The short answer is no – particularly if the child is younger than seven years old, and not unless the mother is found to be an unfit parent.
An illegitimate child is born of parents who weren’t legally married during the time of the child’s birth, and who continue to be unmarried to each other.
By law, the mother of the illegitimate offspring has sole parental authority and may keep the child in her care. This rule applies even if the father acknowledges paternity. Though the court may require the father to provide support, the court will not grant full custody.
Working abroad does not constitute abandonment
In the case of Briones vs. Miguel, GR 156343, Oct. 18, 2004, the court chose to uphold the mother’s custody although she had left the Philippines to work in Japan. She was able to eventually bring the child to live with her.
It is stated in Article 213 of the Family Code that children younger than seven years old can’t be separated from their mother unless the court finds persuasive reasons to do so.
In Briones vs. Miguel, the court ruled that: “Only the most compelling of reasons, such as the mother’s unfitness to exercise sole parental authority, shall justify her deprivation of parental authority and the award of custody to someone else.”
In previous custody cases, the grounds for another to be deprived of custody and parental authority have been:
- Neglect or abandonment
- Maltreatment of the child
- Immorality
- Unemployment
- Habitual drunkenness
- Drug addiction
- Communicable disease
- Insanity
There are two things that determine the fitness of a parent:
- The capacity to attend to the physical, social, moral, and educational welfare of the child
- The capacity to give the child a healthy environment, in addition to physical and financial support that take into consideration the resources and the social and moral situation of the parent
Leaving for work in another country does not count as neglect or abandonment. Having entrusted the child with the child’s maternal grandparents is not grounds for removing custody from the mother either.
Likewise, the mother cannot transfer or renounce custody of the child unless authorized by law.
Fathers of illegitimate children, however, do have visitation rights that cannot be denied by the mother or the child’s maternal grandparents.
Visitation rights
In the case of Silva v. Court of Appeals, the court upheld the visitorial rights of a father over his illegitimate children in lieu of the inherent and natural right of the parent over their children, one that is protected by the constitution. The rule applies even if the parents are estranged and have lost affection for each other, with the premise that their feelings for and attachment to their children remain unchanged.
The law and the court will not allow their affinity for their children suffer, not unless there is a grave, real, or imminent threat to the illegitimate child’s well-being.
For more information on family law litigation, get in touch with Duran & Duran-Schulze here. The attorneys at Duran & Duran-Schulze offer a free case evaluation for your convenience.
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22 Responses
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Can the father get full custody of an illegitimate child when the mother has no mean to care for the child and unemployed.
Hi, my name is Larry. I work overseas. May i know if i can refuse to have online communications with my illegitimate child? I continue to give financial support anyway. I am worried that the mother will sue me if i express my non interest to have communications with the child. I am worried that the mother will only use that platform so she can ask more support from me.
Hi, my name is Larry. I work overseas. May i know if i can refuse to have online communications with my illegitimate child? I continue to give financial support anyway. I am worried that the mother will sue me if i express my non interest to have communications with the child.
I am worried that the mother will only use that platform so the chils can ask more from me.
If the mother of illegitimate child is in the US studying and working t the same time to provide for her child, child is left under the care of the grandmother ( maternal side). Father is a student no work and they are not married. Does grandmother need to file for legal guardianship in court so that they have that legal temporary guardianship document that will protect them from the father if he is attempting to take custody of the child. Is it safe to be sure to have the mother appoint the grandmother temporary legal guardianship. Is it her preference who she wants to appoint?
good day. i have been researching regarding the situation of me and my illegitimate son. my sons mother and i were never married.now my son is 10yrs old and his mother walked away and left when my son was still a year plus old. i have been the only one supporting my son financially, emotionally, etc in everything.i have plans of working as a nurse in the US but i am unable to even get my son a passport being his mother is nowhere to be found. weve contacted her family (brother) but he also doesnt know where she is. what would be the best legal way to get get full authority over my son regarding passports and living in the US. by the way he is using my surname.
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