Rivera v. Tibot

11 P.R. 531
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 18, 1906
DocketNo. 44
StatusPublished

This text of 11 P.R. 531 (Rivera v. Tibot) 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
Rivera v. Tibot, 11 P.R. 531 (prsupreme 1906).

Opinion

Mr. Justice MacLeary

delivered tlie opinion of the court.

This was a civil suit brought by Gumersindo Rivera and Custodio Agosto against José Ramón Tibot and Andrés and Juan Ocasio for damages and the possession of animals. The facts may be briefly stated as follows:

Tibot, as the testamentary administrator of Fuentes, brought a suit of forcible detainer, in the District Court of San Juan, against the brothers Andrés and Juan Ocasio and recovered judgment condemning them to vacate the premis.es and to pay the costs. For the collection of these costs he liad execution issued and levied upon the following animals:

“First. A black cow with crumpled horns, weighing about 10 arrobas (250 pounds), with her calf, the former marked with the-initials ‘E. Yd on the right hip and ‘C. Ad on the left shoulder.
“Second. Another black cow and calf, also weighing about 2501 pounds, marked with the initials ‘C. Ad on the left shoulder, and ‘V. F. ’ upside down on her right hip.
“Third. A brownish-yellow cow and calf, the cow weighing from 9 to 10 arrobas (or from 225 to 250 pounds).
“Fourth. A chestnut mare, iy2 hands high, with her filly colt, which is mouse colored.
“Fifth. A hog.”

The plaintiffs alleged that the animals which had been levied.upon belonged to them and not to the defendants Oca-sio, and in their suit they prayed for the return of the animals, and for $342 damages for their detention; alleging-.that [533]*533they had been deprived of the value of the milk from the 3 cows, which was estimated to amount to 4 quarts a day from each cow — that is to say, 120 quarts per month, worth 5 cents for each quart, or $6 a month from each cow, and that they had been detained for nineteen months — thus claiming the damages for detention of the cows to reach the sum of $342, as aforesaid. They also claim that they have been deprived of the services of the mare, which they calculate to be worth 50 cents per day, or $95 for the nineteen months. Nothing is claimed for the use of the hog. The total damages claimed for detention of the animals amounts to $437. Two of the cows were claimed by Custodio Agosto, and the other cow, the mare and the hog were claimed by G-umersindo Rivera. No question of the improper joinder of the parties plaintiff: was raised in the court below or in this court.

The answer of the defendant Tibot, consists entirely of a general and special denial of all the facts set forth in the plaintiffs’ petition. The evidence, both documentary and oral, showed that the 2 cows claimed by the plaintiff Agosto were sold to him by certain parties; and it was further shown by witnesses that they had sold the other animals, to wit, the other 2 cows, the mare and the hog, to the other plaintiff, Gum-ersindo Rivera. All the animals prior to the levy remained in possession of the Ocasio brothers, who claimed to be pasturing them for the plaintiffs, Rivera and Agosto.

The judgment rendered by the district court, on the 2d of February, 1906, ordered that the defendant, José Ramón Tibot, return to the owner, the said plaintiff, Custodio Agosto, a black cow, 250 pounds in weight, with her calf, marked with the initials “E. Y.” on the right hip, and “F. A.” on- the right shoulder, and the other black cow with a young calf, weighing about 250 pounds, marked “C. A.” on the left shoulder, an<f “V. F.” reversed upon the right hip, being the same property levied upon on the 23d of July, 1903, in the case of Tibot against Ocasio for forcible detainer, and that if it was not possible to deliver them, that he should pay their [534]*534value, according to expert valuation, and that lie pay besides the sum of $100 as indemnity for the damages which had been occasioned and the loss of the products of the said cattle. And the court further resolved that the balance of the claim made by the petition could not be maintained, giving judgment in favor of the defendant Tibot as to that part of the demand, and condemning him to pay the costs of suit.

Each party filed a separate bill of exceptions within the proper time, which vary from each other somewhat in setting forth the facts1, but agree substantially along the main lines. On the 28th of April Tibot took an appeal to this court from the judgment rendered b}r the district court by filing a proper notice of appeal in the court below. The stenographer’s notes are contained in the record submitted for our examination which is the practice that has been repeatedly condemned by this court. Statements containing documents of that nature should not be approved by the trial judges, unless there is some special reason why the evidence adduced on the trial should be set forth in the form of question and answer, which rarely occurs.

Notice of appeal appears to have duly been given also by Gumersindo Rivera and Custodio Agosto; so that we have before us a cross-appeal prosecuted by both parties to the suit below.

The case came on to be heard in the Supreme Court on the 15th of October, all of the justices being present at the hearing. The appellant, Tibot, alleges as an error committed by the trial court an incorrect interpretation of article 1803 of the Civil Code of Porto Rico, now in force. That article reads as follows:

“A person who by an act or omission causes damage to another, when there is fault or negligence, shall be obliged to repair the-damage so done.”

Let us then examine some authorities showing the rule for the measure of damages which should be applied in the [535]*535case at bar. They will be found to harmonize with tbe provisions of our statute just quoted.

At common law tbe measure of damages for tbe unlawful seizure of personal property depended to a considerable extent on tbe form of tbe action wbicb might be brought in consequence thereof. But under our statutes, which are similar to those of California and Montana, this distinction becomes immaterial. This action being one for the recovery of personal property — that is to say, cows, horses, and hogs, and damages for their detention — is entirely similar to the case of Morgan v. Reynolds, decided by the Supreme Court of Montana in the year 1870, 1 Mont., 163. In the opinion rendered in that case, by Mr. Justice Knowles, the present case is fully covered. Damages in cases of this nature, where plaintiffs recover the specific personal property, which has been unlawfully detained, are measured by the value of the use of the animals from the date at which the defendant obtained possession of them until the day of the trial of the cause.

An eminent text-writer thus lays down the modern rule:

“If the plaintiff establishes his right to the property on the trial and it is restored to him on thé he can generally recover damages, only for the value of the use of the property during the detention, and any depreciation of its value while in the hands of the defendant.” (Field on Damages, 659.)

In cases of trover, at common law, a different rule prevails. The present action, however, is in the nature of the common-law action of replevin. The plaintiffs seek to recover primarily the specific personal property detained (which are domestic animals), and have done so by the judgment of the court below. It was also proper that they should recover the value of the use of the property while so detained.

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Related

Morgan v. Reynolds
1 Mont. 163 (Montana Supreme Court, 1870)

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Bluebook (online)
11 P.R. 531, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rivera-v-tibot-prsupreme-1906.