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                                                                             G.R. No. 134100    International Legal Resources AUSL Exclusive
                                                                    SECOND DIVISION
         G.R. No. 134100                September 29, 2000
         PURITA ALIPIO, petitioner,
         vs.
         COURT OF APPEALS and ROMEO G. JARING, represented by his Attorney-In-Fact RAMON G. JARING,
         respondents.
                                                                     DECISION
         MENDOZA, J.:
         The question for decision in this case is whether a creditor can sue the surviving spouse for the collection of a debt
         which is owed by the conjugal partnership of gains, or whether such claim must be filed in proceedings for the
         settlement of the estate of the decedent. The trial court and the Court of Appeals ruled in the affirmative. We
         reverse.
         The facts are as follows:
         Respondent Romeo Jaring1 was the lessee of a 14.5 hectare fishpond in Barito, Mabuco, Hermosa, Bataan. The
         lease was for a period of five years ending on September 12, 1990. On June 19, 1987, he subleased the fishpond,
         for the remaining period of his lease, to the spouses Placido and Purita Alipio and the spouses Bienvenido and
         Remedios Manuel. The stipulated amount of rent was ₱485,600.00, payable in two installments of ₱300,000.00 and
         ₱185,600.00, with the second installment falling due on June 30, 1989. Each of the four sublessees signed the
         contract.
         The first installment was duly paid, but of the second installment, the sublessees only satisfied a portion thereof,
         leaving an unpaid balance of ₱50,600.00. Despite due demand, the sublessees failed to comply with their
         obligation, so that, on October 13, 1989, private respondent sued the Alipio and Manuel spouses for the collection of
         the said amount before the Regional Trial Court, Branch 5, Dinalupihan, Bataan. In the alternative, he prayed for the
         rescission of the sublease contract should the defendants fail to pay the balance.
         Petitioner Purita Alipio moved to dismiss the case on the ground that her husband, Placido Alipio, had passed away
         on December 1, 1988.2 She based her action on Rule 3, §21 of the 1964 Rules of Court which then provided that
         "when the action is for recovery of money, debt or interest thereon, and the defendant dies before final judgment in
         the Court of First Instance, it shall be dismissed to be prosecuted in the manner especially provided in these rules."
         This provision has been amended so that now Rule 3, §20 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure provides:
         When the action is for the recovery of money arising from contract, express or implied, and the defendant dies
         before entry of final judgment in the court in which the action was pending at the time of such death, it shall not be
         dismissed but shall instead be allowed to continue until entry of final judgment. A favorable judgment obtained by the
         plaintiff therein shall be enforced in the manner especially provided in these Rules for prosecuting claims against the
         estate of a deceased person.
         The trial court denied petitioner's motion on the ground that since petitioner was herself a party to the sublease
         contract, she could be independently impleaded in the suit together with the Manuel spouses and that the death of
         her husband merely resulted in his exclusion from the case.3 The Manuel spouses failed to file their answer. For this
         reason, they were declared in default.
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         Petitioner appealed to the Court of Appeals on the ground that the trial court erred in denying her motion to dismiss.
         In its decision4 rendered on July 10, 1997, the appellate court dismissed her appeal. It held:
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         The rule that an action for recovery of money, debt or interest thereon must be dismissed when the defendant dies
         before final judgment in the regional trial court, does not apply where there are other defendants against whom the
         action should be maintained. This is the teaching of Climaco v. Siy Uy, wherein the Supreme Court held:
         Upon the facts alleged in the complaint, it is clear that Climaco had a cause of action against the persons named as
         defendants therein. It was, however, a cause of action for the recovery of damages, that is, a sum of money, and the
         corresponding action is, unfortunately, one that does not survive upon the death of the defendant, in accordance
         with the provisions of Section 21, Rule 3 of the Rules of Court.
                                                              xxx   xxx        xxx
         However, the deceased Siy Uy was not the only defendant, Manuel Co was also named defendant in the complaint.
         Obviously, therefore, the order appealed from is erroneous insofar as it dismissed the case against Co. (Underlining
         added)
         Moreover, it is noted that all the defendants, including the deceased, were signatories to the contract of sub-lease.
