Alvarez v. Suárez

30 P.R. 135
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMarch 7, 1922
DocketNo. 2463
StatusPublished

This text of 30 P.R. 135 (Alvarez v. Suárez) 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
Alvarez v. Suárez, 30 P.R. 135 (prsupreme 1922).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Aldrey

delivered the opinion of the court.

Juan Suárez Rodríguez died on June 2, 1902, in Puñil, Province of Asturias, Spain, leaving a will made in 1893 wherein he designated as his heirs his sons and two granddaughters, the children of a deceased daughter. In the said will the testator made the following special bequest;

“It is the will of the testator to make a special bequest of a third of all his property and rights, and of another third of the same property of which he may freely dispose, to his said sons Mar-cial, Cándido and Herminio Suárez, tire said bequest to be assigned to the one of the three said sons who shall live and reside in the testator’s family residence at Puñil; and for this purpose the said three sons shall agree upon the one to receive the special bequest, or, if not, the matter shall be settled by lot; and the favored or [136]*136selected one shall receive in fee tire entire special bequest, the usu-fruct of the respective third parts passing to those who may be excluded from the said special bequest and the obligation falling on the one'selected by lot or agreement to provide for his sisters Tar-sila and Sirena endowments equal to those given to the other sisters Aurora and Justa, whether the said sisters marry or remain unmarried and whether they live with the brother who receives the special bequest or elsewhere.”

Cándido Suárez, one of the sons mentioned in the special bequest, died unmarried prior to the death of his father.

In 1919 Paz Alvarez, one of the granddaughters designated as an heir, filed a sworn complaint in the District Court of San Juan, Section First, reciting these facts and alleging the following:

“Fifth: The plaintiff likewise avers that from the time of the death of Juan Suárez y Rodriguez up to this date his sons Marcial and Herminio Suárez have not yet made the designation of the person who is to receive tire special bequest referred to in count III, nor has this designation been made by lot.
“Sixth: The plaintiff likewise avers that from the date of the testator’s death up to the present time neither Marcial nor Herminio Suárez y Suárez has gone to live and reside in the homestead at Puñil, the permanent residence of Marcial being in this Island as well as that of Herminio until he recently changed his residence to San Pedro to Mlacoris, Republic of Santo Domingo. ..
‘ ‘ Seventh: The plaintiff likewise avers that neither Marcial nor Herminio Suárez has up to the present time constituted in favor of their sisters Tarsila and Serena Suárez the endowment directed by the testator upon making the aforesaid bequest.”

She also alleged that the greater part of the testator’s estate is situated in this Island and concluded with a prayer that the court render judgment declaring that the special bequest made by Juan Suárez Rodríguez in his will in favor of his sons Marcial, Cándido and Herminio Suárez has become ineffective for the reasons stated and that the property included in the special bequest should be distributed in equal [137]*137parts among all of the heirs of the testator, with the costs against the defendants.

Jn their verified answer the defendants alleged that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. They denied each and all of the allegations of the complaint and specifically alleged the making of the will by Juan Suárez Rodríguez; the date of his death; ■ the special bequest made by him in favor of his sons Cándido, Marcial and Herminio Suárez; the death of Cándido on the date stated in the complaint, and as to the three counts herein transcribed from the complaint they made the • following-statement :

“YII. The defendants deny the fifth count of the'complaint and aver that pursuant to the aforesaid clause making this special bequest the sons of Juan Suárez Rodríguez, Marcial and Herminio Suárez, by common consent and strictly within the conditions of said will, cast lots for the said special bequest' and defendant Marcial Suárez won.
“YHI. The defendants allege that while it is true that they now reside in Porto Rico, their residence is temporary, and when they are able to return to their homestead at Puñil it is the intention of defendant Marcial Suárez to permanently reside in said Puñil where the said defendant has re-built the homestead in agreement and with the co-operation of Herminio Suárez, it being his intention to reside permanently in said place of Puñil.
“IX. The defendants deny the seventh count of the complaint.”

After denying the allegation that the greater part of the estate is situated in this Island, they concluded with a prayer for the dismissal of the complaint.

While the suit was pending defendant Herminio Suárez died and -was substituted by his heirs.

The evidence examined at the trial with reference to the special bequest was oral and showed that Marcial Suárez lives and has lived in this Island since before the death of his father and that the same is true of Herminio Suárez [138]*138until lie recently went to live in Santo Domingo and finally died in Madrid, Spain.

The defendants having- presented no evidence and the trial court being of the opinion that the burden of proving the allegations of the complaint was on the plaintiff who had not introduced any evidence to show that the designation of the heir to the special bequest had not been made by agreement or by lot, it rendered judgment dismissing the complaint.

Although the three assignments of error made by the appellant in this appeal from the judgment rendered against her are intended to show that the burden was on the defendants to prove that the conditions imposed by Juan Suá-rez Bodriguez in the special bequest made in his will had been fulfilled and that she was not required to prove the contrary, yet we may disregard this question because the record shows that the plaintiff proved her case, as we shall see.

The wording of the clause of the will in which the special bequest was made shows of itself that it was the desire of the testator that after his death one of his three sons should live at the family homestead in Puñil, it being indifferent to him as to which one of them should do so, for he ordered that the designation of the beneficiary was to be made by agreement among them or by lot. That condition of the special bequest'has not been complied with in spite of the fact that a period of seventeen years has elapsed from the time of the death of the testator to the date of the filing of the complaint, and this fact has been shown by the plaintiff through her witnesses; therefore it can not be maintained that she did not prove the material allegation of her complaint that the condition imposed by the testator upon the special bequest that one of the said sons should live and reside in the family homestead had not been fulfilled. It is true that the plaintiff presented no evidence to show that [139]*139the heir entitled to the special bequest had not been designated by agreement or by lot, but, as we have said, that is not the condition or the consideration of the special bequest, bnt is an incident of it, so much so that even if the designation had been made, the special bequest would still be ineffectual, inasmuch as the designated person was not living and residing at the family homestead in Puñil.

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30 P.R. 135, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alvarez-v-suarez-prsupreme-1922.