Case Digest: Mercato v. Tan

VINCENT MERCADO, petitioner vs. MA.CONSUELO TAN, defendant
G.R. No. 137110. August 1, 2000

FACTS:

The accused, Vincent Mercado was in lawful wedlock with Ma. Thelma Oliva in a marriage ceremony solemnized on April 10, 1976. Despite the prior marriage he got married to complainant Ma. Consuelo Tan on June 27, 1991. On October 5, 1992, a letter-complaint for bigamy was filed by complainant through counsel with the City Prosecutor of Bacolod City, which eventually resulted [in] the institution of the present case before this Court against said accused, Dr. Vincent G. Mercado, on March 1, 1993 in an Information dated January 22, 1993. On November 13, 1992, or more than a month after the bigamy case was lodged in the Prosecutor’s Office, accused filed an action for Declaration of Nullity of Marriage against Ma. Thelma V. Oliva in RTC-Br. 22, Cebu City, and in a Decision dated May 6, 1993 the marriage between Vincent G. Mercado and Ma. Thelma V. Oliva was declared null and void. Despite this, the Trial Court charged Vincent with bigamy since his prior marriage was still subsisting at the time he had contracted his second marriage. The Court of Appeals affirmed the ruling of the trial court. The petitioner then filed a case to the Supreme Court.

ISSUE:

Is the judicial declaration of nullity of a prior marriage necessary for remarriage?

RULING:

The Supreme Court denied the petition and affirmed the assailed decision. Under Article 40 of the Family Code, ‘the absolute nullity of a previous marriage may be invoked for purposes of remarriage on the basis solely of a final judgment declaring such previous marriage void.’ But here, the final judgment declaring null and void accused’s previous marriage came not before the celebration of the second marriage, but after, when the case for bigamy against accused was already tried in court. And what constitutes the crime of bigamy is the act of any person who shall contract a second subsequent marriage ‘before’ the former marriage has been legally dissolved.

It is now settled that the fact that the first marriage is void from the beginning is not a defense in a bigamy charge. As with a voidable marriage, there must be a judicial declaration of the nullity of a marriage before contracting the second marriage.

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