PRIMA PARTOSA-JO, petitioner, vs. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS and HO HANG
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Transcript of PRIMA PARTOSA-JO, petitioner, vs. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS and HO HANG
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7/29/2019 PRIMA PARTOSA-JO, petitioner, vs. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS and HO HANG
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[G.R. No. 82606. December 18, 1992.]
PRIMA PARTOSA-JO, petitioner, vs. THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS
and HO HANG (WITH ALIASES JOSE JO AND CONSING), respondents.
Leo B. Diocos for petitioner.
Antonio Ramas-Uypitching for private respondent.
SYLLABUS
1. REMEDIAL LAW; JUDGMENT; AMBIGUITY CAUSED BY OMISSION OR
MISTAKE IN DISPOSITIVE PORTION OF DECISION; MAY BE CLARIFIED BY THIS
COURT BY AMENDMENT EVEN AFTER JUDGMENT BECOME FINAL. The
dispositive portion of the decision in question was incomplete insofar as it
carried no ruling on the complaint for judicial separation of conjugal
property although it was extensively discussed in the body of the decision.
Nevertheless, the technicality invoked in this case should not be allowed toprevail over considerations of substantive justice. After all, the technical
defect is not insuperable. We have said time and again that where there is
an ambiguity caused by an omission or mistake in the dispositive portion of
the decision, this Court may clarify such ambiguity by an amendment even
after the judgment has become final. In doing so, the Court may resort to
the pleadings filed by the parties and the findings of fact and the
conclusions of law expressed in the text or body of the decision.
2. CIVIL LAW; FAMILY CODE; PROPERTY RELATIONS BETWEENHUSBAND AND WIFE; CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP OF GAINS; DISSOLUTION
THEREOF BY PETITION FOR JUDICIAL SEPARATION OF PROPERTIES;
GROUNDS. Art. 178(3) of the Civil Code has been superseded by Article
128 of the Family Code. Under this provision, the aggrieved spouse may
petition for judicial separation on either of these grounds: 1. Abandonment
by a spouse of the other without just cause; and 2. Failure of one spouse to
comply with his or her obligations to the family without just cause, even if
said spouse does not leave the other spouse.
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ABANDONMENT, EXPLAINED.
Abandonment implies a departure by one spouse with the avowed intent
never to return, followed by prolonged absence without just cause, and
without in the meantime providing in the least for one's family although
able to do so. There must be absolute cessation of marital relations, duties
and rights, with the intention of perpetual separation. This idea is clearly
expressed in the above-quoted provision, which states that "a spouse isdeemed to have abandoned the other when he or she has left the conjugal
dwelling without any intention of returning."
4. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; SUFFICIENT CAUSE PRESENT IN CASE AT BAR.
The record shows that as early as 1942, the private respondent had already
rejected the petitioner, whom he denied admission to their conjugal home
in Dumaguete City when she returned from Zamboanguita. The fact that she
was not accepted by Jo demonstrates all too clearly that he had no intention
of resuming their conjugal relationship. Moreover, beginning 1968 until the
final determination by this Court of the action for support in 1988, the
private respondent refused to give financial support to the petitioner. The
physical separation of the parties, coupled with the refusal by the private
respondent to give support to the petitioner, sufficed to constitute
abandonment as a ground for the judicial separation of their conjugal
property. Their separation thus falls also squarely under Article 135 of the
Family Code, providing as follows: Art. 135. Any of the following shall be
considered sufficient cause for judicial separation of property: . . . (6) That at
the time of the petition, the spouses have been separated in fact for at least
one year and reconciliation is highly improbable.
5. ID.; FAMILY CODE; MADE APPLICABLE IN CASE AT BAR. The
amendments introduced in the Family Code are applicable to the case
before us although they became effective only on August 3, 1988. As we
held in Ramirez vs. Court of Appeals, 72 SCRA 231: The greater weight of
authority is inclined to the view that an appellate court, in reviewing a
judgment on appeal, will dispose of a question according to the law
prevailing at the time of such disposition, and not according to the law
prevailing at the time of rendition of the appealed judgment. The court will
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therefore reverse a judgment which was correct at the time it was originally
rendered where, by statute, there has been an intermediate change in the
law which renders such judgment erroneous at the time the case was finally
disposed of on appeal.
6. ID.; ID.; PROPERTY RELATIONS BETWEEN HUSBAND AND WIFE;
CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP OF GAINS, DISSOLUTION THEREOF BY JUDICIAL
SEPARATION OF PROPERTIES; DIVISION BETWEEN SPOUSES. The order of
judicial separation of the properties in question is based on the finding of
both the trial and respondent courts that the private respondent is indeed
their real owner. It is these properties that should now be divided between
him and the petitioner, on the assumption that they were acquired during
coverture and so belong to the spouses half and half. As the private
respondent is a Chinese citizen, the division must include such properties
properly belonging to the conjugal partnership as may have been registered
in the name of other persons in violation of the Anti-Dummy Law.
D E C I S I O N
CRUZ, J p:
The herein private respondent, Jose Jo, admits to having cohabited with
three women and fathered fifteen children. The first of these women, the
herein petitioner, claims to be his legal wife by whom he begot a daughter,
Monina Jo. The other two women and their respective offspring are not
parties to this case.
In 1980, the petitioner filed a complaint against Jo for judicial separation of
conjugal property, docketed as Civil Case No. 51, in addition to an earlier
action for support, also against him and docketed as Civil Case No. 36, in the
Regional Trial Court of Negros Oriental, Branch 35.
The two cases were consolidated and tried jointly. On November 29, 1983,
Judge German G. Lee, Jr. rendered an extensive decision, the dispositive
portion of which read:
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing arguments and considerations, this
court hereby holds that the plaintiff Prima Partosa was legally married to
Jose Jo alias Ho Hang, alias Consing, and, therefore, is entitled to support as
the lawfully wedded wife and the defendant is hereby ordered to give a
monthly support of P500.00 to the plaintiff Prima Partosa, to be paid on or
before the 5th day of every month, and to give to the plaintiff the amount
of P40,000.00 for the construction of the house in Zamboanguita, NegrosOriental where she may live separately from the defendant being entitled
under the law to separate maintenance being the innocent spouse and to
pay the amount of P19,200.00 to the plaintiff by way of support in-arrears
and to pay the plaintiff the amount of P3,000.00 in the concept of attorney's
fees. prcd
As will be noticed, there was a definite disposition of the complaint for
support but none of the complaint for judicial separation of conjugal
property.
Jo elevated the decision to the Court of Appeals, which affirmed the ruling
of the trial court in the complaint for support. 1 The complaint for judicial
separation of conjugal property was dismissed for lack of a cause of action
and on the ground that separation by agreement was not covered by Article
178 of the Civil Code.
When their motions for reconsideration were denied, both parties came to
this Court for relief. The private respondent's petition for review on
certiorari was dismissed for tardiness in our resolution dated February 17,1988, where we also affirmed the legality of the marriage between Jose and
Prima and the obligation of the former to support her and her daughter.
This petition deals only with the complaint for judicial separation of conjugal
property.
It is here submitted that the Court of Appeals erred in holding that: a) the
judicial separation of conjugal property sought was not allowed under
Articles 175, 178 and 191 of the Civil Code; and b) no such separation was
decreed by the trial court in the dispositive portion of its decision.
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The private respondent contends that the decision of the trial court can no
longer be reviewed at this time because it has long since become final and
executory. As the decretal portion clearly made no disposition of Civil Case
No. 51, that case should be considered impliedly dismissed. The petitioner
should have called the attention of the trial court to the omission so that
the proper rectification could be made on time. Not having done so, she is
now concluded by the said decision, which can no longer be corrected atthis late hour.
We deal first with the second ground.
While admitting that no mention was made of Civil Case No. 51 in the
dispositive portion of the decision of the trial court, the petitioner argues
that a disposition of that case was nonetheless made in the penultimate
paragraph of the decision reading as follows:
It is, therefore, hereby ordered that all properties in question areconsidered properties of Jose Jo, the defendant in this case, subject to
separation of property under Article 178, third paragraph of the Civil Code,
which is subject of separate proceedings as enunciated herein.
The petitioner says she believed this to be disposition enough and so did not
feel it was necessary for her to appeal, particularly since the order
embodied in that paragraph was in her favor. It was only when the
respondent court observed that there was no dispositive portion regarding
that case and so ordered its dismissal that she found it necessary to come to
this Court for relief. Cdpr
The petitioner has a point.
The dispositive portion of the decision in question was incomplete insofar as
it carried no ruling on the complaint for judicial separation of conjugal
property although it was extensively discussed in the body of the decision.
