Marriage in the Philippines is not treated merely as a private romantic arrangement. It is a legal institution governed by the Family Code of the Philippines, protected by public policy, and accompanied by mutual rights and obligations between spouses. Among these obligations are fidelity, mutual respect, support, cohabitation, and assistance.
When a spouse engages in an extramarital sexual relationship, the legal consequences may extend beyond emotional betrayal. Depending on the circumstances, the conduct may give rise to criminal liability, civil consequences, family law remedies, property disputes, custody issues, and possible effects on inheritance, support, and marital relations.
Two criminal offenses are historically associated with marital infidelity in the Philippines: adultery and concubinage. These are punishable under the Revised Penal Code, but they are not identical. Philippine law treats them differently depending on whether the offending spouse is the wife or the husband, and the elements, penalties, and required proof are not the same.
This distinction has long been criticized for reflecting gendered assumptions embedded in older criminal law. Nevertheless, unless amended or invalidated, the provisions remain part of Philippine penal law.
II. Legal Framework
The principal laws relevant to adultery, concubinage, and marital rights in the Philippines include:
The Revised Penal Code
- Article 333: Adultery
- Article 334: Concubinage
- Article 344: Prosecution of adultery and concubinage
The Family Code of the Philippines
- Marriage obligations
- Property relations
- Legal separation
- Support
- Custody
- Parental authority
The Civil Code
- Damages
- Human relations provisions
- Civil liability arising from wrongful acts
Rules of Court
- Criminal procedure
- Evidence
- Provisional remedies
- Family court procedure
Special laws
- Anti-Violence Against Women and Their Children Act, where applicable
- Family Courts Act
- Rules on custody and protection orders
III. Marriage and Marital Rights in Philippine Law
Marriage gives rise to a set of reciprocal rights and duties. Under Philippine family law, spouses are expected to:
- live together;
- observe mutual love, respect, and fidelity;
- render mutual help and support;
- manage the family together;
- contribute to family expenses according to their means;
- respect each other’s dignity and rights;
- jointly exercise parental authority over their children.
Fidelity is not merely a moral expectation. It is part of the legal content of marriage. A breach of marital fidelity may therefore have consequences in criminal law, family law, property law, and civil liability.
However, Philippine law does not provide absolute ownership by one spouse over the other. Marital rights are not rights of possession or control over a spouse’s body, movement, employment, friendships, or personal autonomy. Marriage creates duties, but it does not extinguish constitutional and personal rights.
IV. Adultery
A. Definition
Adultery is committed by a married woman who has sexual intercourse with a man who is not her husband, and by the man who has carnal knowledge of her, knowing that she is married.
The crime is governed by Article 333 of the Revised Penal Code.
B. Elements of Adultery
The elements are:
- The woman is married.
- She has sexual intercourse with a man who is not her husband.
- The man knows that she is married.
Each act of sexual intercourse may constitute a separate offense.
C. Who may be charged
Both the married woman and her male partner may be charged.
The male partner is criminally liable only if he knew that the woman was married. If he genuinely did not know that she was married, that lack of knowledge may be a defense.
D. The husband’s conduct is not an element
For adultery, it is not required that the wife and her paramour live together. It is also not required that the affair be public, scandalous, or repeated. A single act of sexual intercourse can be enough, provided it is proven beyond reasonable doubt.
E. Penalty
Adultery is punishable by prisión correccional in its medium and maximum periods.
In simplified terms, this is imprisonment within the correctional range. The exact penalty depends on the rules on duration, modifying circumstances, and the Indeterminate Sentence Law where applicable.
F. Nature of proof
Direct evidence of sexual intercourse is rare. Courts may consider circumstantial evidence, but it must be strong enough to prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
Possible evidence may include:
- eyewitness testimony;
- hotel records;
- messages or communications;
- photographs or videos;
- admissions;
- birth of a child under circumstances showing non-paternity of the husband;
- opportunity and conduct strongly indicating sexual relations.
