Pardell y Cruz v. Bartolome y Escribano

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FIRST DIVISION

[G.R. No. 4656. November 18, 1912.]

RICARDO PARDELL Y CRUZ and VICENTA ORTIZ Y FELIN DE


PARDELL , plaintiffs-appellees, vs . GASPAR DE BARTOLOME Y
ESCRIBANO and MATILDE ORTIZ Y FELIN DE BARTOLOME ,
defendants-appellants.

Gaspar de Bartolome in his own behalf.


B. Gimenez Zoboli for appellees.

SYLLABUS

1. ESTATES; REALTY; RIGHTS OF COOWNERS OR TENANTS IN COMMON. —


Each coowner or tenant in common of undivided realty has the same rights therein as
the others; he may use and enjoy the same without other limitation except that he must
not prejudice the rights of his coowners, but until a division is effected, the respective
parts belonging to each can not be determined; each coowner exercises joint dominion
and is entitled to joint use.
2. ID.; ID.; ID; RENT BY ONE COOWNER. — For the use and enjoyment of a
particular portion of the lower part of a house, not used as living quarters, a coowner
must, in strict justice, pay rent, in like manner as other people pay for similar space in
the house; he has no right to the free use and enjoyment of such space which, if rented
to a third party, would produce income.
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; REPAIRS AND IMPROVEMENT; INTEREST. — Until a cause
instituted to determine the liability of the rest of the coowners for repairs and
improvements made by one of their number is nally decided and the amount due is
xed, the persons alleged to be liable can not be considered in default as to interest,
because interest is only due from the date of the decision xing the principal liability.
(Supreme court of Spain, April 24, 1867, November 19, 1869, November 22, 1901, in
connection with arts. 1108-1110 of the Civil Code.)
4. ID.; ID.; ID.; VOLUNTARY ADMINISTRATOR; COMPENSATION. — To an
administrator or voluntary manager of property belonging to his wife and another, both
coowners, the property being undivided, the law does not conceded any remuneration,
without prejudice to his right to be reimbursed for any necessary and useful
expenditures in connection with the property and for any damages he may have
suffered thereby.
5. ID.; ID.; ID.; RIGHT TO DEMAND VALUATION BEFORE DIVISION OR SALE. —
Any one of the coowners of undivided property about to be divided or to be sold in
consequence of a mutual petition, has the right to ask that the property be valued by
experts, a valuation which would not be prejudicial but rather beneficial to all.

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DECISION

TORRES , J : p

This is an appeal by bill of exceptions, from the judgment of October 5, 1907,


whereby the Honorable Dionisio Chanco, judge, absolved the defendants from the
complaint, and the plaintiff from a counterclaim, without special finding as to costs.
Counsel for the spouses Ricardo Pardell y Cruz and Vicenta Ortiz y Felin de
Pardell, the rst of whom absent in Spain by reason of his employment, conferred upon
the second suf cient and ample powers to appear before the courts of justice, on June
8, 1905, in his written complaint, alleged that the plaintiff, Vicenta Ortiz, and the
defendant, Matilde Ortiz, are the duly recognized natural daughters of the spouses
Miguel Ortiz and Calixta Felin y Paula who died in Vigan, Ilocos Sur, in 1875 and 1882,
respectively; that Calixta Felin, prior to her death, executed, on August 17, 1876, a
nuncupative will in Vigan, whereby she made her four children, named Manuel,
Francisca, Vicenta, and Matilde, surnamed Ortiz y Felin, her sole and universal heirs of all
her property; that, of the persons enumerated, Manuel died before his mother and
Francisca a few years after her death, leaving no heirs of the said testatrix are the
plaintiff Vicenta Ortiz and the defendant Matilde Ortiz; that, aside from some personal
property and jewelry already divided among the heirs, the testatrix possessed, at the
time of the execution of her will, and left at her death the real properties which, with
their respective cash values, are as follows:
1. A house of strong material, with the lot on which it is built,

