Biaggi v. Heirs of Esbrí

71 P.R. 420
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 26, 1950
DocketNo. 10032
StatusPublished

This text of 71 P.R. 420 (Biaggi v. Heirs of Esbrí) 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
Biaggi v. Heirs of Esbrí, 71 P.R. 420 (prsupreme 1950).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice De Jesús

delivered the opinion of the Court.

The appellant brought this suit for execution of a deed against the Heirs of her mother Angelina'Esbrí widow of Bauzá. She alleged that her predecessor died in December 1946; that the plaintiff lived with her and that the latter borrowed, in separate amounts, the sum of $2,730; that in order to pay said sum, Mrs. Esbrí agreed to convey to her two urban properties which are described in the complaint and to that effect gave instructions to notary Agustín E. Font to prepare the deed; that as soon as the contract was completed, the plaintiff took possession of the property and started to collect the rent from December 1946, precisely the. same month when the alleged vendor died without executing any document; that she requested the other heirs to comply with the contract of the deceased but since they refused, she prayed for judgment accordingly.

[422]*422The defendants filed their answer in which they denied the essential allegations of the complaint.

The court a quo, after receiving extensive evidence, decided that Mrs. Esbri had never agreed with the plaintiff to give her the two properties in payment. This is the fundamental’ question in the present appeal. In support thereof, appellant assigns four errors. Three are directed against the weighing of the evidence and the remaining one consists in not having admitted the plaintiff’s testimony in connection with the alleged transactions between her and the deceased.

We shall commence the discussion by making a summary of 'the evidence introduced by the plaintiff.

The plaintiff lived with her mother until the latter’s death; the daughter had lent her mother different sums amounting to $2,730, and Mrs. Esbri, wishing to pay said debt, had agreed to transfer two lots located in the city of Ponce. To that effect the mother gave instructions to notary Agustín E. Font so that he would proceed to prepare the pertinent documents. The notary advised her to make a plan of the lots, as they had to be segregated from a larger property, which'she asked surveyor José Serra Gaztambide to do, which drawings were delivered to said notary, who did not prepare the documents because of Mrs. Esbri death.

Did the court a quo err in not believing this evidence? Attorney Font testified that Mrs. Esbri had called him to her house to ask him if she could sell some lots in spite of the mortgage thereon. Although at the beginning of his testimony he admitted that Mrs. Esbri had told him to prepare the deed of sale in favor of the plaintiff, later he rectified by denying that mention was made of preparing any deed for that purpose.

Serra Gaztambide, the surveyor who was commissioned to prepare the drawings, testified that he received an unsigned note in which he was asked to prepare them; that the nóte was delivered to him personally by Mrs. Esbri’s collector .who told him that it was sent by Doña Angelina; that [423]*423as it was not signed, in order to verify its authenticity, he called Mrs. Esbrí, who confirmed over the phone the contents of the note but that he was not familiar with her voice.

Herminio Velázquez testified that he was Mrs. Esbri’s collector; that she had informed him of the agreement with the plaintiff; that Mrs. Esbrí dictated a note to him for Serra Gaztambide, which he personally took to the latter; that several days later, at the request of Mrs. Esbrí, he delivered to Serra Gaztambide the sum of $30, cost of the drawings, and on receiving the latter, he handed it to Attorney Font.

Rafael Rivera Esbrí testified that he was Mrs. Esbri’s nephew and manager and adviser of the plaintiff; that on a certain occasion while he was at his aunt’s home together with Attorney Font, she told the plaintiff that she had just given the data to said attorney so that he would prepare the deeds in her favor, but that the attorney had indicated to her the need of having a plan made, which she intended to order; that certain properties were conveyed by said deeds to the plaintiff as payment for a debt; that after Mrs. Es-bri’s death, he obtained a copy of the plan from Attorney Font and at the latter’s suggestion he chose Attorney Colón to bring the present suit.

Pedro Archevald and Josefa Colón, who were tenants of the houses located on the lots involved in this suit, testified that Mrs. Esbrí had told them before her death, that she had sold the lots to her daughter and asked them thereafter to pay the rent to the new owner.

Angel Prado, Mrs. Esbri’s son-in-law, as witness for the plaintiff, confined his testimony to identifying a letter that he had written to the plaintiff and which she presented and was admitted in evidence.1

[424]*424According to defendants’ evidence, Mrs. Esbri knew how to write. Supposing it were true that she dictated to the collector the note she sent Serra Gaztambide, it does not explain the reason why, at least, she did not sign it. Did it not occur to her that an unsigned note could not be accepted as authentic? But it also appears from Angel Prado’s testimony, as witness for the defendants, that Mrs. Esbri was so deaf that in order to talk to her one had to shout at her ear and for that reason she had not been able to talk over the phone for years. Being so, how could the judge give credit to Serra Gaztambide’s testimony regarding his conversation with Mrs. Esbri, especially, if Serra did not know her voice? Does it not seem more reasonable that if she did [425]*425not want or could not write, she would dictate the note to her own daughter, the plaintiff, who lived with her and managed her affairs? But there are other circumstances highly suspicious in the present case. Before filing this action a petition for judicial administration was filed by the plaintiff in the lower court. In this proceeding the liabilities and assets of the estate were reported. The alleged debt of $2,730 to the plaintiff did not appear among them. Likewise, it was not stated that the lots had been sold to her. On the contrary, they appeared as property belonging to the estate. It was some time after the petition for judicial administration was filed that Rafael Rivera Esbrí asked attorney Font to amend the petition so that said debt should [426]*426appear. If as witness Rivera Esbri testified he was attorney-in-fact and adviser of the plaintiff and was present when his aunt told plaintiff that she had given instructions to Attorney Font to prepare the deeds on the lots, is it not inconsistent with said statement to request that the debt be included and not ask that it be stated in the judicial administration proceeding that the properties described in the complaint belonged to the plaintiff herein, by virtue of an agreement between mother and daughter? In Cintrón v. Cintrón 70 P.R.R. 734, which dealt with a simulated sale performed by a father in behalf of a daughter with prejudice to his other heirs, we said:

[427]*427“We should not lose sight of the well-settled principle that transactions between close relatives that might prejudice other persons, should be examined with caution. Mackall v. Mackall, 135 U. S. 167.”

Under all these circumstances, we do not agree with appellant’s view that the trial judge erred in weighing the evidence.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
71 P.R. 420, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/biaggi-v-heirs-of-esbri-prsupreme-1950.