16 Cabrera Vs Agustin
16 Cabrera Vs Agustin
16 Cabrera Vs Agustin
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Philippine Supreme Court Jurisprudence > Year 1959 > September 1959 Decisions > Adm. Case No. 225
September 30, 1959 - ANITA CABRERA v. FRANCISCO G. AGUSTIN
106 Phil 256:
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EN BANC
[Adm. Case No. 225. September 30, 1959.]
ANITA CABRERA, Petitioner, v. FRANCISCO AGUSTIN Y GARCIA, Respondent.
Bienvenido A. Tan, Jr. for Petitioner.
Francisco Agustin y Garcia in his own behalf.
Solicitor General Ambrosio Padilla and Solicitor Federico V. Sian for the Government.
SYLLABUS
DECISION
PADILLA, J.:
This is a complaint filed by Anita Cabrera charging Francisco Agustin y Garcia, a member of the bar, with
immorality.
Sometime in April 1953 the respondent courted the complainant and proposed marriage. In July 1954
she accepted his proposal. On 27 November 1954 the affianced couple proceeded to Pasay City to obtain
their respective residence certificates and thereafter repaired to the Office of the Local Civil Registrar at
the City Hall of Manila to apply for a marriage license and in the room of Mr. Leoncio V. Aglubat both
signed two sheets of paper (Exhibits A and B). Mr. Aglubat asked them whether they were willing to
marry each other and in answer they said they were. From the room of Mr. Aglubat they entered
another room and there a lady doctor took blood from them. After coming from the lady doctors room,
the respondent told the complainant that as they were already married they would go to Grace Park and
call on his uncle to introduce her to him. He called a taxi to go there. In Grace Park they went to a
house which she later on learned was the Venus Hotel. After the respondent had signed a book, he and
the complainant went inside a room the door of which he closed. The respondent asked the complainant
to have sexual intercourse with him for they were already married. Because of his insistence and
assurance that they were already married, she gave in to his desire. From then on they continued to
have sexual intercourse in the same place once a month for three consecutive months and in another
hotel near the Espiritu Santo Church. Three days after the first contact, the respondent showed to her
the report of her blood test and drew her attention to the fact that after the printed word "occupation"
the handwritten word "bride" appears, which shows, according to him, that they were already married
(Exhibit C). Sometime in January 1955 she asked the respondent why despite their marriage they had
not yet lived as husband and wife. The respondent excused himself by saying that he was still waiting
for the release of the result of the bar examinations. After he passed the bar examinations, the
respondent gave her his diploma issued by the Clerk of the Supreme Court (Exhibit D) to show his
affection to her. She then told him to settle down and he agreed to talk to her parents. Sometime in
March he spoke to her father and the latter told him that as they were Catholics it would be better for
them to be married in the Catholic Church. He agreed. On 26 April 1955 both went to the Office of the
Local Civil Registrar at the City Hall in Manila to get the marriage license which they had applied for
previously (Exhibit E). The respondent handed to the complainant the original copies of their
applications for marriage license (Exhibits A & B); the marriage license (Exhibit E); a copy of the notice
of publication of their applications for marriage license (Exhibit E-1); and the official receipt for the
marriage license fee of P2.00 paid by the respondent (Exhibit E-2), with instructions to bring them to
the Espiritu Santo Church after two weeks. On 2 May 1955 they went to the Espiritu Santo Church to
make arrangement for their wedding, where the respondent filled out the blanks in a mimeographed
questionnaire (Exhibit F), and set the date of the wedding on 15 May 1955, for which the fee charged
was P22 (Exhibit G.) However, before the date set, the complainant received a letter from the
respondent withdrawing from their agreement to marry. She showed to her father the documents in her
possession and he found out that they had not been married civilly. She confessed to him that she was
on the family way. On 4 August 1955 she delivered at the Saint Marys Hospital a baby girl whom she
named Delia Agustin (Exhibit H). On 9 June 1955 the respondent married Asuncion Talan.
The respondent admits his relationship with the complainant and acknowledges the child Delia Agustin
as his own. His defense in breaching his promise to marry the complainant was that her family insisted
on a pompous wedding, the expenses of which he had to defray; and that he noticed she was mentally
deranged because she often smiled for no cause at all. He denies that he deceived her into believing
that they had been married civilly to satisfy his carnal desire and insist that she submitted to his desire
voluntarily.
The respondents defense cannot be believed. If it were true that the complainants family was insisting
on a pompous wedding, then why should she choose a wedding at the Espiritu Santo Church for which
the fee was P22? Moreover, the complainant knew that she was on the family way and any undue
demand for a pompous wedding would thwart their plans. For that reason, she would be the first to
oppose such a demand and prevail upon her family not to insist on it. Likewise, the respondents claim
that when the complainants family insisted on a pompous wedding he suggested to her to elope cannot
be true. In the condition the complainant found herself she would jump at the idea and grab the
opportunity to save her from embarrassment.
The respondents suspicion that the complainant was mentally deranged cannot withstand scrutiny,
because if it were true that he suspected her to be so, why did he persist on having sexual intercourse
with her? The truth is that all along he never intended to redeem the complainants honor. He had
inveigled her into believing that they had been married civilly to satisfy his carnal desire. He himself
admits that what prompted him to offer and propose marriage to her was to satisfy such desire. On the
other hand, the complainant has not gone far in educational attainment, having reached the first year of
high school only, and does not have the slightest idea of a legal and valid marriage. Thus she fell an
easy prey of a man like the respondent, a lawyer who knows the intricacies of the law and the way to
extricate himself from the mess that he has brought about.
September-1959 Jurisprudence
G.R. No. L-12826 September 10, 1959 - LUCINA
EVANGELISTA v. PEDRO DEUDOR
106 Phil 170
G.R. No. L-11923 September 18, 1959 - PEOPLE OF
THE PHIL. v. LEONARDO BARROSO
The respondent has not maintained the highest degree of morality and integrity, which at all times is
expected of, and must be possessed by, members of the bar.1 He is, therefore, disbarred from the
practice of law and his name in the roll of attorneys stricken out.
Paras, C.J., Bengzon, Montemayor, Bautista Angelo, Labrador, Concepcion, Endencia, Barrera and
Gutirrez David, JJ., concur.
Endnotes:
1. In re Pelaez, 44 Phil., 567; Balinon v. De Leon, 94 Phil., 277; 50 Off. Gaz., 583.
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