Divorce in the Philippines explained

Divorce is a contentious issue for the Philippines, which has a predominantly Catholic population. It is not typically legally available to Filipino citizens, and annulment is the usual legal alternative. The Muslim Personal Code, however, allows for divorce for couples who got married through the Islamic rite under specific circumstances.[1] The Philippines is often cited as the "only country in the world" where divorce is illegal, aside from the Vatican City after Malta had divorce legalized in 2011.[2] [3] [4]

Couples may also opt for legal separation, alternatively referred to as "relative divorce", although this process does not dissolve the marriage. Relative divorce is contrasted with "absolute divorce", a setup where previously married individuals are allowed to remarry.[5]

There have been several attempts to legalize absolute divorce in the Philippine Congress.[6]

History

Spanish colonial era

During the Spanish era in the Philippines, absolute divorce was unrecognized. The colony was under the jurisdiction of the Siete Partidas, which only ever granted couples "relative divorce," which is mensa et thoro or legal separation and does not legally dissolve the actual marital ties. The following are the prerequisite for a relative divorce under the Siete Partidas.[5] [7]

American colonial era

The United States would take over the Philippines after the conclusion of the Spanish–American War. During this period Act No. 2710, or the Divorce Law, became law on March 11, 1917. The legislation provided for divorce a vinculo matrimonii or absolute divorce. Divorce permissibility was fault-based, with the following prerequisite.[7]

Japanese occupation

When the Japanese Empire occupied the Philippines during the World War II, the Japanese-installed Philippine Executive Commission issued Executive Order No. 141 on March 25, 1943, which repealed Act No. 2710 and expanded the divorce law in the archipelago through the new decree providing eleven grounds for a valid absolute divorce.[7] Following the end of Axis occupation of the islands and the proclamation of the revival of the Philippine Commonwealth on October 23, 1944 by General Douglas MacArthur,[5] Act No. 2710 became, once again, the prevailing law on divorce matters in the Philippines.[8]

Post-Commonwealth and contemporary era

Following the Philippines independence from the United States in the Philippines in 1946, Act No. 2710 remained applicable for a time. Until the enactment of the Republic Act No. 386 or the Civil Code on August 30, 1950 which only allowed for legal separation or what was before known as 'relative divorce' and does not allow for absolute divorce.[5] The grounds were adultery/concubinage by a spouse and an attempt on one's life of one spouse over another. There was deliberation within the Code Commission to include provisions on absolute divorce which was opposed by conservatives.[8]

The Civil Code would be updated through the Family Code in 1987 but the newer law did not allow for absolute divorce.[8] The Civil Code allows for divorce for Muslims for a period of twenty years.

In 1977, President Ferdinand Marcos enacted the Code of Muslim Personal Laws which included absolute divorce provisions for Muslims.

Presidents Gloria Macapagal Arroyo,[9] [10] Benigno Aquino III,[11] [12] and Rodrigo Duterte[13] have expressed they would not support the passage of an absolute divorce bill during their presidencies, although Aquino mentioned he was open to a 'legal separation' law which would allow couples to re-marry.[11]

Current president Bongbong Marcos has said that he was open to legalizing divorce when he was still a candidate for the 2022 presidential election provided that the option is not made "easy".[14]

By custom or rite of union

Indigenous peoples

Several indigenous peoples' cultures recognize divorce in their marriages including the Ibaloi of Benguet, Tagbanwa of Palawan, Gaddangs of Nueva Vizcaya, the Kankanaeys and Bontocs of the Cordilleras, and the Manobos and B'laans of Mindanao.[7] However, the dissolution of marriages conducted under indigenous peoples' rites through divorce are not recognized by the government.[15]

Muslims

The Code of Muslim Personal Laws of 1977 does allow for divorce for Filipino Muslims, many of who are part of the Moro people.[16] Divorce is unavailable for Muslims, including converts, who got married under the Civil Code.[17]

Transnational marriages

Where a non-Filipino is married to a Filipino citizen and a divorce is obtained abroad by the non-Filipino spouse, the Filipino spouse can remarry under Philippine law,[18] even if the non-Filipino spouse acquired foreign citizenship after the marriage.[19]

Legalization

Current proposals

The following are the current proposal to legalize divorce in the current 19th Congress of the Philippines.