situated on Escalante Street, Vigan, and valued at P6,000.00

2. A house of mixed material, with the

lot on which it

stands, at No. 88 Washington Street, Vigan valued at 1,500.00

3. A lot on Magallanes Street, Vigan;

valued at 100.00

4. A parcel of rice land, situated in

the barrio of San Julian,

Vigan;

valued at 60.00

5. A parcel of rice land in the pueblo

of Santa Lucia; 86.00

6. Three parcels of land in the pueblo

of Candon; valued at 150.00

Total 7,896.00

That, on or about the rst months of the year 1888, the defendants, without
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judicial authorization, nor friendly or extrajudicial agreement, took upon themselves the
administration and enjoyment of the said properties and collected the rents, fruits, and
products thereof, to the serious detriment of the plaintiffs' interest; that,
notwithstanding the different and repeated demands extrajudicially made upon Matilde
Ortiz to divide the aforementioned properties with the plaintiff Vicenta and to deliver to
the latter the one-half of the same which rightly belonged to her, or the value thereof,
together with one-half of the fruits and rents collected therefrom, the said defendant
and her husband, the said defendant and her husband, the self-styled administrator of
the properties mentioned, had been delaying the partition and delivery of the said
properties by means of unkempt promises and other excuses; and that the plaintiffs, on
account of the extraordinary delay in the delivery of one-half of said properties, or their
value in cash, as the case might be, had suffered losses and damages in the sum of
P8,000. Said counsel for the plaintiffs therefore asked that judgment be rendered by
sentencing the defendants, Gaspar de Bartolome and Matilde Ortiz Felin de Bartolome,
to restore and deliver to the plaintiffs one-half of the total value in cash, according to
appraisal, of the undivided property speci ed, which one-half amounted approximately
to P3,498, or, if deemed proper, to recognize the plaintiff Vicenta Ortiz to be vested
with the full and absolute right of ownership to the said undivided one-half of the
properties in question, as universal testamentary heir thereof together with the
defendant Matilde Ortiz, to indemnify the plaintiffs in the sum of P8,000, for losses and
damages, and to pay the costs.
Counsel for the defendants, in his answer denied the facts alleged in paragraphs
1, 4, 6, 7 and 8 thereof, inasmuch as, upon the death of the litigating sisters' brother
Manuel, their mother, who was still living, was his heir by force of law, and the
defendants had never refused to give to the plaintiff Vicenta Ortiz her share of the said
properties; and stated that he admitted the facts alleged in paragraph 2, provided it be
understood, however, that the surname of the defendant's mother was Felin, and not
Felix, and that Miguel Ortiz died in Spain, and not in Vigan; that he also admitted
paragraph 3 of the complaint, with the difference that the said surname should be Felin,
and likewise paragraph 5, except the part thereof relating to the personal property and
the jewelry, since the latter had not yet been divided; that the said jewelry was in the
possession of the plaintiffs and consisted of: one Lozada gold chronometer watch with
a chain in the form of a bridle curb and a watch charm consisting of the engraving of a
postage stamp on a stone mounted in gold and bearing the initials M.O., a pair of cuff
buttons made of gold coins, four small gold buttons, two nger rings, another with the
initials M.O., and a gold bracelet; and that the defendants were willing to deliver to the
plaintiffs, in conformity with petition, one-half of the total value in cash, according to
appraisement, of the undivided real properties speci ed in paragraph 5, which half
amounted to P3,948.
In a special defense said counsel alleged that the defendant had never refused to
divide the said property and had in fact several years before solicited the partition of
the same; that, from 1886 to 1901, inclusive, there was collected from the property on
Calle Escolta the sum of 288 pesos, besides a few other small amounts derived from
other sources, which were delivered to the plaintiffs with other larger amounts, in 1891,
and from the property on Calle Washington, called La Quinta, 990.95 pesos, which
proceeds, added together, made a total of 1,278.95 pesos, saving error or omission;
that, between the years abovementioned, 765.38 pesos were spent on the house
situated on Calle Escolta, and on that on Calle Washington, La Quinta, 376.33, which
made a total of 1,141.71, saving error or omission; that, in 1897, the work of
reconstruction was begun of the house on Calle Escolta, which had been destroyed by
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an earthquake, which work was not nished until 1903 and required an expenditure on
the part of the defendant Matilde Ortiz, of 5,091.52 pesos; that all the collections made
up to August 1,1905, including the rent from the stores, amounted to only P3,654.15,
and the expenses to P6,252.32, there being, consequently, a balance of P2,598.18,
which, divided between the sisters, the plaintiff and the defendant, would make the
latter's share P1,299.08; that, as shown by the papers kept by the plaintiffs, in the year
1891 the defendant Bartolome presented to the plaintiffs a statement in settlement of
accounts, and delivered to the person duly authorized by the latter for the purpose, the
sum of P2,606.29, which the said settlement showed was owing his principals, from
various sources; that, the defendant Bartolome having been the administrator of the
undivided property claimed by the plaintiffs, the latter were owing the former the legal
remuneration of the percentage allowed by law for administration; and that the
defendants were willing to pay the sum of P3,948, one-half of the total value of the said
properties, deducting therefrom the amount found to be owing them by the plaintiffs,
and asked that the judgment be rendered in their favor to enable them to recover from
the latter that amount, together with the costs and expenses of the suit.

