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Constitution Statutes Executive Issuances Judicial Issuances Other Issuances Jurisprudence International Legal Resources AUSL Exclusive
182894
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Constitution Statutes Executive Issuances Judicial Issuances Other Issuances Jurisprudence International Legal Resources AUSL Exclusive
EN BANC
DECISION
MENDOZA, J.:
Challenged in this petition is the October 2, 2006 Decision1 and the May 9, 2008 Resolution2 of the Court of Appeals
(CA) in CA-G.R. CV No. 61613, which reversed the October 1, 1998 Decision3 of the Regional Trial Court, Branch
77, Quezon City (RTC) which ruled that petitioner Fe Floro Valino (Valino) was entitled to the remains of the
decedent.
The Facts:
Atty. Adriano Adriano (Atty. Adriano), a partner in the Pelaez Adriano and Gregorio Law Office, married respondent
Rosario Adriano (Rosario) on November 15, 1955. The couple had two (2) sons, Florante and Ruben Adriano; three
(3) daughters, Rosario, Victoria and Maria Teresa; and one (1) adopted daughter, Leah Antonette.
The marriage of Atty. Adriano and Rosario, however, turned sour and they were eventually separated-in-fact. Years
later, Atty. Adriano courted Valino, one of his clients, until they decided to live together as husband and wife. Despite
such arrangement, he continued to provide financial support to Rosario and their children (respondents).
In 1992, Atty. Adriano died of acute emphysema. At that time, Rosario was in the United States spending Christmas
with her children. As none of the family members was around, Valino took it upon herself to shoulder the funeral and
burial expenses for Atty. Adriano. When Rosario learned about the death of her husband, she immediately called
Valino and requested that she delay the interment for a few days but her request was not heeded. The remains of
Atty. Adriano were then interred at the mausoleum of the family of Valino at the Manila Memorial Park. Respondents
were not able to attend the interment.
Claiming that they were deprived of the chance to view the remains of Atty. Adriano before he was buried and that
his burial at the Manila Memorial Park was contrary to his wishes, respondents commenced suit against Valino
praying that they be indemnified for actual, moral and exemplary damages and attorney’s fees and that the remains
of Atty. Adriano be exhumed and transferred to the family plot at the Holy Cross Memorial Cemetery in Novaliches,
Quezon City.
In her defense, Valino countered that Rosario and Atty. Adriano had been separated for more than twenty (20) years
before he courted her. Valino claimed that throughout the time they were together, he had introduced her to his
friends and associates as his wife. Although they were living together, Valino admitted that he never forgot his
obligation to support the respondents. She contended that, unlike Rosario, she took good care of Atty. Adriano and
paid for all his medical expenses when he got seriously ill. She also claimed that despite knowing that Atty. Adriano
was in a coma and dying, Rosario still left for the United States. According to Valino, it was Atty. Adriano’s last wish
that his remains be interred in the Valino family mausoleum at the Manila Memorial Park.
Valino further claimed that she had suffered damages as result of the suit brought by respondents. Thus, she prayed
that she be awarded moral and exemplary damages and attorney’s fees.
The RTC dismissed the complaint of respondents for lack of merit as well as the counterclaim of Valino after it found
them to have not been sufficiently proven.
The RTC opined that because Valino lived with Atty. Adriano for a very long time, she knew very well that it was his
wish to be buried at the Manila Memorial Park. Taking into consideration the fact that Rosario left for the United
States at the time that he was fighting his illness, the trial court concluded that Rosario did not show love and care
for him. Considering also that it was Valino who performed all the duties and responsibilities of a wife, the RTC
wrote that it could be reasonably presumed that he wished to be buried in the Valino family mausoleum.4
In disposing of the case, the RTC noted that the exhumation and the transfer of the body of Atty. Adriano to the
Adriano family plot at the Holy Cross Memorial Cemetery in Novaliches, Quezon City, would not serve any useful
purpose and so he should be spared and respected.5 Decision of the CA
On appeal, the CA reversed and set aside the RTC decision and directed Valino to have the remains of Atty. Adriano
exhumed at the expense of respondents. It likewise directed respondents, at their expense, to transfer, transport
and inter the remains of the decedent in the family plot at the Holy Cross Memorial Park in Novaliches, Quezon City.
