In the Philippines, ending a marriage is legally difficult because the country does not generally provide for absolute divorce for most marriages covered by the Family Code. As a result, spouses who want to sever the marital bond usually look to one of two court remedies: declaration of nullity of marriage and annulment of marriage. These are not the same. A void marriage is treated as invalid from the beginning; a voidable marriage is considered valid unless and until a court annuls it.
This distinction affects everything: the legal grounds, who may file, the evidence required, the effect on children and property, whether a spouse may remarry, and how long the case may take.
This article explains the Philippine legal framework in practical terms.
I. The Basic Distinction
1. Declaration of Nullity
A declaration of nullity of marriage applies to a void marriage. A void marriage is one that is considered invalid from the start because it lacked an essential or formal requirement, or because the law expressly declares it void.
In theory, a void marriage never produced a valid marital bond. In practice, however, a person ordinarily still needs a court judgment declaring it void before remarrying and before registry records can be corrected.
2. Annulment
An annulment of marriage applies to a voidable marriage. A voidable marriage is valid and binding until a court annuls it. That means the marriage exists in the eyes of the law unless and until the court sets it aside.
3. Why the Distinction Matters
The difference is not academic. It affects:
- the grounds available
- the period within which the case may be filed
- whether ratification or continued cohabitation bars the case
- who can sue
- how the marriage affects legitimacy of children
- how property relations are dissolved
A common mistake is using “annulment” as a catch-all term. In Philippine law, it is only one of several remedies.
II. Other Related Remedies Often Confused With Annulment
Before getting into the grounds, it helps to distinguish related actions.
1. Legal Separation
Legal separation does not dissolve the marriage bond. The spouses remain married and cannot remarry. It mainly addresses separation in bed, property consequences, and certain marital rights.
2. Recognition of Foreign Divorce
If a valid foreign divorce is obtained and one spouse is a foreigner at the time the divorce is secured, the Filipino spouse may seek judicial recognition of that foreign divorce in the Philippines. This is not annulment and not declaration of nullity.
3. Declaration of Presumptive Death for Remarriage
Where a spouse disappears under circumstances defined by law, a present spouse may seek a declaration of presumptive death for purposes of remarriage. This is a separate proceeding.
4. Correction or Cancellation of Civil Registry Entries
Sometimes registry errors exist in the marriage certificate or birth records. Correction of entries is different from attacking the validity of the marriage itself.
III. Governing Law and Procedural Setting
The main legal framework comes from:
- the Family Code of the Philippines
- the Rules of Court
- the Rule on Declaration of Absolute Nullity of Void Marriages and Annulment of Voidable Marriages
- related jurisprudence of the Supreme Court
Family law in the Philippines is heavily shaped by case law. Even when the statutory text appears short, court decisions have given detailed meaning to the grounds, especially psychological incapacity.
IV. Essential and Formal Requisites of Marriage
To understand nullity and annulment, the law’s structure matters.
A valid marriage requires:
Essential requisites
- legal capacity of the contracting parties, who must be a male and a female under the traditional Family Code framework
- consent freely given in the presence of the solemnizing officer
Formal requisites
- authority of the solemnizing officer
- a valid marriage license, except in marriages exempt from license requirements
- a marriage ceremony where the parties personally declare that they take each other as husband and wife in the presence of at least two witnesses of legal age
If a required element is missing or defective, the legal consequence depends on the specific provision involved.
V. Void Marriages: Grounds for Declaration of Nullity
A void marriage is invalid from the beginning. The usual Philippine grounds include the following.
1. Absence of Essential or Formal Requisites
Some defects make the marriage void from the start. Examples include:
- no marriage license when one is required
- lack of authority of the solemnizing officer, subject to statutory exceptions
- absence of a real marriage ceremony
- lack of legal capacity to marry
Not every irregularity makes a marriage void. Some defects are mere irregularities that can subject parties or officers to liability without invalidating the marriage.
2. One or Both Parties Below the Minimum Marriageable Age
A marriage contracted by a party below the age required by law is void.
3. Bigamous or Polygamous Marriage
A marriage contracted while one party is still validly married to another is generally void, unless a specific legal exception applies, such as remarriage after a valid declaration of presumptive death under the Family Code.
4. Mistake as to Identity
A marriage may be void where consent is entirely vitiated because one party married the wrong person in terms of identity.
