Text of the provision

Art. 57. An action for legal separation shall be filed within five years from the time of the occurrence of the cause.

(102)

Family Code of the Philippines, Executive Order No. 209, approved July 6, 1987. The Code took effect on August 3, 1988 (Republic v. Orbecido III, G.R. No. 154380, October 5, 2005). Reproduced in full.

What this article means

Article 57 puts a hard five-year deadline on legal separation. The clock runs from the occurrence of the cause — the act that gives the ground under Article 55 — not from when the aggrieved spouse decides to act. Miss it, and the petition is barred by prescription, which is itself one of the grounds for denial in Article 56(6).

The rule matters because the grounds in Article 55 are often ongoing or repeated. The five years is measured from the occurrence of the cause relied on; a fresh act can furnish a fresh cause, but a petitioner cannot revive a ground that lapsed years ago by pointing to old conduct.

Why a deadline at all

The short period reflects the law's preference for the marriage to continue. A spouse who lives with an offence for years without acting is treated, in effect, as having moved past it — a policy that overlaps with the condonation defense in Article 56(1).

Related provisions

Cases interpreting this article

Note. The text of the provision above is reproduced in full from the official enactment. The annotation, case summaries and commentary around it are the work of Vivas & Nobles Law Office and are general legal information, not legal advice. Whether this provision applies to a particular marriage depends on facts that only a lawyer reviewing your situation can assess.