Fajardo Sugar Co. v. Sancho Bonet

50 P.R. 191
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 12, 1936
DocketNo. 6716, 6717, 6718, 6719, 6726 and 6868
StatusPublished

This text of 50 P.R. 191 (Fajardo Sugar Co. v. Sancho Bonet) 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
Fajardo Sugar Co. v. Sancho Bonet, 50 P.R. 191 (prsupreme 1936).

Opinion

Mb. Chief Justice Del Tobo

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The same questions of law are involved in these appeals. The Fajardo Sugar Company of Puerto Rico paid under protest certain income taxes withheld at the source, which were levied and collected by the Treasurer of the Island for the years 1924, 1925, 1926, 1927, 1928, and 1929, and resorted to the District Court of San Juan requesting their return plus legal interest from the date the complaint was filed and the costs, in six separate suits. The Treasurer answered. The cases went to trial and all were decided for the plaintiff.

The defendant appealed and in a single brief for all of the appeals assigns the following errors:

[192]*192“1. The District Court erred in bolding, as a ground for the judgment, that the situs of the debt paid by the plaintiff to L. W. & P. Armstrong is in the city of New York.
“2. The court also erred in holding that although the interest on the debt was paid with the proceeds of the sale of sugar manufactured by the debtor in Puerto Rico, the transaction between the creditor and the debtor was made in New York and that the contract was consummated there when principal and interest was repaid in New York at the semiannual liquidation of the current account between the parties.
“3. The court also erred in holding that the question raised in this case is similar to that decided by the Circuit Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, affirming the judgment in the case of Domenech v. United Porto Rico Sugar Company, 62 Fed. (2d) 552, 556.
“4. The court also erred in holding that in the present case as in that of Domenech v. United Porto Rican Sugar Company, supra, the question is one of a tax on non resident corporations, by reason of the income made or which should have been made as a result of transactions entered into and totally executed or consummated outside the limits of Puerto Rico.
“5. The court also erred in weighing erroneously the evidence admitted at the trial and in rendering judgment for the plaintiff and ordering the return of the tax paid under protest in each case.”

As may be seen from the very errors assigned, the question to be considered and decided is reduced to a determination of the true situs of the transaction giving rise to the income on which the tax was levied.

The plaintiff alleged in its complaints that it is a corporation organized in accordance with the laws of this island; that L. W. & P. Armstrong has been since 1924 a commercial partnership organized under the laws of the state of New York where it had and has its main office; that the said partnership has not now nor has it at any time had an office or agent in Puerto Rico; that the amounts received by the said partnership represent interest on advances made by it to the plaintiff in New York on a current account opened in the said city by virtue of an agreement made there; that the plaintiff, in accordance with the said agreement, sent sugar [193]*193to the partnership to he sold, as it was sold, the proceeds of the sale being credited to the plaintiff and the interest collected from the same; that the advances were never secured by any lien on real property located in Puerto Rico and the interest was not on bonds, promissory notes or other interest-bearing obligations.

The plaintiff also alleged in its complaints that the collection of the taxes was erroneous, arbitrary and illegal among other reasons:

“(c) Because the sum collected by L. W. & P. Armstrong as interest on a loan effected and consummated totally outside this island is a personal obligation whose situs for the purposes of taxation is at the domicile of the creditor.
“(d) Because the interest collected by L. W. & P. Armstrong is not interest on bonds, notes or other interest — bearing obligations.
“(d) Because the sum thus collected by L. W. & P. Armstrong as interest does not constitute income which is taxable by the Treasurer of Puerto Rico because siich income was not derived from sources within Puerto Rico.”

In his answers the defendant ¡admitted some of the allegations of the complaints and denied other's, alleging, as an additional defense in all of them:

“1. That the interest paid was derived from the use or exploitation of the capital invested by the tax-payer in Puerto Rico; that the capital on Which the plaintiff has paid interest to L. "W. & Armstrong, according to the complaint; is invested in Piierto Rico; that the source of said interest received by L. W. & Armstrong is Puerto Rico and therefore the interest paid is subject to the ineoine tax withheld at the source.”

The six cases were submitted on the same evidence, and the lower court in weighing the same said in its statement of the case and opinion:

“The evidence clearly shows that by virtue of the agreement mentioned above, made between the plaintiff, The Fajardo Sugar Co., and the firm L. W. & P. Armstrong of New York, the latter bought for the former, in the United States, machinery, bags and other articles which the plaintiff might need for its industry; articles and goods for [194]*194which L. W. & P. Armstrong paid the vendors in New York and charged them to the current account which the plaintiff had with said firm. The plaintiff sent its sugar to New York where it was sold by L. W. & P. Armstrong, which after deducting the freight and other expenses, credited the net proceeds of the sugar on its books to the account of the plaintiff. The account was liquidated semiannually, the principal, and interest at 6% per annum being paid from the funds of the plaintiff in the possession of L. W. & P. Armstrong.
“It was also proved satisfactorily that the firm L. W. & P. Armstrong has not had an office and agent in the Island of Puerto Rico and that the credit in favor of L. W. & P. Armstrong was never secured by a mortgage or lien on real property located in Puerto Rico, and that the interest collected by the said firm was not interest on bonds, promissory notes or other interest-bearing obligations.
“Such facts show indubitably that this case involves a tax on a credit whose situs is outside the territorial limits of Puerto Rico and whose owner also resides outside the Island.”

In discussing the evidence the defendant-appellant analyzes the agreement signed in New York and then another made on the same day in Puerto Rico by the same parties, wherein the partnership appeared represented by its attorney in fact, and by virtue of which the plaintiff bound itself to sell to the firm the entire sugar crop which it might produce, buy or otherwise acquire in Puerto Rico, the partnership obligating itself to supply ships for transportation, it being stipulated that the title should pass to the purchaser -upon delivery of the sugar on board of any ship at the port of shipment, and then appellant states, in part:

“The Court will surely see that these contracts executed on the same day, of the same month and year simultaneously in Fajardo and in New York, are reality a single CONTRACT, for all purposes of this controversy ....

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Bluebook (online)
50 P.R. 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fajardo-sugar-co-v-sancho-bonet-prsupreme-1936.