G. Arbona & Co. v. Ortiz
G. Arbona & Co. v. Ortiz
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
G-. Arbona & Company, a mercantile partnership of Ponce,
It was alleged in the complaint that in May of 1918 the defendants and José Blay formed a limited mercantile partnership under the firm name of Ortiz, Núñez & Co., Ltd., the defendants being the managing partners and Blay a silent partner. The partnership so created engaged in the purchase and sale of groceries in its main establishment on Atocha Street in Ponce and in a branch establishment opened on Villa Street in the same city under the name of Alcides Núñez, who, in order to stock the branch store, purchased from the plaintiffs in June of 1918 groceries to the value of $1,022.58 which has not been paid by the firm, by the partners or by any other person. Ortiz, Núñez & Company, Ltd., were dissolved and all of their property was transferred to another firm called L. Ortiz & Company, which did not assume the payment of the debts of Ortiz, Núñez & Company, Ltd.
Nothing appears in the record with regard to defendant Alcides Núñez. Not even whether or not he was summoned. Defendant Luis Ortiz demurred to the complaint and his demurrer was overruled, whereupon he filed an answer denying that Ortiz, Núñez & Company, Ltd., had any branch stpre and that Alcides Núñez bought groceries from the plaintiffs for the branch store for the account of the firm. The dissolution of the firm was admitted, but it was denied that thé new firm did not assume the payment of.the debts actually contracted by the extinct firm.
As new matter of defense it was alleged in the answer that the groceries referred to in the complaint were sold by the plaintiffs to Alcides Núñez personally for a store that he had on Villa Street in the city of Ponce, P. R.
At the trial of the case evidence was examined and the court dismissed the complaint and filed a “ statement of the case and opinion” which reads as follows:
*285 “This case was heard in this court on the 16th and 17th of: January, 1922, after having been set for trial on the civil docket, the plaintiffs appearing by attorney Vicente Zayas Pizarro and the defendants by attorney Rafael Martínez Nadal.
“At the trial the plaintiffs offered oral and documentary evidence while the defendants introduced only documentary evidence.
“In view of the evidence as a whole the court is of the opinion that the law and the facts in this case are in favor of defendants Luis Ortiz and Alcides Núñez and against plaintiffs G. Arbona & Company and that judgment should be rendered dismissing the complaint in all of its parts, the plaintiffs to pay the costs.
“The clerk will enter a'judgment in accordance with the terms of this opinion in the corresponding docket.”
From that judgment tlie plaintiffs appealed to this court, assigning in their brief four errors. The first assignment is that the court failed to comply with section 227 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The other three go to the weighing of the evidence.
Discussing the first assignment the appellants maintain that the “statement of the case and opinion” handed down by the trial court does not comply with section 227 of the Code of Civil Procedure. We agree with. them. In every case the judge should state the facts and the law that he has applied. For that purpose it is not necessary to write a lengthy opinion and thereby the conscience of the judge acts with more certainty. When the material facts of a ease are brought out the questions involved are more clearly seen, and in stating expressly the law or the jurisprudence in the light of which the questions raised are decided the judge has a last opportunity to test the justice of his decision. But the omission noted does not carry with it the reversal of the judgment, in accordance with the jurisprudence of this court, especially as it does not appear that the appellants complained of it in the court below.
The three remaining assignments may be examined jointly.
The plaintiffs first offered in evidence a copy of a deed of purchase and sale and modification of contract executed .in
The said deed contains another paragraph which, in so far as pertinent, reads as follows-
“Third: The parties, in the capacity in which each of them appears, agree that the acts done by Alcides Núñez while he was managing partner of the said firm shall remain in full force and effect, * * '* Núñez stating that he has Contracted no other debts than purchases for the firm of which he was a member.”
The plaintiffs then offered the testimony of witnesses Mirabal and Castellano. Both had been in the employ of the plaintiffs, and the former was still such employee at the time of the trial. Their testimony tends to show that when Al-cides Núñez personally bought the groceries from the plaintiffs he said that they were for the branch store of Ortiz, Núñez & Company, Ltd. Manuel Vallés, who seems to be a member of the plaintiff firm, also took the stand and, among other things, said:
“Alcides Núñez told us that the branch store in question was licensed in his name and that the main store was about to buy, or had in fact begun to buy, a quantity of herring and he himself suggested that in order to avoid confusion of the accounts of the main store with those of the branch the accounts of the main store should be opened in his name and those of the branch in the name of Ortiz, Núñez & Company.”
Such is the summarized evidence. In our opinion the judgment should be affirmed. There are no good reasons for interfering with the conclusion .of the trial judge. Their own books speak against the plaintiffs. If the alleged arrangement with Alcides Núñez was true, they should have entered it by means of a note in their books .for their own protection. They did not do so and have only themselves to blame for that omission. We can not hold that the court overstepped its own judgment and its judicial conscience in refusing to believe the oral'evidence of the plaintiffs.'
