Reviewer On Succession
Reviewer On Succession
Reviewer On Succession
GENERAL PROVISIONS
A. Definitions
Concept of Succession
1. Transmission of property, rights and obligations of a
person to subrogate put one person in the place of
another; substitution of the deceased person by a living
person in all transmissible property and juridical relations
2. Universality or entirety of the property, rights and
obligations transmitted by any of the forms of succession
admitted in law
1. SUCCESSION - mode of acquiring ownership; the
inheritance of a person is transmitted either according to his
express will and words or as provided for by law; legal mode
by which inheritance is transmitted.
a. DECEDENT/TESTATOR person whose property is
transmitted through succession
b. HEIR - anyone who succeeds to the whole or
portion/fraction of the inheritance; continuation of the
personality of the deceased.
Kinds of Heirs
1. Compulsory those who succeed by force of law to some
portion of the inheritance, in an amount predetermined by
law, of which they cannot be deprived by the testator,
except by a valid disinheritance.
2. Voluntary/testamentary instituted by the testator in his
will, to succeed to the inheritance or the portion thereof of
which the testator can freely dispose; right to succession
depends entirely upon the will.
3. Legal/intestate when theres no will.
c. LEGATEE/DEVISEE given a gift of personal (legatee) and
real (devisee) property; determinate or individualized thing
or quantity
Why is distinction between heirs and devisees/legatees
important? In case of preterition (exclusion of compulsory
heirs in a will), heirs will be annulled and d/l will be
respected.
d. PROBATE judicial declaration of validity of will.
(Balus v. Balus; J. Peralta 2010)
The rights to a persons succession are transmitted from the
moment of his death. Inheritance consists of the property
and transmissible rights and obligations existing at the time
of his death, as well as those which have accrued thereto
since the opening of the succession. Thus, in the eyes of the
law, the disputed lot no longer formed part of the estate
because Rufo lost it in his lifetime and did not pass into the
hands of petitioner and respondents as compulsory heirs of
Rufo at any given point in time.
2. INHERITANCE mass or totality of the patrimony of the
deceased person; includes all property, rights and
obligations not extinguished by death of decedent
Not transmissible:
1. Arising from marriage
2. Action for legal separation (only to the innocent
spouse)
3. Action to annul marriage
4. Legal support (except in cases expressly provided in
law)
5. Right to receive support
6. Rights of patria potestas (paternal power)
7. Right of the guardian
8. Right of usufruct
9. Right of the donor to revoke donation due to
ingratitude
10. Rights arising from agency
11. Criminal responsibility
A. Personal Rights
* Rights which are purely personal are by their nature and
purpose intransmissible, extinguished by death (civil
personality, family rights, discharge of public office)
B. Patrimonial Rights
* Patrimonial rights are not extinguished by death and are
transmissible unless the law or will of testator expressly
provides otherwise.
(Spouses Santos v. Lumbao; J. Chico-Nazario 2007)
The 107 sqm lot already sold to Sps. Lumbao can no longer
be inherited by petitioners because the same was no longer
part of their inheritance as it was already sold during the
lifetime of their mother.
(Union Bank v. Santibanez)
Well-settled is the rule that a probate court has the
jurisdiction to determine all the properties of the deceased,
to determine whether they should or should not be included
in the inventory or list of properties to be administered.
There can be no valid partition among the heirs until after
the will has been probated.
(Alvarez v. IAC; J.Fernan 1990)
Under our law, therefore, the general rule is that a party's
contractual rights and obligations are transmissible to the
successors. The rule is a consequence of the progressive
'depersonalization' of patrimonial rights and duties. From
the Roman concept of a relation from person to person, the
obligation has evolved into a relation from patrimony to
patrimony, with the persons occupying only a representative
position, barring those rare cases where the obligation is
strictly personal, in consideration of its performance by a
specific person and by no other. Petitioners being the heirs
of the late Rosendo Alvarez, they cannot escape the legal
consequences of their father's transaction, which gave rise
to the present claim for damages.
C. Contractual Obligations
* Rights of obligation are transmissible except:
- personal (personal qualifications and circumstances of
debtor have been taken into account in the creation of the
obligation
3. Effects
a. Right of accretion does not affect intestate succession
because there is technically no vacant share. The result is
the same, shares go to legal heirs who ultimately succeed.
