1.SEANGIO V. SEANGIO
Facts:
This is a petition for the settlement
of the intestate estate of the late Segundo Seangio.
Segundo left a holographic will, dated September 20, 1995, disinheriting one of the private
respondents, Alfredo Seangio, for cause.
Private respondents
moved for the dismissal of the probate proceedings[5] primarily on the
ground that the document purporting to be the holographic will of Segundo does
not contain any disposition of the estate of the deceased and thus does not
meet the definition of a will under Article 783 of the Civil Code. According to
private respondents, the will only shows an alleged act of disinheritance by
the decedent of his eldest son, Alfredo, and nothing else; that all other
compulsory heirs were not named nor instituted as heir, devisee or legatee,
hence, there is preterition which would result to intestacy.
Issue:
Whether
the document executed by Segundo can be considered as a holographic will.
Ruling:
YES.
The document, entitled Kasulatan ng Pag-Aalis ng Mana, unmistakably
showed Segundo's intention of excluding his eldest son, Alfredo, as an heir to
his estate for the reasons that he cited therein. In effect, Alfredo was disinherited
by Segundo.
For
disinheritance to be valid, Article 916 of the Civil Code requires that the
same must be effected through a will wherein the legal cause therefor shall be
specified. With regard to the reasons for the disinheritance that were
stated by Segundo in his document, the Court believes that the incidents, taken
as a whole, can be considered a form
of maltreatment of Segundo by his son, Alfredo, and that the matter presents a
sufficient cause for the disinheritance of a child or descendant under
Article 919 of the Civil Code:
Article
919. The following shall be sufficient causes for the disinheritance of children
and descendants, legitimate as well as illegitimate:
(1)
When a child or descendant has been found guilty of an attempt against the life
of the testator, his or her spouse, descendants, or ascendants;
(2)
When a child or descendant has accused the testator of a crime for which the
law prescribes imprisonment for six years or more, if the accusation has been
found groundless;
(3)
When a child or descendant has been convicted of adultery or concubinage with
the spouse of the testator;
(4)
When a child or descendant by fraud, violence, intimidation, or undue influence
causes the testator to make a will or to change one already made;
(5)
A refusal without justifiable cause to support the parents or ascendant who
disinherit such child or descendant;
(6) Maltreatment of the testator by
word or deed, by the child or descendant;[8]
(7)
When a child or descendant leads a dishonorable or disgraceful life;
(8)
Conviction of a crime which carries with it the penalty of civil interdiction.
A
holographic will, as provided under Article 810 of the Civil Code, must be
entirely written, dated, and signed by the hand of the testator himself. It is
subject to no other form, and may be made in or out of the Philippines, and
need not be witnessed.
Segundo's
document, although it may initially come across as a mere disinheritance
instrument, conforms to the formalities of a holographic will prescribed by
law. It is written, dated and signed by the hand of Segundo himself. An intent
to dispose mortis causa[9]
can be clearly deduced from the terms of the instrument, and while it does not
make an affirmative disposition of the latter's property, the disinheritance of
Alfredo, nonetheless, is an act of disposition in itself. In other words, the
disinheritance results in the disposition of the property of the testator
Segundo in favor of those who would succeed in the absence of Alfredo.[10]
Holographic wills, therefore, being
usually prepared by one who is not learned in the law, as illustrated in the
present case, should be construed more liberally than the ones drawn by an
expert, taking into account the circumstances surrounding the execution of the
instrument and the intention of the testator.[12]
In this regard, the Court is convinced that the document, even if captioned as Kasulatan ng Pag-Aalis ng Mana,
was intended by Segundo to be his last testamentary act and was executed by him
in accordance with law in the form of a holographic will. Unless the will is
probated,[13] the disinheritance cannot be given effect.[14]
2.LABRADOR V. LABRADOR
Facts:
On June 10, 1972, Melecio Labrador died in the Municipality of
Iba, province of Zambales, where he was residing, leaving behind a parcel of
land designated as Lot No. 1916 under Original Certificate of Title No. P-1652,
and the following heirs, namely: Sagrado, Enrica, Cristobal, Jesus, Gaudencio,
Josefina, Juliana, Hilaria and Jovita, all surnamed Labrador, and a holographic
will.
On July 28, 1975, Sagrado Labrador (now deceased but substituted
by his heirs), Enrica Labrador and Cristobal Labrador, filed in the court a quo
a petition for the probate
docketed as Special Proceeding No. 922-I of the alleged holographic will of the
late Melecio Labrador.
