delivered the opinion of the court.
*258On February 3, 1911, Julia and Félix Valqis Cristián y Casado filed a complaint in the District Court of San Juan, Section 2, against Juan Escobar Casado, Eduardo Jacobo González and Ramón Aboy Benitez, in which they alleged in substance that Pedro Casado and Maria Correa died leaving Agustina and Isabel Casado y Correa as their sole and universal heirs; that a-rural property containing 395 cuer-das of land situated at a place called Palmare jos in the ward of Canóvanas of the district of Loiza formed part of the estate; that taking advantage of the absence of Isabel, her .-sister and co-heiress, Agustina instituted proceedings in which she falsely and fraudulently represented herself to be :'in possession of the whole of the said property, which proceedings were approved by the municipal judge of Loiza and recorded in the Registry of Property of San Juan on June 12, 1880; that Isabel Casado died intestate leaving her children Julia, Félix Valois and Juan Ramón Cristián y Casado as her sole and universal heirs, who are now entitled to one-half of the said property; that on December 26, 1897, Agus-tina Casado sold the entire property to Fernández, Sobrino •& Company, reserving the right to repurchase the same within a period of eight years, and the deed of bargain and sale was recorded in the registry of property; that by a deed of July 31, 1903, which is also recorded in the registry, the firm .of Fernández, Sobrino & Company sold the said property to Eduardo Jacobo González; that these two sales became final and perfected on December 26, 1905, when the period of the right to repurchase expired; that by another deed of July 2,1906, Eduardo Jacobo Gonzalez sold the same property to Juan Escobar Casado and that sale was also recorded in the registry of property; that Juan Escobar Casado segregated from the property of 395 cuerdas a parcel of -26.34 cuerdas and by a public instrument of - July 25, 1908, which is likewise recorded in the registry^ of property, sold the same to Eduardo Jacobo González; that by a deed of August 9, 1909, which is recorded in the registry of property, the *259residue of tlie property was mortgaged by Juan Escobar Casado to Ramón Aboy Benitez to secure a debt of $2,000; that defendants Juan Escobar Casado and Eduardo Jacobo González are at present in possession of the entire property in the proportion stated and both they and mortgagee Ramón Aboy Benitez knew that their possession of one-half of the property was unlawful and fraudulent; that the plaintiffs have been deprived of the use and enjoyment of one-half of the property and, consequently, have been damaged in the sum of $15,000 on the part of defendant Juan Escobar Casado and of $7,000 on the part of the other defendant, Eduardo Jacobo Gonzalez.
The complaint concludes with the prayer that judgment be rendered in favor of the plaintiffs annulling the posses-sory title proceedings and the acts and contracts done and entered into thereafter, as set out in the said deeds and instruments, in so far as they affect one-half of the said property, ordering the cancellation in the registry of all the records based on the said instruments and decreeing that without limitation the defendants deliver to the plaintiffs an undivided moiety of the property, together with the mesne profits of the same, and also pay the expenses and costs of the action including $2,000 as fees of the attorney for the plaintiffs.
Defendant Juan Escobar demurred to the complaint on the ground that it did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause qf action, and later filed an answer praying that it be dismissed and that the plaintiffs be adjudged without right to recover from said defendant the possession and ownership of the moiety of the property in litig;ation, alleging, among other grounds of defense, that in case any cause of action had existed in their favor, it had prescribed according to section 1864 of the Civil Code.
The case went to trial without summoning defendants Eduardo Jacobo González and Ramón Aboy Benitez, and the court rendered judgment on June 13, 1913, dismissing the *260complaint with, costs, from which, judgment the attorney for the plaintiffs appealed to this court.
This is principally an action of ejectment with a supplementary claim for damages for the detention of an undivided moiety of the rural property sought to be recovered, as is acknowledged by defendant Juan Escobar Casado in demurring to the complaint on the ground that the action of ejectment, which is governed by section 1864 of the Civil Code, had prescribed.
