Effect of Annulment in a Criminal Case for Bigamy in the Philippines

There are persistent questions on the effect of a petition for annulment or a declaration of nullity of marriage on a criminal case for bigamy. It is time to have a discussion on this subject matter (see below).

In a case for bigamy, the following matters or “elements” must be shown by the prosecution:

  • 1. That the offender has been legally married;
  • 2. That the marriage has not been legally dissolved or, in case his or her spouse is absent, the absent spouse could not yet be presumed dead according to the Civil Code;
  • 3. That he contracts a second or subsequent marriage; and
  • 4. That the second or subsequent marriage has all the essential requisites for validity.

There are two scenarios: (1) it is argued that the first marriage is null and void or is a nullity; or (2) that the second marriage is null and void. Let’s discuss each scenario.

1. The first marriage is allegedly null and void.

In the case of Mercado vs. Tan (G.R. No. 137110, 1 August 2000), the accused argued that he already obtained a judicial declaration of nullity of his first marriage under Article 36 of the Family Code, thereby rendering it void ab initio. He argues that a void marriage is deemed never to have taken place at all and, hence, there is no first marriage to speak of. The accused also quoted the commentaries of former Justice Luis Reyes that “it is now settled that if the first marriage is void from the beginning, it is a defense in a bigamy charge. But if the first marriage is voidable, it is not a defense.”

The Supreme Court, in dismissing the argument of the accused, stated:

In the instant case, petitioner contracted a second marriage although there was yet no judicial declaration of nullity of his first marriage. In fact, he instituted the Petition to have the first marriage declared void only after complainant had filed a letter-complaint charging him with bigamy. By contracting a second marriage while the first was still subsisting, he committed the acts punishable under Article 349 of the Revised Penal Code.

That he subsequently obtained a judicial declaration of the nullity of the first marriage was immaterial. To repeat, the crime had already been consummated by then. Moreover, his view effectively encourages delay in the prosecution of bigamy cases; an accused could simply file a petition to declare his previous marriage void and invoke the pendency of that action as a prejudicial question in the criminal case. We cannot allow that.

2. The second marriage is allegedly null and void.

The effect of the judicial declaration of the nullity of a second or subsequent marriage (on the ground of psychological incapacity) on an individual’s criminal liability for bigamy is a novel issue, well, until 2004 when the Supreme Court decided Tenebro vs. Court of Appeals (G.R. No. 150758, 18 February 18, 2004).

In that case, the accused argued that the declaration of the nullity of the second marriage, which is an alleged indicator that the second marriage lacks the essential requisites for validity, retroacts to the date on which the second marriage was celebrated. The accused then concluded that since the third and fourth “elements” of bigamy are not present, he should be acquitted.

The Supreme Court, however, decided against the accused and dismissed his arguments, stating that:

Petitioner makes much of the judicial declaration of the nullity of the second marriage on the ground of psychological incapacity, invoking Article 36 of the Family Code. What petitioner fails to realize is that a declaration of the nullity of the second marriage on the ground of psychological incapacity is of absolutely no moment insofar as the State’s penal laws are concerned.

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.
xxx

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 of absolute nullity of the marriage shall be considered legitimate.[28] 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.

The Supreme Court affirmed the following penalty:

Under Article 349 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended, the penalty for the crime of bigamy is prision mayor, which has a duration of six (6) years and one (1) day to twelve (12) years. There being neither aggravating nor mitigating circumstance, the same shall be imposed in its medium period. Applying the Indeterminate Sentence Law, petitioner shall be entitled to a minimum term, to be taken from the penalty next lower in degree, i.e., prision correccional which has a duration of six (6) months and one (1) day 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.

It is important to note that there are vigorous dissents (contrary opinions) from other justices in Tenebro. The concurring opinion of Justice Vitug is also worth reading.


It must be emphasized that due to the apparently conflicting decisions on these issues, each case must be examined separately. For instance, in Ty vs. Court of Appeals (not a criminal case, though), the Supreme Court noted that the bigamous marriage in the above-mentioned case of Mercado vs. Tan was contracted during the effectivity of the Family Code – not the Civil Code. According to the Supreme Court in Ty:

As to whether a judicial declaration of nullity of a void marriage is necessary, the Civil Code contains no express provision to that effect. Jurisprudence on the matter, however, appears to be conflicting.

Originally, in People v. Mendoza, and People v. Aragon, this Court held that no judicial decree is necessary to establish the nullity of a void marriage. Both cases involved the same factual milieu. Accused contracted a second marriage during the subsistence of his first marriage. After the death of his first wife, accused contracted a third marriage during the subsistence of the second marriage. The second wife initiated a complaint for bigamy. The Court acquitted accused on the ground that the second marriage is void, having been contracted during the existence of the first marriage. There is no need for a judicial declaration that said second marriage is void. Since the second marriage is void, and the first one terminated by the death of his wife, there are no two subsisting valid marriages. Hence, there can be no bigamy. Justice Alex Reyes dissented in both cases, saying that it is not for the spouses but the court to judge whether a marriage is void or not.

