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PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

EN BANC

[G.R. No. L-4177. May 29, 1953. ]

In the matter of the petition for Philippine citizenship. YAP CHIN alias JOSE GO TIANSE, Petitioner-Appellee, v. REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, Appellant.

Solicitor General Pompeyo Diaz and Solicitor Meliton G. Soliman for oppositor and Appellant.

Briones & Pascual for petitioner and appellee.


SYLLABUS


1. CITIZENSHIP; DUTY OF APPLICANT TO ESTABLISH ALL LEGAL REQUIREMENTS. — In naturalization cases, it is not the duty of the Government to specify the grounds of its opposition. It is not bound in naturalization proceedings by the pleadings relative to the presence or absence of qualifications. Without objection by the Government, it is the duty of an applicant for citizenship affirmatively to establish all the legal requirements, and the Court motu proprio may and should deny his application if from his evidence he is found lacking in any of those requirements.


D E C I S I O N


TUASON, J.:


This is an appeal by the Provincial Fiscal of Misamis Occidental from an order of the Court of First Instance of that province granting Yap Chin alias Jose Go Tianse’s application for naturalization.

The first ground of appeal is that the petitioner has a son of school age, 14 years old, who is now living in China with appellee’s mother and so not studying in any Philippine Government-recognized school.

In Ang Yee Koe Sengkee v. Republic of the Philippines, * G. R. No. L-3863, December 27, 1951, it was held:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"We have had occasion to rule in several cases of naturalization that the requirement of the Revised Naturalization Law about an applicant for naturalization enrolling all his minor children of school age in any public or private school recognized by the Government where Philippine history, government and civics are taught, is important for the reason that upon naturalization of the father, the children ipso facto acquire the privilege of Philippine citizenship. It is the policy of the Philippine Government to have prospective citizens, children of applicants for naturalization, learn and imbibe the customs, traditions and ideals of the Filipinos as well as their democratic form of government. The fact that all of the children of school age of the appellant are in China or otherwise outside of the Philippines is no valid excuse or reason for noncompliance with this requirement."cralaw virtua1aw library

In Francisco Chan Su Hok v. Republic of the Philippines, 1 G. R. No. L-3470, November 27, 1951, the court said: "Under that provision (Paragraph 6, Section 2 of the Revised Naturalization Law) it is the duty of the applicant affirmatively to show that he has enrolled all his minor children of school age in one of the schools already mentioned."cralaw virtua1aw library

But counsel for petitioner believes that this objection was waived, and may not be raised on appeal for the first time. The Solicitor General counters that by the decision of this Court "in the case of Lim Lian Hong v. Republic of the Philippines, G. R. No. L- 3575, promulgated on December 26, 1950, any question or ground which may affect or vitiate the purported right or qualifications of the applicant to become a citizen of the Philippines may be invoked at any stage of the proceeding." The Solicitor General also cites Jesus Uy Yap 2 v. Republic of the Philippines, G. R. No. L-4270, May 8, 1952, in which the Court took cognizance of the question, raised for the first time on appeal, regarding the failure of the applicant to file a declaration of intention before presenting his application for Philippine citizenship in the court below.

It was not the duty of the Government to specify the grounds of its opposition. It is not bound in naturalization proceedings by the pleadings relative to the presence or absence of qualifications. Without objection by the Government, it is the duty of an applicant for citizenship affirmatively to establish all the legal requirements, and the court motu proprio may and should deny his application if from his evidence he is found lacking in any of those requirements.

By the same measure, it was incumbent upon the applicant, without any reminder by the opponent, to show by competent proof that it was impossible for him to bring his child to the Philippines, or that it was not through his fault that the child was not in this country, as he now alleges in his brief. As it was, he kept silent about the reason or reasons why this child was still with his grandmother in China. Much as we are impressed by counsel’s profession of what the applicant could have proved along this line if he had been expressly called upon to explain, these allegations, unfortunately, are not legal evidence.

The preceding conclusion precludes necessity of passing upon the applicant’s alleged deficient ability to write one of the principal Philippine dialects.

The appealed order is reversed and the application under consideration denied, without prejudice, with costs against the appellee.

Paras, C.J., Feria, Pablo, Bengzon, Montemayor, Reyes, Jugo and Bautista Angelo, JJ., concur.

Endnotes:



* 90 Phil. 594.

1. 90 Phil. 415.

2. 91 Phil. 914.

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