Ramón Sáez —a distinguished local from Navajas— informed Juan Antonio Torres Gascón —the former Official Chronicler of our town— about the existence of "stones with letters" on the edge of a small orchard with a fig tree, located opposite La Palanca —a low bridge that crossed the river to reach El Llano from the cemetery path—.
Juan Antonio, his sons —Juan Antonio and Michel— and his father —Teodoro Clemente Torres Villalba— worked together to find the fragments we have today.
Juan Antonio Torres and Vicente Villalba wrote several articles about this stone in the old Information and Culture Bulletin (now Cultural Yearbook). Helios Borja and Pilar Vañó also mention it in an article published in issue No. 22 of I.C.A.P.
Based on the reading of the text by archaeologist P. Vañó, it is deduced that this would become the Town Hall headquarters starting in the late 18th century, occupying the site of the former "Casa de la Señoría". It was built using "surplus funds" from a different budget allocation.