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[PEOPLE v. ANUNCIACION ROSAL](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c130b?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. 25706, Nov 02, 1926 ]

PEOPLE v. ANUNCIACION ROSAL +

DECISION

49 Phil. 509

[ G. R. No. 25706, November 02, 1926 ]

THE PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINE ISLANDS, PLAINTIFF AND APPELLANT, VS. ANUNCIACION ROSAL (ALIAS MARIA A. ROSAL), DEFENDANT AND APPELLEE.

D E C I S I O N

VILLAMOR, J.:

This is an appeal taken by the prosecution from an order of the Court of First Instance of Ilocos  Sur sustaining a demurrer  filed by the defense to the following complaint:
"That the said accused Anunciacion Rosal  (alias Maria A. Rosal), having become the widow of Guillermo Rabe on June 29, 1925, did willfully, maliciously, illegally and criminally contract a second marriage with  Justino Velasco on or about August 19, 1925, in the municipality  of San Ildefonso, Province of Ilocos Sur, Philippine Islands, before the lapse of 301 days from the death of her first husband Guillermo Rabe, i. e., from June 29,1925 to August 19, 1925 on which latter date, as aforesaid, she contracted a second marriage with Justino Velasco.   Contrary to law."
The demurrer is on the ground that the charge does not constitute a crime.  The court, by order of February 26, 1926, sustained  the contention of  the defense and  dismissed the case, with the costs de oficio.  From this order the prosecuting attorney appealed to this court in accordance with section 44 of General Orders No. 58.

It is alleged in support of this demurrer that article 476 of the Penal Code is the penal sanction of article 45 of the Civil  Code; and Title 4 of the Civil Code, which includes article 45, having been suspended,  said article 476 of the Penal Code is not applicable for lack of subject-matter.

As  may be seen, the question submitted for our determination is whether or not article 476 of the Penal Code is in force.

First of all, it must be observed that the Penal Code of the Philippine Islands was published in  the Gazette of Manila on  March 13, 1887 and went into  effect four months after its publication, while the Civil Code was published and became  effective as a law in the Philippine Islands on December  8,  1889.   It is true, as Viada says  in his commentaries on  the Penal Code, that article 476 of the Penal Code of Spain is a sanction of  article 45, paragraph 2, of the Civil  Code.  It is also true that the legal effects of Title 4 of Book 1 of our Civil Code, which includes article 45, was suspended  by  order of Governor-General Weyler on December 31, 1889.  But the indisputable fact remains that article 476 of the Penal Code was already in force in the Philippine Islands  before  the promulgation of the Civil Code, which shows that said article is not dependent for its existence upon the provisions of the latter code.  It thus results that the suspension of a part of the Civil Code cannot legally affect the provisions  of  the Penal Code under consideration.  Furthermore, it must be borne in mind that the object of the penal sanction  established in article 476 is, as acknowledged by the trial court,  to. prevent doubtful paternity and therefore a marriage contracted in violation of its provisions is  punishable.  The fact that General Orders No. 68, in its second section, Does not make a marriage illegal and void if contracted within the period prohibited by article 476  of the Penal Code, does not mean that this article has been repealed, for the reason that the sanction of the Penal Code does not declare such marriage contracted by a widow void or voidable; but that  notwithstanding its validity, a widow who thus contracts marriage is criminally liable as committing an act in violation of the law.

On the other hand, the  Code of Civil Procedure which went into effect on October 1, 1901, may be said to supply the proof that article 476 of the Penal Code, based, as it is, on a sound principle of public policy, is-in force.  Section 333, paragraph 3, of the Code of Civil/Procedure establishes the conclusive presumption that  the issue of a wife cohabiting with her husband, who is not impotent, is indisputably presumed to be legitimate, if not  born within the one hundred eighty days immediately succeeding the marriage, or after the expiration of three hundred days following its dissolution.  Without the penal sanction of article 476 of the Penal Code such presumption might produce inconsistent effects.   Thus, a widow can contract a second marriage on the tenth day after becoming a widow and give birth to a  child two  hundred seventy-nine days after  the second marriage.  This child, having been born within three hundred days after the death of the first husband, might conclusively be presumed to be the legitimate child of the first husband; and, yet, for the  very  reason that it was born one hundred eighty days after the  second marriage, the same  child would unquestionably be presumed to  be the legitimate child of the second husband.   In order to avoid the possibility of such situation, it  is necessary to apply article 476 of the Penal Code.

In the case of United States vs. Dulay  (10 Phil., 302), this court, although in an indirect manner, took occasion to express its opinion that article 476 of the Penal Code imposes a  punishment  upon a  widow who marries before three hundred one days after the death of her husband, and that said prohibition is in harmony with other legal provisions and is intended to prevent confusion in connection  with filiation and paternity inasmuch as the  widow might have conceived and  become pregnant by her late husband.

For the foregoing  we are of the  opinion, and so hold, that article 476 of the Penal Code is  in force and therefore the order appealed from must be, as it is hereby, revoked and the  record is ordered remanded to the trial court for further proceedings in accordance with the law, with the costs  de oficio.   So ordered.

Avanceña, C.  J., Johnson,  Street, Ostrand, Johns, Romualdez, and Villa-Real, JJ., concur.

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