THIRD DIVISION
[G.R. No. 127578. February 15, 1999]
MANUEL DE ASIS, petitioner, vs. COURT OF APPEALS,
HON. JAIME T. HAMOY, Branch 130, RTC, Kalookan City and GLEN CAMIL ANDRES DE
ASIS represented by her mother/guardian VIRCEL D. ANDRES, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
PURISIMA, J.:
Petition for certiorari
under Rule 65 of the Revised Rules of Court seeking to nullify the decision of
the Court of Appeals which affirmed the trial court’s Orders, dated November
25, 1993 and February 4, 1994, respectively, denying petitioner’s Motion to
Dismiss the Complaint in Civil Case No. C-16107, entitled “Glen Camil Andres
de Asis, etc. vs. Manuel de Asis”, and the motion for
reconsideration.
The pertinent facts leading to the
filing of the petition at bar are, as follows:
On October 14, 1988, Vircel D.
Andres, (the herein private respondent) in her capacity as the
legal guardian of the minor, Glen Camil Andres de Asis, brought an action for
maintenance and support against Manuel de Asis, docketed as Civil Case No.
Q-88-935 before the Regional Trial Court of Quezon City, Branch 94, alleging
that the defendant Manuel de Asis (the petitioner here) is the father of
subject minor Glen Camil Andres de Asis, and the former refused and/or failed
to provide for the maintenance of the latter, despite repeated demands.
In his Answer, petitioner denied
his paternity of the said minor and theorized that he cannot therefore be
required to provide support for him.
On July 4, 1989, private
respondent Vircel D. Andres, through counsel, sent in a manifestation the
pertinent portion of which, reads;
“1. That in his proposed Amended Answer,
defendant (herein petitioner) has made a judicial admission/declaration
that “1) defendant denies that
the said minor child (Glen Camil) is his child; 2) he (petitioner) has no
obligation to the plaintiff Glen Camil xxx.”
2. That with the
aforesaid judicial admissions/declarations by the defendant, it seems futile
and a useless exercise to claim support from said defendant.”
3. That under the foregoing circumstances it
would be more practical that plaintiff withdraws the complaint against the
defendant subject to the condition that the defendant should not pursue his
counterclaim in the above-entitled case, xxx.”[1]
By virtue of the said
manifestation, both the plaintiff and the defendant agreed to move for the
dismissal of the case. Acting
thereupon, the Regional Trial Court a quo issued the
following Order of August 8, 1989, dismissing Civil Case No. Q-88-935 with
prejudice, to wit:
“Acting on the manifestation of Atty. Romualdo C. delos Santos,
counsel for the defendant, that counsel for the plaintiff Atty. Ismael J.
Andres has no objection that this case be withdrawn provided that the defendant
will withdraw the counterclaim, as prayed for, let the case be dismissed with
prejudice.
SO ORDERED.”[2]
On September 7, 1995, another
Complaint for maintenance and support was brought against Manuel A. de Asis,
this time in the name of Glen Camil Andres de Asis, represented by her legal
guardian/mother, Vircel D. Andres.
Docketed as Civil Case No. C-16107 before Branch 130 of the Regional
Trial Court of Kalookan, the said Complaint prayed, thus:
“WHEREFORE, premises considered, it is respectfully prayed that
judgment be rendered ordering defendant:
1. To pay plaintiff the sum of not less than P2,000.00
per month for every month since June 1, 1987 as support in arrears which
defendant failed to provide plaintiff shortly after her birth in June 1987 up
to the present;
2. To give plaintiff a
monthly allowance of P5,000.00 to be paid in advance on or before the
5th of each and every month;
3. To give plaintiff by way of support pendente lite, a monthly
allowance of P5,000.00 per month, the first monthly allowance to start
retroactively from the first day of this month and the subsequent ones to be
paid in advance on or before the 5th of each succeeding month;
4. To pay the costs of
suit.
Plaintiff prays for such other relief just and equitable under
the premises.”[3]
On October 8, 1993, petitioner moved
to dismiss the Complaint on the ground of res judicata, alleging that
Civil Case C-16107 is barred by the prior judgment which dismissed with
prejudice Civil Case Q-88-935.
