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FIRST DIVISION
Present:
DECISION
PERALTA, C.J.:
Penned by Associate Justice Mario V. Lopez (now a Member of the Supreme Court), w ith Associate
Justices Remedios A. Salazar-Fernando and Eduardo B. Peralta, Jr. concurring; rollo, pp. 37-44.
2 Id. at 70.
Penned by Judge Rico Sebastian D. Liwanag; id. at 130-138.
Decision -2- G.R. No. 234462
Eduardo and Elena first met in 1969 when they were in high school; the
former was a senior while the latter was a sophomore. 4 It was love at first sight
for the two. After months of being in a relationship, Elena introduced Eduardo
to her parents, who opposed their relationship as Elena's father wanted her to
finish her studies first. Despite the objection of Elena's parents, the couple
decided to elope. They eventually got married on October 18, 1970 in Makati
City. 5
Eduardo and Elena lived harmoniously for the first few months of their
married life. However, after a year, the newlyweds started having frequent
and violent fights. Eduardo would always go out with his friends and stay with
his grandmother instead of going home to his wife. Elena would then confront
and shout invectives at Eduardo, insulting him and his family. This would
prompt Eduardo to leave the house and stay with his own family. He would
also leave whenever Elena's father was due to visit them. Every time Eduardo
left their home, Elena would fetch him to bring him home and settle their
issues. 6
This cycle in the couple's married life went on for quite some time.
When Elena did not change her nagging and loud behavior, Eduardo started
resenting her and her condescending attitude towards him. He began spending
more time with his friends and relatives instead of with his wife. He became
more preoccupied with his mother and his siblings. Eduardo also started to
realize that he was happier without his wife, and that was nothing good in their
marriage. At the same time, Elena started complaining that Eduardo was a
failure as a husband. She likewise accused him of being a womanizer and an
alcoholic. 7
Things took a tum for the worse for the couple in 1972, when Eduardo
left their conjugal home and Elena did not fetch him as she usually did. They
lost communication with each other from then on, with Elena eventually
finding out that Eduardo had engaged in an extramarital affair. In 1976,
without any hope of reconciling with each other, the couple finally decided to
separate. 8
On February 25, 2013, Eduardo filed before the RTC, Branch 136 of
Makati City a Petition9 for declaration of absolute nullity of marriage under
Article 36 of the Family Code, docketed as Civil Case No. 13-178. He alleged
that he and Elena were unfit to assume and perform the essential obligations
of marriage, adding that their relationship was weak and short-lived as the
same began when both of them were still immature and not yet prepared to
6
7
9
Id. at 157.
Id.at 131.
Id. at 38.
Id.
Id.
c1i
Id. at 71-73.
Decision -3- G.R. No. 234462
fulfill their roles and duties as a married couple. Eduardo averred that it was
their respective psychological incapacities which caused their marriage to
end, their personality aberrations already being grave, severe, and beyond
repair despite any intervention or psychotherapy. 10 In support of his Petition,
Eduardo attached a copy of the psychological assessment report (Report) 11
conducted by clinical psychologist Dr. Nedy L. Tayag (Dr. Tayag) who
diagnosed him with Passive Aggressive Personality Disorder and Elena with
Narcissistic Personality Disorder. A portion of the Dr. Tayag's Report on
Eduardo states:
xxxx
He is the sort who does not want to be criticized and fails to assert
himself well. Though the criticisms and feedbacks are for his development
and growth, he sees these are attack (sic) to his person such that he. would
retaliate through means that would likely strain and affect his ties with
others. The passive attitude that he shows when dealing with others does
not enable him to have better relations as he just lets others take control of
the situation while he would repress his feelings and thoughts.
xxxx
xxxx
10
Id. at 72.
II
Id at 76-10 I; referred to as ".Jud ic ial Affidavit ofNedy Tayag" in some parts of the rollo.