The drafting of the decision was indeed not exactly careful. The petitioner's
counsel, noting this, should have taken immediate steps for the rectification
of the omission so that the ruling expressed in the text of the decision could
have been embodied in the decretal portion. Such alertness could have
avoided this litigation on a purely technical issue.
Nevertheless, the technicality invoked in this case should not be allowed to
prevail over considerations of substantive justice. After all, the technical
defect is not insuperable. We have said time and again that where there is
an ambiguity caused by an omission or mistake in the dispositive portion of
the decision, this Court may clarify such ambiguity by an amendment even
after the judgment has become final. 2 In doing so, the Court may resort to
the pleadings filed by the parties and the findings of fact and the
conclusions of law expressed in the text or body of the decision. 3
The trial court made definite findings on the complaint for judicial
separation of conjugal property, holding that the petitioner and the private
respondent were legally married and that the properties mentioned by the
petitioner were acquired by Jo during their marriage although they were
registered in the name of an apparent dummy.
There is no question therefore that the penultimate paragraph of the
decision of the trial court was a ruling based upon such findings and so
should have been embodied in the dispositive portion. The respondent
court should have made the necessary modification instead of dismissing
Civil Case No. 51 and thus upholding mere form over substance.
In the interest of substantive justice, and to expedite these proceedings, we
hereby make such modification.
And now to the merits of Civil Case No. 51.
The Court of Appeals dismissed the complaint on the ground that the
separation of the parties was due to their agreement and not because of
abandonment. The respondent court relied mainly on the testimony of the
petitioner, who declared under oath that she left Dumaguete City, where
she and Jo were living together "because that was our agreement." It held
that an agreement to live separately without just cause was void under
Article 221 of the Civil Code and could not sustain any claim of
abandonment by the aggrieved spouse. Its conclusion was that the only
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remedy available to the petitioner was legal separation under Article 175 of
the Civil Code, 4 by virtue of which the conjugal partnership of property
would be terminated.
The petitioner contends that the respondent court has misinterpreted
Articles 175, 178 and 191 of the Civil Code. She submits that the agreement
between her and the private respondent was for her to temporarily live
with her parents during the initial period of her pregnancy and for him to
visit and support her. They never agreed to separate permanently. And even
if they did, this arrangement was repudiated and ended in 1942, when she
returned to him at Dumaguete City and, he refused to accept her.
The petitioner invokes Article 178 (3) of the Civil Code, which reads:
ARTICLE 178. The separation in fact between husband and wife without
judicial approval, shall not affect the conjugal partnership, except that:
xxx xxx xxx
(3) If the husband has abandoned the wife without just cause for at
least one year, she may petition the court for a receivership, or
administration by her of the conjugal partnership property or separation of
property.
The above-quoted provision has been superseded by Article 128 of the
Family Code, which states:
ARTICLE 128. If a spouse without just cause abandons the other or fails to
comply with his or her obligations to the family, the aggrieved spouse may
petition the court for receivership, for judicial separation of property, or for
authority to be the sole administrator of the conjugal partnership property,
subject to such precautionary conditions as the court may impose. llcd
The obligations to the family mentioned in the preceding paragraph refer to
marital, parental or property relations.
A spouse is deemed to have abandoned the other when he or she has left
the conjugal dwelling without any intention of returning. The spouse who
has left the conjugal dwelling for a period of three months or has failed
within the same period to give any information as to his or her whereabouts
shall be prima facie presumed to have no intention of returning to the
conjugal dwelling.
Under this provision, the aggrieved spouse may petition for judicial
separation on either of these grounds:
1. Abandonment by a spouse of the other without just cause; and
2. Failure of one spouse to comply with his or her obligations to the
family without just cause, even if said spouse does not leave the other
spouse.
Abandonment implies a departure by one spouse with the avowed intent
never to return, followed by prolonged absence without just cause, and
without in the meantime providing in the least for one's family although
able to do so. 5 There must be absolute cessation of marital relations,
duties and rights, with the intention of perpetual separation. 6 This idea is
clearly expressed in the above-quoted provision, which states that "a
spouse is deemed to have abandoned the other when he or she has left the
conjugal dwelling without any intention of returning."
The record shows that as early as 1942, the private respondent had already
rejected the petitioner, whom he denied admission to their conjugal home
in Dumaguete City when she returned from Zamboanguita. The fact that she
was not accepted by Jo demonstrates all too clearly that he had no intentionof resuming their conjugal relationship. Moreover, beginning 1988 until the
final determination by this Court of the action for support in 1988, the
private respondent refused to give financial support to the petitioner. The
physical separation of the parties, coupled with the refusal by the private
respondent to give support to the petitioner, sufficed to constitute
abandonment as a ground for the judicial separation of their conjugal
property.
In addition, the petitioner may also invoke the second ground allowed by
Article 128, for the fact is that he has failed without just cause to comply
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with his obligations to the family as husband or parent. Apart from
refusing to admit his lawful wife to their conjugal home in Dumaguete
City, Jo has freely admitted to cohabiting with other women and siring
many children by them. It was his refusal to provide for the petitioner and
their daughter that prompted her to file the actions against him for
support and later for separation of the conjugal property, in which actions,
significantly, he even denied being married to her. The private respondenthas not established any just cause for his refusal to comply with his
obligations to his wife as a dutiful husband.
Their separation thus falls also squarely under Article 135 of the Family
Code, providing as follows:
ARTICLE 135. Any of the following shall be considered sufficient cause for
judicial separation of property:
xxx xxx xxx
(6) That at the time of the petition, the spouses have been separated in
fact for at least one year and reconciliation is highly improbable.
The amendments introduced in the Family Code are applicable to the case
before us although they became effective only on August 3, 1988. As we
held in Ramirez vs. Court of Appeals: 7
The greater weight of authority is inclined to the view that an appellate
court, in reviewing a judgment on appeal, will dispose of a question
according to the law prevailing at the time of such disposition, and not
according to the. law prevailing at the time of rendition of the appealed
judgment. The court will therefore reverse a judgment which was correct at
the time it was originally rendered where, by statute, there has been an
intermediate change in the law which renders such judgment erroneous at
the time the case was finally disposed of on appeal.
The order of judicial separation of the properties in question is based on the
finding of both the trial and respondent courts that the private respondent
is indeed their real owner. It is these properties that should now be divided
between him and the petitioner, on the assumption that they were acquired
during coverture and so belong to the spouses half and half. As the private
respondent is a Chinese citizen, the division must include such properties
properly belonging to the conjugal partnership as may have been registered
in the name of other persons in violation of the Anti-Dummy Law.
The past has caught up with the private respondent. After his extramarital
flings and a succession of illegitimate children, he must now make an
accounting to his lawful wife of the properties he denied her despite his
promise to her of his eternal love and care. LLpr
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED and the assailed decision of the
respondent court is MODIFIED. Civil Case No. 51 is hereby decided in favor
of the plaintiff, the petitioner herein, and the conjugal property of the
petitioner and the private respondent is hereby ordered divided between
them, share and share alike. This division shall be implemented by the trial
court after determination of all the properties pertaining to the saidconjugal partnership, including those that may have been illegally registered
in the name of other persons.
SO ORDERED.
[A.M. No. MTJ-92-716. October 25, 1995.]
MA. BLYTH B. ABADILLA, complainant, vs. JUDGE JOSE C. TABILIRAN, JR.,Presiding Judge, 8th MCTC, Manukan and Jose Dalman, 9th Judicial Region,
Manukan, Zamboanga del Norte, respondent. cdasia
SYLLABUS
1. CIVIL CODE; PERSONS AND FAMILY RELATIONS; MARRIAGE; WHEN
SANCTITY THEREOF VIOLATED; EFFECT IN CASE AT BAR. Contrary to his
protestations that he started to cohabit with Priscilla Baybayan only after
his first wife, Teresita Tabiliran, had long abandoned him and the conjugal
home in 1966, it appears from the record that he had been scandalously
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and openly living with said Priscilla Baybayan as early as 1970 as shown by
the fact that he begot three children by her, namely Buenasol, Venus and
Saturn, all surnamed Tabiliran. Buenasol was born on July 14, 1970; Venus
was born on September 7, 1971; while Saturn was born on September 20,
1975. Evidently, therefore, respondent and Priscilla Baybayan had openly
lived together even while respondent's marriage to his first wife was still
valid and subsisting. The provisions of Sec. 3(w) of the Rules of Court andArt. 390 of the Civil Code which provide that, after an absence of seven
years, it being unknown whether or not the absentee still lives, the absent
spouse shall be considered dead for all purposes, except for those of
succession, cannot be invoked by respondent. By respondent's own
allegation, Teresita B. Tabiliran left the conjugal home in 1966. From that
time on up to the time that respondent started to cohabit with Priscilla
Baybayan in 1970, only four years had elapsed. Respondent had no right to
presume therefore that Teresita B. Tabiliran was already dead for all
purposes. Thus, respondent's actuation of cohabiting with Priscilla Baybayanin 1970 when his marriage to Teresita B. Tabiliran was still valid and
subsisting constitutes gross immoral conduct. It makes mockery of the
inviolability and sanctity of marriage as a basic social institution. According
to Justice Malcolm: "The basis of human society throughout the civilized
world is that of marriage. It is not only a civil contract, but is a new relation,
an institution on the maintenance of which the public is deeply interested.