Subsequently, on September 30, 1975, Jesus Labrador (now
deceased but substituted by his heirs), and Gaudencio Labrador filed an
opposition to the petition on the ground that the will has been extinguished or revoked by implication of
law, alleging therein that on September 30, 1971, that is, before Melecio's
death, for the consideration of Six Thousand (P6,000) Pesos, testator Melecio
executed a Deed of Absolute Sale, selling, transferring and conveying in favor
of oppositors Jesus and Gaudencio Lot No. 1916.
Sagrado thereupon
filed, on November 28, 1975, against his brothers, Gaudencio and Jesus, for the
annulment of said purported Deed of Absolute Sale over a parcel of land, which Sagrado
allegedly had already acquired by devise from their father Melecio Labrador
under a holographic will executed on March 17, 1968.
Issue:
Whether
or not the alleged holographic will of one Melecio Labrador is dated, as provided for in Article 810[2] of the New Civil Code.
Ruling:
YES. The will has been dated in the hand of the testator himself
in perfect compliance with Article 810. It is worthy of note to quote the first
paragraph of the second page of the holographic will, viz:
"And this is the day in which we agreed that we are making
the partitioning and assigning the respective assignment of the said fishpond,
and this being in the month of March, 17th day, in
the year
1968, and this decision and or
instruction of mine is the matter to be followed. And the one who made this
writing is no other than MELECIO LABRADOR, their father."
The law does not specify a particular location where the date
should be placed in the will. The only requirements are that the date be in the
will itself and executed in the hand of the testator. These requirements are
present in the subject will.
The intention to show 17 March 1968
as the date of the execution of the will is plain from the tenor of the
succeeding words of the paragraph. As aptly put by petitioner, the will was not
an agreement but a unilateral act of Melecio Labrador who plainly knew that
what he was executing was a will. The act of partitioning and the declaration
that such partitioning was the testator’s instruction or decision to be
followed reveal that Melecio Labrador was fully aware of the nature of the
estate property to be disposed of and of the character of the testamentary act
as a means to control the disposition of his estate.
3.NHA V. CA
Facts:
On 24 October 1968, Proclamation No. 481 issued by then
President Ferdinand Marcos set aside a 120-hectare portion of land in Quezon
City owned by the NHA[4] as reserved property for the site of the National Government
Center ("NGC"). On 19 September 1977, President Marcos issued
Proclamation No. 1670, which removed a seven-hectare portion from the coverage
of the NGC. Proclamation No. 1670 gave MSBF usufructuary rights over this
segregated portion
This parcel of land,
which shall embrace 7 hectares, shall
be determined by the future survey based on the technical
descriptions found in Proclamation No. 481, and most particularly on the
original survey of the area, dated July 1910 to June 1911, and on the
subdivision survey dated April 19-25, 1968. (Emphasis added)
MSBF
occupied the area granted by Proclamation No. 1670. Over the years, MSBF's
occupancy exceeded the seven-hectare area subject to its usufructuary rights.
By 1987, MSBF occupied approximately 16 hectares. By then the land occupied by
MSBF was bounded by Epifanio de los Santos Avenue ("EDSA") to the
west, Agham Road to the east, Quezon Avenue to the south and a creek to the
north.
On
18 August 1987, MSBF leased a portion of the area it occupied to BGC and other
stallholders. BGC leased the portion facing EDSA, which occupies 4,590 square
meters of the 16-hectare area.
On
11 November 1987, President Corazon Aquino issued Memorandum Order No. 127
("MO 127") which revoked the reserved status of "the 50
hectares, more or less, remaining out of the 120 hectares of the NHA property
reserved as site of the National Government Center." MO 127 also
authorized the NHA to commercialize the area and to sell it to the public.
Issue:
Whether BCG, as lessee of MSBF, the
usufructury, should vacate the area.
Ruling:
NO.
A usufruct may be constituted for a specified term and under
such conditions as the parties may deem convenient subject to the legal
provisions on usufruct.[9]
A usufructuary may lease the object held in usufruct.[10]
Thus, the NHA may not evict BGC if the 4,590 square meter portion MSBF leased
to BGC is within the seven-hectare area held in usufruct by MSBF. The owner of
the property must respect the lease entered into by the usufructuary so long as
the usufruct exists.[11] However, the NHA has the right to evict BGC if BGC occupied a
portion outside of the seven-hectare area covered by MSBF's usufructuary
rights.
ART.
