Maryland Casualty Co. v. Quick Construction Corp.

90 P.R. 323
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 8, 1964
DocketNo. R-62-213
StatusPublished

This text of 90 P.R. 323 (Maryland Casualty Co. v. Quick Construction Corp.) 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
Maryland Casualty Co. v. Quick Construction Corp., 90 P.R. 323 (prsupreme 1964).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Belaval

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The Maryland Casualty Company was surety for Quick Construction Corporation in a public works contract for the construction of the Medical Center of Guaynabo. Quick Construction Corporation wás unable to perform its contract and the Secretary of Public Works required the surety to terminate the work. The surety terminated the work and required Quick Construction Corporation and its president, Carlos del Valle, Jr., to pay the amount spent by the surety [325]*325in the termination of the work. The surety company alleges that it became surety under the public works contract because Carlos del Valle, Jr., president of Quick Construction Corporation, bound himself personally with the surety to answer with his own property for any loss which the surety might sustain. Del Valle, Jr., alleges, on the contrary, that all his dealings with the surety were made in his capacity of president of Quick Construction Corporation, and he never agreed with the surety to secure it in turn against any loss which the surety might sustain in the construction contract.

In dismissing the complaint against Carlos del Valle, Jr., the trial court concluded that he “did not become principal guarantor of any debt which Quick Construction Corporation might incur in connection with the performance bond issued on July 2, 1956 by Maryland Casualty Company for the construction of the Medical Center of Guaynabo. Indeed, the court has the reasonable certainty, on the basis of the evidence introduced and the inferences drawn therefrom, that what happened was that plaintiff’s agent trusted the moral solvency of defendant, who was known to him, and that he accordingly authorized the issuance of the bond in favor of the corporation without further guarantee. It is settled in Puerto Rico that the desire to bind one’s self in this type of case should be express. The facts provided during the hearing do not warrant the finding that Del Valle bound himself personally with the surety company. There is an extraordinary similarity between the facts of this case and those which the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico found proved in Compañía Industrial v. Sánchez, 21 P.R.R. 178.”

The surety-appellant alleges that the trial court committed the following errors: (1) In concluding that code-fendant Carlos del Valle, Jr., never bound himself to answer with his private property for the obligations of Quick Construction Corporation, “although that possibility was considered,” such conclusion being in open conflict with the value [326]*326and the probative force of the.evidence; (2) In concluding that Carlos del Valle, Jr., did not become principal guarantor of any debt which Quick Construction Corporation might incur in connection with the performance bond for the payment of materials and labor issued on July 2, 1956 for the construction of.the Medical Center of Guaynabo, this conclusion being a manifest error as it appears from the weighing as a whole of the entire evidence; (3) In concluding that the surety’s agent trusted the moral solvency of defendant, who was known to him, and that he accordingly authorized the issuance of the bond in favor of Quick Construction Corporation without further guarantee, as being in open conflict with the value and probative force of the evidence, for a clear case of variance or manifest error between the most adequate interpretation of the evidence and. the findings of fact, and failing to represent the more rational, fair and juridical balance of the evidence, and contravening the rational order of human intelligence; (4) Because the evidence presented in this case by the surety to show that all the bonds in favor of Quick Construction Corporation were issued upon the guarantee which codefendant Carlos del Valle, Jr., had given to plaintiff to the effect that he would be personally responsible for the losses which the surety might sustain by reason of the bonds issued in favor of co-defendant Quick Construction Corporation — a corporation which transacted business for hundreds of thousands of dollars with a paid-in capital of $4,000 — which evidence consisted of the testimony of several witnesses — one was holder of 50 percent of the capital stock of Quick Construction Corporation, the other 50 percent being held by the family of Del Valle, Jr. Those witnesses testified having heard Del Valle, Jr., himself make statements on several occasions that he was personally responsible to the insurance company for any loss which it might sustain, “for anything which might happen in the contract,” without there being evidence to the [327]*327contrary other than the interested testimony of Del Valle, Jr., himself. Such evidence does not support the trial court’s finding that “the plaintiff’s agent issued the bonds because he trusted defendant’s moral solvency”; (5) Because the part of the judgment dismissing the complaint as to Carlos del Valle, Jr., is clearly and manifestly erroneous, and an analysis of the evidence would convince this Court that a manifest error has been committed.

The assignment of errors presents a simple question of weighing of evidence. The question for decision is whether Carlos del Valle, Jr., agreed verbally to do what he refused to do in writing: to guarantee personally the losses of the surety-appellant as a result of the failure of Quick Construction Corporation to perform the public works contract.

1-2.' An exhaustive analysis of the testimonies given by Orfilio Peláez, Jacinto F. Casablanca, Jr., Manuel San Juan, Jr., and Haydee Seda has convinced us that the finding of the trial court in the sense that codefendant Carlos del Valle, Jr., never bound himself to answer with his private property for the obligations of Quick Construction Corporation is absolutely correct. What the evidence shows at most is that Carlos'del Valle, Jr., occasionally made statements on the solvency of the corporation under his direction or on his own solvency, and, after the Secretary of Public Works required the surety company to terminate the contract, the assertions that the construction corporation could terminate the work without loss to the surety company. Every time he was required to agree in writing to guarantee the operations of the surety company to terminate' the work, he refused to do so.

3-5. The inference drawn by the trial court in the sense that the agent of the surety-appellant, trusting the moral solvency of defendant, authorized the issuance of the bonds of Quick Construction Corporation without further guarantee, may or may not be a perfect interpretation of the presumable elements of implied consent, but unquestionably [328]*328it does not constitute a manifest error and is not at variance with the more rational, fair and juridical balance of the evidence, nor contravenes the rational order of human intelligence. The evidence shows that on some occasions, though not in the general course of business, the surety company issued bonds without requiring a guarantee of the debtors for the losses which the surety company might sustain. Although unquestionably it is the practice of the surety business to require such guarantee, it is not to be expected, except for some percentage suggested by secular experience, that the surety company be always covered fully in every operation. The evidence further shows that the professional education and the standing of the person in the community are taken into account. San Juan, Jr., gave a clear and trustworthy explanation of the peculiar character of the business.

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Bluebook (online)
90 P.R. 323, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maryland-casualty-co-v-quick-construction-corp-prsupreme-1964.