Leticia Valmonte ORTEGA, Petitioner, JOSEFINA C. VALMONTE, Respondent. G.R. No. 157451 December 16, 2005 Panganiban, J.: Facts
Leticia Valmonte ORTEGA, Petitioner, JOSEFINA C. VALMONTE, Respondent. G.R. No. 157451 December 16, 2005 Panganiban, J.: Facts
Leticia Valmonte ORTEGA, Petitioner, JOSEFINA C. VALMONTE, Respondent. G.R. No. 157451 December 16, 2005 Panganiban, J.: Facts
vs.
JOSEFINA C. VALMONTE, Respondent.
PANGANIBAN, J.:
FACTS:
The facts were summarized in the assailed Decision of the CA, as follows:
Like so many others before him, Placido toiled and lived for a long
time in the United States until he finally reached retirement. In 1980,
Placido finally came home to stay in the Philippines, and he lived in the
house and lot located at #9200 Catmon St., San Antonio Village, Makati,
which he owned in common with his sister Ciriaca Valmonte and titled in
their names in TCT 123468. Two years after his arrival from the United
States and at the age of 80 he wed Josefina who was then 28 years old, in a
ceremony solemnized by Judge Perfecto Laguio, Jr. on February 5, 1982.
But in a little more than two years of wedded bliss, Placido died on October
8, 1984 of a cause written down as COR PULMONALE.
Placido executed a notarial last will and testament written in English
and consisting of two (2) pages, and dated June 15, 1983 but acknowledged
only on August 9, 1983. The first page contains the entire testamentary
dispositions and a part of the attestation clause, and was signed at the end or
bottom of that page by the testator and on the left hand margin by the three
instrumental witnesses. The second page contains the continuation of the
attestation clause and the acknowledgment, and was signed by the witnesses
at the end of the attestation clause and again on the left hand margin.
We stress that the party challenging the will bears the burden of
proving the existence of fraud at the time of its execution. The burden to
show otherwise shifts to the proponent of the will only upon a showing of
credible evidence of fraud. Unfortunately in this case, other than the self-
serving allegations of petitioner, no evidence of fraud was ever presented.
It is a settled doctrine that the omission of some relatives does not
affect the due execution of a will. That the testator was tricked into signing it
was not sufficiently established by the fact that he had instituted his wife, who
was more than fifty years his junior, as the sole beneficiary; and disregarded
petitioner and her family, who were the ones who had taken “the cudgels of
taking care of [the testator] in his twilight years.”
Moreover, as correctly ruled by the appellate court, the conflict
between the dates appearing on the will does not invalidate the document,
“because the law does not even require that a [notarial] will x x x be
executed and acknowledged on the same occasion.” More important, the
will must be subscribed by the testator, as well as by three or more credible
witnesses who must also attest to it in the presence of the testator and of one
another. Furthermore, the testator and the witnesses must acknowledge the
will before a notary public. In any event, we agree with the CA that “the
variance in the dates of the will as to its supposed execution and attestation
was satisfactorily and persuasively explained by the notary public and the
instrumental witnesses.”
Notably, petitioner failed to substantiate her claim of a “grand
conspiracy” in the commission of a fraud. There was no showing that the
witnesses of the proponent stood to receive any benefit from the allowance
of the will. The testimonies of the three subscribing witnesses and the
notary are credible evidence of its due execution. Their testimony favoring it
and the finding that it was executed in accordance with the formalities
required by law should be affirmed, absent any showing of ill motives.
It must be noted that despite his advanced age, he was still able to
identify accurately the kinds of property he owned, the extent of his shares
in them and even their locations. As regards the proper objects of his
bounty, it was sufficient that he identified his wife as sole beneficiary. As
we have stated earlier, the omission of some relatives from the will did not
affect its formal validity. There being no showing of fraud in its execution,
intent in its disposition becomes irrelevant.
WHEREFORE, the Petition is DENIED, and the assailed Decision and
Resolution of the Court of Appeals are AFFIRMED. Costs against
petitioner.