What Is A Separation Agreement
What Is A Separation Agreement
What Is A Separation Agreement
If children are involved, a separation agreement helps clarify details about who should have
custody, how frequently the other parent can visit, and whether child support is required.
Similarly, if one spouse puts their career on pause to raise children, the separation agreement
could address whether one person should receive spousal support or alimony.
Parties: list the name of the two spouses who are married but want to live apart
Residency Requirement: confirm that the couple has lived in the state and particular
county for the required amount of time to establish residency for legal purposes
Children: if minor children under the age of 18 years old are involved, discuss who has
custody, how much child support will be provided, and how often can the other parent visit
Assets: who will stay in the marital home and how will shared property like cars and
furniture be divided
Debts: how will taxes, mortgages, loans, or bills be handled while living apart
Spousal Support: ask yourselves whether one person should receive financial support
given their occupation, age, and health
Notarized Signatures: in order for the agreement to be legally enforceable, both spouses
MUST sign the agreement in the presence of a notary public, not necessarily at the same time or
with the same notary
Note: All conditions must be mutually agreed by both spouses in order to be binding and
enforceable.
An action for legal separation which involves nothing more than bed-and-board separation of the spouses
is purely personal.
1. By allowing only the innocent spouse and no one else to claim legal separation;
2. By providing that the spouses can, by their reconciliation, stop or abate the proceedings and even
rescind a decree of legalese parathion already granted (Lapuz v. Eufemio, G.R. No. L-31429, January 31,
1972).
Legal separation can be granted when there are serious marital problems. Under the law, the
grounds for legal separation are:
(a) Repeated physical violence or grossly abusive conduct directed against the petitioner,
a common child, or a child of the petitioner;
(d) Final judgment sentencing the respondent to imprisonment of more than six years,
even if pardoned;
(j) Abandonment of petitioner by respondent without justifiable cause for more than one
year.
An action for legal separation shall be filed within five years from the time of the occurrence of
the cause (FC, Art. 57)
1. Spouses entitled to live separately but the marriage bond is not severed;
2. Absolute Community property (ACP) / Conjugal Partnership of Gains (CPG) shall be dissolved
and liquidated.
3. The share of the offending spouse in the net profits shall be forfeited in favour of:
a. Common children,
b. In default of the common children, children of the guilty spouse by a previous marriage,
c. In default of common children and the children of the guilty spouse, innocent spouse;
4. Custody of minor children is awarded to the innocent spouse(subject to FC, Art. 213);
6. Provisions in the will of innocent spouse which favors offending spouse shall be revoked by
operation of law;
7. Innocent spouse may revoke donations he/she made in favor of offending spouse;
And NOTE: Prescriptive period: 5 years from finality of decree of legal separation
8. Innocent spouse may revoke designation of offending spouse as beneficiary in any insurance
policy, even when stipulated as irrevocable
Subject to court discretion on the best interests of the child, the custody of the minor children
will be awarded to the innocent spouse.
The spouse at fault becomes disqualified from inheriting from the innocent spouse whether with
or without a last will and testament.
(1) Where the aggrieved party has condoned the offense or act complained of;
(2) Where the aggrieved party has consented to the commission of the offense or act
complained of;
(3) Where there is connivance between the parties in the commission of the offense or act
constituting the ground for legal separation;
(4) Where both parties have given ground for legal separation;
(5) Where there is collusion between the parties to obtain a decree of legal separation; or
This means that even if there were valid grounds for legal separation, if the spouses have sexual
intercourse after the grounds became known then legal separation will not be allowed by the
court. “The legal separation may be claimed only by the innocent spouse, provided there has
been no condonation of or consent to the adultery or concubinage. Where both spouses are
offenders, legal separation cannot be claimed by either of them. Collusion between the parties to
obtain legal separation shall cause the dismissal of the petition.
Consider also ground (4) for denying a petition for legal separation, “Where both parties have
given ground for legal separation.” Consider what it means in practice.
He who comes to court must come with “Clean hands” means that one spouse must have no
fault.
The law demands that a spouse who seeks legal separation should come to court with
“clean hands”.
COOLING-OFF PERIOD
An action for legal separation shall be in no case tried before 6 months has elapsed since the
filing of the petition, to enable the contending spouses to settle differences. In other words, it is for
possible reconciliation (FC, Art. 58).
General Rule: The 6 months cooling-off period is a mandatory requirement. Petition shall not be granted
if it is not observed (Pacete v. Carriaga, G.R. No. L-53880, March 17, 1994).
Note: Matters other than the merits of legal separation can be determined by the court without waiting
for the lapse of the 6-month period.
Exception: There is no cooling-off period if the grounds alleged are those under R.A. 9262 (Anti-
Violence against Women and Children Act). The court can immediately hear the case.
EFFECTS OF RECONCILIATION
As to the Decree:
During the pendency of the case: Legal Separation proceedings terminated at whatever stage
After the issuance of the decree: Final decree of Legal Separation to be set aside (FC, Art. 66).
General Rule: In case there had been already separation of property and forfeiture of the share of the
guilty spouse, the same shall be maintained (Pineda, 2008).
Exception: The parties, however, can come into an agreement to revive their previous regime. Their
agreement must be under oath and must contain a list of the properties desired to be returned to the
community or conjugal property and those which will remain separate, a list of creditors and their
addresses.