The defendants, in their counterclaim, reported each and all of the allegations
contained in each of the paragraphs of section 10 of their answer; that the plaintiffs
were obliged to pay to the administrator of the said property the remuneration allowed
him by law; that, as the revenues collected by the defendants amounted to no more
than P3,654.15, and the expenditures incurred by them, to P6,252.32, it followed that
the plaintiffs owed the defendants P1,299.08, that is, one-half of the difference
between the amount collected from and that expended on the properties, and asked
that judgment be therefore rendered in their behalf to enable them to collect this sum
from the plaintiffs, Ricardo Pardell and Vicenta Ortiz, with legal interest thereon from
December 7, 1904, the date when the accounts were rendered, together with the sums
to which the defendant Bartolome was entitled for the administration of the undivided
properties in question.
By a written motion of August 21, 1905, counsel for the plaintiffs requested
permission to amend the complaint by inserting immediately after the words "or
respective appraisal," fth line of paragraph 5, the phrased "in cash in accordance with
the assessed value," and likewise further to amend the same, in paragraph 6 thereof, by
substituting the following words in lieu of the petition for the remedy sought: "By
reason of all the foregoing, I beg the court to be pleased to render judgment by
sentencing the defendants, Gaspar de Bartolome and Matilde Ortiz Felin de Bartolome,
to restore and deliver to the plaintiffs an exact one-half of the total value of the
undivided properties described in the complaint, such value to be ascertained by the
expert appraisal of two competent persons, one of whom shall be appointed by the
plaintiffs and the other by the defendants, and, in case of disagreement between these
two appointees such value shall be determined by a third expert appraiser appointed by
the court, or, in a proper case, by the price offered at public auction; or, in lieu thereof, it
is requested that the court recognize the plaintiff, Vicenta Ortiz, to be vested with a full
and absolute right to an undivided one-half of the said properties; furthermore, it is
prayed that the plaintiffs be awarded an indemnity of P8,000 for losses and damages,
and the costs." Notwithstanding the opposition of the defendants, the said defendants
were allowed a period of three days within which to present a new answer. An
exception was taken to this ruling.
The proper proceedings were had with reference to the valuation of the
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properties concerned in the division sought and incidental issues were raised relative to
the partition of some of them and their award to one or the other of the parties. Due
consideration was taken of the averments and statements of both parties who agreed
between themselves, before the court, that any of them might at any time acquire, at the
valuation xed by the expert judicial appraiser, any of the properties in question, there
being none in existence excluded by the litigants. The court, therefore, by order of
December 28, 1905, ruled that the plaintiffs were entitled to acquire, at the valuation
determined by the said expert appraiser, the building known as La Quinta, the lot on
which it stands and the warehouses and other improvements comprised within the
inclosed land, and the seed lands situated in the pueblos of Vigan and Santa Lucia; and
that the defendants were likewise entitled to acquire the house on Calle Escolta, the lot
on Calle Magallanes, and the three parcels of land situated in the pueblo of Candon.
After this partition had been made, counsel for the defendants, by a writing of
March 8, 1908, set forth: That, having petitioned for the appraisement of the properties
in question for the purpose of their partition, it was not to be understood that he
desisted from the exception duly entered to the ruling made in the matter of the
amendment to the complaint; that the properties retained by the defendants were
valued at P9,310, and those retained by the plaintiffs, at P2,885, one-half of which
amounts each party had to deliver to the other, as they were pro indiviso properties;
that, therefore, the defendants had to pay the plaintiffs the sum of P3,212.50, after
deducting the amount which the plaintiffs were obliged to deliver to the defendants, as
one-half of the price of the properties retained by the former; that, notwithstanding that
the amount of the counterclaim for the expenses incurred in the reconstruction of the
pro indiviso property should be deducted from the sum which the defendants had to
pay the plaintiffs, the former, for the purpose of bringing the matter of the partition to a
close, would deliver to the latter, immediately upon the signing of the instrument of
purchase and sale, the sum of P3,212.50, which was one-half of the value of the
properties allotted to the defendants; such delivery, however, was not to be understood
as a renouncement of the said counterclaim, but only as a means for the nal
termination of the pro indiviso status of the property.
