Heirs of Morales v. Agustin PDF
Heirs of Morales v. Agustin PDF
Heirs of Morales v. Agustin PDF
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SECOND DIVISION ~3~'31CJ-I----
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DECISION
REYES, JR., J. :
While the Court could not hold the bonds of familial relationships
together through force, it could hope to deter any further degradation of this
sacred tie through law.
Jh1U
Decision 2 G.R. No. 224849
The Case
Challenged before the Court via this Petition for Review on Certiorari
under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court is the Decision 1 of the Court of Appeals
(CA) in CA-G.R. CV No. 101991, promulgated on August 13, 2015, which
affirmed the Decision 2 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 12 of
Laoag City, in Civil Case No. 14438-12, dated November 22, 2013.
Likewise challenged is the subsequent Resolution3 of the CA promulgated
on April 21, 2016, which upheld the earlier decision.
The Facts
For clarity of the discussion, the heirs of Jayme and his wife,
Telesfora Garzon, who both died intestate, were their four (4) children:
Pe1med by Justice Magdangal M. De Leon. and concurred in by Justices Elihu A. Ybaficz and
Victoria Isabel A. Paredes: ro!lo, pp. 49-64
2
Penned by Presiding Judge Charles A. Aguilar: id. at 65-78.
Id. at 94-95.
Id. at 65.
Id. at 222.
6
Lydia Morales was later dropped as plaintiff and named as defendant pursuant to the Addendum
Order issued by the RTC: id. at 71.
hilt
Decision 3 G.R. No. 224849
Meanwhile, per the Order of the RTC dated April 22, 2009, summons
to the heirs of Martina Morales-Enriquez, who were at that time residing
abroad, were allowed to be served personally. 10 They were subsequently
declared to be in default. 11 In response, one of Martina Morales-Enriquez's
heirs, Emeterio Enriquez, filed a Motion to Dismiss and alleged that the
Id. at 12.
Id. at 52.
9
Id. at 163-164.
IO
Id at 71.
]]
Id. at 14.
F(
Decision 4 G.R. No. 224849
R TC did not acquire jurisdiction over his person because he was not
furnished with a copy of the Amended Complaint. 12
In the hearing dated February 8, 2012, the RTC heard the testimony of
the respondent. There being no other witnesses to be presented, the
respondent manifested that she was ready to submit her formal offer of
exhibits. 13
SO ORDERED. 14
12
Id. at 15.
13
Id. at 14.
14
Id. at 77-78.
'1µ
Decision 5 G.R. No. 224849
The R TC ruled that: (1) the estate of a deceased who died intestate
may be partitioned without need of any settlement or administration
proceeding; 15 and (2) the RTC properly and lawfully rendered summary
judgment despite the absence of any motion from any of the parties praying
for the application of the rules thereon. 16
The CA opined that the settlement of the entire estate of the late
spouses Jayme and Telesfora is "of no moment in the instant case of
partition" 17 because the respondent was "asserting her right as a co-owner of
the subject property by virtue of her successional right from her deceased
father Simeon Morales, who was once a co-owner of the said property, and
not from Jayme and Telesfora Morales." 18
Further, the CA ruled that an action for partition under Rule 69 of the
Rules of Court is an action quasi in rem, and thus, "jurisdiction over the
impleaded defendants-heirs is not required since the trial court has
jurisdiction over the res or the subject property which is the subject matter of
the action for partition." 19
fa1yv
Decision 6 G.R. No. 224849
The Issues
The petitioners anchor their prayer for the reversal of the CA decision
and resolution based on the following grounds:
22
Id. at 21.
fit
Decision 7 G.R. No. 224849
fg»
Decision 8 G.R. No. 224849
In this case, the filing of the complaint before the R TC which sought
to partition the subject property effectively placed the latter under the power
of the court. On this front, none of the parties challenged the RTC' s
jurisdiction.
