Judicial Guardian-Appellant Movant-Appellee Martin T. Suelto Jose M. Kimpo

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SECOND DIVISION

[G.R. No. L-27402. July 25, 1981.]

GUARDIANSHIP OF THE INCOMPETENT LEONORA NAVARRO


AND THE MINORS ADOLFO YUSON AND OTHERS,
ELDEGARDES YUSON DE PUA, judicial guardian-appellant, vs.
JUSTINIANO SAN AGUSTIN, movant-appellee.

Martin T. Suelto for judicial guardian-appellant.


Jose M. Kimpo for movant-appellee.

SYNOPSIS

In the course of the settlement of the intestate estate of the deceased


spouses Enrique and Maximina, the court approved the Project of Partition
submitted by their heirs. Among the properties awarded to the incompetent
heir Leonora were Lot No. 634-A with an area of 89,430 square meters, and
Lot Nos. 632 and 633 with an aggregate area of 1.5 hectares. Upon petition
of Leonora's judicial guardian, the guardianship court authorized the sale of
Lot No. 634-A to respondent San Agustin for P13,750.00 as per a Deed of
Absolute Sale. Simultaneous with this sale, the judicial guardian likewise
executed another deed disposing of Lot Nos. 632 and 633 in favor of the
same respondent for P8,250.00, but the petition for authority to sell the said
lots were filed later and was disapproved by the guardianship court.
Thereafter, the heirs discovered that Lot Nos. 632 and 633 actually consisted
not only of 1.5 but of 11 hectares, whereupon they submitted, and the
probate court approved, a Supplemental Project of Partition, later amended,
where the heirs "recognized and confirmed the conveyance of the rights over
Lot Nos. 632 and 633 in favor of San Agustin," and where they assigned to
Leonora all their rights over the said lots. On the basis of this amended
supplemental project of partition, respondent San Agustin filed a motion to
confirm the sale to him of Lot Nos. 632 and 633. The probate court granted
the motion. Hence, this petition.
The Supreme Court held that the sale of the ward's property without
prior approval by the guardianship court is void; and that the probate court
had no jurisdiction to authorize the sale of any property belonging to an heir
who is under guardianship, more so where the sale had been previously
disapproved by the guardianship court because it was not necessary nor
beneficial for the ward.
Assailed order set aside.

