Succession Outline Notes&Cases
Succession Outline Notes&Cases
Succession Outline Notes&Cases
SUCCESSION
Legend: T Senator Tolentino comments B Professor Balane comments
Art. 782. An heir is a person called to the succession either by the provision of a will or by operation of law. Devisees and legatees are persons to whom gifts of real and personal property are respectively given by virtue of a will. Art. 887. The following are compulsory heirs: (1) Legitimate children and descendants, with respect to their legitimate parents and ascendants; (2) In default of the foregoing, legitimate parents and ascendants, with respect to their legitimate children and descendants; (3) The widow or widower; (4) Acknowledged natural children, and natural children by legal fiction; (5) Other illegitimate children referred to in Article 287. Compulsory heirs mentioned in Nos. 3, 4, and 5 are not excluded by those in Nos. 1 and 2; neither do they exclude one another. In all cases of illegitimate children, their filiation must be duly proved. The father or mother of illegitimate children of the three classes mentioned, shall inherit from them in the manner and to the extent established by this Code. (807a) The Collateral Relatives Art. 1003. If there are no descendants, ascendants, illegitimate children, or a surviving spouse, the collateral relatives shall succeed to the entire estate of the deceased in accordance with the following articles. (946a) Art. 1004. Should the only survivors be brothers and sisters of the full blood, they shall inherit in equal shares. (947) Art. 1005. Should brothers and sisters survive together with nephews and nieces, who are the children of the descendant's brothers and sisters of the full blood, the former shall inherit per capita, and the latter per stirpes. In relation to Article 975 which states Art. 975. When children of one or more brothers or sisters of the deceased survive, they shall inherit from the latter by representation, if they survive with their uncles or aunts. But if they alone survive, they shall inherit in equal portions.
I. GENERAL PROVISIONS A. Definition and Concepts Art. 774. Succession is a mode of acquisition by virtue of which the property, rights and obligations to the extent of the value of the inheritance, of a person are transmitted through his death to another or others either by his will or by operation of law. (n) Art. 712. Ownership is acquired by occupation and by intellectual creation. Ownership and other real rights over property are acquired and transmitted by law, by donation, by estate and intestate succession, and in consequence of certain contracts, by tradition. They may also be acquired by means of prescription. Art. 1311. Contracts take effect only between the parties, their assigns and heirs, except in case where the rights and obligations arising from the contract are not transmissible by their nature, or by stipulation or by provision of law. The heir is not liable beyond the value of the property he received from the decedent. If a contract should contain some stipulation in favor of a third person, he may demand its fulfillment provided he communicated his acceptance to the obligor before its revocation. A mere incidental benefit or interest of a person is not sufficient. The contracting parties must have clearly and deliberately conferred a favor upon a third person. Fundamental Changes in the NCC in line with the purpose of Socialization 1. The surviving spouse is given a better status in terms of succession to the property of the decease husband, her right to the property was improved from a mere usufruct to full ownership. 2. The illegitimate children are now given successional rights unlike the old civil code which does not. Further, the illegitimate childs mother or father not related by blood has a chance of inheriting, thus, furthering the purpose of socialization preventing a the property from staying within the same family. 3. The Legitime of the compulsory heirs is increased from 1/3 to 4. The free portion of the estate of the deceased is likewise increased. B. Subjects of Succession 1. Who are the subjects? The Decedent Art. 775. In this Title, "decedent" is the general term applied to the person whose property is transmitted through succession, whether or not he left a will. If he left a will, he is also called the testator. The Heir, devisee, Legatee
Division per capita entails a division of the estate into as many equal parts as there are persons to succeed. If there are three children, for instance, each will receive, per capita, one third of the estate. Division per capita is the general rule. Division per stirpes is made when a sole descendant or a group of descendants represent a person in intestate succession. The sole representative or group of representatives are counted as one head. Thus, should a father be survived by a son and four children of another son who predeceased him, then, the estate is divided per stirpes. The first half is given to the surviving son and the other half shall be divided among the four grandchildren.
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when there are no brothers whether the full of half blood, the other collateral relatives succeed which whom, however, are limited within the 5th degree of relationship. Because beyond this degree, it is safe to say that, there is hardly any affection to merit succession. Hence, for succession purposes these persons are no longer considered relatives. The following rules shall apply: 1. the nearest relative exclude the farther. 2. collateral of the same degree inherit equal parts, there being no right of representation, 3. They succeed without distinction or lines or preference among them on account of the whole blood relationship
The State Art. 1011. In default of persons entitled to succeed in accordance with the provisions of the preceding Sections, the State shall inherit the whole estate. (956a)
When a person dies intestate, leaving no compulsory heir, nor any other relatives to succeed him by law, the natural result would be the complete abandonment of the property. The estate becomes subject to appropriation by anyone. This condition would result in conflicts detrimental to the public and economic order. In view of this, the law awards the property to the State, in representation of the people. Ratio: a) Dictated by public policy and, b) private property is enjoyed only under the protection of the State, and when no longer used, it should revert back to the State. The reversion of the res nullius property can only be done through an Escheat proceedings instituted by the Solicitor General to the proper
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In such cases as above, the shares would have pertained to those who repudiated or are incapacitated do not pass to relatives of the next degree, but are retained by other relatives of the same degree through the right of accretion, with the exception of the cases where the right of representation obtains. The right to represent a living person obtains only in cases of disinheritance and incapacity.
Art. 969. If the inheritance should be repudiated by the nearest relative, should there be one only, or by all the nearest relatives called by law to succeed, should there be several, those of the following degree shall inherit in their own right and cannot represent the person or persons repudiating the inheritance. * The article only pertains to repudiation. What then would be the effect of incapacity of the only nearest relative? The right of representation may or may not obtain. Should the incapacitated heir be the child of the decease, and he in turn has children, the latter may represent the incapacitated heir.
3. Capacity to Succeed The general rule is any person may succeed by law or by will unless excluded by law. Requisites of capacity to succeed: a) that there be general civil capacity of the person, whether natural or artificial, according to law; and b) that here be no incapacity to succeed under express provision of law. a. Determination
Art. 1034. In order to judge the capacity of the heir, devisee or legatee, his qualification at the time of the death of the decedent shall be the criterion. In cases falling under Nos. 2, 3, or 5 of Article 1032, it shall be necessary to wait until final judgment is rendered, and in the case falling under No. 4, the expiration of the month allowed for the report. If the institution, devise or legacy should be conditional, the time of the compliance with the condition shall also be considered. Art. 1039. Capacity to succeed is governed by the law of the nation of the decedent Art. 16. Real property as well as personal property is subject to the law of the country where it is stipulated.
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b.
Art. 1024. Persons not incapacitated by law may succeed by will or ab intestato.
the second paragraph above merely enunciates a general rule because Article 1027 and 1028 clearly are exceptions which do not apply to intestate succession but only that of testamentary dispositions. Kinds of Incapacity: a) absolute or per se and b) relative or per accidens
Art. 1025. In order to be capacitated to inherit, the heir, devisee or legatee must be living at the moment the succession opens, except in case of representation, when it is proper. 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. (n) * Those not existing at the time of death is incapacitated to succeed except on conditional wills where succession only opens upon the happening of the condition. Art. 1026. A testamentary disposition may be made to the State, provinces, municipal corporations, private
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Art. 1027. The following are incapable of succeeding: (1) The priest who heard the confession of the testator during his last illness, or the minister of the gospel who extended spiritual aid to him during the same period; (2) The relatives of such priest or minister of the gospel within the fourth degree, the church, order, chapter, community, organization, or institution to which such priest or minister may belong; (3) A guardian with respect to testamentary dispositions given by a ward in his favor before the final accounts of the guardianship have been approved, even if the testator should die after the approval thereof; nevertheless, any provision made by the ward in favor of the guardian when the latter is his ascendant, descendant, brother, sister, or spouse, shall be valid; (4) Any attesting witness to the execution of a will, the spouse, parents, or children, or any one claiming under such witness, spouse, parents, or children; in relation to Art. 823. If a person attests the execution of a will, to whom or to whose spouse, or parent, or child, a devise or legacy is given by such will, such devise or legacy shall, so far only as concerns such person, or spouse, or parent, or child of such person, or any one claiming under such person or spouse, or parent, or child, be void, unless there are three other competent witnesses to such will. However, such person so attesting shall be admitted as a witness as if such devise or legacy had not been made or given. (n) (5) Any physician, surgeon, nurse, health officer or druggist who took care of the testator during his last illness; (6) Individuals, associations and corporations not permitted by law to inherit. (745, 752, 753, 754a) Art. 1028. The prohibitions mentioned in article 739, concerning donations inter vivos shall apply to testamentary provisions. Art. 1031. A testamentary provision in favor of a disqualified person, even though made under the guise of an onerous contract, or made through an intermediary, shall be void. (755) Art. 1032. The following are incapable of succeeding by reason of unworthiness: (1) Parents who have abandoned their children or induced their daughters to lead a corrupt or immoral life, or attempted against their virtue;
Art. 1036. Alienations of hereditary property, and acts of administration performed by the excluded heir, before the judicial order of exclusion, are valid as to the third persons who acted in good faith; but the co-heirs shall have a right to recover damages from the disqualified heir. e. Rights of the excluded Heir
Art. 1035. If the person excluded from the inheritance by reason of incapacity should be a child or descendant of the decedent and should have children or descendants, the latter shall acquire his right to the legitime. The person so excluded shall not enjoy the usufruct and administration of the property thus inherited by his children Art. 1037. The unworthy heir who is excluded from the succession has a right to demand indemnity or any expenses incurred in the preservation of the hereditary property, and to enforce such credits as he may have against the estate. Art. 1014. If a person legally entitled to the estate of the deceased appears and files a claim thereto with the court within five years from the date the property was delivered to the State, such person shall be entitled to the possession of the same, or if sold the municipality or city shall be accountable to him for such part of the proceeds as may not have been lawfully spent. f. Liabilities of the excluded heir
Art. 1038. Any person incapable of succession, who, disregarding the prohibition stated in the preceding
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Art. 1040. The action for a declaration of incapacity and for the recovery of the inheritance, devise or legacy shall be brought within five years from the time the disqualified person took possession thereof. It may be brought by any one who may have an interest in the succession. C. Object of Succession Art. 776. The inheritance includes all the property, rights and obligations of a person which are not extinguished by his death. It is evident from this article that the inheritance does not include everything that belongs to the deceased at the time of his death. It is limited to the property, rights, and obligations not extinguish by his death. Including those transmissible rights and property accruing thereto from that time pertain to the heir. The following are the rights and obligations extinguished by death: 1. 2. 3. those arising from marriage action for legal separation belonging to the innocent spouse action to annul marriage obligation to give legal support except those expressly provided for by law right to receive support right of patria potestas right of the guardian right of usufruct right of donor to revoke donation due to ingratitude of donee executed 11. criminal responsibility 12. rights from public law such as suffrage and public employment The following rules are laid down 1. rights which are purely personal are by their nature and purpose intransmissible, ex. Those relating to civil personality, family rights, and discharge of public office rights which are patrimonial or relating to property are, as ageneral rule, not extinguished by death except those expressly provided by law or by will of the testator such as usufruct and personal servitudes.
The heirs of the deceased are no longer liable for the debts he may leave at the time of his death. Such debts are chargeable against the property or assets left by the deceased. In other words, the heirs are no longer liable personally for the debts of the deceased ; such debts must be collected only from the property left upon his death, and if this should not be sufficient to cover all of them, the heirs cannot be made to pay the uncollectible balance. Inheritance consists of the mass of property, rights, and obligations adjudicated to the heirs or transmitted to them after deducting therefrom all the debts left by the deceased. This should not be understood to mean, however, that obligations are no longer a part of inheritance. Only the money debts are chargeable against the estate left by the deceased; these are obligations which do not pass to the heirs, but constitute a charge against the hereditary property. Art. 781. The inheritance of a person includes not only the property and the transmissible rights and obligations existing at the time of his death, but also those which have accrued thereto since the opening of the succession. Since ownership is vested in the heir from the moment of the death of the predecessor, necessarily all accessions subsequent to that moment must belong to such heir. The criticism on this article is that the accession to such property is not transmitted by death; it is acquired already by virtue of the right of ownership which is vested from the moment of the predecessors death in the successor. It is judicially erroneous to say that inheritance includes such accession. Even without this article, an heir would be entitled to the accession and fruits which accrued since the death of the decedent by virtue of the right of accession (ownweship). Art. 1311. Contracts take effect only between the parties, their assigns and heirs, except in case where the rights and obligations arising from the contract are not transmissible by their nature, or by stipulation or by provision of law. The heir is not liable beyond the value of the property he received from the decedent. If a contract should contain some stipulation in favor of a third person, he may demand its fulfillment provided he communicated his acceptance to the obligor before its revocation. A mere incidental benefit or interest of a person is not sufficient. The contracting parties must have clearly and deliberately conferred a favor upon a third person. As a general rule, rights and obligations under a contract are transmitted to the heirs of the parties. The heirs cannot be considered third parties, because there is privity of interest
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5.
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7. 8. 9.
2.
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Express will of the testator or provision of law Death of the person whose property is subject of succession acceptance of the inheritance Art. 1041-1057
Express or tacit acceptance by the heir, devisee or legatee is necessary to the perfection of the juridical relation in succession, and indispensable to the transmission of successional rights. To make a person succeed by the mere fact of death of the predecessor is to deny him the right to accept or repudiate the inheritance. However, a previous declaration of heirship is not necessary in order that an heir may assert his right to the property of the deceased. The acceptance of the inheritance may, therefore, be said to be
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Exceptions: 1. 2. 3. Creditors who became such after repudiation inheritance is useless to the heir because the debt of the estate exceeds the inheritance left the heir-debtor is solvent and has sufficient properties to cover his debt.
Art. 1053. If the heir should die without having accepted or repudiated the inheritance his right shall be transmitted to his heirs. (1006) This is on the assumption that the heir of the heir who died accepts his inheritance from the latter. Then he may accept the inheritance from the original decedent. Art. 1054. Should there be several heirs called to the inheritance, some of them may accept and the others may repudiate it. (1007a) Art. 1055. If a person, who is called to the same inheritance as an heir by will and ab intestato, repudiates
Art. 1051. The repudiation of an inheritance shall be made in a public or authentic instrument, or by petition presented to the court having jurisdiction over the testamentary or intestate proceedings. (1008)
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Art. 1057. Within thirty days after the court has issued an order for the distribution of the estate in accordance with the Rules of Court, the heirs, devisees and legatees shall signify to the court having jurisdiction whether they accept or repudiate the inheritance. If they do not do so within that time, they are deemed to have accepted the inheritance. (n)
CASES: 5. Uson vs. Del Rosario Maria Uson was the lawful wife of Faustino Nebreda who upon his death in 1945 left the lands involved in this litigation. Faustino Nebreda left no other heir except his widow Maria Uson. However, plaintiff claims that when Faustino Nebreda died in 1945, his common- law wife Maria del Rosario took possession illegally of said lands thus depriving her of their possession and enjoyment. Defendants in their answer set up as special defense that on February 21, 1931, Maria Uson and her husband, the late Faustino Nebreda, executed a public document whereby they agreed to separate as husband and wife and, in consideration of their separation, Maria Uson was given a parcel of land by way of alimony and in return she renounced
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E. Kinds of Succesion
Art. 778. Succession may be: (1) Testamentary; (2) Legal or intestate; or (3) Mixed. (n) Art. 779. Testamentary succession is that which results from the designation of an heir, made in a will executed in the form prescribed by law. (n) B: Legal or Intestate succession is inexplicably not defined. Curiously, the draft code contained a definition of this kind of succession but for some unknown reasons it was not included. It stated that an Intestate succession takes place by operation of law in the absence of a valid will. Art. 960. Legal or intestate succession takes place: (1) If a person dies without a will, or with a void will, or one which has subsequently lost its validity; (2) When the will does not institute an heir to, or dispose of all the property belonging to the testator. In such case, legal succession shall take place only with respect to the property of which the testator has not disposed; (3) If the suspensive condition attached to the institution of heir does not happen or is not fulfilled, or if the heir dies before the testator, or repudiates the inheritance, there being no substitution, and no right of accretion takes place; (4) When the heir instituted is incapable of succeeding, except in cases provided in this Code. (912a)
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1. 2.
