De Aranz V Judge Galing
De Aranz V Judge Galing
De Aranz V Judge Galing
Facts: Private respondent filed w/ the Pasig RTC a petition for the probate & allowance of the will of the late Montserrat Infante. The petition specified the names & addresses of herein petitioners as legatees & devisees. The probate court issued an order setting the petition for hearing & the order was published in a newspaper of general circulation in Metro Mla once a week for 3 consecutive weeks. On the date of the hearing, no oppositor appeared. The hearing was reset, on w/c date the probate court issued an order designating the clerk of court to receive evidence ex-parte of the petitioner as there was no opposition. During the proceedings, private respondent was appointed executor. 2 Days later, petitioners filed a motion for reconsideration of the order. They alleged that as legatees, no notices were sent to them as required by Sec 4 of Rule 76 ROC. They prayed that they be given 10 days to file their opposition to the probate of the will. The probate court denied the motion for reconsideration. The CA dismissed the petition for certiorari & prohibition consequently filed by petitioners. Issue: Whether the CA erred in holding that the requirement of notice on individual heirs, devisees & legatees is merely a matter of procedural convenience to better satisfy in some instances the requirements of due process Held: Yes. It is clear from Sec 4 Rule 76 ROC that notice of the time and place of the hearing for the allowance of a will shall be forwarded to the designated or other known heirs, legatees, and devisees residing in the Philippines at their places of residence, if such places of residence be known. There is no question that the residences of herein petitioners legatees and devisees were known to the probate court. The petition for the allowance of the will itself indicated the names and addresses of the legatees and devisees of the testator. But despite such knowledge, the probate court did not cause copies of the notice to be sent to petitioners. The requirement of the law for the allowance of the will was not satisfied by mere publication of the notice of hearing for three (3) weeks in a newspaper of general circulation in the province. The case cited by the CA in its assailed decision to support its theory is not applicable in the present case. If the allegation of the petition was wrong and the true
residence of petitioners was not known, then notice upon them individually was not necessary. Individual notice upon heirs, legatees and devisees is necessary only when they are known or when their places of residence are known. In other instances, such notice is not necessary and the court may acquire and exercise jurisdiction simply upon the publication of the notice in a newspaper of general circulation.