MANILA, March 23, 2011―The number of annulment of marriages in the Philippines rose by more than 40% over the past ten years, according to the Office of the Solicitor General. From 2001, the country had 4,520 cases and 8,282 in 2010. This brings a daily average of at least 22 cases filed every day.
Common grounds for legal separation or declaration of nullity is psychological incapacity, according to a document sent to CBCPNews, signed by Solicitor General Jose Anselmo I. Cadiz, the Assistant Solicitor General Karl B. Miranda and one Attorney Christer James Ray A. Gudiano,
Psychological incapacity can be found in Article 36 of the Family Code and can be cited as a ground for legal separation or nullity of marriage.
Other grounds include lack of authority of the solemnizing officer, bigamous or polygamous marriages and marriages where one or both parties were below the marrying age allowed by law.
It was learned that those who filed for annulment, 61% of the petitioners were women with 90% have filed cases in their twenties, while only 4% filed in their thirties.
The same study revealed only 39% of men initiated the filing of the complaint with 70% of them in their twenties. It was also found that 25% of men in their 30’s or 40’s filed for annulment. The number of cases filed was lesser for both genders who are in their 40’s or 50’s.
Some 35% of married couples filed their annulment case within the first five years of their marriage. The OSG report said marriages that lasted for five years or more, only 26% ended in an annulment suit while marriages that lasted for more than ten years, only 17% opted to have their union annulled.
“The study noted the longer the parties are married, the lesser chances of them seeking annulment of their marriage,” the OSG document surmised.
Acknowledging the sad part in the surge of annulment cases, as usual, is that more and more children are affected. The data from the OSG showed 82% of those who filed these cases have children and out of this 82% who filed these cases, 59% have at least one or two children, 22% have three to four children and 1% has five to six children.
“The children of these marriages are likely to be affected by the separation of their parents,” the same study revealed.
Meanwhile, Archbishop Emeritus Oscar V. Cruz, head of the CBCP National Matrimonial Tribunal said, the Office of the Solicitor General at times “talked of ‘annulment’ and ‘nullity’ as if said actions on de facto marriages were somehow the same.”
He explained nullity is about ab initio void marriages while annulment is regarding ab initio valid but invalidated marriages.