The former practice in regard to appeals from the Supreme Court
of Porto Rico provided by § 35 of the Foraker Act of 1900, was
superseded by § 244, Jud.Code, subjecting appeals from that
court to the same regulations as appeals from the district courts
of the United States, thus extending the review of this Court to
include questions of fact, and § 244 has been repealed by
section three of the Act of January 28, 1915, with a reservation of
cases then pending in this Court.
In this case, the record discloses no sufficient ground for
reversing the court below on questions of fact.
The courts of Porto Rico having held, prior to the decision in
this case,
Page 239 U. S. 284
that a judgment in a proceeding under § 395 of the Mortgage
Law to establish title was not
res judicata as between the
party instituting the proceeding and a party opposing it, and
having also held that § 395 had not been repealed either
directly or by implication,
held that such prior decisions
had stood so long unchallenged as to have become a rule of
property, and should not now be overruled.
A party defeated in a statutory possessory proceeding in an
inferior court, which a higher court has already held not to be a
proceeding in which the judgment is
res judicata, may rely
upon such decision and refrain from appealing from such adverse
judgment, and bring suit in the courts to set it aside.
19 Porto Rico 162 affirmed.
The facts, which involve the title to land in, and the
construction of the Mortgage Law of, Porto Rico, are stated in the
opinion.
MR. JUSTICE PITNEY delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was commenced by the present appellant in the District
Court of San Juan to set aside as null and void certain possessory
proceedings instituted by Paula Chaves in the year 1895 with
respect to an estate containing 50 cuerdas of land, situate at a
place known as Honduras, in the Ward of Sabana Llana, in the
Municipality of Rio Piedras, Porto Rico, and the resulting entry of
possession in the registry of property of San Juan, and to require
the defendants (the present appellees), who are children and heirs
of Paula Chaves, to vacate the property and deliver up possession
to the plaintiff as the lawful owner. The district court rendered
judgment in his favor, but the Supreme Court of Porto Rico reversed
this judgment and
Page 239 U. S. 285
dismissed the complaint. 19 P.R.Sup.Ct. 162. The present appeal
was taken under § 244, Jud.Code (Act of March 3, 1911, 36
Stat. 1087, 1157, c. 231), it appearing that the estate in question
exceeds $5,000 in value.
The transcript contains, in addition to the evidence, a
"statement of facts in the nature of a special verdict," made up
for the purposes of the present appeal in the manner contemplated
by § 35 of the Foraker Act (of April 12, 1900, c. 191, 31
Stat. 77, 85).
See Rosaly v. Graham y Fraser, 227 U.
S. 584,
227 U. S. 589;
Ochoa v. Hernandez y Morales, 230 U.
S. 139,
230 U. S. 143.
But that practice was superseded by § 244, Jud.Code, which
subjected appeals taken from the Supreme Court of Porto Rico to the
same regulations as appeals from the district courts of the United
States, thus extending our review so as to include questions of
fact.{1}
Plaintiff asserted that the 50 cuerdas were part of a tract of
112 cuerdas, and this in turn part of a tract containing between
140 and 150 cuerdas formerly owned by Alonso Hernandez, who
acquired it in the year 1854; that Hernandez hypothecated this
property to the Spanish government as security for the faithful
performance of his duties as collector of internal revenue; that,
because of an embezzlement of public funds by him, the property was
seized by the government in the year 1875; that about twenty years
later, on June 5, 1895, it took possession of the land, and, on
September 14, in that year, possession was recorded in the registry
in favor of the government, without prejudice to third parties who
might have a better title, and that, on October 15, 1897, the tract
of 112 cuerdas was sold at auction to one Cuadrado, who transferred
his right to plaintiff, and thereafter, by deed of
Page 239 U. S. 286
October 17, 1898, the proper public official conveyed the land
to plaintiff. As to the source of the title of Hernandez, plaintiff
claims to have shown by evidence that, prior to the year 1819, the
whole tract was inherited by Eugenia de la Cruz and her brother,
Jose, from their grandparents, and the brother conveyed his share
to the sister; that, in that year, Eugenia sold the land without
deed to Juana Maria de Otero, and that, after the death of Eugenia
and in the year 1836, her son and testamentary executor instituted
proceedings to prove the inheritance of the estate by his mother
and the sale of it to Mrs. Otero. In these proceedings, which were
in evidence, several witnesses testified that Eugenia de la Cruz
was the owner of the property then in question for many years prior
to the sale of it to Mrs. Otero in 1819, but agreed in saying that,
at the time of testifying and for some years before, one Juan
Caneti was in possession of it under some title unknown to them.
