Rodríguez Pérez v. Banco Popular de Puerto Rico

66 P.R. 736
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 21, 1946
DocketNo. 9293
StatusPublished

This text of 66 P.R. 736 (Rodríguez Pérez v. Banco Popular de Puerto Rico) 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
Rodríguez Pérez v. Banco Popular de Puerto Rico, 66 P.R. 736 (prsupreme 1946).

Opinion

Mk. Justice Todd, Jr.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In an alleged oral will José Manuel Rodriguez was declared sole and universal heir of José Rodríguez Pérez, who died in the Auxilio Mutuo Hospital without leaving descend-[737]*737anta or ascendants. The heir applied to the District Court of Dayamon for the protocolization of said will and it was so ordered by the court. The alleged heir presented to Banco Popular de Puerto Bico the order of the court as well as a copy of the will and of the deed of protocolization, whereupon the latter delivered the balance of two accounts which the predecessor had in said institution amounting to $41,628.96. Thereafter a brother of the testator residing in Spain challenged the order rendered and after the case was heard in the District Court of San Juan, the will was declared void. Appeal Avas taken from said judgment which Avas affirmed by this court. Rodríguez v. Rodríguez, 62 P.R.R. 855.

Plaintiffs in the present case, as sole and universal heirs of José Rodríguez Pérez, brought an action against Banco Popular seeking the return of the amounts deposited, alleging that the payment made by said bank to the presumptive heir did not release said entity from its obligation toward the heirs of the deceased depositor for the following reasons: (a) because the legitimate heirs of the aforesaid predecessor did not authorize the defendant-appellee to dispose of said amount; (b) because since the defendant bank made the payment by virtue of a decision of the District Court of Bayamón Avhieh ordered the protocolization of the aforesaid Avill, and as it Avas established therein that José Manuel Rodriguez was the heir of José Rodríguez Pérez, without prejudice to third persons, the plaintiffs being such third persons, the payment could not prejudice them; (c) because it being expressly stated in the decision ordering the protocoli-zation of the Avill that the precedessor died intestate, that he had died without leaving ascendents or descendants, Banco Popular de Puerto Rico knew when it made the payment that it Avas making it without prejudice to third persons: (d) because it appears from the aforesaid decision that the person to whom appellee made the payment was not a forced heir and, therefore, his institution as heir could not prejudice third persons; (e) because from the evidence presented by [738]*738the petitioner and which gave rise to the decision, it also appears that the witnesses who had taken part in the aforesaid will were not the proper witnesses because they were not residents of the place where the act of the last will was executed; and, lastly,. (/) because the inheritance tax had not been paid at the time the defendant bank made the payment. Plaintiffs prayed that defendant be ordered to pay to them the ¿mount of their predecessor’s accounts less certain deduction's which they considered correct.

Defendant -filed in the district court a motion for dismissal because the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. This motion was granted and the complaint was amended. Another motion for dismissal was filed against the amended complaint which was also granted by the court. Then plaintiffs prayed for judgment on the pleadings and took an appeal from the dismissal of the complaint on the ground that the lower court committed four errors which are based'in effect on the same grounds previously set forth under letters (a) to (/). Those marked under'letters (a) to (e) may be decided jointly.

Appellants maintain that the relationship between José Rodríguez Pérez, later his heirs, and Banco Popular was that of creditor and debtor and that the only manner-in which the debtor- could have been released from its obligation was by payment to said heirs pursuant to :§ 1116 of the Civü Code, which provides that “Payment must be made to the person, in whose favor the obligation is constituted, or to another authorized to receive it in his name.” Appellants are correct in setting up this first allegation; however, to whom did. Banco Popular de Puerto Pico make payment? Was.it not precisely to the person “authorized to receive it in his name,-” that is, to José Manuel Rodriguez declared heir by the court? Furthermore, § 1118 of the Civil Code provides that “A payment made in good faith to the person who is -in possession of the credit shall release the debtor.”

[739]*739Commenting on § 1164 of the Spanish Civil Code, equivalent to § 1118 of onr Code, Manresa in vol. 8 (1901 ed.), p. 259, of his work states: £ ‘ The following are proper cases for the application of Section 1164 and hence involve valid payments: Where payment is made to the original creditor by a debtor who has no knowledge of the assignment of the credit or the incapacity of the former; where the payment is made in favor of an assignee, recognized as such, even if the rescission or nullity of the conveyance is subsequently decreed; and when made to persons who, like heirs, are in the position of creditors. In these cases the debtor cannot be prejudiced because of the fact that those to whom payment is made should later be defeated in an action, nor those who might win the case have no other remedy but to recover from the person who unduly collected.” (Italics ours.)

Scaevola also approves of this dctrine in his work, Comen-tarios al Código Civil, vol. 19, p. 897, thus:

“A most typical example of these possessions is where the presumptive heir, to whom we referred in dealing with heirship, receives the inheritance under an alleged full title, without really having it; for, as it is known, especially in the case of heirs in collateral line, it ■often happens that the right of the presumptive heir ab intestaio easily vanishes.
“The presumptive heir, and in general the presumptive creditor, may,or may not act in good faith in claiming the rights to which he is apparently entitled. Sometimes they suspect but at other times they ignore the nonexistence of the title with which they are invested. But in this particular, it is immaterial to the law whether the creditor acted in good or bad faith, for since the sole question is whether the payment is valid, and consequently, the possibility of a second claim against the debtor, the statute dispenses with any other consideration for this purpose but the good or bad faith of the person making the payment.” (Italics ours.)

. In the complaint herein no bad faith was alleged on the part of the bank and, since it cannot be presumed, § 1118 of the Civil Code, supra, is therefore applicable. The bank had before it not only the possessor of the credit but the [740]*740person invested with the alleged staths of a true creditor. According to Scaevolá (vól. 19, p. 899), the latter is a necessary requirement in order that the payment made should release the debtor. To this same effect the Supreme Court of Spain rendered its judgments on DeceMebr 6, 1895, and February 28, 1896.

Commenting on these judgments Martínez Riii'z, in his work Código Civil, vol. 7, p. 249, states: “The provisions of $ 1164, pursuant to which payment made ill good faith to the person who is in possession of the credit, shall release the debtor, are made clear by the judgments of December 6, .1895, and February 28, 1896, which may be presently consulted.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
66 P.R. 736, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodriguez-perez-v-banco-popular-de-puerto-rico-prsupreme-1946.