Rosario de Rosario v. Registrar of Property of Guayama

59 P.R. 430
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedNovember 3, 1941
DocketNo. 1090
StatusPublished

This text of 59 P.R. 430 (Rosario de Rosario v. Registrar of Property of Guayama) 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
Rosario de Rosario v. Registrar of Property of Guayama, 59 P.R. 430 (prsupreme 1941).

Opinion

Mr. Justice De Jesús

delivered the- opinion of the court.

By deed No. 25 of May 15, 1940, executed before Notary Jorge Morales, The National City Bank of New York, represented by 'William L. Pope and Donal P. Campbell, sold to the appellant a certain lot situated in the ward (barrio) of Matón Arriba of Cayey. Upon said deed being presented in the Registry of Property of Guayama, the record thereof was denied on the grounds set forth in the following decision:

“Recoed of the foregoing document, at page 241, vol. 98 of the Municipality of Cayey, property No. 3654, entry letter ‘A’, is DENIED, because it is noted that, in the light of Section 14 of the Notarial Law, as amended by Act No. 7 of March 23, 1937, this deed is void, as it does not appear therefrom that the purchaser, who does not lmow how to sign, has stamped her fingerprints on each sheet or page of the same; and because it is further noted that the power of attorney on which the attorneys in fact base their authority is insufficient for the following reasons: (a) because the power of attorney which was executed outside the Island of Puerto Rico has not been protoeolized in accordance with Section 4 of the Act establishing the Register of Powers of Attorney, approved May 8, 1937, nor has the same been registered in the Register of Powers of Attorney created by said [432]*432act; (Z>) because there is involved a substitution whereby William A.. Simonson delegated to W. L. Pope and to suck person as might be authorized to act as manager of any branch of The National City Bank of New York in Puerto Rico, certain powers granted to the former by the Board of Directors of said Bank, and the instrument whereby said original powers were granted has not been submitted in order to pass upon the same; (e) because the identity of the person designated to act jointly with Mr. Pope as a substitute attorney in fact does not appear, nor in any case, is it shown, that Mr. Campbell is the Manager of a branch of the Bank in Puerto Rico; and (d) because in any event, if the protocolization be not necessary, no ‘acceptance can be accorded to the so-called certificate attesting to the exhibition of a power of attorney (testimonio por exhibición), wherein there is merely set forth a copy of the delegation of authority without the notary certifying nor being able to-certify to the authenticity of the document exhibited, which, in order to be effective as against third persons must be deposited in a public registry, and then subjected to a determination of its genuineness by means of a comparison of the signatures thereon or by any other means of establishing its validity in case any controversy respecting the same should arise; AND in lieu thereof a cautionary notice has been entered for the statutory period of 120 days in favor of Doña Julia Rosario, widow of Rosario, respecting her purchase-title, on the page and volume above-mentioned. The property sold is free from all charges or liens. Guayama, this 14th day of April, 1941.”

From the above-transcribed decision the present appeal has been taken, without the respondent registrar having filed any brief in support of his ruling.

The first question raised by the registrar involves-the interpretation of Section 14 of the Notarial Law, as amended by Act No. 7, approved March 23, 1937 (Laws of 1936-37, p. 128), which textually reads as follows;

“Should the parties to the instrument, or any of them, not know how to sign, or.be unable to do so, the notary shall state the fact, and one of the witnesses shall sign and affix his initials for the party, and such witness shall precede his signature with a note in his own-handwriting that he signs for himself as witness and' in the name of the party who does not know how, or is unable, to do so; Provided,, [433]*433further, That the party or parties to the instrument who do not know how to sign or aro unable to do so, shall' stamp their fi/nger-prints on each sheet or page.” (Italics ours.) ' ' .

Challenging the first part of the decision, the appellant argues that the failure to stamp the fingerprints which is characterized by the registrar as an incurable defect, can only be considered at most as a curable defect, since the appellant, in entering into the contract of sale, did not perform any act of alienation but of mere acquisition, for which purpose she could be represented by an agent under an oral power of attorney, who also in that same capacity could have ratified the deed; these circumstances being, in her. judgment, indicative of the curable character 'of the defect in question.

We will not stop to consider the merits of this argument. The appellant has deviated from the true question in controversy, which is to determine whether the document. involved constitutes one of the instruments subject to record referred to in Section 3 of the Mortgage Law which in its pertinent part provides:

“Art. 3.- In order to permit of the record of the instruments mentioned in the foregoing article, they must be embodied in a public ■instrument, final judgment, or authentic document, issued by a judicial authority, or by the Government or its agents, in the form’ prescribed,1, in the regulations.”

The deed giving rise to this appeal was executed, on, May 15, 1940. However, as we have seen, three years before, that date Section 14 of the Notarial Law above cited had been amended in the sense of requiring that a party who - does not know how to sign or is unable to do so, should stamp his fingerprints on each sheet or page.

Notwithstanding the clearness of the above-quoted provision, the requirement in question was not complied with in this case. In other words, the signature of one of the parties to the instrument was not affixed in the form required [434]*434by the statute. That being so, as was said in Banco Territorial v. Registrar of San Germán, 22 P.R.R. 545, 549, the result is the same as though said signature did not exist, and therefore the instrument is null and void pursuant to Section 20 of the Notarial Law which in its pertinent part provides :

‘ ‘ Section 20. — The following public instruments shall be null and void:
< < ® * *= * # # #
< ‘ 2 # # * * * * *
.“3. . . . where the signature of the parties and witnesses, and the signature, mark and rubric of the notary, when requested,' do not appear.”

Unquestionably, the legal requisite of stamping the fingerprints is of the utmost importance, since in that way,- in so far as the parties who can not or do not know how to sign are concerned, the lawmaker has succeeded in imparting to the public instrument the seal of indisputable authenticity, in accordance with the latest dictates of science. Indeed, fingerprints can properly take the place of a signature.

See, by analogy, besides the above-cited case, the decisions in Rodrígues v. Registrar, 14 P.R.R. 715; Villanueva v. Registrar, 18 P.R.R. 801; and Muñoz v. Registrar, 25 P.R.R. 786.

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