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G.R. No. 199885, October 02, 2017 JESUSA DUJALI BUOT, Petitioner, v. ROQUE RASAY DUJALI, Respondent. Decision Jardeleza, J.

This document summarizes a Supreme Court decision regarding a petition for review of a trial court's dismissal of a petition for letters of administration of a deceased person's estate. The trial court dismissed the petition on the grounds that there had already been an extrajudicial settlement of some of the estate's properties. The Supreme Court denied the petition for review, finding that the question of whether the petitioner was a proper party to file for administration was a question of fact, not law. However, the Court found that the trial court erred in ruling the petitioner's motion for reconsideration was prohibited, as it was her first motion challenging the dismissal order.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
66 views7 pages

G.R. No. 199885, October 02, 2017 JESUSA DUJALI BUOT, Petitioner, v. ROQUE RASAY DUJALI, Respondent. Decision Jardeleza, J.

This document summarizes a Supreme Court decision regarding a petition for review of a trial court's dismissal of a petition for letters of administration of a deceased person's estate. The trial court dismissed the petition on the grounds that there had already been an extrajudicial settlement of some of the estate's properties. The Supreme Court denied the petition for review, finding that the question of whether the petitioner was a proper party to file for administration was a question of fact, not law. However, the Court found that the trial court erred in ruling the petitioner's motion for reconsideration was prohibited, as it was her first motion challenging the dismissal order.

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Crisvon L. Gazo
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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G.R. No.

199885, October 02, 2017

JESUSA DUJALI BUOT, Petitioner, v. ROQUE RASAY DUJALI, Respondent.

DECISION

JARDELEZA, J.:

This is a petition for review on certiorari1 under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court. Petitioner
Jesusa Dujali Buot (Buot) challenged the Orders of Branch 34 of the Regional Trial
Court (RTC), Panabo City, dated September 19, 20112 and December 8,
2011,3 dismissing her petition and denying her subsequent motion for reconsideration,
respectively.

Buot filed before the RTC a petition4 for letters of administration of the estate of
deceased Gregorio Dujali (Gregorio). In her petition, Buot alleged that she was a
surviving heir, along with Roque Dujali, Constancia Dujali-Tiongson, Concepcion Dujali-
Satiembre, Marilou Sales-Dujali, Marietonete Dujali, Georgeton Dujali, Jr. and Geomar
Dujali, of Gregorio who died intestate.5 Buot annexed6 to her petition a list of Gregorio's
properties that are allegedly publicly known. She claimed that since Gregorio's death,
there had been no effort to settle his estate. Roque Dujali (Dujali) purportedly
continued to manage and control the properties to the exclusion of all the other heirs.
Buot further alleged that Dujali for no justifiable reason denied her request to settle the
estate.7 Thus, Buot asked that: (1) an administrator be appointed to preserve
Gregorio's estate; (2) a final inventory of the properties be made; (3) the heirs be
established; and (4) the net estate be ordered distributed in accordance with law
among the legal heirs.8

Dujali filed an opposition with motion to dismiss,9 arguing that Buot had no legal
capacity to institute the proceedings. He asserted that despite Buot's claim that she
was Gregorio's child with his first wife Sitjar Escalona, she failed to attach any
document, such as a certificate of live birth or a marriage certificate, to prove her
filiation. Dujali, on the other hand, attached a certificate of marriage between Gregorio
and his mother Yolanda Rasay. This certificate also indicated that Gregorio had never
been previously married to a certain Sitjar Escalona. Thus, as Buot failed to prove that
she is an heir, Dujali prayed that her petition be dismissed outright.

Buot filed her comment10 to Dujali's opposition with motion to dismiss. She argued that
under the Rules of Court, only ultimate facts should be included in an initiatory
pleading. The marriage certificate and certificate of live birth which Dujali demands are
evidentiary matters that ought to be tackled during trial. Nevertheless, to answer
Dujali's allegations, Buot attached to her comment a copy of the necrological services
program11 where she was listed as one of Gregorio's heirs, a certification12 from the
municipal mayor that she is Gregorio's child, and a copy of the Amended Extrajudicial
Settlement13 dated July 4, 2001 which includes both Buot and Dujali as Gregorio's heirs.
Notably, this Amended Extrajudicial Settlement pertained to parcels of land not
included in the list of properties annexed in Buot's petition.

