Veve v. Sanchez

226 U.S. 234, 33 S. Ct. 36, 57 L. Ed. 201, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2149
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedDecember 2, 1912
Docket42
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 226 U.S. 234 (Veve v. Sanchez) 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
Veve v. Sanchez, 226 U.S. 234, 33 S. Ct. 36, 57 L. Ed. 201, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2149 (1912).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lamar

delivered the opinion of the court.

In 1885 Jose Avalo Sanchez mortgaged to Dona Maria Diaz y Siaea a sugar plantation in Porto Rico known as Bello Sitio, described as containing 400 cuerdas, and bounded on the north, south, east and west by the colin-dantes, or adjoining land owners, whose names were given. Suit to foreclose was instituted in 1889 and at the end of three years the mortgagee obtained a decree which, how *236 ever, instead of ending the controversy, was the beginning of litigation in the Spanish courts which is said , to have been the most protracted and bitter in the history of the Island of Porto Rico.

The record of the various proceedings is involved and complicated, but it appears that Mrs. Diaz purchased, at the foreclosure sale, and apparently in accordance with Spanish custom, (4 Wall; 261), was put in possession on October 30, 1891. But before she received the judicial deed, attachments were levied on Bello Sitio, on a lot afterward called Sauri, “in the center of the same”- and on certain personalty, as the property of Sanchez. About the same time a concurso of creditors, in the nature of bankruptcy proceeding, was begun against him. The trustee apparently went through the form of taking possession of all property of Sanchez, including-Bello Sitio, though without actually evicting Mrs. Diaz. Sanchez-himself later instituted proceedings to cancel the mortgage and judicial deed under which Mrs. Diaz claimed title. He failed in this suit, but the other branches of the litigation continued for 16 years and, after the death of Mrs. Diaz, finally terminated in 1907, when the Supreme Court of the Island held that the attachment should be released, the bankruptcy proceedings dismissed, and all the property returned to Sanchez, except Bello Sitio, which was to remain at the disposal, of the heirs of Mrs. Diaz.

Both parties seem to have considered this a decision in their favor — the plaintiff claiming that it adjudged to him everything that was not Bello Sitio, and the defendants that it restored to them all that was included in the mortgage.

In the meantime Sanchez (in 1906) filed a bill in the United States court for Porto Rico,' in which, as appears from statements in the opinion of the court, he attacked all of the proceedings in the Spanish tribunals as fraudulent, and asked that the mortgage foreclosure be set *237 aside and himself declared to be the owner of Bello Sitio. Whether any issue was therein presented, or legally involved, as to the boundaries of the land, cannot-, in the absence of a copy of the pleadings, be determinéd. On demurrer this bill was dismissed for laches and want of equity.

Sanchez then brought the present suit for the recovery of 134 cuerdas of land, (lying within the exterior limits of Bello Sitio), and $60,000 as damages for improvements destroyed, crops removed, and mesne profits, from 1891 to 1907, during which time, he alleges, that the defendants and their ancestor, Mrs'. Diaz, had usurped the premises, by means of false and fraudulent claims instituted in the Porto Rican courts. On demurrer the court held that the suit should be treated solely as an action in ejectment.

The defendants plead res adjudícala, title by prescription and title under the mortgage foreclosure. We need only consider the question presented by the claim in the answer “that the 400 cuerdas, known as the Hacienda Bello Sitio, includes the several parcels of land described in the plaintiff’s complaint.”

On the first hearing there was a mistrial. On the second, plaintiff offered evidence to show that between 1878 and 1880, he purchased three small lots forming a part of the tract mentioned in the complaint; that on January 5, 1880, he bought Bello Sitio from Monserfáte Garcia, at the same time occupying, as lessee, the lot called Sauri. He admitted that “the land for which he is now suing was in the middle of what was formerly Bello Sitio,” but claimed that Mrs. Diaz knew, or ought to have known, that the mortgage, dated May 28, 1885, did not convey Sauri, because he did not then own that place, and did not purchase it until June 15, 1885, three weeks later. There was evidence that, in 1892, during the bankruptcy, a survey was made with a view to marking the lines between Bello Sitio and the land now sued for; that the agent of *238 Mrs. Diaz was present and assented to the correctness, of the survey. But if his admissions at that time could have bound the principal, or if he had authority to establish a new line by parol, the agreepaent was never executed by any change in possession, the complaint itself alleging that Mrs. Diaz and her heirs had been in possession since 1891. Plaintiff also relied on the records in the Spanish courts, which showed that from the time Mrs. Diaz took possession in' 1891, he, his creditors and the trustee in bankruptcy, had persistently claimed that Sauri, and the- other land now sued for, formed no part of Bello Sitio, and was not included in the mortgage. On the other hand, the defendants insisted that a single, not a divided tract, was conveyed by the mortgage, which, as translated, described the land as being “a, sugar cane plantation known as Bello Sitio . . . composed of 400 cuerdas of land, equivalent to 157 hectares, 21 areas and 59 centiares with its buildings . . . and Other appurtenances used in its cultivation. Said land being bounded on the north by the property of Isabel Siaca and by lands of the plantation 'Convento’ belonging to Pilar Becerril y Torres; on the east by land of Nicolas Telemaco and by lands of Benigno and Sebastian de Santiago; on the south by the property called ‘Ausubal’ belonging to the Succession of Alejan-drina Becerril y Torres, with lands belonging to Concepcion Lopez and by the property belonging to the Successors of Alberto Western and the Luquillo-Fajardo road; and on the west by lands belonging to Enrique Garcia and those of Nicolas Perez and of Gervasio Rivera.”

A plat of Bello Sitio, made in 1907, showed that it contained exactly 415 cuerdas, and the defendants contended that if the 134 sued for were excluded, only 279 would be left, although the mortgage purported to' convey 400 cuerdas. The plaintiff denied that the plat made in 1907 correctly represented the land which he had conveyed in 1885, insisting that, excluding Sauri, he bought 400 cuerdas *239 from Monserrate Garcia, and had conveyed that quantity to Mrs. Diaz. He claimed that if there was any present deficiency, it was due to encroachments by the adjoining land owners. He did not, however, establish what, if any, change had been made, while the surveyor testified that he followed the boundaries of Bello Sitio as indicated by ditches, fences, trees, stakes, and the documents of the. adjoining land owners, all of whom were present when the survey was made and assented to its correctness. The land owners were also examined. Some of them had known the property from the date of the mortgage, and others, who were younger, for a shorter time. But all-testified that they knew of no change in the lines.

The jury found a verdict for the plaintiff.. A motion for a new trial was overruled.

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Bluebook (online)
226 U.S. 234, 33 S. Ct. 36, 57 L. Ed. 201, 1912 U.S. LEXIS 2149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/veve-v-sanchez-scotus-1912.