(1018)
NO ACCRETION:
1. (TESTATE) Express will of testator
2. (INTESTATE) Incapacity of child/descendant
because representation will take place
3. (INTESTATE) Predecease of a co-heir; survivors are
called to succession in their own right or by right of
representation
b. The heirs to whom the portion goes by the right of
accretion take it in the same proportion that they inherit.
(1019)
c. The heirs to whom the inheritance accrues shall succeed
to all the rights and obligations which the heir who
renounced or could not receive it would have had. (1020)
d. Among the compulsory heirs the right of accretion shall
take place only when the free portion is left to two or more
of them, or to any one of them and to a stranger. Should the
part repudiated be the legitime, the other co-heirs shall
succeed to it in their own right, and not by the right of
accretion. (1021)
* No accretion in legitiime but only in the free portion.
Testate
* How accretion is prevented:
X
[C Z (1)]
1. Requisites
a. General civil capacity
b. No incapacity/prohibition to succeed (1024)
* Requisites should be present at the time of death and/or
time of condition
Types of Incapacity:
1. Absolute (per se)
2. Relative (per accidens) disqualification only with
respect to specific persons/property
* Heir, devisee or legatee should be living at the moment
succession opens. A child already conceived at the time of
the death of the decedent is capable of succeeding provided
it be born later under the conditions prescribed in article 41.
(1025)
* The State, provinces, municipal corporations, private
corporations, organizations or associations for religious,
scientific, cultural, educations or charitable purposes may be
testate heirs (1026).
When would a corporation have juridical capacity?
At the time it gets Certificate of Registration from SEC
* BUT there are certain corporations prohibited by law to
succeed (ex. Law, charity vested with public interest)
* FOR PRAYERS AND PIOUS WORK- if general terms and
without specifying its application, the executor, with the
court's approval shall deliver one-half thereof or its proceeds
to the church or denomination to which the testator may
belong, to be used for such prayers and pious works, and the
other half to the State, for the purposes mentioned in Article
1013. (1029)
*FOR POOR IN GENERAL - deemed limited to the poor living
in the domicile of the testator at the time of his death,
unless it should clearly appear that his intention was
otherwise.
Who shall designate who are to be considered poor?
1. One appointed by testator
2. Executor
3. Justice of the peace, the mayor, and the municipal
treasurer, who shall decide by a majority of votes
all questions that may arise.
*The approval of the Court of First Instance shall be
necessary.
(Parish Priest of Victoria v. Rigor)
Capacity to succeed is determined at the time of death of
the testator.
B. Interposition (1031)
Testator institutes A as heir; he has an agreement with A to
give inheritance to B; means to skirt Art. 1032
- disguising a disposition in a form of contract ground to
challenge by other heirs
Is it valid if the one transferred to takes the property?
Tolentino: YES, valid if given; Testator ran the risk
Balane: No, contact is void.
C. Relationship (1027) P G T R A P
1. Priest/minister of gospel who extended spiritual aid
2. Guardian (unless descendant. Ascendant, brother, sister
or spouse)
3. Those not permitted by law
th
4. Relatives of priest (with 4 degree)
5. Attesting witness + spouse, parents, children
6. Physician, surgeon, nurse, health officer or druggist
(during last illness)
Balane: What has to be proved is relationship; concept of
influence is presumed
2
D. Unworthiness (1032) C H A P F A G
1. Convicted of an attempt against life of testator, spouse,
descendants, ascendants
2. Heir (of full age) who failed to report violent death of
testator within a month. Unless the authorities have already
taken action; Not applicable to cases wherein, according to
law, there is no obligation to make an accusation2.
3. Abandoning parents; induced daughters to lead corrupt or
immoral life; attempted against virtue
4. Prevents another from making a will, or from revoking
one already made, or who supplants, conceals, or alters the
latter's will
5. Fraud, violence, intimidation, or undue influence to cause
the testator to make a will or to change one already made
6. Falsifies or forges a supposed will of the decedent.
7. Adultery or concubinage with the spouse of the testator
8. Groundlessly accused testator of crime penalized by 6
years imprisonment or more
3. Pardon
* Pardon in writing or knowledge at time of death shall
cause unworthiness to be without effect (1033)
IMPLIED PARDON
If testator knows of such unworthiness but designates
him/her nonetheless.
although not a given: mere silence is not sufficient to
constitute implied pardon; prove that testator know of
unworthiness and there was some kind of disposition
4. Effects
a. Children/descendants of incapacitated child/descendant
of the testator shall acquire right to legitime. Person
excluded shall not enjoy usufruct and admin of property
inherited by children (1035)
LEGITIME
FREE
PORTION
(SACRED)
Voluntary Acts
* Heir has the freedom to accept or repudiate inheritance
because the act only prejudices the heir himself. This follows
the principle that rights granted by law may be waived,
provided such waiver is not contrary to public morals.
