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NEW AND UPDATED 7 TOP FAQ ABOUT DIVORCE IN THE PHILIPPINES

  • April 18, 2020
  • Frederick De Borja
  • DIVORCE IN THE PHILIPPINES

The Philippines is one of only two countries in the world which does not allow for divorce. The following discussions will provide the answers to your most frequent questions.

1) IS THERE DIVORCE IN THE PHILIPPINES?

Generally, there is NO divorce in the Philippines under the Family Code ( Official Gazette of the Philippines, E.O 209 Series of 1987 )which allows only the declaration of nullity of marriage on the ground , among others, of psychological incapacity  (Art. 36, Family Code of the Philippines) minority, lack of a marriage license, and multiple marriages ( Art. 35, Family Code)

Divorce is allowed in limited instances under P.D. NO. 1083 , otherwise known as A DECREE TO ORDAIN AND PROMULGATE A CODE RECOGNIZING THE SYSTEM OF FILIPINO MUSLIM LAWS, CODIFYING MUSLIM PERSONAL LAWS, AND PROVIDING FOR ITS ADMINISTRATION AND FOR OTHER PURPOSES. The law provides for the creation of Sariah courts in the Philippines and allowed for divorce among Muslims , or when the husband is Muslim, and the marriage was celebrated under Muslim rites. This law is the only divorce law in the Philippines and remains in full force and effect. 2) If I convert to Islam after having been previously married in a Catholic church, can I file for divorce under P.D. 1083? No. The law provides: Article 13. Application. (1) The provisions of this Title shall apply to marriage and divorce wherein both parties are Muslims, or wherein only the male party is a Muslim and the marriage is solemnized in accordance with Muslim law or this Code in any part of the Philippines. (2) In case of marriage between a Muslim and a non-Muslim, solemnized not in accordance with Muslim law or this Code, the Civil Code of the Philippines shall apply. (3) Subject to the provisions of the preceding paragraphs, the essential requisites and legal impediments to marriage, divorce, paternity and filiation, guardianship and custody of minors, support and maintenance, claims for customary dower (mahr), betrothal, breach of contract to marry, solemnization and registration of marriage and divorce, rights and obligations between husband and wife parental authority, and the properly relations between husband and wife shall be governed by this Code and other applicable Muslim laws.

Since you were married in a Catholic church and under the Civil Code of the Philippines, P.D. 1083 will not apply to you.

3) IF MY DIVORCE WAS OBTAINED IN A FOREIGN COUNTRY, CAN IT BE RECOGNIZED IN THE PHILIPPINES?

Yes, Art. 26 of the Family Code as amended by EO No. 227, Series of 1987 ( Official Gazette of the Philippines )  provides, to wit: Art. 26. All marriages solemnized outside the Philippines, in accordance with the laws in force in the country where they were solemnized, and valid there as such, shall also be valid in this country, except those prohibited under Articles 35 (1), (4), (5) and (6), 3637 and 38. (17a) Where a marriage between a Filipino citizen and a foreigner is validly celebrated and a divorce is thereafter validly obtained abroad by the alien spouse capacitating him or her to remarry, the Filipino spouse shall have capacity to remarry under Philippine law. (As amended by Executive Order 227)

4) IF I WAS THE ONE WHO FILED FOR DIVORCE ABROAD, CAN IT STILL BE RECOGNIZED IN THE PHILIPPINES?

It was previously argued that under the provisions of Art. 26 as quoted above, for the divorce to be recognized in the Philippines, it must have been validly obtained by the foreign spouse abroad, NOT the Filipino spouse.

However, a recent case of the Supreme Court has allowed for the recognition of the divorce even if it was obtained by the Filipino spouse. ( Republic vs. Manalo, G.R. No. 221029, April 24, 2018 )

5) The law states that the divorce obtained by the foreign spouse will result in the Filipino spouse having the capacity to remarry under Philippine law. Does this mean that I can already marry after my foreign spouse has already obtained a divorce without filing anything?

No. You cannot assume by yourself your capacity to remarry. It has to be recognized by a court of law (Rules of Court of the Philippines, Rule 39 Section 48 (b); Rule 132 Section 24 , 25) and starts with the filing of a Petition for Recognition of a Foreign Divorce by a licensed lawyer  in the Philippines. It is also not allowed to have your divorce recorded on your marriage certificate without a final judgment recognizing your divorce.

6) My foreign ex-husband divorced me years ago after I found out that he had another Filipina girlfriend during the time that we were married. I just learned that he wants to marry his girlfriend in the Philippines, can he also file for recognition of our divorce so he can marry his Filipina girlfriend?

