delivered the opinion of the court.
On July 2, 1915, Jacob Eosenstadt ancl his wife appeared before a notary public and executed a deed in which they stated that two or three months previously they had sold two houses situated in Caguas to Eosenstadt & Waller, Incorporated, for $10,302, which sum they had received to their entire satisfaction, and that they executed the said deed in order that the contract should have the necessary legal effect and could be recorded in the registry of property. In the same instiument Jacob Eosenstadt, acting as president of the said Bo-senstadt & Waller, Incorporated, accepted the deed “as being in entire accord with the conditions of the contract as agreed upon * * * by the parties thereto.”
The instrument was presented fort record in the Begistry of Property of Caguas, accompanied by other documents from which it appears that Eosenstadt & Waller, Incorporated, is a corporation organized under the laws of the State of *270New York and duly authorized to do business in Porto Eico; that its business includes the purchase of real estate, and that at a meeting of the board of directors entrusted with the management of the affairs of the corporation it was agreed to purchase the houses referred to in the deed for $10,302, and Jacob Eosenstadt, the president of the same, was expressly authorized to execute the necessary instruments.
The registrar refused to record the deed “because the conveyance was made by the spouses Jacob Eosenstadt and Eosa L, Eosenstadt and accepted by the corporation Eosenstadt & Waller, Incorporated,- represented by its president, who is the same Jacob Eosenstadt; because by the said contract the same person appears as vendor and vendee, inasmuch as Jacob Eosenstadt, on the one hand, is the managing partner of the conjugal partnership which executed the deed as vendor and, on the other hand, he is interested in the vendee corporation and i-s its administrative representative; because on account of the ambiguity in the wording of the said instrument it cannot be determined absolutely whether the contract of sale ratified therein was made verbally or in a private document or in a public instrument, and in these last two cases the said contract of sale was neither incorporated in nor attached to the instrument presented for record for the. purpose of showing the terms and conditions of the said contract. ” The purchasing corporation took the present appeal from the decision of the registrar.
First. In our opinion the first ground of the decision apjoealed from is erroneous. Either as a natural person or as a member of the conjugal partnership composed of himself and his wife, Eosa Eosenstadt, Jacob Eosenstadt is a person distinct from the corporation Eosenstadt & Waller, Incorporated, of which he is president. The registrar has cited no law or jurisprudence to sustain the conclusion stated in his decision and in the absence of a legal prohibition, express or implied, or of a manifestly immoral consequence, the *271principle of freedom to contract must prevail, whether the persons be natural or artificial.
Second. In our opinion the second ground of the decision is also erroneous. The wording of the instrument is not ambiguous. The certified'resolution of the board of directors of the corporation Rosenstadt & Waller, Incorporated, is clear and specific. The corporation decided to purchase certain urban properties at a specific price and authorized its president to pay the amount and execute the deed, and the president complied with the resolution of the board. It is not obligatory in cases of this kind to present the previous documents which may have been executed by the parties. What the law requires and the registry system exacts is that the execution of the contract shall appear in a public instrument and that the contract itself as appearing in the instrument shall be valid according to law.
By the contract of bargain and sale (section 1348 of the Civil Code) one of the contracting parties — in this case the conjugal partnership composed of the spouses Rosenstadt and personally represented in the deed by both partners — bound himself to deliver a specified thing — in this case the two houses — and the other — in this case the corporation Rosen-stadt & Waller, Incorporated, represented in the deed by its president who was expressly authorized by the board of directors entrusted with the management of its affairs — to pay a certain price therefor in' money or its equivalent — in this case the sum of $10,302.
There were consent, subject-matter and consideration, which are essential requisites to all contracts. There were also the special circumstances essential to a contract of bargain and sale, and the capacity of the parties was fully shown; The houses which previously belonged to the Rosenstadt conjugal partnership now belong to Rosenstadt & Waller, Incorporated, and as the conveyance appears in a public, instru*272ment it should be recorded in the proper registry of property, since one of the interested parties has so requested.
The judgment appealed from- should be
Reversed.
Chief Justice Hernández and Justices Wolf, Alclrey and Hutchison concurred.