Mere suspicion, jealousy, rumors, or friendly association is insufficient.
G. Defenses
Common defenses include:
No marriage existed
- If the woman was not legally married at the time, adultery cannot be committed.
No sexual intercourse occurred
- Emotional intimacy, dating, flirting, or messaging is not adultery unless sexual intercourse is proven.
The male partner did not know she was married
- This defense applies to the man, not to the married woman.
Condonation, consent, or pardon
- These may bar prosecution under Article 344.
Invalid complaint
- Adultery cannot be prosecuted unless the offended spouse files the proper complaint and includes both guilty parties, if both are alive.
Insufficient evidence
- Criminal conviction requires proof beyond reasonable doubt.
V. Concubinage
A. Definition
Concubinage is committed by a married man under Article 334 of the Revised Penal Code when he does any of the acts punished by law in relation to a woman who is not his wife.
B. Elements of Concubinage
The elements are:
The man is married.
He commits any of the following acts:
- keeps a mistress in the conjugal dwelling;
- has sexual intercourse under scandalous circumstances with a woman who is not his wife;
- cohabits with her in any other place.
The woman knows that the man is married.
C. Three ways concubinage may be committed
1. Keeping a mistress in the conjugal dwelling
This occurs when the husband maintains his mistress in the home where he and his wife live or are supposed to live as spouses.
The term “conjugal dwelling” generally refers to the family home or residence of the married couple. Bringing a mistress into that home is treated as especially offensive to the dignity of the wife and the marriage.
2. Sexual intercourse under scandalous circumstances
This requires more than merely proving sexual intercourse. The circumstances must be scandalous.
“Scandalous circumstances” may involve public notoriety, offensive display, or conduct that causes public outrage or humiliation. The law does not punish every private sexual act of a married man as concubinage. The sexual intercourse must be accompanied by circumstances that make it scandalous.
3. Cohabiting with a mistress in any other place
Cohabitation implies more than occasional meetings. It suggests living together as though husband and wife, or maintaining a common household or arrangement resembling marital life.
D. Who may be charged
The married husband may be charged with concubinage. The mistress may also be charged if she knew that the man was married.
E. Penalty
The husband is punishable by prisión correccional in its minimum and medium periods.
The concubine is punishable by destierro, which is not ordinary imprisonment. Destierro generally involves banishment from a specified place or places within the radius fixed by the court.
F. Proof required
Concubinage is often more difficult to prove than adultery because the prosecution must establish not only sexual infidelity but one of the specific statutory circumstances.
Evidence may include:
- proof of cohabitation;
- lease contracts or property records;
- witnesses showing that the man and woman lived together;
- photographs, messages, or admissions;
- proof that the mistress stayed in the conjugal dwelling;
- public acts showing scandalous sexual relations;
- documents showing a shared household or domestic arrangement.
Mere proof that a married man had sexual relations with another woman may not be enough unless it falls within Article 334.
G. Defenses
Common defenses include:
No valid marriage
- Concubinage requires that the accused man be legally married.
No cohabitation
- Occasional visits or meetings may not amount to cohabitation.
No scandalous circumstances
- Private sexual intercourse, without more, may not satisfy the statutory requirement.
The woman did not know he was married
- This may be a defense for the alleged concubine.
Pardon, consent, or condonation
- These may bar prosecution.
Failure to comply with Article 344
- The offended wife must file the complaint and must include both guilty parties if both are alive.
VI. Difference Between Adultery and Concubinage
Adultery and concubinage are often discussed together, but they are materially different.
| Point | Adultery | Concubinage |
|---|---|---|
| Offending spouse | Married wife | Married husband |
| Third party | Man who knows she is married | Woman who knows he is married |
| Main act | Sexual intercourse with another man | Keeping mistress in conjugal dwelling, scandalous intercourse, or cohabitation |
| Single sexual act enough? | Yes, if proven | Not necessarily |
| Need for scandal or cohabitation? | No | Usually yes, except mistress in conjugal dwelling |
| Penalty for married spouse | Prisión correccional medium and maximum | Prisión correccional minimum and medium |
| Penalty for third party | Same as married woman | Destierro |
| Perceived burden of proof | Often easier once intercourse is shown | Often harder because statutory circumstances must be shown |
The law is asymmetrical. A married woman may be criminally liable for a single act of sexual intercourse. A married man is not automatically guilty of concubinage merely because he had sex with another woman; the prosecution must prove one of the specific acts under Article 334.
