Case Digest Assignment # 1 Sept. 5,2020
Case Digest Assignment # 1 Sept. 5,2020
Case Digest Assignment # 1 Sept. 5,2020
Preliminaries: The death of a person does not extinguish his obligation. At bar is a Petition for
Review on Certiorari assailing the Decision of the Court of Appeals and Resolution denying the
petitioner’s motion for reconsideration.
This is a consolidated case stemming from two civil cases filed before the Regional Trial Court
for the payment of a debt by the respondent.
Facts:
Respondent Benjamin Bayhon obtained a loan from the petitioner amounting to P1,000,000.00 to
be paid monthly with 5% interest. That respondent executed a Deed of Real Estate Mortgage in
favor of the petitioner to cover the loan which was conditioned upon the personal assurance of
the petitioner that the said instrument is only a private memorandum of indebtedness and that it
would neither be notarized nor enforced according to its tenor. During the proceeding for the
reconstitution of said real estate property before the RTC, Quezon City, Branch 87 petitioner
filed an Answer in Intervention in the said proceeding and attached a copy of an alleged dacion
en pago covering said lot. Respondent assailed the dacion en pago as a forgery alleging that
neither he nor his wife, who had died 3 years earlier, had executed it. In separate case petitioner
filed an action for specific performance, before the RTC, Quezon City. In his Complaint,
petitioner alleged that respondent failed to pay the loan and executed on October 21, 1989 a
dacion en pago in favor of the petitioner. The dacion en pago was inscribed and recorded with
the Registry of Deeds of Quezon City. Petitioner further averred that despite demands,
respondent refused to execute the requisite documents to transfer to him the ownership of the lot
subject of the dacion en pago. Petitioner prayed, inter alia, for the court to order the respondent
to execute the final deed of sale and transfer of possession of the said lot. In the decision of the
lower court, it stated that the dacion en pago was novated by the payments made by the
respondent and that the Deed of Real Estate Mortgage was void considering that respondent’s
wife was already dead during the execution of the deed. On appeal by the respondent to the CA,
the CA held that the real estate mortgage and the dacion en pago were both void. The appellate
court ruled that at the time the real estate mortgage and the dacion en pago were executed, the
wife of respondent Benjamin Bayhon was already dead. Thus, she could not have participated in
the execution of the two documents. The appellate court struck down both the dacion en pago
and the real estate mortgage as being simulated or fictitious contracts pursuant to Article 1409 of
the Civil Code. During the appeal, respondent Benjamin Bayhon died. The Court of Appeals
held further that while the principal obligation is valid, the death of respondent Benjamin
Bayhon extinguished it. The heirs could not be ordered to pay the debts left by the deceased.
Issue:
Whether or not the heirs of the decedent can be ordered to pay the debt left by the deceased?
Held:
The Court held, with regards to the dacion en pago, the Court affirm the ruling of the appellate
court that the subject dacion en pago is a simulated or fictitious contract, and hence void. The
evidence shows that at the time it was allegedly signed by the wife of the respondent, his wife
was already dead. This finding of fact cannot be reversed. With regards to the appellate court
extinguishing the obligation of respondent, as a general rule, obligations derived from a contract
are transmissible. According to Article 1311 of the Civil Code, contracts take effect only
between the parties, their assigns and heirs, except in case where the rights and obligations
arising from the contract are not transmissible by their nature, or by stipulation or by provision of
law. The heir is not liable beyond the value of the property he received from the decedent. The
loan in this case was contracted by respondent. He died while the case was pending before the
Court of Appeals. While he may no longer be compelled to pay the loan, the debt subsists against
his estate. No property or portion of the inheritance may be transmitted to his heirs unless the
debt has first been satisfied. 9 The decision of the Court of Appeals is AFFIRMED with the
MODIFICATION that the obligation to pay the principal loan and interest contracted by the
deceased Benjamin Bayhon subsists against his estate.
NACAR vs. NISTAL
FACTS:
Sometime in the year 1968 petitioners stepfather, Isabelo Nacar, incurred an indebtedness
with the respondent in the amount P2,791.00. Despite repeated demands by the respondent,
Isabelo was not able to pay. Thus, prompting the respondent to file a civil action for the
collection of money against Isabelo. In the year 1970, Isabelo died. Respondent then filed a
complaint in Civil Case and entitled it "Claim Against the Estate Nicanor Nacar the Late Isabelo
Nacar With Preliminary Attachment".
