Pastor Jr. Vs CA
Pastor Jr. Vs CA
Pastor Jr. Vs CA
QUEMADA should receive was still premature. ATLAS, upon order of the
Court, submitted a sworn statement of
royalties paid to the Pastor Group. The statement revealed that of the
mining claims being operated by ATLAS, 60%
pertained to the Pastor Group distributed as follows:
1. A. Pastor, Jr. ...................................40.5%
2. E. Pelaez, Sr. ...................................15.0%
3. B. Quemada .......................................4.5%
On August 20, 1980, while the reconveyance suit was still being litigated,
the PROBATE COURT issued the assailed
Order of Execution and Garnishment, resolving the question of ownership
of the royalties
payable by ATLAS
and
ruling in effect that the legacy to QUEMADA was
NOT INOFFICIOUS
.
The PROBATE COURT directed ATLAS to remit directly to QUEMADA the
42% royalties due decedent's estate, of
which QUEMADA was authorized to retain 75% for himself as legatee and
to deposit 25% with a reputable banking
institution for payment of the estate taxes and other obligations of the
estate.
The 33% share of PASTOR, JR. and/or his assignees was ordered
garnished to answer for the accumulated legacy of
QUEMADA from the time of PASTOR, SR.'s death.
The order being "immediately executory", QUEMADA succeeded in
obtaining a Writ of Execution and Garnishment,
serving the same on ATLAS on the same day. The oppositors sought
reconsideration thereof on the ground that the
PROBATE COURT gravely abused its discretion when it resolved the
question of ownership of the royalties and
ordered the payment of QUEMADA's legacy after
prematurely
passing upon the intrinsic validity of the will.
In the meantime, the PROBATE COURT ordered suspension of payment of
all royalties due PASTOR, JR. and/or his
assignees until after resolution of oppositors' motion for reconsideration.
Before the Motion for Reconsideration could be resolved, PASTOR, JR.
and his wife Ma. ELENA ACHAVAL DE PASTOR,
filed with the Court of Appeals a Petition for certiorari and Prohibition with a
prayer for writ of preliminary
injunction, assailing the writ of execution and garnishment issued by the
Probate Court. Said petition was denied as
well as their motion for reconsideration.
Hence, this Petition for Review by certiorari
ISSUE:
Whether or not questions of ownership and the intrinsic validity of the
holographic were resolved by the Probate Court with
finality in the case at bar?
RULING:
No, it was not resolved by the Probate Court in the case at bar.
In a special proceeding for the probate of a will, the issue by and large is
restricted to the extrinsic validity of the
will, i.e., whether the testator, being of sound mind, freely executed the will
in accordance with the formalities
prescribed by law. (Rules of Court, Rule 75, Section 1; Rule 76, Section 9.)
As a rule, the question of ownership is an extraneous matter which the
Probate Court cannot resolve with finality.
Thus, for the purpose of determining whether a certain property should or
should not be included in the inventory
of estate properties, the Probate Court may pass upon the title thereto, but
such determination is provisional, not
conclusive, and is subject to the final decision in a separate action to
resolve title.
Nowhere in the dispositive portion is there a declaration of ownership of
specific properties. It
confined itself to the question of extrinsic validity of the will, and the need
for and propriety of
appointing a special administrator. It allowed and approved the holographic
will with respect to its
extrinsic validity and declared that the intestate estate administration
aspect must proceed “subject
to the outcome of the suit for reconveyance of ownership and possession
of real and personal
properties.”
The Probate Order did not resolve the question of ownership of the
properties listed in the estate inventory,
considering that the issue of ownership was the very subject of controversy
in the reconveyance suit that was still
pending.
It was, therefore, error for the assailed implementing Orders to conclude
that the Probate Order
adjudged with finality the question of ownership of the mining properties
and royalties, and that,
premised on this conclusion, the dispositive portion of the said Probate
Order directed the special
administrator to pay the legacy in dispute.