Garzot v. De Rubio

209 U.S. 283, 28 S. Ct. 548, 52 L. Ed. 794, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1703
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedApril 6, 1908
Docket141, 142, 604
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 209 U.S. 283 (Garzot v. De Rubio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Garzot v. De Rubio, 209 U.S. 283, 28 S. Ct. 548, 52 L. Ed. 794, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1703 (1908).

Opinion

Mr. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

These several appeals were taken by the various appellants from the same decree. We dispose of them together. The transcript is voluminous and confused. Following the order of the court below and the direction of the counsel for all the appellants, not objected to by the counsel for- the appellee, the transcript contains all the proceedings, all the testimony offered at the hearing, together with-the opinion as well as the elaborate findings of fact and conclusions of law by which the court below disposed of the case. The many assignments of error proceed upon the assumption. that every question arising from the transcript is open for our consideration.

Our power to review is derived from § 35 of the act of April 12, 1900 (31 Stat. 85), which provides “that writs of error and appeals from the final decisions ... of the District Court of the United States (for Porto Rico) shall be allowed and may be taken to the Supremo Court of the United States in the same manner and under the same regulations . . .as from

the Supreme Courts of the territories of the United States.” Our jurisdiction over causes coming from the Territories generally was thus stated in Idaho & Oregon Land Co. v. Bradley, 132 U. S. 509, 513:

“Congress has prescribed that the appellate jurisdiction of this court over ‘judgments and' decrees’ of the Territorial courts, ‘ in cases of trial by jury, shall be exercised by writ of error, and in all other cases by appeal;’ and ‘on appeal, instead of the evidence at large, a statement-of the facts of the case in the nature of a special verdict, and also the rulings of the court on the admission or rejection of evidence when excepted to, shall be made and certified by the court below,’ and transmitted to this court with the' transcript of the record. Act of April 7, 1874, c. 80, sec. 2, 18 Stat. 27, 28.”

*285 And, as pointed out in the same case (p. 513), followed since in a long line of cases:

"The necessary effect of this enactment.is that no judgment or decree of the highest court of a Territory can be reviewed by this court in matter of fact, but only in matter of law. As observed by Chief Justice Waite: ‘We are not to consider the testimony in any case. Upon a writ of error, we are confined to the bill of exceptions, or questions of law otherwise presented by the record; and upon an appeal, to the statement of facts and rulings certified by the court below. The facts set forth in the statement which must come up with the appeal are conclusive on us.’ Hecht v. Boughton, 105 U. S. 235, 236.”

While the suggestion that because there is no intermediate reviewing court between this and the District Court of the United States for Porto Rico, differing from what is generally the case in the Territories of the United States, a wider scope of authority should exist in reviewing by appeal the decrees of the District Court of Porto Rico, may have cogency, it affords no ground for disregarding the plain command of the statute of 1874, which is here applicable, as expounded by many previous decisions of this court. It follows, that the greater part of the transcript is superfluous, and we therefore disregard it and confine our attention to such legal questions as necessarily arise on the face of the record, viz., to rulings concerning the rejection or admission of testimony duly excepted to, and to the sufficiency of the findings to sustain the legal conclusion or decree based on them.

The sole complainant, Maria Rios de Rubio, a widow, was averred to be "a resident of San Juan, Porto Rico, and a loyal subject of the King of Spain.” There was no specific traverse of this averment. The court expressly found “that the citizenship and residence of the parties was as alleged in the bill of complaint.” After the findings of fact had been made and the decree entered, and after an appeal by one of the parties, other of the defendants who had initiated appeals, but had not perfected them, moved for an extension of time to perfect *286 their appeals and for an opening of the decree, on the ground that when the bill was filed complainant was not a citizen of Spain but of Porto Pico, and, therefore, the court never had jurisdiction of the case. This motion was entertained by the judge then presiding, who succeeded in office the judge by whom the cause was tried. After hearing the evidence offered by .both parties and analyzing the same, it was found that the complainant was a citizen of Spain as alleged. The motion to reopen was therefore denied. Without stopping to review the elaborate discussion of the subject on behalf of the appellants, we content ourselves with saying that we think the facts upon which the court based its action sustain that conclusion, and therefore the contention as to want of jurisdiction, because of the alleged absence of Spanish citizenship of the complainant, is without merit.

In approaching the merits we put out of view for the moment the many assignments of error which are addressed to rulings of the court admitting or rejecting evidence, and reserve for ulterior determination whether in view of the state of the record such objections are open, and if they are, whether any of them are well taken.

In order to a clear understanding of the origin of the controversy, wo state the facts out of which it arose, confining ourselves to those shown by the pleadings or documents made a part thereof or established by the findings below.

José Maria Rios and Manuela Gutman were married in Porto Rico in 1866. There being no marital contract to the contrary, a legal community of property, as defined in the Spanish law, supervened between the spouses.

The wife at the time of the marriage had eight thousand pesos of separate money and the husband about half that amount. During the. nine years which intervened, between the marriage and September 8, 1875, the husband had become the owner of various pieces of real estate, seven or eight of which were situated in the district of Naguabo, and one, or maybe two or more, in the district of Humacao. On Septem *287 ber 8, 1875, the husband, Rios,- died leaving surviving him his widow, Manuela, and three minor children, the issue of the marriage, viz., two daughters, the one Petronila and the other Maria, and a son, José. On the night of his death the husband executed a power of attorney, authorizing his wife to make a last will on his behalf, and on September 12 following, in virtue of this power, the wife executed the will. As the document was in no respect dispositive, but purely declaratory of the rule of legal succession, its effect on this controversy may be put out of view. By the law of Spain the three children were the heirs of the estate of their father, less the mother’s share of the community estate, if any, subject to the usufruct of the mother on her husband’s estate and subject to a marital fourth in favor of the wife, if the circumstances justified such an allowance.

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Bluebook (online)
209 U.S. 283, 28 S. Ct. 548, 52 L. Ed. 794, 1908 U.S. LEXIS 1703, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/garzot-v-de-rubio-scotus-1908.