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Corona Vs CA

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TOPIC: EXECUTORS AND ADMINISTRATORS (1058-1060)

G.R. No. L-59821 August 30, 1982


ROWENA F. CORONA, petitioner,
vs.
THE COURT OF APPEALS, ROMARICO G. VITUG, AVELINO L. CASTILLO, NICANOR CASTILLO,
KATHLEEN D. LUCHANGCO, GUILLERMO LUCHANGCO, JR., ANTONIO LUCHANGCO, RODOLFO
TORRES, REYNALDO TORRES and PURISIMA T. POLINTAN, respondents.

FACTS:
On November 10, 1980, Dolores Luchangco Vitug died. She left two Wills: one, a holographic Will dated
October 3, 1980, which excluded her husband, respondent Romarico G. Vitug, as one of her heirs, and
the other, a formal Will sworn to on October 24, 1980, which expressly disinherited her husband
Romarico "for reason of his improper and immoral conduct amounting to concubinage. The will stated that
she bequeathed her properties in equal shares to her three (3) sisters and her two (2) nieces, and that
her niece, Rowena F. Corona, herein petitioner, as her Executrix.

After Dolores’ death, Rowena filed a petition for the probate of the Wills before the Court of First Instance
of Rizal, Branch VI (Spec.Procs. No. 9398), and for the appointment of Nenita P. Alonte as Administrator
because she (Rowena) is presently employed in the United Nations in New York City. Nenita was
appointed Special Administratrix. This was opposed by the surviving husband, Romarico Vitug
contending that the will should be disallowed because of they were procured through undue and improper
pressure and influence, having been executed at a time when the decedent was seriously ill and under
the medical care. And that the holographic will has impaired his legitime.

On a later date, the Probate Court set aside the order of Nenita’s appointment as special administratrix
and instead appointed the surviving spouse Romanico.

ISSUE:
WON Romanico can be appointed as special administrator despite being disinherited by the decedent
(wife).

RULING:
YES. The appointment of a Special Administrator is discretionary with the Court and is unappealable; that
co-administratorship is impractical and unsound and as between the surviving husband, who was
responsible for the accumulation of the estate by his acumen and who must be deemed to have a
beneficial interest in the entire estate, and a stranger, respondent Court had made the correct choice; and
that the legality of the disinheritance made by the decedent cannot affect the appointment of a Special
Administrator.

However, Nenita F. Alonte, should be appointed as co-Special Administrator. The executrix’s choice of
Special Administrator, considering her own inability to serve and the wide latitude of discretion given her
by the testratix in her will, is entitled to the highest consideration. Objection to Nenita Alonte’s
appointment on grounds of impracticality and lack of kinship are overshadowed by the fact that justice
and equality demand that the side of the deceased wife and the faction of the surviving husband be
represented in the management of the decedent’s estate.
Special Administrators, while they may have respective interests to protect, are officers of the Court
subject to the supervision and control of the Probate Court and are expected to work for the best interests
of the entire estate, its smooth administration, and its earliest settlement.

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