Fuentes v. Aponte

62 P.R. 694
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 22, 1943
DocketNo. 8682
StatusPublished

This text of 62 P.R. 694 (Fuentes v. Aponte) 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
Fuentes v. Aponte, 62 P.R. 694 (prsupreme 1943).

Opinion

MR. Justice De Jesús

delivered the opinion of the court.

By d¿ed executed on January 3, 1929, Antero Aponte constituted a voluntary mortgage on a house and lot owned by him, in favor of Francisco Fuentes, to secure a $400-loan with interest thereon at one per cent monthly, for a period of three months. At the end of said deed and next to clause seven, in which the notary stated that the parties accepted the deed and that he had cautioned them as required by law, an eighth clause was added, reading as follows: “It is agreed by the parties hereto that the sum of $125 shall he paid by Aponte to cover expenses and attorney’s fees in case of judicial recovery by the creditor.”

The loan having matured and not having been paid, the creditor brought summary foreclosure proceedings for its recovery, said proceedings terminating with the adjudication of the property to the complainant creditor. Immediately after the adjudication, that is to say, in the month of August, 1934, the defendant debtor entered into a contract of lease with the new owner of the property, his former creditor, the lease rent being $8 per month, which he paid until [696]*696the end of 1938. The total of the rentals paid amounted to $424. Subsequently, the lessee and former owner of the property brought an action in the lower court seeking the annulment of the foreclosure proceedings, which action was decided in favor of the plaintiff by a judgment rendered on December 18, 1941, on the ground that the $125 agreed upon as attorney’s fees had been claimed within the foreclosure proceedings, inasmuch as such sum was not secured by the mortgage, as was held by the court. Upon the annulment of the foreclosure proceedings, the heirs of the creditor Francisco Fuentes, .appellants herein, brought an action in the lower court for the recovery of the $400 that their predecessor in interest had lent to the appellee herein, and prayed that the $125 which the defendant had undertaken to pay for attorney’s fees in case of judicial recovery he incorporated in the amount of the loan. In his answer the defendant admitted that a loan had existed but stated that the obligation had been paid, and prayed for a judgment dismissing the complaint with costs,. expenses, and attorney’s fees on the plaintiffs.

Relying on the facts as set forth and on the conclusions of law to which we shall presently refer, the action was dismissed.

In the opinion in support of the judgment appealed from, the judge below discusses at length the merits of the ease and reaches the conclusion that the plaintiffs, as appears from the evidence, have no cause of action, but immediately afterwards he considers the case from another angle and holds that besides' the conclusion reached by him that the obligation claimed had been fully met, the court never acquired jurisdiction of the ease inasmuch as the amount involved was less than $500. It seems logical that if the court never had jurisdiction of the case, any pronouncements made regarding the merits thereof is coram non- judice.

Wo will first consider the jurisdictional question.

[697]*697It is alleged in the complaint that the defendant undertook to pay to the ancestor of the plaintiffs the sum of $400 within three months counted from January 3, 1929, with interest thereon at one per cent monthly, and that said obligation had not been satisfied. As already stated by ns, nothing is staled in the body of the complaint regarding the undertaking to pay attorney's, fees, but in the prayer it is stated as follows: “For which reason it is prayed that judgment be rendered against Antero Aponte for $400 as principal plus $i25 stipulated in the loan deed for the payment of costs and attorney’s fees in case of judicial recovery.”

It has been repeatedly held by this court as well as by the continental courts that the prayer of the complaint often ser res for determining, in doubtful cases, the nature of the action prosecuted. However, the sufficiency of the complaint is not dependent upon the prayer, but on the facts alleged as constituting a cause of action. Likewise, the jurisdictional amount must appear from the averments of the complaint, and for this reason, if the jurisdictional amount does not appear from said averments, the fact that a judgment is prayed for in an amount which was not claimed in the complaint should not be taken into account for the purpose of determining the jurisdictional amount. 1 Bancroft’s Code Pleading, §188 and eases cited; 1 Bancroft’s Code Practice and Remedies, §629 and cases cited.

In the case at bar, however, the defect in the complaint was not brought up for consideration by the court through demurrer or in any other way before the case was considered on its merits. If a demurrer to the complaint had been filed on this ground, we would have agreed, in accordance with the authorities cited, with the court below in that the amount claimed in the complaint was $400 and therefore insufficient to vest the lower court with jurisdiction. But such was not the case. The court itself, sua sponte, after the admission of the evidence and submission of the case, pro[698]*698ceeded to consider the sufficiency of the complaint without hearing in mind that the defect had been cured by the evidence offered by the defendant himself without objection from the plaintiff. Said evidence consisted of some part of the record in ease No. 2929 of the lower court (Tr. of Ev., p. 14) from which it appeared that the obligation now claimed in the complaint in the present case amounted to $400 plus an additional credit of $125 for costs and attorney’s fees in case of judicial recovery.

However,, the lower Gourt went even further and, notwithstanding its ruling that it was without jurisdiction' by reason of the amount, went to the merits of the case and concluded that the $400 obligation had been paid, as alleged by the defendant. It then held that the evidence showed that the defendant did not owe the principal of the obligation for $400; that the $125 of the accessory obligation for costs and attorney’s fees was contracted for the event that the creditor should be compelled to claim an existing obligation, but not in the case of a claim for an obligation already paid in full; and congruently with this reasoning it held that the plaintiff was not entitled to recover in the instant case the accessory credit claimed in the complaint; that if the $125 item were eliminated, the claim was reduced to $400, which is an insufficient amount to vest the lower court with jurisdiction.

The judge below in his reasoning overlooks the fact that two items were claimed: one for $400, which is the principal, and another for $125 for costs and attorney’s fees, which constitutes a claim accessory to the principal. If the plaintiffs prove partially or wholly the principal of the credit, they would ab 'initio be entitled to a judgment for the amount actually owed, plus the $125 of the accessory credit. If they fail to do so, the complaint must be dismissed. Therefore, the two credits are inseparable and fall or subsist together; but in either case the sum claimed in [699]*699the complaint, as amended by the evidence, will always amount to $525.

This question having been disposed of, we will go into the merits of the case.

The lower court holds that, by setting aside the summary foreclosure proceedings, the status quo

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Bluebook (online)
62 P.R. 694, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fuentes-v-aponte-prsupreme-1943.