Valiente & Co. v. Succession of Fuentes

76 F.2d 78, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2467
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedFebruary 27, 1935
DocketNo. 2942
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 76 F.2d 78 (Valiente & Co. v. Succession of Fuentes) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Valiente & Co. v. Succession of Fuentes, 76 F.2d 78, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2467 (1st Cir. 1935).

Opinion

BINGHAM, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico of July 29, 1933, reversing a judgthent of the District Court of San Juan of December 31, 1929, so far as it affected the fights and interests of the defendants Aurelia Fuentes de Rodriguez and Rosalia Fuentes Suarez and as to them ordering.judgment in their favor.

The action is a suit at law. It was brought in the District Court for San Juan June 3, 1929, by the plaintiff, Valiente & Co., a juridical entity under the laws of Puerto Rico, against the defendants, Aurelia, Elisa, Maria, Florentino, Aureliana, Carmen, Rosalia, Manuela, and Francisca Fuentes Suarez, and Rosalia Suarez Morales, constituting • the succession of Abdon Fuentes Marrero, Rosalia Suarez Morales being the widow of Abdon and the others mentioned their children.

The action was brought t.o.recover the sum due on two promissory notes for $4,000 each, bearing interest at 12 per. cent., dated September 30, 1926, payable to Valiente & Co. or order, one on December 30, 1927, arid the other on June 30, 1928, signed by Flor-entino Fuentes, the son, and Ábdon Fuentes, the father. The complaint alleges that the amount due on the notes when, the suit was brought amounted to $9,120; that the sum of $3,618.61, in addition. to.Jhe $9,120-, was due and owing by Abdon on an account current in which was included the notes and [79]*79a debt of Florentino for $1,749.22; that Abdon, in his lifetime, and his wife accepted the details of the account and the balance in favor of the plaintiff; and that the sum of $12,738.61 was liquidated and de-mandable as an account stated.

All the defendants, except the daughters Aurelia Fuentes de Rodriguez and Rosalia Fuentes Suarez, failed to appear and answer to the complaint and were defaulted. Aurelia and Rosalia appeared and filed answers, in which they denied that Abdon Fuentes owed the plaintiff the sum of $12,-738.61 or any other sum; denied that he executed the notes in question; denied that he owed $3,618.61, the balance of the $12,-738.61; denied that he assented to the details of the account and the balances which the plaintiff alleged existed in its favor; denied that the sum of $12,738.61 was liquidated and demandable or that it had been acknowledged and accepted by Abdon; and alleged that Abdon was insane; that he was confined in the Insane Asylum of Puerto Rico from about June 4, 1921, to September 21, 1921, when he was discharged at the request of his family; that he was again confined in the asylum from June 13, 1922, to September 9, 1922, when he was discharged at the request of his family; that the mental trouble with which he was afflicted was general progressive paralysis, with which mental disease he continued to suffer to the time of his death; that, on the date of the alleged execution of the notes, Abdon was without capacity to contract; that an item of $1,749.72, included in the $12,738.61, was the personal debt of Florentino Fuentes; that on August 10, 1928, the date this item was charged against Abdon, he was not capable of entering into a contract; and that the supposed account current is the account of Florentino Fuentes and that Florentino received the value of the notes.

In the District Court it was found that Florentino Fuentes signed the notes; that Abdon made his mark; that the notes were delivered to the plaintiff to pay an obligation of Florentino which he had with Roses & Co.; that this debt of his arose out of a contract for planting and cultivating tobacco, which contract Roses & Co. had assigned to the plaintiff, and that neither the principal nor the interest had been paid; that Ab-don and his wife, on August 10, 1928, caused a letter to be written to the plaintiff, which they signed with their marks, and in which, after alluding to his -sickness and whether he would ever improve, he directed the plaintiff “that you charge this sum [$8,0Q0] to my account; you may charge besides $1,-749.72, or a total of $9,747.72.” The District Court also found “that, besides acknowledging the debt, this letter acknowledged also the delivery of certain items of merchandise and sums of money in cash, the said account current beginning,” as per the account, “in 1925 and ending May 27, 1929”; that on the latter date Abdon, the predecessor of the defendant succession, was owing the sum of $12,738.61; that neither Abdon nor his wife knew how to read or write; that their son Florentino “was the person in charge and practically the administrator of the properties and rights of their predecessor [Abdon]”; that, on the question of the mental capacity of Abdon, three physicians testified, one of whom was the chief of clinical psychiatry of the insular insane asylum; that this witness brought with him two of the records of the asylum showing that Abdon was confined in the insular insane asylum on two occasions during the years 1921 and 1922; that, according to the records, Abdon was suffering from general progressive paralysis; that the third physician testified that he treated Abdon in 1928, and three or four weeks before Abdon died he consulted with another physician; that at that time the patient was mentally deficient, was also suffering from influenza and pneumonia, and that he diagnosed his affliction as an advanced stage of paretic dementia.

In rebuttal the plaintiff offered in evidence a record of the District Court of San Juan in a case brought by Rosalia Suarez, the wife, wherein it was alleged that, on July 27, 1922, Abdon was mentally incapacitated, and that, because of this, Florentino, the son, was appointed guardian of his person and property; that in the same record, but of a later date, there was a petition by Rosalia Suarez, the wife, asking that Abdon be ordered restored and that such an order was entered on April 19, 1923, ending the guardianship; that a doctor testified in behalf of the plaintiff, and said the disease suffered by Abdon was known as general paresis, one characteristic of which was the existence of lucid intervals in the person having the disease; that the defendants then offered evidence in surrebuttal; that one of the physicians who had previously testified in the defendants’ behalf, on being recalled, stated that, although lucid intervals might exist, that did not mean that the person was not insane, and besides that a [80]*80paretic-person suffers from abulia, who follows advice and obeys any one.

In considering the evidence on the question of insanity and the judicial decree offered by the plaintiff in rebuttal, the court said: “We cannot see how the parties now may impeach a judicial decree of this same court of justice [the District Court of San Juan], which adjudged that * * * Ab-don Fuentes was perfectly capable of managing his person and properties. If there is a case in which in our opinion paragraph 3 of section 101 [102] of the Law of Evidence is applicable, that is the present one.

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Related

Rivera v. Sucesión de Díaz Luzunaris
70 P.R. Dec. 181 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1949)
Hermanos v. Matos
81 F.2d 930 (First Circuit, 1936)

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Bluebook (online)
76 F.2d 78, 1935 U.S. App. LEXIS 2467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/valiente-co-v-succession-of-fuentes-ca1-1935.