Pedrosa v. District Court of San Juan

55 P.R. 750
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 19, 1939
DocketNo. 1175
StatusPublished

This text of 55 P.R. 750 (Pedrosa v. District Court of San Juan) 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
Pedrosa v. District Court of San Juan, 55 P.R. 750 (prsupreme 1939).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a petition for certiorari involving the interpretation and application of the law to secure the effectiveness of judgments approved March 1, 1902. Code .of Civil Procedure (1933 ed.), p. 96.

The Las Monjas Racing Corporation, a corporation organized according to the law of the Island, filed suit in the District Court of San Juan against various persons claiming $65,000 as damages, and prayed the court to secure the effectiveness of any judgment it might render in the following' terms:

[751]*751“1. That it has filed a complaint in the clerk’s office of this District Court for the collection of money, wherein it claims the amount of $65,000 as damages suffered by plaintiff as a result of several injunctions issued at the request of defendants, who it turned out had no right to such orders.
“2. That as the case involves the payment of a liquidated debt to plaintiff, said plaintiff desires to secure the judgment of this court in ease it is victorious by an order of this court according to the Act to secure the effectiveness of judgments of March 1, 1902, which authorizes the attachment of goods of the defendant.
“3. The complainant wishes an attachment up to the sum of $5,000 on sufficient goods of defendants to secure up to that amount •of the $65,000 claimed and to that effect it offers to give bond in the amount this court may fix to order the said attachment.”

The security was decreed as follows:

“In view of the previous motion and after examining its allegations and the Act of March 1, 1902, to secure the effectiveness of judgments, the court grants said motion on the condition that the .plaintiff file a bond for $5,000 and after said bond is approved by this court, the clerk is ordered to issue the necessary writ to the marshal so that he attach as he is hereby ordered to attach sufficient goods of the defendants Fausto Arandes, Francisco Gfrovas, Deogra-eias Viera, Jorge Bomany or OYian Pedrosa to secure the sum of $5,000.”

After the plaintiff filed the required bond, the marshal attached prop'erty of one of the defendants, Pedrosa, consisting of race horses valued at $5,000, and by virtue of another bond given by Pedrosa, the property was given to him in deposit. Later the attachment was enlarged for $400 more under a bond for the same amount.

Under this state of affairs the defendant Pedrosa asked the court to lift the attachment in accordance with Section '15, of the act to secure the effectiveness of judgments con-cíitioned on the filing of a bond for the value of the property Attached. The plaintiff opposed this request and after long and repeated discussions and incidents including another [752]*752writ of certiorari, the district judge entered an order, the pertinent part of which says:

“The attached horses were delivered to petitioner, Pedrosa, upon the filing of a $5,0000-bond. This bond is in force. The truth is that this bond is for the same amount as that given by the pla:ntiff to secure the effectiveness of the judgment. The attachment prayed for covered only the amount of $5,000. There is no doubt whatsoever that the court had this petition in mind when it fixed the bond-In any case, the parties discuss extensively the scope of Section 15 of the Act to secure the effeetivenes of judgments and cite abundant jurisprudence, but I have found no case such as the present wherein a bond is given for a sum less than that claimed. It .s around this, point that the parties argue extensively in their memoranda: but in my opinion the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, through its Associate-Justice Mr. Hutchison, has already decided the rjuestion when affirming a decision of January 17, 1939, wherein Judge Torres Pérez says: ‘the plaintiff is bound to furnish bond in the amount claimed, that is, $30,000,' it states: ‘the error, if any, on the order of January 17 to the effect that Pedrosa could not effect a dissolution of the attachment by the filing of a bond for $5,000, but in order to accomplish, that result would be requ'red to furnish a bond for $30,000 plus a reasonable amount to secure costs, disbursements and attorney’s fees— was no prejudicial to petitioner.’
“That order whether right or wrong, was substantially in accord with petitioner’s own theory as to the purpose and meaning of Section 15.
“I agree with the petitioner, Mr. Pedrosa, that this interpretation is somewhat hard on the defendant, but I cannot criticize the lawr since the mission of the judge is to interpret same as it stands, and as it has been interpreted, or at least as may be deduced from the interpretation of the opinion of the Supreme Court to which I have referred. We understand that the petition of the defendant, Mr. Pe-drosa, has already been decided by this court, and the Supreme Court has passed on such decision and we should therefore not disturb this state of facts and law.”

It was then that Mr. Pedrosa filed this petition for cer-tiorari which, as we said at first, involves the interpretation and application of the Act to secure the effectiveness of judgments, of 1902, and wherein the parties have been fully heard.

[753]*753Section 15 of said Act, invoked by petitioner, provides (Code of Civil Procedure, 1933 ed., p. 100) : . • ¡

“The payment or deposit by the defendant of the sums claimed from him, or a bond given to cover the claim, shall' suspend the attachment ordered to secure said claim, or shall annul an attachment already in force. ” ' ;

The judge of the district court understood, giving the opinion of this Court in Las Monjas Racing Corporation v. District Court, 54 P.R.R. 386, a decisive scope which it does not have, and the intervenor insists in that said Section requires that in order to raise an attachment in all cases and therefore in the present one, that the payment, deposit or bond be in the amounts claimed from defendant, and that as here the amount claimed from defendant Pedrosa.within the general claim of $65,000 was for $30,000, a bond for, $5,000 was insufficient to raise the attachment. ..

In accordance with the letter of the law this conclusion appears clear. Applied to this concrete case it would operate as follows: to raise an attachment of goods for the value of $5,400 an amount of $30,000, or that is, an amount more than five times the value of the attached property, would have to be paid, deposited or bonded.

Such a conclusion is unjust, absurd. Nevertheless, we would be bound to accept it as the law if a further study of all the provisions of the act did not permit us t'o harmonize the order of the legislator in Section 15 of the act with what happens in this concrete ease.

Section 2 of said act states:

“Section 2. — The effectiveness of the judgment shall be secured in the following manner:
“(a) If the obligation on which suit is brought be the delivery of a certain object or thing possessed by the defendant or by a third person in the name of such defendant, said defendant, or third person, as the ease may be shall be prohib’ted from alienating or encumbering the object or thing until judgment has been rendered.
[754]*754“(b)

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Bluebook (online)
55 P.R. 750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pedrosa-v-district-court-of-san-juan-prsupreme-1939.