The case having been heard, the court, on October 5, 1907, rendered judgment
holding that the revenues and the expenses were compensated by the residence
enjoyed by the defendant party, that no losses or damages were either caused or
suffered, nor likewise any other expense besides those aforementioned, and absolved
the defendants from the complaint and the plaintiffs from the counterclaim, with no
special nding as to costs. An exception was taken to this judgment by counsel for the
defendants who moved for a new trial on the grounds that the evidence presented did
not warrant the judgment rendered and that the latter was contrary to law. This motion
was denied, exception whereto was taken by said counsel, who led the proper bill of
exceptions, and the same was approved and forwarded to the clerk of this court, with a
transcript of the evidence.
Both of the litigating sisters assented to a partition by halves of the property left
in her will by their mother at her death; in fact, during the course of this suit,
proceedings were had, in accordance with the agreement made, for the division
between them of the said hereditary property of common ownership, which division
was recognized and approved in the ndings of the trial court, as shown by the
judgment appealed from.
The issues raised by the parties, aside from the said division made during the
trial, and which have been submitted to this court for decision, concern: (1) The
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indemnity claimed for losses and damages, which the plaintiffs allege amount to
P8,000, in addition to the rents which should have been derived from the house on Calle
Escolta, Vigan; (2) the payment by the plaintiffs to the defendants of the sum of
P1,299.08, demanded by way of counterclaim, together with legal interest thereon from
December 7, 1904; (3) the payment to the husband of the defendant Matilde Ortiz, of a
percentage claimed to be due him as the administrator of the property of common
ownership; (4) the division of certain jewelry in the possession of the plaintiff Vicenta
Ortiz; and (5) the petition that the amendment be held to have been improperly
admitted, which was made by the plaintiffs in their written motion of August 21, 1905,
against the opposition of the defendants, through which admission the latter were
obliged to pay the former P910.50.
Before entering upon an explanation of the propriety or impropriety of the claims
made by both parties, it is indispensable to state that the trial judge, in absolving the
defendants from the complaint, held that they had not caused losses and damages to
the plaintiffs, and that the revenues and the expenses were compensated, in view of the
fact that the defendants had been living for several years in the Calle Escolta house,
which was pro indiviso property of joint ownership.
By this nding absolving the defendants from the complaint, and which was
acquiesced in by the plaintiffs who made no appeal therefrom, the rst issue has been
decided which was raised by the plaintiffs, concerning the indemnity for losses and
damages, wherein are comprised the rents which should have been obtained from the
upper story of the said house during the time it was occupied by the defendants,
Matilde Ortiz and her husband, Gaspar de Bartolome.
Notwithstanding the acquiescence on the part of the plaintiffs, assenting to the
said nding whereby the defendants were absolved from the complaint, yet as such
absolution is based on the compensation established in the judgment of the trial court,
between the amounts which each party is entitled to claim from the other, it is
imperative to determine whether the defendant Matilde Ortiz, as coowner of the house
on Calle Escolta, was entitled, with her husband, to reside therein, without paying to her
coowner, Vicenta Ortiz, who, during the greater part of the time, lived with her husband
abroad, one-half of the rents which the upper story would have produced, had it been
rented to a stranger.
Article 394 of the Civil Code prescribes:
"Each coowner may use the things owned in common, provided he uses
them in accordance with their object and in such manner as not to injure the
interests of the community nor prevent the coowners from utilizing them
according to their rights."
Matilde Ortiz and her husband occupied the upper story, designed for use as a
dwelling, in the house of joint ownership; but the record shows no proof that, by so
doing, the said Matilde occasioned any detriment to the interests of the community
property, nor that she prevented her sister Vicenta from utilizing the said upper story
according to her rights. It is to be noted that the stores of the lower oor were rented
and an accounting of the rents was duly made to the plaintiffs.
Each coowner of realty held pro indiviso exercises his rights over the whole
property and may use and enjoy the same with no other limitation than that he shall not
injure the interests of his coowners, for the reason that, until a division be made, the
respective part of each holder can not be determined and every one of the coowners
exercises together with his other coparticipants, joint ownership over the pro indiviso
