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[GUILLERMO F. BOWLER v. INTESTATE ESTATE OF MATEA ALVAREZ Y RUBIO](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/ca01?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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23 Phil. 561

[ G.R. No. 7519, December 06, 1912 ]

GUILLERMO F. BOWLER, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. THE INTESTATE ESTATE OF MATEA ALVAREZ Y RUBIO, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT.

D E C I S I O N

TORRES, J.:

Appeal  by counsel for the judicial administrator of the estate of  the deceased Matea Alvarez y Rubio, by means of a bill of exceptions, from the judgment of September 22, 1911,  wherein the honorable Charles S. Lobingier, judge, held that the claim based on the document submitted by the plaintiff on July 9, 1910, in administrative proceedings No. 1024  and  duplicated in case No. 7939,  constitutes a  legal claim against  the  estate  of the said deceased, thereby admitting said  claim and authorizing the administrator to pay it.

On  October 20, 1910, counsel for the plaintiff, Guillermo F. Bowler, filed in the Court of First Instance of this city an  amended complaint against the intestate estate of the deceased Matea Alvarez y  Rubio, setting forth that the administration of the estate of said intestate is pending in Sala II of the court of this  city under the old No.  1025; that at the time  of her death, and  for many  years  prior thereto, the said Matea Alvarez y Rubio lived in the  town of Capiz, province of the.same name; that she died a widow on  May 26, 1897, intestate and leaving no heir by  force of law, and therefore the Court of First Instance of Capiz immediately proceeded to provide for her intestate estate in accordance with  article  942 of the Ley de  Enjuiciamiento Civil then in force; that the next day, that is, May 27,  Marcos Arcenas, legitimate son of Maria Geronimo Rubio, appeared in the case and in the court with a power of attorney executed in his favor on that date by his mother, proving the latter's relationship  to the deceased Matea Alvarez y Rubio within the fourth degree, as she was the aunt  of  the deceased Matea;  that  the court held  such  relationship to be proven and, in conformity with  article 944 of the said Ley, ordered the delivery of all the property and effects, including the business and stock, belonging to the deceased to the said Marcos Arcenas in the character  of  representative of Maria Geronimo Rubio, all legal intervention ceasing on  May  31 of that year,  1897; that in addition to Marcos Arcenas' mother there survived the deceased Matea Alvarez, Victorina Rubio and  Manuel Rubio, uncle and aunt  of the deceased and brother and sister  of the said  Maria  Geronimo Rubio,' who then resided  in the Island of Cebu, and who, in the month of the  death  of Matea Alvarez, executed  powers of attorney in  favor  of the said  Marcos Arcenas, so that he might represent them and look after their  interests as heirs of the deceased; that as such representative of the three sole heirs of the deceased Matea Alvarez, Marcos Arcenas  took over the business belonging to her and assumed possession of all the property, real and personal, and the live stock, of the intestate  estate, until  he  was  relieved in November,  1900,  by  a judicial administrator appointed by the Court  of First Instance  of this city; that at 'the death of Matea Alvarez y Rubio her intestate succession had little ready cash and, in consequence of the revolution which a little while after her death spread to the Province of Capiz, Marcos Arcenas as administrator of the property and business of the deceased had to ask for extensions of time for the payment of the  debts contracted by the deceased and to borrow various sums, to carry on the business  she  left, and to avert great damage to the interests of the three heirs he represented; that among said debts of the deceased Matea Alvarez y Rubio appears a note reading thus: 

"I hereby acknowledge that I owe Don Guillermo Bowler thirteen  thousand  nine  hundred  and  fifteen  (pesos) (P13,915)  which he has furnished me in cash,  as  a loan without interest, and obligate myself with all my property, present and, future,  to return to him the said sum in two years, reckoned from this date, that is, on January tenth, eighteen  hundred and ninety-eight. 

"And to make his rights a matter of record I deliver the present to him  in the presence of Don Marcos  Arcenas, Don Antonio Laserna and  Don Rafael Rodriguez, of this place.

    "Capiz, January 10, 1896.
(Sgd.)
"MARCOS ARCENAS.
  "ANTONIO LASERNA.
  "MATEA ALVAREZ
  "RAFAEL RODRIGUEZ."

