Palmieri Góñez v. Federal Land Bank

59 P.R. 4
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 24, 1941
DocketNo. 7957
StatusPublished

This text of 59 P.R. 4 (Palmieri Góñez v. Federal Land Bank) 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
Palmieri Góñez v. Federal Land Bank, 59 P.R. 4 (prsupreme 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Justice De Jesús

delivered tlie opinion of the court.

Alfredo Palmieri Ferri died intestate in Adjuntas on December 18,1921, leaving among other properties, two rural estates lying within that municipal district and described in the complaint. Five days afterward, his brothers, named in the complaint, were declared to be his sole and universal heirs, without prejudice to a third party with a tetter right, and they recorded in their names the hereditary property on December 11, 1925.

By a deed of October 26, 1926, the heirs of Alfredo Pal-mieri constituted a voluntary mortgage upon the above two estates in favor of the Federal Land Bank of Baltimore to secure a loan for $9,600 as principal and other subsidiary credits which mortgage was recorded on November 19, 1926. The amount of the mortgage was subsequently increased to $12,400 by a deed of October 14, 1932.

In September 1933, the appellant, while a minor but represented by her mother with patria potestas, brought an action of filiation seeking to be declared an acknowledged natural daughter of Alfredo Palmieri Ferri, and recorded the complaint in the registry of property as regards the said estates on September 26, 1933. The lower court found for the plaintiff in the action for filiation on June 26, 1934, and its decision became final (firme) by reason of the judgment of this court of July 24, 1936 (50 P.R.R. 439).

While the action of filiation was pending on appeal and the lis pendens notice entered was still in force, the creditor, [6]*6The Federal Land Bank of Baltimore, brought a summary foreclosure proceeding in the District Court of San Juan and made the brothers Palmieri Ferri parties defendant but omitted to join Esther Góñez Palmieri, plaintiff herein, as a party to said proceeding or to notify her, notwithstanding the existence of the recorded lis pendens notice.

Subsequently that proceeding was removed to the United States District Court where it was prosecuted until terminated by the award of the estates to the mortgagee which subsequently sold them to third persons.

Based on the above facts, the minor Esther Palmieri Gó-ñez brought the present action for damages against the said bank. The plaintiff also alleged that by reason of the defendant having sold the estates to third persons, “the plaintiff was never able to take possession of the two described estates,” which she appraises at $18,000; that the said mortgage foreclosure proceeding, commenced in the District Court of San Juan and terminated in the United States District Court for Puerto Rico, is void on the following grounds: (a) because the District Court of San Juan Avas without jurisdiction to take cognizance of the summary foreclosure proceeding, as the mortgaged estates are located in the judicial district of Ponce; (b) because the plaintiff herein Avas not made a defendant in said proceeding or served with notice thereof, nor did she ratify the mortgage in question.

She further alleged that in consequence of the conduct of the defendant, the plaintiff “has been deprived of the use and enjoyment of the aforesaid two estates, and suffered damages in the sum of $20,000 as estimated by hex',” and her complaint ended with the following prayer:

“That judgment be duly rendered in her favor and that the Federal Land Bank be adjudged to pay to the plaintiff the sum of $20,000, Avith interest thereon from the filing of her complaint nnlil the same is fully paid, and the costs of this suit.”

[7]*7The defendant demurred to the complaint on the grounds that the same did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action; that the action was barred under the second paragraph of Section 23 of the Mortgage Law; and that the complaint is ambiguous, unintelligible, and uncertain.

The lower court sustained the grounds of insufficiency and of prescription but failed to pass upon that of ambiguity, as it deemed it unnecessary to do so.

The plaintiff refused to amend her complaint and on her motion the court rendered final judgment against her. It is from that judgment that the present appeal has been taken.

The grounds relied on by the court for sustaining the demurrers are set forth in the following paragraphs of its decision:

“Section 23 of the Mortgage Law provides that the record of real property and property rights acquired by inheritance or legacy shall not prejudice third persons if five years from the date thereof shall not have passed, excepting cases of testate or intestate inheritances, betterments, and legacies, when left to heirs by force of law.
( C
“By reason of all the foregoing, and in view, moreover, of the decision in Menéndez v. Succession of Menéndez et al., 20 P.R.R. 208, the court reaches the conclusion that the complaint ‘does not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action’ against the defendant Federal Land Bank of Baltimore. ...” (Italics ours.)

The only error assigned by the appellant relates to the sustaining of the above-mentioned demurrers.

We will first determine whether or not the mortgage in question is valid. For this purpose, we must refer to the second paragraph of Section 23 of the Mortgage Law invoked by the appellee and by the lower court. It reads as follows:

“The record of real property and property rights acquired by inheritance or legacy shall not prejudice third persons if five years from the date thereof shall not have passed, excepting cases of testate or intestate inheritances, betterments and legacies, when left to heirs by force of law.”

[8]*8In harmony with the above legal provisions, the record of real property and property rights in favor of heirs or legatees who are not forced heirs shall be made subject to the resolutory condition of the cancellation of the recorded right if the thing recorded is claimed by another heir with a better right within five years from the date of the record. In other words, one who acquires from a voluntary heir before the lapse of five years assumes the risk of forfeiting the thing acquired if within such period the real property or property right is claimed by an heir with a better right.

Commenting on Section 23 of the Spanish Mortgage Law, of July 17, 1877, which is identical with Section 23 of our Mortgage Law, Galindo and Escosura express themselves as follows:

“In short, according to Section 23 of the Law, in its present form, a record prejudices third persons from the date thereof, except only where it relates to property acquired by voluntary heirs or legatees, in which case it shall not prejudice heirs with a better right until after the lapse of five years.” Legislación Hipotecaria, vol. 2, p. 284.
“If the inheritance passes within the five years to other heirs, the latter shall not be prejudiced and may set up a claim against the recorded conveyance; if five years have already elapsed, they shall he prejudiced by such sales; that is, before accepting them, save their right to recover from the vendors, supposed heirs at the time they sold, the purchase price of the thing conveyed.” Id., p. 286.

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59 P.R. 4, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/palmieri-gonez-v-federal-land-bank-prsupreme-1941.