In reaching said determination, the CA explained that Rosario, being the legal wife, was entitled to the custody of
the remains of her deceased husband. Citing Article 305 of the New Civil Code in relation to Article 199 of the
Family Code, it was the considered view of the appellate court that the law gave the surviving spouse not only the
duty but also the right to make arrangements for the funeral of her husband. For the CA, Rosario was still entitled to
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such right on the ground of her subsisting marriage with Atty. Adriano at the time of the latter’s death,
notwithstanding their 30-year separation in fact.
Like the RTC, however, the CA did not award damages in favor of respondents due to the good intentions shown by
Valino in giving the deceased a decent burial when the wife and the family were in the United States. All other
claims for damages were similarly dismissed.
The lone legal issue in this petition is who between Rosario and Valino is entitled to the remains of Atty. Adriano.
Article 305 of the Civil Code, in relation to what is now Article 1996 of the Family Code, specifies the persons who
have the right and duty to make funeral arrangements for the deceased. Thus:
Art. 305. The duty and the right to make arrangements for the funeral of a relative shall be in accordance with the
order established for support, under Article 294. In case of descendants of the same degree, or of brothers and
sisters, the oldest shall be preferred. In case of ascendants, the paternal shall have a better right. [Emphases
supplied]
Art. 199. Whenever two or more persons are obliged to give support, the liability shall devolve upon the following
persons in the order herein provided:
[Emphasis supplied]
Art. 308. No human remains shall be retained, interred, disposed of or exhumed without the consent of the persons
mentioned in Articles 294 and 305. [Emphases supplied]
Section 1103. Persons charged with the duty of burial. – The immediate duty of burying the body of a deceased
person, regardless of the ultimate liability for the expense thereof, shall devolve upon the persons herein below
specified:
(a) If the deceased was a married man or woman, the duty of the burial shall devolve upon the surviving spouse if
he or she possesses sufficient means to pay the necessary expenses;
x x x x. [Emphases supplied]
From the aforecited provisions, it is undeniable that the law simply confines the right and duty to make funeral
arrangements to the members of the family to the exclusion of one’s common law partner. In Tomas Eugenio, Sr. v.
Velez,7 a petition for habeas corpus was filed by the brothers and sisters of the late Vitaliana Vargas against her
lover, Tomas Eugenio, Sr., alleging that the latter forcibly took her and confined her in his residence. It appearing
that she already died of heart failure due to toxemia of pregnancy, Tomas Eugenio, Sr. sought the dismissal of the
petition for lack of jurisdiction and claimed the right to bury the deceased, as the common-law husband.
In its decision, the Court resolved that the trial court continued to have jurisdiction over the case notwithstanding the
death of Vitaliana Vargas. As to the claim of Tomas Eugenio, Sr. that he should be considered a "spouse" having the
right and duty to make funeral arrangements for his common-law wife, the Court ruled:
x x x Indeed, Philippine Law does not recognize common law marriages. A man and woman not legally married who
cohabit for many years as husband and wife, who represent themselves to the public as husband and wife, and who
are reputed to be husband and wife in the community where they live may be considered legally married in common
law jurisdictions but not in the Philippines.
While it is true that our laws do not just brush aside the fact that such relationships are present in our society, and
that they produce a community of properties and interests which is governed by law, authority exists in case law to
the effect that such form of co-ownership requires that the man and woman living together must not in any way be
incapacitated to contract marriage. In any case, herein petitioner has a subsisting marriage with another woman, a
legal impediment which disqualified him from even legally marrying Vitaliana. In Santero vs. CFI of Cavite, the
Court, thru Mr. Justice Paras, interpreting Art. 188 of the Civil Code (Support of Surviving Spouse and Children
During Liquidation of Inventoried Property) stated: "Be it noted, however, that with respect to 'spouse,' the same
must be the legitimate 'spouse' (not common-law spouses)."
