Republic of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila
SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC
G.R. No. L-16749 January 31, 1963IN THE MATTER OF THE TESTATE ESTATE OF EDWARD E. CHRISTENSEN, DECEASED.
ADOLFO C. AZNAR, Executor and LUCY CHRISTENSEN, Heir of the deceased, Executor and Heir-appellees,
vs.
HELEN CHRISTENSEN GARCIA, oppositor-appellant.
M. R. Sotelo for executor and heir-appellees.
Leopoldo M. Abellera and Jovito Salonga for oppositor-appellant.
LABRADOR, J.:
This is an appeal from a decision of the Court of
First Instance of Davao, Hon. Vicente N. Cusi, Jr., presiding, in
Special Proceeding No. 622 of said court, dated September 14, 1949,
approving among things the final accounts of the executor, directing the
executor to reimburse Maria Lucy Christensen the amount of P3,600 paid
by her to Helen Christensen Garcia as her legacy, and declaring Maria
Lucy Christensen entitled to the residue of the property to be enjoyed
during her lifetime, and in case of death without issue, one-half of
said residue to be payable to Mrs. Carrie Louise C. Borton, etc., in
accordance with the provisions of the will of the testator Edward E.
Christensen. The will was executed in Manila on March 5, 1951 and
contains the following provisions:
3. I declare ... that I have but ONE (1) child, named
MARIA LUCY CHRISTENSEN (now Mrs. Bernard Daney), who was born in the
Philippines about twenty-eight years ago, and who is now residing at No.
665 Rodger Young Village, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A.
4. I further declare that I now have no living
ascendants, and no descendants except my above named daughter, MARIA
LUCY CHRISTENSEN DANEY.
x x x x x x x x x
7. I give, devise and bequeath unto MARIA HELEN
CHRISTENSEN, now married to Eduardo Garcia, about eighteen years of age
and who, notwithstanding the fact that she was baptized Christensen, is
not in any way related to me, nor has she been at any time adopted by
me, and who, from all information I have now resides in Egpit, Digos,
Davao, Philippines, the sum of THREE THOUSAND SIX HUNDRED PESOS
(P3,600.00), Philippine Currency the same to be deposited in trust for
the said Maria Helen Christensen with the Davao Branch of the Philippine
National Bank, and paid to her at the rate of One Hundred Pesos
(P100.00), Philippine Currency per month until the principal thereof as
well as any interest which may have accrued thereon, is exhausted..
x x x x x x x x x
12. I hereby give, devise and bequeath, unto my
well-beloved daughter, the said MARIA LUCY CHRISTENSEN DANEY (Mrs.
Bernard Daney), now residing as aforesaid at No. 665 Rodger Young
Village, Los Angeles, California, U.S.A., all the income from the rest,
remainder, and residue of my property and estate, real, personal and/or
mixed, of whatsoever kind or character, and wheresoever situated, of
which I may be possessed at my death and which may have come to me from
any source whatsoever, during her lifetime: ....
It is in accordance with the above-quoted provisions
that the executor in his final account and project of partition ratified
the payment of only P3,600 to Helen Christensen Garcia and proposed
that the residue of the estate be transferred to his daughter, Maria
Lucy Christensen.
Opposition to the approval of the project of
partition was filed by Helen Christensen Garcia, insofar as it deprives
her (Helen) of her legitime as an acknowledged natural child, she having
been declared by Us in G.R. Nos. L-11483-84 an acknowledged natural
child of the deceased Edward E. Christensen. The legal grounds of
opposition are (a) that the distribution should be governed by the laws
of the Philippines, and (b) that said order of distribution is contrary
thereto insofar as it denies to Helen Christensen, one of two
acknowledged natural children, one-half of the estate in full ownership.
In amplification of the above grounds it was alleged that the law that
should govern the estate of the deceased Christensen should not be the
internal law of California alone, but the entire law thereof because
several foreign elements are involved, that the forum is the Philippines
and even if the case were decided in California, Section 946 of the
California Civil Code, which requires that the domicile of the decedent
should apply, should be applicable. It was also alleged that Maria Helen
Christensen having been declared an acknowledged natural child of the
decedent, she is deemed for all purposes legitimate from the time of her
birth.