3. 4.
happening of a resolutory condition which sets aside the institution of the heir expiration of the resolutory term or period of institution of an heir, legatee or devisee instituted up to a day certain noncompliance or the impossibility of complying with the will of the testator. Preterition which results to annulment of the institution of an heir
B: There are three instances contained in this paragraph, although, legally, the result is the same in each instance, i.e., there is no will. In par. 2 validity should read as efficacy Intestacy may be total or partial depending on the extent of the disposition that turns out to be inoperative Art. 780. Mixed succession is that effected partly by will and partly by operation of law. (n) Art. 130. The future spouses may give each other in their marriage settlements as much as one-fifth of their present property, and with respect to their future property, only in the event of death, to the extent laid down by the provisions of this Code referring to testamentary succession. Art. 1347. All things which are not outside the commerce of men, including future things, may be the object of a contract. All rights which are not intransmissible may also be the object of contracts. No contract may be entered into upon future inheritance except in cases expressly authorized by law. All services which are not contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order or public policy may likewise be the object of a contract. Art. 752. The provisions of Article 750 notwithstanding, no person may give or receive, by way of donation, more than he may give or receive by will. The donation shall be inofficious in all that it may exceed this limitation. (636)
Art. 84. If the future spouses agree upon a regime other than the absolute community of property, they cannot donate to each other in their marriage settlements more than one-fifth of their present property. Any excess shall be considered void. Donations of future property shall be governed by the provisions on testamentary succession and the formalities of wills. (130a) These donations, unlike donations of present property which take effect upon the celebration of the marriage, take effect upon the death of the donor spouse. It cannot be made in the marriage settlement but in a will or testament. Its limits are governed by the rules of testamentary succession. Since a will can be revoked by the testator at any time before his death the donation propter nuptias of future property may be so revoked. Persons other than the affianced parties cannot give donations propter nuptias of future property. There is no more contractual succession by virtue of the the repeal of Article 130 of the Old Civil Code which was amended under Article 84 of the Family Code. In mandating the applicability of the rules on Succession to donation of future property between spouses, the law, therefore, eliminated this kind of succession. Hence, by implication such type of succession under Article 84 is considered an ordinary testamentary succession.
TESTAMENTARY SUCCESSION II. WILLS A. Definition Art. 783. A will is an act whereby a person is permitted, with the formalities prescribed by law, to control to a certain degree the disposition of this estate, to take effect after his death. (667a)
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Balane: 9. individual (Art. 818) 10. executed with animus testandi (Art. 783) 11. Statutory (Art. 783) Art. 783. A will is an act whereby a person is permitted, with the formalities prescribed by law, to control to a certain degree the disposition of this estate, to take effect after his death. (667a) B: The word Act is too broad and should have been limited to a more specific term such as instrument or document in view of Art. 804 that every will must be in writing. The requirement of form prescribed respectively for attested and holographic wills. The testators power of disposition is limited by the rules on legitimes. Will making is purely statutory being defined as permitted.
B: This characteristic is consistent with the principle laid down in Art. 777, successional rights vest only upon death. Art. 796. All persons who are not prohibited by law may make a will. (662) expressly
Art. 839. The will shall be disallowed in any of the following cases: (1) If the formalities required by law have not been complied with; (2) If the testator was insane, or otherwise mentally incapable of making a will, at the time of its execution; (3) If it was executed through force or under duress, or the influence of fear, or threats;
T: The law presumes capacity to make a will, thus, one must be expressly be prohibited by law to be disqualified. Only natural persons may make a will. Juridical persons are not granted T.C. Even spendthrifths or prodigal under guardianship, can make a will. A peson under civil interdiction can make a will, he is only disqualified fro dispositions of property inter vivos, but not by act mortis causa. Art. 797. Persons of either sex under eighteen years of age cannot make a will. (n)
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Art. 786. The testator may entrust to a third person the distribution of specific property or sums of money that he may leave in general to specified classes or causes, and also the designation of the persons, institutions or establishments to which such property or sums are to be given or applied. (671a) T: the third person here does not make any disposition, but simply carries out details in the execution of the testamentary disposition made by the testator himself in the will. B: for this article to take effect the testator must determine the ff: 1. 2. the property or amount of money given and; the class or cause to be benefited
and the ff. may be delegated: 1. 2. designation of persons, institutions, establishments within the class or cause; the manner of distribution. or
3. 4. 5.
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Art. 788. If a testamentary disposition admits of different interpretations, in case of doubt, that interpretation by which the disposition is to be operative shall be preferred. (n) T: The presumption is that the testator intended a lawful rather than an unlawful thing, and courts will not seek an interpretation that will nullify his will or any part thereof.That construction must be followed which will sustatn and uphold the will in all its parts, if it can be done consistently with the established rules of law. If the will is susceptible of two interpretations , the doubt must be resolved in favor of the construction which will give effect to the will, rather than the one which will defeat it. Art. 789. When there is an imperfect description, or when no person or property exactly answers the description, mistakes and omissions must be corrected, if the error appears from the context of the will or from extrinsic evidence, excluding the oral declarations of the testator as to his intention; and when an uncertainty arises upon the face of the will, as to the application of any of its provisions, the testator's intention is to be ascertained from the words of the will, taking into consideration the circumstances under which it was made, excluding such oral declarations. (n) T: The first part of this article pertains to patent or extrinsic ambiguity which appears upon the face of the instrument such as when the testator gives a devise or legacy to SOME of the six children of his cousin Juan The second part pertains to latent or intrinsic ambiguity which cannot be seen from a mere perusal or reading of the will but appears only upon consideration of extrinsic circumstances, such as giving legacy to my cousin Pedro, when I fact he has two cousins named Pedro. Thus. It occurs when: 1. 2. two or more persons or things answer the name or description; misdescription of the beneficiary or the gift
Extrinsic evidence is admissible to show the situation of the testator and all the relevant facts and circumstances surrounding him at the time of making the will, for the purpose of explaining or resolving patent ambiguity. B: method of resolving ambiguity, whether latent or patent is any evidence admissible and relevant excluding the oral declarations of testator as to his intention. Ratio for the exclusion: B: can a dead man refute a tale?
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Art. 930. The legacy or devise of a thing belonging to another person is void, if the testator erroneously believed that the thing pertained to him. But if the thing bequeathed, though not belonging to the testator when he made the will, afterwards becomes his, by whatever title, the disposition shall take effect. (862a) The presumption under this article is that had the testator known the fact that another owns the property, he would not have made the legacy. The ignorance of the testator is presumed by law. Its must be noted that if the subsequent change of ownership transferred the thing to the very person to whom it was being given as a devise or legacy, and by lucrative title, or to another third person, the legacy is void. Solla vs. Ascuenta Da. Maria Solla died in June, 1883, in the municipality of Cabugao, Ilocos Sur, leaving a will executed and recorded in accordance with the laws then in force, but which had not been probated in accordance with the Code of Civil Procedure. There were named in said will, as legatees Sergio Solla, Cayetano Solla, Josefa Solla, Jacinto Serna, Rosenda Lagmay, Silvestra Sajor and Matias Sevedea, and Leandro Serrano, as universal heir, with their shares given them by the will above-mentioned.
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Art. 17. The forms and solemnities of contracts, wills, and other public instruments shall be governed by the laws of the country in which they are executed. When the acts referred to are executed before the diplomatic or consular officials of the Republic of the Philippines in a foreign country, the solemnities established by Philippine laws shall be observed in their execution. Prohibitive laws concerning persons, their acts or property, and those which have, for their object, public order, public policy and good customs shall not be rendered ineffective by laws or judgments promulgated, or by determinations or conventions agreed upon in a foreign country. (11a) Art. 18. In matters which are governed by the Code of Commerce and special laws, their deficiency shall be supplied by the provisions of this Code. (16a)
Matters connected with the performance of contracts are regulated by the law prevailing at the place of performance. Remedies, such as the bringing of suit, admissibility of evidence, and the statute of limitations, depend upon the law of the place where the action is brought. In terms of the validity and effect of obligations, the following rules shall be followed. First, the law designated by the parties shall be applied; if there is no stipulation on the matter, and the parties of the same nationality, their national law shall be applied; if this is not the case, the law of the place of perfection of the obligation shall govern its fulfillment; but if these places are not specified and they cannot be deduced from the nature and circumstances of the obligation, then the law of the domicile of the passive subjects shall apply. 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)
c. d. e.
What is actually prohibited, therefore, is the execution of a will in a SINGLE DOCUMENT and by ONE ACT.
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Fleumer vs. Hix It is the theory of the petitioner that the alleged will was executed in Elkins, West Virginia, on November 3, 1925, by Hix who had his residence in that jurisdiction, and that the laws of West Virginia govern. To this end, there was submitted a copy of section 3868 of Acts 1882, c. 84 as found in West Virginia Code, Annotated, by Hogg, Charles E., vol. 2, 1914, p. 1690, and as certified to by the Director of the National Library. But this was far from a compliance with the law. The laws of a foreign jurisdiction do not prove themselves in our courts. The courts of the Philippine Islands are not authorized to take judicial notice of the laws of the various States of the American Union. Such laws must be proved as facts. (In re Estate of Johnson [1918], 39 Phil., 156.) Here the requirements of the law were not met. There was no showing that the book from which an extract was taken was printed or published under the authority of the State of West Virginia, as provided in section 300 of the Code of Civil Procedure. Nor was the extract from the law attested by the certificate of the officer having charge of the original, under the seal of the State of West Virginia, as provided in section 301 of the Code of Civil Procedure. No evidence was introduced to show that the extract from the laws of West Virginia was in force at the time the alleged will was executed. While the appeal was pending submission in this court, the attorney for the appellant presented an unverified petition asking the court to accept as part of the evidence the documents attached to the petition. One of these documents discloses that a paper writing purporting to be the last will and testament of Edward Randolph Hix, deceased, was presented for probate on June 8, 1929, to the clerk of Randolph County, State of West Virginia, in vacation, and was duly proven by the oaths of Dana Wamsley and Joseph L. Madden, the subscribing witnesses thereto, and ordered to be recorded and filed. It was shown by another document that, in vacation, on June 8, 1929, the clerk of court of Randolph County, West Virginia, appointed Claude W. Maxwell as administrator, cum testamento annexo, of the estate of Edward Randolph Hix, deceased. In this connection, it is to be noted that the application for the probate of the will in the Philippines was filed on February 20, 1929, while the proceedings in West Virginia appear to have been initiated on June 8, 1929. These facts are strongly indicative of an intention to make the Philippines the principal administration and West Virginia the ancillary administration. However this may be, no attempt has been made to comply with the provisions of sections 637, 638, and 639 of the Code of Civil Procedure, for no hearing on the question of the allowance of a will said to have been proved and allowed in West Virginia has been requested. There is no showing that the deceased left any property at any place other than the Philippine Islands and no contention that he left any in West Virginia. Reference has been made by the parties to a divorce purported to have been awarded Edward Randolph Hix from Annie Cousins Hix on October 8, 1925, in the State of West
Dela Cerna vs. Potot "It appears that on May 9, 1939, the spouses, Bernabe de la Cerna and Gervasia Rebaca, executed a joint last will and testament in the local dialect whereby they willed that 'our two parcels of land acquired during our marriage together with all improvements thereon shall be given to Manuela Rebaca, our niece, whom we have nurtured since childhood, because God did not give us any child in our union, Manuela Rebaca being married to Nicolas Potot', and that 'while each of the testator is yet living, he or she will continue to enjoy the fruits of the two lands aforementioned', the said two parcels of land being covered by Tax No. 4676 and Tax No. 6677, both situated in sitio Bucao, barrio Lugo, municipality of Borbon, province of Cebu. Bernabe de la Cerna died on August 30, 1939, and the aforesaid will was submitted to probate by said Gervasia and Manuela before the Court of First Instance of Cebu which, after due publication as required by law and there being no opposition, heard the evidence, The appealed decision correctly held that the final decree of probate, entered in 1939 by the Court of First Instance of Cebu (when the testator, Bernabe de la Cerna, died), has conclusive effect as to his last will and testament, despite the fact that even then the Civil Code already decreed the invalidity of joint wills, whether in favor of the joint testators, reciprocally, or in favor of a third party (Art. 669, old Civil Code). The error thus committed by the probate court was an error of law, that should have been corrected by appeal, but which did not affect the jurisdiction of the probate court, nor the conclusive effect of its final decision, however erroneous. A final judgment rendered on a petition for the probate of a will is binding upon the whole world (Manalo vs. Paredes, 47 Phil. 938; In re Estate of Johnson, 39 Phil. 156); and public policy and sound practice demand that at the risk of occasional errors, judgment of courts should become final at some definite date fixed by law. Interest rei publicae ut finis sit litium (Dy Cay vs. Crossfield, 38 Phil. 521, and other cases cited in 2 Moran, Comments on the Rules of Court 1963 Ed., p. 322).
Petitioners, as heirs and successors of the late Bernabe de la Cerna, are concluded by the 1939 decree admitting his will to probate. The contention that being void the will cannot be validated, overlooks that the ultimate decision on whether an act is valid or void rests with the courts, and here they have spoken with finality when the will was probated in 1939. On this count, the dismissal of their action for partition was correct. But the Court of Appeals should have taken into account also, to avoid future misunderstanding, that the probate decree in 1939 could only affect the share of the deceased husband, Bernabe de la Cerna. It could not include the disposition of the share of the wife, Gervasia Rebaca, who was then still alive, and over whose interest in the conjugal properties the probate court acquired no jurisdiction, precisely because her estate could not then be in issue. Be it
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In above cases, the national law of the decedent applies and the ratio of which is stated by Dean Capistrano in this wise: With regard to succession there is only one will, express in testatmentary and presumed in intestate succession. The oneness and universality of the inheritance cannot be divided or broken up merely because of the different countries where the properties of the estate are situated. The intrinsic validity of the provisions of the will of a foreigner who dies in the Philippines is to be determined by the laws of his own state or country, and not by those of the Philippines. The second paragraph of this article can only invoked when the deceased eas vested with a descendible interest in property within the jurisdiction of the Philippines. When a foreign law is invoked it must be proved. (fluemer vs. Hix) In re the estate of Amos G. Bellis Amos G. Bellis, born in Texas, was "a citizen of the State of Texas and of the United States." By his first wife, Mary E. Mallen, whom he divorced, he had five legitimate children: Edward A. Bellis, George Bellis (who pre-deceased him in infancy), Henry A. Bellis, Alexander Bellis and Anna Bellis Allsman; by his second wife, Violet Kennedy, who survived him, he had three legitimate children: Edwin G. Bellis, Walter S. Bellis and Dorothy Bellis; and finally, he had three illegitimate children: Amos Bellis, Jr., Maria Cristina Bellis and Miriam Palma Bellis. On August 5, 1952, Amos G. Bellis executed a will in the Philippines, in which he directed that after all taxes, obligations, and expenses of administration are paid for, his distributable estate should be divided, in trust, in the following order and manner: (a) $240,000.00 to his first wife, Mary E. Mallen; (b) P120,000.00 to his three illegitimate children, Amos Bellis, Jr., Maria Cristina Bellis, and Miriam Palma Bellis, or P40,000.00 each and (c) after the foregoing two items have been satisfied, the remainder shall go to his seven surviving children by his first and second wives, namely: Edward A. Bellis, Henry A. Bellis, Alexander Bellis, and Anna Bellis Allsman, Edwin G. Bellis, Walter S. Bellis, and Dorothy E. Bellis, in equal shares. Subsequently, or on July 8, 1958, Amos G. Bellis died, a resident of San Antonio, Texas, U.S.A. His will was admitted to probate in the Court of First Instance of Manila on September 15, 1958. The People's Bank and Trust Company, as executor of the will, paid all the bequests therein including the amount of $240,000.00 in the form of shares of stock to Mary E. Mallen and to the three (3) illegitimate children, Amos Bellis, Jr., Maria Cristina Bellis and Miriam Palma Bellis, various amounts totalling P40,000.00 each in satisfaction of their respective legacies, or a total of P120,000.00, which it
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1.