SYLLABUS

1. REMEDIAL LAW; SPECIAL PROCEEDINGS; GUARDIANSHIP; SALE


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OF WARD'S PROPERTY REQUIRES AUTHORITY OF GUARDIANSHIP COURT;
ABSENCE THEREOF IN CASE AT BAR RENDERS SALE ILLEGAL. — Reiteratedly,
this Court has ruled that under Sections 2 and 3 of Rule 96 (now Rule 95) the
properties of Leonora, the ward of appellant Mrs. de Pua, could be sold only
under authority of the guardianship court in Special Proceedings No. 282.
Without such authority, any sale would necessarily be illegal. Indeed, even
on the assumption posited by appellee that the lack of authority from the
guardianship court resulted only in a voidable sale which could be ratified,
there is no showing in the record that there was any such ratification. We
cannot go along with the proposition that the approval by the probate court
in Case No. 64-R of the amended "Supplemental Project of Partition" may be
deemed in law as tantamount to the required ratification.
2. ID.; ID.; ID.; PROBATE COURT DEVOID OF AUTHORITY TO
APPROVE SALE OF WARD'S PROPERTY; CASE AT BAR. — It is quite true that
appellant-guardian Mrs. de Pua, did sign, assisted by her lawyer, the motion
to approve said "Supplemental Project of Partition" of July 29, 1960, and that
said motion was approved by the probate court on August 29, 1960. It is
further true that in the first "Supplemental Project of Partition" it was
specifically stipulated in paragraph 7(a) "that this Estate shall recognize and
confirm the conveyance of the rights over said Lots Nos. 632 and 633, Cad.
102, with an area of 11 hectares, in favor of Justiniano San Agustin, for the
stipulated price of P8,250.00." But legally speaking, the approval by the
probate court of such project of partition (the stipulation just quoted was
specifically reiterated in the amended project dated July 29, 1960), did not in
any degree confer upon Mrs. de Pua the power to dispose of the lots in
question without prior permission of the guardianship court. Indeed, the
motion to approve referred to was signed only by Flor Unson, the Judicial
Administrator in the probate court in Case No. 64-R. We hold that that court
had no jurisdiction to authorize the sale of any property belonging to an heir
who is under guardianship without first requiring the guardian to secure the
corresponding authority from the guardianship court. Worse, much less could
the probate court have any power to effectively approve a sale of an heir-
ward which had, as in this case, been actually disapproved by the
guardianship court.
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; RIGHT TO REQUIRE RECONVEYANCE BY DEED OF
LOTS SOLD WITHOUT AUTHORITY OF GUARDIANSHIP COURT. — Appellant
guardian had every right to require the reconveyance by deed of the lots
without authority from the guardianship court, without prejudice to her
returning to appellee-buyer the P7,375.00 he appears to have paid, but not
before said appellee has accounted for the fruits of the lots in question which
have remained in his possession since 1959 and a proper set-off of the
amount of any possible additional payment has been determined.
AQUINO, J., concurring:
1. REMEDIAL LAW; SPECIAL PROCEEDINGS; GUARDIANSHIP; SALE
OF PROPERTY BELONGING TO THE WARD; REQUIREMENTS. — After
disauthorizing that sale in 1959, the lower court, as a guardianship court, if it
desired to reopen the matter in 1966, should have followed the requirements
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of sections 2 and 3 of Rule 96, now Rule 95, regarding the sale of the real
property belonging to the ward. Section 2 requires that the guardianship
court should issue an order directing the next of kin of the ward and all
persons interested in the ward's estate to appear at a reasonable time and
place to show cause why the sale should not be allowed. Section 3 requires
the guardianship court to hold a hearing and hear the proofs and allegations
of the petitioner, the ward's next of kin and the other interested persons as
to whether the sale would be for the best interest of the ward.
2. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; SALE AS CONFIRMED BY PROBATE COURT IN
CASE AT BAR TANTAMOUNT TO SALE MADE BY COURT. — It was anomalous
for the guardianship court to have approved in 1966 a sale made in 1959 by
the guardian for which there was no prior authority or license given to the
guardian, which the court had in fact disauthorized and whose rescission, at
the instance of the guardian, was sanctioned by the court, and which sale
the guardian later on opposed. The sale, as confirmed, was, in effect, a sale
made by the court and not by the guardian. It is odd for the guardianship
court to confirm in 1966 a sale made by the guardian in 1959 which the
guardian later repudiated. The unorthodox procedure followed by the court
is in contravention of Rule 96, now Rule 95, and is not within the
contemplation thereof.

DECISION

BARREDO, J : p

Appeal from the order dated November 12, 1966 approving the "Motion
for Confirmation of Deed Of Transfer of Right on Lots Nos. 632 and 633,
Cadastre No. 102 in favor of Justiniano San Agustin" of the Court of First
Instance of Davao, Branch I, Hon. Vicente N. Cusi, Jr. presiding, in Special
Proceedings (Case) No. 282, entitled "Guardianship of the Incompetent
Leonora Navarro and the Minors Adolfo Yuson and Others." prcd

The records disclose the following antecedents of this appeal:


The spouses Enrique Navarro and Maximina Bonleon died intestate in
1945 — on March 18 and February 15, 1945, respectively — leaving as heirs
the following:
a) Benita Navarro, legitimate daughter, of legal age, and
residing at Lasang, Davao City.

b) Leonora Navarro, legitimate daughter, of legal age, and


residing in Lasang, Davao City, under the judicial guardianship of Atty.
Eriberto A. Unson — later Eldegardes Yuson de Pua — Davao City.
c) Ramon Navarro and Delia Navarro, legitimate
grandchildren (children of predeceased child Antonio Navarro), eight
and seven years of age respectively, represented by their mother
Filipinas Catalan.
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In the course of the settlement of the estate of the deceased spouses
in Special Proceeding No. 64-R, entitled "Intestate Estate of the Deceased
Spouses Enrique Navarro and Maximina Bonleon" of the Court of First
Instance of Davao, Branch I, Hon. Wenceslao L. Fernan then presiding, a
Project of Partition dated June 11, 1956, executed by all the above-named
heirs with the assistance of their respective guardian and counsel, was
presented to the court for approval, which the court approved in its order
dated August 31, 1956. Among the properties awarded to Leonora Navarro in
said Project of Partition were:
xxx xxx xxx
"b) The parcel of land situated at Lasang, Davao City,
designated as Lot 634-A, with an area of 89,430 square meters, more
or less . . .