There is a view that under Article 332 of the Revised Penal Code, the term "spouse" embraces common law relation
for purposes of exemption from criminal liability in cases of theft, swindling and malicious mischief committed or
caused mutually by spouses. The Penal Code article, it is said, makes no distinction between a couple whose
cohabitation is sanctioned by a sacrament or legal tie and another who are husband and wife de facto. But this view
cannot even apply to the facts of the case at bar. We hold that the provisions of the Civil Code, unless expressly
providing to the contrary as in Article 144, when referring to a "spouse" contemplate a lawfully wedded spouse.
Petitioner vis-a-vis Vitaliana was not a lawfully-wedded spouse to her; in fact, he was not legally capacitated to
marry her in her lifetime.8 [Emphases supplied]
As applied to this case, it is clear that the law gives the right and duty to make funeral arrangements to Rosario, she
being the surviving legal wife of Atty. Adriano. The fact that she was living separately from her husband and was in
the United States when he died has no controlling significance. To say that Rosario had, in effect, waived or
renounced, expressly or impliedly, her right and duty to make arrangements for the funeral of her deceased husband
is baseless. The right and duty to make funeral arrangements, like any other right, will not be considered as having
been waived or renounced, except upon clear and satisfactory proof of conduct indicative of a free and voluntary
intent to that end.9 While there was disaffection between Atty. Adriano and Rosario and their children when he was
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still alive, the Court also recognizes that human compassion, more often than not, opens the door to mercy and
forgiveness once a family member joins his Creator. Notably, it is an undisputed fact that the respondents wasted no
time in making frantic pleas to Valino for the delay of the interment for a few days so they could attend the service
and view the remains of the deceased. As soon as they came to know about Atty. Adriano’s death in the morning of
December 19, 1992 (December 20, 1992 in the Philippines), the respondents immediately contacted Valino and the
Arlington Memorial Chapel to express their request, but to no avail.
Valino insists that the expressed wishes of the deceased should nevertheless prevail pursuant to Article 307 of the
Civil Code. Valino’s own testimony that it was Atty. Adriano’s wish to be buried in their family plot is being relied
upon heavily. It should be noted, however, that other than Valino’s claim that Atty. Adriano wished to be buried at the
Manila Memorial Park, no other evidence was presented to corroborate such claim. Considering that Rosario
equally claims that Atty. Adriano wished to be buried in the Adriano family plot in Novaliches, it becomes apparent
that the supposed burial wish of Atty. Adriano was unclear and undefinite. Considering this ambiguity as to the true
wishes of the deceased, it is the law that supplies the presumption as to his intent. No presumption can be said to
have been created in Valino’s favor, solely on account of a long-time relationship with Atty. Adriano.
Moreover, it cannot be surmised that just because Rosario was unavailable to bury her husband when she died, she
had already renounced her right to do so. Verily, in the same vein that the right and duty to make funeral
arrangements will not be considered as having been waived or renounced, the right to deprive a legitimate spouse
of her legal right to bury the remains of her deceased husband should not be readily presumed to have been
exercised, except upon clear and satisfactory proof of conduct indicative of a free and voluntary intent of the
deceased to that end. Should there be any doubt as to the true intent of the deceased, the law favors the legitimate
family. Here, Rosario’s keenness to exercise the rights and obligations accorded to the legal wife was even
bolstered by the fact that she was joined by the children in this case.
Even assuming, ex gratia argumenti, that Atty. Adriano truly wished to be buried in the Valino family plot at the
Manila Memorial Park, the result remains the same. Article 307 of the Civil Code provides:
Art. 307. The funeral shall be in accordance with the expressed wishes of the deceased. In the absence of such
expression, his religious beliefs or affiliation shall determine the funeral rites. In case of doubt, the form of the
funeral shall be decided upon by the person obliged to make arrangements for the same, after consulting the other
members of the family.
