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Dolar Vs Sundiam

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[G.R. No. L-27631. April 30, 1971.

]
CIRILO D. DOLAR and LUIS B. TUPAS, petitioners, vs. CARLOS L. SUNDIAM,
GREGORIO LIRA and REMIGES LUMAMPAO, respondents.
Gaudencio D. Demaisip for petitioners.
Lopez Vito for respondents.
SYLLABUS
1.
REMEDIAL LAW; PROVISIONAL REMEDIES; RECEIVERSHIP; OBJECTIVE;
WHEN AVAILABLE IF THE PROPERTY IS ALREADY IN THE CUSTODY OF THE LAW.
The principal object of the ancillary relief of receivership is to secure and preserve the
property or thing in controversy pending litigation in order that, as far as practicable, a judicial
tribunal, in aid of its jurisdiction, may be able to effectively bestow to the parties litigant the
rights to which they are entitled, or exact from them the obligations to which they are subject,
under the law. Ordinarily, therefore, this remedy will not lie where the property involved is
already in custody of law, such as that in the hands of an executor or administrator. In these
cases, the practical and equitable purposes to be accomplished under a receivership are then
virtually available. The fact remains, however that relief by way of receivership is essentially
equitable in nature, and consequently, must be controlled by, and administered on, equitable
principles, in the absence of statutory principles specifically defining or laying out the dimension
of its coverage, scope or application. Thus, the Corpus Juris Secundum, in a brief resume of the
decisions of several learned American tribunals, says: "Ordinarily, a receiver cannot be put on
property which is already in custody of the law under process from another court of competent
jurisdiction; and there cannot be more than one receiver over the same property . . . . A court of
equity has power to appoint a receiver of property which is already in the hands of an executor or
administrator, but such power should be exercised u with caution, and a receiver should not be
appointed to take assets out of the hands of legally appointed representatives except in cases of
manifest danger of loss or destruction of, or material injury to, assets. . . . " . . . Also, a receiver
will be appointed when the executor or administrator has been guilty of misconduct, waste, or
misuse of assets, and there is real danger of loss, and conversely, a receiver will not be appointed
to take assets from the custody of an executor or administrator unless there is manifest danger of
loss or destruction of, or material injury to, the assets and a receivership is clearly necessary to
protect and preserve the property."
2.
ID.; ID.; ID.; APPOINTMENT OF RECEIVER; WHEN REASONABLE. A piece of
property which originally is a part of the estate of a deceased person is sold by an heir of the
deceased having a valid claim thereto, and said piece of property is, by mistake, subsequently
inventoried or considered part of the deceased's estate subject to settlement, and, thereafter, with
the authority and approval of the probate court, is sold once more to another person, a receiver of
the property so sold may, during the pendency of a motion to set aside the second sale, be