This note does not express the true intention and agreement between the  parties, for the sum received by Matea Alvarez y Rubio was not P13,915, but P11,500, with interest at  10 per cent compounded at the end  of each  year, as shown by the accounts of the deceased.  Instead of stating these facts in the  note, the contracting parties calculated the interest for two years and added it to the amount borrowed, that is, the sum of P2,415, and  entered the total amount, P13,915 in said note, with the statement that  it was without interest, then a very general custom  in these Islands.  When the foregoing note became due on  January 10, 1898, Marcos Arcenas lacked funds with which to pay it, wherefore he  sought and obtained from the creditor an extension of one year, thereupon executing in Bowler's favor the following document:

"In view of the circumstances  that have not permitted nor  permit  the  payment of  the P13,915  called for in the' preceding document, it has been  agreed between the creditor Don Guillermo Bowler and Don Marcos Arcenas, the latter as the representative of Dona  Geronima Rubio, who is by judicial order now in possession of the property left by Dona Matea Alvarez Rubio, to extend the time of settlement for one year,  reckoned  from the date it became due, that is, until January 10, 1899.

"Capiz,  July 1, 1898.
                     
  "G. BOWLER.
  "MARCOS ARCENAS."

When the extension agreed upon had elapsed, the intestate succession of the deceased was  in a worse financial condition than before, on account of the insurrection in the country, so Marcos Arcenas was obliged to asjc the creditor for another extension, and  when he had secured it, Marcos Arcenas as representative and agent of the heirs and also as an heir himself,  for his mother Maria Geronimo Rubio had died in the meantime, executed the  document herewith reproduced:

"The undersigned, in his own name and as the general representative  of the heirs  of  Maria  Geronimo  Rubio, acknowledging  to be true  and genuine the obligation  of payment contracted  by Dona Matea  Alvarez  y Rubio  on January 10, 1896, in favor of Don  Guillermo Bowler,  to which  obligation  the present document  refers, will  pay to the said Don Guillermo Bowler  the sum of thirteen thousand nine hundred and fifteen pesos on January 10, 1900, and in addition, as  interest on the said sum, ten per cent thereof annually, reckoning from January 10,  1898, until the date of payment, without prejudice to Don  Guillermo Bowler's right,  in case of insolvency, to proceed against the intestate estate  of the said Dona Matea Alvarez y Rubio for the amount stated.  I will make payment of the capital and interest stated  in the city  of Iloilo, to the order of Don Guillermo Bowler or his duly authorized representative.

"Capiz, March 5,1899.

(Sgd.)  "MARCOS ARCENAS."

Neither does the foregoing document express the  true intention and agreement  between the parties,  because the interest, according to the agreement, was payable  at the end of each year, while in  fact it was paid on September 26,  1900, by Pedro Arcenas  Rubio, the  successor of said Marcos Arcenas Rubio, who on July 11,1900, appointed the said  Pedro Arcenas  his  successor in the office of  representative and agent  of the three heirs, Maria  Geronimo Rubio,  Victoriha Rubio, and Manuel Rubio, with full powers, granted by them.   The balance struck ia shown in a document, a copy whereof follows:

"Don Guillermo Bowler, according to current account and reciprocal1 interest at 10 per cent a year:

DEBIT.
CREDIT.
1900.
1898.
July 12.  Paid through
Dona Felisa- F.  de
Viaplana...................... $1,350.00

Jan. 10.  Balance ..................................

                        1899.

$13,915.00
  Jan.  10.  Interest  for  one year................
l,391.50
  Dec. 31.  Interest from  Jan. 10 to date......
1,488.13
 
1900.
  June 30.  Interest from  Jan. 10 to date.....
839.73
   
17,634.36
  ."Capiz,  September 24, 1900

(Sgd.)   "Pedeo Arcenas.

"Accepted:   

(Sgd.)   "WM. F.  BOWLER.

"BACOLOD, NEGROS, October 8, 1900."

Nor was any payment made  when  the second extension expired, but five months after  that date Marcos Arcenas began to make payments as interest,  thus:

July 12, 1900. Paid through Dona Felisa J. de Viaplana, of Silay, Occidental Negros............................................................................................................................