         The remaining defendants cannot avoid the action by claiming that the death of one of the parties to the contract
         has totally extinguished their obligation as held in Imperial Insurance, Inc. v. David:
         We find no merit in this appeal. Under the law and well settled jurisprudence, when the obligation is a solidary one,
         the creditor may bring his action in toto against any of the debtors obligated in solidum. Thus, if husband and wife
         bound themselves jointly and severally, in case of his death, her liability is independent of and separate from her
         husband's; she may be sued for the whole debt and it would be error to hold that the claim against her as well as the
         claim against her husband should be made in the decedent's estate. (Agcaoili vs. Vda. de Agcaoili, 90 Phil. 97).5
         Petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration, but it was denied on June 4, 1998.6 Hence this petition based on the
         following assignment of errors:
                A. THE RESPONDENT COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE ERROR IN APPLYING CLIMACO v. SIY UY, 19
                SCRA 858, IN SPITE OF THE FACT THAT THE PETITIONER WAS NOT SEEKING THE DISMISSAL OF
                THE CASE AGAINST REMAINING DEFENDANTS BUT ONLY WITH RESPECT TO THE CLAIM FOR
                PAYMENT AGAINST HER AND HER HUSBAND WHICH SHOULD BE PROSECUTED AS A MONEY CLAIM.
                B. THE RESPONDENT COURT COMMITTED REVERSIBLE ERROR IN APPLYING IMPERIAL INSURANCE
                INC. v. DAVID, 133 SCRA 317, WHICH IS NOT APPLICABLE BECAUSE THE SPOUSES IN THIS CASE DID
                NOT BIND THEMSELVES JOINTLY AND SEVERALLY IN FAVOR OF RESPONDENT JARING.7
         The petition is meritorious. We hold that a creditor cannot sue the surviving spouse of a decedent in an ordinary
         proceeding for the collection of a sum of money chargeable against the conjugal partnership and that the proper
         remedy is for him to file a claim in the settlement of estate of the decedent.
         First. Petitioner's husband died on December 1, 1988, more than ten months before private respondent filed the
         collection suit in the trial court on October 13, 1989. This case thus falls outside of the ambit of Rule 3, §21 which
         deals with dismissals of collection suits because of the death of the defendant during the pendency of the case and
         the subsequent procedure to be undertaken by the plaintiff, i.e., the filing of claim in the proceeding for the
         settlement of the decedent's estate. As already noted, Rule 3, §20 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure now
         provides that the case will be allowed to continue until entry of final judgment. A favorable judgment obtained by the
         plaintiff therein will then be enforced in the manner especially provided in the Rules for prosecuting claims against
         the estate of a deceased person. The issue to be resolved is whether private respondent can, in the first place, file
         this case against petitioner.
         Petitioner and her late husband, together with the Manuel spouses, signed the sublease contract binding
         themselves to pay the amount of stipulated rent. Under the law, the Alipios' obligation (and also that of the Manuels)
         is one which is chargeable against their conjugal partnership. Under Art. 161(1) of the Civil Code, the conjugal
         partnership is liable for ¾
         All debts and obligations contracted by the husband for the benefit of the conjugal partnership, and those contracted
         by the wife, also for the same purpose, in the cases where she may legally bind the partnership.8
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         or wife, the community property shall be inventoried, administered, and liquidated, and the debts thereof paid, in the
         testate or intestate proceedings of the deceased spouse. If both spouses have died, the conjugal partnership shall
6/14/24, 7:24 AM
         be liquidated in the testate or intestate proceedings of either. G.R. No. 134100
         As held in Calma v. Tañedo,10 after the death of either of the spouses, no complaint for the collection of
         indebtedness chargeable against the conjugal partnership can be brought against the surviving spouse. Instead, the
         claim must be made in the proceedings for the liquidation and settlement of the conjugal property. The reason for
         this is that upon the death of one spouse, the powers of administration of the surviving spouse ceases and is
         passed to the administrator appointed by the court having jurisdiction over the settlement of estate proceedings.11
         Indeed, the surviving spouse is not even a de facto administrator such that conveyances made by him of any
         property belonging to the partnership prior to the liquidation of the mass of conjugal partnership property is void.12
         The ruling in Calma v. Tañedo was reaffirmed in the recent case of Ventura v. Militante.13 In that case, the surviving
         wife was sued in an amended complaint for a sum of money based on an obligation allegedly contracted by her and
         her late husband. The defendant, who had earlier moved to dismiss the case, opposed the admission of the
         amended complaint on the ground that the death of her husband terminated their conjugal partnership and that the
         plaintiff's claim, which was chargeable against the partnership, should be made in the proceedings for the settlement
         of his estate. The trial court nevertheless admitted the complaint and ruled, as the Court of Appeals did in this case,
         that since the defendant was also a party to the obligation, the death of her husband did not preclude the plaintiff
         from filing an ordinary collection suit against her. On appeal, the Court reversed, holding that ¾
         as correctly argued by petitioner, the conjugal partnership terminates upon the death of either spouse. . . . Where a
         complaint is brought against the surviving spouse for the recovery of an indebtedness chargeable against said
         conjugal [partnership], any judgment obtained thereby is void. The proper action should be in the form of a claim to
         be filed in the testate or intestate proceedings of the deceased spouse.
