Torres v. Renta

27 P.R. 347
CourtSupreme Court of Puerto Rico
DecidedMay 19, 1919
DocketNo. 1987
StatusPublished

This text of 27 P.R. 347 (Torres v. Renta) 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
Torres v. Renta, 27 P.R. 347 (prsupreme 1919).

Opinion

Mu. Chief Justice Hernández

delivered the opinion of the court.

The plaintiffs herein brought an action of ejectment against the defendants in the District Court of Ponce on Jnne 24, 1918, to recover parts of a rural property and mesne profits and the defendants having’ demurred on the ground that the complaint did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, because, among other reasons, they had acquired the property sued for by prescription under section .1858 of the Civil Code, the court, on January 4, 1919, sustained the said demurrer for the reason given and granted the plaintiffs ten days in which to amend their complaint.

The plaintiffs filed an amended complaint on January 13, 1919, and the defendants thereupon moved for judgment on the pleadings for the reason that it appeared from the amended complaint, as had formerly appeared from the original complaint, that the defendants had held possession of the property in question since December, 1902, and that they could not be prejudiced by any defect involving the nullity of the title of their grantors which did not appear from the title itself, or from the registry, or of which they had no personal knowledge.

The motion having been heard, the court held that the amended complaint did not substantially vary the terms of the original complaint, the conditions being, therefore, the same as when its decision of January 4, 1919, was rendered based on the acquisition of the property by prescription by [349]*349tlie defendants. Therefore, citing section 1858 of tlie Civil Code and tlie cases of Teillard v. Teillard, 18 P. R. R. 546, and Maldonado v. Ramos, 24 P. R. R. 278, tlie court entered judgment on January 22, 1919, sustaining tlie motion for judgment on the pleadings and dismissing the complaint on its merits, without special imposition of costs, disbursements and attorney fees.

From that judgment counsel for plaintiffs appealed to this court, alleging as fundamental ground for the appeal the. absence of all the necessary elements for the acquisition of the title by prescription.

The facts alleged in the complaint, which we must assume to be true in considering whether the plea of prescription set up by the defendants should be sustained, are, briefly, the following:

Gregoria Zayas Escott, married to her third husband, José María Torres, died on March 7, 1891, leaving several heirs.

Among the properties left by Gregoria Zayas Escott at her death was a rural property in the ward of Amuelas of the municipality of Juana Diaz at the place called Agua Salada, with an area of 80 acres, more or less.

The widower and heirs of Gregoria Zayas Escott made a partition of the estate and of the said property, valued at $4,000, a one-half undivided share, valued at $2,000, was awarded to the widower, and the other half was divided among the other six heirs in the proportion of $333% each.

In the year 1901 José María Torres instituted proceedings in the Municipal Court of Juana Diaz to establish his possession of the whole of the said property and the proceeding was approved by an order of July 13 of that year, the possession of the whole property being recorded in the registry in the name of José María Torres.

One of the heirs of Gregoria Zayas Escott was Clementina Torres y Zayas, married to Luis Felipe Padilla, who, as her advisor, took part in the partition of the estate of Gregoria [350]*350Zayas and had positive knowledge that the property in litigation did not belong wholly to José María Torres.

In December, 1902, José María Torres sold the property to his son-in-law, Luis Felipe Padilla, and a simulated deed of sale was executed on the 5th of said month by Torres in favor of Sinforiano Rodriguez, who never held possession oí the property for the reason that the real vendee, Felipe Padilla, possessed it until the subsequent conveyances were made.

Afterwards, Luis Felipe Padilla sold the property to Margarita Alvarado y Colón, widow of Ferrer, and her legitimate daughters Catalina, Lucía and Mercedes Ferrer y Alvarado in the proportion of three-sixths to the widow and one-sixth each to her daughters, they receiving their title of acquisition, not from Padilla, the real owner, but from the apparent owner, Sinforiano Rodriguez, in a deed of June 8, 1912.

By a deed of partition dated June 27, 1912, the property was awarded to Margarita Alvarado y Colón in part payment of her share of the community property in the estate of her husband, José Ferrer y Reynes, who died at Juana Diaz on February 5, 1905.

Margarita Alvarado sold the property to Pablo Renta by a public deed dated February 16, 1918, for the sum of $16,000.

Margarita Alvarado and her daughters Catalina, Lucia and Mercedes Ferrer y Alvarado had been in possession of the property from June 6, 1911, when they purchased it, to January 27, 1912, when it was awarded to Margarita Alvarado, and she held possession of it from January 27, 1912, to February 16, 1918, when she sold it to Renta, appropriating to herself the products of the property during such possession.

The prayer of the complaint is that the possessory title proceeding instituted by José Maria Torres be adjudged null and void as to half of the property, as well as all subsequent conveyances of the said undivided half, and that these records [351]*351in the registry of property be canceled; that it be also adjudged that this undivided one-half interest in the property belongs exclusively to the succession of Gregoria Zayas, represented by the plaintiffs, who shall be reinstated in their ownership rights; that the plaintiffs recover from the succession of Margurita Alvarado and José Ferrer, composed of their legitimate daughters Catalina and Mercedes Ferrer y Alvarado, the sum of $5,013 as the mesne profits of the property in controversy received by them and by their deceased mother in proportion to the time of their possession; finally, that the defendants be jointly adjudged to pay the costs, expenses and disbursements of the action and a sum of not less than $2,000 for attorney fees.

Let ns examine these averments of the complaint in connection with section 1858 of the Civil Code, relied upon in support of the prescription.

Said section reads as follows:

“See. 1858. — Ownership and other property rights in real property shall prescribe by possession for ten years as to persons present, and for twenty years with regard to those absent, with good faith and with a proper title.”

Margarita Alvarado y Colón and her daughters Lucia, Catalina and Mercedes Ferrer y Alvarado were in possession of the property from June 6, 1911, to January 27, 1912, and Margarita Alvarado possessed it from January 27, 1912, to October 16, 1918, there being no doubt that they held possession during these periods of time in good faith and with colorable title. There is no dispute on these points.

But it is otherwise as to the possession of the predecessors in interest of Margarita Alvarado and her daughters.

If under the allegations of the complaint the real owner of the property was not Sinforiano Rodriguez, but Luis Felipe Padilla, and the latter, and not Rodriguez, was in possession of it, the possession to be considered as a basis for prescription must be that of Padilla, and his possession was not [352]

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Bluebook (online)
27 P.R. 347, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/torres-v-renta-prsupreme-1919.