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[MATILDE ARAMBURU Y GARCIA v. ANGEL ORTIZ](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/cddb?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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14 Phil. 691

[ G.R. No. 5398, January 07, 1910 ]

MATILDE ARAMBURU Y GARCIA, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT, VS. ANGEL ORTIZ, DEFENDANT AND APPELLEE.

D E C I S I O N

TORRES, J.:

On the 4th  of October, 1907, counsel for Matilde Aramburu y Garcia presented a written complaint against Angel Ortiz,  alleging that in suit No. 2060, brought  in the Court of First Instance of Manila by  virtue of the claim filed by Angel  Ortiz on  August 20,   1903, against the heirs of the late Ceferino Aramburu y Lambarri,  one of whom) is the plaintiff Matilde Aramburu  y Garcia, for the recovery of certain moneys,  judgment was rendered  on  the 28th of October,  1905, sentencing the  defendants, Ceferino, Josef a, Matilde,  Adelaida, Leonor, Encarnacion, Angel, Jose, Carmen, Alfredo, and Julia, all  bearing the surname of Aramburu, as  heirs of said deceased, to pay to the,plaintiff Ortiz the sum of P262,628.19 with the agreed interest of 8  per  cent thereon from the 1st  of July, 1903, until  full payment was  made, with costs.  It  was therein provided, however, that  the five last-named  defendants,  Angel, Jose, Carmen, Alfredo, and Julia Aramburu, being minors, should only be obligated to  the  extent of the property they respectively inherited from their father.  At the request of the plaintiff,  Ortiz,  the said  judgment was  amended  to read as follows:
"For the  reasons  above set forth, the  court orders  the said eleven defendant heirs of the late Ceferino Aramburu y Lambarri to  pay the plaintiff Ortiz the sum of P345,193.31 and the agreed  interest thereon at the rate of 8 per cent from the 1st of July, 1903, until its payment is completed, and to  pay the costs of the proceedings; provided, however, that the five  last-named  defendant  minors,  Angel, Jose, Carmen, Alfredo, and Julia  Aramburu, shall  only  be obligated to  pay said  money and interests to the extent of the property that they respectively  inherited from their father."
The  above judgment was affirmed in  all its parts  by this court,[1]  and it  appears therefrom that Matilde Aramburu, the plaintiff herein, was  sentenced to pay Ortiz the sum  of P31,381.21, with  interest  thereon at the rate of 8 per cent from  the 1st of  July, 1903, until  full payment is made, this being one-eleventh part of the aforesaid sum of P345,193.31,  total amount  of  the judgment  entered against the eleven  defendants  in said suit;  that for the execution of  the  said judgment,  private property of Matilde Aramburu to the value of  P57,031.83 was  sold, the sum  of P8,331.75 in cash  was withdrawn from the Hongkong Bank, and  both these amounts were applied to the payment of said  judgment,  with the exception of P54.66 that was withheld for sheriff's  fees.  From this it is seen that  Matilde  Aramburu has paid  Angel Ortiz by reason of said judgment P65,308.92.  As the eleventh part corresponding to Matilde Aramburu only amounted to P31,381.21, plus  interest thereon from  the  1st  of July, 1903, until the time of payment, it  appears that the creditor  Ortiz received, and  that  Matilde  Aramburu  paid an  excess of P25,561.95, as may  be seen from the following statement:

Eleventh part of the capital as per   judgment...................................................................... P31,381.21
Interest thereon from July 1,   1903, until February 1, 1906,  when the sum of P8,031.83, proceeds  of   the sale of real  estate in Titinan,  Mabigao, Ologan, and Rangas,   all in  the municipality of Ugao, Province of Albay, P. I., was  applied   to the judgment ............................................................................................................   6,487.45
Amount   of the debt on February 1, 1906..........................................
37,868.66
Proceeds   of sales as above ...........,................................................... 8,031.83
Net   debit balance on February 1, 1906..............................................
29,836.83
Interest    on the foregoing debit balance from February 1,  1906, to March 30,    1906, when the  sum of P8,277.09,  balance of the P8,331.75 withdrawn   from the Hongkong  Bank,  was applied to the judgment   ............................................................................................................    372.78
Net debit balance on March 30,   1906.................................................  30,209.61
Net amount in cash collected   from the Hongkong Bank.................  8,277.09
Net balance on March   30, 1906................................................... 21,932152
Interest on the   foregoing debit balance of P21,932.52 from  March 30, 1906, to   February 5, 1907, when the sum of  P49,000, proceeds of the sale of   the rights of Matilde  Aramburu y Garcia in the estate of Ceferino   Aramburu  y Lambarri, in the intestate estate of Dona Josefa Garcia,  and   in the estate of Jose M."  Ceballos was applied  to the   judgment....... P1,505.53
Net   debit balance on February 5, 1907...........................................
23,438.05
Amount   of the proceeds of the sale of the rights of Matilde  Aramburu y   Garcia in the estates above referred to...............................................

