Janer Vilá v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico

90 P.R. 277
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedApril 28, 1964
DocketNo. C-62-84
StatusPublished

This text of 90 P.R. 277 (Janer Vilá v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico) 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
Janer Vilá v. Superior Court of Puerto Rico, 90 P.R. 277 (prsupreme 1964).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Belaval

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On June 30, 1954 the divorce of petitioner José Ernesto Janer Vilá and intervener Margarita Velázquez Grillo became final and the legal conjugal partnership existing between them was dissolved. This conjugal partnership was owner of certain personal and real property which remained in the possession of the petitioner, for which reason the intervener requested the appointment of a referee to take possession of the aforesaid property and manage them under the order of the court until the liquidation and delivery of property was accomplished and she also requested that an acting referee be appointed until provision was made for a permanent receivership. Ismael H. Herrero was appointed acting referee and he was authorized to take possession of the property and collect all the rents, fruits and interest yielded by said property.

On March 17, 1955 the petitioner filed a motion in the lower court seeking to set aside the appointment of the acting referee and to reinstate petitioner in the administration and management of the business, because the pro[279]*279visional receivership decreed was causing serious prejudice to his business and to the credit, good name, and business reputation of the defendant, causing the suspension of the different lines of credit granted to the defendant by the Banco Popular de Puerto Rico. Said suspension of credit precluded the defendant from paying all the ordinary expenses of the cutting and hauling of cane, the continuation of the crop-loan contracts with the colonos and, in general, the continuation of the business established and developed by the defendant up to that time; that the petitioner was willing to present in the office of the clerk of the court a detailed statement of the aforesaid business on or before March 31 in order to proceed to the immediate and prompt liquidation of any participation that might correspond to the intervener therein; that since June 24, 1954 the petitioner had delivered to the intervener, through her attorneys, a detailed statement of the real property and he has been and is willing to proceed with its liquidation at the earliest possible date; that the right belonging to the intervener in the conjugal partnership was not jeopardized in any way and was amply guaranteed by the existence of the real property of the conjugal partnership as well as separately belonging to the defendant.

On March 17, 1955 the lower court entered an order setting aside the designation of the acting referee, reinstating defendant in the custody and disposition of the property, and ordering him to report a detailed statement of the assets and liabilities of the former conjugal partnership on or before March 31, 1955, ordering him also to permit the intervener or her representative to inspect the accounting books of said business and, lastly, ordering petitioner to post a bond for $15,000 to answer for the damages that might be caused by the petitioner to the intervener by reason of the business transactions that said petitioner might ac[280]*280complish up to the date set for the appointment of the permanent referee, that is, April 1, 1955.

On April 1, by virtue of an express stipulation, the hearing for the permanent receivership was suspended and the intervener informed the court that the petitioner had delivered a statement of the assets and liabilities of the agricultural and commercial businesses in which the former conjugal partnership had an interest. As to a probable inventory of the corpus of the property, it would be advisable to examine the request for admission of facts filed by the inter-vener on July 23, 1956 and the partial answer to said request filed by the petitioner on August 1, 1956 and the supplementary answer to said request filed by the petitioner on August 22, 1956. The petition requested petitioner to admit the certainty of the following facts:

“1. — That the following real property belong to the conjugal partnership which is the object of liquidation in this case:
“(a) Lot of 2491 square meters, with two buildings, situated on Gautier Benitez Street of Caguas, known as Almacenes Johnson, acquired by deed No. 85 of March 5, 1949, before Notary Luis Morales Contreras, and recorded at folio 58 of volume 250 of Caguas;
“(b) Lot of 400 square meters on Juan Jiménez García Street of Caguas, acquired by deed No. 103 executed on April 2, 1945 before Notary Andrés Mena Latorre, recorded at folio 113 of volume 281 of Caguas, property No. 7971.
“(c) Lot of 324 square meters on Juan Jiménez García Street of Caguas, acquired by deed No. 326, executed on August 22, 1945 before Notary Andrés Mena Latorre, recorded at folio 118 of volume 281 of Caguas, property No. 7972.
“(d) Lot of 600 square meters with a house, on Juan Jiménez García Street of Caguas, known as Almacén Plá, formed by consolidation, pursuant to deed No. 659 executed on December 2, 1960 before Notary Antonio L. López, recorded at folio 235 of volume 281 of Caguas, property No. 7985.
[281]*281“(e) House on municipal lot of 853 square meters at 57 Celis Aguilera Street of Caguas, acquired by deed No. 64 executed on September 29, 1952 before Notary J. E. González Quiñones, recorded at folio 55 back, volume 22 of Caguas, property No. 790.
“(f) Property of 524 square meters with three buildings on Muñoz Rivera Street of Juncos, acquired by deed No. 79 executed on December 8, 1952 before Notary Luis Ríos Algarin, recorded in the Registry of Property of Ca-guas at folio 232 of volume 67 of Juncos, property No. 2239.
“(g) Joint interest of 61.31 cuerdas in a farm situated in Barrio Tomás de Castro of Caguas, having an area of 343.29 cuerdas, acquired in different parcels.
“(h) Property of 80.70 cuerdas in Barrio Ceiba of Las Piedras, consisting of two parcels of land of 39.93 and 40.77 cuerdas, recorded at folios 130 and 122 back, respectively, of volume 33 of Las Piedras, in the Registry of Property of Caguas.
“(i) Property of 21.78 cuerdas situated in Barrio Turabo of Caguas, consisting of two parcels of land of 14.03 and 7.75 cuerdas, recorded at folios 61 and 47, respectively, of volume 278 of Caguas.
“(j) Property of 65.33 cuerdas situated in Barrio Que-mados of San Lorenzo, recorded at folio 89 of volume 63 of San Lorenzo, in the Registry of Property of Caguas.
“2. — That the aforesaid conjugal partnership invested the. amount of $39,854 in materials and labor in the reconstruction of a building situated at 45 Celis Aguilera Street of Caguas, P.R., separate property of the defendant.
“3. — That at the time he contracted marriage with the plaintiff, the separate real properties of the defendant were encumbered by mortgages, which were paid during the marriage with funds of the conjugal partnership, as follows:
“(a) — $1,540 principal and $3.89 interest on property of 45.62 cuerdas in Barrio Tomás de Castro of Caguas, P.R.
“(b) — $3,600 principal and $19.60 interest on property of 111.50 cuerdas in Barrios Tomás de Castro and Quemados of Caguas and San Lorenzo, P.R., respectively.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P.R. 277, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/janer-vila-v-superior-court-of-puerto-rico-prsupreme-1964.