appointed by the court when in its sound judgment the grant of such temporary relief is
reasonably necessary to secure and protect the rights of its real owner against any danger of loss
or material injury to him arising from the use and enjoyment thereof by another who manifestly
cannot acquire any right of dominion thereon because the approving surrogate court had already
lost jurisdiction to authorize the further sale of such property to another person. Under the
particular facts of the instant dispute, we find no compelling reason for disturbing the respondent
court's order granting the petition of Lumampao for the appointment of a receiver over the
parcels of land in question.
DECISION
CASTRO, J p:
This is an original action for certiorari and prohibition to set aside an order of the Court of First
Instance of Iloilo dated December 1, 1966, in Special Proceeding 472, granting the petition of the
herein respondent Remigio Lumampao for the appointment of a receiver over two (2) parcels of
land subject of a motion, filed by the said respondent Lumampao, to set aside the sale thereof
made by the herein petitioner Luis Tupas, in his capacity as judicial administrator of the testate
estate of one Generoso Tupas, Sr., in favor of his herein co-petitioner Cirilo Dolar.
On June 25, 1948, one Generoso Tupas, Jr. filed a petition with the Court of First Instance of
Iloilo (docketed as Special Proceeding 472) for the allowance of his father's will and the
appointment of an administrator for the deceased's estate. The deceased was survived by his
spouse, his son Generoso Tupas, Jr., and his other children by a first marriage.
After the probate of the will and the appointment of the deceased's widow (later replaced by Luis
Tupas) as judicial administrator of the testate estate, Generoso Tupas, Jr., on December 5,1953,
sold to the herein respondent Lumampao, for the price of P40,000, two (2) parcels of land
bequeathed to him by his father. On August 9, 1955, Lumampao, by virtue of this purchase,
asked the surrogate court to be allowed to intervene in the proceedings. The court granted his
motion.
On July 9, 1956, a project of partition of the testate estate, comprising at least two hundred
twenty-three (223) hectares, was submitted to the probate court for approval, by the here n
petitioner Luis Tupas, as judicial administrator thereof. The two parcels of land of the testate
estate previously sold to Lumampao, with an area of ninety-two (92) hectares, more or less, were
thereunder expressly assigned to Generoso Tupas, Jr. This project of partition was approved by
the probate court on July 16, 1956.

On February 18, 1957, however, a complaint for the recovery of the said two parcels of land was
filed by Lumampao against Generoso Tupas, Jr. and Luis Tupas with the Court of First Instance
of Iloilo (docketed as civil case 4276), on the ground that the defendants therein, by use of force,

threats, stealth, strategy and intimidation, deprived him of the possession of the said properties
and gathered all the products therefrom. The validity of the sale to him of these properties, which
was brought in issue in the said case, was upheld by the court a quo on May 15, 1959.
This decision, in turn, was affirmed on appeal, by the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. 26507-R on
April 2, 1964. The dispositive portion of the appellate court's decision reads as follows:
"WHEREFORE, the judgment appealed from [declaring Lumampao the owner of said parcels of
real estate] is AFFIRMED, with the modification that Generoso Tupas, Jr. pay plaintiff P437.20
and that defendants pay plaintiff P4,000.00 for the bodega and sugar mill and P6,000.00 annually
from the crop year 1954-55 up to the delivery of the land to plaintiff. Costs against defendants."
The foregoing decision was appealed to this Court in L-23134, but in a minute resolution dated
December 15, 1964 we dismissed the appeal.
Prior to the final adjudication on the aforementioned complaint of Lumampao, however, Luis
Tupas filed with the probate court, on February 9, 1960, a motion for authority to sell four (4)
parcels of land of the testate estate for the payment of taxes due to the Government in the amount
of P1,701.68, attorney's fees and other obligations. The said motion included the two parcels of
land previously sold to Lumampao. The motion was approved by the probate court on February
13, 1960 with Judge Wenceslao Fernan, presiding, subject to the condition that "before executing
the sale, the price must first be referred [to] and approved by his Court."
For some unexplained reason, Luis Tupas did not take any action relative to the foregoing
authority, for, on May 14, 1963, or more than three (3) years later, another motion for authority
to sell the same parcels of land mentioned in his motion of February 9, 1960 was filed by him
with the probate court, again for the payment of municipal taxes in the same amount of
P1,701.68 and P10,000 for counsel's services. This motion, however, unlike the first motion,
bore the signed conformity of the heirs of the deceased, except Generoso Tupas, Jr. The said
motion was approved on May 31, 1963 by the probate court, with Judge Jesus Rodriguez,
presiding, subject to the condition that the real properties mentioned therein shall be said, as per
prayer of Luis Tupas, for not less than P15,000.
On June 4, 1963, Luis Tupas sold to his herein co-petitioner Cirilo Dolar for the price of P15,000
the four (4) parcels of land specified in the motion, comprising an aggregate area of 143 hectares,
more or less, inclusive of the 92 hectares previously sold to Lumampao by Generoso Tupas, Jr.
for P40,000. It will be noted that at this time, the validity of the sale to Lumampao was still
pending adjudication in the Court of Appeals.
On January 24, 1964, the probate court, through Judge Imperial Reyes, who temporarily took
over the functions of the court a quo in the absence of its presiding judge who was then in
Manila, affixed his signature at the foot of the deed of sale executed by Luis Tupas to his copetitioner Cirilo Dolar, indicating his conformity therewith.

