Diez v. Green

HAMILTON, Judge,

delivered tbe following opinion:

Tbe plaintiff filed herein a bill of complaint to set aside a certain mortgage on tbe ground tbat the attorney in fact who executed it was without authority. This was sustained by this court upon tbe proof, but the court held tbat tbe transaction bad been confirmed by actions afterwards. Tbe case was appealed, but tbe circuit court of appeals dismissed it on the authority of tbe Diaz Mor Case, [253 U. S. 345, 64 L. ed. 944, 40 Sup. Ct. Rep. 516] which held tbat foreigners residing in Porto Pico could not sue in tbe Federal court. Thereupon tbe defendant Green brought summary proceedings in tbe local court under tbe Mortgage Law for tbe foreclosure of the mortgage. Tbe only defenses allowed in such case are three, as prescribed in art. 175 of tbe Kegulations to the'Mortgage Law, as follows:

“Art. 175. Tbe summary proceedings referred to in this section cannot be suspended by incidental issues or any other issues raised by the debtor or tbe third person in possession, nor by any other person appearing as an interested party, excepting in the following cases:

“1. When documentary evidence is produced of criminal proceedings charging tbe forgery of tbe mortgage deed tbe subject of the proceedings, in which a complaint shall have been admitted or an order of prosecution has been issued.

*271“2. When an action in intervention of ownership' is filed, necessarily the title of the ownership of the estate in question recorded in favor of the intervener under a date prior to the record of the claim of the execution creditor and not canceled in the registry being necessarily filed therewith.

“3. When, a certificate from the registrar is presented to the effect that the mortgage under which the proceedings are being prosecuted has been canceled, or an authentic copy of the public instrument of the cancelation of the same, bearing a memorandum of its presentation in .any of the registries where it is to be noted, executed by the plaintiff or by his predecessors or successors in interest, the transfer in a proper case being also proved by documentary evidence. . . .

“All other claims that may be brought, either hy the debtor or by third persons in possession and other persons interested, including those involving the nullity of the title or of the proceedings, or the maturity, truth, extinction or amount of the debt, shall be heard in the proper plenary action, without ever producing the effect of suspending or interfering with the execution proceedings. The jurisdiction to take- cognizance of this declaratory action shall be determined by the ordinary rules.” [Compilation 1911, § 1272.]

1. It will be seen, therefore, that the case has not been tried upon its merits in this court or the court of appeals, because of the Diaz Mor decision. And it will not be tried upon its merits in the local court, because the proceeding brought is what is called executory, that is to say, admits of no defense upon the merits with the exception of the three named in art. 115. The defense that there was no authority on the part of the attorney in fact to execute the mortgage *272•cannot be tried at all under the local law. Tlic contention is that this amounts to depriving the plaintiff of due process of law.

It would seem that the point is well taken. It is depriving the plaintiff of his property without allowing’ him to set up a defense which he has and which he could enforce if he could bring the defendant into this court. The authorities justify the statement of Foster that whenever the right or title of cither party is founded upon state legislation which undertakes to transfer to him property belonging to the other without dire process of law there is a controversy as to the operation and effect of the Constitution, to which the Federal jurisdiction attaches. 1 Foster, Fed. Pr. 5th ed. 12. The matter comes up now not upon merits but upon the question of preliminary injunction.

2. The point is raised, however, that this will be doing indirectly what the law does not permit to be done directly. That is to say, that a foreigner residing in Porto Rico can come or be brought into the Federal court to test a mortgage upon equitable gr'ounds, when nevertheless the question of constitutional rights must have been decided by implicatión in the circuit court of appeals when it dismissed the appeal. The opinion of that court, however, does not show that the point was raised or that the point was considered by the court. It would seem best under the circumstances to let the plaintiff give a bond which will indemnify the defendant, and to grant the preliminary injunction. It is quite likely that this court will have to come to the same conclusion as to ratifying which it did in the first suit, but the plaintiff will still have his right of appeal. In this way, both the constitutional point first *273and then afterwards, if that is sustained, the question of ratification, may be passed upon by the appellate court. It would seem that this would be the proper procedure. If it is not- done the plaintiff has lost his property irrevocably without the opportunity of setting up in any court not only what seems to be an equitable principle, but one which goes to the root of the mortgage and involves the constitutional rights of the plaintiff to due process of law.

The preliminary injunction will issue accordingly upon proper bond.

It is so ordered.