In Gomez v. Lipana, and Consuegra v. Consuegra, however, we recognized the right of the second wife who entered into the marriage in good faith, to share in their acquired estate and in proceeds of the retirement insurance of the husband. The Court observed that although the second marriage can be presumed to be void ab initio as it was celebrated while the first marriage was still subsisting, still there was a need for judicial declaration of such nullity (of the second marriage). And since the death of the husband supervened before such declaration, we upheld the right of the second wife to share in the estate they acquired, on grounds of justice and equity.

But in Odayat v. Amante (1977), the Court adverted to Aragon and Mendoza as precedents. We exonerated a clerk of court of the charge of immorality on the ground that his marriage to Filomena Abella in October of 1948 was void, since she was already previously married to one Eliseo Portales in February of the same year. The Court held that no judicial decree is necessary to establish the invalidity of void marriages. This ruling was affirmed in Tolentino v. Paras.

Yet again in Wiegel v. Sempio-Diy (1986), the Court held that there is a need for a judicial declaration of nullity of a void marriage. In Wiegel, Lilia married Maxion in 1972. In 1978, she married another man, Wiegel. Wiegel filed a petition with the Juvenile Domestic Relations Court to declare his marriage to Lilia as void on the ground of her previous valid marriage. The Court, expressly relying on Consuegra, concluded that:

There is likewise no need of introducing evidence about the existing prior marriage of her first husband at the time they married each other, for then such a marriage though void still needs according to this Court a judicial declaration (citing Consuegra) of such fact and for all legal intents and purposes she would still be regarded as a married woman at the time she contracted her marriage with respondent Karl Heinz Wiegel; accordingly, the marriage of petitioner and respondent would be regarded VOID under the law. (Emphasis supplied).

In Yap v. Court of Appeals, however, the Court found the second marriage void without need of judicial declaration, thus reverting to the Odayat, Mendoza and Aragon rulings.

At any rate, the confusion under the Civil Code was put to rest under the Family Code. Our rulings in Gomez, Consuegra, and Wiegel were eventually embodied in Article 40 of the Family Code. Article 40 of said Code expressly required a judicial declaration of nullity of marriage.“

Art. 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.

In Terre v. Terre (1992) the Court, applying Gomez, Consuegra and Wiegel, categorically stated that a judicial declaration of nullity of a void marriage is necessary. Thus, we disbarred a lawyer for contracting a bigamous marriage during the subsistence of his first marriage. He claimed that his first marriage in 1977 was void since his first wife was already married in 1968. We held that Atty. Terre should have known that the prevailing case law is that “for purposes of determining whether a person is legally free to contract a second marriage, a judicial declaration that the first marriage was null and void ab initio is essential.”

The Court applied this ruling in subsequent cases. In Domingo v. Court of Appeals (1993), the Court held:

Came the Family Code which settled once and for all the conflicting jurisprudence on the matter. A declaration of absolute nullity of marriage is now explicitly required either as a cause of action or a ground for defense. (Art. 39 of the Family Code). Where the absolute nullity of a previous marriage is sought to be invoked for purposes of contracting a second marriage, the sole basis acceptable in law for said projected marriage to be free from legal infirmity is a final judgment declaring the previous marriage void. (Family Code, Art. 40; See also arts. 11, 13, 42, 44, 48, 50, 52, 54, 86, 99, 147, 148).

However, a recent case applied the old rule because of the peculiar circumstances of the case. In Apiag v. Cantero, (1997) the first wife charged a municipal trial judge of immorality for entering into a second marriage. The judge claimed that his first marriage was void since he was merely forced into marrying his first wife whom he got pregnant. On the issue of nullity of the first marriage, we applied Odayat, Mendoza and Aragon. We held that since the second marriage took place and all the children thereunder were born before the promulgation of Wiegel and the effectivity of the Family Code, there is no need for a judicial declaration of nullity of the first marriage pursuant to prevailing jurisprudence at that time.

Similarly, in the present case, the second marriage of private respondent was entered into in 1979, before Wiegel. At that time, the prevailing rule was found in Odayat, Mendoza and Aragon. The first marriage of private respondent being void for lack of license and consent, there was no need for judicial declaration of its nullity before he could contract a second marriage. In this case, therefore, we conclude that private respondent’s second marriage to petitioner is valid.

Atty.Fred

84 thoughts on “Effect of Annulment in a Criminal Case for Bigamy in the Philippines

  1. ryan

    Atty.,

    Gd day! Got question, a married man, who,
    after 4 yrs remarried a girl after being
    forced by the girl’s parents for a marriage
    since the girl got pregnant. The first wife
    died. He part ways with his second wife.
    4 years after, he remarried another girl.
    Is there bigamy here? What marriage was valid
    then?

