De Cintron v. Registrar of Property

52 P.R. 143
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 31, 1937
DocketNo. 1001
StatusPublished

This text of 52 P.R. 143 (De Cintron v. Registrar of Property) 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
De Cintron v. Registrar of Property, 52 P.R. 143 (prsupreme 1937).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On May 13, 1876, Mrs. Móiiica Vizcarrondo bought a parcel of land which in the purchase deed recorded in the registry was described as follows:

“Parcel of land having a frontage of 39 meters on the highway leading to Rio Piedras with which it abuts on the south and its corresponding length (fondo) until it reaches the sea, which it borders on the north and on which side it has an extension of 35 meters, also bounded on the east and on the west by other lands of the same vendor.”

By virtue of various transfers Mrs. Asunción Andino, widow of Guerra Mondragón, acquired the ownership of the parcel, and in 1907, as a result of an exchange of sixty square meters with Mr. Antonio Alvarez Nava, the owner of the abutting lot, she gave a description of her property, which she has since recorded in the registry in accordance with said description as follows:

“A lot measuring thirty-seven meters along its front on the road, thirty-seven meters along its front on the sea, and one hundred and twenty meters in length (fondo), situated in the ward of Santurce of this Municipal District, adjacent to the building known as ‘Convento de las Madres’; and bounded on the north by the sea; on the south by the highway from San Juan to Río Piedras; on the east by land formerly of Mr. Francisco Ramos Latour, and now of the other contending party, Mr. Alvarez Nava, and on the w^est by the said ‘Convento ele las Madres’, now a charity school for girls belonging to The People of Puerto Rico.”

As may be seen, the length of the parcel from the highway to the sea was not mentioned in the first record, which length was mentioned in the record of 1907 as measuring one hundred and twenty meters.

Subsequent transfers took place until the property was finally acquired by the appellant, Mrs. Encarnación Aboy widow of Cintron, pursuant to an award at a public sale on March 18, 1931, under the description given in 1907.

[145]*145At this stage, the appellant entrusted the survey of her property to two civil engineers who certified their work showing that the property instead of having a length (fondo) of 120 meters, had on one side 147.68 meters and 147.35 meters on the other side, which represented a difference of 27 meters and a fraction.

On June 28, 1937, in order to establish said fact, she executed before a notary an explanatory deed which she presented in the registry accompained by the certificate and the plan of the engineers, together with various certified copies of other deeds and of a plan made in April 23, 1930, by the Division of Public Lands and Records of the Department of the Interior, and the registrar refused to make the correction by the following ruling:

“The correction sought is denied, as it appears -that this is not the proper procedure to record the enlargement or extension of the area of a property.”

This administrative appeal was taken from said decision. In her brief the appellant claims her right to make the correction by herself and to have it recorded in the registry. She cites in support of her contention Section 28 of the Regulations for. the Execution of the Mortgage Law, two decisions of the General Directorate of the Registries of March 14, 1876, and September 7, 1880, and the decisions of this Court in Cobb v. The Registrar of Property, 12 P.R.R. 211; Figueroa v. The Registrar of Property, 22 P.R.R. 612; Delgado v. Registrar of Arecibo, 29 P.R.R. 807; Portocarrero v. Registrar, 34 P.R.R. 283; also 1 Galindo (1903 ed.) 581.

We have examined Section 28 of the Regulations for the Execution of the Mortgage Law and it does not contain any provision which refers to the matter in controversy. Doubtless, the citation was made following the decisions of the General Directorate of the Registries of March 14, 1876 and September 7, 1880 above cited, which refer to the Regulations that existed prior to those in force in this island since 1893.

[146]*146We have also examined said decisions and in our judgment, instead of supporting the contention of the appellant they rather justify the action taken by the registrar.

The former appears in the Official Compilation of Laws, Eoyal Decrees, Eoyal Orders, Circulars, and Eesolutions which have been rendered with reference to the Eegistry of Eeal Property and Other Eeal Eights . . . published by the G-eneral Directorate of Civil, Eeal Property, and Notarial Eegistries, at page 262 of the volume that contains the decisions of 1874-78, its findings and disposition parts being as follows ;

“Considering that although Section 28 of the General Regulations in force provides that when the name, location, area, boundaries nr other important circumstances, do not appear in the titles presented in the same manner that they appear in the Registry, the circumstances which have changed shall be set out in the record and a simple reference made as to the others, this provision should not be understood in the sense that no matter what the difference which appears is, even though this creates a doubt as to the identity of the properties, the entry requested should be made; because, apart from the fact that such practice would be contrary to the extensive powers which the law gives to the registrar to pass upon the instruments in their extrinsic as well as in their intrinsic forms, it would be tantamount to authorizing confusion ■ and disorder in the books and the recorded properties, and would give rise to fraud and prejudice against the public treasury ;
“Considering that the correct interpretation of said Section 28 seeks nothing else than to avoid unnecessary repetitions in the entries in the books when the description to be made of the properties is the same that appears already in the Registry, and only to note the differences which may result in any important circumstances; it being understood that these diiffierences should not be of such a nature as to reasonably create a doubt as to the identity or similarity of the property, but only those which are the result of the changing nature of the circumstances determined by the records, as the boundaries, agricultural use, price, name or number of the property; or those resulting from natural accidents, such as the increase or diminution of a property by alluvion or force of a river, or in [147]*147general, those which result from error, misinterpretation, or any other reasonable cause which may have previously occurred in the description of the property;
“Considering that in the case the object of this consultation the interested parties confined themselves to stating that according to the survey made, the true area of the property consisted of 98 yokes (■yugadas)

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52 P.R. 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/de-cintron-v-registrar-of-property-prsupreme-1937.