Caribbean Insurance v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico

98 P.R. 898
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedApril 6, 1970
DocketNo. O-67-410
StatusPublished

This text of 98 P.R. 898 (Caribbean Insurance 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
Caribbean Insurance v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico, 98 P.R. 898 (prsupreme 1970).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Rigau

delivered the opinion of the Court.

[900]*900On October 28, 1963, the Superior Court, San Juan Part, at the request of the Commissioner of Insurance of Puerto Rico, and pursuant to the provisions of the Insurance Code concerning the rehabilitation of insurers (§ 40.010 et seq. of the Insurance Code; 26 L.P.R.A. § 4001 et seq.), issued an order appointing the Commissioner of Insurance, Receiver of the Caribbean Insurance Company, and granting upon him, in his capacity as Receiver, the powers, functions, duties, and authority which said appointment entails, all that under the authority of the aforementioned legal provisions.

On June 21, 1967 the court issued another order, through which the properties and administration of - the Caribbean were returned to its owners and officers. While the Commissioner was in charge of the administration of the affairs of the Caribbean, the latter continued its operations and issued bonds and collected premiums.

On November 1, 1965,- Carlos Armstrong e Hijos, Suers., Inc., intervener herein, filed a complaint in the Superior Court, Ponce Part, wherein, in synthesis, the following was alleged: That plaintiff is a domestic corporation engaged in the wholesale and retail trade of building materials; that plaintiff supplied and sold building materials to the contractor Bonse Construction Corporation; that the defendant, Caribbean Insurance Co., by acceptance of the proper premium, issued a bond guaranteeing, jointly with Bonse Construction Corporation, the payment of the price of the building materials supplied to the latter for certain work, the principal of said bond being higher than the sum of $6,121.14 claimed in the complaint; that Bonse Construction Corp. owes plaintiff the aforementioned amount, which is due since March 23, 1965, and which is liquid and demandable, the steps taken for the collection thereof having been fruitless.

On May 12, 1966 the court rendered judgment, by default because of defendant’s failure. to appear and ordered the latter to pay plaintiff the sum of $6,121.14, plus -legaí interest since March 23,1965, and costs.

[901]*901On August 9, 1967, Armstrong e Hijos, Suers.-, Inc., filed a motion pursuant to Rule 61.4 of the Rules of Civil Procedure, requesting the court-to summon the President and the Treasurer of -the Caribbean Insurance Company in order to examine them.- They were summoned, but did not appear. Caribbean Insurance filed two motions to set aside the judgment which, after several incidents, were denied. The judgment of the Superior- Court of July 12, 1966 being final and unappealable, the Caribbean Insurance filed in this Court a petition for certiorari to review-that action of the Superior Court. We must decide three contentions.

The first of these is to the effect -that the Ponce Part of the Superior Court lacked jurisdiction to hear the lawsuit brought against Caribbean Insurance, since the order entered by the San Juan Part in the rehabilitation proceeding prohibited that “judicial or administrative proceedings shall,. by no means, be .brought against the aforementioned Receiver, except with the, previous authorization of the court.” The court appealed from decided this contention stating that the order in question was not valid, since it went beyond the provisions of the Insurance Code, which only prohibits that during the course of the proceedings, actions or proceedings “in the nature of an attachment, garnishment, or execution,” be commenced or maintained. Section 40.130 of the Code; 26 L.P.R.A. § 4013. .

Because the rehabilitation proceeding is a special proceeding especially created by the statute, the jurisdiction of the court which issues the order of rehabilitation is limited by the proper terms and conditions of the statute under which said proceeding is raised. Caminetti v. Imperial Mut. Life Ins. Co., 139 P.2d 681; Caminetti v. Mutual Life Ins. Co., 129 P.2d 432; 2 Couch, On Insurance 2d, § 22:60. The order of the San Juan Part cannot have the scope of prohibiting judicial proceedings other than “in the nature of an attachment, garnishment, or execution.”-There is nothing in the Insurance [902]*902Code that authorizes the court in these proceedings to prohibit the bringing of an action for the recovery of money or to render judgment against the intervened company. It would be rare, and even contradictory, that it were as defendant claims, since the Commissioner was administering it so that the company would continue its operations and would rehabilitate itself. In order to continue its operations, said company had to be able to collect and also to make payments.

The purpose of the statutory prohibition is to prevent the acquisition of rights over the assets in charge of the Commissioner, but it is not to prevent the bringing of judicial proceedings which only reach the stage of a judgment rendered against the company, as it happened in the case at bar.

Even assuming, without it being thus decided, that the court had inherent or incidental power to prohibit all types of judicial proceedings to persons who are not parties in the rehabilitation proceeding, the order itself in the case at bar provides that the presentation of the same “duly certified . . . whenever a petition from the Receiver is attached thereto .. . may be used as an order,” so that the persons or entities who receive the same cease from doing any act prohibited by said order. In the case at bar, the order is not certified, nor was it accompanied by a petition from the Receiver. In the absence of these requirements, petitioner cannot now, after the rehabilitation proceeding has been terminated, make good an order which the Commissioner himself, while he was in charge of the company and after having been duly summoned by the Ponce Part, did not set up in the lawsuit.

The reasons why the Commissioner chose not to assert the prohibition contained in the order is evident, if we take into account an amendment which the San Juan Part made to its order of rehabilitation on June 17, 1964. Said amendment states that ever since the Commissioner took charge of the [903]*903Caribbean, he has been issuing bonds in the name of the latter for the purpose of rehabilitating it; that the day before, someone, without the authority to do so, circulated a copy of the order of rehabilitation in some of the courtrooms of the Superior Court; that this led some judges to refuse bonds issued by Caribbean; that in view, of this situation, the original order is amended to authorize the Commissioner to “continue issuing the contracts of suretyships in the same manner as the insurer did.”

{5] The aforesaid amendment was made for the purpose of clarifying that the order was an order of rehabilitation, and that it was not an order to liquidate the insurer, Caribbean Insurance. To authorize the Commissioner to continue issuing contracts of suretyship in the same manner as the insurer did was tantamount to empowering him to continue the operation of the company as a going concern, which is something quite different from administering a company to liquidate it.

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Caminetti v. Imperial Mutual Life Insurance
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In re the Receivership of International Re-Insurance Corp.
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84 F. 67 (U.S. Circuit Court for the District of South Carolina, 1898)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
98 P.R. 898, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/caribbean-insurance-v-superior-court-of-puerto-rico-prsupreme-1970.