* Violence, intimidation, undue influence, error and deceit
will defeat effects.
Partial Acceptance
* Not allowed by the Old Civil Code because it places
uncertainty to transmission of rights by succession.
(Sanchez Roman) The will of the testator should be
respected by the will of the heir because it is more
fundamental and preferred but both should concur to
perfect the relation.
(Manresa) Heir cannot be permitted to continue the
personality of the decedent or represent him in fraction. All
or nothing.
* Partial acceptance is now allowed:
- (Indivisibility argument) Heir in the law is no longer a
continuation of the personality of the deceased; same
footing as that of the legatee
- (Prejudice to creditors) Creditors of the estate must be paid
first
Retroactive Effect
*The effects of the acceptance or repudiation shall always
retroact to the moment of the death of the decedent (1042).
* To retroact at the time of death of the decedent; will of
the heir to take inheritance is made simultaneous to the
death of the decedent. (Continuity of ownership should not
suffer)
*Old Civil Code prohibits acceptance or repudiation with a
term or condition (distinguished from power of testator to
designate day and time to effect institution of heir) as
violative of the law.
To allow acceptance/repudiation with a term or subject
to a condition would be contrary to the principle that there
should not be hiatus or gap even for a moment. It would also
be inconsistent with the irrevocable character of acceptance
or repudiation.
2. Requisites
Requisites of Acceptance (1043)
1. Certainty of death
Will of man is changeable
The person who accepts or repudiates an inheritance
from a living person cannot know whether he will survive or
predecease the decedent or whether he will have the
capacity to succeed in the latters succession
2. Certainty of his rights to the inheritance Ineffective if
heir knows that will is null and void or when he is not sure
whether there are certain relatives nearer in degree or when
he is unsure if he was instituted.
3. Capacity
Capacity to Accept
* Persons having the capacity to succeed but not having the
capacity to dispose of their property may not accept or
repudiate but legal representatives (parents/executors) may
do so for them.
but also
Formality of Repudiation
The acceptance of an inheritance confirms the transmission
of the right of succession while repudiation makes
transmission ineffective (more violent and disturbing
consequences)
* The publicity of repudiation is needed for the benefit of
the creditors and the public interest; opens the way for
other heirs
Authentic Instrument
Sanchez-Roman & Valverde: authentic refers to document
distinct and apart from a public or notarial instrument.
Authentic instrument is one whose genuineness is
admitted or clearly proved
4. Forms of Acceptance
1. Express must be in public or private document
2. Tacit resulting from acts by which the intention to
accept is necessarily implied/ which one would have no right
to do except in the capacity of an heir
* acts if mere preservation/provisional administration is not
acceptance if title or capacity of an heir has not been
assumed (1049).
6. Effects of Repudiation
a. Repudiation by Heir to the prejudice of creditors Creditors may petition court to authorize acceptance of
inheritance. Benefit shall only be to an extent sufficient to
cover credits excess shall be adjudicated to persons whom it
may belong (1052).
Acceptance by Creditors
* co-heirs benefit by receiving more property, creditors are
prejudiced
Acceptance shall benefit in so far as it covers the amount
of their credits; excess shall be adjudicated to person it may
pertain to
Requisites:
1. There must be repudiation by the heir-debtor in legal
form which is valid in law
2. There must be credits existing against the heir who
repudiates
Purely personal
Effect of Mistake
- error must not be due to negligence of the heir; should be
based on facts and circumstances which the heir could not
have known notwithstanding due diligence on his part
Effect of Fraud
rd
- must be practiced by a 3 person; must be serious and
must consist of insidious words or machinations without
which the heirs would not have accepted or repudiated
* Acceptance/repudiation shall be signified to court within
30 days after issuance of order; failure to so such deems heir
to have accepted inheritance (1057).
Art. 808. If the testator is blind, the will shall be read to him
twice; once, by one of the subscribing witnesses, and again,
by the notary public before whom the will is acknowledged.