But more than this, in compliance with De Pedro, there is in this case
proper service of summons to the defendants. In no uncertain terms, the CA
found that: (1) the heirs of Vicente Morales received summons, filed an
Answer, and actively participated in the trial; (2) the heirs of Jose Morales
filed their Answer and admitted to the allegations in the complaint; and (3)
the heirs of Martina Morales were duly served with summons, copies of the
complaint, and actively participated in the trial. 31
Even the trial court authoritatively concluded the same in saying that:
As borne out from the record of the case, Summons and a copy of
the Complaint was served upon and received by defendant Emeterio
Enriquez in Virginia Beach on June 25, 2009 as per verified Affidavit of
Service of one Nancy G. Wood. Defendant Bernardita Alojipan in
Trenton, MI received on July 4, 2009 a copy each of Summons and
Complaint as per verified Affidavit of Service of one Herb Alexander.
Defendant Elizabeth Somera received in Hanover Dirk, Illinois on June
27, 2009 a copy each of the Summons and of the Complaint as per verified
Affidavit of Service of one George Pierce and defendant Evelina Lopez
received in Trenton, Michigan on July 4, 2009 a copy each of Summons
and Complaint as per verified Affidavit of Service issued by Herb
Alexander. 32
31
Rollo, p. 61.
32
Id. at 71.
33
RULE 35 Summary Judgments
SECTION 1. Sununary judgment for claimant. - A party seeking to recover upon a claim, counterclaim,
or cross-claim or to obtain a declaratory relief may, at any time after the pleading in answer thereto has
been served, move with supporting affidavits, depositions or admissions for a summary judgment in his
favor upon all or any part thereof. (la, R34)
~~
Decision 9 G.R. No. 224849
In Evangelista vs. Mercator Finance Corp. ,41 the Court has already
defined a genuine issue as an issue of fact which calls for the presentation of
evidence, as distinguished from an issue which is fictitious or contrived, 42
set up in bad faith and patently unsubstantial so as not to constitute a
genuine issue for trial. 43 According to Spouses Pascual vs. First
Consolidated Rural Bank (Bohol), Inc. ,44 where the facts pleaded by the
parties are disputed or contested, proceedings for a summary judgment
cannot take the place of a trial.
SECTION 2. Summary judgment for defending party. - A party against whom a claim, counterclaim, or
cross-claim is asserted or a declaratory relief is sought may, at any time, move with supporting affidavits
depositions or admissions for a summary judgment in his favor as to all or any part thereof. (2a, R34)
34
492 Phil. 106, 115 (2005)
35
Cotabato Timberland Co., Inc. v. C. Alcantara and Sons, Inc., 474 Phil. 259, 266 (2004).
36 178 Phil. 561, 572-573 (1979).
37
217 Phil. 93 (1984).
38
Id. at 100.
39
Wood Technology Corporation, et al. v. Equitable Banking Corporation, supra note 34, at 116,
citing Evangelista v. Mercator Finance Corp., 456 Phil. 695, 703 (2003).
40
Supra, citing Narra Integrated Corporation v. Court ofAppeals, 398 Phil. 733, 741 (2000).
41
456 Phil. 695 (2003).
42
Id. at 703.
43
Spouses Pascual v. First Consolidated Rural Bank (Bohol), Inc., G.R. No. 202597, February 8,
2017.
44
Supra; See also Excelsa Industries, Inc. v. Court ofAppeals, 317 Phil. 664, 671 (1995), citing Paz
v. Court ofAppeals, 260 Phil. 31, 36 (1990); Caridao, etc. et al. v. Hon. Estenzo, etc.. et al., supra note 37,
at 100.
