McCormick de Serrano v. McCormick de Watson

64 P.R. 283
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 14, 1944
DocketNo. 8807
StatusPublished

This text of 64 P.R. 283 (McCormick de Serrano v. McCormick de Watson) 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
McCormick de Serrano v. McCormick de Watson, 64 P.R. 283 (prsupreme 1944).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Todd, Jr.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

On March 29, 1939, the District Court of San Juan granted a complaint which sought the nullity of the judgment rendered .by that same court on February 15, 1930, approving the partition of the estate of Harry McCormick. In the second action, some of the defendants were summoned personally and others by the publication of edicts, to wit: (■a) Eduardo Otto McCormick; Hortensia Dalmau; Eduardo, [284]*284William, Josefina, Hortensia, and Dolores McCormick Dal-mau, represented by their father with patria potestas, Eduardo Otto McCormick; Edith McCormick de Muñoz and her children José, Fernando, Aida, Carlos, and Roberto Muñoz McCormick, the first three represented by their father with patria potestas, José Muñoz Vázquez; and said José Muñoz Vázquez and Edith McCormick de Muñoz as the only heirs of the deceased defendant, Aida Muñoz McCormick, were summoned personally; and'(b) Helen Kierman McCormick, Catalina, and Muriel Kierman McCormick and Catalina McCormick, for herself, and as mother with patria potestas over her minor daughter Helen Kierman McCormick; and Adela McCormick de Watson, James W. Watson, and their minor children Adela Watson McCormick, Edith Watson McCormick, and William Wilford Watson McCormick, were summoned by edicts. The latter failed to appear and default was entered against them on March 15, 1938.

On June 16, 1942, the appeal of the defendants surnamed McCormick Dalmau and Muñoz McCormick, who were summoned personally, was dismissed by this court on the ground that it had been taken after the expiration of the statutory term [McCormick v. McCormick et al., 60 D.P.R. 949 (per curiam decision] and on April 28, 1943, the judgment v us reversed as to four of the defendants who were summoned by edicts and who appealed 1 — Helen Kierman McCormick, Catalina, and Muriel Kierman McCormick and Catalina McCormick — on the ground that the same had been rendered without jurisdiction, inasmuch as they had not been duly summoned. McCormick v. McCormick, 61 P.R.R. 812.

In view of this, the defendants who were summoned personally and whose appeal was dismissed by.this court, filed a motion in the lower court praying that the judgment ren[285]*285dered against them on March 29, 1939, he set aside, and alleged, in substance that in view of the fact that the judgment was void as to four of the defendants who were unduly summoned, the same could not subsist as to the other defendants, because of the very nature of the partition, as said judgment had to affect in like manner all the heirs of Harry McCormick; they further alleged that the judgment entered against the heirs surnamed Watson McCormick, who were unduly summoned but did not appeal, was void because of lack of jurisdiction.

The District Court of San Juan issued an order dismissing the motion and the defendant petitioners have ’taken the present appeal.

When the judgment in this ease was reversed in so far as it affected the only appellants herein, surnamed Kierman McCormick, the same question involved in the present appeal, was raised by them but we then refused to decide it and stated the following:

“ (2) Further, the defendants argue with regard to the judgment the nullity of which was decreed in this action and which refers to a partition of her hereditary rights, that if said judgment is reversed it must be so with regard to all the defendants, since the partition is a unity and it can not be maintained that the partition is valid as to some of the defendants and invalid as to others.
“We can not advance or express an opinion about this question, since we face the fact that the appeal taken by the other defendants' was dismissed by this court on June 12, 1942, and the mandate sent to the court below. With regard to them, and also to the defendants surnamed Watson McCormick who did not appeal, the judgment is final. They are the ones affected by said judgment and it is they, and not the defendants herein, who must raise in the court below whatever may be proper regarding the effect and the scope of the reversal of the judgment as to the defendants Kierman McCormick, as affecting their rights.” (McCormick v. McCormick, 61 P.R.R. 812.)

Based on the above pronouncement, the defendants sur-named McCormick Dalmau and Muñoz McCormick prayed [286]*286the lower court to set aside the judgment in its entirety. The lower court denied their motion and relied on the doctrine that “in actions against several defendants jointly, where the defense interposed by the answering defendant is not personal to himself, that is, where it goes to the whole right of the plaintiff to recover at all, if successful, it inures to the benefit of all the defendants, which'doctrine is set forth in 78 A.L.R. 939 . . and considered that the‘jurisdictional defense pleaded by the defendants surnamed Kierman McCormick could not inure to the benefit of the other defendants because the same was of a personal and not of a general character. From the citation of 78 A.L.R. 939 we quote at the foot of this page2 the first paragraph in order to show that the question raised and discussed in the annotation is not applicable to the facts of the case at bar. It refers to cases in which the defense successfully alleged by one of several answering codefendants inures to the benefit of a defaulting defendant. The situation herein is the opposite. The default judgment was entered against the codefendants who alleged lack of jurisdiction on the part of the court to render the judgment annulling the partition decreed and approved by that same court. It is true, as stated by the lower court in its order appealed from, that the appellants herein submitted to its jurisdiction. Does this mean, however, that the judgment rendered should and may subsist as to those defendants and not as to the defendants surnamed Kierman McCormick and Watson McCormick?

The appellants contend that since the partition is a unit by virtue of which is destroyed the universality or community of property which existed up to the time of the partition among all the heirs of the deceased, said partition may not validly subsist as to four defendant heirs and be void as to the other defendant heirs.

[287]*287In our opinion here lies the real gist of the question involved. We must hear in mind that the judgment rendered in this case in 1939 expressly declared “null and void the judgment rendered by this court on February 15, 1930 . . . in so far as said judgment purported to make a partition of the estate of Harry A. McCormick, without the intervention of the plaintiff Maria McCormick.”

Therefore, because the plaintiff herein was not summoned and because she failed to intervene in the judicial partition made, said partition was annulled. On the other hand, we may ask, can that judgment annulling the partition subsist partially if some of the heirs were neither summoned nor heard? We do not think so. The reason is that in a case like this the judgment can not be considered divisible. The partition is either valid or void. Its nullity having been decreed, the judgment is indivisible and must affect all the heirs who 'intervened therein. When it was reversed by this court as to the defendants Kierman McCormick, the same became ineffective as to all of the defendants.

In Vázquez v. Santalís,

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Related

McCormick v. McCormick
60 P.R. Dec. 949 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1942)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
64 P.R. 283, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccormick-de-serrano-v-mccormick-de-watson-prsupreme-1944.