I. Introduction
In the Philippines, the term “annulment” is commonly used to refer to the legal process by which a marriage is ended or declared legally ineffective. Strictly speaking, however, Philippine law distinguishes among several remedies: declaration of nullity of marriage, annulment of voidable marriage, legal separation, and recognition of foreign divorce. These remedies differ in grounds, effects, procedure, and consequences.
The Philippines does not generally allow absolute divorce between two Filipino citizens. Because of this, many spouses who wish to end their marital bond resort to annulment or declaration of nullity, depending on the circumstances surrounding their marriage.
This article explains the annulment process in the Philippine legal context, including the legal grounds, procedure, evidence, costs, duration, effects on children and property, and common misconceptions.
II. Governing Law
The principal laws and rules governing annulment and related matrimonial actions in the Philippines include:
- The Family Code of the Philippines
- The Rules of Court
- A.M. No. 02-11-10-SC, or the Rule on Declaration of Absolute Nullity of Void Marriages and Annulment of Voidable Marriages
- Relevant Supreme Court decisions
- Civil registration rules of the Philippine Statistics Authority and local civil registrars
- Rules on property relations, custody, support, and legitimacy of children
The Family Code is the primary substantive law. The procedural rules determine how cases are filed, tried, and decided.
III. Annulment vs. Declaration of Nullity
Many people use “annulment” as a catch-all term, but Philippine law makes an important distinction.
A. Declaration of Nullity of Marriage
A declaration of nullity applies to a void marriage. A void marriage is considered invalid from the beginning. In legal terms, it is void ab initio.
Examples include marriages where:
- One party lacked legal capacity to marry.
- The marriage lacked an essential or formal requisite.
- The marriage was bigamous or polygamous, subject to certain exceptions.
- The marriage was incestuous.
- The marriage was void due to psychological incapacity under Article 36 of the Family Code.
Because the marriage is considered invalid from the beginning, the court does not “annul” it. Rather, the court declares that it was void from the start.
B. Annulment of Voidable Marriage
An annulment applies to a voidable marriage. A voidable marriage is valid until annulled by a court. It produces legal effects unless and until a final judgment annuls it.
Examples include marriages involving:
- Lack of parental consent for a party aged 18 to below 21 at the time of marriage
- Insanity
- Fraud
- Force, intimidation, or undue influence
- Physical incapacity to consummate the marriage
- Serious and incurable sexually transmissible disease existing at the time of marriage
The distinction matters because the grounds, prescriptive periods, defenses, evidence, and effects are different.
IV. Void Marriages: Grounds for Declaration of Nullity
Void marriages do not become valid by the passage of time, ratification, or continued cohabitation, except in limited situations where the law recognizes curative effects or presumptions.
A. Absence of Essential Requisites
A valid marriage requires:
- Legal capacity of the contracting parties
- Consent freely given in the presence of a solemnizing officer
If either legal capacity or consent is absent, the marriage is void.
Legal capacity generally means that the parties are male and female under the Family Code framework, not under any legal impediment, and of marriageable age. The minimum legal age for marriage is 18.
Consent must be real, voluntary, and given before a duly authorized solemnizing officer.
B. Absence of Formal Requisites
The formal requisites of marriage are:
- Authority of the solemnizing officer
- A valid marriage license, except in cases where a license is not required
- A marriage ceremony where the parties personally declare that they take each other as husband and wife in the presence of the solemnizing officer and witnesses
A defect in a formal requisite may not always make the marriage void, but the absence of a formal requisite generally results in nullity.
For example, a marriage without a valid marriage license is generally void unless it falls within recognized exceptions, such as marriages in articulo mortis, certain marriages among Muslims or ethnic communities under applicable law, or ratification by cohabitation under specific statutory conditions.
C. Lack of Authority of Solemnizing Officer
A marriage solemnized by a person without legal authority is generally void.
However, there is an exception: if either or both parties believed in good faith that the solemnizing officer had authority, the marriage may be considered valid.
Authorized solemnizing officers include, among others:
- Incumbent members of the judiciary within their jurisdiction
- Priests, rabbis, imams, ministers, or church officials authorized by their religious sect and registered with the civil registrar general
- Ship captains or airplane chiefs in specific exceptional circumstances
- Military commanders in certain cases
- Consuls-general, consuls, or vice-consuls abroad
- Mayors, under applicable law
D. Absence of Marriage License
A marriage license is generally required. A marriage without a license is void unless it falls under an exception.
Common exceptions include:
- Marriage in articulo mortis, where one or both parties are at the point of death
- Marriage in remote places where there is no means of transportation to appear before the local civil registrar
- Marriage among certain cultural communities in accordance with customs
- Marriage between parties who have lived together as husband and wife for at least five years and have no legal impediment to marry each other
- Certain Muslim marriages governed by the Code of Muslim Personal Laws
The five-year cohabitation exception is often misunderstood. The parties must have lived together as husband and wife for at least five years, continuously and exclusively, and must have no legal impediment to marry each other during that entire period.
E. Bigamous or Polygamous Marriages
A marriage contracted by a person during the subsistence of a prior valid marriage is generally void for being bigamous or polygamous.
There are exceptions, particularly where a prior spouse has been absent and the present spouse obtains a judicial declaration of presumptive death before contracting a subsequent marriage. The requirements are strict. Without the judicial declaration, the subsequent marriage is generally void.
A spouse who remarries without complying with the law may also face criminal liability for bigamy under the Revised Penal Code.
F. Mistake as to Identity
A marriage is void if one party’s consent was obtained through mistake as to the identity of the other party.
This is a narrow ground. It does not usually refer to mistake about character, wealth, occupation, moral qualities, fertility, or background. It refers to identity itself.