On May 3, 2011, the RTC denied Dujali's motion to dismiss. It agreed with Buot that the
issues raised by Dujali are evidentiary matters that should be addressed during trial.14
Dujali filed a motion for reconsideration.15 He argued that under the Rules of Court and
prevailing jurisprudence, a party's lack of legal capacity to sue should be raised in a
motion to dismiss. Further, he took issue with the existence of the Amended
Extrajudicial Settlement. According to him, when an estate has no debts, recourse to
administration proceedings is allowed only when there are good and compelling
reasons. Where an action for partition (whether in or out of court) is possible, the
estate should not be burdened with an administration proceeding.

The RTC, in its Order dated September 19, 2011, granted Dujali's motion for
reconsideration. It held that under the law, there are only two exceptions to the
requirement that the settlement of a deceased's estate should be judicially
administered—extrajudicial settlement and summary settlement of an estate of small
value.16 According to the RTC, in the case of Buot's petition, administration has been
barred by the fact that Gregorio's estate has already been settled extrajudicially as
evidenced by the Amended Extrajudicial Settlement. It also noted that Gregorio had no
creditors since Buot failed to allege it in her petition.17 Since recourse to judicial
administration of an estate that has no debt is allowed only when there are good
reasons for not resorting to extrajudicial settlement or action for partition, the RTC
dismissed Buot's petition. Buot filed a motion for reconsideration which the RTC denied
in its Order dated December 8, 2011. According to the RTC, not only was Buot's motion
a second motion for reconsideration prohibited under the Rules, there was also no
sufficient reason to reverse its earlier dismissal of the petition.18

Buot filed this petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court
challenging the RTC's Orders on pure questions of law. In her petition, Buot argues that
her motion for reconsideration is not a prohibited second motion for reconsideration.
Section 2 of Rule 52 of the Rules of Court states that a prohibited second motion for
reconsideration is one filed by the same  party. In this case, Buot's motion for
reconsideration was her first, since the motion for reconsideration subject of the Order
dated September 19, 2011 was filed by Dujali. She also argued that the Amended
Extrajudicial Settlement did not cover all of Gregorio's properties.19

Further, Buot maintains that heirs are not precluded from instituting a petition for
administration if they do not, for good reason, wish to pursue an ordinary action for
partition. In her case, she claims that there are good reasons justifying her recourse to
administration proceedings: (1) the Amended Extrajudicial Settlement did not cover the
entire estate; (2) there has been no effort to partition the property; (3) Dujali seeks to
challenge Buot's status as an heir; (4) other heirs have been deprived of the properties
of the estate; and (5) other heirs, particularly Constancia Dujali and Marilou Dujali,
have already manifested that they are amenable to the appointment of an
administrator.20

In his comment,21 Dujali argues that Buot is not an interested person allowed to file a
petition for administration of the estate. While she claims to be Gregorio's heir, public
documents, such as Buot's certificate of live birth and the certificate of marriage
between Gregorio and Yolanda Rasay, reveal otherwise. Dujali also attached to his
comment certain documents that appear to show that there has been an extrajudicial
settlement of some of the properties of the estate and that Buot has already received
her share from the proceeds of the sale of these properties by the true heirs.22 Further,
he explains that Buot was only allowed to participate in the Amended Extrajudicial
Settlement by Gregorio's legitimate heirs out of humanitarian considerations, not
because she is a true heir. All these, Dujali argues, clearly indicate that there is no good
and compelling reason to grant Buot's petition for administration.23

In her reply,24 Buot contends that the issue of whether she is a person interested in the
estate is a matter that should be raised during the trial by the RTC of her petition for
administration.

We deny the petition.

First, we must emphasize that this is a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of
the Rules of Court. This recourse to the Court covers only a review of questions of law.
In this case, the question of law presented before us is whether the RTC properly
dismissed the petition for administration on the ground that there has already been an
extrajudicial settlement of certain properties of the estate. An additional question of
procedure raised here is whether the RTC was correct in holding that Buot's motion for
reconsideration should be denied as it is a prohibited second motion for reconsideration.

All other issues raised in the pleadings before us are questions of fact that we cannot
resolve at this time. As we shall shortly explain in this Decision, these questions of fact
ought to be resolved by a trial court in the appropriate proceeding.

We will first rule on the procedural issue raised in the petition. In its Order dated
September 19, 2011, the RTC held that Buot's motion for reconsideration is a second
motion for reconsideration prohibited under the Rules of Court. Thus, the motion was
denied. We reviewed the motions filed by the parties before the RTC and rule that the
RTC erred in its finding.