"c) All rights and interests under the portion of Lot No. (632
and 633) situated at Panabo, Davao with an area of 1.5 hectares, more
or less adjacent to the parcel of land described in Transfer Certificate of
Title No. T-1297."

On October 13, 1958, Eldegardes Yuson de Pua, eldest legitimate


daughter and judicial guardian of the incompetent Leonora Navarro Yuson,
filed a verified petition with the court below, praying for authority to sell Lot
No. 634-A. On October 25, 1958, the court issued an order granting the
judicial guardian authority to sell Lot No. 634-A on the ground that "the sale
of the aforesaid property will be beneficial to the ward and her minor
children because the proceeds thereof could be expended for their
maintenance." Accordingly, Lot No. 634-A was sold to herein appellee,
Justiniano San Agustin, for P13,750.00 as evidenced by a Deed of Absolute
Sale dated January 19, 1959. This sale was approved by the court on January
23, 1959, and Eldegardes Yuson de Pua was directed in the same order "to
deposit with the Philippine National Bank, Davao Branch, the amount of
Thirteen Thousand Seven Hundred Fifty Pesos (P13,750.00), consideration of
the aforesaid sale, in the name of the above-entitled guardianship, to be
withdrawn only upon previous approval of the court." LLphil

Subsequently, or on January 20, 1959, the same guardian Mrs. de Pua


filed a second petition in the court a quo, praying for authority to sell Lots
Nos. 632 and 633 on the following ground, to wit:
"That in view of the standing account of the estate of the insane,
Leonora Yuson and the expenses for maintenance of her children, the
herein petitioner deems it wise that the above-mentioned property,
which the estate cannot maintain or improve, be sold." (Record on
Appeal, p. 2.)

However, the true area of the two lots — i.e., eleven (11) instead of only one
and one-half (1-1/2) hectares — was disclosed in this petition, thus:
"That among the properties of the insane, Leonora Navarro, as
inheritance from the deceased spouses, Enrique Navarro and Maximina
Bonleon, are two (2) parcels of land known as Lots Nos. 632 and 633
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Cad. 102, consisting of 11 hectares, more or less, and situated at
Lasang, Davao." (Emphasis supplied) (Id., p. 2)

On the same day that this second petition was filed, Mrs. de Pua also
filed a "Motion to Approve Sale of Property" because Lots Nos. 632 and 633
had in the meantime been already sold by her to Dr. Justiniano San Agustin
the day before, i.e., on January 19, 1959, as evidenced by an instrument
titled "Transfer of Rights", that is to say, simultaneously with the other deed
which was duly authorized and approved by the court.
Acting on this second motion, on February 7, 1959, the Court denied
the petition to sell Lots Nos. 632 and 633, thus:
"Inasmuch as the judicial guardian sold just recently Lot No. 634-
A, TCT No. 1296, belonging to the ward, in the amount of Thirteen
Thousand Seven Hundred Fifty Pesos (P13,750.00), the sale of the
property mentioned in her petition filed on January 20, 1959, is not
necessary or would not be beneficial to the ward; hence, the petition to
sell is hereby denied." (Id., pp. 26-27).