2.
3.
Nature of the estate to be disposed- the testator should have a fairly accurate knowledge of what he owns. Accurate should be understood in the relative sense. The more one owns the less accurate is ones knowledge of his estate expected to be. Henry Sy might have a far less accurate picture of his economic empire than a poverty stricken laborer. Proper objects of his bounty- under ordinary circumstances, the testator should know his relatives in the proximate degrees. As the degree of relationship goes further, it is less likely that he knows them. Character of the testamentary act- it is not required, in order for this requisite to be present, that the testator know the legal nature of a will with the erudition of a civilest. All that he need know is that the document he is executing is one that disposes of his property upon death.
T: Neither sickness, old age, deafness, senile debility, blindness, nor poor memory is by itself sufficient to establish a presumption of lack of testamentary capacity, actual insanity need not exist in order that a person may be said to lack testamentary capacity. It is enough that the mental condition be such that there is want of understanding of the nature and consequences of the disposition by will. 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 must prove that the testator made it during a lucid interval. (n) Art. 801. Supervening incapacity does not invalidate an effective will, nor is the will of an incapable validated by the supervening of capacity. (n) The capacity of the person who leaves a will is to be determined as of the time of execution of such will. Any prior or subsequent incapacity will not affect the validity of the will. It will, however, in cases of prior incapacity within 30 days from the making of the will merely shift the burden of proof of capacity on the person maintaining the validity of the will. (Art. 800) Art. 802. A married woman may make a will without the consent of her husband, and without the authority of the court. (n) Art. 803. A married woman may dispose by will of all her separate property as well as her share of the conjugal partnership or absolute community
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
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B. Supervening Incapacity Art. 801. Supervening incapacity does not invalidate an effective will, nor is the will of an incapable validated by the supervening of capacity. (n) The capacity of the person who leaves a will is to be determined as of the time of execution of such will. Any prior or subsequent incapacity will not affect the validity of the will. It will, however, in cases of prior incapacity within 30 days from the making of the will merely shift the burden of proof of capacity on the person maintaining the validity of the will. (Art. 800) IV. SOLEMNITIES OF WILLS A. Kinds of Wills Art. 804. Every will must be in writing and executed in a language or dialect known to the testator. (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) T: the following are the advantages of a holographic will: 1. simple and easy to make for those a) who have no means to employ a lawyer, b)who are timid and wants to reread their wills before signing, c) those who have only very little property to dispose 2. It induces foreigners in this jurisdiction to set down their last wishes;
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Suroza vs. Hon. Honrado Mauro Suroza, a corporal in the 45th Infantry of the U.S. Army (Philippine Scouts), Fort McKinley, married Marcelina Salvador in 1923 (p. 150, Spec. Proc. No. 7816). They were childless. They reared a boy named Agapito who used the surname Suroza and who considered them as his parents as shown in his 1945 marriage contract with Nenita de Vera (p. 15, Rollo of CA-G.R. No. 08654, p. 148, Rollo of Testate Case showing that Agapito was 5 years old when Mauro married Marcelina in 1923). Mauro died in 1942. Marcelina, as a veteran's widow, became a pensioner of the Federal Government. That explains why on her death she had accumulated some cash in two banks. Agapito and Nenita begot a child named Lilia who became a medical technologist and went abroad. Agapito also became a soldier. He was disabled and his wife Nenita was appointed as his guardian in 1953 when he was declared an incompetent in Special Proceedings No. 1807 of the Court of First Instance of Rizal, Pasig Branch I (p. 16, Rollo of CAG.R. No. 08654-R) In that connection, it should be noted that a woman named Arsenia de la Cruz wanted also to be his guardian in another proceeding. Arsenia tried to prove that Nenita was living separately from Agapito and that she (Nenita) admitted to Marcelina that she was unfaithful to Agapito (pp. 61-63, Record of testate case) Judge Bienvenido A. Tan dismissed the second guardianship proceeding and confirmed Nenita's appointment as guardian of Agapito (p. 16, Rollo of CA case). Agapito has been staying in a veteran's hospital in San Francisco or Palo Alto, California (p. 87, Record) On a date not indicated in the record, the spouses Antonio Sy and Hermogena Talan begot a child named Marilyn Sy, who, when a few days old, was entrusted to Arsenia de la Cruz (apparently a girl friend of Agapito) and who was later delivered to Marcelina Salvador Suroza who brought her up as a supposed daughter of Agapito and as her granddaughter (pp. 23-26, Rollo of CA-G.R. No. SP-08654R). Marilyn used the surname Suroza. She stayed with Marcelina but was not legally adopted by Agapito. She married Oscar Medrano and is residing at 7666 J.B. Roxas Street, Makati, apparently a neighbor of Marina Paje, a resident of 7668 J.B. Roxas Street. Marcelina supposedly executed a notarial will in Manila on July 23, 1973, when she was 73 years old. That will, which is in English, was thumb marked by her. She was illiterate. Her letters in English to the Veterans Administration were also thumb marked by her (pp. 3839, CA Rollo). In that will, Marcelina bequeathed all her estate to her supposed granddaughter Marilyn. On April 24, Nenita filed in the testate case an omnibus petition "to set aside proceedings, admit opposition with counter-petition of administration and preliminary injunction." Nenita in that motion reiterated her allegation that Marilyn
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3.
the witnesses need not even know the contents of the will because what they attest to is the due execution and the signing of the testator. It is presumed that a witness has the qualifications prescribed by law, unless the contrary is established. His credibility depends upon the appreciation of his testimony and arises from the belief and appreciation of the court that he is telling the truth. His competency arise or is required to exist at the time of execution of the will. As to order of signing, there are two views: Strict approach; The general rule has been, that everything required to be done by the testator in the execution of a will shall precede in point of time the subscription by the attesting witness, and if the signatures of the latter precede the signing by the testator there is no proper attestation, and the will is void, for until the testator has signed, there is no will and nothing to attest. Liberal approach; where the witnesses and the testator all sign in the presence of one another, it is not essential that the testator sign first, if the signing and the attestation be parts of the same transaction; in such case, where the acts are substantially contemporaneous, it cannot be said that there is any substantial priority. The latter view is upheld by most courts. In the absence of proof to the contrary, it will be presumed that the testator signed first. Purpose of requiring presence of each other: 1. 2. 3. to prevent another paper being substituted for the will fraudulently; so that each may be a witness of the other and; to render fabrication of testimony more difficult.
When testator is blind; when witness subscribe his will in the same room or within reasonable close proximity and within his hearing, they subscribe in his presence. Evidently, the rule is that they should be within the cognizance of his remaining senses, such that he knows what is being done. The testator and witnesses must sign on the left margin of every page, the failure of all of them to sign the left margin is a fatal defect The purpose of numbering of pages is to afford a means for determinig whether any sheet or page of the will has been removed. Except only when will was written on a single page. An attestation clause is a memorandum of facts attending the execution of the will and is that part of the instrument
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4.
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Garcia vs. la Cuesta This is an appeal from a decision of the Court of Appeals disallowing the will of Antero Mercado dated January 3, 1943. The will is written in the Ilocano dialect and contains the following attestation clause: "We, the undersigned, by these presents do declare that the foregoing testament of Antero Mercado was signed by himself and also by us below his name and of this attestation clause and that of the left margin of the three pages thereof. Page three the continuation of this attestation clause; this will is written in Ilocano dialect which is spoken and understood by the testator, and it bears the corresponding number in letter which compose of three pages and all of them were signed in the presence of the testator and witnesses, and the witnesses in the presence of the testator and all and each and every one of us witnesses. "In testimony, whereof, we sign this testament, this the third day of January, one thousand nine hundred forty three, (1943) A.D. (Sgd.) (Sgd.) "NUMERIANO EVANGELISTA ROSENDO CORTES BIBIANA ILLEGIBLE" (Sgd.)
The will appears to have been signed by Atty. Florentino Javier who wrote the name of Antero Mercado, followed below by "A ruego del testador" and the name of Florentino Javier. Antero Mercado is alleged to have written a cross immediately after his name. The Court of Appeals, reversing the judgment of the Court of First Instance of Ilocos Norte, ruled that the attestation clause failed (1) to certify that the will was signed on all the left margins of the three pages and at the end of the will by Atty. Florentino Javier at the express
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The will appears to have been signed by Atty. Florentino Javier who wrote the name of Antero Mercado, followed below by "A ruego del testador" and the name of Florentino Javier. Antero Mercado is alleged to have written a cross immediately after his name. The Court of Appeals, reversing the judgment of the Court of First Instance of Ilocos Norte, ruled that the attestation clause failed (1) to certify that the will was signed on all the left margins of the three pages and at the end of the will by Atty. Florentino Javier at the express request of the testator in the presence of the testator and each and every one of the witnesses; (2) to certify that after the signing of the name of the testator by Atty. Javier at the former's request said testator has written a cross at the end of his name and on the left margin of the three pages of which the will consists and at the end thereof; (3) to certify that the three witnesses signed the will in all the pages thereon in the presence of the testator and of each other. In our opinion, the attestation clause is fatally defective for failing to state that Antero Mercado caused Atty. Florentino Javier to write the testator's name under his express direction, as required by section 618 of the Code of Civil Procedure. The herein petitioner (who is appealing by way of certiorari from the decision of the Court of Appeals) argues,
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Javellana vs. Ledesma By order of July 23, 1953, the Court of First Instance of Iloilo admitted to probate the documents in the Visayan dialect, marked Exhibits D and E, as the testament and codicil duly executed by the deceased Da. Apolinaria Ledesma Vda. de Javellana, on March 30, 1950, and May 29, 1952, respectively, with Ramon Tabiana, Gloria Montinola de Tabiana and Vicente Yap as witnesses. The contestant, Da. Matea Ledesma, sister and nearest surviving relative of said deceased, appealed from the decision, insisting that the said exhibits were not executed in conformity with law. The appeal was made directly to this Court because the value of the properties involved exceeded two hundred thousand pesos. Originally the opposition to the probate also charged that the testatrix lacked testamentary capacity and that the dispositions were procured through undue influence. These grounds were abandoned at the hearing in the court below, where the issue was concentrated into three specific questions: (1) whether the testament of 1950 was executed by the testatrix in the presence of the instrumental witnesses; (2) whether the acknowledgment clause was signed and the notarial seal affixed by the notary without the presence of the testatrix and the witnesses; and (3) if so, whether the codicil was thereby rendered invalid and ineffective. These questions are the same ones presented to us for resolution. The contestant argues that the Court below erred in refusing credence to her witnesses Maria Paderogao and Vidal Allado, cook and driver, respectively, of the deceased Apolinaria Ledesma. Both testified that on March 30, 1950, they saw and heard Vicente Yap (one of the witnesses to the will) inform the deceased that he had brought the "testamento" and urge her to go to attorney Tabiana's office to sign it; that Da. Apolinaria manifested that she could not go, because she was not feeling well; and that upon Yap's insistence that the will had to be signed in the attorney's office and not elsewhere, the deceased took the paper and signed it in the presence of Yap alone, and returned it with the statement that no one would question it because the property involved was exclusively hers. At any rate, as observed by the Court below, whether or not the notary signed the certification of acknowledgment in the presence of the testatrix and the witnesses, does not affect the validity of the codicil. Unlike the Code of 1889 (Art. 699), the new Civil Code does not require that the signing of the testator, witnesses and notary should be accomplished in one single act. A comparison of Articles 805 and 806 of the new Civil Code reveals that while testator and witnesses must sign in the presence of each other, all that is thereafter required is that "every will must be acknowledged before a notary public by the testator and the witnesses" (Art. 806); i.e., that the latter should avow to the certifying officer the authenticity of their signatures and the voluntariness of their actions in executing the testamentary disposition. This was
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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) T: these are witnesses under an ordinary will. B: Six qualifications of a witness: 1. sound mind; 2. 18 years of age; 3. not blind, deaf or dumb,; 4. literateor able to read and write; domicile in the Philippines;6. not convicted of a crime involving, falsification, perjury, or false testimony. Art. 821. The following are disqualified from being witnesses to a will: (1) Any person Philippines; not domiciled in the
(2) Those who have been convicted of falsification of a document, perjury or false testimony. (n) T: The law requires that the witness be domiciled in the Philippines mere residence is not sufficient. Domicile under Art. 50, Art. 50. For the exercise of civil rights and the fulfillment of civil obligations, the domicile of natural persons is the place of their habitual residence. (40a) Ratio of domicile requirement: 1. 2. availability of witness when will is probated if the same is within the Philippines; witness domiciled in the Philippines more likely to know the testator and be ablr to testify on his mental condition at the time of execution of the will.
Except of course if the will was executed in a foreign country the domicile requirement does not apply.
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Under the law, there is no mandatory requirement that the witness testify initially or at any time during the trial as to his good standing in the community, his reputation for trustworthiness and reliableness, his honesty and uprightness in order that his testimony may be believed and accepted by the trial court. It is enough that the qualifications enumerated in Article 820 of the Civil Code are complied with, such that the soundness of his mind can be shown by or deduced from his answers to the questions propounded to him, that his age (18 years or more) is shown from his appearance, testimony, or competently proved otherwise, as well as the fact that he is not blind, deaf or dumb and that he is able to read and write to the satisfaction of the Court, and that he has none of the disqualifications under Article 821 of the Civil Code. We reject petitioner's contention that it must first be established in the record the good standing of the witness in the community, his reputation for trustworthiness and reliableness, his honesty and uprightness, because such attributes are presumed of the witness unless the contrary is proved otherwise by the opposing party. In probate proceedings, the instrumental witnesses are not character witnesses for they merely attest the execution of a will or testament and affirm the formalities attendant to said execution. And We agree with the respondent that the rulings
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Art. 823. If a person attests the execution of a will, to whom or to whose spouse, or parent, or child, a devise or legacy is given by such will, such devise or legacy shall, so far only as concerns such person, or spouse, or parent, or child of such person, or any one claiming under such person or spouse, or parent, or child, be void, unless there are three other competent witnesses to such will. However, such person so attesting shall be admitted as a witness as if such devise or legacy had not been made or given. (n) T: This article does not refer to disqualification to be a witness, but a disqualification to inherit. The devisee or legatee is not disqualified nor his spouse, parent or child to be witness as long as he is competent and credible under Art. 821 but the devise or legacy, however, shall be void. But if the witness is not a devisee or legatee, but an heir, is the institution of such heir void? Notwithstanding the terminology of the article, we believe that even as instituted heir, or spouse, parent child is disqualified. The disqualification is intended to to aply to one succeeding by will, and it is not material in what concept he succeeds. This is proved by Art. 1027 par. 4 on relative incapacity which makes no distinction between heirs, devisees or legatees. B: this article pertains more on the capacity to succeed than the capacity to be a witness. The witness will remain as such but the legacy or devise shall be void. The disqualification applies only to testamentary disposition . if the witness is also entitled to legitime or intestate share this shall not be affected. 3. Special requirements for deaf, deaf mute and blind testators
Art. 807. If the testator be deaf, or a deaf-mute, he must personally read the will, if able to do so; otherwise, he shall designate two persons to read it and communicate to him, in some practicable manner, the contents thereof. (n) 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)
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Art. 809. In the absence of bad faith, forgery, or fraud, or undue and improper pressure and influence, defects and imperfections in the form of attestation or in the language used therein shall not render the will invalid if it is proved that the will was in fact executed and attested in substantial compliance with all the requirements of Article 805. T: The law on formal requirements of a will should be liberally construed; while perfection in drafting is desirable, unsubstantial departures should be ignored, as long as the possibility of fraud and bad faith are obviated. There are many people who are fluent and have a graet mastery of grammar. Thus, grammatical errors which may be noted from the general tenor of the attestation clause must, therefore, be overlooked or corrected by construction, so as not to frustrate the recognized intention of those who intervened in the execution thereof. Where it appears from the context of the attestation that certain words were ommtied inadvertently, the court may supply the omission. It is sufficient if from the language employed it can be reasonably deduced that the attestation clause fulfills what the law expects of it. Hence, an attestation clause will be held sufficient, notwithstanding some imperfections in the grammatical constructions, where it is evident that the defect is due to carelessness of the clerk or to lac of mastery of the language, if the meaning sought to be conveyed can be determined from the clause itself. Furthermore, the whole language of the attestation clause must be taken together to determine whether the testaor complied with the law. The substantial compliance rule has been applied to such extent as to allow the attestation clause to be contained in the body of the will itself and not a separate portion therein, expressed in the first preson as a recital of the testator, provided that it is also signed by the three instrumental witnesses. Justice JBL Reyes criticism of this article is enlightening:
All these are facts that the will itself can reveal, and defects or even omissions concerning them in the attestation clause can be safely disregarded. But the total number of pages, and whether all persons required to sign did so in the number of pages, and whether all required to sign did so in the presence of each other must substantially appear in the attestation clause being the only check against perjury in probate proceedings. C. Holographic Wills 1. General requirements.
