Cruz v. Martínez

Mr. Chief Justice Hernández

delivered the opinion' of the court.

This is an action for the rescission of a contract for the exchange of two iron safes between Luis de la Cruz, of whom the plaintiff is the assignee, and Lorenzo Martinez Noriega on the ground that the latter failed to pay the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars to Luis de la Cruz as the difference between the values of the two safes.

Prom the allegations of the complaint, slightly modified by the evidence produced by the plaintiff at the trial, it appears that the contract of exchange was entered into between Luis de la Cruz and Lorenzo Martínez Norieg’a in January, 1915, Luis de la Cruz delivering to Martinez Noriega a safe valued at three hundred dollars and Martinez Noriega delivering to Luis de la Cruz another safe valued at fifty dollars,- Martinez Noriega therefore owing to Luis de la Cruz the difference of two hundred and fifty dollars, which he has *62not paid, and three dollars for the transportation of the safe delivered to him; that the partnership Successors of Lnis de la Cruz,' Ltd., of which Luis de la Cruz was a managing partner, was dissolved by a public instrument of April 12, 1915, the whole capital of the partnership being awarded to Luis de la Cruz, including the outstanding accounts and cash on hand, he remaining as the sole owner and liquidator of the assets and liabilities of the partnership; that according to the books of the said partnership Lorenzo Martinez Noriega was its debtor in the sum of three hundred dollars for a safe and three dollars for cash paid for its transportation, he being credited with fifty dollars for another safe; that Luis de la Cruz assigned to Manuel de la Cruz the account of two hundred and fifty dollars which he had against Lorenzo Martinez Noriega for the exchange of the safes, for this credit and others were awarded to Manuel de la Cruz in payment of his share upon his retiring from the partnership of Successors of Luis de la Cruz, Ltd., of which he also had been a member.

" The defendant demurred to the complaint on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, and the demurrer having been overruled, he filed an answer in which he merely denied the allegations of the complaint. Judgment was consequently entered sustaining a motion for a nonsuit and dismissing the complaint with costs against the plaintiff, who took the present appeal.

The ground of the motion for a nonsuit was that the evidence was insufficient because it was not alleged and proved that the safe sought to be recovered by the plaintiff was in the possession of the defendant and because the action for rescission being a subsidiary one, it was not alleged and proved that the plf&itiff had no other legal remedy for the reparation of the damage, according to section 1261 of the Civil Code.

The first ground alleged by the appellant-in support of *63the appeal is that the coart erred in sustaining the defendant’s motion for a nonsnit for insufficiency of the evidence in that it was necessary to prove that the safe sned for was in the possession of the defendant and that the plaintiff had no other legal remedy to obtain reparation of the damage, the action being a subsidiary one.

And he alleges in support of the appeal that sections 1091 and 1261 of the Civil Code were violated because the former was not applied and the latter was improperly applied.

These sections read as follows:

“Section 1091. — The right to rescind the obligations is considered as implied in mutual ones, in case one of the obligated persons does not comply with what is incumbent upon him.
“The person prejudiced may choose between exacting the fulfilment of the obligation or its rescission, with indemnity for damages and payment of interest in either case. * * * ”
“Section 1261. — The action for rescission is a subsidiary one; it may be enforced only when the person injured has no other legal remedy to obtain reparation for the injury.”

In the contract of exchange in question defendant Lorenzo Martinez Noriega did not perform his obligation of paying to Luis de la Cruz the sum of two hundred and fifty dollars as the difference between the values of the two safes exchanged; therefore Manuel de la Cruz, as assignee of Luis de la Cruz, could elect between demanding the rescission of the contract and the performance of the obligation by the defendant. The statute leaves no doubt as to that matter.

And it can not be held that in order that his action may prosper the plaintiff must prove that the safe sued for was in the possession of the defendant, for if it were not and the defendant was therefore unable to restore it, he could and should have so alleged in his answer to the complaint. This was a matter of defense, as involving a fact within the knowledge of the defendant and not of the plaintiff. Sub-división 31 of section 102 of the Law of Evidence, which *64establishes the presumption that “a thing once proved to exist continues as long as is usual with things of that nature,” is applicable to this case, it being a legal consequence that as the defendant had received the safe, it is to be presumed that it continued in his possession until the contrary was shown. See the case of Fulladosa v. Castro, 27 P. R. R. 644.

Nor was the burden upon the plaintiff to prove, according to said section 1261 of the Civil Code, that he had no other legal remedy to obtain reparation for the damage, for that section confers upon the plaintiff the right to elect between the rescission of the contract and the performance of the defendant’s obligation, and if the theory of the ap-pellee should be sustained, the person damaged would be precluded from demanding the rescission of the obligation when he is entitled to demand its performance, thus rendering ineffective the provision of section 1091 which gives him the right of electing between the rescission of the contract and its performance. In commenting on section 1291 of the Spanish Civil Code (section 1258 of the revised Civil Code), which after enumerating various rescindable contracts provides for the rescission of any others specially determined by law, Manresa says that to these other cases application is hardly possible of the chapter on the rescission of contracts when election is given between an action for rescission and any other action. In the present case, as we have said, the plaintiff could elect between the rescission of the contract and its performance, and in the exercise of that right he elected its rescission.

The plaintiff made out a prima facie case; therefore the motion for a nonsuit, which is similar to a demurrer to the evidence, should have been overruled. Méndez v. Bunco Comercial, 26 P. R. R. 586.

Besides, the motion for a nonsuit was partly based on the insufficiency of the complaint, and that pleading can. *65not be directly attacked by snob a motion, which must be directed solely to the evidence. Príncipe v. American Railroad Company, 22 P. R. R. 282.

For the foregoing reasons it is necessary to conclude that the District Court of Ponce erred in sustaining the motion for a nonsuit made by the defendant; therefore its ruling to that effect, as well as the judgment appealed from which dismissed the complaint, must be reversed, with costs to the plaintiff, and the case remanded to the said court for further proceedings not inconsistent with the principles laid down herein.

Reversed and remanded.

Justices Wolf, Del Toro, Aldrey and Hutchison concurred.