On November 6, 1965, Lumampao, in his capacity as intervenor in the settlement proceedings,


filed with the surrogate court an amended motion to set aside the order of the said court dated
May 81, 1963 insofar as it authorized the sale of the two (2) parcels of land conveyed to him by
Generoso Tupas, Jr. Among the grounds adduced by Lumampao in his motion are (a) that the
said parcels of land belong to him by virtue of a final and executory decision of the Court of
Appeals; (b) that contrary to section 7 (b), Rule 89 (formerly Rule 90) of the New Rules of Court
no notice was given to him and to some of the heirs of the deceased of both motions of Luis
Tupas for authority to sell said properties; (c) that the probate court's approvals of the said
motions were all made without his knowledge; (d) that the approval of the conveyance to Cirilo
Dolar of the said parcels was made without any corresponding motion therefor; and (e) that the
testate estate has other properties with which to pay its obligations.
On October 22, 1966, pending decision on his motion to set aside, Lumampao filed with the
probate court a petition for the appointment of a receiver over the two parcels of land conveyed
and adjudicated to him.
On December 1, 1966, the probate court, with Judge Carlos Sundiam presiding, granted
Lumampao's petition, and, on February 8, 1967, appointed the herein respondent Gregorio Lira
receiver over the said parcels of land.
On June 7, 1967, Tupas and Dolar filed with this Court the instant petition to set aside the
receivership order of the court a quo. On June 16, 1967, we issued a writ of preliminary
injunction against the herein respondents Judge Sundiam, Lumampao and Lira.
The principal object of the ancillary relief of receivership is to secure and preserve the property
or thing in controversy pending litigation in order that, as far as practicable, a judicial tribunal, in
aid of its jurisdiction, may be able to effectively bestow to the parties litigant the rights to which
they are entitled, or exact from them the obligations to which they are subject, under the law.
Ordinarily, therefore, this remedy will not lie where the property involved is already in custody
of law, such as that in the hands of an executor or administrator. In these cases, the practical and
equitable purposes to be accomplished under a receivership are then virtually available.
The fact remains, however, that relief by way of receivership is essentially equitable in nature,
and consequently, must be controlled by, and administered on, equitable principles, in the
absence of statutory principles specifically defining or laying out the dimension of its coverage,
scope or application. Thus, the Corpus Juris Secundum 1 in a brief resum of the decisions of
several learned American tribunals, says:
"Ordinarily, a receiver cannot be put on property which is already in custody of the law under
process from another court of competent jurisdiction; and there cannot be more than one receiver
over the same property.. A court of equity has power to appoint a receiver of property which is
already in the hands of an executor or administrator, but such power should be exercised with
caution, and a receiver should not be appointed to take assets out of the hands of legally

