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7 Santos Vs CA

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VOL.

242, MARCH 16, 1995 407


Santos, Sr. vs. Court of Appeals

*
G.R. No. 113054. March 16, 1995.

LEOUEL SANTOS, SR., petitioner-appellant, vs. COURT OF


APPEALS, and SPOUSES LEOPOLDO and OFELIA BEDIA,
respondents-appellees.

Civil Law; Family Code; Parent and Child; The right of custody
accorded to parents springs from the exercise of parental authority.—
The right of custody accorded to parents springs from the exercise of
parental authority. Parental authority or patria potestas in Roman Law
is the juridical institution whereby parents rightfully assume control
and protection of their unemancipated children to the extent required
by the latter’s needs. It is a mass of rights and obligations which the
law grants to parents for the purpose of the children’s physical
preservation and development, as well as the cultivation of their
intellect and the education of their heart and senses. As regards
parental authority, “there is no power, but a task; no complex of rights,
but a sum of duties; no sovereignty but a sacred trust for the welfare of
the minor.”

Same; Same; Same; Parental authority and responsibility are


inalienable and may not be transferred or renounced except in cases
authorized by law.—Parental authority and responsibility are
inalienable and may not be transferred or renounced except in cases
authorized by law. The right attached to parental authority, being
purely personal, the law allows a waiver of parental authority only in
cases of adoption, guardianship and surrender to a children’s home or
an orphan institution. When a parent entrusts the custody of a minor to
another, such as a friend or godfather, even in a document, what is
given is merely temporary custody and it does not constitute a
renunciation of parental authority. Even if a definite renunciation is
manifest, the law still disallows the same.

Same; Same; Same; The father and mother, being the natural
guardians of unemancipated children, are duty-bound and entitled to
keep them in their custody and company.—The father and mother,
being the natural guardians of unemancipated children, are duty-bound
and entitled to keep them in their custody and company. The child’s
welfare is always the paramount consideration in all questions
concerning his care and custody.

_______________

* THIRD DIVISION.

408

408 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED

Santos, Sr. vs. Court of Appeals

Same; Same; Same; Only in case of the parents’ death, absence


or unsuitability may substitute parental authority be exercised by the
surviving grandparent.—The law vests on the father and mother joint
parental authority over the persons of their common children. In case
of absence or death of either parent, the parent present shall continue
exercising parental authority. Only in case of the parents’ death,
absence or unsuitability may substitute parental authority be exercised
by the surviving grandparent.

Same; Same; Same; Private respondents’ demonstrated love and


affection for the boy, notwithstanding, the legitimate father is still
preferred over the grandparents.—We find the aforementioned
considerations insufficient to defeat petitioner’s parental authority and
the concomitant right to have custody over the minor Leouel Santos,
Jr., particularly since he has not been shown to be an unsuitable and
unfit parent. Private respondents’ demonstrated love and affection for
the boy, notwithstanding, the legitimate father is still preferred over the
grandparents. The latter’s wealth is not a deciding factor, particularly
because there is no proof that at the present time, petitioner is in no
position to support the boy. The fact that he was unable to provide
financial support for his minor son from birth up to over three years
when he took the boy from his in-laws without permission, should not
be sufficient reason to strip him of his permanent right to the child’s
custody. While petitioner’s previous inattention is inexcusable and
merits only the severest criticism, it cannot be construed as
abandonment.

PETITION for review of a decision of the Court of Appeals.

The facts are stated in the opinion of the Court.


     Elam Law Offices for petitioner.
     Manuel S. Gemarino for private respondents.

ROMERO, J.:

In this petition for review, we are asked to overturn the decision


1
of the Court of Appeals granting custody of six-year old

_______________

1 CA-GR CV No. 30563, “In the matter of petition for care, custody and
control of minor Leouel Santos, Jr., spouses Leopoldo and Ofelia Bedia,
petitioners-appellees, v. Leouel Santos, Sr., respondent-appellant,” Rollo, p. 21.