VII. Who May File the Criminal Complaint
Adultery and concubinage are considered private crimes under the Revised Penal Code, although they are still public offenses once properly prosecuted.
Under Article 344:
- Adultery cannot be prosecuted except upon complaint filed by the offended husband.
- Concubinage cannot be prosecuted except upon complaint filed by the offended wife.
The complaint must generally include both guilty parties if both are alive.
For adultery, the offended husband must charge both the wife and her paramour.
For concubinage, the offended wife must charge both the husband and the concubine.
The offended spouse cannot selectively prosecute only one party when both are available and alive. This rule is meant to prevent the use of criminal prosecution as a tool for private revenge against only one of the participants.
VIII. Pardon, Consent, and Condonation
A. Effect of pardon
The offended spouse’s pardon may bar prosecution.
For pardon to be legally effective, it must generally be given before the filing of the criminal action and must extend to both offenders. A spouse cannot usually pardon one guilty party and prosecute the other.
B. Express and implied pardon
Pardon may be express or implied.
An express pardon may be shown through clear statements or conduct forgiving the offense.
An implied pardon may arise from acts inconsistent with the intention to prosecute, such as voluntarily resuming marital relations with full knowledge of the offense.
C. Consent
Consent is different from pardon.
Consent exists where the offended spouse agreed to or tolerated the extramarital relationship before or during its commission. If the offended spouse consented to the conduct, prosecution may be barred.
D. Condonation
Condonation generally means forgiveness of the marital offense, often inferred from continued cohabitation or marital relations after knowledge of the infidelity.
However, the facts matter. A spouse’s temporary decision to remain in the home, especially for children, financial necessity, fear, or lack of alternatives, should not automatically be treated as full legal forgiveness. Courts examine intent, knowledge, and circumstances.
IX. Prescription of the Offense
Criminal offenses must be prosecuted within the period allowed by law. Adultery and concubinage are subject to prescriptive periods under Philippine criminal law.
The computation of prescription can be technical. It may depend on when the offense was discovered, when the complaint was filed, whether proceedings interrupted the period, and whether each act is considered separately.
Because adultery may involve separate criminal liability for each act of intercourse, prescription may be considered act by act. For concubinage, the nature of the continuing conduct may affect analysis.
X. Relationship to Legal Separation
A. Sexual infidelity as ground for legal separation
Under the Family Code, sexual infidelity may be a ground for legal separation.
Legal separation does not dissolve the marriage bond. The spouses remain married and cannot remarry. However, it allows them to live separately and may have consequences on property relations, custody, support, and inheritance rights.
B. Grounds related to infidelity
Sexual infidelity or perversion is among the grounds for legal separation. Acts of marital betrayal may also overlap with other grounds, such as repeated physical violence, moral pressure, abandonment, or attempt to corrupt a child, depending on the facts.
C. Prescriptive period for legal separation
An action for legal separation must be filed within the period provided by law from the occurrence of the cause. Failure to file within the statutory period may bar the action.
D. Cooling-off period
Legal separation cases are subject to a mandatory cooling-off period, except in situations involving violence or other urgent circumstances where protective measures may be needed.
E. Reconciliation
Reconciliation between spouses may terminate legal separation proceedings or affect a decree already issued, depending on the stage of the case.