In the Order dated November 25,
1993 denying subject motion to dismiss, the trial court ruled that res
judicata is inapplicable in an action for support for the reason that
renunciation or waiver of future support is prohibited by law. Petitioner’s
motion for reconsideration of the said Order met the same fate. It was likewise
denied.
Petitioner filed with the Court of
Appeals a Petition for Certiorari. But on June 7, 1996, the Court of
Appeals found the said Petition devoid of merit and dismissed the same.
Undaunted, petitioner found his
way to this court via the present petition, posing the question whether
or not the public respondent acted with grave abuse of discretion amounting to
lack or excess of jurisdiction in upholding the denial of the motion to dismiss
by the trial court, and holding that an action for support cannot be barred by res
judicata.
To buttress his submission,
petitioner invokes the previous dismissal of the Complaint for maintenance and
support, Civil Case Q-88-935, filed by
the mother and guardian of the minor, Glen Camil Andres de Asis, (the herein
private respondent). In said case,
the complainant manifested that because of the defendant’s judicial declaration
denying that he is the father of subject minor child, it was “futile and a
useless exercise to claim support from defendant”. Because of such manifestation, and
defendant’s assurance that he would not pursue his counterclaim anymore, the
parties mutually agreed to move for the dismissal of the complaint. The motion was granted by the Quezon City
Regional Trial Court, which then dismissed the case with prejudice.
Petitioner contends that the
aforecited manifestation, in effect, admitted the lack of filiation between him
and the minor child, which admission binds the complainant, and since the
obligation to give support is based on the existence of paternity and filiation
between the child and the putative parent, the lack thereof negates the right
to claim for support. Thus, petitioner maintains that the dismissal of the
Complaint by the lower court on the basis of the said manifestation bars the
present action for support, especially so because the order of the trial court explicitly stated that the
dismissal of the case was with prejudice.
The petition is not impressed with
merit.
The right to receive support can
neither be renounced nor transmitted to
a third person. Article 301 of the
Civil Code, the law in point, reads:
Art. 301. The right to
receive support cannot be renounced, nor can it be transmitted to a third
person. Neither can it be compensated
with what the recipient owes the obligor. xxx
Furthermore, future support cannot
be the subject of a compromise.
Article 2035, ibid,
provides, that:
“No compromise upon the following questions shall be valid:
(1) The civil status of
persons;
(2) The validity of a
marriage or legal separation;
(3) Any ground for legal separation
(4) Future support;
(5) The jurisdiction of courts;
(6) Future legitime.
The raison d’ etre behind
the proscription against renunciation, transmission and/or compromise of the
right to support is stated, thus:
“The right to support being founded upon the need of the
recipient to maintain his existence, he is not entitled to renounce or transfer
the right for this would mean sanctioning the voluntary giving up of life
itself. The right to life cannot be
renounced; hence, support, which is the means to attain the former, cannot be
renounced.
xxx
To allow renunciation or transmission or compensation of the
family right of a person to support is virtually to allow either suicide or the
conversion of the recipient to a public burden. This is contrary to public policy.[4]
In the case at bar, respondent
minor’s mother, who was the plaintiff in the first case, manifested that she
was withdrawing the case as it seemed futile to claim support from petitioner
who denied his paternity over the child.
Since the right to claim for support is predicated on the existence of
filiation between the minor child and the putative parent, petitioner would
like us to believe that such manifestation admitting the futility of claiming
support from him puts the issue to rest and bars any and all future complaint
for support.
The manifestation sent in by
respondent’s mother in the first case, which acknowledged that it would be
useless to pursue its complaint for support, amounted to renunciation as it
severed the vinculum that gives the minor, Glen Camil, the right to claim
support from his putative parent, the petitioner. Furthermore, the agreement entered into between the petitioner
and respondent’s mother for the dismissal of the complaint for maintenance and
support conditioned upon the dismissal of the counterclaim is in the nature of
a compromise which cannot be countenanced.