(n)
Art. 810. A person may execute a holographic will which
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. (678, 688a)
d.
Mortis causa
Individual
h.
Art. 796. All persons who are not expressly prohibited by law
may make a will. (662)
Art. 797. Persons of either sex under eighteen years of age
cannot make a will. (n)
Art. 798. In order to make a will it is essential that the
testator be of sound mind at the time of its execution. (n)
Art. 799. To be of sound mind, it is not necessary that the
testator be in full possession of all his reasoning faculties, or
that his mind be wholly unbroken, unimpaired, or
unshattered by disease, injury or other cause.
It shall be sufficient if the testator was able at the time of
making the will to know the nature of the estate to be
disposed of, the proper objects of his bounty, and the
character of the testamentary act. (n)
Art. 800. The law presumes that every person is of sound
mind, in the absence of proof to the contrary.
The burden of proof that the testator was not of sound mind
at the time of making his dispositions is on the person who
opposes the probate of the will; but if the testator, one
month, or less, before making his will was publicly known to
be insane, the person who maintains the validity of the will
Art. 794. Every devise or legacy shall cover all the interest
which the testator could device or bequeath in the property
disposed of, unless it clearly appears from the will that he
intended to convey a less interest. (n)
Rabadilla v. CA (Purisima)
i.
j.
Unilateral
Dispositive disposes of property
the law of the country in which he may be. Such will may be
probated in the Philippines. (n)
7. FORMS
a. Notarial Will
i. In writing, Language
Art. 804. Every will must be in writing and executed in a
language or dialect known to the testator. (n)
vi. Witnesses
Art. 820. Any person of sound mind and of the age of
eighteen years or more, and not bind, deaf or dumb, and
able to read and write, may be a witness to the execution of
a will mentioned in Article 805 of this Code. (n)
(Roxas v. De Jesus)
The underlying and fundamental objectives permeating the
provisions of the law wills consists in the liberalization of the
manner of their execution with the end in view of giving the
testator more freedom in expressing his last wishes, but with
sufficient safeguards and restrictions to prevent the
commission of fraud and the exercise of undue and
improper pressure and influence upon the testator. If a Will
has been executed in substantial compliance with the
formalities of the law, and the possibility of bad faith and
fraud in the exercise thereof is obviated, said Will should be
admitted to probate (Rey v. Cartagena 56 Phil. 282).
b. Holographic Will
A holographic will can be in any form as long as the intent to
dispose is clearly shown.
i. General Requirements
Art. 810. A person may execute a holographic will which
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. (678, 688a)
Art. 811. In the probate of a holographic will, it shall be
necessary that at least one witness who knows the
handwriting and signature of the testator explicitly declare
that the will and the signature are in the handwriting of the
testator. If the will is contested, at least three of such
witnesses shall be required.
In the absence of any competent witness referred to in the
preceding paragraph, and if the court deem it necessary,
expert testimony may be resorted to. (619a)
(Ajero v. CA)
A reading of Article 813 shows that its requirement affects
the validity of the dispositions contained in the holographic
will, but not its probate. If the testator fails to sign and date
some of the dispositions, the result is that these dispositions
cannot be effectuated. Such failure, however, does not
render the whole testament void.
Likewise, a holographic will can still be admitted to probate
notwithstanding non-compliance with the provisions of
Article 814.
Unless the authenticated alterations, cancellations or
insertions were made on the date of the holographic will or
on testators signature, their presence does not invalidate
the will itself. The lack of authentication will only result in
disallowance of such changes.
It is also proper to note that he requirements of
authentication of changes and signing and dating of
dispositions appear in provisions (Article 813 and 814)
separate from that which provides for the necessary
conditions for the validity of the holographic will (Article
810).
This separation and distinction adds support to the
interpretation that only the requirements of Article 810 of
the NCC and not those found in Articles 813 and 814 are
essential to the probate of a holographic will.
Section 9, Rule 76 of the Rules of Court and Article 839 of
the Civil Code enumerate the grounds for disallowance of
wills. These lists are exclusive; no other grounds can serve to
disallow a will.
In a petition to admit a holographic will, the only issues to be
resolved are:
1. whether the instrument submitted is, indeed, the
decedents last will and testament;
2. whether said will was executed in accordance with the
formalities prescribed by law;
3. whether the decedent had the necessary testamentary
capacity at the time the will was executed; and
4. whether the execution of the will and its signing were
the voluntary acts of the decedent.
