Longpré v. Diaz

237 U.S. 512, 35 S. Ct. 731, 59 L. Ed. 1080, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1361
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 1, 1915
Docket51
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 237 U.S. 512 (Longpré v. Diaz) 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
Longpré v. Diaz, 237 U.S. 512, 35 S. Ct. 731, 59 L. Ed. 1080, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1361 (1915).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

Clemente Diaz y Gonzalez, residing in Viequez, Porto Rico, there died in April, 1890, leaving a widow and an infant son, the issue of their marriage. The deceased was the recorded owner of a piece of farming property known as Destino, as well as of other pieces of property of small area and value, all of which were his separate estate, having been acquired before marriage. ' By the provisions of the Code it is conceded that the minor was the sole legal heir of his father, taking all his property,' subject however to a usufruct of one-third in favor of his mother, the widow. In April, 1892, in conciliatory proceedings before a municipal magistrate preparatory to a suit to be brought by Ramon Aboy Benitez to enforce a debt which he asserted against the estate, the widow admitted that Aboy was a creditor of the estate for a little over three thousand pesos, evidenced as to a considerable part by the notes of the deceased and the remainder embracing doctors’ bills, taxes and monéy advanced for the support of the widow and infant child. The creditor, *514 presumably in consequence of this acknowledgment, agreed to await payment until March, 1893, when a lease would expire which existed on the property known as Destino in favor of an agricultural partnership styled Mourraille & Martineau. In the following August, 1892, on the petition of the widow the court of first instance of Humacao, within whose territorial jurisdiction Viequez was situated, recognized the minor as the sole heir of the father and as such entitled to his estate subject to the usufruct in favor of the widow as above stated. The court subsequently on the petition of the mother appointed a paternal uncle of the minor, Santos Diaz y Gonzalez, his guardian ad litem to act for and represent the infant in matters where from conflict of interest or otherwise his mother would be incapacitated from so doing. Thereafter Aboy by a notarial act transferred to the firm of Mourraille & Martineau the greater part of his acknowledged debt, the widow intervening in the act for the purpose of taking cognizance of the transfer and in addition to recognize certain small debts held by the firm against the estate.

Contemplating an extra-judicial partition, the widow and the guardian ad litem then united in thé appointment of an accountant to accomplish that purpose, who drew an agreement of so-called partition which was executed by the parties on December 27, 1893. In the agreement the liabilities of the estate were enumerated and its. assets were stated and valued and the property of the entire estate was conveyed. For the purposes of this case it suffices to say that as the debt due to the firm of Mourraille & Martineau was as stated precisely equal to the value affixed to the farm Destino, that property was transferred and delivered to the firm in extinguishment of its debts and a like course by transferring other property was pursued as to the comparatively small debt of Aboy. The small remainder of the estate was declared to be subject to the ownership of the minor and the one-third usufruct *515 of his mother. To make this private agreement for voluntary and extra-judicial partition' authentic in form by placing it of record, the widow, on February 1, 1894, appeared before a notary and exhibiting the agreement deposited it among the archives of his office after making the necessary declarations to accomplish that purpose. This being done, a copy of the agreement as authenticated and deposited was presented to the judge of the court of first instance of Humacao for his approval, which was by him given with a direction to the officer of registration to place the agreement as authenticated upon the public records. In April, 1894, this was done, thus transferring on the public record the title, of the farm Destino from the name of Diaz, the deceased, to the name of the firm of Mourraille & Martineau. It is conceded, however, that in the meanwhile, in February, 1894,- as a result of the transfer made under the so-called partition agreement delivery of the possession of the farm Destino was made to the firm and they held the same asserting ownership thereof.

By the provisions of a notarial act executed in May, 1894, which was inscribed'upon the public registry, for the purpose of dividing the assets of the firm of Mourraille & Martineau among the partners, the title to the farm Destino passed from the firm to the individual name of Victor Mourraille. By his death which, although the date is somewhat obscure in the record, occurred probably in January, 1895, the property passed to the plaintiffs in error, his widow and heirs. Whether they took as the result of intestacy or by will is not disclosed and is immaterial to consider, since it is conceded that the rights enjoyed by them Were but a continuation of those possessed by Mourraille himself in virtue of the proceedings conveying the property Destino to the firm and of the attribution of the property to Mourraille in the division of the firm assets.

*516 More than twenty years after the death of his father the minor, Clemente Diaz, having been duly emancipated, commenced in a local court in Porto Rico this suit against the present plaintiffs in error, the widow and heirs of Mourraille, in revendication of the property called Destino previously transferred to them under the circumstances above stated. They removed the case to the court bélow and successfully resisted a motion to remand. Thereupon the petition was amended. . As amended in substance it .'asserted that the plaintiff was the duly registered owner of the property, and that his possession had been wrongfully disturbed in 1894 by the action of the defendants or their author in taking possession of the same. A brief outline of the facts which we have previously stated was made and the prayer was for a recovery of the farm called Destino and for a decree for fruits and revenues from the time of taking possession in 1894. An answer was filed which was demurred to for insufficiency. It would seem that before the demurrer was passed upon an amended and-fuller answer was filed. By this answer the facts which we have previously stated were in substance admitted. The capacity of the plaintiff to sue was challenged, first, because as an heir of his. father he had no right to do so, and second, because he was without authority to recover the property without previously suing to rescind the .partitibn proceedings and the recorded title resulting therefrom and thus collaterally assail those proceedings. The- want of right to recover as a question of merits was denied, first, because of a term of prescription which was pleaded, second, because of the validity of the partition proceedings and the conclusive effect of the judgment of approval given to them by the proper court, third, because a suit to rescind such proceedings was barred by a prescription which was also pleaded, fourth, because in any event the plaintiff was without authority to sue to recover the fruits-and revenues of the property because *517 during his minority they were collectible, if due, by his mother as administrator, of his estate and because even in case there was a right to evict, the fruits and revenues could not be recovered from Mourraille because of his good faith, nor from the defendants holding under him because of their good faith.

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Bluebook (online)
237 U.S. 512, 35 S. Ct. 731, 59 L. Ed. 1080, 1915 U.S. LEXIS 1361, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/longpre-v-diaz-scotus-1915.