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https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c130f?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09
[GREGORIO MONTINOLA v. MARIA PIEDAD VILLANUEVA ET AL.](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c130f?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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49 Phil. 528

[ G. R. No. 26008, November 04, 1926 ]

GREGORIO MONTINOLA, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. MARIA PIEDAD VILLANUEVA ET AL., DEFENDANTS AND APPELLANTS.

D E C I S I O N

VILLAMOR, J.:

In the proceeding  for  the settlement of the intestate estate of Manuel  Seijo, deceased,  in the Court of First Instance  of  Iloilo,  bearing No. 850, the  herein plaintiff Gregorio  Montinola presented a claim for P16,337.70 which said estate owed him, to  the committee on appraisal and claims.   The claim was approved  by said  committee, its report having been approved by the Court of First Instance, without any appeal having been taken  from said approval either by the administrator of  the  estate  or the heirs of Manuel Seijo.

Judging from the record, it appears that while said claim was pending payment, cadastral proceedings Nos. 6 and 9, which included lots Nos. 3792, 4499, 4330 and 3302, and lots 207, 210, 277,  306 and 1040, were being held in the same court.  These nine lots were claimed by Maria Piedad Villanueva in her own behalf and that  of  her minor children Jose, Benjamin, Fe, Esperanza and Lourdes Seijo, had with her deceased husband Manuel Seijo.   The court ordered the adjudication and registration of said lots in said cadastral proceedings in the name of the children of Manuel Seijo, subject to the usufructuary right of the widow Maria Piedad Villanueva.   (Exhibit H.)

On April 6, 1922, in the proceeding for the settlement of the intestate estate of  the deceased Manuel Seijo, the court' authorized the  administrator  to sell the nine  lots above-mentioned for the  purpose of paying  the  expenses of the administration and the claim of Gregorio Montinola for the amount of P16,337.70.  Said administrator, however,  could not make the sale for the reason that the lots appeared  to  be the individual property of  the  heirs of Manuel Seijo in  said cadastral  proceedings,  for which reason the administrator applied for the cancellation of said titles  and the issuance of new ones in his  name, which application was denied by the lower court,  its judgment having later  been affirmed by this court.[1]

In view of the fact that the titles to said  lots were issued in the name of the heirs of the deceased Manuel Seijo, the court,  in said  intestate  proceeding No.  850,  ordered the administrator to return the ownership of all  the  lots to the persons to whom they were adjudicated in the cadastral proceedings,  without  having  paid the claim  of Gregorio Montinola, which gave rise  to this action.

The plaintiff  prays  that his  claim for P16,337.70  be declared a legal lien on the lands described in certificates of title Nos. 21523 (Exhibit H), 9498  (Exhibit I), 10926 (Exhibit J),  9493 (Exhibit K) and 7573 (Exhibit L), and that  the  defendants  be  sentenced  to pay,  jointly   and severally,  the amount of P16,337.70  and the  costs of this action.

The defendants set up a counterclaim against the plaintiff for the sum of P46,938.39,  the balance resulting in favor of the estate from  the  liquidation, of account made by the heirs  of Manuel Seijo, alleging that the property to which the plaintiff refers  having been adjudicated in favor of the defendants,  without any lien  on said property appearing on the respective titles,  the  same cannot be sold and the proceeds applied to the payment of the alleged indebtedness.

The lower court rendered judgment in favor of the plaintiff, ordering the defendants Maria Piedad Villanueva, Jose, Benjamin,  Fe, Esperanza and Lourdes,  surnamed Seijo, jointly to pay the plaintiff Gregorio Montinola the sum of P16,337.70, with legal interest from  the date of the  filing of the complaint, and costs.

The appellants allege that the lower court  erred: (a) In holding in  its decision that the debt claimed by Gregorio Montinola  is indisputable as res judicata; (b)  in holding in its decision that the properties adjudicated to the minors Jose,  Benjamin,  Fe, Esperanza and Lourdes,  surnamed Seijo, covered by titles Nos.  3792, 4499,  4330,  3302, 207, 210, 297, 306 and 1040 are subject to the payment of Manuel Seijo's debt, and (c) in not admitting the  evidence presented by the defendants tending to show that Gregorio Montinola  far from being a  creditor is, on the contrary, a debtor of the  defendant minors.

The contention of the appellants in these three assignments of error is not tenable.

