People v. 632 Square Meters of Land

74 P.R. 897
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 19, 1953
DocketNo. 10676
StatusPublished

This text of 74 P.R. 897 (People v. 632 Square Meters of Land) 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
People v. 632 Square Meters of Land, 74 P.R. 897 (prsupreme 1953).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Snyder

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On December 30, 1948 the People of Puerto Rico filed a complaint in the former Condemnation Court to condemn a certain tract of land consisting of 632 sq. meters. The People filed with the complaint a declaration of taking which vested title to the land in the government and deposited with the Secretary of the court the sum of $8,848.00 as its estimate of just compensation for the land. The complaint recites that the Compañía de los Ferrocarriles de Puerto Rico and the members of the Sucesiones of Avelino Vicente González and Ana Segunda Aguayo Hernández were included as defendants for the reason that, according to the information. and [900]*900belief of the plaintiff, the Company was the owner and the members of the Sucesiones were the persons who, as owners of some interest therein, might claim compensation for the said land.

Exhibit I, attached to and forming part of the complaint, first describes the condemned tract of 632 sq. meters. It then recites that the said 632 sq. meter tract is being segregated from a larger tract of 1125 sq. meters parallel to the railroad track. The latter parcel, according to Exhibit I, “was acquired by the Compañía de los Ferrocarriles de Puerto Rico, as per Deed of Cession of Land and Concession, No. 594, executed by don Avelino Vicente y González before Notary don Mauricio Guerra-Mondragón y Mejias, on August 31, 1897, which has not been inscribed in the Registry of Property.” Exhibit I adds that the 1125 sq. meter tract had in turn been segregated from an 89 cuerda tract, known as farm No. 1618, inscribed at folio 87 of Book No. 39 of the Capital, first inscription, of May 21, 1897, in favor of don Avelino Vicente y González, married to doña Ana Segunda Aguayo y Hernández. A description is then given in Exhibit I of the 89 cuerda tract from which the 1125 sq. meter tract was segregated.

The defendants were properly served, but the members of the Sucesiones did not file appearances or answers and their defaults were entered.1 On March 7, 1949, the People and the Company filed a stipulation reciting that “in the said complaint the members of the Sucesiones of don Avelino Vicente González and doña Ana Segunda Aguayo Hernández were made defendants because the principal farm from which the condemned parcel is being segregated is inscribed in their name in the Registry of Property, although the truth is that the said parcel had been acquired by and belongs in fee- to the Compañía de los Ferrocarriles de Puerto Rico.” The stip[901]*901ulation went on to say that the plaintiff and the Company had agreed that the fair and reasonable value of the condemned tract was $11,376.00 and had consented to entry of judgment on that basis; that the Company waived interest on the excess over the original deposit, $2,528.00; and that the parties waived their right of appeal.

On the next day, March 8, 1949, the former Condemnation Court entered judgment as provided in the stipulation. On March 15, 1949 the Company filed a motion requesting delivery to it of the $11,376.00. The next day the trial court entered an order to that effect. The members of the Suce-siones were never notified of (1) the stipulation between the People and the Company, (2) the order of the court approving the stipulation, (3) the motion of the Company for delivery to it of the $11,376.00 or (4) the order directing delivery of the money to the Company.2

On April 3, 1950 — one year and twenty-six days after the judgment entered by the former Condemnation Court — the members of the Sucesión of Avelino Vicente filed a motion in the condemnation proceeding praying that the judgment of March 8, 1949 be set aside. They alleged that the Sucesión was the only owner of the condemned parcel and that the Company had no right, title or interest therein. According to the Sucesión, under a deed of August 31, 1897, Avelino Vicente ceded 1305 sq. meters to the Company for use as a railway station, with a provision that the said tract would revert to Vicente if the Company ceased to use it as a railway station ; that “a long time before these condemnation proceedings were begun, the Railroad Company of Puerto Rico had [902]*902abandoned the use and service of the said railway station, eliminating from its itinerary all stops at the said place”; and that title to the said tract had therefore reverted to the Sucesión of Avelino Vicente.

The motion of the Sucesión went on to allege that the Company, knowing that it had no right,'title or interest in the said tract, by “inadvertence, error or malice” appeared before the court alleging that it had such a right and by means of the foregoing stipulation “confused” the former Condemnation Court and obtained an order for delivery of the $11,376.00 which belonged exclusively to the Sucesión.

The Sucesión alleged that it was not interested in altering the amount awarded for the land and that it appeared only to ask that the proceedings be opened to enter a new judgment fixing the same amount as the value of the land and ordering the Company to return the $11,376.00 to the former Condemnation Court so that the court might determine who was entitled to payment thereof. The motion recites that the following documents are attached thereto: (1) copy of deed No. 594 of August 31, 1897 executed by Avelino Vicente in favor of the Company; (2) certificate of the Registrar of Property of the first inscription of farm No. 2153 showing title in favor of Avelino Vicente as well as the “conditional cession” in the said deed as to the railway station; (3) certificate of the marginal note made by the Registrar on the margin of said first inscription, dated November 28, 1947, “showing the cancellation of the cession made to the Com-pañía de Ferrocarriles de Puerto Rico for the railway station in question.” 3

In their motion to set aside the judgment of the former Condemnation Court, the members of the Sucesión Vicente invoked Rules 55(c) and 60(6) of the Rules of Civil Pro[903]*903cedure. They alleged that they had all relied on Manuel Vicente Aguayo, one of the members of the Sucesión, to handle its affairs; that when he was notified of the complaint he was ill and under medical attention for two months; that under these circumstances he did not know which tract of land was involved in the condemnation proceeding; and that as a result a default judgment was entered against the members of the Sucesión.

On April 27, 1950 the former Condemnation Court held a hearing on the motion of the Sucesión to set aside its judgment of March 8, 1949. On the same date the Company filed a motion praying that the motion of the Sucesión be dismissed outright because it had been filed more than six months after the entry of the judgment. In support of its motion, the Company cited Rule 60(6) and Great Am. Ins. Co. v. District Court, 67 P.R.R. 529, and Alcázar v. District Court, 67 P.R.R. 680. Counsel for the People and for the Company appeared at the hearing held on April 27, but counsel for the Sucesión did not appear. On April 28,1950, the former Condemnation Court denied the motion of the Sucesión to set aside the judgment on the ground that it was untimely.

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Bluebook (online)
74 P.R. 897, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-632-square-meters-of-land-prsupreme-1953.