From its terms, it is apparent that Article 307 simply seeks to prescribe the "form of the funeral rites" that should
govern in the burial of the deceased. As thoroughly explained earlier, the right and duty to make funeral
arrangements reside in the persons specified in Article 305 in relation to Article 199 of the Family Code. Even if
Article 307 were to be interpreted to include the place of burial among those on which the wishes of the deceased
shall be followed, Dr. Arturo M. Tolentino (Dr. Tolentino), an eminent authority on civil law, commented that it is
generally recognized that any inferences as to the wishes of the deceased should be established by some form of
testamentary disposition.10 As Article 307 itself provides, the wishes of the deceased must be expressly provided. It
cannot be inferred lightly, such as from the circumstance that Atty. Adriano spent his last remaining days with Valino.
It bears stressing once more that other than Valino’s claim that Atty. Adriano wished to be buried at the Valino family
plot, no other evidence was presented to corroborate it.
At any rate, it should be remembered that the wishes of the decedent with respect to his funeral are not absolute. As
Dr. Tolentino further wrote:
The dispositions or wishes of the deceased in relation to his funeral, must not be contrary to law. They must not
violate the legal and reglamentary provisions concerning funerals and the disposition of the remains, whether as
regards the time and manner of disposition, or the place of burial, or the ceremony to be observed.11 [Emphases
supplied]
In this case, the wishes of the deceased with respect to his funeral are limited by Article 305 of the Civil Code in
relation to Article 199 of the Family Code, and subject the same to those charged with the right and duty to make the
proper arrangements to bury the remains of their loved-one. As aptly explained by the appellate court in its
disquisition:
The testimony of defendant-appellee Fe Floro Valino that it was the oral wish of Atty. Adriano Adriano that he be
interred at the Floro family’s mausoleum at the Manila Memorial Park, must bend to the provisions of the law. Even
assuming arguendo that it was the express wish of the deceased to be interred at the Manila Memorial Park, still,
the law grants the duty and the right to decide what to do with the remains to the wife, in this case, plaintiff-appellant
Rosario D. Adriano, as the surviving spouse, and not to defendant-appellee Fe Floro Valino, who is not even in the
list of those legally preferred, despite the fact that her intentions may have been very commendable. The law does
not even consider the emotional fact that husband and wife had, in this case at bench, been separated-in-fact and
had been living apart for more than 30 years.12
As for Valino’s contention that there is no point in exhuming and transferring the remains of Atty. Adriano, it should
be said that the burial of his remains in a place other than the Adriano family plot in Novaliches runs counter to the
wishes of his family. It does not only violate their right provided by law, but it also disrespects the family because the
remains of the patriarch are buried in the family plot of his live-in partner.
It is generally recognized that the corpse of an individual is outside the commerce of man. However, the law
recognizes that a certain right of possession over the corpse exists, for the purpose of a decent burial, and for the
exclusion of the intrusion by third persons who have no legitimate interest in it. This quasi-property right, arising out
of the duty of those obligated by law to bury their dead, also authorizes them to take possession of the dead body
for purposes of burial to have it remain in its final resting place, or to even transfer it to a proper place where the
memory of the dead may receive the respect of the living. This is a family right. There can be no doubt that persons
having this right may recover the corpse from third persons.13
All this notwithstanding, the Court finds laudable the acts of Valino in taking care of Atty. Adriano during his final
moments and giving him a proper burial. For her sacrifices, it would indeed be unkind to assess actual or moral
damages against her. As aptly explained by the CA:
The trial court found that there was good faith on the part of defendant-appellee Fe Floro Valino, who, having lived
with Atty. Adriano after he was separated in fact from his wife, lovingly and caringly took care of the well-being of
Atty. Adriano Adriano while he was alive and even took care of his remains when he had died.
