Hess Klinger v. Heirs of Mestres Bagués

55 P.R. 792
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJanuary 8, 1940
DocketNo. 7938
StatusPublished

This text of 55 P.R. 792 (Hess Klinger v. Heirs of Mestres Bagués) 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
Hess Klinger v. Heirs of Mestres Bagués, 55 P.R. 792 (prsupreme 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice De Jesús

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The question involved in this appeal does not affect the '’defendants against whom the plaintiffs have a final judgment. 'This is an incident between plaintiffs and the intervener when "the former tried to execute their judgment on a property mortgaged to the latter. Leaving aside those details which are not necessary for a decision of this appeal, the facts of the case may be summarized as follows: the plaintiffs were the owners of three rural properties mortgaged to Boses & Co. As they were the owners of another rural property on which there were no liens, the plaintiffs grouped the four properties and so grouped sold them to two persons each of [793]*793whom purchased a half in common of the same. The purchasers owed a balance of $650 of the purchase price and although they executed a mortgage in favor of the vendor on the whole grouped property acquired by them, when the contract of sale was recorded, the record of the mortgage was not requested and therefore, the registrar, in making the record of the sale, expressly mentioned the mortgage for $650 executed as guarantee for the balance of the purchase price.

One of the purchasers mortgaged his tenancy in common in favor of the intervener for an amount of $1,200, in principal, interest, etc., and this mortgage was recorded in the registry of property. Under this state of affairs, the mortgage in favor of Roses & Co. was foreclosed and due to this, the defendants lost said three properties, and in regard to these properties the mention of a mortgage in favor of the plaintiffs vendors was canceled as well as that executed and recorded in favor of the intervener. Later, the plaintiffs filed this suit against the successors in interest of the purchasers for the collection of $650 balance of the purchase price, and they obtained a judgment on default which became final when no appeal was taken from it. Once the judgment was final, the plaintiffs tried to attach the remaining property, that is, the one which was not subject to the mortgage of Roses & Co., but in trying to foreclose, they were confronted by the mortgage which the intervener had recorded on the same property. The lower court held that the inter-vener should be notified of the auction sale and although ho appeared and alleged that he had a better title than the plaintiffs, his claims were rejected and finally the property was sold in execution of the judgment and the mortgage of the intervener in the registry of property was ordered canceled. It was against this ’ decision that the intervener filed this appeal.

The fact that the express mention of title or of any other real right is effective against third parties in due [794]*794course since the date of presentation of the respective title, according to the provisions of Section 29 of the Mortgage L,aw, appears to have confused not only the plaintiffs-ap-pellees but the lower court as well, thereby preventing a correct decision of the controversy.

The mention of the mortgage which was made in favor of the plaintiffs constituted a warning to all the world of the existence of a mortgage right in poientia, we could say, a right which could be consummated as soon as the mortgage was recorded in the registry of property.

Once the mortgage object of the mention is recorded in the registry of property, its legal effect is effective from the date of the presentation of the title on which the mention was based, since if this were not so, it could not be properly said that a mention is effective against third parties in due course. The necessity of recording the right object of the mention appears in Section 1774 of the Civil Code (1930 ed.) and in paragraph 2 of Section 146 of the Mortgage Law, both of which state that in order that a mortgage be validly constituted, it must be recorded in the registry of property and, in any case, this also appears from the second paragraph of Section 29 of the Mortgage Law which states: (Italics ours.)

“The provisions of the foregoing paragraph shall he understood without prejudice to the obligation of specially recording such interests, or to the liability which may be incurred by a person who must request the record in certain cases.”

Morell, in his work entitled “Legislación Hipotecaria de Ultramar”, commenting on said Section, says:

“Although the simple mention would affect third parties in due course, if he (this refers to the owner of the above mentioned right) wishes to make good his right before the courts, he has to register specifically said right, since he has tO‘ show a title registered in his favor.” (Parenthesis and italics supplied.)

In the case at bar, the plaintiffs did not record their mortgage before filing the complaint for the collection of the balance of the purchase money, Therefore, their action was [795]*795not one for the foreclosure of a mortgage, since as the right was not recorded, the mortgage had no existence as yet. But even assuming that the mortgage had been previously recorded, even so, the action that they filed was a personal suit for the collection of money since the action was not against the property, the complaint not praying for the sale of the mortgaged property, a circumstances which characterizes the ordinary action for the foreclosure of a mortgage. Apart from the fact that until the mortgage of the plaintiffs is recorded, the interveners’ recorded mortgage continues being a first mortgage, as this is not a case for the foreclosure of a mortgage — whether through the summary proceedings of the Mortgage Law or by the ordinary proceedings under the Code of Civil Procedure — Section 125 of the Mortgage Law, as amended in 1912 (Laws, p. 65) and Sections 171 and 172 of the Regulations which authorize the cancellation of the rights of second mortgagees and junior mortgage lien holders if after notifying them of the sale at auction of the mortgaged property it is sold or adjudicated “in payment to the first creditor, in such manner that the value of what is sold does not equal or exceed the mortgage debt which is liquidated’, are not applicable.

The case of Montes de Oca v. Báes et al., 23 P.R.R. 656, on which the lower court based its judgment, is not applicable to the present case. In that case it was decided that Section 125 of the Mortgage Law and Sections 171 and 172 of the Regulations are applicable to an action for the collection of a mortgage credit through the special proceedings of the Mortgage Law as well as when a creditor elects the ordinary procedure of the Code of Civil Procedure. In both proceedings a mortgage foreclosure is involved while in the suit filed by the plaintiffs in this case the -action brought is a personal one for the collection of money and therefore the said legal provisions are not applicable-.

The case of Mora v. Registrar, 32 P.R.R. 731, cited by the appellees, far from favoring them is adverse to them [796]*796and illustrates perfectly the principles which we have stated in this opinion. In that case José Mora sold a rural property to Luis Perocier on July 3, 1920 for $6,500, of which he paid the amount of $500 and in the same deed of sale executed a mortgage to guarantee the deferred amount of the purchase price.

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55 P.R. 792, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hess-klinger-v-heirs-of-mestres-bagues-prsupreme-1940.