It violates the prohibition against any compromise of the right to
support.
“Thus, the admission made by counsel for the wife of the facts
alleged in a motion of the husband, in which the latter prayed that his
obligation to support be extinguished cannot be considered as an assent to the
prayer, and much less, as a waiver of the right to claim for support.”[5]
It is true that in order to claim
support, filiation and/or paternity must first be shown between the claimant
and the parent. However, paternity and
filiation or the lack of the same is a relationship that must be judicially
established and it is for the court to declare its existence or absence. It cannot be left to the will or agreement
of the parties.
“The civil status of a son having been denied, and this civil
status, from which the right to support is derived being in issue, it is
apparent that no effect can be given to such a claim until an authoritative
declaration has been made as to the existence of the cause.”[6]
Although in the case under
scrutiny, the admission may be binding upon the respondent, such an admission
is at most evidentiary and does not conclusively establish the lack of
filiation.
Neither are we persuaded by
petitioner’s theory that the dismissal with prejudice of Civil Case Q-88-935
has the effect of res judicata on the subsequent case for support. The case of Advincula vs.
Advincula[7] comes to the fore.
In Advincula, the minor, Manuela Advincula, instituted a case for
acknowledgment and support against her putative father, Manuel Advincula. On motion of both parties and for the reason
that the “plaintiff has lost interest and is no longer interested in continuing
the case against the defendant and has no further evidence to introduce in
support of the complaint”, the case was dismissed. Thereafter, a similar case was instituted by
Manuela, which the defendant moved to dismiss, theorizing that the dismissal of
the first case precluded the filing of the second case.
In disposing such case, this Court
ruled, thus:
“The new Civil Code provides that the allowance for support is provisional
because the amount may be increased or decreased depending upon the means of
the giver and the needs of the recipient (Art. 297); and that the right to
receive support cannot be renounced nor can it be transmitted to a third
person; neither can it be compensated with what the recipient owes the
obligator (Art. 301). Furthermore, the
right to support can not be waived or transferred to third parties and future
support cannot be the subject of compromise (Art. 2035; Coral v. Gallego, 38
O.G. 3135, cited in IV Civil Code by Padilla, p. 648, 1956 Ed.). This being
true, it is indisputable that the present action for support can be brought,
notwithstanding the fact the previous case filed against the same defendant was
dismissed. And it also appearing that
the dismissal of Civil Case No. 3553, was not an adjudication upon the merits,
as heretofore shown, the right of herein plaintiff-appellant to reiterate her
suit for support and acknowledgment is available, as her needs arise. Once the needs of plaintiff arise, she has
the right to bring an action for support, for it is only then that her cause of
action accrues.xxx
x x x
It appears that the former dismissal was predicated upon a
compromise. Acknowledgment, affecting
as it does the civil status of persons and future support, cannot be the
subject of compromise. (pars. 1 &
4, Art. 2035, Civil Code). Hence,
the first dismissal cannot have force and effect and can not bar the filing of
another action, asking for the same relief against the same defendant.”(emphasis
supplied)
Conformably, notwithstanding the
dismissal of Civil Case 88-935 and the lower court’s pronouncement that such
dismissal was with prejudice, the second action for support may still prosper.
WHEREFORE, the petition under consideration is hereby DISMISSED
and the decision of the Court of Appeals AFFIRMED. No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
Romero, (Chairman), Vitug,
Panganiban, and Gonzaga-Reyes, JJ., concur.
[1]
Rollo, p. 7.
[2]
Ibid. p. 18.
[3]
Ibid. pp. 18-19.
[4] Arturo Tolentino, Commentaries and
Jurisprudence on the Civil Code of the Philippines, Vol. 1, p. 596, 601.
[5]
Ibid., p. 596-597, citing Coral vs. Gallego, 39 Official Gazette
3150.
[6]
Tolentino, p. 579 citing Francisco vs.
Zandueta, 61 Phil. 752; Garcia vs. CA, 4 SCRA 689.
[7]
10 SCRA 189.