Societé Anonyme de Photographie Industrialle v. Vallés

46 P.R. 631
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 3, 1934
DocketNo. 6098
StatusPublished

This text of 46 P.R. 631 (Societé Anonyme de Photographie Industrialle v. Vallés) 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
Societé Anonyme de Photographie Industrialle v. Vallés, 46 P.R. 631 (prsupreme 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hutchison-

delivered the opinion of the court.

Cerame López & Co., in an action against G-astón Blon-court, attached certain personal property which was placed in the custody of the managing partner, Manuel Valles. Soeieté Anonyme de Photographie Industrials, in an action against Gastón Bloncourt, or Gastón Bloncourt & Company, attached the same property in the hands of Valles. Later, when the attached property could not be found, Soeieté Anonyme de Photographie Industrials brought the present action for damages against Valles and Cerame López & Company and obtained a judgment.

The first assignment is that the district court erred in overruling a demurrer for want of facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action: (A) Because plaintiff did not allege any fault or negligence on the part of defendants; (B) because plaintiff did not allege the amount covered by the second attachment; (C) because plaintiff did not allege that Vallés accepted the office of custodian or took possession of [633]*633the property attached by plaintiff; (D) because plaintiff did not allege the existence of any relationship between Blon-court and Bloncourt and Company, who are two separate entities, nor the insolvency, of either, nor the nonexistence of other property subject to execution; and, (E) because plaintiff did not allege that the court had rendered in the second action any judgment from which no appeal had been or could be taken determining the amount for which Gastón Bloncourt & Company was liable.

The complaint does not use the words fault and negligence. It does set forth the. circumstances in which Valles, with full knowledge of the second attachment, returned the attached property to Gastón Bloncourt, Cerame López & Company was responsible for the tortious act of Vallés as custodian of the attached property. It was not necessary to allege that A^allés committed a tort when he delivered the attached property to Bloncourt instead of to the marshal, from whom he had received it, nor to point out that Cerame López & Company was responsible for the act of the custodian in whose hands Cerame López & Company, as plaintiff in the original action, had caused the attached property to be placed. Plaintiff did allege, however, that Vallés had been named as custodian of the attached property at the request and under the responsibility of Cerame López & Co.

Plaintiff alleged that as a result of a certain investigation and hearings in a certain action, it transpired that Vallés had delivered the attached property to Bloncourt as the result of a compromise between the parties to the original action on exhibition by Bloncourt of certain documents which showed that the compromise had been reached without judicial approval. Appellants stress this averment as evidence of good faith on the part of Vallés. Plaintiff also alleged that notice of the second attachment was served on Vallés as custodian of the attached property to the end that he should retain possession thereof until further order of the court. He must be presumed to have been aware of the duty [634]*634and responsibility imposed npon Mm by tMs constructive levy of a second attachment whether expressly instructed or not as to the nature and character of that duty-and responsibility. He must be presumed to have known that the property in his custody was in custodia legis and that he was not at liberty to deliver the' same to the defendant in the original action without leave or order of court. The fact that Bloncourt exhibited documentary evidence ■ of an extra judicial settlement of the original controversy may or may not be an extenuating circumstance. It can not be regarded as enough to relieve defendants from all responsibility.

Plaintiff .alleged that in the second action a writ of execution for $591.71 with interest at the legal rate had been issued against the attached property. A detailed inventory of the property covering four closely typewritten images’ was attached to the complaint as an exhibit. Plaintiff also alleged that the value of the property exceeded $1,200 and that the damages caused by the tortious acts of defendants amounted to $591.71, with interest at the legal rate and in addition thereto, $200 attorney’s fees which plaintiff has agreed to pay its .attorneys. It may be conceded that the complaint is ambiguous and uncertain but defendants did not demur on that ground nor move the court to require that the pleading be made more specific. The inference from the facts stated was that the amount specified in the second attachment was sufficient to cover the damages sought to be recovered in the present action. In any event, the question here presented involved a defective statement of the cause of action rather than a failure to state a cause of action and the defect complained of is not enough to justify a reversal.

Here we have assumed with appellants, first, that plaintiff was obliged to allege facts showing the maximum of defendant’s liability, and second, that the amount specified in the second attachment was' the maximum limit of such liability. As between the amount of the second attachment and the [635]*635value of the • attached- property • we- see no reason why . the limit of defendants’ responsibility should, not be determined by the latter instead of the former so far as either of these factors was involved.

The argument for appellants concedes by necessary implication a liability for damages within an unspecified maximum. It concedes a liability for the full amount sought to be recovered unless that amount should exceed such unspecified maximum, and in any event, for a certain proportion of the amount claimed by plaintiff. The failure to state facts sufficient to show conclusively that plaintiff was entitled to the whole of the amount claimed as damages was not a failure to state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

An averment that Vallés accepted the office of custodian or took possession of the property attached by plaintiff was unnecessary. He was already in possession of the attached property and the fact that he continued to retain possession after being served with notice of the second attachment was a sufficient acceptance of responsibility as custodian. He might have relieved himself of that responsibility at the time of the second attachment or at any time thereafter by redelivery of the attached property to the marshal of the court from whom he had received it.

Plaintiff alleged that when the marshal went to resume possession of the attached property under the writ of execution, the property had disappeared; that, pursuant to instructions from plaintiff’s attorneys, the marshal then made a search for other property belonging to “the defendant, Gastón Bloncourt, or to Gastón Bloncourt & Company” and was unable to find any property belonging “to the defendant Gastón Bloncourt or to Gastón Bloncourt & Company” and was unable to make any levy under the writ of execution. This was a sufficient averment as to the nonexistence of other property subject to execution. In the circumstances, it was not necessary to allege the insolvency of Gastón Blon-court or of Gastón Bloncourt & Company. Nor can we [636]*636assume with, plaintiff that Gastón Bloncourt and Gastón Bloncourt & Company were necessarily separate entities. Gastón Bloncourt may have been doing business under the name of Gastón Bloncourt & Company.

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Bluebook (online)
46 P.R. 631, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/societe-anonyme-de-photographie-industrialle-v-valles-prsupreme-1934.