Wills & Succession 4 Year Review Class St. Thomas More School of Law
Wills & Succession 4 Year Review Class St. Thomas More School of Law
Wills & Succession 4 Year Review Class St. Thomas More School of Law
Part I
4th
YEAR
REVIEW CLASS
Exceptions:
1. Rights and obligations which are not
transmissible by their nature
a. Those relating to family relations
- parental authority
- support
- action for legal separation
b. Those arising from public law
- right to suffrage
- right to public office
c. Those involving personal skills or
qualifications
- singing
- acting
d. Criminal Responsibility
2. Rights and obligations which are not transmissible
by stipulation
3. Rights and obligations which are not transmissible
by provision of law (usufruct, agency, personal
easements, commodatum)
4. Money Debts
BQ 2012: 92. The following rights are
extinguished by death, except:
a) Legal support
b) Parental authority
c) Right to inherit
d) Agency
Can Human Corpse be subject of succession?
Requisites of Succession:
1. death of decedent
2. transmissible estate
3. existence (transferee is still alive)
4. capacity of successor
5. designated by decedent or by law; and
6. acceptance of successor (no repudiation)
BQ 2012: 90. The requisites of succession
are as follows, except:
a) Death of decedent
b) Transmissible estate
c) Existence and capacity of successor,
designated by decedent or law
d) Payment of Taxes
Death: Kinds
• Actual death – successor becomes the owner at
the time of death and not at the time of the
delivery of the property
• Presumed death
Ordinary Death (Art. 390)
– Shall be presumed dead for the purpose of
opening his succession at the end of ten
years (5 years in case he disappeared after
the age of 75)
– Death is presumed at the end of ten or five
years
Extraordinary Death (Art. 391)
– Death is presumed to have occurred at the
time of loss and not at the end of four years
BQ (1991)
RULING: In the instant case, the evidence showed that as between the parties,
it is the petitioner who has a Torrens Title to the property. Respondents
merely showed their unregistered deeds of sale in support of their claims. In
resolving the issue of possession in an ejectment case, the registered
owner of the property is preferred over the transferee under an unregistered
deed of sale.
While respondent has in his favor deeds of sale over the eight parcels of land,
these deeds were not registered; thus, title remained in the name of the
owner and seller Atilano. When he died, title passed to petitioner. Under
Article 777 of the Civil Code, "[t]he rights to the succession are transmitted
from the moment of the death of the decedent." Thus, applying the principle
enunciated in the above-cited cases, petitioner and her co-heirs should
have been favored on the question of possession, being heirs who
succeeded the registered owner of the properties in dispute.
Calalang-Parulan vs. Calalang-Garcia, G.R. No. 184148, Dec. 09, 2014
FACTS: Pedro Calalang contracted two marriages during his lifetime. The first
marriage was with their mother Encarnacion Silverio. During the
subsistence of this marriage, their parents acquired the above-mentioned
parcel of land from their maternal grandmother Francisca Silverio. Despite
enjoying continuous possession of the land, however, their parents failed to
register the same. On June 7, 1942, the first marriage was dissolved with
the death of Encarnacion Silverio.
On February 17, 1984, Pedro Calalang sold the said parcel of land to Nora B.
Calalang-Parulan as evidenced by a Deed of Sale executed by both Pedro
Calalang and Elvira B. Calalang. Accordingly, the Register of Deeds of
Bulacan cancelled OCT No. P-2871 and issued Transfer Certificate of Title
(TCT) No. 283321 in the name of Nora B. Calalang-Parulan. On December
27, 1989, 7 Pedro Calalang died.
ISSUE: Respondents argued that the sale
of the land was void because Pedro
Calalang failed to obtain the consent of the
respondents who were co-owners of the
same. As compulsory heirs upon the death
of Encarnacion Silverio, the respondents
claimed that they acquired successional
rights over the land. Thus, in alienating the
land without their consent, Pedro Calalang
allegedly deprived them of their pro
indiviso share in the property.
RULING: Pedro Calalang is the sole and exclusive owner of the disputed property.
A close perusal of the records of this case would show that the records are bereft of
any concrete proof to show that the subject property indeed belonged to
respondents' maternal grandparents. The evidence respondents adduced
merely consisted of testimonial evidence such as the declaration of Rosario
Calalang-Garcia that they have been staying on the property as far as she can
remember and that the property was acquired by her parents through purchase
from her maternal grandparents. However, she was unable to produce any
document to evidence the said sale, nor was she able to present any
documentary evidence such as the tax declaration issued in the name of either
of her parents. Moreover, we note that the free patent was issued solely in the
name of Pedro Calalang and that it was issued more than 30 years after the
death of Encarnacion and the dissolution of the conjugal partnership of gains of
the first marriage. Thus, we cannot subscribe to respondents' submission that
the subject property originally belonged to the parents of Encarnacion and was
acquired by Pedro Calalang and Encarnacion.
