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MAXEY Vs CA Case Digest
MAXEY Vs CA Case Digest
THESIS STATEMENT
Maxey, et al., filed a petition for review of the case instituted on June 26, 1962,
wherein the Court of Appeals is in favor of the defendant-spouses who asserted that
they are the true and lawful owners and possessors of the properties in question.
This petition for review involves the rights of a woman over properties acquired in 1912
principally through the efforts of the man she was living with and at a time when the two
were not yet legally married.
Facts
In 1911 and 1912, respectively, the late Melbourne Maxey acquired the parcels
of land.
Maxey and Regina Morales (both deceased) lived together as husband and wife
(was legally married on February 16, 1919) in Banganga, Davao; that out of said union
were born six (6) children, among them are the herein plaintiffs, namely: John or Carlos,
Lucille, Margaret, Florence, Fred and George, all surnamed Maxey.
Melbourne Maxey, through his attorney-in-fact Julia Pamatluan Maxey, sold in
favor of the defendants-spouses in 1953 the parcels of land under litigation which fact of
sale was not controverted by the perties; that since thereof, the defendants-spouses
have taken immediate possession thereof continuously up to the present.
The sales of the said lands in favor of the defendants-spouses in 1953, after the
death of their mother, Regina Morales, was executed by their father, Melbourne Maxey,
without the petitioners’ knowledge and consent; and that they came to know of the
above mentioned sales only in 1961.
Petitioners instituted the present case on January 26, 1962, before the Court of
First Instance of Davao, praying for the annulment of the documents of sale covering
the subject parcels of land and to recover possession thereof with damages from the
herein defendants-spouses. Defendants-spouses deny the material allegations of the
complaint and assert by way of affirmative defenses that they are the true and lawful
owners and possessors of the properties 'm question having purchased the same in
good faith and for value from Melbourne Maxey during his lifetime in 1953, based upon
the reasonable belief that the latter is the me and exclusive owner of the said parcels of
land and that since then, they have been in possession thereof openly, exclusively and
continuously in concept of owners.
Melbourne remarried and in 1953, Julia Pamatluan Maxey (the second wife) sold
the properties to the respondent spouses, Mr. and Mrs. Beato C. Macayra using a
power of attorney.
Plaintiffs instituted the present case on January 26, 1962, before the Court of
First Instance of Davao, praying for the annulment of the documents of sale covering
the subject parcels of land and to recover possession thereof with damages from the
herein defendants-spouses, alleging, among others, that the aforesaid realties were
common properties of their parents, having been acquired during their lifetime and
through their joint effort and capital; and that the sales of the of the said lands in favor of
the defendants-spouses in 1953, after the death of their mother, Regina Morales, was
executed by their father, Melbourne Maxey, without their knowledge and consent; and
that they came to know of the above mentioned sales only in 1961.
The petitioners claim that their parents were united in 1903 in a marriage
performed in the “military fashion”. Both the trial court and the appellate court rejected
this claim of “military fashion” marriage.
The Court of First Instance and the Court of Appeals correctly rejected the
argument that Act No. 3613, the Revised Marriage Law, recognized "military fashion"
marriages as legal. Maxey and Morales were legally married at a church wedding
solemnized on February 16, 1919. The Court of First Instance and the Court of Appeals
both ruled that Melbourne Maxey and Regina Morales were married only in 1919.
The Court of Appeals, found the parcels of land to be exclusive properties of the
late Melbourne Maxey. It held that the disputed properties were exclusively those of the
petitioner’s father because these were not acquired through the joint efforts of their
parents.
The Court of Appeals, was of the opinion that Article 144 of the Civil Code is not
applicable to the properties in question citing the case of Aznar et al. v. Garcia (102
Phil. 1055) on non-retroactivity of codal provisions where vested rights may be
prejudiced or impaired judgment.
ISSUES
Whether or not the petitioners’ mother has rights over the properties of their father?
RULING
The petition for review on certiorari is hereby granted. The judgment of the Court
of Appeals is reversed and set aside insofar as one-half of the disputed
properties are concerned. The private respondents are ordered to return one-half
of said properties to the heirs of Regina Morales. No costs.
The disputed properties were owned in common by Melbourne Maxey and the
estate of his late wife, Regina Morales, when they were sold. Technically
speaking, the petitioners should return one-half of the P1,300.00 purchase price
of the land while the private respondents should pay some form of rentals for
their use of one-half of the properties. Equitable considerations, however, lead us
to rule out rentals on one hand and return of P650.00 on the other.
Laws shall have no retroactive effect, unless the contrary is provided. The
question of how far the new Civil Code should be made applicable to past acts
and events is attended with the utmost difficulty. It is easy enough to understand
the abstract principle that laws have no retroactive effect because vested or
acquired rights should be respected. But what are vested or acquired rights? The
Commission did not venture to formulate a definition of a vested or acquired right
seeing that the problem is extremely committed.
No. Article 144 of the Civil Code provides: When a man and a woman live
together as husband and wife, but they are not married, or their marriage is void from
the beginning, the property acquired by either or both of them through their work or
industry or their wages and salaries shall be governed by the rules on co-
ownership.
With the enactment of the new Civil Code, Article 144 codified the law
established through judicial precedents but with the modification that the property
governed by the rules on co-ownership may be acquired by either or both of them
through their work or industry. Even if it is only the man who works, the property
acquired during the man and wife relationship belongs through a fifty-fifty
sharing to the two of them.
Code Commission stated: Laws shall have no retroactive effect, unless the
contrary is provided. What constitutes a vested or acquired right well be determined
by the courts as each particular issue is submitted to them.
The Supreme Court granted the petition for review on certiorari. The judgment of
the Court of Appeals is reversed and set aside insofar as one-half of the disputed
properties are concerned. The private respondents are ordered to return one-half of
said properties to the heirs of Regina Morales. No costs.