American Surety Co. of New York v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico

97 P.R. 440
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 18, 1969
DocketNo. O-69-16
StatusPublished

This text of 97 P.R. 440 (American Surety Co. of New York v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Surety Co. of New York v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico, 97 P.R. 440 (prsupreme 1969).

Opinion

Mr. .Justice. Blanco Lugo,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Petitioner, American Surety Company, of New York,- ass assignee of the sums owed, on account-of. work done by Inter American Builders, Inc., for the construction of Dos -Pinos Development and a. multipurpose building in Hato Rey, filed, on- April 26, 1962, an action for the recovery of money against, among others, the Teachers’ Association of Puerto Rico, owner of the works, and the contractor enterprises Southern Builders, Inc., Constructora de las Antillas, Inc., and its two affiliates, The Williams Co. and Constructors, Dos Pinos, Inc. Inter American Builders, Inc., had subcontracted part of the construction of both works. Four years later, on October 10, 1966, the trial court affirmed, in all its parts, an award rendered on June 1, 1965 by the arbitrators appointed to take cognizance of the different claims brought [442]*442in the action, as supplemented by the reports of September 16, 1965, March 29, 1966, and May 2, 1966.

By virtue of the aforementioned award it was established that the Teachers’ Association of Puerto Rico owed, from the contractual price, the total sum of $115,838.67, and that the subcontractor enterprises were bound to pay $78,093.82 to the American Surety Company of New York, as assignee of the subcontractor Inter American Builders, Inc. On June 8, 1967 the Teachers’ Association deposited the indicated sum “without prejudice of the right which the Commonwealth may have over this sum .. . .” It refers to three withholding orders rendered on July 8, 1965, to secure the effectiveness of judgment, in claims filed for the collection of income taxes, by which said entity was ordered to abstain from transferring, delivering or paying $8,000 to The Williams Co., Inc., $4,800 to Constructora de las Antillas, Inc., and $70,386.49 to Southern Builders, Inc., from the monies which could correspond to them by virtue of the arbitrator’s award.

On June 14, 1967, the American Surety Co. of New York requested by means of a motion the delivery of the sum of $78,093.82, balance in its favor, according to the award, to which the Commonwealth objected on the ground of an alleged preferred right derived from the withholding orders.

By means of an order of January 3, 1969, the trial court, applying provisions related to the concurrence and preference of credits, maintained that the State’s right had preference,1 and denied the withdrawal requested. It ignored the crucial [443]*443issue as to the nature of the act exercised by the American Surety Co. of New York pursuant to the provisions of § 1489 of the Civil Code, 31 L.P.R.A. § 4130. Upon doing so the trial court erred.

1. As an exception to the cardinal principle of the right of obligations on the effects of contracts — only between the executing parties and their heirs, § 1209 of the Civil Code, 31 L.P.R.A. § 3374 — in the cited § 1489 supra,2 it is consecrated that the workers and materialmen of a work agreed upon for a lump sum by a contractor have action against the owner for the amount the latter may owe the former when the action is brought. It is advisable to note immediately that it does not involve the action of an eminently subrogate nature which § 1064 of the Civil Code, 31 L.P.R.A. § 3028, recognizes to all creditors, and which by its own terms, presupposes the excussion of the debtor’s property.3 Public policy considerations — to propitiate the prompt payment to those who furnish their labor and materials in another’s work — and moral considerations — to avoid the enrichment of the owner or contractor by means of fraud or conspiracy— provide the justification of this action. C. Armstrong e Hijos v. Diaz, 95 P.R.R. 800, 805 (1968).4

Manresa, in his commentary about § 1597 of the Spanish Civil Code, which corresponds to § 1489 of the Puerto [444]*444Rican, states that “a direct action” is granted against the owner only for the amount which he may owe when the action is brought. However, he recognizes that laborers or materialmen have not been granted any privilege whatsoever, and that the action is subject to the vicissitudes which the contractor may make concerning the disposal of his credit. X Comentarios ql Código Civil Español 934-935 (5th ed. 1950). The Spanish doctrine is unanimous in describing the action which we are discussing as direct. XXIV Scaevola, Código Civil 136-150 (1915 ed.); IV-2 Puig Peña, Tratado de Derecho Civil Español 304; III Valverde, Tratado de Derecho Civil Español 599-600 (4th ed. 1937); II De .Diego, Instituciones de Derecho Civil Español 326; II Santamaría, Comentarios al Código Civil 641; Traviesas, El Contrato de Arrendamiento, VI Rev. Derecho Privado 44; Bonet Ramón, Código Civil Comentado 1270 (Aguilar ed. 1962). And the French — from whose legislation the Spanish principle, even though limited to laborers’ claims, arose — declares itself in the same sense. V Aubry and Rau, Droit Civil Francais 420 (6th ed.). 4 Colin and Capitant, Curso Elemental de Derecho Civil 504-505 (Reus ed. 1955); II-2 Josserand, Derecho Civil 233'; XI Plañid and Ripert, Tratado Práctico de Derecho Civil Francés 213; XXVI Laurent, Principios de Derecho Civil Francés 95 et seq.; III Ripert and Boulanger, Traité de Droiit Civil 684.

This direct nature..of the action produces the important effect of deducting the amount claimed by the laborer or materialman from the claims of other creditors of the contractor, since from the very moment the claim is made to the owner, the latter becomes the debtor of the contractor’s laborers and materialmen. Scaevola, op. cit, at 138, states in summarizing the French case law on that particular “. . . from the time on which action is brought against the owner by the laborers, he becomes the latter’s debtor, ceasing to be the contractor’s debtor, up to the point that the particular [445]*445creditors of the contractor shall not participate with the' operators in the sum owed by the owner,” and equalizes the position of the materialman to that of a builder in good faith-in accession cases. In considering the contractor’s bankruptcy-proceeding, Manresa points out the same thing, op. cit., at 935, when he says that “If before said declaration those who furnished their labor or material in the work had already brought action against the owner, this credit will not go to the mass, because from the time of the claim it should be considered that the owner owes to his claimants and not to the contractor.”5

Applying the principles set forth to the facts which we are considering, we are constrained to conclude that petitioner became the direct creditor of the owner of the works from the very moment when it filed its judicial claim on April 26, 1962, and that -its credit is not subject to the risks of the contractor’s responsibilities for other reasons. Since the indicated date the Teachers’ Association became the debtor of the American Surety Co. of New York It is not a question of a situation where it is necessary to determine as to the preference of credits in relation to the same debtor. Therefore, the American Surety Co.

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