Any violation or noncompliance with the requirements established above shall bring about the automatic revocation of the authorization, except when the permit or authorization has been recorded in the Property Registry of Puerto Rico, as authorized in § 64d-1 of this title. The expenses of dismantling or removing the access control facilities shall be the responsibility of and be defrayed by the residents and proprietors of the urbanization or community concerned who favored the control of the access.
Once the permit or authorization is registered in the Property Registry of Puerto Rico the authorization may not be revoked, but the municipality where the development of segregation is located may impose sanctions, if there is a municipal ordinance to such effects, on any natural or juridical person who is liable for violating or failing to comply with the requirements established above. When the permit or authorization has been requested by the urbanizer, developer or constructor, they shall be liable for such noncompliance or infractions as long as not more than sixty-five percent (65%) of the residences, lots or plots that make up the urbanization, subdivision or simple segregation, have been sold and delivered. When a council, board or residents’ association has been constituted, it shall be liable for noncompliance or infraction of the provisions of § 64c of this title and shall keep the access control under its authority, to administer and maintain it.
The municipal governments of Puerto Rico shall have the power to approve those municipal ordinances that are needed to sanction violations of the provisions of §§ 64-64h of this title or the regulations promulgated hereunder to a maximum of two hundred and fifty dollars ($250) for each violation. Each day that the same violation is committed shall be deemed as a separate violation.
History —May 20, 1987, No. 21, p. 63, § 5, renumbered as § 6 and amended on Aug. 10, 1988, No. 156, p. 669, § 7.