When Buot filed her petition for administration, Dujali filed an opposition with a motion
to dismiss. When the RTC denied his motion to dismiss, Dujali filed a motion for
reconsideration. This led to the RTC's issuance of the Order of September 19, 2011
granting Dujali's motion for reconsideration and holding that Buot's petition for
administration should be dismissed. It was only at this point that Buot filed, for the first
time, a motion seeking for reconsideration of the Order which declared the dismissal of
her petition for administration. Clearly, this is not the motion for reconsideration
contemplated in Section 2 of Rule 52 of the Rules of Court which states:

Sec. 2. Second motion for reconsideration. - No second motion for reconsideration of a


judgment or final resolution by the same party shall be entertained.
Section 2 of Rule 52 is clear and leaves no room for interpretation. What it prohibits is a
second motion for reconsideration filed by the same party involving the same judgment
or final resolution. In the present case, Buot's motion for reconsideration was only her
first motion challenging the Order dismissing her petition for administration of
Gregorio's estate. The RTC clearly erred in denying her motion on the ground that it is a
second motion for reconsideration prohibited under the Rules.

Nevertheless, we rule that the RTC properly ordered the dismissal of Buot's petition for
administration.
When a person dies intestate, his or her estate may generally be subject to judicial
administration proceedings. There are, however, several exceptions. One such
exception is provided for in Section 1 of Rule 74 of the Rules of Court. This Section
states:
Sec. 1. Extrajudicial settlement by agreement between heirs. - If the decedent left no
will and no debts and the heirs are all of age, or the minors are represented by their
judicial or legal representatives duly authorized for the purpose, the parties may,
without securing letters of administration, divide the estate among themselves as they
see fit by means of a public instrument filed in the office of the register of deeds, and
should they disagree, they may do so in an ordinary action of partition. If there is only
one heir, he may adjudicate to himself the entire estate by means of an affidavit filed in
the office of the register of deeds. The parties to an extrajudicial settlement, whether
by public instrument or by stipulation in a pending action for partition, or the sole heir
who adjudicates the entire estate to himself by means of an affidavit shall file,
simultaneously with and as a condition precedent to the filing of the public instrument,
or stipulation in the action for partition, or of the affidavit in the office of the register of
deeds, a bond with the said register of deeds, in an amount equivalent to the value of
the personal property involved as certified to under oath by the parties concerned and
conditioned upon the payment of any just claim that may be filed under Section 4 of
this rule. It shall be presumed that the decedent left no debts if no creditor files a
petition for letters of administration within two (2) years after the death of the
decedent.

The fact of the extrajudicial settlement or administration shall be published in a


newspaper of general circulation in the manner provided in the next succeeding section;
but no extrajudicial settlement shall be binding upon any person who has not
participated therein or had no notice thereof.
According to this provision, when the deceased left no will and no debts and the heirs
are all of age, the heirs may divide the estate among themselves without judicial
administration. The heirs may do so extrajudicially through a public instrument filed in
the office of the Register of Deeds. In case of disagreement, they also have the option
to file an action for partition.

Section 1 of Rule 74, however, does not prevent the heirs from instituting
administration proceedings if they have good reasons for choosing not to file an action
for partition. In Rodriguez, et al. v. Tan, etc. and Rodriguez,26 we said:
[S]ection 1 [of Rule 74] does not preclude the heirs from instituting administration
proceedings, even if the estate has no debts or obligation, if they do not desire to resort
for good reasons to an ordinary action of partition. While section 1 allows the heirs to
divide the estate among themselves as they may see fit, or to resort to an ordinary
action of partition, it does not compel them to do so if they have good reasons to take a
different course of action. Said section is not mandatory or compulsory as may be
gleaned from the use made therein of the word may. If the intention were otherwise
the framer of the rule would have employed the word shall as was done in other
provisions that are mandatory in character. x x x.27 (Italics in the original.)
Since such proceedings are always "long," "costly," "superfluous and
unnecessary,"28 resort to judicial administration of cases falling under Section 1, Rule
74 appears to have become the exception rather than the rule. Cases subsequent
to Rodriguez emphasized that "[w]here partition is possible, either in or out of court,
the estate should not be burdened with an administration proceeding without good and
compelling reasons."29

