Cabanas
v. Pilapil
G.R. No. L-25843 July 25, 1974
Fernando, J.
Facts:
The
insured, Florentino Pilapil had a child, Millian Pilapil, with a married woman,
the plaintiff, Melchora Cabanas. She was ten years old at the time the complaint
was filed on October 10, 1964. The defendant, Francisco Pilapil, is the brother
of the deceased. The deceased insured himself and instituted as beneficiary, his
child, with his brother to act as trustee during her minority. Upon his death, the
proceeds were paid to him. Hence this complaint by the mother, with whom the child
is living, seeking the delivery of such sum. She filed the bond required by the
Civil Code. Defendant would justify his claim to the retention of the amount in
question by invoking the terms of the insurance policy.
After
trial duly had, the lower court in a decision of May 10, 1965, rendered judgment
ordering the defendant to deliver the proceeds of the policy in question to plaintiff.
Its main reliance was on Articles 320 and 321 of the Civil Code. The former provides:
“The father, or in his absence the mother, is the legal administrator of the property
pertaining to the child under parental authority. If the property is worth more
than two thousand pesos, the father or mother shall give a bond subject to the approval
of the Court of First Instance.” The latter states: “The property which the unemancipated
child has acquired or may acquire with his work or industry, or by any lucrative
title, belongs to the child in ownership, and in usufruct to the father or mother
under whom he is under parental authority and whose company he lives; …
Conformity to such
explicit codal norm is apparent in this portion of the appealed decision: “The insurance
proceeds belong to the beneficiary. The beneficiary is a minor under the custody
and parental authority of the plaintiff, her mother. The said minor lives with plaintiff
or lives in the company of the plaintiff. The said minor acquired this property
by lucrative title. Said property, therefore, belongs to the minor child in ownership,
and in usufruct to the plaintiff, her mother. Since under our law the usufructuary
is entitled to possession, the plaintiff is entitled to possession of the insurance
proceeds. The trust, insofar as it is in conflict with the above quoted provision
of law, is pro tanto null and void. In order, however, to protect the rights of
the minor, Millian Pilapil, the plaintiff should file an additional bond in the
guardianship proceedings to raise her bond therein to the total amount of P5,000.00.”
Issue:
Who
between the mother and the uncle of a minor beneficiary of the proceeds of an insurance
policy issued on the life of her deceased father is entitled to be a trustee thereof?
Held:
The
mother is entitled to be a trustee thereto. What is paramount is the welfare of
the child. It is in consonance with such primordial end that Articles 320 and 321
have been worded. There is recognition in the law of the deep ties that bind parent
and child. In the event that there is less than full measure of concern for the
offspring, the protection is supplied by the bond required. With the added circumstance
that the child stays with the mother, not the uncle, without any evidence of lack
of maternal care, the decision arrived at can stand the test of the strictest scrutiny.
It is further fortified by the assumption, both logical and natural, that infidelity
to the trust imposed by the deceased is much less in the case of a mother than in
the case of an uncle.
The judiciary, as an agency of the State acting as parens patriae, is called upon whenever a pending
suit of litigation affects one who is a minor to accord priority to his best interest.
It may happen, as it did occur here, that family relations may press their respective
claims. It would be more in consonance not only with the natural order of things
but the tradition of the country for a parent to be preferred. it could have been
different if the conflict were between father and mother. Such is not the case at
all. It is a mother asserting priority. Certainly the judiciary as the instrumentality
of the State in its role of parens patriae,
cannot remain insensible to the validity of her plea.
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