Succession of Igaravídez v. Rubert Bros.

23 P.R. 272
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedDecember 8, 1915
DocketNo. 1024
StatusPublished

This text of 23 P.R. 272 (Succession of Igaravídez v. Rubert Bros.) 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
Succession of Igaravídez v. Rubert Bros., 23 P.R. 272 (prsupreme 1915).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Wolf

delivered the opinion of the court.'

This is a case in which little or nothing was' done in the; court below to simplify the issues. Por one reason or another ’ not fully explained, the appellants were allowed to include hi" the complaint a number of irrelevant and impertinent matter^,"' some of them having no apparent relation to the alleged' causes of action. The fundamental theory of the complaint was that by reason of the acts of various people, and especially of José G-allart and others who intervened'in'the'exe-1' cution of a certain mortgage, the Succession of Leonardo Iga-ravidez was deprived of certain rights of property. It is'fur-" ther, more or less consistently, the theory, of the complaint: that in order to restore the Succession of Leonardo Xgaravi-dez to its rights, a certain execution sale and the mortgage on.' which it was founded must be declared absolutely null and: [274]*274void and, if necessary, inexistent. To the Succession of Leonardo Igaravidez the Successions of Carmen Landrón and of Manuel López were joined, apparently to aid in destroying the citadel erected by the common enemy, José G-allart, in which destruction the two last-named successions would hope to derive some benefit. If the Succession of Manuel López and the Succession of Carmen Landrón never parted with any of their primitive rights, barring questions of prescription, they could still perhaps have • sued Hubert Brothers .-for a partition of property. This complaint, however, is in no sense a partition suit, the rights of the defendants to ;any part of the property being vigorously contested ,and (only vaguely recognized when the Succession of Manuel López, the brothers of López Landrón, claim a legal mortgage. Even then, not a single one of the alleged thirty-six causes of action claims the said legal mortgage as its basis of action. The .complaint, in form, is a rambling narrative to which are .•appended what ordinarily would be called prayers. The appellants style them “causes of action” and discuss them .seriatim in their brief. There can be no consistent theory ■of the complaint other than an attempt to destroy the title <or titles which the defendants claim by reason of the mortgage and the execution sale thereunder. Strength is added to this theory by various matters in the record and especially by the fact that in the assailed mortgage Leonardo Igaravidez .and Carmen Landrón appear to be mortgaging the whole ■property and not their separate interests, and that the mortgage proceeding was begun against the whole property. Of course, under sections 406 and 1758 of the Civil Code, the mortgage only really applied to their individual interests.

The appellants have filed a brief of some 392 typewrit-4en pages, and it has been with the idea of giving the innumerable claims serious consideration that the court has postponed the decision of this case. The judge of the court below, the late Mr. Justice Grill, filed a very able opinion, with which, in its main aspects, we agree. Here again the appel[275]*275lants, in attacking the reasoning of the eonrt below, allege a great number of errors when in point of fact only one could be alleged, namely, the failure of tbe court to render judgment for the appellants, or, at least, some of them, in their widely ranging claims of fraud, illegalities and nullities.

The judge of the court below, although criticised by. the appellants, says that the subject-matter of this suit was known as the plantation San Vicente of Vega Baja. There were other lots included in the litigation, but the whole plantation was dedicated to the cultivation and grinding of cane. The property was known and still is known as San Vicente, although the title of it was changed later to Central San Vicente.

To take this shorthand way of speaking of the matter, the plantation San Vicente was owned by Jacinto López Mar-tínez, who died in 1863. In the division of his estate the plantation was allotted to his son, Manuel Antonio López Martínez, and three of the latter’s sisters. During the first part of 1864 Manuel bought' the interests in San Vicente of two of his sisters and obtained a lease from the third. Manuel died in November, 1865, leaving a widow, Carmen Landrón, and three children. Carmen Landrón contributed nothing to the conjugal partnership; she was allotted 11,000 pesos, more or less, as her part of the ganancial property and 117,000 pesos with which to pay the debts of Manuel. All the remainder of the property, about 88,000 pesos, was allotted to the three children, the testamentary heirs of Manuel.

In 1866 Manuel’s sister Teresa de Jesús López Martínez, who was the only owner with him, sold her interest to Reverend Antonio García and later he sold it to Leonardo Igara-videz, who paid Mm about 40,000 pesos in cash and gave him a mortgage for the balance. Thus, in November, 1866, the joint owners of San Vicente were the three López Landrón children, with an interest of 88,000 pesos among them, the widow, Carmen Landrón, with an interest of 11,000 pesos as her ganancial property and 117,000 pesos with which to pay the debts of her deceased husband, and Leonardo Igaravidez, [276]*276with, an interest of 98,000 pesos, more or less. Leonardo was then a widower with a son and two daughters and it appears that the son died a minor. One of the daughters died later and the other is the Succession of Igaravídez y Santana.

In November, 1866, Leonardo Igaravídez married Carmen Landrón and of that marriage there were horn six children, who composed the Succession of Igaravídez Landrón. The three successions, that of López Landrón, of Igaravídez Santana and of Igaravídez Landrón, are the plaintiffs in this suit. At the time of the marriage the said plantation was encumbered by the said mortgage in favor of Reverend Antonio G-arcia and by two mortgages in favor of the two sisters of Manuel, to secure the purchase price of their respective interests.

The court below points out that the liens which existed on the plantation San Vicente in 1866 were paid, or, at least, in part. He also points out that none of the plaintiffs in this suit came before the court in tile character of heir of the sisters of Manuel or as heir of the Reverend Garcia, nor did the said plaintiffs appear in representation of any other creditor having a right of-action against the owners of the plantation in 1866 or at any other subsequent date. Considerable was said in the complaint about various existing liens and the rights of various creditors, but the' object of these various allegations, as we understand them, was to show that the acts .of G-allart and others were bound to he illegal b}^ reason of these various existing liens and alleged credits. The court emphasized the fact that the complainants represent • no creditor. Indeed, throughout the complaint there are various attacks made on the recorded titles of the defendants by reason of facts or claims which other people might have set up, but in which none of the complainants had any interest. We also think that this failure to understand that a person who attacks a deed or a proceeding as null must have an interest, accounts for a number of erroneous ideas of the appellants. From the time of the marriage Leonardo man[277]*277aged the plantation in representation of Ms own interests and of the interests of his wife and her three children by her first marriage, the said children being then infants.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cole v. Roebling Construction Co.
105 P. 255 (California Supreme Court, 1909)
Johnson v. Phenix Insurance
80 P. 719 (California Supreme Court, 1905)
McGary v. Pedrorena
58 Cal. 91 (California Supreme Court, 1881)
Thompson v. Johnson
60 Cal. 292 (California Supreme Court, 1882)
Reinhart v. Lugo
24 P. 1089 (California Supreme Court, 1890)
Clarke v. Mohr
58 P. 176 (California Supreme Court, 1899)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
23 P.R. 272, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/succession-of-igaravidez-v-rubert-bros-prsupreme-1915.