Judicial Administration of the Property of Vidal
Judicial Administration of the Property of Vidal
Opinion of the Court
delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.
J osé E. Yidal Amadeo was married three times, but there never was an accounting or liquidation of any of tbe matrimonial partnerships so created until after bis death. He died testate. After some necessary preliminary proceedings tbe court rendered a judgment and an award whereby a distribu
First. The failure to accept as evidence the certificate issued by the secretary of the Municipality of San Juan with regard to the property of the testator that appeared in the list of taxes for the years 1873 to 1878, the duration of the second marriage.
Second. In not applying in a case of doubt the rule set forth in section 1341 of the Civil Code.
The section referred to provides:
‘ ‘ Section 1341. Whenever the liquidation of the partnership property of two or more marriages contracted by the same person may have to be made simultaneously in order to determine the funds of each partnership, every kind of proof shall be admitted, in the absence of inventories, and in ease of doubt, the partnership property shall bq divided between the different partnerships in proportion to the time of their duration and to the property owned by the respective spouses. ’ ’
The special master, with considerable show of reason, decided that the certificate of the secretary of the Municipality of San Juan showing the payment was incompetent evidence, but we prefer to follow the course of the referee and to consider such proof for what it is worth.
Moreover, the payment of taxes is no indication of the value of the property. It may be so heavily mortgaged as practically to have no value. Furthermore, the certificate in this case gave no idea of when and how the property was acquired, and it might have been obtained during the period of the first marriage or before. No presumption as to owner! ship or time of acquisition arises fromi the payment of taxes at any particular dates.
It is true that some of the property described in the certificate is not shown to have belonged either to the first matrimonial society or shown to have been the testator’s separate estate, -but as none of such alleged property of the second marriage was shown to have remained in the possession of the testator at the death of the second wife, the presumption; if any, was that such property was consumed or disposed of during the pendency of the second marriage. The specific property remaining in the hands of the testator at the time of his death are all accounted for as having been acquired before or after his second marriage, and the presumption would be that such property was ganancial property of the first or third marriages. If any of the property apparently of the third marriage was acquired by the use of funds or property acquired during the second marriage, something more than the production of a tax receipt was necessary to show that fact or. raise a doubt concerning whether there was in fact any property belonging to such conjugal society.
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.