Meanwhile, because the co-heirs of the ward, Leonora Navarro —


namely, Benita Navarro, Delia Navarro and Ramon Navarro, in
aforementioned Special Case No. 64-R learned thru the sale by appellant
guardian Mrs. de Pua to Dr. San Agustin that Lots Nos. 632 and 633
consisted not merely of 1.5 hectares but 11, steps were taken towards the
return of the said properties and they were correspondingly returned to the
estate for proper disposition, and as a result, a Supplemental Project of
Partition dated June 9, 1960 was arrived at, submitted to the court but
subsequently amended on July 29, 1960. The amended Supplemental Project
of Partition was also approved by the court in Case No. 64-R on August 29,
1960. Under the terms of the Supplemental Project of Partition and the
amendment thereto, the heirs agreed that —
". . . th(e) Estate shall recognize and confirm the conveyance of
the rights over said Lots Nos. 632-633, Cad. 102, with an area of 11
hectares, in favor of JUSTINIANO SAN AGUSTIN, for the stipulated price
of P8,250.00; and
". . . the heirs Benita Navarro and the minors Ramon and Delia,
both surnamed Navarro, hereby cede and assign in favor of the heir
Leonora Navarro, all of their rights, interests in the aforecited lots nos.
632-633, Cad. No. 102 and all its improvements under the
consideration that said Leonora Navarro shall pay to the aforenamed
co-heirs, namely, Benita Navarro and the minors Ramon and Delia, all
surnamed Navarro, the sum of ONE THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED PESOS
(P1,200.00) and in addition, shall release and rescind the respective
mortgage obligations of the said co-heirs in favor of said Leonora
Navarro, and with the corresponding cancellation of the annotation of
mortgage encumbrance appearing in TCT No. T-8363 of Benita Navarro
and the titles in the name of the minors Ramon and Delia, all surnamed
Navarro, which properties were assigned to said co-heirs under the
project of partition dated June 11, 1956, approved by this Honorable
Court in its Order of August 31, 1956." (Id., pp. 47-48).
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On August 21, 1962, Mrs. de Pua filed an "Ex-Parte Motion" manifesting
her desire to return to Dr. San Agustin the amount of P7,375.00 advanced by
him, so that the possession of Lots Nos. 632 and 633 may be returned to the
guardianship. This motion was granted in an order dated September 1, 1962,
pertinent portion of which provides:
xxx xxx xxx
". . . conformably with her ex-parte motion filed on August 31,
1962, P7,375.00 of said amount shall be paid to Justiniano San Agustin
so that he could return possession of Lots Nos. 632 and 633, Cad. 102,
belonging to the incompetent, to the judicial guardian . . . ." (Id., pp.
29-30)

On September 4, 1962, she followed this with an "Amended Ex-Parte


Motion" with the following relevant allegations:
xxx xxx xxx
"2. That since January 19, 1959, said Dr. San Agustin has
been in continuous possession of the said lots and has been enjoying
the fruits thereof, which fact was not alleged as it should be, in the
aforestated ex-parte motion of August 31st. (should be 21st)
xxx xxx xxx
"WHEREFORE, it is respectfully prayed that the undersigned
guardian be allowed to return the sum of P7,375.00 to Dr. Justiniano
San Agustin, less the total value of the fruits he realized from his
possession of the land in question from January 19, 1959 until he
returns the possession thereof to the undersigned-movant, the amount
of which may be ascertained from the doctor's record of production
and sales of the coconuts thereon." (Id., p. 31)

The record does not disclose the lower court's action on this "Amended
Ex-Parte Motion," Neither does it appear there that appellee ever took any
step to enforce the sale to him of the two lots in question evidently because,
as he very well knew, the Court had disapproved the same. According to
appellant on page 11 of her brief, it was only after she filed a civil action,
docketed as Civil Case No. 5160, seeking the reconveyance of the said lots
that appellee began to move by filing on September 28, 1966 a "Motion for
Confirmation of Deed of Transfer of Rights Over Lots 632 and 633, Cad. 102"
in his favor. He prayed that ". . . in the interest of justice and equity . . . the
Transfer of Rights over Lots 632 and 633 in favor of Justiniano San Agustin
be approved and confirmed by the Honorable Court." He based his alleged
right over the two lots on the "Supplemental Project of Partition" of June 9,
1960 and the "Amendment to the Supplemental Project of Partition" of July
29, 1960, which were executed by the Judicial Administrator and by the
heirs, respectively, and approved by the probate court in the intestate
proceeding, to modify, as already stated earlier, the original Project of
Partition because of the discovery of the true area of Lots Nos. 632 and 633,
which is eleven (11) hectares and not one and one-half (1.5) hectares only,
and that all the heirs agreed in said "Supplemental Project of Partition" and
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the amendment thereto, among other things, to recognize and confirm the
sale of Lots Nos. 632 and 633 in his favor, instead of partitioning the same in
some other manner. LLphil

On November 12, 1966, Mrs. de Pua filed an "Opposition to the Motion


for Confirmation, contending that:
"1. The transfer of rights over Lots Nos. 632 and 633, Cad.
102 had been passed upon and disapproved by an order of this
Honorable Court which has become final. (Referring to order of
February 7, 1959 disapproving the sale of the same lots.)

"2. The petition (motion for confirmation) is self-serving and


states on ground to warrant approval of the transfer of rights."