409

VOL. 242, MARCH 16, 1995 409


Santos, Sr. vs. Court of Appeals

Leouel Santos, Jr. to his maternal grandparents and not to his


father, Santos, Sr. What is sought is a decision which should
definitively settle the matter of the care, custody and control of
the boy.
Happily, unlike King Solomon, we need not merely rely on a
“wise and understanding heart,” for there is man’s law to guide
us and that is, the Family Code.
The antecedent facts giving rise to the case at bench are as
follows:
Petitioner Leouel Santos, Sr., an army lieutenant, and Julia
Bedia, a nurse by profession, were married in Iloilo City in
1986. Their union begot only one child, Leouel Santos, Jr. who
was born July 18, 1987.
From the time the boy was released from the hospital until
sometime thereafter, he had been in the care and custody of his
maternal grandparents, private respondents herein, Leopoldo
and Ofelia Bedia.
Petitioner and wife Julia agreed to place Leouel, Jr. in the
temporary custody of the latter’s parents, the respondent
spouses Bedia. The latter alleged that they paid for all the
hospital bills, as well as the subsequent support of the boy
because petitioner could not afford to do so.
The boy’s mother, Julia-Bedia-Santos, left for the United
States in May 1988 to work. Petitioner alleged that he is not
aware of her whereabouts and his efforts to locate her in the
United States proved futile. Private respondents claim that
although abroad, their daughter Julia had been sending financial
support to them for her son.
On September 2, 1990, petitioner along with his two
brothers, visited the Bedia household, where three-year old
Leouel, Jr. was staying. Private respondents contend that
through deceit and false pretensions, petitioner abducted the
boy and clandestinely spirited him away to his hometown in
Bacong, Negros Oriental.
The spouses Bedia then filed a “Petition for Care, Custody
and Control of Minor Ward Leouel Santos, Jr.,” before the
Regional Trial Court of Iloilo City, with Santos, Sr. as
2
respondent.

_______________

2 Spec. Proc. No. 4588, Regional Trial Court, Iloilo City, Branch 29, Judge
Ricardo P. Galvez, presiding.

410
410 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Santos, Sr. vs. Court of Appeals

After an ex-parte hearing on October 8, 1990, the trial court


issued an order on the same day awarding custody of the child
Leouel3 Santos, Jr. to his grandparents, Leopoldo and Ofelia
Bedia.
4
Petitioner appealed this Order to the Court of Appeals. In
its decision dated April 30, 1992, respondent appellate court
5
affirmed the trial court’s order. His motion for reconsideration
6
having been denied, petitioner now brings the instant petition
for review for a reversal of the appellate court’s decision.
The Court of Appeals erred, according to petitioner, in
awarding custody of the boy to his grandparents and not to
himself. He contends that since private respondents have failed
to show that petitioner is an unfit and unsuitable father,
substitute parental authority granted to the boy’s grandparents
under Art. 214 of the Family Code is inappropriate.
Petitioner adds that the reasons relied upon by the private
respondents in having custody over the boy, are flimsy and
insufficient to deprive him of his natural and legal right to have
custody.
On the other hand, private respondents aver that they can
provide an air-conditioned room for the boy and that petitioner
would not be in a position to take care of his son since he has to
be assigned to different places. They also allege that the
petitioner did not give a single centavo for the boy’s support
and maintenance. When the boy was about to be released from
the hospital, they were the ones who paid the fees because their
daughter and petitioner had no money. Besides, Julia Bedia-
Santos, their daughter, had entrusted the boy to them before she
left for the United States. Furthermore, petitioner’s use of
trickery and deceit in abducting the child in 1990, after being
hospitably treated by private respondents, does not speak well
of his fitness and suitability as a parent.
The Bedias argue that although the law recognizes the right
of a parent to his child’s custody, ultimately the primary
consider-
_______________

3 Rollo, p. 50.
4 Docketed as CA-G.R. CV No. 30563.
5 Penned by Justice Serafin V.C. Guingona, with Justices Vicente V.
Mendoza and Jaime M. Lantin, concurring; Rollo, p. 21.
6 Resolution dated November 16, 1993, Rollo, p. 34.

