3 Tenebro vs. Court of Appeals
3 Tenebro vs. Court of Appeals
3 Tenebro vs. Court of Appeals
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 1/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
_______________
* EN BANC.
273
liability for bigamy; Article 349 of the Revised Penal Code penalizes the
mere act of contracting a second or a subsequent marriage during the
subsistence of a valid marriage.–As a second or subsequent marriage
contracted during the subsistence of petitioner’s valid marriage to
Villareyes, petitioner’s marriage to Ancajas would be null and void ab initio
completely regardless of petitioner’s psychological capacity or incapacity.
Since a marriage contracted during the subsistence of a valid marriage is
automatically void, the nullity of this second marriage is not per se an
argument for the avoidance of criminal liability for bigamy. Pertinently,
Article 349 of the Revised Penal Code criminalizes “any person who shall
contract a second or subsequent marriage before the former marriage has
been legally dissolved, or before the absent spouse has been declared
presumptively dead by means of a judgment rendered in the proper
proceedings.” A plain reading of the law, therefore, would indicate that the
provision penalizes the mere act of contracting a second or a subsequent
marriage during the subsistence of a valid marriage.
Same; Same; Same; Same; Same; The requisites for the validity of a
marriage are classified by the Family Code into essential (legal capacity of
the contracting parties and their consent freely given in the presence of the
solemnizing officer) and formal (authority of the solemnizing officer,
marriage license, and marriage ceremony wherein the parties personally
declare their agreement to marry before the solemnizing officer in the
presence of at least two witnesses).–Moreover, the declaration of the nullity
of the second marriage on the ground of psychological incapacity is not an
indicator that petitioner’s marriage to Ancajas lacks the essential requisites
for validity. The requisites for the validity of a marriage are classified by the
Family Code into essential (legal capacity of the contracting parties and
their consent freely given in the presence of the solemnizing officer) and
formal (authority of the solemnizing officer, marriage license, and marriage
ceremony wherein the parties personally declare their agreement to marry
before the solemnizing officer in the presence of at least two witnesses).
Under Article 5 of the Family Code, any male or female of the age of
eighteen years or upwards not under any of the impediments mentioned in
Articles 37 and 38 may contract marriage.
274
People vs. Aragon, this Court has underscored the fact that the Revised
Penal Code itself does not, unlike the rule then prevailing in Spain, require
the judicial declaration of nullity of a prior void marriage before it can be
raised by way of a defense in a criminal case for bigamy. Had the law
contemplated otherwise, said the Court, “an express provision to that effect
would or should have been inserted in the law, (but that in) its absence, (the
courts) are bound by (the) rule of strict interpretation” of penal statutes. In
contrast to a voidable marriage which legally exists until judicially annulled
(and, therefore, not a defense in a bigamy charge if the second marriage
were contracted prior to the decree of annulment), the complete nullity,
however, of a previously contracted marriage, being void ab initio and
legally inexistent, can outrightly be a defense in an indictment for bigamy.
Same; Same; Same; Same; Same; A civil case questioning the validity
of the first marriage would not be a prejudicial issue much in the same way
that a civil case assailing a prior “voidable” marriage (being valid until
annulled) would not be a prejudicial question to the prosecution of a
criminal offense for bigamy.–Considerations, both logical and practical,
would point to the fact that a “void” marriage due to psychological
incapacity remains, for all intents and purposes, to be binding and
efficacious until judicially declared otherwise. Without such marriage
having first been declared a nullity (or otherwise dissolved), a subsequent
marriage could constitute bigamy. Thus, a civil case questioning the validity
of the first marriage would not be a prejudicial issue much in the same way
that a civil case assailing a prior “voidable” marriage (being valid until
annulled) would not be a prejudicial question to the prosecution of a
criminal offense for bigamy.
Same; Same; Same; Same; Same; For a person to be held guilty of
bigamy, it must, even as it needs only, be shown that the subsequent
marriage has all the essential elements of a valid marriage were it not for
the subsisting first union.–In cases where the second marriage is void on
grounds other than the existence of the first marriage, this Court has
declared in a line of cases that no crime of bigamy is committed. The Court
has explained that for a person to be held guilty of bigamy, it must, even as
it needs only, be shown that the subsequent marriage has all the essential
elements of a valid marriage, were it not for the subsisting first union.
