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Bonsato Vs CA

The heirs of Domingo Bonsato filed a case claiming that two deeds of donation signed by Bonsato in 1949 transferring land to his brother and nephew were donations mortis causa and void for lack of formalities. The defendants denied this and said the donations were made in consideration of past services. The trial court found the deeds were valid donations inter vivos. The Supreme Court ruled the donations were also inter vivos because the deeds conveyed immediate title, Bonsato retained only the right to fruits and did not reserve revocability, and validity was not dependent on his surviving the transferees.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
499 views1 page

Bonsato Vs CA

The heirs of Domingo Bonsato filed a case claiming that two deeds of donation signed by Bonsato in 1949 transferring land to his brother and nephew were donations mortis causa and void for lack of formalities. The defendants denied this and said the donations were made in consideration of past services. The trial court found the deeds were valid donations inter vivos. The Supreme Court ruled the donations were also inter vivos because the deeds conveyed immediate title, Bonsato retained only the right to fruits and did not reserve revocability, and validity was not dependent on his surviving the transferees.

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Sj Eclipse
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Bonsato vs CA Case Digest 95 PHIL 481

FACTS:
Respondents Josefa Utea and other heirs of Domingo Bonsato and his wife Andrea Nacario, both deceased filed thi
case at the CFI Pangasinan. Their complaint (for annulment and damages) charged that in 1949, Domingo Bonsato,
then already a widower, had been induced and deceived into signing two notarial deeds of donations in favor of his
brother Juan Bonsato and of his nephew Felipe Bonsato, respectively. The deeds transferred to them several parcels
of land. Also, they likewise charged that the donations were mortis causa and void for lack of the requisite
formalities.
The defendants, Juan Bonsato and Felipe Bonsato denied this and answered averring that the donations were
voluntarily executed in consideration of past services rendered by them to the late Domingo Bonsato. Also, praying
for the dismissal of the case, they claimed that the deeds were executed freely without the use of force and violence,
misrepresentation or intimidation.
The CFI favored the defendants finding that the deeds of donation were executed by the donor while the latter was
of sound mind, without pressure or intimidation; that the deeds were of donation inter vivos without any condition
making their validity or efficacy dependent upon the death of the donor; but as the properties donated were
presumptively conjugal, having been acquired during the coverture of Domingo Bonsato and his wife Andrea
Nacario, the donations were only valid as to an undivided one-half share in the three parcels of land described
therein.
ISSUE:
W/N the donation was a donation mortis causa or a donation inter vivos?
HELD:
The SC ruled that it was a donation inter vivos. If it was a donation mortis causa, then the documents should reveal
any or all of the following characteristics:
(1) Convey no title or ownership to the transferee before the death of the transferor; or, what amounts to the same
thing,
that the transferor should retain the ownership (full or naked) and control of the property while alive;
(2) That before his death, the transfer should be revocable by the transferor at will, ad nutum; but revocability may
be provided for indirectly by means of a reserved power in the donor to dispose of the properties conveyed;
(3) That the transfer should be void if the transferor should survive the transferee.
None of these characteristics appear in the deeds of donation executed by the late Domingo Bonsato. The donor only
reserved for himself, during his lifetime, the owners share of the fruits or produce, a reservation that would be
unnecessary if the ownership of the donated property remained with the donor. Further, the absence of stipulation
that the donor could revoke the donations, and on the contrary, the deeds expressly declare them to be irrevocable,
a quality absolutely incompatible with conveyances mortis causa, where revocability is of the essence of the act, to
the extent that a testator can not lawfully waive or restrict his right of revocation (Old Civil Code, Art. 737; New
Civil Code, Art. 828).

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