1) Vito Borromeo died in 1952 without a legal will, leaving extensive property. A forged will was presented naming beneficiaries.
2) In 1969, after claims from alleged heirs, the court declared nine intestate heirs of Vito Borromeo, excluding Fortunato Borromeo.
3) In 1972, Fortunato claimed to be Vito's illegitimate son and heir. He later presented a 1967 document where five heirs waived rights in his favor, which he argued made him entitled to 5/9 of the estate. However, the court found the waiver invalid as the signatories did not clearly intend to relinquish their inheritance rights.
1) Vito Borromeo died in 1952 without a legal will, leaving extensive property. A forged will was presented naming beneficiaries.
2) In 1969, after claims from alleged heirs, the court declared nine intestate heirs of Vito Borromeo, excluding Fortunato Borromeo.
3) In 1972, Fortunato claimed to be Vito's illegitimate son and heir. He later presented a 1967 document where five heirs waived rights in his favor, which he argued made him entitled to 5/9 of the estate. However, the court found the waiver invalid as the signatories did not clearly intend to relinquish their inheritance rights.
1) Vito Borromeo died in 1952 without a legal will, leaving extensive property. A forged will was presented naming beneficiaries.
2) In 1969, after claims from alleged heirs, the court declared nine intestate heirs of Vito Borromeo, excluding Fortunato Borromeo.
3) In 1972, Fortunato claimed to be Vito's illegitimate son and heir. He later presented a 1967 document where five heirs waived rights in his favor, which he argued made him entitled to 5/9 of the estate. However, the court found the waiver invalid as the signatories did not clearly intend to relinquish their inheritance rights.
1) Vito Borromeo died in 1952 without a legal will, leaving extensive property. A forged will was presented naming beneficiaries.
2) In 1969, after claims from alleged heirs, the court declared nine intestate heirs of Vito Borromeo, excluding Fortunato Borromeo.
3) In 1972, Fortunato claimed to be Vito's illegitimate son and heir. He later presented a 1967 document where five heirs waived rights in his favor, which he argued made him entitled to 5/9 of the estate. However, the court found the waiver invalid as the signatories did not clearly intend to relinquish their inheritance rights.
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BORROMEO-HERRERA vs BORROMEO
G.R. No. L-41171 July 23, 1987
FACTS: Vito Borromeo, a widower and permanent resident of Cebu City, died on March 13, 1952, in Paranaque, Rizal at the age of 88 years, without forced heirs but leaving extensive properties in the province of Cebu. On April 19, 1952, Jose Junquera filed with the Court of First Instance of Cebu a petition for the probate of a one page document as the last will and testament left by the said deceased, devising all his properties to Tomas, Fortunato and Amelia, all surnamed Borromeo, in equal and undivided shares, and designating Junquera as executor thereof. The document, drafted in Spanish, was allegedly signed and thumbmarked by the deceased in the presence of Cornelio Gandionco, Eusebio Cabiluna, and Felixberto Leonardo who acted as witnesses. Oppositions to the probate of the will were filed. On May 28, 1960, after due trial, the probate court held that the document presented as the will of the deceased was a forgery. The testate proceedings was converted into an intestate proceedings. Several parties came before the court filing claims or petitions alleging themselves as heirs of the intestate estate of Vito Borromeo. On April 10, 1969, the trial court, invoking Art. 972 of the Civil Code, issued an order declaring nine heirs as the intestate heirs of the deceased Vito Borromeo. The order excluded Fortunato. On August 25, 1972, Fortunato Borromeo, who had earlier claimed as heir under the forged will, filed a motion before the trial court praying that he be declared as one of the heirs of the deceased Vito Borromeo, alleging that he is an illegitimate son of the deceased and that in the declaration of heirs made by the trial court, he was omitted, in disregard of the law making him a forced heir entitled to receive a legitime like all other forced heirs. As an acknowledged illegitimate child, he stated that he was entitled to a legitime equal in every case to four-fifths of the legitime of an acknowledged natural child. The court dismissed his motion. Fortunato Borromeo filed a motion for reconsideration. In the memorandum he submitted to support his motion for reconsideration, Fortunato changed the basis for his claim to a portion of the estate. He asserted and incorporated a Waiver of Hereditary