Cardona v. Quinones

240 U.S. 83, 36 S. Ct. 346, 60 L. Ed. 538, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1428
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 21, 1916
Docket185
StatusPublished
Cited by40 cases

This text of 240 U.S. 83 (Cardona v. Quinones) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cardona v. Quinones, 240 U.S. 83, 36 S. Ct. 346, 60 L. Ed. 538, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1428 (1916).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

Both courts below rejected the claim of title made by the appellant to a tract of land of 40 cuerdas. As the *84 appeal was prayed within the statutory time, the mere date of ifs allowance by. the court is not controlling and the motion to dismiss which proceeds upon a contrary assumption is therefore without foundation and is overruled. United States v. Vigil, 10 Wall. 423, 427.

Obviously upon the theory that our power to review was controlled by the rule obtaining as to territorial courts of the United States this record, as was the case in Elzaburu v. Chavez, 239 U. S. 283, contain a statement . of facts prepared .by the lower court for the purposes of this appeal. As there is an entire absence from the record of the oral and documentary evidence upon which the court below acted except so far as the same may be shown by the opinion of the court or may be contained in the statement of facts, it follow's that the record does not enable us to review the facts and we proceed to dispose of the legaí propositions urged for reversal in the light of the facts as stated and as elucidated in the opinion of the court. Abbreviating and. somewhat changing the order in which they are stated below, we recapitulate the essential fact's as follows:

Two brothers, José Salvador Suris and Ramón Maria Suris, having acquired by various acts of purchase seventy cuerdas of land in the ward of Sabana Eneas of San German, in November, 1870, executed a mortgage on 40 cuerdas of the-land thus acquired, being the 40 cuerdas here in controversy, in favor of the Charity Hospital at San German. In 1879 the Charity Hospital commenced proceedings to foreclose this mortgage, but such proceedings were stayed until 1882 in consequence of an appeal taken to the Territorial Audiencia. After the cessation of the stay, in that year an attachment against 100 cuerdas of land belonging to the two brothers was levied and the property thus attached was placed (sequestered) in the hands of one Pablo María Ste'fani. On the same day, *85 February 9, 1882, by a contract under private signature the two Suris Brothers sold to Stefani the 40 cuerdas here in controversy which had been mortgaged to. the hospital, the purchaser obligating himself to pay the hospital debt and, if a surplus remained, to pay certain attorney’s feés which had been incurred. The agreement also contained a conveyance to Stefani of another and distinct tract of land for another and distinct price. This agreement under private signature was never inscribed upon the public records. A few days after it was made and presumably before the contract of sale had been carried out, the Sufis, brothers executed before á notary an act of consolidation of the various properties which they had ■acquired which they described as “Perseguida” and this atet was put upon the public records. Under the private agreement Stefani the purchaser went into possession and discharged the obligations of the private contract of. sale.

In 1888 a commercial firm, Schulze & Company, as creditors of the Succession of Stefani, who had in the meanwhile died, brought suit against his Succession to enforce' its debt, and for the purpose of getting upon the records the possessory title of Stefani to enable an attachment to be levied, instituted and carried out the riecessary proceedings. When the order for record was obtained the property was levied upon and sold at a judicial sale ,and was bought in by Schulze & Company. After thus becoming the purchasers of the land in controversy, the firm in 1899 executed before a notary and put of record a deed consolidating into a plantation called Imisa various tracts of land containing 192.30 cuerdas, the deed reciting that one of the parcels of land .included in the plantation was a tract of 40 cuerdas called “Hospital” or “Perseguida.” Ramón Maria Sufis, one of the original vendors, died in the. meanwhile, and in 1900 his heirs put upon record a declaratory deed asserting their undivided owner *86 ship as the successors of their father to a tract of 40 cuerdas known as Perseguida!

The Bank of Porto Rico as the holder of a mortgage put upon the Imisa plantation by Schulze & Company, foreclosed, the same and bought in the property in August, 1905, and in November of the following year (1906) the bank sold the plantation thus acquired to Francisco P. Quiñones, the defendant, his title as purchaser having been inscribed upon the public records.

In 1907 José Salvador Suris, one.of the original vendors under the act of private sale, as well as the widow and heirs of his deceased brother, Ramón María Suris, the other original, vendor, each executed- deeds of sale of an undivided half interest in the property called “Perseguida” to Juan Suris Cardona, a son of José, and these acts of sale were put upon the public registry. A few days later the parties vendor to the acts above stated executed another notarial act in which they declared that the property had not been in their possession, but. in the possessibn of the defendant Quiñones and the Bank of Porto Rico and therefore they had not collected revenues, and they ceded to the purchaser the right to collect such revenues. Under the ownership alleged to result from these acts this suit was commenced by Cardona to recover the property.

The findings in express terms establish that “From 1882 the property sued for ceased to belong to the brothers José Salvador and Ramón María Suris by reason of the sale set out .in the private contract, and 'since then it has been in the quiet, peaceful and public possession, as owners, in good faith and by title of purchasé of Stefani, later of Schluze & Company, then of the Banco de Puerto Rico,, and finally of Quiñones, residents of Porto Rico.” As to the purchase by Cardona, the plaintiff, from his father and the representatives of his deceased uncle, the findings expressly state: “When the plaintiff purchased the property sought to be recovered he knew the *87 history of it as here related and knew that his father and cousins had not possessed the same since thé year 1882.” And the conclusion reached as to the ultimate facts on this subject is thus expressed in the opinion of the court below: "In view of the manner in which the facts have occurred, we have no doubt whatever that the deeds of sale of the property in question executed in favor' of Juan Suris Cardona have had no other purpose than that he should institute this suit to avail himself of and assert his rights as a third party and thus save, his father and the. heirs of his uncle from the consequences of the private document executed in favor of Stefani; and we are likewise convinced that the plaintiff knew the history of the said property before he made his purchase, .and that his father and his cousins had not possessed the same since 1882, as stated in the complaint.”

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Bluebook (online)
240 U.S. 83, 36 S. Ct. 346, 60 L. Ed. 538, 1916 U.S. LEXIS 1428, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cardona-v-quinones-scotus-1916.