         In many cases as in the instant one, even after the death of one of the spouses, there is no liquidation of the
         conjugal partnership. This does not mean, however, that the conjugal partnership continues. And private respondent
         cannot be said to have no remedy. Under Sec. 6, Rule 78 of the Revised Rules of Court, he may apply in court for
         letters of administration in his capacity as a principal creditor of the deceased . . . if after thirty (30) days from his
         death, petitioner failed to apply for administration or request that administration be granted to some other person.14
         The cases relied upon by the Court of Appeals in support of its ruling, namely, Climaco v. Siy Uy15 and Imperial
         Insurance, Inc. v. David,16 are based on different sets of facts. In Climaco, the defendants, Carlos Siy Uy and
         Manuel Co, were sued for damages for malicious prosecution. Thus, apart from the fact the claim was not against
         any conjugal partnership, it was one which does not survive the death of defendant Uy, which merely resulted in the
         dismissal of the case as to him but not as to the remaining defendant Manuel Co.
         With regard to the case of Imperial, the spouses therein jointly and severally executed an indemnity agreement
         which became the basis of a collection suit filed against the wife after her husband had died. For this reason, the
         Court ruled that since the spouses' liability was solidary, the surviving spouse could be independently sued in an
         ordinary action for the enforcement of the entire obligation.
         It must be noted that for marriages governed by the rules of conjugal partnership of gains, an obligation entered into
         by the husband and wife is chargeable against their conjugal partnership and it is the partnership which is primarily
         bound for its repayment.17 Thus, when the spouses are sued for the enforcement of an obligation entered into by
         them, they are being impleaded in their capacity as representatives of the conjugal partnership and not as
         independent debtors such that the concept of joint or solidary liability, as between them, does not apply. But even
         assuming the contrary to be true, the nature of the obligation involved in this case, as will be discussed later, is not
         solidary but rather merely joint, making Imperial still inapplicable to this case.
         From the foregoing, it is clear that private respondent cannot maintain the present suit against petitioner. Rather, his
                                                                                                                      1âwphi1
         remedy is to file a claim against the Alipios in the proceeding for the settlement of the estate of petitioner's husband
         or, if none has been commenced, he can file a petition either for the issuance of letters of administration18 or for the
         allowance of will,19 depending on whether petitioner's husband died intestate or testate. Private respondent cannot
         short-circuit this procedure by lumping his claim against the Alipios with those against the Manuels considering that,
         aside from petitioner's lack of authority to represent their conjugal estate, the inventory of the Alipios' conjugal
         property is necessary before any claim chargeable against it can be paid. Needless to say, such power exclusively
         pertains to the court having jurisdiction over the settlement of the decedent's estate and not to any other court.
         Second. The trial court ordered petitioner and the Manuel spouses to pay private respondent the unpaid balance of
         the agreed rent in the amount of ₱50,600.00 without specifying whether the amount is to be paid by them jointly or
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         compliance with the prestations. There is a solidary liability only when the obligation expressly so estates, or when
         the law or the nature of the obligation requires solidarity.