Consequently, every intendment of the law leans toward legalizing
matrimony." (Civil Code, 1993 Ed., Volume 1, p. 122, Ramon C. Aquino). By
committing the immorality in question, respondent violated the trustreposed on his high office and utterly failed to live up to the noble ideals
and strict standards of morality required of the law profession. (Imbing v.
Tiongson, 229 SCRA 690).
2. ID.; ID.; LEGITIMATION; CONSTRUED; WHEN NOT APPLICABLE; CASE
AT BAR. An examination of the birth certificates of respondent's three
illegitimate children with Priscilla Baybayan clearly indicate that these
children are his legitimate issues. It was respondent who caused the entry
therein. It is important to note that these children, namely, Buenasol, Venus
and Saturn, all surnamed Tabiliran, were born in the year 1970, 1971, and
1975, respectively, and prior to the marriage of respondent to Priscilla,
which was in 1986. As a lawyer and a judge, respondent ought to know that,
despite his subsequent marriage to Priscilla, these three children cannot be
legitimated nor in any way be considered legitimate since at the time they
were born, there was an existing valid marriage between respondent and
his first wife, Teresita B. Tabiliran. The applicable legal provision in the case
at bar is Article 269 of the Civil Code of the Philippines (R.A. 386 asamended) which provides: Art. 269. Only natural children can be
legitimated. Children born outside of wedlock of parents who, at the time of
the conception of the former, were not disqualified by any impediment to
marry each other, are natural. Legitimation is limited to natural children and
cannot include those born of adulterous relations (Ramirez vs. Gmur, 42
Phil. 855). The Family Code (Executive Order No. 209), which took effect on
August 3, 1988, reiterated the above-mentioned provision thus: Art. 177.
Only children conceived and born outside of wedlock of parents who, at the
time of the conception of the former, were not disqualified by anyimpediment to marry each other may be legitimated.
3. ID.; ID.; ID.; RATIONALE. The reasons for this limitation are given
as follows: 1) The rationale of legitimation would be destroyed; 2) It would
be unfair to the legitimate children in terms of successional rights; 3) There
will be the problem of public scandal, unless social mores change; 4) It is too
violent to grant the privilege of legitimation to adulterous children as it will
destroy the sanctity of marriage; 5) It will be very scandalous, especially if
the parents marry many years after the birth of the child. (The Family Code,
p. 252, Alicia V. Sempio Diy).
4. LEGAL ETHICS; NOTARY PUBLIC; COMPENSATION; RULE; WHEN
VIOLATED; CASE AT BAR. Respondent himself admitted that he prepared
and notarized the documents wherein he charged notarial fees. Though he
was legally allowed to notarize documents and charge fees therefor due to
the fact that there has been no Notary Public in the town of Manukan, this
defense is not sufficient to justify his otherwise corrupt and illegal acts.
Section 252 of the Notarial Law expressly provides thus: Sec. 252.
Compensation of Notaries Public
No fee, compensation, or reward of any
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sort, except such as is expressly prescribed and allowed by law, shall be
collected or received for any service rendered by a notary public. Such
money collected by notaries public proper shall belong to them personally.
Officers acting as notaries public ex-officio shall charge for their services the
fees prescribed by law and account therefor as for Government funds.
(Notarial Law, Revised Administrative Code of the Philippines, p. 202.)
Respondent's failure to properly account and turn over the fees collected byhim as Ex-Officio notary to the municipal government as required by law
raises the presumption that he had put such fund to his personal use. cdlex
5. JUDICIAL ETHICS; JUDGES; VIOLATION OF THE CODE OF JUDICIAL
CONDUCT; CASE AT BAR. With respect to the charge that respondent
prepared an Affidavit of Desistance in a rape case f iled before his sala for
which he collected the amount of P500.00 from the complainant therein,
respondent merely denied the said imputation but failed to offer any
evidence to support such denial. Denial, if unsubstantiated by clear and
convincing evidence, is a negative and self-serving evidence which deserves
no weight in law and cannot be given greater evidentiary value over the
testimony of credible witnesses who testify on affirmative matters (People
v. Amaguin, 229 SCRA 166). It is unfortunate that respondent had failed to
adhere to, and let this remind him once again of Canon 2 of the Code of
Judicial Conduct, to wit: Canon 2 A judge should avoid impropriety and
the appearance of impropriety in all activities.
D E C I S I O N
PER CURIAM p:
"We have a list of these crooked judges whose actuations have been found
to be patently wrong and indefensible. There ought to be no objection or
compunction in weeding them out from the service. If they are not booted
out now, it will take from here to eternity to clean this Augeun stable." 1
Indeed, our judicial structure is supposed to be manned by magistrates
chosen for their probity, integrity, impartiality, dedication and learning. And
so, any judge wanting in any of these qualities should be broomed off and
out of the bench in order to improve the judicial landscape. Screening off
the misfits, considering the great number of judges and justices in the
country at present, is the arduous and Herculean task of this Court. The
effort if dramatized with rectitude and sincerity should bring about the
strengthening of the people's abiding faith in democracy and the integrity of
our courts of justice.
The herein administrative case arose from a complaint, dated September 8,
1992, filed by Ma. Blyth B. Abadilla, a Clerk of Court assigned at the sala of
respondent, Judge Jose C. Tabiliran, Jr., of the 8th Municipal Circuit Trial
Court, Manukan, Zamboanga del Norte. Respondent stands charged with
"gross immorality, deceitful conduct, and corruption unbecoming of a
judge."
In her verified complaint, complainant Abadilla, in respect to the charge of
gross immorality on the part of the respondent, contends that respondent
had scandalously and publicly cohabited with a certain Priscilla Q. Baybayanduring the existence of his legitimate marriage with Teresita Banzuela.
Adding ignominy to an ignominious situation, respondent allegedly
shamefacedly contracted marriage with the said Priscilla Baybayan on May
23, 1986. Complainant claims that this was a bigamous union because of the
fact that the respondent was then still very much married to Teresita
Banzuela.
Furthermore, respondent falsely represented himself as "single" in the
marriage contract (Exh. "A") and dispensed with the requirements of amarriage contract by invoking cohabitation with Baybayan for five years.
cda
Of persuasive effect on the charge of immorality is the fact that, earlier,
respondent's wife filed a complaint in the case entitled, Teresita B. Tabiliran
vs. Atty. Jose C. Tabiliran, Jr., 115 SCRA 451. Respondent stood charged
therein for abandoning the family home and living with a certain Leonora
Pillarion with whom he had a son.
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In respect of the charge of deceitful conduct, complainant claims that
respondent caused to be registered as "legitimate," his three illegitimate
children with Priscilla Baybayan, namely:
Buenasol B. Tabiliran born on July 14, 1970
Venus B. Tabiliran born on Sept. 7, 1971
Saturn B. Tabiliran born on Sept. 20, 1975
by falsely executing separate affidavits stating that the delayed registration
was due to inadvertence, excusable negligence or oversight, when in truth
and in fact, respondent knew that these children cannot be legally
registered as legitimate.
The following acts are alleged to have constituted the charge of corruption:
(1) Utilizing his office time, while being a judge, in the private practice
of law by the preparation and notarization of documents, out of which he
charged fees beyond the authorized rates allowed as Ex-Officio Notary
Public. These acts which, according to the charge, amount to the private
practice of law, prejudice public interest.