49,000.00
Remainder   or excess paid by Matilde  Aramburu  y  Garcia to Angel Ortiz by the   judgment in civil  case No. 2060   ............................................
25,561.95

That  this last sum  Matilde Aramburu improperly  paid to Angel  Ortiz, without being so  required  in  the judgment, and notwithstanding the fact that the creditor Ortiz improperly collected it, he refuses to  return  the same  in spite of the demands made upon him  therefor,  for which reason the plaintiff prayed that judgment be entered against the  defendant Ortiz,  sentencing  him  to refund to the plaintiff the  sum  of  P25,561.95, with the legal interest thereon  since  the date  of  the filing of the complaint, and the costs.

In answer to the foregoing complaint, the defendant Ortiz alleged as first defense that  he admitted the facts stated in paragraphs 2, 3, 4,  5, and 6 of the complaint, but denied the allegation contained in paragraph 7; he likewise denied the facts alleged in paragraph 8 in so far as they do not conform to those that he would allege as a second  defense; he offered a general and  specific  denial to the allegations in paragraph 9 as  well as to those contained in paragraph 10 of the complaint.  As a Second defense, he alleged that the dispositive part of the judgment  rendered in  said case No. 2060 and  copied in the complaint,  finds,  among other things that are made an  integral part  of his  answer, the following:  The facts therefore conclusively show that the mercantile relations between  the deceased  Aramburu  and Ortiz, by virtue of the public instrument  dated July 15, 1889, were reassumed or continued after the death of the former, between the eleven defendant heirs of the deceased and the said Ortiz, under the same conditions and guaranties as were stipulated in said instrument;  that the property of the inheritance  of the late Aramburu  was in the possession of his heir Ceferino Aramburu  y Garcia, the other  defendant heirs, and Jose Rodriguez de Hinojosa, without one or other or any of them having availed themselves of the benefit of inventory or the right to deliberate within the term granted  by law; it  is evident that  they showed their  intention not to  make use of the  same when they held with Ortiz the conferences  and agreements that resulted in said transactions and the continuation thereof in the form and to the extent heretofore  described, which acts did not constitute the mere keeping or  temporary administration of  the inheritance; and  that, by means  of these acts, the  eleven  defendants assumed  the title and quality of heirs of  the  late Aramburu  y Lambarri, and publicly, and  in  all their business transactions, made use thereof, particularly in such as they had with Ortiz, which acts necessarily  imply willingness to accept the inheritance, and constitute the tacit  acceptance defined  by  article 999 of  the Civil  Code;  an  acceptance  which  is   pure  and simple on the  part of the heirs who are of age,  and which, according to paragraph 2 of article 992, must be  understood as made under  benefit of  inventory  on the  part of those who are minors, for the reason that  it was carried  out by  their tutor,  Ceferino Aramburu  y Garcia,  without it appearing  that he had secured authority  for the purpose from the  family council;  consequently,  the one and  the other acceptance, according to its class, should produce the effects respectively defined by articles 1003 and 1023 of said code,  for which reason the defendants, as inheriting the  assets  and  liabilities of the deceased,  must be  considered as  continuing to  bear the responsibility of the deceased in the business carried on with Ortiz to such extent as may respectively correspond to  them, according to the acceptance made by them of the inheritance of their principal;  that  the  Supreme Court,  upon affirming the  judgment of the court below, advanced as a ground for its decision, among others, the following: It was admitted that the entire assets of "the firm" of The  Heirs of C. Aramburu, the name under which the business was carried on after the death: of the latter, was the property which the latter had left to his heirs.   This property was taken possession of and  managed  by this new  firm.  Any of the heirs who participated in these acts accepted the inheritance without  benefit of an inventory and  became  personally responsible for the obligations of the deceased.   (Arts 999, 1000, Civil  Code.)   That Ceferino Aramburu for himself and as attorney in fact of all the heirs except Leonor, did participate in these acts, is  clearly proved.   As to the appellant  Leonor,  the wife  of Jose Rodriguez de Hinojosa, it appears that the latter administered said business for several years while she was in  these  Islands,  and  there is sufficient evidence to hold that she consented to the acts performed  by  her coheirs  and  accepted the  inheritance without benefit of inventory; that  from these conclusions there follows the legal consequence that the  plaintiff, Matilde Aramburu, was responsible in solidum with her coheirs for the total indebtedness of her deceased father, claimed in the said  civil case No. 2060; that, with  the exception of the sum of P8,277.09, cash, withdrawn from the Hongkong Bank,  the  defendant has not received any other sum of money from the property of  the plaintiff in payment of the judgment rendered  in  said  case  No. 2060,  since, although the sheriff  of  Albay  offered at public auction certain rights and interests that the plaintiff had or might have over property administered  in the proceedings of the intestate estate of Josefa  Garcia,  the  plaintiff's  mother, and  in the estate of Ceferino Aramburu y  Lambarri, as well  as in  the estate  of Jose M.a Ceballos, instituted in the Court of First Instance  of Albay, as no bidder  came forward, Angel  Ortiz  moved that the said rights and interests of the plaintiff be adjudicated to him at given prices so that  they  might  be applied in  part  payment  of said judgment; but the fact is that the said plaintiff, ignoring all rights of the defendant Ortiz  over said interests  sold, claims to still have  and  maintain all  her  interest in the property included in  said proceedings, and has denied and still  denies  Ortiz any  interest  therein,  and  claimed and still  claims  to be and continue to be an interested  party in said proceedings;  and  as third defense he alleges  that, even  on  the supposition that the  plaintiff had really paid more than she was bound  to pay by reason of the judgment in said  case  No. 2060, she is  not  entitled to bring any action against the defendant Ortiz  to recover the excess; that if such claim existed it should be brought  against her codebtors  and coheirs sentenced  in  said case  No. 2060, and, in  view  of what  has been  set forth,  he prays the court to  dismiss the plaintiff's claim  with  costs against her.