5. Incestuous Marriages
Marriages between ascendants and descendants, and between brothers and sisters, whether of the full or half blood, are void.
6. Marriages Void for Reasons of Public Policy
These include marriages between certain relatives by affinity, adoption, or other prohibited relationships defined by the Family Code.
7. Psychological Incapacity
A marriage may be void if either or both parties were psychologically incapacitated to comply with the essential marital obligations at the time of the marriage.
This is the most litigated and most misunderstood ground.
What psychological incapacity is not
It is not merely:
- incompatibility
- difficulty getting along
- immaturity in the ordinary sense
- infidelity by itself
- abandonment by itself
- refusal to support by itself
- drunkenness, addiction, or violence by themselves
These may be evidence, but they are not automatically equivalent to legal psychological incapacity.
What the courts look for
Philippine jurisprudence has described psychological incapacity as a grave and serious incapacity rooted in causes that existed at the time of the marriage, even if the symptoms became more visible only later. Courts have often looked for these traits:
- gravity: the condition must be serious, not trivial
- juridical antecedence: the root cause must have existed before or at the time of marriage
- incurability or such enduring nature that the spouse is truly unable, not merely unwilling, to perform marital duties
Over time, the Supreme Court has cautioned against a rigid checklist and moved toward a more case-sensitive approach. Still, courts remain careful. A failed marriage does not automatically prove psychological incapacity.
Essential marital obligations
The inability must relate to essential duties of marriage, such as:
- living together as spouses
- mutual love, respect, fidelity, and support
- observing marital commitment
- cooperation in family life and child-rearing
Evidence commonly used
- testimony of the petitioner
- testimony of family members, friends, coworkers, or others who observed the spouse
- psychological or psychiatric evaluation
- documentary evidence, messages, medical records, police records, or other corroborative material
A personal examination of the respondent by the expert is helpful but not always indispensable if the opinion is based on sufficient independent facts and reliable testimony.
8. Subsequent Void Marriages Without Proper Prior Judicial Declaration
Even if a first marriage is void, a party generally cannot validly remarry without first obtaining a judicial declaration of nullity of that first marriage. A second marriage entered into without this prior judicial declaration is itself vulnerable as void.
VI. Voidable Marriages: Grounds for Annulment
A voidable marriage is valid until annulled. The recognized grounds are narrower than many people expect.
1. Lack of Parental Consent
If a party was of the age bracket that required parental consent at the time of the marriage, and such consent was absent, the marriage is voidable.
This ground is subject to ratification. If the party freely cohabits with the other spouse after reaching the age where such consent is no longer required, the defect may be cured.
2. Insanity
If one party was of unsound mind at the time of the marriage, the marriage may be annulled.
But the action can be lost if, after regaining reason, the formerly insane spouse freely cohabits with the other, or if the sane spouse continued to live with the insane spouse after learning of the condition, depending on the statutory setup and who files.
3. Fraud
Fraud is a ground, but Philippine law does not treat every lie before marriage as actionable fraud. Only certain types of fraud count.
Examples traditionally recognized include:
- non-disclosure of a conviction for a crime involving moral turpitude
- concealment by the wife that she was pregnant by another man at the time of marriage
- concealment of a sexually transmissible disease of a serious and apparently incurable nature
- concealment of drug addiction, habitual alcoholism, homosexuality, or lesbianism existing at the time of marriage
Important limitation
Misrepresentation as to:
- character
- health not falling within the statutory category
- rank
- fortune
- chastity
is generally not the kind of fraud that annuls a marriage.
4. Force, Intimidation, or Undue Influence
Consent must be free. If one spouse was compelled by force or serious intimidation, or was improperly pressured through undue influence, the marriage may be annulled.
This ground is lost if the spouse freely cohabits with the other after the force or intimidation has ceased or the undue influence has disappeared.
5. Impotence
If one spouse was physically incapable of consummating the marriage and the incapacity appears incurable, this may be a ground for annulment.
The incapacity must ordinarily exist at the time of marriage and be of such a nature that consummation is impossible, not merely difficult or refused.
6. Sexually Transmissible Disease
A serious and apparently incurable sexually transmissible disease existing at the time of marriage may be a ground for annulment.
VII. Prescription Periods and Time Limits
One of the biggest differences between nullity and annulment is timing.