Complainant submitted the following documents in support of these
allegations:
a) Affidavit of Ponciana Geromo (Annex "B"), attesting to the fact that
respondent Judge Tabiliran prepared a Simultaneous Deed of Sale, (Annex"C", Doc. No. 901, Page No. 77, Book No. V, Series of 1991 of Ex-Officio
Notary Public Jose C. Tabiliran, Jr.) and collect P600.00 from the vendees
(par. 10(a) a-1 Complaint, p. 9 records);
b) Receipt prepared under instruction of the respondent showing that
he received P250.00 thru MCTC Aide Ely O. Inot for preparation and
notarization of Joint Affidavit declaring the correct ages of Carlo Manzano,
Lodmila Cinco, Kadapi Amad, Jul Samud and Amman Eddai dated November
12, 1991, when the legal fees therefor should have been P10.00 only (Annex
"D") (par. 10(a) a-2 Complaint, p. 9 records);
c) Another receipt (Annex "E") prepared thru the direction of the
respondent dated November 12, 1991, showing that said respondent
received from Reynaldo Subebe the sum of P150.00 for preparation and
notarization by him of a Joint Affidavit declaring the correct age of Agata
Luna, Rosie Miranda and Jose Juneser Adrias (par. 10 (a) a-c Complaint, p. 9
records);
d) Still another receipt (Annex "F") dated November 12, 1991, signed
by the respondent himself showing that he received from Nelly Baradas the
sum of P50.00 for preparation and notarization of Joint Affidavit attesting to
the correct age of one Luzviminda Jacoba (par. 10(a) a-d Complaint, p. 9
records);
e) Another receipt (Annex "G") dated November 12, 1991, issued by
the respondent, showing that he received from Torres P. Modai the sum of
P50.00, thru the same Ely O. Inot, MCTC Aide, for preparation of Joint
Affidavit attesting to the correct age of Flores Jalampangan (par. 10 (a) a-eComplaint, pp. 9 & 10 records).
(2) Accepting bribes from parties-litigants in his Court as supported by
an affidavit (Annex "M") executed by a certain Calixto Calunod, a court aide,
stating that he saw Edna Siton, complainant in a criminal case tried by
respondent, hand over to the latter a bag of fish and squid which
respondent Judge received.
(3) Preparing an Affidavit of Desistance in a case filed with his sala out
of which he collected the amount of P500.00 from the accused Antonio
Oriola, as supported by the affidavits of Arcelita Salvador, the complainant
therein, and Benito Sagario, one of the persons present when the accused
perpetrated the acts aforesaid. (Submitted as Annexes "I" and "J",
respectively.)
Complainant manifests that the commission by the respondent of the
foregoing acts renders him unfit to occupy the exalted position of a
dispenser of justice. By the example shown by the respondent, the public
had allegedly lost confidence in the administration of justice, perceiving as is
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evident to see that the person occupying the position of a judge lacks the
morality and probity required of one occupying such a high office.
Respondent, in his comment, dated December 25, 1992, declared that his
cohabitation with Priscilla Baybayan is not and was neither bigamous nor
immoral because he started living with Priscilla Baybayan only after his first
wife had already left and abandoned the family home in 1966 and, since
then, and until the present her whereabouts is not known and respondent
has had no news of her being alive. He further avers that 25 years had
already elapsed since the disappearance of his first wife when he married
Priscilla Baybayan in 1986.
Respondent cited Sec. 3(w), Rule 131 of the Rules of Court and Art. 390 of
the Civil Code in order to show the legality of his acts:
"After the absence of seven years, it being unknown whether or not the
absentee still lives, he is considered dead for all purposes except for those
of succession." (Rule 131, Sec. 3(w), Rules of Court.)
"After an absence of seven years, it being unknown whether or not the
absentee still lives, he shall be presumed dead for all purposes, except for
those of succession." (Art. 390, Civil Code.)
The case of Jones vs. Hortiguela, 64 Phil. 179, where this Court held that for
the purpose of the civil marriage law, it is not necessary to have the former
spouse judicially declared an absentee is to respondent's mind, a case in
point.
He admits that he indicated in his marriage contract that he was then
"single," but he denied the charge that he acted with deceit or false
misrepresentation, claiming that, since there were only three words to
choose from, namely: Single, Widow or Divorced, he preferred to choose
the word "single," it being the most appropriate. Besides, both he and
Priscilla executed a joint affidavit wherein his former marriage to Banzuela
was honestly divulged.
On the charge of corruption, respondent submitted certifications (Annexes
"4" & "5") from the Mayor of Manukan, Zamboanga del Norte, attesting to
the fact that there was no Notary Public in Manukan and, as such,
respondent may be allowed to notarize documents. He denied having
charged exorbitant fees. He claims that all the amounts received by him
were used to subsidize office expenses, since the funds he had been
receiving from the municipal government were not enough to coverexpenses in maintaining his office. Respondent submitted a certification
(Annex "6") from the Accounting Department of the Municipal Government
of Manukan to the effect that his yearly expenditures were more than the
yearly appropriations.
Respondent finds support in Canon 4, Rule 4.01 of the Code of Judicial
Conduct which states:
"A Judge may, with due regard to official duties, engage in activities to
improve . . . the administration of justice."
Respondent vehemently denies the charge of bribery claiming that it was
inconceivable for him to receive a bag full of fish and squid since his
residence was 42 kilometers from Jose Dalman where his courtroom or
office was located. It takes one an hour and a half by bus to reach Katipunan
and so, by the t ime he reaches his house, the fish and the squid should have
become rotten. In support of his denials, respondent submitted as Annex
"8", an affidavit of Ely D. Inot, their court Interpreter who declared:
xxx xxx xxx
"3. That last June 6, 1991, I was with the Municipal Judge, Jose C.
Tabiliran, Jr., from the morning until we went home in the afternoon and we
in fact dined together in the local Carenderia of Jose Dalman as it is the
usual ways of the Judge to eat lunch together with the court personnel;
4. That when we went home in the afternoon of that day we were also
together riding in a bus, the Lillian Express and until I drop in Roxas and he
proceeded to Katipunan where his residence is;
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5. That all the time during that day I did not noticed him bringing
anything except his 'Hand Bag' which he used to carry in going to the
office;" (Annex "8", Affidavit of Ely O. Inot, December 17, 1992.)
xxx xxx xxx
Finally, respondent tags as a fabricated lie the charge that he prepared an
Affidavit of Desistance in a case pending in his sala and thereafter chargedthe accused, Antonio Oriola, the sum of P500.00 for legal services. The
complainant, he said, was the one who induced Arcelita Salvador (the
complainant in the rape case) to execute an affidavit (Annex " I") in support
of the charge of corruption against respondent.
Complainant's filing of the present case was motivated by revenge and
resentment because, earlier, respondent filed an administrative case (A.M.
No. P-91-597) against her for "Insubordination and Serious Misconduct."
The Supreme Court decided to reprimand her with a warning that a
repetition of her acts will be severely dealt with. Respondent claims that the
complainant had nevertheless repeatedly continued to do acts of
insubordination in the following manner:
1) She continues to keep court records and has kept refusing to hand
them over to respondent inspite of verbal and written orders;
2) She refused to receive a memorandum from the Vice-Mayor
requiring the Clerk of Court to submit an Annual report;
3) She refused to prepare the said annual report required of her as
Clerk of Court;
4) She continue to refuse to obey just and lawful orders of the Court.
On April 12, 1993, by resolution of this Court En Banc, the herein
administrative case was referred to Executive Judge Jesus O. Angeles of the
Regional Trial Court, Dipolog City, for investigation, report and
recommendation. Judge Angeles found respondent guilty only on two (2)
counts of corruption: (1) for acting as notary public and collecting fees for
his services; and (2) for preparing an aff idavit of desistance in a case
pending in his Court and receiving payment for it.
In his report and recommendation dated August 3, 1993, Executive Judge
Angeles found that:
ON GROSS IMMORALITY:
In contracting marriage with Priscilla Q. Baybayan on May 23, 1986, (p. 13 of
the records), respondent did not hide the fact that he was married to
Teresita T. Banzuela, having disclosed it in his affidavit jointly executed with
Priscilla Q. Baybayan on May 23, 1986 (p. 115 of the records), particularly
paragraph 4 thereof which reads:
"4. That affiant Jose C. Tabiliran, Jr., was formerly married to Teresita T
. Banzuela but who left and abandoned their family home sometime in 1965
in Katipunan, Zamboanga del Norte, and until now at present her
whereabouts is not known."
It was therefore a marriage contracted under Article 83(2) of the Civil Code
which, although bigamous, remains valid until automatically terminated by
the recording of the affidavit of reappearance of the absent spouse (Art. 42,
Family Code). Respondent's assertion that since 1965 to the present, his
first wife Teresita T. Banzuela had left their conjugal dwelling and did not
return, her whereabouts being unknown, was not controverted. Living as
husband and wife pursuant to an authorized bigamous marriage,
respondent cannot be said to be acting in an immoral and scandalousmanner, and the immoral stigma of extra-marital union since 1969 duly
declared in their aforesaid joint affidavit, may be considered cleansed by
their marriage in 1986, if Art. 1395 of the Civil Code on ratification on
contracts in general is allowed to be applied, it being ratification of marital
cohabitation. Article 76 of Civil Code, now Art. 34 of the Family Code was
intended to facilitate and encourage the marriage of persons who have
been living in a state of concubinage for more than five years (Tolentino,
Civil Code, Book I, 1974 Ed., p. 245, cited in Ernesto L. Pineda, Family Code,
1992 Ed., p. 38). Indicating his civil status in the marriage contract as
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"single" is hardly considered a misrepresentation of fact, specially to the
solemnizing officer, Municipal Mayor Jacinto C. Ruedas, Jr. to whom the
aforesaid joint affidavit was submitted.