The court below ruled that as Edward E. Christensen
was a citizen of the United States and of the State of California at the
time of his death, the successional rights and intrinsic validity of
the provisions in his will are to be governed by the law of California,
in accordance with which a testator has the right to dispose of his
property in the way he desires, because the right of absolute dominion
over his property is sacred and inviolable (In re McDaniel's Estate, 77
Cal. Appl. 2d 877, 176 P. 2d 952, and In re Kaufman, 117 Cal. 286, 49
Pac. 192, cited in page 179, Record on Appeal). Oppositor Maria Helen
Christensen, through counsel, filed various motions for reconsideration,
but these were denied. Hence, this appeal.
The most important assignments of error are as follows:
ITHE LOWER COURT ERRED IN IGNORING THE DECISION OF THE HONORABLE SUPREME COURT THAT HELEN IS THE ACKNOWLEDGED NATURAL CHILD OF EDWARD E. CHRISTENSEN AND, CONSEQUENTLY, IN DEPRIVING HER OF HER JUST SHARE IN THE INHERITANCE.IITHE LOWER COURT ERRED IN ENTIRELY IGNORING AND/OR FAILING TO RECOGNIZE THE EXISTENCE OF SEVERAL FACTORS, ELEMENTS AND CIRCUMSTANCES CALLING FOR THE APPLICATION OF INTERNAL LAW.IIITHE LOWER COURT ERRED IN FAILING TO RECOGNIZE THAT UNDER INTERNATIONAL LAW, PARTICULARLY UNDER THE RENVOI DOCTRINE, THE INTRINSIC VALIDITY OF THE TESTAMENTARY DISPOSITION OF THE DISTRIBUTION OF THE ESTATE OF THE DECEASED EDWARD E. CHRISTENSEN SHOULD BE GOVERNED BY THE LAWS OF THE PHILIPPINES.IVTHE LOWER COURT ERRED IN NOT DECLARING THAT THE SCHEDULE OF DISTRIBUTION SUBMITTED BY THE EXECUTOR IS CONTRARY TO THE PHILIPPINE LAWS.VTHE LOWER COURT ERRED IN NOT DECLARING THAT UNDER THE PHILIPPINE LAWS HELEN CHRISTENSEN GARCIA IS ENTITLED TO ONE-HALF (1/2) OF THE ESTATE IN FULL OWNERSHIP.
There is no question that Edward E. Christensen was a
citizen of the United States and of the State of California at the time
of his death. But there is also no question that at the time of his
death he was domiciled in the Philippines, as witness the following
facts admitted by the executor himself in appellee's brief:
In the proceedings for admission of the will to
probate, the facts of record show that the deceased Edward E.
Christensen was born on November 29, 1875 in New York City, N.Y.,
U.S.A.; his first arrival in the Philippines, as an appointed school
teacher, was on July 1, 1901, on board the U.S. Army Transport
"Sheridan" with Port of Embarkation as the City of San Francisco, in the
State of California, U.S.A. He stayed in the Philippines until 1904.
In December, 1904, Mr. Christensen returned to the
United States and stayed there for the following nine years until 1913,
during which time he resided in, and was teaching school in Sacramento,
California.
Mr. Christensen's next arrival in the Philippines was
in July of the year 1913. However, in 1928, he again departed the
Philippines for the United States and came back here the following year,
1929. Some nine years later, in 1938, he again returned to his own
country, and came back to the Philippines the following year, 1939.
Wherefore,
the parties respectfully pray that the foregoing stipulation of facts
be admitted and approved by this Honorable Court, without prejudice to
the parties adducing other evidence to prove their case not covered by
this stipulation of facts. 1äwphï1.ñët
Being an American citizen, Mr. Christensen was
interned by the Japanese Military Forces in the Philippines during World
War II. Upon liberation, in April 1945, he left for the United States
but returned to the Philippines in December, 1945. Appellees Collective
Exhibits "6", CFI Davao, Sp. Proc. 622, as Exhibits "AA", "BB" and
"CC-Daney"; Exhs. "MM", "MM-l", "MM-2-Daney" and p. 473, t.s.n., July
21, 1953.)
