125720-1996-Aruego Jr. v. Court of Appeals
125720-1996-Aruego Jr. v. Court of Appeals
SYLLABUS
DECISION
HERMOSISIMA, JR. , J : p
3. Declaring that the estate of deceased Jose Aruego are the following:
Herein petitioners led a Motion for Partial Reconsideration of the decision alleging
loss of jurisdiction on the part of the trial court over the complaint by virtue of the passage
of Executive Order No. 209 (as amended by Executive Order No. 227), otherwise known as
the Family Code of the Philippines which took effect on August 3, 1988. This motion was
denied by the lower court in the Order, dated January 14, 1993.
Petitioners interposed an appeal but the lower court refused to give it due course on
the ground that it was filed out of time.
A Petition for Prohibition and Certiorari with prayer for a Writ of Preliminary
Injunction was led by herein petitioners before respondent Court of Appeals, the petition
was dismissed for lack of merit in a decision promulgated on August 31, 1993. A Motion
for Reconsideration when led was denied by the respondent court in a minute resolution,
dated October 13, 1993.
Hence, this Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45 alleging the following
grounds:
A
B
RESPONDENT COURT ERRED IN HOLDING THAT THE PETITION FILED BY
PETITIONERS BEFORE IT DOES NOT INVOLVE A QUESTION OF JURISDICTION.
C
RESPONDENT COURT HAD CLEARLY ERRED IN RULING THAT THERE IS NO
PERCEPTIBLE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE CIVIL CODE PROVISION AND THOSE
OF THE FAMILY CODE ANENT THE TIME AN ACTION FOR COMPULSORY
RECOGNITION MAY BE MADE AND THAT THERE IS NO DIFFERENCE UNDER THE
CIVIL CODE FROM THAT OF THE FAMILY CODE CONCERNING THE
REQUIREMENT THAT AN ACTION FOR COMPULSORY RECOGNITION ON THE
GROUND OF CONTINUOUS POSSESSION OF THE STATUS OF AN ILLEGITIMATE
CHILD SHOULD BE FILED DURING THE LIFETIME OF THE PUTATIVE PARENT, IN
UTTER DISREGARD OF THE RULING OF THIS HONORABLE COURT IN THE
UYGUANGCO CASE THAT THE CIVIL CODE PROVISION HAD BEEN SUPERSEDED,
OR AT LEAST MODIFIED BY THE CORRESPONDING ARTICLES IN THE FAMILY
CODE.
Petitioners, on the other hand, submit that with the advent of the New Family Code on
August 3, 1988, the trial court lost jurisdiction over the complaint of private respondent
on the ground of prescription, considering that under Article 175, paragraph 2, in
relation to Article 172 of the New Family Code, it is provided that an action for
compulsory recognition of illegitimate liation, if based on the "open and continuous
possession of the status of an illegitimate child," must be brought during the lifetime of
the alleged parent without any exception, otherwise the action will be barred by
prescription. The law cited reads:
"Article 172. The liation of legitimate children is established by any of the
following:
(1) The record of birth appearing in the civil register or a nal
judgment; or
(2) An admission of legitimate liation in a public document or a
private handwritten instrument and signed by the parent concerned.
In the absence of the foregoing evidence, the legitimate liation shall be
proved by:
(1) The open and continuous possession of the status of a legitimate
child; or
(2) Any other means allowed by the Rules of Court and special laws."
"Article 175. Illegitimate children may establish their illegitimate liation in
the same way and on the same evidence as legitimate children.
The action must be brought within the same period speci ed in Article 173
[during the lifetime of the child], except when the action is based on the second
paragraph of Article 172, in which case the action may be brought during the
lifetime of the alleged parent."
In the case at bench, petitioners point out that, since the complaint of private
respondent and her alleged sister was led on March 7, 1983, or almost one (1) year
after the death of their presumed father on March 30, 1982, the action has clearly
prescribed under the new rule as provided in the Family Code. Petitioners, further,
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maintain that even if the action was led prior to the effectivity of the Family Code, this
new law must be applied to the instant case pursuant to Article 256 of the Family Code
which provides:
"This Code shall have retroactive effect insofar as it does not prejudice or
impair vested or acquired rights in accordance with the Civil Code or other laws."
