Alamayri vs. Pabale
Alamayri vs. Pabale
Alamayri vs. Pabale
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* THIRD DIVISION.
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care for himself and/or his properties; and second, who is most
qualified to be appointed as his guardian.—The objectives of an
RTC hearing a petition for appointment of a guardian under Rule
93 of the Rules of Court is to determine, first, whether a person is
indeed a minor or an incompetent who has no capacity to care for
himself and/or his properties; and, second, who is most qualified
to be appointed as his guardian. The rules reasonably assume
that the people who best could help the trial court settle such
issues would be those who are closest to and most familiar with
the supposed minor or incompetent, namely, his relatives living
within the same province and/or the persons caring for him.
Same; Same; Same; The burden of proving incapacity to enter
into contractual relations rests upon the person who alleges it; if
no sufficient proof to this effect is presented, capacity will be
presumed.
—While both cases involve a determination of Nave’s
incompetency, it must be established at two separate times, one in
1984 and the other in 1986. A finding that she was incompetent in
1986 does not automatically mean that she was so in 1984. In
Carillo v. Jaojoco, 46 Phil. 957, 960 (1924), the Court ruled that
despite the fact that the seller was declared mentally
incapacitated by the trial court only nine days after the execution
of the contract of sale, it does not prove that she was so when she
executed the contract. Hence, the significance of the two-year gap
herein cannot be gainsaid since Nave’s mental condition in 1986
may vastly differ from that of 1984 given the intervening period.
Capacity to act is supposed to attach to a person who has not
previously been declared incapable, and such capacity is
presumed to continue so long as the contrary be not proved; that
is, that at the moment of his acting he was incapable, crazy,
insane, or out of his mind. The burden of proving incapacity to
enter into contractual relations rests upon the person who alleges
it; if no sufficient proof to this effect is presented, capacity will be
presumed.
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CHICO-NAZARIO, J.:
Before this Court is a Petition for Review on Certiorari1
under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court filed by petitioner
Lolita R. Alamayri (Alamayri) seeking the reversal and
setting aside of the Decision,2 dated 10 April 2001, of the
Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 58133; as well as the
Resolution,3 dated 19 December 2001 of the same court
denying reconsideration of its aforementioned Decision.
The Court of Appeals, in its assailed Decision, upheld the
validity of the Deed of Absolute Sale, dated 20 February
1984, executed by Nelly S. Nave (Nave) in favor of siblings
Rommel, Elmer, Erwin, Roiler and Amanda, all surnamed
Pabale (the Pabale siblings) over a piece of land (subject
property) in Calamba, Laguna, covered by Transfer
Certificate of Title (TCT) No. T-3317 (27604); and, thus,
reversed and set aside the Decision,4 dated 2 December
1997, of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Pasay City,
Branch 119 in Civil Case No. 675-84-C.5 The 2 December
1997
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Decision of the RTC declared null and void the two sales
agreements involving the subject property entered into by
Nave with different parties, namely, Sesinando M.
Fernando (Fernando) and the Pabale siblings; and ordered
the reconveyance of the subject property to Alamayri, as
Nave’s successor-in-interest.
There is no controversy as to the facts that gave rise to
the present Petition, determined by the Court of Appeals to
be as follows:
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directed Judge de Guzman to act on the Nave cases. (Rollo, pp. 69-70)
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same; and (2) she already sold the property in good faith to
Rommel, Elmer, Erwin, Roller and Amanda, all surnamed Pabale
[the Pabale siblings] on February 20, 1984 after the complaint
was filed against her but before she received a copy thereof.
Moreover, she alleged that [Fernando] has no cause of action
against her as he is suing for and in behalf of S.M. Fernando
Realty Corporation who is not a party to the alleged Contract to
Sell. Even assuming that said entity is the real party in interest,
still, [Fernando] cannot sue in representation of the corporation
there being no evidence to show that he was duly authorized to do
so.
Subsequently, [the Pabale siblings] filed a Motion to Intervene
alleging that they are now the land owners of the subject
property. Thus, the complaint was amended to include [the
Pabale siblings] as party defendants. In an Order dated April 24,
1984, the trial court denied [Nave’s] Motion to Dismiss prompting
her to file a Manifestation and Motion stating that she was
adopting the allegations in her Motion to Dismiss in answer to
[Fernando’s] amended complaint.
Thereafter, [Nave] filed a Motion to Admit her Amended
Answer with Counterclaim and Cross-claim praying that her
husband, Atty. Vedasto Gesmundo be impleaded as her co-
defendant, and including as her defense undue influence and
fraud by reason of the fact that she was made to appear as widow
when in fact she was very much married at the time of the
transaction in issue. Despite the opposition of [Fernando] and [the
Pabale siblings], the trial court admitted the aforesaid Amended
Answer with Counterclaim and Cross-claim.
