SECOND DIVISION
[G.R. No. 116773. January 16, 1997]
TERESITA SAGALA-ESLAO, petitioner, vs. COURT OF APPEALS and MARIA PAZ CORDERO-OUYE, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
TORRES, JR., J.:
Children begin by loving their parents. After a time they judge them.
Rarely, if ever, do they forgive them.[1] Indeed, parenthood is a riddle of no mean
proportions except for its mission.
Thus, a mother’s concern for her child’s custody is undying - such is a
mother’s love.
The right of the mother to the custody of her daughter is the issue in the case at bar.
In this petition for review, Teresita Sagala-Eslao seeks the
reversal of the Court of Appeals decision[2] dated March 25, 1994, which affirmed the
trial court’s judgment granting the petition of Maria Paz Cordero-Ouye to
recover the custody of her minor daughter from her mother-in-law, Teresita
Sagala-Eslao.
As found by the Court of Appeals, the facts of the case are as follows:
“From the evidence, it appears that on June 22, 1984, petitioner
Maria Paz Cordero-Ouye and Reynaldo Eslao were married;[3] after their marriage, the couple stayed with
respondent Teresita Eslao, mother of the husband, at 1825, Road 14, Fabie
Estate, Paco, Manila; that out of their marriage, two children were begotten,
namely, Leslie Eslao who was born on February 23, 1986 and Angelica Eslao who
was born on April 20, 1987;[4] in the meantime, Leslie was entrusted to the
care and custody of petitioner’s mother in Sta. Ana, Pampanga, while Angelica
stayed with her parents at respondent’s house; on August 6, 1990, petitioner’s
husband Reynaldo Eslao died;[5] petitioner intended to bring Angelica with
her to Pampanga but the respondent prevailed upon her to entrust the custody of
Angelica to her, respondent reasoning out that her son just died and to assuage
her grief therefor, she needed the company of the child to at least compensate
for the loss of her late son. In the
meantime, the petitioner returned to her mother’s house in Pampanga where she
stayed with Leslie.
“Subsequently, petitioner was introduced by her auntie to Dr. James
Manabu-Ouye, a Japanese-American, who is an orthodontist practicing in the
United States; their acquaintance blossomed into a meaningful relationship
where on March 18, 1992, the petitioner and Dr. James Ouye decided to get married;
less than ten months thereafter, or on January 15, 1993, the petitioner
migrated to San Francisco, California, USA, to join her new husband. At present, the petitioner is a trainee at
the Union Bank in San Francisco, while her husband is a progressive
practitioner of his profession who owns three cars, a dental clinic and earns
US$5,000 a month. On June 24, 1993, the
petitioner returned to the Philippines to be reunited with her children and
bring them to the United States; the petitioner then informed the respondent
about her desire to take custody of Angelica and explained that her present
husband, Dr. James Ouye, expressed his willingness to adopt Leslie and Angelica
and to provide for their support and education; however, respondent resisted
the idea by way of explaining that the child was entrusted to her when she was
ten days old and accused the petitioner of having abandoned Angelica. Because of the adamant attitude of the
respondent, the petitioner then sought the assistance of a lawyer, Atty. Mariano
de Joya, Jr., who wrote a letter to the respondent demanding for the return of
the custody of Angelica to her natural mother[6] and when the demand remain[ed] unheeded, the
petitioner instituted the present action.”[7]Missda
After the trial on the merits, the lower court rendered its decision, the dispositive portion of which reads:
“WHEREFORE, finding the petition to be meritorious, the Court
grants the same and let the corresponding writ issue. As a corollary, respondent Teresita Sagala-Eslao or anyone acting
under her behalf is hereby directed to cause the immediate transfer of the
custody of the minor Angelica Cordero Eslao, to her natural mother, petitioner
Maria Paz Cordero-Ouye.
“No pronouncement as to costs.
“SO ORDERED.”
On appeal, the respondent court affirmed in full the decision of the trial court.