$1,350.00
Sept. 27, 1900. Idem, Messrs. Hoskyn & Co., of Iloilo................................................. 
1,440.00
Oct.  20, 1900. Idem, Mr.,Buchanan, of Iloilo.................................................................
27.25
Nov. 28, .1900. Idem,  the Chinaman  Conclu ...............................................................
28.99
Nov. 28,  1900. Proceeds from firewood ......................................................................
91.77
Nov. 28,  1900. Paid through N. Azcona. ..:...................................................................
182.50
 
3,120.51

On October 12 of the same year, 1900, the plaintiff sold and delivered to Pedro Arcenas 252 demijohns for his use in the nipa wine distillery belonging to the intestate estate, the operation of wnich was continued after the death of Matea Alvarez y  Rubio.   The pric6  stipulated for  said demijohns was 311.25 Mexican pesos, so that on November 30, 1900, the result of all  said transactions  between the intestate estate and the plaintiff was a balance in the latter's favor of $15,497.32 Mexican, as appears from the account books of said deceased, which were kept up by Marcos and Pedro  Arcenas, and from which the last-named took and delivered to the plaintiff the following account;

"Don  Guillermo Bowler, according to current account, and interest  at 10 per cent up to November 30, 1900. 

DEBIT.

Paid through J. Viaplana..............................
Idem, on account to Hoskyn......................
Received from Buchanan..........................
Idem, from Chinaman, V. Conclu..............
Proceeds from firewood and nipas.............
Received from D. N. Azcona...................
14,826.10 trial balance............................
Balance in his favor on new account.........
July 12 
Sept. 27
Oct. 20
Nov. 28
...do....
...do...
...do...
...do...
1,350.00 
1,440.00
27.26
28.99
91.77
182.50
   .................
15.497.32
18,617.83
12 
89
112
151
151
151
153 ________
_ _ _ _ _
16200 
128160 
3024 
4228
   13741
27482
268225
___________
2461060

CREDIT.

Balance in his favor.......................................
262 demijohns..............................................
Interest, in his favor, 2420008/3600.............

Balance in his favor.....................................

June 30 
Nov. 9
............



Nov. 38

17,634.36 
311.25
672.22
________
18,617.83
________
15.497.32

.......... 
132
...........
______
...........
______
............
.............
41052 
2420008 
_______
   2461060
_______
................

Not  only did  Marcos Arcenas  seek  extension for  the debt to plaintiff but he also, under the same authority and power, borrowed from various persons sums that amounted to $20,000, which have been  allowed and paid by judicial order  and wholly for the benefit of the  entire  estate and its heirs, in order to avoid  loss and  damage to them.   All the acts executed by Marcos Arcenas and his successor in the management of the estate and business of the intestate estate were performed with full knowledge  and approval of  all the heirs.  Since the  appointment  of the judicial administrator in November,  1900, the plaintiff has tried by all possible means, friendly and judicial, to collect said debt, the validity whereof  the heirs  have acknowledged, and they assured him of the payment  thereof, with  the interest stipulated by Marcos Arcenas, as soon as the property of the intestate estate should be  adjudicated.  In spite of the fact that the present administrator, appointed in 1903, knew perfectly well that the intestate estate owed large sums, yet he did not ask for the appointment of a commissioner until the close of 1906.  In May, 1907, the plaintiff presented  his claim to  said  commissioners  and it was allowed to the extent of $23,971.80, without any objection by the heirs, although the administrator appealed to the Court "of First Instance; but on the face of the evidence said court affirmed the decision of the commissioners in the plaintiff's favor for the sum of $23,072.25, and after the matter had been carried to this Supreme Court on appeal it was decided, as appears in 13 Phil. Rep., 282.   Since the appointment of the judicial administrator in November, 1900, up to date, all the property of the intestate estate has been in administration  under the direction of the Court of First Instance of Manila, with the exception of $9,000 in cash, which have at various times been delivered to the heirs by the present administrator without any authorization, although sufficient property  remains to settle  all  the  debts  of the intestate estate.  Outside of  their respective  shares  in the intestate inheritance, the majority of the heirs is composed of insolvent persons who are financially unable to answer proportionally for the payment  of  the sum claimed in this suit, they having unlawfully taken to meet  their expenses said $9,000,  as  follows:

