Torres v. Registrar of Property
Torres v. Registrar of Property
Opinion of the Court
By public deed No. 7, executed January 30, 1914, before Notary Enrique Rincón Plumey, Luisa Pellicier conveyed to Apolinaria Torres the ownership of a house belonging to the former situated at No. 135 Sol Street of this city and
The said deed having been presented in the Registry of Property of San Juan, Section 1, for record, the registrar admitted the same to record as to the property conveyed, but denied its admission as to the assignment of the mortgage credit on the. grounds that it did not appear recorded in the name of the assignor and that there was no consideration for the assignment inasmuch as only the said property conveyed was charged with the annuity, all of which was set forth in the registrar’s decision of February 27, 1914, which is submitted to our consideration in an appeal taken by Apolinaria Torres from' that part thereof which denied admission to record of the assignment of the mortgage credit for lack of consideration.
This is a contract for a life annuity entered into between Luisa Pellicier and Apolinaria Torres.
Section 1704 of our Civil Code gives the following definition of such a contract:
“Section 1704.- — An aleatory contract of annuity binds the debtor to pay a pension or annual income to one or more specified persons for life, for a principal (capital) in personal or real property, the ownership of which is at once transferred to said debtor charged with the income.”
In this regard the distinguished commentator Manresa says that the contracting parties may covenant at the beginning that the same property conveyed in ownership shall secure the payment of the annuity in the form of a mortgage, antichresis, or pledge, although ordinarily the annuity does not carry with it such a guaranty.
It cannot be sustained, then, that there is no consideration for the assignment of the mortgage credit, as is claimed by the registrar, for the reason that the house property alone is charged with the annuity. There exists a consideration for the assignment of the mortgage credit, for on account of the assignment of said credit and the conveyance of the house together Apolinaria Torres bound herself to pay an annuity to Luisa Pellieier, and although the latter could have left the payment of the annuity unsecured, she desired to secure its payment in conveying, as she did, the ownership of the house subject to the payment of the annuity without encumbering the' mortgage credit assigned.
And it cannot be inferred therefrom that the assignment of the mortgage credit constitutes a gift pure and simple, because, as we have stated previously, the consideration for the annuity is derived jointly from the conveyance of the
For the foregoing reasons the decision of the registrar should be reversed in so far as it denies admission to record of the mortgage credit because of lack of consideration, and sustained on the ground that the said credit was not recorded in the name of the assignor. '
Reversed as to defect of lack of consideration.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.