At the trial the plaintiff presented as evidence under Exhibit A all the civil orders involved in case No. 2060 of the Court  of First Instance of Manila  in which  are included the complaint and the  judgment  rendered  therein.  Both parties agreed that the accounting set out in paragraph 9 of the complaint was correct.

Counsel for the defendant in turn presented as evidence the original judgment rendered by the lower court  and the amended complaint in  the said case No.  2060,  together with the decision of the Supreme Court, for the purpose of proving the fourth allegation of his answer; he also offered as evidence  the printed copy of civil case No. 143 in the Court  of First Instance of Albay in connection with the estate of the late Jose  M.a Ceballos, reviewed by  the Supreme Court under No. 4190,[1] wherein Angel Ortiz  appears as appellant,  and Matilde  Aramburu  the  appellee.   The judge below ordered that the original judgment rendered in case  No.  2060 be marked as "Exhibit 1," the amended complaint as "Exhibit 2," the  decision  of the Supreme Court in said  matter as  "Exhibit  3," and the printed copy of case No. 143 of the Court of Albay as "Exhibit 4."

On the 5th of March of this year judgment was entered by the  trial court absolving the defendant of the previous complaint with the  costs  against  the  plaintiff.   On  the following day counsel for the plaintiff excepted in writing and announced  his intention to file and forward  a bill of exceptions,  and  in addition moved  that the said judgment be set aside and a new trial granted on the ground that the evidence was insufficient and did not justify the  decision of the court below,  which decision was furthermore contrary to law; his motion was overruled on the 15th of said month, to which the petitioner excepted and presented in due course the corresponding bill of exceptions which  was approved and forwarded to the clerk of this court.