property, in addition to his use and enjoyment of the same.
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As the hereditary properties of the joint ownership of the two sisters, Vicenta
Ortiz, plaintiff, and Matilde Ortiz, defendant, were situated in the Province of Ilocos Sur,
and were in the care of the last named, assisted by her husband, while the plaintiff
Vicenta with her husband was residing outside of the said province the greater part of
the time between 1885 and 1905, when she left these Islands for Spain, it is not at all
strange that delays and dif culties should have attended the efforts made to collect
the rents and proceeds from the property held in common and to obtain a partition of
the latter, especially during several years when, owing to the insurrection, the country
was in a turmoil; and for this reason, aside from that founded on the right of
coownership of the defendants, who took upon themselves the administration and care
of the property of joint tenancy for purposes of their preservation and improvement,
these latter are not obliged to pay to the plaintiff Vicenta one-half of the rents which
might have been derived from the upper story of the said house on Calle Escolta, and,
much less, because one of the living rooms and the storeroom thereof were used for
the storage of some belongings and effects of common ownership between the
litigants. The defendant Matilde, therefore, in occupying with her husband the upper
oor of the said house, did not injure the interests of her coowner, her sister Vicenta,
nor did she prevent the latter from living therein, but merely exercised a legitimate right
pertaining to her as a coowner of the property.
Notwithstanding the above statements relative to the joint-ownership rights
which entitled the defendants to live in the upper story of the said house, yet, in view of
the fact that the record shows it to have been proved that the defendant Matilde's
husband, Gaspar de Bartolome, occupied for four years a room or a part of the lower
oor of the same house on Calle Escolta, using it as an of ce for the justice of the
peace, a position which he held in the capital of that province, strict justice requires that
he pay his sister-in-law, the plaintiff, one-half of the monthly rent which the said quarters
could have produced, had they been leased to another person. The amount of such
monthly rental is xed at P16 in appearance with the evidence shown in the record. This
conclusion as to Bartolome's liability results from the fact that, even as the husband of
the defendant coowner of the property, he had no right to occupy and use gratuitously
the said part of the lower oor of the house in question, where he lived with his wife, to
the detriment of the plaintiff Vicenta who did not receive one-half of the rent which
those quarters could and should have produced, had they been occupied by a stranger,
in the same manner that rent was obtained from the rooms on the lower oor that were
used as stores. Therefore, the defendant Bartolome must pay to the plaintiff Vicenta
P384, that is, one-half of P768, the total amount of the rents which should have been
obtained during four years from the quarters occupied as an of ce by the justice of the
peace of Vigan.
With respect to the second question submitted for decision to this court, relative
to the payment of the sum demanded as a counterclaim, it was admitted and proved in
the present case that, as a result of a serious earthquake on August 15, 1897, the said
house on Calle Escolta was left in ruins and uninhabitable, and that, for its
reconstruction or repair, the defendants had to expend the sum of P6,252.32. This
expenditure, notwithstanding that it was impugned, during the trial, by the plaintiffs, was
duly proved by the evidence presented by the defendants. Evidence, unsuccessfully
rebutted, was also introduced which proved that the rents produced by all the rural and
urban properties of common ownership amounted, up to August 1, 1905, to the sum of
P3,654.15 which, being applied toward the cost of the repair work on the said house,
leaves a balance of P2,598.17, the amount actually advanced by the defendants, for the
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rents collected by them were not suf cient for the termination of all the work
undertaken on the said building, necessary for its complete repair and to replace it in a
habitable condition. It is therefore lawful and just that the plaintiff Vicenta Ortiz, who
was willing to sell to her sister Matilde for P1,500, her share in the house in question,
when it was in a ruinous state, should pay the defendants one-half of the amount
expended in the said repair work, since the building after reconstruction was worth
P9,000, according to expert appraisal. Consequently, the counterclaim made by the
defendants for the payment to them of the sum of P1,299.08, is a proper demand,
though from this sum a reduction must be made of P384, the amount of one-half of the
rents which should have been collected for the use of the quarters occupied by the
justice of the peace, the payment of which is incumbent upon the husband of the
defendant Matilde, as aforesaid, and the balance remaining, P915.08, is the amount