Art. 804. Every will must be in writing and executed in a language or dialect known to the testator. (n) Our law does not recognize nuncupative wills, which is one that is not written, but orally declared by the testator in his last illness, in contemplation of death, and before a sufficient number of competent witnesses. The above requirement applies to both holographic and notarial. In notarial wills it is immaterial who performs the mechanical act writing the will, so long as the testator signs it or has somebody sign his name in his presence upon his direction. As to the language or dialect, when a will is executed in a certain province or locality, in the dialect currently usd in such province or locality, there arises a presumption that the testator knew the dialect so used, in the absence of contrary evidence. It is not required that the will express that the language is known by the testator it is a fact which may be proved by evidence aliunde. The attestation clause of an ordinary will does not have to be written in a language or dialect known to the testator. It is not part of the testamentary disposition. The language used in the attestation clause does not even have to be known to the witness; it should, however, be translated to them. 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) T: the following are the advantages of a holographic will: 1. simple and easy to make for those a) who have no means to employ a lawyer, b)who are timid and wants to reread their wills before signing, c) those who have only very little property to dispose
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"Art. 814. In case of any insertion, cancellation, erasure or alteration in a holographic will, the testator must authenticate the same by his full signature."
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Art. 827. If a will, executed as required by this Code, incorporates into itself by reference any document or paper, such document or paper shall not be considered a part of the will unless the following requisites are present: (1) The document or paper referred to in the will must be in existence at the time of the execution of the will;
A.
Art. 825. A codicil is supplement or addition to a will, made after the execution of a will and annexed to be taken as a part thereof, by which disposition made in the original will is explained, added to, or altered. (n)
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2.
a) b) c)
Revocation is an act of the mind, terminating the potential capacity of the will to operate at the death of the testator, manifested by some outward and visible act or sign, symbolic thereof. Revocation is the recall of some power, authority, or a thing granted or a destroying or making void of some deed that had existence until the act of revocation made it void. (Blacks Law Dictionary)
D. Modes of Revocation Art. 830. No will shall be revoked except in the following cases: (1) By implication of law; or
Art. 828. A will may be revoked by the testator at any time before his death. Any waiver or restriction of this right is void. (737a) T: During the life of the testator the will is said to be ambulatory and may be altered, revoked, or superseded at any time. Its is of no possible effect as a will while the maker lives. A will may be revoked at pleasure. Revocation is an act of the mind, terminating the potential capacity of the will to operate at the death of the testator, manifested by some outward and visible act or sign, symbolic thereof. Revocation vs. 1. act of testator 2. presupposes a valid act 3. inter vivos 4. testator cannot renounce Nullity 1. proceeds from law 2. inherent from the will 3. invoked After death 4. can be disregarded by heirs
(2) By some will, codicil, or other writing executed as provided in case of wills; or (3) By 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. (n) There is revocation by implication of law when certain acts or events take place subsequent to making of a will, which nullify or render inoperative either the will itself or some testamentary disposition therein. Examples are the ff: 1. act of unworthiness by an heir, devisee, or legatee under Art. 1032;
B: This characteristic is consistent with the principle laid down in Art. 777, successional rights vest only upon death.
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Art. 834. The recognition of an illegitimate child does not lose its legal effect, even though the will wherein it was made should be revoked. (714)
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Art. 1088. Should any of the heirs sell his hereditary rights to a stranger before the partition, any or all of the coheirs may be subrogated to the rights of the purchaser by reimbursing him for the price of the sale, provided they do so within the period of one month from the time they were notified in writing of the sale of the vendor." Tasiana Ongsingco further argues that her contract with Jose de Borja (Annex "A") is void because it amounts to a compromise as to her status and marriage with the late Francisco de Borja. The point is without merit, for the very opening paragraph of the agreement with Jose de Borja (Annex "A") describes her as "the heir and surviving spouse of Francisco de Borja by his second marriage, Tasiana Ongsingco Vda. de de Borja", which is in itself definite admission of her civil status. There is nothing in the text of the agreement that would show that this recognition of Ongsingco's status as the surviving spouse of Francisco de Borja was only made in consideration of the cession of her hereditary rights. It is difficult to believe, however, that the amicable settlement referred to in the order and motion above-mentioned was the compromise agreement of 13 October 1963, which already had been formally signed and executed by the parties and
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SECTION 1. Allowance necessary. Conclusive as to execution.No will shall pass either real or personal estate unless it is proved and allowed in the proper court. Subject to the right of appeal, such allowance of the will shall be conclusive as to its due execution. SEC. 2. Custodian of will to deliver.The person who has custody of a will shall, within twenty (20) days after he knows of the death of the testator, deliver the will to the court having jurisdiction, or to the executor named In the will. SEC. 3. Executor to present will and accept or refuse trust.A person named as executor in a will shall, within twenty (20) days after he knows of the death of the testator, or within twenty (20) days after he knows that be is named executor if he obtained such knowledge after the death of the testator, present such will to the court having jurisdiction, unless the will has reached the court in any other manner, and shall, within such period, signify to the court in writing his acceptance of the trust or his refusal to accept it. SEC. 4. Custodian and executor subject to fine for neglect.A person who neglects any of the duties required in the two last preceding sections without excuse satisfactory to the court shall be fined not exceeding two thousand pesos. SEC. 5. Person retaining will may be committed.A person having custody of a will after the death of the testator who neglects without reasonable cause to deliver the same, when ordered so to do, to the court having jurisdiction, may be committed to prison and there kept until he delivers the will. RULE 76 ALLOWANCE OR DISALLOWANCE OF WILL SECTION 1. Who may petition for the allowance of will.Any executor, devisee, or legatee named in a will, or any other person interested in the estate, may, at any time after the death of the testator, petition the court having jurisdiction to have the will allowed, whether the same be in his possession or not, or is lost or destroyed. The testator himself may, during his lifetime, petition the court for the allowance of his will. SEC. 2. Contents of petition.A petition for the allowance of a will must show, so far as known to the petitioner: (a) The jurisdictional facts;
(b) The names, ages, and residences of the heirs, legatees, and devisees of the testator or decedent; (c) The probable value and character of the property of the estate; (d) The name of the person for whom letters are prayed; (e) If the will has not been delivered to the court, the name of the person having custody of it. But no defect in the petition shall render void the allowance of the will, or the issuance of letters testamentary or of administration with the will annexed. SEC. 3. Court to appoint time for proving will. Notice thereof to be published.When a will is delivered to, or a petition for the allowance of a will is filed in, the court having jurisdiction, such court shall fix a time and place for proving the will when all concerned may appear to contest the allowance thereof, and shall cause notice of such time and place to be published three (3) weeks successively, previous to the time appointed, in a newspaper of general circulation in the province. But no newspaper publication shall be made where the petition for probate has been filed by the testator himself. SEC. 4. Heirs, devisees, legatees, and executors to be notified by mail or personally. The court shall also cause copies of the notice of the time and place fixed for proving the will to be addressed to the designated or other known heirs, legatees, and devisees of the testator resident in the Philippines at their places of residence, and deposited in the post office with the postage thereon prepaid at least twenty (20) days before the hearing, if such places of residence be known. A copy of the notice must in like manner be mailed to the person named as executor, if he be not the petitioner, also, to any person named as co-executor not petitioning, if their places of residence be known. Personal service of copies of the notice at least ten (10) days before the day of hearing shall be equivalent to mailing. If the testator asks for the allowance of his own will, notice shall be sent only to his compulsory heirs. SEC. 5. Proof at hearing. What sufficient in absence of contest.At the hearing compliance with the provisions of the last two preceding sections must be shown before the introduction of testimony in support of the will. All such
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testimony shall be taken under oath and reduced to writing. If no person appears to contest the allowance of the will, the court may grant allowance thereof on the testimony of one of the subscribing witnesses only, if such witness testify that the will was executed as is required by law. In the case 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. In the absence of any such competent witness, and if the court deem it necessary, expert testimony may be resorted to. SEC. 6. Proof of lost or destroyed will. Certificate thereupon.No will shall be proved as a lost or destroyed will unless the execution and validity of the same be established and the will is proved to have been in existence at the time of the death of the testator, or is shown to have been fraudulently or accidentally destroyed in the lifetime of the testator without his knowledge, nor unless its provisions are clearly and distinctly proved by at least two (2) credible witnesses. When a lost will is proved, the provisions thereof must be distinctly stated and certified by the judge, under the seal of the court, and the certificate must be filed and recorded as other wills are filed and recorded. SEC. 7. Proof when witnesses do not reside in province.If it appears at the time fixed for the hearing that none of the subscribing witnesses resides in the province, but that the deposition of one or more of them can be taken elsewhere, the court may, on motion, direct It to be taken, and may authorize a photographic copy of the will to be made and to be presented to the witness on his examination, who may be asked the same questions with respect to it and to the handwriting of the testator and others, as would be pertinent and competent if the original will were present. SEC. 8. Proof when witnesses dead or insane or do not reside in the Philippines.If it appears at the time fixed for the hearing that the subscribing witnesses are dead or insane, or that none of them resides in the Philippines, the court may admit the testimony of other witnesses to prove the sanity of the testator, and the due execution of the will; and as evidence of the execution of the will, it may admit proof of the handwriting of the testator and of the subscribing witnesses, or of any of them.
SEC. 9. Grounds for disallowing will.The will shall be disallowed in any of the following cases: (a) If not executed and attested as required by law; (b) If the testator was insane, or otherwise mentally incapable to make a will, at the time of its execution; (c) If it was executed under duress, or the influence of fear, or threats; (d) If it was procured by undue and improper pressure and influence, on the part of the beneficiary, or of some other person for his benefit; (e) If the signature of the testator was procured by fraud or trick, and he did not intend that the instrument should be his will at the time of fixing his signature thereto. SEC. 10. Contestant to file grounds of contest.Anyone appearing to contest the will must state in writing his grounds for opposing its allowance, and serve a copy thereof on the petitioner and other parties interested in the estate. SEC. 11. Subscribing witnesses produced or accounted for where will contested.If the will is contested, all the subscribing witnesses, and the notary in the case of wills executed under the Civil Code of the Philippines, if present in the Philippines, and not insane, must be produced and examined, and the death, absence, or insanity of any of them must be satisfactorily shown to the court. If all or some of such witnesses are present in the Philippines but outside the province where the will has been filed, their deposition must be taken. If any or all of them testify against the due execution of the will, or do not remember having attested to it, or are otherwise of doubtful credibility, the will may, nevertheless, be allowed if the court is satisfied from the testimony of other witnesses and from all the evidence presented that the will was executed and attested in the manner required by law. If a holographic will is contested, the same shall be allowed if at least three (3) witnesses who know the handwriting of the testator explicitly declare that the will and the signature are in the handwriting of the testator; in the absence of any competent witness, and if the court deem it necessary, expert testimony may be resorted to.
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SEC. 12. Proof where testator petitions for allowance of holographic will.Where the testator himself petitions for the probate of his holographic will and no contest is filed, the fact that he affirms that the holographic will and the signature are in his own handwriting, shall be sufficient evidence of the genuineness and due execution thereof. If the holographic will is contested, the burden of disproving the genuineness and due execution thereof shall be on the contestant The testator may, in his turn, present such additional proof as may be necessary to rebut the evidence for the contestant. SEC. 13. Certificate of allowance attached to proved will. To be recorded in the Office of Register of Deeds.If the court is satisfied, upon proof taken and filed, that the will was duly executed, and that the testator at the time of its execution was of sound and disposing mind, and not acting under duress, menace, and undue influence, or fraud, a certificate of its allowance, signed by the judge, and attested by the seal of the court shall be attached to the will and the will and certificate filed and recorded by the clerk. Attested copies of the will devising real estate and of certificate of allowance thereof, shall be recorded in the register of deeds of the province in which the lands lie.
