Specpro Digest
Specpro Digest
Summonses were issued against both, but the one intended for Edmund was not served since he was in the United States and there
was no information on his address or the date of his return to the Philippines. Florence filed her Answer and alleged that the loan
documents did not bind her since she was not a party thereto. Considering that the joint agreement signed by her and her brother
Edmund was not approved by the probate court, it was null and void; hence, she was not liable to Union Bank under the joint
agreement.
Union Bank asserts that the obligation of the deceased had passed to his legitimate heirs (Edmund and Florence) as provided in
Article 774 of the Civil Code; and that the unconditional signing of the joint agreement estopped Florence, and that she cannot deny
her liability under the said document.
In her comment to the petition, Florence maintains that Union Bank is trying to recover a sum of money from the deceased Efraim
Santibaez; thus the claim should have been filed with the probate court. She points out that at the time of the execution of the joint
agreement there was already an existing probate proceedings. She asserts that even if the agreement was voluntarily executed by her
and her brother Edmund, it should still have been subjected to the approval of the court as it may prejudice the estate, the heirs or
third parties.
ISSUE: W/N the claim of Union Bank should have been filed with the probate court before which the testate estate of the late
Efraim Santibaez was pending. W/N the agreement between Edmund and Florence (which was in effect, a partition of hte estate)
was void considering that it had not been approved by the probate court. W/N there can be a valid partition among the heirs before
the will is probated.
HELD: Well-settled is the rule that a probate court has the jurisdiction to determine all the properties of the deceased, to determine
whether they should or should not be included in the inventory or list of properties to be administered. The said court is primarily
concerned with the administration, liquidation and distribution of the estate.
In our jurisdiction, the rule is that there can be no valid partition among the heirs until after the will has been probated. In the
present case, Efraim left a holographic will which contained the provision which reads as follows:
(e) All other properties, real or personal, which I own and may be discovered later after my demise, shall be distributed in the
proportion indicated in the immediately preceding paragraph in favor of Edmund and Florence, my children.
The above-quoted is an all-encompassing provision embracing all the properties left by the decedent which might have escaped his
mind at that time he was making his will, and other properties he may acquire thereafter. Included therein are the three (3) subject
tractors. This being so, any partition involving the said tractors among the heirs is not valid. The joint agreement executed by
Edmund and Florence, partitioning the tractors among themselves, is invalid, specially so since at the time of its execution, there
was already a pending proceeding for the probate of their late fathers holographic will covering the said tractors.
The Court notes that the loan was contracted by the decedent. The bank, purportedly a creditor of the late Efraim Santibaez, should
have thus filed its money claim with the probate court in accordance with Section 5, Rule 86 of the Revised Rules of Court.
The filing of a money claim against the decedents estate in the probate court is mandatory. This requirement is for the purpose of
protecting the estate of the deceased by informing the executor or administrator of the claims against it, thus enabling him to
examine each claim and to determine whether it is a proper one which should be allowed. The plain and obvious design of the rule
is the speedy settlement of the affairs of the deceased and the early delivery of the property to the distributees, legatees, or heirs.
Perusing the records of the case, nothing therein could hold Florence accountable for any liability incurred by her late father. The
documentary evidence presented, particularly the promissory notes and the continuing guaranty agreement, were executed and
signed only by the late Efraim Santibaez and his son Edmund. As the petitioner failed to file its money claim with the probate
court, at most, it may only go after Edmund as co-maker of the decedent under the said promissory notes and continuing guaranty.
PNB vs. CA et al
~ vbdiaz
PNB vs. CA et al
G.R. No. 121597
June 29, 2001
FACTS: The spouses Chua were the owners of a parcel of land covered by a TCT and registered in their names. Upon the
husbands death, the probate court appointed his son, private respondent Allan as special administrator of the deceaseds intestate
estate. The court also authorized Allan to obtain a loan accommodation from PNB to be secured by a real estate mortgage over the
above-mentioned parcel of land, which Allan did for P450,000.00 with interest.
