Emanuelli Jiménez v. District Court of San Juan

49 P.R. 756
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedApril 6, 1936
DocketNo. 1064
StatusPublished

This text of 49 P.R. 756 (Emanuelli Jiménez v. District Court 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
Emanuelli Jiménez v. District Court of San Juan, 49 P.R. 756 (prsupreme 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ana Joaquina Emanuelli, a minor, represented by her mother with patria potestas, Jesusa Jiménez, requested this court to issue a writ of certiorari, seeking to have annulled two orders of the District Court of San Juan, rendered in a certain foreclosure proceeding.

The writ was issued and returned by Judge Berga of the district court.who sent up the original records of case No. 21961, a proceeding brought by Antonio Dávila against Lillian Lienza, widow of Emanuelli et al., to foreclose a mort[758]*758gage, and. of ease No. 21860, a suit brought by Ana Joaquina Emanuelli against Antonio Dávila et al., to declare the nonexistence of a contract.

The parties were heard on January 27 last. Petitioner maintained the right claimed; Antonio Dávila moved that the writ of certiorari issued be discharged.; and Lillian Lienza, widow of Emanuelli, filed a writing explaining her position in the matter, and the case was thus definitely submitted to the court.

Dávila maintains that the writ did not lie because an appeal had been taken from the orders complained of ; because in accordance with section 175 of the Mortgage Law Regulations, certiorari is not the proper remedy to review judicial action in a summary foreclosure proceeding; because petitioner had already .exercised the only remedy granted by law by bringing suit to declare the nonexistence of the contract; and because she is estopped as an heir to plead what her predecessor in interest could not have set up.

There is indeed an appeal taken, the dismissal of which Dávila has requested on the grounds that the orders appealed from were not appealable and the appeal constitutes a collateral attack of the summary foreclosure proceeding, contrary to the letter and spirit <. -f the Mortgage Law. Under such circumstances, and' the exi 'fence of the remedy by appeal not being, in proper cases, an unsurmountable bar-, rier to the employment of the remedy by certiorari, in the exercise of our discretion we will entertain the proceeding. And as certiorari has been used in this jurisdiction in special cases to review actions in summary foreclosure proceedings, we will not consider the provisions of section 175 of the Mortgage Law Regulations, nor the pendency of the suit to declare the nonexistence of a contract, as unsurmountable obstacles either. Nor do we think that petitioner is estopped. "We are-not convinced that the question raised by her could not have been raised by her predecessor in interest.'

[759]*759Having thus decided the preliminary questions raised, we will consider the ease on the merits. The suit to declare the nonexistence*of contract — case No. 21860 — -involves the mortgage, the foreclosure of which is sought in case No. 21961. . The initial petition in this case was filed on November 16, 1934. The service of a demand for payment on the debtor was ordered the following day. The writ demanding-payment was issued on the 20th, and on the 21st of the same month of November it was served by the marshal by requesting payment personally from the minor Joaquina, from Jesusa Jiménez as mother with patria pot estas over said minor, and from Lillian Lienza, widow of Emanuelli, individually and as administratrix of the estate.

After more than eight months had elapsed, or on August 5, 1935, the foreclosing creditor Dávila filed a motion in court stating that neither in the mortgage deed nor in the secured promissory notes, the debtors Joaquin Emanuelli and his wife Lillian Lienza had set forth the appraised'value of the mortgaged property to serve as a basis for the auction in case of a foreclosure, and that as thirty days had’ elapsed from the time demand was made and the debt had not been paid, and as the creditor could continue with the foreclosure, it. was proper for the court to summon the defendants and, after hearing all the interested parties in the suit, to fix the appraised value, in accordance with the provisions of section 127 of the Mortgage Law, as amended by Act No. 69 of May 2, 1931 (Sess. Laws, p. 432).

The court so ordered. The judicial administratrix consented, and the minor objected. Her objection was based on the allegations in the suit to declare the nonexistence of the contract, and on the following:

“FOURTH: Petitioner further alleges that, even assuming that a mortgage was validly executed, this Honorable District Court lacks authority,- power, or jurisdiction to fix, or intervene in, the appraisement or assessment requested by plaintiff, because the mortgage in question was constituted after the effective date of section 127 of [760]*760tbe Mortgage Law, and because tbe latter and its Regulations only authorize tbe suppletory appraisement, sucb as is requested here, in those cases where the mortgage was recorded prior to the effective date of the Mortgage Law of 1893, which provided for the appraisement referred to in the cited section 127 of said law.
“Fifth: Under the same hypothesis, the defendant alleges that the appraisement now sought is too late and untimely, because, in accordance with section 175 of the Mortgage Law Regulations, the judicial proceedings for the appointment of an expert must be taken at the time the demand for payment is made, and in this case such demand was made in November 1934.
“Sixth: Defendant also alleges that the proceeding brought by plaintiff in this case, seeking to obtain an appraisement, is not authorized by the Mortgage Law nor by the Regulations for its execution, as the suppletory appraisement, according to section 175 of the Regulations, should be made by experts in the absence of an agreement- ’ ’

On December 3, 1935, tbe court decided the question in favor of tbe foreclosing creditor, and ordered the parties by mutual agreement to fix the appraised yalue of the property to serve as a basis for the first public sale, and if they failed to do so within ten days after being notified, the court would proceed to appoint an expert at the expense of the foreclosing creditor to appraise the property and, in view of his report, to fix the basis for the first public sale.

The minor moved for a reconsideration of that decision and the court denied such motion by an order of January 3, 1936. On January 4, she appealed, and on the 9th she filed in this Supreme Court her petition for a writ of certiorari.

In our judgment, the minor is correct. The case was a special summary proceeding of which the previous assessment was made one of its essential characteristics, as said in the very report accompanying the bill which became the mortgage law, submitted to thé Spanish Cortes by the Colonial Minister, Don Antonio Maura y Montaner, thus:

“. . . . Previous appraisement, uniformity of judicial jurisdiction in all necessary proceedings, only one summons and the immediate sale by auction, are the basis of 'the new law. We- have [761]*761abolished actions, letters requisitory, writs of attachment on property already mortgaged, incidental issues, simultaneous auctions, and a great many other barriers in the path of territorial credit, which had been placed there with the best of intentions, but which actually only tripped good faith.” Mortgage Law for Cuba, Porto Rico, and the Philippines, 1893 ed.

The act amending section 127 of the Mortgage Law continues to require the previous appraisément. It is Act No.

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49 P.R. 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/emanuelli-jimenez-v-district-court-of-san-juan-prsupreme-1936.