Hence, where it is established that the second marriage has been contracted
without the necessary license and thus void, or that the accused is merely
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 3/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
forced to enter into the second (voidable) marriage, no criminal liability for
the crime of bigamy can attach.
Same; Same; Same; Same; Same; The judicial declaration of nullity of
a bigamous marriage on the ground of psychological incapacity merely
nullifies the effects of the marriage but it does not negate the fact of perfec-
275
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 4/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
276
YNARES-SANTIAGO, J.:
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 5/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
277
“That on the 10th day of April 1990, in the City of Lapu-lapu, Philippines,
and within the jurisdiction of this Honorable Court, the aforenamed accused,
having been previously united in lawful marriage with Hilda Villareyes, and
without the said marriage having been legally dissolved, did then and there
willfully, unlawfully and feloniously contract a second
_______________
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 6/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
4 TSN, 24 July 1995, pp. 11-12; TSN, 13 September 1995, pp. 6-9.
5 Record, pp. 1-2.
278
_______________
6 Id., p. 66.
7 TSN, 11 December 1996, p. 6.
8 Id., pp. 6-7.
9 Id., pp. 7-8.
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 7/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
10 Penned by Judge Rumoldo F. Fernandez, Rollo, pp. 156-162.
279
_______________
11 Rollo, p. 7.
12 Reyes, L.B., THE REVISED PENAL CODE, Book Two, 14th ed., 1998, p. 907.
13 Rollo, pp. 7-16.
14 Id., pp. 16-18.
15 Record, p. 85.
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 8/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
280
This being the case, the certified copy of the marriage contract,
issued by a public officer in custody thereof, was admissible as the
best evidence of its contents. The marriage contract plainly indicates
that a marriage was celebrated between petitioner and Villareyes on
November 10, 1986, and it should be accorded the full faith and
credence given to public documents.
Moreover, an examination of the wordings of the certification
issued by the National Statistics Office on October 7, 1995 and that
issued by the City Civil Registry of Manila on February 3, 1997
would plainly show that neither document attests as a positive fact
that there was no marriage celebrated between Veronico B. Tenebro
and Hilda B. Villareyes on November 10, 1986. Rather, the
documents merely attest that the respective issuing offices have no
record of such a marriage. Documentary evidence as to the absence
_______________
16 Record, p. 84.
17 Record, p. 148.
18 Record, p. 149.
281
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 9/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
_______________
19 Mariategui v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 57062, 24 January 1992, 205 SCRA
337, 343, citing People v. Borromeo, 218 Phil. 122, 126; 133 SCRA 106 [1984]).
20 Decision dated November 20, 1995, penned by Judge Epifanio C. Llano of the
Regional Trial Court of Argao, Cebu, Branch 26, in Civil Case No. AV-885 (Annex
“C,” Rollo, p. 43).
282
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 10/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
_______________
283
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 11/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
_______________
26 Art. 38. The following marriages shall be void from the beginning for reasons of
public policy:
27 Valdes v. Regional Trial Court, Branch 102, Quezon City, G.R. No. 122749, 31
July 1996, 260 SCRA 221.
284
In this case, all the essential and formal requisites for the validity of
marriage were satisfied by petitioner and Ancajas. Both were over
eighteen years of age, and they voluntarily contracted the second
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 12/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
marriage with the required license before Judge Alfredo B. Perez, Jr.
of the City Trial Court of Lapu-lapu City, in the presence of at least
two witnesses.
Although the judicial declaration of the nullity of a marriage on
the ground of psychological incapacity retroacts to the date of the
celebration of the marriage insofar as the vinculum between the
spouses is concerned, it is significant to note that said marriage is
not without legal effects. Among these effects is that children
conceived or born before the judgment of28 absolute nullity of the
marriage shall be considered legitimate. There is therefore a
recognition written into the law itself that such a marriage, although
void ab initio, may still produce legal consequences. Among these
legal consequences is incurring criminal liability for bigamy. To hold
otherwise would render the State’s penal laws on bigamy completely
nugatory, and allow individuals to deliberately ensure that each
marital contract be flawed in some manner, and to thus escape the
consequences of contracting multiple marriages, while beguiling
throngs of hapless women with the promise of futurity and
commitment.
