Guzmán Rodríguez v. Registrar of Property of San Juan

57 P.R. 297
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJuly 11, 1940
DocketNo. 1065
StatusPublished

This text of 57 P.R. 297 (Guzmán Rodríguez v. Registrar of Property of San Juan) 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
Guzmán Rodríguez v. Registrar of Property of San Juan, 57 P.R. 297 (prsupreme 1940).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wole

delivered the opinion of the court.

Manuel Guzmán Bodríguez, in union with his wife, owns a piece of land in Bio Piedras, the description of which is as follows:

“BuRAL: Composed of thirty-ñve cuerdas, equivalent to thirteen hectares, seventy-five ares and sixty-four centiares, situated in the Ward Monacillo of the Municipal District of Bio Piedras; bounded on the north and east with Manuel Calderón formerly, today Mrs. Bamona Muñoz de Alonso; on the south with Central Yannina, Incorporated and the main highway; and on the west with Central Yannina Incorporated and the country road which goes from the main highway to G-uaynabo.”

From the seventh record (inscripción) of the said farm it appears that former owners thereof by deed rented it to the corporation Central Yannina for a period of eleven years eight months (beginning November 4, 1910) and along with [298]*298the lease granted the corporation lessee a servitude described as follows:

“ .. .it was granted to the Central Vannina corporation in perpetuity the right to enter, cross,,and leave the lands of said property, the lessee corporation constructing, to make use of this right of way, a permanent railway, plus .two sidings, with the proper grade crossings, it being stipulated that the contract of lease with the grant to enter, cross and come out of the property, once recorded in the Registry of Property-, will have the effect of a real right as a lien imposed on the property binding upon subsequent purchasers...

On the 24th of March 1939, Central Vannina, Inc., was voluntarily dissolved.

The foregoing facts are substantially the. introduction of a petition for the cancellation of the servitude. Petitioner relied on various sections of the Mortgage Law as amended in 1936 and 1923.

The Registrar of San Juan, Second Section, refused the cancellation in the following note:

“Denied.- — The cancellation sought in the present document is denied: First: because we have to do with a predial and not a personal servitude (19 P.R.R. 782) as is expressed in the petition itself and in the seventh entry whereof the cancellation is sought, wherein it is stated verbatim that ‘the lessors grant to the lessee corporation, in perpetuity, the right to enter, cross and come out of the lands of said estate, and the Central Vannina will construct, to make use of this servitude, a permanent railroad track which will make use of the land necessary for the track and for the passage of trains, upon condition that on said track two grade crossings shall be made, and to install on the property one or two sidings long enough for two or three wagons, for the use of the owners or their subsequent lessees, and it is also condition thereof that once the lease expires, if not renewed, the Central Vannina will accept and grind after a contract made, the cane grown on the property, on the same conditions given to the most favored planter. The lessee corporation has granted to Mr. José Martínez Llonin all the time left up to end of the month in which the deed was signed to make arrangements and withdraw his cattle from the leased property, and this concession shall not diminish the amount - of the lease, which has started to run from the.first of the month. .The- contract of lease with-.the [299]*299grant to enter, leave, and cross the property, and its other agreements, once recorded in the Registry of Property, will have the effect of a real right as a lien imposed on the property binding upon subsequent purchasers. ’ Second: because- the right that the petitioners call right of way of railroad track through the property, to come in and out of the lands of the same, is nothing but a real easement of way (■servidumbre de paso), created in a' permanent form, and neither Act No. 12 of 1923, nor that of 1924, nor any other, states that ‘on written motion of a party or its agent, duly attested before a notary’ it is proper to cancel any real right, except a mortgage bond executed in favor of the State to guarantee the discharge of an office, if created more than twenty years ago, or in case a date was set for expiration, after the lapse thereof. Third: because the fact of dissolution of the lessee corporation cannot deprive its grantee (if it had any) from the right of way of railroad track constructed by its grantor for the passage of trains. Fourth: because it is not shown, in any way, that the railroad track .has remained unused for more than twenty years, which is one of the ways of extinguishing a servitude, according to section 553 of the Civil Code, although it was created in 1910. Fifth: because servitudes are inseparable from the property to which they belong, actively or passively. (Section 541 of the Civil Code.) .Sixth: because by the next-to-the-last entry, the petitioner himself leases the property in question to Central Yannina, Incorporated, for ten years to date from October 20, 1937, date of the contract, and nothing is said about the right of way of railroad track. Seventh: because not even by a tax sale are servitudes extinguished as the Honorable Supreme Court has decided in the case of Del Llano v. Plazuela Sugar Company (55 P.R.R. 567) and in that of Colón v. Plazuela Sugar Co. (47 P.R.R. 827) which is a case exactly .like, the one at bar and what is more,, the. servitude had been originally created by oral permit, and granted, the right of use in perpetuity to establish, lay down and embed a railroad track, maintain it and exploit it with the adequate rolling stock. Eighth: because the case cited by the distinguished colleagues in their petition (44 P.R.R. 873) was about a personal servitude which expired with the death of the owner thereof. Ninth: because in the case 19 P.R.R. 782, which is also cited, the court declares that a right of way granted in favor of a central .so that it may build a railroad over which to haul sugar thereto constitutes a real and not a personal servitude, and this is the one which the petitioners seek to cancel. Tenth: because the registrar has no power to cancel entries in the registry except by judicial .order or by public,, deed or authentic document [300]*300in wbicb the owner oí the recorded right gives his consent to the cancellation. To hold the contrary would be to maintain that a person can be deprived of his property without due process of law. (Decision of January 18, 1940, Del Toro v. Registrar, Administrative Appeal No. 1050). Eleventh: because the petition must be verified before a Notary, as provided by Section A of Act No. 12 of 1924, and that is an essential requirement before those liens which the law enumerates may be cancelled.
"Cautionary notice has been taken for a term of one hundred and twenty days in favor of Manuel Guzmán Rodríguez at folio 69, volume 123 of Río Piedras, property number five hundred six octuplicate, annotation G. San Juan, P. R., February 19, 1940. (Sgd) Emigdio S. Ginorio, Registrar.”

Manuel Guzmán Rodríguez appealed. On the 11th of March, 1940, the registrar answered. Appellant replied a few days thereafter. On the 16th of March 1940, Attorneys Monserrat, De la Haba and Monserrat, as attorneys for the corporation Central San José, Inc., asked leave to intervene as amicus curies. The petition, among other things, states as follows:

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

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
57 P.R. 297, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guzman-rodriguez-v-registrar-of-property-of-san-juan-prsupreme-1940.