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[SEVERINO VILLARRUZ v. ISIDRO AZARRAGA](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/cdd6?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. 4913, Jan 27, 1910 ]

SEVERINO VILLARRUZ v. ISIDRO AZARRAGA +

DECISION

15 Phil. 108

[ G.R. No. 4913, January 27, 1910 ]

SEVERINO VILLARRUZ, ADMINISTRATOR OF THE ESTATE OF GREGORIO VILLARRUZ, DECEASED, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLEE, VS. ISIDRO AZARRAGA, GUARDIAN OF THE MINORS MARIA FELISA AND JESUS BELLOSILLO Y AZARRAGA, DEFENDANT AND APPELLANT.

D E C I S I O N

MORELAND, J.:

Gregorio Villarruz had two sons; one, Severino Villarruz, the  plaintiff in this action; the other,  Ignacio  Bellosillo. The first was a legitimate son.   It is claimed in this case that the other was  illegitimate.   Whether he was or not we do not now decide.

For several years prior to the year 1900 said Gregorio Villarruz and said Ignacio Bellosillo had  sustained business relations with each other.  Ignacio seems to have had entire charge of the business of Gregorio during that period.  In the year  1900 Ignacio,  being in failing health, found  it necessary to go to Manila to be cured of his infirmity.   Just prior to  his departure he went carefully over the book of accounts which he kept showing the relations'between himself and  his father and  found a  balance due from him to his father of P10,102.  This balance he duly entered in the book  as  a part of the  account  between himself and his father, placed the book in his safe with  some other papers and delivered the key thereof to his father.  At the time of delivering the key to  his father he told him of the fact that he had balanced the books between them and that there was a balance in favor of the father of  said amount.  He also acknowledged to  his  father that he owed  him  that amount and that he would find the evidence thereof in his safe.

Ignacio went to Manila and there died on the 3d day of November, 1900.   On arriving in Manila Ignacio deposited in the Banco Espanol-Filipino the sum of P22,870, most of which was still on deposit in said  bank at the time he died. Ignacio left surviving him his wife Filomena and two minor children, Felisa Bellosillo and Jesus Bellosillo, his only heirs at  law.   During the  month  of April or May,  1901,  the defendant, Isidro Azarraga, was appointed guardian of said children.   Immediately after his appointment as such guardian  the defendant  withdrew from  the said bank substantially all of the money there on deposit.  So far as  can be  ascertained from the record in this case  said money so deposited, if it were  the money of Ignacio,  constituted all of  his estate.  The claim of Gregorio for the said balance seems to have been the only debt outstanding against Ignacio when he died.

Gregorio Villarruz  died in Capiz on  the 31st day of July, 1905.  During his lifetime he made no effort to collect  the amount due  him from Ignacio.  Soon after his  death  the plaintiff was appointed his administrator and duly qualified as such.   This action is brought by the plaintiff as administrator of  his father's estate to recover from the defendant as guardian the sum due from the estate of Ignacio Bellosillo to the estate of Gregorio Villarruz, basing that  right of action upon the claim that the defendant as  guardian took possession of the estate of the deceased Ignacio, converting the same  to his use as such guardian  and that thereby  he became responsible for the  debts of  the said  Ignacio Bellosillo.

Judgment  was rendered in favor  of the plaintiff in  the court below for the sum of P10,102, with interest thereon from  the  commencement of the action.   From that  judgment  this appeal is taken.

We have carefully examined the fourteen assignments of error on  the part  of the  appellant's  counsel  and passed adversely  upon them  all.  We  find  it necessary  to  refer specifically to only the following ones, the others being reviewed by  implication.  The first  is an objection to the jurisdiction of the court on  account  of the lack of personality of the plaintiff, accompanied with the allegations that the facts stated in the complaint are insufficient to sustain a cause of action and that  the complaint is unintelligible and vague.  There is no question about the right of an administrator to begin an action for the purpose of recovering a debt due the estate.   That is expressly granted by section 702 of the Code of  Civil Procedure.  The complaint states facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action, clearly and definitely.

In the second error assigned  the  defendant's  counsel maintains that the court below had no jurisdiction over the subject-matter of the litigation, alleging that actions against executors, administrators, and guardians, touching the performance of their official duties, and actions for account and settlement by them, and actions for the distribution of the estates  of deceased persons among the heirs and distributees, and actions  for the  payment  of legacies,  shall be brought in the province in which the will was admitted to probate  or  letters of  administration were granted or the guardian was appointed.   The  action  at  bar is  not one which falls within the terms or the meaning of said section. The action  was  properly brought  in  the  Court of First Instance of Capiz.

As to  the   eleventh error assigned by  the  appellant, namely, that the right  to maintain the action had prescribed before its commencement, it is necessary only to  refer to section 38 of the Code  of Civil Procedure.  It has been held by  this court  that the rule of prescription  to be applied where the right of action arose before the present code went into effect  is that stated in the Civil Code or in the laws in force prior to the Civil Code.  (Araneta vs. Garrido, 5 Phil. Rep., 137; Magallanes vs. Caneta, 7 Phil. Rep., 161; Tubucon vs. Dalisay, 7 Phil. Rep., 183; Palacio vs. Sudario, 7 Phil. Rep., 275; Fianza vs. Reavis, 7 Phil. Rep., 610; Civil Code, arts.  1941, 1964.)   These references clearly affirm the right of the  plaintiff to maintain  the action notwithstanding the claim that it has prescribed.

The evidence supporting the  statement  of facts  above set forth is substantially undisputed.  It is substantially undisputed that  Ignacio  Bellosillo  prepared the account book between  himself  and his father and left that book in the possession of his father in order that he might know the condition of the account between them.   It is substantially undisputed that that book showed a balance of P10,102 in favor of the father and against Ignacio.  It is undisputed that Ignacio told his father in  the presence of three other persons that he, Ignacio, owed his father the sum of P10,102, the sum indicated in  the account book.  The  existence of the account book was clearly proved, and the  handwriting therein showing the status of the account between the father and Ignacio was clearly  shown to  be the  handwriting of Ignacio.  It is clearly proved that said book was left by the father in the possession of the  wife  of Ignacio and that it was never seen by the father thereafter.  It is undisputed that the plaintiff sought after  the  commencement  of this action to obtain possession of such book for the purpose of producing it in evidence and that he was unable to do so. It is admitted in the record that a subpcena for its production was secured and  served  upon the defendant and that the defendant failed and neglected  to produce such book for evidentiary  purposes.  Its  contents were  proved by several reputable and disinterested witnesses.  Letters from Ignacio to his father disclosing  substantially the  same condition of the account as indicated by the account book itself were identified and  proved and  were admitted  in evidence. There was substantially no  evidence  disproving any of the facts above stated except the very improbable story of some of  defendant's  witnesses,  who  alleged that said account book had been fabricated and made up for the occasion by Gregorio Villarruz and that early  one morning, during the absence  of  Filomena  at church,  said Gregorio  Villarruz surreptitiously  entered her house  and by connivance with her servants placed the said book in the safe where  it was later found.  The court below for apparent reasons rejected this story as untrue and passed  upon the  credibility of the witnesses presenting it.

The evidence of record abundantly justifies the decision of the court below.

The judgment of the court  below is, therefore, affirmed, with costs against the appellant.  So ordered.

Arellano, C,  J., Torres,  Mapa,  Johnson,  Carson, and  Elliott, JJ., concur.

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