Absolute Divorce Act

On May 15, 2024, the House of Representatives in a plenary session presided by Aurelio Gonzales Jr. via voice vote approved on "Second Reading" "Edcel Lagman" House Bill 9349, the proposed "Absolute Divorce Act". As the spouses' fourth way to separate, the bill enumerated limited grounds of the petition as defined by Loreto B. Acharon: Article 45 of the Family Code on annulment of marriage, spouses' de facto 5 years separation, gender-affirming surgery by a spouse or gender transition, psychological incapacity under Article 36 of the Family Code, irreconcilable differences, domestic, marital abuse or physical violence under Republic Act 9262, the Violence against women and Their Children Act of 2004 and moral pressure to change religious or political affiliation. The legal separation grounds under the Article 97 of the New Civil Code of the Philippines (2) and Article 55 of the Family Code of the Philippines (10) are also, for now, absolute divorce grounds.[24] [25] [26] The bill also provides validity recognition of a foreign divorce decree by either the alien or Filipino spouse with proper authentication by the Philippine Consul.[27]

Opposition

The legalization of divorce has been opposed on religious grounds. Among those groups who oppose it are the Roman Catholic Church.[28]

Opponents of legalization of divorce have also argued that the state sanctioning such process is unconstitutional on the basis of the provision which mandates the state to uphold the "sanctity of marriage and its being the foundation of the family".[29] [30] [31] [32]

Views of religious groups

Catholic Church

The Roman Catholic Church in the Philippines through the Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines (CBCP) has historically lobbied against any legislation to legalize absolute divorce in the country viewing the sanction of the state of such process as "anti-marriage" and "anti-family".[28] [33] It maintains that the process of legal separation and annulment for aggrieved married couples are sufficient.[34]

Bishop Socrates Villegas as CBCP President in 2015, in a published position argued that legalizing divorce is contrary to human rights especially of the children of divorce couples. He said that allowing divorce would deter couples from working on their relationship first. He added that children whose married parents availed legal separation are already traumatized and that divorce would allow "a total stranger" to enter their lives in a form of a new legal spouse which would make their situation worse.[35]

In May 2024, the CBCP's Fr. Jerome Secillano told the Philippine Daily Inquirer that it strongly opposes the bill's approval for being "anti-family, anti-marriage and anti-children and a betrayal of their constitutional mandate to uphold marriage and the family.”[36]

The Couples for Christ strongly opposed any divorce law in the Philippines. In June 2024, it published a manifesto stating "Marriages formed in love and mutual understanding can be happy, enduring, and fulfilling." It stressed that single parent children become victims of parental breakup resulting in permanent emotional, psychological, financial or even physical social stigma.[37]

Other Christian groups

The Iglesia ni Cristo prohibits its members from availing divorce, and maintains that couples in a troubled marriages should work on their differences.[38] [39]

Bishop Modesto Villasanta of the United Church of Christ in the Philippines (UCCP) meanwhile expressed that his group is open to discuss the issue of divorce. Villasanta states that it is "up to the Church on how they will teach their people the importance of marriage and not on barring its (a divorce bill's) approval".[40]

Alternatives to divorce

While divorce is largely not recognized by the state, marriages can be ended in the Philippines through annulment or declaring it null and void. Couples can also avail of legal separation.[41]

MethodGroundsLimitationsNotes
Legal separation
  • Repeated violence and physical abuse
  • Sexual infidelity
  • Conviction of a criminal offense with a penalty of more than six years
  • Abandonment
Either parties cannot remarry or have sexual relations with a third party
Declaration of nullity of marriage
  • Nonvalid marriages
    • Minors married without parental consent
    • Married by an unauthorized person
    • Bigamous marriages
    • 'Mistaken identity'
    • Incestuous marriages
Children arising from couples under voided marriages are considered as illegitimate
Annulment (Civil)
  • Minors married without parental consent
  • Individuals who have been of 'unsound mind' at the time of marriages
  • Couples married under 'deceitful circumstances'
    • Included failure of one to inform the other party:
      • Infliction of a sexually transmitted disease
      • Pregnancy involving another man
      • Criminal conviction of one party
      • Addiction
      • Impotence
      • Homosexuality
  • 'Psychological incapacity' of one party which caused the inability to perform one's marital obligations
Annulment sought from religious institutions does not automatically void marriages.[42] [43] Marriage is considered valid by the state until the point it was annulled