In April, 1951, Edward E. Christensen returned once
more to California shortly after the making of his last will and
testament (now in question herein) which he executed at his lawyers'
offices in Manila on March 5, 1951. He died at the St. Luke's Hospital
in the City of Manila on April 30, 1953. (pp. 2-3)
In arriving at the conclusion that the domicile of
the deceased is the Philippines, we are persuaded by the fact that he
was born in New York, migrated to California and resided there for nine
years, and since he came to the Philippines in 1913 he returned to
California very rarely and only for short visits (perhaps to relatives),
and considering that he appears never to have owned or acquired a home
or properties in that state, which would indicate that he would
ultimately abandon the Philippines and make home in the State of
California.
Sec. 16. Residence is a term used with many shades of
meaning from mere temporary presence to the most permanent abode.
Generally, however, it is used to denote something more than mere
physical presence. (Goodrich on Conflict of Laws, p. 29)
As to his citizenship, however, We find that the
citizenship that he acquired in California when he resided in
Sacramento, California from 1904 to 1913, was never lost by his stay in
the Philippines, for the latter was a territory of the United States
(not a state) until 1946 and the deceased appears to have considered
himself as a citizen of California by the fact that when he executed his
will in 1951 he declared that he was a citizen of that State; so that
he appears never to have intended to abandon his California citizenship
by acquiring another. This conclusion is in accordance with the
following principle expounded by Goodrich in his Conflict of Laws.
The terms "'residence" and "domicile" might well be
taken to mean the same thing, a place of permanent abode. But domicile,
as has been shown, has acquired a technical meaning. Thus one may be
domiciled in a place where he has never been. And he may reside in a
place where he has no domicile. The man with two homes, between which he
divides his time, certainly resides in each one, while living in it.
But if he went on business which would require his presence for several
weeks or months, he might properly be said to have sufficient connection
with the place to be called a resident. It is clear, however, that, if
he treated his settlement as continuing only for the particular business
in hand, not giving up his former "home," he could not be a domiciled
New Yorker. Acquisition of a domicile of choice requires the exercise of
intention as well as physical presence. "Residence simply requires
bodily presence of an inhabitant in a given place, while domicile
requires bodily presence in that place and also an intention to make it
one's domicile." Residence, however, is a term used with many shades of
meaning, from the merest temporary presence to the most permanent abode,
and it is not safe to insist that any one use et the only proper one.
(Goodrich, p. 29)
The law that governs the validity of his testamentary
dispositions is defined in Article 16 of the Civil Code of the
Philippines, which is as follows:
ART. 16. Real property as well as personal property is subject to the law of the country where it is situated.
However, intestate and testamentary successions, both
with respect to the order of succession and to the amount of
successional rights and to the intrinsic validity of testamentary
provisions, shall be regulated by the national law of the person whose
succession is under consideration, whatever may be the nature of the
property and regardless of the country where said property may be found.
The application of this article in the case at bar requires the determination of the meaning of the term "national law" is used therein.
There is no single American law governing the
validity of testamentary provisions in the United States, each state of
the Union having its own private law applicable to its citizens only and
in force only within the state. The "national law" indicated in Article
16 of the Civil Code above quoted can not, therefore, possibly mean or
apply to any general American law. So it can refer to no other than the
private law of the State of California.
The next question is: What is the law in California
governing the disposition of personal property? The decision of the
court below, sustains the contention of the executor-appellee that under
the California Probate Code, a testator may dispose of his property by
will in the form and manner he desires, citing the case of Estate of
McDaniel, 77 Cal. Appl. 2d 877, 176 P. 2d 952. But appellant invokes the
provisions of Article 946 of the Civil Code of California, which is as
follows:
If there is no law to the contrary, in the place
where personal property is situated, it is deemed to follow the person
of its owner, and is governed by the law of his domicile.