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         Indeed, if from the law or the nature or the wording of the obligation the contrary does not appear, an obligation is
         presumed to be only joint, i.e., the debt is divided into as many equal shares as there are debtors, each debt being
         considered distinct from one another.20
         Private respondent does not cite any provision of law which provides that when there are two or more lessees, or in
         this case, sublessees, the latter's obligation to pay the rent is solidary. To be sure, should the lessees or sublessees
         refuse to vacate the leased property after the expiration of the lease period and despite due demands by the lessor,
         they can be held jointly and severally liable to pay for the use of the property. The basis of their solidary liability is
         not the contract of lease or sublease but the fact that they have become joint tortfeasors.21 In the case at bar, there
         is no allegation that the sublessees refused to vacate the fishpond after the expiration of the term of the sublease.
         Indeed, the unpaid balance sought to be collected by private respondent in his collection suit became due on June
         30, 1989, long before the sublease expired on September 12, 1990.
         Neither does petitioner contend that it is the nature of lease that when there are more than two lessees or
         sublessees their liability is solidary. On the other hand, the pertinent portion of the contract involved in this case
         reads:22
         2. That the total lease rental for the sub-leased fishpond for the entire period of three (3) years and two (2) months is
         FOUR HUNDRED EIGHT-FIVE THOUSAND SIX HUNDRED (₱485,600.00) PESOS, including all the
         improvements, prawns, milkfishes, crabs and related species thereon as well all fishing equipment, paraphernalia
         and accessories. The said amount shall be paid to the Sub-Lessor by the Sub-Lessees in the following manner, to
         wit:
         A. Three hundred thousand (₱300,000.00) Pesos upon signing this contract; and
         B. One Hundred Eight-Five Thousand Six-Hundred (₱185,6000.00) Pesos to be paid on June 30, 1989.
         Clearly, the liability of the sublessees is merely joint. Since the obligation of the Manuel and Alipio spouses is
         chargeable against their respective conjugal partnerships, the unpaid balance of ₱50,600.00 should be divided into
         two so that each couple is liable to pay the amount of ₱25,300.00.
         WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. Bienvenido Manuel and Remedios Manuel are ordered to pay the amount
         of ₱25,300.00, the attorney's fees in the amount of ₱10,000.00 and the costs of the suit. The complaint against
         petitioner is dismissed without prejudice to the filing of a claim by private respondent in the proceedings for the
         settlement of estate of Placido Alipio for the collection of the share of the Alipio spouses in the unpaid balance of the
         rent in the amount of ₱25,300.00.
         SO ORDERED.
         Bellosillo, (Chairman), Quisumbing, Buena, and De Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.
         Footnotes
                1
                 Although in the Court of Appeals Rollo and in the pleadings in this Court private respondent is referred to as
                Romeo Jaring, it appears that his correct name is Romero Jaring as indicated in a document signed by him.
                2
                    Records, p. 11.
                3
                    Id., p. 37.
                4
                 Per Justice Oswaldo D. Agcaoili and concurred in by Justices Jaime M. Lantin and Buenaventura J.
                Guerrero.
                5
                    CA Decision, pp. 6-7; Rollo, pp. 28-29. (Emphasis in the original)
                6
                    Rollo, p. 32.
                7
                    Petition, p. 7; Rollo, p. 15.
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                      66 Phil. 594, 598 (1938).
6/14/24, 7:24 AM11 Id.   at 597.                                         G.R. No. 134100
                 12
                   Corpuz v. Corpuz, 97 Phil. 655 (1955). See also Ocampo v. Potenciano, 89 Phil. 159 (1951). Under the
                 Family Code (Art. 124), both the husband and the wife now act as co-administrators of the conjugal
                 partnership property.
                 13
                      G.R. No. 63145, Oct. 5, 1999.
                 14
                      Id. at 13.
                 15
                      19 SCRA 858 (1967).
                 16
                      133 SCRA 317 (1984).
                 17
                      See Castillo, Jr. v. Pasco, 11 SCRA 102 (1964).
                 18
                      RULES OF COURT, Rule 79, §2.
                 19
                      Id., Rule 76, §1.
                 20
                      See CIVIL CODE, Art. 1208.
                 21
                      See Abalos v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 106029, Oct. 19, 1999.
                 22
                      Records, p. 4. (Emphasis added)
         The Lawphil Project - Arellano Law Foundation
https://lawphil.net/judjuris/juri2000/sep2000/gr_134100_2000.html                                                         5/5