F. Effects of legal separation
A decree of legal separation may result in:
- separation of spouses from bed and board;
- dissolution and liquidation of property relations;
- forfeiture of certain shares of the offending spouse in favor of the innocent spouse or children;
- custody determinations;
- support orders;
- disqualification of the offending spouse from inheriting from the innocent spouse by intestate succession;
- revocation of provisions in a will in favor of the offending spouse, by operation of law in appropriate cases.
XI. Relationship to Annulment, Declaration of Nullity, and Divorce
A. Adultery or concubinage does not automatically void a marriage
Infidelity by itself does not make a marriage void.
A spouse cannot obtain a declaration of nullity simply by proving that the other spouse committed adultery or concubinage.
B. Psychological incapacity
In some cases, repeated infidelity may be alleged as evidence of psychological incapacity under Article 36 of the Family Code. However, infidelity alone is not automatically psychological incapacity. The court must find that the incapacity is grave, juridically antecedent, and incurable or sufficiently enduring in the legal sense.
C. Annulment
Annulment applies to voidable marriages based on specific grounds existing at or near the time of marriage, such as lack of parental consent where required, insanity, fraud, force, impotence, or serious sexually transmissible disease under legal conditions. Later adultery is not, by itself, a ground for annulment.
D. Divorce
For most Filipino citizens, absolute divorce is generally not available under current Philippine family law, except in specific contexts involving Muslim Filipinos under the Code of Muslim Personal Laws or where a valid foreign divorce is obtained by an alien spouse and recognized under Philippine law.
Adultery or concubinage may be relevant in divorce systems applicable to certain persons, but for most civil marriages between Filipinos, the main remedies are legal separation, declaration of nullity, annulment where grounds exist, criminal complaint, civil action for damages, support, custody, and property remedies.
XII. Marital Rights Affected by Adultery or Concubinage
A. Right to fidelity
The most directly affected marital right is the right to fidelity. Each spouse has a legal and moral obligation to remain faithful to the other.
B. Right to consortium
Consortium refers broadly to the companionship, society, affection, assistance, and marital partnership expected between spouses. Infidelity may damage this marital interest.
C. Right to support
A spouse is generally entitled to support from the other according to law. However, disputes involving infidelity, separation, and fault may affect support arrangements depending on the proceeding and the facts.
A guilty spouse is not automatically deprived of all support in every situation, especially while the marriage subsists. Courts consider the applicable law, the status of proceedings, the needs of the claimant, and the means of the obligor.
D. Right to cohabitation
Spouses generally have a duty to live together. However, a spouse may have just cause to live separately, especially where there is infidelity, violence, abuse, humiliation, or danger.
The law does not force physical cohabitation in a way that violates dignity, safety, or personal liberty.
E. Right to manage property
Infidelity may lead to disputes over conjugal or community property, especially if marital funds were used to support a mistress, paramour, illegitimate child, second household, travel, gifts, or property purchases.
The innocent spouse may seek accounting, liquidation, recovery, or protection of family assets through appropriate legal actions.
F. Right to custody and parental authority
Adultery or concubinage does not automatically make a parent unfit. Custody is determined primarily according to the best interests of the child.
However, infidelity may become relevant if it affects:
- the child’s welfare;
- the child’s emotional environment;
- exposure to scandal or instability;
- neglect;
- abandonment;
- misuse of family resources;
- violence or abuse;
- moral fitness in a legally relevant way.
G. Right to dignity and respect
Public humiliation, emotional abuse, abandonment, or open maintenance of a mistress or paramour may affect the innocent spouse’s dignity. Depending on the circumstances, these acts may support claims for damages, protection, legal separation, or other remedies.
XIII. Property Consequences
A. Property regime matters
The consequences of adultery or concubinage often depend on the spouses’ property regime:
- Absolute Community of Property
- Conjugal Partnership of Gains
- Complete Separation of Property
- Regime under marriage settlements
- Special rules for marriages celebrated before the Family Code
The applicable regime determines ownership, administration, liability, and liquidation.