Opinion polling

Date! scope="col" data-sort- type="number" style="background:green; color:white; width:100px;"
ForAgainstUndecidedConducted by
May 2005 43% 45% 12% [44] [45]
March 2011 50% 32% 16%
December 2014 60% 29% 11%
March 2015 48% 35% 17%
September 2016 55% 30% 14%
March 2017 51% 32% 17%
December 2017 55% 31% 14%
December 2019 50% 39% 12%
September 2021 46% 36% 17%
March 2023 65% 21% 15%
June 2023 55% 27% 17%
March 2024 50% 32% 17%

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: The Week Staff . 2019-04-09 . Countries where divorce is illegal . 2024-05-25 . . en.
  2. News: Santos . Ana . The Only Country in the World That Bans Divorce . 13 April 2023 . The Atlantic . 25 June 2015 . en.
  3. Web site: The Philippines: a global holdout in divorce . New Internationalist . 15 April 2023 . en . 5 July 2011 . April 15, 2023 . https://web.archive.org/web/20230415103115/https://newint.org/blog/majority/2011/07/05/philippines-last-bastion-divorce-illegal . dead .
  4. News: Hundley . Tom . Santos . Ana . The Last Country in the World Where Divorce Is Illegal . 15 April 2023 . Foreign Policy . 19 January 2015.
  5. Juco . Jorge . Fault, Consent and Breakdown-The Sociology of Divorce Legislation in the Philippines. Philippine Sociological Review . April 1966 . 67–76 . 13 April 2023.
  6. Web site: House okays on final reading bill legalizing divorce. Manila Standard.
  7. Book: Foja . Alnie . Reintroducing Absolute Divorce in the Philippines & Thoughts on the Divorce Bill . August 2017 . UP Diliman Gender Office . Monograph Series No. 2 . 13 April 2023.
  8. Web site: Women's Priority Legislative Agenda for the 18th Congress: Adopting Divorce in the Family Code . Philippine Commission on Women . 13 April 2023.
  9. News: Philippine President Arroyo Opposes Constitutional Amendments, Divorce . 15 April 2023 . Wall Street Journal . 6 July 2001.
  10. News: Arroyo opposes divorce bill . 15 April 2023 . News24 . 19 March 2005.
  11. News: Beltran . Jill . Aquino won't support divorce (12:59 p.m.) . 13 April 2023 . SunStar . 19 August 2010 . en.
  12. News: Divorce? No way, stresses Philippine government . 13 April 2023 . The Korea Herald . 7 January 2013 . en.
  13. News: Salaverria . Leila . Duterte opposed to divorce – Roque . 15 April 2023 . Philippine Daily Inquirer . 20 March 2018 . en.
  14. News: Patag . Kristine Joy . Marcos open to divorce, 'but don't make it easy' . 15 April 2023 . The Philippine Star . 19 March 2022.
  15. News: Pulta . Benjamin . SC rules in favor of Ibaloi heirs claim on father's estate . 13 April 2023 . Philippine News Agency . 8 June 2021.
  16. Web site: Shariah Law and the Code of Muslim Personal Laws . Institute for Autonomy and Governance . Sun Star Davao . 15 April 2023 . en-gb . 21 January 2015.
  17. News: Eugenio . Ara . Converting to Islam falsely touted as 'pathway to divorce' in Catholic-majority Philippines . 9 March 2024 . AFP Fact Check . Agence France-Presse . 14 February 2024 . en.
  18. Web site: Family Code of the Philippines. 2006-09-06. https://web.archive.org/web/20000819002657/http://www.chanrobles.com/executiveorderno209.htm. dead. 2000-08-19.
  19. Web site: Republic of the Philippines vs Orbeceido. Lawphil Project. Arellano Law. 26 January 2018.
  20. News: Quismoro . Elson . Many marriages are 'mistakes', says pro-divorce solon . 15 April 2023 . Manila Bulletin . 23 February 2023 . en.
  21. News: Torres . Sherrie Ann . Hontiveros files 'no-fault' divorce bill amid church objection . 13 April 2023 . ABS-CBN News . 12 July 2022.
