Imperial V CA
Imperial V CA
Imperial V CA
Facts:
Leoncio Imperial was the registered owner of a 32,837-square meter parcel of land
covered by OCT No. 200, also known as Lot 45 of the Cadastral Survey of Albay. On 1951,
Leoncio sold the said lot for P1.00 to his acknowledged natural son, petitioner herein, who
then acquired title over the land and proceeded to subdivide it into several lots. Petitioner
and private respondents admit that despite the contract’s designation as one of "Absolute
Sale", the transaction was in fact a donation.
On July 28, 1953, Leoncio filed a complaint for annulment of the said Deed of
Absolute Sale in the then Court of First Instance of Albay, on the ground that he was
deceived by petitioner herein into signing the said document. The dispute, however, was
resolved through a compromise agreement with Leoncio recognizing the legality and validity
of the rights of petitioner to the land and petitioner agreeing to sell a designated 1,000-
square meter portion of the donated land, and to deposit the proceeds thereof in a bank,
for the convenient disposal of Leoncio. In case of Leoncio’s death, it was agreed that the
balance of the deposit will be withdrawn by petitioner to defray burial costs.
Upon the death of Leoncio pending the execution of the judgement, he was replaced
by his other heir, Victor, his adopted son, who moved for its execution which was duly
granted. Fifteen years thereafter, Victor died single and without issue, survived only by his
natural father, Ricardo Villalon, who was a lessee of a portion of the disputed land. Four
years hence, Ricardo died, leaving as his only heirs his two children, Cesar and Teresa
Villalon.
Sometime in 1986, Cesar and Teresa filed a complaint for annulment of the donation
with the RTC Legaspi. Petitioner moved to dismiss on the ground of res judicata, by virtue
of the compromise judgment rendered by the Court of First Instance of Albay, which was
granted by the RTC but was reverse by the CA which remanded the case to the trial court
for further proceedings.
On October 18, 1989, Cesar and Teresa filed an amended complaint in the same case,
Civil Case No. 7646, for "Annulment of Documents, Reconveyance and Recovery of
Possession" with the Regional Trial Court of Legazpi City, seeking the nullification of the
Deed of Absolute Sale affecting the above property, on grounds of fraud, deceit and
inofficiousness, alleging that petitioner caused Leoncio to execute the donation by taking
undue advantage of the latter’s physical weakness and mental unfitness, and that the
conveyance of said property in favor of petitioner impaired the legitime of Victor Imperial,
their natural brother and predecessor-in-interest.
The RTC held the donation to be inofficious and impairing the legitime of Victor, on
the basis of its finding that at the time of Leoncio’s death, he left no property other than
the 32,837-square meter parcel of land which he had donated to petitioner. The Court of
Appeals affirmed the RTC Decision in toto.
ISSUE: WON PRIVATE RESPONDENTS HAD THE RIGHT TO CONTEST THE DONATION
SINCE VICTOR RENOUNCED HIS LEGITIME.
Article 772 of the Civil Code reads that only those who at the time of the donor’s
death have a right to the legitime and their heirs and successors in interest may ask for the
reduction of inofficious donations.
In this case, petitioners argue that when Leoncio died on January 8, 1962, it was only
Victor who was entitled to question the donation. However, instead of filing an action to
contest the donation, Victor asked to be substituted as plaintiff in Civil Case No. 1177 and
even moved for execution of the compromise judgment therein. No renunciation of legitime
may be presumed from the foregoing acts. It must be remembered that at the time of the
substitution, the judgment approving the compromise agreement has already been rendered.
Victor merely participated in the execution of the compromise judgment. He was not a party
to the compromise agreement.
More importantly, our law on succession does not countenance tacit repudiation of
inheritance. Rather, it requires an express act on the part of the heir.
Thus, when Victor substituted Leoncio in Civil Case No. 1177 upon the latter’s death,
his act of moving for execution of the compromise judgment cannot be considered an act of
renunciation of his legitime. He was, therefore, not precluded or estopped from
subsequently seeking the reduction of the donation, under Article 772. Nor are Victor’s
heirs, upon his death, precluded from doing so, as their right to do so is expressly recognized
under Article 772, and also in Article 1053.
A claim for legitime does not amount to a claim of title. What is brought to collation
in a claim for legitime is not the donated property itself, but the value of the property at
the time it was donated. The rationale for this is that the donation is a real alienation which
conveys ownership upon its acceptance, hence, any increase in value or any deterioration or
loss thereof is for the account of the heir or donee.
Under Article 1144 of the Civil Code, actions upon an obligation created by law must
be brought within ten years from the time the right of action accrues. Thus, the ten-year
prescriptive period applies to the obligation to reduce inofficious donations, required under
Article 771 of the Civil Code, to the extent that they impair the legitime of compulsory
heirs. It shall be reckoned from the death of the donor-decedent.
In this case, it took private respondents 24 years since the death of Leoncio to
initiate this case. The action, therefore, has long prescribed.
It may be recalled that Leoncio died on January 8, 1962. Fifteen years later, Victor
died, leaving as his sole heir Ricardo Villalon, who also died four years later. While Victor
was alive, he gave no indication of any interest to contest the donation of his deceased
father. The fact that he actively participated in Civil Case No. 1177 did not amount to a
renunciation of his inheritance and does not preclude him from bringing an action to claim
his legitime. These are matters that Victor could not possibly be unaware of, considering
that he is a lawyer. Ricardo Villalon was even a lessee of a portion of the donated property,
and could have instituted the action as sole heir of his natural son, or at the very least,
raised the matter of legitime by way of counterclaim in an ejectment case filed against him
by petitioner in 1979. Neither does it help private respondents’ cause that five years have
elapsed since the death of Ricardo in 1981 before they filed their complaint with the RTC.