Gandia & Stubbe v. Cadierno

233 F. 739, 147 C.C.A. 505, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2515
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMay 23, 1916
DocketNo. 1135
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 233 F. 739 (Gandia & Stubbe v. Cadierno) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gandia & Stubbe v. Cadierno, 233 F. 739, 147 C.C.A. 505, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2515 (1st Cir. 1916).

Opinion

DODGE, Circuit Judge.

The bankrupt in this case was a firm known by the name “Sola é Hijo, S. en C.” How many partners composed the firm is not shown by the record, nor do the names of any of them appear. '

The appellants are creditors of the firm and have a claim against the estate which has been allowed in the sum of $7,052.33, being the total amount due them from the firm for fertilizer sold and delivered to it at various times during 1911 and 1912-

Having obtained its allowance, as above, th,e appellants filed a petition to the referee, asking that their claim be granted priority. This was filed April 5, 1914, entitled, “Motion to Obtain Priority of Payment on Behalf of Gandía & Stubbe.” The request made was:

“Wherefore the petitioners move that their claims be allowed priority for payment within paragraph 6 of section 1823, and paragraph 4 of the section [741]*7411824, of the Civil Code oí Porto Rico, as a refactionary credit representing cultivating expenses for agricultural purposes.”

The referee denied the request, holding that the petitioners had not established a proper claim for priority. The District Court, on review, sustained the referee, from which order this appeal is taken.

[1] The business done by the bankrupt firm appears to have consisted in raising tobacco and sugar cane upon various farms or plantatations belonging to it in Porto Rico called “fincas.” Findings by the referee that the debt in question “arose out of the sale of fertilizers sold to the bankrupt as agriculturists and not as wholesalers of fertilizer,” and that “the fertilizer was sold for the purposes oí cultivation,” are not disputed. The material portions of sections 1823 and 1824 of the Civil Code of Porto Rico containing the provisions relied on by the appellants may be quoted from the English version of the Code included in the compilation of the Revised Statutes and Codes of Porto Rico, published by the Bureau of Insular Affairs, War Department, in 1913.

Section 1823 provides that:

“Witti regard to specified personal property of the debtor, tlie following are preferred: * í: * 6. Credits for seeds and expenses of cultivation, and harvesting, advanced to the debtor, with regard to the fruits of the crops to which they were applied.”

There being nothing' in the record to show that any of the fertilizer sold to the bankrupt firm as above was applied to any particular crop, or that the fruits of any crop to which it may have been applied, or the proceeds thereof, form any part of the bankrupt estate, it is clear that, as the referee and the District Court both held, the above provisions have no application for any purpose in the present case.

[2, 3J Section 1824 of the Code provides that:

“With regard to certain real property and rights on realty of the debtor, the following shall have preference: * * *
“2. Credits for advances for agricultural purposes, as to the crops on the property for which such advances are made, as provided In the special act relative to that subject. * * ~
“4. Mortgage and agricultural credits (refaccionarios) entered and recorded in the registry of property, with regard to the property mortgaged, or which had been the object of the agricultural loan (refacción). * * *
"(5. Agricultural loans not entered or recorded with regard to the real estate to which the agricultural loan (refacción) relates, and oidy with regard to other credits from that mentioned in the. four preceding numbers.”

[4, 5] Paragraph 4 of this section is the only paragraph expressly relied on in the above “motion to obtain priority,” etc. It has no application, because no claim is made that tiiere was ever anji record relating to the debt in question or any part thereof. Paragraph 2, not mentioned in the above motion, but considered by the referee, has no application; for the same reason as those which exclude paragraph 6 of sec. 1823. It is in paragraph 6 alone, also not mentioned in the appellants’ original motion, that any possible support for their claim to “preference” under the Code can be found — as was held both by the referee and by the District Court.

The “preference” given by paragraph 6 is not given with regard to the debtor’s entire property, or with regard to all his real property, [742]*742but only “with regard to the real estate to which the agricultural loan relates.” Assuming the debt here in question to have been for an “agricultural loan,” within the meaning of the Code, to what real estate it related does not appear from the record, nor does it appear to what real estate the appellants contend that it related, unless their claim is that it related to all the real estate belonging to the bankrupt firm when the fertilizer was sold, without distinction. From the referee’s opinion dated June 23, 1914, they appear to have contended, on the evidence before the referee, that the firm had only one property, a finca called “La Union,” and that the fertilizer sold was presumably used on that property. But the records showed, according to the referee, that the firm had several other properties, upon any or all of which the fertilizer might have been used, wherefore he regarded the claim to priority as maintainable only if paragraph 6 of section 1824 entitled the appellants to payment out of the proceeds of sale of the finca “La Union.” In his subsequent certificate to the District Court, dated October 15, 1914, the referee stated that:

' “No evidence was offered to show upon which properties of the "bankrupt i estate the fertilizer sold by petitioner was used. No evidence was offered to show that any of the fertilizer in question was used on the property called ‘Union.’ ”

There is no indication in the record of any attempt by the appellants to show that their “agricultural loan” related either to the finca “La Union,” or to any particular piece of real property belonging to the bankrupt firm. The opinion of the District Court makes no reference to the above statements by the referee, nor does the brief submitted to us by the appellants. On behalf of the trustee in bankruptcy, there has been neither argument nor brief submitted in this court. The appellants’ contention appears to be, that if the sales of fertilizer were to the firm “as agriculturists” and “for the purposes of cultivation,” nothing further is necessary to make the transaction an “agricultural loan” or to make it “relate” in the sense of section 1824, to all real estate owned by the firm, without discrimination. We are by no means satisfied that the section is to be so understood; but, if it is, there are further difficulties in the way of holding that the appellants have acquired either “preference” or “priority” by virtue of it.

In the first place, the assumption that a “preference” good, according to section 1824, against all a bankrupt’s real estate would be the same thing as a “priority,” in the sense in which the Bankruptcy Act uses that term, is one which we are not prepared to adopt.

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Bluebook (online)
233 F. 739, 147 C.C.A. 505, 1916 U.S. App. LEXIS 2515, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gandia-stubbe-v-cadierno-ca1-1916.