Roig v. Central Pasto Viejo, Inc.

6 F.2d 106, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 1961
CourtCourt of Appeals for the First Circuit
DecidedJune 12, 1925
DocketNo. 1844
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 6 F.2d 106 (Roig v. Central Pasto Viejo, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the First Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Roig v. Central Pasto Viejo, Inc., 6 F.2d 106, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 1961 (1st Cir. 1925).

Opinion

ANDERSON, Circuit Judge.

This is an appeal from a decision of the Supreme Court of Porto Rico, affirming a judgment of the district court of Humaeao. The case is described as one of legal redemption by a co-owner, exercising a right given by sections 1424, 1425, and 1427 of the Civil Code of Porto Rico. These sections are as follows:

“1424. Legal redemption is the right to be subrogated, with the same conditions stipulated in the contract, in the place of the person who acquires a thing by purchase or in payment of a debt.
“1425. A co-owner of a thing held in common may exercise the redemption in ease the shares of all the other co-owners, or of any of them, are sold to a third party.
“When two or more co-owners wish to exercise the redemption, they shall only [107]*107do so pro rata with regard to the share they have in the thing owned in common. ’ ’
“1427. The right of legal redemption cannot be exercised except within nine days, counted from the entry in the registry, and in the absence thereof from the time the redeemer may have had knowledge of the sale.
“The redemption of co-owners excludes that of adjacent owners.”

Sections 1414 and 1421 also have a bearing:

“1414. The vendee substitutes the vendor in all his rights and actions.”
“1421. The vendor cannot exercise the right of redemption without returning to the vendee the price of the sale, and furthermore :
“1. The expenses of the contract and any other legitimate payment made by reason of the sale.
“2. The useful and necessary expenses incurred by the thing sold.”-

Shortly stated, these sections provide that, if and when one owner of an estate held in common sells his interest, the other owner or owners may step into the shoes of the purchaser, in order to promote the public policy of preventing multiplicity of undivided interests in property. It is a statute in favor of the integration of title to land. Compare Gonzalez v. Acha, 21 Porto Rico, 124, 126. This right is effected by bringing an action (retracto), and a majority of the Supreme Court have held that the action must be actually brought within 9 days, and that notice of intention given within that period is not enough. See Felici v. Ribas, 11 Porto Rico, 517, 525. It has also been held by that court that the purchase price, if known, should be deposited in court at the time of the bringing of the action. Gonzalez v. Acha, 21 Porto Rico, 124, 126. This strict construction of a right to redeem is grounded, not on the express language of the present Code, but upon the conclusion that the present law is in that regard in effect a re-enactment of the old Spanish law. Gonzalez v. Acha, supra. But, as stated in that case, if the purchase price is unknown, then a bond may be given to insure such deposit when the purchase price becomes known.

While these decisions indicate that the ordinary rule in redemption eases, where offer in the bill to redeem is enough, is not applied, they also show that the right of the plaintiff is not to be destroyed by failure to make deposit in court at the time when the suit is brought, if there then be excusable ignorance of the terms of the purchase.

In this case, both courts, in careful and elaborate opinions, held for the plaintiff. Only plain error would warrant this court in disturbing conclusions of fact so reached. Gandia v. Porto Rico Fertilizer Co. (C. C. A.) 291 F. 18, 20.

The assignments of error, here as before the Supreme Court of Porto Rico, involve 3 points:

(1) Whether the property in question had been divided by the co-owners so that there was no real co-ownership.
(2) Whether the deposit of $12,000 with the clerk of the court was adequate.
(3) Whether the plaintiff appellee could perform all the terms of the contract of sale to the appellants and thus be subrogated to the appellants’ rights.

The property involved is a farm property called Rosario, situated in Humaeao, and described on the register as containing 200 acres, more or less. But, according to the plan offered in evidence, it actually surveyed only 175.789 acres. This shortage bears on the amount of deposit requisite. In 1903, the title to this tract stood in the name of the widow Rosario Mandry, owning one-half, undivided, and in her seven children, each owning one-fourteenth, undivided.

The first question — as to whether the property had been partitioned — involves a fairly complicated history of the title, elaborately dealt with by both courts. A restatement of that history is here unnecessary. It is enough to say that a careful examination of the opinions of both courts and of the evidence leaves us in no doubt whatever that the courts below were right in holding that there was, as matter of fact, no partition of the property in question. At most, there were only negotiations, or possibly an agreement, among some of the co-owners, that if and when certain outstanding undivided interests should be obtained, they would then partition the property along lines described.

The next question is as to whether the deposit of $12,000 was adequate. The contract of sale to the appellants purported to cover 69 acres at $195 per acre, which would amount to $13,455. But in the appellants’ acceptance of the contract it was expressly set forth that the transaction included all the farm properties and the condominium (undivided interest) in farm properties in the designated wards owned by the vendors; sg that the contract cov[108]*108ered the vendors’ rights in this traet, whether divided or undivided. The evidence showed, and the court below found, that the vendors were not the owners of any particular traet of 69 acres, but of nine twenty-eighths of a traet which, on survey, was found to contain only 175.789 acres, which would be equivalent to approximately 56% acres. This, at the price of $195 per acre, would amount to a little over $11,000. It is therefore obvious that the deposit of $12,000 was amply sufficient, as both courts held.

The third point — that the plaintiff could not perform the terms of the contract with the appellants — arises out of the following provision in the contract of sale:

“In consideration of the sale by the Bustelo spouses to Roig of the Rosario property the said spouses exact as an essential condition of the said sale, in addition to all of the preceding stipulations, that Roig shall lease to the said spousfes a traet of 100 acres that Roig shall segregate from his Pitajaya property of Bejuca fronting on the public road running .from Humacao to the Playa for a period of ten years at $7 per acre yearly and the taxes,” with a five-year option of purchase at $200 per acre.

The district court of Humacao held that this provision for lease of other properties by the appellants to the vendors should not be considered as forming part of the contract for the purposes of this action, saying:

“To admit in cases of this kind allegations of existing conditions obstructing redemption would be to render illusory the right of redemption given by law.”

The Supreme Court, on this single point, differed from the District Court, saying:

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Related

Ortiz Romeu v. Registrar of Property of San Germán
82 P.R. 487 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1961)
Ortiz Romeu v. Registrador de la Propiedad de San Germán
82 P.R. Dec. 501 (Supreme Court of Puerto Rico, 1961)

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6 F.2d 106, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 1961, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roig-v-central-pasto-viejo-inc-ca1-1925.