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26 GSIS V Montescarlos TORRES

1. Nicolas Montesclaros married Milagros Orbiso less than a year before retiring from government service. When Nicolas passed away, Milagros applied for survivorship pension benefits but was denied under Section 18 of PD 1146, which prohibited such benefits if the marriage occurred within three years of retirement. 2. Milagros challenged the validity of Section 18, arguing it violated her rights. Both the trial court and Court of Appeals found in her favor, declaring her eligible for benefits. However, Milagros later accepted the GSIS decision denying her claim. 3. The Supreme Court still resolved the case. It found Section 18 to be unconstitutional as it violated due process and equal protection. The Court

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

26 GSIS V Montescarlos TORRES

1. Nicolas Montesclaros married Milagros Orbiso less than a year before retiring from government service. When Nicolas passed away, Milagros applied for survivorship pension benefits but was denied under Section 18 of PD 1146, which prohibited such benefits if the marriage occurred within three years of retirement. 2. Milagros challenged the validity of Section 18, arguing it violated her rights. Both the trial court and Court of Appeals found in her favor, declaring her eligible for benefits. However, Milagros later accepted the GSIS decision denying her claim. 3. The Supreme Court still resolved the case. It found Section 18 to be unconstitutional as it violated due process and equal protection. The Court

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Nicole Torres
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TORRES, NICOLE

Article III, Section 1. Survivorship Pension Claims.


GSIS v. MONTESCLAROS
G.R. No. 146494
July 14, 2004
FACTS:
Nicolas Montesclaros, a 72-year-old widower married Milagros Orbiso, who was then 43 years old, on 10 July 1983.
Nicolas filed with the GSIS an application for retirement benefits under the Revised Government Insurance Act of
1977. In his retirement application, he designated his wife as his sole beneficiary. GSIS approved Nicolas
application for retirement effective 17 February 1984, granting a lump sum payment of annuity for the first five
years and a monthly annuity after.
Nicolas died on 22 April 1992. Milagros filed with the GSIS a claim for survivorship pension under PD 1146 but
was denied the claim because under section 18 of PD 1146, the surviving spouse has no right to survivorship
pension if the surviving spouse contracted the marriage with the pensioner within three years before the pensioner
qualified for the pension. Nicolas wed Milagros on 10 July 1983, less than one year from his date of retirement on
17 February 1984.
Milagros filed with the trial court a special civil action for declaratory relief questioning the validity of Sec. 18 of
PD 1146. The trial court rendered judgment declaring Milagros eligible for survivorship pension and ordered GSIS
to pay Milagros the benefits including interest. Articles 115 and 117 of the Family Code states that retirement
benefits are property acquired through labor and therefore, are conjugal property. The trial court held that Section 18
of PD 1146 was repealed by the Family Code, a later law. GSIS appealed to the Court of Appeals, which affirmed
the trial courts decision. Hence, this appeal.
In a letter dated 10 January 2003, Milagros informed the Court that she has accepted GSIS decision disqualifying
her from receiving survivorship pension and that she is no longer interested in pursuing the case. However, the
Court will still resolve the issue despite the manifestation of Milagros because social justice and public interest
demand the resolution of the constitutionality of the proviso.
ISSUE/S:
1. Whether Section 18 of PD 1146 is unconstitutional
2. Whether retirement benefits form part of conjugal property
RULING:
1. UNCONSTITUTIONAL because it violates the due process clause. The proviso is also discriminatory and
denies equal protection of the law. It is unduly oppressive in outrightly denying a dependent spouses claim
for survivorship pension simply because they contracted the marriage within the three-year prohibited
period. There is an outright confiscation of benefits due the surviving spouse without giving the latter an
opportunity to be heard. Under PD 1146, the primary beneficiaries are the dependent spouse until such
spouse remarries, and the dependent children. Under the dependent term, it includes the legitimate spouse
dependent for the support of another, which in this case is Milagros. Therefore, the ruling of the lower court
is upheld and Milagros is entitled to survivorship pension under Section 16 of PD 1146.
Statutes sometimes require that the spouse should have married the employee for a certain period before the
employees death to prevent sham marriages contracted for monetary gain. A statute based on reasonable
classification does not violate the constitutional guaranty of the equal protection of the law. The
requirements for a valid and reasonable classification are: (a) it must rest on substantial distinctions; (b) it
must be germane to the purpose of the law; (c) it must not be limited to existing conditions only; and (d) it
must apply equally to all members of the same class. The proviso in question does not satisfy these
requirements. The proviso discriminates the dependent spouse who contracts marriage to the pensioner
within three years before the pensioner is qualified for the pension.

Indeed, the classification is discriminatory and arbitrary. This is probably the reason why Congress deleted
the said proviso in RA 8291 or the Government Insurance Act of 1997, revising the old charter of GSIS
(PD 1146).
2.

YES. A widows right to receive pension following the demise of her husband is also part of the husbands
contractual compensation. The reason for providing retirement benefits is to compensate service to the
government. Retirement benefits to government employees reward them for giving the best years of their
lives in the service of their country. Thus, where the employee retires and meets the eligibility
requirements, he acquires a vested right to benefits that is protected by the due process clause. No law can
deprive such person of his rights without due process of law, that is, without notice and opportunity to be
heard.

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