As such, we rule that the third and fourth requisites for the crime
of bigamy are present in this case, and affirm the judgment of the
Court of Appeals.
As a final point, we note that based on the evidence on record,
petitioner contracted marriage a third time, while his marriages to
Villareyes and Ancajas were both still subsisting. Although this is
irrelevant in the determination of the accused’s guilt for purposes of
this particular case, the act of the accused displays a deliberate
disregard for the sanctity of marriage, and the State does not look
kindly on such activities. Marriage is a special contract, the key
characteristic of which is its permanence. When an individual
manifests a deliberate pattern of flouting the foundation of the
State’s basic social institution, the State’s criminal laws on bigamy
step in.
_______________
285
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 13/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
to six (6) years. Hence, the Court of Appeals correctly affirmed the
decision of the trial court which sentenced petitioner to suffer an
indeterminate penalty of four (4) years and two (2) months of
prision correccional, as minimum, to eight (8) years, and one (1)
day of prision mayor as maximum.
WHEREFORE, in view of all the foregoing, the instant petition
for review is DENIED. The assailed decision of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. CR No. 21636, convicting petitioner Veronico
Tenebro of the crime of Bigamy and sentencing him to suffer the
indeterminate penalty of four (4) years and two (2) months of
prision correccional, as minimum, to eight (8) years and one (1) day
of prision mayor, as maximum, is AFFIRMED in toto.
SO ORDERED.
286
SEPARATE OPINION
VITUG, J.:
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 14/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
_______________
287
“Article 40. The absolute nullity of a previous marriage may be invoked for
purposes of remarriage on the basis solely of a final judgment declaring
such previous marriage void.”
_______________
288
_______________
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 16/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
8 I might add, parenthetically, that the necessity of a judicial declaration of nullity
of a void marriage even for purposes of remarriage should refer merely to cases when
it can be said that the marriage, at least ostensibly, has taken place. For instance, no
such judicial declaration of nullity would yet be required when either or both parties
have not at all given consent thereto that verily results in a “no” marriage situation or
when the prior “marriage” is between persons of the same sex.
9 Deliberations of the Family Code Revision Committee, 9 August 1996.
10 Art. 2. No marriage shall be valid, unless these essential requisites are present:
(1) Legal capacity of the contracting parties who must be a male and a female;
and
(2) Consent freely given in the presence of the solemnizing officer. (53a)
289
_______________
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 17/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
(3) A marriage ceremony which takes place with the appearance of the
contracting parties before the solemnizing officer and their personal
declaration that they take each other as husband and wife in the presence of
not less than two witnesses of legal age. (53a, 55a)
Art. 4. The absence of any of the essential or formal requisites shall render the
marriage void ab initio, except as stated in Article 35(2).
A defect in any of the essential requisites shall not affect the validity of the
marriage but the party or parties responsible for the irregularity shall be civilly,
criminally and administratively liable. (n)
11 One might observe that insanity, which could be worse than psychological
incapacity, merely renders a marriage voidable, not void.
290
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 18/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
_______________
12 De la Cruz vs. Hon. Ejercito, G.R. No. L-40895, 6 November 1975, 68 SCRA 1;
Merced vs. Hon. Diez, et al., 109 Phil. 155; Zapanta vs. Hon. Montesa, et al., 114
Phil. 1227; 4 SCRA 510; People vs. Mora Dumpo, 62 Phil. 246; People vs. Lara, 51
O.G. 4079.
13 People vs. Lara, supra.
14 De la Cruz vs. Hon. Ejercito, supra; Merced vs. Hon. Diez, supra.
291
DISSENTING OPINION
CARPIO, J.:
The issue may be stated thus: if the second marriage is void ab initio
on grounds other than the existence of the first marriage such as
psychological incapacity, is there a crime of bigamy?