On the issue of damages, plaintiffs-appellants are not entitled to actual damages. Defendant-appellee Fe Floro
Valino had all the good intentions in giving the remains of Atty. Adriano a decent burial when the wife and family
were all in the United States and could not attend to his burial. Actual damages are those awarded in satisfaction of,
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or in recompense for, loss or injury sustained. To be recoverable, they must not only be capable of proof but must
actually be proven with a reasonable degree of certainty. In this case at bench, there was no iota of evidence
presented to justify award of actual damages.
Plaintiffs-appellants are not also entitled to moral and exemplary damages. Moral damages may be recovered only
1âwphi1
if the plaintiff is able to satisfactorily prove the existence of the factual basis for the damages and its causal
connection with the acts complained of because moral damages although incapable of pecuniary estimation are
designed not to impose a penalty but to compensate for injury sustained and actual damages suffered. No injury
was caused to plaintiffs-appellants, nor was any intended by anyone in this case. Exemplary damages, on the other
hand, may only be awarded if claimant is able to establish his right to moral, temperate, liquidated or compensatory
damages. Unfortunately, neither of the requirements to sustain an award for either of these damages would appear
to have been adequately established by plaintiffs-appellants.
As regards the award of attorney's fees, it is an accepted doctrine that the award thereof as an item of damages is
the exception rather than the rule, and counsel's fees are not to be awarded every time a party wins a suit. The
power of the court to award attorney's fees under Article 2208 of the New Civil Code demands factual, legal and
equitable justification, without which the award is a conclusion without a premise, its basis being improperly left to
speculation and conjecture. In this case, we have searched but found nothing in plaintiffs-appellants' suit that
justifies the award of attorney's fees.14
Finally, it should be said that controversies as to who should make arrangements for the funeral of a deceased have
often aggravated the bereavement of the family and disturbed the proper solemnity which should prevail at every
funeral. It is for the purpose of preventing such controversies that the Code Commission saw it best to include the
provisions on "Funerals."15
SO ORDERED.
WE CONCUR:
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, I hereby certify that the conclusions in the above Decision
had been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court.
Footnotes
1
Rollo, pp. 36-46; Penned by Associate Justice Vicente Q. Roxas with Associate Justice Josefina Guevara-
Salonga, and Associate Justice Apolinario D. Bruselas, Jr., concurring.
2
Id. at 65.
3
Id. at 127-131.
4
Id. at 129-130.
5
Id. at 131.
6
Formerly Article 294a of the New Civil Code.
7
263 Phil. 1149 (1990).
8
Id. at 1158-1159.
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9
See Marawi Marantao General Hospital, Inc. v. CA, 402 Phil. 356, 369 (2001). See also Thomson v. CA, 358
Phil. 761, 778, (1998); Gatchalian v. Delim, G.R. No. 56487, October 21, 1991, 203 SCRA 126, 132; Yepes v.
Samar Express Transit, 123 Phil. 948, 949 (1966); Andres v. The Crown Life Insurance Co., 102 Phil. 919,
924(1958); Lang v. Acting Provincial Sheriff of Surigao, 93 Phil. 661, 669 (1953); and Fernandez v. Sebido, 70
Phil. 151, 159 (1940).
10
TOLENTINO, I CIVIL CODE OF THE PHILIPPINES, p. 657, citing Sheeban v. Commercial Travelers, 283
Mass. 543, 186 N.E. 627; Lindh v. Great Northern, 99 Minn. 408, 109 N.W. 823; Kyles v. Southern Ry Co.,
147 N.C. 394, 61 S.E. 278.
11
TOLENTINO, I CIVIL CODE OF THE PHILIPPINES, p. 657, citing Sacred Heart of Jesus v. Soklowski, 159
Minn. 331, 199 N.W. 81; Wilson v. Read, 74 N.H. 322, 68 Atl. 37; Pettigrew v. Pettigrew, 20 Pa. 313, 56 Atl.
878.
12
Rollo, p. 43.
13
TOLENTINO, I CIVIL CODE OF THE PHILIPPINES, p. 654, citing 1-I Enneccerus, Kipp & Wolff 548 fn; 1
Valverde 239-240 fn.
14
Id. at 43-45.
15
Report of the Code Commission, p. 49.
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