Olmedo v. Reyes

Mb. Chiee Justice Heenandez

delivered the opinion of the court.

Obdulio Delgado Santana, the lawful husband of Cristina Olmedo, died on November 2, 1900, leaving a will executed on May 30 of the same year in which he named his daughters Petronila, Juana and Eloísa Delgado y Olmedo as his heirs in equal proportions, left $200 °to Petronila as a special bequest, bequeathed $100 to the minors Teresa and Maria Luisa Villanueva from the third at his free disposal, and directed that the remainder of said third should be delivered to Providencia Reyes, mother of the minors Carmen and Nar-ciso, for distribution between them.

*507On April 23, 1901, the widow, Cristina Olmedo, instituted. ex parte proceedings for the partition of the estate of Delgado Santana in accordance with the formalities of the former Code of Civil Procedure. On June 25 of the said year an inventory was made of the estate, consisting of a rural property of 75.50 cuerdas of land, a house built of native lumber and various heads of cattle. By an order of July 29, 1905, Tomás Carrera y Más was appointed commissioner for the division of the property left by the deceased' and on September 14 of the same year, at a meeting held before the said commissioner at which Cristina Olmedo, in her own right and in representation of her minor daughters, and Pro-videncia Beyes as residuary legatee of the third part of free disposal, were present, Cristina Olmedo named her brother, Lucas Olmedo, and Providencia Beyes named her neighbor, Juan Delgado, as appraisers of the estate of the deceased. These appraisers discharged their trust on November 15, 1905, and appraised the inventoried property at $1,104.50, which included the rural property of 75.50 cuerdas which was appraised at $755, or $10 the cuerda.

The partition having been made on the basis of the ap-praisement made and it being impossible to satisfy the legacy of Providencia Beyes, the partition was submitted to the court for approval on January 30, 1906. On October 16, 1916, the parties stipulated that Providencia Beyes, in representation of her children, should be allowed to file a written objection to the plan of partition of the hereditary estate submitted by the commissioner.

On November 27, 1916, Providencia Beyes filed a verified motion objecting to the approval of the partition on the ground that the rural property, with the house thereon, had been appraised eleven years ago at $805, whereas its present value was $5,000, and that, therefore, a new appraisement of the property should be made according to which the partition of the estate should be made and the debts and legacies paid.

*508The motion was overruled by an order of February 12, 1917, by which the court approved the inventory, appraisement, liquidation and partition of- the estate left by Obdulio Delgado Santana at bis death, which partition should be pro-tocoled in the notarial office of Attorney Francisco González Fagundo.

Providencia Beyes, in representation of her minor children, appealed from the said order to this court, alleging in support of her appeal that the appraisement of the rural property in question at $755, made more than -eleven years ago,'when its present value at the time of consummating the partition is $5,000, cannot serve as a basis for the partition made which has deprived the appellant’s minor children of the legacy left them by the testator and fails to comply with the latter’s wishes.

The approval of the partition of the estate of Obdulio Delgado Santana must be considered as of the date on which it was made, and if on that date it was not fatally defective, we do not see how it can be annulled now for a reason that did not exist at the time it was made, inasmuch as it is not claimed that there was ány error in the appraisement at that time.

As a matter of fact, one of the appraisers who made the appraisement was named by Providencia Beyes in representation of her children.

If after the approval of a partition the value of the property involved should increase, the partition certainly cannot be annulled on that ground alone. Nor can an appraisement which was deemed just when it was made be annulled for no other reason than that pleaded by the appellant.

Moreover, Providencia Beyes has not attempted to show that the rural property in question is now worth the $5,000 at which she values it; and although she alleges this under oath, her oath alone is not sufficient to make her statement unassailable, referring as it does to an opinion of the appellant and not to a fact known to her of her own knowledge.

*509Although the value of real property may have increased considerably in recent years — and this may be granted as a general proposition- — it cannot be held that a specific property has shared in such increase in value. It might be that if a new appraisement of the property in question were ordered its value would not be found to be greater than that at which it was appraised, and, therefore, such an order would serve no practical purpose.

The order appealed from must be

Affirmed.

Justices Wolf, del Toro, Aldrey and Hutchison concurred.