G. Incestuous Marriages
The following marriages are void for being incestuous:
- Between ascendants and descendants of any degree, whether legitimate or illegitimate
- Between brothers and sisters, whether full or half blood, legitimate or illegitimate
These marriages are void as a matter of public policy.
H. Marriages Void for Reasons of Public Policy
Certain marriages are void because they offend public policy, such as marriages between:
- Collateral blood relatives up to the fourth civil degree
- Stepparents and stepchildren
- Parents-in-law and children-in-law
- Adopting parents and adopted children
- Surviving spouse of the adopting parent and the adopted child
- Surviving spouse of the adopted child and the adopter
- Adopted child and legitimate child of the adopter
- Adopted children of the same adopter
- Parties where one, with the intention to marry the other, killed that other person’s spouse or his or her own spouse
These prohibitions protect family integrity, prevent abuse, and preserve public morals.
V. Article 36: Psychological Incapacity
The most widely discussed ground for declaration of nullity in the Philippines is psychological incapacity under Article 36 of the Family Code.
Article 36 provides that a marriage contracted by a party who, at the time of the celebration, was psychologically incapacitated to comply with the essential marital obligations of marriage is void, even if the incapacity becomes manifest only after solemnization.
A. Nature of Psychological Incapacity
Psychological incapacity does not simply mean incompatibility, immaturity, laziness, infidelity, irresponsibility, or refusal to perform marital duties. It refers to a condition that renders a spouse truly incapable of understanding or carrying out essential marital obligations.
Essential marital obligations include:
- Living together
- Observing mutual love, respect, and fidelity
- Rendering mutual help and support
- Caring for and supporting children
- Maintaining the family as a basic social institution
- Performing obligations involving conjugal partnership or community property
- Respecting the dignity and rights of the other spouse
B. Modern Interpretation
Earlier jurisprudence imposed strict requirements, often described as juridical antecedence, gravity, and incurability. Later jurisprudence has adopted a more flexible approach, emphasizing that psychological incapacity is a legal concept, not strictly a medical one.
A psychological or psychiatric diagnosis may help, but it is not always indispensable. The totality of evidence may be sufficient.
C. Evidence Commonly Presented
Evidence may include:
- Testimony of the petitioner
- Testimony of relatives, friends, or persons who observed the spouses
- Psychological evaluation, where available
- Expert testimony, where appropriate
- Documents showing patterns of behavior
- Police reports, medical records, letters, messages, or other records
- Evidence of abandonment, violence, addiction, compulsive behavior, or extreme irresponsibility
The court examines whether the incapacity existed at the time of marriage, even if it became obvious only later.
D. What Is Usually Insufficient
The following, by themselves, may not be enough:
- Ordinary marital quarrels
- Mere incompatibility
- Simple refusal to live together
- Occasional infidelity
- Financial difficulty
- Drunkenness without proof of incapacity
- Immaturity that does not amount to incapacity
- Irreconcilable differences alone
The focus is not whether the marriage failed, but whether one or both spouses were legally incapable of fulfilling essential marital obligations from the beginning.
VI. Voidable Marriages: Grounds for Annulment
Voidable marriages are valid until annulled. The Family Code provides specific grounds.
A. Lack of Parental Consent
A marriage may be annulled if one party was 18 or over but below 21 at the time of marriage, and the marriage was solemnized without parental consent.
The action must be filed by:
- The party whose parent or guardian did not give consent, within five years after reaching 21; or
- The parent, guardian, or person having substitute parental authority, before the party reaches 21
The marriage may no longer be annulled on this ground if, after reaching 21, the party freely cohabited with the other spouse as husband and wife.
B. Insanity
A marriage may be annulled if either party was of unsound mind at the time of marriage.
The action may be filed by:
- The sane spouse who had no knowledge of the insanity
- A relative, guardian, or person having legal charge of the insane spouse
- The insane spouse after regaining sanity
The marriage may be ratified if the insane spouse, after regaining reason, freely cohabits with the other spouse.
C. Fraud
Fraud must be serious and must relate to specific matters recognized by law.
Fraud may include:
- Non-disclosure of a previous conviction by final judgment for a crime involving moral turpitude
- Concealment by the wife of the fact that she was pregnant by another man at the time of marriage
- Concealment of a sexually transmissible disease, regardless of nature, existing at the time of marriage
- Concealment of drug addiction, habitual alcoholism, homosexuality, or lesbianism existing at the time of marriage
No other misrepresentation or deceit generally constitutes fraud as a ground for annulment.
The action must be filed within five years after discovery of the fraud.
The marriage may be ratified if, after discovering the fraud, the innocent spouse freely cohabits with the other as husband and wife.
D. Force, Intimidation, or Undue Influence
A marriage may be annulled if consent was obtained by force, intimidation, or undue influence.
The action must be filed within five years from the time the force, intimidation, or undue influence disappeared or ceased.
The marriage may be ratified if the injured party freely cohabits with the other spouse after the force or intimidation has ceased.
E. Physical Incapacity to Consummate the Marriage
A marriage may be annulled if either party was physically incapable of consummating the marriage with the other, and the incapacity appears to be incurable.
The incapacity must:
- Exist at the time of marriage
- Continue thereafter
- Be incurable
- Prevent consummation with the other spouse
The action must be filed within five years after the marriage.
This ground concerns physical incapacity, not mere refusal or lack of desire.
F. Serious and Incurable Sexually Transmissible Disease
A marriage may be annulled if either party was afflicted with a serious and incurable sexually transmissible disease at the time of marriage.
The action must be filed within five years after the marriage.
This ground differs from fraud. If the disease was concealed, fraud may also be considered. If the disease exists and is serious and incurable, it may be an independent ground for annulment.
VII. Legal Separation Distinguished
Legal separation does not end the marriage bond. Spouses remain legally married and cannot remarry.