The testimony having been forwarded to the court of San Juan, it
was ordered that the owners of the adjacent properties and the
sindico procurador be heard. The property owners waived hearing. It
does not appear that Caneti was either summoned or heard. The
sindico made no objection to approving the investigation,
"for although the witnesses say that said property is possessed
by Juan Caneti, this does not annul the ownership had by Eugenia,
and Juana may have leased or sold it to Caneti."
The investigation was thereupon approved by the court.
Hernandez's title was derived in the year 1854 under a public deed
made by a brother and four sisters named Otero, in their own name
and for two other brothers named, for
"an estate in the barrio of Honduras, Rio Piedras, which is
bounded by lands belonging to the Marchioness de Leon and to Jose
de la Cruz, and is composed of 140 or 150 cuerdas, the exact number
of which will be stated in the deed to be executed for the
purpose,
Page 239 U. S. 287
as well as the demarcation thereof, when the same is
surveyed."
Defendants (the present appellees) alleged that Juan Caneti was
the true owner at least of the tract of 50 cuerdas now in dispute;
that from him it passed to his son, Santos Caneti, who in the year
1867 sold it on installments to Ramon Clemente, the husband of
Paula Chaves, from whom it descended to Paula and the defendants,
who are her lawful children by Clemente. There was substantial
evidence tending to support these allegations. It was also shown
quite clearly that Paula Chaves was in continuous possession from
the year 1875 until her death in 1899, after which event defendants
held continuous possession down to the time of the suit. In the
year 1895, Paula instituted proceedings for the recording of her
possession, in which the adjoining owners were summoned, testimony
was taken, and the proceedings were approved November 7, 1895, and
recorded in the registry of property in the month of March
following.
The Supreme Court of Porto Rico treated the present suit as
partaking of the character of an action of ejectment to such extent
that it devolved upon plaintiff at the outset to prove that he was
the lawful owner of the lands claimed by and in the possession of
defendants. The court reviewed the evidence, found that plaintiff's
chain of title did not clearly identify the location or boundaries
of the land claimed by him, that the evidence of Hernandez's title
was dubious, and, while the tract of 50 cuerdas was clearly
comprised within the boundaries which the Spanish government fixed
for the properties sold by it to plaintiff, there was so much doubt
respecting the question of ownership as to render it impossible to
reach the conclusion that plaintiff had proved his title. It was
pointed out that, in the proceedings instituted in 1836, no
description of the property was given, that the witnesses then
examined failed to establish the possession of Mrs. Otero, but
did
Page 239 U. S. 288
refer to the fact of possession by Juan Caneti, who was neither
summoned nor heard; that it was not established in what manner the
Oteros who made the deed of sale in 1854 to Hernandez were
connected with Mrs. Otero named in the proceedings of 1836; that it
was not shown how the seizure of the property by the Spanish
government in 1875 was carried into effect, or the quantity or
location of the property seized; that there was no record of the
details connected with the act of taking possession of the 112
cuerdas by the mayor of Rio Piedras in behalf of the government on
June 5, 1895, as alleged by plaintiff, but that, even if those 112
cuerdas included the 50 cuerdas in controversy, it appeared that
Paula Chaves, who at that time was in possession of the 50 cuerdas,
not only remained in possession, but, for the purposes of the
possessory title proceedings, brought by her later in the same
year, obtained a certificate from the mayor, the secretary, and the
sindico of the Municipality of Rio Piedras, stating that, according
to the records in the municipal archives she was in possession
under title of ownership, and that, from the whole of the evidence,
it appeared that the Canetis had held continuous possession in
early times, and the Chaves family at least from 1875.