Decision -4- G.R. No. 234462
Eduardo filed his motion for reconsideration, which the RTC denied in
its Order 14 dated July 13, 2015.
In . a Decision dated March 15, 201 7, the appellate court granted the
appeal and declared void the maniage between Eduardo and Elena, thus:
12
JJ
14
15
Id. at I 02-107.
Id. at 130- 138.
Id.at 172.
ell
Id. at 39.
Decision -5- G.R. No. 234462
SO ORDERED. 16
In reversing the trial court, the CA found that both parties were
psychologically incapacitated to fulfill the basic duties of marriage as
corroborated on material points by the conclusions of Dr. Tayag. It found that
the link between the acts that manifest incapacity and the psychological
disorders was fully explained.
Elena, through the Office of the Solicitor General, filed a motion for
reconsideration which, in a Resolution 17 dated September 4, 2017, was denied
by the CA.
Hence, this petition which calls on the Court to determine whether the
appellate comi erred in declaring the marriage between Elena and Eduardo
void on the ground that both parties are psychologically incapacitated to fulfill
their marital obligations.
16
Id. at 44.
17
Id. at 70.
Decision -6- G.R. No. 234462
A marriage contracted by any patty who, at the time of the celebration, was
psychologically incapacitated to comply with the essential marital
obligations of maniage, shall likewise be void even if such incapacity
becomes manifest only after its solemnization.
(5) Such illness must be grave enough to bring about the disability
of the party to assume the essential obligations of marriage.
Thus, "mild characterological peculiarities, mood changes,
18
Article 11, Section 12 of the 1987 Constitution.
19
Article XV, Section 2 of the 1987 Constitution.
20
Gerardo A. Eliscupiclez v. Glenda C. Eliscupidez, G.R. No. 226907, July 22, 2019.
21
l eoue/ Santos v. Court ofAppeals and Bedia-Santos, 310 Phil. 21, 39 ( 1995).
22
Yambao v. Rep. of the Phi/s., 655 Phil. 346, 357, (2011); Rep. ofthe Phils. v. De Gracia, 726 Phil.
502, 510 (20 14); Mallilin v. Jamesolamin, el al., 754 Phil. 158, 174 (20 I 5); Castillo v. Rep. ofthe Phils., et
al., 805 Phil. 209,219 (2017); Espina-Dan v. Dan, G.R. No. 209031 , April 16, 20 18, 861 SCRA 219,240;
Gerardo A. Eliscupidez v. Glenda C. Eliscupidez, G.R. No. 226907, July 22, 20 19.
23
335 Phil. 664 (1997). u ~
·P
Decision -7- G.R. No. 234462
(8) The trial court must order the prosecuting attorney or fiscal and the
Solicitor General to appear as counsel for the state. x x x24
(Emphasis supplied)
Applying the foregoing standards to the case at bar, the Court finds that,
contrary to the findings of the CA, the totality of the evidence presented failed
to prove sufficient factual or legal basis to rule that the paiiies' personality
disorders amount to psychological incapacity under Article 36 of the Family
Code. Eduardo had the burden of proving the nullity of his marriage to Elena
based on psychological incapacity. He failed to discharge this burden.
While the Report of Dr. Tayag submitted that Eduardo suffered from a
Passive-Aggressive Personality Disorder and was "obstructive and intolerant
of others, expressing negative or incompatible attitudes," 27 the Court finds that
the incapacity of Eduardo is premised not on some debilitating psychological
24 Id. at 676-679.
25 AnacletoAlden Meneses v. .Jung Soon Linda lee-Meneses, G.R. No. 200 182, March 13, 2019.
26
Rollo, p. 161. ~
27
Id at 95. ~ ,
Decision -8- G.R. No. 234462
condition, but rather from his refusal or unwillingness to perform the essential
marital obligations. As Dr. Tayag stated in her Report herself, Eduardo "is
quite resistive and whenever arguments would arise between him and the
respondent [Elena] , he would just leave the house and would not even come
home on his own accord such that it created more strain between him and his
wife, who eventually got tired of his attitude."28
Q: How did you find your wife as a person before your marriage?