In the present case, the prosecution filed the information for
bigamy against the accused Veronico Tenebro before the judicial
declaration of nullity of his second marriage. However, before his
conviction for bigamy by the trial court, another court judicially
declared his second marriage void ab initio because of psychological
incapacity.
The majority opinion is premised on two basic assertions. First,
the mere act of entering into a second marriage contract while the
first marriage subsists consummates the crime of bigamy, even if the
second marriage is void ab initio on grounds other than the mere
existence of the first marriage. Second, a marriage declared by law
void ab initio, and judicially confirmed void from the beginning; is
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 19/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
292
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 20/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
293
Moro Hassan and Mora Dumpo have been legally married according to the
rites and practices of the Mohammedan religion. Without this marriage
being dissolved, it is alleged that Dumpo contracted another marriage with
Moro Sabdapal after which the two lived together as husband and wife.
Dumpo was prosecuted for and convicted of the crime of bigamy in the
Court of First Instance of Zamboanga and sentenced to an indeterminate
penalty with a maximum of eight years and one day of prision mayor and a
minimum of two years, four months and twenty-one days of prision
correccional, with costs. From this judgment the accused interposed an
appeal. The records of the case disclose that it has been established by the
defense, without the prosecution having presented any objection nor
evidence to the contrary, that the alleged second marriage of the accused is
null and void according to Mohammedan rites on the ground that her father
had not given his consent thereto.
xxx
It is an essential element of the crime of bigamy that the alleged second
marriage, having all the essential requisites, would be valid were it not for
the subsistence of the first marriage. It appearing that the marriage alleged
to have been contracted by the accused with Sabdapal, her former marriage
with Hassan being undissolved, cannot be considered as such, there is no
justification to hold her guilty of the crime charged in the information.
(Emphasis supplied)
_______________
294
The following facts are undisputed: On August 5, 1936, the appellant and
Jovita de Asis were married in Marikina, Rizal. On May 14, 1941, during
the subsistence of the first marriage, the appellant was married to Olga
Lema in the City of Manila. On February 2, 1943, Jovita de Asis died. On
August 19, 1949, the appellant contracted another marriage with Carmencita
Panlilio in Calamba, Laguna. This last marriage gave rise to his prosecution
for and conviction of the crime of bigamy.
The appellant contends that his marriage with Olga Lema on May 14,
1941 is null and void and, therefore, non-existent, having been contracted
while his first marriage with Jovita de Asis August 5, 1936 was still in
effect, and that his third marriage to Carmencita Panlilio on August 19, 1949
cannot be the basis of a charge for bigamy because it took place after the
death of Jovita de Asis. The Solicitor General, however, argues that, even
assuming that appellant’s second marriage to Olga Lema is void, he is not
exempt from criminal liability, in the absence of a previous judicial
annulment of said bigamous marriage; and the case of People vs. Cotas, 40
Off. Gaz., 3134, is cited.
xxx
In the case at bar, it is admitted that appellant’s second marriage with
Olga Lema was contracted during the existence of his first marriage with
Jovita de Asis. Section 29 of the marriage law (act 3613), in force at the
time the appellant contracted his second marriage in 1941, provides as
follows:
_______________
295
It is not disputed that the [accused] and Anacoreta Dalanida were married on
July 1, 1947 x x x. Neither is it denied that on August 18, 1951, while the
marriage just referred to was subsisting, appellant entered into a second
marriage, this time with Josefa A. Rosales x x x.
In connection with the contract [for the second marriage], undisputed
documentary evidence show that x x x it was only on August 19, 1951, that
the marriage license x x x was issued x x x.
We are x x x of the opinion that the evidence in this case virtually
beyond reasonable doubt that the marriage license x x x was issued x x x on
the date appearing thereon x x x namely, August 19, 1951.
xxx
Article 53 of the Civil Code of the Philippines, x x x which “no marriage
shall be solemnized,” one of them being a marriage license duly issued at
the time of the celebration of the marriage x x x. Related to this point,
Article 80(3) of the new Civil Code makes it clear that a marriage
performed without the corresponding marriage license is void, this being
nothing more than the legitimate consequence flowing from the fact that the
license is the essence of the marriage contract.
