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https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c2f39?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09
[FRANCISCO MARTIR v. SPS. PEDRO TRINIDAD AND CARMEN VASQUEZ](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c2f39?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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105 Phil. 725

[ G.R. No. L-12057, May 20, 1959 ]

FRANCISCO MARTIR, ET AL., PLAINTIFFS AND APPELLANTS, VS. THE SPOUSES PEDRO TRINIDAD AND CARMEN VASQUEZ, DEFENDANTS AND APPELLEES.

D E C I S I O N

LABRADOR, J.:

Appeal from an order of the Court of First Instance of Negros Occidental, granting a motion to dismiss.

The complaint alleges that the spouses  Hilarion Martir and Legoria Martir, during their lifetime and  up to year 1941, were in the possession and enjoyment of a parcel of public land under fishpond permit issued by the  Government, which parcel of land they converted into a fishpond on  which bangus was  raised; that in his  will Hilarion Martir devised said fishpond to Hermogenes Martir, and the will was admitted to probate; that in October, 1940 while Hermogenes  Martir was  judicial administrator  of the estate of his parents, he obtained a loan from the defendants Pedro Trinidad and Carmen Vasquez;  that  to secure payment of said loan he executed  a deed of conditional sale of the fishpond  or his  rights  thereto; that defendants induced the said  Hermogenes Martir  through deceit, fraud or  strategem, to  execute the  deed  of conditional sale above mentioned; that said conditional sale was simulated and fictitious and, therefore, null and void. It is further alleged that by reason  of  such fraud and deceit plaintiffs herein had been caused damages in the amount of P60,000.  In the prayer, plaintiffs seek to annul the  above-mentioned conditional sale  and  the return  of the fishpond, as well as the payment of damages to them.

The plaintiffs are minor children of the deceased Hermogenes Martir.  From a decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. No. L-4054-R, entitled "The  Government of the Republic of the Philippines and Pedro Trinidad, plaintiffs-appellants, vs. Angela Martir, Antonio Guanzon and Hilario Midez,  defendants-appellees," submitted by the defendants in support of their motion to dismiss, it appears that there was a previous litigation for the recovery of the possession of the fishpond, and defendants in this action, plaintiffs in the said case, obtained a decision of the Court of Appeals declaring them entitled to the possession of the fishpond.

On the basis of the  decision of the Court of Appeals, the  defendants moved  to dismiss, alleging  the following grounds:  (1) That plaintiffs have no cause of action;  (2) That the cause of action, if any, is barred by a prior judgment and by the statute of limitations; and (3) That the action is not brought in the name of the real party  in interest.

The lower court sustained the motion to dismiss, holding that the plaintiffs do not have  a cause of  action because they  are not primarily or subsidiarily liable under the contract; that the action has prescribed because the same should have been filed 4 years from October 1,  1942, but that they filed this case  only on June 27, 1957; and  that it is also barred by a prior judgment.

Against the  above order  of  dismissal, plaintiffs have prosecuted this  appeal.

With respect  to the first ground upon which the motion to  dismiss was sustained,  we find that appellants' claim that a cause of action exists or existed in their favor  is well taken.  Plaintiffs in this action are the children  of the late Hermogenes Martir who executed  the deed  of conditional sale, allegedly  obtained by the defendants  in a fraudulent manner.  As the contract involved is  a  conditional  sale of the rights to the fishpond,  the subject  of the contract are  real rights thereto transmissible  to the heirs of the deceased Hermogenes Martir.  (Art. 776, old Civil Code).

Appellants argue  also that the judgment  rendered by the Court of Appeals is not binding on them.  There  is also merit in this contention because neither Hermogenes Martir nor his  administrator were parties  to said  action.

The appellants  further  argue that the finding of the court below that the action has prescribed is not supported by the facts, for  the reason that the plaintiffs herein are still minors  and have not yet become of age, so  that  they can still bring  the action.   There is no merit in this argument.  The cause  of  action  arose  in 1940, when the supposed deed of conditional sale was supposedly secured through fraud  and deceit  by the defendants  in the  case at  bar.   The cause of action arose from that date, as there is no allegation that fraud was discovered later.  The cause of  action accrued  not in favor  of the minors herein, but in favor of the father who was the person against whom fraud  was committed.  Their  father  died  in 1943, and upon  his death the four year period of filing the action on ground of fraud had not yet expired.   But the  disability of the plaintiffs can not be  tacked to the disability caused by  their father's  death, because tacking of disabilities is not  allowed.
"Except where the statute  otherwise so provides,  one disability cannot be tacked to  another, nor the disabilities  of an ancestor to those of the heir, to protect a party from the operation of the statute; nor can a party avail himself of several disabilities, unless they all existed at the time when the right of action accrued  * * * This is an obedience to the universal rule, before stated, that when the statute once begins  to run no subsequent disability can stop  its operation, unless  specially so provided in the statute."   (Wood on Limitations, 3d edition, pp.  554-557).

'Disability cannot be added to disability.  If that were permitted a right might travel through minorities for an indefinite time for two centuries, Lord Eldon said.  Demarest m Wynkoop, 3 Johns, Ch., 129,  139; 8 Am. Dec., 467/  (Messinger vs. Foster, 101 N.Y. Supp. 387.)"

"* *  *  The  Rule  stated is  in complete harmony with the Civil Law on the  subject;  the heir or successor acquires the rights of the predecessor  and no more.  'The heir represents the person of the deceased, and both are even considered as one same person: haeres censetur, cum defuncto una eademque persona; 'according to law,' says law 13, tit. 9, Part 7, 'the person of the heir and that of him from whom he inherits is considered as one.'   (Escriche's Dictionary, title 'Heredere'".

"* * * The following are general rules as to successors: He who succeeds to the right or property of another must use the same right as he: qui in jus dominumve alterius  succedit, jure ejus  uti debet. The successor cannot be in a better condition than  big predecessor: non debeo meliores esse  conditions quam auctor neus, a quo jus ad ge  transit."   (Ibid.,  title  "Successor.")  (Quijano and  Heirs  of Francis vs. Gomez Cabale, pp. 49 Phil.,  367).
Upon their father's death,  his administrator or his heirs had the right  to continue the action,  which  has already started  to  accrue, for the remaining period,  which is only one year more.   Instead of filing the action within  that remaining period of time, the heirs brought the same only after 13  years from  the time  the right to bring it had expired.

The order of dismissal is hereby affirmed, on the ground of the limitation of  the  action,  with costs against  the appellants.

Paras,  C.  J., Bengzon, Padilla, Montemayor,  Reyes, A., Bautista Angelo,  Concepcion, and Endencia, JJ., concur.

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