/J1'-'
Decision 10 G.R. No. 224849
And that is not all, The (sic) nullity of the assailed Summary
Judgment stems not only from the circumstances that such kind of a
judgment is not proper under the state of pleadings obtaining in the instant
case, but also from the failure to comply with the procedural guidelines for
the rendition of such a judgment. Contrary to the requirements
prescribed by the Rules, no motion for a summary judgment was filed
by private respondent. Consequently, no notice or hearing for the
purpose was ever conducted by the trial court. The trial court merely
required the parties to submit their affidavits and exhibits, together with
their respective memoranda, and without conducting any hearing, although
the parties presented opposing claims of ownership and possession, hastily
rendered a Summary Judgment. The trial court was decidedly in error
in cursorily issuing the said Judgment. 45 (Emphasis supplied, citations
omitted)
Still, in the more recent case of Calubaquib et al. vs. Repubhc of the
46
Phils. , the Court once more was asked to determine the propriety of the
summary judgment rendered by the trial court judge in the absence of any
motion filed by the parties for that purpose. In that case, the trial court judge
opined that "the basic facts of the case were undisputed"47 and that, even
after the parties' refusal to file a motion for summary judgment, the trial
court rendered a judgment sans trial. In ruling for the nullity of such issued
judgment, the Court said that:
45
Supra note 37, at 102.
46
667 Phil. 653 (2011 ).
47
Id. at 658.
48
Id. at 663. citing Estrada v. Conso/acion, 163 Phil. 540. 550 (1976).
f/!Jl)
Decision 11 G.R. No. 224849
To be clear, the rule only spells out that unless the motion for such
judgment has earlier been filed, the pre-trial may be the occasion in
which the court considers the propriety of rendering judgment on the
pleadings or summary judgment. If no such motion was earlier filed,
the pre-trial judge may then indicate to the proper party to initiate
the rendition of such judgment by filing tlte necessary motion. Indeed,
such motion is required by either Rule 34 (Judgment on the Pleadings) or
Rule 35 (Summary Judgment) of the Rules of Court. The pre-trial judge
cannot motu proprio render the judgment on the pleadings or
summary judgment. In the case of the motion for summary judgment, the
adverse party is entitled to counter the motion. 50 (Emphasis and
underscoring supplied, citations omitted)
On the basis of the foregoing disquisitions, the Court now focuses its
attention to the factual milieu surrounding the present case. To begin with,
the Court is of the opinion that the petitioners, from the beginning of the
proceedings, have already submitted an issue of fact that definitively calls
for the presentation of evidence. They have, for all intents and purposes,
presented a genuine issue that should have foreclosed the rendition of a
summary judgment.
Particularly, while the petitioners have not questioned the fact that the
subject property belonged to their progenitor, Jayme, they have, however,
asserted that herein respondent has "no more right of participation" over the
same. 52 The Answer with Motion to Dismiss and Compulsory Counter-
Claims claimed that:
49
Supra note 43.
50
Id.
51
Supra note 46, at 663.
52 Rollo, p. 163.
53
Id. at 164.
!Ub
Decision 12 G.R. No. 224849
In affirming this decision, the CA even opined that the issue raised by
herein petitioners is "of no moment in the instant case of partition" 56 because
the respondent was "asserting her right as a co-owner of the subject property
by virtue of her successional right from her deceased father Simeon Morales,
who was once a co-owner of the said property, and not from Jayme and
Telesfora Morales. " 57
These opinions, however, are reversible errors on the part of both the
trial court and the CA. The question of who shall inherit which part of the
property and in what proportion is in the province of the partition of the
estate of a deceased. That an heir disposed of his/her aliquot portion in favor
of another heir is a matter that should be fully litigated on in a partition
proceeding-as in this case.
5~
Id. at 165.
55
Id. at 76.
56
Id. at 59.
57
Id.
58
150-B Phil. 486 (1972).
59
Id. at 498.
~~
Decision 13 G.R. No. 224849
[A]nd as already shown, that eventual share she owned from the
time of Francisco's death and the Court of Nueva Ecija could not bar her
selling it. As owner of her undivided hereditary share, Tasiana could
dispose of it in favor of whomsoever she chose. Such alienation is
expressly recognized and provided for by article 1088 of the present Civil
Code:
Art. 1088. Should any of the heirs sell his hereditary rights to a
stranger before the partition, any or all of the co-heirs 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.
