56 Matubis v. Praxedes
56 Matubis v. Praxedes
56 Matubis v. Praxedes
L-11766
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EN BANC
PAREDES, J.:
Alleging abandonment and concubinage, plaintiff Socorro Matubis, filed with the Court of First Instance of
Camarines Sur, on April 24, 1956, a complaint for legal Separation and changed of surname against her husband
defendant Zoilo Praxedes.
The allegations of the complaint were denied by defendant spouse, who interposed the defense that it was plaintiff
who left the conjugal home.
During the trial, wherein the plaintiff alone introduced oral as well as documentary evidence, the following facts were
established:.
Plaintiff and defendant were legally married on January 10, 1943 at Iriga, Camarines Sur. For failure to agree on
how they should live as husband and wife, the couple, on May 30, 1944, agreed to live separately from each other,
which status remained unchanged until the present. On April 3, 1948, plaintiff and defendant entered into an
agreement (Exhibit B), the significant portions of which are hereunder reproduced..
. . . (a) That both of us relinquish our right over the other as legal husband and wife.
(b) That both without any interference by any of us, nor either of us can prosecute the other for adultery or
concubinage or any other crime or suit arising from our separation.
(c) That I, the, wife, is no longer entitled for any support from my husband or any benefits he may received
thereafter, nor I the husband is not entitled for anything from my wife.
(d) That neither of us can claim anything from the other from the time we verbally separated, that is from May
30, 1944 to the present when we made our verbal separation into writing.
In January, 1955, defendant began cohabiting with one Asuncion Rebulado and on September 1, 1955, said
Asuncion gave birth to a child who was recorded as the child of said defendant (Exh. C.).It was shown also that
defendant and Asuncion deported themselves as husband and wife and were generally reputed as such in the
community.
After the trial, without the defendant adducing any evidence, the court a quo rendered judgment holding that the acts
of defendant constituted concubinage, a ground for legal separation. It however, dismissed the complaint by stating:
While this legal ground exist, the suit must be dismissed for two reasons, viz:
Under Art. 102 of the new Civil Code, an action for legal separation cannot be filed except within one year
from and after the date on which the plaintiff became cognizant of the cause and within five years from and
after the date when the cause occurred. The plaintiff became aware of the illegal cohabitation of her husband
with Asuncion Rebulado in January, 1955. The complaint was filed on April 24, 1956. The present action was,
therefore, filed out of time and for that reason action is barred.
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Article 100 of the new Civil Code provides that the legal separation may be claimed only by the innocent
spouse, provided there has been no condonation of or consent to the adultery or concubinage. As shown in
Exhibit B, the plaintiff has consented to the commission of concubinage by her husband. Her consent is clear
from the following stipulations:
(b) That both of us is free to get any mate and live with as husband and wife without any interference
by any of us, nor either of us can prosecute the other for adultery or concubinage or any other crime or
suit arising from our separation. (Exh. B).
This stipulation is an unbridled license she gave her husband to commit concubinage. Having consented to
the concubinage, the plaintiff cannot claim legal separation.
The above decision is now before us for review, plaintiff- appellant claiming that it was error for the lower court to
have considered that the period to bring the action has already elapsed and that there was consent on the part of
the plaintiff to the concubinage. The proposition, therefore, calls for the interpretation of the provisions of the law
upon which the lower court based its judgment of dismissal.
An action for legal separation cannot be filed except within one year from and after the date on which the
plaintiff became cognizant of the cause and within five years from after the date when cause occurred.
The complaint was filed outside the periods provided for by the above Article. By the very admission of plaintiff, she
came to know the ground (concubinage) for the legal separation in January, 1955. She instituted the complaint only
on April 24, 1956. It is to be noted that appellant did not even press this matter in her brief.
The very wording of the agreement Exhibit B. gives no room for interpretation other than that given by the trial judge.
Counsel in his brief submits that the agreement is divided in two parts. The first part having to do with the act of
living separately which he claims to be legal, and the second part — that which becomes a license to commit the
ground for legal separation which is admittedly illegal. We do not share appellant's view. Condonation and consent
on the part of plaintiff are necessarily the import of paragraph 6(b) of the agreement. The condonation and consent
here are not only implied but expressed. The law (Art. 100 Civil Code), specifically provides that legal separation
may be claimed only by the innocent spouse, provided there has been no condonation of or consent to the adultery
or concubinage. Having condoned and/or consented in writing, the plaintiff is now undeserving of the court's
sympathy (People vs. Scheneckenburger, 73 Phil., 413). Plaintiff's counsel even agrees that the complaint should be
dismissed. He claims however, that the grounds for the dismissal should not be those stated in the decision of the
lower court, "but on the ground that plaintiff and defendant have already been legally separated from each other, but
without the marital bond having been affected, long before the effectivity of the new Civil Code" (appellants brief, pp.
7-8). Again, we cannot subscribed to counsel's contention, because it is contrary to the evidence.
Conformably with the foregoing, we find that the decision appealed from is in accordance with the evidence and the
law on the matter. The same is hereby affirmed, with costs.
Paras, C.J., Bengzon, Padilla, Bautista Angelo, Labrador, Reyes, J.B.L., Barrera, and Gutierrez David, JJ., concur.
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