Our examination of the record discloses no sufficient ground for
reversing the Supreme Court of Porto Rico upon the questions of
fact.
The chief reliance of appellant is upon certain questions of
law, the first insistence being that the court erred in denying the
force and effect of
res judicata to a decision rendered by
the District Court of San Juan May 31, 1907, in a former action
between the present parties. It appears that defendants, as heirs
of Paula Chaves, instituted a proceeding in the Municipal Court of
San Juan for the purpose of converting the entry of possession of
the 50 cuerdas, previously made in her favor, into a dominion
title; that plaintiff opposed the conversion; upon the trial,
Page 239 U. S. 289
decision was rendered in his favor, and on appeal the District
Court of San Juan declared that the 50 cuerdas were not in
possession of defendants, but were part of the estate of 112
cuerdas belonging to plaintiff, that he was in lawful possession,
and that the heirs of Chaves had no right to convert their recorded
possession into a dominion title.
The supreme court held that this decision was not
res
judicata. Appellant cites to the contrary, § 188 of the
local Code of Civil Procedure (Comp.Stat.P.R. § 5172), which
declares that "a judgment is a final determination of the rights of
the parties in an action or proceeding," and §§ 59 and
101 of the law of evidence (Comp.Stat.P.R. §§ 1427,
1469), which are to the effect that, as to parties notified, "a
judgment or final order in an action or special proceeding" is
conclusive.{2}
Page 239 U. S. 290
The question is whether the decision of May 31, 1907, was "a
judgment or final order in an action or special proceeding" within
the meaning of the sections cited. The proceeding was instituted
under Article 395 of the Mortgage Law (Comp.Stat.P.R., p. 1108),
which enables an owner of property having no written title to
record his ownership upon proving it before the judge of the court
of first instance, or municipal court, under prescribed
formalities. Notice is given to the person from whom the property
may have been acquired, or his predecessor in interest, and to the
representative of the department of public prosecution. The judge
is to
"receive written pleadings upon the claims and evidence which
may have been presented by the representative of the department of
public prosecution, or by the other persons who may have attended
the proceedings,"
and in view of their allegations, he is to decide upon the
evidence and declare whether the ownership of the property involved
has been established; any person interested may appeal from this
decision, and "if said decision is accepted or affirmed, it shall
constitute a sufficient title for the record of the ownership."
There seems to be no question that such a decision, as the law
stood at the time of the annexation of the island to the United
States, was not conclusive upon the question of ownership, even as
between the parties participating in the proceeding, but was
subject to be set aside in an ordinary action.
By Article 413 of the Mortgage Law, it was declared: "None of
the articles of which this law consists can be repealed except by
virtue of another special law." And by § 8 of the Foraker Act
of April 12, 1900, c. 191, 31 Stat.
Page 239 U. S. 291
79, c. 191, the law was continued in force until amended or
repealed by the legislative assembly or by act of Congress. The
Code of Civil Procedure was enacted by the legislative assembly
March 10, 1904. The law of evidence was enacted March 9, 1905. As
already shown, it refers to "actions and special proceedings." Upon
the same day, another act was approved entitled, "An Act Relating
to Special Legal Proceedings." (Comp.Stat.P.R., p. 300.) It
contains provisions for the recording of public instruments and
wills, for declaration of heirship, administration of decedents'
estates, appointment of guardians, the care of the persons and
properties of minors, and other matters, and in its final section
there is this declaration:
"All previous laws in conflict herewith are hereby repealed, but
the special proceedings established in the Civil Code, in the
Mortgage Law and its regulations, and in any other law, insofar as
not provided for by this act, remain in force."
The effect of these subsequent enactments upon the special
proceedings established in the Mortgage Law and regulations was
considered by the Supreme Court of Porto Rico in
Gimenez v.
