Manjon v. Lebron

23 F.2d 266, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3175
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 27, 1927
DocketNo. 2095
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 23 F.2d 266 (Manjon v. Lebron) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Manjon v. Lebron, 23 F.2d 266, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3175 (1st Cir. 1927).

Opinion

BINGHAM, Circuit Judge.

This is an action of ejectment, brought in the United States District Court for Porto Rico, to recover the possession, of certain land claimed by the plaintiff, of which he alleges the defendant had dispossessed him, and for damages. The plaintiff is a citizen of the United States, domiciled in Porto Rico; the defendant is a subject of the king of Spain, who resides and has his domicile in Spain; and the amount involved exceeds $3,000. The verdict of the jury was that the “plaintiff is the owner of the property described in the complaint and entitled to the possession thereof, and further that he is entitled to recover $3,500 damages.”

The complaint, omitting the names of the parties, their citizenship, etc., reads as follows:

“2. That at all times mentioned in this complaint the plaintiff was the owner in fee, and now is the owner in fee, of the following described tract of land, situated within the municipality of Aibonito, P. R., to wit:
“ ‘A traet of land lying witbin the barrio of “Pasto,” of the municipality of Aibonito, Porto Rico, composed of 190 cuerdas, more or less, equivalent to 74 hectares, 67 areas and 74 centiares, bounded on the north by lands of Francisco Cervoni y Acisclo Solivan, on the south by lands of Jesus Gonzalez and Juan Rolon, on the east by land of Adelo Aponte and Antonio Manjon, and on the west by lands of Isidoro Diaz and Manuel Solivan.’
“And adjoining the foregoing described tract of land plaintiff is the owner in fee o£ another traet, within the same municipality and barrio, composed of 5 cuerdas, equal to 1 hectare, 96 areas, and 51 centiares, bounded on the north, south, east, and west by the-tract of land above described, and lying within the same; the two said traets composing one sole tract of 195 cuerdas, more or less, the said traet of land being worth not less than $20,000.
“3. Plaintiff further alleges that, being in the peaceful possession of the foregoing tract of land, during the month of August of the year 1924, the defendant, by his tenants, agents, and employees, without right or title or interest to or in the said traet of land described in paragraph 2 heroin, unlawfully entered upon the said tract of land and dispossessed plaintiff of a considerable part thereof; that plaintiff has no certain knowledge as to how much of the said tract of land defendant claims, or claims to be in possession of, but plaintiff says that defendant, claiming to be the owner thereof, has deprived plaintiff of the possession of a portion thereof, the value of which, together with the damages suffered by plaintiff, as later herein set forth, amount to considerably more than the sum of three thousand dollars ($3,000) exclusive of interest and costs.
“4. Plaintiff further says that the defendant, by his tenants, agents and employees, after having unlawfully entered upon the property of the plaintiff as above alleged, cut, destroyed, and sold large quantities of valuable timber, damaged plaintiff's property by building a road thereon and using same, destroyed plaintiff’s fences, all of which caused plaintiff to suffer actual damages in the sum and to the amount of $3,000, and defendant, since August, 1924, by his tenants, agents, and employees, has gathered coffee and other crops belonging to plaintiff on said land, all willfully, without right or leave, which said crops plaintiff says were worth $1,000.
“Wherefore plaintiff prays for judgment against the defendant herein; that plaintiff be adjudged to be the owner of the traets of land described in paragraph 2 herein, and [268]*268entitled to immediate possession of all of same, and for damages suffered as herein alleged in the amount of $4,000 as actual damages; and that judgment be entered and awarded for treble the actual damages, as by law provided.”

In his answer the defendant sets up as a first defense that the complaint does not •state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action.

As a second defense he denies (1) the allegations of the complaint as to the citizenship and domicile of the plaintiff; (2) the facts stated in paragraph 2 of the complaint as to the ownership of the property there described; (3) the allegations in paragraph 3 of the complaint, and specifically alleges that he .“has never entered upon any traet of land of the plaintiff, nor has dispossessed the plaintiff of any tract of land by him personally, nor by persons authorized by him, nor has caused the said plaintiff damages”; and (4) denies the allegations of the fifth paragraph of the complaint. The jury having found a verdict in the terms- above set out, a judgment was entered, which, instead of following the verdict and describing the land as set out in the complaint, described it as follows:

“A rural traet of land lying within the barrio of ‘Pasto’ of the municipality of Aibonito, Porto Rico, composed of one hundred and fifty-six and ninety-three one-hundredths (156.93) cuerdas,' equivalent to 62 hectares, 90 areas, and 88 centares, and bounded on the north by lands of Nicholas Ortiz Lebrón, formerly of A. Solivan, and lands of Francisco Cervoni and Felicita Montes; on the south by lands of Celestino Rolon) formerly Juan Rolon, and Jesus Gonzalez, formerly Isidoro Diaz, and those of Antonio Manjon formerly, now belonging to Manuel Fernandez; on the east by Adelo Aponte and Antonio Manjon formerly, now by Manuel Fernandez; and on the west by Jose.Solivan, formerly Manuel Solivan, and Areisclo Solivan.”

It was ordered and adjudged that the plaintiff was the owner of the tract of land thus described and entitled to the immediate possession thereof, and that a writ of execution and possession issue to the marshal directing him to eject from the above-described traet the defendant, his agents, employees, and representatives, and any persons holding under or privy to him, and that the plaintiff be put into possession of the same. It further ordered -and adjudged that the plaintiff recover the $3,500, as damages awarded by the jury, with interest. It -is from this judgment that the defendant brings this writ of error.

After the verdict and before judgment, the defendant filed a motion for a new trial, one of the grounds being that since the trial he had discovered evidence which established the fact that the traet of land, described in paragraph 2 of the complaint as containing 195 cuerdas, consisted of 156 cuerdas, and not 195; that this fact was material to the issue tried; and appended thereto a certificate of the registry of property disclosing that out of the 195 cuerdas traet two tracts of land had been conveyed away by an ancestor in title, and that a survey of the so-called 195 cuerdas traet showed that only 156.93 cuerdas remained. In the appended certificate it appears that this tract of 195-cuerdas, thus reduced to 156.93 cuerdas, is bounded and described the same as is the traet described in the judgment. Consequently the land described in the judgment is only a part of the 195 cuerdas tract and its boundaries, described by the names of the adjoining owners, are changed to conform to the changes in boundaries brought about by the two sales above mentioned.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 F.2d 266, 1927 U.S. App. LEXIS 3175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manjon-v-lebron-ca1-1927.