7 Santos Vs CA
7 Santos Vs CA
7 Santos Vs CA
*
G.R. No. 113054. March 16, 1995.
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; 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.
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* THIRD DIVISION.
408
ROMERO, J.:
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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
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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
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
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.
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412
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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
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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
415
Sr.
SO ORDERED.
Petition granted.
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