A. Void Marriages
As a rule, actions to declare a void marriage may generally be brought even after many years, because the marriage is considered void from the start. Still, practical and procedural issues arise if evidence is stale, witnesses are gone, or the parties have entered into later marriages.
For psychological incapacity, the action is not treated like an ordinary claim that simply expires after a short statutory period, but delay can still harm credibility and proof.
B. Voidable Marriages
Annulment is subject to strict statutory periods, depending on the ground and who files. Broadly:
- for lack of parental consent: within a limited period tied to reaching the proper age
- for insanity: by the sane spouse with time counted from discovery or from the restoration of sanity, depending on who sues
- for fraud: within a limited period from discovery of the fraud
- for force, intimidation, or undue influence: within a limited period from the time the coercion ceases
- for impotence and sexually transmissible disease: within a limited period from marriage or discovery, depending on the text and interpretation
These periods matter. A party may have facts that sound compelling but still lose because the case was filed too late or because continued voluntary cohabitation ratified the marriage.
VIII. Who May File
The answer depends on the nature of the action.
1. Declaration of Nullity
Generally, a spouse directly affected may file. In some void marriages, certain heirs or interested parties may also be affected by the marriage’s validity in inheritance or property disputes, though direct attacks and collateral issues must be handled carefully.
2. Annulment
Annulment is more personal. The right to file is generally limited to the spouse designated by law, and sometimes to parents or guardians in narrow circumstances. It is not a remedy open to just any interested party.
IX. Venue and Jurisdiction
These cases are filed in the Family Court, which is ordinarily the Regional Trial Court designated as a Family Court in the proper city or province.
Venue is generally based on:
- where either spouse resides, as allowed by the applicable procedural rule
- the location and circumstances recognized by the rules for family cases
Venue must be checked carefully because filing in the wrong court can delay the case.
X. Why These Cases Are Not Simple “Uncontested” Petitions
Even when the respondent spouse does not object, the court does not automatically grant the petition.
Philippine law treats the State as an interested party in marriage cases because marriage is considered an institution imbued with public interest. This has practical consequences:
- the Office of the Solicitor General or the public prosecutor may participate
- the court must guard against collusion
- even if the respondent admits the allegations, the petitioner must still prove the case
- default does not automatically mean victory
A marriage cannot be dissolved just because both spouses agree that they want out.
XI. The General Court Process
While exact practice varies by court and by the complexity of the case, the usual sequence is as follows.
1. Initial Case Assessment
Counsel first determines:
- whether the proper remedy is nullity, annulment, legal separation, or recognition of foreign divorce
- the exact ground
- whether the case is timely
- what evidence exists
- whether there are children, property issues, support claims, or safety concerns
This stage is critical. Many cases fail because the wrong theory is filed.
2. Preparation of the Petition
The verified petition usually states:
- the parties’ personal circumstances
- the date and place of marriage
- children of the marriage
- facts constituting the ground
- details showing the court’s jurisdiction and venue
- allegations concerning absence of collusion
- relief sought, including dissolution of property relations and custody-related matters where proper
Supporting documents commonly include:
- PSA-issued marriage certificate
- birth certificates of children
- proof of residence
- medical, psychological, police, or school records when relevant
- affidavit and documentary attachments
3. Filing and Raffle
The petition is filed in the proper Family Court and raffled to a branch.
4. Summons and Notice
The respondent is served with summons. If the spouse cannot be located, substituted service or publication issues may arise depending on the circumstances and court orders.
5. Investigation for Collusion
The prosecutor or designated officer may be directed to investigate whether the parties are colluding.
This is routine and important. The State wants to ensure the case is not fabricated.
6. Pre-Trial
At pre-trial, the court defines issues, marks evidence, considers stipulations, and sets the case for hearing.
7. Trial Proper
The petitioner presents evidence. This may include:
- personal testimony
- corroborating witnesses
- expert witness such as a psychologist or psychiatrist
- documentary exhibits
If the respondent contests the petition, the respondent presents contrary evidence.
8. Participation of the State
The State, through the prosecutor and/or the Solicitor General, may oppose the petition, cross-examine witnesses, or challenge the sufficiency of the proof.
9. Decision
If the court finds the ground established, it issues a decision declaring the marriage void or annulling it.
But the decision does not become practically operative for registry purposes until entry of judgment and the corresponding registration steps are completed.