consulted with Fausto E. Gan, nephew of Felicidad, who was then preparing for the bar examinations. The latter replied it could be done without any witness, provided the document was entirely in her handwriting, signed and dated by her. Vicente Esguerra lost no time in transmitting the information, and on the strength of it, in the morning of November 5, 1951, in her residence at Juan Luna Street, Manila, Felicidad wrote, signed and dated a holographic will substantially of the tenor above transcribed, in the presence of her niece, Felina Esguerra (daughter of Vicente), who was invited to read it. In the afternoon of that day, Felicidad was visited by a distant relative, Primitivo Reyes, and she allowed him to read the will in the presence of Felina Esguerra, who again read it. The trial judge refused to credit the petitioner's evidence for several reasons, the most important of which were these: (a) if according to his evidence, the decedent wanted to keep her will a secret, so that her husband would not know it, it is strange she executed it in the presence of Felina Esguerra, knowing as she did that witnesses were unnecessary; (b) in the absence of a showing that Felina was a confidant of the decedent it is hard to believe that the latter would have allowed the former to see and read the will several times; (c) it is improbable that the decedent would have permitted Primitivo Reyes, Rosario Gan Jimenez and Socorro Olarte to read her will, when she precisely wanted its contents to remain a secret during her lifetime; (d) it is also improbable that her purpose being to conceal the will from her husband she would carry it around, even to the hospital, in her purse which could for one reason or another be opened by her husband; (e) if it is true that the husband demanded the purse from Felina in the U.S.T. Hospital and that the will was there, it is hard to believe that he returned it without destroying the will, the theory of the petitioner being precisely that the will was executed behind his back for fear he will destroy it. The New Civil Code effective in 1950 revived holographic wills in its arts. 810-814. "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." The object of such requirements it has been said, is to close the door against bad faith and fraud, to prevent substitution of wills, to guarantee their truth and authenticity (Abangan vs. Abangan, 40 Phil., 476) and to avoid that those who have no right to succeed the testator would succeed him and be benefited with the probate of same. (Mendoza vs. Pilapil, 40 off. Gaz., 1855). However, formal imperfections may be brushed aside when authenticity of the instrument is duly proved. Now, in the matter of holographic wills, no such guaranties of truth and veracity are demanded, since as stated, they need no witnesses; provided however, that they are "entirely written, dated, and signed by the hand of the testator himself." The law, it is reasonable to suppose, regards the document itself as material proof of authenticity, and as its own safeguard, since it could at any time, be demonstrated to be or not to be in the hands of the testator himself. "In the probate of a holographic will" says the New Civil Code, "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 such witnesses shall be required. In the absence of any such witnesses, (familiar with decedent's handwriting) and if the
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) Gan vs. Yap On November 20, 1951, Felicidad Esguerra Alto Yap died of heart failure in the University of Santo Tomas Hospital, leaving properties in Pulilan, Bulacan, and in the City of Manila. On March 17, 1952, Fausto E. Gan initiated these proceedings in the Manila court of first instance with a petition for the probate of a holographic will allegedly executed by the deceased, Opposing the petition, her surviving husband Ildefonso Yap asserted that the deceased had not left any will, nor executed any testament during her lifetime. Sometime in 1950 after her last trip abroad, Felicidad Esguerra mentioned to her first cousin, Vicente Esguerra, her desire to make a will. She confided however that it would be useless if her husband discovered or knew about it. Vicente
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Art. 839. The will shall be disallowed in any of the following cases: (1) If the formalities required by law have not been complied with; (2) If the testator was insane, or otherwise mentally incapable of making a will, at the time of its execution; (3) If it was executed through force or under duress, or the influence of fear, or threats; (4) If it was procured by undue and improper pressure and influence, on the part of the beneficiary or of some other person; (5) If the signature of the testator was procured by fraud; (6) If the testator acted by mistake or did not intend that the instrument he signed should be his will at the time of affixing his signature thereto. (n) Art. 1335. There is violence when in order to wrest consent, serious or irresistible force is employed. There is intimidation when one of the contracting parties is compelled by a reasonable and wellgrounded fear of an imminent and grave evil upon his person or property, or upon the person or property of his spouse, descendants or ascendants, to give his consent. To determine the degree of intimidation, the age, sex and condition of the person shall be borne in mind. A threat to enforce one's claim through competent authority, if the claim is just or legal, does not vitiate consent. (1267a) Art. 1336. Violence or intimidation shall annul the obligation, although it may have been employed by a third person who did not take part in the contract. (1268) Art. 1337. There is undue influence when a person takes improper advantage of his power over the will of another, depriving the latter of a reasonable freedom of choice. The following circumstances shall be considered: the confidential, family, spiritual and other relations between the parties, or the fact that the person alleged to have been unduly influenced was suffering from mental weakness, or was ignorant or in financial distress. (n) Art. 1338. There is fraud when, through insidious words or machinations of one of the contracting
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1.
2.
3.
Primary those who exclude other compulsory heirs ex. Legit children & ascendants secondary succeed only in the absence of the primary. ex. Legit parents & ascenadants Concurring succeed together with the primary and secondary cannot be excluded by them. Ex. Widow/er & illegit children
Legitimate children and ascendants in the ordinary course of nature father or mother die ahead of the child; the law confers preferential legitimary rights upon them. Thus the law intends that property of the decedent pass not to strangers but to his natural successor. Legitimated Children the NCC is silent as to this kind of children but the Family code under Art. 272 grants the same rights to legitimated as that of the legitimate. Hence they are included as a compulsory heir.
Art. 887. The following are compulsory heirs: (1) Legitimate children and descendants, with respect to their legitimate parents and ascendants; (2) In default of the foregoing, legitimate parents and ascendants, with respect to their legitimate children and descendants; (3) The widow or widower; (4) Acknowledged natural children, and natural children by legal fiction; (5) Other illegitimate children referred to in Article 287. Compulsory heirs mentioned in Nos. 3, 4, and 5 are not excluded by those in Nos. 1 and 2; neither do they exclude one another. In all cases of illegitimate children, their filiation must be duly proved. The father or mother of illegitimate children of the three classes mentioned, shall inherit from them in the manner and to the extent established by this Code. (807a) Compulsory heirs are those who succeed whether the testator likes it or not and they cannot be deprived of their legitime except only by disinheritance. An heir, of whatever class is absolutely free to accept or renounce the inheritance because the law on legitime is a restriction not on the freedom of the heir to accept or repudiate, but on the freedom of testator to dispose of his property. Kinds of Compulsory heirs:
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1.
2.
3.
4.
null and void marriages such as incestuous or bigamous ones. Except in cases of bigamous marriages where two wives contract in good faith with the same husband, both are entitled to inherit equally from the deceased husband. Voidable marriages entitle the widow/er to legitime because there exists a valid marriage until it is annulled. Thus, once annulled before death of a spouse they are incapacitated to inherit. However, pending the case of annulment and one spouse dies the widow/er, nevertheless, inherits the legitime because the marriage can no longer be annulled after death of one. Legal separation of the spouses before death entitles the widow/er the Legitime if he /she is the innocent spouse. Unless reconciliation occurred before the death of the spouse, the survivor will inherit regardless of his guilt. In such case that the decree is pending upon death of one spouse then the decision should be awaited. The fact that the innocent spouse instituted the legal separation manifest his desire to not to allow the guilty spouse to benefir fro his estate. The accident of death should not defeat this purpose. Separation in fact by amicable settlement does not incapacitate the guilty spouse to inherit though there may be valid grounds for legal separation there being no judicial decree, the right of legitime is preserved.
Art. 902. The rights of illegitimate children set forth in the preceding articles are transmitted upon their death to their descendants, whether legitimate or illegitimate. (843a) The article allows the legitimate and illegitimate descendants to represent the illegitimate child who predecease his own parent. But the illegitimate children of of an illegitimate child can represent the latter only in the rights set forth in the preceding articles namely 894, 895, 896, 899, and 901. The criticism on this article is that the law gives better rights to the illegitimate children of an illegitimate child and not to the illegitimate children of a legitimate child. This is absurd since the position of the illegitimate children is no better than or equal to that of the legitimate child. However, though unfair to the latter this is an express provision of law which we are confronted with. Thus, dura lex sed lex Rosales vs. Rosales In this Petition for Review of two (2) Orders of the Court of First Instance of Cebu the question raised is whether the widow whose husband predeceased his mother can inherit from the latter, her mother-in-law. In the course of the intestate proceedings, the trial court issued an Order dated June 16, 1972 declaring the following individuals the legal heirs of the deceased and prescribing
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Art. 888. The legitime of legitimate children and descendants consists of one-half of the hereditary estate of the father and of the mother. The latter may freely dispose of the remaining half, subject to the rights of illegitimate children and of the surviving spouse as hereinafter provided. (808a) The enlargement of the legitime and the free portion to half each is primarily the result of removal of the 1/3 mejora or betterment in the old code where the testator disposes a portion in favor of his legitimate children for their betterment or reward. The NCC eliminated the mejora for the following reasons: 1. 2. 3. The natural inequalities among children is but imaginary and parent reward merely on better qualities of one children such reward may be effected by the father or mother by disposing of part or all of the free half the testator should have greater freedom to dispoe of his estate by will
the supposed free portion is not always disposable by the testator; it is expressly made subject to the rights of illegitimate children and the surviving spouse. Only the remainder thereafter shall be disposable, if there is any left. Art. 889. The legitime of legitimate parents or ascendants consists of one-half of the hereditary estates of their children and descendants. The children or descendants may freely dispose of the other half, subject to the rights of illegitimate children and of the surviving spouse as hereinafter provided. (809a) Art. 890. The legitime reserved for the legitimate parents shall be divided between them equally; if one of the parents should have died, the whole shall pass to the survivor.
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4.
Art. 896. Illegitimate children who may survive with legitimate parents or ascendants of the deceased shall be entitled to one-fourth of the hereditary estate to be taken from the portion at the free disposal of the testator. (841a) Art. 897. When the widow or widower survives with legitimate children or descendants, and
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Art. 904. The testator cannot deprive his compulsory heirs of their legitime, except in cases expressly specified by law. Art. 872. The testator cannot impose any charge, condition, or substitution whatsoever upon the legitimes prescribed in this Code. Should he do so, the same shall be considered as not imposed. (813a) The legitime goes to the heir by operation of law and not by the will of the testator; hence it cannot be subject to the freedom of the latter to impose encumbrances, conditions and substitutions. Any encumbrance is simply disregarded and considered as not written. The CHs right to the legitime is free, unencumbered, and pure. Art. 905. Every renunciation or compromise as regards a future legitime between the person owing it and his compulsory heirs is void, and the latter may claim the same upon the death of the former; but they must bring to collation whatever they may have received by virtue of the renunciation or compromise. (816) 1. 2. The future legitime between is merely an expectancy, and the heir does not acquire any right over the same until death of testator. The renunciation or compromise does not become valid by the mere failure of the compulsory heirs to assert its invalidity because the matter of its legal effect cannot be left to the will of the parties. all renunciations of future legitimes are void. However, a mere statement made by a son of the properties ne has received from his father, still living, for the purpose of taking the same into account in case of partition in the event the father dies, is not a renunciation or compromise on future legitime. Since the legitime is a part of the inheritance, and a compromise is contract, it is obvious that all compromises on future legitimes, by and between
3.
4.
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5. 6.
Art. 906. Any compulsory heir to whom the testator has left by any title less than the legitime belonging to him may demand that the same be fully satisfied. (815) By the word testator, irt is believed thiat this principle applies only when that which has been left is in a will or testament. If there is no testatmentery disposition in his favor, the heir cannot ask for completion of his legitime, because there is nothing to complete; instead, there should be case of preterition or total omission, and in such case the forced heir in the direct line is entitled to ask, not merely for the completion of his legitime, but for the annulment of the institution of heir. But when it is not evedent that the testator has forgotten the compulsory heir and it appears as a fact that the compulsory heir had already received something in the way of advance upon his legitime, it cannot be presumed that the testator had forgotten the compulsory heir. There is no real preterition, although nothing has been left by will to the CH. The purpose of Article 906 evidently is to give the compulsory heir only that ehich has been reserved for him by the law, nothing less nothing more. If he was not forgotten then he is entitled only to that which the testator cannot deprive him. Even when the CH has not been mentioned in the will or has not been gien an advance on his legitime, if the testamentary dispositions do not cover the entire estate but something is left undisposed, and the CH is also a compulsory heir is also an intestate heir. The indisposed portion would pass by the rule of intestacy to the CH; if it is not enough to cover his legitime, then he may ask for the completion of such legitme. It is to be presumed that the testator intended to give him the undisposed portion.
1.
Determination of the value of the property which remains at the time of the testators death; either by: a. b. judicial proceedings in the settlement of the estate assisted by tax appraisers true value of the property not merely assessed value for taxation purposes
determination of the obligations, debts, and charges which have to be paid out or deducted from the value of the property the difference between the assets and the liabilities, giving rise to the net hereditary estate; addition to the net value of the estate of donations subject to collation
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The remainder after deduction of the debts and charges is the net hereditary estate. Collation, in the first concept is the imaginary or fictitious reconstitution of the estate of the testator by mere mathematical process of adding all that is donated during the lifrtime of the testator to CH or strangers. The second concept entails that property donated by the testator during his lifetime must be brought back actually and returened to the hereditary estate whenever it is found that such donation exceeds the disposable portion of the estate. The purpose of which is to complete the assets necessary for the payment of the shares of the compulsory heirs. Collation is thus for the benefit of the CH, and not the creditors of the decedent. The presence of the latter, however, must be determined at the time of the testators death, not at the time the donation was made. The value of the property donated, however, is determined on the date the donations were made. To the net value of the hereditary estate, shall be added the value of all donations by the testator that are subject to collation, at the time he made them. (818a) Art. 909. Donations given to children shall be charged to their legitime. Donations made to strangers shall be charged to that part of the estate of which the testator could have disposed by his last will. Insofar as they may be inofficious or may exceed the disposable portion, they shall be reduced according to the rules established by this Code. (819a) Art. 910. Donations which an illegitimate child may have received during the lifetime of his father or mother, shall be charged to his legitime. Should they exceed the portion that can be freely disposed of, they shall be reduced in the manner prescribed by this Code. (847a) Any donation to the grandchild is not subject to collation because the same is not a CH but it may be charged against the free portion as a donation to stranger. When the donation to a compulsory heir exceeds his legitime, the excess is chargeable against the free portion which is at the disposal of the the testator, just as any donation to stranger, subject to the resk of reduction. If the donation to a stranger exceeds the free portion, then it will have to be reduced as inofficious. The purpose of the law is not to prevent the stranger from getting more from the
2. 3.
The article provides a rule on preference to determine which devise or legacy is to be reduced whenervr it execeeds the free portion or to the extent that it impairs the legitime. Art. 950 also provides the following order of reduction of legacy or devise: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. remunatory legacy or devise; legacy or devise declared by testator to be preferred; legacies for support; legacies for education; specific determinate thing ehich form part of the estate; all others pro rata.
Where lies the distintion bet. 950 and 911? Article 911 will apply as to the manner of reducing legacies:
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b.
Article 950 applies when the question of reduction is exclusively among the legatees themselves, either because ther are no compulsory heirs, or because the legitme of CH has already been provided for by the testator in his will and there are no donation inter vivos. As to usufruct, use or habitation, or life annuity there shall be taken into account the probable life of the beneficiary in accordance with the American Tropical Experience table at 8% per annum. Donations are reduced first the most recent ones with regard the excess. Thus, priority in time priority in right. If several donations made on the same date they are reduced pro rata A property donated once alienated by donee cannot be set aside. It would be dangerous to the stability of property and inimical to the freedom of alienation. In the above instance, can the inofficious part of the donation be taken from other proerty of the donee? We believe that in such case the donee should be made to respond fro the value of the excess or inofficoius part. It was the act of the donee which made it impossible to recover the inofficoius part to the hereditary estate. He is conclusively presumed to knoe that that the donation stands the risk of reduction. What if the donee is insolvent and cannot return anything to the estate to complete the impaired legitime; who shall bear the loss? It is submitted that that the amount to be returned by the insolvent must be borne and paid by those whose donation are within the free portion. As between the compulsory heir, whose rights are derived from law, and the donees, whose rights spring from the will of the deceased, the former should be protected from the impairment of their shares. Art. 912. If the devise subject to reduction should consist of real property, which cannot be conveniently divided, it shall go to the devisee if the reduction does not absorb one-half of its value; and in a contrary case, to the compulsory heirs; but the former and the latter shall reimburse each other in cash for what respectively belongs to them. The devisee who is entitled to a legitime may retain the entire property, provided its value does not exceed that of the disposable portion and of the share pertaining to him as legitime. (821)
Summary of Legitimes of Compulsory Heirs 1. Legitimate Children with other CH c. d. e. f. LC alone 1 LC w/ SS- , 2 or more LC w/ SS , same as 1 LC receives LC w/ IC , half of 1 LC 1LC, SS, IC , , half of 1 LC LCs, SS, IC , same as 1 LC, half of 1 LC
g.
h.
2. Legitimate Parents & Ascendants w/ other CH a. b. c. d. LPA alone 1/2 LPA w/ SS , LPA w/ IC , LPA, SS, IC , 1/8,
4. Surviving Spouse alone Except in articulo mortis marriage and spouse dies w/in 3 mos. Surviving spouse entitled only to 1/3 5. Illegitimate Parents w/ other CH
a.
b.