  22. News: Cruz . RG . House panel drops chronic unhappiness, no-fault provision in divorce bill . 13 April 2023 . ABS-CBN News . 20 February 2018.
  23. News: Felipe . Cecille Suerte . Senate panel OKs absolute divorce bill. May 16, 2024 . . September 20, 2023.
  24. News: Cervantes. Filane Mike . Absolute divorce bill hurdles 2nd reading in House. May 16, 2024 . . May 16, 2024.
  25. News: Garcia . Nick . House approves divorce bill on second reading. May 16, 2024 . The Philippine Star. May 16, 2024.
  26. News: Lalu. Gabriel Pabico . House approves divorce bill on 2nd reading. May 16, 2024 . . May 15, 2024.
  27. News: Cruz. Maricel . Bill on 'absolute divorce' gets House vote on second reading. May 16, 2024 . Manila Standard. May 15, 2024.
  28. News: Patinio . Ferdinand . No need for divorce, legal methods available for couples: CBCP . 16 April 2023 . Philippine News Agency . 18 September 2019.
  29. News: Rosario . Ben . Oppositors confident 'unconstitutional' divorce bill will not get Lower House nod . 16 April 2023 . Manila Bulletin . 20 August 2021 . en.
  30. Web site: Diaz . Jess . 'Divorce law will violate Constitution' . Philstar.com . The Philippine Star . 16 April 2023 . 16 March 2018.
  31. News: Fides . Agenzia . Bishops: No to bills on divorce, anti-constitutional and anti-family - Agenzia Fides . 16 April 2023 . Agenzia Fides . 20 September 2019.
  32. Web site: Our Right To Self-determination: Pilipina's Position On The Issues Of Divorce And Abortion . Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung . 16 April 2023 . 2000.
  33. News: CBCP: Divorce bill 'anti-marriage and anti-family' . https://web.archive.org/web/20180225171450/http://cnnphilippines.com/news/2018/02/23/cbcp-divorce-bill.html . dead . February 25, 2018 . 16 April 2023 . CNN Philippines . 23 February 2018 . en.
  34. News: Medenilla . Samuel . CBCP: Divorce unconstitutional in PHL; legal methods available . 16 April 2023 . Business Mirror . 22 September 2019.
  35. Web site: CBCP Position against the Divorce Bill and against the Decriminalization of Adultery and Concubinage . CBCP Online . 16 April 2023.
  36. News: Mendoza. John. CBCP hits House for approving divorce bill. May 23, 2024 . Catholic Bishops' Conference of the Philippines. May 23, 2024.
  37. News: Tolentino . Ma. Reina Leanne. Couples for Christ issues anti-divorce manifesto. June 24, 2024 . . June 24, 2024.
  38. Web site: For they are no longer two, but one . Iglesia Ni Cristo . 16 April 2023 . 23 November 2022.
  39. Web site: Alignay . Moses . What Does the Bible Say About Divorce? . INC Media . 16 April 2023 . 30 September 2021.
  40. Escareal-Go . Chiqui . Driven to Survive: Four Filipino Women CEOs' Stories on Separation or Annulment . Philippine Social Sciences Review . 2014 . 52 . 16 April 2023.
  41. News: Is the Philippines Ready for Divorce? . 16 April 2023 . Philippine Daily Inquirer . 9 July 2011.
  42. News: Bordey . Hana . Padilla files bill recognizing civil effect of church decreed annulment . 14 June 2024 . GMA News . 31 March 2023 . en.
  43. News: Quisimorio . Ellson . 'Significant development' on bill simplifying annulment of marriage hailed . 14 June 2024 . Manila Bulletin . en.
  44. Web site: Social Weather Report 50% of Filipino adults agree, 31% disagree, and 17% are undecided about legalizing divorce for irreconcilably separated couples . Social Weather Stations . 1 June 2024.
  45. News: Parungao . Adrian . SWS: 50% OKs divorce for 'irreconcilably separated' couples . 1 June 2024 . Philippine Daily Inquirer . 1 June 2024 . en.