There was, therefore, no cause of action against him. Private respondent Japitana filed an
opposition to this motion while intervenor Antonio Doloricon filed a complaint in intervention
asserting that he was the owner of the attached carabaos and that the certificates of ownership of
large cattle were in his name. The respondent Judge denied the motion to dismiss prompting Mr.
Nacar to come to the Supreme Court.
ISSUE:
Whether or not a complaint against an heir of a decedent, who incurred indebtedness, is the
correct action for the collection of money?
HELD:
The Court held in the negative. Under the circumstances of this case, respondent Japitana
has no cause of action against petitioner Nacar. The Court said that, a cause of action is an act or
omission of one party in violation of the legal right of the other.
Its essential elements are, namely: (1) the existence of a legal right in the plaintiff, (2) a
correlative legal duty in the defendant, and (3) an act or omission of the defendant in violation of
plaintiff's right with consequential injury or damage to the plaintiff for which he may maintain an
action for the recovery of damages or other appropriate relief.
Indeed, although respondent Japitana may have a legal right to recover an indebtedness
due him, petitioner Nicanor Nacar has no correlative legal duty to pay the debt for the simple
reason that there is nothing in the complaint to show that he incurred the debt or had anything to
do with the creation of the liability. As far as the debt is concerned, there is no allegation or
showing that the petitioner had acted in violation of Mr. Japitana's rights with consequential
injury or damage to the latter as would create a cause of action against the former.
JOHNNY S. RABADILLA, Petitioner, -versus - COURT OF APPEALS AND MARIA
MARLENA2 COSCOLUELLA Y BELLEZA VILLACARLOS, Respondents.
G.R. No. 113725, THIRD DIVISION, June 29, 2000, PURISIMA, J.
Under Article 776 of the NCC, inheritance includes all the property, rights and
obligations of a person, not extinguished by his death. Conformably, whatever rights Dr. Jorge
Rabadilla had by virtue of subject Codicil were transmitted to his forced heirs, at the time of his
death. And since obligations not extinguished by death also form part of the estate of the
decedent; corollarily, the obligations imposed by the Codicil on the deceased Dr. Jorge
Rabadilla, were likewise transmitted to his compulsory heirs upon his death.
FACTS:
In a Codicil appended to the Last Will and Testament of testatrix Aleja Belleza, Dr. Jorge
Rabadilla, predecessor-in-interest of the herein petitioner, Johnny S. Rabadilla, was instituted as
a devisee of parcel of land. The Codicil provides that a Lot no. 13292 of the Bacolod Cadastre
located in Negros Occidental is bequeathed to Jorge Rabadilla and he shall have the obligation
until he dies, every year to give Maria Marlina Coscolluela y Belleza, (75) piculs of Export sugar
and (25) piculs of Domestic sugar, until the said Maria Marlina Coscolluela y Belleza dies.
Dr. Jorge Rabadilla died in 1983 and was survived by his wife Rufina and children Johnny
(petitioner), Aurora, Ofelia and Zenaida, all surnamed Rabadilla.
On August 21, 1989, Maria Marlena Coscolluela y Belleza Villacarlos brought a complaint
against the above-mentioned heirs of Dr. Jorge Rabadilla, to enforce the provisions of subject
Codicil. The plaintiff then prayed that judgment be rendered ordering defendant-heirs to
reconvey/return-Lot No. 1392 to the surviving heirs of the late Aleja Belleza, the cancellation of
TCT No. 44498 in the name of the deceased, Dr. Jorge Rabadilla, and the issuance of a new
certificate of title in the names of the surviving heirs of the late Aleja Belleza.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the obligations of Jorge Rabadilla under the Codicil are inherited by his heirs.
HELD: YES.
It is a general rule under the law on succession that successional rights are transmitted from the
moment of death of the decedent10 and compulsory heirs are called to succeed by operation of
law. The legitimate children and descendants, in relation to their legitimate parents, and the
widow or widower, are compulsory heirs.11 Thus, the petitioner, his mother and sisters, as
compulsory heirs of the instituted heir, Dr. Jorge Rabadilla, succeeded the latter by operation of
law, without need of further proceedings, and the successional rights were transmitted to them
from the moment of death of the decedent, Dr. Jorge Rabadilla.