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Art. 1069. Any sums paid by a parent in satisfaction of the debts of his children, election expenses, fines, and similar expenses shall be brought to collation. (1043a) Art. 1070. Wedding gifts by parents and ascendants consisting of jewelry, clothing, and outfit, shall not be reduced as inofficious except insofar as they may exceed one-tenth of the sum which is disposable by will. (1044) Art. 1071. The same things donated are not to be brought to collation and partition, but only their value at the time of the donation, even though their just value may not then have been assessed. Their subsequent increase or deterioration and even their total loss or destruction, be it accidental or culpable, shall be for the benefit or account and risk of the donee. (1045a) Art. 1072. In the collation of a donation made by both parents, one-half shall be brought to the inheritance of the father, and the other half, to that of the mother. That given by one alone shall be brought to collation in his or her inheritance. (1046a) Art. 1073. The donee's share of the estate shall be reduced by an amount equal to that already received by him; and his co-heirs shall receive an equivalent, as much as possible, in property of the same nature, class and quality. (1047) Art. 1074. Should the provisions of the preceding article be impracticable, if the property donated was immovable, the co-heirs shall be entitled to receive its equivalent in cash or securities, at the rate of quotation; and should there be neither cash or marketable securities in the estate, so much of the other property as may be necessary shall be sold at public auction. If the property donated was movable, the co-heirs shall only have a right to select an equivalent of other personal property of the inheritance at its just price. (1048) Art. 1075. The fruits and interest of the property subject to collation shall not pertain to the estate except from the day on which the succession is opened. For the purpose of ascertaining their amount, the fruits and interest of the property of the estate of the same kind and quality as that subject to collation shall be made the standard of assessment. (1049) Art. 1076. The co-heirs are bound to reimburse to the donee the necessary expenses which he has incurred for the preservation of the property donated to him, though they may not have augmented its value.
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Art. 854. The preterition or omission of one, some, or all of the compulsory heirs in the direct line, whether living at the time of the execution of the will or born after the death of the testator, shall annul the institution of heir; but the devises and legacies shall be valid insofar as they are not inofficious. If the omitted compulsory heirs should die before the testator, the institution shall be effectual, without prejudice to the right of representation. (814a) Art. 855. The share of a child or descendant omitted in a will must first be taken from the part of the estate not disposed of by the will, if any; if that is not sufficient, so much as may be necessary must be taken proportionally from the shares of the other compulsory heirs. (1080a) The article does not necessarily refer to preterition. It refers to a child or descendant omitted in a will. The share of the omitted child is to be determined by other provisions of law; once that is determined this article provides the manner in which that share shall be satisfied. This article suffers serious defects. The term cjold pr descendant should be construed as compulsory heirs, in much the same way that the first paragraph of article 909 has been construed by commentators to refer to compulsory heirs. Theree is patent fundamental mistake in the last sentence of the article because it creates a confusion and does not express the true intent of the law. It should have been reworded in this wise: the share of the compulsory heir omitted in a will must first be taken from the part of the estate not diposed of by will, if
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That the said credit of P1,321.40, equivalent to 3,696.50 pesetas, allowed by the commissioners, is the only claim presented within the legal term against the estate; that Francisco Escuin, the father of the testator, his wife or widow, Teresa Ponce de Leon, and his natural child, the minor Emilio Escuin y Batac, represented by his mother and guardian Julia Batac, are entitled to the succession; that, by setting aside one-third of the estate in favor of the natural son recognized in accordance with article 842 of the Civil Code, there only remains the question as to how the remaining twothirds of the inheritance shall be bestowed, taking into account the directions of the testator in his will; that the same does not disclose that he had left any child by his wife; that the latter, as the widow of the testator, besides being a designated heir entitled to one-half of the hereditary funds, is entitled to the usufruct of the portion fixed by the law, and that the funds to be apportioned are composed wholly of cash or ready money. On the 30th of September, 1905, the court below found that Emilio Escuin y Batac was the recognized natural child of the late Emilio Escuin de los Santos, had by Julia Batac; that the testator was also the natural son of the defendant Francisco
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Art. 891. The ascendant who inherits from his descendant any property which the latter may have acquired by gratuitous title from another ascendant, or a brother or sister, is obliged to reserve such property as he may have acquired by operation of law for the benefit of relatives who are within the
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P.D. 603; Art. 39. Effects of Adoption. - The adoption shall: (1) Give to the adopted person the same rights and duties as if he were a legitimate child of the adopter: Provided, That an adopted child cannot acquire Philippine citizenship by virtue of such adoption: (2) Dissolve the authority vested in the natural parent or parents, except where the adopter is the spouse of the surviving natural parent; (3) Entitle the adopted person to use the adopter's surname; and (4) Make the adopted person a legal heir of the adopter: Provided, That if the adopter is survived by legitimate parents or ascendants and by an adopted person, the latter shall not have more successional rights than an acknowledged natural child: Provided, further, That any property received gratuitously by the adopted from the adopter shall revert to the adopter should the former
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b.
c.
Exception on attempt against the life are the following: 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. intention is lacking conviction for mere reckless imprudence negligence though mitigated justifying circumstance under the RPC accessory after the fact prosecution dismissed even if provisional only prescription of the crime appeal to the higher court reverses conviction
or
Elements od false accusation: 1. 2. 3. act of accusing the testator; judicial declaration that such accusation is false; offense charged is punishable be 6 years imprisonment.
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What is dishonorable or disgraceful life is largely a matter of appreciation and opinion. If denied, the burden of proof is lodeged to the others interested in the estate. Ultimately, it is the opinion of the court which will be the basis of the disinheritance. The conviction of the crime which carries the penalty of Civil interdiction must be by final judgement.
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Art. 63. The decree of legal separation shall have the following effects: (1) The spouses shall be entitled to live separately from each other, but the marriage bonds shall not be severed; (2) The absolute community or the conjugal partnership shall be dissolved and liquidated but the offending spouse shall have no right to any share of the net profits earned by the absolute community or the conjugal partnership, which shall be forfeited in accordance with the provisions of Article 43(2); (3) The custody of the minor children shall be awarded to the innocent spouse, subject to the provisions of Article 213 of this Code; and (4) The offending spouse shall be disqualified from inheriting from the innocent spouse by intestate succession. Moreover, provisions in favor of the offending spouse made in the will of the innocent spouse shall be revoked by operation of law. (106a)
Once revoked it cannot be renewed except for other causes subsequent to the revocation. Thus, after reconciliation a new disinheritance can be based only on new grounds. Art. 923. The children and descendants of the person disinherited shall take his or her place and shall preserve the rights of compulsory heirs with respect to the legitime; but the disinherited parent shall not have the usufruct or administration of the property which constitutes the legitime. (857) The causes of disinheritance are personal to the disinherited heir; he alone is at fault, and nobody else should suffer the effects of such culpability. His children and ascendants therefore should not be penalized for acts not imputable to them. The article allows the children and descendants of the person disinherited to take his place and retain the rights of compulsory heirs in respect to the legitime. The disinherited person can be represented only if he is a child or descendant, a disinherited ascendant or spouse cannot be represented. Right of representation applies. The representation should extend to everything that would have passed to the disinherited heir by operation of law; this includes the amount that pertains to him as intestate heir and not only that as compulsory heir. XVI. INSTITUTION OF HEIRS A. 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) The will of the testator is the supreme law which succession is governed, thus, the beneficiaries under the will must be designated with clearness so that there can be no doubt as to who are intended by the testator. Since the institution of heirs and the designation of legatees and devisees spring exclusively from the will of the testator, only the portion of the inheritance that is subject to the disposal of the testator would be affected by such institution or designation. It cannot affect the portion known as the legitime.
Art. 922. A subsequent reconciliation between the offender and the offended person deprives the latter of the right to disinherit, and renders ineffectual any disinheritance that may have been made. (856) General pardon is not sufficient. The pardon must expressly refer to the heir disinherited and specifically to the acts causing the disinheritance. Such pardon must be accepted by the heir. There must be a real reconciliation between the parties. There are some grounds for disinheritance which are also causes for incapacity by reason of unworthiness. What then would be the effect of a subsequent reconciliation between the parties, if a disinheritance has already been made on any of the grounds which are also causes for unworthiness? Same effect, the heir may inherit as a CH and intestate. Incapacity by reason of unworthiness is merely an expression of the implied will of a person who has not expressed his intention in a will. If the express intention, manifested by the testator in a disinheriting clause in a will, is rendered ineffective by a subsequent reconciliation, how can the implied intention be logically held to exist? If a disinheritance has been made, and then reconciliation takes place, it will be the same as if there had been no disinheritance. The disinheritance does not legally exist, and the rights established by law in favor of the person provisionally disinherited recover their supremacy over the express disposition of thetestator. Disinheritance may be revoked by: 1. reconciliation; 2. subsequent institution of the disinherited heir;
Art. 785. The duration or efficacy of the designation of heirs, devisees or legatees, or the determination of the portions which they are to take, when referred to by name, cannot be left to the discretion of a third person. (670a) T: The matters mentioned in this article are testamentary in nature; they constitute expressions of the will or disposition of the testator. Hence, pursuant to Art. 784, it cannot be delegated.
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Art. 787. The testator may not make a testamentary disposition in such manner that another person has to determine whether or not it is to be operative. (n) Art. 841. A will shall be valid even though it should not contain an institution of an heir, or such institution should not comprise the entire estate, and even though the person so instituted should not accept the inheritance or should be incapacitated to succeed. The heir may be instituted to succeed to the whole or to an aliquot part of the inheritance. The existence of the institution does not depend upon the designation or name which the testator gives to his testamentary disposition. In such cases the testamentary dispositions made in accordance with law shall be complied with and the remainder of the estate shall pass to the legal heirs. (764) 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. The article pertains to the principle of freedom of distribution by will. The extent of his freedom of disposition depends upon the existence, knid, and number of compulsory heirs. When there are CH the law limits this freedom to such extent that legitime is not impaired. Besides the civil law, special laws also restrict this freedom such as the Public Land Act which vests upon the heirs of the applicant or grantee the ownership of land in such case that the latter dies. Thus, he does not have free disposal of the subject land. The body of the deceased testator will not pass under his will or become part of the estate because it is not a property. But the testator may be allowed to such extent for scientific or educational purposes. One who has compulsory heirs may dispose of his estate provided he does not contravene the provisions of this Code with regard to the legitime of said heirs. (763a) Art. 843. The testator shall designate the heir by his name and surname, and when there are two persons having the same names, he shall indicate some circumstance by which the instituted heir may be known. Even though the testator may have omitted the name of the heir, should he designate him in such manner that there can be no doubt as to who has been instituted, the institution shall be valid. (772)
Extrinsic evidence is admissible to show the situation of the testator and all the relevant facts and circumstances surrounding him at the time of making the will, for the purpose of explaining or resolving patent ambiguity. B: method of resolving ambiguity, whether latent or patent is any evidence admissible and relevant excluding the oral declarations of testator as to his intention. Ratio for the exclusion: B: can a dead man refute a tale? T: the testator whose lips have been sealed by death can no longer deny or affirm the truth of what witnesses may say he declared, would create confusion and give rise to false claims. Art. 845. Every disposition in favor of an unknown person shall be void, unless by some event or circumstance his identity becomes certain. However, a disposition in favor of a definite class or group of persons shall be valid. (750a) Art. 786. The testator may entrust to a third person the distribution of specific property or sums of money that he may leave in general to specified
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and the ff. may be delegated: 3. 4. designation of persons, institutions, establishments within the class or cause; the manner of distribution. or
Art. 846. Heirs instituted without designation of shares shall inherit in equal parts. (765) Art. 848. If the testator should institute his brothers and sisters, and he has some of full blood and others of half blood, the inheritance shall be distributed equally unless a different intention appears. (770a) Art. 847. When the testator institutes some heirs individually and others collectively as when he says, "I designate as my heirs A and B, and the children of C," those collectively designated shall be considered as individually instituted, unless it clearly appears that the intention of the testator was otherwise. (769a) Art. 849. When the testator calls to the succession a person and his children they are all deemed to have been instituted simultaneously and not successively. (771) Art. 850. The statement of a false cause for the institution of an heir shall be considered as not written, unless it appears from the will that the testator would not have made such institution if he had known the falsity of such cause. (767a) Austria vs. Reyes On July 7, 1956 Basilia Austria vda. de Cruz filed with the Court of First Instance of Rizal (Special Proceedings 2457) a petition for probate, ante mortem, of her last will and testament. The probate was opposed by the present petitioners Ruben Austria, Consuelo Austria-Benta and Lauro Austria Mozo, and still others who, like the petitioner, are nephews and nieces of Basilia. This opposition was, however, dismissed and the probate of the will allowed after due hearing. The bulk of the estate of Basilia, admittedly, was destined under the will to pass on to the respondents Perfecto Cruz, Benita Cruz-Meez, Isagani Cruz, Alberto Cruz, and Luz
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Art. 851. If the testator has instituted only one heir, and the institution is limited to an aliquot part of the inheritance, legal succession takes place with respect to the remainder of the estate. The same rule applies if the testator has instituted several heirs, each being limited to an aliquot part, and all the parts do not cover the whole inheritance. (n) Art. 852. If it was the intention of the testator that the instituted heirs should become sole heirs to the whole estate, or the whole free portion, as the case may be, and each of them has been instituted to an aliquot part of the inheritance and their aliquot parts together do not cover the whole inheritance, or the whole free portion, each part shall be increased proportionally. (n) Art. 853. If each of the instituted heirs has been given an aliquot part of the inheritance, and the
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Art. 872. The testator cannot impose any charge, condition, or substitution whatsoever upon the legitimes prescribed in this Code. Should he do so, the same shall be considered as not imposed. (813a) Art. 873. Impossible conditions and those contrary to law or good customs shall be considered as not imposed and shall in no manner prejudice the heir, even if the testator should otherwise provide. (792a) Art. 874. An absolute condition not to contract a first or subsequent marriage shall be considered as not written unless such condition has been imposed on the widow or widower by the deceased spouse, or by the latter's ascendants or descendants.
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Art. 885. The designation of the day or time when the effects of the institution of an heir shall commence or cease shall be valid. In both cases, the legal heir shall be considered as called to the succession until the arrival of the period or its expiration. But in the first case he shall not enter into possession of the property until after having given sufficient security, with the intervention of the instituted heir. (805)
Art. 878. A disposition with a suspensive term does not prevent the instituted heir from acquiring his rights and transmitting them to his heirs even before the arrival of the term. (799a) Art. 880. If the heir be instituted under a suspensive condition or term, the estate shall be placed under administration until the condition is fulfilled, or until it becomes certain that it cannot be fulfilled, or until the arrival of the term. The same shall be done if the heir does not give the security required in the preceding article. (801a) Modal Institutions Art. 882. The statement of the object of the institution, or the application of the property left by the testator, or the charge imposed by him, shall not be considered as a condition unless it appears that such was his intention. That which has been left in this manner may be claimed at once provided that the instituted heir or his heirs give security for compliance with the
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XVII. LEGACIES AND DEVISEES Art. 924. All things and rights which are within the commerce of man be bequeathed or devised. (865a) Art. 925. A testator may charge with legacies and devises not only his compulsory heirs but also the legatees and devisees. The latter shall be liable for the charge only to the extent of the value of the legacy or the devise received by them. The compulsory heirs shall not be liable for the charge beyond the amount of the free portion given them. (858a) Art. 926. When the testator charges one of the heirs with a legacy or devise, he alone shall be bound. Should he not charge anyone in particular, all shall be liable in the same proportion in which they may inherit. (859) Art. 927. If two or more heirs take possession of the estate, they shall be solidarily liable for the loss or destruction of a thing devised or bequeathed, even
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Fernandez vs. Dimagiba It appears from the record that on January 19, 1955, Ismaela Dimagiba, now respondent, submitted to the Court of First Instance a petition for the probate of the purported will of the late Benedicta de los Reyes, executed on October 22, 1930, and annexed to the petition. The will instituted the petitioner as the sole heir of the estate of the deceased. The petition was set for hearing, and in due time, Dionisio Fernandez, Eusebio Reyes and Luisa Reyes, and one month later, Mariano, Cesar, Leonor and Paciencia, all surnamed Reyes, all claiming to be heirs intestate of the decedent, filed oppositions to the probate asked. Grounds advanced for the opposition were forgery, vices of consent of the testatrix, estoppel by laches of the proponent, and revocation of the will by two deeds of conveyance of the major portion of the estate made by the testatrix in favor of the proponent in 1943 and 1944, but which conveyances were finally set aside by this Supreme Court in a decision promulgated on August 3, 1954, in cases G.R. Nos. L-5618 and L-5620 (unpublished). Oppositors Fernandez and Reyes petitioned for reconsideration and/or new trial, insisting that the issues of estoppel and revocation be considered and resolved; whereupon, on July 27, 1959, the Court overruled the claim that proponent was in estoppel to ask for the probate of the will, but "reserving unto the parties the right to raise the issue of implied revocation at the opportune time." On February 27, 1962, after receiving further evidence on the issue whether the execution by the testatrix of deeds of sale of the larger portion of her estate in favor of the testamentary heir, made in 1943 and 1944, subsequent to the execution of her 1930 testament, had revoked the latter under Article 957(2) of the 1950 Civil Code (Art. 869 of the Civil Code of 1889), the trial Court resolved against the oppositors and held the will of the late Benedicta de los Reyes "unaffected and unrevoked by the deeds of sale." Whereupon, the oppositors elevated the case to the Court of Appeals. In this instance, both sets of oppositors-appellants pose three main issues: (a) whether or not the decree of the Court of First Instance allowing the will to probate had become final for lack of appeal; (b) whether or not the order of the Court of origin dated July 27, 1959, overruling the estoppel invoked by oppositors-appellants had likewise become final; and (c) whether or not the 1930 will of Benedicta de los Reyes had been impliedly revoked by her execution of deeds of conveyance in favor of the proponent on March 26, 1943 and April 3, 1944.
