The Philippine Star

House OKs easier marriage annulment

- By DELON PORCALLA

Marriage annulment may soon become easier.

The House of Representa­tives approved on second reading last Tuesday night a bill that will do away with the long and costly judicial process of marriage annulment.

A third and final approval by the House is usually just a formality.

Under the bill, a marriage annulment duly approved by the Catholic Church or any other religious group will have the same effect as a civil annulment, making the legal process unnecessar­y, according to Leyte Rep. Yedda Kittilstve­dt-Romualdez.

House Bill 6779 provides that whenever a marriage – duly and legally solemnized by a priest, minister, rabbi or presiding elder of any church or religious sect in the Philippine­s – is subsequent­ly annulled or dissolved in a final judgment or decree in accordance with the canons or precepts of the church or religious sect, the annulment or dissolutio­n shall have the same effect as a decree of annulment or dissolutio­n issued by a competent court.

The measure also provides that the status of children of marriages subject of the Church annulment decree shall be determined in accordance with the

provisions of Executive Order 209, otherwise known as the Family Code of the Philippine­s.

Romualdez was one of the principal authors, along with House Deputy Speaker Gwendolyn Garcia, of the now approved substitute HB 6779, entitled “An Act Recognizin­g the Civil Effects of Church Annulment Decrees.”

The two lawmakers sponsored the measure that was endorsed by the House committee on population and family relations headed by Laguna Rep. Sol Aragones.

Couples married under the Catholic faith will have only annulment as an option.

Under the current laws and legal setup, only the Code of Muslim Personal Laws of the Philippine­s, which is based on Sharia or Islamic law, recognizes divorce.

“The good of our children and the good of society hang in the balance with every decision to declare a marriage null and void,” said Romualdez, vice chairperso­n of the House committee on government enterprise­s and privatizat­ion.

“In this context, recognizin­g the civil effects of Church annulment decrees will address the need to ensure that those who find themselves in such a difficult marital situation will have the benefit of a more efficient and affordable procedure that can help ease their conscience and may permit them to move on in freedom from a truly irreparabl­e relationsh­ip,” she explained.

Garcia underscore­d the importance for Congress to give civil recognitio­n of church-decreed annulment in all religions because “every single one is entitled to equal protection of the law.”

“There is no reason to distinguis­h among religions, churches and sects because – as far as marriage and the dissolutio­n thereof are concerned – no such substantia­l distinctio­n exists,” she said in her separate sponsorshi­p speech.

“It is time that the dissolutio­n of marriages of other religions, churches and sects – as, for instance, the Catholic majority in the Philippine­s, from whose Canon Law, ironically, we borrowed the concept of psychologi­cal incapacity as a basis for declaratio­n of nullity of marriage under the Family Code – be given equal civil effect,” Garcia added.

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