Ernestina Girod Lube v. Ortiz Rolón

94 P.R. 386
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 3, 1967
DocketNo. CE-66-1
StatusPublished

This text of 94 P.R. 386 (Ernestina Girod Lube v. Ortiz Rolón) 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
Ernestina Girod Lube v. Ortiz Rolón, 94 P.R. 386 (prsupreme 1967).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Santana Becerra

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff s-appellees, heirs- of Girod, .filed a- civil action in the District Court, Guayama Part, against appellants and alleged that on December 30, 1954 they sold to Vicente Colón [388]*388Morales a 180-square-meter lot; that due to an involuntary-error, there being no consideration, plaintiffs transferred to Colón Morales a 454-square-meter lot; that the defendants, subsequent purchasers and owners of the property at the time the complaint was filed, wrongfully withheld, encroached, and possessed against plaintiffs’ will a parcel of land of 274 square meters within the perimeter of the 454-square-meter lot, and that plaintiffs were the sole and exclusive owners of said 274-square-meter parcel of land. They requested judgment ordering defendants to surrender to them the possession of the aforementioned 274-square-meter lot.

Defendants called as warrantors Antonio Amaro and his wife, the persons from whom they acquired the property. The latter appeared in the suit and called as warrantors Vicente Colón and his wife, the persons from whom, in turn, they acquired the property. Colón Morales appeared in his own right and said that he accepted the facts alleged in the complaint and stated that he had notified Amaro that he only sold him the lot “enclosed within the fencing wire and iron pipes which were the boundary of the lot acquired by him”; that Amaro would explain the title in the deed with plaintiffs for the purpose of establishing the correct area bought, and that he later sold the lot as it appeared erroneously described in all the deeds.

The other defendants denied the facts in the complaint, as well as Colón Morales’ allegations. They raised special defenses of prescription, laches on the part of plaintiffs, and of estoppel to restrain the latter from going against their own actions.

With the evidence presented at the hearing the parties submitted the case for the determination of the special defenses. The District Court, Guayama Part, rendered judgment declaring that the complaint had prescribed, either under § 1361 of the Civil Code, 1930 ed., or under its § 1253. On appeal, the Superior Court, Guayama Part, reversed, on [389]*389the ground that the case involved an imprescribable question of nonexistence of contract.

The question in issue requires a recital of the evidence.

(1) By deed No. 256 executed in Guayama on December 30, 1954, before Notary Ubaldo Aponte, plaintiffs-appel-lees declared they were owners of a parcel of land 83 varas front and 57 varas deep, situated on Jobos Street in Gua-yama, duly recorded in the Registry of Property. In the fourth averment of the deed the appellee-vendors stated:

“That the parties of the first part, after the approval of the Puerto Rico Planning Board dated June twenty-five, nineteen hundred and fifty-four, in case number fourteen thousand, three hundred forty-four (14,344), segregated from the lot above-described, which is the principal property, the lot described below: . “URBAN: Lot situated in the city of Guayama, consisting of four hundred fifty-four square meters bounded on the North, along twelve meters, by Enrique González Street; on the South, along nineteen meters and eighty centimeters, by land owned by the Department of Education; on the East, along thirty-seven meters fifty centimeters, by the principal property from which it is segregated, owned by the heirs of Ernesto Girod Denis; and on the West, along twenty-eight meters, by land owned by the Department of Education.”

The segregated lot was assessed at $800 and thus segregated it was sold to Vicente Colón Morales for that amount, the notary having attested that the money was delivered in his presence. Attached to the deed of sale there appears a Report of the Puerto Rico Planning Board of June 25, 1954, approving the aforementioned segregation, in which the segregated lot was identically described as in the former description. Said report states that the subdivision was submitted by the heirs of Ernesto Girod, through Vicente Colón Morales.

(2) By deed No. 7 executed in Guayama on February 16, 1955, before Notary Tomás Bernardini Palés, Vicente Colón Morales sold this property, as it was previously described, [390]*390to Antonio Amaro. Vendor Colón Morales stated that on the-lot he had a house 20 feet long by 34 feet deep under construction, .almost finished, and in that act he delivered to the purchaser the construction permit of the Board, as well as the blueprints.

(3) By deed No. 153 executed in Guayama on October 6, 1958 before Notary Ubaldo Aponte, Antonio Amaro sold to defendant-appellant, Hilda Ortiz Rolón, the aforementioned lot with the same description as that appearing in the preceding averment No. 1, in addition to the building already finished.

(4) According to the drawings of the lot which appear in the evidence with the longitudinal measurements stated in the different deeds of sale and in the segregation report of the Board, the lateral sides of 37.50 meters on the East and 28 meters on the West are parallel and both perpendicular to its front side of 12 meters on González Street, and it would form a perfect rectangle but for its rear side. The 180-meter lot described in the complaint, which plaintiffs allege was the one sold to Morales, would occupy the front portion of 12 meters with an alleged depth of 15 meters, forming a perfect rectangle. The area of 274 meters object of the suit would be the remainder of the lot up to the rear boundary.1

(5) Even though it has not been sent here with the documentary evidence, among the documents it had for making the decision the District Court mentioned defendants’ Exhibit C, which was an assessment plan No. 420-041 of Gua-yama, dated August 6, 1949, in which the lot object of the [391]*391suit is described with the same measurements as in plaintiffs’ deed of sale No. 256 and in all the others.

(6) The oral evidence consisted of the testimony of Vicente Colón Morales, who testified that on December 30, 1954 the heirs of Girod sold him a parcel of land included in a lot situated on Enrique González Street; he bought 180 meters; he sold the lot to Antonio Amaro and he did not explain to him; he sold according to the marks that Girod gave him. On these marks he placed iron poles imbedded in concrete, enclosed on all sides. The Planning Board measured the land, which had already been fenced, in his presence. He fenced before the Planning Board came. The witness never measured. He paid $800 for the lot. The Planning Board said he should square the lot and Girod gave him a piece, free of charge, to square it. He could not determine whether the lot had the same shape as the drawing. He squared on the rear side.

Filiberto Santiago, Judge of the District Court, stated that he gave no credit to the witness’ testimony in the sense that the latter bought 180 meters, and he relied on his own personal observation of the witness’ manner of testifying. The witness was 75 years old. Judging from the rest of said testimony, it seems to us that the court did not lack ground for its conclusion.

Giving him credit, however, this witness does not support plaintiffs’ position as to the nonexistence of a contract.

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94 P.R. 386, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ernestina-girod-lube-v-ortiz-rolon-prsupreme-1967.