Clavell y Rodríguez v. Clavell y Ríos

41 P.R. 193
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 23, 1930
DocketNo. 4834
StatusPublished

This text of 41 P.R. 193 (Clavell y Rodríguez v. Clavell y Ríos) 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
Clavell y Rodríguez v. Clavell y Ríos, 41 P.R. 193 (prsupreme 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Jaime Facundo Clavell y Rios died in Ponce on March 25, 1925. On July 10 of the same year his nine children, Ana, Sarah, Librada, Palmira, Jaime, Justino, Juan, Antonio, and Ulises Clavell y Rodriguez were declared his heirs by the district court. On January 20, 1928, Ana, Sarah, Li-brada, and Palmira instituted the action herein against Ulises Clavell y Rios to recover a parcel of land measuring 5acres (cuerdas) which they valued at $5,500, and the sum of $3,630 as mesne profits after deducting therefrom $600 which plaintiffs’ ancestor owed to the said defendant. The other five heirs of Jaime Facundo Clavell y Rios, having refused to join in the complaint, were made parties defendant.

It is alleged in short in the complaint that Jaime Facundo Clavell was the owner of a property of 30 acres which he sold, with reservation of the right to_ repurchase, to Matilde Muñoz Pizarro; that as he did not have the $600 needed to , make such repurchase, he requested a loan from his brother, the defendant Don Ulises; that Don Ulises granted this request and in order to reimburse him for the amount loaned, Don Jaime Facundo had agreed to segregate from said property of 30 acres the 5%-acre parcel claimed in this action and to deliver it to the creditor, so that the latter might repay himself for the amount of his credit out of the fruits of said parcel; but that, instead of carrying out that agreement, in connection with the drafting of the deed of [195]*195resale of the 30-acre property which was executed by Mrs. Muñoz in favor of Don Jaime Facundo, he ordered the preparation of a deed of sale of the said 5y2 acres, to be executed by him in favor of Don Ulises and which was signed in the manner which will be stated further on in this opinion.

The defendants answered and alleged in brief that the defendant, Ulises Clavell y Bios, now holds and is the owner of the 5%-acre parcel in question, which he acquired by purchase from Jaime Facundo Clavell y Bios on September 6, 1905 by a public instrument, executed before notary Bosendo Matienzo y Cintron and recorded in the registry of property on December 26 of the same year. The defendants further pleaded: (1) Insufficiency of the allegations of the complaint to set forth a cause of action; (2) the four-year statute of limitations; (3) the ten-year prescription; (4) a claim for fruits and profits; (5) estoppel on the part of plaintiffs’ ancestor; (6) ratification of the sale by the said ancestor, and '(7) estoppel on the part of the plaintiffs themselves.

The case went to trial. Considerable evidence was introduced and the court finally rendered judgment for the defendants, with costs. In its statement of the case and opinion it said:

“The court, without entertaining any doubt in the premises and by reason of the credence which it gives to the evidence of the defendants, holds as proved that at the execution of deed No. 263 before notary Rosendo Matienzo Cintron, the contracting parties Jaime Facundo Clavell y Ríos and Ulises Clavell y Rios were present, and that the transaction evidenced by the said-deed, that is, the sale of the 514 acres of land, actually took place and was subsequently ratified by other acts of the vendor, Jaime Facundo Clavell y Rios.”

The defendants thereupon took the present appeal and assigned in their brief nine errors, which they have argued at length. Appellees’ brief is also a lengthy one and it answers all the questions raised .by the appellants.

The impression which gradually arises in favor of the [196]*196defendants as the examination of the record progresses is so strong, that at the end no doubt remains that the only decision which can properly be rendered in this case is an affirmance of the judgment appealed from. Indeed the only' difficulty lies in choosing the grounds upon which such an affirmance may be based, because these are so many that to state them all would unduly lengthen this opinion.

Everything here gravitates around a certain defect incurred in signing the deed of sale.

The said deed concludes as follows:

“Under the foregoing covenants they execute the within deed, which the parties hereto bind themselves to keep and fulfill in a lawful manner. It having been read in its entirety to them in the presence of the witnesses, residents of this city and personally known to me, Francisco Alvarez Tizol and Raúl Mattei, the parties having renounced the right to read it for themselves, of which right they were duly advised, it is approved and ratified by the parties hereto, of whom only the purchaser signs and not the vendor because, although the latter knows how to do it, he is precluded from signing by reason of lack of eyesight, but at his request it is signed by his son who is present, Jaime Clavell. y Rodriguez, jointly with the attesting witnesses; to all of which I, the notary, certify. Jaime Clavell y Rodriguez. — ITlises Clavell. — Franco. Alvarez Tizol. — Raúl Mattei. — Signed: Rosendo Matienzo Cintron. — There is a canceled internal revenue stamp of the value of one dollar.”

The Notarial Law provides:

“Sec. 14. — .Should the parties to the instrument, or any of them, be unable to sign, the notary shall state the fact, and one of the witnesses shall sign for the party, and such witness shall precede his signature with the note in his own handwriting that he signs for himself and for the party, in the name of said party or parties. ’ ’

As the son who signed for his father did not appear as a witness, nor was he qualified to do so, it is contended that the instrument is null and void. This was the discovery which served as a basis for the suit. However, the force of truth is such that, generally, it prevails of itself and it is the decided tendency of the law and the jurisprudence to [197]*197acknowledge it and to expedite its way, in order that it may manifest itself and eventually become established. For that reason, we think that the trial judge acted properly and applied the law and the jurisprudence correctly in deciding the case in the manner in which he did, and in expressing himself in the said statement of the case and opinion, as follows:

“The defendants are right in'their contention that the said deed must be considered as null and void, in accordance with the Notarial Law and the decisions in the cases of Banco Territorial v. Registrar, 22 P.R.R. 545; Rosa v. Registrar of San Juan, 28 P.R.R. 665; Berríos v. Registrar, 25 P.R.R. 668; Villanueva v. Registrar, 18 P.R.R. 801 and Rodríguez v. Registrar, 14 P.R.R. 715. But such a nullity, however, only affects its recordation in the registry of property, and therefore it does not prejudice third persons. Nevertheless, the fact that the deed, as well as its record, is thus null and void does not mean that the contract of sale must also be void as to the contracting parties and their privies; and this is what we expressly hold: That the contract existed; the transaction was carried out; it was ratified by everybody, since the plaintiffs themselves have assigned all their right and interest in the 24% acres, thereby admitting since 1915, while of age, that the 5% acres had ceased to belong to their father and, therefore, that as between the parties the contract is and was valid. Our Supreme Court in the case of Rosa v. Registrar of San Juan, 28 P.R.R. 665, held that—

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