The existence of this provision is alleged in
appellant's opposition and is not denied. We have checked it in the
California Civil Code and it is there. Appellee, on the other hand,
relies on the case cited in the decision and testified to by a witness.
(Only the case of Kaufman is correctly cited.) It is argued on
executor's behalf that as the deceased Christensen was a citizen of the
State of California, the internal law thereof, which is that given in
the abovecited case, should govern the determination of the validity of
the testamentary provisions of Christensen's will, such law being in
force in the State of California of which Christensen was a citizen.
Appellant, on the other hand, insists that Article 946 should be
applicable, and in accordance therewith and following the doctrine of
the renvoi, the question of the validity of the testamentary
provision in question should be referred back to the law of the
decedent's domicile, which is the Philippines.
The theory of doctrine of renvoi has been defined by various authors, thus:
The problem has been stated in this way: "When the
Conflict of Laws rule of the forum refers a jural matter to a foreign
law for decision, is the reference to the purely internal rules of law
of the foreign system; i.e., to the totality of the foreign law minus
its Conflict of Laws rules?"
On logic, the solution is not an easy one. The
Michigan court chose to accept the renvoi, that is, applied the Conflict
of Laws rule of Illinois which referred the matter back to Michigan
law. But once having determined the the Conflict of Laws principle is
the rule looked to, it is difficult to see why the reference back should
not have been to Michigan Conflict of Laws. This would have resulted in
the "endless chain of references" which has so often been criticized be
legal writers. The opponents of the renvoi would have looked merely to
the internal law of Illinois, thus rejecting the renvoi or the reference
back. Yet there seems no compelling logical reason why the original
reference should be the internal law rather than to the Conflict of Laws
rule. It is true that such a solution avoids going on a merry-go-round,
but those who have accepted the renvoi theory avoid this inextricabilis circulas by getting off at the second reference and at that point applying internal law. Perhaps the opponents of the renvoi are a bit more consistent for they look always to internal law as the rule of reference.
Strangely enough, both the advocates for and the objectors to the renvoi
plead that greater uniformity will result from adoption of their
respective views. And still more strange is the fact that the only way
to achieve uniformity in this choice-of-law problem is if in the dispute
the two states whose laws form the legal basis of the litigation
disagree as to whether the renvoi should be accepted. If both
reject, or both accept the doctrine, the result of the litigation will
vary with the choice of the forum. In the case stated above, had the
Michigan court rejected the renvoi, judgment would have been against the woman; if the suit had been brought in the Illinois courts, and they too rejected the renvoi,
judgment would be for the woman. The same result would happen, though
the courts would switch with respect to which would hold liability, if
both courts accepted the renvoi.
The Restatement accepts the renvoi theory in
two instances: where the title to land is in question, and where the
validity of a decree of divorce is challenged. In these cases the
Conflict of Laws rule of the situs of the land, or the domicile of the
parties in the divorce case, is applied by the forum, but any further
reference goes only to the internal law. Thus, a person's title to land,
recognized by the situs, will be recognized by every court; and every
divorce, valid by the domicile of the parties, will be valid everywhere.
(Goodrich, Conflict of Laws, Sec. 7, pp. 13-14.)
X, a citizen of Massachusetts, dies intestate,
domiciled in France, leaving movable property in Massachusetts, England,
and France. The question arises as to how this property is to be
distributed among X's next of kin.
Assume (1) that this question arises in a
Massachusetts court. There the rule of the conflict of laws as to
intestate succession to movables calls for an application of the law of
the deceased's last domicile. Since by hypothesis X's last domicile was
France, the natural thing for the Massachusetts court to do would be to
turn to French statute of distributions, or whatever corresponds thereto
in French law, and decree a distribution accordingly. An examination of
French law, however, would show that if a French court were called upon
to determine how this property should be distributed, it would refer
the distribution to the national law of the deceased, thus applying the
Massachusetts statute of distributions. So on the surface of things the
Massachusetts court has open to it alternative course of action: (a)
either to apply the French law is to intestate succession, or (b) to
resolve itself into a French court and apply the Massachusetts statute
of distributions, on the assumption that this is what a French court
would do. If it accepts the so-called renvoi doctrine, it will follow the latter course, thus applying its own law.
