Santini Fertilizer Co. v. Dávila

50 P.R. 725
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 18, 1936
DocketNos. 6625 and 6731
StatusPublished

This text of 50 P.R. 725 (Santini Fertilizer Co. v. Dávila) 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
Santini Fertilizer Co. v. Dávila, 50 P.R. 725 (prsupreme 1936).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Cóedova Dávila

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action to collect a series of promissory notes, interest, and agreed attorney’s fees, brought by Santini Fertilizer Co. against Felipe Gr. Davila. The defendant admitted making the notes but alleged that he had paid some in which he was the only debtor and that he had been released as to the others, some of which he signed jointly with Francisco Rodríguez and others with Ramón- Díaz. There are, then, three groups of notes to which we will subsequently refer as the Dávila, Rodríguez, and Díaz notes respectively. The evidence of the defendant tends to show that in May, 1930, the plaintiff was insisting that the defendant liquidate [727]*727the Dávila and Rodriguez notes. A conference was held at the time for that purpose in the Bank of Yabucoa, attended, among others, by the defendant, W. B. Almon, employee of the plaintiff, and Rafael Buseaglia, attorney for the plaintiff.

The defendant stated that he could not pay the obligations of Rodriguez. Almon told him that if he would pay his own notes Rodriguez would be given an extension to June 30, 1930, and if he did not pay then, suit would be brought against Rodríguez. The defendant explained that he could not pay his own obligations at that time, but he-offered Almon a letter which the latter accepted, addressed by the defendant to the Yabucoa Sugar Co., authorizing this sugar company to pay the plaintiff a sum equal to the amount of the said notes, from the proceeds of certain cane which the defendant was grinding in the mill of the said company. The defendant assured Almon that if the proceeds of the case did not cover his notes, he would pay any deficit in June, 1930. The defendant called Almon’s attention to the Diaz notes and told him that he could not take care of them, to which Almon answered that the Diaz money was sufficiently secured and that the plaintiff would deal directly with Diaz. At the- suggestion of his attorney the defendant' requested Almon to put the agreement in writing and Almon replied that he could not put anything in writing, that he had not received any money, that when he received the money he would issue a receipt stating.that the defendant had paid his own notes and was released from the obligation of paying the Díaz and Rodriguez notes. A few days later Almon wrote to Rodriguez granting him an extension to June 30, 1930, to pay his notes.

The evidence of the plaintiff does not differ essentially from that of the defendant, except as to the Rodríguez and Diaz notes. On this point the witnesses for the plaintiff, Aim on and Buseaglia, denied that there was any talk of releasing Dávila from his obligation as to those notes, and [728]*728asserted that the defendant was told only that the plaintiff would make an effort to collect from Rodríguez and Diaz directly.

The complaint was filed on June 9, 1930'. On that date the Tabueoa Sugar Oo. had made no remittance whatever to the plaintiff nor had it bound itself in any way to the plaintiff.

The lower court rendered judgment for the plaintiff as to the principal sum of all the Dávila notes, but denied the claim to costs, interest, and attorney’s fees agreed on in the said notes, and also denied recovery on the Rodriguez and Diaz notes. Although the opinion of the court is not clear, it apparently believed that the defendant’s allegation of a release was established as to the Rodríguez and Diaz notes and did not believe that the defense of payment of the Dávila notes was established. The court says, nevertheless, that the plaintiff acted improperly in bringing an action on .the Dávila notes, and for this reason, although it orders Dávila to pay the principal of the notes, it denies to the plaintiff the interest and attorney’s fees agreed upon. The court does not state the grounds it had for its conclusion that the plaintiff acted improperly. Its decision, however, gives us the impression that the court probably considered that the complaint was premature, that the Dávila notes were not due until payment was demanded of the Yabucoa Sugar Co.

Naturally, both parties have appealed from the judgment rendered, both appeals having been argued and submitted jointly. The plaintiff assigns as errors, among others which we do not consider pertinent to the case, those which it maintains the lower court committed in not granting interest or costs on the Dávila notes, and in deciding that the defend ant was released on the Rodrígmez and Diaz notes. The defendant assigns as errors those which he says the court committed in not dismissing the complaint entirely and in not ordering the plaintiff to pay the costs.

[729]*729 We will consider first the errors assigned by the defendant. It is obvious that the lower court erred in ordering the defendant to pay one of the Dávila notes, amounting to $42.34, since the complaint itself shows that it was not due when this action was brought. The complaint was filed on June 9, 1930 and the said note was not due until July 18 of the same year. As to the rest of the Dávila notes, the defendant maintains that he was granted an exten sion to June, 1930 for payment, that the complaint was therefore premature, and that the court erred in ordering him to pay the principal of the said notes. The defendant did not allege this defense in his answer. What was alleged is that the notes were paid by the delivery to the plaintiff of the letter addressed by the defendant to the Yabucoa Sugar Company. Moreover, the evidence does not show that such an extension was granted. It is true that upon delivering the letter the defendant offered to pay the debt on June 30, 1930, but il does not appear that the plaintiff bound itself to wait until that date. The mere fact that a debtor offers to pay an overdue debt on a certain date, or before that date, is not sufficient to establish an extension. It is necessary that the creditor bind himself, and in the instant case it was neither alleged nor proved that the creditor agreed to an extension. It cannot be said then, that the lower court erred in not holding that an extension was granted or in ordering the defendant to pay the Dávila notes.

The defendant also maintains, although in a somewhat ambiguous manner, that the Dávila notes were paid by the delivery of the letter addressed by the defendant to the Yabucoa Sugar Company. We say that the position of the defendant is ambiguous because at times he maintains that the letter was delivered in payment, and at times that it was delivered as collateral security. The defendant considers the letter as a draft, a commercial bill of exchange. If the • plaintiff had agreed to receive a bill of exchange accepted by the Yabucoa Sugar Company in substitution for [730]*730the Dávila notes, there is no doubt that the latter would have been extinguished. The evidence does not show this. The letter reads as follows:

“Bank of Yabucoa,
Yabucoa, Puerto Rico,
May 1, 1930.
The Yabucoa Sugar Co.,
Humaeao, Puerto Rico.
Dear Sirs:
I trust that, as soon as the sum of $3,129 which I owe to the Bank of Yabucoa is paid, plus a dollar for cut and haul per ton of cane to be liquidated by you, you will be so kind as to remit to San-tini Fertilizer Co., of San Juan, $1,000, and so on successively, until the sum of $2,359.01 is covered in two more liquidations.

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Bluebook (online)
50 P.R. 725, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/santini-fertilizer-co-v-davila-prsupreme-1936.