The basic question that must be resolved in this case, therefore, appears to be:
Should the provisions of the Family Code be applied in the instant case? As a corollary, Will
the application of the Family Code in this case prejudice or impair any vested right of the
private respondent such that it should not be given retroactive effect in this particular
case?
The phrase "vested or acquired rights" under Article 256, is not de ned by the Family
Code. "The Committee did not de ne what is meant by a 'vested or acquired right,' thus
leaving it to the courts to determine what it means as each particular issue is submitted to
them. It is di cult to provide the answer for each and every question that may arise in the
future." 5
In Tayag vs. Court of Appeals , 6 a case which involves a similar complaint
denominated as "Claim for Inheritance" but treated by this court as one to compel
recognition as an illegitimate child brought prior to the effectivity of the Family Code by the
mother of the minor child, and based also on the "open and continuous possession of the
status of an illegitimate child," we had occasion to rule that:
"Under the circumstances obtaining in the case at bar, we hold that the
right of action of the minor child has been vested by the ling of the complaint in
court under the regime of the Civil Code and prior to the effectivity of the Family
Code. We herein adopt our ruling in the recent case of Republic of the Philippines
vs. Court of Appeals, et al. 7 where we held that the fact of ling of the petition
already vested in the petitioner her right to le it and to have the same
proceed to nal adjudication in accordance with the law in force at the time,
and such right can no longer be prejudiced or impaired by the enactment of
a new law.
xxx xxx xxx
Accordingly, Article 175 of the Family Code nds no proper application to
the instant case since it will ineluctably affect adversely a right of private
respondent and, consequentially, of the minor child she represents, both of which
have been vested with the ling of the complaint in court . The trial court is,
therefore, correct in applying the provisions of Article 285 of the Civil Code and in
holding that private respondent's cause of action has not yet prescribed."
Tayag applies four-square with the case at bench. The action brought by private
respondent Antonia Aruego for compulsory recognition and enforcement of successional
rights which was led prior to the advent of the Family Code, must be governed by Article
285 of the Civil Code and not by Article 175, paragraph 2 of the Family Code. The present
law cannot be given retroactive effect insofar as the instant case is concerned, as its
application will prejudice the vested right of private respondent to have her case decided
under Article 285 of the Civil Code. The right was vested to her by the fact that she filed her
action under the regime of the Civil Code. Prescinding from this, the conclusion then ought
to be that the action was not yet barred, notwithstanding the fact that it was brought when
the putative father was already deceased, since private respondent was then still a minor
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when it was led, an exception to the general rule provided under Article 285 of the Civil
Code. Hence, the trial court, which acquired jurisdiction over the case by the ling of the
complaint, never lost jurisdiction over the same despite the passage of E.O. No. 209 also
known as the Family Code of the Philippines.
Our ruling herein reinforces the principle that the jurisdiction of a court, whether in
criminal or civil cases, once attached cannot be ousted by subsequent happenings or
events, although of a character which would have prevented jurisdiction from attaching in
the first instance, and it retains jurisdiction until it finally disposes of the case. 8
WHEREFORE, the petition is DENIED and the decision of the Court of Appeals dated
August 31, 1993 and its Resolution dated October 13, 1993 are hereby AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.
Padilla, Bellosillo and Kapunan, JJ., concur.
Vitug, J., also believes that the Court of Appeals did not err in holding that the
petition before it did not involve a question of jurisdiction and cannot thus be a substitute
for a lost appeal.
Footnotes
1. Docketed as Civil Case No. 83-16093.
2. Rollo, p. 45.
3. Rollo, pp. 10-11.
4. Rollo, p. 55.
5. Sempio-Diy, Alicia V., Handbook on the Family Code of the Philippines, 1988 ed., p. 325.
6. 209 SCRA 665 [1992].
7. 205 SCRA 356 [1992].
8. Regalado, Florenz D., Remedial Law Compendium, Volume One, Fifth Revised Edition, p.
9 citing Ramos, et al. v. Central Bank, L-29352, October 4, 1971; Dioquino v. Cruz, et al., L-
38579, September 9, 1982; Republic v. Pielago, et al., G.R. No. 72218, July 21, 1986.