Court Opinion

ID: 8537682
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-11-23 11:08:13.089216+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:52:07.032872
License: Public Domain

Order
By deed No. 4 executed on January 9, 1962 before Notary Miguel Bahamonde Ricomar, appellant Luciano Mar-tiniano Garcia constituted a mortgage to secure a note to bearer “on the one-half joint interest belonging to the appearing party” in a certain real property which he had *2acquired during his marriage to Lucy Grillasca Salas and which is recorded in favor of the community partnership constituted by them. A certified copy of this deed was presented in the Registry of Property together with — as a supplementary document — the death certificate of Mrs. Grillasca which occurred in 1944.
The Registrar refused to make the registration sought on the ground that the dissolution of the said community partnership did not appear from the books in his custody. In support of his decision he cites § 1313 of the Civil Code, 31 L.P.R.A. § 3672, and the holding in Blanco v. Registrar of Property, 5 P.R.R. 53 (1903), and Ríos v. The Registrar, 19 P.R.R. 708 (1913).
 The legal provision cited relative to the need for the wife’s consent to alienate property of the community partnership is not applicable to the situation under consideration precisely because the death certificate establishes that one of the spouses is dead, and the object of the contract is the share which corresponds to the surviving spouse in such property. The applicable doctrine is stated in Pérez v. Registrar, 62 P.R.R. 760 (1944); Maldonado v. Registrar, 45 P.R.R. 816 (1933); Muñoz v. Registrar of Caguas, 30 P.R.R. 68 (1921); Allende v. Registrar of San Juan, 28 P.R.R. 529 (1920); Becerra v. Registrar of Guayama, 27 P.R.R. 770 (1919); and Fabián v. Registrar of San Juan, 25 P.R.R. 838 (1917). The case of Rios cited by respondent was expressly modified in that of Allende, and Blanco v. Registrar of Property, supra, involved a situation of facts distinct from that under consideration in which the question was the alienation of an entire piece of real community property by the surviving spouse without the consent of the deceased’s heirs. It is well to point out that the registration can not even be made subject to the result of the liquidation of the community *3partnership, Piazza v. Registrar, 79 P.R.R. 403 (1956); Piazza v. Registrar, 78 P.R.R. 288 (1955); Alameda v. Registrar, 76 P.R.R. 216 (1954).
The decision appealed from is set aside and the registration ordered.
It was so decided and ordered by the Court as witnesses the signature of the Chief Justice.
(s) Luis Negrón Fernández

Chief Justice

I attest:
(s) Ignacio Rivera

General Secretary