As to capacity to succeed:
The Family Code does not provide for the revival of revoked provisions in a will originally made
in favor of the offending party as a result of the Legal Separation. This absence gives the innocent spouse
the right to choose whether the offending spouse will be reinstituted.
Reconciliation does not automatically revive the former property regime of the spouses. If the
spouses want to revive the previous property regime, they must execute an agreement to revive the former
property regime, which agreement shall be submitted in court, together with a verified motion for its
approval (FC, Art. 67).
3. The names of all their known creditors, their addresses and the amounts owing to each (Pineda, 2008)
If the spouses should reconcile, a corresponding joint manifestation under oath duly signed by
them shall be filed with the court in the same proceeding for legal separation.
The legal separation proceedings, if still pending, shall thereby be terminated at whatever stage.
Net profits of the conjugal property are given to the spouse without fault.
The rule in legal separation is that the spouse at fault shall have no right to any share of the net
profits earned by the couple’s common property during the marriage. His or her share of the net
profits is forfeited in favor of the children or the innocent spouse.
Quiao was a case for legal separation filed by the wife against the husband. The spouses had no
assets when they married in 1977. By the time of the legal separation, they had numerous
valuable properties (land, several mills and a factory).
NOTE: BEFORE THE EFFECTIVITY OF THE FAMILY CODE IF THE SPOUSES GOT
MARRIED WITHOUT PRENUPTIAL AGREEMENT / MARRIAGE SETTLEMENT THEN
THEIR PROPERTY REGIME WILL BE CONJUGAL PARTNERSHIP OF GAINS.
NOTE: WHEN THE MARRIAGE IS CELEBRATED AT THE EFFECTIVITY OF THE
FAMILY CODE AND THE SPOUSES GOT MARRIED WITHOUT PRENUPTIAL
AGREEMENT / MARRIAGE SETTLEMENT THEIR PROPERTY REGIME WILL BE
ABSOLUTELY COMMUNITY PROPERTY.
FAMILY CODE EFFECTIVITY: AUGUST 03, 1988
Absolute community has been the default setting for marriages since the Family Code came into
effect in 1988.
In absolute community, all the assets of the spouses are deemed conjugal property.
(b) All the properties which remained will be liable for the debts and obligations of the
community. Such debts and obligations will be subtracted from the market value at
dissolution.
(c) What remains after the debts and obligations have been paid from the total assets of
the absolute community constitutes the net remainder or net asset. And from such net
asset/remainder of the petitioner and respondent’s remaining properties, the market value
at the time of marriage will be subtracted and the resulting totality constitutes the net
profits.
(d) Since both husband and wife have no separate properties, and nothing would be
returned to each of them, what will be divided equally between them is simply the net
profits. However, in the Decision dated October 10, 2005, the trial court forfeited the
half-share of the petitioner in favor of his children. Thus, if we use Article 102 in the
instant case (which should not be the case), nothing is left to the petitioner since both
parties entered into their marriage without bringing with them any property.
Conclusion
In conclusion, nothing was left to the husband of the numerous properties acquired during the
marriage because of the following reasons.
Voidable Marriage - A voidable marriage is considered valid and produces all its civil effects
until it is set aside by final judgment of a competent court in an action for annulment. Simply, a
voidable marriage is valid until it is annulled .
Art. 45 of the Family Code. A marriage may be annulled for any of the following causes,
existing at the time of the marriage:
(1) That the party in whose behalf it is sought to have the marriage annulled was
eighteen years of age or over but below twenty-one, and the marriage was
solemnized without the consent of the parents, guardian or person having substitute
parental authority over the party, in that order, unless after attaining the age of
twenty-one, such party freely cohabited with the other and both lived together as
husband and wife;
(2) That either party was of unsound mind, unless such party after coming to
reason, freely cohabited with the other as husband and wife;
It is essential that the mental incapacity must relate specifically to the contract of
marriage and the test is whether the party at the time of the marriage was capable of
understanding the nature and consequences of the marriage (Rabuya, 2018)
(3) That the consent of either party was obtained by fraud, unless such party
afterwards, with full knowledge of the facts constituting the fraud, freely cohabited
with the other as husband and wife;
2. Concealment by the wife of the fact that at the time of marriage, she was pregnant by
a man other than her husband;
NOTE: Where there has been no misrepresentation or fraud, that is, when the
husband at the time of the marriage knew that the wife was pregnant, the marriage cannot
be annulled (Buccat v. Buccat, G.R. No. 47101, April 25, 1941)
(4) That the consent of either party was obtained by force, intimidation or undue
influence, unless the same having disappeared or ceased, such party thereafter
freely cohabited with the other as husband and wife;
General Rule: Consent of either party was obtained by force, intimidation or undue
influence.
Force or violence–“There is violence when, in order to wrest consent, serious or
irresistible force is employed.
XPN: However, if the same having disappeared or ceased, such party thereafter freely
cohabited with the other as husband and wife. A threat to enforce one's claim through
competent authority however, if the claim is just or legal, does not vitiate consent
(5) That either party was physically incapable of consummating the marriage with
the other, and such incapacity continues and appears to be incurable; or
3. Incurable;
If after 3years of living together with her husband, the wife remained a virgin, the
husband is presumed to be impotent (Rabuya, 2018).
(6) That either party was afflicted with a sexually-transmissible disease found to be
serious and appears to be incurable