Silva v. District Court of San Juan
Silva v. District Court of San Juan
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
The petitioner herein, a married woman, had established in her name, in house No. 49 on Allen Street, in San Juan, a beauty parlor: a business in which she has been engaged for the last seven years. In order to reduce the cost of the lease of the premises, the petitioner sublet to the Monteserin spouses a room and the entrance hall of said house for a monthly rental of $28.
By the judgment which is now soug’ht to be reviewed, the lower court dismissed the complaint and imposed costs on the plaintiff. The grounds for said judgment are:
1. That the present ease is not one of those where a married, woman can sue without her husband being joined, in accordance with the provisions of section 54 of the Code of Civil Procedure (1933 cd.) as the action brought is not one between husband and wife nor one in which there is involved a right of homestead or which relates to the separate property of the plaintiff, nor is there any evidence that the spouses are living separate and apart from each other.
2. That the sublease rentals sought to be recovered do not belong to the separate estate of the plaintiff wife, in accordance with the provisions of section 1299 of the Civil Code, 1930 ed.
3. That no application can be made of section 6 of the Code of Commerce, 1932 ed., nor of section 93 of the Civil Code, 1930 ed., because there is no evidence to show that the plaintiff wife is engaged in commerce or industry; because the business of a beauty parlor is not an industry, nor can it be said that a person who engages in the same is a merchant or is engaged in commerce; and because the subletting of premises does not convert the sublessor into a merchant.
4. That the action instituted is for the benefit of the conjugal partnership and must therefor be brought by the husband and not by the wife.
“Section 6. — A married woman may freely engage in commerce and industry without other formalities than those required for men. In the business or industry in which a woman may engage, her liability shall be confined to her private property, with its fruits, the income therefrom and interest thereon, the immediate and direct profits obtained from such industry or trade, and the property acquired with such profits; and she may dispose of all such property without her husband’s consent. Community property shall be liable for the results of the trade or industry undertaken by the woman provided there is express or tacit consent of the husband. If the husband wishes to express his will that such community property shall not be liable, he shall by means of a writing duly certified, notify his wife and the Mercantile Registry, where an entry thereof shall be made in the margin of the registration of the merchant.
“Section 93. — The husband is the legal representative of the conjugal community.
'“The wife may contract, and appear in court, in all cases referring to the defense of her own rights and property, to the discharge of the patria potestas, guardianship or administration conferred on her by the law, and to the exercise of a profession, employment or occupation.”
The first question which we must decide is this: Is the maintenance and operation of a beauty parlor the kind of commerce or industry in which a married woman may freely engage, the express or implied consent of her husband not being a necessary legal requisite therefor?
A beauty parlor is an establishment which is patronized by the ladies in order to have their hair dressed or curled,
The plaintiff by leasing a house in order to establish therein - a beauty parlor performed an act necessary for the installation and operation of the business inherent in that kind of establishments, and by subletting a part of the premises with a view to reducing the general expenses of the business so started, she also performed another act of commerce connected with the same business.
The sublease rental which the defendants were bound lo pay to the plaintiff, could not at all be considered as a fruit or liquidated profit of the business of the plaintiff. The latter was bound to pay the rental for the whole house. If the defendants pay rent under the sublease the plaintiff reduces to that extent the general expenses of her business; and if on the contrary they pay nothing, then the plaintiff will be compelled to pay the entire rental.
In order to be able to determine whether the subletting of a part of the house produced profits or losses, it would be necessary to make a liquidation of the entire business of the plaintiff. It is unquestionable that the net profits derived by a married woman from a commercial or industrial enterprise belong to the conjugal partnership. But these net profits can have no legal existence until a liquidation is made of the business which produced them. Until the debts contracted in the business or industry of a married woman are
For 'the reasons stated the judgment sought to be reviewed must be set aside and the case remanded to the district court for further proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.