565. The rights and obligations of the usufructuary shall be those provided in
the title constituting the usufruct; in default of such title, or in case it is
deficient, the provisions contained in the two following Chapters shall be
observed.
In the present case,
Proclamation No. 1670 is the title constituting the usufruct. Proclamation No.
1670 categorically states that the seven-hectare area shall be determined
"by future survey under the administration of the Foundation subject to
private rights if there be any."
Proclamation
No. 1670 authorized MSBF to determine the location of the seven-hectare area.
This authority, coupled with the fact that Proclamation No. 1670 did not state
the location of the seven-hectare area, leaves no room for doubt that
Proclamation No. 1670 left it to MSBF to choose the location of the
seven-hectare area under its usufruct.
On the other hand, this
Court cannot countenance MSBF's act of exceeding the seven-hectare portion
granted to it by Proclamation No. 1670. A usufruct is not simply about rights
and privileges. A usufructuary has the duty to protect the owner's interests.
MSBF's
encroachment of its benefactor's property gave birth to the confusion that
attended this case. To put this matter entirely to rest, it is not enough to
remind the NHA to respect MSBF's choice of the location of its seven-hectare
area. MSBF, for its part, must vacate the area that is not part of its
usufruct. MSBF's rights begin and end within the seven-hectare portion of its
usufruct. This Court agrees with the trial court that MSBF has abused the
privilege given it under Proclamation No. 1670. The direct corollary of
enforcing MSBF's rights within the seven-hectare area is the negation of any of
MSBF's acts beyond it.
A
final point. Article 605 of the Civil Code states:
ART. 605. Usufruct cannot be constituted in favor of a town,
corporation, or association for more than fifty years. If it has been constituted, and before the expiration
of such period the town is abandoned, or the corporation or association is
dissolved, the usufruct shall be extinguished by reason thereof.
(Emphasis added)
The law clearly limits any usufruct constituted in favor of a
corporation or association to 50 years. A usufruct is meant only as a lifetime
grant. Unlike a natural person, a corporation or association's lifetime may be
extended indefinitely. The usufruct would then be perpetual. This is especially
invidious in cases where the usufruct given to a corporation or association
covers public land. Proclamation No. 1670 was issued 19 September 1977, or 28
years ago. Hence, under Article 605, the usufruct in favor of MSBF has 22 years
left.
4.CHINA BANKING V. LOZADA
Facts:
On
25 June 1995, the spouses Lozada entered into a Contract to Sell[7]
with PPGI. PPGI, the developer of Makati Prime City Condominium Townhomes
Project (Project), agreed to sell to the spouses Lozada Unit No. 402 of Cluster
1 of the Project, a two-bedroom residential unit with an area of 42.90 square
meters, covered by CCT No. 34898, for the total price of P1,444,014.04, payable
as follows:
30% Downpayment
(including the Residential Fee)
|
P 402,803.92
|
- Payable in 15
months, beginning 2 October 1995
|
70% Balance
|
P 1,010,809.83
|
- Payable upon
completion or turn-over of the unit
|
About
six months later, or on 7 December 1995, PPGI, represented by its President
Kenneth T. Yap and Treasurer Gilbert Y. Yap, and with Mortgage Clearance[8]
from the Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board (HLURB), executed two Deeds of
Real Estate Mortgage[9] in favor of CBC to secure the credit facilities granted by CBC
to PPGI in the combined maximum amount of P37,000,000.00. The real estate
mortgages covered 51 units of the Project, including Unit No. 402.
PPGI availed itself of the said credit facilities and incurred a
total principal obligation of P29,067,708.10 to CBC. When PPGI failed to pay
its indebtedness despite repeated demands, CBC filed with the Clerk of Court
and Ex Officio Sheriff of the Makati
City RTC a Petition for Extrajudicial Foreclosure[10] of the real estate
mortgages on 31 July 1998.
On 25 April 2000, CBC Chief Executive Officer Peter S. Dee
executed an Affidavit of Consolidation[14] stating… xxx …the period for redemption of
the remaining foreclosed properties (which included Unit No. 402) had already
expired without having been redeemed; the titles to the remaining foreclosed
properties had already been consolidated in the name of CBC…xxx
Issue:
Whether the writ of possession may be granted and issued by the
Makati City RTC ex parte or without
notice to other parties.
Ruling:
YES.
Section 7 of Act No. 3135, as amended, which provides:
SEC.
