Cuello v. Fuster

3 P.R. Fed. 193
CourtDistrict Court, D. Puerto Rico
DecidedOctober 15, 1907
DocketNo. 404
StatusPublished

This text of 3 P.R. Fed. 193 (Cuello v. Fuster) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cuello v. Fuster, 3 P.R. Fed. 193 (prd 1907).

Opinion

Rodey, Judge,

delivered the following opinion:

The issue before us at this time in this cause is that raised by the demurrer and exceptions to the answer and cross bill. The respondent Bernardo Aguilo Fuster, it seems, is the real, party in interest, the other respondent, Juan Rosell y Maymi,, being practically a nominal party only. A statement of the facts is necessary to an understanding of the situation.

In the year 1899, the respondent Bernardo Aguilo Fuster executed a mortgage on a tract of land near Yauco, in this-island, in favor of the complainant, Francisco Marques Cuello,, to secure the payment of $5,960, Porto Rican currency. Payment of this sum was to be made in instalments each year up to and including 1904. Fuster defaulted in these payments,, and thereupon, in the early part of 1905, the complainant, Francisco Marques Cuello, brought proceedings in the local [195]*195insular courts to foreclose tbe mortgage or collect tbe debt,- costs, and interest, and it also appears that in some manner be coupled therewith an attachment proceeding by which he took immediate possession of all of the property mentioned in his said mortgage, and, as it is alleged, also attached another plantation belonging to respondent which was not mentioned in the mortgage at all, but which was, at that time, mortgaged to another person, and which attachment, as it is alleged, caused such other person to immediately foreclose such other mortgage, and thus cause the property mentioned in it to be lost to the respondent. Respondent further claims that at the time these former proceedings were brought against him, he had a bargain pending to sell the other property for enough to pay both mortgages, hut that said attachment caused a foreclosure of the other mortgage and prevented such sale, thus greatly damaging him. It transpired that the complainant wholly mistook his remedy in the insular courts in these other proceedings, and, after the matter was litigated through the local district court, and appealed to the supreme court of the island, the latter tribunal set aside the whole proceeding as null and void, — the complainant, of course, having had possession of this respondent’s property ever since he took it under the attachment, as stated, and, having, pending the appeal from the local district court to the supreme court of the island, caused the premises described in the mortgage to be sold, bidding the same in at the sale himself, and causing the same to be registered in his own name. This action of the local supreme court of course rendered it necessary for the complainant to begin anew his efforts to foreclose his said mortgage, and to that end he filed the present suit. All his trouble, time, costs, and expense in and about said former foreclosure proceedings went, of course, for naught.

[196]*196Immediately after the dismissal of the proceedings by the supreme court of the island, the respondent Bernardo Aguilo Buster brought a suit in this court (No. 370, law docket) against the complainant, Francisco Marquez Cuello [2 Porto Rico Fed. Rep. 183], to recover damages in the amount of some $10,000 for this alleged wrongful proceeding and attachment. That suit was dismissed on demurrer, and, in the opinion rendered in the premises, which is on file, we took occasion to point out that, under the ruling of the Supreme Court of the United States in the case of Perez v. Fernandez, 202 U. S. 80, 50 L. ed. 942, 26 Sup. Ct. Rep. 561, such an action could not be maintained, but that all of the damages to which the plaintiff in that suit was properly and legally entitled, could, in our opinion, be set up as a defense to the present bill which was then pending. . In that opinion we also pointed out that eases are extremely rare where a plaintiff who files a suit for damages, with probable cause and without malice, is held liable to the defendant for the inconvenience he puts such defendant to or the damage he causes him by the suit; it being held in law that the failure of the proceedings and the consequent cost and expense to the plaintiff are sufficient punishment, and usually a sufficient deterrent against frivolous litigation. See Cooley, Torts, § 180; Drake, Attachm. §§114, 726; King v. Montgomery, 50 Cal. 115; Day v. Bach, 14 Jones & S. 460; Palmer v. Foley, 71 N. Y. 106; Stewart v. Sonneborn, 98 U. S. 187, 25 L. ed. 116.

After the dismissal of his suit at law, as aforesaid, and the expression of the views of the court as to the right of the respondent to set up all proper matters as a defense to this suit, which he could, if at all, recover in the former suit, he filed his answer and cross bill in the case at bar, and set out [197]*197every one of tbe grounds of recovery in tbe former suit as a defense here in this equity proceeding. This, of course, caused complainant to demur to tbe answer and except to portions of tbe cross bill, as be bas done.

After due consideration, we believe tbe respondent, in and by bis said answer and cross bill, bas gone too far, and bas attempted to set up as a defense to tbe action matter not properly provable as sucb.

Tbe demurrer and exceptions ar.e not in very concise form, and bence tbe court will not attempt to sustain and overrule tbe same seriatim, paragraph by paragraph, but will here state that the respondent will not be permitted to prove as an offset or damage against tbe claim of tbe complainant anything save what could and ought to be considered in law as a payment upon said mortgage; and we bold that tbe value of tbe possession, use, and enjoyment of tbe land and premises mentioned in tbe mortgage, tbe cost of correcting tbe registration in tbe recorder’s office, and tbe value of tbe crops from said land, and loss to tbe cross complainant thereon by reason of tbe acts of tbe complainant, since tbe date tbe same was so wrongfully taken by tbe complainant, is a payment, or that which can be claimed as a payment, upon tbe mortgage itself, and that to this' can be added tbe value of any other property of tbe respondent which tbe complainant actually or constructively took and appropriated, as alleged in tbe bill, in connection with said improper so-called foreclosure proceedings, sucb as tbe wooden structure and tbe use of half an acre of land, described in paragraph 9 of the cross bill, and tbe crop items, pasture value, etc., set up in paragraph 11 of tbe cross bill. For the reasons above set out, we do not, however, think that tbe attorneys’ fees set out in paragraph [198]*19813 of tbe cross bill are provable as damage or as payment in this case.

We are clearly of the opinion that the matters set out in the cross bill about the damage alleged to have accrued to the respondent because of the attachment by complainant of a tract of land not mentioned in his mortgage, which caused the other mortgagee to at once foreclose, and thereby, as it is claimed, damage respondent, are not provable either as payment or an offset in the present suit, and we doubt if damage therefor could now be recovered in any court, under the circumstances, and under the ruling of the Supreme Court of the United States in Perez v. Fernandez, supra.

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Related

Stewart v. Sonneborn
98 U.S. 187 (Supreme Court, 1879)
Perez v. Fernandez
202 U.S. 80 (Supreme Court, 1906)
Palmer v. . Foley
71 N.Y. 106 (New York Court of Appeals, 1877)
King v. Montgomery
50 Cal. 115 (California Supreme Court, 1875)
Day v. Bach
14 Jones & S. 460 (The Superior Court of New York City, 1880)

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Bluebook (online)
3 P.R. Fed. 193, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cuello-v-fuster-prd-1907.