In yet another case, Alejandrina vs. Court of Appeals,61 the Court has
ruled that "when a co-owner sells his inchoate right in the co-ownership, he
expresses his intention to 'put an end to indivision among (his) co-heirs.'
Partition among co-owners may thus be evidenced by the overt act of a co-
owner of renouncing his right over the property regardless of the form it
takes. ''62 The Court based this assertion on Article 1082 of the Civil Code,
which states that:
Thus, when the petitioners herein asserted that the respondent has "no
more right of participation" over the subject property because the
successional rights of the respondent's parents over the same has already
been conveyed to the petitioners' father, the petitioners tendered a genuine
issue. They were in fact stating that the respondent's parents exercised their
right to sell, exchange, or compromise their undivided inchoate share of their
inheritance from Jayme, and, as the Court niled in Alejandrina, the
60
Id. at 501.
61 356 Phil. 851 (1998).
62
Id. at 866.
fgv
Decision 14 G.R. No. 224849
63 Article 1079. Partition, in general, is the separation, division and assignment of a thing held in
common among those to whom it may belong. The thing itself may be divided, or its value. (n).
64
Rollo, p. 87.
65
Id. at 88.
fqu
Decision 15 G.R. No. 224849
Even the respondent did not deny the petitioners' allegation that no
motion was filed to apply the rules on summary judgment. In addition, in its
decision, the trial court itself admitted to having issued the same motu
proprio, as none of the parties herein moved for such summary judgment. It
stated that:
Thus, that the trial court rendered a summary judgment despite the
absence of any motion calling for its application was in clear contravention
of the established rules of procedure. To be sure, on the strength of the
Court's unequivocal pronouncements in Caridao, 68 Viajar, 69 Calubaquib,70
and Pascual, 71 which require the observance of the procedural guidelines for
the rendition of summary judgments, the RTC committed reversible error,
and the R TC and CA decisions must perforce be annulled and set aside.
On the basis of the discourse above, there should have been no further
necessity to discuss the final issue herein presented. Nonetheless, for the
guidance of the R TC in resolving the instant case, a discussion of the nature
of the partition is in order.
66
Id. at 17.
67
Id. at 76-77.
68
Caridao, etc., et al. v. Hon. Estenzo, etc., et al, supra note 37.
69
Viajar v. Judge Estenzo, supra note 36.
70
Calubaquib et al. v. Republic ofthe Phils., supra note 46.
71
Pascual v. First Consolidated Rural Bank (BOHOL), Inc., supra note 49.
'UV
Decision 16 G.R. No. 224849
While the Court does not agree with this assertion by the petitioners,
the Court, nonetheless, agrees that the trial court should have collated
Jayme's other properties, if any, prior to the promulgation of any judgment
of partition in accordance with the laws on Succession.
The Court must emphasize, however, that this definition does not take
into account the difference between (1) an action of partition based on the
successional rights of the heirs of a decedent, and (2) an ordinary action of
partition among co-owners. While oftentimes interchanged with one another,
and although in many ways similar, these two partitions draw legal basis
from two different sets of legal provisions in the Civil Code of the
Philippines (Civil Code). 73
Under the law, partition of the inheritance may only be effected by (1)
the heirs themselves extrajudicially, (2) by the court in an ordinary action for
partition, or in the course of administration proceedings, (3) by the testator
himself, and (4) by the third person designated by the testator. 74
72
Roque v. Intermediate Appellate Court, 247-A Phil. 203, 211 (1988).
73
Rep. Act. 386 (1950).
74
Alejandrina v. Court ojAppeals, supra note 59, at 865.
75
Rules of Court, Rule 74, Sec. 1.
