Republic of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila
SECOND DIVISION
G.R. No. L-31664 August 30, 1974
REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES,
petitioner,
vs.
HONORABLE SANTIAGO O. TAÑADA as Judge of the Court of First Instance of Cebu, Branch V, HO HANG LIET and the minors MICHAEL GO HO, JOHN GO HO represented by their father and natural guardian HO HANG LIET, respondents.
Office of the Solicitor General Felix Q. Antonio, Assistant Solicitor General Antonio G. Ibarra and Solicitor Enrique M. Reyes for petitioner.
J. R. Gaboya & J. M. Perez for respondents.
FERNANDO, J.:p
It is not easy to explain why on such a matter as the change of name, some courts of first instance would be at times still unable to perceive the public interest involved and thus without due regard to authoritative pronouncements from this Tribunal grant such a petition. So it had happen in this case. The lower court decision now under review authorized respondent Ho Hang Liet to change his name to Hanley L. Young.1 The ostensible justification was that as a naturalized citizen, he was desirous of being identified in a language easy to pronounce and remember, his Chinese appellation being awkward and difficult to pronounce. The opposition filed by the then Solicitor-General, now Associate Justice, Felix B. Makasiar, was based on binding precedents, primarily Yu Chi Han v. Republic2 and Ong Te v. Republic.3
The lower court was unimpressed, resulting in the aforesaid judgment. Hence this petition for review.
The decision of the lower court cannot stand the test of scrutiny and therefore must be reversed.
The strictness with which the judiciary views an attempt to change one's name is one of the accepted truisms of the law. It is the court's duty, as Justice J. B. L. Reyes pointed out, in Oan v. Republic,4
"to consider carefully the consequences of the change of name, and to deny the same unless weighty reasons are shown. It must not be forgotten that the State has an interest in the names borne by individual and entities for purposes of identification, and that a change of name is a privilege and not a matter of right."5 That was in 1957. In 1970, in Ang Chay v. Republic,6 there was a further elaboration of the matter in a still latter opinion by the same jurist: "We find no error in the decision of the court below. It is a ruling of long standing in this jurisdiction that change of name is not a matter of right; that being a privilege, before it can be authorized, the person petitioning for such a change must first show proper cause of compelling reason therefore."7 No such compelling reason is present in this case. The mere fact that his present Chinese name may cause difficulty in pronunciation and that as a naturalized citizen he would want to adopt one in accordance with the Philippine custom, do not meet such a standard. If such were really the case, it defies rational explanation why an Anglo-Saxon name was chosen. Moreover, respondent Ho Hang Liet should be aware that it is no longer unusual in the Philippines to have family names composed of Chinese words. The list of respectable individuals in that category in quite impressive. It is far better then, with the needs of the public in mind, that the change sought be not granted. That would be to avoid confusion and wrong identification as in the meanwhile, the people he must have dealt with had known him by this real name. Public interest is thus better served. It is not, to repeat individual preference that counts. Respondents Ho Hang Liet must ever keep that in mind.
WHEREFORE, the order of respondent Judge of December 12, 1969, granting the petition for a change of name, is hereby reversed and set aside. No costs.
Zaldivar (Chairman), Barredo, Fernandez and Aquino, JJ, concur.
Footnotes
1 His minor children were allowed respectively to do so, respondents Michael Go Ho to Michael G. Young and John Go Ho to John G. Young.
2 L-22040 November 29, 1965, 15 SCRA 454.
3 L-15549, June 30, 1962, 5 SCRA 484.
4 102 Phil. 468 (1957).
5 Ibid, 470.
6 L-28507 July 31, 1970, 34 SCRA 224.
7 Ibid, 227.
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