Gandia v. Porto Rico Fertilizer Co.

2 F.2d 641, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2131
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 13, 1924
DocketNo. 1777
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2 F.2d 641 (Gandia v. Porto Rico Fertilizer Co.) 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 v. Porto Rico Fertilizer Co., 2 F.2d 641, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2131 (1st Cir. 1924).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Circuit Judge.

This is the same case in which this court rendered an opinion on June 21, 1923, 291 F. 18. We then held the Supreme Court of Porto Rico in error in reversing the District Court of San Juan, for lack of necessary parties, in order to determine title to 60 shares of stock of the defendant company. After mandate from this court, Gandia contended that the reversal involved the merits, and thus affirmed the decision of the District Court in his favor. The Fertilizer Company contended that this court decided only the question of law as to necessary parties, and that the merits were thus open for consideration by the Supreme Court on the original appeal to that court. The Supreme Court adopted that view, considered the case on the merits, and reversed the District Court.

Gandia’s present appeal, therefore, involves two questions:

(1) Whether the Supreme Court of Porto Rico correctly interpreted the mandate from this court.

(2) If. it did, whether the last decision of that court is correct.

The mandate, which must be construed with the opinion, in terms remanded the case to the Supreme Court “for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.” The opinion referred to facts and merits, as distinguished from the question of law arising as to indispensable parties, only as a setting to show what the question of law really was.

The Supremo Court was correct in reviewing the appeal from the District Court on its merits. The question now before us on appeal is, then, as to the merits.

This is one of numerous lawsuits arising out of the dissolution agreement of the partnership of Gandía and. Stubbe. The instrument thus fruitful of litigation is as follows:

“Articles of Dissolution and Liquidation of Mercantile Partnership.

“In the city of San Juan, Porto Rico, this 24th day of July, 1916. Before me, Cayetano Coll Cuchi, attorney and notary public, resident of this capital, with an office at No. 46 Tetuan Street, appears Johann D. Stubbe, of age, married, and merchant, of the one part and Pedro Gandía, of age, married, and a merchant, of the other part. Both parties are residents of this city of San Juan, and assure me that they have, as I believe they have, the necessary capacity to execute these articles of their own free wills. They sot forth:

“First. That by deed Ño. 5 executed in San Juan, Porto Rico, on March 23, 1916, before the undersigned notary, both parties agreed to an extension for one year more of the mercantile partnership contract which they entered into before Notary Eduardo Acuna Aybar on April 18, 1908, the term of which had been successively extended until by the said deed executed before me its dissolution was fixed for the 18th of April, 1917, the said deed being duly recorded in the mercantile registry.

“Second. That, although the day fixed in the said deed for the dissolution of the part[642]*642nership has not arrived, the parties consider it necessary to terminate their business relations and have agreed to dissolve the partnership in the manner and under the terms to be stated hereafter.

'“Third. That for the purposes of the said dissolution of the’partnership a general balance and inventory was made on July 18 of' the present .year, in order to close the books accordingly, it being as follows:

“Balance of Gandia & Stubbe on July 18, 1916. Ledger.
Account No. 3, Furniture ....... $1,014.23
Account No. 4. Lands in. Trasmiramar ....... 12,104.86
Account No. 5. Rural property.. 23,450.35
Account No. 6. Stock of Plata Sugar Company............... 1,406.25
Account No. 11. Cotton-mill building .......................... 3,301.53
Account No, 13. Stock of Porto Rico Fertilizer Company....... 25,000.00
Account No. 16. Mortgages ..... 1,795.06
Account No. 18. Commission Department, cash account......... 5,281.17
Account No. 19. Cash.......... 2,076.87
Account No. 20. Dividends of . Porto Rico Fertilizer Company.. 16,468.12
Account No. 21. Bills receivable. 128.08
Account No. 33. Cattle business 565.86
Account No. 36. Consignment accounts ....................... 3,989.26
Account No. 37. Merchandise ... 4,055.65
Account No„ 43. Commission Department, special account...... 4,821.70
Account No. 47. Accounts current .............:........... 37,771.21
Account No. 51. Stock of Central Pasto Viejo................... 800.00
Account No. 60. Gandia & Stub-be, liquidation account......... 10,090.00
Total ...................... $154,120.55
Account No. 1. Pedro Gandia, capital account................ $50,000.00
Account No. 2. J. D. Stubbe, capital account............... 50,000.00
Account No. 14. J. P. Coats, Limited ..................... 1.325.00
Account No. 17.’ Sun Life Association Company .of Canada.... 1,082.68
Account No. 22. Martin Faljr, tires account ...................... 562.53
Account No. 23. Discounted bill.., 2.200.00
Account No. 24. Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Company ........................ 47.53
Account No. 26. Taxes account.. 129.71
Account No. 27. The Palatine, duties account................... 126.60
Account No. 42. Banks ........ 154.88
Account No. 44. J. D. Stubbe, personal account.............. 4,378.11
Account No. 45. J. D. Stubbe, special account.........:...... 13,200700
Account No. 46. Reserve fund... 5,757.27
Account No. 48. Pedro Gandia, personal account............... 5,389.51
Account No. 50. Bills payable.,. 4,335.53
Account No. 56. Federico Stubbe 7,476.63
Account No. 59. P. Gandia, special account.................... 7,954.51
Total ......................$154,120.55

“Fourth. That the two partners have agreed that the said dissolution shall be made in the following manner: The assets of the partnership shall be divided between the two partners in the manner to be specifically stated hereinafter, the allotments being credited to the liabilities of the partnership; and there shall be opened a liquidation account of Gandia & Stubbe to settle all outstanding accounts not immediately susceptible of division between the partners by a liquidator to be appointed by common agreement, who shall act in the name and as the 'representative of both partners.

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2 F.2d 641, 1924 U.S. App. LEXIS 2131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gandia-v-porto-rico-fertilizer-co-ca1-1924.