YES. The Supreme Court in the case of Corpus vs. Sto. Tomas (G.R. No. 186571 ,August 11, 2010 ) held that while Article 26 of the Family Code gives only the Filipino spouse the right to claim the recognition of the divorce obtained by the foreign spouse, the latter is allowed under other provisions of the Rules of Court and existing laws to have the divorce recognized as well. 7) What are the basic requirements to have a divorce recognized in the Philippines? Basically, you need the copies of the foreign divorce decree and the foreign law under which the divorce was granted authenticated by the proper officer of the Philippine embassy where the divorce was obtained. You will also need a certified true copy of your marriage certificate. These are only the basic requirements. The court may ask for further documentation.

Divorce Letters 1800 07 Mar 2017

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divorce essay tagalog

Divorce in the Philippines: An Essay

Essay on divorce, is divorce morally permissible, effects of divorce if it becomes legal in the philippines, main causes of divorce, what married couples can do to avoid a divorce, ourhappyschool recommends.

divorce essay tagalog

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Ending a Marriage in the Only Country That Bans Divorce

In the Philippines, a husband and wife can part only through death, or the torturous process of annulment.

A small hand holding a gold wedding band rests on top of another person's larger hand.

MANILA, Philippines—The call came in the middle of a workday. My lawyer’s name flashed on the caller-ID screen, and there was no small talk when I picked up.

“I have the court decision,” she said.

She was literally holding my future in her hands, in the form of an annulment decision we had sought for four years. After opening the envelope, she rambled a bit, skimming the contents out loud to fill the dead air.

Then she paused.

“Petition approved. Congratulations!” she said. “You are now a free woman!”

I had finally gotten out of my long-dead marriage in the devoutly Catholic Philippines , the only country in the world (other than Vatican City) where divorce is not legal. Two people can voluntarily choose to love, honor, and remain faithful to each other, but in the Philippines it is pretty much only through death, or the torturously long process of annulment, that they can part.

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I had walked out on my marriage five years earlier and had barely spoken with my daughter’s father for just as long, but on paper he was still my husband. I was a single woman, but I was not free. My name was only half mine—all my identification papers remained in my married name. Any major purchase I made would be considered conjugal property. If I got into a new relationship, I risked being charged with adultery and jailed.

I was 28 when I left my husband, 29 when I finally decided—against my family’s wishes and without their support—to file for annulment. I was 33 when I received the court decision. And on the phone that day, I felt like the oldest 33-year-old in the world.

Under Philippine law, two people wishing to end their marriage have limited options. They can file for legal separation, which will allow them to separate their possessions and live apart, but does not legally end a marital union and thus does not permit remarriage. They can file for divorce if they are among the estimated 5 percent of the population that is Muslim and is governed by the Code of Muslim Personal Laws .

Or they can get an annulment, which in the Philippines is a lengthy and expensive court proceeding. (An ecclesiastical annulment, granted through a Church tribunal, is a separate procedure, without which a Catholic cannot get remarried in the Church. Pope Francis has said that the Church should “streamline” this process, which can take up to a decade.) An annulment ends a marriage, but differs from divorce in important ways. The parties, for instance, must prove that the marriage was never valid to begin with. Under Philippine law, reasons can include one or both parties having been younger than age 18 when they got married, either party having an incurable sexually transmitted disease, or cases of polygamy or mistaken identity.

Divorce has not always been banned in the Philippines. The Spanish colonizers who ruled the island until the late 19th century imposed their own Catholic traditions, allowing “relative divorce,” or legal separation, in cases involving adultery or one spouse joining a religious order. But the relevant law declared that “so great is the tie and force of marriage, that when legally contracted, it cannot be dissolved even if one of the parties should turn heretic, or Jew, or Moor, or even commit adultery.” After the Spanish era, divorce laws depended on the colonizer. The Americans, who acquired the nation in 1898 following the Spanish-American War, allowed divorce, but only on the grounds of adultery or concubinage. The Japanese, who occupied the Philippines during World War II, introduced liberal divorce laws. Following liberation, however, divorce was once again outlawed—except among the Muslim minority—under the Philippine Civil Code of 1949.

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If marriage is essentially a contract, the difference between an annulment and a divorce is the difference between declaring the contract null—because, say, it was signed under conditions of duress or fraud—and terminating it.

In the case of marriage, declaring the contract null is a far more difficult proposition. Infidelity and physical abuse, for example, are not on the list of acceptable reasons for a marriage to be declared invalid under Philippine law. A petitioner seeking to leave a marriage for those or any number of other reasons has to try to prove that his or her spouse is suffering from “psychological incapacity” such as narcissistic personality disorder.