Rights dated July 31, 1967, supposedly signed by the heirs. In the waiver, five of the nine heirs relinquished to Fortunato their shares in the disputed estate. The motion was opposed on the ground that the trial court, acting as a probate court, had no jurisdiction to take cognizance of the claim; that respondent Fortunato Borromeo is estopped from asserting the waiver agreement; that the waiver agreement is void as it was executed before the declaration of heirs; that the same is void having been executed before the distribution of the estate and before the acceptance of the inheritance; and that it is void ab initio and inexistent for lack of subject matter. It is argued by the petitioner that the document entitled " waiver of Hereditary Rights" executed on July 31, 1967, aside from having been cancelled and revoked on June 29, 1968, by Tomas L. Borromeo, Fortunato Borromeo and Amelia Borromeo, is without force and effect because there can be no effective waiver of hereditary rights before there has been a valid acceptance of the inheritance the heirs intend to transfer. Pursuant to Article 1043 of the Civil Code, to make acceptance or repudiation of inheritance valid, the person must be certain of the death of the one from whom he is to inherit and of his right to the inheritance. Since the petitioner and her co-heirs were not certain of their right to the inheritance until they were declared heirs, their rights were, therefore, uncertain. This view, according to the petitioner, is also supported by Article 1057 of the same Code which directs heirs, devicees, and legatees to signify their acceptance or repudiation within thirty days after the court has issued an order for the distribution of the estate. Fortunato Borromeo on the other hand, contends that under Article 1043 of the Civil Code there is no need for a person to be first declared as heir before he can accept or repudiate an inheritance. What is required is that he must first be certain of the death of the person from whom he is to inherit and that he must be certain of his right to the inheritance. He points out that at the time of the signing of the waiver document on July 31, 1967, the signatories to the waiver document were certain that Vito Borromeo was already dead as well as of their rights to the inheritance as shown in the waiver document itself. ISSUE: WON Fortunato Borromeo is entitled to 5/9 of the estate of Vito Borromeo under the waiver agreement. NO RULING: The prevailing jurisprudence on waiver of hereditary rights is that "the properties included in an existing inheritance cannot be considered as belonging to third persons with respect to the heirs, who by fiction of law continue the personality of the former. Nor do such properties have the character of future property, because the heirs acquire a right to succession from the moment of the death of the deceased, by principle established in article 657 and applied by article 661 of the Civil Code, according to which the heirs succeed the deceased by the mere fact of death. More or less, time may elapse from the moment of the death of the deceased until the heirs enter into possession of the hereditary property, but the acceptance in any event retroacts to the moment of the death, in accordance with article 989 of the Civil Code. The right is vested, although conditioned upon the adjudication of the corresponding hereditary portion." (Osorio v. Osorio and Ynchausti Steamship Co., 41 Phil., 531). The heirs, therefore, could waive their hereditary rights in 1967 even if the order to partition the estate was issued only in 1969. In this case, however, the purported "Waiver of Hereditary Rights" cannot be considered to be effective. For a waiver to exist, three elements are essential: (1) the existence of a right; (2) the knowledge of the existence thereof; and (3) an intention to relinquish such right. (People v. Salvador, (CA) 53 O.G. No. 22, p. 8116, 8120). The intention to waive a right or advantage must be shown clearly and convincingly, and when the only proof of intention rests in what a party does, his act should be so manifestly consistent with, and indicative of an intent to, voluntarily relinquish the particular right or advantage that no other reasonable explanation of his conduct is possible (67 C.J., 311). (Fernandez v. Sebido, et al., 70 Phil., 151, 159). The circumstances of this case show that the signatories to the waiver document did not have the clear and convincing intention to relinquish their rights. The supposed waiver of hereditary rights can not be validated. The essential elements of a waiver, especially the clear and convincing intention to relinquish hereditary rights, are not found in this case.