As to cases existing at the time of it enactment, the Philippine
Code of Civil Procedure did not displace the system of parental
control and usufructuary interest defined by the civil Code
respecting the property of minor children.
Held,
therefore, that the right of a parent to emancipate minor children
and thus endow them with capacity to make a valid mortgage of their
real estate persisted notwithstanding the Code of Civil
Procedure.
Section 581 of the Code of Civil Procedure, providing that
"all proceedings in cases of guardianship pending . . . at the
time of the passage of this Act, shall proceed in accordance with
the existing Spanish procedure under which the guardians were
appointed,"
is construed broadly as relating not merely to court
proceedings, but as expressly preserving existing powers and
usufructuary rights of parents over the property of minor children
existing under the Civil Code.
30 Phil.Rep. 228, affirmed.
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE McKENNA delivered the opinion of the Court.
Suit by appellants, Joaquin Ibanez de Aldecoa and Zoilo Ibanez
de Aldecoa, brought in the Court of First
Page 246 U. S. 622
Instance of Manila, to have declared null and void a mortgage
executed by them in favor of appellees on the ground that, when
they executed the mortgage, they were unemancipated minors.
After some preliminary procedure and upon answer filed and
hearing had, the Court of First Instance dismissed the suit as to
Joaquin Ibanez, but granted relief in favor of Zoilo Ibanez. Upon
appeal, the Supreme Court of the Philippine Islands affirmed the
judgment so far as it sustained the validity of the mortgage as to
Joaquin Ibanez, and reversed it, the judgment, so far as it
declared the nullity of the mortgage as to Zoilo Ibanez, and
declared the mortgage binding upon the latter -- that is, declared
the mortgage valid as to both. This appeal was then prosecuted.
The facts are not in dispute. The appellants were born in the
Islands, their parents being natives of Spain. Their father's
domicile was in Manila, where he died October 4, 1895. After his
death, the firm of Aldecoa & Co., of which he had been a
regular member, was reorganized, and his widow became one of the
general or "capitalistic" partners of the firm, and she appeared as
such in the articles of partnership.
On July 31, 1903, the mother of the appellants, they then being
over the age of 18 years, went before a notary public and executed
two instruments wherein and whereby she emancipated them with their
consent.
No guardian of the person or property of appellants has ever
been applied for or appointed under the Code of Civil Procedure of
the Islands since its promulgation; instead, appellants had
continued from the death of their father under the custody of their
mother until the execution of the instruments of emancipation.
February 23, 1906, the firm of Aldecoa & Co. was heavily
indebted to the appellee bank, and the bank was pressing for
payment or security. In consequence,
Page 246 U. S. 623
the mortgage which is the subject of this suit was executed
February 23, 1906. On December 31, 1906, the firm expired by
limitation, and went into liquidation.
The question presented is whether the mother of appellants could
legally emancipate them, and thus confer upon them capacity to
execute a valid mortgage of their real property, they consenting.
The solution of the question, the Supreme Court said,
"involves an inquiry as to the effect of the provisions of the
New Code of Civil Procedure relating to guardianship upon certain
provisions of the Civil Code relating to the control by parents
over the persons and property of their minor children."
In other words, the question in the case turns upon the
accommodation or conflict between certain provisions of the Civil
Code and certain provisions of the Code of Civil Procedure, the
latter being later in enactment. If its provisions did not repeal
or supersede the provisions of the other, the mother of appellants
had power to emancipate them, and their mortgage was a valid
instrument. On this question, the courts below are in dissonance.
The Court of First Instance considered that the codes were
irreconcilable, and gave a repealing strength to the Code of Civil
Procedure. The Supreme Court rejected this conclusion and gave
accommodation to the provisions of the codes by excluding those of
the Code of Civil Procedure from operation upon parents who had
assumed charge of the property of their minor children and were
enjoying its usufruct prior to the adoption of that code. In other
words, the rights and duties of such parents with respect to their
children, including the right of emancipation, continued to be
regulated by the Civil Code.
The court deduced this conclusion from the explicit language of
the Civil Code conferring parental authority, the absence of a
repealing, or modifying or superseding, word in the Code of Civil
Procedure, and the declaration of the latter that guardianships
pending at the time of its
Page 246 U. S. 624
passage should "proceed in accordance with Spanish law," with
certain exceptions, which emphasized the declaration. It, the
declaration, is important, and we therefore quote it. It is §
581, and is as follows:
"Pending guardianships to proceed in accordance with Spanish
law, with certain exceptions. All proceedings in cases of
guardianship pending in the Philippine Islands at the time of the
passage of this act shall proceed in accordance with the existing
Spanish procedure under which the guardians were appointed:
Provided, nevertheless, that any guardian appointed under
existing Spanish law may be removed in accordance with the
provisions of § 574 of this Act, and his successor may be
appointed as therein provided, and every successor to a guardian so
removed shall, in the administration of the person or estate, or
either, as the case may be, of his ward, be governed by the
provisions of this act."
