Bobis Vs Bobis
Bobis Vs Bobis
Bobis Vs Bobis
138509, FIRST
DIVISION, July 31, 2000, YNARES-SANTIAGO, J. Article 40 of the Family Code, which was effective at the
time of celebration of the second marriage, requires a prior judicial declaration of nullity of a previous
marriage before a party may remarry. The clear implication of this is that it is not for the parties,
particularly the accused, to determine the validity or invalidity of the marriage. Whether or not the first
marriage was void for lack of a license is a matter of defense because there is still no judicial declaration
of its nullity at the time the second marriage was contracted. It should be remembered that bigamy can
successfully be prosecuted provided all its elements concur two of which are a previous marriage and a
subsequent marriage which would have been valid had it not been for the existence at the material time
of the first marriage. FACTS On October 21, 1985, respondent contracted a first marriage with one Maria
Dulce B. Javier. Without said marriage having been annulled, nullified or terminated, the same
respondent contracted a second marriage with petitioner Imelda Marbella-Bobis on January 25, 1996
and allegedly a third marriage with a certain Julia Sally Hernandez. Based on petitioners complaint-
affidavit. Sometime thereafter, respondent initiated a civil action for the judicial declaration of absolute
nullity of his first marriage on the ground that it was celebrated without a marriage license. Respondent
then filed a motion to suspend the proceedings in the criminal case for bigamy invoking the pending civil
case for nullity of the first marriage as a prejudicial question to the criminal case. ISSUE Whether the
subsequent filing of a civil action for declaration of nullity of a previous marriage constitutes a
prejudicial question to a criminal case for bigamy. (NO) RULING A prejudicial question is one which
arises in a case the resolution of which is a logical antecedent of the issue involved therein. It is a
question based on a fact distinct and separate from the crime but so intimately connected with it that it
determines the guilt or innocence of the accused. It must appear not only that the civil case involves
facts upon which the criminal action is based, but also that the resolution of the issues raised in the civil
action would necessarily be determinative of the criminal case. Consequently, the defense must involve
an issue similar or intimately related to the same issue raised in the criminal action and its resolution
determinative of whether or not the latter action may proceed. Its two essential elements are:
crtualibräry DEAN’S CIRCLE 2019 – UST FACULTY OF CIVIL LAW 139 (a) the civil action involves an issue
similar or intimately related to the issue raised in the criminal action; and (b) the resolution of such issue
determines whether or not the criminal action may proceed. A prejudicial question does not
conclusively resolve the guilt or innocence of the accused but simply tests the sufficiency of the
allegations in the information in order to sustain the further prosecution of the criminal case. A party
who raises a prejudicial question is deemed to have hypothetically admitted that all the essential
elements of a crime have been adequately alleged in the information, considering that the prosecution
has not yet presented a single evidence on the indictment or may not yet have rested its case. A
challenge of the allegations in the information on the ground of prejudicial question is in effect a
question on the merits of the criminal charge through a non-criminal suit. Article 40 of the Family Code,
which was effective at the time of celebration of the second marriage, requires a prior judicial
declaration of nullity of a previous marriage before a party may remarry. The clear implication of this is
that it is not for the parties, particularly the accused, to determine the validity or invalidity of the
marriage. Whether or not the first marriage was void for lack of a license is a matter of defense because
there is still no judicial declaration of its nullity at the time the second marriage was contracted. It
should be remembered that bigamy can successfully be prosecuted provided all its elements concur two
of which are a previous marriage and a subsequent marriage which would have been valid had it not
been for the existence at the material time of the first marriage. In the case at bar, respondents clear
intent is to obtain a judicial declaration of nullity of his first marriage and thereafter to invoke that very
same judgment to prevent his prosecution for bigamy. He cannot have his cake and eat it too.
Otherwise, all that an adventurous bigamist has to do is to disregard Article 40 of the Family Code,
contract a subsequent marriage and escape a bigamy charge by simply claiming that the first marriage is
void and that the subsequent marriage is equally void for lack of a prior judicial declaration of nullity of
the first. A party may even enter into a marriage aware of the absence of a requisite - usually the
marriage license - and thereafter contract a subsequent marriage without obtaining a declaration of
nullity of the first on the assumption that the first marriage is void. Such scenario would render nugatory
the provisions on bigamy.