United Porto Rican Bank v. District Court of Humacao

44 P.R. 826
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 31, 1933
DocketNo. 892
StatusPublished

This text of 44 P.R. 826 (United Porto Rican Bank v. District Court of Humacao) 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
United Porto Rican Bank v. District Court of Humacao, 44 P.R. 826 (prsupreme 1933).

Opinion

Mb. Justice Hutchisou

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A long term.lease, or two or more such leases, provided for the payment of a quarterly rental and of taxes on the leased properties by the lessee. The United Porto Eican Bank entered into a contract for agricultural advances with the lessee. The lease provided that the lessors should give thirty days’ notice to the bank before proceeding against the lessee in the event of default and extended to the bank the privilege of avoiding the result of such default by payment of the delinquent instalments within that period.

The lessee executed promissory notes for money advanced by the bank. Some of these notes were endorsed by the bank to the Baltimore Trust Company. Later, the trust company and the bank brought an action on these notes against the lessee. The complaint contained an averment as to the existence of a lien for agricultural advances on some two thousand acres of growing cane and on the sugar to be produced therefrom. It contained another averment on information and belief as to the continued existence of the lease. The lessors were made parties defendant. The prayer was for a foreclosure of the lien, for a sale of the cane or of the sugar produced therefrom and for such a decree as might be proper concerning the rights of the lessors.

[828]*828Plaintiffs then asked for the appointment of a receiver. After outlining the averments of the complaint they set forth in their petition:

“4. That the said properties were leased to Garzot & Fuertes by their respective owners at the time of the execution of the aforesaid contract for agricultural advances between the United Porto Eiean Bank and Garzot & Fuertes, and it is alleged on information and belief that the said contracts are still in force, the plaintiffs not having been parties to any contract of rescission either by agreement or by judicial process.
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“7. That since the beginning of November, 1932, neither defendant, Garzot & Fuertes, nor the owners of the property, nor any other person, has attended to the cultivation and management of the said cane plantations, which have been in a state of. neglect from that date up to the present, and as a result of the lack of care and cultivation the said cane has depreciated in value and continues depreciating, and the said plantations are now in need of immediate attention and cultivation to prevent their almost total loss.
“8. That the defendant, Garzot & Fuertes, is insolvent with no sufficient funds, means, or required equipment to take care of the cultivation and management of the said cane, nor can the said defendant raise funds or obtain the necessary means and equipment for that purpose, nor has it shown any intention of paying due attention to the cultivation and management thereof; and it is alleged on information and belief that the owners of the respective properties can not give the proper attention to the cultivation and management of the said cane for lack of funds, means and necessary equipment, and as many of the owners are women, under age, and without experience and knowledge of agriculture, they are not competent and able to take charge of such cultivation and management either.
“9. That several persons claiming the proper authority have forbidden The United Porto Rican Bank, plaintiff herein, to enter the said properties in order to take charge of the cultivation and management of the said cane so as to prevent its loss, although the said plaintiff is and always has been ready to enter the properties and give the necessary attention to the cultivation and management of the said cane without prejudice to the defendant or to the owners of the said properties, and the said-plaintiff, The United Porto [829]*829Rican Bank, is and always has been ready to pay to the owners of the said properties a proportionate share of the rent corresponding to that part of the said properties which are planted to canes and that may be required for said cultivation and management from the date of the entry of the receiver whose appointment is sought herein.
“10. That according to clause ‘K’ of the said deed No. 23, of July 29, 1931, executed before notary Walter L. Newsom, Jr., which deed contains the aforesaid Contract for agricultural advances, The United Porto Rican Bank, the plaintiff herein, and/or the holders of the notes for agricultural advances, which were issued in accordance with the terms of the said contract which is the basis of the claim herein, are entitled at maturity, that is to say, on June 30, 1932, to take possession of the aforesaid cane plantations in order to take charge of the management and cultivation thereof or to the right to claim judicially the recovery of the said notes and to secure the appointment of a receiver to take possession of the said cane plantations and to manage them in accordance with tne orders of the court without furnishing bond for the appointment of said receiver.
“11. That according to section 182 of the Code of Civil Procedure in force, a receiver may be appointed by the court in which an action is pending and which has been instituted by a creditor to subject any property or fund to his claim, whose right to or interest in such property or fund or proceeds thereof is presumable, provided it is shown that such property or fund is in danger of being lost, removed, or materially injured, as has happened and is still happening in the present case.
“12. It is alleged on information and belief that the defendant-G-arzot & Fuertes has failed to pay rent to the owners of the said properties and that no taxes on said properties have been paid for a long time and that owing to the failure to pay the said rent the owners are not receiving any income from their properties, which circumstance is prejudicial to the said owners, and that if a receiver were appointed this situation would be eased from the date of the entry of the said receiver.
“13. That the appointment of a receiver in the present case will be of great benefit to all the parties and will not prejudice in any manner the rights or preferences or liens held or claimed to be held by any of them, since all the aforesaid questions of preference in the section could be settled within this receivership, and- as the proceeds from the receivership will be deposited with this court pending a settlement, the appointment of the said receiver, therefore, will result in the avoidance of a multiplicity of actions.
[830]*830"14. That if this court grants this motion and by virtue thereof appoints a receiver acceptable to the plaintiffs, said plaintiffs can positively state that the receiver, by means of the proper receivership certificates, can raise the necessary funds to give the proper care to the cultivation, management and gathering of the cane crops.
"15. '.
"16. That the plaintiffs, as creditors for agricultural advances, have a lien, an interest and a right to the said plantations, in excess of the estimated value thereof.”

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Bluebook (online)
44 P.R. 826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-porto-rican-bank-v-district-court-of-humacao-prsupreme-1933.