Díaz, Rodríguez & Co. v. G. Llinás & Co., S. en C.

57 P.R. 351
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 19, 1940
DocketNo. 8107
StatusPublished

This text of 57 P.R. 351 (Díaz, Rodríguez & Co. v. G. Llinás & Co., S. en C.) 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
Díaz, Rodríguez & Co. v. G. Llinás & Co., S. en C., 57 P.R. 351 (prsupreme 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Del Toro

delivered the opinion of the court.

Díaz, Rodríguez & Company, a commercial partnership domiciled in Yauco, brought, in the District Court of Ponce, an action against Gr. Llinás & Company, another commercial partnership having the same domicile, and prayed for a judgment declaring that it was entitled to the use and enjoyment • of certain lots of the Municipality of Yauco, and ordering the defendant to restore to the plaintiff a portion of the same which it withholds.

The defendant demurred to the complaint and its demurrer was overruled. It then answered, and the plaintiff requested and obtained the striking out of certain particulars from the answer. The case went to trial and the court, on September 13th last, sustained the complaint in part and dismissed it in part. Feeling aggrieved by that decision, the defendant took theo present appeal.

The complaint sets forth two causes of action. By the first it is alleged that, as appears in a deed of May 2, 1917, which is recorded in the registry of property, the Municipality of Yauco granted to the commercial firm of Solivellas & Company the use and enjoyment, in perpetuity, of a lot situated on Muñoz Rivera, Pasarell, and Buena Vista Streets, in Yauco, measuring 1,911.83 square meters.

The area of the lot was corrected by the municipality in a deed of November 12, 1931, wherein it was declared that it contained 2,132.87 square meters, and that the municipality consented to the division of the lot into three parcels: one measuring 1,255.69 square meters, another measuring 158.05 square meters, and still another measuring 718.63 square meters.

By virtue of subsequent transfers, the right to the use and enjoyment of the first two parcels became vested in the plaintiff and that pertaining to the third parcel was acquired by the defendant.

[354]*354The first count concluded by alleging that tlie plaintiff occupied only 1,376.96 square meters, and that the defendant was withholding the portion of 37.28 square meters that plaintiff' lacked: a fact which was denied by the defendant.

In the second cause of action the uncontroverted aver-ments were reproduced, and it was alleged that, according to a survey made by the Municipality of Yauco at the request of the plaintiff, the total area of the original lot was 2,147.06 •square meters, representing an excess of 14.19 square meters which plaintiff acquired by assignment from the former owner of the right to the use of the three lots, and which the defendant withholds. The latter denied this new allegation.

To the complaint was attached a plat which comprises the whole of the original lot with markings to show what portions are occupied by the parties at present and what portion was claimed, and-said plat was made a part of that pleading.

In support of its appeal the appellant in a brief consisting of seventy-eight pages assigns and discusses eight errors. The first four relate to questions raised prior to the trial, the next three refer to the introduction of the evidence, and the last one concerns the weighing thereof.

By the first assignment it is maintained that the court erred in not sustaining the demurrer for insufficiency based on the grounds that the complaint violated section 125 of the Code of Civil Procedure, that it showed on its face that any right that the plaintiff might have had was barred, and that it failed to show that the administrative remedies had been exhausted.

Section 125 of the Code of Civil Procedure provides that in an action for the recovery of real -property, it must be described in the complaint with such certainty as to enable an officer upon execution to identify it.

After an examination of the complaint it is found, indeed, that the same does not contain a description of the portions of land of which the plaintiff claims to have been deprived [355]*355and which are alleged to be withheld by the defendant; but such an omission is supplied by the exhibited plat, and this is sufficient.

In support of tlie contention that the action bad prescribed, there are invoked sections 1360 and 1361 of the Civil Code, 1930 ed., which form part of the provisions of said code that relate to contracts of sale, particularly those provisions having reference to the delivery of the thing sold. As no contract of sale or delivery of the thing sold by the vendor is involved, said sections have no application herein.

Moreover, as maintained by the plaintiff in its brief:

“The theory of the appellee was that the. strip of land in controversy was not only covered by its acquired title to the right of use and enjoyment, but also in point of'fact covered by the.purchase of said right which it made from the National City Bank of New York, whose manager, Mr. Ramiro Lázaro, had received offers from the appellant, an adjoining owner, for the sale of the right of using the parcel in question.”

Nor is the appellant right in maintaining that, in a case like the present, it was necessary to exhaust the administrative remedies before resorting to the courts of justice. It cites the fifth paragraph of section 70 of the Municipal Law in force (Laws of 1928, p. 390); but the procedure therein prescribed refers to 1he forfeiture of grants of lots, ' and here no such forfeiture is involved. Here the action proceeded on the basis of an existing grant. There was no error.

By the second assignment it is maintained that the trial court erred in overruling the demurrer for nonjoinder of parties defendant, the' municipality, owner of the fee in the two lots which both parties occupy, not having been made a party to the action. In our judgment, the court did not err, either, in acting as it did.

The municipality is not a necessary party, because the sole purpose of the action is to determine the actual extent of the usufruct granted in order to adjust the same to the [356]*356terms of the grant, without this implying any alteration in the substance of the property. Any judgment that might be rendered would not affect the legal title held by the municipality.

In these circumstances, we consider as applicable the following jurisprudence:

“Necessary parties to an action in the capacity of defendants are those who are interested in resisting the demands of the plaintiff either immediately or consequently and whose rights would be preju-dicially affected by the controversy. ’ ’ Rowland v. Horst, 188 Cal. 772.
“Nothing is asked from either of them and they are in no way necessary parties to a determination of the respective rights of appellant and respondents in the property which is sought in this action.” Burns v. Ross, 190 Cal. 269, 272.

By the third assignment it is maintained that the court erred in striking out, on motion of the plaintiff, certain particulars from the answer of the defendant.

We will not consider in detail the questions involved, as it would unnecessarily extend this opinion.

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Related

Burns v. Ross
212 P. 17 (California Supreme Court, 1923)
Rowland v. Horst
207 P. 373 (California Supreme Court, 1922)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 P.R. 351, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/diaz-rodriguez-co-v-g-llinas-co-s-en-c-prsupreme-1940.