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1.
Define Support
2.
What are the factors that are considered in determining support to be awarded?
The law is silent as to the exact amount of support that should be given. The amount of support is
never fixed. Once given, the amount of support shall be reduced or increased proportionally
according to the two factors.
The factors that should be considered when determining the amount of support are
(a) The resources or financial capacity of the family or the giver;
(b) The indispensable needs of the recipient.
3.
Support shall be demandable from the time the recipient needs it for maintenance. (Article 203
of the Family Code of the Philippines)
4.
5.
An increase or reduction of the support may be prayed for by mere motion in the same
proceeding which granted the support.
6.
7.
Under the Philippine laws, the obligation to give support shall continue until the child in question
reaches the age of majority, which is eighteen (18) years old. (Section 3 of Republic Act 6809)
Support for education of the one being supported may continue even beyond the age of majority.
(Article 194 of the Family Code of the Philippines)
8.
The education of the person entitled to be supported will also include his schooling or training
for some profession, trade or vocation, even beyond the age of majority. Transportation shall
include expenses in going to and from school, or to and from place of work.
9.
12. What are the requirements for an illegitimate child to receive support from their
biological parent?
There are two kinds of illegitimate children:
(a) A recognized illegitimate child where the child can use the surname of his father. The
filiation can be recognized by the father through:
a. The recognition of the father of the childs paternity through the record of birth appearing
in the civil registrar;
b. When admission is made in a public document;
c. When admission is made in a private hand written document.
(b) An unrecognized illegitimate child where a child is not acknowledged by his biological
father and thus has to use the surname of his mother.
If the child had been recognized by his father, he is entitled to support. But if he is an
unrecognized child, relationship between the child and the father must first be proved. Once
paternity has been proved, only then the child is entitled to child support from the father.
15. What if the hearing for the petition of annulment was still ongoing, am I obliged to
support my wife even though we are already separated?
Yes. The right to support is not lost even if the spouse is gainfully employed as long as he or she
still needs support. (Canonizado v. Almeda-Lopez, 109 Phil. 1169)
16. What if, my wife and I are legally separated, how is support determined, considering
we have a child?
When the obligation to give support falls upon two or more persons, the payment of the support
shall be divided between them in proportion with the resources of each.
However, the judge may order only one of them to furnish the support provisionally, without
prejudice to his right to claim from the other obligors the share due from them, in the following
instances:
(a) Urgent need;
(b) By special circumstances.
17. My wife filed a case for annulment and support against me. Am I obliged to pay her
support even if the case has not yet been decided by the Court?
Yes, you are obliged to give support to your wife for the benefit of your children with her.
In all cases involving a child, his interest and welfare are always the paramount concerns. There
may be instances where, in view of the poverty of the child, it would be a travesty of justice to
refuse him support until the decision of the trial court attains finality while time continues to slip
away. (Gan v. Reyes, G.R. No. 145527, May 28 2002)
The money and property adjudged for support and education should and must be given presently
and without delay because if it had to wait the final judgment, the children may in the meantime
have suffered because of lack of food or have missed and lost years in school because of lack of
funds. One cannot delay the payment of such funds for support and education for the reason that
if paid long afterwards, however much the accumulated amount, its payment cannot cure the evil
and repair the damage caused. The children with such belated payment for support and education
cannot act as gluttons and eat voraciously and unwisely, afterwards, to make up for the years of
hunger and starvation. Neither may they enrol in several classes and schools and take up
numerous subjects all at once to make up for the years they missed in school, due to nonpayment of the funds when needed. (De Leon v. Soriano, G.R. No. L-7648, September 17,
1954)
18. My wife was convicted of adultery. Am I still obliged to give support to her?
No. you are no longer obliged to give support to your wife. The wife who committed adultery
loses the right to support. (Quintana v. Lerma, 24 Phil. 285)
However, mere allegation that the wife has committed adultery will not bar her from the right to
support pendente lite. The alleged adultery of the wife must be established by competent
evidence. (Reyes v. Ines-Luciano, 88 SCRA 803)
21. My son recently died and there is an on-going demand for support while he was still
alive. What will happen now?
The death of the child extinguishes the right to support. The mother of the child cannot receive
the support of the said child. The death removed the only valid cause for the judgment of
support, and the lower court has rightly held that respondents obligation ceased with that
eventuality. (Malabana v. Abeto, 74 Phil. 13)