delivered the opinion of the court.
This proceeding was instituted before the municipal court of Mayagiiez by virtue of a complaint filed by José A. Fer-nández, a resident of said, town, charging the accused, Agustín’ *254Hernández Mena, Jnana Lliteras, and Mannel Parra y Parra, with, an offense which is defined in section 469 of the Penal Code now in force, alleging that on September 3, 1909, in the city of Mayagüez, which forms part of the aforesaid judicial district, the accused voluntarily and with the intention to thwart the collection of a mortgage claim presented against Hernandez and the woman, Lliteras, appeared before the notary public, Mariano Riera Palmer, and sold to their servant, Manuel Parra, a tract of land that had been attached by the complainant, in order to secure the effectiveness of his mortgage; which property was advertised to be sold at a public auction, by order of the district court; and after the said property had been adjudicated to the complainant, the registrar of property refused to record the same, for the reason that it had been sold by the said Hernández and the woman, Lliteras, to their servant, Manuel Parra.
It is claimed that section 469 of the Penal Code does not sufficiently define an offense against the laws of Porto Rico to permit the punishment of any person accused of violating the same. The said section reads as follows:
“Section 469. — Every person who is a party to any fraudulent conveyance of any property, real or personal, or any right or interest issuing out of the same, or to any bond, suit, judgment, or execution, contract or' conveyance, had, made, or contrived, with intent to deceive and defraud others, or to defeat, hinder, or delay creditors or others of their just debts, damages, or demands; or who, being a party as aforesaid, at any time wittingly and willingly puts in, uses, avows, maintains, justifies, or defends the same, dr any of them, as true, and done, had, or made in good faith, or upon good consideration, or alienates, assigns, or sells any of the property, real or personal, or other things before-mentioned, to him or them conveyed aforesaid, or any part thereof, is guilty of a misdemeanor i ’ ’
. From a. careful reading of this section, though it is not, perhaps, framed as skilfully.as it might have been, we' think that the purpose, of the Legislature is. apparent and that it is our-duty to enforcedhe law.as written.
*255The accused, were declared guilty by the municipal court, and Hernández was sentenced to a fine of $500, or 10 months ’ imprisonment in the district jail, and Parra, to the payment of a fine of $400, or eight months’ imprisonment in the same district jail; each of them being condemned, besides, to pay one-half of the costs. The other defendant, Juana Lliteras, was acquitted.
After an appeal had been taken from said judgment to the district court by the two defendants who had been convicted, the said court held a new trial, at which the accused pleaded not guilty; and after having heard the evidence and the oral arguments of the parties, the court declared the accused to be guilty, and sentenced each of them to pay a fine of $200, .and, in default thereof, to suffer one day of imprisonment for each dollar of said fine that they might fail to pay, limiting the subsidiary penalty to 90 days’ imprisonment in the district jail. The accused moved for a new trial, basing their motion on the allegation that the judgment was contrary to law and to the evidence. Said motion was overruled by the court; and from this ruling, as well as from the final judgment, the accused took an appeal to this court.
Included in the record, is a statement of the case, which contains the testimony of all the witnesses, who testified at the trial on both sides; and there are, besides, a copy of the deed executed by Hernández Mena in favor of Parra, and another of the deed executed by Ramón Irizarry, as marshal of the District Court of Mayagiiez, in favor of José Ramón Preire, which documents have reference to the property in -question.
• This statement, when the transcript was presented here, lacked the signature and authenticatitin of the district judgé. This default seems to have escaped the notice of all parties until the case was being heard in this court.’ Then the 'fiscal made an oral motion to disregard the statement of- the case because it lacked the proper authentication. In- the argument, the attorney for .the accused attempted to excuse his neglect *256in this matter by claiming that the law makes it the duty of the district clerk to prepare and forward to this court, all transcripts in criminal cases and that the fiscal had not made any motion, prior, to the, trial, to suppress the statement of the case for lack of proper authentication. The hearing was closed, after the usual arguments, and the case was taken under advisement by the court. A week after the hearing* counsel for the accused, under rules 55 and 56, presented a certified copy from the district court, showing a proper- authentication of the statement of the case by the district judge, and moved that it be accepted and made a part of the record. This motion was heard, on oral argument of counsel for both sides, on Monday, the 11th, and although it came after the hearing, the court, in its discretion, granted the same and the certificate of the district judge, approving the statement of the case, was made a part of the record. So it must be given due consideration in the decision of the case.