411

VOL. 242, MARCH 16, 1995 411


Santos, Sr. vs. Court of Appeals

ation is what is best for the happiness and welfare of the latter.
As maternal grandparents who have amply demonstrated their
love and affection for the boy since his infancy, they claim to be
in the best position to promote the child’s welfare.
The issue to be resolved here boils down to who should
properly be awarded custody of the minor Leouel Santos, Jr.
The right of custody accorded to parents springs from the
exercise of parental authority. Parental authority or patria
potestas in Roman Law is the juridical institution whereby
parents rightfully assume control and protection of their
unemancipated children to the extent required by the latter’s
7
needs. It is a mass of rights and obligations which the law
grants to parents for the purpose of the children’s physical
preservation and development, as well as the cultivation of their
8
intellect and the education of their heart and senses. As regards
parental authority, “there is no power, but a task; no complex of
rights, but a sum of duties;
9
no sovereignty but a sacred trust for
the welfare of the minor.”
Parental authority and responsibility are inalienable and may
not be transferred or renounced except in cases authorized by
10
law. The right attached to parental authority, being purely
personal, the law allows a waiver of parental authority only in
cases of adoption, guardianship and surrender to a children’s
11
home or an orphan institution. When a parent entrusts the
custody of a minor to another, such as a friend or godfather,
even in a document, what is given is merely temporary custody
12
and it does not constitute a renunciation of parental authority.
Even if a definite renunciation is manifest, the law still
13
disallows the same.

_______________

7 Puig Peña, cited in I J. REYES AND R. PUNO, AN OUTLINE OF THE


PHILIPPINE CIVIL LAW, 295 (4th ed., 1964).
8 Reyes v. Alvarez, 8 Phil. 732; 2 Manresa 21; cited in I A. TOLENTINO,
CIVIL CODE OF THE PHILS., COMMENTARIES AND JURISPRUDENCE
604 (1990 ed.).
9 Puig Peña cited in Reyes and Puno, supra at note 7.
10 Family Code, Arts. 210, 223 and 224.
11 Family Code, Arts. 222-224; Act No. 3094.
12 Celis v. Cafuir, 86 Phil. 555; De La Cruz v. Lim Chai Lay (CA) GR
14080-R, August 15, 1955; Bacayo v. Calum, (CA) O.G. 8607.
13 Family Code, Art. 210, taken from Art. 313 of the Civil Code.

412

412 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED


Santos, Sr. vs. Court of Appeals

The father and mother, being the natural guardians of


unemancipated children, are duty-bound and entitled to keep
14
them in their custody and company. The child’s welfare is
always the paramount consideration in all questions concerning
15
his care and custody.
The law vests on the father and mother joint parental
16
authority over the persons of their common children. In case
of absence or death of either parent, the parent present shall
17
continue exercising parental authority. Only in case of the
parents’ death, absence or unsuitability may substitute parental
18
authority be exercised by the surviving grandparent. The
situation obtaining in the case at bench is one where the mother
of the minor Santos, Jr., is working in the United States while
the father, petitioner Santos, Sr., is present. Not only are they
physically apart but are also emotionally separated. There has
been no decree of legal separation and petitioner’s attempt to
obtain an annulment of the marriage on the ground of
19
psychological incapacity of his wife has failed.
Petitioner assails the decisions of both the trial court and the
appellate court to award custody of his minor son to his parents-
in-law, the Bedia spouses on the ground that under Art. 214 of
the Family Code, substitute parental authority of the
grandparents is proper only when both parents are dead, absent
or unsuitable. Petitioner’s unfitness, according to him, has not
been successfully shown by private respondents.
The Court of Appeals held that although there is no evidence
to show that petitioner (Santos, Sr.) is “depraved, a habitual

_______________

14 Family Code, Art. 209 and 211; Aldecoa v. Hongkong and Shanghai
Bank, 30 Phil. 228 cited in A. Tolentino, supra at p. 618.
15 Art. 8, Pres. Decree No. 603, Child and Youth Welfare Code; Cervantes v.
Fajardo, G.R. No. 79955, January 27, 1989, 169 SCRA 575; Unson v. Navarro,
L-52242, November 17, 1980, 101 SCRA 182.
16 Family Code, Art. 211.
17 Family Code, Art. 212.
18 Family Code, Art. 214.
19 On January 4, 1995, the Court en banc, denied Leouel Santos, Sr.’s
petition for review where he sought to have his marriage to Julia Bedia-Santos
annulled on the ground of psychological incapacity. Leouel Santos v. Hon.
Court of Appeals and Julia Rosario Bedia-Santos, G.R. No. 112019.