Over said opposition, the court issued the following order, granting Dr.
San Agustin's motion for confirmation:
"Finding the Motion for Confirmation of Deed of Transfer of Right
over Lots Nos. 632 and 633, Cad. 102 in favor of Justiniano San Agustin
filed by his counsel on September 28, 1966, meritorious, the Order of
this Court of February 7, 1959, based on erroneous facts, is hereby set
aside and the aforesaid transfer of rights signed by Justiniano San
Agustin and Leanora Navarro represented by Eldegardes Yuson de Pua,
her judicial guardian . . . is hereby approved." (Emphasis supplied)
Her motion for reconsideration having been denied "for lack of merit,"
the judicial guardian, Mrs. de Pua, is now before Us and urges the following
assignment of errors:
FIRST ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE ORDER OF THE LOWER COURT APPROVING THE TRANSFER OF
RIGHTS IN FAVOR OF JUSTINIANO SAN AGUSTIN IS CONTRARY TO
LAW ON THE FOLLOWING GROUNDS:
I. THE TRANSFER OF RIGHTS IS VOID AB INITIO; HENCE,
COULD NOT BE APPROVED NOR CONFIRMED.
II. THE TRANSFER OF RIGHTS IS NOT NECESSARY NOR
BENEFICIAL TO THE WARD.
SECOND ASSIGNMENT OF ERROR
THE ORDER OF THE LOWER COURT IN SETTING ASIDE ITS ORDER
DATED FEBRUARY 7, 1959 IS CONTRARY TO LAW ON THE GROUND
THAT IT SETS ASIDE AN ORDER WHICH HAS BECOME FINAL AND
EXECUTORY.
In support of the first assigned error, judicial guardian-appellant Mrs.
de Pua argues through counsel that the transfer of rights is void ab initio and
cannot be approved nor confirmed, because under Rule 95, Sec. 1 of the
Rules of Court, property under guardianship can be sold only by prior
authority granted by the guardianship court; that in the instant case "not
only was the transfer of rights executed by the judicial guardian without any
authority, but the petition seeking authority to sell, which was filed a day
after the actual execution of the transfer of rights, was expressly denied by
the lower court"; and, therefore, the transfer of rights is void because "a sale
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of the ward's realty by the guardian without authority from the court is void,"
citing Inton vs. Quintana, (81 Phil. 97). Furthermore, she adds that the
transfer of rights is not necessary nor beneficial to the ward. In fact, there is
no allegation at all to such effect in appellee's motion for confirmation.
Relative to the second assigned error, judicial guardian-appellant
argues that the Order of the lower court of February 7, 1959, which denied
her petition to sell Lots 632 and 633 completely disposed of her petition and,
therefore, the challenged Order of November 12, 1966, which summarily set
aside the said previous order is contrary to law.
The foregoing assignment of errors/arguments raise only one decisive
issue, which is: Whether or not, under the circumstances related above, the
lower court acted correctly in issuing the order of November 12, 1966,
approving the Motion for Confirmation of Sale of Lots 632 and 633 filed by
the appellee Dr. San Agustin and setting aside its previous order of February
7, 1959, which earlier disapproved the sale of the same lots. cdrep

We agree with appellant that the impugned order cannot stand legal
scrutiny.
To start with, it must be emphasized that what appellee asked the
court to confirm was a sale in 1959, or seven years before the filing of said
motion, and what is more, it was a sale which the court refused to authorize
in its order of February 7, 1959, for the simple reason that in its opinion,
considering that a previous sale of Lot 634-A for P13,750.00 had just been
approved, it could not see why it would again be "necessary," after just a
few days, "or beneficial to the ward" that the two lots, Lots 632 and 633
should still be sold.
Reiteratedly, this Court has ruled that under Sections 2 and 3 of Rule
96 (now Rule 95) that the properties of Leonora, the ward of appellant Mrs.
de Pua could be sold only under authority of the guardianship court in
Special Proceedings No. 282. Without such authority, any sale would
necessarily be illegal. Indeed, even on the assumption posited by appellee
that the lack of authority from the guardianship court resulted only in a
voidable sale which could be ratified, there is no showing in the record that
there was any such ratification. We cannot go along with the proposition that
the approval by the probate court in Case No. 64-R of the amended
"Supplemental Project of Partition" may be deemed in law as tantamount to
the required ratification.
It is quite true that appellant-guardian Mrs. de Pua, did sign, assisted
by her lawyer, Atty. Pedro S. Castillo, the motion to approve said
"Supplemental Project of Partition" of July 29, 1960, and that said motion
was approved by the probate court on August 29, 1960. It is further true that
in the first "Supplemental Project of Partition" it was specifically stipulated in
paragraph 7(a) "that this Estate shall recognize and confirm the conveyance
of the rights over said Lots Nos. 632 and 633, Cad. 102, with an area of 11
hectares, in favor of Justiniano San Agustin, for the stipulated price of
P8,250.00." But legally speaking, the approval by the probate court of such
project of partition (the stipulation just quoted was specifically reiterated in
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the amended project dated July 29, 1960), did not in any degree confer upon
Mrs. de Pua the power to dispose of the lots in question without prior
permission of the guardianship court. Indeed, the motion to approve referred
to was signed only by Flor A. Unson, the Judicial Administrator in the probate
court in Case No. 64-R. We hold that court had no jurisdiction to authorize
the sale of any property belonging to an heir who is under guardianship
without first requiring the guardian to secure the corresponding authority
from the guardianship court. Worse, much less could the probate court have
any power to effectively approve a sale of an heir-ward which had, as in this
case, been actually disapproved by the guardianship court. cdrep