Filipino TV host Amy Perez is familiar with the difficulties these rules pose. Perez married a rock musician in 1995, and the couple had a son two years later. But within a year of their son’s birth, Perez’s husband had left her with their baby and gone to live abroad. Perez filed for an annulment in 2000, and was denied. She appealed and lost. In 2006, the Philippine Supreme Court declined to hear her case, declaring:

We find [the husband’s] alleged mixed personality disorder, the ‘leaving-the-house’ attitude whenever they quarreled, the violent tendencies during epileptic attacks, the sexual infidelity, the abandonment and lack of support, and his preference to spend more time with his band mates than his family, are not rooted on some debilitating psychological condition but a mere refusal or unwillingness to assume the essential obligations of marriage.

Statistics from the Philippines’ Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) show that there were more than 10,000 petitions filed to end marriages in 2013, out of a population of roughly 100 million, with women filing slightly more than half of the petitions. The most recent statistics OSG provided me, based on a sample of such cases from 2010 to 2011, showed that 6 percent of these petitions were dismissed or denied. But this obscures the fact that such cases can drag on for years, and that court fees, which typically amount to nearly $400 just to file paperwork, can exceed the average monthly wages of Filipino workers, which a 2012 International Labor Organization study estimated at less than $300.

“The system is so unfair, especially to women like me in a situation of abandonment. Why do they have to make it so hard?” asked Perez, whose marriage didn’t formally end until a decade after her husband left her. She declined to give details about how she finally obtained the annulment. Last year, she married her longtime boyfriend, with whom she has two children.

Like Perez, I filed for annulment claiming my spouse was psychologically incapacitated. My lawyer suggested I try to have both of us declared psychologically incapacitated to double the chances of success, but I refused. I was afraid such a designation would damage my chances of getting a job or custody of my daughter.

“Don’t worry. It’s just a term to justify your petition,” my lawyer assured me, echoing the two other lawyers I had consulted before her. (I wanted a second opinion.) They all gave me some variation on: “It’s just the Philippine version of ‘irreconcilable differences.’”

But making such a claim is not an innocuous formality. Trying to show psychological incapacity is an adversarial process in civil court, aimed at proving beyond a reasonable doubt that one spouse was exhibiting behavior indicating an inability to take on the responsibilities of marriage. It means stating in public court all the reasons—both trivial and consequential—why you cannot stay married to your spouse. It involves psychological tests and, in some cases, witnesses. It’s a game of mud-slinging and one-upmanship that makes breaking up that much harder and uglier. It encourages a petitioner to exaggerate problems—to declare a once-loved partner an alcoholic as opposed to someone who occasionally came home drunk, or a chronic womanizer as opposed to someone who once had an affair.

“The process is inhumane. It is hurtful to two people who may have at one point loved each other and may have even tried to work it out,” Philippine Senator Pia Cayetano, a prominent women’s-rights legislator, told me. She should know: She’s been through it too.

This kind of hassle can be avoided for the right price, however.

Michelle, a former classmate of mine who asked that I not use her full name, claims to have paid her lawyer $10,000 for an all-inclusive annulment package that covered a psychiatric evaluation, all the related paperwork and fees, and a guarantee of a favorable decision from the judge, an old law-school buddy of the lawyer’s.

As a 28-year-old middle manager, I couldn’t afford that. It took me a year before I found a lawyer I could afford; my cousin eventually negotiated a fee of $2,000 with a former law-school classmate. I paid this lawyer in installments as my case dragged on.

But you get what you pay for.

Michelle got her annulment in six months. I waited four years.

Michelle had to appear in court only once. I spent years using up vacation days for intermittent court appearances.

Michelle took the stand to answer only one question: her name. I withstood a barrage of inquiries from a judge.

It was a harrowing experience, forcing me to dredge up years of bad, buried memories. The judge probed for details about the fights I’d had with my husband. He accused me of not trying hard enough to keep the peace in our relationship. When I brought up the allegations in my petition—regarding the abuse and infidelity I’d had to endure—he asked me if I thought that was enough to end a marriage. (My then-husband didn’t show up to any of the court proceedings, which is a way of opposing the annulment petition.) I was too proud to beg the judge to stop his line of questioning, too angry to stay quiet. I was ultimately taken off the stand because I was crying uncontrollably. I felt like I was on trial, as if I were a criminal.

And in the eyes of the Church and Philippine matrimonial law, which is largely based on Church doctrine, I had done something worse than commit a crime. I had sinned. I was reneging on sacred vows. I had desecrated the sanctity of marriage.