Hence, the instant petition by the minor’s paternal grandmother, contending that the Court of Appeals erred:
I
IN RULING THAT PRIVATE RESPONDENT MARIA PAZ
CORDERO-OUYE, DID NOT ABANDON MINOR, ANGELICA ESLAO, TO THE CARE AND CUSTODY OF
THE PETITIONER TERESITA SAGALA-ESLAO.Missdaa
II
IN RULING THAT THERE WAS NO COMPELLING REASON TO SEPARATE MINOR, ANGELICA ESLAO, FROM PRIVATE RESPONDENT MARIA PAZ CORDERO-OUYE, IN FAVOR OF PETITIONER TERESITA SAGALA-ESLAO.
III
IN NOT FINDING THAT PETITIONER TERESITA
SAGALA-ESLAO, IS FIT TO BE GIVEN THE CUSTODY OF MINOR, ANGELICA ESLAO.SdaÓadsc
The petition is without merit.
Being interrelated, the issues shall be discussed jointly.
Petitioner argues that she would be deserving to take care of
Angelica; that she had managed to raise 12 children of her own herself; that
she has the financial means to carry out her plans for Angelica; that she
maintains a store which earns a net income of about P500 a day, she gets P900 a
month as pension for the death of her husband, she rents out rooms in her house
which she owns, for which she earns a total of P6,000 a month, and that from
her gross income of roughly P21,000, she spends about P10,000 for the
maintenance of her house.SdaÓadsc
Despite the foregoing, however, and petitioner’s “genuine desire
to remain with said child, that would qualify her to have custody of Angelica,”
the trial court’s disquisition, in consonance with the provision that the
child’s welfare is always the paramount consideration in all questions
concerning his care and custody[8] convinced this Court to decide in favor of
private respondent, thus:
“On the other hand, the side of the petitioner must also be presented here. In this case, we see a picture of a real and natural mother who is -
‘x x x legitimately, anxiously, and desperately trying to get back
her child in order to fill the void in her heart and existence. She wants to make up for what she has failed
to do for her boy during the period
when she was financially unable to help him and when she could not have him in
her house because of the objection of the father. Now that she has her own home and is in a better financial
condition, she wants her child back, and we repeat that she has not and has
never given him up definitely or with any idea of permanence.’[9]
“The petitioner herein is married to an
Orthodontist who has a lucrative practice of his profession in San Francisco,
California, USA. The petitioner and her
present husband have a home of their own and they have three cars. The petitioner’s husband is willing to adopt
the petitioner’s children. If the
children will be with their mother, the probability is that they will be
afforded a bright future. Contrast this
situation with the one prevailing in the respondent’s [grandmother’s]
house. As admitted by the respondent,
four of the rooms in her house are being rented to other persons with each room
occupied by 4 to 5 persons. Added to
these persons are the respondent’s 2 sons, Samuel and Alfredo, and their
respective families (ibid., p. 54) and one can just visualize the kind of
atmosphere pervading thereat. And to
aggravate the situation, the house has only 2 toilets and 3 faucets. Finally, considering that in all
controversies involving the custody of minors, the foremost criterion is the
physical and moral well being of the child taking into account the respective
resources and social and moral situations of the contending parties (Union III
vs. Mariano, 101 SCRA 183), the Court is left with no other recourse but to
grant the writ prayed for.”[10]
Petitioner further contends that the respondent court erred in finding that there was no abandonment committed by the private respondent; that while judicial declaration of abandonment of the child in a case filed for the purpose is not here obtaining as mandated in Art. 229 of the Family Code because petitioner failed to resort to such judicial action, it does not ipso facto follow that there was in fact no abandonment committed by the private respondent.
