Torregrosa v. Dodd

50 P.R. 43
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 26, 1936
DocketNo. 6600
StatusPublished

This text of 50 P.R. 43 (Torregrosa v. Dodd) 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
Torregrosa v. Dodd, 50 P.R. 43 (prsupreme 1936).

Opinion

Mr. Justice HutchisoN

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Victoria C. Dodd appeals from an adverse judgment in -a suit brought by Torregrosa’s minor children to establish the superiority of a certain mortgage lien.

In June 1924, Rafael Bigles executed a mortgage in favor of the minors, now plaintiffs herein, to secure the payment of $3,217.50 which he borrowed from them. In October 1925, Bigles conveyed the mortgaged property to 'Torregrosa for $4,500. Of this amount Torregrosa paid $1,383.00 in cash and retained the balance of the purchase price amounting to $3,217.50 in order to meet the mortgage held by his children. In order to complete the cash payment, Torregrosa borrowed from Vicente Texera $500 and •executed in favor of Texera a mortgage to secure the payment of this amount. Both the deed of conveyance by Bigles • and the new mortgage executed by Torregrosa in favor of Texera were embodied in a single instrument. By the terms and recitals of that instrument, Texera as a party thereto was fully informed as to the existence of the previous mort.gage. He knew that he was a junior mortgagee. In June 1928, Torregrosa borrowed from Victoria C. Dodd, a sister-in-law of Texera, $2,000 and executed a mortgage on three pieces of property to secure the payment thereof. One of [45]*45these properties was the house and lot purchased from Bigles, already encumbered by the mortgage in favor of Torre-grosa ’s children. No mention was made of this mortgage. The notary, when called as a witness in the district court said that he did not deem it necessary to mention it because Texera was the “absolute representative,” because Texera had handled the whole matter “with absolute authority” up to the last moment when he told the notary to insert the name of his sister-in-law as mortgagee and because the notary understood that the money belonged to Texera and that he was merely taking the mortgage in the name of his sister-in-law as the nominal mortgagee. The evidence as a whole shows that, up to the time of signing, Texera had been handling the transaction, if not as though for himself, at least as the agent and representative of his sister-in-law. Whether she was an undisclosed principal or not is unimportant. The notary who drew the Dodd mortgage was the same notary who had drawn the instrument whereby Bibles conveyed the property to Torregrosa and whereby Torregrosa executed the mortgage in favor of Texera. ■ Texera also appeared as a party to the instrument of June 16, 1928, acknowledged receipt of the $500 which Torregrosa owed him and cancelled the mortgage held by him as security for the payment thereof. A few days later the Dodd mortgage was recorded as to two only of the three properties mortgaged to' secure the payment of the $2,000." As far as the house and lot already mortgaged in favor of the Torregrosa children was concerned, no record of the Dodd mortgage was requested. Of the $2,000 principal of the Dodd mortgage, $800 only had been alloted to the house and lot which Bigles had conveyed to Torregrosa for a consideration of $4,500 while the balance of $1,200 had been distributed equally betwen the two vacant lots which constituted the rest of the mortgaged property.

At 8:15 in the morning of May 9, 1932, the Dodd mortgage was again presented in the registry of property. The following day, May 10 the registrar refused to record the [46]*46mortgage as to the house and lot because the same still stood upon the record in the name of Bigles but he entered a cautionary notice for 120 days. At 2:30 in the afternoon of May 10, 1932, Texera presented in the registry of property the deed of conveyance 'by Bigles to Torregrosa, together with the mortgage which the registrar had just refused to record, with a request that the house and lot be recorded in the name of Torregrosa and that the “converted mortgage” be recorded in the name of Miss Dodd. On the following day, May 11, the registrar recorded the conveyance, by Bigles to Torregrosa. In this entry he mentioned the mortgage for $3,217.50 in favor of the Torregrosa children. He then proceeded to convert the cautionary notice of the day before into a record entry of the Dodd mortgage. The mortgage in favor of the Torregrosa children which had been presented at 2:55 in the afternoon of May 10 was then recorded.

The theory of appellant is that by virtue of the foregoing-facts the Dodd mortgage, a second mortgage, was converted into a first mortgage and that the mortgage in favor of the Torregrosa children, a first mortgage, was relegated to the position of a second mortgage.

Article 70 of the Mortgage Law provides that:

“When the cautionary notice of a right is converted into a final record thereof, it shall produce its effects from the date of the notice. ’ ’

The gist of the argument for appellant is: that the Dodd mortgage was presented for record at 8:15 in the morning of May 9; that upon entry of the cautionary notice for 120 days and conversion thereof into a permanent record of the mortgage on May the 11th, the mortgage should be deemed to have been recorded as of May 9; that the deed of conveyance to Torregrosa having been presented at 2:30 in the afteernoon of May 10 and the mortgage in favor of the Torregrosa children having been mentioned in the registry for the first time when that deed was recorded, the Dodd mortgage was recorded as a first mortgage thirty hours and [47]*47fifteen minutes before there was any mention in the registry of the Torregrosa mortgage.

Article 70 of the Mortgage Law must be construed in connection with articles 9, 20 and 29 thereof, the pertinent portions of which read as follows:

“Art. 9. — Every record made in a registry shall set forth the following details:
“3. — The nature, extent, conditions and charges of the right upon which that the subject of the record is constituted.
“Art. 20. — In order to permit of the record or entry of deeds •conveying or encumbering the ownership or possession of real property or property rights, the interest of the person executing it or of the person in whose name the conveyance or encumbrance is made must first appear of record.
‘ t * * * «= * * «
‘.‘If such interest is recorded in favor of a person other than the one making the conveyance or placing the encumbrance, registrars shall deny the record requested.
“Art. 29. — Ownership or any other’property right expressly mentioned in records or cautionary notices, although not appearing in •erty or property rights, the interest of the person executing it or of the person in whose name the conveyance or encumbrance is made must first apper or record.

In Antonsanti v. Registrar, 9 P.R.R. 171, this Court said:

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50 P.R. 43, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torregrosa-v-dodd-prsupreme-1936.