Under the provisions of the Revised Penal Code there can be possible
conviction for bigamy without proof that the accused had voluntarily
contracted a second marriage during the subsistence of his first marriage
with another person. Such was the interpretation given by the Court in
People v. Mora Dumpo that: “It is an essential element of the crime of
bigamy that the alleged second marriage, having all the essential requisites,
would be valid were it not for the subsistence of the first marriage.”
_______________
296
xxx
As to its validity, the marriage should be examined as of the time it was
entered into. On that precise date all the essential requisites must be present
x x x. In the case before us, the evidence discloses that the marriage
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 23/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
preceded the issuance of the marriage license by one day. The subsequent
issuance of the license cannot in law, to our mind, render valid what in the
eyes of the law itself was void from the beginning x x x. (Emphasis
supplied)
4
In the 1960 case of Merced v. Diez, the Court held that a prior case
for annulment of the second marriage on the ground of vitiated
consent constitutes a prejudicial5 question warranting the suspension
of the criminal case for bigamy. The Court declared:
Before this Court the sole question raised is whether an action to annul the
second marriage is a prejudicial question in a prosecution for bigamy.
xxx
In order that a person may be held guilty of the crime of bigamy, the
second and subsequent marriage must have all the essential elements of a
valid marriage, were it not for the subsistence of the first marriage. This
was the ruling of this Court in People vs. Dumpo, 62 Phil. 246, x x x. One of
the essential elements of a valid marriage is that the consent thereto of the
contracting parties must be freely and voluntarily given. Without the
element of consent a marriage would be illegal and void. (Section 29, Act
No. 3613, otherwise known as the Marriage Law.) But the question of
invalidity cannot ordinarily be decided in the criminal action for bigamy but
in a civil action for annulment. Since the validity of the second marriage,
subject of the action for bigamy, cannot be determined in the criminal case
and since prosecution for bigamy does not lie unless the elements of the
second marriage appear to exist, it is necessary that a
_______________
297
decision in a civil action to the effect that the second marriage contains all
the essentials of a marriage must first be secured.
We have, therefore, in the case at bar, the issue of the validity of the
second marriage, which must be determined before hand in the civil action,
before the criminal action can proceed. We have a situation where the issue
of the validity of the second marriage can be determined or must first be
determined in the civil action before the criminal action for bigamy can be
prosecuted. The question of the validity of the second marriage is, therefore,
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 24/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
_______________
298
consent. The Court, ruling that the annulment of the second mar
riage rendered the criminal case “moot and untenable,” explained:
The issue is whether the bigamy case became moot or untenable after the
second marriage, on which the prosecution for bigamy is based, was
annulled.
The City Fiscal of Angeles City contends that the lower court acted
correctly in denying the motion to dismiss the bigamy charge. He argues
that the decision in the annulment case should be set up as a defense by
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 25/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
Milagros de la Cruz during the trial and that it would not justify the outright
dismissal of the criminal case.
On the other hand, the Solicitor General manifested that the stand of
Milagros de la Cruz should be sustained because one element of bigamy is
that the alleged second marriage, having all the requisites, would be valid
were it not for the subsistence of the first marriage (People vs. Mora
Dumpo, 62 Phil. 246, 248; Merced vs. Hon. Diez, 109 Phil. 155; Zapanta vs.
Montesa, 114 Phil. 1227).
We hold that the finding in the annulment case that the second marriage
contracted by Milagros de la Cruz with Sergeant Gaccino was a nullity is
determinative of her innocence and precludes the rendition of a verdict that
she committed bigamy. To try the criminal case in the face of such a finding
would be unwarranted. (Emphasis supplied)
299
The first three elements reiterate the language of the law. The
lastelement, the validity of the second marriage except for the
existence of the first marriage, necessarily follows from the language
ofthe law that the offender contracts a “second or subsequent
marriage.”