After the record  of the suit  brought by Angel  Ortiz against Josefa Aramburu et al.  under No.  2060,  for  the recovery of a certain sum of money, was returned to  the Court of  First Instance on April 23,  1907,  with  certified copies of the judgment and the affirmative decision rendered by this  court, counsel for one  of the defendants, Matilde Aramburu y Garcia, presented a written motion  on the 10th  of September of the said year, that is to say, four months  and a half later, requesting  that the said judgment and decision be made clear in the sense that the defendants were  sentenced  to pay  the  amount claimed  not severally but jointly,  that is, that each defendant  shall respond for one eleventh part of the debt and the corresponding interest thereon.   To this end he alleged that the judgment of the lower court,  as affirmed by this court, did not impose  an obligation in solidum on said defendants, nor had the plaintiff asked that the payment be ordered made in  that manner; that the explanation prayed for did not violate article 1003  of the  Civil  Code, and that  the defendant  Matilde Aramburu did not refuse  to pay  her share  with her own property, seeing that the  inherited  property  was not sufficient even  though said judgment be made clear, and she only wishes to know the extent of her obligation.

The court,  after discussing the matter in its  sitting of the 23d of the  month of September, resolved to overrule the motion.

Before taking up the question set up in this controversy and in  the appeal interposed against the judgment of the court below, we deem it advisable and pertinent to refer to the aforesaid motion which was duly acted upon and finally decided in said resolution, inasmuch as the point for which an explanation was requested (in  the sense that  the order of  payment of  the  amount claimed in  the  complaint, as decreed  in the judgment affirmed  by  this court, shall be considered as mancomun, and not in solidum, so that the petitioner would only be responsible for one eleventh part of the debt with interest thereon), was considered  in the complaint filed in this new suit as settled and a determining reason  for bringing the suit,  notwithstanding  the said resolution which conclusively overruled her pretension, as may be seen from folio 56  of the record of the  principal proceedings, bearing the register number 3143.

With the above preface, and proceeding to an examination of the errors assigned in the judgment appealed  from, we find in  the appellant's brief and  bill of errors  that the following question  has been  set  up:  Has the  order  of payment of the  debt contained in  the  judgment  the character of an obligation in solidum, so that Matilde Aramburu, one of the debtors, is under obligation  to pay the whole amount of the indebtedness although entitled to claim from her codefendants?  The  provisions  of articles 1084 and 1085 of the Civil Code answer the question in the affirmative.

The question at issue is an hereditary debt, acknowledged after the death of  the debtor, the common  principal, by six of his heirs  who are  of age  and by the representative of the five minors,  and as the former accepted the inheritance purely and  simply, without  the  benefit of inventory, since by the acceptance of the inheritance of the late Ceferino Aramburu y  Lambarri as  made by the said six heirs  who are of age, among them  being  the plaintiff herein, Matilde Aramburu, according to article 1003 of the code they thereupon became liable for all of the charges of said inheritance not only with the  inherited property but also with their own; for said reason the condemnatory judgment entered in case  No. 2060 of the Court of First Instance of Manila, which bears No.  3143 of the general register of this court, was properly executed with  regard to the legal portion or interest in the estates of her deceased parents which pertained to Matilde Aramburu, also with regard  to her own property, and even such  as she was entitled to from the estate of her  late husband, Jose Ma. Ceballos.

Granted the foregoing, and as the court must abide by the express provisions of the law, it must  be affirmed that the obligation to pay the large sum in  controversy as decreed in the  said judgment is in solidum,  although  it may not be clearly stated therein.   The obligation of heirs who accept an inheritance encumbered by debts does not arise from the contracts, but from the law which has established the right  to  inherit, and has declared  that  the  obligation to pay an hereditary indebtedness is in solidum, as whatever may have been tfce form  in  which they accepted the inheritance, and, according to the  form of such acceptance, the extent of their respective liability would  differ, but the creditor is entitled  to  claim  the entire amount of his credit from any one of the heirs who accepted the inheritance  without benefit  of  inventory, and also from any of the others who received the same with benefit to the extent of their hereditary portion.   (Arts. 988, 998,  1003, 1010, 1023, Civil Code.)

It  is immaterial to the creditor of the  principal what may  be the number of the heirs.  He has the right to select one or more of them who may inspire  him with confidence or offer him  better assurances for the collection of his  credit. If the debt is  a single  one,  as  in  the present case, the obligation of'the debtors toward the owner of the credit is also one and indivisible.  The  power  to divide the debt between the  debtor heirs,. as well  as the  inheritance,  resulting from the relations among themselves, can not affect the right of the creditor which already  existed before the death of the principal and  before the rights of his heirs. There is no law or proper  reason to compel a  creditor to divide his action into the  number of heirs  a  debtor  may have, and  incur  the  risks  and expenses  arising  from a multiplicity of suits.

