Serbisyo Abogado Full-Service Law Office

Serbisyo Abogado Full-Service Law Office Law office offering notarial, affidavit, contract preparation & review, processing of permits, etc.

16/01/2026

NOTICE

Please be advised that the Law Office will be closed on Monday, January 19, 2026.
Regular business operations will resume on the next business day.

Thank you for your understanding.

🎄Holiday Advisory!Please be advised that our office will be closed on weekends and declared holidays.Thank you and happy...
23/12/2025

🎄Holiday Advisory!

Please be advised that our office will be closed on weekends and declared holidays.

Thank you and happy holidays!

20/12/2025

I have irrevocably resigned as legal counsel of Ion Hotel effective 20 December 2025 to focus on my overall well-being.

I will not be making further statements on the matter. Thank you for your understanding.

Atty Perlita Chan Rondez
Founding Partner

24/09/2025

📢 NOTICE TO CLIENTS

Our Notary / Law Office is now open for business.

We were temporarily closed due to the recent typhoon and sincerely thank you for your patience.

📢WE ARE STILL HIRING!Position: ASSOCIATE LAWYER⚖️Qualifications:✅ ️Barpasser✅️ Hardworking✅️ Fast learnerFor interested ...
30/08/2025

📢WE ARE STILL HIRING!

Position: ASSOCIATE LAWYER

⚖️Qualifications:
✅ ️Barpasser
✅️ Hardworking
✅️ Fast learner

For interested applicants:
Submit your resume at [email protected]

We are located at the Main Lobby of Casa Vallejo Hotel, Upper Session, Baguio City.

21/07/2025

The (SC) has ruled that a spouse’s inability to love or emotionally connect with their partner, if rooted in a genuine personality disorder, may be considered evidence of psychological incapacity and a ground to declare a marriage void.

In a Decision written by Senior Associate Justice Marvic M.V.F. Leonen, the SC’s Second Division reinstated an earlier ruling of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) which declared a couple’s marriage void from the beginning due to the husband’s psychological incapacity to fulfill his marital duties.

The couple met in 1999 and married in 2002. They did not live together immediately, as the husband worked in Saudi Arabia. They were only physically together for about five years, and their relationship was marked by frequent arguments and periods of separation.

In 2016, the husband filed a petition to nullify the marriage, supported by a psychologist’s diagnosis of his Passive-Aggressive Personality Disorder, which made it difficult for him to maintain close relationships. The RTC initially granted his petition, but reversed the same on reconsideration. The Court of Appeals denied the husband’s appeal.

The SC, however, ruled in favor of the husband, finding that he had sufficiently proven psychological incapacity.

Under Article 36 of the Family Code, a marriage is void if one or both spouses are psychologically unable to fulfill their marital duties—even if the condition becomes evident only after the wedding. The incapacity must be deeply rooted in the person’s character and must have existed before the marriage.

The SC clarified that psychological incapacity can manifest long after the wedding, so a spouse who initially appears capable may later show signs of inability. If this comes from a genuine psychological condition, the marriage can still be declared void.

In this case, the SC found that the husband’s emotional detachment stemmed from a strict and emotionally distant upbringing. While he could provide for his family financially, he struggled to meet his wife’s emotional needs, including basic companionship.

Read the full text of the Press Release at https://tinyurl.com/2zjba472.

Read the full text of the Decision at https://tinyurl.com/8e67mcme.

Read the Dissenting Opinion of Associate Justice Jhosep Y. Lopez at https://tinyurl.com/56e9rs43.

Copying of this content is subject to the SC PIO’s Credit Attribution Policy: https://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/credit-attribution-policy/.

21/07/2025

The (SC) has ruled that a land sale made through a verbal, unwritten agreement can be considered valid and binding—as long as it has been partly or fully carried out.

In a Decision written by Associate Justice Samuel H. Gaerlan, the SC’s Third Division upheld the verbal sale of land between Marcos Batara (Batara) and his nephew Benedicto Ocampo (Ocampo). Even without a written contract, the SC found the sale valid because Ocampo had already received the land title, moved into the property, and made improvements on it.

The land was registered in the name of Batara, who passed away in 1974. His children, Noblesa and Ernesto, only learned of their father’s ownership of the property in 2007, when they received a notice to pay unpaid real estate taxes on the land and found out that the same was being occupied by their cousin, Ocampo.