76
Id.
f1RJ
Decision 17 G.R. No. 224849
The ordinary action for partition therefore is meant to take the place of
the special proceeding on the settlement of the estate. The reason is that, if
the deceased dies without pending obligations, there is no necessity for the
appointment of an administrator to administer the estate for the heirs and the
creditors, much less, the necessity to deprive the real owners of their
possession to which they are immediately entitled. 78
Thus, an action for partition with regard to the inheritance of the heirs
should conform to the law governing the partition and distribution of the
estate, and not only to the law governing ordinary partition. These pertinent
provisions of the law could be found in Title IV (Succession), Chapter 4
(Provisions Common to Testate and Intestate Successions), Section 6
(Partition and Distribution of the Estate) of the Civil Code. 79
77
Supra note 75.
78
See Guico v. Bautista, 110 Phil. 584, 586 (1960), citing Bondad v. Bondad, 34 Phil., 232, 235
(1916); Fule v. Fule, 46 Phil., 317, 323 (1924); Macalinao v. Valdez, et al., 95 Phil., 318, 320 (1954); 50
Off. Gaz., 3041; Intestate Estate ofRufina Mercado v. Magtibay, et al., 96 Phil., 383, 386 (1954).
79
Rep. Act. 386 (1950).
8
° Civil Code, Art. 1078.
81
Id., Art. 1079.
82
Id., Art. 1082.
h~
Decision 18 G.R. No. 224849
heir, and in the account of the partition. ( 103 Sa) (Emphasis supplied)
Thus, while both partitions make use of Rule 69 as the procedural rule
that would govern the manner of partition, the foregoing disquisitions
explicitly elaborate that the bases of the ownership are different, and the
subject matters concerned are also different-one speaks of the partition of
the estate to distribute the inheritance to the heirs, legatees, or devisees,
whereas the other speaks of partition of any undivided thing or right to
distribute to the co-owners thereof.
In the case at hand, the parties are the heirs of the late Jayme Morales.
The land being sought to be divided was a property duly registered under
Jayme's name. Necessarily, therefore, the partition invoked by the
respondents is the partition of the estate of the deceased Jayme.
83
Id., Art. 1091.
84
Id., Art. 484.
85
Id., Art. 494.
86
Id., Art. 496.
fdf)
Decision 19 G.R. No. 224849
As such, when the petitioners alleged in their answer that there is yet
another property that needs to be partitioned among the parties, they were
actually invoking the Civil Code provisions, not on Co-ownership, but on
Succession, which necessarily includes Article 1061 of the Civil Code-the
provision on collation. It is therefore proper for the trial court to have delved
into this issue presented by the petitioner instead of disregarding the same
and limiting itself only to that singular property submitted by the respondent
for partition. As the case of Gulang vs. Court ofAppeals87 said:
In this case, the Court is of the opinion that there is no cogent reason
to render the partition of one of Jayme's properties and totally ignore the
others, if any. Absent any circumstance that would warrant the partial
partition and distribution of Jayme's estate, the pn1dent remedy is to settle
the entirety of the estate in the partition proceedings in the court a quo.
Besides, as stated by the Court in Gulang, it is quite unnecessary to require
the plaintiff to file another action, separate and independent from that of
partition originally instituted. 91 This would entail wastage of additional time
87
360 Phil. 435 (1998).
88
Id. at 451.
89
109 Phil. 108 (1960).
90
Id. at 111.
91
Id.
l"Jt>
Decision 20 G.R. No. 224849
SO ORDERED.
u
ANDRE
Asso fl REYES, JR.
e Justice
WE CONCUR:
~-1 __,_._,,.J-,~
Senior Associate Justice
Chairperson
AJ.Q 'L.,,J/
ESTELA ~]PERLAS-BERNABE
Associate Justice Associate Justice
S. CAGUIOA
Decision 21 G.R. No. 224849
CERTIFICATION
~'
Senior Associate Justice
(Per Section 12, R.A. No. 296 The
Judiciary Act of 1948, as amended)