Under Philippine law, specifically the Civil Code and the Family Code, the surviving spouse (widow or widower) occupies a protected and privileged position. The law ensures that they are not left destitute upon the death of their partner, classifying them as a Compulsory Heir.
This article outlines the substantive rights, the specific shares (legitimes), and the procedural steps involved in inheriting from a deceased spouse in the Philippines.
1. The Surviving Spouse as a Compulsory Heir
In the Philippines, a person cannot simply "disinherit" a spouse without a specific, legally proven cause (such as an attempt on the life of the testator). The surviving spouse is a Compulsory Heir, meaning the law reserves a portion of the deceased’s estate for them. This reserved portion is called the Legitime.
Types of Succession
- Testate Succession: When the deceased left a valid Last Will and Testament.
- Intestat Succession: When the deceased died without a will. The law provides a default distribution scheme.
2. Table of Inheritable Shares
The share of the surviving spouse depends on who else survives the deceased. The following table summarizes the shares under Intestate Succession (no will) and Testate Succession (legitime).
| Surviving Heirs | Share of Surviving Spouse (Intestate) | Legitime of Surviving Spouse (Testate) |
|---|---|---|
| Spouse + One Legitimate Child | 1/2 of the estate | 1/4 of the estate |
| Spouse + Several Legitimate Children | Same share as one legitimate child | Same share as one legitimate child |
| Spouse + Legitimate Parents | 1/2 of the estate | 1/4 of the estate |
| Spouse + Illegitimate Children | 1/2 of the estate | 1/4 of the estate |
| Spouse + Legitimate Children + Illegitimate Children | Same share as one legitimate child | Same share as one legitimate child |
| Spouse Alone | Entire estate | 1/2 of the estate (the rest is free portion) |
| Spouse + Brothers/Sisters/Nephews/Nieces | 1/2 of the estate | 1/2 of the estate |
Note on Conjugal Property: Before inheritance is calculated, the "mass of the estate" must be determined. This involves liquidating the conjugal partnership. Generally, 50% of the common property belongs to the surviving spouse as their personal share of the marriage partnership; only the remaining 50% (the deceased’s half) plus any "exclusive property" of the deceased constitutes the Hereditary Estate.
3. The Right to the Family Home
Under the Family Code of the Philippines, the family home is characterized as a sacred unit.
- Occupancy: The surviving spouse has the right to continue occupying the family home.
- Exemption from Execution: The family home is generally exempt from execution, forced sale, or attachment, provided it was constituted as such.
- Article 159: The family home shall continue for ten years after the death of one of the spouses, or as long as there is a minor beneficiary, regardless of whether the property is inherited by others.
4. Legal Procedures for Settlement
To transfer the titles of properties (land, cars, bank accounts) from the deceased to the surviving spouse and other heirs, one of two procedures must be followed:
A. Extrajudicial Settlement of Estate
This is the fastest and least expensive method. It can be used only if:
- The deceased left no will.
- The deceased left no debts (or all debts have been settled).
- All heirs are of legal age (or represented by judicial guardians).
- All heirs agree on the division of the properties.
Process: The heirs sign a public instrument (Deed of Extrajudicial Settlement), publish a notice in a newspaper of general circulation for three consecutive weeks, and pay the estate tax.
B. Judicial Settlement of Estate
If the heirs cannot agree, or if there is a Will, a court proceeding is required.
- Petition for Probate: If there is a will, the court must first determine its extrinsic validity.
- Letters of Administration: If there is no will or the executor is disqualified, the court appoints an administrator (often the surviving spouse).
- Inventory and Appraisal: All assets and debts are listed.
- Distribution: The court orders the final distribution after debts and taxes are paid.
5. Estate Tax and the TRAIN Law
Under the current tax regime (TRAIN Law), the estate tax is a flat rate of 6% of the net estate.
- Standard Deduction: A significant deduction of ₱5 Million is allowed from the gross estate.
- Family Home Deduction: If the family home is part of the estate, an additional deduction of up to ₱10 Million may be claimed.
- Tax Clearance: The Bureau of Internal Revenue (BIR) must issue a Certificate Authorizing Registration (CAR) before the Register of Deeds can transfer land titles to the heirs.
6. Disqualification and Unworthiness
A surviving spouse may lose their right to inherit under Article 1032 of the Civil Code if they are found "unworthy." Grounds include:
- Conviction of an attempt against the life of the deceased spouse.
- Adultery or concubinage with a third party (under certain criminal conditions).
- Failure to report the violent death of the spouse within a month, if known.
- Causing the deceased to make a will or change one through fraud, violence, or intimidation.
Important Distinction: Legal separation does not necessarily disqualify a spouse from inheriting intestate unless the surviving spouse was the "guilty party." However, a decree of Annulment or Nullity of Marriage severs the legal bond entirely, removing all rights of succession.