If the second marriage is void ab initio on grounds other than the
existence of the first marriage, then legally there exists no second
marriage. Article 35 of the Family Code enumerates the marriages
that are “void from the beginning.” The succeeding article, Article
36, declares that a marriage contracted by one psychologically
incapacitated “shall likewise be void.” Article 1409 of the Civil
Code declares “inexistent and void from the beginning” contracts
“expressly x x x declared void by law.” Thus, a marriage contracted
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 26/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
Article 1411. When the nullity proceeds from the illegality of the cause
or object of the contract, and the act constitutes a criminal act, both parties
being in pari delicto, they shall have no action against each other, and both
shall be prosecuted. x x x.
The rule shall be applicable when only one of the parties is guilty;
x x x.
300
the first marriage. This has been the consistent interpretation of the
Court for more than seven decades since the enactment of the
Revised Penal Code. Text writers in criminal law have never
entertained or advanced any other interpretation. There is no cogent
reason to depart from the well-established jurisprudence on Article
349 of the Revised Penal Code.
Even assuming, for the sake of argument, there is doubt on the
interpretation of Article 349, substantive due process of law requires
a strict interpretation of Article 349 against the State and a liberal
interpretation in favor of the accused. The majority opinion reverses
this principle and interprets Article 349 of the Revised Penal Code
strictly against the accused and liberally in favor of the State.
Article 349 of the Revised Penal Code does not state that it is
immaterial whether the second marriage is valid or void ab initio.
This Article does not also state that the mere act of celebration of the
second marriage, while the first marriage subsists, constitutes the
crime of bigamy. Article 349 speaks of a “second or subsequent
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 27/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
Criminal and penal statutes must be strictly construed, that is, they cannot
be enlarged or extended by intendment, implication, or by any equitable
considerations. In other words, the language cannot be enlarged beyond the
ordinary meaning of its terms in order to carry into effect the general
purpose for which the statute was enacted. Only those persons, offenses, and
penalties, clearly included, beyond any reasonable doubt, will be considered
within the statute’s operation. They must come clearly within both the spirit
and the letter of the statute, and where there is any reasonable doubt, it must
be resolved in favor of the person accused of violating the statute; that is, all
questions in doubt will be resolved in favor of those from whom the penalty
is sought. (Statutory Construction, Crawford, pp. 460-462.)
_______________
301
The rule that penal laws are to be construed strictly, is perhaps not much less
old than construction itself. It is founded on the tenderness of the law for the
rights of individuals; and on the plain principle that the power of
punishment is vested in the legislature, not in the judicial department. It is
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 28/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
the legislature, not the Court, which is to define a crime, and ordain its
punishment. (Emphasis supplied)
Appellant in this Court relies on the case of People vs. Mendoza, (95 Phil.,
845; 50 Off. Gaz., [10] 4767). In this case the majority of this Court
declared:
_______________
302
We are aware of the very weighty reasons expressed by Justice Alex Reyes
in his dissent in the case above-quoted. But these weighty reasons
notwithstanding, the very fundamental principle of strict construction of
penal laws in favor of the accused, which principle we may not ignore,
seems to justify our stand in the above-cited case of People vs. Mendoza.
Our Revised Penal Code is of recent enactment and had the rule enunciated
in Spain and in America requiring judicial declaration of nullity of ab initio
void marriages been within the contemplation of the legislature, an express
provision to that effect would or should have been inserted in the law. In its
absence, we are bound by said rule of strict interpretation already adverted
to. (Emphasis supplied)
_______________
13 Tuck & Sons v. Priester, 19 QBD 629 (1887), cited in Cross on Statutory
Construction, p. 172, 3rd Edition (1995).
303
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 30/32
8/4/23, 8:35 PM SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED VOLUME 423
_______________
304
of the Regional Trial Court in Civil Case No. AU-885 before the
court a quo rendered judgment convicting the petitioner of bigamy
declaring null and void ab initio the petitioner’s marriage with the
private respondent on the ground of the latter’s psychological
incapacity. Since the second marriage is null and void ab initio,such
marriage in contemplation of criminal law never existed and for that
reason, one of the essential elements of bigamy has disappeared. To
quote Groizard:
––o0o––
_______________
305
https://www.central.com.ph/sfsreader/session/00000189c08c7e9ab41c8822000d00d40059004a/t/?o=False 32/32