As the sole and exclusive owner, Pedro Calalang had the right to convey his
property in favor of Nora B. Calalang-Parulan by executing a Deed of Sale on
February 17, 1984. The CA therefore erred in ruling that Pedro Calalang
deprived his heirs of their respective shares over the disputed property when he
alienated the same.
It is hornbook doctrine that successional rights are vested only at the time of death.
Article 777 of the New Civil Code provides that "[t]he rights to the succession
are transmitted from the moment of the death of the decedent.
Kinds of Succession:
1. Testamentary – succession by will
• Personal Act
• Animus testandi
• Solemn or formal act
• Statutory Right
• Unilateral
• Capacity
• Free from vices of consent
• Individual
• Revocable
• Disposes of the testator’s estate
• Mortis causa
BQ 2012: 91. The characteristics of
succession are as follows, except:
a) It is a legal contract.
b) Only property, rights and obligations to
the extent of the value of the inheritance
are transmitted.
c) The transmission takes place only at the
time of death.
d) The transmission takes place either by
will or by operation of law.
MAKING OF A WILL AS A STRICTLY
PERSONAL ACT (Art. 784)
Rules to be observed:
1. It cannot be left in whole or in part to the
discretion of a third person, or accomplished
through the instrumentality of an agent or
attorney. (Art. 784)
2. 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. (Art.
785)
3. 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. (Art. 787)
Exceptions:
Exceptions:
• if expressly stated in the will to include after-acquired
properties
• if will is republished or modified by a subsequent will
or codicil
• will erroneously stated properties unless after making
the will, said properties will belong to the testator
• legacy of credit or remission
BQ (1996) Alfonso, a bachelor without any
descendant or ascendant, wrote a last will and
testament in which he devised." all the
properties of which I may be possessed at
the time of my death" to his favorite brother
Manuel.
• paralysis
• loss of speech
• cholera
• insomnia
• diabetes
• sleeping sickness or addison’s disease
• cerebral hemorrhage affecting half body
• deafness
• blindness
• poor memory
There is unsoundness of mind in:
• religious delusion
• blind extraordinary belief in spirits
• monomania (insanity on a single object)
• insane delusions
• drunkenness
• idiocy
• comatose stage
• state of delirium
CAPACITY TO MAKE A WILL
1. Order of succession
2. Amount of successional rights
3. Intrinsic validity of the provisions of the will
4. Capacity to succeed
BQ 2004 In his lifetime, a Pakistani citizen, ADIL,
married three times under Pakistani law. When he died
an old widower, he left behind six children, two sisters,
three homes, and an estate worth at least 30 million
pesos in the Philippines. He was born in Lahore but
last resided in Cebu City, where he had a mansion and
where two of his youngest children now live and work.
xxx
xxx
a) Chinese law
b) Philippine law
c) Indonesian law
d) Japanese law
BQ 2012: 13. The will of a Filipino executed in a
foreign country---
"T. SILVERIO.
FRUCTUOSO G. MORIN.
"RAFAEL ESPINOS."
or in this form:
During the day of the signing of her will, Clara fell down the stairs and
broke both her arms. Coming from the hospital, Clara insisted on signing
her will by thumb mark and said that she can sign her full name later.
While the will was being signed, Roberta experienced a stomach ache and
kept going to the restroom for long periods of time.
Hannah, while waiting for her turn to sign the will, was reading the 7th
Harry Potter book on the couch, beside the table on which everyone was
signing.
Benjamin, aside from witnessing the will, also offered to notarize it.
A week after, Clara was run over by a drunk driver while crossing the street
in Greenbelt.
May the will of Clara be admitted to probate? Give your reasons briefly.
5th Req: Ordinary or Notarial Will
Marginal signatures of the testator or the person
requested by him to write his name and the
instrumental witnesses of the will
SC:
• That is a fact required by law to be stated in the
attestation clause itself
• If it is settled that where it is not so stated it
cannot be established by evidence aliunde
• Where such evidence has been admitted, even
without opposition, it should not be given the
effect intended. (Testate Estate of Paula Toray,
G.R. No. L-2415, July 31, 1950)
Facts: The will fails to state that the testator and the
three witnesses signed each and every page of the
will in the manner prescribed by law. Is the defect
fatal?