The construction by the Supreme Court is vigorously assailed by
appellants. It was so assailed in the Supreme Court, and the court
answered it and other contentions of appellants by a discussion at
once minute and comprehensive. It is not possible to reproduce it
or even epitomize it. Its basis is the customs and habits of a
people, with resulting rights which found expression and sanction
in the Civil Code, and of which there is no repeal, it was held, or
displacement in the Code of Civil Procedure. And the abruptness of
the change and disorder of rights which the contentions of
appellants involve the court felt and declared.
The change, if change there was, was certainly abrupt, and quite
radical. Under the Civil Code, parents had general control over the
property of their children. "The father, or, in his absence, the
mother, is the legal administrator of the property of the children
who are under their authority" (§ 159), and by subsequent
articles, a usufruct in the property was given to the parents.
"Filiation,"
Page 246 U. S. 625
the court said, "stood in lieu of those legal safeguards" with
which the "Code of Civil Procedure envelops the property of a minor
child." And the court pointed out that there were certain
restrictions upon the parent, but they "did not make the parent a
guardian." It was further held that the Civil Code drew a sharp and
clearly distinguishable line between guardianship, properly so
called, and the
patria potestas, or parental authority,
and confined the former to guardianship contained in article 199 of
that Code, which defined it as
"the custody of the person and property or only of the property
of those who, not being under the parental authority, are incapable
of taking care of themselves."
It was upon these considerations that the court based its
judgment, and if it be granted there are counter-considerations of
strength, we are disposed to defer to the tribunal "on the spot."
It has support in the principles of our jurisprudence which are
repellant to retrospective operation of a law and the repeal by
implication of one law by another. These principles have urgency in
the present case. The change contended for is not only abrupt, but
fundamental. It is not change of procedure merely, but of systems,
disturbing rights, devesting or imposing obligations. Indeed, the
present case is an example. The mother of appellants, in confidence
of her right to do so, emancipated the appellants, and the
appellees, in equal confidence, accepted it as legal, and that many
are in like situation under like confidences may be
conjectured.
It is in effect urged, however, that such disorder was foreseen
and accepted as a consequence of existing laws which the
legislators with ability and care made a study of, and "finding the
law of guardianship and the law of parental authority, as they
stood then, repugnant to the American idea of justice, ruthlessly
brushed aside" the old order and inaugurated "the new in the form
which had
Page 246 U. S. 626
withstood the test of time in the United States." In other
words, displaced the parental authority and all that it meant of
power of administration and enjoyment by the parents of the estates
of their minor children.
We concede the care and ability of the legislators, but deduce a
conclusion different from that of counsel. We are convinced that
neither would have been exercised to displace abruptly a system so
fixed in the habits and sentiments of a people as parental
authority was in the habits of the Islands, and certainly not
without explicit declaration, and leave without warning so radical
and important a change to be collected from disputable
implications. We concur, therefore, with the Supreme Court that
§ 581,
supra, was intended to save "from the
operation of the new act all proceedings in cases of guardianship
pending in the Philippine Islands at the time of its passage." And
guardianship and the administration of an estate did not mean, as
contended by appellants, something procedural in a court, but they
meant what the laws recognized as such, and, we have seen, §
159 of the Civil Code provides that "the father, or, in his
absence, the mother, is the legal administrator of the property of
the children who are under their authority." The right is a
valuable one, and it has as an incident a right as valuable, the
usufruct of the estate administered.
The value and extent of both rights this Court has had occasion
to declare in
Darlington v. Turner, 202 U.
S. 195,
202 U. S. 230
et seq., and, in view of that case, we are forced to think
that, however our habits may induce us to approve the American
system of the relation of parent and child and that there should be
interposed between them when property interests are involved the
order of a court and the security of bonds, there are other peoples
-- including a state of this Union -- who have found that they
could rely with confidence on other than material considerations
for the performance of duty, and that "filiation"
Page 246 U. S. 627
could stand in lieu of "those legal safeguards" with which the
new Code of Procedure "envelops the property of a minor child."
There are other contentions of appellants which are either mixed
with questions of fact or depend upon an appreciation of local
matters and procedure the decision of the local court upon which we
accept.
Judgment affirmed.