This is one type of renvoi. A jural matter is
presented which the conflict-of-laws rule of the forum refers to a
foreign law, the conflict-of-laws rule of which, in turn, refers the
matter back again to the law of the forum. This is renvoi in the
narrower sense. The German term for this judicial process is
'Ruckverweisung.'" (Harvard Law Review, Vol. 31, pp. 523-571.)
After a decision has been arrived at that a foreign
law is to be resorted to as governing a particular case, the further
question may arise: Are the rules as to the conflict of laws contained
in such foreign law also to be resorted to? This is a question which,
while it has been considered by the courts in but a few instances, has
been the subject of frequent discussion by textwriters and essayists;
and the doctrine involved has been descriptively designated by them as
the "Renvoyer" to send back, or the "Ruchversweisung", or the
"Weiterverweisung", since an affirmative answer to the question
postulated and the operation of the adoption of the foreign law in toto
would in many cases result in returning the main controversy to be
decided according to the law of the forum. ... (16 C.J.S. 872.)
Another theory, known as the "doctrine of renvoi", has been advanced. The theory of the doctrine of renvoi
is that the court of the forum, in determining the question before it,
must take into account the whole law of the other jurisdiction, but also
its rules as to conflict of laws, and then apply the law to the actual
question which the rules of the other jurisdiction prescribe. This may
be the law of the forum. The doctrine of the renvoi has generally been repudiated by the American authorities. (2 Am. Jur. 296)
The scope of the theory of renvoi has also
been defined and the reasons for its application in a country explained
by Prof. Lorenzen in an article in the Yale Law Journal, Vol. 27,
1917-1918, pp. 529-531. The pertinent parts of the article are quoted
herein below:
The recognition of the renvoi theory implies
that the rules of the conflict of laws are to be understood as
incorporating not only the ordinary or internal law of the foreign state
or country, but its rules of the conflict of laws as well. According to
this theory 'the law of a country' means the whole of its law.
x x x x x x x x x
Von Bar presented his views at the meeting of the
Institute of International Law, at Neuchatel, in 1900, in the form of
the following theses:
(1) Every court shall observe the law of its country as regards the application of foreign laws.
(2) Provided that no express provision to the contrary exists, the court shall respect:
(a) The provisions of a foreign law which disclaims
the right to bind its nationals abroad as regards their personal
statute, and desires that said personal statute shall be determined by
the law of the domicile, or even by the law of the place where the act
in question occurred.
(b) The decision of two or more foreign systems of
law, provided it be certain that one of them is necessarily competent,
which agree in attributing the determination of a question to the same
system of law.
x x x x x x x x x
If, for example, the English law directs its judge to
distribute the personal estate of an Englishman who has died domiciled
in Belgium in accordance with the law of his domicile, he must first
inquire whether the law of Belgium would distribute personal property
upon death in accordance with the law of domicile, and if he finds that
the Belgian law would make the distribution in accordance with the law
of nationality — that is the English law — he must accept this reference
back to his own law.
We note that Article 946 of the California Civil Code is its conflict of laws rule, while the rule applied in In re Kaufman, Supra,
its internal law. If the law on succession and the conflict of laws
rules of California are to be enforced jointly, each in its own intended
and appropriate sphere, the principle cited In re Kaufman should apply
to citizens living in the State, but Article 946 should apply to such of
its citizens as are not domiciled in California but in other
jurisdictions. The rule laid down of resorting to the law of the
domicile in the determination of matters with foreign element involved
is in accord with the general principle of American law that the
domiciliary law should govern in most matters or rights which follow the
person of the owner.
