Nadal v. Registrar of San Germán

32 P.R. 106
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 20, 1923
DocketNo. 518
StatusPublished

This text of 32 P.R. 106 (Nadal v. Registrar of San Germán) 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
Nadal v. Registrar of San Germán, 32 P.R. 106 (prsupreme 1923).

Opinion

Me. Justice Hutchison

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is in some respects typical of a class and may serve to call attention to a condition that Can he remedied only by legislative action.

A large and increasing number of controversies involving amounts too insignificant to rouse the interest of an attorney make heavy demands upon the time of this court and of necessity often receive serious consideration at the expense of matters of much larger importance to the parties immediately concerned.

The instrument, record of which was refused herein, purports, among other things, a conveyance to the present alleged owner of a parcel of land for a consideration of $50.

This is the second appeal. See Nadal v. Registrar, 30 P. R. R., 74.

The brief for appellant throws no light upon the real questions involved and the registrar has filed no brief.

Appellant of course would have' no reason to complain if the ruling appealed from should be affirmed without passing upon its merits. But the soundness of that ruling [107]*107was not so self-evident that we were able to agree among ourselves upon such, a course. Hence, some expression of opinion became necessary. A number of questions which, are more or less involved are by - no means free from difficulty. Our decisions in matters of this kind are acted upon by parties dealing with real estate and in the course of time become rules of property. It follows that some degree of caution must be exercised in arriving at conclusions, and a case in which the parties appearing before this court have little or no interest often demands, and of necessity receives, an amount of care and consideration out of all proportion to its intrinsic importance.

Whatever apology this prologue may require will be found in the opening paragraph.

And by way of transition we may add that in dealing with such a situation .our duty is best discharged by a conscientious endeavor-to avoid, in so far as feasible, the unwitting establishment of false and misleading precedents, rather than by an attempt to determine i;n any particular case without the aid of counsel all the questions involved.

In the instant Case the registrar refused to record a deed executed by the marshal of a district court as the result of a summary foreclosure proceeding instituted by the vendee, Cristina Carrión y. Otero, as mortgagee and sole owner of the lien. This instrument likewise purports a simultaneous transfer by the vendee above mentioned and her daughter María Nadal y Carrión in favor of a third party, Gonzalo' Arán y Soler. In it the daughter as a joint owner of the mortgage credit, although not a party to the foreclosure proceedings, undertakes to ratify and approve the unauthorized action of the mother above mentioned; and, upon the theory of merger, both consent to a cancellation of the mortgage upon the record.

The mortgage had been executed to secure a loan made out of conjugal funds by the mother, as original mortgagee, [108]*108during- tlie life time of lier husband, who died prior to the-institution of tlie foreclosure proceedings. Thereupon an undivided one-half interest in the mortgage vested in the daughter, subject to the usufructuary interest of the widow, who of course retained her ownership of the other one-half as survivor of the conjugal partnership.

These and other details are all set forth at length in the attempted double conveyance, which was tendered for rec-cord first in the name of mother and daughter, as joint owners of the land in question, and then in the name of Gonzalo Arán as their vendee.

The ruling appealed from reads as follows:

“Record of the foregoing deed No. 19, executed in Mayagiiez on February 10, 1921, before notary Angel A.- Vázquez y Sánchez, which is accompanied by an exhibit, is denied as to the judicial sale of the mortgaged property referred to in the deed to Cristina Carrión y Otero and the ownership right in the property attributed to Carmen María Nadal y Carrión for the following reason: Because, it appearing from the record that the foreclosed mortgage credit is recorded in common and pro indiviso in favor of the said persons under titles of community, legacy, usufruct and testate inheritance, and it appearing from the document presented that the judicial sale of this property by virtue of the said foreclosure was made by the marshal exclusively in favor of the first of these co-owners, who also exclusively prosecuted the said foreclosure and therefore that the said sale is.not valid as regards the second co-owner, inasmuch as she took no part in the foreclosure; and although she ratifies it in all its parts in the said document, such ratification does not destroy the fact of the nullity of the summary proceeding, as it thus appears from its face and the books of the registry; and for the same reason the cancellation prayed for is denied, which is based on the supposed consolidation of the mortgage and ownership rights in the same persons, and in lieu of the record requested a cautionary notice has been entered for the period of 120 days in favor of the said persons at folio 143 of volume 25 of Maricao, property No. 404, duplicate, annotation letter ‘/’. Record of the said instrument is likewise denied as regards the sale by the said persons to Gonzalo Arán y Soler, [109]*109inasmuch as the said property is not recorded, but an entry is made in favor of the vendors.”

Appellant lays much stress upon the fact that the interest of the daughter, although acquired prior to the commencement of the foreclosure proceedings, was not recorded until after the execution of the marshal’s deed. That circumstance may explain why the court proceeded without requiring that the daughter be joined. The outstanding interest in the daughter, if known to prospective purchasers at the sale may account for the fact that a coffee plantation, with a dwelling, and containing 50 cuerdas more or less brought only '$152, to be credited upon a total indebtedness of $840. And it may be that the failure to record the evidence of title in the daughter, or to mention her interest in the initial pleading, served to conceal the truth from defendant and to deprive him of such opportunity as he might have had, under the stringent provisions of the Mortgage Law, to call the attention of the court to the real character of the situation. Or, if we assume that the provisions last mentioned were an adequate deterrent in this regard, then the futility of such action may also suffice to eliminate any question of waiver through failure to object on the ground of a defect of parties plaintiff. In any event, we fail to perceive what comfort for appellant is to be found in the mere delay in placing the daughter’s title upon the record.

Article 128 of the Mortgage Law provides that the judicial proceedings preliminary to the sale shall be'initiated through “the presentation by the creditor of a petition to the judge or court of competent jurisdiction of the place, in which the property may be situated.”

And article 169 of the Regulations reads in part as follows:

“The following shall be preserved with the initial petition in the proceedings:
[110]*110“1. Evidence of legal capacity to sue, including tbe power of attorney of tbe creditor, if tbe creditor or tbe legal representative does not appear in person.”

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Bluebook (online)
32 P.R. 106, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nadal-v-registrar-of-san-german-prsupreme-1923.