ON DECEITFUL CONDUCT:
Respondent's children begotten with Priscilla Q. Baybayan, namely:
Buenasol B. Tabiliran, Venus B. Tabiliran and Saturn B. Tabiliran, all of whomwere born before their marriage, were disclosed and made known to the
solemnizing officer and the latter himself, in his affidavit dated May 23,
1986 (p. 116 of the records) which supports the marriage contract of
respondent with Priscilla Q. Baybayan, having shown such fact.
Exhibit P which purports to be an affidavit of Lydia T. Zanoria dated May 27,
1993, consisting of three pages, was submitted by the complainant for the
purpose of proving her charge that the respondent falsely executed his
three separate affidavits, namely: Exhibit K dated May 24, 1983 regarding
the late registration of birth of his daughter Buenasol B. Tabiliran; Exhibit M
dated May 28, 1988 regarding the late registration of birth of his third child
Saturn B. Tabiliran; and his affidavit dated May 27, 1988, Exhibit O, in
reference to the late registration of birth of his second child Venus B.
Tabiliran, stating inadvertence, excusable negligence or oversight as the
reasons for the delayed registration of their births, without however
presenting said affiant Mrs. Zanoria, consequently denying respondent the
opportunity to cross examine her. Her affidavit is not among those brought
out in the pre-hearing conference, and was not discussed during the hearing
itself, submitting it only after the investigation proper was terminated. The
supposed affiant claimed she was the government midwife who attended to
the births of respondent's three children, denying, as the affidavit shows,
negligence, inadvertence or oversight on her part to register their birth on
time. Not having been presented for respondent to confront her, or an
opportunity to do so, Exhibit P cannot be considered evidence of the
charge. An affidavit is hearsay unless the affiant is presented (People vs.
Villeza, 127 SCRA 349), or admitted by the party against whom it is
presented.
ON CORRUPTION:
1. Acting as Notary Public during office hours, and collecting fees:
Respondent has admitted having prepared the documents and collected
fees, in the instances specified in par. 10 of the complaint, namely: (1)
affidavit of Ponciana Geromo; (2) Joint Affidavit of Carlo Manzano, Lodmila
Cinco, Kadapi Amad, Jul Samud and Amman Eddai; (3) Joint Affidavit ofAgata Luna, Rosie Miranda and Jose Juneser Adrias; (4) Joint Affidavit on the
correct age of Luzviminda Jacoba; and (5) Joint Affidavit on the correct age
of Flores Jalampangan, but not necessarily on the accuracy of the amounts
therein stated as having been collected by him from them (please see Pre-
Hearing Order of May 20, 1993 of the Investigating Judge). Seeking
justification of his acts, respondent submitted Annexes 4 & 5 of his
comments (pp. 118 and 119, records) which are certifications of Manukan
Mayor Eugene U. Caballero attesting that in the absence of a Notary Public
in Manukan town, respondent who is a Judge thereat was allowed "toprepare and ligalize (sic) documents."
He declared "the fees derived from the preparation and notarization of
documents were mostly used by respondent to buy supplies and materials
of his Office," explaining that his office needs cannot be sustained by the
appropriations of the local government which are inadequate. On page 120
of the records, his Annex 6 shows a shortage in his appropriations for
supplies. And supplies from the Supreme Court can only be obtained if
secured personally but has to assume the expenses for transportation,
freight and handling.
Respondent Judge maintains that the Code of Judicial Conduct does not
prohibit him from acting as Notary Public, and the fees he has received were
much lower than the rates prescribed by the Integrated Bar of the
Philippines, Zamboanga del Norte Chapter, submitting Annex 3, p. 117 of
the records, to prove it.
Further justifying his act under Canon 4, Rule 4.01 of the Code of Judicial
Conduct which provides that a judge may, with due regard to official duties,
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engaged in activities to improve the administration of justice, respondent
claims that due to his efforts, he was able to secure an extension room of
his office covering a floor area of 24 square meters, from the Sangguniang
Pampook of Region IX based in Zamboanga City, costing P19,000.00 per
certification shown in his Annex 7 (page 121 of the records).
In the light of 1989 Code of Judicial Conduct vis-a-vis the power of Municipal
Trial Court Judges and Municipal Circuit Trial Court Judges to act in the
capacity of Notary Public Ex-Officio, the Honorable Supreme Court in A.M.
No. 89-11-1303, MTC, Dec. 19, 1989, has ruled:
"MTC and MCTC Judges assigned to municipalities or circuits with no
lawyers or notaries public may, in their capacity as notary public ex-officio
perform any act within the competency of a regular Notary Public, provided
that: (1) all notarial fees charged be for the account of the Government and
turned-over to the municipal treasurer (Lapea, Jr. vs. Marcos, Adm. Matter
No. 1969-MJ, June 29, 1982, 114 SCRA 572); and (2) certification be made inthe notarized documents attesting to the lack of any lawyer or notary public
in such municipality or circuit." LLpr
Although absence of a notary public commissioned for, and residing in
Manukan town, even in Jose Dalman which is within his circuit is confirmed,
respondent Judge while he may be justified in so acting as notary public, did
not, however, comply with requirement No. 1 which obliged him to charge
for the account of the Government and turn-over to the municipal treasurer
all notarial fees. And there is no way of determining the truth of his
assertion that the notarial fees he collected were "mostly used" to buy
supplies and materials for his office, absent any accounting.
2. Accepting Bribe from Parties-litigants:
Admitting the existence of Annex H found on page 21 in the records,
respondent, however, denied the imputation therein contained by affiant
Calixto Calunod that he received a sando bag full of fish and squid from a
certain Edna Siton who had a case with respondent's court as complainant
in a certain criminal case. Instead of calling the affiant himself, complainant
presented the Court Interpreter Ely O. Inot, who "confirmed that there was
squid and fish contained in a plastic bag which was left in Aseniero
Carenderia by a person unknown to her and some members of the Court
staff. When informed by the carenderia owner that the stuff was intended
for Judge Tabiliran, the latter told them to cook it, and they afterwards
partook of it without the Judge who already boarded the passenger bus."
(Record of Proceedings, p. 1, par. No. 1, dated June 11, 1993). Being herwitness, complainant is bound by her testimony. This particular charge is,
therefore, not proved.
3. Preparing Affidavit of Desistance and Collecting Fee for his Services:
Under this count, two affidavits both sworn before 2nd Asst. Provincial
Fiscal Valeriano B. Lagula were submitted: one by Arcelita Salvador,
complainant in an attempted rape case who was categorical in her
declaration that respondent Judge asked and received from Pitoy Oriola,
brother of accused Antonio Oriola the amount of P500.00 after the Judgeprepared the affidavit of desistance and motion to dismiss which he made
her sign (Annex I, p. 40 records). Benito Sagario who was present executed
another separate affidavit, Annex J found on page 41 in the records,
confirming it. In admitting the affidavit, respondent, however, denied the
imputation, asserting that it is false, but without confronting them or
presenting witnesses to dispute their accusation. He could have demanded
that the affiants, including the persons they mentioned were present in the
transaction, namely: accused Antonio Oriola, his brother Pitoy Oriola,
Ignacio Salvador, and INC Minister Antonio Calua be required to appear forhis confrontation, but respondent chose not, contended himself only with
the explanation that it was just the handiwork of complainant Abadilla and
her husband, a major in the military who is an active member of the Iglesia
Ni Cristo of which affiant Arcelita Salvador also belonged, which is bare and
unsubstantiated. No other conclusion can be drawn other than holding, as
the Investigating Judge does, that this particular charge is true. Evidently,
Judge Tabiliran wants to avoid meeting them by way of confrontation. If he
is innocent, and is certain the charge is fabricated, he will surely raise hell to
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insist that he confronts them face to face. Clearly, his deportment betrays
his insistence of innocence.
On Respondent's Counterclaim:
It was not proven. On the contrary, the controverting evidence shows that
the records of Criminal Case No. 2279 referred to in his Annex 9, p. 123 of
the records, were not in the possession of complainant. Quite obviously, ElyO. Inot, respondent's Court Interpreter tried to cover up the fact that the
same were already being kept by Judge Tabiliran before he issued the
memorandum, Annex 9. Complainant, who is respondent's Clerk of Court
was not, therefore, in a position to comply with his Order.
