Caro vs. Ca

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LUZ CARO, vs. COURT OF APPEALS et al. (G.R. No.

L-46001 March 25,


1982)
GUERRERO, J.:
FACTS:
Alfredo Benito, Mario Benito and Benjamin Benito were the original coowners of two parcels of land.
Mario died sometime in January, 1957. His surviving wife, Basilia
Lahorra and his father, Saturnino Benito, were appointed in Special
Proceeding No. 508 of the Court of First Instance of Sorsogon as joint
administrators of Mario's estate.
Benjamin Benito, one of the co-owners,executed a deed of absolute
sale of his one-third undivided portion over said parcels of land in favor of
herein petitioner, Luz Caro. This was registered on September 29, 1959. Caro
was issued TCT No. T-4978 over LOT I-C upon consent by Saturnino and
Alfredo Benito.
Luz Caro made an allegation in a pleading presented in Spec. Pro No.
508 that she acquired by purchase from Benjamin Benito the aforesaid onethird undivided share in each of the two parcels of land. Basilia Lahorra Vda.
De Benito a written offer to redeem to redeem the said one-third undivided
share.
Caro ignored the offer, thus Basilia sought to intervene in Civil Case
No. 2105 entitled "Rosa Amador Vda. de Benito vs. Luz Caro" for annulment
of sale and mortgage and cancellation of the annotation of the sale and
mortgage involving the same parcels of land. The main case was dismissed.
Basilia then filed the present case as an independent one and in the trial
sought to prove that as a joint administrator of the estate of Mario Benito,
she had not been notified of the sale as required by Article 1620 in
connection with Article 1623 of the New Civil Code.
The trial court dismissed the complaint on the grounds that: (a) private
respondent, as administratrix of the intestate estate of Mario Benito, does
not have the power to exercise the right of legal redemption, and (b)
Benjamin Benito substantially complied with his obligation of furnishing
written notice of the sale of his one-third undivided portion to possible

redemptioners. MR was denied, thus she appealed to CA which ruled that


since the right of the co-owner to redeem in case his share be sold to a
stranger arose after the death of Mario Benito, such right did not form part of
the hereditary estate of Mario but instead was the personal right of the heirs,
one of whom is Mario's widow. Thus, it behooved either the vendor,
Benjamin, or his vendee, Luz Caro, to have made a written notice of the
intended or consummated sale under Article 1620 of the Civil Code. CA
reversed the appealed judgment; MR was denied. Thus, this present petition.

ISSUE: Whether Basilia, as administrator of Marios estate, could exercise


the right of redemption.
RESOLUTION:
NO.
Sec. 3, Rule 85, Rules of Court, the administrator has the right to the
possession of the real and personal estate of the deceased, so far as needed
for the payment of the expenses of administration, and the administrator
may bring and defend action for the recovery or protection of the property or
right of the deceased (Sec. 2, Rule 88), such right of possession and
administration do not include the right of legal redemption of the undivided
share sold to a stranger by one of the co-owners after the death of another,
because in such case, the right of legal redemption only came into existence
when the sale to the stranger was perfected and formed no part of the estate
of the deceased co-owner; hence, that right cannot be transmitted to the
heir of the deceased co-owner. (Butte vs. Manuel Uy and Sons, Inc., 4 SCRA
526).
Even assuming that redemption exists, private respondent as
administratrix, has no personality to exercise said right for and in behalf of
the intestate estate of Mario Benito. She is on the same footing as coadministrator Saturnino Benito. Hence, if Saturnino's consent to the sale of
the one-third portion to petitioner cannot bind the intestate estate of Mario
Benito on the ground that the right of redemption was not within the powers
of administration, in the same manner, private respondent as coadministrator has no power exercise the right of redemption the very
power which the Court of Appeals ruled to be not within the powers of
administration.

Basilia cannot be considered to have brought this action in her behalf


and in behalf of the heirs of Mario Benito because the jurisdictional
allegations of the complaint specifically stated that she brought the action in
her capacity as administratrix of the intestate estate of Mario Benito.

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