Gavilán v. Torres

31 P.R. 96
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 27, 1922
DocketNo. 2415
StatusPublished

This text of 31 P.R. 96 (Gavilán v. Torres) 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
Gavilán v. Torres, 31 P.R. 96 (prsupreme 1922).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Hutchison

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

• Plaintiff appeals from a judgment of dismissal entered after a trial on tbe merits and based upon facts and conclusions stated by tbe trial judge as follows:

“'Phis is an ordinary action for tbe recovery of a sum of money due on a mortgage, which defendant contends was paid. Tbe evidence shows that on Januray 2, 1914, Teodoro Torres Laborda created a voluntary mortgage in favor of A. Gómez & Co. on a property belonging t.o him in Roble ward of the municipal district of Aibonito for the sum of $775 and interest, of which $475 was payable on certain specific dates. On May 19, 1919, and after the firm of A. Gomez & Co. had been adjudged bankrupt, the said credit, together with other credits due to the extinguished firm, was awarded to Francisco Gavilán. On May 13, 1920, Gavilán notified Teodoro Torres Laborda of the transfer of said mortgage credit. Tt does not appear from the evidence that the voluntary mortgage was recorded in the registry of property, nor has the transfer in payment or adjudication of such mortgage credit been [97]*97so recorded. That prior to the dissolution o£ the firm .of A. Gómez & Co. and before it ivas adjudged bankrupt, defendant Teodoro Torres Laborda delivered to A. Gómez & Co. thirty-two quintals of tobacco valued at $25 the quintal and ten quintals of 'boliche’ worth $10 the quintal, aggregating a value of $900. This amount was received by A. Gómez & Co. in cancellation of the mortgage, but the deed of cancellation was never made. Defendant Teodoro Torres Laborda also proved that he pastured twenty head of cattle belonging to A. Gómez & Co. on his property, subject to an agreed rate of $1 a month per head and that said cattle were grazing on the property.of Torres Laborda for nearly two years and six months. Article 152 of the Mortgage Law provides that ‘A .mortgage credit may be conveyed or assigned to a third person in whole or in part, provided it be effected by means of a public instrument, notice of which is given to the debtor’, and that it be recorded in tire registry. The debtor shall not be bound by said contract to any further extent than he was by his own. The assignee shall be subrogated to all the rights of the assignor. ’ Under these provisions it is clear that Torres Laborda was under no greater obligation to. the assignee than to the assignor, and the latter could not assign any rights other than those he held against Laborda. Neither the mortgage nor the transfer of the credit was recorded in the registry of property. The assignee in this ease has elected the ordinary proceeding of a personal action of debt and not the summary foreclosure proceeding. In this action there is no doubt that the defendant can rely on any defense he may have against Gavilán as the assignee of the rights of A. Gómez & Go. And from his evidence it appears that he paid A. Gómez & Co. an amount sufficient to cancel said indebtedness. The defendant has filed a counterclaim against A. Gómez & Co. for the sum of $525 for the pasturing of the cattle. But A. Gómez & Co. were not made a party to this action and hence no judgment can be rendered against them. The defendant must limit his defense to defeat the personal action of debt brought against him by the plaintiff as assignee of the credit'of A. Gómez & Co.”

Error is assigned as follows:

“1. The court erred in admitting, over the objection of the plaintiff, the amended answer herein at the trial.
2. The court erred in not striking the fourth plea from the • amended answer.
[98]*98■' “3. The court erred in rendering judgment against the plaintiff dismissing the complaint.
■ ”4. The court erred in not admitting the testimony of Benjamin Gómez in connection with the contents of the books of A. Gómez &:Co., the whereabouts of which was unknown.”

The grounds of the first assignment are:

”1. That the party was negligent in making his motion to amend;.
“2. That it was made when the case was ready to be heard on its merits, that is, on the very day on which the evidence was to ■})(? submitted.
“3. That this amendment was a surprise to the plaintiff, since it raised new issues and defenses for which the plaintiff was not prepared.
”4. That its admission meant the adjournment of the trial.”

None of these reasons seem to have been suggested at the trial.

The plaintiff alleged, among other things:

Fourth: That the commercial firm of A. Gómez & Co., defendant’s creditor, was adjudged bankrupt by the District Court of the United States for Porto Rico in San Juan, and the case was submitted to the referee. — Fifth: That after the legal formalities in said proceeding, all the assets of the said firm of A. Gómez & Co. were transferred under the bankruptcy proceeding to the creditors of the said firm, including the plantiff herein, who was awarded, together with other property, the whole mortgage credit created by the defendant Teodoro Torres Laborda, which adjudication or award was agreed on at the final meeting of creditors held in the said ■case in the city of San Juan on April 17th of the current year in •settlement of the claim against the bankrupt firm in accordance with a deed of adjudication executed by the trustee in said bankruptcy, Isidoro D. Delgado, before Notary Harry F. Besosa on May 19, 1919. — Sixth: That after the said mortgage credit had been awarded to the plaintiff, he, on various occasions, made demand on ' the defendant, who was notified of the transfer, but who has refused to pay either the said debt in whole or the interest accruing thereon to the plaintiff or to any person authorized by the latter.

The answer, after a general denial, alleged as new matter:

[99]*99“That more than three years ago the defendant delivered to, the said firm of A. Gómez & Co. certain lots of leaf tobacco that he had harvested from the rural property described in the complaint, the value of which was greater than the amount alleged to be due from him to the plaintiff, A. Gómez & Co., in discharge of his indebtedness, the said firm having assumed the obligation to execute the necessary deed of acquittance in due course, which it failed to. do because of - the confidential relations existing between the representative of tire said firm of A. Gómez & Co, and the defendant Teodoro Torres Laborda, and that subsequently the said representative A. Gómez died without having consummated the said deed of acquittance, which was deferred by mutual agreement of the parties, and the mortgage, extinguished.

The amended answer, before setting up this new matter, says that:—

“The defendant denies the first, second and third allegations of the complaint. — 2. He also denies the fourth- allegation of the complaint and, per contra,, contends that at the time referred to in the alleged bankruptcy proceeding of the firm of A. Gómez & Co., he was a creditor of said firm, but received no notice of the said proceeding and was without official knowledge thereof. — 3. He also denies the fifth and sixth allegations of the complaint., alleging, per contra,

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Bluebook (online)
31 P.R. 96, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gavilan-v-torres-prsupreme-1922.