Pinto v. Giol García

98 P.R. 221
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 31, 1969
DocketNo. R-68-328
StatusPublished

This text of 98 P.R. 221 (Pinto v. Giol García) 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
Pinto v. Giol García, 98 P.R. 221 (prsupreme 1969).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Ramírez Bages

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Appellee, the sole heir of José Miguel Giol, and appellant, the latter’s widow, not being able to come to an agreement as to the liquidation of the conjugal partnership and the partition of the properties of said predecessor, the widow filed in the trial court, on June 10, 1964, a complaint against appellee in which she requested the trial court to (1) order the liquidation of the community property; (2) fix the amount of the hereditary estate; (8) perform the distribution of the same; and (4) issue the other corresponding pronouncements. She requested the appointment of an administrator of all the properties for the purpose of protecting appellant’s interests. In his answer, appellee accepted the allegations of the complaint except that of the appointment of an administrator, alleging to the contrary that the corporate businesses are being effectively managed without danger of [223]*223dilapidation or concealment and that the hereditary estate has not been liquidated “solely and exclusively on account of appellant’s contumacious attitude since she has rejected the different offers and alternatives offered to her.”

At appellee’s request, the court appointed Mr. Alfonso Miranda Cárdenas, whose name was suggested by appellant, as Commissioner in Partition “being also invested with all the powers and authorities of a Special Master under Rule 41 of the Rules of Civil Procedure entrusting expressly on him, also, the power to protect the property involved in the litigation” and that “Said Master will act first to determine the litigious questions in this case, he shall render his report about them, and finally he shall act as Partitioner for all legal purposes.” In said order, the trial court announced that it would fix said Master and Partitioner’s fees and that “it would charge said costs to the party which the court would determine.”

The parties filed on April 29, 1965 a stipulation in which they recited the inventory of all the properties of the conjugal partnership constituted by José Miguel Giol and appellant. After numerous and lengthy hearings, the Special Master and Partitioner rendered his reports on May 19, 1967. He determined that (1) the value of the estate, consisting mostly of 369 shares of The Granchel Medicine Co. Inc., and lot and building amounted to $393,408.82; (2) he adjudicated (a) the shares plus other sums to appellee; and (b) the real properties which he did not describe for registration ends, plus other sums, to appellant and recommended that appellee is bound to pay in cash to appellant the usufructuary quota of the latter, which in his judgment amounts to $31,418.04 plus the sum of $2,642.80 received in excess by appellee. Said officer determined that on the ground of the allegations of the complaint and the parties’ answer he could not determine that any controversy existed between the parties.

[224]*224The objections of the parties to said report having been considered, the trial court concluded that :■

“. . . in accordance with what is stated in the first paragraph of the Special Master’s recommendations, that it does not reasonably appear that a real controversy between the parties exists in the instant case, and the plaintiff is wrong in her objections in the sense that the Special Master has not decided the questions between the parties, since all the questions which said Master had for consideration are included in his report.”

It approved the Partitioner’s report, except that:

“In determining the liquidation of the surviving spouse’s usufructuary quota it is not correct to grant plaintiff the total amount of the usufruct of $31,418.04. In making the liquidation of the usufruct the legal formula expressed by our Supreme Court should be applied taking into consideration plaintiff’s life expectancy.
“As to the reasonable value of the use by plaintiff [appellant herein] of a property subject to partition half of the value of said usufruct [sic] should be credited only to defendant and nothing should be credited to plaintiff. In other words, it having been established that the reasonable value of said occupation is the sum of $10,083.33 it is proper to credit to defendant the sum of $5,041.66 and nothing to plaintiff.”1

It fixed the Special Master and Partitioner’s fees at $4,000. In its judgment it ordered that by a deed executed before notary public Mr. Mariano Canales to proceed and make the partition of the properties in agreement with the distribution of the properties to each party which was related in the judgment and that the surviving spouse’s usufructuary quota could be liquidated and satisfied by appellee through the pay[225]*225ment of the amount which results after the computation performed in accordance with the formula accepted by the Supreme Court taking into account the longevity tables and Mrs. Pinto’s life expectancy. It added that “. . . in the instant case no controversy should have existed between the parties and all the hearings provoked by plaintiff were unnecessary since no improper action of any kind on defendant’s part was established in prejudice of plaintiff’s rights. Therefore, the costs of all the proceedings are imposed on plaintiff, as well as the payment of the Special Master and Commissioner in Partition’s fees.”

On May 23, 1968 appellee filed a motion in which he alleged that appellant had made withdrawals and had taken advance payments from the corporation The Granchel Medicine Co. Inc., for which reason she owes him $56,788 which should be taken into consideration in the deed of partition. Hearings on this question having been held before the Special Master, said officer concluded that “plaintiff [appellant herein] owes said corporation, The Granchel Medicine Co. Inc., the sum of $56,305.07 and this should be taken into consideration in the deed of partition.” Appellee filed objections to this report. The trial court then proceeded, on November 18, 1968, to amend its judgment determining that appellant owed said corporation the sum of $55,955.07 which should be taken into consideration in the deed of partition.

In support of her appeal appellant alleges that:

1. — “That the Superior Court erred in determining that no controversy ever existed between the parties, it erred in not settling such controversies and it erred in imposing on plaintiff costs and expenses, and the fees of the- Commissioner in Partition and Special Master in this litigation.”

In synthesis, appellant argues that it was not proper to impose upon her the payment of the Special Master and Commissioner in Partition’s fees because pursuant to § 1017 of the Civil Code the costs of the division made for the common [226]*226interests of all the coheirs shall he deducted from the estate (31 L.P.R.A. § 2883).2

Appellant maintains that the evidence establishes that there was controversy between the parties because appellant was eliminated from continuing participating in the management of the business and operations of The Granchel Medicine Co. Inc., that share dividends were declared, that some shares were substituted by others, new certifications were issued to the parties, litigants herein, and the right of appellant to sign checks of said corporation was restricted.

She is partly correct. The trial court appointed Mr.

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