Padura Vs Baldovino
Padura Vs Baldovino
Padura Vs Baldovino
PADURA vs BALDOVINO
G.R. No. L-11960 December 27, 1958
FACTS
Agustin Padura contracted two marriages during his lifetime. With his first wife Gervacia Landig, he had
one child, Manuel Padura. With the second wife, Benita Garing, he had two children, Fortunato and Candelaria
Padura. Agustin died on Apr 26, 1908, leaving a last will and testament, duly probated, wherein he bequeathed
his properties among his three children and his surviving spouse, Benita Garing.
Fortunato was adjudicated four parcels of land. He died unmarried on May 28, 1908, without having
executed a will; and not having any issue, the parcels of land were inherited exclusively by his mother Benita.
Benita was issued a Torrens Certificate of Title in her name, subject to the condition that the properties were
reservable in favor of relatives within the third degree belonging to the line from which said property came.
On Aug 26, 1934, Candelaria died, leaving as her heirs her four legitimate children: Cristeta, Melania,
Anicia, and Pablo Baldovino (Oppositors-appellants). On Oct 6, 1940, Manuel also died, survived by his
legitimate children Dionisia, Felisa, Flora, Cornelio, Francisco, Juana, and Severino Padura (Petitioners-
appellees) Upon the death of Benita (the reservista) on Oct 15, 1952, the heirs took possession of the
reservable properties. CFI Laguna declared the children of Manuel and Candelaria to be the rightful reservees,
and as such, entitled to the reservable properties (the original reservees, Candelaria and Manuel, having
predeceased the reservista)
The Baldovino heirs filed a petition seeking to have the properties partitioned, such that one-half be
adjudicated to them, and the other half to the appellees, allegedly on the basis that they inherited by right of
representation from their respective parents, the original reservees.
Padura heirs opposed, maintaining that they should all be deemed as inheriting in their own right, under
which, they claim, each should have an equal share.
(In essence, the Baldovino heirs, who are whole blood relatives of the reservista, were contending that they
should get more than their half-blood relatives, the Padura heirs. They anchor their claim on Articles 1006 and
1008 of the Civil Code)
ISSUE
WON the reserved properties should, as the trial court held, be apportioned among the heirs equally.
HELD: NO.
The nephews of the whole blood should take a share twice as large as that of the nephews of the half blood.
The reserva troncal is a special rule designed primarily to assure the return of the reservable property to the
third degree relatives belonging to the line from which the property originally came, and avoid its being
dissipated into and by the relatives of the inheriting ascendant (reservista). Article 891 of the Code provides:
ART 891. The ascendant who inherits from his descendant any property which the latter may have acquired
by gratuitous title from another ascendant, or a brother or sister, is obliged to reserve such property as he
may have acquired by operation of law for the benefit of relatives who are within the third degree and who
belong to the line from which said property came.
The purpose of the reserva troncal is accomplished once the property has devolved to the specified relatives
of the line of origin. But from this time on, there is no further occasion for its application. In the relations
between one reservatario and another of the same degree, there is no call for applying Art 891 any longer; the
respective share of each in the reversionary property should be governed by the ordinary rules of interstate
succession.
Florentino v Florentino (as restated in the case): upon the death of the ascendant reservista, the reservable
property should pass, not to all the reservatorios as a class, but only to those nearest in degree to the
descendant (prepositus), excluding those reservatarios of more remote degree... And within the third degree of
relationship from the descendant (prepositus), the right of representation operates in favor of nephews.
Proximity of degree and right of representation are basic principles of ordinary intestate succession; so is
the rule that whole blood brothers and nephews are entitled to share double that of brothers and nephews of
half-blood. If in determining the rights of the reservatarios inter se, proximity of degree and the right of
representation of nephews are made to aply, the rule of double share for immedaite collaterals of the whole
blood should likewise be operative.
In other words, reserva troncal merely determines the group of relatives (reservatarios) to whom the
property should be returned; but within that group, the individual right to the property should be decided by
the applicable rules of ordinary intestate succession, since Art 891 does not specify otherwise. The reserva being
an exceptional case, its application should be limited to what is strictly needed to accomplish the purpose of the
law.
Even during the reservista’s lifetime, the reservatarios, who are the ultimate acquirers of the property, can
already assert the right to prevent the reservista from doing anything that might frustrate their reversionary
right: and for this purpose they can compel the annotation of their right in the Registry of Property even while
the reservista is alive. This right is incompatible with the mere expectancy that corresponds to the natural heirs
of the reservista. It is also clear that the reservable property is not part of the estate of the reservista, who may
not dispose of them by will, so long as there are reservatarios existing. The latter, therefore, do not inherit from
the reservista, but from the descendant prepositus, of whom the reservatarios are the heirs mortis causa,
subject to the condition that they must survive the reservista.