B. Use of marital funds for an affair
A common issue is whether one spouse used community or conjugal funds for:
- hotel stays;
- rent for a mistress or paramour;
- gifts;
- vehicles;
- business capital;
- tuition;
- travel;
- medical expenses;
- jewelry;
- real property;
- support of children outside the marriage.
The innocent spouse may seek remedies if marital assets were diverted or dissipated.
C. Donations to a mistress or paramour
The Family Code and Civil Code contain restrictions on donations between persons guilty of adultery or concubinage at the time of the donation. Donations made in violation of law may be void or subject to challenge.
A spouse may question transfers intended to defraud the conjugal partnership, absolute community, compulsory heirs, or creditors.
D. Property bought in the name of the third party
If property was purchased using marital funds but placed in the name of a mistress, paramour, relative, dummy, or corporation, the innocent spouse may attempt to prove beneficial ownership or fraudulent transfer.
Evidence may include:
- bank records;
- purchase documents;
- messages;
- admissions;
- source of funds;
- possession and control;
- timing of acquisition;
- income capacity of the named buyer.
E. Liquidation after legal separation
If legal separation is decreed, the property regime is dissolved and liquidated. The offending spouse may suffer forfeiture of certain benefits or shares as provided by law.
XIV. Civil Liability and Damages
A. Civil damages against the offending spouse
An innocent spouse may claim damages where the conduct caused injury recognized by law. Possible bases include provisions on human relations, abuse of rights, emotional suffering, humiliation, and civil liability arising from criminal conduct.
Damages may include:
- moral damages;
- exemplary damages;
- actual damages;
- attorney’s fees, where justified.
B. Civil damages against the third party
A third party who knowingly interferes with a marriage may be held civilly liable in proper cases. Philippine jurisprudence recognizes that a spouse may recover damages from a person who alienates the affection of the other spouse or acts in a manner that violates the rights and dignity of the marital relationship.
However, liability is not automatic. The claimant must prove wrongful conduct, injury, and causal connection.
C. Proof of damage
Evidence may include:
- public humiliation;
- emotional distress;
- medical or psychological treatment;
- reputational harm;
- abandonment;
- financial loss;
- social scandal;
- messages or admissions;
- testimony of family members or witnesses.
D. Independent civil action
Depending on the legal theory, a civil action may proceed separately from a criminal action. However, procedural rules on reservation of civil action, implied institution of civil action with the criminal case, and related doctrines must be considered.
XV. Criminal Procedure
A. Complaint requirement
The prosecutor cannot proceed with adultery or concubinage unless the offended spouse files the required complaint.
The complaint must be initiated by the offended spouse, not merely by parents, siblings, children, neighbors, or police officers.
B. Inclusion of both parties
The complaint must include both guilty parties if both are alive.
For adultery, the husband must charge both the wife and the alleged paramour.
For concubinage, the wife must charge both the husband and the alleged concubine.
C. Effect of death
If one of the guilty parties is dead, the complaint may proceed against the surviving party, subject to the rules and facts.
If the offended spouse dies before filing, the right to initiate the complaint generally cannot be exercised by heirs, because the law gives the right to the offended spouse.
D. Venue
Venue generally lies where the offense or any essential element occurred. For crimes involving sexual conduct or cohabitation, determining venue may depend on where the act was committed, where cohabitation occurred, or where the relevant statutory circumstance took place.
E. Preliminary investigation
Depending on the penalty and procedural rules, the complaint may undergo preliminary investigation before the prosecutor. The respondent may submit a counter-affidavit and evidence.
F. Arraignment and trial
If the prosecutor finds probable cause and the case proceeds to court, the accused will be arraigned, enter a plea, and undergo trial. The prosecution must prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
G. Settlement
Because adultery and concubinage involve private complainants and marital disputes, parties sometimes attempt settlement. However, once a criminal case is filed, the public prosecutor and the court are involved. Settlement does not automatically erase criminal liability unless the law recognizes the effect of pardon, reconciliation, or other legally relevant acts.
XVI. Evidence in Adultery and Concubinage Cases
A. Standard of proof
The standard is proof beyond reasonable doubt.