SC:
• The underscored phrase "in the same manner"
cannot in the instant case mean, and it in fact
means nothing, but that the testator and the
witnesses signed on the left margin of each sheet of
the will "in the same manner" in which they signed at
the bottom thereof, that is, the testator in the
presence of the witnesses and the latter in the
presence of the testator and of each other.
RULING: The law is clear that the attestation must state the number of pages
used upon which the will is written. The purpose of the law is to safeguard
against possible interpolation or omission of one or some of its pages and
prevent any increase or decrease in the pages. 9
While Article 809 allows substantial compliance for defects in the form of the
attestation clause, Richard likewise failed in this respect. The statement in
the Acknowledgment portion of the subject last will and testament that it
"consists of 7 pages including the page on which the ratification and
acknowledgment are written" cannot be deemed substantial compliance.
The will actually consists of 8 pages including its acknowledgment which
discrepancy cannot be explained by mere examination of the will itself but
through the presentation of evidence aliunde. On this score is the comment
of Justice J.B.L. Reyes regarding the application of Article 809, to wit:
. . . The rule must be limited to disregarding those defects that can be supplied
by an examination of the will itself: whether all the pages are consecutively
numbered; whether the signatures appear in each and every page; whether
the subscribing witnesses are three or the will was notarized. 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
presence of each other must substantially appear in the attestation clause,
being the only check against perjury in the probate proceedings.
8th Req: Ordinary or Notarial Will
Notarial Acknowledgment
(i) x x x
(ii) x x x
The will was very brief and straightforward and both the above provisions
were contained in page 1, which Arthur and his instrumental witness,
signed at the bottom.
Page 2 contained the attestation clause and the signatures, at the bottom
thereof, of the 3 instrumental witnesses which included Lambert, the driver
of Arthur; Yoly, the family cook, and Attorney Zorba, the lawyer who
prepared the will.
There was a 3rd page, but this only contained the notarial
acknowledgement. The attestation clause stated the will was signed on the
same occasion by Arthur and his instrumental witnesses who all signed in
the presence of each other, and the notary public who notarized the will.
There are no marginal signatures or pagination appearing on any of the 3
pages.
if illiterate, the will must be read whether literate or not, the will
by 2 persons designated by the must be read twice once by
testator subscribing witness and
another by the Notary Public
Qualifications of Witnesses:
1. of sound mind
2. at least 18 years of age
3. able to read and write
4. not be blind, deaf or dumb
5. must be domiciled in the Phil
6. not convicted of falsification of document, perjury or
false testimony
ARTICLE 823.
REQUIREMENTS: Must be
• Entirely written by hand of testator himself;
• Dated by the hand of the testator himself;
There is already substantial compliance with
“FEB./61” (Roxas vs. de Jesus, 134 SCRA 245)
• Signed by the hand of the testator himself;
Full or customary signature
Thumbmark is not allowed in HW unlike in ordinary
will
AC in HW is a mere surplasage
• Executed in the language or dialect known to testator
• Animus testandi
• Executed at the time that such wills are allowed
BQ 2012: 94. The following are the
formalities required 1n the execution of
holographic will, except:
a) Entirely written;
b) Dated;
c) Signed by testator himself
d) Notarized by a notary public.
PROBATE OF HOLOGRAPHIC WILLS
Concept
• It is a will made on one instrument by 2 or more
persons who jointly signed the same as their will
• If executed by a foreigner, joint wills may be
considered valid if allowed by their national law
C. Yes, since they executed their joint will out of mutual love
and care, values that the generally accepted principles of
international law accepts.
EXCEPTION:
Principles on revocation:
• Any waiver or restriction of this right is void. (Art.