10. Entry of Judgment and Registration
The final decision and entry of judgment must usually be registered with the proper civil registrar and with the Philippine Statistics Authority channels so that the civil status record reflects the court judgment.
Failure to complete this step causes practical problems in later marriage, property, passport, or inheritance transactions.
XII. Evidence: What Usually Makes or Breaks the Case
1. Credibility and Specificity
Courts do not want vague complaints like:
- “we were incompatible”
- “he was irresponsible”
- “she changed after marriage”
- “we always fought”
The facts must be detailed and legally connected to the ground alleged.
2. Corroboration
Although the petitioner’s testimony matters, corroboration is often crucial:
- relatives
- close friends
- former partners
- neighbors
- counselors
- physicians
- church workers
- school officials
- documentary records
3. Expert Evidence in Psychological Incapacity Cases
A psychologist’s report is often central, but it is not magic. Courts assess:
- methodology
- factual basis
- consistency with testimony
- whether the opinion explains how the spouse was truly incapable of carrying out essential marital duties
Reports that read like generic templates are weak.
4. Documentary Trail
Helpful documents may include:
- chat logs or emails
- medical records
- psychiatric evaluations
- police blotter entries
- protection orders
- proof of abandonment
- records of addiction treatment
- financial records showing refusal of support
- school or child welfare records showing parental neglect
Documents do not replace legal proof, but they often strengthen it.
XIII. Psychological Incapacity in Depth
Because so many Philippine marriage cases are filed on this ground, it deserves fuller treatment.
1. Why It Is Often Used
Other grounds are narrow and highly technical. Psychological incapacity can, in appropriate cases, capture patterns like:
- chronic narcissism or antisocial traits
- pathological lying
- compulsive infidelity linked to personality structure
- extreme dependency
- violent inability to maintain reciprocal relationships
- severe emotional immaturity amounting to incapacity, not mere stubbornness
- refusal of basic marital obligations arising from deep-rooted personality pathology
2. What Must Be Shown
The petitioner must persuade the court that the spouse was not simply difficult, immoral, or immature, but truly incapable of understanding or carrying out the essential obligations of marriage.
Examples that may support the case:
- repeated abandonment with no capacity for stable commitment
- total inability to provide emotional, moral, or financial partnership arising from a deep personality disorder
- extreme and persistent infidelity tied to a rooted personality structure
- severe pathological jealousy, violence, or manipulation reflecting incapacity for mutuality
- inability to form genuine marital attachment due to grave psychological disorder
3. What Often Weakens the Case
- overreliance on labels without facts
- expert report based only on one interview and little corroboration
- ordinary marital conflict presented as pathology
- evidence showing only refusal, not incapacity
- inconsistency between the petition and actual testimony
- long periods of normal cohabitation without explanation
4. The Respondent Need Not Be Personally Examined in Every Case
A respondent who refuses to appear cannot necessarily defeat the petition on that basis alone. Courts may still consider expert testimony grounded in reliable collateral sources. But the lack of direct examination may affect the weight of the evidence.
5. The Court Looks at the Whole Story
A strong case usually tells a coherent narrative:
- premarital background
- courtship behavior
- events at or shortly after marriage
- consistent pattern during marriage
- effect on spouse and children
- link to essential marital obligations
XIV. Effects of a Declaration of Nullity or Annulment
1. Capacity to Remarry
Once there is a final judgment and proper registration, the parties may generally remarry, subject to compliance with all requirements.
2. Status of Children
This is a sensitive area.
In void marriages
The legal status of children depends on the nature of the marriage and the applicable provisions of the Family Code. In some instances, children of certain void marriages may still be treated as legitimate under specific rules, especially where the law protects children conceived or born under a marriage believed by the parents to be valid. In other cases, they may be considered illegitimate.
This must be analyzed carefully, because the answer is not identical for every void marriage.
In voidable marriages later annulled
Children conceived before the decree of annulment are generally treated as legitimate.
3. Custody and Parental Authority
Nullity or annulment does not erase parental obligations. The court may address:
- custody
- visitation
- support
- parental authority
The child’s best interests govern.
4. Support
Parents remain obliged to support their children. Support between spouses depends on the legal context, property regime, and court orders.
5. Property Relations
The court may settle:
- dissolution and liquidation of the property regime
- reimbursement claims
- forfeiture issues in some circumstances
- delivery of presumptive legitimes where required by law
The outcome depends on whether the marriage was void or voidable, whether one or both spouses were in bad faith, and what property regime applied.