In Pereira v. Court of Appeals30 we had the opportunity to explain what the "good
reason exception" means. What constitutes good reason depends on the circumstances
of each case. We said:
"Again the petitioner argues that only when the heirs do not have any dispute as to the
bulk of the hereditary estate but only in the manner of partition does section 1, Rule 74
of the Rules of Court apply and that in this case the parties are at loggerheads as to the
corpus of the hereditary estate because respondents succeeded in sequestering some
assets of the intestate. The argument is unconvincing, because, as the respondent
judge has indicated, questions as to what property belonged to the deceased (and
therefore to the heirs) may properly be ventilated in the partition proceedings,
especially where such property is in the hands of one heir."
In another case, We held that if the reason for seeking an appointment as administrator
is merely to avoid a multiplicity of suits since the heir seeking such appointment wants
to ask for the annulment of certain transfers of property, that same objective could be
achieved in an action for partition and the trial court is not justified in issuing letters of
administration. In still another case, We did not find so powerful a reason the argument
that the appointment of the husband, a usufructuary forced heir of his deceased wife,
as judicial administrator is necessary in order for him to have legal capacity to appear
in the intestate proceedings of his wife's deceased mother, since he may just adduce
proof of his being a forced heir in 2 intestate proceedings of the latter.31 (Citations
omitted.)
Thus, in Pereira, we refused to allow administration proceedings where the only reason
why the appointment of an administrator was sought so that one heir can take
possession of the estate from the other heir. We held that this was not a compelling
reason to order judicial administration. We added that in cases like this, "the claims of
both parties as to the properties left by the deceased may be properly ventilated in
simple partition proceedings where the creditors, should there be any, are protected in
any event."32

We have reviewed the reasons which Buot proffers to warrant the grant of her petition
for letters of administration and rule that these do not suffice to warrant the submission
of Gregorio's estate to administration proceedings. That the extrajudicial settlement in
this case did not cover Gregorio's entire estate is, by no means, a sufficient reason to
order the administration of the estate. Whether the extrajudicial settlement did in fact
cover the entire estate and whether an extrajudicial settlement that does not cover the
entire estate may be considered valid do not automatically create a compelling reason
to order the administration of the estate. Parties seeking to challenge an extrajudicial
settlement of estate possess sufficient remedies under the law and procedural rules.

As to Buot's other allegations that: (1) there has been no effort to partition the estate;
(2) that Dujali challenges her status as an heir; (3) that other heirs have been deprived
of the estate; and (4) these heirs are amenable to the appointment of an administrator,
we find that none of these allegations actually prevent the filing of an ordinary action
for partition. In fact, if it is indeed true that there has been no effort to partition
Gregorio's entire estate, the filing of an action for partition before the proper court will
leave his heirs with no choice but to proceed. An action for partition is also the proper
venue to ascertain Buot's entitlement to participate in the proceedings as an heir.33 Not
only would it allow for the full ventilation of the issues as to the properties that ought to
be included in the partition and the true heirs entitled to receive their portions of the
estate, it is also the appropriate forum to litigate questions of fact that may be
necessary to ascertain if partition is proper and who may participate in the proceedings.

WHEREFORE, this petition for review on certiorari is DENIED. The Orders of Branch


34 of the Regional Trial Court, Panabo City, dated September 19, 2011 and December
8, 2011 are AFFIRMED insofar as they ordered the dismissal of the petition for letters
of administration.

SO ORDERED.

Sereno, C.J., (Chairperson), Leonardo-De Castro, Del Castillo, and Tijam, JJ., concur.

Endnotes:

1
Rollo, pp. 13-34.

2
Id. at 35-36.

3
Id. at 37-38.

4
Id. at 48-54.

5
Id. at 49-50. ("Marietonete" was also referred to as "Marrietonete" in some parts of the
record.)

6
Id. at 50, 56.

7
Id. at 51.

8
Id. at 52.

9
Id. at 66-69.

10
Id. at 72-74.

11
Id. at 82-83.

12
Id. at 84.

13
Id. at 75-81.

14
Id. at 85-86.

15
Id. at 90-94.

16
Id. at 35-36.
17
Id. at 36.

18
Id. at 37-38.

19
Id. at 26.

20
Id. at 102-103.

21
Id. at 145-157.

22
Id. at 168-195.

23
Id. at 150-152.

24
Id. at 206-209.

25
 RULES OF COURT, Rule 73, Sec. 1 & Rule 78, Sec. 6.

26
 92 Phil. 273 (1952).

27
Id. at 276-277.

28
Pereira v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 81147, June 20, 1989, 174 SCRA 154, 159-160.

29
Id. at 159. Citation omitted.

30
Supra.

31
Id. at 160-161.

32
Id. at 161.

33
Butiong v. Plazo, G.R. No. 187524, August 5, 2015, 765 SCRA 227.

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