Alonso Fonseca v. Muñoz Santana Widow of Alonso González

76 P.R. 512
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 17, 1954
DocketNo. 10913
StatusPublished

This text of 76 P.R. 512 (Alonso Fonseca v. Muñoz Santana Widow of Alonso González) 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
Alonso Fonseca v. Muñoz Santana Widow of Alonso González, 76 P.R. 512 (prsupreme 1954).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ortiz

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On December 14, 1949, Genaro Alonso Fonseca brought an action in the former District Court of San Juan for division of inheritance and rendition of accounts and fruits, alleging that he was an acknowledged natural son of José Alonso González, predecessor in interest of his widow and legitimate children defendants herein; that José Alonso González died on January 12, 1910, under a will leaving the defendants as his sole heirs; that on March 27, 1916, the former District Court of San Juan rendered judgment declaring plaintiff a natural child of said predecessor in interest, plaintiff having been born before the said predecessor married co-defendant Ramona Muñoz Santana, widow of Alonso, thereby rendering null and void the will in question on the ground of preterition; that on September 2, 1913, the defendants executed a deed of partition of the hereditary estate, to the exclusion of plaintiff, whereby the [514]*514widow remained in possession of the estate as administratrix thereof; that the properties to be partitioned were worth (according to an amended complaint) $2,000,000; that defendants have enjoyed in usufruct all the properties, whereas plaintiff has failed to receive any fruits or rents of any kind whatever when he should have received the sum of $485,689.74 on account of such fruits and rents.

In their answer, the defendants alleged, among other special defenses, that “if plaintiff herein has any right to claim a hereditary share of the estate left upon the death •of José Alonso González, the action for division is contrary to law and has prescribed, and any right sought to be asserted thereunder has extinguished because of the actual indivisión of co-ownership, since defendants have been in the uninterrupted possession of the hereditary estate, as owners and to the exclusion of plaintiff, for over 30 years as respects real estate, and for over 6 years as respects personal property.”

After several incidents, this Court held and ordered by way of certiorari that a separate trial on the question of prescription raised by defendants be held in the San Juan Court. Muñoz v. District Court, 72 P.R.R. 788. A trial was held on that question and after weighing the oral and documentary evidence offered by both parties the San Juan Court held that defendants had acquired by acquisitive prescription the ownership of the property herein involved, having been in possession thereof, as owners, for more than 30 and 6 years, to the exclusion of plaintiff. Thereupon the San Juan Court rendered judgment dismissing the complaint. Plaintiff appealed to this Court. The issue involved is whether defendants have acquired the title to the property in fee simple by extraordinary acquisitive prescription, as a result of which plaintiff forfeited all his rights to the property as well as his right to bring action for partition and recovery of the fruits.

[515]*515According to the findings of fact of the lower court, on the evidence presented and the stipulations made by the parties in the course of the trial, the facts are, briefly, as follows:

Plaintiff was born on September 19, 1892 and in 1893 José Alonso González married codefendant Ramona Muñoz Santana. The codefendants, legitimate children, were born of that union. José Alonso González died on January 12, 1910, under an open will leaving his widow and legitimate children as his sole heirs. On September 2, 1913, the widow and the legitimate children, the latter represented by a guardian ad litem, executed a deed whereby certain amounts of money in cash and certain specifically designated credits were adjudicated in favor of the widow and codefendant in payment of her usufructuary quota and her share in the conjugal partnership. The remaining properties, which were also specifically designated, were adjudicated to the legitimate children “in equal undivided shares,” on the basis of one-fifth to each. Plaintiff was excluded from those adjudications.

On November 23, 1915 plaintiff filed an action of filiation against the heirs of José Alonso González and claimed his share in the predecessor’s estate. On March 27, 1916 the former District Court of San Juan rendered judgment declaring plaintiff herein the acknowledged natural child of José Alonso González, annulling his will as to the institution of heirs and the deed of September 2, 1913. The defendant heirs appealed from that judgment. While the appeal was pending, codefendant Ramona Muñoz widow of Alonso and plaintiff herein executed on July 19, 1916 a deed of “sale and assignment of rights and actions,” whereby the parties agreed to compromise all claims involved in the action brought by plaintiff, which was on appeal, and all other claims which he might have against the said heirs ar'sing as a result of that litigation; that plaintiff Genaro Alonso [516]*516Fonseca, “sells, assigns, waives and conveys in favor of the other appearing party, Ramona Muñoz y Santana, widow of José Alonso González, who acquires them in her own name, all rights and actions which the former had, has or may hereafter have in the hereditary estate left upon the death of the said José Alonso González.” It was further set forth that “Fonseca himself, in consideration of the purchase price received by him for all such rights and actions, also waives, desists from and relinquishes all right to claim, judicially or extra judicially, his designation as acknowledged natural child or otherwise of the late Alonso González; that he binds himself to desist from, and does hereby consider abandoned and desisted from, the said judicial action, which is now pending . . . further waiving any right or benefit which may accrue to him or be derived from the judgment, now on appeal.” The assignment and waiver were made for the agreed price of $7,000, which plaintiff received, it having been set forth that “that sum which he receives in this act represents the fair value which, in his opinion, is the present worth of the share which might correspond to him in the hereditary estate of Alonso González.” Plaintiff further ratified the validity of the operations involved in the partition made in the deed of September 2, 1913, “waiving all right to challenge, avoid and rectify the same.”

On December 14, 1949, or more than 30 years after the deed of sale and assignment of rights of July 19, 1916 was executed, Genaro Alonso Fonseca brought the action involved in this appeal. Based on the deed of July 19, 1916, defendants moved for summary judgment. The San Juan Court overruled the motion for summary judgment and held that the 1916 deed was null and void on the ground that plaintiff invalidly waived thereby his status as natural child, such illegal waiver being inseparable from his share of the estate. Such holding has not been challenged and still stands for the purposes of this appeal. Thereafter the judgment appealed from was rendered.

[517]*517Although, as a matter of law, the deeds of September 2, 1913 and July 19, 1916 are null and void, as a matter of fact the codefendants, legitimate children of José Alonso González, were in possession of the properties herein involved for more than 30 years before the action herein was brought, having actually held such property in common and un-dividedly, as coowners or coheirs and to the exclusion of plaintiff, who did not share that actual possession.

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