“You could have chosen your battles better and just stayed quiet,” I remember a friend telling me when I told him what had happened in court. “That judge is going to decide whether or not to grant you an annulment. He is not someone you want to piss off.”

He was right, of course. But I couldn’t see that. My lawyer later told me the judge had said I was too smart for my own good, and suggested that this was why my marriage had failed. I still did not see how that could warrant shaming me in front of a courtroom full of strangers. When I went through the legal prerequisites of getting married, I was not subjected to such interrogation.

“It’s really hard for us too,” Noel Segovia, a senior lawyer at the OSG, told me. “In some cases, we know the couple can no longer live together, but because of insufficient evidence, we have to deny their petition for annulment.”

A bill to legalize divorce, proposed in 2010, received little support from the country’s Catholic, bachelor president, who told reporters that he did not want to turn the Philippines into Las Vegas, where “[t]he stereotype is you get married in the morning [and] you get divorced in the afternoon.” In the meantime, Philippine public opinion has moved steadily in favor of legalizing divorce, from 50 percent in March 2011 to 60 percent in December 2014, according to a survey by the Philippine research institution Social Weather Stations. When legislators were asked if the results of the survey would sway their opinion on divorce, one senator explained: “I cannot favor a divorce law. My wife might use that against me.”

If there’s a middle ground between Vegas and the Vatican, the pope didn’t advocate for it during his recent visit to the Philippines, despite his earlier calls for the Church to show more kindness toward sinners. And so the Philippines, the land of no divorce, continues to lay claim to a title no other country wants.

Reporting for this story was supported by the Pulitzer Center on Crisis Reporting under the Persephone Miel Fellowship.

Translation of "divorce" into Tagalog

ihiwalay, Diborsiyo, diborsiyo are the top translations of "divorce" into Tagalog. Sample translated sentence: This will help the divorced Christian to feel more confident as he or she moves on in life. ↔ Makakatulong ito sa isang Kristiyano para magkaroon ng higit na kumpiyansa habang sinisikap niyang makabangon pagkatapos ng diborsiyo.

The legal dissolution of a marriage. [..]

English-Tagalog dictionary

termination of a marital union

This will help the divorced Christian to feel more confident as he or she moves on in life.

Makakatulong ito sa isang Kristiyano para magkaroon ng higit na kumpiyansa habang sinisikap niyang makabangon pagkatapos ng diborsiyo .

Less frequent translations

  • paghihiwalay, diborsiyo

Show algorithmically generated translations

Automatic translations of " divorce " into Tagalog

Translations with alternative spelling

Divorce, Italian Style

"Divorce" in English - Tagalog dictionary

Currently we have no translations for Divorce in the dictionary, maybe you can add one? Make sure to check automatic translation, translation memory or indirect translations.

Phrases similar to "divorce" with translations into Tagalog

  • surviving divorced wife natitirang diborsiyadang asawang babae

Translations of "divorce" into Tagalog in sentences, translation memory

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  1. Divorce Law sa Pilipinas: Sang-Ayon Ka Ba o Hindi?

    Kapag naramdaman ng mga bata na hindi nila mababago o ayusin ang nangyari sa pamilya, nagiging malakas ang pakiramdam ng pagkawala at kalungkutan, "sabi ni Blesila. "/ Upang maprotektahan ang kanilang sarili, maaaring mapili ng mga bata na harapin ang isyu sa pamamagitan ng hindi pagkilala sa katotohanan.

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    Absolute divorce sa Pilipinas. Nitong January 14 ng kasalukuyang taon ay naghain ng panukala si Sen. Risa Hontiveros na ma-legalize ang absolute divorce sa Pilipinas. Sa ilalim ng Senate Bill 2134 o Divorce Act of 2019, ang divorce o legal separation ay maaring i-file ng mag-asawa kung ito ay dahil sa physical violence at grossly abusive ...

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    3 min read. Divorce in the Philippines debate patuloy pa rin. Bilang natitirang bansa, kung saan hindi pa legal ang divorce, mainit pa rin ang debate kung dapat bang ipasa-batas ito. Bukod kasi sa Vatican, tayo na lang ang bansang hindi nagle-legalize pa ng divorce.

  4. Divorce Law, handa na ba ang Pinoy?

    Base naman sa pina­kahuling survey ng Social Weather Station (SWS) noong 2015, tatlo sa kada limang Filipino o 60 porsiyento nito ang pabor sa divorce. Subalit ano nga ba ang saloobin ng ilan ...