Legal separation may be sought on grounds such as:
- Repeated physical violence or grossly abusive conduct
- Physical violence or moral pressure to compel change of religion or political affiliation
- Attempt to corrupt or induce the petitioner, a common child, or a child of the petitioner to engage in prostitution
- Final judgment sentencing the respondent to imprisonment of more than six years
- Drug addiction or habitual alcoholism
- Lesbianism or homosexuality
- Subsequent bigamous marriage
- Sexual infidelity or perversion
- Attempt against the life of the petitioner
- Abandonment without justifiable cause for more than one year
The effects of legal separation include separation of property and possible disqualification of the guilty spouse from inheritance from the innocent spouse. But the parties remain married.
Legal separation is not the same as annulment.
VIII. Recognition of Foreign Divorce
A Filipino spouse may, in certain circumstances, seek judicial recognition of a foreign divorce.
Under Philippine law, if a marriage between a Filipino and a foreigner is validly dissolved abroad by divorce obtained by the foreign spouse, and the divorce enables the foreign spouse to remarry, the Filipino spouse may also have capacity to remarry after judicial recognition in the Philippines.
The Filipino spouse must generally file a petition in a Philippine court for recognition of the foreign divorce decree. The foreign judgment and foreign divorce law must be properly pleaded and proved.
This remedy is not an annulment. It is a recognition proceeding.
Important documents often include:
- Foreign divorce decree
- Proof of finality
- Marriage certificate
- Proof of citizenship of the foreign spouse
- Foreign divorce law
- Certified translations, if documents are not in English
- Authentication or apostille, where required
IX. Who May File the Petition
A. In Declaration of Nullity
Generally, either spouse may file a petition for declaration of nullity of marriage.
For certain void marriages, the State may also have an interest, but in practical terms, the case is ordinarily initiated by one of the spouses.
B. In Annulment of Voidable Marriage
The proper party depends on the ground.
For example:
- In lack of parental consent cases, the underage party or parent/guardian may file depending on timing.
- In insanity cases, the sane spouse, guardian, relative, or the formerly insane spouse may file.
- In fraud, force, physical incapacity, or sexually transmissible disease cases, the injured spouse usually files.
C. Death of a Spouse
If a spouse dies, the legal consequences can differ depending on the nature of the action, the stage of the case, and the rights involved. Some actions are personal and may not continue in the same manner after death. Property and succession issues may still be litigated in appropriate proceedings.
X. Venue: Where to File
Petitions for annulment or declaration of nullity are generally filed in the Family Court of the province or city where the petitioner or respondent has resided for at least six months before the date of filing, or in the case of a nonresident respondent, where the petitioner resides.
For overseas Filipinos, venue may involve the Philippine residence of the petitioner, last common residence, or other legally acceptable venue depending on the facts and applicable rules.
Venue is important. Filing in the wrong court may cause delay or dismissal.
XI. The Annulment Process Step by Step
Step 1: Consultation and Case Evaluation
The process usually begins with consultation with a lawyer.
The lawyer evaluates:
- Date and place of marriage
- Ages and civil status of the parties at the time of marriage
- Existence of marriage license
- Authority of solemnizing officer
- Prior marriages
- Circumstances before, during, and after marriage
- Children
- Property relations
- Possible grounds
- Evidence available
- Residence and venue
- Whether the case is annulment, declaration of nullity, legal separation, or recognition of foreign divorce
Not every failed marriage qualifies for annulment or declaration of nullity. The available remedy depends on legal grounds, not merely the desire to separate.
Step 2: Preparation of Evidence
The petitioner and lawyer gather documents and evidence.
Common documents include:
- PSA-issued marriage certificate
- Birth certificates of the spouses
- Birth certificates of children
- CENOMAR or advisory on marriages
- Marriage license records or certification of no license
- Barangay, police, or medical records
- Photographs, letters, messages, and other communications
- Proof of residence
- Property documents
- Psychological evaluation, if relevant
- Witness affidavits or judicial affidavits
The evidence must support the specific legal ground alleged.
Step 3: Psychological Evaluation, If Applicable
For Article 36 cases, a psychological evaluation is commonly obtained, although not always strictly indispensable. The psychologist may interview the petitioner, available witnesses, and sometimes the respondent if he or she cooperates.
The evaluation may discuss:
- Family background
- Developmental history
- Personality patterns
- Marital history
- Specific behavior showing incapacity
- Connection between the condition and marital obligations
- Whether the incapacity existed at the time of marriage
The psychological report is not a substitute for legal proof. It supports the petition but must be consistent with testimony and other evidence.
Step 4: Drafting and Filing of Petition
The lawyer prepares a verified petition stating:
- Personal circumstances of the parties
- Date and place of marriage
- Children, if any
- Property relations
- Facts supporting the ground
- Reliefs prayed for
- Proposed custody, support, and property arrangements, if applicable
The petition is filed in the proper Family Court.
Docket fees and other lawful fees must be paid. If property issues are involved, filing fees may be affected.
Step 5: Summons
After filing, the court issues summons to the respondent.
If the respondent is in the Philippines, personal or substituted service may be made. If the respondent is abroad or cannot be located, special rules on extraterritorial service or publication may apply, subject to court approval.
Service of summons is crucial because it gives the court jurisdiction over the respondent for purposes of due process.
Step 6: Answer by Respondent
The respondent may file an answer admitting or denying the allegations.
The respondent may:
- Oppose the petition
- Agree with the petition but still require proof
- Raise defenses
- File counterclaims involving custody, support, or property
- Participate in trial
- Refuse to participate
Even if the respondent does not oppose the case, the court does not automatically grant annulment. The State has an interest in preserving marriage, and the petitioner must prove the case.
Step 7: Investigation by Public Prosecutor
The public prosecutor or designated government counsel participates to ensure there is no collusion between the parties and that evidence is not fabricated or suppressed.