Victorina Rubio (original heir)...................................................
P2,599,25
Francisco Rubio (heir of the original heir Manuel Rubio)......
793.21
Heirs of the original heir,  Maria  Geronimo Rubio:
  Maria Rubio..............................................................
1,037.49
  Candelario Arcenas ...............................:..................   
680.21
  Cornelio Aldea .........................................................   
509.10
  Roque Arcenas ........................................................   
496.19
  Isidora Arcenas........................................................   
764.42
  Basilio Arcenas ......................'...............................   
169 00
  Pedro Arcenas ......................................................  
1,156.41
  Anastacia Batuigaa..................................................
543.90
  Esteban Arcenas....................................................   
104.00
  Agustin Aldea......................................................    
74.00
  Lucio Aldea..............................:........................  
9.00
   
8,936.77

On July I3, 1910, the plaintiff received on the principal debt in question the sum of P8,000  Philippine currency, without prejudice to the question of interest pending, and has not to date received any amount as  interest on said debt; therefore he begs that judgment be rendered against said intestate estate for the sum of 311.25 pesos Mexican, or its  equivalent in current money, as requested in paragraph 15 of the complaint; and  also for annual interest at the rate  of  10  per  cent, compounded at the end  of each year, from November 30,  1900,  upon the balance of 15,497.35  pesos  Mexican, according to the final statement quoted in  said  paragraph  15 of the complaint, less  the reciprocal interest  for the sum  of 3,120.59 Mexican pesos paid on account since the same date.

The demurrer interposed  by  counsel for  the  defendant having been  overruled  by order of March 17, 1910, said defendant, as judicial administrator of the property of the deceased Matea Alvarez Rubio, excepted and in reply to the previous complaint  generally and  specifically denied each and all of the facts therein alleged, with  the exception of those expressly  admitted, and  in  special defense alleged that, for the  collection of the interest at 10 per cent a year on the principal stipulated in the  note signed  by Matea Alvarez Rubio on January 10, 1896, the plaintiff presented a  claim to the  commissioners appointed, who saw fit to admit  it and  decide that the plaintiff was  entitled to collect said principal with interest at  the rate of 10 per  cent  a year,  that  is, the  sum  of 23,971.08 pesos Mexican.  The plaintiff appealed from this decision and the Court of First Instance held that  the  administration of  the property  of said deceased was liable for the settlement of said interest and therefore sentenced the administration to the payment of the sum  of 27,072.25 pesos  Mexican  with interest  at 10 per cent  a year from  September 10, 1908; but  the administrator appealed and this court, reversing the judgment of the court below, held that the intestate succession of said deceased was not  obligated  to pay the interest claimed by  the  plaintiff and merely sentenced  said  administration to pay 10,794.49 pesos Mexican with interest at the rate of 6 per cent a year from the date when the claim was presented to the commissioners.  In view of this decision,  the  question  regarding the  payment of interest of 10  per cent claimed by the plaintiff  has already  been discussed and definitely decided in a final decision rendered by a competent court and is res adjudicata.   To carry out that decision of the Supreme Court the defendant on July 9, 1910,  deposited with  the clerk of the Court of First Instance the sum of P11,384.12 Philippine currency, which represents the amount to which the plaintiff is entitled, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent a year, according to that decision of the Supreme Court, and it was necessary to make said deposit because the plaintiff refused to accept the amount offered by the defendant under that decision, although  subsequent to the date of the deposit counsel for the plaintiff took from the clerk, on account of the claim, the sum of P8,000 Philippine currency.  In order to  base his action for the collection of interest at the rate of 10 per  cent  a  year on the  document  dated March 5,  1899, signed by Marcos Arcenas in his own behalf and as representative  of the heirs of Maria Geronimo Rubio, the plaintiff should proceed against the said Marcos Arcenas and the heirs of the said Maria Geronimo Rubio, or against all the heirs of the deceased Matea Alvarez Rubio and not against the latter.  On the hypothesis that the extension for the payment of the principal owed by the deceased Matea Alvarez y Rubio has been beneficial to the administration of her property, a fact which the defendant expressly denies, then the plaintiff should present a petition to the Honorable A. S. Crossfield, judge,  who is familiar with the orders of said  administration, requesting that, after investigation of the validity and admissibility of the claim for payment of interest of 10 per cent  and for the value of the 252 demijohns, he  order the payment of said interest  and the value of the demijohns, which should be charged, as expenses of administration.  Wherefore his  action in the form  presented,  or  a separate  suit against the intestate estate of the deceased Matea  Alvarez y Rubio,  would be improper, and therefore the defendant begs that the administration of the  property  of  this  deceased be absolved from the amended complaint presented in this  case, with the costs against the plaintiff.

