Macarubbo Vs Atty Macarubbo (January 22, 2013)

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Macarubbo vs.

Atty Macarubbo

CONTENTION OF THE COMPLAINANT:

Florence Teves Macarrubo (complainant), by herself and on behalf of her two


children, filed on June 6, 2000 a verified complaint for disbarment against Atty.
Edmundo L. Macarubbo (respondent) with the Integrated Bar of the Philippines (IBP),
alleging that respondent deceived her into marrying him despite his prior subsisting
marriage with a certain Helen Esparza.
Detailing the circumstances surrounding respondents complained act,
complainant averred that he started courting her in April 1991, he representing himself
as a bachelor; that they eventually contracted marriage which was celebrated on two
occasions, the first on December 18, 1991, and the second on December 28, 1991;
and that although respondent admitted that he was married to Helen Esparza on June
16, 1982, he succeeded in convincing complainant, her family and friends that his
previous marriage was void.
Complainant further averred that respondent entered into a third marriage with
one Josephine T. Constantino; and that he abandoned complainant and their children
without providing them any regular support up to the present time, leaving them in
precarious living conditions.
Complainant submitted documentary evidence consisting of the marriage contract
between respondent and Helen Esparza and that between her and respondent, and
photographs of their (complainant and respondent) nuptials and of captured moments
in their life as a couple and a family.

DEFENSE OF THE RESPONDENT:


Respondent denied employing deception in his marriage to complainant, insisting
instead that complainant was fully aware of his prior subsisting marriage to Helen
Esparza, but that she dragged him against his will to a sham wedding to protect her
and her family’s reputation since she was then three-months pregnant.
Respondent submitted in evidence the final and executory October 30, 2000
Decision of Branch IV of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Tuguegarao City in Civil
Case No. 5617, Edmundo L. Macarubbo v. Florence J. Teves, declaring his marriage
to complainant void ab initio. He drew attention to the trial courts findings on the basis
of his evidence which was not controverted, that the marriage was indeed a sham and
make believe one, vitiated by fraud, deceit, force and intimidation, and further
exacerbated by the existence of a legal impediment and want of a valid marriage
license.
Respondent also submitted a certification from the National Statistics Office that
complainants name does not appear in the National Index of Marriages for
Bride; another certification from the National Statistics Office-Office of Civil Registrar
General that it has no record of the December 28, 1991 marriage of complainant and
respondent; and an attestation from the Office of the Municipal Civil Registrar of
Bacoor, Cavite that the Marriage License which was used in complainant and
respondents marriage is not on file in its records.
Admitting having sired complainant’s two children, Juris Alexis and Gabriel Enrico,
respondent denied ever abandoning them.
In his Supplemental Comment, respondent claimed that he left complainant and
their two children with her consent after explaining to her that the pain and shame of
living in sin and ridicule was unbearable.
To disprove that he is of depraved moral character, respondent submitted
certifications from the Office of the Bar Confidant, Office of the Ombudsman.
Department of Justice, and the Philippine National Police in his hometown in Enrile,
Cagayan that he has no cases of any nature pending with them. And he too submitted
letters from the Department of Interior and Local Government and the Metro Manila
Development Authority addressed to him to show that he is a civic-spirited person.
Finally, respondent, in his Supplemental Comment, raised the additional defenses
that the judicial decree of annulment of his marriage to complainant is res
judicata upon the present administrative case; that complainant is in estoppel for
admitting her status as mere live-in partner to respondent in her letter to Josephine T.
Constantino; and that she resorted to forum-shopping in bringing both this
administrative action and the civil case with the Quezon City RTC.
Stressing that he had always been the victim in his marital relations, respondent
invoked the final and executory August 21, 1998 Decision of Branch 158 of the Pasig
City RTC in JDRC Case No. 4320, Edmundo L. Macarubbo v. Helen C.
Esparza, declaring his first marriage void on the ground of his wifes psychological
incapacity.

RULING OF THE SUPREME COURT:


Macarubbo is disbarred. Even though his second marriage is declared void, it is still undeniable that
he contracted it while his first one is subsisting. Further, since the second marriage is void, he is then
liable for concubinage for living with another woman while his first marriage is subsisting. The
Supreme Court cannot give credit to his defense that both second and third marriages are shot gun
marriages. He is a lawyer and is unlikely to be coerced. One incident of a “shotgun marriage” is
believable, but two such in succession would tax one’s credulity. Macarrubo’s actions show a blatant
disregard to the institution of marriage and family. His acts import moral turpitude and is a public
assault upon the basic social institution of marriage.

As officers of the court, lawyers must not only in fact be of good moral character but must also be
perceived to be of good moral character and must lead a life in accordance with the highest moral
standards of the community. The moral delinquency that affects the fitness of a member of the bar to
continue as such, including that which makes a mockery of the inviolable social institution of marriage,
outrages the generally accepted moral standards of the community. Macarrubo violated the following
provisions of the Code of Professional Responsibility:

There can then be no other fate that awaits respondent, as a consequence of his
grossly immoral conduct, than to be disbarred or suspended from the practice of
law.The penalty of 3 months suspension recommended by the IBP is, not
commensurate to the gravity of his conduct.

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