Tyrell v. Saurí
Tyrell v. Saurí
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
In reversing the judgment entered by the lower court refusing jurisdiction in this case—Tyrell v. Saurí, 71 P.R.R. 429, we said at p. 440: “We have no desire to express an opinion as to whether the evidence in this case is sufficient to declare the defendant a spendthrift. That is the mission of the lower court at first instance. . . .”
On remand, the lower court proceeded to decide the ease on the merits and on the grounds set forth in an extensive opinion containing findings of fact and conclusions of law, it again dismissed the complaint. Feeling aggrieved, the plaintiffs appealed and as an only error they contend that the trial court erred in weighing the evidence with “noticeable” passion, prejudice, and partiality.
. (a) a disorderly and loose conduct — not merely imprudent — in the management or use of his own patrimony, either due to a disorderly spirit or to disorderly habits; (6) that such conduct be habitual, inasmuch as the more or less irregular or excessive acts, but isolated or purely circumstantial, can not be characterized as constituting the legal condition of prodigality; (c) if the preservation of the patrimony is unreasonably jeopardized to the prejudice of those persons who have a right of action and are attached to the prodigal by very close family ties and to whom the latter is bound by moral and legal obligations.” (Italics ours.)
The complaint herein was filed on March 10, 1949 and alleged, as acts of prodigality carried out by the defendant, the following:
“. . . that due to his age and character, the defendant has been recently and habitually carrying out acts of prodigality with respect to third persons who are not his relatives, making gratuitous gifts of considerable sums of money and other acts of prodigality, capriciously wasting his estate to the prejudice of the plaintiffs as wife and daughter, respectively, and defendant’s sole forced heirs.” (Italics ours.)
After making an analysis of the evidence for the plaintiffs, the lower court arrived at the conclusion that the only actions of the defendant which, in a deficient manner and
By virtue of those facts the lower court considered that the requisites or patterns (a), (6), and (c) contemplated by the Judgment of the Supreme Court of Spain, supra, had not been established by the plaintiffs since it had not been shown: (1) that defendant’s conduct had been disorderly and loose in the management or use of his patrimony; (2) that such conduct had been habitual, inasmuch as his acts in connection with Maria Luisa Antongiorgi, even accepting that all of them had been proved, were purely circumstantial and isolated, and rather irregular; and (3) that the prodigal acts alleged unreasonably jeopardized the preservation of his patrimony to the prejudice of the plaintiffs as defendant’s heirs.
From a thorough examination of the evidence we conclude that the only error assigned by the appellants was not committed. Said evidence is insufficient to meet the test required to establish a case of prodigality.
The appellants argue that Dr. Fernández Marina’s testimony shows that the defendant suffers from a hypomaniac condition whose characteristic is that he is gradually losing the capacity to control his primitive impulses, especially in the sexual aspect, and that this disease would gradually render him incapable in the future in other aspects of his personality and that the defendant was wholly incompetent to properly manage his estate. Thus, in fact, testified the expert. However, the court was not bound by said testimony
The judgment of the Supreme Court of Spain of June 19, 1915, 133 Jurisprudencia Civil 729,
“Whereas, as held by this Court, since the Civil Code does not define prodigality we are bound to acknowledge that it admits it in the general and grammatical sense of the word, namely, of waste and consumption of the estate in vain and useless things, the sense of which coincides with the sense previously attributed thereto by the 5th Act, title 11, 5th Partida; and this having been established, in order that a person may deserve the characterization of spendthrift and deserve to be applied the limitations which in the exercise of his civil capacity are fixed by §§ 221 and following of the aforesaid Code, due regard must be given as a characteristic essential note, not to the more or less morality or legality of his acts in regard to the administration and disposition of his properties and to challenge which in each specific case the law provides adequate and efficacious action, but rather to that of having performed them arbitrarily and capriciously, with no other purpose or end that the irrational complacence which the dissipation and squandering of such properties might produce with the spirit of the*331 person performing them, despite the fact that they are intended for the satisfaction and .fulfilment of necessary human ends and that the property right thereon is based on such destination.” (Italics ours.)
Neither can we accept appellants’ contention that the Judge of the lower court acted with “noticeable” passion, prejudice, and partiality in the weighing of the evidence. His repeated references in his findings as to the fact that the witnesses had consistently testified' by virtue of leading questions and intimations of their attorney are amply established in the record. It is true that the case was heard in default, but it was not the mission of the court, as the appellants contend, to object to the questions asked by their attorney. The reference made toward the fact that there was no evidence to the effect that defendant’s properties were worth $500,000, as it was erroneously alleged that the court a quo stated, is not by itself demonstrative of passion, prejudice, or partiality. Not giving credence to the valuation of $75,000 set upon the properties by Mr. Nicole, for the reasons it gave, the court was compelled to make inferences, pursuant to the evidence as a whole, regarding the value thereof. At any rate, that was a most essential fact which the appellants had the burden to prove for, according to the importance of a person’s patrimony, it may or may not be considered that the gifts he makes and expenses he incurs affect the hereditary rights which the persons authorized by § 188 of the Civil Code, 1930 ed., to demand the decree of prodigality, may have in said patrimony.
Just as it is a well-established doctrine in this jurisdiction that we must respect the findings of fact of lower courts, based on the evidence presented — Rule 52(a) of the Rules of Civil Procedure — the same doctrine prevails in Spain and especially in these actions for prodigality it has been decided that “. . . it may well be asserted that, for civil purposes today a spendthrift is the prodigal or squanderer who wastes away his estate in vain, useless, and superfluous
The judgment appealed from will be affirmed.
People v. Dones, 56 P.R.R. 201; Candelario v. Pension Board, 45 P.R.R. 417 and León v. Industrial Commission, 58 P.R.R. 905.
The judgment of March 25, 1942, swpra, referred to this Judgment which was cited by the lower court.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.