The plaintiffs lay great stress on the deed. They contend that it contains the statement made by the members of the firm of Ortiz, Núñez & Company, Ltd., that .the store on Villa Street for which the groceries were sold was a branch store belonging to the firm and that as the firm has been dissolved its members are liable.
In the first place, although the use of the word “branch” seems to give the idea of dependence or ownership, the fact is that in the deed it is not expressly stated that the branch store belonged to the firm, but only that a part of the purchase price of the interest of Núñez was. to be paid for ¡with ““groceries that the firm has in a branch store.”
The deed in question was admitted over the- objection of the defendants ,based on its invalidity because the silent partner personally was not a party to it. But discarding the objection and giving it all possible probative value, it .appears therefrom that the newly formed firm, if it can be so considered, assumed the obligations of the old firm -which, judging from the documents, lived less than two
The appeal must be dismissed and the judgment
Affirmed.
Dissenting Opinion
DISSENTING OPINION OP
In' Ponce two merchants, one a firm and the other' an individual, pooled their interests and formed a new partnership. The articles of partnership are not before us but the articles of dissolution are. These articles contain the following clauses:
“Fourth. — 'Considering his interests best served by withdrawing from the firm in question, the partner Aleides Núñez has made an agreement therewith to sell his interest therein, winch he hereby does under the following terms and conditions:
First. — Aleides Núñez sells, transfers and conveys to the mercantile firm of Ortiz, Núñez & Co., Ltd., all the assets, rights and actions pertaining to him therein in connection with all the business in which the said firm is engaged.
“Second. — The price Of the interest so alienated is fixed at the stipulated sum of fourteen hundred dollars, made up as follows: $450 paid by the firm in settlement of the private accounts of Al-cides Núñez; $450 in U. S. bills of lawful currency in hand paid, and the balance of $500 in merchandise owned by the firm at its branch in Villa Street, Ponce, including food-stuffs and goods already inventoried and accepted by Aleides Núñez, and account's made payable to him.
‘ ‘ Third. — Each of the parties in his respective capacity agrees that the acts performed by Aleides Núñez while he was managing partner of the said firm shall remain in full force and effect; that the firm releases Aleides Núñez from any and all obligations contracted by him for or against the concern; and that, in like manner, the party Núñez forever renounces any right he may or might have against*289 tbe said partnership, releasing it in tbe most solemn manner from any act or obligation that may have' been contracted personally by, him, in which connection he, the said Núñez, denies that he has contracted any debts other than for purchases for the firm of which he was a partner.”
This was a clear obligation on the part of Ortiz to save' Núñez harmless from any debts contracted on behalf of the firm. Before he entered Núñez had a shop of his’ own. That this shop became merged in the firm is shown by the paragraph marked “Second” and by the new matter of defense contained in the answer as follows:
“And as new matter of defense defendant Luis Ortiz alleges that the sales amounting to $1,022.58 to which G. Arbona & Co. refers in the fourth paragraph of the complaint were made privately and in his personal capacity to Aleides Núñez for a shop owned by the latter in his name and owned exclusievly by him in Villa Street, to whom G. Arbona & Co. extended credit during the time he was partner of Ortiz, Núñez & Co., Ltd., and that when Núñez withdrew from said partnership, G. Arbona & Co., fearing the loss of their credit, brought action against Ortiz, Núñez & Co. although their debtor was Aleides Núñez in his personal capacity as shown by the plaintiff’s own invoice.”
In this new matter the sucursal is identified as being the same as the one referred to iñ the articles of dissolution. The defendants and appellees merely raised the question whether the merchandise bought was on account of Núñez or on the account of the firm. In the articles of dissolution' that we have transcribed Ortiz specifically accepted the cession of all the goods contained in the sucursal, but does not want to be made responsible for the debts of that sucursal. With this end in view he denies responsibility for the same despite the provision “Third” of the articles of dissolution wherein not only is Núñez relieved of any debts contracted on behalf of the firm, but he solemnly sets forth that he has made no purchases except for the firm.
Under these circumstances it would make no difference, as appears probable, that the court did not believe the statements of the employees of G. Arbona to the effect that Nú-ñez was buying for the firm. • They may have tried to bolster up the case but a prima facie case was shown by the pleading and the articles of dissolution.
The facts, therefore, place the case on the basis of the right of a person dealing with a supposed individual, when in point of fact he was a member of a firm with the confusion of rights and liabilities necessarily resulting. This is more especially evidenced by the fact that Ortiz and his other partner are shown to be taking possession of all the assets in the branch. This would be a fraud against creditors unless they had also assumed the payment of the debts.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.