Noblesa and Ernesto filed a case to reclaim the land from Ocampo, saying they were the rightful heirs. Ocampo, on the other hand, claimed he bought the land from Batara while the latter was still alive. After Batara died, Ocampo kept paying installments to Marcelo, Batara’s brother.

Ocampo admitted that the sale was not evidenced by any written document because Batara died before they could execute the necessary instruments. But Ocampo provided the owner’s copy of land title as proof, claiming Batara gave it to him after the initial payment in 1972.

Ruling in Ocampo’s favor, the SC said that under the Civil Code, a sale of land must be in writing to be enforced in court. This written document serves as proof that both parties agreed to the sale.

However, the sale is still considered valid even without a written contract if it has already been fully or partly carried out. In such cases, a verbal agreement can still be legally binding, and witnesses may be allowed to testify to prove that the sale happened.

In this case, the sale was partially executed as Ocampo had partially paid for the land, taken possession of it, received the land title, and paid real property taxes. The SC thus admitted the testimonies of Ocampo and his witnesses, which proved the sale.

The SC, however, found that Ocampo’s payments to Batara’s brother Marcelo were ineffective because he was not authorized to accept them on behalf of his brother’s heirs.

Therefore, while the sale remains valid, Ocampo must pay the remaining balance of the purchase price, with interest, to Noblesa and Ernesto.

Read the full text of the Press Release at https://tinyurl.com/yeapyzcd.

Read the full text of the Decision at https://tinyurl.com/msxr7hsd.

Copying of this content is subject to the SC PIO’s Credit Attribution Policy: https://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/credit-attribution-policy/.

21/07/2025

The (SC) has ruled that an acknowledgment receipt cannot be considered a contract of sale unless it clearly shows that the seller intends to transfer ownership of the property to the buyer.

In a decision written by Associate Justice Maria Filomena D. Singh, the SC’s Third Division ruled that the agreement between Virgilio B. Chavez and his fellow petitioners (Chavez family) on one hand, and Spouses Joselito and Adriana Gopez (spouses) on the other was a contract to sell, not a contract of sale.

The case involved two properties inherited by the Chavez family, which they agreed to sell to the Spouses Gopez for PHP 31.5 million. The spouses were required to pay PHP 5 million as downpayment and to prepare the necessary documents, including the contract to sell.

The spouses initially paid PHP 200,000, noted in an acknowledgment receipt as “earnest money.” This receipt was the only proof of their agreement.

Later, the Chavez family canceled the agreement, claiming that the spouses had not paid the full down payment and had delayed the paperwork. This led the Spouses Gopez to file a case to force the Chavez family to proceed with the sale.

Ruling that the transaction was a contract to sell, the SC explained that in such a contract, the seller does not agree to transfer ownership of the property just yet. The seller only commits to fulfilling their promise to sell the properties and transfer title to the buyer after an event, typically the full payment of the purchase price. If this does not happen, their obligation to sell does not arise, and the seller retains ownership of the property.

In contrast, a contract of sale clearly shows the seller's intent to transfer ownership to the buyer.

In this case, the acknowledgment receipt did not include any promise to transfer ownership. It only showed that the spouses needed to meet conditions: the payment of the purchase price and preparation of the contract to sell, deed of sale, and estate settlement.

Read the full text of the Press Release at https://tinyurl.com/3zfynpbc.

Read the full text of the Decision at https://tinyurl.com/4hvfm3ze.

Read the the Concurring Opinion of Associate Justice Alfredo Benjamin S. Caguioa at https://tinyurl.com/msysydyb.

Copying of this content is subject to the SC PIO’s Credit Attribution Policy: https://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/credit-attribution-policy/.

21/07/2025

The (SC) has recognized that a sudden outburst of uncontrolled emotions, triggered by years of abuse from the accused’s father, qualifies as passion or obfuscation – a mitigating circumstance that can reduce the penalty for parricide.

In a Decision written by Associate Justice Ramon Paul L. Hernando, the SC’s First Division upheld the conviction of accused Leopoldo Singcol’s (Singcol) for killing his father, but lowered the penalty due to the presence of this mitigating factor.

Case records show that during a heated argument, Singcol’s father attempted to attack him with a bolo, but the former stumbled and fell. Singcol then grabbed the bolo and stabbed his father in the chest, killing him.