XV. Property Consequences in More Detail
1. If the Marriage Is Void
If the marriage was void from the beginning, the standard property regime for valid marriages may not apply in the usual way. Instead, the law may treat the parties as co-owners in property acquired during their union, subject to rules on contribution and good faith.
Important distinctions arise:
- both parties in good faith
- one in bad faith
- both in bad faith
These affect ownership shares and forfeiture.
2. If the Marriage Is Voidable and Later Annulled
Because the marriage was valid until annulled, the property regime existed up to the finality of the decree. It must then be dissolved and liquidated according to law.
3. Registry and Inventory Requirements
In many cases, liquidation, partition, and recording requirements matter greatly before a party remarries or transfers property. Failure to liquidate a prior property regime can create later complications.
XVI. Legitimacy, Surnames, and Civil Registry Issues
After final judgment, practical civil status updates are often needed:
- annotation of the marriage certificate
- correction of civil registry records
- child records where legally necessary
- use of surname, depending on status and existing documents
A court decree does not update every government database by itself. Registration and follow-through matter.
XVII. Timeline: How Long Does a Case Take?
There is no single universal timeline. Philippine annulment and nullity cases can move quickly in some courts and slowly in others. The actual duration depends on many factors.
Common variables
- court congestion
- completeness of pleadings and annexes
- ease of serving summons
- whether the respondent contests the case
- availability of witnesses
- quality of evidence
- need for expert testimony
- postponements
- participation of the State
- appeals or motions for reconsideration
- administrative and registry delays after judgment
Practical ranges
A straightforward case may take around one to two years in many settings. A more contested or delayed case may take several years. Some cases move faster; many do not.
The process often includes these rough phases:
1. Preparation Phase
Several weeks to a few months, depending on how quickly documents and witness statements are gathered and, in psychological incapacity cases, how soon the psychological evaluation is completed.
2. Filing to First Hearings
A few months, depending on raffle, summons, and court scheduling.
3. Trial Stage
This may take months or longer, especially if there are multiple witnesses, missed hearings, or active opposition.
4. Decision and Finality
Even after the court renders judgment, there is additional time for:
- lapse of appeal periods
- entry of judgment
- annotation with the civil registrar
That final stage can itself take weeks or months.
Why “quick annulment” claims should be treated cautiously
Any claim that annulment or nullity can be guaranteed in a fixed short period should be approached with skepticism. No lawyer can honestly guarantee success or a precise completion date because the decision belongs to the court.
XVIII. Cost Considerations
Although the topic here is grounds and process, cost is part of the real picture. Expenses may include:
- attorney’s fees
- filing fees
- appearance fees
- psychological evaluation fees
- witness-related costs
- publication or service costs in some cases
- transcript and documentation expenses
- annotation and certification fees
Costs vary widely depending on complexity, location, and counsel.
XIX. Common Misconceptions
1. “If we are separated for many years, the marriage is automatically void.”
False. Long separation does not itself end the marriage.
2. “Mutual agreement is enough.”
False. The court must still find a valid legal ground.
3. “Cheating alone is automatic annulment.”
False. Infidelity alone is not a standalone ground for annulment or nullity. It may be evidence under a broader theory, especially psychological incapacity, depending on the facts.
4. “No sex for a long time automatically means annulment.”
Not automatically. The law addresses impotence in a technical sense, not every sexual problem.
5. “If my spouse disappears, I can remarry right away.”
False. Specific legal procedures must be followed.
6. “A marriage abroad can be ignored if it was defective.”
False. A judicial proceeding is generally still required before remarriage.
7. “A psychologist’s report guarantees victory.”
False. It is only part of the evidence.
8. “If my spouse does not show up, I automatically win.”
False. The case must still be proved.
XX. Frequent Fact Patterns and Their Likely Legal Framing
1. Spouse is habitually unfaithful, abusive, manipulative, and incapable of family life
Possible theory: psychological incapacity, if the facts show deep-rooted incapacity rather than mere misconduct.
2. One party discovered after the wedding that the spouse was already married
Possible theory: declaration of nullity for bigamy.
3. One party married due to grave threats from family or another person
Possible theory: annulment for force, intimidation, or undue influence, subject to time limits and ratification rules.