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Rosales vs. Rosales In this Petition for Review of two (2) Orders of the Court of First Instance of Cebu the question raised is whether the widow whose husband predeceased his mother can inherit from the latter, her mother-in-law. In the course of the intestate proceedings, the trial court issued an Order dated June 16, 1972 declaring the following individuals the legal heirs of the deceased and prescribing their respective share of the estate Fortunato T. Rosales (husband) 1/4; Magna R. Acebes (daughter), 1/4; Macikequerox Rosales, 1/4; and Antonio Rosales (son), 1/4. This declaration was reiterated by the trial court in its Order dated February 4, 1975. These Orders notwithstanding, Irenea Rosales insisted in getting a share of the estate in her capacity as the surviving spouse of the late Carterio Rosales, son of the deceased, claiming that she is a compulsory heir of her mother-in-law together with her son, Macikequerox Rosales. In sum, the petitioner poses two (2) questions for Our resolution. First is a widow (surviving spouse) an intestate heir of her mother-in-law? Second are the Orders of the trial court which excluded the widow from getting a share of the estate in question final as against the said widow? Our answer to the first question is in the negative. Intestate or legal heirs are classified into two (2) groups, namely, those who inherit by their own right, and those who inherit by the right of representation. 1 Restated, an intestate heir can only inherit either by his own right, as in the order of intestate succession provided for in the Civil Code, 2 or by the right of representation provided for in Article 981 of the same law. There is no provision in the Civil Code which states that a widow (surviving spouse) is an intestate heir of her mother-in-law. The entire Code is devoid of any provision which entitles her to inherit from her mother-in-law either by her own right or by the right of representation. The provisions of the Code which relate to the order of intestate succession (Articles 978 to 1014) enumerate with meticulous exactitude the intestate heirs of a decedent, with the State as the final intestate heir. The conspicuous absence of a provision which makes a daughter-in-law an intestate heir of the deceased all the more confirms Our observation. If the legislature intended
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Art. 962. In every inheritance, the relative nearest in degree excludes the more distant ones, saving the right of representation when it properly takes place. Relatives in the same degree shall inherit in equal shares, subject to the provisions of article 1006 with respect to relatives of the full and half blood, and of Article 987, paragraph 2, concerning division between the paternal and maternal lines. (912a) Delos Santos vs. Dela Cruz From the record of this case, we cull the following salient facts: On May 21, 1965, Gertrudes de los Santos filed a complaint for specific performance against Maximo de la Cruz, alleging, among others, that on August 24, 1963, she and several co-heirs, including the defendant, executed an extrajudicial partition agreement (a copy of which was
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Art. 982. The grandchildren and other descendants shall inherit by right of representation, and if any one of them should have died, leaving several heirs, the portion pertaining to him shall be divided among the latter in equal portions. (933) Art. 902. The rights of illegitimate children set forth in the preceding articles are transmitted upon their death to their descendants, whether legitimate or illegitimate. (843a) Art. 992. An illegitimate child has no right to inherit ab intestato from the legitimate children and relatives of his father or mother; nor shall such children or relatives inherit in the same manner from the illegitimate child. (943a) Art. 1005. Should brothers and sisters survive together with nephews and nieces, who are the children of the descendant's brothers and sisters of the full blood, the former shall inherit per capita, and the latter per stirpes. (948) Art. 1006. Should brother and sisters of the full blood survive together with brothers and sisters of the half blood, the former shall be entitled to a share double that of the latter. (949) Art. 1007. In case brothers and sisters of the half blood, some on the father's and some on the mother's side, are the only survivors, all shall inherit in equal shares without distinction as to the origin of the property. (950) Art. 1008. Children of brothers and sisters of the half blood shall succeed per capita or per stirpes, in accordance with the rules laid down for the brothers and sisters of the full blood. (915) Teotica vs. Del Val Chan Maria Mortera y Balsalobre Vda. de Aguirre died on July 14, 1955 in the City of Manila leaving properties worth P600,000.00. She left a will written in Spanish which she executed at her residence in No. 2 Legarda St., Quiapo, Manila. She affixed her signature at the bottom of the will and on the left margin of each and every page thereof in the presence of Pilar Borja, Pilar G. Sanchez, and Modesto Formilleza, who in turn affixed their signatures below the attestation clause and on the left margin of each and every page of the will in the presence of the testatrix and of each other. Said will was acknowledged before Notary Public Niceforo S. Agaton by the testatrix and her witnesses. Among the many legacies and devises made in the will was one of P20,000.00 to Rene A. Teotico, married to the testatrix's niece named Josefina Mortera. To said spouses
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XX. ORDER OF INTESTATE SUCCESSION A. Descending Direct Line 1. Estate of legitimate decedent a. Illegitimate children
Art. 983. If illegitimate children survive with legitimate children, the shares of the former shall be in the proportions prescribed by Article 895. (n) Art. 988. In the absence of legitimate descendants or ascendants, the illegitimate children shall succeed to the entire estate of the deceased. (939a) Art. 989. If, together with illegitimate children, there should survive descendants of another illegitimate child who is dead, the former shall succeed in their own right and the latter by right of representation. (940a) Art. 990. The hereditary rights granted by the two preceding articles to illegitimate children shall be transmitted upon their death to their descendants, who shall inherit by right of representation from their deceased grandparent. (941a) Art. 991. If legitimate ascendants are left, the illegitimate children shall divide the inheritance with them, taking one-half of the estate, whatever be the number of the ascendants or of the illegitimate children. (942-841a) Art. 992. An illegitimate child has no right to inherit ab intestato from the legitimate children and
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Art. 903. The legitime of the parents who have an illegitimate child, when such child leaves neither legitimate descendants, nor a surviving spouse, nor illegitimate children, is one-half of the hereditary estate of such illegitimate child. If only legitimate or illegitimate children are left, the parents are not entitled to any legitime whatsoever. If only the widow or widower survives with parents of the illegitimate child, the legitime of the parents is onefourth of the hereditary estate of the child, and that of the surviving spouse also one-fourth of the estate. (n) Art. 987. In default of the father and mother, the ascendants nearest in degree shall inherit. Should there be more than one of equal degree belonging to the same line they shall divide the inheritance per capita; should they be of different lines but of equal degree, one-half shall go to the paternal and the other half to the maternal ascendants. In each line the division shall be made per capita. (937)
SUBSECTION 3. - Illegitimate Children Art. 988. In the absence of legitimate descendants or ascendants, the illegitimate children shall succeed to the entire estate of the deceased. (939a) Art. 989. If, together with illegitimate children, there should survive descendants of another illegitimate child who is dead, the former shall succeed in their own right and the latter by right of representation. (940a) Art. 990. The hereditary rights granted by the two preceding articles to illegitimate children shall be transmitted upon their death to their descendants, who shall inherit by right of representation from their deceased grandparent. (941a) Art. 991. If legitimate ascendants are left, the illegitimate children shall divide the inheritance with them, taking one-half of the estate, whatever be the number of the ascendants or of the illegitimate children. (942-841a) Art. 992. An illegitimate child has no right to inherit ab intestato from the legitimate children and relatives of his father or mother; nor shall such children or relatives inherit in the same manner from the illegitimate child. (943a)
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Art. 990. The hereditary rights granted by the two preceding articles to illegitimate children shall be transmitted upon their death to their descendants, who shall inherit by right of representation from their deceased grandparent. (941a) Art. 992. An illegitimate child has no right to inherit ab intestato from the legitimate children and relatives of his father or mother; nor shall such children or relatives inherit in the same manner from the illegitimate child. (943a) B. Surviving Spouse Art. 995. In the absence of legitimate descendants and ascendants, and illegitimate children and their descendants, whether legitimate or illegitimate, the surviving spouse shall inherit the entire estate, without prejudice to the rights of brothers and sisters, nephews and nieces, should there be any, under article 1001. (946a) Art. 996. If a widow or widower and legitimate children or descendants are left, the surviving spouse has in the succession the same share as that of each of the children. (834a) Art. 997. When the widow or widower survives with legitimate parents or ascendants, the surviving spouse shall be entitled to one-half of the estate, and the legitimate parents or ascendants to the other half. (836a) Art. 998. If a widow or widower survives with illegitimate children, such widow or widower shall be entitled to one-half of the inheritance, and the illegitimate children or their descendants, whether legitimate or illegitimate, to the other half. (n) Art. 999. When the widow or widower survives with legitimate children or their descendants and illegitimate children or their descendants, whether legitimate or illegitimate, such widow or widower
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Art. 985. In default of legitimate children and descendants of the deceased, his parents and ascendants shall inherit from him, to the exclusion of collateral relatives. (935a) Art. 986. The father and mother, if living, shall inherit in equal shares. Should one only of them survive, he or she shall succeed to the entire estate of the child. (936) Art. 987. In default of the father and mother, the ascendants nearest in degree shall inherit. Should there be more than one of equal degree belonging to the same line they shall divide the inheritance per capita; should they be of different lines but of equal degree, one-half shall go to the paternal and the other half to the maternal ascendants. In each line the division shall be made per capita. (937) 2. Illegitimate parents
Art. 993. If an illegitimate child should die without issue, either legitimate or illegitimate, his father or mother shall succeed to his entire estate; and if the
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Art. 1091. A partition legally made confers upon each heir the exclusive ownership of the property adjudicated to him. (1068) Art. 1092. After the partition has been made, the coheirs shall be reciprocally bound to warrant the title to, and the quality of, each property adjudicated. (1069a) Art. 1093. The reciprocal obligation of warranty referred to in the preceding article shall be proportionate to the respective hereditary shares of the co-heirs, but if any one of them should be insolvent, the other co-heirs shall be liable for his part in the same proportion, deducting the part corresponding to the one who should be indemnified. Those who pay for the insolvent heir shall have a right of action against him for reimbursement, should his financial condition improve. (1071) Art. 1094. An action to enforce the warranty among heirs must be brought within ten years from the date the right of action accrues. (n) Art. 1095. If a credit should be assigned as collectible, the co-heirs shall not be liable for the subsequent insolvency of the debtor of the estate, but only for his insolvency at the time the partition is made. The warranty of the solvency of the debtor can only be enforced during the five years following the partition. Co-heirs do not warrant bad debts, if so known to, and accepted by, the distributee. But if such debts are not assigned to a co-heir, and should be collected, in whole or in part, the amount collected shall be distributed proportionately among the heirs. (1072a) Art. 1096. The obligation of warranty among co-heirs shall cease in the following cases:
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Revised Rules of Court RULE 90 DISTRIBUTION AND PARTITION OF THE ESTATE SECTION 1. When order for distribution of residue made.When the debts, funeral charges, and expenses of administration, the allowance to the widow, and inheritance tax, if any, chargeable to the estate in accordance with law, have been paid, the court, on the application of the executor or administrator, or of a person interested in the estate, and after hearing upon notice, shall assign the residue of the estate to the persons entitled to the same, naming them and the proportions, or parts, to which each is entitled, and such persons may demand and recover their respective shares from the executor or administrator, or any other person having the same in his possession. If
Art. 1097. A partition may be rescinded or annulled for the same causes as contracts. (1073a) Art. 1098. A partition, judicial or extra-judicial, may also be rescinded on account of lesion, when any one of the co-heirs received things whose value is less, by at least one-fourth, than the share to which he is entitled, considering the value of the things at the time they were adjudicated. (1074a) Art. 1099. The partition made by the testator cannot be impugned on the ground of lesion, except when the legitime of the compulsory heirs is thereby prejudiced, or when it appears or may reasonably be presumed, that the intention of the testator was otherwise. (1075)
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there is a controversy before the court as to who are the lawful heirs of the deceased person or as to the distributive shares to which each person is entitled under the law, the controversy shall be heard and decided as in ordinary cases. No distribution shall be allowed until the payment of the obligations above mentioned has been made or provided for, unless the distributees, or any of them, give a bond, in a sum to be fixed by the court, conditioned for the payment of said obligations within such time as the court directs. SEC. 2. Questions as to advancement to be determined.Questions as to advancement made, or alleged to have been made, by the deceased to any heir may be heard and determined by the court having jurisdiction of the estate proceedings; and the final order of the court thereon shall be binding on the person raising the questions and on the heir. SEC. 3. By whom expenses of partition paid. If at the time of the distribution the executor or administrator has retained sufficient effects in his hands which may lawfully be applied for the expenses of partition of the properties distributed, such expenses of partition may be paid by such executor or administrator when it appears equitable to the court and not inconsistent with the intention of the testator; otherwise, they shall be paid by the parties in proportion to their respective shares or interest in the premises, and the apportionment shall be settled and allowed by the court, and, if any person interested in the partition does not pay his proportion or share, the court may issue an execution in the name of the executor or administrator against the party not paying for the sum assessed. SEC. 4. Recording the order of partition of estate.Certified copies of final orders and judgments of the court relating to the real estate or the partition thereof shall be recorded in the registry of deeds of the province where the property is situated.
observed, provided that the expenses referred to in Article 2244, No. 8, shall be those involved in the administration of the decedent's estate. (n) Art. 1060. A corporation or association authorized to conduct the business of a trust company in the Philippines may be appointed as an executor, administrator, guardian of an estate, or trustee, in like manner as an individual; but it shall not be appointed guardian of the person of a ward. (n) Relevant provisions from the Rules of Court
RULE 78 LETTERS TESTAMENTARY AND OF ADMINISTRATION, WHEN AND TO WHOM ISSUED SECTION 1. Who are incompetent to serve as a executors or administrators.No person is competent to serve as executor or administrator who: (a) Is a minor; (b) Is not Philippines; and a resident of the
(c) Is in the opinion of the court unfit to execute the duties of the trust by reason of drunkenness, improvidence, or want of understanding or integrity, or by reason of conviction of an offense involving moral turpitude. SEC. 2. Executor of executor not to administer estate.The executor of an executor shall not, as such, administer the estate of the first testator. SEC. 3. Married women may serve.A married woman may serve as executrix or administratrix, and the marriage of a single woman shall not affect her authority so to serve under a previous appointment SEC 4 Letters testamentary issued when will allowed.When a will has been proved and allowed, the court shall issue letters testamentary thereon to the person named as executor therein, if he is competent, accepts the trust, and gives bond as required by these rules SEC. 5. Where some coexecutors disqualified others may act.When all of the executors named in a will can not act because of incompetency, refusal to accept the trust, or failure to give bond, on the part of one or more of them, letters testamentary may issue to such of them as are competent, accept and give bond, and they may perform the duties and discharge the trust required by the will.
