González Salas v. Charneco Widow of González Rivera

99 P.R. 560
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJanuary 29, 1971
DocketNo. R-68-68
StatusPublished

This text of 99 P.R. 560 (González Salas v. Charneco Widow of González Rivera) 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
González Salas v. Charneco Widow of González Rivera, 99 P.R. 560 (prsupreme 1971).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Martínez Muñoz

delivered the opinion of the Court.

We must decide in-this case, whether in the context of § 1020 of the Civil Code of Puerto Rico, which consecrates the redemption of coheirs, the widow is a stranger in the inheritance of her deceased husband.

José Manuel González Rivera died on April 17, 1954, having executed a will. He married twice. In his first marriage he begot two children, José Clemente and Odette Gonzá-lez Salas, appellant herein.

In his second marriage to Rosa Maria Charneco, appellee herein, González Rivera begot three children named Ana María, José Manuel, and Sandra María González Charneco.

On January 23, 1967, the Superior Court, Ponce Part, rendered judgment in an action of filiation declaring Nilsa González Otero daughter of José Manuel González Rivera with all the rights to the inheritance state of the latter.

Three days before the judgment was rendered, Nilsa González Otero, plaintiff in the action of filiation, the widow Rosa Maria Charneco, and all the children begotten in marriage, with the exception of appellant Odette González Salas, agreed through public deed number one of that same date, before notary Nazario Lugo Silvagnoli, to a compromise of the economical aspect of the action of filiation, excluding its filial aspect, through which Nilsa González Otero conveyed any right, title, stock, interest or share corresponding to her in the inheritance of José Manuel González Rivera .and Rosa [562]*562Ana Rivera widow of González,1 in favor of Rosa María Charneco and the children of the first and second marriages of José Manuel González Rivera, with the exception of Odette González Salas, in a proportion of one-third (14) for defendant Rosa Maria Charneco and the remaining portion in equal parts for the others. The vendor was paid the amount of sixty thousand dollars ($60,000.00), of which Rosa Maria Charneco paid twenty thousand dollars ($20,000.00).

On February 15, 1967, Odette González Salas, the only daughter who did not appear in the deed, filed an action for legal redemption seeking to redeem the rights acquired from Nilsa González Otero by her father’s widow, Rosa Maria Charneco widow of González Rivera appellee herein, in the aforesaid contract of compromise, seeking to subrogate herself in the place of the defendant and offering to reimburse the expenses which corresponded to the latter for the execution of the above-mentioned deed as well as any other useful and necessary expenses, in addition to the expenses of the deed to convey to her the hereditary rights involved. Together with the action for redemption she deposited with the clerk’s office in the trial court, the amount of twenty thousand dollars ($20,000.00) at the disposal and for the benefit of the defendant to cover the sale price and thus redeem the third (1/3) part of the hereditary rights sold by Nilsa González Otero to defendant Rosa Maria Charneco.

Appellee is the widow of the predecessor, who was appellant’s father. In the will executed by the latter, in the seventh clause, he designated his wife, Rosa Maria [563]*563Charneco, as legatee in the usufruct of the third of the property which can be freely disposed of, bequeathing the naked property of that free third to his three children begotten in his second marriage, Ana Maria, Sandra María, and José Manuel. In the EIGHTH clause he designated his five children named Odette González Ortiz, José Clemente González Ortiz, Ana María González Charneco, Sandra María González Charneco, and José Manuel González Charneco as sole and universal heirs in the remaining of all his properties, rights and shares, that is, in the two thirds devoted for the legal portion, on equal parts and without prejudice to the usufruct-uary portion provided by law in favor of his wife Rosa Maria Charneco.2

The complaint object of the judgment appealed from relies on § 1020 of the Civil Code, 31 L.P.R.A. § 2886. Said section creates the action for legal redemption, also known as redemption of coheirs. Said section provides:

“If any of the heirs should sell his hereditary rights to a stranger before the division, all or any of the coheirs may subrogate himself in the place of the purchaser, reimbursing him [564]*564for the value of the purchase, provided they do so within the period of a month, to be counted from the time they were informed thereof.”

For the solution of this case it is necessary to establish some basic premises concerning the nature of this action about which there is no disagreement.

First, its purpose. On previous occasions we have pointed out that the purpose of the action for redemption of heirs is to prevent the intervention of a stranger in the division operations. Lugo v. Ferrer, 85 P.R.R. 832, 836 (1962). Undoubtedly, it is inferred from the text itself of § 1020. In Rivera v. Archevald, 83 P.R.R. 582, 592 (1961), we stated the following:

■“Colin and Capitant state the reasons more thoroughly, in our opinion, that justify the institution of the hereditary redemption, even conceding that it is contrary to the security of the transactions and to the underlying rule of the incorporality in matters of contracts in our law. They state thus:
“ T. The partition is a family operation, which, because it incorporates into the mass all the deceased’s papers, may uncover family secrets, their situation, their business, which would be embarrasing to the ears of strangers.
“ ‘2. In the partition among next of kin it is frequently difficult to procure the consent necessary to carry out successfully the partition, which is the form most convenient for all. Would this not be even more difficult if there should participate in that act strangers moved by a desire to speculate ?
“ ‘3. Lastly, the exclusion from the partition transactions of strangers assignees of hereditary rights affords to the coheirs a means of preserving the property in the family, particularly the hereditary real property. By this latter result the redemption of hereditary interests is linked with the oldest institution, but 'which is now obsolete, of family or patrimonial redemption.’ ”

Professor Guaroa Velázquez, deceased, states the same thing in his work entitled Teoría del Derecho Sucesorio Puer-torriqueño3 when he says: •

[565]*565“As set forth by Planiol and Ripert the hereditary redemption is the' means organized by law to circumscribe the state of indivisión and the partition operations to the circle of the coheirs, discarding the holders of the undivided rights when they are strangers in the hereditary transfer. According to this institution it is guaranteed, in the first place, that the property is kept in the family, and that the same is not split; in the second place, it prevents people from meddling in the family’s private affairs; and finally, the difficulties in the partition caused by persons moved by profit is prevented.”

Another authority, the Supreme Court of Spain, in its judgment of April 25, 1964,4 considers that the purpose of the action for the redemption of coheirs provided by § 1067 of the Spanish Civil Code, equivalent to § 1020 of our Civil Code is to . .

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
99 P.R. 560, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gonzalez-salas-v-charneco-widow-of-gonzalez-rivera-prsupreme-1971.