Mattei v. Registrar of Property of Utuado
Mattei v. Registrar of Property of Utuado
Opinion of the Court
delivered the opinion of the Court.
The most remote decision of this Court which is relevant to the solution of the juridical problem now before us is Palou v. Registrar of Property, 19 P.R.R. 352, decided in 1913, more than half a century ago. We considered therein the need for judicial authorization for a guardian of an incapacitated person to consolidate her real property pursuant to the provisions of subdivision 5 of § 282 of the Civil Code then in force,
Hidalgo v. Registrar, 37 P.R.R. 446 (1927), where Palou, supra, is cited with approval, elaborates further on the doctrine, and after considering various situations — leases under certain terms, cancellation of a mortgage, acceptance of a donation — agrees that evidently under the principle of hermeneutics of noscitur a sociis the purpose of subdivision 5 of § 212 is to require judicial authorization for the making of recordable contracts whereby the real property or property rights of minors are alienated or encumbered or might be prejudiced. It is agreed that the controlling factor should be whether the recordable instrument injures or prejudices the rights or interests of the minor or incapacitated person.
In his well written brief the respondent registrar opposes the pronouncement originated in Palou to the effect that the consolidation is an act of such a nature as to affect only the registry itself and expressly requests that it be overruled. It is true that the new registration becomes a primary record of the new property to all the subsequent steps and vicissitudes of the property and that no operation can be made
Furthermore, he alleges that the consolidation as well as the segregation are strictly acts of ownership the execution of which corresponds only to the owner. The segregation is nothing but the separation of a parcel from its main property to constitute a different property. That is why it is required that the act be “within the discretion and option” of the owner and such power is denied to the creditor, Alvarez v. Registrar, 57 P.R.R. 651 (1940); Moraza v. Registrar, 45 P.R.R. 804 (1933), or to a lessee, Surís v. Registrar, 55 P.R.R. 524 (1939). Such requirement has been met in the case at bar inasmuch as the segregation is made by the only interested party, except that, because her legal capacity is affected, it is executed by the person who completes said capacity, her tutrix. Actually we do not see any reason to disturb the reiterated doctrine that judicial authorization be required for the execution of recordable acts or contracts which may injure or prejudice the rights of the minor or the incapacitated person.
Now, applying to the act of segregation that test of the possibility of injury or prejudice to the interests of the minor or incapacitated person, contrary to what ordinarily occurs in the consolidation, certain situations may arise which would require the judicial intervention to justify thoroughly the absence of injury or prejudice. The act of segregation may adversely affect the individual value of the parcels, especially that of the remainder, depending on the manner in which it is performed. We have so recognized in condemnation cases, Commonwealth v. Fonalledas, 84 P.R.R. 552, 567
We consider safer the position requiring that the segregation be subject to judicial authorization.
The note appealed from will be affirmed.
“Section 282. The tutor shall require the authorization of the proper district court:
“5. To alienate or encumber the real property which constitutes the capital of the minor or incapacitated person or to make contracts or execute acts requiring recording. ...”
“When two estates are joined to form a single estate, the latter shall be recorded under a new number, a mention thereof being made in the margin of each of the previous records relating to the ownership of the estates combined. Reference shall also be made in the new record to the old records, as well as to the charges which previously encumbered the estates joined.” See § 137 of the new proposed Mortgage Law, S.B. 604 of the Third Regular Session of the Fifth Legislative Assembly which substantially keeps intact this provision.
Even though the ruling of refusal of the recording of the instrument presented was sustained — the deed for a tutor to acquire for his ward an undivided one-fourth interest in a property for an amount acknowledged to have been received from the purchasers prior to the date of the deed — the reasons given were that it could not be considered that under the circumstances shown in the instrument the case fell within the rule mentioned, and the fact that the transaction involved an investment of money belonging to the minor the value of which exceeded two hundred dollars.
Although nothing is stated in the instrument, from the description of the farms it is inferred that the subdivision is one of those exempt in the rural zone, for agricultural purposes, the area of the remainder and of the new parcel being over ñve cuerdas. Section 3 of Planning Regulation No. 3, 23 R.&R.P.R. § 10-3.
Case-law data current through December 31, 2025. Source: CourtListener bulk data.