delivered the opinion of the court.
El Ancora, an insurance company, appeals from a judgment in favor of the mother of one of its policy-holders and from an order overruling a motion for a new trial.
There is no separate assignment of errors and the matters complained of in the course of the argument, contained in an unpaged brief for appellant, do not demand extended consideration.
The first contention is that the court below erred in rendering judgment for plaintiff, notwithstanding a finding that the evidence as a whole justified a suspicion that the assured was tuberculous at the time of his application. The finding referred to reads thus:
‘ ‘ On tbe other hand, the court holds that although from an examination of the evidence as a whole there are some suspicions that the assured Juan Yilar, upon becoming a member of El Ancora and at the time of his death, might have been suffering from tubercu*853losis, yet this fact bas not been satisfactorily proved, in tbe opinion of the court, and, on the contrary, the plaintiff has presented evidence tending to show that the said Juan Vilar did not suffer from said complaint.”
Articles 8 and 9 of the company’s regulations read as follows:
“Art. 8. — In order that a person may become a member the formality of a medical examination is required. The physician making this examination shall be chosen by the company, which reserves the right of submitting the applicant to a new examination by its physician, should that be necessary.
“Art. 9. — After ascertaining that the applicant is in good health, or suffers from any complaint which alone would not cause death within a short time in the opinion of the physician, the company will give him a certificate showing that he is a subscriber, after the required entrance fees have been paid.'”
The second specification is that the court erred by including in its judgment interest on the amount of the claim. The theory is that the company having no capital of its own, the applicant contracted for payment to he made out of assessments levied upon and collected from the members after deduction of a portion thereof to cover general expenses and by way of contribution to a certain fund, as provided by the articles of incorporation. But neither the spirit nor the letter of the clause quoted by appellant exempt the company from payment of interest on the amount overdue and unpaid to beneficiaries under the policy issued by such company.
The third proposition is that the court erred in admitting a private document as evidence of reassignment or rescission of a previous transfer of the policy made by the assured prior to his death and thereafter ratified and acknowledged by plaintiff as sole and universal heir of deceased. Sections 1247 and 1198 of the Civil Code are cited to show the invalidity of such reassignment. Section 1247 provides that *854‘ ‘ The following must appear in a public instrument: * * * á. The assignment, repudiation, and renunciation of hereditary rights or of those of the conjugal partnership.” The document in question however, did not purport to pass any hereditary right of the transferor, but involved the reassign-rdent of an insurance policy by an assignee of the assured to the sole and universal heir of such assured after his death.
Section 1198 provides that “ Private instruments executed for the purpose of changing the agreements made in a public instrument shall produce no effect against a third person.”
Had defendant paid the amount of the policy to the original assignee after the transfer by him to plaintiff, without notice of such transfer, the section last quoted would be applicable; but the evidence shows, on the contrary, that defendant had refused to recognize as valid the original assignment upon the ground that the same had not been executed in the presence of certain officers of the company, as required by the regulations. Indeed, this attitude on the part of the company seems to have been the principal reason for the reassignment now assailed on the grounds above indicated.
The next question raised in the brief might have constituted sufficient ground for reversal had appellant brought up the record, admission of which was refused. The contention is that the court erred “in not admitting as evidence the mandamus proceeding instituted before the District Court of Ponce by Juana Maria Vilar against the Ancora for the recovery of the amount of the policy in question, which was offered by defendant in order to show the existence of another action pending between the same parties in regard to the same subject-matter.”
The answer contained an affirmative averment which, liberally construed, might be regarded as a plea in abatement' on the ground of another action pending between the same parties as to the same subject-matter, but the attention of the court below was not called to this circumstance at the *855time the record in the previous suit was offered, not as sug-. gested by appellant in the assignment of error, but in so. far as disclosed by the statement of counsel at the time for the sole purpose of showing that a certain mandamus proceeding No. 4881 was “pending decision in the Supreme Court of Porto Eico ’ ’ by reason of an appeal taken from the judgment rendered by the district court. The court below thereupon sustained the objection of plaintiff to the admission of such record for the purpose indicated, but added that it might be admitted to show certain dates referred to in a previous tender of the same evidence. Whether or not the same was in fact admitted does not clearly appear, but in any event appellant lias not brought up the record so offered and rejected as evidence, and for this reason we can not review the ruling now assigned as error.
The fifth assignment is that the court erred in refusing a new trial. In the answer defendant set up, among other things, that “the plaintiff, Juana Maria Vilar, by a public instrument dated August 21, 1915, executed before the’notary of Caguas, A. Mena, sold the rights to the policy of Juan Vilar to Eliocloro Vidal and so notified the company, sending it a copy of the instrument of sale.” The principal, if not the only ground of the motion for a new trial, and the point most stressed upon appeal in this regard is that defendant was surprised by the introduction of the rescission or reassignment of the policy, the admissibility of which we have already discussed, and that, relying upon the defense that plaintiff was not the true party in interest and upon the advice of counsel and in order to avoid unnecessary expense, defendant had not brought its witnesses to court. The second witness for plaintiff testified, without objection, both to the original assignment and to the reassignment or rescission. When the document last mentioned was exhibited to this witness however, counsel for defendant objected to further testimony in regard thereto upon the ground that it was *856a private agreement and a public instrument bad been mentioned. Plaintiff thereupon offered the document as evidence and the court, although no further objection was made, of its own motion reserved its ruling pending identification of the document. When it was again tendered and admitted as evidence, no objection whatever was made thereto nor was any exception taken. We need not" speculate at this time as to whether or not the admission of this evidence over proper objection by the defendant or a refusal thereupon to grant defendant a reasonable opportunity to produce its witnesses upon timely request therefor and suggestion of surprise at the trial would have been reversible error.
If the claim of surprise be not an afterthought that came too late when made for the first time as ground for a new trial, at least it is not the “accident or surprise which ordinary prudence could not have guarded against” contemplated by the Code of Civil Procedure, and the court below did not err in overruling the motion.
The judgment and order appealed from must be
Affirmed.
Chief Justice Hernández and Justices Wolf, Del Toro and Aldrey concurred.