Llompart v. Moll
Llompart v. Moll
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
“We adjudge that we should sustain, and do sustain, this complaint and in virtue whereof we hold that the defendant is bound to maintain his wife, and it is made optional with him whether he shall pay for the same in cash to the amount of twenty dollars monthly, which is the amount hereby fixed, or receive and maintain his said wife in his own home, without special imposition of costs. ”
Notice of this judgment was served upon the parties on the day of the month and year above mentioned, and was consented to, because no appeal whatever was taken therefrom.
On the 18th of said month Attorney Antonio Sarmiento, in the name of the husband, Sebastian Moll, presented to the court a written statement to the effect that his client was disposed to receive and maintain his wife in his home.
Notice of said statement was ordered to be served upon the plaintiff who, accepting service of the same, prayed that an order issue to the manager of the Banco Español requiring him to deduct from the monthly salary of Moll, as an employee, the sum of twenty dollars to be delivered to his wife.
On September 16, 1903, the following order was made, to-wit:
“The application is denied because the obligation of the defendant is optional, and it has not been shown that he refused to receive his wife in his home, or to comply with the obligation to maintain her, imposed by the judgment. ’ ’
We will now consider the nature of tbe decision appealed from in order to determine whether or not tbe appeal taken lies.
Section 4 of tbe Act of the Legislative Assembly approved March 12, 1903, tbe purpose of which was to change tbe Supreme Court of this Island into a court of appeals, reads as follows:
“In all cases where reference is made in the Law of Civil Procedure to actions in cassation, the same shall be construed to mean actions on appeal.”
Tbis means to say, that it has been so constructed in other cases by tbis court, that an appeal lies in all cases in which an appeal in cassation would lie, and, in contrariro censu, that an appeal will not lie in cases where an appeal in cassation would not lie according to law.
Having set down this premise, sight should not be lost of the fact that the appeal was taken from an order entered in compliance with the judgment, and article 1693 of the former Law of Civil Procedure reads as follows:
“No appeal in cassation will lie from orders entered by audiencias in proceedings for the execution of judgment, unless substantial points are decided which are not controverted in the action nor decided in the judgment, or which are contradictory thereto. ’ ’
So, then, if it is not maintained nor even, indicated, because it could not have been indicated or maintained, that in the
So ordered.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.