Alemañy v. García
Alemañy v. García
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an appeal by the defendant from a judgment of the District Court of Mayagüez of February 28, 1917, sustaining the complaint and ordering in consequence that the plaintiff be restored to the possession of a parcel of land of sixteen acres forming part of a property of forty-seven acres and that his possession be respected by the defendant, with the costs, expenses, disbursements and attorney fees against the defendant.
In the amended complaint filed on December 19, 1916, in an “action to recover possession” the plaintiff, Caspar Ale-mañy y Oliver, alleged as material grounds for his action that by a public deed executed to him on July 17, 1915, by the marshal of the District Court of Mayagüez in compliance-with an order of the said court, he acquired at public auc
The complaint. concludes with a prayer for judgment ordering that the plaintiff be restored to the possession of the sixteen acres of land and that such possession be respected by the defendant, without prejudice to the lawful exercise by the latter of any right to which he may deem himself entitled, with the costs, expenses, disbursements and plaintiff’s attorney fees against the defendant in the capacity in which he has acted.
In answering the complaint the defendant pleaded that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action and further alleged that when he showed the plaintiff his letters as administrator of the property of the deceased Isidro Garcia, said plaintiff voluntarily delivered to him the possession of the parcel of sixteen acres, of which the plaintiff was in possession without any right thereto; that said property of sixteen acres does not form part of any property belonging to the plaintiff, for it belongs to the Succession of Isidro Garcia, who died on October 25, 1881, after having purchased it on January 29, 1880, from Juan Santos Soto-mayor, whose title was recorded in the registry of property
The case was brought to trial and the Mayagfiez court rendered the judgment which, as we said at the beginning of this opinion, is the basis of the present appeal.
The appellant makes the following assignments of error:
First. — That the court erred in considering and holding that the action is one to recover possession since it really is an action of ejectment, according to the allegations of the complaint. •
Second. — That the court erred in weighing the evidence and the judgment is contrary to law.
TKir'd. — That the plaintiff’s evidence is insufficient to sustain the complaint.
The action brought by the plaintiff is a possessory action, for the title of the complaint styles it an "action to recover possession,” and this is confirmed by the prayer, which is for restoration to possession only and not for a judgment of ownership. It is also shown by the complaint itself in which the plaintiff alleges that he was in possession and was unlawfully deprived thereof, by the defendant. The allegations of ownership by virtue of which the plaintiff is entitled to possession and of its consequent record in the registry may be unnecessary, but they do not change the object of the action.
It is true that there is no evidence to show that the defendant forcibly took the land in question from the plaintiff, but this was not necessary to establish the plaintiff’s case. In order that the said action may prosper, the only indispensable requisites are the actual possession of the property by the plaintiff and his deprivation of such possession by an unlawful act of the defendant. There is no doubt that Gaspar Alemañy y Oliver was in possession of the sixteen acres of land and that defendant Epifanio Garcia Hernandez unlawfully deprived him of such possession. The defendant,
The administrator, Garcia Hernandez, had no right to take possession of a property which was in the possession of a person who was not one of the heirs of Isidro García who died on October 25, 1881, and if the heirs of Isidro Garcia had any right to the ownership of the said property because it had belonged to their ancestor, they could have exercised that right in the proper manner by soliciting the aid of the courts.
According to section 443 of the Civil Code, any person who believes that he has a right or action to deprive another of the holding of a thing shall petition the assistance of the competent authorities, provided the holder refuses to deliver up the said thing. And section 448 provides that every possessor has a right to be respected in his possession and if he be disturbed therein he shall be protected or reinstated in such possession by the means established in the laws of procedure.
■The plaintiff did not deliver the property to the defendant
For the foregoing reasons the judgment appealed from should be
Affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.