which the plaintiff Vicenta must pay to the defendants.
The defendants claim to be entitled to the collection of legal interest on the
amount of the counterclaim, from December 7, 1904. This contention can not be
sustained, inasmuch as, until this suit is nally decided, it could not be known whether
the plaintiffs would or would not be obliged to pay any sum whatever in reimbursement
of expenses incurred by the plaintiffs in the repair work on the said house on Calle
Escolta, whether or not the defendants in turn, were entitled to collect any such amount,
and nally what the net sum would be which the plaintiffs might have to pay as
reimbursement for one-half of the expenditures made by the defendants. Until nal
disposal of the case, no such net sum can be determined, nor until then can the debtor
be deemed to be in arrears. In order that there be an obligation to pay legal interest in
connection with a matter at issue between the parties, it must be declared in a judicial
decision from what date the interest will be due on the principal concerned in the suit.
This rule has been established by the decisions of the supreme court of Spain, in
reference to articles 1108, 1109, and 1110 of the Civil Code, rendered on April 24, 1867,
November 19, 1869, and February 22, 1901.
With regard to the percentage, as remuneration claimed by the husband of the
defendant Matilde for his administration of the property of common ownership,
inasmuch as no stipulation whatever was made in the matter by and between him and
his sister-in-law, the said defendant, the claimant is not entitled to the payment of any
remuneration whatsoever. Of his own accord and as an of cious manager, he
administered the said pro indiviso property, one-half of which belonged to his wife who
held it in joint tenancy, with his sister-in-law, and the law does not allow him any
compensation as such voluntary administrator. He is merely entitled to a
reimbursement for such actual and necessary expenditures as he may have made on
the undivided properties and an indemnity for the damages he may have suffered while
acting in that capacity, since at all events it was his duty to care for and preserve the
said property half of which belonged to his wife; and in exchange for the trouble and
labor occasioned him by the administration of his sister-in-law's half of the said
property, he with his wife resided in the upper story of the house aforementioned,
without payment of one-half of the rents said quarters might have produced had they
been leased to another person.
With respect to the division of the certain jewelry, petitioned for by the
defendants and appellants only in their brief in this appeal, the record of the
proceedings in the lower court does not show that the allegation made by the plaintiff
Vicenta is not true, to the effect that the deceased mother of the litigant sisters
disposed of this jewelry during her lifetime, because, had she not done so, the will made
by the said deceased would have been exhibited in which the said jewelry would have
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been mentioned, at least it would have been proved that the articles in question came
into the possession of the plaintiff Vicenta without the expressed desire and the
consent of the deceased mother of the said sisters, for the gift of this jewelry was
previously assailed in the courts, without success; therefore, and in view of its
inconsiderable value, there is no reason for holding that the said gift was not made.
As regards the collection of the sum of P910.50, which is the difference between
the assessed value of the undivided real properties and the price of the same as
determined by the judicial expert appraiser, it is shown by the record that the ruling of
the trial judge admitting the amendment to the original complaint, is in accord with the
law and principles of justice, for the reason that any of the coowners of a pro indiviso
property, subject to division or sale, is entitled to petition for its valuation is not
prejudicial to any of the joint owners, but is bene cial to their interests, considering
that, as a general rule, the assessed value of a building or a parcel of realty is less than
the actual real value of the property, and this being understood by the defendants, they
appointed an expert appraiser to determine, in conjunction with the one selected by the
plaintiffs, the value of the properties of joint ownership. These two experts took part in
the later proceedings of the suit until nally, and during the course of the latter, the
litigating parties agreed to an amicable division of the pro indiviso hereditary property,
in accordance with the price xed by the judicial expert appraiser appointed as a third
party, in view of the disagreement between and nonconformity of the appraisers
chosen by the litigants. Therefore it is improper now to claim a right to the collection of
the said sum, the difference between the assessed value and that xed by the judicial
expert appraiser for the reason that the increase in price, as determined by this latter
appraisal, redounded to the benefit of both parties.