Still unsatisfied with her defense, [Nave] and Atty. Vedasto
Gesmundo filed a Motion to Admit Second Amended Answer and
Amended Reply and Cross-claim against [the Pabale siblings],
this time including the fact of her incapacity to contract for being
mentally deficient based on the psychological evaluation report
conducted on December 2, 1985 by Dra. Virginia P. Panlasigui, M.
A., a clinical psychologist. Finding the motion unmeritorious, the
same was denied by the court a quo.
[Nave] filed a motion for reconsideration thereof asseverating that
in Criminal Case No. 1308-85-C entitled “People vs. Nelly S.
Nave” she raised therein as a defense her mental deficiency. This
being a decisive factor to determine once and for all whether the
contract entered into by [Nave] with respect to the subject
property
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7 Id., at p. 46.
8 Penned by Judge Salvador P. De Guzman, Jr.; id., at pp. 52-59.
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I
THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN HOLDING THAT THE
FINDING THAT NELLY S. NAVE WAS INCOMPETENT IN
SPECIAL PROCEEDING NO. 146-86-C ON JUNE 22, 1988
CANNOT RETROACT TO AFFECT THE VALIDITY OF THE
DEED OF SALE SHE EXECUTED ON FEBRUARY 20, 1984 IN
FAVOR OF RESPONDENTS PABALES.
II
THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN HOLDING THAT THE
DECISION IN SPECIAL PROCEEDING NO. 146-86-C DATED
JUNE 22, 1988 IS NOT BINDING ON RESPONDENTS
PABALES.
III
THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN DENYING
PETITIONER’S MOTION TO SCHEDULE HEARING TO MARK
DOCUMENTARY EXHIBITS IN EVIDENCE TO ESTABLISH
THE IDENTITY OF JOSE PABALE AS THE FATHER OF
RESPONDENTS PABALES.9
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9 Id., at p. 18.
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11 Vda. de Cruzo v. Carriaga, Jr., G.R. Nos. 75109-10, 28 June 1989, 174 SCRA
330, 338.
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No identity of parties
SP. PROC. No. 146-86-C was a petition filed with the
RTC by Atty. Gesmundo for the appointment of a guardian
over the person and estate of his late wife Nave alleging
her incompetence.
A guardian may be appointed by the RTC over the
person and estate of a minor or an incompetent, the latter
being described as a person “suffering the penalty of civil
interdiction or who are hospitalized lepers, prodigals, deaf
and dumb who are unable to read and write, those who are
of unsound mind, even though they have lucid intervals,
and persons not being of unsound mind, but by reason of
age, disease, weak mind, and other similar causes, cannot,
without outside aid, take care of themselves and manage
their property, becoming thereby an easy prey for deceit
and exploitation.”14
Rule 93 of the Rules of Court governs the proceedings for
the appointment of a guardian, to wit:
Rule 93
APPOINTMENT OF GUARDIANS
“SECTION 1. Who may petition for appointment of
guardian for resident.—Any relative, friend, or other
person on behalf of a resident minor or incompetent who
has no parent or lawful guardian, or the minor himself if
fourteen years of age or over, may petition the court having
jurisdiction for the appointment of a general guardian for
the person or estate, or both, of such minor or incompetent.
An officer of the Federal Administration of the United
States in the Philippines may also file a petition in favor of
a ward thereof, and the Director of Health, in favor of an
insane person who should be hospitalized, or in favor of an
isolated leper.
SEC. 2. Contents of petition.—A petition for the
appointment of a general guardian must show, so far as
known to the petitioner:
(a) The jurisdictional facts;
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15 Rollo, p. 60.
16 Id., at p. 61.
17 Rule 51, Section 1 of the Rules of Court reads:
SECTION 1. When case deemed submitted for judgment.—A case
shall be deemed submitted for judgment:
A. In ordinary appeals.—
1) Where no hearing on the merits of the main case is held,
upon the filing of the last pleading, brief, or memorandum required
by the Rules or by the court itself, or the expiration of the period for
its filing.
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“While it is now alleged, for the first time, that the [herein
respondents Pabale siblings] participated in the guardianship
proceedings considering that the Jose Pabale mentioned therein is
their late father, [herein petitioner Alamayri] submitting herein
documentary evidence to prove their filiation, even though
admitted in evidence at this late stage, cannot bind [the Pabale
siblings] as verily, notice to their father is not notice to them there
being no allegation to the effect that he represented them before
the Calamba Court.”21
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21 Rollo, p. 50.
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25 Rollo, p. 58.
26 Id., at pp. 53-54.
27 Id., at pp. 54-55.
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