Also, Mrs. Abadilla's failure to prepare the annual report of the Court in
1992 as called for in Annexes 10 and 10-A was, contrary to respondent's
claim, not by reason of her obstinate refusal to obey her superior but, by
sheer impossibility to comply, considering that monthly reports upon which
the annual report shall be based, were not prepared by her, not because of
her refusal to do so which is among those included in her job description,
but because the Judge himself took the work from her for no other reason
than to establish the false impression that the complainant is disobedient to
the Judge, and does not attend to her duties.
By and large, there is no harmony in their office. Complainant and
respondent are not in talking terms. They are hostile to each other.
Respondent's complaint that Mrs. Abadilla spat saliva in front of him
whenever they meet each other; destroying the Court dry seal by throwing
it at him one time she was mad; showing face; and sticking out her tongue
to him, are all puerile acts which the undersigned cannot conclude as
sufficiently established even with the testimony of Mrs. Ely O. Inot which is
far from being definite and categorical, whose actuation is understandable
because Judge Tabiliran, being her superior, has moral ascendancy over her
(Record of Proceedings, June 11, 1993).
The undersigned believes that the problem is on Judge Tabiliran, and not on
Mrs. Abadilla, who has been in the service as Clerk of Court under a
previous Judge of the same Court for quite long without any complaint
having been filed. The evidence disputing his counterclaim tends to show
that respondent tried to build up a situation of undesirability against his
Clerk of Court whom he wanted pulled out from her position in his Court.
Other Matters Not Covered By The Complaint And Comments:
The authority to investigate being confined only to matters alleged in thecomplaint on the basis of which respondent filed his comments, other
matters not therein covered which complainant brought out by way of
presenting documentary exhibits, (from Exhibit AAA to HHH), are not
subject of this report and recommendation.
RECOMMENDATION:
The charge of GROSS IMMORALITY and DECEITFUL CONDUCT have not been
proven, but the undersigned believes evidence is sufficient to sustain a
pronouncement of guilt on two counts of CORRUPTION, namely: acting as
notary public and collecting fees for his services in preparing affidavit of
desistance of a case in his Court. Likewise, acts of oppression, deceit and
false imputation against his Clerk of Court are found duly established.
WHEREFORE, suspension of the respondent Judge from the service for a
period of three months is recommended.
THE FOREGOING CONSIDERED, We hold the respondent culpable for gross
immorality, he having scandalously and openly cohabited with the said
Priscilla Baybayan during the existence of his marriage with Teresita B.
Tabiliran.
Contrary to his protestations that he started to cohabit with Priscilla
Baybayan only after his first wife, Teresita Tabiliran, had long abandoned
him and the conjugal home in 1966, it appears from the record that he had
been scandalously and openly living with said Priscilla Baybayan as early as
1970 as shown by the fact that he begot three children by her, namely
Buenasol, Venus and Saturn, all surnamed Tabiliran. Buenasol was born on
July 14, 1970; Venus was born on September 7, 1971; while Saturn was born
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on September 20, 1975. Evidently, therefore, respondent and Priscilla
Baybayan had openly lived together even while respondent's marriage to
his first wife was still valid and subsisting. The provisions of Sec. 3(w) of the
Rules of Court and Art. 390 of the Civil Code which provide that, after an
absence of seven years, it being unknown whether or not the absentee still
lives, the absent spouse shall be considered dead for all purposes, except
for those of succession, cannot be invoked by respondent. By respondent's
own allegation, Teresita B. Tabiliran left the conjugal home in 1966. From
that time on up to the time that respondent started to cohabit with Priscilla
Baybayan in 1970, only four years had elapsed. Respondent had no right to
presume therefore that Teresita B. Tabiliran was already dead for all
purposes. Thus, respondent's actuation of cohabiting with Priscilla Baybayan
in 1970 when his marriage to Teresita B. Tabilaran was still valid and
subsisting constitutes gross immoral conduct. It makes mockery of the
inviolability and sanctity of marriage as a basic social institution. According
to Justice Malcolm: "The basis of human society throughout the civilized
world is that of marriage. It is not only a civil contract, but is a new relation,
an institution on the maintenance of which the public is deeply interested.
Consequently, every intendment of the law leans toward legalizing
matrimony." (Civil Code, 1993 Ed., Volume 1, p. 122, Ramon C. Aquino).
By committing the immorality in question, respondent violated the trust
reposed on his high office and utterly failed to live up to the noble ideals
and strict standards of morality required of the law profession. (Imbing v.
Tiongson , 229 SCRA 690). LLjur
As to respondent's act of eventually marrying Priscilla Baybayan in 1986, We
are not in a position to determine the legality thereof, absent all the facts
for a proper determination. Sufficient for Our consideration is the finding of
the Investigating Judge, that the said marriage is authorized under Art. 83
(2) of the Civil Code.
With respect to the charge of deceitful conduct, We hold that the charge
has likewise been duly established. An examination of the birth certificates
(Exhs. "J", "L", & "M") of respondent's three illegitimate children with
Priscilla Baybayan clearly indicate that these children are his legitimate
issues. It was respondent who caused the entry therein. It is important to
note that these children, namely, Buenasol, Venus and Saturn, all surnamed
Tabiliran, were born in the year 1970, 1971, and 1975, respectively, and
prior to the marriage of respondent to Priscilla, which was in 1986. As a
lawyer and a judge, respondent ought to know that, despite his subsequent
marriage to Priscilla, these three children cannot be legitimated nor in any
way be considered legitimate since at the time they were born, there was
an existing valid marriage between respondent and his first wife, Teresita B.
Tabiliran. The applicable legal provision in the case at bar is Article 269 of
the Civil Code of the Philippines (R.A. 386 as amended) which provides:
ARTICLE 269. Only natural children can be legitimated. Children born
outside of wedlock of parents who, at the time of the conception of the
former, were not disqualified by any impediment to marry each other, are
natural.
Legitimation is limited to natural children and cannot include those born ofadulterous relations (Ramirez vs. Gmur, 42 Phil. 855). The Family Code
(Executive Order No. 209), which took effect on August 3, 1988, reiterated
the above-mentioned provision thus:
ARTICLE 177. Only children conceived and born outside of wedlock of
parents who, at the time of the conception of the former, were not
disqualified by any impediment to marry each other may be legitimated.
The reasons for this limitation are given as follows:
1) The rationale of legitimation would be destroyed;
2) It would be unfair to the legitimate children in terms of successional
rights;
3) There will be the problem of public scandal, unless social mores
change;
4) It is too violent to grant the privilege of legitimation to adulterous
children as it will destroy the sanctity of marriage;
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5) It will be very scandalous, especially if the parents marry many years
after the birth of the child. (The Family Code, p. 252, Alicia V. Sempio Diy).
It is clear, therefore, that no legal provision, whether old or new, can give
refuge to the deceitful actuations of the respondent.
It is also erroneous for respondent to state that his first wife Teresita
disappeared in 1966 and has not been heard from since then. It appearsthat on December 8, 1969, Teresita filed a complaint against respondent
entitled, Tabiliran vs. Tabiliran (A.C. No. 906) which was decided by this
Court in 1982. In the said case, respondent was sued for abandonment of
his family home and for living with another woman with whom he allegedly
begot a child. Respondent was, however, exonerated because of the failure
of his wife to substantiate the charges. However, respondent was
reprimanded for having executed a "Deed of Settlement of Spouses To Live
Separately from Bed," with a stipulation that they allow each of the other
spouse to live with another man or woman as the case may be, without theobjection and intervention of the other. It was also in the same case where
respondent declared that he has only two children, namely, Reynald
Antonio and Jose III, both surnamed Tabiliran, who are his legitimate issues.
Thus, his statements in his affidavits marked as Exhs. "M-4" and "O-4" that
Saturn and Venus are his third and second children respectively, are
erroneous, deceitful, misleading and detrimental to his legitimate children.
With respect to the charge of corruption, We agree with the findings of the
Investigating Judge that respondent should be found culpable for two
counts of corruption: (1) acting as Notary Public; and (2) collecting legal fees
in preparing an Affidavit of Desistance of a case in his court.
Respondent himself admitted that he prepared and notarized the
documents (Annexes "C", "D", "E", "F" and "G") wherein he charged notarial
fees. Though he was legally allowed to notarize documents and charge fees
therefor due to the fact that there has been no Notary Public in the town of
Manukan, this defense is not sufficient to justify his otherwise corrupt and
illegal acts.
Section 252 of the Notarial Law expressly provides thus:
SECTION 252. Compensation of Notaries Public. No fee, compensation,
or reward of any sort, except such as is expressly prescribed and allowed by
law, shall be collected or received for any service rendered by a notary
public. Such money collected by notaries public proper shall belong to them
personally. Officers acting as notaries public ex-officio shall charge for their
services the fees prescribed by law and account therefor as for Government
funds. (Notarial Law, Revised Administrative Code of the Philippines, p.
