Torres v. Pons

Mr. Justice Aldrey

delivered the opinion of the court.

Eduviges Torres brought an action of revendication for the recovery of a house in the possession of the defendant and for an accounting of rents during the time of such possession, and judgment having been rendered against her by the District Court of Ponce on appeal, she took the present appeal, in which the appellee has not appeared.

In support of her claim the plaintiff introduced documentary and oral evidence at the trial, the former consisting of a private document showing that on March 31, 1910, Sil-*436vestre Verges, as owner of tire house in question under title by construction acquired in 1908, sold it to Carlos Espinet for value received. In the same document Carlos Espinet stated that on June 10, 1910, he sold the house to Eduviges Torres also for value received. The plaintiff also introduced another document in which América Capó acknowledged on November 18, 1911, that she had received from Eduviges Torres payment of the rent of the lot on Jobo Street, Ponce, on which her house is situated. Both documents were admitted in evidence for whatever value they might have.

As to the oral evidence, the plaintiff testified that in 1910 she purchased from Caídos Espinet the house, which was then situated on municipal property, and that later she removed it to Jobo Street in the ward of Nuevo Paris and made some additions thereto; that she lived in it until September, 1911, when she went to San Juan, leaving half of it, which was furnished, in the care of her son, Bartolo Torres, 'and the other half rented to Joaquín Girón; that when she returned from San Juan in 1914 on account of the illness and death of her said son, she found the defendant in possession of the house; that her son used to send her at San Juan four dollars monthly for the rent, and that she had not sold her house nor authorized her son to sell it.

Carlos Espinet testified that the private deed of sale introduced in evidence was genuine and that he sold the house to the plaintiff on the date stated therein, and also sold her paint and lumber for repairing the house.

Joaquín Girón rented half of the house from the plaintiff,, the other half containing her furniture, lie lived in it six months and paid the rent to Bartolo Torres as her agent, receiving from Torres receipts in the name of his mother. The house was old but had some new repairs.

Elias Bengel is a carpenter and testified that lie moved the house from the land of the municipality to the Nuevo Paris ward, having entered into the contract with Bartolo. Torres in the presence of his mother.

*437Salvador Más was hired by Ecluviges Torres to do some carpentry work on a house belonging to her in Nuevo Paris and made some additions thereto. He lived in a house nearby and always regarded her as the owner of the property and as his neighbor.

The evidence of the defendant consisted of the notarial acts of the contracts of bargain and sale, all appearing in public instruments, whereby Bartolo Torres sold the said house in 1912, as constructed by him, to Ramón Flores, who sold it to José Alvarado, from whom Julio C. Conesa took title later and sold it to defendant Pons on August 8, 1914.

On the said evidence the lower court dismissed the complaint on the ground that the principal evidence of the title of the plaintiff consisted of a private document dated June 18, 1910, but which was presented for the first time on April 17, 1915, in the Municipal Court of Ponce when the case was first' tried; that it was not acknowledged previously before any notary; that it had not been filed in any public office prior to that date, and that the defendant having presented as his title an instrument dated August 8, 1914, and the other deeds mentioned, pursuant to section 1195 of the Civil Code and the case of Córdova v. Surís, 19 P. R. R. 1117, the date of the private instrument could not be considered as to the defendant, who is regarded as a third person, except from the said date when the defendant already held title by a public instrument bearing* an authentic date.

The title of the defendant is not recorded in the registry of property and therefore this case presents no question to which the Mortgage Law is applicable.

As the evidence shows that Bartolo Torres was not the owner of the house in controversy, it is evident that he did not convej- the ownership thereof to the persons who took title from him, because no one can convey what he does not own; hence the private document of the plaintiff has effect from the date of its execution and not from the date when it was introduced in evidence at the trial, section 1195 of *438the Civil Code, providing that the date of a private instrument shall be considered with regard to third persons only from the date on which it may have been filed or entered in a public registry, from the death of any of those who signed it, or from the date on which it may have been delivered to a public official by virtue of Ms office, not being applicable to this case. The fact that the defendant and his predecessors in interest purchased the property by a public instrument does not transfer the ownership to them if Bartolo Torres, from whom they took title, was not the owner, for the only advantage which a public instrument has over a private one is the presumption that it is authentic; that the contract therein was executed and on the date stated, but it does not pass the ownership to one who did not take title from the owner. Nor is the case of Córdova v. Surís, supra, applicable, because the parties who claimed the property in that case took title from the members of the conjugal partnership which owned the same; therefore their title emanated from the same source.

Again, according to the doctrine laid down in the case of Longpré et al. v. Wolff et al., 23 P. R. R. 13, section 1195 is strictly applicable when the private document is the onty proof of an act or contract; but this does not mean that when joined with other elements of proof, as in this case, the act or contract witnessed in the private document may not be considered proved as against a third person, which doctrine is strengthened further by the decisions cited by the Supreme Court of Spain in its judgment of July 9, 1904,

But even if section 1195 were deemed applicable and the date of the private document should be considered from the date when it was presented at the trial, it would still follow that the plaintiff proved that she was the owner of the house on the said date and that the defendant had no valid title thereto, for, as we have said, she proved that his title proceeds from one who was not the owner of the thing sold.

Consequently, the judgment appealed from should be re*439versed and another rendered adjudging that the plaintiff is the owner of the house sued for and that the defendant place the same at her free disposal and pay her the rent thereof at the rate of four dollars monthly from August 8, 1914, the date on which he entered into possession, without special imposition of costs.

Reversed.

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