A: She was kind and always ready to go with me.
Q: How about you, how do you describe your relationship with the
respondent prior to your marriage with her?
A: Because I was in high school at that time, I can say we do not have
any problem we do not think of any responsibility so our relationship
was just like nothing serious we are just having fun at that time.
Q: Why?
A: Because after my marriage, I still sleep and go out with my friends
and family and having fun although I have a wife that I need to slept
[sic} with and be with always but I find it very difficult for me to
do that.
Q: What was the situation between you and your wife after your
marriage?
A: Our fighting became more and more often and becoming worse
because of my constant going out and sleeping to be with my
parents and grandmother and I decided to live on my own and
separate from my wife. And after some time of reflection, I
realized I am happy without her.29
Based on the foregoing, the Court sustains the finding of the RTC that
the alleged incapacity of Eduardo is premised not on his personality disorder
or on some debilitating psychological condition, but rather on his outright
refusal or unwillingness to perform his marital obligations.
28
Id
29
Id. at 134-135.
Decision -9- G.R. No. 234462
The Court has held that mere difficulty, refusal or neglect in the
performance of marital obligations or ill will on the part of the spouse is
different from incapacity rooted in some debilitating psychological condition
or illness; irreconcilable differences, sexual infidelity or perversion,
emotional immaturity and irresponsibility and the like, do not by themselves
warrant a finding of psychological incapacity under Article 36, as the same
may only be due to a person's refusal or unwillingness to assume the essential
obligations of marriage. 30
As determined by the trial com1, there was no showing that the behavior
of either paiiy demonstrated a disordered personality which made them
completely unable to discharge the essential obligations of a marital state.
What is evident from these circumstances is that while the alleged personality
disorders of Eduardo and Elena made it difficult for them to comply with their
marital duties, the same did not make them psychologically incapacitated to
fulfill their essential marital obligations.
30
Suazo v. Suazo, 629 Phil. 157, 180- 181 (20 I 0).
JI
Rollo, p. 97.
32 Id. at 93.
Id at 38 .
34 Del Rosario v. Del Rosario, 805 Phil. 978, 993 (2017).
35
Republic ofthe Phils. v. Court ojAppeals, supra note 22, at 674.
]6
Rep. ofthe Phil.1·. v. Pangasinan, 792 Phil. 808, 824(2016).
Decision - IO - G.R. No. 234462
While it is apparent to the Court that the union between Elena and
Eduardo was an acrimonious and unpleasant one, the same did not invalidate
their marriage. An unsatisfactory marriage is not a null and void marriage.37
The Court has repeatedly underscored that psychological capacity under
Article 36 is not to be confused with a divorce law that cuts the marital bond
at the time the causes therefor manifest themselves. 38 While this Court
commiserates with the predicament of Eduardo and Elena, this Court has no
option but to apply the applicable law and jurisprudence that addresses only
an overly specific situation-a relationship where no marriage could have
validly been concluded because the parties, or one of them, by reason of a
grave and incurable psychological illness existing when the marriage was
celebrated, did not appreciate the obligations of marital life and, thus, could
not have validly entered into a marriage.39
SO ORDERED.
37
Baccay v. Baccay, et al., 65 1 Phil. 68, 86 (20 I 0).
38
Aspillaga v. Aspillaga, 619 Phil. 434,442 (2009); Ochosa v. Alano, 655 Phil. 512, 534; Mary
Christine Go-Yu v. Romeo A. Yu, G.R. No. 230443, April 3, 2019.
39
So v. Valera, 606 Phil. 309, 336 (2009).
Decision - 11 - G.R. No. 234462
WE CONCUR:
Associate Justice
sMttil"tf.~N
Associate Justice
CERTIFICATION