Decriminalizing premature marriage
>> Sunday, April 19, 2015
BEHIND THE SCENES
Alfred P. Dizon
Here
is good news for widows wanting another lease in life with another man.
There
is now a law abolishing the Revised Penal Code provision that makes it illegal
for a woman to marry within certain conditions after the death of her husband
or annulment of marriage.
President
Benigno S. Aquino III signed on March 13 Republic Act No. 10655, An Act Repealing the
Crime of Premature Marriage under Article 351 of Act No. 3815 of the Revised
Penal Code (RPC).
Under
the RPC which was enacted in 1930, a woman who shall marry within 301 days from
the date of the death of her husband, or before child delivery if she is
pregnant at the time of his death shall be punished by imprisonment ranging
from one month and one day to six months and a fine not exceeding 500 pesos.
The
same criminal prohibitions apply in case of annulment or dissolution of her
previous marriage. There is no such criminal prohibition for husbands.
Philippine
Commission on Women executive director Emmeline L. Verzosa noted that the
reason for having the said provision in the penal code which is to prevent
doubtful paternity of a child is already addressed under the 1987 Family Code
of the Philippines (FCP). Article 168 of the FCP provides for the rule to
determine paternity and filiation of a child born by a woman who contracted
another marriage within 300 days from the termination of the previous marriage.
Articles
170 and 171 provide remedies by which the legitimacy of a child born under such
circumstances may be questioned, while Articles 103 and 130 address concerns
about property relations. Moreover, advances in science and technology like DNA
testing to determine paternity is now available.
“We
welcome this development! The old law curtails a woman’s right to marry and
bars her enjoyment of equal rights with men on matters relating to marriage and
family relations. As signatory to the United Nations Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW), the
Philippine government is obliged to review laws and repeal provisions that
continue to discriminate against women,” Verzosa said.
She
added that this is a step further in implementing the Magna Carta of Women. Its
Implementing Rules and Regulations (IRR) list some of the old laws that need to
be revised or repealed such as other provisions of the RPC on adultery and
concubinage, prostitution, and death under exceptional circumstances.
The
list, which is part of the PCW’s priority legislative agenda, also includes
amendments to the Family Code provisions that say husband’s or father’s
decision must prevail on matters regarding administration and enjoyment of
properties and exercise of parental authority, among others.
Bills
addressing the aforementioned provisions are now pending in Congress.
Meanwhile,
even as divorce proponents in the country are pressing for this, some are
proposing that marriage should be contractual – say five or 10 years, or even
three years before it is automatically voided unless renewed by spouses.
Proponents
of separation say there are a lot of marriages which are indeed doomed and
there is need for spouses to be separated like in cases wherein there is
habitual infidelity, cruelty or among others like when a spouse always fools
the other on material or money matters
and habitually (that word again) lies through the teeth but that is another
issue for another column.
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