202.) LLcd
Respondent's failure to properly account and turn over the fees collected by
him as Ex-Officio notary to the municipal government as required by law
raises the presumption that he had put such fund to his personal use.
With respect to the charge that respondent prepared an Affidavit of
Desistance in a rape case filed before his sala for which he collected the
amount of P500.00 from the complainant therein, respondent merely
denied the said imputation but failed to offer any evidence to support such
denial. Denial, if unsubstantiated by clear and convincing evidence, is a
negative and self-serving evidence which deserves no weight in law and
cannot be given greater evidentiary value over the testimony of credible
witnesses who testify on affirmative matters (People v. Amaguin, 229 SCRA
166). It is unfortunate that respondent had failed to adhere to, and let this
remind him once again of Canon 2 of the Code of Judicial Conduct, to wit:
Canon 2
A judge should avoid impropriety and the appearance of impropriety in all
activities.
WHEREFORE, the Court finds respondent Judge Jose C. Tabiliran, Jr. guilty of
gross immorality, deceitful conduct and corruption and, consequently,
orders his dismissal from the service. Such dismissal shall carry with it
cancellation of eligibility, forfeiture of leave credits and retirement benefits,
and disqualification from re-employment in the government-service, all
without prejudice to criminal or civil liability.
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SO ORDERED. Llibris
[G.R. No. 155800. March 10, 2006.]
LEONILO ANTONIO, petitioner, vs. MARIE IVONNE F. REYES, respondent.
D E C I S I O N
TINGA, J p:
Statistics never lie, but lovers often do, quipped a sage. This sad truth has
unsettled many a love transformed into matrimony. Any sort of deception
between spouses, no matter the gravity, is always disquieting. Deceit to the
depth and breadth unveiled in the following pages, dark and irrational as in
the modern noir tale, dims any trace of certitude on the guilty spouse's
capability to fulfill the marital obligations even more. CTEaDc
The Petition for Review on Certiorari assails the Decision 1 and Resolution 2
of the Court of Appeals dated 29 November 2001 and 24 October 2002. The
Court of Appeals had reversed the judgment 3 of the Regional Trial Court
(RTC) of Makati declaring the marriage of Leonilo N. Antonio (petitioner)
and Marie Ivonne F. Reyes (respondent), null and void. After careful
consideration, we reverse and affirm instead the trial court.
Antecedent Facts
Petitioner and respondent met in August 1989 when petitioner was 26 years
old and respondent was 36 years of age. Barely a year after their first
meeting, they got married before a minister of the Gospel 4 at the Manila
City Hall, and through a subsequent church wedding 5 at the Sta. Rosa de
Lima Parish, Bagong Ilog, Pasig, Metro Manila on 6 December 1990. 6 Out of
their union, a child was born on 19 April 1991, who sadly died five (5)
months later.
On 8 March 1993, 7 petitioner filed a petition to have his marriage to
respondent declared null and void. He anchored his petition for nullity on
Article 36 of the Family Code alleging that respondent was psychologically
incapacitated to comply with the essential obligations of marriage. He
asserted that respondent's incapacity existed at the time their marriage was
celebrated and still subsists up to the present. 8
As manifestations of respondent's alleged psychological incapacity,
petitioner claimed that respondent persistently lied about herself, the
people around her, her occupation, income, educational attainment and
other events or things, 9 to wit:
(1) She concealed the fact that she previously gave birth to an
illegitimate son, 10 and instead introduced the boy to petitioner as the
adopted child of her family. She only confessed the truth about the boy's
parentage when petitioner learned about it from other sources after their
marriage. 11
(2) She fabricated a story that her brother-in-law, Edwin David,
attempted to rape and kill her when in fact, no such incident occurred. 12
(3) She misrepresented herself as a psychiatrist to her obstetrician, Dr.
Consuelo Gardiner, and told some of her friends that she graduated with a
degree in psychology, when she was neither. 13
(4) She claimed to be a singer or a free-lance voice talent affiliated with
Blackgold Recording Company (Blackgold); yet, not a single member of her
family ever witnessed her alleged singing activities with the group. In the
same vein, she postulated that a luncheon show was held at the PhilippineVillage Hotel in her honor and even presented an invitation to that effect 14
but petitioner discovered per certification by the Director of Sales of said
hotel that no such occasion had taken place. 15
(5) She invented friends named Babes Santos and Via Marquez, and
under those names, sent lengthy letters to petitioner claiming to be from
Blackgold and touting her as the "number one moneymaker" in the
commercial industry worth P2 million. 16 Petitioner later found out that
respondent herself was the one who wrote and sent the letters to him when
she admitted the truth in one of their quarrels. 17 He likewise realized that
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Babes Santos and Via Marquez were only figments of her imagination when
he discovered they were not known in or connected with Blackgold. 18
(6) She represented herself as a person of greater means, thus, she
altered her payslip to make it appear that she earned a higher income. She
bought a sala set from a public market but told petitioner that she acquired
it from a famous furniture dealer. 19 She spent lavishly on unnecessary
items and ended up borrowing money from other people on false pretexts.
20
(7) She exhibited insecurities and jealousies over him to the extent of
calling up his officemates to monitor his whereabouts. When he could no
longer take her unusual behavior, he separated from her in August 1991. He
tried to attempt a reconciliation but since her behavior did not change, he
finally left her for good in November 1991. 21
In support of his petition, petitioner presented Dr. Dante Herrera Abcede
(Dr. Abcede), a psychiatrist, and Dr. Arnulfo V. Lopez (Dr. Lopez), a clinical
psychologist, who stated, based on the tests they conducted, that petitioner
was essentially a normal, introspective, shy and conservative type of person.
On the other hand, they observed that respondent's persistent and constant
lying to petitioner was abnormal or pathological. It undermined the basic
relationship that should be based on love, trust and respect. 22 They further
asserted that respondent's extreme jealousy was also pathological. It
reached the point of paranoia since there was no actual basis for her to
suspect that petitioner was having an affair with another woman. They
concluded based on the foregoing that respondent was psychologically
incapacitated to perform her essential marital obligations. 23
In opposing the petition, respondent claimed that she performed her
marital obligations by attending to all the needs of her husband. She
asserted that there was no truth to the allegation that she fabricated
stories, told lies and invented personalities. 24 She presented her version,
thus: ASHaDT
(1) She concealed her child by another man from petitioner because
she was afraid of losing her husband. 25
(2) She told petitioner about David's attempt to rape and kill her
because she surmised such intent from David's act of touching her back and
ogling her from head to foot. 26
(3) She was actually a BS Banking and Finance graduate and had beenteaching psychology at the Pasig Catholic School for two (2) years. 27
(4) She was a free-lance voice talent of Aris de las Alas, an executive
producer of Channel 9 and she had done three (3) commercials with
McCann Erickson for the advertisement of Coca-cola, Johnson & Johnson,
and Traders Royal Bank. She told petitioner she was a Blackgold recording
artist although she was not under contract with the company, yet she
reported to the Blackgold office after office hours. She claimed that a
luncheon show was indeed held in her honor at the Philippine Village Hotel
on 8 December 1979. 28
(5) She vowed that the letters sent to petitioner were not written by
her and the writers thereof were not fictitious. Bea Marquez Recto of the
Recto political clan was a resident of the United States while Babes Santos
was employed with Saniwares. 29
(6) She admitted that she called up an officemate of her husband but
averred that she merely asked the latter in a diplomatic matter if she was
the one asking for chocolates from petitioner, and not to monitor herhusband's whereabouts. 30
(7) She belied the allegation that she spent lavishly as she supported
almost ten people from her monthly budget of P7,000.00. 31
In fine, respondent argued that apart from her non-disclosure of a child
prior to their marriage, the other lies attributed to her by petitioner were
mostly hearsay and unconvincing. Her stance was that the totality of the
evidence presented is not sufficient for a finding of psychological incapacity
on her part. 32
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In addition, respondent presented Dr. Antonio Efren Reyes (Dr. Reyes), a
psychiatrist, to refute the allegations anent her psychological condition. Dr.
Reyes testified that the series of tests conducted by his assistant, 33
together with the screening procedures and the Comprehensive Psycho-
Pathological Rating Scale (CPRS) he himself conducted, led him to conclude
that respondent was not psychologically incapacitated to perform the
essential marital obligations. He postulated that regressive behavior, gross
neuroticism, psychotic tendencies, and poor control of impulses, which are
signs that might point to the presence of disabling trends, were not elicited
from respondent. 34
In rebuttal, Dr. Lopez asseverated that there were flaws in the evaluation
conducted by Dr. Reyes as (i) he was not the one who administered and
interpreted respondent's psychological evaluation, and (ii) he made use of
only one instrument called CPRS which was not reliable because a good liar
can fake the results of such test. 35
After trial, the lower court gave credence to petitioner's evidence and held
that respondent's propensity to lying about almost anything-her occupation,
state of health, singing abilities and her income, among others-had been
duly established. According to the trial court, respondent's fantastic ability
to invent and fabricate stories and personalities enabled her to live in a
world of make-believe. This made her psychologically incapacitated as it
rendered her incapable of giving meaning and significance to her marriage.
