1) is a minor;
3) is in the opinion of the court unfit to execute the duties of the trust by reason of drunkenness,
improvidence, or want of understanding or integrity, or by reason of conviction of an offense
involving moral turpitude (Rule 78, Sec. 1, RULES OF COURT);
or the executor or executors are incompetent, refuse the trust, or fail to give bond,
or to such person as such surviving husband or wife, as the case may be, or next of kin, requests to
have appointed,
2) if such surviving husband or wife, as the case may be, or next of kin, or the person selected by
them,
be incompetent or unwilling;
it may be granted to one or more of the principal creditors, if competent and willing to serve; and
it may be granted to such other person as the court may select (Rule 78, Sec. 6)
Principal consideration; Test of Highest Interest and Most Influential Motive. The principal
consideration in the appointment of the administrator is the interest in the estate of the one to be
appointed. The underlying assumption behind the order of preference in the appointment of an
administrator is that those who will reap the benefit of a wise, speedy, economical administration of
the estate or, on the other hand, suffer the consequences of waste, improvidence or
mismanagement, have the highest interest and most influential motive to administer the estate
correctly (Gonzales vs. Aguinaldo, 190 SCRA 112, 1990).
Next of kin. those persons who are entitled under the statute of distribution to the decedents
property (Gabriel vs. Court of Appeals, 212 SCRA 413, 1992). The nearest of kin is preferred in the
choice of administrator because his interest in the estate is more preponderant (Ventura vs. Ventura,
160 SCRA 180, 1988).
The Supreme Court does not look with favor on the practice of clerks of court or other court
employees being appointed as administrators of estates of decedents pending settlement before the
probate court. The objectivity or impartiality of such clerks of court or other employees in discharging
their regular functions may be easily compromised by extraneous considerations. Furthermore, self-
interest may intrude in the prompt and expeditious settlement of the estate because of the
administrators fees and compensation payable to them (2 Bautista 36, citing Medina vs. Court of
Appeals, 53 SCRA 206, 1973).
Co-administrators. Two or more administrators may be appointed for an estate, especially when
it is large and its administration complex.
Co-administration should however be resorted to in exceptional cases only because it may lend to
conflict between or among the co-administrators and diffusion of responsibility.
The appointment of co-administrators has however been upheld for various reasons:
1) to have the benefit of their judgment and perhaps at all times to have different interests
represented;
2) where justice and equity demand that opposing parties or factions be represented in the
management of the estate of the deceased;
3) where the estate is large or, from any cause, an intricate one to settle;
4) to have all interested parties satisfied and the representatives to work in harmony for the best
interests of the estate; and
5) when a person is entitled to the administration of an estate desires to have another competent
person associated with him in the office (Gabriel vs. Court of Appeals, 212 SCRA 413, 1992).
(obligatory force) the letters of administration shall be revoked and all powers thereunder cease,
and the administrator shall forthwith surrender the letters to the court, and render his account within
such time as the court directs (Rule 82, Sec. 1, RULES OF COURT).
1) neglects to render his account and settle the estate according to law,
2) or to perform an order or judgment of the court, or a duty expressly provided by the Rules,
3) or absconds,
4) or becomes insane,
the court may remove him, or, in its discretion, may permit him to resign.
where he failed to pay the estate tax and render an accounting of the estate
and where he involved the heirs in a transaction which caused them to be sued (Mendiola vs. Court
of Appeals, 190 SCRA 421, 1990)
An executor was held to have been properly removed for the following reasons:
1) withdrawal of money from a joint current account maintained in a bank in his name and that of
the deceased and the deposit of the withdrawn amount in a joint account in his name and that of
his brother;
2) the executor omitted to include, as income of the estate, the sum of P6,000.00 which he received
from a hacienda of the deceased and the deposit of other proceeds from deceaseds farm in his joint
account with his brother;
3) the executor claimed as his own certain shares in a gas company in the name of the deceased on
his assertion that the deceased was merely his dummy.
Conflict between the interest of the executor and the interest of the deceased is ground for removal
or resignation of the former who thereby becomes unsuitable to discharge the trust. An executor is
a quasi-trustee who should be indifferent between the estate and claimants of the property, except
to preserve it for due administration (2 Bautista 43, citing Borromeo vs. Borromeo, 97 Phil. 549,
1955).
Effect of Removal on Prior Acts of Administrator. The lawful acts of an executor or administrator
before the revocation of his letters testamentary or of administration, or before his resignation or
removal,
(obligatory force) shall have the like validity as if there had been no such revocation, resignation, or
removal (Rule 82, Sec. 3, RULES OF COURT).
2) and may prosecute or defend actions commenced by or against the former executor or
administrator,
3) and have executions on judgments recovered in the name of such former executor or
adminsitrator.
An authority granted by the court to the former executor or administrator for the sale or mortgage
of real estate may be renewed in favor of such person without further notice or hearing (Rule 82,
Sec. 4, RULES OF COURT).