In arriving at this conclusion, We are not overlooking the fact that the
same judge, the Honorable Vicente N. Cusi, Jr. who had issued the order
denying authority to sell Lots 632 and 633 was the very one who in his order
of November 12, 1966, here being assailed, approved the motion for
confirmation on the lame excuse, as We see it, that his previous order of
February 7, 1959 was "based on erroneous facts." What "erroneous facts "
he did not state, which circumstance readily places the order in question
subject to the omission to comply with the constitutional requirement that
final orders or decisions of courts of record should state the facts on which it
is based, which means, of course, that at least the main elemental facts
must be stated in a manner such as to enable the parties to comprehend
intelligently what they are. LexLib

Another equally important consideration lies in the way to Our giving


Our sanction to the questioned order. In the order of February 7, 1959, Judge
Cusi held the sale was neither necessary nor beneficial to the ward. The
motion for confirmation of appellee of September 28, 1966 had no allegation
at all that could induce anyone to alter the conclusion in the February 7,
1959 order. If indeed there was already need on the part of the ward
Leonora for additional funds in 1966, the court could not just assume that
such was the case, absent any allegation, much less any proof to such effect
before it.
Besides, We cannot but wonder how Lot 634-A with an area of a little
less than nine(9) hectares was sold for P13,750.00 and yet two lots,
numbered 632 and 633, indicating that they must be either contiguous to
Lot 634-A or within its immediate vicinity could be sold on the same day for
only P8,250.00. A guardianship court is designed purposely to see to it that
the interests of wards under its jurisdiction are taken care of by the court's
appointed guardian with the diligence and prudence of a bonus pater
familiae. We are not convinced that such standard of care was observed in
the impugned order of November 12, 1966.
We hold that appellant had every right to require the reconveyance by
deed of said lots, without prejudice to her returning to appellee the
P7,375.00 he appears to have paid, but not before appellee San Agustin has
accounted for the fruits of the lots in question which have remained in his
possession since 1959 and a proper set-off of the amount of any possible
additional payment has been determined. Cdpr

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WHEREFORE, judgment is hereby rendered setting aside the impugned
order of November 12, 1966, and ordering the guardianship court in Case
No. 282 of the Court of First Instance of Davao, Branch I, to proceed with the
accounting pursuant to the above opinion.
Fernandez, Abad Santos and De Castro, JJ., concur.
Concepcion, J., took no part.
Fernandez, J., member of the First Division, was designated to sit in the
Second Division.

Separate Opinions
AQUINO, J., concurring:

I concur. On January 20, 1959, Eldegardes Yuson de Pua, as guardian


of her insane mother, Leonora Navarro-Yuson, filed in the lower court (1) a
petition for authority to sell Lots 632 and 633 with an area of eleven
hectares located at Panabo, Davao and (2) another petition for the approval
of the sales to Justiniano San Agustin of the said two lots and of Lot 634-A,
with an area of more than eight hectares located at Lasang, Davao City as
evidenced by two deeds of sale executed the day before, or on January 19.
In one deed of sale, Lot 634-A was sold to San Agustin for P13,750,
while in the deed denominated "Transfer of Rights," Lots 632 and 633 were
sold to him for P8,250 of which the sum of P7,375 was paid. The sale of Lot
634-A was authorized by the lower court in its order of October 25, 1958.
That sale was approved in the lower court's order of January 23, 1959.
On the other hand, the lower court in its order of February 7, 1959
denied the petition to sell Lots 632 and 633 on the ground that the sale was
not necessary and that it would not be beneficial to the ward because on
that same day, January 19, 1959, the guardian, as stated above, sold to San
Agustin Lot 634-A .
At this juncture, it should be stated that in theintestate proceeding for
the settlement of the estates of the spouses, Enrique Navarro and Maximina
Bonleon, Lots 632 and 633 were adjudicated in the project of partition to the
incompetent, Mrs. Yuson, on the assumption that the area of the two lots
was only one and a half hectares with a value of three hundred pesos.
When in the guardianship proceeding it was discovered that the
correct area of the two lots was eleven hectares, a supplemental project of
partition dated June 9, 1960 and an amendment thereto dated July 29, 1960
were filed in the intestate proceeding with respect to Lots 632 and 633. It
was clarified therein that the sale of the two lots to San Agustin should be
respected but the estate of the ward should pay P1,200 to her co-heirs as
consideration for the transfer of their interests in the two lots.
cdrep

