Siragusa v. People

18 P.R. 579
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedJune 24, 1912
DocketNo. 724
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 18 P.R. 579 (Siragusa v. People) 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
Siragusa v. People, 18 P.R. 579 (prsupreme 1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolf

delivered the opinion of the court.

The complaint in this case, among other things, sets forth that the complainants were the only and universal heirs of Antonio Eoses Bisbal; that on May 27, 2889, by means of [581]*581a public deed, the said Antonio Eoses Bisbal acquired the real property No. 855 by purchase from Bamona Balseiro Macias, the description of the property being as follows: A rural property located in the municipal limits of Arecibo, ward of Islote, which name it bears, locality of la Burrada, which measures 390 acres of land, more or less, composed of pasture and cortadera, including a dwelling house, and bounded on the north by the seacoast, on the south by the Caño de Tiburones, on the east by José Manuel Alvarez, and on the west by lands of Gregorio Pastoriza. That by suces-sive conveyances and transmission of title the complainants acquired, from José Manuel Alvarez y Alvarez, the land situated directly to the east of property No. 855 heretofore described, the description of the second rural property being as follows: A piece of property in the ward of Islote, in the municipal limits of Arecibo, consisting of 156 acres and a fraction, being bounded on the north by the road to Palmas Altas, on the south by the Caño de Tiburones, on the ea&t by lands of Joaquin de Santiago, and on the west by other lands of Antonio Eoses, namely, the property heretofore described, this second piece of property bearing the number 1504.

The complainants also set up that they had acquired a third piece of property bearing number 1644, the description of which is as follows: A rural property situated in the ward of Islote, of the municipal limits of Arecibo, consisting of 150 acres, being bounded on the north and east by lands of Nicolasa Colón; on the south by the Caño de Tibu-rones, and on the west by lands of the predecessor in title of the complainants, namely, Antonio Eoses Bisbal, being the property No. 1504 above described. The complaint goes on to say that these three pieces of property are .contiguous and form a single piece of land with the following description: A rural property located in the ward of Islote, place of la Burrada, of the municipal limits of Arecibo, composed of 696.60 acres, being bounded on the north by the seacoast, [582]*582the road to Palmas Altas or Barceloneta and the land of Nicolasa Colón; on the sonth by the Caño de Tiburones; on the west by lands of Gregorio Pastoriza.

The eighth averment of the complaint is that the complainants are owners of the aforesaid property and have possessed it quietly, pacifically and entirely, with good faith and a just title, for an uninterrupted period of more than 15 years up to June 4,1910.

The ninth paragraph sets forth that on June 4, 1910, the fiscal of the District Court of Arecibo, without any title, entered upon the property of the complainants, accompanied by various persons, and, after having, with various landmarks, traced a line which, running in a direction from east to west, approximately divides the property in half, seized, in the name of The People of Porto Eico, the portion of land included between such line and the Caño de Tiburones, and, ejecting therefrom the plaintiffs, put Winceslao Borda in possession of the same in representation of The People of Porto Eico, ordering those present not to disturb him in such possession.

The complainants then aver that a feAv days after the said June 4, various workmen, under the orders of Wenceslao Borda, set up a fence of wood and wire on the line traced by the fiscal, thereby completely dividing the property of the complainants and preventing them from using and occupying the lands included between the fence and the Caño de Tiburones; that the said portion of land from which they have been ejected has a area of 435 acres and a fraction of solid land, partly cultivated and the rest being mountains and pasture, and on which pasture various oxen were grazing at the time of the said ejectment, the boundaries of such despoiled portion being as follows: On the north the rest of the land of the complainants, from which the fence previously referred tq separates the property; on the east lands of Basilio Eeyes, formerly of Juan José Tirado and before him of Juan Bautisto Salicrup; on the south the Caño [583]*583de Tiburones, and on the west the said caño and lands of G-regorio Pastoriza. The defendants denied all the essential averments of the complaint.

The court below, after setting out the foregoing facts, in its 'opinion maintains that the lands covered by the waters of the Caño de Tiburones, or lake, belonged to the public domain, so long as it is not proved that they have become part of the property in the manner which the law provides. The opinion goes on to maintain that according to the rules published in April, 1884, royal lands consist of all vacant property without legitimate owners or which had never become private property; that by virtue óf the eighth article of the Treaty of Peace all the property which then belonged to the Crown of Spain passed to the United States, and that,, in turn, the United States ceded these properties to The-People of Porto Eico.

With these facts as premises, the court then proceeds to* examine whether any part of the lands which the complainants are claiming was included within the perimeter of the-lands belonging to the lake or Caño de Tiburones. The court believed from the evidence that the greater part of the 435-acres sought to be recovered was not solid, but was wet or humid soil. The evidence, in fact, clearly shows that-a great, portion of the land of the complainants is swamp and contains cortadero and poyales, it being admitted that corta-dera and poyales are stalks or weeds which grow only in. swamp lands, or in wet or humid places. The court, in its. opinion says, that the proof adduced by the complainants and defendants in the present case convinced it that the lands, in litigation — if not all, at least the greater part of them— belonged to The People of Porto Eico.; that all the lands-inundated by the waters of the caño are of the public domain, and the proof of the defendants shows that the fence was located on the dividing line between the inundated land and the dry or solid ground.

The judge cites the opinion of the Federal 'Court in the [584]*584case of Marcelis v. Graham, 5 Federal Reports, 493, to show the,nature of the Caño de Tiburones and its location, and that all the inundated lands were property of The People of Porto Rico.

We do not think it is necessary to follow the court in all its reasoning. It is clearly shown that any lands which are shown to have formed a part of the original lake or caño belong to The People of Porto Rico; but we do not think it follows that because there was anciently a lake or swamp which covered a large region between Arecibo and Barcelo-neta, and that some of these waters have receded, or because a good part of the swamp lands in that region were once covered by the waters of the canal or lake, that the lands belonging to The People of Porto Rico necessarily include any and every bit of swamp or wet lands which are found in the neighborhood.

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Bluebook (online)
18 P.R. 579, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/siragusa-v-people-prsupreme-1912.