Aldea y Díaz v. Tomás y Piñá

51 P.R. 740
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 18, 1937
DocketNo. 7000
StatusPublished

This text of 51 P.R. 740 (Aldea y Díaz v. Tomás y Piñá) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Puerto Rico primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Aldea y Díaz v. Tomás y Piñá, 51 P.R. 740 (prsupreme 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an action to enforce a homestead claim amounting to $500. The action was commenced in a municipal court which rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and, on appeal to a district court, that judgment was reversed. Plaintiff is the widow of Fernando Pozada who owned jointly with her the property in which the homestead right is claimed, and the defendants are the heirs of Ana Piñán, the mortgage creditor who foreclosed the property without satisfying the homestead claim.

In the complaint it was alleged in substance that Fernando Pozada .and his wife, the plaintiff, bought in 1917 a two-story concrete house and lot numbered 84 on San Agustín Street in Puerta de Tierra; that they occupied said property as a homestead, the plaintiff having lived in it with her husband, and, after the latter’s death which occurred in 1925, with their children and grandchildren, and then she was compelled to vacate the premises on account of a summary foreclosure proceeding instituted by the defendants; that on April 4, 1925, the plaintiff and her husband borrowed from Ana Pi-ñán, the predecessor in interest of the defendants, the sum of $3,000, to secure which they mortgaged the property without waiving their homestead right, Fernando Pozada being the head of a family and occupying with his family the said property at the time the lien was constituted; that Mrs. Pi-ñán died in 1925 and the mortgage credit was alloted to her heirs, the defendants herein, who foreclosed said credit at maturity for failure to satisfy the same, the property being [742]*742sold at public auction and awarded to F. Rivera Collazo on August 30, 1928, for $4,100, without the defendants paying to the plaintiff the sum of $500 as the value of her homestead right.

The defendants in their answer denied that the plaintiff had any homestead right in the house described in the complaint and alleged that the house in question and “another one at the back of the same lot” had been built by her husband to replace the one which he purchased in 1907 from José Fernández, with $3,000 borrowed by him from Antonio Gayol, and which was destroyed by fire, said loan being secured by a mortgage for the payment of which he again borrowed a like sum from the predecessor in interest of the defendants. This latter loan was also secured by mortgage and gave rise to the foreclosure proceeding which terminated in the sale at public auction of the property involved.

The defendants reproduced in their answer their defenses of insufficiency of the complaint, prescription, and nonjoinder of parties defendant.

The case went to trial. Both parties introduced their evidence and the court, for the reasons set forth in its statement of the case and opinion, dismissed the complaint and imposed costs on the plaintiff. The trial court said: [743]*743pears from tbe testimony of tbe defendant Marcos Tomás Caneja that at tbe time of tbe execution of tbe mortgage in favor of bis wife Ana Piñán y Acevedo, defendants’ predecessor in interest, Po-zada, tben tbe owner of tbe mortgaged property, told bim that that mortgage was given in order to cancel tbe one held by Antonio Gayol y Martínez, and that tbe latter mortgage, that is, tbe one owned by Gayol, bad been constituted for tbe purpose of raising funds for tbe construction of the mortgaged bouse.

[742]*742“The mortgage which gave rise to the foreclosure proceeding was constituted by deed No. 15, dated April 4, 1925, and executed before Notary Luis E. Dubón. It does not appear from said deed that the mortgagors, that is, the plaintiff and her deceased husband, waived any homestead rights they might have in the mortgaged property. However, it appears from.the said deed that in the same transaction and by means of the same instrument there was canceled a mortgage for the same amount as that of the mortgage given to the predecessor in interest of the defendants, that is $3000 as principal, which mortgage so canceled had been constituted in favor of Antonio Gayol y Martinez by a deed of March 15, 1922, executed before Notary E. H. F. Dottin and duty recorded in the registry of property. The evidence fails to show that upon the execution of the mortgage deed to Gayol any homestead right was waived, but it ap-
[743]*743“This testimony of Mareos Tomás Caneja was objected to by tbe plaintiff, relying on tbe doctrine laid down by our Supreme Court in Wilcox v. Axtmayer et al., 23 P.R.R. 319. Tbe objection was overruled because in tbe opinion of tbe court tbe doctrine of that case is not applicable to tbe case at bar, as the latter is not within tbe purview of the law that was construed in Wilcox v. Axtmayer et al., supra. No action instituted by tbe heirs or successors in interest of a decedent is involved in tbe instant case. This action was brought by tbe plaintiff in her own behalf, and as an admission adverse to her made by her predecessor in title is involved, the same is admissible under tbe doctrine established in Falero v. Falero, 15 P.R.R. 111.
“Tbe testimony of Marcos Tomás Caneja is corroborated, by tbe fact that tbe mortgage in favor of bis wife was constituted in. the same instrument containing1 tbe cancellation of tbe mortgage held by Antonio Gayol y Martínez; and it further appears from the said deed that tbe orignal bouse bought by Pozada and his wife, tbe plaintiff, was destroyed by fire, and that tbe ownership of the present bouse which was encumbered by the two mortgages was vested in tiro Pozada-Aldea spouses as having been built by-them.
“It having been established that tbe proceeds of the loan, secured by mortgage to Antonio Gayol, were applied to .the building of the mortgaged house, and it having been further shown that the mortgage to Gayol had been pa:d with money received from Ana Pinán, it remains for us to determine whether, under those circumstances, the plaintiff is entitled to claim the homestead right sought to be enforced against the defendants herein.
“There is no doubt that tbe plaintiff and her husband would not have been entitled, under the provisions of the Homestead Act, to recover aiiy sum on that account from Gayol, the former mortgagee, as his lien was constituted to secure a certain sum of money that was applied to the reconstruction of the house. If, as appears from the evidence, the money lent to the plaintiff and her husband by the [744]*744ancestor of the defendants was applied to pay Gayol’s mortgage, then it follows that the defendants’ predecessor in interest was subrogated to the rights of Gayol in such manner that if the homestead claim could not be enforced against him it could not be enforced against the defendants either. Upon this question our Supreme Court has said:
‘ ‘ ‘ Our statute in regard to the matter provides that the homestead exemption shall not apply to an execution levied upon the property for the taxes due thereon, or purchase price of said property, or liability incurred for the improvements placed thereon. Therefore, the defense set up in this case could have been successful only if it had been shown that the mortgage, which was canceled with a part of the money that the defendant loaned to the plaintiff, had been constituted to meet all, any, or some of the said liabilities; but it was not so shown.’

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 P.R. 740, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aldea-y-diaz-v-tomas-y-pina-prsupreme-1937.