The lower court, as a probate court, approved the amended


supplemental project of partition in its order of August 29, 1960.
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However, notwithstanding the probate court's confirmation of the sale
to San Agustin, the guardian, Mrs. De Pua, filed two years later, or on August
21, 1962, in the guardianship proceeding a motion wherein she manifested
her desire to return to San Agustin the sum of P7,375 which he had
advanced to her for the sale of Lots 632 and 633.
The lower court, as a guardianship court, in its order of September 1,
1962 granted her motion in order to enable her to recover the possession of
the two lots from San Agustin. The record does not show whether that order
was implemented.
In spite of that order, San Agustin filed four years later or on
September 28, 1966 a motion for the confirmation of the deed of transfer of
rights covering Lots 632 and 633, which, as already stated, was executed in
his favor by Mrs. De Pua on January 19, 1959. He based his motion for
confirmation on the amended supplemental project of partition.
Mrs. De Pua, the guardian, opposed that motion on November 12,
1966. She invoked the lower court's orders of February 7, 1959 and
September 1, 1962 denying her motion for authority to sell Lots 632 and 633
to San Agustin and allowing her to rescind the sale by returning the sum of
P7,375 to San Agustin.
On that same date, November 12, 1966, the lower court overruled the
opposition, set aside its order of February 7, 1959 and granted the motion
for confirmation. That is the order under appeal in this case.
The lower court erred in setting aside its 1959 order disapproving the
sale of the two lots to San Agustin and in confirming the same sale seven
years later or in 1966.
It should be recalled that the lower court in its 1962 order, which had
not been set aside, authorized Mrs. De Pua, the guardian, to return the price
of the two lots to San Agustin or to rescind the sale. In issuing that order, the
lower court presumably acted on the theory that the sale was not beneficial
to the ward's estate since Lot 634-A, an eight-hectare land located in Davao
City, had already been sold to San Agustin on January 19, 1959 or on the
same day that Lots 632 and 633 were also sold to him.
Indeed, the lower court in its 1966 order had not made any finding that
the sale of the two lots would redound to the benefit of the ward or her
estate.
After disauthorizing that sale in 1959, the lower court, as a
guardianship court, if it desired to reopen the matter in 1966, should have
followed the requirements of sections 2 and 3 of Rule 96, now Rule 95,
regarding the sale of the real property belonging to the ward.
Section 2 requires that the guardianship court should issue an order
directing the next of kin of the ward and all persons interested in the ward's
estate to appear at a reasonable time and place to show cause why the sale
should not be allowed.
Section 3 requires the guardianship court to hold a hearing and hear
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the proofs and allegations of the petitioner, the ward's next of kin and the
other interested persons as to whether the sale would be for the best
interest of the ward.
The anomaly herein is that the guardianship court in 1966 approved a
sale made in 1959 by the guardian for which there was no prior authority or
license given to the guardian, which the court had in fact disauthorized and
whose rescission, at the instance of the guardian, was sanctioned by the
court, and which sale the guardian later on opposed. The sale, as confirmed,
was in effect, a sale made by the court and not by the guardian. LibLex

It is odd for the guardianship court to confirm in 1966 a sale made by


the guardian in 1959 which the guardian later repudiated. The unorthodox
procedure followed by the court is in contravention of rule 96, now Rule 95,
and is not within the contemplation thereof.
I vote for the setting aside of the lower court's order of November 12,
1966 and to order San Agustin to accept the sum of P7,375, to account for
the fruits of the two lots and to return the possession thereof to the guardian.

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