For failure to pay the loan in full, the bank extrajudicially foreclosed the real estate mortgage. During the auction, PNB was the
highest bidder. However, the loan having a payable balance, to claim this deficiency, PNB instituted an action with the RTC,
Balayan, Batangas, against both Mrs. Chua and Allan.
The RTC rendered its d
ecision, ordering the dismissal of PNBs complaint. On appeal, the CA affirmed the RTC decision by dismissing PNBs appeal for
lack of merit.
Hence, the present petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court.
ISSUE: The WON it was error for the CA to rule that petitioner may no longer pursue by civil action the recovery of the balance of
indebtedness after having foreclosed the property securing the same.
HELD: petition is DENIED. The assailed decision of the CA is AFFIRMED.
No
Petitioner relies on Prudential Bank v. Martinez, 189 SCRA 612, 615 (1990), holding that in extrajudicial foreclosure of mortgage,
when the proceeds of the sale are insufficient to pay the debt, the mortgagee has the right to recover the deficiency from the
mortgagor.
However, it must be pointed out that petitioners cited cases involve ordinary debts secured by a mortgage. The case at bar, we must
stress, involves a foreclosure of mortgage arising out of a settlement of estate, wherein the administrator mortgaged a property
belonging to the estate of the decedent, pursuant to an authority given by the probate court. As the CA correctly stated, the Rules of
Court on Special Proceedings comes into play decisively. The applicable rule is Section 7 of Rule 86 of the Revised Rules of Court (
which PNB contends is not.)
In the present case it is undisputed that the conditions under the aforecited rule have been complied with [see notes]. It follows that
we must consider Sec. 7 of Rule 86, appropriately applicable to the controversy at hand, which in summary [and case law as well]
grants to the mortgagee three distinct, independent and mutually exclusive remedies that can be alternatively pursued by the
mortgage creditor for the satisfaction of his credit in case the mortgagor dies, among them:
(1) to waive the mortgage and claim the entire debt from the estate of the mortgagor as an ordinary claim;
(2) to foreclose the mortgage judicially and prove any deficiency as an ordinary claim; and
(3) to rely on the mortgage exclusively, foreclosing the same at any time before it is barred by prescription without right to
file a claim for any deficiency.
Clearly petitioner herein has chosen the mortgage-creditors option of extrajudicially foreclosing the mortgaged property of the
Chuas. This choice now bars any subsequent deficiency claim against the estate of the deceased. Petitioner may no longer avail of
the complaint for the recovery of the balance of indebtedness against said estate, after petitioner foreclosed the property securing the
mortgage in its favor. It follows that in this case no further liability remains on the part of respondents and the deceaseds estate.
NOTES:
Section 7, Rule 86 of the Rules of Court, which states that:
Sec. 7. Rule 86. 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 proceeding 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 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 hold as security, under the direction of the
court if the court shall adjudge it to be for the interest of the estate that such redemption shall be made.
To begin with, it is clear from the text of Section 7, Rule 89, that once the deed of real estate mortgage is recorded in the proper
Registry of Deeds, together with the corresponding court order authorizing the administrator to mortgage the property, said deed
shall be valid as if it has been executed by the deceased himself. Section 7 provides in part:
Sec. 7. Rule 89. Regulations for granting authority to sell, mortgage, or otherwise encumber estate The court having jurisdiction
of the estate of the deceased may authorize the executor or administrator to sell personal estate, or to sell, mortgage, or otherwise
encumber real estate, in cases provided by these rules when it appears necessary or beneficial under the following regulations:
xxx
(f) There shall be recorded in the registry of deeds of the province in which the real estate thus sold, mortgaged, or otherwise
encumbered is situated, a certified copy of the order of the court, together with the deed of the executor or administrator for such
real estate, which shall be valid as if the deed had been executed by the deceased in his lifetime.
CASE DIGEST
Aldamiz v. Judge of CFI Mindoro
December 29, 1949
Moran, C.J.
FACTS: Santiago Rementeria y
Aldamizcogeascoa, the decedent was a
Spaniard and member of the commercial
partnership "Aldamiz y Rementeria." The other
members were his brothers. Santiago
Rementeria died in Spain in 1937, and probate
proceedings were instituted in the same year in
the CFI of Mindoro by Gavino Aldamiz
represented by Atty. Juan L. Luna. Gavino
Aldamiz was appointed administrator and was
again represented by respondent Atty. Juan
Luna.