Collusion occurs when parties agree to manufacture grounds or conceal defenses to obtain a decree.
If the respondent fails to answer, the court usually directs the prosecutor to investigate whether collusion exists.
Step 8: Pre-Trial
The case proceeds to pre-trial.
During pre-trial, the court may address:
- Possibility of settlement on property, custody, support, and visitation
- Admissions and stipulations
- Issues to be tried
- Witnesses and documents
- Marking of exhibits
- Trial dates
- Referral to mediation for matters capable of compromise
The validity of marriage itself cannot be compromised. However, related issues such as property arrangements, child custody, support, and visitation may be discussed, subject to court approval and the best interests of the child.
Step 9: Trial
At trial, the petitioner presents evidence.
Witnesses may include:
- Petitioner
- Relatives
- Friends
- Psychologist or psychiatrist
- Custodian of records
- Other persons with personal knowledge
The respondent may cross-examine witnesses and present opposing evidence.
The public prosecutor may also participate.
In some courts, judicial affidavits serve as direct testimony, subject to cross-examination in court.
Step 10: Formal Offer of Evidence
After presenting witnesses and documents, the petitioner formally offers evidence. The respondent and prosecutor may comment or object.
The court rules on admissibility.
Step 11: Memoranda or Submission for Decision
The court may require the parties to submit memoranda summarizing facts, evidence, and law.
After submission, the case is deemed submitted for decision.
Step 12: Decision
The court may either grant or deny the petition.
If granted, the decision declares the marriage void or annuls the marriage, depending on the remedy.
The decision may also address:
- Custody
- Support
- Visitation
- Property relations
- Liquidation of assets
- Legitimacy of children
- Use of surname
- Costs
Step 13: Finality of Judgment
A decision does not immediately become final. Parties may file motions for reconsideration or appeals within the allowed period.
Once no appeal is filed and the period lapses, the court issues an entry of judgment or certificate of finality.
Only after finality can the decree be registered and annotated.
Step 14: Registration and Annotation
The final judgment must be registered with:
- The local civil registrar where the marriage was recorded
- The local civil registrar where the Family Court is located
- The Philippine Statistics Authority
- Other offices required by the judgment or rules
The marriage certificate is annotated to reflect the court decree.
Without proper registration and annotation, the civil registry records may still show the parties as married, causing problems in remarriage, immigration, property transactions, and civil status documents.
Step 15: Liquidation, Partition, and Delivery of Presumptive Legitimes
Before a party may validly remarry, the law may require compliance with liquidation, partition, distribution of properties, and delivery of presumptive legitimes of the children, where applicable.
This step is often overlooked. A final judgment alone may not be enough for remarriage if the required registration and liquidation steps have not been completed.
XII. Evidence Required
The evidence must be clear, credible, and sufficient to prove the specific ground.
A. Documentary Evidence
Typical documents include:
- PSA marriage certificate
- Birth certificates
- CENOMAR or advisory on marriages
- Marriage license or certification of absence
- Court records
- Medical records
- Police reports
- Barangay blotters
- Photos
- Communications
- Financial records
- Property titles
- Foreign documents, if applicable
B. Testimonial Evidence
The testimony should establish concrete facts, not mere conclusions.
For example, instead of simply saying “my spouse was irresponsible,” the testimony should describe specific acts, patterns, dates, consequences, and how these affected marital obligations.
C. Expert Evidence
In Article 36 cases, expert evidence may assist the court. However, the court is not bound by the expert’s opinion. The judge evaluates the totality of evidence.
D. Corroborating Evidence
Corroboration strengthens the case. Testimony from relatives, friends, neighbors, employers, or other witnesses may help show long-standing behavioral patterns.
XIII. Role of the Public Prosecutor and the State
Marriage is considered a social institution protected by the State. Therefore, annulment and nullity cases are not treated like ordinary private disputes.
The public prosecutor participates to prevent:
- Collusion
- Fabrication of evidence
- Suppression of material facts
- Default judgments that automatically dissolve marriages
Even where both spouses agree to separate, the court must independently determine whether legal grounds exist.
XIV. Collusion
Collusion is prohibited.
Examples of collusion include:
- Spouses agreeing to invent facts
- Respondent agreeing not to oppose in exchange for money or property
- Parties suppressing evidence that would defeat the petition
- Parties staging incidents to support a false ground
- Respondent falsely admitting allegations
A case may be dismissed if collusion is found.
However, mere non-opposition by the respondent does not automatically mean collusion. A respondent may choose not to participate, but the petitioner must still prove the case.
XV. Defenses Against Annulment
Defenses depend on the ground.
A. Ratification
Some voidable marriages may be ratified by free cohabitation after the defect ceases.
Examples:
- A spouse who married without parental consent may ratify the marriage by freely cohabiting after reaching 21.
- A spouse who was forced may ratify the marriage by freely cohabiting after the force ceases.
- A spouse who discovered fraud may ratify the marriage by freely cohabiting after discovery.
- An insane spouse may ratify the marriage by freely cohabiting after regaining sanity.
Ratification does not generally apply to void marriages.
B. Prescription
Voidable marriages are subject to prescriptive periods. If the action is filed too late, it may be barred.
Void marriages generally may be challenged even after a long time, but practical, evidentiary, and procedural issues may arise.
C. Insufficient Evidence
The respondent may argue that the facts do not meet the legal ground.
For example, in Article 36 cases, the respondent may argue that the evidence shows only incompatibility or ordinary marital conflict, not psychological incapacity.
D. Good Faith
In certain cases, good faith may affect validity or consequences. For example, good faith belief in the authority of a solemnizing officer may affect the validity of the marriage.
E. Denial of Facts
The respondent may deny allegations, present contrary witnesses, or submit documentary evidence contradicting the petition.