7. In any sale made under the provisions of this Act, the purchaser may
petition the Court of First Instance of the province or place where the
property or any part thereof is situated, to give him possession thereof during
the redemption period, furnishing bond in an amount equivalent to the use of
the property for a period of twelve months, to indemnify the debtor in case it
be shown that the sale was made without violating the mortgage or without
complying with the requirements of this Act. Such petition shall be made under oath and filed in form or an ex
parte
motion in the registration or cadastral proceedings if the property is
registered, or in special proceedings in the case of property registered under
the Mortgage Law or under section one hundred and ninety-four of the
Administrative Code, or of any other real property encumbered with a mortgage
duly registered in the office of any register of deeds in accordance with any
existing law, and in each case the clerk of court shall, upon the filing of
such petition, collect the fees specified in paragraph eleven of section one
hundred and fourteen of Act Numbered Four hundred and ninety six as amended by
Act Numbered Twenty-eight hundred and sixty-six, and the court shall, upon
approval of the bond, order that a writ of possession issue addressed to the
sheriff of the province in which the property is situated, who shall execute
said order immediately. (Emphasis supplied.)
The
Court expounded on the application of the foregoing provision in De Gracia v. San Jose,[44]
thus:
As
may be seen, the law expressly authorizes the purchaser to petition for a writ
of possession during the redemption period by filing an ex parte
motion under oath for that purpose in the corresponding registration or
cadastral proceeding in the case of property with Torrens title; and upon the
filing of such motion and the approval of the corresponding bond, the law also
in express terms directs the court to issue the order for a writ of possession.
Under the legal provisions above copied, the order for a writ of possession
issues as a matter of course upon the filing of the proper motion and the
approval of the corresponding bond. No
discretion is left to the court. And any question
regarding the regularity and validity of the sale (and the consequent
cancellation of the writ) is left to be determined in a subsequent proceeding
as outlined in section 8. Such question is not to be raised as a justification
for opposing the issuance of the writ of possession, since, under the Act, the
proceeding for this is ex
parte. (Emphasis supplied.)
The
purchaser, therefore, in the public auction sale of a foreclosed property is
entitled to a writ of possession; and upon an ex parte petition of the purchaser, it is
ministerial upon the RTC to issue such writ of possession in favor of the
purchaser.
Under
Sec. 35, Rule 39 of the Revised Rules of Court, which was made applicable to
the extrajudicial foreclosure of real estate mortgages by Sec. 6 Act No. 3135,
the possession of the mortgaged property may be awarded to a purchaser in
extrajudicial foreclosures unless a third party is actually holding the
property adversely to the judgment debtor.
The
spouses Lozada acquired possession of Unit No. 402 pursuant to the Contract to
Sell executed in their favor by PPGI. According to the Contract to Sell, PPGI
shall deliver Unit No. 402 to the spouses Lozada upon the completion thereof,
and the spouses Lozada, in turn, shall already be bound at that point to pay
the 70% balance of the purchase price for the said property. The records do not
establish the date when the spouses Lozada actually entered into possession of
Unit No. 402. However,
it is undisputed that they were already in possession thereof at the time CBC
filed its Ex Parte Petition for the Issuance of a Writ
of Possession with the Makati City RTC on July 2001.
Given
the foregoing, it is apparent that the spouses Lozada's possession of Unit No.
402 cannot be considered adverse to that of PPGI. Their right to possess the
said property was derived from PPGI under the terms of the Contract to Sell
executed by the latter in their favor. It was because PPGI contractually agreed
to deliver Unit No. 402 to them even prior to the transfer of ownership and
title over the same that they came into its possession. They cannot assert that
said right of possession is adverse or contrary to that of PPGI when they have
no independent right of possession other than what they acquired from PPGI. The
spouses Lozada can be more appropriately considered the transferee of or
successor to the right of possession of PPGI over Unit No. 402.
It
is true that in the case presently before this Court, PPGI executed in favor of
the spouses Lozada the Contract to Sell covering Unit No. 402 before it
constituted in favor of CBC the real estate mortgages on 51 Project units
including Unit No. 402. Nonetheless, it must be emphasized that what PPGI
executed in favor of the spouses Lozada was a Contract to Sell,[58]
a mere promise to sell,[59]
which, at the moment of its execution, did not yet transfer possession, much
less, title to Unit No. 402 from PPGI to the spouses Lozada. When PPGI
constituted the real estate mortgage on Unit No. 402 in favor of CBC six months
later, possession of and title to the property still resided in PPGI. And when
PPGI subsequently ceded possession of Unit No. 402, upon its completion, to the
spouses Lozada, such right was already burdened by the terms and conditions of
the mortgage constituted thereon. By merely stepping into the shoes of PPGI,
the spouses Lozada's right of possession to Unit No. 402 cannot be less or more
than PPGI's.
