Santiago v. Suazo

87 P.R. 701
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 15, 1963
DocketNo. 314
StatusPublished

This text of 87 P.R. 701 (Santiago v. Suazo) 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
Santiago v. Suazo, 87 P.R. 701 (prsupreme 1963).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Pérez Pimentel

delivered the opinion of the Court.

By private contract executed on October 1, 1956, José R. Santiago and Tomás Casiano organized a partnership under the name of “Tropical Garden” to operate a cafeteria of the same name situated in the Commercial Center of Lloréns Torres Housing Project. Santiago would be the silent partner and Casiano the industrial partner. The lat[702]*702ter would be the manager of the business and all operations would be transacted in his name, including the lease of the premises owned by the Housing Authority. He would receive 30 per cent of the profits and the silent partner the other 70 per cent. Upon the sale or liquidation of the business the total capital recovered would belong exclusively to Santiago, the silent partner.1

About one year after the business was operating they decided to sell it. Salvador E. Suazo, a businessman, wished to buy it and to that end he conferred with Casiano, the industrial partner and manager of the business. Suazo noticed that the licenses appeared in Casiano’s name and also verified with the Housing Authority that Casiano was the lessee of the premises. For the purposes of the transaction, Casiano always took Suazo to see Juan A. Santiago, brother and representative of the silent partner in the execution of the contract of sale.

On September 28, 1957 José R. Santiago sold the business to Suazo for the sum of $10,000. This price included the value of the furniture and equipment as well as the use of the premises. On that same date and in order to pay the price of the sale, Suazo, in his own right and as attorney in fact of his wife, signed and delivered to vendor Santiago a note to bearer for the sum of $10,000, with interest at 8 per cent annually, plus $1,000 for costs and attorney’s fees, secured by mortgage on certain real property situated in Guaynabo. On the same date the said mortgage note was executed, Suazo paid to the vendor the sum of $1,000, for which the latter gave him two receipts for $500 each, the text of which is as follows:

“Received from Salvador E. Suazo the sum of Five Hundred dollars ($500) for credit to the Ten Thousand Dollars ($10,000) [703]*703mortgage note constituted by deed No. 189, executed lief ore -José Quiñones Elias on September 28, 1957.
Santurce, Puerto Rico, October 1, 1Ü57,
José R. Santiago
By: Juan A. Santiago
Accepted:
(s) S. E. Suazo Witness:
(s) Carmen S. de Pérez Carmen S. de Pérez.”

The conversations and transactions always took place in the office of José R. Santiago, the vendor’s brother.

Suazo took material possession of the business and started to operate it. Eventually the Housing Authority transferred to him the contract of lease of the premises. Apparently the business was not profitable and during some nine months he failed to pay the lease rental of the premises.2 He also failed to pay the interest on $9,000 which he owed Santiago.

Thus, Suazo and the Housing Authority agreed that the latter would take over the business and collect the lease rental due from the proceeds of the equipment and furniture. The equipment and furniture was sold for the sum of $2,700, out of which the Housing Authority collected $2,034 back rental and the difference of $666 was delivered to Suazo.

In June 1958 José R. Santiago brought an action against Suazo to foreclose the mortgage summarily. By virtue of an acceleration clause contained in the mortgage deed,3 he claimed the $9,000 principal, $560 interest due since October 1, 1957, and $1,000 agreed upon for costs, expenses and attorney’s fees.

[704]*704Defendant Suazo answered admitting the fact of the execution of the mortgage note and that plaintiff was the owner thereof, but he denied that the latter had acquired the same for just or good consideration. He also denied that he owed the amount of interest claimed. Lastly, he filed a counterclaim alleging that he had purchased the “Tropical Garden” business from a brother of plaintiff for the sum of $10,000, secured by a mortgage note, which he promised to pay on September 28, 1959, and

“2. That defendant purchased the said business and signed the obligation through error, fraud and deceit, since he was not aware that the business belonged to Tomás Casiano, in whose name appeared the municipal and insular licences as well as the lease contract made with the P. R. Housing Authority.
“3. That defendant, despite the many steps taken, has been unable to have those licenses transferred in his name, nor has he obtained the absolute ownership thereof, and that such defect was known to the vendor and the plaintiff and unknown to the vendee.
“4. That defendant has good reason to fear being disturbed in the possession and ownership of the thing purchased, or by an action of revendication on the part of Tomás Casiano.”

The trial having been held, at which the facts described at the outset of this opinion were established, the trial court rendered judgment dismissing the complaint and sustaining the counterclaim. Consequently, it ordered the cancellation of the mortgage note and of the corresponding recording of the mortgage in the Registry of Property, and further ordered plaintiff to return to defendant the $1,000 which the latter credited to the selling price, less $666 which defendant retained out of the selling price of the furniture and equipment.

The trial court held that the contract of sale executed between plaintiff and defendant was null and void because plaintiff not being the owner of the contract of lease of the premises, he could not sell it and that that part of the object of the contract was illicit. It also held that since the illicitness of one of the objects of the contract was due [705]*705to plaintiff’s fault, the provisions of 31 L.P.R.A. § 3517(2), in relation to the provisions of § 3514, were applicable.

Some of the findings of fact erroneously made by the trial court served as basis for the conclusions of law on which the judgment rendered by that court is founded. Finding of fact No. 6 reads as follows:

'‘6. The partnership between plaintiff and Casiano was apparently liquidated before the former sold to the latter, without the liquidation having shown any profits.4 Yet, plaintiff concealed from defendant the fact that Casiano was the lessee of the premises. Nor did he inform that the licenses appeared in Casiano’s name.” Footnote 4, inserted in that finding, reads: “It is also apparent that the value of the right to use the premises was not considered as part of the assets subject to liquidation.”

[706]*706From an examination of the transcript of the evidence it will be seen that these findings are not supported by the evidence. The only witness who testified on the liquidation of the partnership existing between Santiago and Casiano was plaintiff himself. We copy from the record the pertinent part of his testimony:

“Q. Has Casiano ever asked you to liquidate that business?
A. No, sir.

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87 P.R. 701, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santiago-v-suazo-prsupreme-1963.