XVI. Prescriptive Periods
Prescriptive periods are especially important in annulment of voidable marriages.
| Ground |
Who May File |
Period |
| Lack of parental consent |
Underage party |
Within 5 years after reaching 21 |
| Lack of parental consent |
Parent or guardian |
Before the party reaches 21 |
| Insanity |
Sane spouse with no knowledge |
Any time before death of either party |
| Insanity |
Relative/guardian of insane spouse |
Any time before death of either party |
| Insanity |
Insane spouse |
During lucid interval or after regaining sanity |
| Fraud |
Injured spouse |
Within 5 years after discovery |
| Force, intimidation, undue influence |
Injured spouse |
Within 5 years from cessation |
| Physical incapacity |
Injured spouse |
Within 5 years after marriage |
| Serious and incurable STD |
Injured spouse |
Within 5 years after marriage |
For void marriages, the action generally does not prescribe, but court action is still necessary for purposes of remarriage and civil status.
XVII. Effects of Annulment or Declaration of Nullity
A. Civil Status
After finality, registration, and compliance with legal requirements, the parties are no longer treated as married to each other.
In a declaration of nullity, the marriage is considered void from the beginning.
In annulment, the marriage is valid until annulled.
B. Capacity to Remarry
A party may not simply remarry after receiving a court decision. The final judgment must be registered, and the civil registry must be properly annotated. Property liquidation and delivery of presumptive legitimes, where required, must also be complied with.
Failure to comply may create legal problems, including possible invalidity of a subsequent marriage.
C. Children
The effect on children depends on the type of case and ground.
Generally:
- Children conceived or born before the judgment of annulment of a voidable marriage are legitimate.
- Children of certain void marriages may be considered illegitimate, subject to exceptions.
- Children conceived or born before the judgment of absolute nullity under Article 36 are considered legitimate.
- Children conceived or born of subsequent marriages under certain presumptive death situations may also have special treatment under the law.
Legitimacy affects surname, parental authority, support, inheritance, and other civil rights.
D. Custody
Custody is determined according to the best interests of the child.
Factors may include:
- Age of the child
- Emotional, physical, educational, and moral needs
- Capacity of each parent
- Stability of home environment
- Existing relationship with each parent
- Child’s preference, depending on age and maturity
- History of abuse, neglect, violence, or abandonment
Children below seven years of age are generally not separated from the mother unless there are compelling reasons.
E. Support
Both parents are obliged to support their children.
Support includes:
- Food
- Shelter
- Clothing
- Medical care
- Education
- Transportation
- Other necessities according to family circumstances
Support may be fixed by the court and may be modified depending on the needs of the child and the resources of the parent.
F. Visitation
The non-custodial parent generally has visitation or access rights unless restricted for serious reasons such as abuse, danger, neglect, or trauma.
The court may set schedules, conditions, and safeguards.
G. Property Relations
The property consequences depend on:
- Date of marriage
- Marriage settlement, if any
- Applicable property regime
- Whether the marriage is void or voidable
- Good faith or bad faith of the parties
- Presence of children
- Proof of ownership and contribution
Common property regimes include:
- Absolute Community of Property
- Conjugal Partnership of Gains
- Complete Separation of Property
- Co-ownership, especially in certain void marriages
H. Donations and Insurance Benefits
Donations by reason of marriage may be revoked in certain cases.
Insurance beneficiary designations may also be affected depending on law, policy terms, and the nature of the decree.
I. Succession Rights
After annulment or declaration of nullity, spousal inheritance rights are generally affected.
A spouse in bad faith may lose certain rights. In legal separation, the guilty spouse may be disqualified from inheriting from the innocent spouse by intestate succession, and testamentary provisions in favor of the guilty spouse may be revoked by operation of law.
XVIII. Property Regimes in Detail
A. Absolute Community of Property
For marriages governed by the Family Code without a marriage settlement, the default regime is generally absolute community of property.
Under this regime, most properties owned by the spouses at the time of marriage and acquired thereafter become community property, subject to exclusions.
Upon annulment or declaration of nullity, the community is liquidated.
B. Conjugal Partnership of Gains
For marriages celebrated before the Family Code, or where agreed upon in a marriage settlement, conjugal partnership may apply.
Under this regime, each spouse retains ownership of certain separate properties, while gains acquired during the marriage are shared.
C. Separation of Property
Spouses may agree to separation of property in a valid marriage settlement before marriage. Courts may also decree separation of property in certain cases.
D. Co-Ownership in Void Marriages
In certain void marriages, property relations may be governed by co-ownership rules. Wages and salaries are generally owned equally, while property acquired through actual joint contribution is owned in proportion to contribution, subject to legal presumptions.
Bad faith can affect a party’s share. In some cases, the share of the party in bad faith may be forfeited in favor of common children or innocent parties.
XIX. Costs of Annulment in the Philippines
Costs vary widely depending on location, complexity, lawyer’s fees, expert fees, publication, and whether the case is contested.
Common expenses include:
- Attorney’s acceptance fee
- Pleading and appearance fees
- Filing or docket fees
- Sheriff’s fees
- Psychological evaluation fees
- Expert witness fees
- Publication expenses, if summons by publication is needed
- Transcript and stenographic fees
- Certified true copies
- Registration and annotation expenses
- Travel and notarization costs
Article 36 cases often cost more because they may involve psychological evaluation and expert testimony.
The lowest-cost cases are usually those involving documentary grounds, such as absence of marriage license, if evidence is clear. More complex cases involving psychological incapacity, property disputes, overseas respondents, or contested custody tend to be more expensive.
XX. Duration of the Process
The duration depends on several factors:
- Court docket congestion
- Availability of witnesses
- Service of summons
- Whether the respondent is abroad
- Whether publication is required
- Complexity of evidence
- Number of hearings
- Prosecutor’s investigation
- Judicial workload
- Appeals or motions
- Delay in registration and annotation
Some cases may finish in a shorter period if uncontested and documentary evidence is straightforward. Others may take several years, especially if contested or procedurally complicated.