5.RAMIREZ V. RAMIREZ
Facts:
The case was about partitioning the testate estate of Jose
Eugenio Ramirez among the principal beneficiaries, namely: his widow Marcelle
Demoron de Ramirez; his two grandnephews Roberto and Jorge Ramirez; and his
companion Wanda de Wrobleski.
The widow Marcelle is a French who lives in Paris, while the
companion Wanda is an Austrian who lives in Spain. Moreover, the testator
provided for substitutions.
Jose Eugenio Ramirez,
a Filipino national, died in Spain on December 11, 1964, with only his widow as
compulsory heir. His will was admitted to probate by the Court of First
Instance of Manila, Branch X, on July 27, 1965. Maria Luisa Palacios was
appointed administratrix of the estate.
On June 23, 1966, the
administratrix submitted a project of partition as follows: the property of the
deceased is to be divided into two parts. One part shall go to the widow
"en pleno dominio" in satisfaction of her legitime; the other part or
"free portion" shall go to Jorge and Roberto Ramirez "en nuda
propriedad." Furthermore, one third (1/3) of the free portion is charged
with the widow's usufruct and the remaining two-third (2/3) with a usufruct in
favor of Wanda.
Issue:
Whether the usufruct in favor of Wanda
valid.
Ruling:
YES. The 1935 Constitution which is controlling provides as follows:
"SEC.
5. Save in cases of hereditary succession, no private agricultural
land shall be transferred or assigned except to individuals, corporations, or
associations qualified to acquire or hold lands of the public domain in the
Philippines." (Art. XIII.)
The court a quo upheld the validity of the
usufruct given to Wanda on the ground that the Constitution covers not only
succession by operation of law but also testamentary succession. We are of the
opinion that the Constitutional provision which enables aliens to acquire
private lands does not extend to testamentary succession for otherwise the
prohibition will be for naught and meaningless. Any alien would be able to
circumvent the prohibition by paying money to a Philippine landowner in
exchange for a devise of a piece of land.
This opinion notwithstanding, We uphold the usufruct in favor of Wanda because a usufruct,
albeit a real right, does not vest title to the land in the usufructuary and it
is the vesting of title to land in favor of aliens which is proscribed by the
Constitution.
6.KALAW V. RELOVA
Facts:
On
September 1, 1971, private
respondent GREGORIO K. KALAW, claiming to be the sole heir of his deceased
sister, Natividad K. Kalaw, filed a petition before the Court of First Instance
of Batangas, Branch VI, Lipa City, for the probate of her holographic Will
executed on December 24, 1968.
The holographic Will, as first written, named ROSA K. Kalaw, a
sister of the testatrix as her sole heir. Hence, on November 10, 1971,
petitioner ROSA K. Kalaw opposed probate alleging, in substance, that the
holographic Will contained alterations, corrections, and insertions without the
proper authentication by the full signature of the testatrix as required by
Article 814 of the Civil Code reading:
"Art. 814. In case of any insertion, cancellation, erasure
or alteration in a holographic will, the testator must authenticate the same by
his full signature."
The NBI reported that the handwriting, the signature, the
insertions and/or additions and the initial were made by one and the same
person. Consequently, Exhibit 'C' was the handwriting of the decedent,
Natividad K. Kalaw.
Issue:
Whether the will, Exhibit ‘C’, should be admitted to probate
although the alterations and/or insertions or additions above-mentioned were
not authenticated by the full signature of the testatrix pursuant to Art. 814
of the Civil Code.
Ruling:
NO. Ordinarily, when
a number of erasures, corrections,
and interlineations made by the testator in a holographic Will have not been
noted under his signature, x x x the Will is not thereby invalidated as a
whole, but at most only as respects the particular words erased, corrected or interlined.
However, when as in this case, the holographic Will in dispute
had only one substantial provision, which was altered by substituting the
original heir with another, but which alteration did not carry the requisite of
full authentication by the full signature of the testator, the effect must be
that the entire Will is voided or revoked for the simple reason that nothing
remains in the Will after that which could remain valid. To state that the Will
as first written should be given efficacy is to disregard the seeming change of
mind of the testatrix. But that change of mind can neither be given effect
because she failed to authenticate it in the manner required by law by affixing
her full signature.
No comments:
Post a Comment