Singcol thereafter encountered his sister-in-law and her two-year-old son; he fatally stabbed his sister-in-law, and injured the child.

During trial, Singcol admitted to stabbing his father, his sister-in-law, and the child. He claimed he suffered abuse from his father since childhood, and was thus not thinking clearly when he attacked the others.

While the SC agreed with the trial court and the Court of Appeals that self-defense was not applicable in this case, it ruled that passion or obfuscation should be considered as a mitigating factor or circumstance that lessens the penalty. It sentenced Singcol to two counts of reclusion perpetua or a maximum of 40 years in prison for the parricide and the murder of his sister-in-law.

Under the 𝘙𝘦𝘷𝘪𝘴𝘦𝘥 𝘗𝘦𝘯𝘢𝘭 𝘊𝘰𝘥𝘦, the crime of parricide is committed when the accused kills their parents or child, whether legitimate or illegitimate, or any of their ascendants or descendants, or legal spouse.

On the other hand, passion or obfuscation is a state of mind present when a crime is committed due to an uncontrollable burst of emotions triggered by previous unjust or improper acts.

The SC considered the parricide a result of “a sudden surge of the accused’s bottled-up feelings caused by paternal neglect since childhood,” as shown by Singcol’s narration and his extreme, irrational acts of self-harm immediately after the killing.

Read the full text of the Press Release at https://tinyurl.com/5yk5j7sr.

Read the full text of the Decision at https://tinyurl.com/4xm6xee3.

Copying of this content is subject to the SC PIO’s Credit Attribution Policy: https://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/credit-attribution-policy/.

21/07/2025

The (SC) has ruled that a doctor who offers proper medical advice, clearly explains the risks of a procedure, and secures proper consent from the patient is not liable for medical malpractice.

In a Decision written by then Associate Justice Mario V. Lopez, the SC’s Second Division upheld the dismissal of a complaint against Dr. Avelino P. Aventura (Dr. Aventura), Head of the Philippine Heart Center Surgery Department, for the death of his patient, Quintin Que (Quintin).

Records of the case show that Elpidio Que filed a lawsuit for damages against Dr. Aventura, accusing him of medical malpractice in connection with the death of his father, Quintin, following a failed stenting procedure.

Quintin was first brought to Dr. Aventura due to an aneurysm in his aortic arch, a life-threatening condition. Dr. Aventura advised Quintin to first undergo a heart bypass operation and then address the aneurysm after. The bypass operation was successful.

However, Quentin’s aneurysm worsened. Dr. Aventura offered his family two options: an open-chest surgery or a newer, less invasive stenting procedure.

Dr. Aventura also informed the Que family that neither procedure guaranteed success and that stenting still posed the risk of death. He clarified he would not be the one performing the stenting, as it was outside his expertise. After introducing Quintin to visiting Belgian specialist Dr. Eric Verhoeven, who would do the stenting procedure, Quintin consented.

During the procedure, Dr. Verhoeven attempted to insert the custom stent three times but failed due to a bend in Quintin’s artery. As a result, Quintin suffered a stroke and never woke up.

Ruling that Dr. Aventura was not negligent and did not commit medical malpractice, the SC explained that medical malpractice occurs when a doctor fails to deliver the standard of care expected from other doctors in similar circumstances, resulting in harm to the patient.

A basis for malpractice is the lack of informed consent, which occurs when a patient agrees to a procedure without being fully informed about its risks and potential outcomes.

In this case, the SC found that Dr. Aventura clearly informed Quintin and his family about the risks associated with the stenting procedure, including the risk of death. He also clarified that another doctor would perform the procedure, and Quintin signed the consent forms.

Read the full text of the Press Release at https://tinyurl.com/jjjx4k7b.

Read the full text of the Decision at https://tinyurl.com/5n6a6e7p

Read the Concurring Opinion of Senior Associate Justice Marvic M.V.F. Leonen at https://tinyurl.com/yzmhvbbn.

Copying of this content is subject to the SC PIO’s Credit Attribution Policy: https://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/credit-attribution-policy/.

Address

Main Lobby, Casa Vallejo Hotel, Upper Session Road
Baguio City
2600

Opening Hours

Monday 9am - 5pm
Tuesday 9am - 5pm
Wednesday 9am - 5pm
Thursday 9am - 5pm
Friday 9am - 5pm

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