Brenes (1906), 10 P. R. Co. 124, 131, 133, etc., and again in
Gonzales v. People (1906), 10 P.R.Sup.Ct. 458, 462. In the
former case, it was held, with respect to summary proceedings for
the collection of a mortgage debt under Article 128, in the latter
with respect to a special proceeding under Article 395, that the
provisions of the Mortgage Law remained in force notwithstanding
the Code of Civil Procedure, and in the latter case it was
distinctly held that the proceedings to establish ownership did not
produce the effect of
res judicata. This was reaffirmed by
the same court in
Calderon v. Carcia (1908), 14
P.R.Sup.Ct. 407, 416.
And see Ochoa v. Hernandez y
Morales, 230 U. S. 139,
230 U. S. 151.
These decisions of the Supreme Court of Porto Rico are based upon
reasoning that, while conceding the full authority
Page 239 U. S. 292
of the legislative assembly to repeal or modify the Mortgage
Law, in effect invokes Article 413 of that law (continued in force
as a part of it by the Foraker Act) as prescribing a rule of
interpretation to be applied in testing the intention of the
lawmaking body as expressed in subsequent enactments. No express
repeal of Article 395 of the Mortgage Law being found, and the
question being one of implied repeal, the court deemed it manifest
that the legislative assembly, in adopting the Code of Civil
Procedure and the law of evidence, did so with full knowledge of
Article 413 of the Mortgage Law, and therefore intended no implied
repeal. And the law of evidence having been enacted
contemporaneously with the act relating to special proceedings, the
latter act was looked to in construing § 59 of the former, and
the express reservation of the special proceedings established in
the Mortgage Law and its regulations was treated as showing that
they were to be left in existence with their former force and
effect, and no greater. This view, to say the least, is a
reasonable one, and since it is plain that the decisions, having
stood so long unchallenged, have established a rule of property, it
seems to us that they ought not now to be overruled. It is worthy
of remark that
Gonzales v. People, supra, was decided more
than a full year before the decision of the District Court of San
Juan which appellant insists ought to be treated as conclusive.
Defendants may well have refrained from taking an appeal from the
decision of the district court in reliance upon the previous
decision of the higher tribunal that it had no conclusive
effect.
The remaining questions of law raised by appellant resolve
themselves, upon analysis, into a mere criticism of the process of
reasoning by which the court reached its conclusions upon the
facts. We find them without substantial merit so far as their
effect upon the result is concerned.
Judgment affirmed.
Section 244, Judicial Code, was repealed by Act of January 28,
1915, 38 Stat. 804, c. 22, but with a reservation of cases then
pending in this Court, as the present case was.
"(1427) Sec. 59. The effect of a judgment or final order in an
action or special proceeding before a court or judge of Porto Rico
. . . having jurisdiction to pronounce the judgment or order, is as
follows:"
"1. In case of a judgment or order against a specific thing, or
in respect to the probate of a will, or the administration of the
estate of a decedent, or in respect to the personal, political, or
legal condition or relation of a particular person, the judgment or
order is conclusive upon the title to the thing, the will, or
administration, or the condition or relation of the person;"
"2. In other cases, the judgment or order is, in respect to the
matter directly adjudged, conclusive between the parties and their
successors in interest by title subsequent to the commencement of
the action or special proceeding, litigating for the same thing
under the same title and in the same capacity, provided they have
notice, actual or constructive, of the pendency of the action or
proceeding."
"(1428) Sec. 60. Other judicial orders of a court or judge of
Porto Rico . . . create a disputable presumption, according to the
matter directly determined, between the same parties and their
representatives and successors in interest by title subsequent to
the commencement of the action or special proceeding, litigating
for the same thing under the same title and in the same capacity. .
. ."
"
* * * *"
"(1469) Sec. 101. The following presumptions, and no others, are
deemed conclusive:"
"
* * * *"
"6. The judgment or order of a court, when declared by this Code
to be conclusive. . . ."