Lodge ''Knights of Agueynaba,'' No. 9639 v. Lodge "Knights of Pythias''

47 P.R. 498
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedSeptember 29, 1934
DocketNo. 6318
StatusPublished

This text of 47 P.R. 498 (Lodge ''Knights of Agueynaba,'' No. 9639 v. Lodge "Knights of Pythias'') 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
Lodge ''Knights of Agueynaba,'' No. 9639 v. Lodge "Knights of Pythias'', 47 P.R. 498 (prsupreme 1934).

Opinion

Mb. Chief Justice Del Tobo

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The plaintiff lodge was organized in the year 1916 in the city of Mayagiiez, under the auspices of the “Grand United Order of Oddfellows in America.” It was named Lodge “Knights of Agueynaba, No. 9639.”

On August 5, 1922, the lodge purchased from Antonio Touzón a concrete one-story house located on Peral Street, Mayagiiez, and the purchase was recorded in the registry of property. The lodge moved in, and as the house was too small for its meetings and activities, it was enlarged by building a second story.

On May 9, 1930, the plaintiff appears in, a public deed selling its house to the defendant, and this is an action brought by the former to annul the deed, or rather, the contract embodied therein.

The defendant demurred and answered. The case went to trial and the court rendered judgment for the plaintiff, with costs. The defendant then took the present appeal, assigning in its brief the following errors which it claims were committed by the district court: (1) in overruling its [500]*500demurrer; (2) in deciding that the notary before whom the deed was executed was incapacitated; (3) in holding that there was identity of contracting parties; (4) in holding that there was no consideration; (5) in sustaining the complaint, and (6) in mulcting it in costs.

In its statement of the case and opinion the trial court held as proved the existence of the plaintiff lodge since 1916, its acquisition of the house in question, and the enlargement thereof, and its devotion to a temple.

It also held as proved that the sale of the house to the defendant was not a real and effective sale but one made in order to prevent the house from being mortgaged and in order that the defendant lodge, constituted by the same members of the plaintiff lodge, could engage in activities prohibited by the regulations of the plaintiff lodge; and that once the defendant obtained the execution of the deed, it rebelled against the United Order of Oddfellows in America and abandoned the plaintiff lodge expelling those members who ''remained faithful to the Order, and appropriating the temple 'to its own use and benefit, and constituting a new order named Latin Oddfellows of America.

The above facts established, the court reached the following conclusions:

“That the members which constituted the plaintiff lodge prior to the authorization to form the defendant lodge and to the authorization to sell the described property belonging to the defendant, were the same members or persons . . . and that all of them knew that the deed of sale in question was executed pro-forma, with the only purpose of preventing the property in question from being encumbered and to perpetuate the life of the defendant and .its premises.
“That the rebellion of a great number of the members of the plaintiff lodge after they became members of the defendant lodge was made with the preconceived idea of dispossessing the plaintiff from its property ... as it clearly appears from the fact that . . . they rebeled and abandoned the plaintiff, entirely excluding the latter and its members from their rights to said property, notwithstanding the fact that they knew that the defendant lodge had been [501]*501organized for the sole purpose of teaching and enlightening all members of the plaintiff lodge, since the rules and regulations of the same allowed no other reading, lectures or teachings but those related with said plaintiff order.
“This Court also holds. . . .
“That there was no consideration whatsoever for the sale, as said obligations (the one thousand shares to bearer of $5.00 each) do not appear to have been executed in favor of the seller . . . When the plaintiff entity sold the property it was the only person, as such, which should have received the value or consideration of the sale, but not its members or unknown persons. The sale with promissory notes in favor of unkown persons which at maturity might be holders and lawful bearers of the same, is equivalent to the nonpayment of the price, which is contrary to the power “to sell” given by the plaintiff to its officers.
“This Court also finds that the deed in question is null by the other ground that the same persons which originally formed the plaintiff lodge later constituted the defendant lodge, and as the plaintiff lodge was the seller and the defendant lodge was the purchaser in law both parties were the same, that is, there are no relations between two parties, one the seller and the other the purchaser. It is not conceivable in law that one person be at the same time purchaser and seller.
“This Court finally concludes that the said deed was null on the other ground that the notary before whom it was executed was unable to act as such a notary in the execution of' said deed; inasmuch as it clearly appears from the evidence that he was an interested party.”

To get a clear view of the facts and of the attendant circumstances, it seems advisable to copy the following from the deed dated May 9, 1930, and from the testimony of witness Altieri.

The deed reads as follows:

“By this deed the Lodge “Knights of Agueynaba” No. 9639 of the Grand United Order of Oddfellows in America, represented by its Worthy Noble Grandee (President), the said Juan Acevedo Pérez, sells the property described, with all its belongings to the said Worshipful Lodge, Knights of Pythias, for five thousand dollars, which the said purchaser by its Knight Commander (President) Blpidio Rivera delivers in this act in one thousand promissory notes to [502]*502BEARER, to be paid without interest on the tenth day of May of the year one thousand nine hundred fifty; and to secure the payment of all the one thousand promissory notes to the bearer which it delivers, to the natural or artificial person which on the said date of maturity might be the holder of all and each one of the said PROMISSORY notes to bearer, and for the interests at 10 per cent annual rate from the date of maturity to its total payment, the purchaser, the Worshipful Lodge Knights of Pythias, represented by its Knight Commander, Elpidio Rivera, constitutes voluntary mortgage upon the same urban property purchased by this document.”

And the witness testified in part:

“Q —Are you in any way related to the Lodge Knights of Agueynaba No. 6369?
“A. — Yes, sir; I was its founder in Mayagüez 16 years ago.
“Q. — For what purposes was said lodge organized?
“A. — It was organized for the purposes determined by fraternity among the brothers; mutual insurance and visits to sick brothers; we organized an insurance fund, and any other disposition coming from the Grand District Lodge and from the London Biennal Committee. ’
“Q. — That is, it has no lucrative purposes?
"A. — No, sir.
“Q. — On or about the year 1930, did you have anything to do with the members of that lodge?
“A. — I did.
“Q. — Please tell the Court about your intervention therein.
“A.

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47 P.R. 498, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lodge-knights-of-agueynaba-no-9639-v-lodge-knights-of-pythias-prsupreme-1934.