Section 70  of Act No. 496 provides:
  "SEC. 70. Registered land, and ownership therein,  shall in all respects be subject to the same burdens and incidents attached by law to  unregistered  land.  Nothing contained in this Act shall in any way be construed to relieve registered land or the owners thereof from any rights incident to the relation of husband and wife, or from liability to attachment on mesne process or levy on execution, or  from liability to any lien of any description established by law on land and  the buildings thereon, or the interest of the owner in such land  or  buildings, or to change the laws of descent, or the rights of partition  between coparceners, joint tenants and other cotenants, or the right to  take the same by eminent domain, or to relieve such land from liability to be  appropriated in  any lawful  manner for the payment of debts, or to change or affect in any other way any other rights  or  liabilities created by  law and applicable to unregistered land, except as otherwise expressly provided in this Act or in the amendments hereof"
On the other hand, section 731 of the Code of Civil Procedure, among other  things, says:
"*   *  *  The  persons  who as heirs,  have received the estate not  disposed of by will, shall be liable to contribute like the devisees  or  legatees."
In accordance with these statutory provisions, this court, in the case of Pavia vs. De  la Rosa (8 Phil., 70), held:
  "In accordance with the provisions of  the aforesaid Act No. 190, it is understood  that testate or intestate  succession is always accepted with  benefit of inventory,  and the heirs,  even after  taking possession of the estate  of the deceased, do not make themselves responsible for the debts of the deceased with their own property,  but  solely with that property coming from the testate  or intestate succession of  the deceased"
Said doctrine was confirmed in  Suiliong  & Co. vs. ChioTaysan (12 Phil.,  13), in  which it was said:
"Under  the provisions of the new Code of Civil Procedure, the heir is not as such personally  responsible for the debts and obligations  of the deceased,  in  whole or in part; and,  on  the other hand, the property  of the deceased comes to him charged with the debts of the deceased,  so that he  cannot  alienate or charge  it free of such  debts, until and unless they are extinguished  either by payment, prescription, or satisfaction  in one or  the other  of the modes recognized  by law."
And in Lopez vs.  Enriquez (16 Phil., 336), this court stated:
"Heirs are not required to respond with their own property for the debts of their deceased ancestors.  But even after  the partition of an estate, heirs and distributees are liable individually  for the  payment of all lawful outstanding claims against the estate in proportion to the amount or value of the property they have respectively received from the estate.   The hereditary  property consist only of that part  which remains after the settlement of all lawful claims against the estate, for the settlement  of which the entire estate is first liable.   The heirs cannot, by any act of their own  or  by agreement among themselves,  reduce the creditors' security for the payment  of their claims."
What has been said resolves the first two assignments of error.  As to the third ground of the appeal,  it is to be observed that section 696 of the  Code of Civil Procedure provides:
"When a creditor against whom the deceased has claims presents a claim  to the committee, the executor or  administrator shall  exhibit the claims of the deceased in offset to the  claims of the creditor, and the  committee  shall ascertain and allow the balance for or against the estate, as they find the same to be.

"Claims in favor of the estate and against a creditor who presents  a claim for allowance against the estate shall be barred, unless so presented by  the executor or administrator as an offset; but the committee shall have  no jurisdiction over claims in favor of the estate, except as offsets to claims  presented against the estate."
The counterclaim of the defendants not having been presented in due time to the committee on appraisal and claims, which considered  the claim  of the plaintiff,  this question cannot now be raised.   (Bayot vs. Zurbito, 39 Phil., 650.)

For the foregoing, the assignment of errors of the appellants cannot be sustained and the indebtedness of the intestate estate claimed in this proceeding must  be, as it is hereby, held to be  a legal lien  on the  property described in certificates of title Nos. 21523 (Exhibit H), 9498 (Exhibit I), 10926 (Exhibit J), 9493  (Exhibit K) and  7573   (Exhibit L), and,  therefore, the judgment appealed from is modified to the effect that the amount claimed by the plaintiff must be paid out of the property aforesaid, but  only to the extent of the value of  the same, with the costs against the appellants.  So ordered.

Avanceña, C. J., Johnson,  Street,  Ostrand, Johns,  Romualdez, and Villa-Real, JJ., concur.



[1] Director  of Lands vs. Abdon, G.. R.  No. 20625,  promulgated August 27, 1923, not reported.

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