After ten years from the date of his appointment,
Gavino Aldamiz, as administrator, through his
attorney, Juan L. Luna, submitted his accounts
for the years 1944, 1945 and 1946 and also a
project of partition with a view to closing the
proceedings. The court approved the accounts
but refused to approve the project of partition
unless all debts including attorney's fees be first
paid. In the project of partition, it was expressly
stated that attorney's fees, debts and incidental
expenses would be proportionately paid by the
beneficiaries after the closure of the testate
If 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 dispute exists as to the right of the six Padlan children to inherit from the decedent because there are proofs that they have been
duly acknowledged by him and petitioner herself even recognizes them as heirs of Arturo Padlan, nor as to their respective
hereditary shares.
Private respondent is not a surviving spouse that can inherit from him as this status presupposes a legitimate relationship. Her
marriage to Arturo being a bigamous marriage considered void ab inito under Articles 80 and 83 of the Civil Code renders her not a
surviving spouse.
The decision of the Court of Appeals ordering the remand of the case is affirmed.
The Incompetent Carmen Caniza v. Court of Appeals, Pedro and Leonora EstradaG.R. No. 110427; February 24, 1997
Facts:
Carmen Caniza (94), a spinster, a retired pharmacist, and former professor of the Collegeof Chemistry and Pharmacy of the
University of the Philippines, was declared incompetent by judgment of the QC RTC in a guardianship proceeding instituted by her
niece, Amparo A.Evangelista. She was so adjudged because of her advanced age and physical infirmitieswhich included cataracts in
both eyes and senile dementia. Amparo A. Evangelista wasappointed legal guardian of her person and estate. Amparo commenced a
suit to eject thespouses Estrada from the said premises. In their Answer, the defendants declared that theyhad been living in Caiza's
house since the 1960's; that in consideration of their faithfulservice they had been considered by Caiza as her own family, and the
latter had in fact executed a holographic will by which she "bequeathed" to the Estradas the house and lot inquestion.The MTC
rendered judgment in favor of Caniza. The RTC reversed said decision.The appellate court affirmed the RTC's judgment.
Issue:
Evangelista's authority.
Ruling:
The Estradas insist that the devise of the house to them by Caiza clearly denotes herintention that they remain in possession
thereof, and legally incapacitated her judicialguardian, Amparo Evangelista, from evicting them therefrom, since their ouster would
beinconsistent with the ward's will.A will is essentially ambulatory; at any time prior to the testator's death, it may be changedor
revoked; and until admitted to probate, it has no effect whatever and no right can beclaimed thereunder, the law being quite explicit:
"No will shall pass either real or personalproperty unless it is proved and allowed in accordance with the Rules of Court" (ART.
838,id.). An owner's intention to confer title in the future to persons possessing property byhis tolerance, is not inconsistent with the
former's taking back possession in the meantimefor any reason deemed sufficient. And that in this case there was sufficient cause for
theowner's resumption of possession is apparent: she needed to generate income from thehouse on account of the physical
infirmities afflicting her, arising from her extreme age.Amparo Evangelista was appointed by a competent court the general
guardian of both theperson and the estate of her aunt, Carmen Caiza. Her Letters of Guardianship clearlyinstalled her as the
"guardian over the person and properties of the incompetent CARMENCANIZA with full authority to take possession of the
property of said incompetent in any province or provinces in which it may be situated and to perform all other acts necessaryfor
the management of her properties . . " By that appointment, it became Evangelista'sduty to care for her aunt's person, to attend to her
physical and spiritual needs, to assureher well-being, with right to custody of her person in preference to relatives and friends.
It also became her right and duty to get possession of, and exercise control over, Caiza'sproperty, both real and personal, it being
recognized principle that the ward has no right to possession or control of his property during her incompetency. That right to
manage theward's estate carries with it the right to take possession thereof and recover it fromanyone who retains it, and bring and
defend such actions as may be needful for thispurpose