People v. Ruiz
People v. Ruiz
Opinion of the Court
delivcied the opinion of the court.
The defendant took’ the present appeal, alleging that the district court erred because it was not proved at the trial (a) that he was the agent of the owner of the dresses; (b) that any fiduciary relation existed between him and the said owner, and (c) because the evidence showed that he became the owner of the garments immediately upon delivery, citing in support of his contention the case of The People v. Rivera, 21 P. R. R. 366.
We have examined the evidence carefully and find that that for the prosecution fully sustains the facts charged in the complaint. The defendant received the garments for sale on commission. The ownership of the garments did not pass to the defendant by reason of delivery. Although he could sell-the garments at whatever price he wished, each garment was given a certain value on delivery and that value formed the basis on which the commission to be received by the defendant in each c$,se was estimated.
The evidence for the defense tends to show- that the defendant usually bought the garments on credit, reselling them later and paying their value- to his vendor; that he in turn sold the goods on credit and was not paid therefor, hence his inability to comply with the obligation which he contracted. In other words, the said evidence tends to show that the remedy is civil and not criminal.
The judgment appealed from should be
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.