Fuster y Fuster v. District Court of Guayama
Fuster y Fuster v. District Court of Guayama
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the court.
Rafael Fuster y Fuster brought an action of debt in the District Court of G-uayama against America Paonessa and Julia B. de Moya on a promissory note for $500, with interest at 12 per cent annually in case of default, subscribed by the defendants in solido to the order of Fuster on January 13, 1928, before notary Arcilio Alvarado, and due prior to the filing of the complaint, wherein it was alleged that the defendants refused to pay the debt. Julia Brenes de Moya, one of the defendants, filed a motion to strike out which was partially granted, and the plaintiff filed an amended complaint which contained the same essential averments of the original complaint. Thereupon the defendant demurred. In the decision on the demurrer the court held that the consent of the husband of defendant Julia Brenes de Moya did not appear from the promissory note and, sustaining the demurrer, it ordered that the said defendant be stricken out from the case; where
In deciding the demurrer the district court should have confined itself to sustaining or overruling the demurrer and to entering judgment thereafter as of course or on motion of either party. The “striking out” of a party in the manner done in the case herein is not warranted by law. A party may be stricken out in pursuance of a judgment on the demurrer, which, in a case like the present one, is the proper way to do it.
The jurisprudence cited by the petitioner — Torres v. Calaf, 17 P.R.R. 585, and prior decisions therein confirmed; also González v. Malgor, 27 P.R.R. 354 — is applicable in so far as it holds that decisions on demurrer do not determine a case, and that it becomes necessary that they should be entered as judgments in order to become appealable. The procedure to be followed was further clarified in Medina v. Montalvo et al., 38 P.R.R. 461, wherein we said that an order directing that judgment be entered can not take the place of the judgment itself, but that the judgment should be entered and a copy thereof attached to the record on appeal.
Indeed the decision of the court could and should have been supplemented by the judgment, especially since it was so requested expressly by the plaintiff. Otherwise, the latter would be deprived of his right of appeal for want of an appealable decision.
The court retained jurisdiction over Julia Brenes de Moya, in regard to whom no judgment had been entered. As to her, the case had not been finally determined and the court was in a position to render the judgment sought.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.