Capó v. Romaní
Capó v. Romaní
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The district court, after a trial on the merits, dismissed a
The argument assumes that plaintiff’s predecessors in interest were in constructive possession of the strip in controversy. Most of appellant’s contentions depend, either for their existence or for their supposed prejudicial effect, upon the soundness of that assumption. Practically the only basis in the record for such an assumption is the fact that the deed of conveyance referred to in the first assignment was recorded in the registry of property. It is an undisputed fact that none of plaintiff’s predecessors in interest back to and including the common source was, at the date of any of the deeds in plaintiff’s chain of title or at any time thereafter, in actual possession of the strip in controversy. If none of these vendors was at the time 'of his conveyance the owner of that strip, his deed could not vest any title thereto in the vendee. The recording of the Colmore deed did not confer upon Capó any better title than Colmore had.
In 1906, Courtenay Cample John Nairn y Perpal was the owner of three cuerdas of land, the remainder of eleven cuerdas previously acquired and in part disposed of by him. Prom this parcel of three cuerdas he segregated and sold July 12, 1906, to Charles M. • Boerman, 1337.05 meters, hounded on the north, 27.50 meters, by the maritime zone; on the south, 28 meters, hy another lot belonging to the .vendor; on the east, 44 meters, hy land belonging to Elias-Allende, formerly heirs of Allende; and on the west, 55.50 meters, by another lot property of the vendor measuring 26.50 meters on the north and 27 meters on the south, toward the east from Nairn Avenue, which is forty feet wide. Boerman entered into possession and proceeded to indicate the boundaries of the lot by planting coconut palms along lines previously marked by stakes. Bomani derived title from Boerman. The. actual possession established by Boerman has never been interrupted. -The land in controversy is a strip of 189 square meters and 47 centimeters extending across the southern portion of the lot occupied hy Bomani and his predecessors in interest. Its boundary lines on three sides, east, west and south, are marked by the coconut palms which Boerman planted.
In November’, 1906, Nairn sold to John D. Leavitt 7,150 meters described as bounded on the north by the sea and the maritime zone and for a distance of twenty-eight meters by the Boerman lot, on the west by Nairn Avenue and on the East hy land belonging to Elias Allende, now his heirs, and for a distance of fifty-five meters by Boerman. The southern boundary was Washington Street. ' It was' stip
Colmore segregated and sold a number of lots. One of these, which he sold to Capó in March, 1919, was described as 795.77 meters, on Nairn Avenue, bounded on the north by a house belonging to Doña Catalina widow of Cuyar, and for a distance of 27 meters and 19 centimeters by a strip of land in the possession of widow Boerman, and on the east, for a distance of 5.29 meters, by the same strip, and for a distance of 8.12 meters by a lot the property of the widow Hord, formerly belonging to the heirs of Elias Allende and on the south by the remainder of the parcel from which the lot so conveyed was segregated. More specifically the deed recites that to the north and east of the lot conveyed to Capó lies a strip of land 189.47 square meters occupied by the widow Boerman but claimed by Colmore, bounded on the north 28 meters by the Boerman lot, on the east, 8.31 meters, by the Hord lot, on the south, 28 meters, and on the west, 5.29 meters, by the Capó lot. In December 1925, Colmore also sold to Capó the 189.47 meters. Capó recorded his deed and brought this action to recover the 189.47 meters.