A court decree becomes useful for civil status purposes only after finality and proper registration.
XXI. Common Misconceptions
A. “Mutual agreement is enough.”
False. Spouses cannot dissolve a Philippine marriage merely by agreement. Legal grounds must be proven in court.
B. “Non-appearance of the respondent guarantees annulment.”
False. Even if the respondent does not appear, the petitioner must prove the case. The prosecutor also checks for collusion.
C. “Infidelity automatically means annulment.”
False. Infidelity may be relevant evidence in some cases, but it is not by itself a standard ground for annulment or declaration of nullity. It may be a ground for legal separation or evidence supporting psychological incapacity if connected to a deeper incapacity.
D. “Abandonment automatically means annulment.”
False. Abandonment may support legal separation or may be evidence in an Article 36 case, but abandonment alone does not automatically void a marriage.
E. “A church annulment is the same as a civil annulment.”
False. A church annulment affects religious status within the church. It does not by itself change civil status under Philippine law. A civil court decree is required for civil effects.
F. “A court decision is enough to remarry immediately.”
False. The decision must become final, be registered, and be annotated. Property liquidation and presumptive legitime requirements may also apply.
G. “Psychological incapacity means any mental illness.”
False. A mental condition must relate to incapacity to perform essential marital obligations. Not every disorder or diagnosis qualifies.
H. “Long separation automatically voids the marriage.”
False. Long separation does not dissolve a marriage. It may be evidence, but it is not an automatic ground.
I. “Having children prevents annulment.”
False. Having children does not bar annulment or declaration of nullity. However, custody, support, legitimacy, and property consequences must be addressed.
J. “The process can be done purely administratively.”
False. Annulment and declaration of nullity require court proceedings.
XXII. Annulment and Church Proceedings
The Philippines has both civil and religious concepts of marriage. For Catholics, a declaration of nullity by a church tribunal may allow remarriage in the Church, but it does not dissolve the civil effects of marriage.
Similarly, a civil annulment does not automatically guarantee a church annulment.
The two proceedings are separate:
| Civil Court |
Church Tribunal |
| Affects civil status |
Affects religious status |
| Governed by Philippine law |
Governed by canon law or religious rules |
| Needed for civil remarriage |
Needed for religious remarriage within the church |
| Results in annotated civil records |
Results in church records |
A person who wants both civil and religious freedom to remarry may need both proceedings.
XXIII. Annulment Involving Overseas Filipinos
Many Filipinos file annulment or nullity cases while living abroad. This is possible, but it presents practical challenges.
Issues include:
- Execution and notarization of documents abroad
- Authentication or apostille of documents
- Availability for testimony
- Venue
- Service of summons on respondent
- Coordination with Philippine counsel
- Time zone and travel constraints
- Use of video conferencing, subject to court approval
- Civil registry annotation after judgment
The petitioner may need to return to the Philippines for hearings, especially for testimony, unless remote testimony is allowed.
XXIV. Respondent Abroad or Missing
If the respondent cannot be personally served, the petitioner may seek court permission for substituted service, extraterritorial service, or publication, depending on the circumstances.
Publication is often expensive and time-consuming. It must follow court requirements strictly.
A missing respondent does not automatically prevent the case, but due process requirements must be satisfied.
XXV. Annulment and Bigamy Risk
A person who remarries without a final court judgment and proper compliance with civil registry requirements may face serious consequences.
Risks include:
- Criminal prosecution for bigamy
- Nullity of the subsequent marriage
- Property disputes
- Inheritance complications
- Immigration problems
- Civil registry conflicts
Even if a first marriage is void, a person generally needs a judicial declaration of nullity before remarrying. The law does not allow individuals to decide for themselves that a marriage is void and then remarry without court action.
XXVI. Annulment and Children’s Surnames
A child’s surname depends on legitimacy, acknowledgment, and applicable civil registry rules.
Legitimate children generally use the father’s surname. Illegitimate children may use the mother’s surname, although use of the father’s surname may be allowed if filiation is recognized under applicable law.
Annulment or declaration of nullity may affect records, but it does not erase parental obligations.
XXVII. Support During the Case
While the case is pending, the court may issue provisional orders concerning:
- Spousal support
- Child support
- Custody
- Visitation
- Administration of property
- Protection orders, if violence is involved
- Use of the family home
Provisional orders are temporary and may be modified as circumstances change.
XXVIII. Custody During the Case
Pending trial, the court may determine temporary custody.
The best interests of the child remain controlling. Courts avoid using custody as punishment between spouses. The focus is the child’s welfare, not the parents’ resentment.
Where there is violence, abuse, neglect, addiction, instability, or risk of abduction, the court may impose safeguards.
XXIX. Violence Against Women and Children
Where the marriage involves abuse, the victim may also seek remedies under laws protecting women and children, including protection orders.
These remedies are separate from annulment. A person may pursue protection, criminal, custody, support, and annulment remedies simultaneously or separately, depending on the facts.
Violence may also be relevant evidence in a nullity or legal separation case.
XXX. Annulment and Property Transfers
Parties should be careful about selling, transferring, or concealing property while the case is pending.
Improper transfers may lead to:
- Injunctions
- Contempt
- Damages
- Criminal complaints in extreme cases
- Adverse rulings during liquidation
- Forfeiture consequences
Property issues should be properly disclosed and addressed in court.
XXXI. Annulment and Immigration
Civil status affects immigration petitions, visas, permanent residence applications, fiancé or spouse petitions, and overseas benefits.
