Rodriques v. Santos

466 A.2d 306, 1983 R.I. LEXIS 1097
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedOctober 7, 1983
Docket82-438-Appeal
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 466 A.2d 306 (Rodriques v. Santos) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rodriques v. Santos, 466 A.2d 306, 1983 R.I. LEXIS 1097 (R.I. 1983).

Opinion

OPINION

SHEA, Justice.

The defendants, Alfredo Santos and Manuel Cabral, appeal from a judgment entered against them in the Superior Court. The appeal raises several issues, that will be addressed in the order presented. We affirm the judgment entered below.

The evidence established that the plaintiff, Jesuino Rodriques, was seventy-six at the time of trial. He was born in Brazil and was taken to Portugal when he was very young. By the time he emigrated to the United States in 1920, he had only completed four years of schooling. He never learned to read or write English but could sign his name. The plaintiff’s wife, Maria, was born in Portugal. She could neither read nor write in any language and never attended school.

Since the 1920s plaintiffs had enjoyed a very close friendship with defendant Santos. At one time, when plaintiffs were in Portugal for a year, Alda, their daughter, lived in the Santos home. Alda testified that Emily Santos Cabral, daughter of defendant Alfredo Santos, was her godmother at her confirmation. The defendant Cabral, Santos’s son-in-law, became acquainted with plaintiffs around 1942.

The controversy in this case involves money that plaintiffs lent at the request of defendants. Santos and a cousin had established a dump-truck business known as A. Ancelmo Trucking Company, Inc. The company later extended its operations to include tractor-trailers for use in hauling freight. Sometime later the business was converted back to its original operation. In 1948 defendants approached plaintiffs and asked them to invest money in a Massachusetts corporation known as the Boston-New *308 York Transportation Company (Boston-New York), which was being purchased by Santos, Cabral, and others. The plaintiffs agreed to invest $22,000 in the corporation; however, there is no evidence that they ever received any stock certificates in return for their capital investment.

About a year later defendants again approached plaintiffs, requesting an additional $20,000 for Boston-New York, which by then was in serious financial difficulty. Although plaintiffs initially were very reluctant to invest more money, they eventually yielded to the beseeching of defendants but attached certain conditions to this loan. The trial justice found that plaintiffs agreed to lend an additional $18,000 to defendants in the form of a personal loan. In return, defendants agreed to convert $12,-000 of the original $22,000 capital investment into a personal loan. As a result, defendants were personally liable for loans in the aggregate of $30,000. The parties further agreed, as found by the trial justice, that the new loan would be secured by personal notes and mortgages on real estate owned by defendants. The trial justice also found that plaintiffs understood and expected that defendants would repay them personally and that plaintiffs agreed to those terms.

Over the following years, plaintiffs made numerous demands on defendants for repayment of the $30,000 loan. Throughout this period, defendants apparently recognized the obligation they had toward plaintiffs. There was testimony given by plaintiffs’ daughter, Alda, which the trial justice found credible. She was a college graduate, was fluent in the Portugese language, and had participated in and heard many discussions relating to the transaction from its earliest days. She testified that at various times as late as 1959 defendants promised to repay the loan, and these promises were repeated into the early 1960s.

Although defendants had initially promised to secure the loans with mortgages on their personal real estate, they instead drew up two $15,000 mortgages on the corporate property — one on property of Boston-New York and the other on property of A. Ancel-mo Trucking Co., Inc. The plaintiffs received no mortgage notes or deeds.

In 1955 defendant Cabral was able to induce plaintiffs to sign discharges of the mortgages on the business properties, which discharges were recorded. At this time, the transportation company was again in financial trouble and was being sold to another Massachusetts trucking company for $125,-000 out of which creditors, including plaintiffs, were to be paid. The closing attorney, however, refused to pay plaintiffs because they did not have notes evidencing the mortgages. Instead, the attorney placed the disputed sum in escrow. A short time later when Boston-New York went into bankruptcy, the trustee brought suit to recover these escrowed funds on the ground that Boston-New York had illegally given a mortgage to secure personal loans without proper authorization. The Massachusetts court agreed, ruling the mortgages illegally made.

In February of 1958, plaintiffs consulted an attorney about security for their loans. As a result of this consultation, defendant Cabral offered to make plaintiffs beneficiaries to $30,000 of a $40,000 personal life insurance policy. This policy had originally named Ancelmo Trucking as beneficiary, but it had been taken over by Cabral personally in 1957 at which time he designated his wife and children as beneficiaries. Although he actually did substitute plaintiffs as beneficiaries for $30,000, this policy was later canceled when Cabral surrendered it for its cash value in 1961.

The record indicates that during the intervening years, the families remained friendly and continued to see each other during and after the February 1958 contact that resulted in Cabral’s assignment of the proceeds of his life insurance policy. The parties to the action continued to discuss the debt, and plaintiffs forebore any legal action as a result of their continuing understanding and belief that defendants would repay the loan.

*309 In March of 1964, plaintiffs finally realized that defendants apparently did not intend to repay the $30,000 personal loan and filed suit through their original attorney. This action began as a bill in equity under our common-law practice followed before the adoption of the Rules of Civil Procedure in 1966. In the bill of complaint, plaintiffs sought that a lien be placed upon the estate and assets of defendants in such sum as would be found due; that defendants be restrained and enjoined from conveying, transferring, alienating, or encumbering their property to evade or avoid the effects of any findings made against them; and that plaintiffs be awarded such other and further relief as justice and equity might require.

When the action was first filed, the attorney for defendants only entered an appearance. Under the old practice, this appearance constituted a plea to the general issue and therefore the case was considered answered even though a formal answer was not actually filed for almost twelve years. The action lay dormant until 1975 when plaintiffs engaged new counsel who moved to assign the case for trial and noticed depositions of defendants. The defendants’ attorney then filed a motion to dismiss under Rule 41(bX2) of the Superior Court Rules of Civil Procedure, which was denied. He proceeded to file an answer asserting a general denial of plaintiffs’ allegations and also raised affirmative defenses of statute of limitations, laches, and plaintiffs’ failure to prosecute. The matter was reached for trial before a justice of the Superior Court sitting without a jury in 1979. A decision was rendered for plaintiffs, and judgment was entered in June of 1982.

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

Related

Thomas Knudsen, Trustee v. Gregory DeJean
Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2024
Adless Desamours v. State of Rhode Island
210 A.3d 1177 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2019)
Tempest v. State
141 A.3d 677 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2016)
Lopez v. State
43 A.3d 1125 (Court of Special Appeals of Maryland, 2012)
Vogel v. Catala
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2011
B.S. International Ltd. v. JMAM, LLC
13 A.3d 1057 (Supreme Court of Rhode Island, 2011)
Cfn, Inc. v. Drake Petroleum Company
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2010
Burns v. Moorland Farm
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2010
Wellington Cond. Assn. v. Cove Cond.
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2010
Lora v. State
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2010
Perry v. State
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2010
Reyes v. State
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2010
Araujo v. State
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2010
Pritsker v. Gateway Woodside, Pb
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2009
Amicable Congregational Church v. Aubin
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2008
Campbell v. Tiverton Zoning Board
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2007
Hilley v. Lawrence
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2007
Ashley v. Kehew
Superior Court of Rhode Island, 2007

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
466 A.2d 306, 1983 R.I. LEXIS 1097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rodriques-v-santos-ri-1983.