The object of the solemnities surrounding the execution of
wills is to close the door against bad faith and fraud;
accordingly, laws on this subject should be interpreted to
attain these primordial ends.
In the case of holographic wills, what assures authenticity is
the requirement that they be totally authographic or
handwritten by the testator himself. Failure to strictly
observe other formalities will no result in the disallowance
of a holographic will that is unquestionable handwritten by
the testator.
(Kalaw v. Relova)
Ordinarily, when a number of erasures, corrections, and
interlineations made by the testator in a holographic Will
litem not been noted under his signature, ... 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
c. Manner - I W B
1. Implication of law
2. Will, codicil, or other writing executed as provided in case
of wills
3. Burning, tearing, cancelling, or obliterating the will with
the intention of revoking it, by the testator himself, or by
some other person in his presence, and by his express
direction. If burned, torn, cancelled, or obliterated by some
other person, without the express direction of the testator,
the will may still be established, and the estate distributed in
accordance therewith, if its contents, and due execution,
and the fact of its unauthorized destruction, cancellation, or
obliteration are established according to the Rules of Court
(830).
not only its execution but its existence. Having proved its
execution by the proponents, the burden is on the
contestant to show that it has been revoked. In a great
majority of instances in which wills are destroyed for the
purpose of revoking them there is no witness to the act of
cancellation or destruction and all evidence of its
cancellation perishes with the testator. Copies of wills
should be admitted by the courts with great caution. When
it is proven, however, by proper testimony that a will was
executed in duplicate and each copy was executed with all
the formalities and requirements of the law, then the
duplicate may be admitted in evidence when it is made to
appear that the original has been lost and was not cancelled
or destroyed by the testator.
(Casiano v. CA)
The physical act of destruction of a will, like burning in this
case, does not per se constitute an effective revocation,
unless the destruction is coupled with animus revocandi on
the part of the testator. It is not imperative that the physical
destruction be done by the testator himself. It may be
performed by another person but under the express
direction and in the presence of the testator. Of course, it
goes without saying that the document destroyed must be
the will itself.
"Animus revocandi is only one of the necessary elements
for the effective revocation of a last will and testament. The
intention to revoke must be accompanied by the overt
physical act of burning, tearing, obliterating, or cancelling
the will carried out by the testator or by another person in
his presence and under his express direction.
There is paucity of evidence to show compliance with these
requirements. For one, the document or papers burned by
Adriana's maid, Guadalupe, was not satisfactorily
established to be a will at all, much less the will of Adriana
Maloto. For another, the burning was not proven to have
been done under the express direction of Adriana. And then,
the burning was not in her presence. Both witnesses,
Guadalupe and Eladio, were one in stating that they were
the only ones present at the place where the stove
(presumably in the kitchen) was located in which the papers
proffered as a will were burned.
The two witnesses were illiterate and does not appear to be
unequivocably positive that the document burned was
indeed Adriana's will. Guadalupe believed that the papers
she destroyed was the will only because, according to her,
Adriana told her so. Eladio, on the other hand, obtained his
information that the burned document was the will because
Guadalupe told him so, thus, his testimony on this point is
double hearsay.
It is an important matter of public interest that a purported
win is not denied legalization on dubious grounds.
Otherwise, the very institution of testamentary succession
will be shaken to its very foundations.
B. Institution of Heirs
Art. 356
Kind of Heir
COMPULSORY
VOLUNTARY
LEGAL
Predecease
1. Transmit nothing
2. Representation
1. Transmit nothing
2. NO Representation
1. Transmit nothing
2. Representation
Incapacity
SAME
SAME
SAME
1. In General
Art. 840. Institution of heir is an act by virtue of which a
testator designates in his will the person or persons who are
to succeed him in his property and transmissible rights and
obligations. (n)
Renunciation
1. Transmit nothing
2. NO Representation
1. Transmit nothing
2. NO Representation
1. Transmit nothing
2. NO Representation
Disinheritance
1. Transmit nothing
2. Representation
1. Transmit nothing
2. Representation
1. Transmit nothing
2. Representation
c. Compulsory Heirs
Art. 887. The following are compulsory heirs:
a. Extent of grant
Art. 842. One who has no compulsory heirs may dispose by
will of all his estate or any part of it in favor of any person
having capacity to succeed.