Rosales Cueli v. Cartagena

39 P.R. 790
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 12, 1929
DocketNo. 4711
StatusPublished

This text of 39 P.R. 790 (Rosales Cueli v. Cartagena) 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
Rosales Cueli v. Cartagena, 39 P.R. 790 (prsupreme 1929).

Opinion

Me. Chief Justice Del Toko

delivered the opinion of the court.

Ignacio Rosales, Rufino Ruiz and Francisco Soto G-ras, holders of two hundred shares out of four hundred issued by the Nimaca Shoe Factory Co., a corporation organized under-time laws of this Island, sued Nicolás Manrique Cartagena, who owned the remaining two hundred shares, and the corporation itself, praying for a judgment decreeing its dissolution and the appointment of a trustee for the liquidation thereof.

Plaintiffs Soto and Ruiz were, respectively, secretary and treasurer of the corporation and defendant Cartagena its president. The complaint, which contains thirty-three paragraphs, describes minutely the difficulties which arose in the management of the corporation, the quarrels among its directors, the losses suffered; in fine a long series of occurrences showing the impossibility of the business continuing under the management' of the existing board of directors.

Some preliminary questions having been disposed of, defendant Cartagena on July 30, 1927, filed a motion which literally copied in so far as pertinent reads as follows:

“That be consents to the complaint of the plaintiffs by reason of facts occurring subsequent to tlie filing of the said complaint.
“Wherefore, the defendant herein prays this Hon. Court to render judgment for plaintiffs without costs against this defendant.”

[792]*792No action was taken on that motion and defendant Car-tagena himself on the fifteenth of the following August requested the court to set the case down for hearing. He alleged in his motion:

“I. The calendar fees in the present case have been paid in full and the matter is of a very urgent nature because it is sought to obtain a judgment decreeing the dissolution of defendant corporation, the Nimaca Shoe Factory, Inc., and the appointment of a trustee to liquidate the same.
“IT. The parties will only introduce documentary evidence as the material facts are admitted by the defendant herein, and the hearing, therefore, will consume less than fifteen minutes, and the appointment of a trustee is urgently necessary in the present case.”

The court thereupon set the case down for hearing on September 17, 1927. Both parties appeared on that day hut on motion of the plaintiffs the hearing was postponed.

Time passed and on June 22, 1928, the plaintiffs, relying on the consent motion filed by defendant Cartagena on July 30, 1927, moved for a judgment decreeing the dissolution of the defendant corporation and authorizing the appointment of a liquidating trustee.

On June 23, 1928, the court made an order granting relief as follows:

“.THEREFORE, the motion of the parties is granted and it is ordered and decreed:
“First: That the domestic corporation named ‘Nimaca Shoe Factory Inc.is hereby declared dissolved and extinguished by the unanimous consent of its shareholders.
“Second: That, the said shareholders having so mov'ed, a trustee be appointed to take possession of the corporate property, to manage the same, to pay the corporate debts, and to distribute the surplus proceeds among the shareholders.
“Third: That on June 25, 1928, at 11 :00 a. m., the parties herein appear personally and submit the names of competent persons to be considered for the appointment of trustee to be made in pursuance of a further order of this court.
“The clerk shall enter judgment in accordance with this order without special pronouncement of costs.”

[793]*793Two days later defendant Cartagena moved to vacate the order of the 23rd and alleged, in short, that what led him to give his consent of record was a certain action of unlawful de-tainer brought by Soto Gras against the defendant corporation, which action had been settled, and that the motion for judgment had been filed without notice to him. The plaintiffs opposed the motion to vacate and the court overruled it, holding that the said consent was conclusive upon the defendant and implied the unanimous acquiescence of the shareholders to the dissolution sought. Final judgment was accordingly entered on July 19, 1928.

. Thereupon defendant Cartagena appealed to this court. In his brief he assigns three errors thus:

“1. Tn sustaining the complaint, since it does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.
“2. In denying the motion to vacate filed by the defendant.
“3. In rendering judgment for the plaintiffs.”

The argument on the errors could hardly be more incomplete. The following is all that is stated regarding the first assignment:

“If the complaint in the case at bar does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, then any judgment based on such complaint is improper and should be reversed. The complaint is at first view insufficient. The corporation Nimaca Shoe Factory Co., Inc., is a duly organized corporation and existing under the laws of Porto Rico, which fact appears not only from the record and the motion to vacate but also from the admission of the plaintiffs themselves in calling for a meeting of directors, etc. The only way to dissolve a corporation organized under the laws of Porto Rico is through the proceedings prescribed by the corporation act of 1911 as amended. No group of shareholders can dissolve a corporation by merely alleging a number of grievances, since the statute provides the manner-in which the shareholders should proceed for securing a dissolution.”

No authority is cited and no further reasoning adduced.

The law under which the Nimaca Shoe Factory, Inc., was organized sets forth rules for the dissolution of corporations [794]*794(sections 26 to 33 of the Corporation Act of 1911, Comp. 1911, p. 98 el seq.), and it is only logical that such rules should first he complied with before applying to the courts. Here, however, the directors openly broke off relations and it became necessary to apply to the conrt for settling the conflict.

The jurisprudence on the dissolution of corporations is so abundant that merely a summary thereof fills more than two hundred pages of Volume 14 a of Corpus Juris. We have made a cursory examination of such summary and in it we find the following excerpt:

“The right of a minority stockholder to bring suit for dissolution of a corporation does not exist independently of statute, except where a case for equitable relief within the general equitable jurisdiction of the court is made out.”' 14a Corpus Juris, p. 1141.

As previously stated, the averments of the complaint reveal such a state of things that we are led to the conclusion that it was impossible to follow the procedure prescribed by the statute for a voluntary dissolution. A conflict arose and it became necessary to apply to the court. Until the contrary is shown in a manner more convincing than by the mere assertion or opinion of the appellant, we will hold, for the purposes only of the present case and leaving the matter open for closer study in the future, that the district court acted within its jurisdiction in settling the conflict.

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39 P.R. 790, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosales-cueli-v-cartagena-prsupreme-1929.