In consideration of the foregoing, whereby the errors assigned to the lower court
have been duly refuted, it is our opinion that, with a partial reversal of the judgment
appealed from, in so far as it absolves the plaintiffs from the counterclaim presented
by the defendants, we should and hereby do sentence the plaintiffs to the payment of
the sum of P915.08, the balance of the sum claimed by the defendants as a balance of
the one-half of the amount which the defendants advanced for the reconstruction or
repair of the Calle Escolta house, after deducting from the total of such sum claimed by
the latter the amount of P384 which Gaspar de Bartolome, the husband of the
defendant Matilde, should have paid as one-half of the rents due for his occupation of
the quarters on the lower oor of the said house as an of ce for the justice of the
peace court of Vigan; and we further nd: (1) That the defendants are not obliged to
pay one-half of the rents which could have been obtained from the upper story of the
said house; (2) that the plaintiffs can not be compelled to pay legal interest from
December 7, 1904, on the sum expended in the reconstruction of the aforementioned
house, but only the interest fixed by law, at the rate of per cent per annum, from the date
of the judgment to be rendered in accordance with this decision; (3) that the husband
of the defendant Matilde Ortiz is not entitled to any remuneration for the administration
of the pro indiviso property belonging to both parties; (4) that, neither is he entitled to
collect from the plaintiffs the sum of P910.50, the difference between the assessed
valuation and the price set by the expert appraisal solicited by the plaintiffs in their
amendment to the complaint; and, (5) that no partition shall be made of certain jewelry
aforementioned now in the possession of the plaintiff Vicenta Ortiz. The said judgment,
as relates to the points appealed, is af rmed, in so far as its ndings agree with those
of this decision, and is reversed, in so far as they do not. No special nding is made
regarding the costs of both instances. So ordered.
CD Technologies Asia, Inc. © 2017 cdasiaonline.com
Arellano, C.J., Mapa, Johnson, Carson, and Trent, JJ., concur.

CD Technologies Asia, Inc. © 2017 cdasiaonline.com

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