    Thank you.

    Ryan

    Reply
  2. scent83

    Hi Atty good day!

    Thanks because this forum really helps.

    I hope you can take a glance at my simple question. 🙂

    I’m a Filipina getting married here in Philippines this month.. Due to pending papers and being so busy at work .. the Catholic church cannot allow my wedding. Coming June, we can have the wedding in Catholic church. But we are too much now in a hurry to get married. So next week we planned to have a wedding in Aglipay Church just inside their office. What confused me is an answer of a Catholic priest to a woman asking if it’s considered valid for a Catholic to have a wedding in Aglipay Church. And the priest said, no, that is invalid, a Catholic must have the wedding in a Catholic church.

    I don’t know what to do .. my fiance is a foreigner .. can just stay here from April 10 to 16. Between those days we want wedding to happen. We already secured.. all papers needed are complete.

    I’m just afraid and confused now about what to do..
    I don’t wanna do something against the law…..
    I want everything is right in the eyes of God and in the eyes of Law.

    Please help.. thanks .. more power Atty ..

    Reply
  3. lea

    If the man was guilty of bigamy in the Philippines. The woman was dismissed from the case due to good faith. What can be other possible arguments or defense can we appeal against the woman since it takes two to tango? Both the woman and the woman should be charged of bigamy. Or if not, what can be the possible case filed against the woman. They married without having the divorce of the man with first wife judicially acknowledged in Philippine court. Woman claims she married the man in good faith believing of the divorce.

    Reply
  4. Joel

    Hi, is it possible to use the wife’s youngest son to be a reason of psychological incapacity? She was pregnant while we’re together and when the child was born she confirmed that it was not my child. I know in my heart that the child is not mine. We separated since then and I’m planning to file annulment. She’s also cohabitating with the true father of the child

    Thanks

    Reply
  5. ADRIANE

    AFTER YOUR BEEN CONVICTED WITH BIGAMY..AND YOU FINISHED THE SENTENCES..WHAT HAPPEN TO YOUR MARRIAGE? IT IS ALREADY NULL AND VOID?

    Reply
  6. Jessy

    I would like to ask regarding my situation where in me and my exwife are working abroad but in different countries, according to her she has filled a divorce since we were really not in good standing all the time and remarried in the country she is currently in but still carrying filipino citizen during her second marriage was initiated( by the way we both are filipinos and was married in the Philippines). We are not in contact for almost 7years now, I signed for all legal papers for her to have full custody of our 3kids and all 4 of them are living abroad with her second husband. Can I get an advice of any legal case to have our marriage finaly annuled? She sent me a copy of the divorce paper she secured and I think it is useless according to my reviews here. Pls I need help badly and I need a closure for me to start a new life of what I have right now. Thank you in advance.

    Reply
  7. Caroline

    Hi, can you help me pls. How about if a Phi.citizen,married but had already been away from the spouse for more than 10 years changing his/her citizenship now, is the Philippine’s law still affect him/her regarding marriage? How about if he/she changing his/her religion to Muslim. Will bigamy allowed?

    Reply
  8. RUTH

    good day . sir i have the same case of three marriege , i was married in 1973, in 1992 after the birth of my youngest my husband left us and din’t come back.i did not mind because our marriege was not good and i am often abused with violence. in 1996 in my first husband absence i contracted second marriege honestly i am not aware of the family code (i guess due to my education elementary ), after 3 years with two kids 2 and 9 months old my second husband also disappear and never came back until now, in 2014 last year i contracted a 3rd marriege hoping this time i would have someone to grow old and spend the rest of my life with..and because i am not familiar with needed papers to marry my friend offered me that she can help .so she has produced all papers needed and that was how i got the 3rd marriege. now im having problem that i found out the cenomar my friend produced was fake though we were married in a mass wedding that was officiated by our town mayor . now i need to know which marriege is valid the second or the third?( please see the dates of marrieges and first husband date of death) my first husband marriege is 1973 and died in feb 1999, my second marriege is 1996 and the third marriege is 2014. please help me..and please tell me how can i correct the cenomar that shows i have two marrieges please i am looking forward for your reply thank you very much and god bless you.

    Reply
  9. van

    my sister presented a marriage contract before. however my mother is not convinced that my sister is maried because she has never signed any waiver. my sister was 19 that time.
    my mom get cenomar for my sister and that it shows that she is still single. my sister said that his husband informed her that information is still pending. we are doubful, they married on 2005 but until 2015 is still single in her cenomar. we decided to get cenomar for the alleged husband that it shoes that the “husband” is still married with diferrent girl.
    Is it possible that the marriage contract is fake?
    is it possible that they are really not married?
    what legal actions can we make?

    thank you

    Reply

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