Doria Veve v. Fajardo Sugar Co.

85 P.R. 365
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 7, 1962
DocketNo. 12116
StatusPublished

This text of 85 P.R. 365 (Doria Veve v. Fajardo Sugar Co.) 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
Doria Veve v. Fajardo Sugar Co., 85 P.R. 365 (prsupreme 1962).

Opinion

Per curiam.

On May 8, 1930, plaintiff, Luz Porrata Doria Veve, was found to be incapable of administering her property and governing herself. Her husband, Augusto O. Már-quez, was designated tutor. By an order of October 18, [366]*3661940, the District Court of San Juan ordered and decreed “that in consideration of the complete recovery of Luz Delia Silva Porrata Doria Veve, the latter is competent to govern herself and to administer her property and, therefore, she is hereby rehabilitated as to all her civil rights... The tutelage exercised by petitioner Augusto O. Márquez, the petitioner’s husband, is hereby terminated, and as she has approved the accounts of tutorship, executing in favor of her husband and tutor a release in settlement of account, the court orders the cancellation of the bond given by him to secure the discharge of his duties.” By deed No. 220 of November 16, 1940, executed before Notary Public Francisco Rebollo López, Luz Porrata Doria gave her aforesaid husband a power of attorney as ample and sufficient as might be required and necessary in law.

Plaintiff and two sisters owned in common a farm dedicated to the cultivation of sugar cane. Fajardo Sugar Co.,1 defendant herein, financed them and, consequently, it paid the taxes levied thereon. At one time Fajardo failed to pay the taxes and it acquired the property at the tax sale. The Porrata Doria sisters sued Fajardo Sugar on the ground that Fajardo was under the obligation to pay the taxes. Judgment for the plaintiffs was entered in that suit. We affirmed .on appeal. Porrata v. Fajardo Sugar Co. of P. R., 57 P.R.R. 615 (1940).

Fajardo Sugar Co. appealed to the Federal Court of Appeal's for the First Circuit. Pending the appeal, the Porrata Doria sisters and Fajardo Sugar agreed to compromise all their pending issues and in return Fajardo would drop its appeal. Augusto O. Márquez, as agent of his wife and the other two Porrata Doria sisters, signed the compromise agreement. Fajardo was represented by John Bass. The agreement was signed in New York on October 28, 1941, and it [367]*367was reproduced in a public deed in Puerto Rico on December 1, 1941. Augusto O. Márquez again appeared as attorney-in-fact of his wife and her sisters.

In September 1945, Luz Porrata Doria filed a petition for voluntary bankruptcy in the Federal District Court for the District of Puerto Rico, which was sworn to by petitioner herself before Notary Enrique Igaravidez. In December 1946, through her counsel and together with her two sisters, she filed a suit in the Humacao District Court against Puerto Rico Production Credit Association.

Nine years passed from the date the compromise agreement was signed. On January 3, 1951, the Humacao District Court, at the request of Augusto O. Márquez, issued an order declaring Luz Porrata Doria incompetent to govern herself and her properties, and designated Miguel Angel Ba-rasorda as her tutor.

On August 24, 1953, Miguel Angel Barasorda filed the instant suit against Fajardo Sugar. On July 20 an amended complaint was filed. The prayer of the complaint reads:

“1. To declare null and void the document of settlement executed in behalf of the plaintiff and Fajardo in the City of New York in the year 1941.
“2. To declare null and void the mortgage executed in behalf of the plaintiff in favor of Fajardo, as per deed No. 101 of December 1, 1941, before Notary Raúl Benedicto.
“3. To order Fajardo to render an account of the income and benefits received by said company and by its stockholders, and to render an account of all the benefits produced by said farm during the years in which Fajardo Sugar Growers As-, sociation was in illegal possession of the farm, in collusion with Fajardo, and for the benefit of the latter and its stockholders.
“4. To declare and decide that, had the farm involved, herein been devoted during the years in which Fajardo Sugar was in illegal possession thereof, to the best use and exploitation, said farm would have produced a sum in excess of $600,000, of which amount a one-third share belongs to the plaintiff.
[368]*368“5. That in the alternative, defendants be sentenced to pay to the plaintiff as damages, a sum equal to one-third of what the farm involved herein might have produced during the years in which it was illegally in the hands of defendants, which sum, in the opinion of plaintiff, would exceed $200,000.
“6. Declaring and establishing that the benefits received by Fajardo, out of its illegal possession, have resulted in direct benefit to Fajardo Sugar Company and its unjust enrichment, the latter having had knowledge of the facts stated herein since the date of its organization.
“7. That plaintiff be granted any other remedy at law to which she might be entitled under the facts stated in this complaint, plus costs and attorney’s fees.”

The trial court dismissed the complaint. It held that “the declaration of judicial rehabilitation establishes the presumption of plaintiff’s competency and it was not destroyed through evidence worthy of credit and supported (sic) by ample expert and oral testimony.” It added: “For the documents of settlement to be null and void the plaintiff must have been mentally incapacitated during the dates on which they were executed. The court believes, and it so declares, that said documents are valid and binding on plaintiff. ...”

In support of her appeal plaintiff challenges the validity of the order issued by the District Court of San Juan on October 18,1946, rehabilitating plaintiff as to all her civil rights and terminating the tutorship that had begun in the year 1930. She bases her challenge on the fact that the San Juan District Court lacked jurisdiction to declare that plaintiff’s incapacity had ended. She claims that this is so because “the court that entered the order of October 18, 1940, knew or should have known — took or should have taken judicial notice of the fact — that the recession or cure of the symptoms of a manic-depressive person known by the court to have been hospitalized in the Insane Asylum on several previous occasions, is not equivalent to a recovery from said illness, [369]*369neither in law nor in psychiatry.” In addition to the fact that this question was not raised in the trial court and that “against the decree terminating the proceeding for incapacity, the interested parties may interpose a suit in the ordinary manner, by means of an oral and public trial”, Civil Code, § 185 — 31 L.P.R.A. § 708 — which action was not filed by the interested parties, the truth is that her position is not correct. Plaintiff’s own expert witness, Dr. Troyano de los Ríos, asserted that when suffering from a manic-depressive psychosis, a person may, during periods of recession, understand the nature of certain acts. Dr. Troyano was questioned :

“Q ... Does the fact that for a number of years a person suffers from a manic-depressive psychosis mean that that person has been incompetent during all that time?
“A. No. Not during all that time.
“Q. Such person has not been incompetent uninterruptedly?
“A. No. ... During periods of recession, said person was not incapacitated.
“Q.

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Bluebook (online)
85 P.R. 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doria-veve-v-fajardo-sugar-co-prsupreme-1962.