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PEOPLE
JARILLIO V. PEOPLE
DOCTRINE:
He who contracts a second marriage before the judicial declaration of nullity of the first
marriage assumes the risk of being prosecuted for bigamy.
FACTS:
On the same year, Emmanuel Uy (2nd husband) filed against the appellant a civil case for
annulment of marriage before the RTC. Parenthetically, Jarillo filed for declaration of
nullity of their marriage against Alocillo in 2000.
For her defense, petitioner insisted that (1) her marriage to Alocillo was null and void
because Alocillo was allegedly still married to a certain Loretta Tillman at the time of the
celebration of their marriage; (2) her marriages to both Alocillo and Uy were null and void
for lack of a valid marriage license; and (3) the action had prescribed, since Uy knew about
her marriage to Alocillo as far back as 1978. Notwithstanding her defenses, the RTC found
Jarillo guilty for the crime of bigamy in 2001 and was sentenced to suffer imprisonment of
six years to ten years of prision mayor.
On appeal to the CA, petitioner’s conviction was affirmed. It held that petitioner committed
bigamy when she contracted marriage with Emmanuel Santos Uy because, at that time, her
marriage to Rafael Alocillo had not yet been declared null and void by the court. This being
so, the presumption is, her previous marriage to Alocillo was still existing at the time of her
marriage to Uy. The CA also struck down, for lack of sufficient evidence, petitioner’s
lawtechworld.com/blog/blog/2013/07/case-digest-jarillio-v-people/ 1/5
8/27/2019 Case Digest: JARILLIO V. PEOPLE
contentions that her marriages were celebrated without a marriage license, and that Uy had
notice of her previous marriage as far back as 1978.
In the meantime, the RTC rendered a decision in 2003, declaring petitioner’s 1974 marriage
to Alocillo null and void ab initio on the ground of Alocillo’s psychological incapacity. Said
decision became final and executory. In her motion for reconsideration, petitioner invoked
said declaration of nullity as a ground for the reversal of her conviction.
ISSUE:
W/N CA committed a reversible error in affirming the conviction of Jarillo for the crime of
bigamy despite the supervening proof that her marriage to Alocillo had been declared void.
HELD:
No. Jarillo’s conviction of the crime of bigamy must be affirmed. The subsequent judicial
declaration of nullity of her marriage to Alocillo cannot be considered a valid defense in the
crime of bigamy. The moment petitioner contracted a second marriage without the previous
one having been judicially declared null and void, the crime of bigamy was already
consummated. Under the law, a marriage, even one which is void or voidable, shall be
deemed valid until declared otherwise in a judicial proceeding.
The outcome of the civil case for annulment of petitioner’s marriage to [private
complainant] had no bearing upon the determination of petitioner’s innocence or guilt in
the criminal case for bigamy, because all that is required for the charge of bigamy to prosper
is that the first marriage be subsisting at the time the second marriage is contracted.
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