Molina v. Munoz

31 F.2d 727, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3540
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedMarch 16, 1929
DocketNo. 2300
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 31 F.2d 727 (Molina v. Munoz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Molina v. Munoz, 31 F.2d 727, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3540 (1st Cir. 1929).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Circuit Judge.

This appeal raises an important question under the Porto Rican Agricultural Loan Act of 1910, as amended. On August 7, 1924, Lebrón, the intervener appellee, leased for ten years to defendant Munoz a sugar plantation. Punctual payment of the rent reserved was for the first five years guaranteed by appellant’s assignors, the Goffinets and the Central, Santa Juana. On the same date, a duly recorded contract was made between the lessee Munoz and appellant’s assignors for advances to be used for producing cane secured under the Agricultural Loan Act of 1910. In November, 1927, the secured claim for advances, then over $20,000, was assigned to the plaintiff Molina, who thereafter made further advances for harvesting the crop. [728]*728Munoz failed to pay the rent due December 31, 1927, and Lebrón filed in the district court of Humaeao on January 7, 1928, an eviction suit. On January 31, 1928, Molina filed against Munoz a bill of complaint in the court below, grounding jurisdiction on diversity of citizenship, seeking specific performance of the contract through a receiver of the leased properties, as Munoz was alleged to be insolvent and unable to perform. A receiver was appointed, who made further substantial advances, .and apparently received certain amounts from the sale of sugar. before his delivery of the premises to Lebrón on May 19, 1928, under the final decree of. the court below. On March 30,1928, Lebrón intervened in this suit; alleged that in his lease from Munoz it was provided:

“Fourth. The failure to comply with any of the said conditions as well as the failure to pay any monthly installment of rent shall cause the rescission of this contract and thereupon any improvement which the lessee shall have made in the braidings and crops as well as crops planted and pending harvest shall be for the benefit of the owner of the property and the lessee shall have no right to claim any indemnity therefor.” That for nonpayment of rent for December, 1927, he had obtained final judgment of eviction against Munoz, that Molina’s assignors had legal notice of this lease when they made the contract for advances, and that therefore his right to possession of both land and crops was paramount to any claim or lien of Molina.

-In Molina’s answer, filed April 9, 1928, he alleged ignorance of clause 4, supra, and of Munoz’s failure to pay the December rent until after his return from the states, on January 23,1928; that he then tendered the rent due, and later deposited in court rent for the four months, December to March, inclusive, with interest from the due dates. As assignee of the Goffinets and the Central, Molina claimed a valid and enforceable lien under the provisions of sections 1823, 1824, and 1827 of the Civil Code, and sections 52. to 72 of the Agricultural Loan Act as amended.

At the trial on April 28, 1928, the lease and the contract of August 7,1924, were put in evidence; also the record of the eviction suit, which went to final judgment on February 14, 1928. Molina testified, without contradiction, to his offer to pay the rent on January 24 or 25, and his deposit in court of the rent (with interest) for four months; that the value of the erop about to be harvested was approximately $15,000. The total claimed to be secured is not clearly shown, but it is much more than the value of the 1928 erop.

On May 9, 1928, the court (Wells, J.) found the facts “as set up in the intervener’s bill of intervention are true,” and that Lebrón “is entitled to the possession of the” property, “and of all crops growing thereon and of the proceeds of. such crops as may have been disposed of by said receiver, together with costs.” Decree accordingly was entered on May 15,1928, in which the receiver was ordered to “file a report to this court under oath within ten days hereafter showing in detail the amounts received by him from the sale of any sugar cane or other crops growing upon the said properties at the time of his appointment and to pay said amount without deduction of any kind whatsoever to the intervener, Jose Ramos Lebrón.”

The receiver’s report shows substantial expenditures both for harvesting the 1928 crop and for planting for the 1929 erop— obviously offsetting, pro tanto, expenses Lebrón would have been under, if he had rightfully obtained immediate possession under his eviction suit. On what theory of equity, accounting was denied for these proper expenditures, beneficial to the appellee and made by the court’s receiver, we do not perceive, even if, on the general merits, the decree should have been for Lebrón. On elementary equitable principles, as well as under the provisions of Civil Code, §§ 369, 373, 454, 455, these expenditures, so far as of value, should have been reimbursed by the owner as a condition of the delivery of possession by the receiver. Compare Jackson v. Railroad, 99 U. S. 513, 25 L. Ed. 460.

The main question is whether the appellant’s lien under the Agricultural Loan Law of 1910 is valid and enforceable, notwithstanding the provision, supra, in the lease and the judgment of eviction. We think it was.

By what was, in effect, a single transaction: Lebrón furnished land and buildings; Munoz agreed to furnish labor; plaintiff’s assignors agreed to furnish working capital; and the Central agreed to grind the sugar cane — thus to be produced and marketed in the form of sugar. It was a species of joint undertaking, involving closely interrelated rights and obligations. Lebrón knew, or at any rate was charged with knowledge, that without security on the crops no capital would be furnished for working his land; that, practically, his lease was worthless without the intervention of the furnishers of working capital. Manifestly, the contracts must be construed in accordance with the [729]*729applicable provisions of law. The Agricultural Loan Act of 1910 was remedial, and entitled to a liberal construction. In general, it gives to the holder of a duly recorded lien under this act preference over all other claims except taxes. In section 3 of the act it is provided:

“Where the lessee or usufructuary under any title shall fail to perform his obligations to the owner or representative of the property, the creditor making the advances for agricultural purposes may, on having knowledge of the fact, fulfill such obligations for account of the debtor and charge the same to the account of advances for agricultural purposes.”

In section 8 we find:

“That such entries 'and marginal notes of entries as may be made in the ‘registry of contracts for agricultural purposes’ shall be to the prejudice and binding upon third parties, from and after the filing of the respective documents.
“If while the lien is in force, the products encumbered are disposed of by the debtor to a third party, the creditor making the advances for agricultural purposes shall have the right to obtain from the latter the delivery of the said products or the proceeds of the sale thereof in case the return of the products is impossible.

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Bluebook (online)
31 F.2d 727, 1929 U.S. App. LEXIS 3540, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/molina-v-munoz-ca1-1929.