Banco Comercial v. District Judge of San Juan

30 P.R. 26
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 15, 1921
DocketNo. 337
StatusPublished

This text of 30 P.R. 26 (Banco Comercial v. District Judge of San Juan) 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
Banco Comercial v. District Judge of San Juan, 30 P.R. 26 (prsupreme 1921).

Opinion

Mr. Justice del Toro

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

This is a petition for a writ of certiorari presented by tbe Banco Comercial de Puerto Rico praying that tbis court [27]*27review and set aside a certain order made by the District Court of San Juan, First District, in a receivership case and authorizing the issuance of preferred certificates over the objection of the mortgagee. The writ was issued. The original documents were brought up to this court and at the hearing on December 5, 1921, the petitioner and the receiver appeared by their respective attorneys who argued in support of their contentions. Intervenor Melchior, Armstrong & Dessau, Inc., a junior mortgagee, also appeared by an attorney and acquiesced in the prayer to set aside the said order. The receiver objected, but did not move for a continuance of the hearing and the said intervenor was allowed to take part in the hearing.

The facts are briefly as follows: On May 10, 1921, the District Court of San Juan, at the petition of the Banco Comercial de Puerto Eico, a mortgagee of the private sugar-manufacturing corporation Central -Bayaney, appointed Ba-món Soler as receiver of the said corporation.

Three days thereafter the receiver was authorized to negotiate a loan of $25,000 secured by certificates preferred to all other liens, including the mortgages. The mortgagees gave their consent, the loan was negotiated and the mill of the central continued to grind its cane until the end of the season.

Soler having ceased to act as receiver, the court appointed Jorge E. Saldaña to substitute him. After studying the situation the new receiver asked the court for authority to negotiate a loan of $59,366.90, secured by certificates to .be issued in the manner and under such conditions as the court might direct, in order to finance the central through the grinding season of 1922.

It appears from the record that the parties were summoned and also that the mortgagee Banco Comercial de Puerto Eico agreed that the receiver should be authorized to borrow $30,000 for the said purpose secured “by certifi[28]*28cates of debt signed by the receiver, which. certificates shall have as a guarantee the industrial'products of Central Ba-yaney, Inc., during the next crop and not the corpus of the property of this corporation.”

It also appears from the record that on November 18, 1921, Melchior, Armstrong & Dessau, Inc., 'the intervenor in the proceedings, filed a paper which concludes as follows:

“The intervenor respectfully prays the court to refuse to order that the certificates issued by the receiver shall be preferred or shall operate as a lien on the property of the defendant which is mortgaged to the intervenor, in preference to the intervenor’s mortgage. ’ ’

Notwithstanding the opposition of the mortgagees, the district court authorized the negotiation of the loan secured by certificates, fixing the amount thereof at $30,000 and directing ‘ ‘ that the said certificates shall constitute a preferred right and first lien on Bll the properties of the defendant within the Island of Porto Rico and with priority to the liens of the mortgages created by the defendant company in favor of the plaintiff corporation.”

The statement of the foregoing facts is sufficient for a conclusion that this case should be decided in favor of the petitioner, in accordance with the jurisprudence laid down by this court in the case of Sobrinos de Ezquiaga v. Rossy, District Judge, 21 P. R. R. 369. In that ease we said:

“Therefore, the questions raised and to be decided are as follows:
“Can a court change the terms of a contract voluntarily and validly entered into according to the statutes ? Does the power which the courts have to appoint receivers in certain and particular cases carry with it the power to assume absolute control of the property placed in the possession of the receivers in such a manner that they may change the order of priority of the liens previously created upon the property by its owners?
“We have looked carefully into the law and it makes no provision on this point. We have considered jurisprudence likewise and do not find that such power has been exercised in cases similar to the one submitted for our decision.
[29]*29“What security can a statute which clearly and conclusively insures the payment of a credit in a certain order of priority offer to . the citizens of a country if a court, at is discretion,, may afterwards change the contract in such manner as to make the security contracted for entirely illusory?
“To recognize such power in the judiciary in the absence of a prior and clear statutory provision would be to go against the fundamental principles upon which our system of government is founded.
“When a difficult situation arises in the business operations of a corporation and the interested parties are confident that such situation is transitory and can be overcome by a supreme effort, the interested parties themselves generally, on their own initiative, defer their rights in the hope of seeing them assume their full value in the future. This is why many cases occur in which recourse is had to the issuance of preferred receiver’s certificates by judicial authority for the purpose of obtaining certain sums of money whose payment is specially guaranteed in order to confront the difficulties. But recourse has not been had, nor do we understand that it will be hady to such a measure when the interested parties themselves oppose it.
“There is an abundance of American jurisprudence on the subject and it establishes a well-defined distinction between the powers of a court when it intervenes in the administration of a quasi-public corporation and when it manages the business of a private corporation through receivers.
“In the case of Hooper v. Central Trust Company of New York, 29 L. R. A., 262, 263, the Court of Appeals of Maryland reached the following conclusion:
“ ‘Vested liens upon the property of individuals and private corporations cannot be displaced by means of receiver’s certificates.’
“In the case of Merriam v. Victory Min. Co. et al., 60 Pac., 997, the Supreme Court of Oregon held as follows:
“ ‘The right of the court appointing a receiver for a corporation to give priority of payment to unsecured debts over the lien of first mortgage bonds is restricted to creditors of railroads, which are public concerns, and cannot be exercised to give unsecured creditors of an ordinary corporation such preference over contract liens.’ ”

This court has consulted also several other cases decided [30]*30by American courts, but considers it unnecessary to cite them.

"What bas been said should be sufficient for a decision of this case, but by brief and in bis argument at tbe bearing tbe receiver raised two questions wbicb require tbe consideration of tbe court. He contended, 1st, tbat certiorari does not lie because tbe order sought to be set aside is ap-pealable, and, 2nd, tbat according to tbe facts set forth in tbe petition itself, tbe said order is valid, and in any event tbe petitioner is estopped from attacking its validity.

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30 P.R. 26, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/banco-comercial-v-district-judge-of-san-juan-prsupreme-1921.