Case # 89

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CASE #89

Vda. De Buncio vs. Estate of De Leon; 156 SCRA 353

Doctrine: The action to annul a contract on the ground that consent is vitiated by mistake, violence,
intimidation, undue influence or fraud prescribes in four (4) years; and the period is reckoned, in case of
mistake or fraud, from the time of the discovery of the same.

FACTS: The father, Andres Arroyo, died sometime in 1901. He left an estate apparently of no mean size,
comprised of properties located mainly in Iloilo and Negros Occidental. He was survived by three compulsory
heirs: Felix Arroyo, a legitimate son by his first wife, and Filomena Arroyo and Simplicio Arroyo, legitimate
children by his second wife. Administration of his estate was assumed and undertaken by Felix Arroyo, as the
oldest son, evidently without objection from his brother or sister.

His daughter, the aforenamed Filomena Arroyo, then already 84 years of age and a widow, together with her
six (6) children, filed suit in the then Court of First Instance of Negros Occidental, seeking to recover from the
estate of the late Spouses Anita de Leon and Serafin Villanueva, Sr. and their children, what she claimed to be
one third (1/3) of the properties left by her deceased father. Her complaint alleged that her share in the
inheritance had at all times been held in trust by Felix Arroyo and after his death, by his heirs and successors-
in-interest, who are the defendants named in her complaint, and she had been deprived of that share through
fraud and misrepresentation. She also prayed for an accounting of the fruits of the inheritance and the payment
to her of her proportionate share in those fruits as might be warranted by the results of the accounting.

Long time ago, the parties executed a compromise agreement entitled Convenio de Transaccion which they
acknowledged before a notary public. By it, the Buncio Spouses and their co-plaintiffs sold, transferred and
conveyed all their rights, title and interests over all the properties involved in the litigation in favor of the
defendant spouses, Anita and Serafin Villanueva. On the same day the parties filed a Peticion with the Court
praying that judgment be rendered in accordance with their convenio This the Court did the following day,
February 20, 1940.

However, on March 14, 1946 (after Liberation), the plaintiffs filed a motion to vacate the decision of February
20, 1940. They alleged as grounds therefor fraud, misrepresentation, deceit and undue influence vitiating their
consent to the Convenio de Transaccion.

Upon these facts the applications of the familiar doctrine of res adjudicata is authorized as against Filomena
Arroyo Vda. de Buncio. The judgment in Civil Case No. 7862 operates as an absolute bar to Civil Case No.
7200, instituted twenty-four (24) years after its rendition.

ISSUE: Whether or not the convenio de transaccion entered into by the parties is void because of the fraud
and as such could be annulled.

RULING: The contract is void but is barred from being annulled by prescription.

Their cause of action for the annulment of their convenio de transaccion on the ground of fraud, undue
influence, or mistake, as also their cause of action for recovery of property on the theory of constructive trust,
assuming their tenability, would nonetheless be barred by another insuperable legal obstacle: prescription.

The action to annul a contract on the ground that consent is vitiated by mistake, violence, intimidation, undue
influence or fraud prescribes in four (4) years; and the period is reckoned, in case of mistake or fraud, from the
time of the discovery of the same.

It is noteworthy that as early as March 14, 1946 the appellants already had pleaded fraud in the motion filed by
them on that day to set aside the judgment rendered in Civil Case No. 7268: their contention was that their
consent to the convenio de transaccion which the judgment had approved, had been obtained by fraud, or
undue machinations. It is thus not unreasonable, surely, to consider March 14, 1946 as the day of the
discovery of the fraud. So considered, it should at once be apparent that the prescriptive period of four (4)
years had long elapsed when Civil Case No. 7200 was instituted by the appellants on February 19, 1964,
eighteen (18) years afterwards.

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