Smallwood v. District Court of San Juan

50 P.R. 608
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedNovember 18, 1936
DocketNo. 1088
StatusPublished

This text of 50 P.R. 608 (Smallwood v. District Court of San Juan) 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
Smallwood v. District Court of San Juan, 50 P.R. 608 (prsupreme 1936).

Opinion

Me,. Justice Tbavieso

delivered the opinion of the Court.

T. H. Smallwood, doing business under the name of Smallwood Brothers, filed in the District Court of San Juan a sworn statement in accordance with the Conditional Sales Act approved on April 13, 1916 (Laws, p. 246) and Act No. 88 of August 22 of the same year (Laws p. 670). He stated therein that Wilfredo Norat had failed to pay six instal-ments due on a Ford Station Wagon which was sold to him on a conditional sale contract dated March 16, 1935, and registered in the Department of the Interior on March 20 following.

The buyer Norat, who was summoned for a hearing and served with copy of the summons, of the sworn statement and of the return, did not appear at the hearing, and after it was shown that the buyer had not complied with the conditions of the contract of conditional sale, the court entered an order directing the marshal to seize the automobile, “removing it from the possession of the defendant or of any other person” and to deliver it to the plaintiff for the purposes provided by law. The marshal refused to execute the. said order, and in the return stated:

“That the automobile was in custodia legis by virtue of an attachment levied in civil case no. 25408, of the District Court of Sam Juan, Alberto Biascoechea v. Carolina Bus Line Inc.
“That he could not find Wilfredo Norat.
“That he considered himself without legal authority to decide whether the automobile belonged to Norat or to the Carolina Bus Line, Inc. ’ ’

On September 3, 1936, the conditional seller filed a motion-requesting the court to order the marshal to deliver the car notwithstanding the attachment levied on it.

After a hearing, at which only the petitioner appeared, the court denied the motion saying:

“Having studied the question, the court considers that although the proceeding for repossession of property to which the conditional sales act refers, and which is one betw^'”' the seller and the buyer, [610]*610provides that the property may he repossessed wherever it may be found, it does not prevent a third party from attaching the property sold conditionally, nor does it provide that, when such an attachment is levied and the property is seized and is held in custodia legis, it can be delivered on the mere presentation of an order for repossession, since that would constitute the loss or abandonment of the attachment, or the lien on the property attached. Oronoz & Co. v. Alvarez, 23 P.R.R. 497. And the court could not, on a simple motion in the repossession proceeding, to which the attachment creditor is not a party, decide the right which he might have to the property .as against the conditional seller,”

“The case lias been sent up to ns on a writ of certiorari to review the order entered by the district court.

At the hearing appeared the attorney for petitioner, and attorneys F. Fernández Cuyar and Héctor G-onzález Blanes, representing Alberto Biascoechea, who alleges an interest in the controversy because he had attached the automobile involved in this case in a civil action brought by him against the Carolina Bus Line, Inc., which had bought the automobile from Wilfredo Norat.

Counsel for the attachment creditor, Biascoechea, argue that the district court could not determine the rights of all the parties interested in the automobile within the proceeding to repossess brought by Smallwood Brothers, and that such a determination could only be made in an ordinary third party proceeding.

The contract of conditional sale made between Smallwood Brothers and Norat contains, among others, the following stipulations:

(a) “That the said vehicle shall remain the absolute property of the Seller, its heirs, successors or assigns until such time as the Buyer shall have paid the total amount of the stipulated instalments and until he shall have fulfilled each and every one of the conditions to which 'this contract holds him, it being then only that the said •vehicle shall become the property of the buyer.
(b) “ . The buyer shall not pledge or dispose of the said vehicle in any way, etc.
[611]*611(c) “ . . . If tbe buyer should attempt to sell, encumber or lend the said vehicle or to send it outside of Puerto Rico while this contract is in force then the Seller, its heirs, successors or assigns, may take possession of the said vehicle in the manner provided by law.
(d) “By this contract it is expressly agreed among all the par* ties that, in case of failure to fulfill any of the obligations or part thereof, the seller Reserves and shall have the right to proceed immediately to repossess the car sold in accordance with the laws in force for that purpose, etc.”

- We shall overlook the question of the legal effect, as to third parties, of the prohibition against transfer contained in the contract cited and shall examine only the question of the rights of a subsequent buyer of personal property originally sold on a duly registered contract of conditional sale.

The conditional sales act provides that when the thing sold is delivered to the buyer; all the conditions and reservations stipulated in the contract, to the effect that the title to the thing sold is retained by the conditional seller until the purchase price is paid, shall he null and void in respect to subsequent buyers, bailees or mortgagees in good faith, or other third persons; and that as to such third persons the sale shall be considered absolute, unless the conditional sale contract containing such conditions and reservations shall have been registered as required by the same act. See: Section 3 of Act no. 61 of April 13, 1916. We must hold, a converso, that if the contract which contains the conditions and reservations has been properly registered, then the sale cannot be considered absolute in respect to a subsequent buyer and the latter cannot have greater rights than those which the act grants to the original conditional buyer, according to the well-known maxim nemo dat qui non habet. The subsequent buyer acquires a property right subject to a condition subsequent, which is the only thing which the original buyer could transfer to him. See Montalvo v. Valdivieso, 38 P.R.R. 487; Rubio Salinas, v. Salvador R. Nin, Inc., 48 P.R.R. 952.

[612]*612 Since the record shows that the contract containing the conditions and reservations copied above was duly registered in the Registry of the Department of the Interior on March 20, 1935, under no. 30,314, we must hold that any person c1 aiming a right to the automobile in question, whether as a subsequent buyer or as the holder of any'lien on the automobile, acquired after the date of registration of the contract of conditional sale, is in the same position legally as the original conditional buyer, under the conditions and reservations of the conditional sale, which are binding on any subsequent possessor.

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