López v. Central Vannina
López v. Central Vannina
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action of unlawful detainer. Plaintiff and defendant entered into a contract of lease containing the following clauses: “The rental under this lease is one hundred and twenty dollars monthly which the lessee corporation agrees to pay to the lessor, the owner of the properties, at the end of each month.” The place where payment was to be made was not stated in the contract.
The district court decided the case in favor of the defendant. Its conclusions are summed up in the paragraph of its opinion which reads as follows:
“The evidence shows that the plaintiff in this case has no representative residing in San Juan, where the defendant corporation has its office, to whom the monthly rent can be paid. The plaintiff took no action whatever to collect the rent for July and August. According to the contract, the defendant corporation is obliged to pay the rent at the end of each month, but in accordance with section 1139 of the Civil Code, this obligation should be complied with at the domicil of the Central Yannina. The lessee is bound to pay the rent when it is due, but is under no obligation to go away from its domicil in order to do so, and if the lessor desires prompt payment without any inconvenience, she should authorize some person to receive payment of the rent in her name at the domicil of the defendant corporation. Until the lessee is given an opportunity to make payment it cannot be said that it has failed to comply with the conditions of the contract with regard to the payment of the monthly rent.”
After carefully considering the pleadings and the evidence we fully agree with, the district court that in the absence of an express stipulation in the contract it must he concluded, in accordance with the provisions of section 1139 of the Civil Code, that the place of payment is the domicil of the defendant corporation. But this conclusion does not carry us to the extreme of holding, as was held by the said court, that the lessee is not required to make payment unless the lessor designates a person at the domicil of the lessee to receive the rent.
According to section 1458 of the Civil Code, the lessee is
“Men stipulate mutually to give or to do something on a "day or within a time certain. Therefore, we hold that each party must give or do what he promised to give or do within the time fixed; and failure of one to demand fulfilment is no excuse for the noncompliance of the other.”
It is true, as held by the trial court, that the lessee was not obliged to go away from its domicil to make the payment, but without moving therefrom it could and should have made the payment even in ease no one appeared to demand it, according to the plain provisions of sections 1144 et seq. of the Civil Code.
Commenting on article 1176 of the Spanish Civil Code, similar to section 1144 of our own, Manresa expresses himself as follows: ■
“In the two paragraphs of this article five eases are enumerated by the code: One in which the tender of payment' is followed by the refusal of the creditor to accept the same and four in which the deposit may be made without tender; namely, in the absence of the creditor; in case of his incapacity; in ease several persons claim a right to collect, and in case the instrument witnessing the obligation has been mislaid.
“Besides these five cases the following three are usually added: When the creditor is unknown; when he refuses to give a receipt, and when he. fails to appear in due time at the place agreed upon or the place designated by law in order to collect. The inclusion of the last case does no violence to the provisions of the code, either considering the purpose of the same, which is to give the debtor an opportunity to avoid the undue continuance of the cares and responsibilities which the obligation carries with it, or because the said hypothesis may be said to be expressly admitted by the code in so far as it refers to the absence of the creditor; not in an exact sense like the legal situation treated of in Book First of the Code, but in a general acceptance like the failure to appear at the place and time*555 agreed upon in tbe contract. As a general rule a previous tender will not be necessary in these cases unless the debtor knows the residence of the creditor and can easily make the tender to him; but as these circumstances are not presumed, the burden of proof is on the creditor should he object to the deposit on the ground of defects of form.” YIII Manresa, Spanish Civil Code, 317.
Therefore, the lessee having failed to comply with its obligation to pay the rent according to the conditions agreed upon, the right of the lessor to bring' an action of unlawful detainer is indisputable. Section 1472, Civil Code; sec. 9, Unlawful Detainer Act of 1905; Finlay v. R. Fabian & Co., 24 P. R. R. 140. Consequently, without considering the other cause of action on which the complaint is based, the appeal is sustained, the judgment appealed from is reversed and a judgment for eviction is rendered as prayed for, without special imposition of costs.
On motion for reconsideration Me. Justice del Tobo delivered the following opinion of the court on July 19, 1918:
This ease was disposed of by this court on February 26, 1918, the judgment appealed from being reversed. The Central Vannina, the defendant, moved for a reconsideration and a rehearing was granted. Both parties appeared and with the new pleadings the case was again submitted for review and decision.
After a careful consideration of all the circumstances of the case, we sustain the first opinion upon which our judgment of February 26 was based.
