Araújo de Jiménez v. Arenas

60 P.R. 277
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedApril 21, 1942
DocketNo. 8192
StatusPublished

This text of 60 P.R. 277 (Araújo de Jiménez v. Arenas) 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
Araújo de Jiménez v. Arenas, 60 P.R. 277 (prsupreme 1942).

Opinions

MR. Justice Todd, Jr.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In this case the District Court of Humacao sustained the complaint and rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, José Salgado Jiménez, and against the defendants, Rafael Arenas and Felipe Licha, on October 2, 1939. Each defendant in the proceedings had appeared separately, represented by his attorney. However, when they appealed from said judgment to this Supreme Court, they did so jointly in a single notice of appeal subscribed by their attorneys, and they affixed thereto a $5 internal revenue stamp. • The notice of appeal was filed in the office of the clerk of the lower court on October 30, 1939, and was served on the same day on Attorney Arturo Ortiz Toro, counsel for plaintiff José Sacado Jiménez.

After the appeal had been perfected and a day set for the hearing thereof, Attorney Arturo Ortiz Toro moved for [280]*280a dismissal on two grounds, to wit: (1) because only one internal revenue stamp of the value of $5 bad been canceled, whereas there were two defendants and appellants who had prosecuted their cases separately, and (2) because, plaintiff José Salgado Jiménez having died on September 15, 1939, the service of the notice of appeal on Attorney Ortiz Toro was void, inasmuch as his authority to represent the plaintiff was terminated on the latter’s death and, therefore, this court was without jurisdiction to hear the appeal. The death certificate of José Salgado Jiménez, which was attached to the record, shows that said plaintiff died on September 15, 1939. From the record it also appears that it was not until December 17,' 1941, that plaintiff José Salgado Jiménez, on motion filed in this Supreme Court by Attorney Arturo Ortiz Toro, was substituted by his heirs Dolores Araujo, widow of Jiménez, and Genoveva Salgado.

The parties were heard on the motion to dismiss on the same day of the hearing of the appeal on the merits.

As to the first ground for dismissal, it is true that defendants Arenas and Licha answered separately but filed jointly a single notice of appeal and canceled thereon one $5 internal revenue stamp. We fail to find anything in the Code of Civil Procedure to prevent any defendants against whom a solidary judgment has been rendered, as happens in the case at bar where they were adjudged to pay to the plaintiff $500 as damages, with costs and $200 as attorney’s fees, from including their appeals from said judgment in a single notice. Besides, in Dessus v. Ricci, 27 P.R.R.. 687, 688, wherein the appellant included appeals from two orders in a single notice and affixed thereto a five-dollar stamp, we held, in deciding a motion to dismiss on that ground, as follows:

“Subsection D of section 2 of Act No. 17 of 1915, regulating the collection of fees and costs in civil cases in the district and municipal courts, provides as follows: For each notice of appeal from a district to the Supreme Court, $5.’
[281]*281“As the language of a law should generally be given its most usual and ordinary meaning, and as the act requires the payment of five dollars for each notice of appeal, we are of the opinion that the appellant complied with that statute notwithstanding the fact that the notice covered two appeals, for, according to the letter of the law, it is only necessary to pay five dollars for each notice of appeal and not five dollars for each appeal referred to in the same notice.” (Italics ours.)

In the cited ease the position of the appellee was stronger, as there were involved two appeals taken from distinct orders in a single notice, whereas in the case at bar the appeal is from a single judgment, although two appellants are concerned.

As to the second ground for dismissal, although it is true that under §1623 of our Civil Code (1930 ed.) as well as under the common law, the agency terminates upon the death of the principal, it is no less true that two possible situations must be taken into account when passing upon the question raised. If Attorney Arturo Ortiz Toro, counsel for plaintiff José Salgado Jiménez, was unaware of the death of his principal at the time of the service of the notice of appeal, his acceptance of said service was valid in accordance with §1629 of the Civil Code (1930 ed.), the first paragraph of which provides that—

“What has been done by the agent, when he was not aware of the death of the principal, or of any other of the causes which terminate the agency, shall be valid and of effect with regard to third persons who may have contracted with the agent in good faith. ’ ’

If even where a contract has been executed by an agent who is unaware of the death of his principal, such contract must be considered as valid with regard to third parties who have contracted with him in good faith, why should not be valid the service of notice of appeal made by the defendants herein who, we must presume, were also unaware of the death of the plaintiff and who, therefore, acted in good faith?

[282]*282If, on the contrary, Attorney Arturo Ortiz Toro was aware of the death of his client at the time of the service on him of the notice of appeal, and notwithstanding his knowledge of the fact that the agency had terminated, he failed to inform both the defendants and the court of that fact, it must he concluded that he acted in had faith and his action could not and should not hind the defendants-appellants.

Commenting on §1738 of the Spanish Civil Code, which corresponds to §1629 of our Civil Cede, Manresa in vol. XI (4th ed.), pp. 504 and 505, says:

“The statement contained in §1738 regarding the validity of' the acts performed by the agent before he was aware of the death of the principal, is of a general character and validates such acts' in cases of revocation, bankruptcy, and insolvency, with respect to third persons who have contracted with him in good faith. The code provision thus indicates that the ignorance must be shared alike by the third persons and the agent, for if the former had notice of the death, bankruptcy, or insolvency of the principal or the revocation of the power, the acts would be void with respect to them, as they might justifiably be charged with bad faith by reason of their having' contracted while being fully aware of the fact that the agent could not act for the principal, since they knew that fact although the agent did not.
“The standard provided by §1738 doubtless constitutes an exception to the general rule of law that error voids consent, but it is justified, as in many other, cases, by the principles of equity so as to avoid that the summum jus might become summa injuria. Such validation is really a legal fiction established for the benefit of the agent and third persons who act in good faith, which validation ends when the agent or the third persons have knowledge of the termination of the agency. In the event that there was bad faith on the part of the agent but not of the third parties, the agent would be liable for fraud and the third persons ivould be entitled to bring the proper actions against him.” (Italics ours.)

In California, in Moyle v. Landers, 20 P. 241, the doctrine of estoppel was applied against a party and his attorney who, with knowledge of the death of the party’s pre-[283]

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Bluebook (online)
60 P.R. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/araujo-de-jimenez-v-arenas-prsupreme-1942.