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Maria Virginia V.Remo Vs Honorable Secretary of FOREIGN AFFAIRS GR No. 169202 March 5, 2010 Facts

Maria Virginia V. Remo applied to renew her expired passport with her maiden name instead of her married name of Rallonza, as used in her previous passport. The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) denied her request, citing rules that only allow married women to revert to their maiden name in certain circumstances like divorce or death of spouse. The Supreme Court upheld the DFA's decision, finding that while RA 8239 does not require married women to take their husband's surname, once a married name has been used it can only be changed under the conditions specified in the law, which did not apply to Remo as her marriage was still ongoing. The Court also noted that as a special law on passports, RA 8

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
73 views2 pages

Maria Virginia V.Remo Vs Honorable Secretary of FOREIGN AFFAIRS GR No. 169202 March 5, 2010 Facts

Maria Virginia V. Remo applied to renew her expired passport with her maiden name instead of her married name of Rallonza, as used in her previous passport. The Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) denied her request, citing rules that only allow married women to revert to their maiden name in certain circumstances like divorce or death of spouse. The Supreme Court upheld the DFA's decision, finding that while RA 8239 does not require married women to take their husband's surname, once a married name has been used it can only be changed under the conditions specified in the law, which did not apply to Remo as her marriage was still ongoing. The Court also noted that as a special law on passports, RA 8

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Ebony Rich
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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MARIA VIRGINIA V.

REMO VS HONORABLE SECRETARY OF


FOREIGN AFFAIRS GR no. 169202 March 5, 2010
FACTS:
Petitioner Maria Virginia V. Remo is a married Filipino citizen whose
Philippine passport was then expiring. Petitioner being married to
Francisco R. Rallonza, the following entries appear in her passport;
Rallonza as her surname, Maria Virginia as her given name and Remo as
her middle name. Prior to the expiry of the validity of her passport,
petitioner, whose marriage still subsists, applied for a renewal of her
passport with the Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA) office in Chicago,
Illinois, U.S.A. with a request to revert to her maiden name and surname in
the replacement of passport.
Petitioner further contends that pursuant to Article 370 of the Civil Code it
is not mandatory to use the surname of the husband hence RA 8239 is in
conflict with Article 370 for requiring her to use the husbands surname.
The DFA denied the request of Ms. Remo contending that it is not
obligatory for a woman to use her husbands name. Use of maiden name is
allowed in passport application only if the married name has not been used
in the previous application. The Implementing Rules and Regulations for
the Philippine Passport Act of 1996 clearly defines the conditions when a
woman applicant may revert to her maiden name. In the present case Maria
does not meet any of these conditions.
ISSUE:
Whether petitioner, who originally used her husbands surname in her
expired passport, can revert to the use of her maiden name in the
replacement passport, despite the subsistence of her marriage.
RULING:
No she may not use her maiden name. Pursuant to RA 8239 including its
Implementing Rules and Regulations, it does not prohibit a married woman
from using her maiden name in her passport. In fact, in recognition of his
right the DFA allows a married woman who applies for a passport for the
first time to use her maiden name. Such an applicant is not required to
adopt her husbands surname.

In the case of renewal of passport, a married woman may either adopt her
husbands surname or continuously use her maiden name. if she chooses to
adopt her husbands surname in her new passport, the DFA additionally
requires the submission of an authenticated copy of the marriage
certificate. Otherwise if she prefers to use her maiden name she may still
do so. The DFA will not prevent her from continuously using her maiden
name.
However, once a married woman opted to adopt her husbands surname in
her passport, she may not revert to the use of her maiden name, except in
the cases enumerated in section 5(D) of RA 8239. These instances are
(1)Death of Husband, (2)Divorce ,(3) Annulment , or (4) Nullity of
marriage since petitioners marriage to her husband subsists, she may not
resume her maiden name in the replacement passport . Otherwise stated a
married womans reversion to the use of her maiden name must be based
solely on the severance of the marriage.
Furthermore, even assuming that RA 8239 conflicts with the civil code, the
provisions of RA 8239 which is a special law specifically dealing with
passport issuance must prevail over the provisions of the title XIII of the
civil code which is the general law on the use of surnames. A basic tenet in
statutory construction is that a special law prevails over a general law

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