Caraballo v. Registrar of Property of Guayama

48 P.R. 902
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 24, 1935
DocketNo. 933
StatusPublished

This text of 48 P.R. 902 (Caraballo v. Registrar of Property of Guayama) 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
Caraballo v. Registrar of Property of Guayama, 48 P.R. 902 (prsupreme 1935).

Opinions

Mr. Justice HutchisoN

delivered the opinion of the court.

In August 1930, one Carrillo and his wife executed a mortgage as security for a loan with interest at 12 percent. The loan and mortgage matured August 1, 1933. An act to amend section 1 of “An Act to fix a legal rate of interest-on all obligations,” approved March 1, 1902, as amended by an act of March 12, 1903, and for other purposes, be#ame effective August 17, 1933. First Special Session Laws of that year, p. 26. A proviso attached to section 1, as amended, says “. . . That no rate of interest shall be fixed by special agreement in excess of nine (9) dollars a year on each one hundred (100) dollars or upon its equivalent in value, when the capital, the object of the loan or of the agree-[904]*904merit does not exceed three thousand (3,000) dollars, and eight (8) dollars a year on each one hundred (100) dollars when the capital passes said sum. ’ ’ In June 1934, the term of the obligation was extended for a period of two years from August 1, 1933, as far as an unpaid balance of $700 was concerned and all other provisions of the original contract were by express agreement continued in force. A registrar of property recorded this instrument as to the partial cancellation of the mortgage and as to the extension thereof but refused to record the agreement for a continuation of the provision contained in the original contract concerning the payment of interest at the rate of 12 per cent on the ground that this agreement was in violation of the amendment of 1933.

The original contract contained no provision concerning the rate of interest in the event of nonpayment at maturity. In the absence of any such provision the mortgagees, if they had brought an action on the original contract, could not have recovered interest at more than 6 per cent after the date of maturity and default. See section 1061 of the Civil Code, 1930 ed.; Goico v. Rodríguez et al., 28 P.R.R. 492; Cook v. Fowler, 14 E. R. C. 546 and other cases cited in 33 C. J. 226, section 111, and decision of the Supreme Court of Spain, June 7, 1922, 156 Jur. Civ. 464. Any claim to interest at a higher rate after maturity and default must rest entirely upon the new agreement. The fact that this new agreement did not amount to a novation of the original contract is no answer to the objection that the new agreement was in the teeth of section one of the law. The parties to the original contract could have entered into the new agreement at any time before the law of 1933 went into effect. After the law went into effect they could not make a valid agreement for the payment of interest at 12 per cent. To hold that the law is applicable to such an agreement made some ten months after the law took effect is not to construe the law so as to give it a retroactive effect.

[905]*905Appellant assumes tliat the instrument executed in June 1934, merely ratified a previous agreement entered into prior to August 17, 1933, but we find nothing in the record to support this theory. Another contention is that the prohibition of contracts for the payment of interest at more than •8 or 9 per cent applies, like the first part of section one of the law, to oral contracts only. The first part of section one provides: “That in the absence of an agneement in writing entered into and executed at the time, the rate of interest upon the loan or forbearance of money or goods or upon any variety of obligation or contract or upon unpaid judgments, shall be at the rate of six (6) dollars annually, on each one hundred (100) dollars or upon its equivalent in value, and at the same rate for a greater or less sum or for a longer or shorter period.” The “special agreement” referred to in the proviso, supra, is an agreement in writing, not an oral agreement. The construction suggested by appellant would make of the section as a whole a direct contradiction in terms. A perusal of sections 3, 4, and 5 of the law (Comp. Stat. 1911, sections 4174, 4175, and 4176) should suffice to remove any doubt as to the question here sought to be raised.

In the course of our own discussion of the case, since the foregoing was written and submitted in the form of a memorandum, a question has been raised as to the jurisdiction of the registrar to consider whether or not the parties had the right to make the agreement for an extension of the term of the mortgage at the rate of 12 per cent. It is said: that a person who has no interest in the transaction cannot set up the defense of usury; that a trial court would not consider the question of usury unless raised by the borrower or by someone in privity with him or having an interest in the defense; that the principles are summed up in 66 C.J. 314, par. 314; that section 315 of the article on usury in the same volume discusses the rights of privies and successors in title; that section 316 treats the matter of whether & transaction is void or voidable; and that “Essentially the [906]*906note of the registrar is analogous to the notes of the registrars in the case of Compañía Azucarera del Toa v. Registrar, 19 P.R.R. 724, and others.”

In Compañía Azucarera de la Carolina v. Registrar, 19 P.R.R. 143, a registrar of property had refused to record the conveyance of certain land to a corporation because it appeared from other entries in the registry that the corporation already owned more than five hundred acres. His theory was that the purchaser had not the legal capacity to acquire-the land in question. This court held that the law invoked' by the registrar did not forbid such an acquisition. Whatever room there may be for a difference of opinion about the effect of the statute now before us upon usurious contracts, it cannot be seriously contended that such contracts are not: expressly forbidden and outlawed by that statute.

We need not quote from the opinion in the Compañía Azucarera de la Carolina case in order to accentuate the-difference between a deed of conveyance to a corporation which already owns more than 500 acres of land and an usurious contract. In the one case the contract is perfectly valid between the parties and as binding upon the corporation as it is upon the vendor. It is not even vitiated by any curable defect which need be noted in the registry in order to protect prospective purchasers or mortgagees or other persons who may thereafter become interested in the land. In the other case the borrower is under no legal obligation to pay any interest whatever either at the specified or at the legal rate. The lender cannot recover from the borrower in any court of justice any part of such interest nor more-than three-fourths of his principal. An assignee of the lender, as far as the liability of the borrower is concerned, is in no better position than the lender himself. Even if the borrower has paid the interest on an usurious contract he may, within one year from the date of such payment, recover the excess. A mortgagee who seeks to record his unenforceable contract for interest in open violation of the law,. [907]*907■which, places a limit upon the rate permitted to he fixed by the parties to any agreement, is in a very different position from that of a corporation which seeks to record a deed of conveyance whereby it has acquired land in excess of the 500 acres specified in the Organic Act.

In the instant case the facts are uncontroverted. The registrar has not tried nor attempted “to try matters that involve disputed questions of fact”.

In La Compañía Azucarera del Toa v.

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48 P.R. 902, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caraballo-v-registrar-of-property-of-guayama-prsupreme-1935.