After trial and examination of the evidence submitted by both parties, the court on September 22, 1911, rendered judgment declaring that the claim presented by the plaintiff against the property of the deceased Matea Alvarez y Rubio was  legal  and therefore allowed and the  administrator authorized  to pay it, with  the costs.

The defendant  excepted to this judgment and asked for a new  hearing, which motion was denied by  the court, whereupon the defendant excepted and  filed the corresponding bill of exceptions, which was approved, certified and forwarded with the evidence to the clerk of this court.

The plaintiff sets up as the principal cause of action his claim for the payment  of interest at the rate of 10 per cent a year compounded at the end of each year since November, 1900,  on the balance of 15,497.36 pesos Mexican, according to the liquidation inserted in paragraph 15 of the complaint.

The defendant objected, averring that said claim for the payment of interest has already been discussed, adjudicated and finally decided by  judgment of this court rendered in the suit entered by the same plaintiff, Guillermo F. Bowler, against the  defendant  Pastor Alcazar,  as  administrator of the property of the  deceased Matea Alvarez Rubio, which judgment appears in 13 Phil. Rep., 282.  Therein this court reversed the judgment appealed from and directed the Court of First Instance to render judgment allowing the plaintiff's claim for the sum of 10,794.49 pesos Mexican, reduced to Philippine currency, with interest at the rate of 6 per cent per annum from the date of the presentation of the claim by said plaintiff to the  commissioners.

In the judgment reversed, the administration of the property of the  deceased Alvarez was held to be liable  for the payment of the principal and interest at the rate of 10 per cent a year and was sentenced to pay 27,072.25 pesos and interest thereon at 10 per cent a year from September, 1908.

So the  question submitted to the court for decision is this: The contention between the plaintiff and counsel for the intestate succession of the deceased Matea  Alvarez concerning interest on a certain sum which she owed at death having already been decided in its previous judgment, can the same question again arise in the present litigation?

In the said decision of this court, the following grounds were assigned as headnotes:

"The inclusion,  in the amount for which a promissory note is given, of interest in advance of the maturity of the note, is not of itself sufficient  evidence to prove an agreement to pay interest after maturity.

"Commissioners appointed to  hear claims  against an estate of a deceased person have no  authority to  allow a claim which arose after the death  of such  person, as for example interest due on a promissory note by  virtue of an agreement made by the creditor with one of the heirs.

"When no agreement  as to interest is made, the  interest does not commence to run  on  loans  not  mercantile until some demand for payment is made."

The plea of res adjudicata in a subsequent  suit may be supported by a judgment of execution in  a  preceding one, and is admissible, when identity of  persons,  things, and grounds of action exists in both suits,, requisites that must be present in common between the first suit already terminated by judgment of execution  and the subsequent one in which judgment is pending  as a result of the  presentation in the second litigation of a  complaint over the same thing, the allegation upon the same ground and between the same parties.

Every question decided by final  judgment  in litigation before the courts is held to be res adjudicata or, as rule 3&, title 34, partida 7, says:

"Furthermore,  we hold that a matter  which has  been adjudicated by a judgment  that cannot be  appealed from must be accepted as truth."

Therefore, a question which is res adjudicata, constitutes a legal truth, and  every judgment  or  judicial decision against which no appeal lies is said to have become res adjudicata, as Law 19, title 22, of the seventh partida says:

"A complete judgment, justly rendered by the trial judge, has such great force that thenceforth the parties and their heirs are bound to submit thereto."

Article  1252 of the Civil Code,  paragraph 1, provides:

"In order that the presumption of the res adjudicata may be valid in  another suit, it is necessary that, between the case decided by the sentence and that in which the  same is invoked, there be the most  perfect  identity between the things,  causes,  and  persons  of the  litigants, and their capacity as  such."

The effect of a judgment or final order in a suit, outside of the cases enumerated in paragraph 1  of section  306 of the Code  of Civil  Procedure, is conclusive, according to paragraph 2, with  reference to  the subject matter of the litigation  between the parties and their  successors in interest who may litigate for the same thing, under the same title and in  the same capacity.