The foregoing is based on various provisions of the Civil Code peculiarly harmonized and interrelated,  and particularly on the above-cited articles  and articles 1082,  1088, and  1084, the first and last  of which are as follows:
"Art. 1082. Creditors, recognized as such, may oppose the division of the inheritance until they are paid or the amount of their credits is secured.

"Art. 1084. After the division has been made the creditors may demand the payment  of their debts in full of any of the heirs who may not have accepted the inheritance under the  benefit of  inventory, or up to the amount of  their hereditary  share in case they have accepted it under  such benefit.

"In either case the  defendant shall have a right to notify and  summon his coheirs, unless, by disposition  of  the testator or by reason of the division, he alone should be bound to pay the debt."
The supreme court of Spain, in applying the  provisions of the above two articles of the code in deciding appeals in cassation, established  in that  of the 9th of January, 1901, the following doctrine:
"That the provisions contained in articles 1082 and  1084 of the  Civil Code  do  not restrict  or limit in any way the right of the hereditary creditor to exercise the  actions derived from his title of credit, and to demand the payment of the  amount thereof  even  when the  inheritance remains undivided; inasmuch  as the first of said provisions  does nothing more  than establish in favor  of the  creditor a faculty which he may or may not use as he wishes, that is, to oppose the division until he has been paid or the amount of his  credit has been secured; and the second,  namely article 1084, does not  subordinate the exercise of his action to the fact that the inheritance has been  divided, but sustains the principle that each heir is jointly liable for the hereditary  debts, and  authorizes  the  creditor to demand the whole amount of the debt from any of the simple heirs, and grants the defendant  the right to notify and summon his coheirs, unless, by disposition of the testator  or by reason of the division,  he alone should be bound to pay the debt."
In that of April 3, 1903, is the following:
"That under the provisions of  article 1084  of  the  Civil Code, as  construed  by recent jurisprudence,  each of the heirs is liable in solidum for the hereditary debts."
The provision contained in article 1085  of said  code sustains all our findings with regard to the character in solidum of the obligation to pay the credit of  Angel Ortiz on the part of the heirs  of the deceased  debtor,  Ceferino Aramburu, inasmuch as,  if  the  creditor is  entitled  to proceed against any one of the heirs in order to recover the value of his credit, the coheir  who has paid more than corresponds to his share in the inheritance may  in turn  demand his proportionate part of the others.

Therefore, the expression in solidum need not be looked for in a judgment recognizing the validity of an obligation which affects and encumbers  an  inheritance,  but in the substantive law,  which, in  establishing hereditary  right, at the same time proclaimed the joint nature of the obligation on  the part of any of his heirs to pay the  debts of the deceased, without prejudice to  the right conferred upon the coheir under article 1085 to demand  his proportional part of  the others.

The complaint of Ortiz,  demanding  payment from  the heirs  of  Ceferino  Aramburu of the  large sum of money that the latter owed him while living, even though it contained no prayer that the  heirs be jointly sentenced, was yet sufficient to  produce the effect that the judgment rendered in the matter should  be considered as involving the character  of in  solidum, it being in accordance with the law that has decreed the joint obligation on the part of the heirs to pay the debts of their deceased principal.   Nothing in the law  provides that the creditor must divide his suit for the recovery of his credit into the number of responsible heirs.

If the obligation in question is per se in solidum, it follows that the judgment rendered in consonance therewith should bear the same character, and that on motion of the creditor its execution may be effected against all or any one of the parties finally sentenced therein.   (Sec. 471, Code of Civil Procedure.)

On the other hand it  should  be noted that the question raised herein has already been  overruled and finally negatived by the said resolution of this court of September 23, 1907, and that in claiming from Ortiz the restitution of a certain sum which the  plaintiff  alleges to have paid in excess,  she  has instituted an improper suit which tends to violate  the  law that  protects the creditor  in his relations with  the heirs of his deceased debtor, and to discredit or modify a  final  judgment rendered in  accordance with the law, and  which  must be understood, complied  with,  and executed in  conformity with its precepts.

In view of the foregoing, and considering that  the judgment appealed from is in accordance with the law, it is our opinion that the  same should be and it is hereby affirmed, with the costs against the petitioner.   So ordered.

Johnson and Elliott, JJ., concur.



[1]Ortiz vs. Aramburo, 8 Phil. Rep.,  98.
[1]12 Phil. Rep., 271.


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