Foreign authorities may require:
- Final court decree
- Certificate of finality
- Annotated marriage certificate
- PSA records
- Proof that the decree is recognized under Philippine law
A mere pending case usually does not establish legal capacity to remarry.
XXXII. Annulment and Employment Benefits
Employment, insurance, pension, and government benefits may be affected by civil status.
After annulment or declaration of nullity, beneficiaries may need to be updated. However, rights that vested before the decree may require separate legal analysis.
Government agencies and private institutions may require annotated civil registry documents before changing records.
XXXIII. Annulment and Death Benefits
If one spouse dies before, during, or after proceedings, inheritance and death benefit questions can become complex.
Issues may include:
- Whether the marriage was valid at the time of death
- Whether a case was pending
- Whether a judgment had become final
- Good faith or bad faith
- Legitimacy of children
- Designated beneficiaries
- Succession rights
Separate estate or benefits proceedings may be necessary.
XXXIV. Practical Checklist Before Filing
A prospective petitioner should prepare the following:
- PSA marriage certificate
- Birth certificates of spouses and children
- Valid government IDs
- Proof of residence
- Marriage license records, if relevant
- CENOMAR or advisory on marriages
- List of children and their needs
- List of properties and debts
- Names and contact details of possible witnesses
- Timeline of the relationship
- Documents proving the ground
- Records of abuse, abandonment, addiction, fraud, or incapacity, if applicable
- Foreign documents, if any
- Prior court cases, if any
- Budget for legal, court, and incidental expenses
A detailed timeline is especially useful. It should cover the period before marriage, during marriage, separation, and events after separation.
XXXV. What Happens If the Petition Is Denied
If the petition is denied, the marriage remains valid unless another remedy is available.
The petitioner may consider:
- Motion for reconsideration
- Appeal
- Filing a different action, if based on a different legal ground and not barred
- Legal separation
- Protection order
- Custody or support case
- Property action
- Recognition of foreign divorce, if applicable later
A denial does not automatically mean the marriage is healthy or that separation is impossible. It means the court found the legal ground insufficient.
XXXVI. Appeals
A party may appeal an adverse decision within the allowed period.
Appeals may involve questions of fact, law, or both, depending on the court and procedure.
Appeals can significantly extend the duration of the case. The decree is not final while appeal remedies remain available.
XXXVII. Ethical Considerations
Annulment cases often involve sensitive family histories. Lawyers and parties must avoid:
- Fabricating psychological incapacity
- Coaching witnesses to lie
- Concealing children or property
- Manufacturing evidence
- Using the case to harass or extort
- Misrepresenting civil status
- Entering into collusive arrangements
False testimony may expose a person to criminal and civil liability.
XXXVIII. Documentary Grounds vs. Behavioral Grounds
Some cases rely mainly on documents, while others rely heavily on testimony.
A. Documentary Grounds
Examples:
- Absence of marriage license
- Bigamous marriage
- Lack of authority of solemnizing officer
- Underage marriage
- Incestuous marriage
- Prior existing marriage
These cases may be more straightforward if official records are clear.
B. Behavioral or Psychological Grounds
Examples:
- Psychological incapacity
- Fraud
- Force or intimidation
- Insanity
- Physical incapacity
- Serious incurable STD
These cases often require detailed testimony, expert evidence, and corroboration.
XXXIX. The Importance of the Marriage License
The marriage license is one of the most important documents in many nullity cases.
Issues may include:
- No license was issued.
- The license number on the marriage certificate is false.
- The license belonged to another couple.
- The license was issued after the marriage date.
- The license had expired.
- The local civil registrar has no record of the license.
A certification from the local civil registrar may be crucial. However, courts may examine the totality of evidence, and absence of a record does not always automatically prove absence of a license if other evidence exists.
XL. Psychological Incapacity: Practical Examples
The following patterns may be relevant, depending on proof and context:
- Chronic inability to maintain fidelity tied to a deep-seated personality structure
- Persistent abandonment of family obligations without remorse or capacity for responsibility
- Severe narcissistic, antisocial, dependent, or other personality traits that render marital obligations impossible
- Extreme emotional immaturity rooted in pre-marital personality development
- Repeated violence showing incapacity for mutual respect and support
- Addiction that existed before marriage and rendered the spouse incapable of family life
- Pathological lying or manipulation affecting essential marital duties
These are not automatic grounds. The court must be convinced that the behavior reflects incapacity, not merely bad choices.
XLI. Difference Between Refusal and Incapacity
A key question in Article 36 cases is whether the spouse was merely unwilling or truly incapable.
- Refusal means the person could comply with marital obligations but chose not to.
- Incapacity means the person could not genuinely understand or perform those obligations due to a psychological condition.
The distinction is often difficult. Courts examine history, consistency, severity, and roots of the behavior.
XLII. Annulment Based on Fraud
Fraud in annulment is limited. It does not include every lie.
Fraud does not usually include:
- Lying about wealth
- Lying about educational attainment
- Lying about family background
- Lying about social status
- Lying about virginity, except where related to pregnancy by another man under the specific legal ground
- Lying about affection
- Lying about employment, unless tied to a recognized ground
The fraud must be one of those recognized by the Family Code.
XLIII. Annulment Based on Force or Intimidation
Consent must be freely given. A marriage entered because of threats, coercion, or undue pressure may be annulled.
Examples may include:
- Threats of physical harm
- Threats against family members
- Severe moral pressure destroying free consent
- Coercion by authority figures
- Threats involving scandal, criminal accusation, or economic ruin, depending on severity
Ordinary family pressure or social embarrassment may not be enough unless it rises to the level of force, intimidation, or undue influence recognized by law.
XLIV. Physical Incapacity to Consummate
This ground is often misunderstood.
It refers to physical inability to consummate the marriage, not infertility. A person may be infertile but still physically capable of consummation.
The incapacity must be incurable and must exist at the time of marriage.
