In the light of Article 40 of the Family Code, respondent, without first
having obtained the judicial declaration of nullity of the first
marriage, can not be said to have validly entered into the second
marriage. Per current jurisprudence, a marriage though void still needs a
judicial declaration of such fact before any party can marry again;
otherwise the second marriage will also be void.19
The reason is that, without a judicial declaration of its nullity, the
first marriage is presumed to be subsisting. In the case at bar,
respondent was for all legal intents and purposes regarded as a married
man at the time he contracted his second marriage with petitioner.20
Against this legal backdrop, any decision in the civil action for
nullity would not erase the fact that respondent entered into a second
marriage during the subsistence of a first marriage. Thus, a decision in
the civil case is not essential to the determination of the criminal
charge. It is, therefore, not a prejudicial question. As stated above,
respondent cannot be permitted to use his own malfeasance to defeat the
criminal action against him.
IMELDA MARBELLA-BOBIS, petitioner,
vs.
ISAGANI D. BOBIS, respondent.
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