Valdes v. Central Altagracia, Inc.

225 U.S. 58, 32 S. Ct. 664, 56 L. Ed. 980, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2069
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 27, 1912
Docket193 and 196. the Firm Name of Nevers & Callaghan
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 225 U.S. 58 (Valdes v. Central Altagracia, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valdes v. Central Altagracia, Inc., 225 U.S. 58, 32 S. Ct. 664, 56 L. Ed. 980, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2069 (1912).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

These cases were consolidated below, tried together, a like statement of facts was made applicable to both and the court disposed of them in one opinion. We shall do likewise. Stating only things deemed to be essential, as shown by the pleadings and documents annéxed to them and the finding of facts made below, the case is this: Joaquin Sanchez owned in Porto Rico a tract of land of about twenty-two acres (cuerdas) on which was a sugar house containing a mill for crushing cane and an evaporating apparatus for manufacturing thé juice of the cane, into sugar. All of the machinery was antiquated and of a limited capacity. The establishment was known as the •Central Altagracia, and Sanchez, while not a cane grower, carried on the business of a Central — that is, of acquiring cane grown by others and manufacturing it.into sugar at his factory. On the eighteenth day of January, 1905, Sanchez leased his land and plant to Salvador Casteilo for a period of ten years. ’ The lease gave to the tenant (Casteilo), the right to install in the plant “such machinery as he may deem convenient, which said machinery, at the end *60 of the years mentioned (the term of the lease) shall 'become the exclusive property” of the lessor, Sanchez. The tenant was given one year in which to begin the work of repairing and improving the plant, and it was provided that “upon the expiration of this term, if the necessary improvements shall not have been begun by him (Castello), then this contract shall be null and void, and no cause of action shall accrue to any of the contracting parties by reason thereof.” Further agreeing on thé subject of the improved machinery which was to be placed in the plant, the contract provided: “Upon the expiration of the term agreed on under this contract, any improvement or machinery installed in the said Central shall remain for the benefit of Don Joaquin Sanchez and Don Salvador Castello shall have no right to claim anything for the improvements made.” The rental was thus provided for: “After each crop such profits as may be produced by the Central Altagracia shall be distributed and twenty-five per cent. (25%) thereof shall be immediately paid to Don Joaquin Sanchez as equivalent for the rental of said Central and of the twenty-two (22) cuerdas of land surrounding the same. The remaining seventy-five per cent. (75%) shall belong to Don Salvador Castello, who may interest therein whomsoever he may wish, either for the whole or part thereof.” It was stipulated, however, that in fixing the profits no charge should be made for repairs of the existing machinery or for new machinery put in, as the entire cost of these matters was to be borne by the lessee, Castello. The lease provided, moreover, that in case of the death of Sanchez the obligations of thé contract should be binding on his heirs, and in the case of the death of Castello, his brother, Gerardo Castello, should take his place “and be a contracting party if he so desired. Othérwise the plantation, in such a condition as it may be at his death, shall immediately pass into the possession of its owner, Don Joaquin Sanchez.” In June, *61 1905, by a supplementary contract, the lease was extended without change of its terms and conditions for an additional period of ten years, making the total term twenty years. Although executed under private signature, this lease, conformably to the laws of. Porto Rico, was produced before a notary and made authentic and in such form was duly registered on the public records, as required by the Porto Rican laws.

On the first day of July, 1905, Salvador and Gerardo Castello transferred all their rights acquired under the lease, as above stated, to Frederick L. Cornwell for “the corporation to be organized under the name of Central Altagracia, of which he is the trustee.” This transfer bound the corporation to all the obligations in favor of the original lessor, Sanchez, provided that the corporation should issue to Castello a certain number of paid up shares of its capital stock and a further number of shares as the output of sugar from thé'plant increased as the result of its enlarged capacity consequent upon the improvement of the machinery by the corporation. The lease further provided for the employment of Castello as superintendent at a salary, for a substitution of Gerardo Castello, in the event of the absence or death of his brother Salvador, and, for this reason, it is to be assumed, Gerardo made himself a party to the transfer of the lease. This transfer of the lease to. the corporation was never put upon the public records. The corporation was organized under the laws of the State of Maine and under the transfer took charge of the plant. The season for grinding cane and the manufacture of sugar in Porto Rico usually commences “about the month of December of each year and terminates in the months of May, June or July of the year following, according to the amount of cane to be ground.” Central factories in Porto Rico usually “make contracts with thé people (colonos) growing cane so that growers of cane will deliver the same to be ground,, and such contracts *62 are usually made and entered into in the months of June, July and August.” In other words, on the termination of one grinding season, in the months of June or July, it is usual in the ensuing August to make new contracts for the cane to be delivered in the following grinding season, which, as we have said, commences in December. The contract transferring the lease to the Central Altagracia, incorporated,-was made in July, 1905, at the end, there-1fore, of the grinding season of that year. To what extent the corporation contracted for cane to be delivered to it for grinding during the season of 1905-6, which began in December,- 1905, does not appear. It is inferable, however, that the corporation began the work of installing new machinery to give the plant a larger capacity within the year stipulated in the'lease from Sanchez to Castello. We say this because it is certain that in the fall of 1906 (October) the corporation borrowed from the commercial firm of Nevers & Callaghan in New York city the sum of twenty-five thousand dollars ($25,000) to enable the corporation to pay for new and enlarged machinery which it had ordered and which was placed in the factory in time to be used in the grinding season of 1906-7,. which began in December, 1906. While such grinding season was progressing, on April 11, 1907, the corporation, through its president, under the authority of its board of directors, sold to one Ramon Valdes all its rights acquired under the lease transferred by Castello. This transfer expressly included all the machinery previously placed by the corporation in the sugar house, as well as machinery which might be thereafter installed during the term of redemption hereafter to be referred to and which, it was declared, conformably to the original lease “shall be a part of said factory for the manufacture of sugar.” The consideration for the sale was stated in the contract to be “thirty-five thousand dollars ($35,000) received by the corporation, twenty-five thousand four hundred dol *63

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Kaczmarek v. Commissioner
1962 T.C. Memo. 131 (U.S. Tax Court, 1962)
Johnston v. Jones
178 F.2d 481 (Third Circuit, 1950)
Haverty Realty & Inv. Co. v. Commissioner
3 T.C. 161 (U.S. Tax Court, 1944)
Heflin v. United States
132 F.2d 907 (Fifth Circuit, 1943)
American Crystal Sugar Co. v. Nicholas
124 F.2d 477 (Tenth Circuit, 1941)
Chamberlain v. Commissioner
41 B.T.A. 10 (Board of Tax Appeals, 1940)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
225 U.S. 58, 32 S. Ct. 664, 56 L. Ed. 980, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2069, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valdes-v-central-altagracia-inc-scotus-1912.