Medical evidence is usually important.
XLV. Sexually Transmissible Disease
A serious and incurable sexually transmissible disease existing at the time of marriage may be a ground for annulment.
Medical records and expert testimony are typically necessary.
If the disease was concealed, fraud may also be alleged, depending on the circumstances.
XLVI. Annulment and Criminal Cases
Some facts in annulment cases may also involve criminal liability.
Examples:
- Bigamy
- Violence against women and children
- Physical injuries
- Child abuse
- Falsification of marriage documents
- Perjury
- Concubinage or adultery, subject to criminal law requirements
- Threats or coercion
Criminal cases and annulment cases are separate. One may proceed independently of the other, although evidence may overlap.
XLVII. Annulment and Settlement Agreements
Parties may enter into agreements on:
- Custody
- Visitation
- Support
- Property division
- Payment arrangements
- Use of family home
- Schooling of children
- Delivery of personal belongings
However, they cannot agree to make the marriage void. The court must decide validity based on law and evidence.
Agreements involving children remain subject to court approval because the child’s welfare is paramount.
XLVIII. The Role of Mediation
Mediation may help resolve related matters such as property, custody, support, and visitation.
But mediation cannot produce an agreement that annuls the marriage. The validity of marriage is not subject to compromise.
XLIX. Annulment and Names
After annulment or declaration of nullity, a woman who used her husband’s surname may need to update records depending on her civil registry documents, government IDs, passport, bank records, employment records, and professional licenses.
The right or obligation to revert to a prior surname depends on the nature of the decree and applicable civil registry and agency rules.
L. Annulment and Remarriage Procedure
Before remarriage, a person should generally ensure the following:
- The court decision has become final.
- An entry of judgment or certificate of finality has been issued.
- The decree has been registered with the proper civil registrars.
- The PSA record has been annotated.
- Property liquidation and presumptive legitime requirements have been complied with, where applicable.
- The person obtains updated civil registry documents showing capacity to marry.
- A new marriage license is obtained unless an exception applies.
Skipping these steps can create serious legal complications.
LI. Timeline of a Typical Case
A typical annulment or declaration of nullity case may proceed as follows:
- Lawyer consultation
- Evidence gathering
- Psychological evaluation, if needed
- Petition drafting
- Filing and payment of fees
- Issuance of summons
- Service of summons or publication
- Respondent’s answer or failure to answer
- Prosecutor’s collusion investigation
- Pre-trial
- Trial
- Formal offer of evidence
- Memoranda
- Decision
- Finality
- Registration and annotation
- Liquidation and compliance
- Remarriage, if desired and legally allowed
The process is formal and court-driven.
LII. Consequences of Falsely Claiming to Be Single
A person who represents himself or herself as single while still legally married may face consequences in:
- Employment records
- Government forms
- Immigration documents
- Loan applications
- Insurance forms
- Property transactions
- Marriage applications
- Criminal proceedings
Civil status should be declared accurately.
LIII. Frequently Asked Questions
1. Is annulment the same as divorce?
No. Divorce dissolves a valid marriage. Annulment voids or annuls a marriage based on grounds existing at or before the time of marriage. The Philippines generally does not allow divorce between two Filipino citizens.
2. Can both spouses file jointly?
Philippine procedure generally contemplates an adversarial petition, not a simple joint application. Even if both spouses agree, the court must receive evidence and the State must ensure there is no collusion.
3. Can a person remarry after annulment?
Yes, but only after the judgment becomes final, is properly registered and annotated, and other legal requirements are complied with.
4. Is psychological incapacity easy to prove?
No. It requires evidence that the incapacity existed at the time of marriage and rendered the spouse incapable of performing essential marital obligations.
5. Is a psychologist required?
A psychological evaluation is common in Article 36 cases, but the legal sufficiency of the case depends on the totality of evidence. Courts are not bound by a psychologist’s conclusion.
6. Can infidelity be used?
Yes, it may be evidence, especially in psychological incapacity or legal separation cases, but it is not automatically a ground for annulment.
7. Can abandonment be used?
Yes, it may be relevant, but abandonment alone does not automatically void a marriage.
8. What if the respondent refuses to participate?
The case may still proceed if summons and due process requirements are satisfied, but the petitioner must still prove the case.
9. What if the respondent is abroad?
The court may allow appropriate modes of service, including extraterritorial service or publication, depending on circumstances.
10. What happens to children?
The court may decide custody, support, and visitation. The child’s best interests control.
11. What happens to property?
The applicable property regime is liquidated according to law. Good faith, bad faith, contributions, and children’s rights may affect the result.
12. Can annulment be denied?
Yes. If the evidence does not establish the legal ground, the petition may be denied.
13. Is church annulment enough?
No. It does not change civil status. A civil court decree is required for civil effects.
14. Is civil annulment enough for church remarriage?
Not necessarily. Religious remarriage may require a separate church process.
15. Can a void marriage be ignored without court action?
For purposes of remarriage, no. A judicial declaration is generally required before contracting another marriage.
LIV. Key Takeaways
Annulment in the Philippines is a judicial process grounded on specific legal causes. It is not granted merely because spouses no longer love each other, have separated for many years, or mutually agree to end the marriage.
The correct remedy depends on whether the marriage is void, voidable, legally separable, or affected by a foreign divorce. The process requires proper venue, sufficient evidence, participation of the prosecutor, court hearings, a final judgment, and civil registry annotation.
The most common modern remedy is a petition for declaration of nullity based on psychological incapacity, but it is not a simple incompatibility proceeding. The petitioner must prove that the incapacity is legally significant and existed at the time of marriage.
Annulment affects not only the spouses’ civil status but also children, property, support, inheritance, benefits, and the right to remarry. Because of these consequences, Philippine courts treat marriage cases with formality and caution.