Fernandez v. Perez

220 U.S. 224, 31 S. Ct. 412, 55 L. Ed. 443, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1670
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 3, 1911
Docket110
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 220 U.S. 224 (Fernandez v. Perez) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Fernandez v. Perez, 220 U.S. 224, 31 S. Ct. 412, 55 L. Ed. 443, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1670 (1911).

Opinion

Mk. Chief Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

José Antonio Fernandez, a judgment creditor of José Perez, in October, 1906, commenced in the court below this suit to unmask alleged fraudulent and simulated mortgages and sales of certain described real property of Perez, the judgment debtor, to the end that such property might be made available to pay the unsatisfied judgment debt.' The defendants were José Perez, Victor Ochoa and his wife, all three alleged to be citizens and residents of Spain and ten persons alleged to be citizens and residents of Porto Rico who were averred to be and were sued as the heirs at law of one Maristany. It was alleged that in the years 1899, 1900 and 1902 Perez, who was the registered owner of certain enumerated real estate, had executed and recorded deeds purporting to mortgage the same in favor of Ochoa and Maristany. These deeds, it was alleged, were simulations executed by Perez with the sole purpose of defrauding his creditors and preventing them from collecting their debts. It was additionally charged that to carry out the wrongful purpose which had caused the acts of mortgage, to be .drawn and recorded and in consequence of a conspiracy between Perez and Ochoa, the latter had in May, 1906, sued in the court below to foreclose the apparent mortgages, and had procured an order of sale and a sale thereunder to be made by the marshal of the court, and at such sale had seemingly bought in the property and received a deed therefor.' Ochoa, the alleged plaintiff, was charged to have been but *226 an'interposed person acting, not for himself, but for Perez, the ostensible defendant. Finally, it was charged that the property standing in the name of Ochoa, the alleged-purchaser, had despite the sale continuously remained undet the dominion and beneficial control of Perez. The prayer of the bill was for a decree recognizing the fraudulent and ■ simulated character of the alleged mortgages and sale, that' they be declared to be mere shadows cast upon the title of Perez and that the decree further direct that the property belonging to Perez be ordered to be sold to pay the judgment debt. ■

The ten persons who were made defendants as heirs or representatives of Maristany having been personally summoned and having- failed tp appear, the bill was, in December, 1906, taken for confessed .against them. On the third day of June, 1907, the counsel for the complainant moved for an order to summons by publication José Perez, Victor Ochoa and his wife. The motion for this 'order was. supported by a return of the marshal showing that the subpoenas issued to the parties named had not been served, because the marshal, after diligent inquiry, had been unable to find them in the district, and by an affidavit of counsel declaring that affiant “is unable to learn of the present whereabouts of said defendants, José Perez y Fernandez, -Victor Ochoa y Perez and his wife, Dolores Olavarricia, after duly inquiring, and that, therefore, personal service upon them is not practicable.” The order was granted, directing that the defendants named be summoned by bublication to appear on or before the third day of August, 1907, the publication to be made “in a newspaper of general circulation in Porto Rico, to wit, ‘La Bandera Americana,’ once-a week for six consecutive weeks.” On September 13 following the defendants named not having appeared and proof of publication having been made, the bill was taken for confessed against them. On February 1, 1908, a formal decree was entered *227 against all the defendants, holding the mortgages and sale to be void as mere simulations, and directing their erasure from the records. The decree recognized the right of complainant to collect his unsatisfied judgment by a sale of the property, and in fact directed the marshal to proceed under an execution which was in his hands to levy upon and sell the property.

Within two months after the entry of this decree and before the marshal had executed it by sale of the property, appearance was entered for José Perez, one of the defendants, and shortly after for Ochoa, and application was made in the name of both to vacate the decree and allow them to defend the suit, on the ground that they were entitled to do so because they had not been personally notified. At the same time, in the same court, a Mrs. Perfecta Blanco, alleging herself to be a resident of Spain, filed her'bill against the marshal as well as against José Fernandez and his attorneys of record, alleging that the complainant had in July, 1906, bought from Ochoa the real estate described-in the Fernandez suit and that she was entitle^ to hold the property free from liability under the execution in the Fernandez case. The prayer was for an injunction pending the suit restraining the marshal from selling the property to pay the Fernandez judgment and for a final decree perpetuating the injunction. The. application made by Perez and Ochoa to set aside the decree and allow them to appear and defend, and that of Mrs. Blanco for a preliminary injunction, were considered by the court at one and the same time. The court stayed, for a brief period, the sale of the property under the execution issued in the case of Fernandez v. Perez and the enforcement of the decree in the equity cause. In a memorandum opinion the court declared that this had been done for the following reasons:

First, to enable Perez and Ochoa “to make a first-class showing establishing-that neither of them had before the *228 decree in the equity cause, any actual personal notice or knowledge of its pendency,” and that, they or either of them never received any notice or knowledge of the pend-ency .of the same through any of the. other respondents in the same mentioned or through any of their aporderados, agents, tenants or others, either in Porto Rico or in Spain before said time, and that they,' or either of them, did not personally receive a copy of or hear of or know of the publication of the notice of the pendency of said suit (the equity cause) in La Bandera Americana . . . and that they or either of them never in fact previous to the entry of the decree, received any copy of said newspaper containing such notice through the' mails from José Antonio Fernandez, or any other person, or see or hear of such copy being received by any other person in their vicinity in Spain.” Second. In order to enable Perez and Ochoa to make “a first-class showing under oath that they in truth and in fact have a meritorious defense to the bill” and to give both Perez and Ochoa an opportunity to swear that the “mortgage to Ochoa in 1899 was in good faith and for a valuable consideration .and that the foreclosure of the same was not collusive, . . .” and that Ochoa must also state that his alleged sale to Mrs. Blanco of the property was made in good faith and for valuable consideration as in the deed stated, and if not for that amount then for how much, and that the said deed was made, by said Ochoa without the knowledge of the decree in said equity cause, and “if possible he must furnish the affidavit of Mrs. Blanco,” stating that her purchase was an honest one and. how much she paid for the property.

The stay granted by the court was extended from time to time. There were hearings and, it may be, some evidence tending to show the existence of the facts referred to by the court in the conditions upon which it granted the stay and there was evidence to the contrary..

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Bluebook (online)
220 U.S. 224, 31 S. Ct. 412, 55 L. Ed. 443, 1911 U.S. LEXIS 1670, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fernandez-v-perez-scotus-1911.