Aponte v. Verdiales

24 P.R. 331
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 18, 1916
DocketNo. 1389
StatusPublished

This text of 24 P.R. 331 (Aponte v. Verdiales) 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
Aponte v. Verdiales, 24 P.R. 331 (prsupreme 1916).

Opinion

Mr. Justice del Toro

delivered the opinion of the court.

Plaintiffs Gertrudis and Francisca Aponte, who are sisters, brought an action entitled an action for division and distribution of an inherited estate, and alleged in the complaint that they are the owners by inheritance of a certain rural property of nine cuerdas of land situated in the ward of Florida, Vieques; that one of them, Gertrudis, sold 1.25 cuerdas to defendant José Eustaquio Verdiales, to be delivered upon the partition of the property between the plaintiffs; that in 1906 the defendant wrongfully and unlawfully took possession of the whole property except one cuerda which was occupied by plaintiff Gertrudis; that the value of the property unlawfully held by the defendant is $705 and the yearly rental value is $10 per cuerda; that plaintiff Gertrudis is entitled to 3.25 cuerdas, the other plaintiff to [332]*3324.50 cuerdas, and tlie defendant to 1.25 cuerdas. On these .allegations the plaintiffs prayed for judgment that the defendant partition the property and deliver to the plaintiffs their respective shares thereof, together with the profits •derived from the property, and the costs, disbursements and attorney fees.

The defendant answered the complaint and denied all and each of its allegations.

The case went to trial and the district court found that the plaintiffs are the heirs of their father, José Manuel .Aponte, who died on November 12, 1905; that Aponte was the owner of the property described in the complaint and that the defendant unlawfully took possession of the said property except one cuerda which was occupied by plaintiff 'Gertrudis Aponte.

Notwithstanding these findings, being of the opinion that the action brought by the plaintiffs was apparently based •on section 407 of the Civil Code, the court held that it did not lie, saying:

“In order that an action communi dividundo may prosper, it is an indispensable requisite that all the parties thereto hold common possession of the undivided estate, and such action cannot be brought when any one of the joint-owners is in exclusive possession of the •common property or any part of it.
“And the complaint alleges that Gertrudis Aponte, one of the plaintiffs, is in possession of .one cuerda of the property in litigation while Eustaquio Verdiales, the defendant, holds eight cuerdas, or the greater part of the estate. So that not only are the different joint-owners not in common and undivided possession of the said property, but on the contrary it appears that the defendant acquired 1.25 cuerdas thereof under a contract of purchase and sale. It results, ■therefore, that the defendant is the owner of a specific part of the property, but not of a joint interest, and that one of the plaintiffs, Gertrudis Aponte, is the owner likewise of another specific part of the property, it being demonstrated thus that there is no community •of rights.”

The judgment was without prejudice to any other action [333]*333which the plaintiffs might bring and the present appeal was taken therefrom.

Before going into and deciding the questions involved in this appeal, we desire to state that the evidence examined at the trial showed also that plaintiffs Gertrudis and Francisca Aponte leased to the defendant one cuerda and two and one-half cuerdas respectively, the lease for the two and one-half cuerdas at $15 annually per cuerda for a period of eight years having been reduced to writing. Both leases were made after the filing of the complaint dated December 22, 1911. The judgment appealed from was rendered on November 11, 1914.

What is the kind of action really brought in this case? The trial court styles it an action communi dividundo or “an action which lies directly by reason of the ownership for each of the owners of the common property against the other joint-owners to compel them to partition and distribute the property by delivering to each owner his corresponding share.” Enciclopedia Jurídica Española, Yol. I, p. 446.

The appellants agree with the classification of the action by the trial court, but not with the results derived therefrom. “We;” say the appellants on page 6 of their brief, “do not need to sue to recover possession; that is, to bring1 a generic action of ejectment. We are suing the joint-owner who has no sacred adverse rights for the partition of the common property and, consequently, within the scope of said action, for the delivery of shares in the property, which is a specific revendication created by law.”

In our opinion the appellants are not altogether wrong. Although they do not make out a typical case of common ownership of property, it cannot be denied that it is shown that three different persons are entitled' to the ownership of a single rural property; that the part claimed by each of those persons is well known; namely, of a total of nine [334]*334cuerdas, four and one-lialf belong to one, three and one-quarter to another and one and one-quarter to the third; that in point of fact the said interests in the property have never been determined, surveyed, or set apart, and that two of the said persons are fully agreed that the unsettled condition of their individual rights should cease and being unable to reach an agreement with the other, they apply to the court and prove the truth of their allegations.

The conflict is evident. The court has before it all the data necessary for a just decision. It acquired jurisdiction over all the interested parties and, in our opinion, its final action should not be delayed because it cannot classify precisely the action brought by the plaintiffs.

As regards the claim set up in the complaint for the profits received from the property, we will say that it was proved at the trial that one cuerda of land of the kind composing the property under consideration in this action produces a rental of $10 to $20 annually. The defendant himself rented two and one-half cuerdas from one of the plaintiffs at the rate of $15 per cuerda annually. Notwithstanding this, the complaint claims only $10. And it was proved also that from the date alleged in the complaint, or July, 1906, the defendant was in possession of at least eight cuerdas. of which six and three-quarter cuerdas were wrongfully held bjr him until the date of the filing of the complaint, or December, 1911. After the complaint was filed, the exact day not being shown, the defendant rented one cuerda from plaintiff Gertrudis and two and one-half cuerdas from plaintiff Francisca, so that the unlawful possession was reduced to one and one-quarter cuerdas as to plaintiff Gertrudis and to two cuerdas as to plaintiff Francisca. Reckoning the profits at $10 per cuerda, two and one-quarter cuerdas during five and one-half years would amount to $123.75 and four and one-half cuerdas to $247.50; therefore the defendant would be in-[335]*335clebted to plaintiff Gertrudis Aponte $123.75 and the profits of one and one-quarter cuerdas at the rate of $10 a cuerda from January, 1912, until the elate of the execution of the judgment; and in like manner to the other plaintiff, Francisca Aponte, the sum of $247.50 and the rental of two cuerdas of land computed at $10 yearly per cuerda

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Bluebook (online)
24 P.R. 331, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/aponte-v-verdiales-prsupreme-1916.