Cabrera v. District Court of Guayama
Cabrera v. District Court of Guayama
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
We issued the writ of certiorari in this case in order to determine whether the lower court acted without jurisdiction in fixing, within a judicial administration proceeding, the amount of attorney’s fees for services rendered to the heirs in said proceeding. The facts are as follows:
In the year 1932 the judicial administration of the estate of José Pérez-Llera at the time of his death was commenced in the District. Court of Guayama. Mr. Genaro Cautiño-Insúa was appointed judicial administrator and he has been
The record of this lengthy and unfinished judicial administration is composed of twelve parts. Although the administrator was released of all responsibility on his bond when the final account was approved on December 13, 1940, the lower court ordered that while the commissioner (contador-partidor) (appointed in 1937 by virtue of our judgment in Ex parte Cautiño, 51 P.R.R. 460) was making the partition and division of the estate and allotting the same to the heirs, “the judicial administrator shall continue in possession of the estate, unless a different order be rendered by the court on petition of an interested.party.”
From a careful examination of the record of the case it appears that ever since the judicial administration proceeding was instituted in 1932, until the present time, Attorney C. Dominguez-Eubio has taken an active part in all the incidents brought úp by the different heirs, ■ through their attorneys, as well as in those brought up by him, in representation
The question involved herein arose as a result of a motion filed by Attorney Dominguez-Rubio praying the court to allow him $2,000 as the reasonable value of the professional services rendered to Isabel Llera widow of Rucabado and to Fernando Pérez-Llera, payable out of the estate of the latter and the shares corresponding to his heirs from the inheritance of his mother, and to order that said fees be paid not .by the judicial administrator, but by.the commissioner, “in order that at the time of fixing the- assets of said Fernando Pérez-Llera, said attorney be listed as a creditor holding a claim and the amount of his claim against the estate be secured. ’ ’
This motion was notified to counsel for the heirs of Fernando Pérez-Llera, Attorney Víctor Marchán, as well as to the other- interested parties, and no opposition was filed by them. The court set March 26, 1943, for the hearing of said motion but postponed the same because all the attorneys had not been notified and thereupon set April 2, on which date the hearing was had with the appearance of Attorney Dominguez-
As we said at the beginning of this opinion, we issued the writ sought not because of the alleged errors of procedure, which in our opinion, have not been committed, but in order to' determine whether the lower court acted without jurisdiction.
As already stated, the order of the court is not against the judicial administrator that he should pay out of the estate the amount of attorney’s fees for his services to one of the heirs, but is directed to the commissioner in order that he should set aside, from the share of one of the heirs who was represented by attorney Dominguez-Rubio, an amount sufficient to secure the claim of said creditor.
Commenting on § 1083 of the Spanish Civil Code, which is identical to ■§ 1036 of our code, Manresa says:
“The law does not establish any exception as to the creditors, no matter whether their credit has matured, or been duly secured, or whether it is pure or conditional. Since the main object is to anticipate, or avoid the prejudice that'might be caused to the creditor as a result of the partition, it makes no difference whether the credit is subject to the fulfillment of a certain condition. . . .
“It is of little import, as to other respects, that the creditor’s right should spring from a time prior to the testator's death or at the time preceding the partition.
“ . . . Who will question the interest that creditors have to intervene in the partition and see that the statutory provisions are complied with? It is true that the partition may be always challenged by the creditors if it is made in fraud of their rights, or if they suffer a prejudice by acts of a gratuitous nature performed by the debtor; hut, apart from the fact that prejudice will not always be sufficient because the gratuitous nature of the act is questionable, the law tries to avoid the disturbance which would arise from the challenge and rescission attempted by the creditors in authorizing the latter to intervene in the partition.- Sec. 1083, therefore, affords á preventive measure for any party interested in the outcome of the partition, thereby avoiding subsequent unnecessary disturbances or repressive acts.” ' 7 Manresa, Comentarios ol Código Civil Español, (5th ed.) 859, 60, 61.
The partition in the ease at bar is being made as an incident within the judicial administration. This is not a question of a creditor of the testator, recognized as snch, who objects to the partition of the estate until he- has been paid or the amount of his claim has been secured according to •§ 1035 of the Civil Code. This is the case of the creditor of one of the heirs who is authorized under §■ 1036, supra, to intervene
There is nothing in the Law of Special Legal Proceedings which precludes an attorney,. who has represented several heirs' in a judicial administration, from applying to the court, after hearing said heirs, for an allowance of his fees, not to he paid out of the estate under administration, but out of the assets of said heirs at the time of partition by the commissioner.
It is true that § 1473 of the Civil Code provides in its pertinent part as follows: “ . . .Professional Services, as regards the remuneration therefor, shall be subject to the agreement of the parties; and where there is no agreement as to remuneration, and a disagreement should arise respecting the same, the party entitled to such remuneration may sue and recover from the adverse party the reasonable value of such services in any court of competent jurisdiction.” (Italics ours.) However, the party entitled to compensation is under no obligation, in default of a contract, to sue for the recovery of his fees. The statute only provides that he ‘ ‘may” sue. We see no reason why he can not, as in the case at bar, recover them also in an incident within a judicial administration proceeding when due process of law has been fully complied with. Cf. Correa v. District Court, 40 P.R.R. 403 and Ex parte Del Moral, 43 P.R.R. 696.
In the instant case, the heirs were given an opportunity to file their opposition to the motion of attorney Dominguez-Rubio and they failed to do so; they were notified of the day set for hearing and they failed to appear. They appeared in court for the first time after the statutory period allowed for seeking reconsideration had expired. And even if their motion should be directed to the discretion of the court pursuant to § 140' of the Code of -Civil Procedure,, we think that the court did not abuse its discretion in dismissing the motion, considering the contentions advanced therein and the facts
.The writ issued must be annulled.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.