The basis of the action of the plaintiffs is that as Pedro Casado and Maria Correa, his wife, were the owners of the property in question, upon their death the ownership thereof passed to their daughters Agustina and Isabel Casado y Correa, and by the death of Isabel the undivided moiety belonging to her descended to her sole and universal heirs, Julia, Félix Valois and Juan Ramón Cristian Casado, and, therefore, they base their rights solely -on the title of inheritance of their deceased mother, Isabel Casado, who jointly inherited with her sister Agustina from their deceased parents, Pedro Casado and Maria Correa. That hereditary title is not sufficient of itself in the present case upon which to recover the property claimed.
In deciding the case of Velilla v. Pizá et al., 17 P. R. R. 1069, we said:
“It is true that articles 657 and 661 of the former Civil Code, .which agree with sections 665 and 669 of the Revised Civil Code, provide that ‘The rights to the succession of a person are transmitted from the moment of his death’ and that ‘Heirs succeed the deceased in all his rights and obligations by the mere fact of his death/ and in accordance with said sections the heir or heirs, if there are more than one, acquire altogether the rights of their predecessor.
“Heirship conveys a joint right to the aggregate heritage, and by virtue thereof, upon the death of their predecessor, all the heirs 'become owners in common. But until proceedings for partition and adjudication, are terminated, and until by virtue thereof this community of ownership does not cease, no one of the heirs may be considered to be the sole and exclusive owner of any particular portion *261or fixed and specific aliquot part of the property of the heritage, which character it is necessary to prove before an action of ejectment may prosper.
“The aforesaid sections confer a right to each and all of the properties of the heritage but not a specific right to certain properties, which can only be acquired by an adjudication lawfully made in partition proceedings.
“According to the foregoing, upon the death of the ancestor his heirs are the owners of the whole undetermined estate which is to be determined and specified by means of the partition and adjudication of the heritage, which partition and adjudication, according to section 1035 of the Revised Civil Code (1068 of the former), is what confers on each heir the exclusive ownership of the property which may have been adjudicated to him.”
That doctrine must govern in the present case, which is similar to that of Velilla v. Pizá et al. The facts alleged in the complaint show no title of ownership in the plaintiffs to the undivided moiety of the property in question, because the said undivided part was not allotted to their deceased mother, Isabel Casado y Correa, in the proper proceeding for that purpose. In the absence of such allotment the character of heirs of Isabel Casado alone does not give them the right to own and use the half of thé property which belonged to Pedro Casado and Maria Correa.
The complaint is demurred to on the ground that it does not state facts sufficient to support the action of ejectment, and that being so, it is not necessary to enter upon an examination of the plea of prescription on which the judgment appealed from is also based.
Respecting the annulments prayed for in the complaint, as they are not the cause but the effect of the principal action of ejectment, and as the action does not lie, it would be superfluous to consider them. Judgments of the Supreme Court of Spain of October 16, 1873; January 17, 1889; April 6, 1889, and February 13, 1882, and decisions of this court in *262the eases of Succession of Nieves v. Succession of Sánchez, 17 P. R. R. 837, and Oliver v. Oliver, decided July 30, 1915.
In deciding the present case we may well repeat what we said in the case of Trinidad et al. v. Succession of Trinidad et al., 19 P. R. R. 616:
“Perhaps the plaintiffs have not received the property to which they are justly and lawfully entitled, but if this be so, the proceedings chosen by them are not proper to secure a recognition of their rights. ’5
See also the case of Vega et al. v. Rodríguez et al., 21 P. R. R. 318.
For the foregoing reasons the judgment appealed from should be affirmed, without prejudice to the right which the plaintiffs may have to recover the interest claimed in the estate of their grandparents, Pedro Casado and Maria Co-rrea.
Affirmed.
Justices Wolf, del Toro, Aldrey and Hutchison concurred.