Oliva v. Fernandez

68 F.2d 338, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4952
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedDecember 15, 1933
DocketNo. 2783
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 68 F.2d 338 (Oliva v. Fernandez) 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
Oliva v. Fernandez, 68 F.2d 338, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4952 (1st Cir. 1933).

Opinion

WILSON, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico. The appellee is the daughter of the appellant and his wife, Ramona Fernandez Betancourt. They were married in 1893, and the wife died in 1907, when the appellee was about seven years old. After marriage, the wife was bequeathed under her father’s will a legacy amounting to $9,944.26, upon which, in the hands of a Puerto Rican firm of Fernandez & Sobrino> there had accumulated interest to the amount of $46.72-, or a total of $9,990.98. During their married life they also accumulated a considerable sum of what, under the Puerto Rican Code, is termed ganancial or community property, which, upon the death of either, the other is entitled to one-half.

The prayers of the complaint rendered the [339]*339initial proceeding's of the nature of a bill in equity to establish a constructive trust, the complaint alleging that there was property belonging to the conjugal partnership amounting to $50,000; that at the timo of her marriage the wife received a dowry of $2,070, and that her .father at Ms death left her in his will a legacy equivalent to $ll,499.94, and that the husband had control of all the property belonging to the wife, which he invested, together with the ganancial property, in real estate, and has, since the appellee became of age, refused to deliver to her her share of her mother’s estate, which the complaint sought to compel him to do.

The appellant, however, filed an answer and also an amended answer to the complaint admitting certain of the allegations and denying that any of the ganancial property was in the form of real estate, or that the wife received any dowry at the time of their marriage. While the appellant admitted in his answer that the ganancial property at her death amounted to $8,498, but that from the ganancial property should be deducted the sum of $1,846.09 paid out by him on a note, for funeral expenses and inheritance taxes, and also admitted that the legacy of his wife from her father amounted, together with accumulated interest in the hands of Fernandez & Sobrino, to $9,990.98, he alleged that from tHs amount was deducted the sum of $5,520.-96, owed by his wife to the firm, but denied in his answer that he ever received any part of the balance of $4,470.02.

As an offset against the appellee’s share of the ganancial property, and as grounds of defense, the appellant alleged in his amended answer that during her minority he had spent on her education over $9,00-0, and since she became of age had paid out for her board and other expenses over $2,000, which exceeded her share of the ganancial property. He, however, stated that he was willing to pay her enough to equal the amount which he paid to her brother, through error, as he says, in settling his share of his mother’s estate.

The District Court of San Juan having found that no part of the ganáneial property was in the form of real estate in the hands of the defendant, the only remaining issue raised by the answers before him was whether there was anything due the plaintiff as her share of the ganancial property, and whether the defendant received any part of his wife’s legacy from her father.

Upon these issues the District Court found that it was not shown that her husband received any part of the legacy of his wife bequeathed to her by her father, that the ganancial property, after deducting the funeral expenses of the wife and certain indebtedness of the conjugal partnership, amounted to only $6,742.84; that the appellee’s share was $1,685.71, and that the sum which the ap - pellant had placed at her disposal to equal the sum paid to her brother of $1,276, and the sums paid for her expenses after she became of age, exceeded her share of the ganan-cial property, and ordered judgment for the defendant.

The plaintiff aj>poaled to the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, which reversed the judgment of the District Court, and ordered judgment to be entered for the plaintiff for $8,381.20, with interest from the date of the judgment.

From this judgment the defendant appealed to this court and assigned numerous errors, but relies upon two :

(1) The Supremo Court of Puerto Rico decided the case and entered judgment upon a theory and supposed cause of action entirely different and distinct from the theory and cause of action of the complaint and from the theory and cause of action upon which it was tried and decided by the District Court of San Juan.

(2) The findings of fact upon which the judgment appealed from is based are both unsupported by and contrary to the evidence and in part rest upon presumptions unauthorized by law.

We think he should not prevail on the first assignment. It is true that by the prayers of the complaint the plaintiff sought to have the real estate which she alleges to have been purchased from the ganancial property declared to be community property and be conveyed to the judicial administrator of the estate. This claim was not sustained by either the District or Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, but the amended answer clearly raised the issue of whether the defendant now has any funds in his hands belonging to the plaintiff, and the District Court fully heard and also decided the case on that issue. We do not think that the cases of Morales v. Velez (C. C. A.) 18 F.(2d) 519, and Storm Waterproofing Corporation v. L. Sonneborn Sons, Inc. (D. C.) 28 F.(2.d) 115, militate against granting the plaintiff the relief accorded her by the Supreme Court. Upon the facts found by both the District Court and the Supreme Court in the first case, the plaintiff was not entitled to any relief whatsoever; and the second ease was not brought under a code similar to that of Puerto Rico.

[340]*340The Revised Statutes and Codes of Puerto Rico (1913 Ed.) provide (section 1141):

“Section 1. That the Supreme Court of Porto Rico shall hereafter be a court of appeals and not a court of cassation. In its deliberations and decisions, in all cases, civil or criminal, said court shall not be confined to the errors in procedure or of law only, as they are pointed out, alleged or saved by the respective parties to the suit, or as set forth in their briefs and exceptions, but in furtherance of justice, the court may also take cognizance of all the facts and proceedings in the case as.they appear in the record, and likewise consider the merits thereof, so as to promote justice and right and to prevent injustice and delay.”

The following sections of the Puerto Rican Code are also pertinent to issues involved:

Section 5350, Rev. St. and Codes 1913 (Code Civ. Proc. § 306): “When the judgment, order or decree of the court below shall be reversed, the court shall proceed to render such judgment, order or decree as the court below should have rendered. * * * ”

Section 5175 (Code Civ. Proc. § 191): “The relief granted to the plaintiff, if there be no answer, cannot exceed that which he shall have demanded in his complaint; but in any other case, the court may grant him any relief consistent with the ease made by the complaint and embraced within the issue.”

Section 3229 (Civil Code, § 159): “The husband shall be the administrator of the conjugal property, except when stipulated otherwise.”

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Bluebook (online)
68 F.2d 338, 1933 U.S. App. LEXIS 4952, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oliva-v-fernandez-ca1-1933.