  5. Argumentative Essay about Legalization of divorce in the ...

    Divorce is a particularly contentious topic in the Philippines, where marriage is highly regarded as the cornerstone of Filipino culture and few people wish to engage in it. This is particularly true given that the Philippines is a largely Catholic nation that strongly defends the sanctity of marriage, making our nation—along with the Vatican ...

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  7. 7 TOP FAQ ABOUT DIVORCE IN THE PHILIPPINES

    The law provides: Article 13. Application. (1) The provisions of this Title shall apply to marriage and divorce wherein both parties are Muslims, or wherein only the male party is a Muslim and the marriage is solemnized in accordance with Muslim law or this Code in any part of the Philippines. (2) In case of marriage between a Muslim and a non ...

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    Filipino families value the tradition and belief from the past generation has not yet changed, and the importance of marriage is crucial to the decision of divorce among Filipino families. The issue of divorce is on a house bill and not yet accepted due to various reasons and divorce is not always an answer to an abusive spouse or worse ...

  9. (PDF) Perceptions of Legalizing Divorce in the Philippines: A

    In conclusion, this research contributes to understanding the Philippines' complex stance on divorce and its impact on Filipino households. Examining diverse perspectives and conducting a ...

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    legal separation by judicial decree for at least two years. psychological incapacity. irreconcilable marital differences. The bill also seeks to penalize a spouse found guilty of coercing his or ...

  11. Diborsiyo

    Diborsiyo. Ang diborsiyo (kilala din bilang disolusyon ng kasal o pagkabuwag ng kasal) ay ang proseso ng pagwakas ng isang kasal o unyong marital. [1] Kadalasang kinakailangan sa diborsiyo ang pagkansela o muling pag-organisa ng mga legal na tungkulin at responsibilidad ng kasal, kaya, binubuwag ang mga bigkis ng matrimonya sa pagitan ng isang ...

  12. Divorce in the Philippines: Legal Perspectives and Considerations

    The introduction of divorce in the Philippines could have significant legal, social, and economic effects. Legally, it would require adjustments to family law, including provisions related to child custody, property division, and spousal support. Socially, it could challenge traditional views on marriage and family.

  13. Divorce in the Philippines: An Essay

    Divorce can also be a family issue that brings about stress. Divorce may result in new living conditions and other stressful circumstances like having blended family, lacking privacy, and having to adjust to new house and school. Clash with a step-parent, sibling rivalry, and the responsibility to look after step-siblings may also cause stress.

  14. 12 FAQs Divorce in the Philippines

    The short answer is no. There is still no divorce in the Philippines in 2023 although there are efforts to try to introduce it. There are some limited exceptions such as divorce among Muslims or when a Filipino is divorced from a foreign spouse. These types of divorces are recognized in the Philippines, however; This is not applicable to the ...

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  16. Divorce Should Be Legalized in the Philippines

    The pieces of evidence that we gathered are from the articles of Evelyn Ursua (Positively Filipino) and Anne Umil (Bulatlat) entitled "Why the Philippines needs a divorce law?" and "Divorce bill, providing a remedy for women in abusive marriages", an excerpt from Sen. Pia Cayetano's privilege speech, annual comparative statistics on violence against women (2004-2011) and a poll ...

  17. 6

    Divorce has always been a hotly debated topic in the Philippines. However, the discussion of divorce changes a lot in context, may it be historical, cultural periods or by religious faith. Recently, Malta, Mexico has legalized divorce, making the Philippines the last country, aside from the Vatican, to finally legalize divorce.

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    Divorce In The Philippines Essay. 1013 Words5 Pages. Couples made a vow to each other and form a bond to live their lives together. But then, there are some instances that the bond they form was not enough to sustain their relationship forever. Many couples or married people ended up in divorce cause of many different issues like lack of ...

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    Mga Sanaysay at Talumpati BSE-Filipino-Kadiwa. May 28, 2020 ·. Divorce. Ni: Rafael S. De Guzman. Ang diborsiyo ay ang pagwawalang bisa sa kasal ng mag asawa . Noon pa man ay napakainit na nang usaping ito dahil sa mainit na pagsupurta at pagkontra ng mga taong pabor at di pabor patungkol sa isyong ito. Simbahang katoliko ang pangunahung hindi ...

  21. divorce in Tagalog

    Translation of "divorce" into Tagalog . ihiwalay, Diborsiyo, diborsiyo are the top translations of "divorce" into Tagalog. Sample translated sentence: This will help the divorced Christian to feel more confident as he or she moves on in life. ↔ Makakatulong ito sa isang Kristiyano para magkaroon ng higit na kumpiyansa habang sinisikap niyang makabangon pagkatapos ng diborsiyo.

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