The stenographic record of the proceedings in the district court contains a statement by counsel for plaintiff:: that the trial had begun at some previous time at which some documentary evidence had been introduced; that a stipulation had been filed; that plaintiff had introduced a plat and four certificates; and that this plat and these certificates had been already marked exhibits A, B, C, D and E. Later, the record explains the impossibility of transcribing exhibit “A,” the map, and says that the original will be sent up. The map is not before us and no order for its transmission seems
•Exhibit “B” is a tax rendition sheet for the fiscal year 1922-23, in which a judicial administrator, as representative of the Boerman heirs, rendered the Boerman lot as containing 1614.82 square meters. The judicial administrator tes-, tified at the trial that shortly after his appointment a tax assessor appeared with this tax sheet which the witness signed; that witness at that time did not know the area of the lot; and that the only matter discussed by him with the tax assessor was the amount of the assessment. Exhibits “C” and “D” are two rendition sheets for the fiscal year 1923-24. In one, Romani renders a 2/5 undivided interest in 1337.05 square meters. In the other, which is unsigned, the other 3/5 of the same area appear in the name of Boer-man. The area given in exhibits “C” and “D” is the area specified in the deed. Exhibit “E” does not appear in the transcript.
From the deed to Boerman it appears that Nairn had previously carved out of the eleven and one-third cuerdas and sold three and two-thirds cuerdas to the Presbyterian Board of Home Missions, and four cuerdas to the Women’s Home Missionary Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church. The registry of property show's other segregations as follows: October 1906, Benjamin S. Haywood, a lot seventy-five feet front by a hundred and forty-five more or less in depth; December 1906, ¡7,150 square meters to John D. Leavitt; April 1910, Haywood, a lot thirty feet in width by seventy-five feet in depth; June 1910, Frank F. Harrington, 182 feet on the north, 178 feet, 8 inches on the south, 85 feet on the east and 85 feet on the west; July 1910, Frank J. Brizzie, 178 feet 8 inches on the north, 176 feet on the south, 75 feet on the east, and 75 feet on the west; and September 1917, a strip twenty-five feet in width by 143 feet to Edward Mayers. The record does not show when Washington Street and Nairn Avenue were laid out. They are mentioned for
An arithmetical circulation made by the district judge and based on the number of meters specified in the deed from Graves to Colmore and on the sum total of the number of meters specified in the subsequent sales by Colmore, including the sale of the strip now in controversy, shows a shortage of fifty-nine square meters in addition to the' one hundred and eighty-nine meters and forty-seven centimeters which Capó now seeks to recover from Romani. In other words, Colmore’s shortage on this basis would be two hundred and forty-eight meters forty-seven centimeters instead of 189.47 meters. • In making this calculation, however, the district judge assumed that the difference between the area specified in the deed from Graves to Colmore and the total area of the lots segregated and sold by Colmore was a shortage, not a remainder. As a matter of fact there is no satisfactory evidence on which to base such a conclusion.
The first of the two deeds from Colmore to Capó makes' no mention of any previous segregations. The lot is described as bounded on the north in part by a house belonging to a certain Catalina widow of Cuyar. Aside from this circumstance the deed reads as if the lot conveyed thereby to Capó'
Colmore testified as a witness at the trial. 'He assumes in his testimony as did the district judge in his opinion, without attempting to show, the existence of a shortage. He testified that at the time of the purchase from Graves he had a mensura by one Castro. He was then permitted to say without objection that Castro had told him: that there was a portion which Mrs'. Boerman said belonged to her; that she was in possession of it without any right thereto; and that he (Castro) “had studied her fence” and that of witness. Colmore also said that Castro had showed him on the plat the portion occupied by Mrs. Boerman without title thereto and it was a strip “in the southern portion of her lot and another smaller piece in the western portion,” and that this was the land conveyed to Capó in the second deed. This testimony, as well as the documentary evidence falls far short of establishing the existence of any shortage. As in the case of the documentary evidence, it furnishes no basis for a conclusion that the strip in controversy was included in the land conveyed by Nairn to Leavitt and subsequently by Graves to Colmore.
The showing as to the existence of any excess in the possession of defendant is equally unsatisfactory. From the
We need not rest our decision, however, upon the failure of plaintiff to establish either a shortage or an excess. Even if plaintiff had established the existence of a shortage in the remainder actually possessed by Colmore after numerous segregations, the actual boundaries of which, as well as those
There is nothing in the record before us upon which to base a conclusion that the district court abused its discretion in awarding the costs to defendant.
The judgment appealed from must be affirmed.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.