Souffront v. La Compagnie Des Sucreries De Porto Rico

217 U.S. 475, 30 S. Ct. 608, 54 L. Ed. 846, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1974
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedMay 16, 1910
Docket155
StatusPublished
Cited by150 cases

This text of 217 U.S. 475 (Souffront v. La Compagnie Des Sucreries De Porto Rico) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Souffront v. La Compagnie Des Sucreries De Porto Rico, 217 U.S. 475, 30 S. Ct. 608, 54 L. Ed. 846, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1974 (1910).

Opinion

Me. Justice White

delivered the opinion of the court.

■In July, 1906, plaintiffs in error, commenced this action in the District Court' of the United States for the District' of Porto Rico, to recover, from the defendants, in error, the possession of certain described real- estate and. damages from April 12, 1904, for unlawfully withholding possession thereof. *478 •The right to'.the relief sought was based upon the averment that one Clemente de Fleuriah, at his death, on February- 24, 1892, was seized in fee and entitled to the possession of the premises, and that he died intestate, leaving the plaintiffs— his widow and two children — “as his legal succession.” A demurrer to the complaint, was overruled, except as to the necessity of furnishing certain information in regard to rents and profits,- which was afterwards done through the medium of a bill of particulars. The defendants filed a joint answer. In addition to a general denial, they pleaded title by adverse possession' of' .twenty years,' a,nd that. plaintiffs’ • right to recover was barred by reason of certain judgménts obtained by the predecessors in title of defendants in actions prosecuted " by therp in the courts of France and in the courts of Porto. Rico during the Spanish regime, and by reason of a judgment ’ of dismissal entered in favor of predecessors in title of defends- ■ ants and against the plaintiffs, in a- suit in equity brought by the latter in' the trial court below in the year 1904 to quiet the title to the premises in'controversy. A motion was filed to strike' out portions of the answer as alleging mere eviden-tiary matter, and a demurrer was also filed to the special, defenses of res judicata. The motion and demurrer were over-' ruled, the court filing an opinion, in which it detailed the sub- : stance of the matters set up in the answer, and, in effect, held that the decrees or judgments of the French and Porto Rican ■ courts prior to the cession from Spain, were res judicata -as-to the claims of the plaintiffs, unless their rights had subsequently arisen., ■ After setting forth its reasons for such conclusion the court called upon the plaintiffs “to file a-replication within ten days or such longer period as they may,if at all, be entitled to, setting.up the fact, whether or not the' answer is true in so far as it sets out the source of plaintiffs’, title and describes or recites these .proceedings in other courts regarding this property'.” This requirement was followed by the statement that “If it shall'transpire that the answér has sét .up the real facts in the case, then, 'on the application of *479 defendants, the action will be immediately dismissed at' the cost of the plaintiffs.” Thereafter a replication .was filed on the part of the plaintiffs, which, omitting the title and the signatures of the attorneys,'is as follows:

“Replication.
“Now come the plaintiffs heroin, in conformity .with the order of the court entered herein and make reply to the answer of the defendants as follows:
“First. .They'deny that the defendants'ha,ve ever had any •just title to the premises or that those, from'whom they derived title have possessed the premises in good faith or with just.' title. • ■
“Second.-The plaintiffs. impugn the alleged • prescription either of t.en .years or of twenty years.
“Third: The plaintiffs deny the allegations .in the answer that the ancestor Clemente de -Fleurian has obtained the deed to the properties, described in the complaint through fraud and they allege that he purchased the .said properties in good faith and for valuable consideration, and. always was ready arid the plaintiffs are ready to comply with all the conditions of the said deed of sale, and that said .deed was delivered .to him by the vendors and their agents. . .
Fourth.. The plaintiffs admit that the j udgments mentioned in. the answer as a third defense to the complaint have been .rendered but the suits in which said judgments were rendered have been instituted'against .Clemente de FLeurian while he was insane and out of his mind and without any curator or.' guardian or committee of his person Being named by the court; ■ and that the ■ defendants herein were neither parties nor privies to the said .judgments arid suits and appeals, and therefore said judgments cannot bar this action. ■
' Fifth. The-plaintiffs admit that the judgment' inentioned in the answér as a -fourth, defense .to the óomplaint has been .rendered, but -the plaintiffs state that the court which ren-' dered said judgment-had no jurisdiction-in the subject riiatter, *480 and said judgment being of a- foreign court without jurisdiction is not binding; and. the plaintiffs further allege that the defendants herein were neither parties nor privies to the said judgment and suit, and ,therefore said judgment is not a bar to this action.
“Sixth. The plaintiffs .further replying say that the judgment or decree mentionéd in the answer, as a fifth defense . to the complaint was rendered not upon the merits of the case and without any proof being taken, but only upon a demurrer to the complaint for want of equity and for laches, both purely equitable defenses available only in suits in equity, and the plaintiffs state that this decree is not a bar to this action. f
■ “Wherefore the plaintiffs pray judgment thereon.”

Thereupon the following entry of. dismissal was made:

“Now come the plaintiffs by their attorneys, Boerman & Llorens, and file a replication to the answer in this cause, and upon consideration thereof it appears to come within the rule laid down in the court’s opinion on the demurrer to'the answer • Of the defendants filed June 1st:. Now, upon application by Hartzell and Rodriguez, the attorneys of said defendants, the cause is dismissed at the cost of the plaintiffs, to be taxed by the clerk, for which execution may issue.
“ Plaintiffs except- tó the dismissal hereof.”

' From this j udgment of dismissal, 'the appeal now before us was taken. In addition. to assigning as error the overruling of the demurrers to the respective defenses of res judicata, it is set up that “The court, erred in.rendering júdgment against .the plaintiffs in said cause upon-the pleadings in said-cause, and that said judgment is contrary- to the law and facts as .stated in the pleadings in said court.”

As upon .the overruling of the demurrer, the court in substance made it a condition, for granting leave to reply to the answer that such reply should disclose that the answer had not setup ‘the real facts in the case, which condition was-manifestly not'complied with in the replication, we shall review the *481 action of the court upon the hypothesis that the order overruling the demurrer had also absolutely decreed a dismissal of the complaint. On this assumption we proceed to examine the defense setting up: as res judicata

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Bluebook (online)
217 U.S. 475, 30 S. Ct. 608, 54 L. Ed. 846, 1910 U.S. LEXIS 1974, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/souffront-v-la-compagnie-des-sucreries-de-porto-rico-scotus-1910.