Lex Fori Philippines

Law, lawyering and everything in between.

  • Pages

  • Subscribe

  • Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

    Join 104 other followers

  • DISCLAIMER

    Any opinion, information or remark made on this site, including any response to queries or comments posted, should not be regarded as a complete and authoritative statement of the law. There is no warranty as to the completeness or accuracy of the information and the authors will not be liable for any loss or damage relating to the use or reliance thereon. A grain of salt is recommended. No recipient of any information or content from this site should act or refrain from acting on the basis of such information or content. Consult your favorite legal representative. Use of this website does not and will not create any legal relationship between the authors and the receiver/user/reader and any lawyer-client privilege will not apply.

Archive for the ‘Civil Law’ Category

Venue for Libel Cases on the Internet

Posted by lexforiphilippines on July 5, 2010

Under Article 360 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended by Republic Act No. 4363, libel cases where the complainant is a private individual is either (1) where the complainant actually resides at the time of the commission of the offense; or (2) where the alleged defamatory article was printed and first published.  If the private complainant opts for the second, the Information (formal indictment) must specifically state where the libelous article was printed and first published.  Previously, the case could be filed where the article was published or circulated, regardless of where it was written or printed.  The purpose of the amendment was to prevent indiscriminate filing of libel cases in far-flung areas in order to harass or intimidate the accused.

If the libelous article appears on a website, there is no way of finding out the location of its printing and first publication.  It is not enough for the complainant to lay the venue where the article was accessed, as this will open the floodgates to the libel suit being filed in all other locations where the website is also accessed or capable of being accessed, and spawn the very ills the amendment sought to prevent.  At any rate, the private complainant has the option to file the case in his/her place of residence, which will not necessitate finding out exactly where the libelous matter was printed and first published. So said the Supreme Court in the case of Bonifacio, et al. vs. RTC of Makati, Br. 129 (G.R. 184800; 5 May 2010).

Click on Tools for a Digest of the case of Bonifacio, et al. vs. RTC of Makati, Br. 129 (G.R. 184800; 5 May 2010).

Posted in Cases, Civil Law, Criminal Law, Law School, Remedial Law | Tagged: , , , | Leave a Comment »

May a married woman, who has chosen to adopt her husband’s surname in her passport, be allowed to revert to her maiden name when she renews her passport?

Posted by lexforiphilippines on May 20, 2010

A married woman is not prohibited from using her maiden name upon marriage; she has an option, not a duty, to use her husband’s surname (Article 370, Civil Code; Yasin vs. Hon. Judge Shari’a District Court, 311 Phil. 696, 707 [1995]).  Accordingly, a married woman who applies for a passport for the first time is allowed to use her maiden name.  If she opts to adopt her husband’s surname in her passport, she may not revert to the use of her maiden name, except in the following instances as enumerated in Section 5(d) of Republic Act No.  8239 or the Philippine Passport Act of 1996: (1) death of husband, (2) divorce, (3) annulment, or (4) nullity of marriage.  In other words, she may not revert to the use of her maiden name in her replacement passport as long as her marriage subsists.  So said the Supreme Court in the case of Remo vs. Secretary of Foreign Affairs (G.R. 169202; 5 March 2010)

(Click on Digested Cases under Tools to find a summary of the case of Remo vs. Secretary of Foreign Affairs G.R. 169202; 5 March 2010.)

Posted in Cases, Civil Law, Law School, Remedial Law | Leave a Comment »

Psychological Incapacity-Article 36 of the Family Code

Posted by lexforiphilippines on February 16, 2010

Can you love someone who is totally dependent on his mother for support, financial or otherwise?

The Philippines has no law that allows divorce between married couple. The closest thing that couples could have is a declaration by the court that their marriage is void due to the “psychological incapacity” of one of the spouses to fulfill the essential obligations of marriage.

In the case of Azcueta v. Republic, decided by the Philippine Supreme Court on May 26, 2009, the parties’ marriage was voided since it was shown that the husband was suffering from Dependent Personality Disorder.

What is Dependent Personality Disorder? Is anyone suffering from it considered as automatically psychologically incapacitated to marry?

See the Supreme Court’s answer at our Digested Cases Tab.

Posted in Civil Law, Law School | Tagged: , | Leave a Comment »

Republic Act No. 9653 – Rent Control Act

Posted by lexforiphilippines on February 11, 2010

For lessors, a new law was signed stating that you could not demand more than one month advance rental and not more than two months deposit. Lessees, on the other hand, will be secured that no increase will be effected one year from its effectivity.

On 14 July 2009, the President signed into law Republic Act 9653, otherwise known as the “Rent Control Act of 2009.”  The law seeks to protect housing tenants in the lower income brackets from unreasonable rent increases.

(To see the salient features of the Rent Control Act, you may click on Laws under Tools.)

Posted in Civil Law, Law School, Laws and Implementing Rules | Tagged: , , | 5 Comments »

Marriage Expiration – Best before 10 years

Posted by lexforiphilippines on January 12, 2010

A partylist group came up with a proposal that marriages should have an expiry period of 10 years to spare incompatible couples from the hassles of annulment or legal separation. According to the partylist group, the marriage license should carry an expiry period like those of the passport and the driver’s license. Failure to renew the license would automatically end the union.

If we are going to equate marriage with a driver’s license, can we then take the future spouse for a test drive? That way, both persons will be spared from having to go through renewing or not renewing the expirable marriage license and save them money from holding the costly marriage ceremony.

Supposing that marriage will expire in ten years, what will happen to the property relations after 10 years? the validity of contracts entered into by the spouses jointly? Do we liquidate the properties, terminate valid contracts, and tell the children to expect lesser legitimes in the event one or both their parents remarry and have additional children?

In all probability, the partylist group is just generating sound bites for its foray in the political arena (notice that I did not place its name here?) and is not really serious in proposing such a measure.  Otherwise, it is an additional reason why partylist representation in Congress should be scrapped.

Oscar

Posted in Civil Law, Political Law | Tagged: , | 20 Comments »

 
Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 104 other followers