Mariscal v. CA
Mariscal v. CA
Mariscal v. CA
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SECOND DIVISION.
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BELLOSILLO, J.:
The only issue in this petition for review is whether the
appellate court erred in setting aside the order of the trial
court denying the motion to dismiss on the ground of litis
pendentia.
The antecedent facts: On 29 March 1993 private
respondent Bella C. Catalan filed a complaint against
petitioner Rogelio Mariscal before the Regional Trial Court
of Iloilo for the annulment of their marriage contracted on
4 April 1988 on the ground that it was void ab initio for
having been solemnized without a valid marriage license
and for being bigamous. She also sought to recover from
Mariscal the sum of $32,000.00 she allegedly sent to him
while she was working as a nurse in the United States to
buy properties as investment for their future life together.
She further asked for P100,000.00 for moral damages,
P50,000.00 for exemplary damages, P60,000.00 for
attorneys fees, plus P700.00 per appearance and
reimbursement of all her expenses of1 litigation. The case
was docketed as Civil Case No. 20983. Previously, Catalan
also filed criminal complaints against
Mariscal for bigamy
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and perjury before the Iloilo courts.
Two (2) days later, or on 31 March 1993, Rogelio
Mariscal filed his own complaint against Bella C. Catalan
before the Regional Trial Court of Digos (Davao del Sur)
seeking likewise the annulment of the same marriage on
the ground that he was forced to marry her at gunpoint
and that they had no valid license. Mariscal likewise
prayed for moral damages of P100,000.00, exemplary
damages of P20,000.00, attorneys fees of P50,000.00
including P2,000.00 monthly retainer starting 31 March
1993 and another P2,000.00 as court appearance fee, and
litigation expenses of3 P20,000.00. The case was docketed as
Civil Case No. 2996.
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Id., p. 47.
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for annulment, the RTC of Digos can still void the marriage
by ruling that Mariscals consent to the marriage with
Catalan was vitiated by force, duress, intimidation and
threats.
The petition is devoid of merit. It is not infrequent that
this Court is given the opportunity to discuss litis
pendentia as ground for the dismissal of an action which
has become unnecessary and vexatious.
In Victronics
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Computers, Inc. v. RTCBr. 63, Makati, we said
It is a rule that for litis pendentia to be invoked as ground for the
abatement or dismissal of an action, the concurrence of the fol
lowing requisites is necessary: (a) identity of parties, or at least
such as representing the same interest in both actions (b)
identity of rights asserted and relief prayed for, the relief being
founded on the same facts and, (c) the identity in the two (2)
cases should be such that the judgment that may be rendered in
the pending case would, regardless of which party is successful,
amount to res judicata in the other.
G.R. No. 104019, 25 January 1993, 217 SCRA 517, citing Del Rosario
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Id., p. 152.
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