Republic of The Philippines, Petitioner, vs. YOLANDA CADACIO GRANADA, Respondent
Republic of The Philippines, Petitioner, vs. YOLANDA CADACIO GRANADA, Respondent
Republic of The Philippines, Petitioner, vs. YOLANDA CADACIO GRANADA, Respondent
*
REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, petitioner, vs.
YOLANDA CADACIO GRANADA, respondent.
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* SECOND DIVISION.
433
434
SERENO, J.:
This is a Rule 45 Petition seeking the reversal of the
Resolutions dated 23 January 20091 and 3 April 20092
issued by the Court of Appeals (CA), which affirmed the
grant by the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of the Petition for
Declaration of Presumptive Death of the absent spouse of
respondent.
In May 1991, respondent Yolanda Cadacio Granada
(Yolanda) met Cyrus Granada (Cyrus) at Sumida Electric
Philippines, an electronics company in Parañaque where
both were then working. The two eventually got married at
the Manila City Hall on 3 March 1993. Their marriage
resulted in the birth of their son, Cyborg Dean Cadacio
Granada.
Sometime in May 1994, when Sumida Electric
Philippines closed down, Cyrus went to Taiwan to seek
employment. Yolanda claimed that from that time, she had
not received any communication from her husband,
notwithstanding efforts to locate him. Her brother testified
that he had asked the relatives of Cyrus regarding the
latter’s whereabouts, to no avail.
After nine (9) years of waiting, Yolanda filed a Petition
to have Cyrus declared presumptively dead. The Petition
was raffled to Presiding Judge Avelino Demetria of RTC
Branch 85, Lipa City, and was docketed as Sp. Proc. No.
2002-0530.
On 7 February 2005, the RTC rendered a Decision
declaring Cyrus as presumptively dead.
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1 Rollo, pp. 30-33. The Court of Appeals Fifth Division Decision in CA-
G.R. CV No. 90165 was penned by Justice Remedios A. Salazar-Fernando
and concurred in by Justices Jose C. Reyes, Jr. and Normandie B. Pizarro.
2 Rollo, pp. 35-36.
435
Issues
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3 489 Phil. 761; 449 SCRA 57 (2005).
4 Rollo, pp. 35-36.
436
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5 Supra note 3.
437
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6 Supra note 3.
7 497 Phil. 528; 458 SCRA 200 (2005).
439
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8 The case cited Rule 41, Sec. 2(a), which reads:
SEC. 2. Modes of appeal.—
(a) Ordinary appeal.—The appeal to the Court of Appeals in cases
decided by the Regional Trial Court in the exercise of its original
jurisdiction shall be taken by filing a notice of appeal with the court which
rendered the judgment or final order appealed from and serving a copy
thereof upon the adverse party. No record on appeal shall be required
except in special proceedings and other cases of multiple or separate
appeals where the law or these Rules so require. In such cases, the record
on appeal shall be filed and served in like manner. (Underscoring
supplied.)
440
intended “to set the records straight and for the future
guidance of the bench and the bar.”
At any rate, four years after Jomoc, this Court settled
the rule regarding appeal of judgments rendered in
summary proceedings under the Family Code when it ruled
in Republic v. Tango:9
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9 G.R. No. 161062, 31 July 2009, 594 SCRA 560.
441
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10 G.R. No. 94053, 17 March 1993, 220 SCRA 20.
11 25 Phil. 71 (1913).
12 513 Phil. 391; 477 SCRA 277 (2005).
13 Art. 83. Any marriage subsequently contracted by any person
during the lifetime of the first spouse of such person with any person other
than such first spouse shall be illegal and void from its performance,
unless:
(1) The first marriage was annulled or dissolved; or
(2) The first spouse had been absent for seven consecutive years at
the time of the second marriage without the spouse present having news
of the absentee being alive, or if the absentee, though he has been absent
for less than seven years, is generally considered as dead and believed to
be so by the spouse present at the time of contracting such subsequent
marriage, or if the absentee is presumed dead according to Articles 390
and 391. The marriage so contracted shall be valid in any of the three
cases until declared null and void by a competent court.
443
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14 The case originated from a bigamy suit against defendant Biasbas,
whose defense was that he contracted a second marriage on the good faith
belief that his first wife was already dead.
444
Resolutions affirmed.
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15 Chan-Tan v. Tan, G.R. No. 167139, 25 February 2010, 613 SCRA
592.
446