Under Article 776 of the NCC, inheritance includes all the property, rights and obligations of a
person, not extinguished by his death. Conformably, whatever rights Dr. Jorge Rabadilla had by
virtue of subject Codicil were transmitted to his forced heirs, at the time of his death. And since
obligations not extinguished by death also form part of the estate of the decedent; corollarily, the
obligations imposed by the Codicil on the deceased Dr. Jorge Rabadilla, were likewise
transmitted to his compulsory heirs upon his death.
In the said Codicil, testatrix Aleja Belleza devised Lot No. 1392 to Dr. Jorge Rabadilla, subject
to the condition that the usufruct thereof would be delivered to the herein private respondent
every year. Upon the death of Dr. Jorge Rabadilla, his compulsory heirs succeeded to his rights
and title over the said property, and they also assumed his (decedent's) obligation to deliver the
fruits of the lot involved to herein private respondent. Such obligation of the instituted heir
reciprocally corresponds to the right of private respondent over the usufruct, the fulfillment or
performance of which is now being demanded by the latter through the institution of the case at
bar. Therefore, private respondent has a cause of action against petitioner and the trial court erred
in dismissing the complaint below.
FACTS:
Aurora Montinola executed a “Deed of Donation Inter Vivos” in favor of her grandchildren who
are the private respondents herein. The deed contained the signatures of the donees in
acknowledgment of their acceptance of the donation. Afterwards, Montinola’s secretary
presented the deed for recording in the Property Registry and the Register of Deeds cancelled
TCT No. T-16105 (the donor’s title) and, in its place, issued TCT No. T-16622 in the name of
the donees.
However, Montinola retained the owner’s duplicate copy of the new title as well as the property
itself, until she transferred the same ten (10) years after her death. Montinola later then drew up a
deed of revocation and caused it to be annotated as an adverse claim on TCT No. T-16622
followed by filing a petition for cancellation of said TCT and the reinstatement of TCT No. T-
16105.
Her petition was granted on the ground that the donation was one mortis causa which thus had to
comply with the formalities of a will, since it had not, the donation was void and could not
effectively serve as basis for the cancellation of TCT No. T-16105 and the issuance in its place
of TCT No. T-16622.
The donees opposed the petition averring that the donation was one inter vivos which, having
fully complied with the requirements therefor set out in Article 729 of the Civil Code, was
perfectly valid and efficacious.
The trial court decided that the donation was indeed one inter vivos and dismissed Montinola’s
petition for lack of merit. The matter of its recovation was not passed upon. While appeal was
pending before the CA, Montinola died and shortly thereafter, the spouses Sicad filed a
Manifestation and Motion alleging that they had become the owners of the property covered by
TCT No. T-16622 in virtue of a “deed of definite sale” and prayed that they be substituted as
appellants and allowed to prosecute the case in their own behalf.
Another motion was presented by the legal heirs of Montinoal declaring that they were not
interested in pursuing the case and asked that the appeal be withdrawn however Montinola’s
counsel opposed the motion. CA issued a resolution ordering the legal heirs as well as spouses
Sicad as appellants and denied the motion for withdrawal of the appeal. However, the eight
division of CA denied the separate motions for reconsideration filed by Montinola’s legal heirs
and the spouses Sicad. Hence, this action.
ISSUE:
RULING:
The real nature of a deed is to be ascertained by both its language and the intention of the parties
as demonstrated by the circumstances attendant upon its execution. A donation which purports to
be one inter vivos but withholds from the done the right to dispose of the donated property
during the donor’s lifetime is in truth one mortis causa. In a donation mortis causa the right of
disposition is not transferred to the done while the donor is still alive.
In the instant case, nothing of any consequence was transferred by the deed of donation in
question to Montinola’s grandchildren; the ostensible donees. They did not get poseession of the
property donated. They did not acquire the right to the fruits thereof, or any other right of
dominion over the property. More importantly, they did not acquire the right to dispose of the
property – this would accrue to them only after ten (10) years from Montinola’s death. Indeed,
they never even laid hands on the certificate of title to the same. They were therefore simply
“paper owners” of the donated property. All these circumstances, including, to repeat, the
explicit provisions of the deed of donation – reserving the exercise of rights of ownership to the
done and prohibiting the sale or encumbrance of the property until ten (10) after her death –
ineluctably lead to the conclusion that the donation in question was a donation mortis
causa, contemplating a transfer of ownership to the donees only after the donor’s demise.