Rosa v. Heirs of Jiménez Cruz

77 P.R. 521
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 2, 1954
DocketNo. 10724
StatusPublished

This text of 77 P.R. 521 (Rosa v. Heirs of Jiménez Cruz) 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
Rosa v. Heirs of Jiménez Cruz, 77 P.R. 521 (prsupreme 1954).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Belaval

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On October 10, 1899, Teresa Rosa Urvelo, resident of Aguas Buenas, executed a will before Notary José Abelardo Cajas y Machado, constituting Manuel Jiménez Cruz as her sole heir. At the time of execution of the will Teresa Rosa Urvelo had a sister, Antonia Rosa Urvelo, who had a son and it is his heirs who now challenge the will in favor of Manuel [522]*522Jiménez Cruz. The testatrix died on October 31, 1899, and from that date, Manuel Jiménez Cruz first, and later his heirs, have been in possession of certain rural and urban properties which originally belonged to the testatrix, Teresa Rosa Urvelo.

On January 27, 1926, José Rosa, the natural acknowledged son of Antonia Rosa, filed for the first time, through his counsel Arturo O’Neill, before the former District Court of San Juan, Civil action No. 820 against the heirs of Manuel Jiménez Cruz for nullity of will and revendication (Tr. 179). After the usual preliminaries, the proceedings were stayed until November 22, 1933, when Arturo O’Neill, counsel for plaintiff, filed a motion to set aside the dismissal of the case (Tr. 179) and (Tr. 180). Nothing further was done in the aforesaid case until August 2, 1948, when a motion by another attorney, Diego 0. Marrero, appears on record withdrawing from the representation of the plaintiff, although the record shows no withdrawal of the former counsel and no substitution of new counsel (Tr. 180).

On March 8, 1949, José Rosa, this time through his counsel Bolívar Pagán, filed a second action in the former District Court of Caguas, Civil case No. 2882 for revendieation and other reliefs, against the heirs of Manuel Jiménez Cruz (Tr. 134), which is the action giving rise to the present appeal.

On February 24, 1950, the clerk of the Court notified the parties to the first action filed in the former District Court of San Juan, that the dismissal for abandonment had been requested in view of the fact that no subsequent steps had been taken in the first complaint, and that the parties were granted the usual term to appear and show cause why judgment should not be entered decreeing the lapse of proceedings through abandonment (Tr. 180). Since none of the parties appeared, on March 24, 1950, the District Court of San Juan rendered judgment declaring the lapse of pro[523]*523ceedings through abandonment (Tr. 180). Some time after March 24, 1950, possibly during the month of September, 1950 (Tr. 185), the plaintiff in the action before the former District Court of San Juan appeared through his counsel Bolívar Pagán before the District Court of Puerto Rico, San Juan Section, successor of the former District Court of San Juan, praying that the judgment decreeing the lapse of proceedings through abandonment, be set aside upon plaintiff showing cause under oath for failing to appear and object to the dismissal by the clerk of the court (Tr. 180). On November 17,1950, the District Court of Puerto Rico entered an order dismissing the motion to set aside the judgment decreeing the lapse of proceedings through abandonment on two grounds: (1) because it had been made outside the term of six months from the date when the judgment was rendered according to Rule 60 (6) of the Rules of Civil Procedure of Puerto Rico and the ruling laid down by this Court in Great Am. Ins. Co. v. District Court, 67 P.R.R. 529, and (2) because a substantially identical cause of action, No. R-2882, was pending in the District Court of Puerto Rico, Caguas Section, between the same parties, that is, the aforesaid second complaint filed on March 8, 1949 (Tr. 180 and 181). José Rosa did not appeal from the order refusing to set aside the judgment decreeing the lapse of proceedings through abandonment, and therefore we must consider the judgment of lapse of proceedings through abandonment as final and unappealable.

On February 24, 1951, defendants Florentina Jiménez, widow of Jiménez, Manuel Guillermo, Concepción, Félix, Jorge, and Gabriel Jiménez y Jiménez filed within the second civil action brought in the former District Court of Caguas, then District Court of Puerto Rico, Caguas Section, a motion for summary judgment alleging mainly that from the very averments of the complaint and from the sworn statements attached, it appeared that at the time the com[524]*524plaint in this second case was filed, the defendants and their predecessors in title had been, and still were, in possession of the immovables referred to in the complaint, quietly, publicly, peacefully, and uninterruptedly for more than 50 years, the defendants having acquired said immovables by virtue of extraordinary prescription.

On March 13, 1951, plaintiff José Rosa filed in the second civil action an opposition to the defendants’ motion for summary judgment alleging primarily that the defendants were not in quiet, public, and peaceful possession for the term of prescription, since, as revealed by the record, the action in the case herein was commenced in 1926, thus interrupting the alleged term of prescription. Undoubtedly, plaintiff referred to the first civil action filed by the plaintiff in the former District Court of San Juan under No. 820 in which a judgment decreeing the lapse of proceedings through abandonment had already been rendered. In opposition, he further alleged that he had a recorded title as successor in interest of his ancestor Teresa Rosa Urvelo.

On February 7, 1951, co-defendant Isabel Jiménez Gon-zález, daughter by the first marriage of Manuel Jiménez Cruz and, as such, also one of the heirs together with her stepmother and stepbrothers, filed in the second civil action another motion for summary judgment, alleging mainly that since the portion of her inheritance was awarded to her from other properties of her ancestor which were not the ones claimed by plaintiff, judgment should be rendered dismissing, with respect to her, the amended complaint.

On May 24, 1951, the plaintiff José Rosa filed in the second civil action a motion for summary judgment, alleging principally that there is no real controversy between the parties as to plaintiff’s ownership right over the property sued on and as to the nullity of the alleged open will referred to therein, which will is clearly null and void, among other reasons, because it has not been duly recorded in the corre[525]*525sponding Registry and because it was executed before a person who, at the time of its execution, was not a notary.

The District Court of Puerto Rico, Caguas Section, speaking through its judge, Carlos Santana Becerra, rendered judgment sustaining the motion for summary judgment filed by the defendants upon examination of the documents attached to said motion, and dismissing the action for revendication and other reliefs filed in the former District Court of Caguas under No. 2882, mainly on the following grounds: (1) because defendants and their predecessor have been in the material possession of the property, in the belief that they are the owners, for over 30 years, uninterruptedly, publicly and peacefully; (2) because § 1859 of the Civil Code of Puerto Rico in relation with § 1860 is applicable; (3) because the possession by defendants has not been interrupted either naturally or civilly; (4) because the fact that the property is still recorded in the name of the deceased Teresa Rosa Urvelo does not affect defendants’ title by prescription.

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77 P.R. 521, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rosa-v-heirs-of-jimenez-cruz-prsupreme-1954.