Kessler v. Domenech

49 P.R. 189
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 16, 1935
DocketNo. 6608
StatusPublished

This text of 49 P.R. 189 (Kessler v. Domenech) 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
Kessler v. Domenech, 49 P.R. 189 (prsupreme 1935).

Opinion

Mb. Chiee Justice Del Tobo

delivered the opinion of the court.

Chain Grlikka Isaraelevna Kessler and twelve other persons, all residing abroad, as testamentary heirs of Esther Bessie Boerman, took an appeal to the District Court of San Juan from the appraisal of the estate of Mrs. Boerman and from the assessment of ta,xes thereon made by the Treasurer of Puerto Rico, and prayed for the recovery of the sum of $684.26 which they paid on May 19, 1932, tog-ether with costs, interest, and attorney’s fees.

In their petition they alleged, in short, the following; facts:

Their ancestor Mrs. Boerman, in turn an heir of her son who died in this island on January 30, 1915, died leaving a will in Tomsk, Russia, on March 10, 1920, when the inheritance of her son was still under administration.

On October 29, 1920, the District Court of Ponce approved the partition and allotment of the estate of Charles M. Boer-man. The property allotted to the petitioners’ ancestor was left in the possession of the judicial administrator. On September 24, 1930, the district court entered an order supplemented by another of March 16,1932, declaring the petitioners to be the heirs of Mrs. Boerman with a right to take possession of the property allotted to her.

Late in April 1932, the Treasurer of Puerto Rico was notified of the death of Mrs. Boerman and was furnished with a description of the estate inherited by the petitioners, which consisted of some properties situated in Utuado, Rio Piedras, Ponce, and San Juan, valued at $25,386.77, including [191]*191ail undivided interest in the naked ownership of a certain house appraised at $11,441.20.

The Treasurer erroneously, arbitrarily, and illegally fixed the value of said properties at $33,965.85, using as a basis therefor the appraisal for taxation purposes' for the fiscal year 1931-32 instead of that for the year in which Mrs. Boerman died. He failed to allow to the petitioners the $5,000 exemption to. which each of them was entitled in accordance with the law, and he included the value of the above-mentioned undivided interest in the naked ownership of a certain house, thus assessing the tax at $322.25, and charging besides the sum of $361.41 as interest from March 10, 1921. Had the Treasurer acted correctly, the petitioners would not have had to pay anything, and even assuming his assessment to be correct the charge for interest would not be proper in any case.

The Treasurer demurred to the petition, and his demurrer was overruled. He then answered. He admitted the fact that petitioners were the heirs of Mrs. Boerman and likewise all the allegations made with reference to the inheritance, but he maintained that his appraisal and assessment were correct. As special defenses he set up that the court lacked jurisdiction to review the appraisal of an assessment of taxes on properties situated outside the court’s district and, further, that it lacked jurisdiction to order within this proceeding, the refund of the interest or of any other sum paid by the petitioners as an inheritance tax.

Subsequently the parties stipulated the following facts:

That the actual value of the inherited properties, in accordance with the official appraisals for the respective years, was $25,386.77 on March 10, 1920, and $33,965.85 in the years 1930-31 and 1931-32; that the petitioners were denied an exemption of $5,000 and granted one of $200; and that the petitioners were the holders of an undivided interest of 77.4877 per cent of the naked ownership of the house situated on Salvador Brau Street in San Juan, Puerto Rico, [192]*192“it being -understood that they legally hold said undivided interest because they have the title thereto, as the actual possession of said property is enjoyed by the usufructuary, Mrs. Charles M. Boerman.”

The introduction of evidence was dispensed with. The district court based on the pleadings and on the stipulation filed, rendered judgment as follows:

"... it is ordered that the inheritance tax be computed by the Treasurer of Puerto Rico: (a.) on the basis of the official appraisal of the property in 1920; (6) excluding the official valuation in 1920 of the undivided interest in the naked ownership of the house situated on Salvador Brau Street in this city; (c) granting no exemption; (d) charging interest on the inheritance from March 10, 1921, to May 19, 1932, at the rate prescribed by law. The difference between the amount paid by the petitioners on May 19, 1932, or $684.26, and what they really should have paid in accordance with this opinion, shall be refunded to the petitioners, with legal interest on the latter amount from May 19, 1932, to the date of payment, without special imposition of costs.”

Both parties appealed.

The petitioners maintain that the trial court erred in not allowing to them the $5,000 exemption and in holding that they were bound to pay interest after the lapse of one year from the death of their ancestor.

The respondent assigns seven errors which, as he claims, were committed by the district court in holding (1) that there was no misjoinder of causes of action; (2) that the complaint was not ambiguous, unintelligible, or uncertain; (3) in reviewing the appraisal of such assessment of taxes on properties situated outside the court’s district; (4) in declaring that the valuation to be considered should be the one given to the properties on the date of the death of the testatrix; (5) in deciding that it was not proper to take into account the value of the naked ownership; (6) in adjudging the respondent to pay legal interest; and (7) in sustaining the complaint and in ordering the respondent to reassess the tax.

[193]*193Before anything else we will take up the first two .errors assigned by the respondent and appellant, to wit: the misjoinder of causes of action and the ambiguity of the complaint.

Both these questions were raised before the district court by demurrer. It is urged that “the action of appeal to review the appraisal of an estate or inheritance and the assessment of taxes thereon and the action for recovery of interest” herein exercised can not be joined because they are not comprised in any of the eight subdivisions of section 104 of the Code of Civil Procedure (1932 ed.); and that the complaint is ambiguous, because even assuming that the causes of action could be joined they were not separately stated, and because the allegations and the prayer are inconsistent in that the former referred to the appraisal and assessment, whereas in the latter the refund of the amount paid for taxes and interest is claimed.

In commenting on the nature of this proceeding, in Succession of Puente v. People et al., 19 P.R.R. 532, 536-539, we said:

“The provisions of the Political Code on inheritance taxes are complete and specific. In brief, they provide * * *.
“We have made the foregoing reference to the Revenue Law in order to call special attention to the fact that in deciding to impose inheritance taxes the Porto Rican legislators adopted a complete and specific system which is distinct in many particulars from that adopted for the imposition and collection of other taxes.

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Bluebook (online)
49 P.R. 189, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kessler-v-domenech-prsupreme-1935.