36 The trial court thus declared the marriage between petitioner and
respondent null and void. cDCaTH
Shortly before the trial court rendered its decision, the Metropolitan
Tribunal of the Archdiocese of Manila annulled the Catholic marriage of the
parties, on the ground of lack of due discretion on the part of the parties. 37
During the pendency of the appeal before the Court of Appeals, the
Metropolitan Tribunal's ruling was affirmed with modification by both the
National Appellate Matrimonial Tribunal, which held instead that only
respondent was impaired by a lack of due discretion. 38 Subsequently, the
decision of the National Appellate Matrimonial Tribunal was upheld by the
Roman Rota of the Vatican. 39
Petitioner duly alerted the Court of Appeals of these rulings by the Catholic
tribunals. Still, the appellate court reversed the RTC's judgment. While
conceding that respondent may not have been completely honest with
petitioner, the Court of Appeals nevertheless held that the totality of the
evidence presented was insufficient to establish respondent's psychological
incapacity. It declared that the requirements in the case of Republic v. Court
of Appeals 40 governing the application and interpretation of psychological
incapacity had not been satisfied.
Taking exception to the appellate court's pronouncement, petitioner
elevated the case to this Court. He contends herein that the evidence
conclusively establish respondent's psychological incapacity.
In considering the merit of this petition, the Court is heavily influenced by
the credence accorded by the RTC to the factual allegations of petitioner. 41
It is a settled principle of civil procedure that the conclusions of the trial
court regarding the credibility of witnesses are entitled to great respectfrom the appellate courts because the trial court had an opportunity to
observe the demeanor of witnesses while giving testimony which may
indicate their candor or lack thereof. 42 The Court is likewise guided by the
fact that the Court of Appeals did not dispute the veracity of the evidence
presented by petitioner. Instead, the appellate court concluded that such
evidence was not sufficient to establish the psychological incapacity of
respondent. 43
Thus, the Court is impelled to accept the factual version of petitioner as the
operative facts. Still, the crucial question remains as to whether the state of
facts as presented by petitioner sufficiently meets the standards set for the
declaration of nullity of a marriage under Article 36 of the Family Code.
These standards were definitively laid down in the Court's 1997 ruling in
Republic v. Court of Appeals 44 (also known as the Molina case 45 ), and
indeed the Court of Appeals cited the Molina guidelines in reversing the RTC
in the case at bar. 46 Since Molina was decided in 1997, the Supreme Court
has yet to squarely affirm the declaration of nullity of marriage under Article
36 of the Family Code. 47 In fact, even before Molina was handed down,
there was only one case, Chi Ming Tsoi v. Court of Appeals, 48 wherein the
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Court definitively concluded that a spouse was psychologically incapacitated
under Article 36.
This state of jurisprudential affairs may have led to the misperception that
the remedy afforded by Article 36 of the Family Code is hollow, insofar as
the Supreme Court is concerned. 49 Yet what Molina and the succeeding
cases did ordain was a set of guidelines which, while undoubtedly onerous
on the petitioner seeking the declaration of nullity, still leave room for a
decree of nullity under the proper circumstances. Molina did not foreclose
the grant of a decree of nullity under Article 36, even as it raised the bar for
its allowance. HSEcTC
Legal Guides to Understanding Article 36
Article 36 of the Family Code states that "[a] marriage contracted by any
party who, at the time of the celebration, was psychologically incapacitated
to comply with the essential marital obligations of marriage, shall likewise
be void even if such incapacity becomes manifest only after its
solemnization." 50 The concept of psychological incapacity as a ground for
nullity of marriage is novel in our body of laws, although mental incapacity
has long been recognized as a ground for the dissolution of a marriage.
The Spanish Civil Code of 1889 prohibited from contracting marriage
persons "who are not in the full enjoyment of their reason at the time of
contracting marriage." 51 Marriages with such persons were ordained as
void, 52 in the same class as marriages with underage parties and persons
already married, among others. A party's mental capacity was not a ground
for divorce under the Divorce Law of 1917, 53 but a marriage where "either
party was of unsound mind" at the time of its celebration was cited as an
"annullable marriage" under the Marriage Law of 1929. 54 Divorce on the
ground of a spouse's incurable insanity was permitted under the divorce law
enacted during the Japanese occupation. 55 Upon the enactment of the
Civil Code in 1950, a marriage contracted by a party of "unsound mind" was
classified under Article 85 of the Civil Code as a voidable marriage. 56 The
mental capacity, or lack thereof, of the marrying spouse was not among the
grounds for declaring a marriage void ab initio. 57 Similarly, among the
marriages classified as voidable under Article 45 (2) of the Family Code is
one contracted by a party of unsound mind. 58
Such cause for the annulment of marriage is recognized as a vice of consent,
just like insanity impinges on consent freely given which is one of the
essential requisites of a contract. 59 The initial common consensus on
psychological incapacity under Article 36 of the Family Code was that it did
not constitute a specie of vice of consent. Justices Sempio-Diy and Caguioa,
both members of the Family Code revision committee that drafted the
Code, have opined that psychological incapacity is not a vice of consent, and
conceded that the spouse may have given free and voluntary consent to a
marriage but was nonetheless incapable of fulfilling such rights and
obligations. 60 Dr. Tolentino likewise stated in the 1990 edition of his
commentaries on the Family Code that this "psychological incapacity to
comply with the essential marital obligations does not affect the consent to
the marriage." 61
There were initial criticisms of this original understanding of Article 36 as
phrased by the Family Code committee. Tolentino opined that
"psychologically incapacity to comply would not be juridically different from
physical incapacity of consummating the marriage, which makes the
marriage only voidable under Article 45 (5) of the Civil Code . . . [and thus]
should have been a cause for annulment of the marriage only." 62 At the
same time, Tolentino noted "[it] would be different if it were psychological
incapacity to understand the essential marital obligations, because then this
would amount to lack of consent to the marriage." 63 These concernsthough were answered, beginning with Santos v. Court of Appeals, 64
wherein the Court, through Justice Vitug, acknowledged that "psychological
incapacity should refer to no less than a mental (not physical) incapacity
that causes a party to be truly incognitive of the basic marital covenants
that concomitantly must be assumed and discharged by the parties to the
marriage." 65
The notion that psychological incapacity pertains to the inability to
understand the obligations of marriage, as opposed to a mere inability to
comply with them, was further affirmed in the Molina 66 case. Therein, the
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Court, through then Justice (now Chief Justice) Panganiban observed that
"[t]he evidence [to establish psychological incapacity] must convince the
court that the parties, or one of them, was mentally or psychically ill to such
extent that the person could not have known the obligations he was
assuming, or knowing them, could not have given valid assumption
thereto." 67 Jurisprudence since then has recognized that psychological
incapacity "is a malady so grave and permanent as to deprive one of
awareness of the duties and responsibilities of the matrimonial bond one is
about to assume." 68
It might seem that this present understanding of psychological incapacity
deviates from the literal wording of Article 36, with its central phase reading
"psychologically incapacitated to comply with the essential marital
obligations of marriage." 69 At the same time, it has been consistently
recognized by this Court that the intent of the Family Code committee was
to design the law as to allow some resiliency in its application, by avoiding
specific examples that would limit the applicability of the provision under
the principle of ejusdem generis. Rather, the preference of the revision
committee was for "the judge to interpret the provision on a case-to-case
basis, guided by experience, in the findings of experts and researchers in
psychological disciplines, and by decisions of church tribunals which,
although not binding on the civil courts, may be given persuasive effect
since the provision was taken from Canon Law." 70
We likewise observed in Republic v. Dagdag: 71
Whether or not psychological incapacity exists in a given case calling for
annulment of a marriage, depends crucially, more than in any field of the
law, on the facts of the case. Each case must be judged, not on the basis of a
priori assumptions, predilections or generalizations but according to its own
facts. In regard to psychological incapacity as a ground for annulment of
marriage, it is trite to say that no case is on "all fours" with another case.
The trial judge must take pains in examining the factual milieu and the
appellate court must, as much as possible, avoid substituting its own
judgment for that of the trial court. 72
The Court thus acknowledges that the definition of psychological incapacity,
as intended by the revision committee, was not cast in intractable specifics.
Judicial understanding of psychological incapacity may be informed by
evolving standards, taking into account the par