Petitioner also argues that it has been amply demonstrated during
the trial that private respondent had indeed abandoned Angelica to the care and
custody of the petitioner; that during all the time that Angelica stayed with
petitioner, there were only three instances or occasions wherein the private
respondent saw Angelica; that private respondent never visited Angelica on
important occasions, such as her birthday, and neither did the former give her
cards or gifts, “not even a single candy;”[11] that while private respondent claims
otherwise and that she visited Angelica "many times" an insists that
she visited Angelica as often as four times a month and gave her remembrances
such as candies and clothes, she would not even remember when the fourth
birthday of Angelica was.
We are not persuaded by such averments.
In Santos, Sr. vs. Court of Appeals, 242 SCRA 407,[12] we stated, viz:
“xxx [Parental authority]
is a mass of rights and obligations which the law grants to parents for
the purpose of the children’s physical preservation and development, as well as
the cultivation of their intellect and the education of their heart and senses.[13] As regards parental authority, ‘there is no
power, but a task; no complex of rights, but a sum of duties; no sovereignty
but a sacred trust for the welfare of the minor.’[14]
“Parental authority and responsibility are inalienable and may not
be transferred or renounced except in
cases authorized by law.[15] The right attached to parental authority,
being purely personal, the law allows a waiver of parental authority only in
cases of adoption, guardianship and surrender to a children’s home or an orphan
institution.[16] When a parent entrusts the custody of a
minor to another, such as a friend or godfather, even in a document, what is
given is merely temporary custody and it does not constitute a renunciation of
parental authority.[17] Even if a definite renunciation is manifest,
the law still disallows the same.[18]
“The father and mother, being the natural guardians of
unemancipated children, are duty-bound and entitled to keep them in their
custody and company.”[19]
Thus, in the instant petition, when private respondent entrusted the custody of her minor child to the petitioner, what she gave to the latter was merely temporary custody and it did not constitute abandonment or renunciation of parental authority. For the right attached to parental authority, being purely personal, the law allows a waiver of parental authority only in cases of adoption, guardianship and surrender to a children’s home or an orphan institution which do not appear in the case at bar.
Of considerable importance is the rule long accepted by the
courts that “the right of parents to the custody of their minor children is one
of the natural rights incident to parenthood, a right supported by law and
sound public policy. The right is an
inherent one, which is not created by the state or decisions of the courts, but
derives from the nature of the parental relationship.[20]
IN VIEW WHEREOF, the decision appealed from dated March 25, 1994 being in accordance with law and the evidence, the same is hereby AFFIRMED and the petition DISMISSED for lack of merit.
SO ORDERED.
Regalado (Chairman), Romero, Puno, and Mendoza, JJ., concur.
[1] Wilde, Oscar: A Woman of No Importance, II.
[2] Imperial, J.,
ponente, Canizares-Nye and Montenegro, JJ., concurring.
[3] Exh. “A”.
[4] Exh. “B”.
[5] Exh. “C”.
[6] Exh. “D”.
[7] Court of Appeals
Decision, pp. 2-3; Rollo, pp. 40-41.
[8] Art. 8, PD 603,
Child and Youth Welfare Code.
[9] Celis v.
Cafuir, 86 SCRA 559.
[10] pp. 118-119, Record.
[11] TSN, July 23, 1993,
pp. 10-11, 13; petition, p. 14, Rollo, p. 23.
[12] G.R. No. 113054,
March 16, 1995.
[13] Reyes vs.
Alvarez, 8 Phil. 732; 2 Manresa 21; cited in IA. Tolentino, Civil Code of the Phils., Commentaries and
Jurisprudence 604 (1990 ed.).
[14] Puig Pena cited in
Reyes and Puno, An Outline of the Philippine Civil Law, 295 (4th ed., 1964).
[15] Family Code, Arts.
210, 223 and 224.
[16] Family Code, Arts.
222-224; Act No. 3094.
[17] Celis vs.
Cafuir, 86 Phil. 555.
[18] Family Code, Art. 210,
taken from Art. 313 of the Civil Code.
[19] Family Code, Art.
209 and 211.
[20] Skedas v.
Skalaroff, 84 RI 206, 122 A2d 444.