Rodríguez v. M. Joglar & Co., S. en C.

46 P.R. 338
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 16, 1934
DocketNo. 6234
StatusPublished

This text of 46 P.R. 338 (Rodríguez v. M. Joglar & Co., S. en C.) 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 v. M. Joglar & Co., S. en C., 46 P.R. 338 (prsupreme 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Cordova Davila

delivered the opinion of the court.

On July 19, 1927, José Ramón Rodríguez and Ms wife, Simona Rodriguez, confessing that they had already received in cash as a loan the sum of $2,900, constituted a mortgage in favor of the firm of M. Joglar & Co., 8. en G., upon a rural property described in the complaint, and which, as is alleged in the complaint, was then owned by them. This property was later sold at public auction to Hamburger Bros. & Co., upon execution of a judgment in favor of that firm and against José Ramón Rodríguez.

The mortgage debtors, plaintiffs in this case, alleged that ■it was untrue that they received from the defendant, M. [339]*339Joglar & Co., 8. en G,, either in whole or in part, the snm of $2,900 as a loan, and that the plaintiff, José Bamón Bodri-guez, consented to execute the deed referred to under duress of the defendant, M. Joglar & Co., 8. en C., in that if he did not consent, they would immediately commence suit against the plaintiff’s aged father, Francisco J. Bodriguez, and would attach all of his property, impoverishing him, to recover the above-mentioned sum which the said Francisco J. Bodriguez owed to the defendant firm.

It was further alleged that the plaintiff, Simona Bodri-guez, gave her consent in the- deed referred to by reason of the insistent pleas of her husband, José Bamón Bodriguez; and that upon the part of the defendant firm there was, simultaneously with the execution of the mortgage deed, the promise that they would not require payment of the mortgage credit, which was merely a provisional measure while the account of the aforesaid Francisco J. Bodriguez was liquidated.

The defendant firm denied-all of the allegations of the complaint, and set up as a defense that the mortgaged property belonged then entirely to the father of the plaintiff, J osé Bamón Bodriguez, that is, to Francisco J. Bodriguez, who .lived on the property; that Mr. Bodriguez, the father, was indebted to the defendant in the amount of $1,462.99, and that José Bamón Bodriguez was indebted to the defendant in the amount of $350.56; that the aforesaid $2,900, the amount of the mortgage credit, was received by the debtor José Bamón Bodriguez in the following form: $1,462.99 owing by his father, who renounced all his right and title in and to the mortgaged property, in consideration that José Bamón Bodriguez would pay the aforesaid debt and that the defendant would deliver to him also, for account of José Bamón Bodriguez, $730.01, amounting in all to $2,200. The said José Bamón Bodriguez, together with his wife, constituted 'a mortgage in favor of the defendant to guarantee the pay[340]*340ment of the said $2,200, $350.56 of Ms current account, and . $349.44 which he received in addition in the form of two checks drawn against the Banco Comercial de Puerto‘Rico, all of which aggregates the sum of $2,900, the amount of the mortgage credit.

The complaint having been dismissed on the merits, the plaintiffs took the present appeal, and have assigned as error that the court below found as proved by the preponderance of the evidence that the property mortgaged by the plaintiff and his wife in favor of the defendant belonged to Francisco J. Rodriguez on the date of the mortgage and not to the “mortgagors,” and that the mortgage contract was supported by sufficient consideration (causa).

Plaintiffs’ cause of action is based solely upon duress imposed upon them by the defendant, and upon their having consented under that duress. Even upon the theory that the plaintiffs were the owners of the property and that the court erred in holding that it belonged to the father, the complaint cannot be sustained if it be shown that there was no duress in this case. José Ramón Rodríguez admitted that his father was owing a sum of money to the defendant firm and testified that he executed the deed because his father told him that he was indebted in a considerable amount to Mr. Manuel Joglar, and that the latter had threatened that if he did not guarantee the debt, he would have to levy execution upon some properties which he had and upon a piece of land as well, and that in case the properties should be attached, he would be left penniless. The witness promised to talk to Mr. Joglar, as he did some days later. We copy literally the words of the witness with respect to his conversation with Joglar: “. . . that then he proposed to him that he should sign a mortgage deed, because it was not the witness who was the debtor; that that was to avoid suits and in order that he would not have to attach his father’s property. Then the witness answered him that he would have to consult with [341]*341Ms wife and she was in Morovis; and then Joglar told him to go to Morovis where she was while Joglar went to the notary. That he told his wife that he was going to have to make a mortgage in favor of Manuel Joglar to avoid an attachment of the old man’s property, and she said that that might be dangerous; bnt then he told her that that could not hurt them at all, because it was not a debt they owed but his father’s; that then he went back to where Joglar was and told him that they would sign the deed. ’ ’

The statements of José Ramón Rodríguez tend to show that the mortgage loan was in effect a guaranty to prevent the defendant from collecting the obligation owing by his father by legal action.

Admitting as true, for the purposes of argument, the statements of the plaintiff, which the court below did not believe, we find that the defendant limited himself to stating that if he did not guarantee the debt, he would exercise his right to collect his claim by suit. There is no duress, in our opinion, when a person advises another that he proposes to exercise his legitimate right of resort to the courts if the latter does not pay a demandable obligation. Not only Francisco Rodriguez, who contracted the obligation, but also his son, the plaintiff, knew that the obligation, once due, was subject to collection by legal action.

We agree, as Manresa states in commenting upon section 1267 of the Civil Code of Spain, equivalent to section 1219 of our Civil Code, 1930 ed., “that consent may be wrested from a man under the threat of an injury which would not terrify him, but which might have serious consequences for a weak woman, an aged father, or a defenseless child. ’ ’ This is not the case before us. The elements of duress do not appear from the statements which the plaintiff attributes to the defendant that if he signed the mortgage deed, he would avoid suits and it would not be necessary to levy upon the properties of the father.

[342]*342In commenting upon the section just cited, Manresa (Coméntanos al Código Civil Español, vol. 8, p. 595, 4th ed.) says:

“Modem law, whose tendencies the Code follows, has sought, following the influence of the canon law, a wider formula and one more consistent with human weakness, than that which inspired the force of the Roman law upon this point. The determination as to the existence of fear is largely entrusted to the courts and made dependent upon the facts in each ease; but the law does not fail to provide rules as to that which we may call the essence and object of duress.

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