This is higher than the standard in civil cases or administrative matters. The court must be morally certain of guilt.
B. Direct evidence
Direct evidence may include:
- testimony of a person who witnessed sexual intercourse or cohabitation;
- admissions by the accused;
- explicit recordings lawfully obtained;
- documentary admissions;
- birth records combined with proof of non-access or impossibility of paternity.
C. Circumstantial evidence
Circumstantial evidence may be sufficient if the circumstances form an unbroken chain leading to a conclusion of guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
Examples may include:
- the accused checked into a hotel together;
- they occupied one room overnight;
- they represented themselves as spouses;
- they lived in the same residence;
- neighbors knew them as a couple;
- they shared household expenses;
- they had a child together;
- messages refer to sexual relations;
- the accused admitted the relationship.
D. Electronic evidence
Text messages, emails, social media posts, chat screenshots, GPS data, digital photos, videos, and call logs may be relevant.
However, admissibility may depend on authentication, legality of acquisition, integrity of records, and compliance with the Rules on Electronic Evidence.
E. Privacy and illegal surveillance
A spouse gathering evidence must avoid illegal methods. Secret recordings, hacking, unauthorized access to accounts, installing spyware, or intercepting communications may create separate criminal, civil, or evidentiary problems.
Evidence obtained unlawfully may be excluded or may expose the gatherer to liability.
F. Private investigators
Private investigators may be used, but their methods must remain lawful. Trespass, harassment, unlawful surveillance, and unauthorized recording may weaken the case or create liability.
XVII. Rights of the Accused
A person accused of adultery or concubinage has constitutional and procedural rights, including:
- presumption of innocence;
- right to counsel;
- right to due process;
- right to remain silent;
- right against self-incrimination;
- right to confront witnesses;
- right to present evidence;
- right to bail where allowed;
- right to speedy trial;
- right to appeal.
Moral outrage does not replace proof. Even where infidelity is suspected, criminal conviction requires legally admissible evidence establishing every element of the offense beyond reasonable doubt.
XVIII. Children and Legitimacy
A. Legitimacy of children born during marriage
Children conceived or born during a valid marriage are generally presumed legitimate, subject to rules on impugning legitimacy.
This presumption is strong and cannot be casually overturned by suspicion of adultery.
B. Impugning legitimacy
The husband, or in certain cases his heirs, may challenge the legitimacy of a child only under the grounds and periods allowed by law.
DNA evidence may be relevant, but the action must comply with strict legal requirements.
C. Illegitimate children
A child born outside a valid marriage may be considered illegitimate, subject to rules on recognition, filiation, support, surname, and inheritance.
The rights of children are not erased by the misconduct of their parents. Children remain entitled to support and legal protection.
D. Support of children from an affair
A biological parent may be required to support a child born from an extramarital relationship. This obligation may create financial tension with the legitimate family, but support rights of children are recognized by law.
XIX. Effect on Inheritance
A. Legal separation and inheritance
An offending spouse in a legal separation case may be disqualified from inheriting from the innocent spouse by intestate succession, subject to legal requirements.
Benefits in a will in favor of the offending spouse may also be revoked by operation of law in proper cases.
B. Adultery or concubinage alone
Mere commission of adultery or concubinage does not automatically dissolve inheritance rights unless there is a legal basis such as legal separation, disinheritance, unworthiness, or other applicable rules.
C. Disinheritance
A spouse may be disinherited only for causes authorized by law and through a valid will. Serious marital offenses may be relevant if they fall within legally recognized grounds.
D. Illegitimate children
Illegitimate children have inheritance rights from their parents, although their shares differ from those of legitimate children. Their rights are independent of the moral judgment attached to the parents’ relationship.
XX. Relationship to Violence Against Women and Their Children
Infidelity may sometimes overlap with psychological abuse, economic abuse, or emotional violence under laws protecting women and children.
