Will v. Tornabells

217 U.S. 47, 30 S. Ct. 424, 54 L. Ed. 660, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1943
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMarch 14, 1910
Docket63
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 217 U.S. 47 (Will v. Tornabells) 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
Will v. Tornabells, 217 U.S. 47, 30 S. Ct. 424, 54 L. Ed. 660, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1943 (1910).

Opinion

217 U.S. 47 (1910)

WILL
v.
TORNABELLS.

No. 63.

Supreme Court of United States.

Submitted December 10, 1909.
Decided March 14, 1910.
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF THE UNITED STATES FOR PORTO RICO.

*48 Mr. Frederick L. Cornwell and Mr. N.B.K. Pettengill for appellant.

No brief was filed for appellees.

MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the court.

This appeal is taken to secure the reversal of a decree of the court below dismissing the bill of complaint. The court sustained its action by an elaborate opinion, and subsequently stated, in a formal way, its findings of fact and conclusions of law.

The evidence is not in the record, although a portion of the testimony is contained in the formal findings of fact, upon the theory that this was necessary to preserve the right to review the action of the court concerning objection urged by the defendants to the admission of certain testimony tendered on behalf of the complainants. The record, we are constrained to say, is unsatisfactory and confused, a condition which we assume has resulted from circumstances referred to by the court below in the opening passage of its opinion, as follows (3 Porto Rico, 125, 126):

"This is a creditors' bill filed June 23, 1902, and permitted to remain on the docket of this court during the five years that have since intervened, without any apparent proper or sufficient cause for the unwarranted delay and with infinite inconvenience to many parties connected with the subject-matter *49 of the controversy. The first two years and a half of the time seem to have been taken up with a battle over the proceedings, trying to get the answers of the several respondents settled, and during which time complainants' exceptions to several of the answers were referred to a master, arguments had before him, his report filed, exceptions to the same presented, arguments had on the latter and briefs submitted in support thereof, and so on, in an interminable and fruitless contest of petitions, motions, exceptions, pleas, demurrers, orders, affidavits and rules to show cause, without result or real merit as we see it. The next year and a half seem to have been taken up somewhat in the same way, and also partly in an application for a receivership and in opposing efforts to the same, and in efforts to prevent outside parties from foreclosing several mortgages they had on some of the premises involved, that they had secured in the meantime, in enjoining them from so proceeding and in issuing rules as for contempts against them for their actions in that behalf, etc."

In order to in some measure dispel the obscurity which must arise from the circumstances just referred to we briefly state, in their chronological order, certain unquestioned facts which gave rise to the controversy, and also outline the pleadings and proceedings, the whole for the purpose of enabling us to adequately test the sufficiency of the errors assigned.

For many years the firm of J. Tornabells & Co., composed of Joaquin Tornabells and Carlos Doitteau, was established in Porto Rico and there carried on a mercantile business. The firm was the owner of various trading establishments and warehouses, and was, besides, the owner of considerable real estate, embraced in which were extensive coffee plantations which the firm carried on, including the buildings, machinery and appurtenances incident thereto. It is not disputed that, presumably as the result of losses occasioned by a disastrous hurricane which devastated the island of Porto Rico the firm, prior to 1900, had become temporarily embarrassed, and, under provisions of the local law, had obtained in a local court *50 an extension of time for the payment of its debts. While we state the fact as to the suspension we shall nevertheless indulge in the assumption that such fact has no material bearing upon the questions here to be decided. We do this because no rights based upon such fact were asserted in the bill of complaint or passed upon by the court, and no right of such a character is asserted in the assignments of error or referred to in the elaborate argument filed on behalf of the appellants, the appellees not having appeared in this court either orally or by brief.

On May 9, 1900, Tornabells & Co., by deed before a notary public, conveyed to Luis Aran y Lanci the following property, as stated by the court below: "Its place of business and other town property, its stock of merchandise and twenty-six several pieces of real estate, most of them being coffee plantations and their appurtenances." The stated price was 197,700 pesos, provincial money, 30,000 declared to have been paid in cash, and the remainder to be paid in ten installments of 16,700 pesos, bearing no interest, maturing respectively from one to ten years. A few days thereafter, on May 11, 1900, Aran y Lanci mortgaged for 150,000 pesos nineteen of the twenty-six pieces of real estate thus conveyed to him. This mortgage was in favor of one Baudelio Duran y Cat and a firm styled Duran & Coll. The mortgage in favor of the first was for 130,000 pesos, divided into ten annual installments of 13,000 pesos each, evidenced by notes to the order of the mortgagee, maturing in each of the ten years, the whole being secured on fourteen of the twenty-six pieces of real estate. The mortgage in favor of Duran & Coll was on five of the pieces of real estate acquired as aforesaid, and secured twenty thousand pesos, divided into five installments of four thousand pesos each, maturing in each of five years. These mortgages were not indivisible, as the amount of each was apportioned among the various pieces of real estate, so that each piece was liable only for the sum secured on it. The sale to Aran y Lanci was recorded on May 21, and the mortgages just stated *51 on May 24, 1900. On June 25, 1900, the mortgage for 20,000 pesos, which had been executed in its favor by Aran y Lanci, was assigned by the firm of Duran & Coll to Raimundo Valdecillo to secure an indebtedness due him by the firm of 6,000 pesos provincial money, and this assignment was duly registered on July 5, 1900. Sixteen months after the conveyance to Aran y Lanci — that is, on September 16, 1901 — the firm of Tornabells & Co. acknowledged by notarial act that Aran y Lanci had by anticipation fully paid the deferred purchase price (167,700 pesos). Nine months after such acknowledgment Aran y Lanci mortgaged in favor of the Banco de Solleir to secure 32,780 pesetas, Spanish money, one of the pieces of property previously mortgaged to Duran y Cat. On July 5, 1902, this mortgage was put upon record. A few days after it was so put upon record, viz., on June 23, 1902, the suit before us was commenced.

The bill — which was not sworn to — was originally filed on behalf of three commercial firms, Will & Co. of Cuba, David Midgley & Sons of Manchester, England, and Ramon Cortado & Co. of Ponce, Porto Rico, and the members of said firms, in their own behalf and in behalf of all others similarly situated who might intervene in the cause. It was alleged that the complainants were creditors of the firm of Tornabells & Co. at the time of the conveyance to Aran y Lanci and the execution of the mortgages by Aran y Lanci above recited, and that subsequent to said transactions the claims of the complainants had been merged into judgments against the firm, obtained in the court where the bill was filed, and that on such judgments executions had issued and been returned unsatisfied. It was further alleged that the conveyance made by Tornabells & Co.

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Bluebook (online)
217 U.S. 47, 30 S. Ct. 424, 54 L. Ed. 660, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1943, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/will-v-tornabells-scotus-1910.