appointed representatives except in cases of manifest danger of loss or destruction of, or material
injury to, assets. . . .
". . . Also, a receiver will be appointed when the executor or administrator has been guilty of
misconduct, waste, or misuse of assets, and there is real danger of loss; and conversely, a
receiver will not be appointed to take assets from the custody of an executor or administrator
unless there is manifest danger of loss or destruction of, or material injury to, the assets and a
receivership is clearly necessary to protect and preserve the property."
In appreciating the foregoing principles, it must be borne in mind that, thus far, we have
proceeded upon the assumption that the estate upon which receivership is prayed for is under the
custody of law. Apparently, the two parcels of land in dispute cannot be said to be within this
category, judged from the records of this case. The said two parcels of real estate were, by virtue
of a final and executory judgment, adjudicated in favor of Lumampao Consequently, they can no
longer be said to form part of the testate estate of the late Generoso Tupas, Sr. over which the
probate court can validly exercise jurisdiction in connection with the distribution and liquidation
of the said estate.
The probate court's order authorizing the sale of the said parcels of land was issued and their
subsequent sale to Cirilo Dolar was consummated prior to the rendition of the judgment of the
Court of Appeals upholding the validity of the sale to Lumampao. Consequently, at the time of
the sale of these two parcels to Cirilo Dolar, the status of such parcels as belonging to the testate
estate or to Lumampao was then still fairly controversial. But the inevitable time-lag that goes
with the disposal of court cases cannot, in the present controversy, alter the fact that the Court of
Appeals' decision on the merits of the controversy below was based upon the validity of the deed
of sale of the said parcels to Lumampao, and, thus, in law, said properties belonged to him even
before the authority to sell them was issued by the probate court to Luis Tupas. Hence, although
the appellate court's decision on the ownership question came later, it nevertheless had merely
the effect of erasing once and for all any doubt or uncertainty about the real ownership of the
said parcels. Appellate courts, beset as they are by heaps of cases, cannot be expected naturally
to act on the hour on every litigation brought to them. A court exercising original jurisdiction
over a suit ought, by constant exposure to his exacting job of unraveling what is true and just, to
comprehend the quantum of caution required for the avoidance of simple problems that may in
the future hamper the closure of a dispute before it. There appears, for instance, no plausible
reason why the sale of the two parcels in dispute was authorized by the probate court considering
that the testate estate was still quite enormous, and considering further that the court a quo itself
had, only a short time before that, upheld the validity of their sale to Lumampao.
Moreover, it is essentially the duty of every person dealing at arms' length with the administrator
of an estate subject to settlement and liquidation to inquire about the existence of claims against,
or of persons having interests in, the estate subject of probate and settlement proceedings, for
such proceedings are, by their nature and purpose, open notice to all and sundry once put into

motion. Every diligent person ought to know that such proceedings require not just the
collection, identification, division and distribution of assets; they not infrequently involve
matters more complicated than these.
The foregoing opinion notwithstanding, we find it essential for the purpose of disposing of the
specific issue raised in the instant petition - that the respondent court has no jurisdiction to grant
receivership over the said parcels of land in dispute - to allow the respondent court the benefit of
the doubt, that when it authorized Luis Tupas to sell the real properties in dispute and approved
their sale in favor of Cirilo Dolar, it was acting under an honestly mistaken impression that the
questioned properties still formed part of the inventoriable estate of the late Generoso Tupas, Sr.
In our opinion, where, as in this case, a piece of property which originally is a part of the estate
of a deceased person is sold by an heir of the deceased having a valid claim thereto, and said
piece of property is, by mistake, subsequently inventoried or considered part of the deceased's
estate subject to settlement, and, thereafter, with the authority and approval of the probate court,
is sold once more to another person, a receiver of the property so sold may, during the pendency
of a motion to set aside the second sale, be appointed by the court when in its sound judgment
the grant of such temporary relief is reasonably necessary to secure and protest the rights of its
real owner against any danger of loss or material injury to him arising from the use and
enjoyment thereof by another who manifestly cannot acquire any right of dominion thereon
because the approving surrogate court had already lost jurisdiction to authorize the further sale of
such property to another person.
Under the particular facts of the instant dispute, we find no compelling reason for disturbing the
respondent court's order granting the petition of Lumampao for the appointment of a receiver
over the parcels of land in question.
ACCORDINGLY, the order of the court a quo dated December 1, 1966 is hereby affirmed. The
said court is, however, enjoined to act in consonance with the tenor and intendment of this
decision. No costs.
Concepcion, C . J ., Reyes, J.B.L., Dizon, Makalintal, Zaldivar, Fernando, Teehankee, Barredo,
Villamor and Makasiar, JJ ., concur.

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