Baetjer v. Garzot

124 F.2d 920, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4572
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJanuary 8, 1942
DocketNo. 3655
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 124 F.2d 920 (Baetjer v. Garzot) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baetjer v. Garzot, 124 F.2d 920, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4572 (1st Cir. 1942).

Opinion

WOODBURY, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal by the defendants from a decree of the District Court of the United States for the District of Puerto Rico ordering them to convey to the plaintiffs a certain parcel of land situated in Naguabo, Puerto Rico in consideration of the sum of $1,762.

Jurisdiction is based upon diversity of citizenship and an amount in controversy in excess of $3,000.

The pertinent facts may be briefly summarized ’ as follows:

On August 21, 1916 Juan R. Garzot and his wife Rosario Aguayo de la Fuente executed a “deed of purchase and sale” in which they conveyed the parcel of land in question, which they called “Central Triunfo”, to a corporation named Garzot y Fuertes. The deed recited that the parties thereto “have agreed upon the purchase and sale of the property * * * in order that there may be built on the same a sugar factory or central for the grinding of canes.” It also contained the following provision:

“Fourth: The parties make it appear that if at any time the factory of the Central should be removed or destroyed, and its owners should not wish for any reason to construct it again, and should so state, Mr. Garzot shall have the right to re-acquire (hacer suya) the property sold, upon returning the price which is the subject of this sale,1 in which case the Corporation shall execute in his favor the corresponding deed of transfer.”

It appears that Garzot y Fuertes constructed a mill for grinding sugar cane on the Central Triunfo property and that it operated that mill up to and through the grinding season of 1928. The mill was last used, and then only for a short time, in 1929, in which year it was damaged by a cyclone. In 1932 it was partially blown down by a hurricane. Some repairs were made in 1933, but it was not put into operating condition. Since 1933 the land has been used only as an accumulation point for cane to be ground at another mill. In 1937 the mill buildings and machinery were sold by the Riverside Corporation, the then owner, and during that year and the year following both machinery and buildings were removed from the property.

The plaintiffs are the heirs and successors of Juan R. Garzot. The defendants, as trustees of Eastern Sugar Associates, are the present owners of Central Triunfo, having acquired their title from the Riverside Corporation on December 7, 1937.

The District Court found that all the conditions set forth in clause four of the deed had occurred, at least in substance, and ruled as a matter of law that the clause was valid and binding upon the defendants. Accordingly it ordered:

“A judgment will be entered in favor of plaintiffs upon their payment to defendants of the sum of $1,762 or a deposit of such amount in the registry of the court. Upon such payment or deposit being made defendants will be allowed a reasonable time within which to remove any buildings, structures or other movable property from the premises and must then execute a deed of conveyance to plaintiffs.”2

[922]*922It is from the judgment entered in conformity with this order that the defendants appeal.

The court adopted as one of its findings of fact an allegation of the plaintiffs’ amended hill of complaint which reads:

“(10) That the said sugar factory ‘Central Triunfo’ was removed from said property between the months of July and December, 1937; that the defendants do not intend to reconstruct said sugar factory and they have so stated.”

In further elaboration of this point the District Court found that “the defendants removed said sugar factory and unquestionably, in the opinion of this court, * * * do not intend to reconstruct said factory, or another factory, or to use the said property for the maintenance and operation of a sugar factory,” and again, “Their (the defendants’) whole conduct speaks most eloquently to the effect that the use of this property as a factory site has been abandoned.”

From the foregoing it is clear that the court below found that the conditions upon which the vendor’s right to repurchase was made to depend had occurred. That is, it found, (1) that the mill erected upon Central Triunfo had been removed or destroyed, (2) that the owners did not wish for any reason to construct- it again, and (3) that they had so stated.

The defendants admit that the first of these conditions has occurred, but they contend that there is no evidence from which it could be found that the other two have. Their position with respect to the second and third conditions is not well taken. In view of the fact that the mill on the property has not been operated since 1929, and that since 1933, the property has been used only as a place upon which to accumulate cane for other mills; in view of the fact that the mill machinery and buildings were sold and removed in 1937 and 1938, and no new mill has since been erected; and in view of the testimony, to be considered in more detail hereafter, that a mill on that site would serve no useful purpose since other mills in operation could grind all the cane being raised in the localitjq we cannot say that the court below erred in its finding that the defendants did not intend to construct another mill on the Central Triunfo property.

A more difficult question is- presented with respect to the third condition. The evidence on this point is not as cleár and explicit as it might be. The situation disclosed is briefly as follows: On December 29, 1936, the Riverside Corporation acquired title to Central Triunfo from the National City Bank of New York, and on December 7, 1937, the Riverside Corporation conveyed it to the defendants herein. There is testimony to the effect that early in 1937, while title stood in the name of the Riverside Corporation, one Harry A. Nadler, who described himself on the stand as general manager for Puerto Rico of the Eastern Sugar Associates, said to the husband of one of the plaintiffs with reference to Central Triunfo, “We are going to remove the Central from there,” and there is also testimony that he made no mention at that time or at any other of constructing another one. It further appears that on that occasion he also said that the capacity of another local mill “was sufficient to take care of all the cane included in the lands of the Central Triunfo”, and on another occasion he was reported to have said “We don’t need any more the central as Pasto Viejo (a mill nearby) has plenty of capacity to grind all the cane, and we intend to sell the old mill.” While these remarks are not categorical statements of an intention not to reconstruct a mill on the premises, that is their obvious and natural import. Considering the entire record we cannot say that the decision of the court below was clearly erroneous on the question of fact as to whether or not the statement had been made that the mill would not be rebuilt. It follows that the finding of the District Court that such a statement was actually made, at least in substance, must stand.

The question of whether or not Nadler had authority to speak for either the Riverside Corporation or the Eastern Sugar Associates has not been pressed before us.

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124 F.2d 920, 1942 U.S. App. LEXIS 4572, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baetjer-v-garzot-ca1-1942.