Avilés v. Registrar of Property

Mr. Justice del Toro

delivered the opinion of the court.

An authentic copy of deed No. 86, executed on the one part .by Ana Méndez Yaz, both in her own right and as mother ■with patria potestas over her minor children, had by her marriage with José M. Reliz, and on the other part by Boni-facio Aviles, before Notary Public Mercader, in Agnadilla, on February 17, 1906, was presented in the Registry of Property of Agnadilla and the registrar refused to record the 'Same for the following reasons:

“The registry of the foregoing instrument is denied as regards the sale to Bonifacio Aviles of 14% cuerdas of land in barrio Capá of Moca, the recording of which sale only was requested, because the *926document of July 15, 1905, transcribed therein and by virtue of which the former was executed, being a private instrument, is not admissible to record under, the provisions o.f subdivision 1 of section 3 of the Mortgage Law; and because Ana Petronila Méndez effected said sale not only in her own right, but also as mother with patria potestas over her children, Luis, Ana María, Monserrate, Juana, Pedro, Ramón, Carlos Guillermo, Asunción, Rosa María, and Maria de las Mercedes, without having obtained the proper judicial authorization in the manner provided for by-section 80 of the Act of Special Legal Proceedings, approved March 9, 1905, as amended March 9, 1911, etc.”

Notice of the refusal having been given to the person who presented, the instrument, he asked that it he sent to the Supreme Court. The registrar did so in accordance with law, and also forwarded a brief explaining his decision. No steps have been taken in this court by the interested parties.

From an examination of the document in question, it appears that José M. Deliz, the husband of Ana Mendez Yaz, executed a private document on July 15, 1905, according to .which he sold to Bonifacio Aviles a certain farm property and in which he set forth that a public deed was not executed for the reason that the property was encumbered and that it was necessary first to remove the encumbrance, and that his wife was cognizant of the facts and willing to execute such a deed in case of the death of Deliz.

Deliz died and his wife and children were declared by the district court his intestate heirs'; and his wife, both in her own right and as mother with patria potestas over her minor children, executed the deed whose admission to record has been denied.

The first of the grounds alleged by the registrar in the decision hereinbefore- transcribed is not well founded, because it was not a question of recording the private document itself, but of doing so after it had been clothed with all the formalities of a public document.

The second ground is well taken and is sufficient to support -the refusal of the registrar.

*927The deed was executed.by Ana Méndez after the death of her husband, Deliz, or after the dissolution of the conjugal partnership to which the property belonged according to the registry, wherefore the consent not only of the wife, Ana Méndez, hut of all the heirs of the husband, Deliz, was necessary for the execution thereof.

The heirs were minors and could not give their consent per se, nor could their mother consent for them in the ordinary exercise of the patria potestas. The act involved the sale or the ratification of the sale of real property and judicial authorization was absolutely necessary in accordance with the Civil Code and the Act of Special Legal Proceedings of 1905, both of which were in force at the time of the execution of the instrument.

In virtue whereof and by reason of the second of his g'rounds the decision of the registrar in this case should be .affirmed.

Affirmed.

Chief Justice Hernández and Justices MacLeary, Wolf .and Aldrey concurred.