The claim presented by the plaintiff to the commissioners appointed in the proceedings for administration of the property of the deceased intestate, Matea Alvarez, for the collec- tion not only of the principal owed, which is  set forth in the  said document  of January  10, 1896, but  also  for interest at the rate of 10 per cent a year allowed by  said commissioners and affirmed by the Court of First Instance, has nevertheless been corrected  by this  court in its  said decision of  March 23, 1909, since it declared that, in addition to the principal, the defendant only owed interest at the rate of  6  per cent.  But, notwithstanding this final judgment, the  plaintiff, on October 20,1910, again instituted the present litigation, asking in his complaint that the court render judgment among other matters for the payment of the same  interest at  the rate of 10 per  cent a year compounded at  the end of each year from November 30. 1900, on the balance of 15,497.35 pesos Mexican.  The suit having been  tried and the representative  of .the intestate succession of the deceased Matea Alvarez having been heard, the Court of First Instance rendered judgment on September 22, 1911, declaring that the  plaintiff's claim is legal  and authorizing the administrator to pay the amount thereof.

There can be no doubt that there exists identity of persons, things, and rights of action  between the present  suit and the previous one which was finally decided by this court. The previous suit, like the present, was instituted  by the plaintiff,  Guillermo F.  Bowler, against the administrator of the property of the intestate  Matea Alvarez; and the complaint upon which the  present is  based  is directed against the same intestate  succession.  In that suit, as well as in this one now submitted to the decision of the  court, interest was claimed on the principal the intestate owed at the. rate of 10 per cent a year, and for  the  same reason, that the payment  of such  interest at 10 per cent had been stipulated in the note quoted.

It cannot be denied that the right of action exercised in the previous suit is reproduced  in the present,  for each is based on  the same cause and reason, to wit, stipulation for payment  of interest at the rate of  10  per  cent a year in the said note, so there  can be no  question that the  requisites of identity of persons, things, and rights of action are present in common between the  former  suit, already terminated, and the one now pending in this second instance on appeal.  Therefore, the question now raised in this suit has already been decided by final judgment in the former  one and  has acquired  the authority of  res adjudicata,  and it would be improper to present a new complaint for collection of the same interest, already definitely decided,  in order to be again tried and  determined in this suit.

So it cannot be  denied that there exists perfect identity of things, the interest claimed, between this case and that decided by the said judgment of this court; the causes, an alleged agreement for the  payment of said interest  at  the rate of 10  per cent a year; the litigants are the  same parties  as creditor and  debtor.  The apparent difference between the defendant in  the said former suit  decided by this court on appeal and the defendant in  this suit is not an obstacle to sustaining the plea of res adjudicata herein; Pastor Alcazar was the defendant in that  former suit, as administrator of the intestate  succession of the deceased Matea Alvarez, and he represents said intestate  succession herein as such administrator, in such wise  that,  in case of judgment, the only party responsible for the payment of the  interest  at 10 per cent, claimed  by  Bowler, would be the same  intestate succession of the deceased Alvarez, especially when the principal debt was contracted by her when alive and to  her is  attributed,  after her  death, the agreement with the creditor to pay the interest at 10 per cent a year on the  principal set forth in the said note, for it was not sustained in that suit terminated  by a  final judgment of execution; and  if  in the said former suit Pastor Alcazar was  the defendant, he was such in the character of administrator of the intestate estate of the  deceased Matea Alvarez, which is the defendant herein and represented by the same Alcazar as such administrator, for collection of the same interest at 10 per cent a year, a point already discussed and decided by this court in  final form.

On this hypothesis it is improper to repeat herein the reasons and legal grounds assigned  in the former decision of this court, rendered in said case No. 5045 of the General Docket and reported in 13 Phil. Rep., 282.

The question of payment of the  sum of  311.25  pesos Mexican, or its equivalent  in current money, for 252 demijohns for wine, which the  plaintiffs  sold to  Pedro Arcenas, one of those who formerly acted as administrator of the property of the deceased Alvarez, lies especially within the jurisdiction  of the court which  heard the  proceedings in said intestate succession and it may determine the nature and  conditions of the said debt and  the person or  party liable for payment thereof.  It was improper to add the action for collection thereof to that exercised  for collection of the interest with which the value of said demijohns has no connection whatever, for if it constitutes a debt it would be for the administrator  who  contracted  it; so no  legal grounds exist whereby, in this suit, said claim may be duly decided with reference to the price of said demijohns against the intestate estate of the deceased Matea Alvarez.

