SUAZO v. SUAZO
G.R.
No. 164493 March 10, 2010
FACTS:
Angelito Suazo and Jocelyn
Suazo were married when they were 16
years old only. Without any means to
support themselves, they lived with Angelito’s parents while Jocelyn took odd
jobs and Angelito refused to work and was most of the time drunk. Petitioner urged him to find work but this often resulted to violent quarrels. A year after their
marriage, Jocelyn left Angelito. Angelito thereafter found another woman with
whom he has since lived. 10 years later,
she filed a petition for declaration of nullity of marriage under Art. 36
Psychological incapacity. Jocelyn testified on the alleged physical beating she
received. The expert witness corroborated parts of Jocelyn’s
testimony. Both her psychological report and testimony concluded
that Angelito was psychologically incapacitated. However, B was not personally
examined by the expert witness. The RTC
annulled the marriage on the ground that Angelito is unfit to comply with
his marital obligation, such as “immaturity,
i.e., lack of an effective sense of rational judgment and responsibility,
otherwise peculiar to infants (like refusal of the husband to support the
family or excessive dependence on parents or peer group approval) and habitual
alcoholism, or the condition by which a person lives for the next drink and the
next drinks” but the CA reversed it
and held that the respondent may have failed to provide material support to the
family and has resorted to physical abuse, but it is still necessary to show
that they were manifestations of a deeper psychological malaise that was
clinically or medically identified. The theory of the psychologist that the respondent was suffering
from an anti-social personality syndrome at the time of the marriage was not
the product of any adequate medical or clinical investigation. The evidence that she got from
the petitioner, anecdotal at best, could equally show that the behavior of the
respondent was due simply to causes like immaturity or irresponsibility which
are not equivalent to psychological incapacity, or the failure or refusal to
work could have been the result of rebelliousness on the part of one who felt
that he had been forced into a loveless marriage.
ISSUE:
ISSUE:
Whether or not there is a basis to nullify
Jocelyn’s marriage with Angelito under Article 36 of the Family Code.
HELD:
HELD:
The Court find the petition
devoid of merit. The CA committed no reversible error of law in setting aside the
RTC decision, as no basis exists to declare Jocelyn’s marriage with Angelito a
nullity under Article 36 of the Family Code and its related jurisprudence.
Jocelyn’s evidence is
insufficient to establish Angelito’s psychological incapacity. The psychologist evaluated Angelito’s psychological condition only in an indirect
manner – she derived all her conclusions from information coming from Jocelyn
whose bias for her cause cannot of course be doubted. The psychlologist, using
meager information coming from a directly interested party, could not have
secured a complete personality profile and could not have conclusively formed
an objective opinion or diagnosis of Angelito’s psychological condition. While the report or
evaluation may be conclusive with respect to Jocelyn’s psychological condition, this is not true for
Angelito’s. The methodology employed simply cannot satisfy the required depth
and comprehensiveness of examination required to evaluate a party alleged to be
suffering from a psychological disorder. Both the psychologist’s report and testimony simply provided
a general description of Angelito’s purported anti-social personality disorder,
supported by the characterization of this disorder as chronic, grave and
incurable. The psychologist was conspicuously silent, however, on the bases for
her conclusion or the particulars that gave rise to the characterization she
gave. Jurisprudence holds that there must be evidence showing a link, medical
or the like, between the acts that manifest psychological incapacity and the psychological disorder itself.
A’s testimony regarding the habitual drunkenness, gambling and refusal to find a job, while indicative of psychological incapacity, do not,
by themselves, show psychological incapacity. All these simply indicate difficulty, neglect or mere
refusal to perform marital obligations.
It is not enough that the
respondent, alleged to be psychologically incapacitated, had difficulty in
complying with his marital obligations, or was unwilling to perform these
obligations. Proof of a natal or
supervening disabling factor – an adverse integral element in the respondent’s
personality structure that effectively incapacitated him from complying with
his essential marital obligations – must be shown. Mere difficulty, refusal or
neglect in the performance of marital obligations or ill will on the part of
the spouse is different from incapacity rooted in some debilitating
psychological condition or illness; irreconcilable differences, sexual
infidelity or perversion, emotional immaturity and irresponsibility and the
like, do not by themselves warrant a finding of psychological incapacity under
Article 36, as the same may only be due to a person’s refusal or unwillingness
to assume the essential obligations of marriage.
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