De Castro Vs de Castro 13

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REINEL ANTHONY B. DE CASTRO vs.

ANNABELLE ASSIDAODE CASTRO


G.R. No. 160172
February 13, 2008
Case Digest by Eunice O. Wagwag

FACTS:

1. 1991 - Petitioner and respondent met and became sweethearts.


2. 1994 - They planned to get married, thus they applied for a marriage license with the Office of the
Civil Registrar of Pasig City in September 1994. They had regularly engaged in sex thereafter.

Marriage

3. 1995 - When the couple went back to the Office of the Civil Registrar, the marriage license had
already expired. Thus, in order to push through with the plan, in lieu of a marriage license, they
executed an affidavit dated 13 March 1995 stating that they had been living together as husband
and wife for at least five years. The couple got married on the same date, with Judge Jose C.
Bernabe, presiding judge of the Metropolitan Trial Court of Pasig City, administering the civil rites.
Nevertheless, after the ceremony, petitioner and respondent went back to their respective homes
and did not live together as husband and wife.

Birth of Child

4. 13 November 1995 - Respondent gave birth to a child named Reinna Tricia A. de Castro. Since the
child's birth, respondent has been the one supporting her out of her income as a government
dentist and from her private practice.

Regional Trial Court, Pasig City

5. 1998 - On 4 June 1998, respondent filed a complaint for support against petitioner. Respondent
alleged that she is married to petitioner and that the latter has "reneged on his
responsibility/obligation to financial support.
6. Petitioner denied the marriage, claiming that their marriage is void ab initio since it was facilitated
by a fake affidavit; and that he was merely prevailed upon by respondent to sign the marriage
contract to save her from embarrassment and possible administrative prosecution due to her
pregnant state; and that he was not able to get parental advice from his parents before he got
married. He also averred that they never lived together as husband and wife and that he has never
seen nor acknowledged the child.
7. In its Decision dated 16 October 2000, the trial court ruled that the marriage was not valid because
it was solemnized without a marriage license. However, it declared petitioner as the natural father
of the child, and thus obliged to give her support.

Court of Appeals

8. Petitioner argued that the lower court committed grave abuse of discretion when it ordered him
to provide support to the child when the latter is not, and could not have been, his own child.
Court of Appeals denied the appeal. Prompted by the rule that a marriage is presumed to be
subsisting until a judicial declaration of nullity has been made, the appellate court declared that
the child was born during the subsistence and validity of the parties' marriage.
9. The appellate court also ruled that it was improper for the trial court to declare the marriage of
petitioner and respondent as null and void in the very same case. There was no participation of
the State, through the prosecuting attorney or fiscal. The burden of proof to show that the
marriage is void rests upon petitioner in an action for declaration of nullity, and not in the instant
proceedings. The proceedings before the trial court should have been limited to the obligation of
petitioner to support the child and his wife on the basis of the marriage apparently and voluntarily
entered into by petitioner and respondent.
10. Petitioner filed motion for reconsideration before the court of appeals but was denied. Hence this
petition for review of the Decision.

ISSUE/S:

1. WON the trial court had the jurisdiction to determine the validity of the marriage between
petitioner and respondent in an action for support
2. WON the child is the daughter of petitioner.

RULING:

1. Yes.

Trial court had jurisdiction to determine the validity of the marriage between petitioner and
respondent. Their marriage was void ab initio.

Under the Family Code, the absence of any of the essential or formal requisites shall render the
marriage void ab initio, whereas a defect in any of the essential requisites shall render the marriage
voidable. In the instant case, it is clear from the evidence presented that petitioner and respondent
did not have a marriage license when they contracted their marriage. Instead, they presented an
affidavit stating that they had been living together for more than five years. However, respondent
herself in effect admitted the falsity of the affidavit when she was asked during cross-examination. In
the instant case, there was no cohabitation at all. The false affidavit which petitioner and respondent
executed has no value whatsoever; They were not exempt from the marriage license requirement.
Their failure to obtain and present a marriage license renders their marriage void ab initio

2. Yes.

The child is the illegitimate daughter of the petitioner and thus, entitled to support.

Illegitimate children may establish their illegitimate filiation in the same way and on the same
evidence as legitimate children. Thus, one can prove illegitimate filiation through the record of birth
appearing in the civil register or a final judgment, an admission of legitimate filiation in a public
document or a private handwritten instrument and signed by the parent concerned, or the open and
continuous possession of the status of a legitimate child, or any other means allowed by the Rules of
Court and special laws.

This was proven through (1) the childs Certificate of Live Birth stating the fatherhood of petitioner
and (2) waiver of tax exemption of the petitioner in favor of respondent.

WHEREFORE, the petition is granted in part. The assailed Decision and Resolution of the Court of
Appeals are SET ASIDE and the decision of the Regional Trial Court is hereby REINSTATED.

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