Bogacki v. Insert
Bogacki v. Insert
Bogacki v. Insert
BOGACKI V. INSERTO
G.R. No. L-39187, January 30, 1982
CONCEPCION JR., J.
FACTS:
Private respondent is the registered owner of four lots with a total area of
3,005 sq. meters over which her mother, the herein petitioner, has a usufructuary
right over a proindiviso one-sixth portion of the said lots. For taking possession of
all the lots and collecting all the rentals therefrom, petitioner was sued in an action
for partition and recovery of rentals and after trial, judgment was rendered
ordering her "to get only one-sixth (1/6) of the rentals and to turn over to her
daughter five-sixth (5/6) of all that she had previously collected from the lots not
beyond ten years before" the date of the decision, the rentals appraised at P50.00
a month. The judgment having become final and executory, it was enforced
against the petitioner's usufructuary right which was levied and sold at public
auction to private respondent. Petitioner moved to set aside the execution sale
on the ground that her usufructuary right is exempt from execution. The trial court
denied the motion and directed the issuance of a writ of possession in favor of
private respondent. Hence, the instant recourse for the annulment of the order
directing the issuance of a writ of possession, the levy on execution and the sale
at public auction of petitioner's usufructuary rights and to restrain private
respondent from dispossessing her of said usufruct.
ISSUE:
WON there was abuse of discretion in the levy and sale on execution of the
petitioner's usufructuary rights and the issuance of the writ of possession.
HELD:
NO. This Court had ruled that the usufruct of a widow may be transferred,
assigned or otherwise disposed of by her as she may please, like any other
hereditary property, and hence, an interest in real property which can be sold
upon execution.
The petitioner claimed that her usufruct cannot be alienated for family
reasons pursuant to Article 321 of the Civil Code. This article of the Civil Code,
however, cannot be invoked by the petitioner because the usufructuary rights
mentioned in this article are those enjoyed by parents over the property of their
unemancipated children under their custody, and not those enjoyed by the
petitioner which are those of a widow, constituted on the property of her late
husband as her share in the estate of the latter.
The petitioner also claimed that her usufruct, which she had confined to a
single area of about 500 square meters, equivalent to 1/6 of the total area of the
lots of the private respondent on which she has a usufruct, and where she had
constructed a residential house, is a homestead and therefore, exempt from
execution according to Sec. 12(a), Rule 39 of the Rules of Court. But, Section 12(a)
of Rule 39 cannot be invoked by the petitioner. Under this section, the debtor's
family home constituted in accordance with the Civil Code, or in the absence
thereof, the homestead in which he resides, and the land necessarily used in
connection therewith, both not exceeding in value P3,000.00, shall exempt from
execution. In the instant case, however, the execution was not enforced against
the petitioner's "homestead" or residential house, but on her usufructuary rights
over the lots belonging to the private respondent. The residential house
constructed by the petitioner on the land of the private respondent is but an
improvement on the property which the usufructuary may remove upon
extinguishment of the usufruct, if it be possible to do so without damage to the
property.
Section 12 (1) of Rule 39 is not also applicable because the property levied
and sold on execution is not the right to receive legal support or money or
property obtained as such support, or any pension or gratuity from the
government. The right to support, unlike the usufruct of a widow, is a personal right
essential to the life of the recipient, so that it cannot be subject to attachment or
execution. On the other hand, the usufruct of the widow, which was not
reincorporated in the new Civil Code, may be transferred or otherwise disposed
of by her, as she may please, like any other hereditary property.
Moreover, it appears that the levy on execution was made on March 26,
1971, and the petitioner's usufructuary rights were sold at a public auction sale on
July 21, 1971. The petitioner, however, took no action thereon such that the orders
issued have already become final and executory when she filed the instant
petition. It is now too late to review the proceedings made therein.
NOTE: The Supreme Court held that no abuse of discretion was committed by the
trial judge in issuing the assailed orders as the grounds relied upon by petitioner in
resisting the levy and sale on execution of her usufructuary rights are devoid of
merit as the same like any other hereditary property and alienable interest in real
property, can be sold upon execution to satisfy a judgment and upon petitioner's
failure to make any redemption within one year after the sale of her usufructuary
rights, the writ of possession was properly issued to complement the writ of
execution.