Garcia v. Fantauzzi

20 F.2d 524, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2577
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedSeptember 7, 1927
Docket1991
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 20 F.2d 524 (Garcia v. Fantauzzi) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garcia v. Fantauzzi, 20 F.2d 524, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2577 (1st Cir. 1927).

Opinions

ANDERSON, Circuit Judge.

The court below sustained a demurrer, and dismissed the complaint. The ease comes here on a writ of error with numerous assignments. Jurisdiction is grounded on diversity of citizenship. It is a very unusual case.

The complaint, filed June 1, 1925, sets up that the plaintiff is the natural son of defendant and Jacinto Garcia y Torrendell; that she is the plaintiff’s guardian; that both are citizens of the United States domiciled in Porto Rico; that the defendant is a citizen of France, domiciled in France, “and is a man of ability, intelligence, education, and wealth, and of high social position, both in Porto Rico and in France”; that he owns property amounting to about $3,000,000; that he has married and has three children by his wife, with whom he lives in France.

It is alleged that in 1906, when there was no legal impediment to prevent their marriage, defendant and Jacinto lived together as man and wife, with the resultant birth of the plaintiff as the natural child of defendant; that on many occasions both mother and son importuned the defendant to acknowledge the son; that, while privately admitting the relationship, the defendant has always refused to make public acknowledgment, and to provide properly for his rearing, support and education; that, as a result, the plaintiff has been roared in poverty and forced to live under sordid and immoral conditions, to his humiliation, prejudice, and damage; that in February, 1910, “defendant willfully, wantonly, and criminally, by conspiracy with parties to plaintiff unknown and by the payment of a large sum of money, induced, by means of fraud and misreijresentation, plaintiff’s mother and one Jose Dolores Diaz y Aponte, a colored barber, without education or means, or social standing, a man of immoral and vicious life and habits, to appear before a notary public in Porto Rico, and to falsely state in writing in a public document that the said Jose Dolores Diaz y Aponte is the plaintiff’s father”; that defendant’s agents, at defendant’s instigation, represented to plaintiff’s mother and the said Jose that by the terms of the document they were signing Jose was only adopting plaintiff as his son; that in 1925 plaintiff’s mother and said Jose, having learned that the document signed by them in 1910 was not an adoption of said plaintiff, but purported to be a legal recognition of plaintiff as the son of said Jose, appeared before a notary public, and by public document revoked the document of 1910 as being untrue, and having been procured through the false representations of defendant and those acting with him; that thereafter the plaintiff and his mother again demanded that defendant acknowledge plaintiff as his son, and that defendant refused so to do, or to make any provision for his support and education; that in 1920 the defendant created in New York a trust fund of $3,000 in the hands of said Jose for the plaintiff’s benefit, but that plaintiff has received no appreciable benefit therefrom.

As a result of the defendant’s failure to recognize plaintiff as his own child and his wrongful acts in causing the plaintiff to be reputed as the “son of an uneducated negro barber of no means or standing, and of immoral life and habits, under whose care and influence plaintiff was forced to live through the criminal conduct of defendant,” the defendant is alleged to have laid himself liable for actual damages of $100,000 and exemplary damages of $150,000.

The ease thus stated must be considered in the light of the Porto Rican statutes dealing with the rights of a child born out of wedlock.

The plaintiff is a natural child, as distinguished from an illegitimate or adulterine child. The Civil Code provides:

“Sec. 193. Natural children are those bom out of wedlock, from parents who, at the moment when such children were conceived or were born could have intermarried with or without dispensation.
“The natural child may be recognized by the father and mother conjointly or by one of them only either in the record of birth or [526]*526in the testament [will] or in any other public instrument.
“The father is obliged to recognize the natural child:
“1. When there exists an indubitable statement in writing of the father wherein he expressly acknowledges his paternity.
“2. Where the child has uninterruptedly enjoyed the condition as of a natural child of the defendant father justified by acts of the same father or of his family.
“3. When the mother was known to have lived in concubinage with the father, both during her pregnancy and at the time of the birth of the child.
“4. When the child may present any authentic evidence of his paternity.
“The mother shall likewise be obliged to recognize a natural child in the same eases as the father, and further where the act of the confinement and the identity of the child are fully established.
“The child, if of age, cannot be recognized without his consent.
“When the recognition of the minor is not made at the time of recording the birth or in the testament, the approval of the judge of the district court of the district where the child resides, with the concurrence of the fiscal, shall be necessary.
“Sec. 194. The action for the recognition of natural children, ©an only be established during the life of the presumptive parents, and a year beyond their death except in the following instances :
“1. If the father or the mother shall have died during the minority of the child, in which case, the child may bring his action before the first four years of his having attained his majority, shall have elapsed.
“2. If after the death of the father or mother there shall appear a written statement or document, of which no notice was previously had, wherein the child is expressly recognized.
“In this case the action shall be established within the next six months after the document has been discovered.
“The recognition of a child not having the qualifications provided for in paragraph first of section 193 can be disputed by whomsoever may be affected thereby.
“See. 195. A natural child has the right:
“1. To use the surname of the parent making the recognition.
'“2. To be supported.
“3. To receive the hereditary portion determined in this code.”

Section 212 provides that:

“Support is understood to be all that is indispensable for maintenance, housing, clothing and medical attention, according to the social position of the family.
“Support also includes the education and instruction of the person supported when he is a minor.”

It is thus manifest that the rights of a natural child under the law in the jurisdiction in which the plaintiff was begotten and bom, are much greater than the rights of a bastard at common law, or under the common law as modified by the statutes enacted in most of our states. Compare 7 C. J. pp. 939, 948, 950, 951, 955, 958-961; Sanders v. Sanders, 167 N. C. 319, 83 S. E. 490; Commonwealth v. Callaghan, 223 Mass. 150, 111 N. E.

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Garcia v. Fantauzzi
20 F.2d 524 (First Circuit, 1927)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
20 F.2d 524, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 2577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garcia-v-fantauzzi-ca1-1927.