413

VOL. 242, MARCH 16, 1995 413


Santos, Sr. vs. Court of Appeals

drunkard or poor, he may nevertheless be considered, as he is in


fact so considered, to be unsuitable to be allowed to have
20
custody of minor Leouel Santos, Jr.”
The respondent appellate court, in affirming the trial court’s
order of October 8, 1990, adopted as its own the latter’s
observations, to wit:
“From the evidence adduced, this Court is of the opinion that it is to be
(sic) best interest of the minor Leouel Santos, Jr. that he be placed
under the care, custody, and control of his maternal grandparents, the
petitioners herein. The petitioners have amply demonstrated their love
and devotion to their grandson while the natural father, respondent
herein, has shown little interest in his welfare as reflected by his
conduct in the past. Moreover, the fact that petitioners are well-off
financially, should be carefully considered in awarding to them the
custody of the minor herein, lest the breaking of such ties with his
maternal grandparents might deprive the boy of an eventual college
education and other material advantages (Consaul vs. Consaul, 63
N.Y.S. 688) Respondent had never given any previous financial
support to his son, while, upon the other hand, the latter receives so
much bounty from his maternal grandparents and his mother as well,
who is now gainfully employed in the United States. Moreover, the
fact that respondent, as a military personnel who has to shuttle from
one assignment to another, and, in these troubled times, may have
pressing and compelling military duties which may prevent him from
attending to his son at times when the latter needs him most, militates
strongly against said respondent. Additionally, the child is sickly and
asthmatic and needs the loving and tender care of those who can
21
provide for it.”

We find the aforementioned considerations insufficient to defeat


petitioner’s parental authority and the concomitant right to have
custody over the minor Leouel Santos, Jr., particularly since he
has not been shown to be an unsuitable and unfit parent. Private
respondents’ demonstrated love and affection for the boy,
notwithstanding, the legitimate father is still preferred over the
22
grandparents. The latter’s wealth is not a deciding factor,
particularly because there is no proof that at the present time,

_______________

20 Rollo, p. 29.
21 Rollo, pp. 31-32.
22 Bacayo v. Calum, (CA) 53 O.G. 8607.

414
414 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Santos, Sr. vs. Court of Appeals

petitioner is in no position to support the boy. The fact that he


was unable to provide financial support for his minor son from
birth up to over three years when he took the boy from his in-
laws without permission, should not be sufficient reason to strip
him of his permanent right to the child’s custody. While
petitioner’s previous inattention is inexcusable and merits only
the severest criticism, it cannot be construed as abandonment.
His appeal of the unfavorable decision against him and his
efforts to keep his only child in his custody may be regarded as
serious efforts to rectify his past misdeeds. To award him
custody would help enhance the bond between parent and son.
It would also give the father a chance to prove his love for his
son and for the son to experience the warmth and support which
a father can give.
His being a soldier is likewise no bar to allowing him
custody over the body. So many men in uniform who are
assigned to different parts of the country in the service of the
nation, are still the natural guardians of their children. It is not
just to deprive our soldiers of authority, care and custody over
their children merely because of the normal consequences of
their duties and assignments, such as temporary separation from
their families.
Petitioner’s employment of trickery in spiriting away his
boy from his in-laws, though unjustifiable, is likewise not a
ground to wrest custody from him.
Private respondents’ attachment to the young boy whom
they have reared for the past three years is understandable. Still
and all, the law considers the natural love of a parent to
outweigh that of the grandparents, such that only when the
parent present is shown to be unfit or unsuitable may the
grandparents exercise substitute parental authority, a fact which
has not been proven here.
The strong bonds of love and affection possessed by private
respondents as grandparents should not be seen as incompatible
with petitioner’s right to custody over the child as a father.
Moreover, who is to say whether the petitioner’s financial
standing may improve in the future?
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The decision of
the respondent Court of Appeals dated April 30, 1992 as well as
its Resolution dated November 13, 1992 are hereby
REVERSED and SET ASIDE. Custody over the minor Leouel
Santos Jr. is awarded to his legitimate father, herein petitioner
Leouel Santos,

415

VOL. 242, MARCH 16, 1995 415


Montejo vs. Commission on Elections

Sr.
SO ORDERED.

     Feliciano (Chairman), Melo, Vitug and Francisco, JJ.,


concur.

Petition granted.

Note.—The Supreme Court gives effect to the policy of the


Civil Code and the Family Code to liberalize the rule on the
investigation of the paternity of illegitimate children. (Mendoza
vs. Court of Appeals, 201 SCRA 675 [1991])

——o0o——

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