Delgado v. Registrar of Caguas

Mr. Justice Wole

delivered trie opinion of trie court.

This appeal from trie Registrar of Caguas raises trie question of the sufficiency of 'certain alleged evidence to prove that a particular piece of land was trie sole and separate property of a husband and was not community .property, trie record being refused for trie alleged lack of such evidence. It *118has been decided frequently that the mere .statement of the hotter ested party is not enough. Here, however, the appellant alleged that the individual ownership of the land of Valentín Díaz y Serrano, the husband, is shown not only by entries already made in the registry, • but also by the affidavit of his wife.

The first entry to which the appellant 'refers is the decía- • ration of possession made in favor of Valentín Díaz y Serrano by virtue' of the possessory right to the land in question (expediente posesorio) 'which was instituted by him while married and approved by the Municipal Judge of Caguas. Therein it is shown that the husband and two of the neighboring landowners testified before the municipal judge that the husband had acquired the property by inheritance, partly from his mother and partly from his grandmother. The municipal judge issued the desired certificate. Paragraph third of article 391 of the Mortgage Law, with regard to the testimony of witnesses in a possessory proceeding, provides as follows:

“Article 391.— * * *.
“Third. The witnesses shall prove that they have the qualifications mentioned in the preceding rule, presenting the document necessary for this purpose.
“They, shall limit their testimony to the statement that the person who instituted the proceedings possesses the estates in his own name, and to the time of said possession, and they shall be responsible for any damage they may cause by the inaccuracy of their depositions.”

The appellant maintains that this article does not limit the witnesses to the bare-statement of the fact of petitioner’s possession, but we think it does. The object of the proceeding is simply to accredit the possessory title in the petitioner. The presumption that property acquired during marriage is common cannot be rebutted by a proceeding in which the wife plays no part and in which the avowed object is to accredit the possession. Such possession may be declared in *119one or the other of the conjugal partners, no matter whether the ownership is common or separate. The jurisdiction of the magistrate does, not extend beyond the'- declaring of the title by possession. So far as the rights of. the other partner are concerned, the action of a petitioner'is res inter alios acta and can have no binding effect. There is no cross examination of the witnesses and the mind of the municipal judge is only directed to the proof of possession. . The question of the separate ownership of the land could not be, and was not, submitted to the municipal .judge. The statements of the witnesses so made have no value as evidence under the Mortgage Law as to whether .the.property, was- ganancial or not. The cases of Despres v. The Registrar, 14 P. R. R., 603, and Boscio v. The Registrar, 14 P. R. R., 605, cited by the registrar, support these conclusions. Tlie particular deed offered for record is a mortgage to the appellant. He maintains that a previous mortgage made by Valentín Díaz y Serrano was recorded by a former registrar upon the-same, property as the separate property of said Valentín Díaz y Serrano. That .former deed is not before us, and if a registrar made a mistake, his action is not binding on himself or his successors when another mortgage deed is 'presented. The undue record of a previous deed is not evidence of the sole and separate character of property.

The note of the registrar, in terms, based his refusal to record on the fact that the entry being by virtue of a pos-sessory certificate, the said Valentín Diaz Serrano had no right to mortgage without the consent of his wife and that the affidavit of the latter, given its nature, was insufficient.

In the case of Successors of Andreu & Co. v. The Registrar, 20 P. R. R., 421, this court decided that 'an affidavit is primarily for court purposes, and for other purposes when expressly permitted by the law. There is no authority for the use of an affidavit to show the separate character of a piece of property: Article 3 of the Mortgage Law requires that to record a title to real estate the act transferring the domin*120ion should be a public deed or other judicial or governmental public document. We considered the nature of this article in the case just cited.’ It is evident that an affidavit is not equivalent to a public deed.

The note of the registrar must" be

Affirmed.

Chief Justice Hernández and Justices del Toro, Aldrey and Hutchison concurred.