828)
• A revocation of a will based on a false cause or
an illegal cause is null and void. (Art. 833)
• The recognition of an illegitimate child does not
lose its legal effect, even though the will wherein
it was made should be revoked. (Art. 834)
LAWS GOVERNING REVOCATION
• Probate
– process of proving before a competent court
the due execution of a will by a person
possessed of testamentary capacity and the
compliance with the solemnities prescribed by
law and its approval
General Rules:
In contracts In wills
vitiates consent and these vices of
renders the contract consent render the
voidable will void
voidable contracts are not susceptible of
susceptible of ratification; in
ratification succession, there is
no voidable will
if wants to ratify =
execute a codicil or a
ratifying deed
BQ 2012: 95. The following are the grounds
for disallowance of wills, except:
2. Made personally
• Requisites:
1. Cause for the institution of heirs must be
stated in the will
2. Cause must be shown to be false
3. Cause must appear from the face of the will
such that the testator would not have made
such institution if he had known the falsity of
the cause
F. Coverage in the Institution of Heirs
FORMULA:
total amount of Estate x share of each heir
total amount given to all in the will
• Institution EXCEEDS the whole estate (Art. 853):
FORMULA:
share of each heir x excess amount
total amount given to all in the will
What are the effects if there are PRETERITION or
INVALID DISINHERITANCE in the Institution of
Heirs?
• Preterition
– Entire institution is annulled
– Legacy shall remain as long as it is not
inofficious
• Invalid Disinheritance
– Institution will be annulled only insofar as the
legitime is impaired
– Legacy shall remain as long as it is not
inofficious
• Preterition in Institution: Effects
• Legitime is 150
• Legacy is not inofficious – effective
• Legacy must remain valid
• 300 less 10 = 290
• Divide 290 among X, Y and Z
Invalid or Ineffective Disinheritance in Institution: Effects
a) reserva troncal
b) preterition
c) fideicommissary
d) disposicion captatoria
BA 2001: Because her eldest son Juan had been
pestering her for capital to start a business, Josefa
gave him P100,000. Five years later, Josefa died,
leaving a last will and testament in which she
instituted only her four younger children as her
sole heirs.
xxx
Upon his death, it was discovered that apart from the house
and lot, he had a P 1 million account deposited with ABC
bank.
Kinds:
• Naked owner
• There is ownership upon transfer of property
• Inherits from the testator
• If he dies ahead of the Fiduciary, but after the
testator, the rights of the fideicommissary pass
to his own heirs
• If the fideicommissary heir is disqualified to
inherit or repudiates, the substitution is
inoperative
4. The First and the Second Heirs must be
only one degree apart
2) Conditional Institution
4. Any disposition made upon the condition that the heir shall
make some provision in his will in favor of the testator or of
any other person shall be void. (Art. 875)
• “Disposition captatoria”
• Disposition itself is void, not merely the condition
BQ 2012: 97. Any disposition made upon the
condition that the heir shall make some
provision in his will in favor of the testator or of
any other person shall be void. Here, both the
condition and the disposition are void. What
principle is being referred to?
a) reserva troncal
b) preterition
c) fideicommissary
d) disposicion captatoria
BQ 2011 # 38. Fernando executed a will, prohibiting
his wife Marina from remarrying after his death, at the
pain of the legacy of P100 Million in her favor
becoming a nullity.
Kinds:
1. suspensive or ex diem
2. resolutory or in diem
Suspensive or ex diem
• Instituted heirs enters into succession only upon
arrival of the term
• does not prevent the instituted heir from
acquiring his rights and transmitting them to his
heirs even before the arrival of the term. (Art.
878)
• the legal heir shall be considered as called to
the succession until the arrival of the period (Art.
885)
– But legal heir shall not enter into possession
of the property until after having given
sufficient security, with the intervention of the
instituted heir. (Caucion Muciana)
Resolutory or in diem
1. Modal Institution
• As a rule, it is not a condition (Art. 881)
• If violated, the instituted heir is supposed
to forfeit the inheritance and return
anything received with fruits and interests
(Art. 882)
• Inheritance can be immediately demanded
provided that security is given (Caucion
Muciana)
2. Conditional Institution
• Suspensive
– Inheritance cannot immediately be demanded
even if the heir voluntarily provides for a
security
– In the meantime, property will be placed
under administration (Art. 880)
• Resolutory
– Property can be taken upon giving of a
security (Art. 879)
– There is hardly any difference between modal
institution vs. resolutory condition
What to remember: Modal Institution
A. a fideicomissary institution.
B. a modal institution.
C. a conditional institution.
D. a collective institution.
(2002) By virtue of a Codicil appended to his will, Theodore
devised to Divino a tract of sugar land, with the obligation
on the part of Divino or his heirs to deliver to Betina a
specified volume of sugar per harvest during Betina’s
lifetime. It is also stated in the Codicil that in the event the
obligation is not fulfilled, Betina should immediately seize
the property from Divino or latter’s heirs and turn it over to
Theodore’s compulsory heirs. Divino failed to fulfill the
obligation under the Codicil. Betina brings suit against
Divino for the reversion of the tract of land.