account.   PRASA stated  that the  failure to  pay or

submit  a proposal for payments would result in the suspension of

water  services after  twenty days.   A  copy of  the  letter was

delivered to  each  unit along  with  another letter  urging  the

residents to take action to avoid the suspension of services.

          In determining the adequacy  of the procedures afforded

the residents we balance  the competing interests at stake.   Id.
                                                                 

These  are the  residents'  private interest  in continued  water

service, PRASA's  interest in receiving payment  for its services

and the avoidance of  administrative burdens, and the risk  of an

erroneous  deprivation  of  water   services.    See  Mathews  v.
                                                             

Eldridge,  424  U.S. 319,  335 (1976).    The receipt  of utility
        

services is a  necessity of  modern day life  and undoubtedly  an

important  interest,  however,    PRASA's interest  in  receiving

payment  for its  services  is also  significant.   It  would  be

unreasonable to expect PRASA  to continue providing free services

                               -17-

to the  residents indefinitely.  PRASA gave  the residents notice

on several occasions of its  intention to discontinue services if

the  residents  did   not  comply  with  PRASA's   administrative

requirements.    PRASA  officials  also held  meetings  with  the

residents and  the  Board of  Directors  of the  Condominium  and

discussed with  them alternative solutions to the problem.  Thus,

the residents were given notice of  PRASA's intended action, they

were informed of how  to resolve the situation and  given several

opportunities to be heard  on the matter.  We do  not see how any

additional  procedures  could  better  safeguard  the  residents'

interests so  as to justify the  additional administrative burden

of  such procedures.   We have no  doubt that the  residents were

given more than adequate due process.

          The  residents   were   not  entitled   to   additional

procedures  set forth in the Puerto Rico Act to Establish Minimum

Procedural Requirements  for the  Suspension of  Essential Public

Services  because  this  Act  affords such  protections  only  to

"subscribers" of utility services.   See P.R. Laws Ann.  tit. 27,
                                        

   262b(a),  262b(b), 262b(c), 262b(e), 262b(g)  and 262b(h); see
                                                                 

also  infra note  2. By failing  to contract  with PRASA  for the
           

provision of  water and sewer  services, the residents  failed to

achieve subscriber status.  The residents' failure to comply with

PRASA's  administrative  requirements  prevents  them   from  now

claiming  an entitlement  to  PRASA's administrative  procedures.

See United States v.  Charles George Trucking Co., 823  F.2d 685,
                                                 

690-91 (1st  Cir. 1987) ("A party who is aware of, and chooses to

                               -18-

ignore, an  available avenue for redress cannot  later be allowed

to characterize his refusal  to travel the road as  tantamount to

the  road being closed  -- or  to no  road being  in existence");

Coghlan, 845 F.2d at 569 (there is no support for the proposition
       

that  there is a  constitutional right to  receive utilities when

the  applicant refuses  to comply with  reasonable administrative

procedures) (internal quotation and citation omitted).

                     C.  Motion for Sanctions

          Defendants have asked this court to impose double costs

and  attorney's fees as a  sanction for pursuing  this action and

further filing this appeal.  Their request is denied.

          Affirmed.
                  

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