When a man dies leaving personal property in one or
more states, and leaves a will directing the manner of distribution of
the property, the law of the state where he was domiciled at the time of
his death will be looked to in deciding legal questions about the will,
almost as completely as the law of situs is consulted in questions
about the devise of land. It is logical that, since the domiciliary
rules control devolution of the personal estate in case of intestate
succession, the same rules should determine the validity of an attempted
testamentary dispostion of the property. Here, also, it is not that the
domiciliary has effect beyond the borders of the domiciliary state. The
rules of the domicile are recognized as controlling by the Conflict of
Laws rules at the situs property, and the reason for the recognition as
in the case of intestate succession, is the general convenience of the
doctrine. The New York court has said on the point: 'The general
principle that a dispostiton of a personal property, valid at the
domicile of the owner, is valid anywhere, is one of the universal
application. It had its origin in that international comity which was
one of the first fruits of civilization, and it this age, when business
intercourse and the process of accumulating property take but little
notice of boundary lines, the practical wisdom and justice of the rule
is more apparent than ever. (Goodrich, Conflict of Laws, Sec. 164, pp.
442-443.)
Appellees argue that what Article 16 of the Civil Code of the Philippines pointed out as the national law
is the internal law of California. But as above explained the laws of
California have prescribed two sets of laws for its citizens, one for
residents therein and another for those domiciled in other
jurisdictions. Reason demands that We should enforce the California
internal law prescribed for its citizens residing therein, and enforce
the conflict of laws rules for the citizens domiciled abroad. If we must
enforce the law of California as in comity we are bound to go, as so
declared in Article 16 of our Civil Code, then we must enforce the law
of California in accordance with the express mandate thereof and as
above explained, i.e., apply the internal law for residents therein, and
its conflict-of-laws rule for those domiciled abroad.
It is argued on appellees' behalf that the clause "if
there is no law to the contrary in the place where the property is
situated" in Sec. 946 of the California Civil Code refers to Article 16
of the Civil Code of the Philippines and that the law to the contrary in
the Philippines is the provision in said Article 16 that the national law
of the deceased should govern. This contention can not be sustained. As
explained in the various authorities cited above the national law
mentioned in Article 16 of our Civil Code is the law on conflict of laws
in the California Civil Code, i.e., Article 946, which authorizes the
reference or return of the question to the law of the testator's
domicile. The conflict of laws rule in California, Article 946, Civil
Code, precisely refers back the case, when a decedent is not domiciled
in California, to the law of his domicile, the Philippines in the case
at bar. The court of the domicile can not and should not refer the case
back to California; such action would leave the issue incapable of
determination because the case will then be like a football, tossed back
and forth between the two states, between the country of which the
decedent was a citizen and the country of his domicile. The Philippine
court must apply its own law as directed in the conflict of laws rule of
the state of the decedent, if the question has to be decided,
especially as the application of the internal law of California provides
no legitime for children while the Philippine law, Arts. 887(4) and
894, Civil Code of the Philippines, makes natural children legally
acknowledged forced heirs of the parent recognizing them.
The Philippine cases (In re Estate of Johnson, 39
Phil. 156; Riera vs. Palmaroli, 40 Phil. 105; Miciano vs. Brimo, 50
Phil. 867; Babcock Templeton vs. Rider Babcock, 52 Phil. 130; and Gibbs
vs. Government, 59 Phil. 293.) cited by appellees to support the
decision can not possibly apply in the case at bar, for two important
reasons, i.e., the subject in each case does not appear to be a citizen
of a state in the United States but with domicile in the Philippines,
and it does not appear in each case that there exists in the state of
which the subject is a citizen, a law similar to or identical with Art.
946 of the California Civil Code.
We therefore find that as the domicile of the
deceased Christensen, a citizen of California, is the Philippines, the
validity of the provisions of his will depriving his acknowledged
natural child, the appellant, should be governed by the Philippine Law,
the domicile, pursuant to Art. 946 of the Civil Code of California, not
by the internal law of California..
WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is hereby
reversed and the case returned to the lower court with instructions that
the partition be made as the Philippine law on succession provides.
Judgment reversed, with costs against appellees.
Padilla, Bautista Angelo, Concepcion, Reyes, Barrera, Paredes, Dizon, Regala and Makalintal, JJ., concur.Bengzon, C.J., took no part.
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