Meléndez Martínez v. Jiménez Realty, Inc.

98 P.R. 872
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 25, 1970
DocketNo. R-68-320
StatusPublished

This text of 98 P.R. 872 (Meléndez Martínez v. Jiménez Realty, Inc.) 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
Meléndez Martínez v. Jiménez Realty, Inc., 98 P.R. 872 (prsupreme 1970).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Dávila

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A contract by which “plaintiffs would segregate part of their respective properties . . . and after said segregations [873]*873were approved by the Puerto Rico Planning Board, they would sell the segregated parcels to defendant, which binds itself to buy them,” is it void in the light of the decision in Soto v. Feliciano, 80 P.R.R. 595 (1958) ?

Before considering the question raised it is necessary to set forth what occurred in the present suit.

Doctors Andrés S. and Manuel Meléndez Martínez signed, on February 14, 1964, a contract with Jiménez Realty, Inc. The document states “that the appearing parties, Manuel Meléndez Martínez and Andrés S.. Meléndez Martínez, and their respective wives, also appearing parties, have agreed to sell to Jiménez Realty, Inc., certain parcels of land which shall be segregated from their respective properties described in detail in the draft of the deed attached to this contract and marked as Exhibits ‘A’ and ‘B’, respectively” and “that since the permit of the Planning Board to make the necessary segregations to effectuate said sale has not been obtained yet, the same cannot be consummated yet,” and “the parties agree that the corresponding Segregation, Sale, and Mortgage deeds shall be executed in the course of the following fifteen (15) days as of the date when both segregations are approved.”

On April 27, 1966, doctors' Meléndez filed a complaint against Jiménez Realty, Inc., in which they alleged “that the Puerto Rico Planning Board denied the segregation permit applied for by plaintiffs, for- which reason it is not possible to effectuate the sales agreed upon by the parties in the aforementioned contract. That this being a contract subject to the suspensive condition of the approval of the segregations by the Puerto Rico Planning Board, and, since the same were not approved, it is proper to invalidate the obligations agreed upon by the parties and that the things be returned to their condition before executing such obligations, plaintiff offering to return to defendant the amounts deposited by the latter,” and praying that “the rescission of the aforementioned con[874]*874tract invalidating the obligations contracted by the parties” be decreed “returning to defendant the amounts deposited and in the possession of plaintiffs . . .

Defendants answered the complaint alleging “that plaintiffs have not taken the necessary steps to obtain the corresponding segregation permits which they bound themselves to take under the contract and that for that reason it has not been possible yet to consummate the sale.” It filed counterclaim to recover damages which the delay in obtaining the permit of the Planning Board had caused to it. They also filed a third-party complaint against the wives of the two plaintiffs “because the two aforementioned real properties were community properties, the appearance of plaintiffs’ wives is indispensable to effectuate said conveyance and likewise it is indispensable that said wives be brought as parties to the suit in order that the judgment ordering specific compliance, which in due time this Court may enter,. shall be valid. At the present time they are not parties to the suit.”

In the answer to the third-party complaint filed on June 6, 1967, it was alleged as affirmative defenses that “the contract whose rescission is requested is not susceptible of compliance according to the same. Counter defendants and third-party defendants have complied with each and every one of their obligations in the aforementioned agreement. The defendant and third-party plaintiff failed to comply with its part in the • aforementioned contract in failing to cooperate in any manner whatsoever.”

Both parties requested information by serving interrogatories, plaintiffs filing their answer on February 23, 1968. On the following March 8, the hearing of the case was set for October 22, 1968.

On April 25, 1968, plaintiffs filed “Motion for Summary Judgment on the Pleadings.” They alleged therein:

“1. That the contract object of the present action which appears in the record of this case as Exhibit ‘A’ is absolutely [875]*875void since it was entered into and executed in violation of § 24 of the Puerto Rico Planning and Budget Act, 23 L.P.R.A. § 25, Paragraph 2.
“2. Said contract is absolutely void inasmuch as its object was illegal since it involved two parcels of land of which plaintiffs, that is, the promisors or vendors could not dispose of on the date on which the agreement was entered into because they were part of some properties of larger area and their segregations had not been previously authorized by the Puerto Rico Planning Board ....
“6. That this Court, by express provision of § 1257 of the Civil Code, should render judgment, either on the pleadings (Rule 10.3 of the Rules of Civil Procedure) or summarily (Rule 36 et seq. of the Rules of Civil Procedure), decreeing the dismissal of the counterclaim and of the third-party complaint, and, consequently, the nullity and inexistence of the contract object of the present suit.
“7. Each and every one of the pleadings appearing in the record of this case and from whose.reading and weighing there arises the necessary and indispensable facts for the determination of the present motion are attached and incorporated to this motion.”

Defendants opposed plaintiffs’ claim alleging:

“That there is nothing illegal in the object of the obligations established in the contract in question nor do said obligations imply any violation of the public policy which prompted the approval of § 24 of the Puerto Rico Planning and Budget Act.
“That the contract does not in any manner whatsoever contemplate carrying out a sale without the previous permit of the Planning Board and on the contrary it imposes on plaintiffs and the third-party defendants the obligation of procuring the corresponding permit before executing the sale.
“That although a sale which implies a segregation without obtaining the corresponding permit of the Planning Board would be void pursuant to the decision in Soto v. Feliciano, 80 P.R.R. 595, the promise of sale in this case is subject to obtaining such permit and does not, in any manner whatsoever, violate the Planning Act.”

[876]*876Finally it alleged “that although plaintiffs and third-party defendants had obstructed the obtaining of the corresponding segregation permit from the Planning Board, said permit has been obtained by action of defendant and copy thereof is attached to this opposition as Exhibit A, and now there is nothing to preclude that said sale be effectuated.”

The question having been submitted to the consideration of the trial court, the latter determined that “a careful analysis of the [contract executed] necessarily leads us to classify it as a perfect sale, pending its consummation . . and since the permit of the Planning Board was not obtained previously as required by § 24 of the Planning Act,1 it held that the contract entered into was void, and granted the summary judgment.

In Soto v. Feliciano, supra,

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98 P.R. 872, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/melendez-martinez-v-jimenez-realty-inc-prsupreme-1970.