For example, a husband’s open and humiliating extramarital relationship, abandonment, deprivation of financial support, or acts causing mental or emotional anguish may be alleged under protective laws depending on the facts.
However, not every act of infidelity automatically constitutes violence under special law. The specific elements of the special offense or remedy must be proven.
Available remedies may include:
- protection orders;
- support orders;
- custody-related relief;
- criminal complaint under special law where elements exist;
- civil damages;
- exclusion from residence in appropriate cases.
XXI. Marital Rights and Limitations
A. The innocent spouse has rights, but not unlimited powers
An offended spouse may pursue legal remedies, but cannot lawfully:
- physically assault the offending spouse or third party;
- detain or restrain them;
- publicly shame them in a way that violates law;
- hack phones or accounts;
- install spyware;
- threaten violence;
- extort money;
- take children without regard to custody rules;
- seize property without legal authority;
- publish intimate images or private communications unlawfully.
B. No marital right to force sexual relations
Marriage does not create a right to force sex. Consent remains essential. Acts of sexual violence within marriage may have serious criminal consequences.
C. No right to imprison or control movement
A spouse cannot invoke marital rights to justify unlawful detention, stalking, coercion, or surveillance.
D. No right to deprive support arbitrarily
A spouse who controls finances cannot simply cut off legally required support in retaliation, especially where children are involved.
XXII. Remedies of the Innocent Spouse
An innocent spouse may consider several remedies depending on the facts.
A. Criminal complaint
The spouse may file a complaint for adultery or concubinage if the elements are present and procedural requirements are satisfied.
B. Legal separation
The spouse may file for legal separation based on sexual infidelity or other grounds.
C. Civil action for damages
The spouse may seek damages against the offending spouse, third party, or both, if legally justified.
D. Protection order
Where there is violence, harassment, threats, psychological abuse, or economic abuse, the spouse may seek protective relief.
E. Custody and support action
The spouse may seek court orders on custody, visitation, child support, and spousal support.
F. Property protection
The spouse may seek accounting, injunction, liquidation, receivership, or other remedies to protect community or conjugal assets.
G. Declaration of nullity or annulment
These remedies are available only if independent legal grounds exist. Infidelity may be evidence in some cases but is not automatically enough.
XXIII. Common Misconceptions
1. “Adultery and concubinage are the same.”
They are not. They have different elements, penalties, and evidentiary requirements.
2. “A husband commits concubinage every time he cheats.”
Not necessarily. The law requires keeping a mistress in the conjugal dwelling, sexual intercourse under scandalous circumstances, or cohabitation.
3. “A wife commits adultery only if she lives with another man.”
No. A single act of sexual intercourse with a man who is not her husband may be enough.
4. “The third party cannot be sued or charged.”
The third party may be charged criminally if the elements are met and may face civil liability in appropriate cases.
5. “Forgiving the spouse has no legal effect.”
Forgiveness, pardon, consent, or reconciliation may affect criminal prosecution and family law remedies.
6. “Infidelity automatically gives custody to the innocent spouse.”
Custody depends on the best interests of the child, not merely on marital fault.
7. “Infidelity automatically annuls the marriage.”
It does not. Annulment or nullity requires separate legal grounds.
8. “Screenshots are always admissible.”
Not automatically. They must be authenticated and legally obtained.
9. “A spouse can post evidence online to expose the affair.”
Public posting may create liability for defamation, privacy violations, cybercrime, or other legal problems.
10. “The offended spouse can file against only the third party.”
Generally, both guilty parties must be included if both are alive.
XXIV. Gender Issues and Constitutional Criticism
Philippine adultery and concubinage laws have been criticized because they impose different standards on wives and husbands.
A married woman may be prosecuted for a single act of sexual intercourse. A married man is punishable only if the affair fits one of the specific forms of concubinage. The penalties also differ, especially as to the third party.
Critics argue that this reflects outdated assumptions about women, chastity, legitimacy, and male privilege. Supporters of criminalization argue that the law protects marriage and family integrity.
