Pagán v. Heirs of Padilla

42 P.R. 941
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 24, 1931
DocketNo. 5387
StatusPublished

This text of 42 P.R. 941 (Pagán v. Heirs of Padilla) 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
Pagán v. Heirs of Padilla, 42 P.R. 941 (prsupreme 1931).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Hutchison

delivered the opinion of the Court.

A compromise, as defined by section 1711 of the Civil Code, “is a contract by which each of the parties in interest, by giving, promising, or retaining something, avoids the provocation of a suit, or terminates one that has already been instituted. ’ ’

Section 1715 provides that—

“No compromise can be made witb regard to the civil status of persons....”

[942]*942A filiation suit may not be made the subject of compromise. Antongiorgi v. Antongiorgi, 28 P.R.R. 815.

In a filiation suit the attorneys for the respective parties filed a paper entitled “Judicial Authorization for a Compromise,” which reads as follows:

“To the Honorable Court:
“Now comes the plaintiff by her guardian ad Mem, José Pagan, and the latter by his attorneys, Benet & Souffront, and the defendants by their attorneys, Angel A. Vázquez, Nazario & García, and Alemañy & Ramirez, before this Honorable Court and respectfully state and pray:
“I. That plaintiff and defendants have agreed definitely to com-prom'se the present suit, on (trievio) acquiescence by defendants in plaintiff’s prayer that she, Germana Pagán, be declared a natural daughter of her predecessor, Juan Asencio Padilla; with the right to use his name and also (además) on (prwia) request that the amended complaint be deemed to have been stricken from the record, in confornrty with the following clauses:
“A. Defendants consent and plaintiff accepts that, as to her rights and interest in the property constituting the estate left by said predecessor, Juan Asencio Padilla, judgment be rendered for $1,200, to be deposited immediately with the Clerk of this Court, in cash.
“B. In consideration of the receipt of said sum the plaintiff considers that her interest in the property left by said Juan Asencio Padilla has been totally paid.
“II. The plaintiff furthermore alleges that said compromise is useful and convenient for the minor, and absolutely necessary for the following reasons:
“(1) Because in case the complaint herein which is hereby decided in her favor through the acquiescence of the defendants, should not be sustained for any reason, as for example, lack of proof or for some other reason, the plaintiff would not receive a single cent from the estate of her alleged natural father, and moreover because through the present compromise she receives the amount offered to her in a definite and conclusive manner.
“(2) That said compromise is furthermore useful, necessary and beneficial to the interest of the plaintiff, because the delay in the prosecution of the present suit, which would be extended by the appeal of the defendants in the hypothetical case that judgment were rendered by this Court sustaining the complaint, and the [943]*943subsequent su'ts with regard to a definite appraisal of the estate would cause the plaintiff to receive an amount not much greater than that received by her through the present compromise with such a delay, that her rights would become almost illusory with the sum so received, eonsider'ng moreover the benefits she would fail to receive by placing the money at interest or investing the money in some other business, compared with the amount now given to her.
“By virtue of the foregoing facts, the parties appearing herein pray this Honorable Court, once the provisions of law have been complied with, to render judgment sustaining the present petition regarding judicial authorization to compromise, granting and approving said judicial authorization to compromise, prayed for by the guardian ad litem of the minor, by reason of utility and necessity, approving and affirming in its entirety the stipulations of said compromise, and consequently decreeing the final dismissal of the case at bar, all of this without special pronouncement of costs.”.

The minutes -of the district court contain this entry:

“January 15, 1926.
“The court approves the compromise entered into by the parties, authorizing José Pagan as guardian ad litem of the nrnor Germana P’agán, to cariy it out as follows: The minor to receive $800 and her attorney $400, the district attorney agreeing to said compromise.”

In January 1927, another attorney, acting in behalf of plaintiff and of her guardian ad litem, presented a motion wherein it was stated that as a result of the stipulation above mentioned a judgment had been rendered whereby plaintiff was declared to be the recognized natural child of Juan Asen-cio Padilla and that pursuant to the said stipulation the $1,200 were deposited in court, $800 in cash and $400 in the form of a promissory note (describing it), and that the said judgment had never been entered in the judgment book. This motion was for an order directing the secretary to transcribe the said judgment, nimc pro turn, in the judgment book.

The district judge decreed Germana Pagán to be the recognized natural child of Juan Asencio Padilla with the right to bear his name and directed the secretary to enter a judgment in accordance with the-terms of such decree.

[944]*944Germana Pagán now brings another action and prays for a judgment: That the compromise was null and void; that she is the recognized natural child of Juan Asencio Padilla with the right to bear his name and all other rights incident to that status; that she is entitled to share with the legitimate children of Padilla the property left by him in the proportion of one-half of the share of each of the said children; and that defendants be required to account for the rents, profits, and benefits received from the property from the date of Padilla’s death, to deliver her share in the estate and to pay all costs, expenses, disbursements, and attorneys’ fees.

The district court rendered judgment for plaintiff upon the second cause of action, that is, to the extent of establishing her status as a recognized natural child. It dismissed the action so far as the first and third counts were concerned, that is, as to the nullity of the previous compromise and as to plaintiff’s alleged right to her statutory portion of the property left by Padilla. Plaintiff appeals from these adverse pronouncements.

Appellees rely upon Ex parte Santiago, 21 P.R.R. 359 and Reyes v. Cabassa, 31 P.R.R. 315.

In Reyes v. Cabassa the interest of plaintiff’s attorney (under a contract for a contingent fee) in plaintiff’s claim to an inheritance had been included in a compromise of such claim. The district judge on authorizing the compromise had ordered plaintiff to pay to her attorney one-half of the sum to be received by her. The action out of which the claim arose was, as usual, a mixed action of filiation and for recovery of inheritance. The evidence showed that defendant had been relieved by the terms of the compromise from any further pecuniary liability. The doctrine of the case is that in such circumstances an item for attorney’s fees included in a memorandum of costs after judgment in the filiation suit should not be allowed.

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42 P.R. 941, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pagan-v-heirs-of-padilla-prsupreme-1931.