The appellant appears before this court, through counsel, in oral argument and by a brief in which he narrates all the facts that have occurred, and sets forth as legal grounds, on which he bases his appeal the provisions of section 129 of the Mortgage Law, and the corresponding section 175 of the Eegulations for the execution of the same, which declare that the owner of a mortgaged estate is not prevented from selling the same; but that, on the contrary, the alienation of properties that are in such condition, is authorized, although rules are prescribed, to which such alienations must conform. The appellant alleges also the infringment of section 469 of the Penal Code, by undue application of the same, inasmuch as it is a prerequisite for the application of said legal precept, that a fraudulent conveyance be made for the purpose of thwarting or,hindering one’s creditors in their just demands; and a contract under which the creditor retains all his rights, in spite of the sale effected thereby, cannot be stigmatized as fraudulent, or deemed to be- made for an unlawful purpose.
*257On the otter hand, the fiscal, in reply to what was said by the appellants in their brief, maintains that the violation of section 489 of the Penal Code, is clear and evident, and that the judgment based on the same, is jnst and should be enforced.
It is undeniable that section 129 of the Mortgage Law which has been cited by the appellants, provides for the case in which a mortgaged estate might be alienated before the creditor had collected the amount due to him under his mortgage. But said provision refers to those alienations which are made in good faith, and which in no way serve the purpose of defrauding the mortgage creditors in the exircise of their rights or tend to put difficulties in their way, in connection with the proceedings taken by them, in order to collect the amoimts to which they are entitled. And this is true to such an extent, that the Mortgage Law itself, upon establishing the general principle, that no suits for rescisión and determination of title, shall be instituted against third persons, who have recorded the instruments showing their respective interests, in conformity with the provisions of said law, excludes the cases in which alienations have been made for the purpose of defrauding creditors, wherein the third person has been an accomplice in the fraud. And the law presumes that the owner of the land is a party to the fraudulent conveyance of the same, when it is proven that he knew the purpose of making said conveyance, and that he was a party to it, in the character of last owner, or in any other capacity. Aside from the aforesaid provisions, the Mortgage Law itself establishes the formalities, by means of which the alienation of an estate encumbered by a mortgage debt, shall be carried into effect, in order that said transactions be truly consistent with the rights and interests of the mortgage creditors. And it appears that none of said formalities have been complied with in the present case; for which reason, the deceitful and fraudulent purpose may be detected by which the appellants appear to have been guided in the simulated trans*258action referred to. So the allegation, made by the first-named accused, Hernández, that his intention in making the conveyance was to avoid a judicial conflict with Mr. Fernández, is not a sufficient excuse for his action or to justify his acquittal of the charge made against him.
It is certainly true that the mortgagor has the right to sell the mortgaged property, subject to the claims and incum-brances created by the mortgage for the benefit of the mortgagee ; but such a sale must be made in good faith without any intention of injuring -the mortgagee or of delaying or obstructing him in the collection of his debt, even should it be necessary to sell the mortgaged property, and for the purchaser of the same to take full and complete possession thereof, in accordance with the sale. If good faith is lacking in the transaction and the fraudulent intention appears from the evidence, the offense forbidden by the statute is complete, and the punishment should follow. .
For the purposes of the criminal law, it does not matter that the mortgage proceeding may be prosecuted through all its stages, in spite of the sale made by the mortgage debtor; for the real purpose of said law is also the punishment of those who obstruct and retard as well as those who defeat this kind of demands on the part of creditors. And it is shown that a real obstruction and a substantial delay have been caused by the illegal act of the accused, inasmuch as the mortgage creditor has been unable to enter into the actual possession of the property purchased at the sale; and, aside from this, the accused have caused to him the damages arising from the failure to record the transfer of the property in the register ; on account of which obstructions he has not been able to make use of said property, as legitimate owner of the same, nor to perform the usual acts of ownership, which the inscription of his deed would have permitted him to carry into effect; and the further fact, that in the alienation of said real estate by the accused, all the proceedings that, for such cases, are prescribed by the Mortgage Law, were omitted, and that the *259property was sold to a person, who, by reason of Ms financial situation, as it is shown, had no ability to enter into contracts of such a nature, as appears from the evidence introduced at the trial, constitutes, without any doubt, sufficient proof of the fraudulent intention of the accused.
On account of these considerations, we áre of the opinion, that the judgment should be affirmed, and that the costs should be imposed upon the appellants.
Affirmed.
Chief Justice Hernández and Justices Figueras, Wolf and del Toro concurred.