Figueroa v. Registrar of Property

Mr. Justice del Toro

delivered the opinion of the court.

*256Román Salazar y Ayala died in San Germán on December 10, 1910, and baying left no will tbe District Court of Maya-giiez, on May 25, 1911, designated bis brother, Hermenegildo, bis sisters, Francisca and Ramona, and bis nepbew, Juan, as bis sole and universal beirs.

A suit against tbe Estate of Román Salazar was filed by Natalio Figueroa in tbe Municipal Court of San Germán for tbe recovery of a debt. At tbe bearing bad tbe evidence introduced by plaintiff showed that tbe debt proceeded from expenses of funeral, casket, medical assistance, vault in which tbe body was buried, medicines, taxes on tbe property left by said Román Salazar, and a note made by tbe decedent on August 10, 1910, in favor of plaintiff. Tbe municipal court rendered judgment on June 27, 1911, adjudging tbe defendant estate to pay to plaintiff the sum of $218.

For tbe enforcement of this judgment a writ of attachment was issued against a certain property recorded in tbe registry in tbe name of Román Salazar. This property having been sold at auction, it was awarded to Natalio Figueroa for $460, of which $216.62 were applied to tbe payment- of tbe debt, tbe balance being turned over to tbe marshal of said court.

On August 3, 1911, tbe marshal and tbe vendee appeared before Notary Forés, in tbe city of San Germán, and executed tbe proper deed wherein it was stated that tbe sale bad been effected in accordance with tbe law. This instrument having been presented for record in tbe registry of property, tbe admission thereof was refused by tbe registrar for tbe reasons set forth by him in tbe following decision, from which this appeal has been taken:

“Admission to record of the foregoing instrument, to which a certified copy of the designation of heirs of José Román Salazar and a certificate of the clerk of the municipal court of this city have been attached as enclosures, is denied on the ground that no proof has been furnished showing that the inheritance tax has either been paid or remitted upon the death of the said Salazar, in whose name and not *257in that of the heirs (against whom the suit was brought) the property appears recorded, no record of such sale having first been requested to be entered; and for the further reason that according to the certificates attached a portion of the debt claimed was not incurred by the decedent, and because no proof has been presented showing that the estate of the decedent remains unsettled.”

The first question for us to examine and decide is whether or not the decedent’s estate still remains undivided. If the question is decided in the affirmative, then the decedent should he presumed to he alive and the sale should he considered as having been effected by himself, in which event the entry of the sale can then be admitted to record in the registry. But if, on the contrary, it should be found that the estate has been accepted, then a record of the property should first be made in the name of the heirs and, afterwards, in that of the purchaser.

“An inheritance remaining unclaimed is held to be undivided.” Scaevola, General Principles of Civil Law, 130.
“Where an inheritance remains undivided through its nonaceept-anee by those entitled to it under the law, the decedent should then be deemed to be still alive. ’ ’ Decision of the Supreme Court of Spain, June 5, 1861.
“Upon proof being presented that the heirs have renounced the inheritance, instruments transferring the title thereof in pursuance of actions brought against the estate are admissible to record, a prior record of the property in the name of the heirs being unnecessary.” Decision of the General Directorate of Registries, July 24, 1884.
“Where execution proceedings have been instituted against the heirs of a debtor, and the property has been disposed of at auction in the name of the unsettled estate on account of the heirs being unknown, there is no necessity of previously recording the property in the name of the heirs.” Decision of the General Directorate of Registries of April 25, 1890.

We will now review the facts such as they appear to us from the documents presented to the registrar in order to ascertain whether or not this is a case involving an unsettled *258estate and accordingly whether tlie requisites of a previous record in the name of the- heirs may be dispensed with.

In no part of said documents does it appear that the inheritance has been expressly accepted. Neither does it appear in any part thereof that the inheritance has been expressly renounced. We are thus forced to conclude by indirect means as to the acceptance or renunciation of the inheritance.

A certificate issued by the secretary of the District Court of Mayagfiez shows that the designation of heirs was made by said court in proceedings instituted at the instance of one of the heirs.

And from the very instrument of sale presented in the registry for admission to record it appears that the suit brought by the creditor, Figueroa, the appellant herein, was not directed against the property left by Eomán Salazar or against his unknown heirs, but against the successors of Eomán Salazar, consisting of his lawful heirs, Hermenegildo, Francisca, and Eamona Salazar, brother and sisters of the decedent, and Juan Crisóstomo Eodriguez, his nephew, all of whom were summoned, but it does not appear that they alleged the renunciation of the inheritance as a plea of the defense.

The case, then, is one where there are heirs designated by the court in proceedings instituted at the instance of one of them, and a sale of property finally resulting from a suit brought, not against the inheritance, but against the heirs. It cannot, therefore, be presumed that an unsettled inheritance is involved in this action and that a prior record in the name of the heirs may be dispensed with. If, as a matter of fact, the inheritance has been repudiated by the heirs, proper proofs must then be presented to destroy the presumption to the contrary originated by the circumstances surrounding the case.

Article 20 of the Mortgage Law requires that a record be. previously made in the name of the heirs unless the case *259be one of an unsettled inheritance, and if the latter circumstance be not established, the decisions of April 25, 1890, and December 22, 1892, are then applicable. Decision of the General Directorate of Registries of June 28, 1905.

The principle contained in said article 20 is general, absolute, and applicable therefore to all titles transferring the ownership of realty including testate or intestate inheritance, not only because an inheritance constitutes another of such titles, but because article 23 of said Mortgage Law expressly prescribes the record of a realty acquired by inheritance in order to prejudice third persons within five years from the date it was entered, after which period of time those acquiring from an heir will be protected in their ownership and possession. Decisions of the General Directorate of Registries of December 9, 1876, and June 21, 1879.

This sale upon execution of an encumbered property, in pursuance of proceedings instituted by the creditor against the heir of the debtor, is not a case which may be said to involve an undivided inheritance, because the defendant, as one of the heirs, was a party to said proceedings by acknowledging the debt and afterwards (although not within the proper period) opposing the marshal’s sale and appealing from the judgment ordering the sale to be carried ouL; all of which, in the absence of an express acceptance (about which nothing is known), warrants the conclusion that said defendant had accepted the inheritance of the debtor, wherefore, not even the decision of December 2 last favors the contention that the award should be recorded without having previously recorded the hereditary title of the defendant. Decision of the General Directorate of Registries of August 8, 1893.

According to an unalterable principle laid down by the General Directorate, an inheritance title (title by descent) may be admitted to record although the acceptance thereof may not appear, which principle is based 031 the fact that the latter circumstance. constitutes legally a condition of abeyance or suspension of the perfect transmission of the owner*260ship, which, once accomplished, is made effective from the date of the acceptance; and according to article 16 of the Mortgage Law, instruments transferring title subject to conditions precedent or subsequent are admissible to record. Decision of the General Directorate of Registries of August 25, 1879.

In view of the foregoing, we have reached the conclusion that the memorandum of the registrar is proper for the reason stated- — that is to say, because from the papers presented in the registry the sale sought to be recorded was made on behalf of the heirs of Román Salazar y Ayala and because the property sold is not recorded in the name of said heirs.

We have carefully considered the other ground given by the registrar in support of his refusal and we find it likewise well founded. It may be perhaps, in this case, that the inheritance which descended to the .heirs, after the debts of the decedent have been deducted, will not amount to the limit fixed by law for purposes of the inheritance tax (section 368-of the Political Code); however, such fact must be proven before the property descended to the heirs can be admitted to record.

The appeal should be dismissed and the decision of the registrar affirmed.

Affirmed.

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