Cang Vs Ca-Digest
Cang Vs Ca-Digest
Cang Vs Ca-Digest
Court of Appeals
G.R. No. 105308. September 25, 1998
Posted by: Michelle M. Bacarra | July 25, 2018
FACTS:
This is the question posed before this Court in this petition for review on
certiorari of the Decision[1] of the Court of Appeals affirming the decree
of adoption issued by the Regional Trial Court of Cebu City, Branch 14,
[2] in Special Proceedings No. 1744-CEB, In the Matter of the Petition
for Adoption of the minors Keith, Charmaine and Joseph Anthony, all
surnamed Cang, Spouses Ronald V. Clavano and Maria Clara Diago
Clavano, petitioner
Herbert left for the United States and sought a divorce from Anna Marie
before court of the State of Nevada. Said court issued the divorce decree
that also granted sole custody of the three minor children to Anna
Marie, reserving rights of visitation at all reasonable times and places to
petitioner. Thereafter, petitioner took an American wife and thus
became a naturalized American citizen. In 1986, he divorced his
American wife and never remarried.
Before the Court of Appeals, Herbert contended that the lower court
erred in holding that it would be in the best interest of the three children
if they were adopted by private respondents Ronald and Maria Clara
Clavano. He asserted that the petition for adoption was fatally defective
and tailored to divest him of parental authority because: (a) he did not
have a written consent to the adoption; (b) he never abandoned his
children; (c) Keith and Charmaine did not properly give their written
consent; and (d) the petitioners for adoption did not present as witness
the representative of the Department of Social Welfare and
Development who made the case study report required by law.
ISSUE:
HELD:
Art. 188. The written consent of the following to the adoption shall be
necessary:
(2) The parents by nature of the child, the legal guardian, or the proper
government instrumentality;
(3) The legitimate and adopted children, ten years of age or over, of the
adopting parent or parents;
(4) The illegitimate children, ten years of age or over, of the adopting
parents, if living with said parent and the latters spouse, if any; and
This Court finds that both the lower court and the Court of Appeals
failed to appreciate facts and circumstances that should have elicited a
different conclusion on the issue of whether petitioner has so
abandoned his children, thereby making his consent to the adoption
unnecessary.
In the instant case, records disclose that petitioners conduct did not
manifest a settled purpose to forego all parental duties and relinquish
all parental claims over his children as to constitute abandonment.
Physical estrangement alone, without financial and moral desertion, is
not tantamount to abandonment.