The Central Vannina invokes in its behalf the judgment of the Supreme Court of Spain of April 12, 1879, which held as follows:
“In dismissing the action of unlawful detainer brought by the owners against the defendant on the ground that on April 12, the date of the complaint, the latter had not paid the stipulated rent for the second semester which began on the first of said month, the judgment appealed from did not violate clauses 1 and 2, or any other*556 clause, because while it is true that the defendant agreed to pay the rent of 34,000 reales semi-annually in advance, nevertheless, as it was not stated where or to whom the payment was to be made; as, on the other hand, it is customary in Madrid for the owner, or his agent, to go to the house of the tenant to collect the rent unless otherwise stipulated, and’ as nobody made a demand upon the defendant for the payment of the rent for the said semester, it cannot be concluded that the tenant had refused to pay, especially after he had made the deposit with the consent of the court.”
The case before the Supreme Court of Spain was different from this case. There, “after the filing- of the complaint the parties were convoked for an oral hearing, the defendant having been summoned on April 18, and on the following-day Francisco Morales filed a plea alleging that as nobody had called to collect the semi-annual rent which became due in advance on the 1st of the said month and as he did not know where to make payment, inasmuch as there were-three owners and none of them nor their agent had called to collect, although it was customary to make collection at the house of the tenant, he did not care to wait longer and deposited the sum of 17,000 reales, the amount of said semi-annual rent, which deposit was allowed by the court.”
In this case there was only one lessor and the custom of the place was not alleged in proper form. The fact that many times the plaintiff sent to collect after the monthly in-stalments were due, can be understood only as an act of mere tolerance which does not modify the contract, in which it is clearly stipulated that the payments shall be made monthly when due; that is, that the rent fell due on the last day of each month, a condition which was well understood by both parties to the contract. Besides, in this case, instead of following the course adopted by the defendant in the case decided by the Supreme Court of Spain by making the deposit forthwith, the defendant alleged in its answer that it was not required to pay until demand for payment had been made, and this is exactly what we have decided against the defendant.
Finally, the defendant prays that in the event that this court should decide the plaintiff’s first cause of action against the defendant, it also consider and decide the second cause of action set up in the coihplaint. Perhaps if we were to enter upon a consideration of said second cause of action we would decide also that the judgment of the district court should be reversed, but we are neither obliged to do this nor do we consider it necessary or opportune in the interests of justice in the present case.
Reversed and substituted.
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENTING OPINION OP
I regret having to dissent from the opinion of my distinguished colleagues, but I am in accord with the theory upon which the District Court of San Juan, Section 1, based
Iu the opinion on which the said court based its judgment dismissing the action of unlawful detainer the said theory is summed up in the following words:
“The evidence shows that the plaintiff in this case has no representative residing in San Juan, where the defendant corporation has its office, to whom the monthly rent can be paid. The plaintiff took no action whatever to collect the rent for July and August. According to the contract, the defendant corporation is obliged to pay the rent at the end of each month, but in accordance with section 1139 of the Civil Code, this obligation should be complied with at the domicil of the Central Vannina. The lessee is bound to pay the rent when it is due, but is under no obligation to go away from its domicil in order to do so, and if the lessor desires prompt payment without any inconvenience, she should authorize some person to receive payment of the rent in her name at the domicil of the defendant corporation. Until the lessee is given an opportunity to make payment it cannot be said that it has failed to comply with the conditions of the contract with regard to the payment of the monthly rent.”
The place of payment not having been stipulated in the contract of lease, payment should have been made at the domicil of the lessee corporation, pursuant to section 1139 of the Civil Code, and the domicil of the plaintiff being elsewhere, it is clear that, as held by this court in its opinion, following the theory of the lower court, the lessee was not obliged to go away, from its domicil in order to make payment.
The provisions of sections 1144 et seq. of the Civil Code regarding tender of payment and deposit are not applicable. It is true that it was stipulated in the contract of lease that the Central Vannina should pay the rent to the lessor at the end of each month, and it follows from that stipulation that the payment became due and was therefore demandable
The obligation to deposit the rent when due, if the creditor fail to appear at the domicil of the debtor to collect it, does not arise from the contract, nor can it arise from the law according to the provisions of section 1057 of the Civil Code, which provide that obligations arising' from law are not presumed and that those expressly determined in said code or in special laws are the only demandable ones. Franco Oins et al. v. Caneja, ante, p. 457.
As the plaintiff neither personally nor through the agency of a third person made demand upon the defendant for the payment of the rent, and such failure to pay formed the basis of the first cause of action set up in the complaint of unlawful detainer, it cannot be held that the lessee refused to make payment. Judgment of the Supreme Court of.Spain of April 12, 1879, 41 J. C. 435.
For the foregoing reasons the conclusion is clear that the action of unlawful detainer should have been dismissed in so far as it rests upon failure to pay the rent.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.