Díaz Carrión v. Eastern Sugar Associates

90 P.R. 170
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 16, 1964
DocketNo. 609
StatusPublished

This text of 90 P.R. 170 (Díaz Carrión v. Eastern Sugar Associates) 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
Díaz Carrión v. Eastern Sugar Associates, 90 P.R. 170 (prsupreme 1964).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Santana Becerra

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By deed No. 236 executed before Notary Fulgencio Piñero Rodríguez in Juncos on December 5, 1927, Carlos [171]*171Díaz Carrion, in his own name and as attorney in fact of his brothers Arturo and José Bibiano, and his sister Amalia Diaz Carrion, constituted a• mortgage on two properties which belonged to them in undivided joint ownership, in favor of Casiano Diaz Mediavilla to secure a loan for $4,000. It was provided in the deed that the loan would accrue interest at the rate of 12 percent annually, payable by semesters in advance, and that the term of the loan would be two years to expire on a date certain, December 5, 1929. The mortgage was constituted “to secure the payment of the aforesaid four thousand dollars principal, its interest, and an additional credit of five hundred dollars for costs and attorney’s fees in case of judicial claim.” Díaz Carrion on his behalf and in his capacity as attorney in fact waived the right of homestead over both properties.

Diaz Mediavilla assigned the mortgage credit to the corporation The United Porto Rican Bank on February 1, 1929. In a summary foreclosure proceeding instituted on October 16, 1931 in the former District Court of Humacao, Civil Case No. 16296, the bank foreclosed the mortgage credit. On October 22, 1931 it filed its complaint for $4,000 principal, interest at 12 percent from June 5, 1928 until September 30, 1931, interest to be accrued until full payment plus the foreclosure credit, and recorded its right of foreclosure. In said proceeding and by the deed of judicial sale, on March 23, 1932 the mortgaged properties were adjudicated to the bank in partial payment of its mortgage credit, and it recorded its title on November 28 of said year.1

By deed No. 25 of March 26, 1932 before notary Walter N. Newsom, the United Porto Rican Bank sold the properties to United Porto Rican Sugar Co. (of Puerto Rico), which recorded its title on November 28 of that year. These prop[172]*172erties were later consolidated with nine others forming a new property in the registry.

By virtue of a decree issued by the United States District Court for Puerto Rico on December 11, 1933, in an action filed in that court against the United Porto Rican Sugar Co. (of Puerto Rico) and of the sale carried out in compliance with said decree, the defendant herein Eastern Sugar Associates acquired the aforesaid properties on June 29, 1934 and recorded its title.

The proceeding on review is an action for the nullity of the summary foreclosure proceeding, revendication, and collection of fruits which Amalia and José Bibiano Díaz Carrión and the heirs of their other brothers Arturo and Carlos, filed in the Superior Court of Puerto Rico, Caguas Part, against the Eastern Sugar Associates, claiming the return of the aforesaid properties with their fruits.2 The annulment of the mortgage foreclosure proceeding filed by the United Porto Rican Bank was requested on the ground that it charged all the interest at 12 percent annually and that it could only charge them up to the date of the expiration of the mortgage credit, without any default interest having been stipulated, whereupon the property was foreclosed and excessive interest demanded. They allege that after the expiration only interest at six percent annually could be collected in the foreclosure proceeding. Cf. Buil v. Banco Popular, 69 P.R.R. 237, 247 (1948); Piovanetti v. Vivaldi, 80 P.R.R. 108 (1957); Heirs of Ramírez v. Sup. Ct.; Del Moral, Int., 80 P.R.R. 147 (1957).

In answering the complaint Eastern Sugar Associates set up several affirmative defenses on the basis that it had already acquired the property in a sale decreed by the United States District Court for Puerto Rico and that pursuant to the terms of the decree of sale it acquired the property with [173]*173a free title from all claim or lien, except those liens expressly acknowledged in the aforesaid decree. It also adduced that the plaintiffs Amalia and José Bibiano Díaz Carrión lacked a cause of action to claim now since they had sold their shares in the mortgaged property prior to the judicial sale in which the creditor the United Porto Rican Bank had acquired them. Actually, there are certified copies in the record of deeds Nos. 37 of September 29 and 40 of November 2, 1931 executed before Notary J. C. Rivera Morales, in which plaintiffs Amalia and José Bibiano Díaz Carrión appeared to sell their undivided shares in these properties, subject to the aforesaid mortgage, to third persons who took it upon themselves to pay the mortgage debt and who recorded their title of property in the registry on January 27 and March 9, 1932, after the complaint for foreclosure had already been entered. In connection with these sales and assignments there are in the record certified copies of deeds Nos. 11 and 12 executed both on September 20, 1959 before Notary Heriberto Torres Vázquez, in which said plaintiffs deny that they had alienated by sale or otherwise their shares in said properties.

Defendant Eastern Sugar Associates moved for summary judgment in its favor invoking the decree of sale of the United States District Court for Puerto Rico granting title to it. On September 22, 1961 the trial court rendered summary judgment dismissing the complaint in all its parts on the basis of the interpretation and scope, which as a matter of law, it gave to the court’s decree. At this moment we review the summary judgment thus rendered.

Aside from the federal decree and its construction of law as a basis for the above judgment, there are in the record a series of important facts in controversy which would have precluded the decision of the case summarily and would have permitted the decision of the case on more solid grounds. Cf. Roth v. Lugo, 87 P.R.R. 365 (1963); García López v. [174]*174Méndez García, 88 P.R.R. 352 (1963); Mercado v. Mercado, 87 P.R.R. 537 (1963), and the previous cases of this Court cited in said decisions.

In the first place there was the controversy, as a question of fact, of the cause of action of plaintiffs Amalia and José Bibiano Díaz Carrion. If it were true that these plaintiffs sold to third persons their shares in the properties foreclosed in this mortgage summary foreclosure proceeding, it is clear that they had no right to claim anything of the present owner of the properties.

In the second place, applicable to all plaintiffs, if the registry did not clearly reveal the vices, defects, or irregularities of the foreclosure proceeding, and if on the other hand the purchaser The United Porto Rican Sugar Co. (of Puerto Rico) did not know of said vices, it would then be a third person in good faith with just title. And if the Porto Rican Sugar Co. (of Puerto Rico) is such a person, so is the receiver who seized its property in the proceeding before the United States Court for Puerto Rico, and finally so would be the present defendant who acquired the property in said proceeding. In the very complaint it is alleged that the defendant and its ancestors were engaged in the exploitation of the property for 27 years. Depending on their good faith and just title, Eastern Sugar Associates could well at present assert its title by virtue of ordinary acquisitive prescription, cf. Rodríguez v. Heirs of Pirazzi, 89 P.R.R.

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90 P.R. 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diaz-carrion-v-eastern-sugar-associates-prsupreme-1964.