XXIII. EXECUTORS AND ADMINISTRATORS Art. 1058. All matters relating to the appointment, powers and duties of executors and administrators and concerning the administration of estates of deceased persons shall be governed by the Rules of Court. (n) Art. 1059. If the assets of the estate of a decedent which can be applied to the payment of debts are not sufficient for that purpose, the provisions of Articles 2239 to 2251 on Preference of Credits shall be
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SEC. 6. When and to whom letters of administration granted.If no executor is named in the will, or the executor or executors are incompetent, refuse the trust, or fail to give bond, or a person dies intestate, administration shall be granted: (a) To the surviving husband or wife, as the case may be, or next of kin, or both, in the discretion of the court, or to such person as such surviving husband or wife, or next of kin, requests to have appointed, if competent and willing to serve; (b) If such surviving husband or wife, as the case may be, or next of kin, or the person selected by them, be incompetent or unwilling, or if the husband or widow, or next of kin, neglects for thirty (30) days after the death of the person to apply for administration or to request that administration be granted to some other person, it may be granted to one or more of the principal creditors, if competent and willing to serve; (c) If there is no such creditor competent and willing to serve, it may be granted to such other person as the court may select. RULE 81 BONDS OF EXECUTORS AND ADMINISTRATORS SECTION 1. Bond to be given before issuance of letters. Amount. Conditions.Before an executor or administrator enters upon the execution of his trust, and letters testamentary or of administration issue, he shall give a bond, in such sum as the court directs, conditioned as follows: (a) To make and return to the court, within three (3) months, a true and complete inventory of all goods, chattels, rights, credits, and estate of the deceased which shall come to his possession or knowledge or to the possession of any other person for him; (b) To administer according to these rules, and, if an executor, according to the will of the testator, all goods, chattels, rights, credits, and estate which shall at any time come to his possession or to the possession of any other person for him, and from the proceeds to pay and discharge all debts, legacies, and charges on the same, or such dividends thereon as shall be decreed by the court;
(c) To render a true and just account of his administration to the court within one (1) year, and at any other time when required by the court; (d) To perform all orders of the court by him to be performed. SEC. 2. Bond of executor where directed in will. When further bond required.If the testator in his will directs that the executor serve without bond, or with only his Individual bond, he may be allowed by the court to give bond in such sum and with such surety as the court approves conditioned only to pay the debts of the testator; but the court may require of the executor a further bond in case of a change in his circumstances, or for other sufficient cause, with the conditions named in the last preceding section. SEC. 3. Bonds of joint executors and administrators.When two or more persons are appointed executors or administrators the court may take a separate bond from each, or a joint bond from all. SEC. 4. Bond of special administrator.A special administrator before entering upon the duties of his trust shall give a bond, in such sum as the court directs, conditioned that he will make and return a true inventory of the goods, chattels, rights, credits, and estate of the deceased which come to his possession or knowledge, and that he will truly account for such as are received by him when required by the court, and will deliver the same to the person appointed executor or administrator, or to such other person as may be authorized to receive them. RULE 84 GENERAL POWERS AND DUTIES OF EXECUTORS AND ADMINISTRATORS SECTION 1. Executor or administrator to have access to partnership books and property. How right enforced.The executor or administrator of the estate of a deceased partner shall at all times have access to, and may examine and take copies of, books and papers relating to the partnership business, and may examine and make invoices of the property belonging to such partnership; and the surviving partner or partners, on request, shall exhibit to him all such books, papers, and property in their hands or control. On the written application of such executor or administrator, the Court having jurisdiction of the estate may order any such surviving partner or partners to freely permit the exercise of the rights, and to exhibit
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the books, papers, and property, as in this section provided, and may punish any partner failing to do so for contempt. SEC. 2. Executor or administrator to keep buildings in repair.An executor or administrator shall maintain in tenantable repair the houses and other structures and fences belonging to the estate, and deliver the same in such repair to the heirs or devisees when directed so to do by the court. SEC. 3. Executor or administrator to retain whole estate to pay debts, and to administer estate not willed.An executor or administrator shall have the right to the possession and management of the real as well as the personal estate of the deceased so long as it is necessary for the payment of the debts and the expenses of administration. RULE 86 CLAIMS AGAINST ESTATE SECTION 1. Notice to creditors to be issued by court. Immediately after granting letters testamentary or of administration, the court shall issue a notice requiring all persons having money claims against the decedent to file them in the office of the clerk of said court. SEC. 2. Time within which claims shall be filed.In the notice provided in the preceding section, the court shall state the time for the filing of claims against the estate, which shall not be more than twelve (12) nor less than six (6) months after the date of the first publication of the notice. However, at any time before an order of distribution is entered, on application of a creditor who has failed to file his claim within the time previously limited, the court may, for cause shown and on such terms as are equitable, allow such claim to be filed within a time not exceeding one (1) month. SEC. 3. Publication of notice to creditors. Every executor or administrator shall, immediately alter the notice to creditors is issued, cause the same to be published three (3) weeks successively in a newspaper of general circulation in the province, and to be posted for the same period in four public places in the province, and in two public places in the municipality where the decedent last resided SEC. 4. Filing copy of printed notice. Within ten (10) days after the notice has been published and posted n accordance with the preceding section, the executor or administrator shall file or cause to be filed in the court a printed copy of the notice accompanied with an
affidavit setting forth the dates of the first and last publication thereof and the name of the newspaper in which the same is printed. SEC. 5. Claims which must be filed under the notice. If not filed, barred; exceptions.All claims for money against the decedent, arising from contract, express or implied, whether the same be due, not due, or contingent, all claims for funeral expenses and expenses for the last sickness of the decedent, and judgment for money against the decedent, must be filed within the time limited in the notice; otherwise they are barred forever, except that they may be set forth as counterclaims in any action that the executor or administrator may bring against the claimants. Where an executor or administrator commences an action, or prosecutes an action already commenced by the deceased in his lifetime, the debtor may set forth by answer the claims he has against the decedent, instead of presenting them independently to the court as herein provided, and mutual claims may be set off against each other in such action; and if final judgment is rendered in favor of the defendant, the amount so determined shall be considered the true balance against the estate, as though the claim had been presented directly before the court in the administration proceedings. Claims not yet due, or contingent, may be approved at their present value. SEC. 6. Solidary obligation of decedent. Where the obligation of the decedent is solidary with another debtor, the claim shall be filed against the decedent as if he were the only debtor, without prejudice to the right of the estate to recover contribution from the other debtor. In a joint obligation of the decedent, the claim shall be confined to the portion belonging to him. SEC. 7. Mortgage debt due from estate.A creditor holding a claim against the deceased secured by mortgage or other collateral security, may abandon the security and prosecute his claim in the manner provided in this rule, and share in the general distribution of the assets of the estate; or he may foreclose his mortgage or realize upon his security, by action in court, making the executor or administrator a party defendant, and if there is a judgment for a deficiency, after the sale of the mortgaged premises, or the property pledged, in the foreclosure or other proceedings to realize upon the security, he may claim his deficiency judgment in the manner provided in the preceding section; or he may rely upon his mortgage or other security alone, and foreclose the same at any time within the period of the
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statute of limitations, and in that event he shall not be admitted as a creditor, and shall receive no share in the distribution of the other assets of the estate; but nothing herein contained shall prohibit the executor or administrator from redeeming the property mortgaged or pledged, by paying the debt for which it is held as security, under the direction of the court, if the court shall adjudge it to be for the best interest of the estate that such redemption shall be made. SEC. 8. Claim of executor or administrator against an estate.If the executor or administrator has a claim against the estate he represents, he shall give notice thereof, in writing, to the court, and the court shall appoint a special administrator, who shall, in the adjustment of such claim, have the same power and be subject to the same liability as the general administrator or executor in the settlement of other claims. The court may order the executor or administrator to pay to the special administrator necessary funds to defend such claim. SEC. 9. How to file a claim. Contents thereof Notice to executor or administrator.A claim may be filed by delivering the same with the necessary vouchers to the clerk of court and by serving a copy thereof on the executor or administrator. If the claim be founded on a bond, bill, note, or any other instrument, the original need not be filed, but a copy thereof with all indorsements shall be attached to the claim and filed therewith. On demand, however, of the executor or administrator, or by order of the court or judge, the original shall be exhibited, unless it be lost or destroyed, in which case the claimant must accompany his claim with affidavit or affidavits containing a copy or particular description of the instrument and stating its loss or destruction. When the claim is due, it must be supported by affidavit stating the amount justly due, that no payments have been made thereon which are not credited, and that there are no offsets to the same, to the knowledge of the affiant. If the claim is not due, or is contingent, when filed, it must also be supported by affidavit stating the particulars thereof. When the affidavit is made by a person other than the claimant, he must set forth therein the reason why it is not made by the claimant. The claim once filed shall be attached to the record of the case in which the letters testamentary or of administration were issued, although the court, in its discretion, and as a matter of convenience, may order all the claims to be collected in a separate folder.
SEC. 10. Answer of executor or administrator. Offsets.Within fifteen (15) days after service of a copy of the claim on the executor or administrator, he shall file his answer admitting or denying the claim specifically, and setting forth the substance of the matters which are relied upon to support the admission or denial. If he has no knowledge sufficient to enable him to admit or deny specifically, he shall state such want of knowledge. The executor or administrator in his answer shall allege in offset any claim which the decedent before death had against the claimant, and his failure to do so shall bar the claim forever. A copy of the answer shall be served by the executor or administrator on the claimant. The court in its discretion may extend the time for filing such answer. SEC. 11. Disposition of admitted claim. Any claim admitted entirely by the executor or administrator shall immediately be submitted by the clerk to the court who may approve the same without hearing; but the court, in its discretion, before approving the claim, may order that known heirs, legatees, or devisees be notified and heard. If upon hearing, an heir, legatee, or devisee opposes the claim, the court may, in its discretion, allow him fifteen (15) days to file an answer to the claim in the manner prescribed in the preceding section. SEC. 12. Trial of contested claim.Upon the filing of an answer to a claim, or upon the expiration of the time for such filing, the clerk of court shall set the claim for trial with notice to both parties. The court may refer the claim to a commissioner. SEC. 13. Judgment appealable.The judgment of the court approving or disapproving a claim, shall be filed with the record of the administration proceedings with notice to both parties, and is appealable as in ordinary cases. A judgment against the executor or administrator shall be that he pay, in due course of administration, the amount ascertained to be due, and it shall not create any lien upon the property of the estate, or give to the judgment creditor any priority of payment. SEC. 14. Costs.When the executor or administrator, in his answer, admits and offers to pay part of a claim, and the claimant refuses to accept the amount offered in satisfaction of his claim, if he fails to obtain a more favorable judgment, he cannot recover costs, but must pay to the executor or administrator costs from the time of the offer. Where an action commenced against the deceased for money has been discontinued and the claim embraced
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therein presented as in this rule provided, the prevailing party shall be allowed the costs of his action up to the time of its discontinuance. RULE 87 ACTIONS BY AND AGAINST EXECUTORS AND ADMINISTRATORS SECTION 1. Actions which may and which may not be brought against executor or administrator.No action upon a claim for the recovery of money or debt or interest thereon shall be commenced against the executor or administrator; but actions to recover real or personal property, or an interest therein, from the estate, or to enforce a lien thereon, and actions to recover damages for an injury to person or property, real or personal, may be commenced against him. SEC. 2. Executor or administrator may bring or defend actions which survive.For the recovery or protection of the property or rights of the deceased, an executor or administrator may bring or defend, in the right of the deceased, actions for causes which survive. SEC. 3. Heir may not sue until share assigned.When an executor or administrator is appointed and assumes the trust, no action to recover the title or possession of lands or for damages done to such lands shall be maintained against him by an heir or devisee until there is an order of the court assigning such lands to such heir or devisee or until the time allowed for paying debts has expired. SEC. 4. Executor or administrator may compound with debtor.With the approval of the court, an executor or administrator may compound with the debtor of the deceased for a debt due, and may give a discharge of such debt on receiving a just dividend of the estate of the debtor. SEC. 5. Mortgage due estate may be foreclosed.A mortgage belonging to the estate of a deceased person, as mortgagee or assignee of the right of a mortgagee, may be foreclosed by the executor or administrator. SEC. 6. Proceedings when property concealed, embezzled, or fraudulently conveyed.If an executor or administrator, heir, legatee, creditor, or other individual interested in the estate of the deceased, complains to the court having jurisdiction of the estate that a person is suspected of having concealed, embezzled, or conveyed away any of the money, goods, or chattels of the deceased, or that such person has in his possession or has
knowledge of any deed, conveyance, bond, contracts, or other writing which contains evidence of or tends to disclose the right, title, interest, or claim of the deceased to real or personal estate, or the last will and testament of the deceased, the court may cite such suspected person to appear before it and may examine him on oath on the matter of such complaint; and if the person so cited refuses to appear, or to answer on such examination such interrogatories as are put to him, the court may punish him for contempt, and may commit him to prison until he submits to the order of the court. The interrogatories put to any such person, and his answers thereto, shall be in writing and shall be filed in the clerks office. SEC. 7. Person entrusted with estate compelled to render account.The court, on complaint of an executor or administrator, may cite a person entrusted by an executor or administrator with any part of the estate of the deceased to appear before it, and may require such person to render a full account, on oath, of the money, goods, chattels, bonds, accounts, or other papers belonging to such estate as came to his possession in trust for such executor or administrator, and of his proceedings thereon; and if the person so cited refuses to appear to render such account, the court may punish him for contempt as having disobeyed a lawful order of the court. SEC. 8. Embezzlement before letters issued.If a person, before the granting of letters testamentary or of administration on the estate of the deceased, embezzles or alienates any of the money, goods, chattels, or effect of such deceased, such person shall be liable to an action in favor of the executor or administrator of the estate for double the value of the property sold, embezzled, or alienated, to be recovered for the benefit of such estate. SEC. 9. Property fraudulent conveyed by deceased may be recovered. When executor or administrator must bring action.When there is a deficiency of assets in the hands of an executor or administrator for the payment of debts and expenses of administration, and the deceased in his lifetime had conveyed real or personal property, or a right or interest therein, or debt or credit, with intent to defraud his creditors or to avoid any right debt, or duty; or had so conveyed such property, right, interest, debt, or creditors, and the subject of the attempted conveyance would be liable to attachment by any of them in his lifetime, the executor or administrator may commence and prosecute to final judgment an action for the recovery of such property, right, interest, debts,
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or credit for the benefit of the creditors; but he shall not be bound to commence the action unless the creditors making the application pay such part of the costs and expenses, or give security therefor to the executor or administrator, as the court deems equitable. SEC. 10. When creditor may bring action. Lien for cost.When there is such a deficiency of assets, and the deceased in his lifetime had made or attempted such a conveyance, as is stated in the last preceding section, and the executor and administrator has not commenced the action therein provided for, any creditor of the estate may, with the permission of the court, commence and prosecute to final judgment, in the name of the executor or administrator, a like action for the recovery of the subject of the conveyance or attempted conveyance for the benefit of the creditors. But the action shall not be commenced until the creditor has filed in a court a bond executed to the executor or administrator, in an amount approved by the judge, conditioned to indemnify the executor or administrator against the costs and expenses incurred by reason of such action. Such creditor shall have a lien upon any judgment recovered by him in the action for such costs and other expenses incurred therein as the court deems equitable. Where the conveyance or attempted conveyance has been made by the deceased in his lifetime in favor of the executor or administrator, the action which a creditor may bring shall be in the name of all the creditors, and permission of the court and filing of bond as above prescribed, are not necessary.
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