4. Marriage took place without a required license
Possible theory: declaration of nullity, unless the marriage fell within an exception to the license requirement.
5. Spouse concealed serious drug addiction existing at the time of marriage
Possible theory: annulment for fraud, if within the statutory framework and time limit.
6. Spouse refuses support and repeatedly abandons the family
Not automatically a ground by itself; may support psychological incapacity or a different remedy depending on the facts.
XXI. The Role of Good Faith and Bad Faith
Good faith matters especially in void marriages. Courts may ask:
- Did either party know of the impediment?
- Was one party deceived?
- Did both knowingly enter into an invalid marriage?
Good faith can affect:
- property division
- forfeiture
- status protections
- entitlement claims
XXII. Collateral Issues Often Litigated Alongside the Main Case
Although the principal issue is the marriage’s validity, related matters often arise:
- child custody
- visitation schedules
- support arrears
- interim support
- use and occupancy of the family home
- property inventory
- protection from abuse
- surname and school record issues
- inheritance implications
A well-prepared petition anticipates these issues.
XXIII. Appeal and Finality
A party who loses may seek reconsideration or appeal as allowed by procedural rules. The State may also challenge an adverse ruling if it believes the evidence was insufficient.
A favorable trial court decision is not the true endpoint. What matters for practical legal effect is:
- finality of judgment
- entry of judgment
- registration and annotation in the civil registry
Until these are completed, remarriage and record correction problems may arise.
XXIV. Why Precision in Pleading Matters
A marriage case is not won by moral sympathy alone. The petition must align facts with a recognized legal ground.
For example:
- “My spouse is selfish” is not enough.
- “My spouse persistently demonstrated, from the start, a grave and enduring incapacity to perform essential marital obligations, shown by these concrete acts and supported by this expert and documentary evidence” is closer to a legally structured case.
The law requires disciplined pleading and proof.
XXV. Philippine Context: Why the Stakes Are High
Because Philippine law has historically treated marriage as a protected social institution, courts do not lightly invalidate it. That explains why:
- the grounds are limited
- proof requirements are demanding
- the State actively participates
- even mutually agreed separation is not enough
At the same time, the legal system does recognize that some marriages are void from the start or should be annulled because consent or legal capacity was fundamentally defective.
XXVI. Practical Preparation for a Case
For someone evaluating whether to file, the practical groundwork usually includes:
Documents
- PSA marriage certificate
- children’s birth certificates
- IDs and proof of residence
- medical, police, or school records
- financial records
- communications showing relevant conduct
Witnesses
Choose people with personal knowledge, not just people willing to say helpful things.
Personal Narrative
The petitioner should be ready to explain:
- family background of both spouses
- courtship and wedding circumstances
- early married life
- key incidents
- effect on children and property
- why the facts satisfy the legal ground
Realistic Expectations
The process is formal, intrusive, document-heavy, and emotionally demanding.
XXVII. The Most Important Legal Difference, Restated
To simplify the whole subject into one sentence:
- Declaration of nullity means the marriage was void from the beginning.
- Annulment means the marriage was valid until a court set it aside.
Everything else flows from that distinction.
XXVIII. Concise Ground-by-Ground Summary
Declaration of Nullity
Available when the marriage is void, such as:
- absence of a required essential or formal requisite
- underage marriage under the law
- bigamous or polygamous marriage
- incestuous marriage
- prohibited marriages on public policy grounds
- psychological incapacity
- other marriages expressly declared void by law
Annulment
Available when the marriage is voidable, such as:
- lack of parental consent in cases where the law required it
- insanity
- fraud of the kind specifically recognized by law
- force, intimidation, or undue influence
- impotence
- serious and apparently incurable sexually transmissible disease
XXIX. Final Observations
Annulment and declaration of nullity in the Philippines are often discussed casually, but they are technical court actions with major consequences for status, children, property, and future remarriage. The most important questions are always:
- Is the marriage void or merely voidable?
- What exact ground applies?
- Is the action still timely?
- What evidence proves the ground?
- What are the consequences for children, support, and property?
- Has the final judgment been properly registered and annotated?
A failed marriage does not automatically qualify for court relief. But where the facts fit the law, Philippine courts can declare a marriage void or annul it through the proper proceeding.
Because this is a technical area shaped by both the Family Code and evolving Supreme Court doctrine, accuracy in the legal theory, the facts pleaded, and the evidence presented is everything.