Cortes v. Registrar

Mr. Justice Aldrey

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

During bis wedlock with María Cortés, Domingo Marrero acquired for a valuable consideration several real properties, which, after his death, were recorded in common pro indiviso in the names of bis heirs and of tbe widow.

Subsequently by public deed of December 2, 1913, tbe widow, María Cortés Marrero, after describing various prop*132erties as having been acquired by her husband during his wedlock with her, sold to Justiniano Cortés y Marrero for a fixed price "all the right, title and interest which she might possess in each of the said properties after the liquidation of the legal conjugal partnership.” Upon presentation of the deed in the Registry of Property of Arecibo the registrar refused to admit the same to record for the reasons stated in the following decision from which the present administrative appeal was. taken-:

"The admission to record of this deed of bargain and sale is denied because the properties sought to be conveyed thereby belong to the legal conjugal partnership composed of the vendor, Maria Cortés Marrero, and Domingo Marrero, which partnership has not yet been liquidated, and because the widow and filial heirs of the-deceased spouse are barred from the free disposal of the conjugal partnership property until the inventoried estate is liquidated and each of the heirs has received his share, pursuant to section 1331 et seq. of the Civil Code as construed by decisions of the Supreme Court of Porto Rico in harmony with the decisions of the General Directorate of Registries of Spain. Also as to the property under letter E the deed contains the curable defect that an error was committed in stating the number of the property and the folio on which it is recorded. In compliance with the provisions of section 7 of the Act of March 1, 1902, the first defect being incurable, a cautionary notice is entered for a period of 120 days on folio 176, over, of volume 70-of Utuado, property No. 3790; on folio 173 of volume 70 of ITtuado, property No. 3789, and on folio 184, over, of volume 52 of Utuado, property No. 2979, entries letter A. Arecibo, January 16, 1914. José Marcial López, Registrar.”

From the foregoing it results that the question raised in this appeal is whether when certain properties have been recorded in common pro indiviso in the names of the heirs of a person and in the name of his widow as to her ganan-cial interest, a deed of sale made by the widow before the liquidation of the partnership of such interests as she may have in said properties when the conjugal partnership property is liquidated, may be recorded.

In deciding the case of Ríos v. The Registrar of Prop*133erty, 19 P. R. R., 708, we held that the surviving spouse cannot dispose of the whole or any fixed part of the community property as if it were his own until after a liquidation of the said partnership, which doctrine is erroneously applied by the registrar to the present case because here the widow does not alienate any fixed and determined part of the properties described by her in the deed of salé, but only the undetermined interests which she may possess in the conjugal estate when the liquidation is made. The contract on which the appeal is based is not one for the sale of properties or of any fixed part thereof, but is a conveyance of rights and shares. González v. Méndez, 8 P. R. R., 249. The appellant, Jnstiniano Cortés, does not acquire by virtue of the sale made by the widow the ownership of a fixed part of the properties described in the deed, but only such interests, if any, as may be allotted to the vendor when the liquidation.is made.

We have examined the decisions of the General Directorate of Registries of Spain which the registrar cites in support of his refusal to admit the deed to record and although they sustain the conclusion reached by ns in the case of Rios formerly referred to, they do not support the ground of the refusal, for they hold only that a fixed or determinate part of the conjugal property cannot be sold by the surviving spouse until after the liquidation. This court has already held in the case of Méndez v. The Registrar of Property, 18 P. R. R., 777, and cases therein cited, that a deed conveying hereditary rights is recordable although the adjudication of the corresponding property has not been made, provided it has been recorded previously in the name of the grantor. Such a conveyance being recordable, a conveyance by the widow of her hereditary right in the conjugal partnership property is also recordable.

The fact that the law provides that upon a dissolution of the marriage a liquidation of the conjugal partnership shall be made, does not prevent, as contended by the registrar, a conveyance of the hereditary rights before the liquidation *134is made. The only object of the said provision is to fix and determine the part corresponding to each, participant in the estate and is indispensable when the parties wish to make a partition. Therefore the registrar’s apprehension that conveyances by the joint owners of their abstract interests in the estate wonld defeat compliance with the statute prescribing such liquidation, is groundless for such liquidation would become absolutely necessary when the purchasers of the rights sold wish to determine the exact and determinate share of each therein. Nor is the objection tenable that creditors might be prejudiced by such sales, because if they have any real rights recorded they could not be prejudiced by such conveyances, and if their rights are not of this character, section 23 of the Act relating to Special Legal Proceedings provides that an unsecured creditor having a written title may apply for a judicial administration of the property.

The appellant’s only ground of appeal being decided, the decision of the respondent registrar should be reversed as regards the incurable defect stated therein and the admission to record of the deed of sale ordered.

Reversed as to incurable defect.

Chief Justice Hernández and Justices Wolf and del Toro concurred.