Carmona v. Méndez

52 P.R. 256
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedNovember 12, 1937
DocketNo. 7502
StatusPublished

This text of 52 P.R. 256 (Carmona v. Méndez) 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
Carmona v. Méndez, 52 P.R. 256 (prsupreme 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Del Toro

'delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is a suit for injunction to recover possession which was decided against the plaintiff.

The complaint was filed on November 13, 1935, and it was alleged therein, that the plaintiff was the owner and had been in possession since 1927 of three rural properties, one of one hundred acres {cuerdas), another of one hundred and fifty-eight acres and another of eighty-eight acres Avhich are designated with the letters (A), .(B), (C), the first two being situated in the Wards of Cubuy and Hato Puerco of Loiza and the last one in the Ward of Guzman Arriba of Bio Grande; that on the previous day, that is, on November 12, 1935, the defendants Eugenio Méndez, Bartolo Peraza, and Alberto Nadal personally and by means of a group of workmen and foremen violently entered the said properties against the will of the owner and possessor, taking possession of a parcel of one acre of property (A), and of another parcel of twenty five acres of property (B), and all of property (C), and that in spite of his repeated efforts for them to vacate the property, they have refused to do so.

On the 22nd of the same month of November 1935, the defendants filed their answer. Briefly, they denied having performed the acts of AÚolence Avith which the plaintiff charges them or that they were in possession of any part of properties (A) and (B), and further denied that the plaintiff was the owner or had possession of property (C) and [258]*258admitted that they were in possession of said property as follows:

: "The defendants admit that they are now in possession of the property designated with the letter (C) and have occupied the same since 1918, when one of the defendants herein, Bartolo Peraza, as .keeper of the National Forest of Luquillo and as representative of the United States of America took possession of said property which had been surveyed since 1912 to 1914 by the engineer Mr. Nin, who placed cement piles in the boundary lines. The defendants claim that the possession of said parcel is exercised in representation of the United States of America and not in their personal character, said defendants being employees of the United States of America. The defendants admit that they have exercised and exercise acts of ownership on said property (C) but they reiterate that said acts have been performed in representation of and at the instance of the sovereign government of the United States of America, who is in possession of this property by its own right and by that of its procedessor the Government of Spain, since time immemorial and especially during during the year preceding the filing of this complaint.
"The defendants allege in answer to the allegations of the complaint that the possession of the property denominated with the lettei (C) is at present and has always been open, peaceful, and without interruption since time immemorial in representation of the United States of America and as part of the possession and enjoyment of the Federal Forest at Luquillo, and specially a parcel of 305.45 acres denominated as 16-L in the official plan of Luquillo made on or about the year 1914.”

As special defenses they pleaded the lack of jurisdiction of the district court as the possession of land belonging to the United States of America was concerned, and the estoppel of the plaintiff to exercise this action, as he had acknowledged that property (C) was federal property.

The case went to trial and the court decided it in the manner in which we have stated. From the statement of the case and opinion which served as basis for its judgment we copy the following:

"From the evidence it appears that the defendants .... have performed work on said parcel (C) which bounds with a property [259]*259of the plaintiff, there being between the boundary of said parcel and that of the property of the plaintiff, certain cement piles which hold signs that indicate that the land in question, which is parcel (C) is part of the National Forest of LuquUlo. ...
“As to the parcels described under letters (A) and-(B), no evidence was offered by the .plaintiff, and hence the allegations of the complaint as to these parcels were not proved.”

In the judgment it was declared ‘ ‘ the complaint is dismissed, without special award of. costs as the defendants have waived them.”

The plaintiff felt aggrieved and took an appeal to this Court. In his brief he makes four assignments, -of errar.

By the first assignment he claims that the denials in the answer constituted admissions.' He cites the cases of Marrero v. Mas, 48 P.R.R. 512; Somonte v. Mimoso, 27 P.R.R. 368; Mazarredo v. Echevarría et al., 32 P.R.R. 464; Guzmán v. American Railroad Co., 29 P.R.R. 375, but he does not argue his contention.

It will be sufficient to say that we do not agree. The answer in our opinión is sufficient, as- it appears from the summary which we have made of the same. •'

By the second assignment it is maintained that the court acted against the law and the jurisprudence by deciding the question of title in a case of this nature'.

We agree that in a case like the present one only the question of possession can be decided, but we do not think that the court went beyond the limits- of this proceeding. The concepts of owner and possessor are so closely united that any independent expression which may be-found in the opinion of the court, is not sufficient to charge it with error. The appellant himself in his complaint begins- by stating that he is the “owner” and “possessor” of the properties in question. The true facts impose themselves. ■ And here the truth is that the plaintiff claims that he was. in possession as' owner and that the defendants in turn maintain to be in possession in representation of the true owner of the property, the People of the United States of America. But this [260]*260does not mean that the fact of possession must be decided— nor is there any reason in the record to show that it was decided in this specific case—by the better right to possession of one or the other party. It is the actual possession during the year preceding the filing of the complaint which must be decided and which once decided must be protected by the judgment. And this is what the district court did. The error assigned has not been proved.

The third assignment is as follows:

‘ ‘ It was committed by the court a quo by deciding that as a tort had been committed by employees of the federal government, it was not a case for the District Court of San Juan to intervene.”

The District Court did not decide that the defendants had committed any tort, and even though in its opinion it made reference to the nature of the possession of the defendants of parcel (C) and referred to the question of jurisdiction raised, its judgment dismissed the complaint, that is, it decided the suit definitely and its decision suppiorts itself, as we shall immediately see, by studying and deciding the fourth and last assignment of error.

By the latter the appellant maintains that the court did not weigh the evidence properly. When the case was called for trial several witnesses testified for the plaintiff and several for the defendants. Subsequently an ocular inspection was requested and ordered.

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52 P.R. 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carmona-v-mendez-prsupreme-1937.