0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views2 pages

Cruz v. Villasor

This document is a court case regarding the probate of a last will and testament. The petitioner opposed allowing probate of the will, alleging it was executed through fraud and undue influence. The sole question is whether the will was executed in accordance with law, specifically requiring at least three credible witnesses and acknowledgment before a notary public. However, the third witness was also the notary public, so the petitioner argued there were effectively only two witnesses. The court sided with the petitioner, finding that having the notary public also act as a witness violates the legal requirement of having three witnesses, as the notary public cannot acknowledge their own signature. The judgment appealed is therefore reversed and probate of the will set aside

Uploaded by

Paris Lison
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
Download as doc, pdf, or txt
0% found this document useful (0 votes)
34 views2 pages

Cruz v. Villasor

This document is a court case regarding the probate of a last will and testament. The petitioner opposed allowing probate of the will, alleging it was executed through fraud and undue influence. The sole question is whether the will was executed in accordance with law, specifically requiring at least three credible witnesses and acknowledgment before a notary public. However, the third witness was also the notary public, so the petitioner argued there were effectively only two witnesses. The court sided with the petitioner, finding that having the notary public also act as a witness violates the legal requirement of having three witnesses, as the notary public cannot acknowledge their own signature. The judgment appealed is therefore reversed and probate of the will set aside

Uploaded by

Paris Lison
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
Download as doc, pdf, or txt
Download as doc, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1/ 2

G.R. No.

L-32213 November 26, 1973


AGAPITA N. CRUZ, petitioner,
vs.
HON. JUDGE GUILLERMO P. VILLASOR, Presiding Judge of Branch I, Court of First Instance of Cebu, and MANUEL B. LUGAY,
respondents.
Paul G. Gorrez for petitioner.
Mario D. Ortiz for respondent Manuel B. Lugay.

ESGUERRA, J.:
Petition to review on certiorari the judgment of the Court First Instance of Cebu allowing the probate of the last will a testament of the late
Valente Z. Cruz. Petitioner-appellant Agapita N. Cruz, the surviving spouse of the said decease opposed the allowance of the will (Exhibit
"E"), alleging the will was executed through fraud, deceit, misrepresentation and undue influence; that the said instrument was execute
without the testator having been fully informed of the content thereof, particularly as to what properties he was disposing and that the
supposed last will and testament was not executed in accordance with law. Notwithstanding her objection, the Court allowed the probate of
the said last will and testament Hence this appeal by certiorari which was given due course.
The only question presented for determination, on which the decision of the case hinges, is whether the supposed last will and testament of
Valente Z. Cruz (Exhibit "E") was executed in accordance with law, particularly Articles 805 and 806 of the new Civil Code, the first requiring
at least three credible witnesses to attest and subscribe to the will, and the second requiring the testator and the witnesses to acknowledge
the will before a notary public.
Of the three instrumental witnesses thereto, namely Deogracias T. Jamaloas Jr., Dr. Francisco Paares and Atty. Angel H. Teves, Jr., one of
them, the last named, is at the same time the Notary Public before whom the will was supposed to have been acknowledged. Reduced to
simpler terms, the question was attested and subscribed by at least three credible witnesses in the presence of the testator and of each
other, considering that the three attesting witnesses must appear before the notary public to acknowledge the same. As the third witness is
the notary public himself, petitioner argues that the result is that only two witnesses appeared before the notary public to acknowledge the
will. On the other hand, private respondent-appellee, Manuel B. Lugay, who is the supposed executor of the will, following the reasoning of
the trial court, maintains that there is substantial compliance with the legal requirement of having at least three attesting witnesses even if the
notary public acted as one of them, bolstering up his stand with 57 American Jurisprudence, p. 227 which, insofar as pertinent, reads as
follows:
It is said that there are, practical reasons for upholding a will as against the purely technical reason that one of the
witnesses required by law signed as certifying to an acknowledgment of the testator's signature under oath rather than
as attesting the execution of the instrument.
After weighing the merits of the conflicting claims of the parties, We are inclined to sustain that of the appellant that the last will and
testament in question was not executed in accordance with law. The notary public before whom the will was acknowledged cannot be
considered as the third instrumental witness since he cannot acknowledge before himself his having signed the will. To acknowledge before
means to avow (Javellana v. Ledesma, 97 Phil. 258, 262; Castro v. Castro, 100 Phil. 239, 247); to own as genuine, to assent, to admit; and
"before" means in front or preceding in space or ahead of. (The New Webster Encyclopedic Dictionary of the English Language, p. 72; Funk
& Wagnalls New Standard Dictionary of the English Language, p. 252; Webster's New International Dictionary 2d. p. 245.) Consequently, if
the third witness were the notary public himself, he would have to avow assent, or admit his having signed the will in front of himself. This
cannot be done because he cannot split his personality into two so that one will appear before the other to acknowledge his participation in
the making of the will. To permit such a situation to obtain would be sanctioning a sheer absurdity.
Furthermore, the function of a notary public is, among others, to guard against any illegal or immoral arrangement Balinon v. De Leon, 50 0.
G. 583.) That function would defeated if the notary public were one of the attesting instrumental witnesses. For them he would be interested
sustaining the validity of the will as it directly involves him and the validity of his own act. It would place him in inconsistent position and the
very purpose of acknowledgment, which is to minimize fraud (Report of Code Commission p. 106-107), would be thwarted.
Admittedly, there are American precedents holding that notary public may, in addition, act as a witness to the executive of the document he
has notarized. (Mahilum v. Court Appeals, 64 0. G. 4017; 17 SCRA 482; Sawyer v. Cox, 43 Ill. 130). There are others holding that his signing
merely as notary in a will nonetheless makes him a witness thereon (Ferguson v. Ferguson, 47 S. E. 2d. 346; In Re Douglas Will, N. Y. S. 2d.
641; Ragsdal v. Hill, 269 S. W. 2d. 911, Tyson Utterback, 122 So. 496; In Re Baybee's Estate 160 N. 900; W. Merill v. Boal, 132 A. 721; See
also Trenwith v. Smallwood, 15 So. 1030). But these authorities do not serve the purpose of the law in this jurisdiction or are not decisive of
the issue herein because the notaries public and witnesses referred to aforecited cases merely acted as instrumental, subscribing attesting
witnesses, and not as acknowledging witnesses. He the notary public acted not only as attesting witness but also acknowledging witness, a
situation not envisaged by Article 805 of the Civil Code which reads:

ART. 806. Every will must be acknowledged before a notary public by the testator and the witnesses. The notary public
shall not be required to retain a copy of the will or file another with the office of the Clerk of Court. [Emphasis supplied]
To allow the notary public to act as third witness, or one the attesting and acknowledging witnesses, would have the effect of having only two
attesting witnesses to the will which would be in contravention of the provisions of Article 80 be requiring at least three credible witnesses to
act as such and of Article 806 which requires that the testator and the required number of witnesses must appear before the notary public to
acknowledge the will. The result would be, as has been said, that only two witnesses appeared before the notary public for or that purpose.
In the circumstances, the law would not be duly in observed.
FOR ALL THE FOREGOING, the judgment appealed from is hereby reversed and the probate of the last will and testament of Valente Z.
Cruz (Exhibit "E") is declared not valid and hereby set aside.
Cost against the appellee.

You might also like