For all the foregoing reasons, we hold that the judgment appealed from should be reversed and that we should absolve from the complaint, as we hereby do, the intestate succession of the deceased Matea Alvarez, represented by its administrator, Pastor  Alcazar;  without  special finding as to costs in either instance.

Arellano, C.  J.,  Mapa and Johnson, JJ., concur.
 
 



  DISSENTING


TRENT, J.,
with whom concurs Carson, J.,

I dissent.  This court says:

"So the question submitted to the court for decision  is this:  The contention between the plaintiff and counsel for the intestate succession of the deceased Matea Alvarez over interest  to  be  paid on a certain sum  which she owed at death having already been decided in its previous judgment, can the same question  again arise in the present litigation?

"There can  be no doubt that there exists  identity of persons, things, and  rights of action between the present suit and the previous one which was finally decided by this court.

*        *        *       *       *      *       *

"It cannot be denied that the right of action exercised in the previous suit is reproduced  in the present,  for each is based on the same cause and reason.   *  *  *"

I assert that this court did not decide in the former suit that the estate is  not liable for the interest which the  plain- tiff is seeking to recover.   In that case (13 Phil. Rep., 282, 286) the court  said:

"The question to be considered is, What class of demands should be presented to the commissioners  appointed to hear claims against  the estate,  and had the commissioners  any authority to  allow a claim  for  interest which  claim did not exist at the time of the death of the deceased, but arose from dealings  between the  heirs and the creditor which took place after such  death.  This  question  has already been  considered  and  decided  in the  case of  Philippine Trading Company vs.  Crossfield  (5 Phil. Rep., 400).

*        *       *       *        *       *       *

"This  claim for interest not existing prior to the death of the deceased,  and the cause of action therefor having arisen after  the  death  of Dona Matea, the commissioners erred in allowing it."

It is therefore clear that  the  court  did  not  decide that the plaintiff  could not recover from the estate the interest on the original debt.  The only question decided was to the effect that the commissioners did not have the power to pass upon this claim for the reason that the same did not exist prior to the death of the deceased.   This was the principal question in the case and the only one decided.   The court, in speaking of the instrument sued upon, said:

"It  is not necessary to consider in this case the legal effect  of  this document.  It is not necessary  to  consider whether it made  the heirs of the deceased personally liable for the payment of this debt."

The plaintiff contends and the trial  court so found "that it was necessary, in order  to maintain a  business constituting a part of  the estate to renew this loan  and to pay interest on the same, and that this being true it should be a proper charge against the  estate as  a necessary expense of administration.  This is, I might say, the only question seriously discussed in the present litigation; that is, whether or not the renewal  of the note and promise to pay interest were  necessary to carry on the business of the estate, and whether the  same should be taxed as a necessary expense of administration.  This  question  is not touched upon in the majority opinion.   It is not even mentioned.   The plaintiff contends that the court expressly refrained  from deciding whether  or not the estate is liable  for the interest and that the only question decided related to the power of the commissioners to pass  upon the claim which arose after the death  of the deceased.  In the face of  these contentions, which are supported by the judgment of the trial court, this court assumes without argument that the plaintiff's right to recover interest from the estate was finally and definitely decided adversely to him in the former suit, and then argues that this question cannot again be litigated.   Of course, if the court's  assumption is  true, the  reasons  advanced in support of the doctrine of res adjudicata are well founded; but the court  reasons  from a false  premise.  It assumes the whole controversy on  this point.   It has  simply taken for granted that the question was decided in the former suit, when, as  a  matter  of  fact, it was  not.   Even  the syllabus  (which is never the decision of the court), quoted in the majority opinion,  does not support the proposition upon which that opinion rests.  The only question before the court in the former suit was whether  or  not the commissioners had the power to  pass  upon this  claim  for interest, and  not  whether the estate was liable for said interest.  That this is true there can be no doubt,  and the only way the court can get around this fact is by assuming the contrary  to be  true.  Such an  assumption  is  wholly unwarranted.   It is contrary to the plain and positive holding in the former suit.  The question whether or not the estate is liable for the  interest not having been heretofore decided,  the  doctrine of  res  adjudicata is certainly  not applicable.


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