Picón v. Mercado Martínez
This text of 63 P.R. 467 (Picón v. Mercado Martínez) 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.
Opinion
delivered the opinion of the court.
Beyes Picón and her husband filed a suit in the district court against Merciader Mercado Martínez and others to recover possession of a certain 40-cuerda farm, asking that the defendants be enjoined from disturbing them in the possession of the same. The farm in question had allegedly been acquired by the plaintiffs at a tax sale. In a previous unlawful detainer suit in the same court, the plaintiffs had obtained an order of eviction against the defendants. Contrary to our holding in Borges v. Janer, Judge, 59 P.R.R. 943, a new order of eviction was entered when the defendants reoccupied certain houses on the farm. However, the defendants again reoccupied the same houses, which the plaintiffs, incidentally, admit are the property of the defendants, after the second ouster order was served on them. Whereupon the plaintiffs filed. the injunction suit herein. The case is here on appeal from the judgment of the district court in favor of the plaintiffs.
Both parties raise a number of questions, but one fundamental point is sufficient to dispose of this appeal. The essential allegation that the appellees were in possession of the real property herein within the year immediately preceding the filing of the complaint is predicated on the alleged possession which the plaintiffs obtained from the marshal in execution of the last ouster order. However, the testimony of the marshal, the pertinent portions of which are [469]*469set forth, in the margin,1 clearly demonstrates that there was considerable confusion as to the boundaries of the farm in controversy, that the latter was never duly identified, and that the marshal therefore never actually gave the plaintiffs material possession of the property.
This becomes even clearer when we note that the district court suggested the designation of a surveyor to locate the [470]*470land.2 If it was necessary before deciding this injunction suit to locate the land involved by a survey, it is obvious that the marshal had not actually put the plaintiffs in possession thereof under the last ouster order. As the suit of the plaintiffs was predicated on the possession allegedly obtained from the marshal, the judgment in their favor cannot be permitted to stand.
The judgment of the district court will be reversed and a new judgment in favor of the‘defendants will be entered.
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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack
63 P.R. 467, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/picon-v-mercado-martinez-prsupreme-1944.