The debate involves constitutional values such as:
- equal protection;
- dignity;
- privacy;
- family protection;
- gender equality;
- state interest in marriage;
- proportionality of criminal punishment.
Until legislative reform or controlling judicial invalidation changes the law, courts generally apply the provisions as written.
XXV. Practical Legal Considerations
A. Criminal cases are difficult and emotionally costly
Adultery and concubinage cases often involve intimate facts, family conflict, children, reputational harm, and prolonged litigation. The offended spouse should consider whether the criminal case will actually advance their broader goals.
B. Evidence must be lawful and sufficient
A strong emotional belief is not enough. The evidence must satisfy the legal elements and be admissible.
C. Family law remedies may be more useful
In many situations, legal separation, custody, support, property protection, or civil damages may better address the practical harm.
D. Children should not be weaponized
Courts disfavor using children as instruments of revenge. Custody, visitation, and support must remain focused on the child’s welfare.
E. Reconciliation has legal consequences
A spouse who resumes marital relations or clearly forgives the offense may affect future claims. The legal consequences should be considered before making formal statements or signing documents.
F. Settlement should be carefully drafted
If parties settle property, custody, support, or separation issues, the agreement should be lawful, specific, and consistent with mandatory family law rules. Matters involving child support and custody remain subject to court review.
XXVI. Comparative Summary of Remedies
| Situation | Possible Remedy |
|---|---|
| Wife had sexual intercourse with another man | Adultery complaint; legal separation; damages |
| Husband lives with mistress | Concubinage complaint; legal separation; damages |
| Husband keeps mistress in family home | Concubinage complaint; protection/property remedies |
| Spouse used family funds for affair | Accounting; recovery; injunction; damages; property liquidation |
| Spouse publicly humiliates partner through affair | Legal separation; damages; possible protective remedies |
| Infidelity affects children | Custody, support, parental authority remedies |
| Spouse abandoned family for lover | Support, custody, legal separation, property remedies |
| Third party knowingly interfered with marriage | Civil damages; criminal liability if elements are met |
| Spouse wants to remarry | Annulment/nullity only if separate grounds exist; legal separation does not allow remarriage |
XXVII. Key Doctrinal Points
- Adultery is committed by a married woman and her male partner.
- Concubinage is committed by a married man under specific statutory circumstances.
- Adultery is easier to establish in theory because one act of intercourse may suffice.
- Concubinage requires proof of keeping a mistress in the conjugal dwelling, scandalous sexual intercourse, or cohabitation.
- Only the offended spouse may initiate prosecution.
- Both guilty parties must generally be included in the complaint.
- Pardon, consent, or reconciliation may bar prosecution or affect remedies.
- Infidelity may support legal separation but does not automatically annul or void a marriage.
- Property, custody, support, inheritance, and damages may be affected depending on the facts.
- Marital rights do not justify violence, coercion, privacy violations, or unlawful retaliation.
XXVIII. Conclusion
Adultery and concubinage in the Philippines sit at the intersection of criminal law, family law, civil liability, gender policy, and marital rights. They are not merely private moral wrongs; they may trigger legal consequences affecting liberty, property, custody, support, inheritance, and family relations.
The law distinguishes sharply between the infidelity of a wife and that of a husband. Adultery punishes a married woman for sexual intercourse with another man, while concubinage punishes a married man only when his conduct falls within specific statutory forms. This asymmetry remains one of the most controversial features of Philippine criminal law.
For the innocent spouse, the available remedies are not limited to criminal prosecution. Depending on the facts, the more meaningful remedies may include legal separation, damages, support, custody orders, protection orders, property recovery, or liquidation of marital assets. For the accused, constitutional rights, evidentiary rules, and procedural safeguards remain fully applicable.
Ultimately, Philippine law treats marital fidelity as a legal duty, but it also recognizes that marital rights have limits. The law protects marriage, family, dignity, and property, but it does not authorize revenge, violence, coercion, or unlawful invasion of privacy.