Tio Tiam V Republic
Tio Tiam V Republic
Tio Tiam V Republic
SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC
In the Matter of the Petition of TEOTIMO RODRIGUEZ TIO TIAM to be admitted a citizen of the
Philippines. TEOTIMO RODRIGUEZ TIO TIAM, petitioner-appellee,
vs.
REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, oppositor-appellant.
Teotimo Rodriguez Tio Tiam filed this petition for naturalization before the Court of First Instance of
Cebu praying that he be granted Philippine Citizenship. During the hearing, petitioner asked that he
be allowed to present evidence to show that long before the filing of the petition he had already
possessed the status of a Filipino citizen. The court granted this request and, after the presentation
of the evidence, found the same sufficient to consider petitioner a Filipino citizen and rendered,
accordingly, a decision declaring him Filipino citizen without the need of complying with the
requirements of Republic Act No. 530 relative to the two-year suspension of the period prior to the
effectivity of the decision. From this decision, the Government has appealed.
The evidence of petitioner shows that he was born in Cebu City of Chinese parents on January 12,
1904 and has never left the Philippines since then. He is married to a Chinese woman with whom he
has eleven children. He considers himself Filipino and has voted in the elections held in 1964, 1949,
1951 and 1953. On October 25, 1945, while he was forty-one years old, he took the oath of
allegiance as a citizen of the Philippines before the Court of First Instance of Cebu. His wife and
children never registered as aliens in the Bureau of Immigration. During the occupation, he joined
the Cebu Guerrilla Command with the rank of second lieutenant under General Macario Peralta, Jr.
He finished first year high school while all his children are presently studying in schools recognized
by the Government. He is at present a businessman by profession with an average annual income of
P20,000 and is a registered owner of several real properties situated in Cebu City. He has evinced a
sincere desire to learn and embrace the customs, traditions, and ideals of the Filipino people. He
has never been convicted of any crime involving moral turpitude. He is not opposed to organized
government nor is he affiliated with any person or association with subversive ideas. He is not a
believer in the practice of polygamy and is not suffering from any mental ailment or any incurable
contagious disease. He believes in the principles underlying the Philippine Constitution and is able to
speak and write English and Chinese languages and the Cebuano dialect. And he was once brought
to Camp Murphy, Philippine Army Headquarters, where he was investigated for the charge of
rebellion and multiple murder, but subsequently, however, he was cleared by the army authorities.
The Government did not introduce any evidence except the testimony of Mauro Magsaysay, Chief of
National Bureau of Investigation, Cebu Office, who declared that Agent No. 64 was assigned by him
to cover the case of petitioner and that said agent obtained a sworn statement of Sonia Tiu to the
effect that petitioner had illicit relations with another woman and begot Sonia Tiu as a result.
However, Sonia Tiu, notwithstanding the opportunity given to her, failed to appear to substantiate the
charge.
The lower court, on the strength of the evidence presented, declared petitioner as having already
acquired Filipino citizenship relying apparently on the decision rendered in the case of Roa vs.
Collector of Customs (23 Phil., 315), which holds that those born in the Philippines of alien parents
are deemed Filipino citizens by virtue of the principle of jus soli. However, we are of the opinion that
petitioner cannot invoke said decision in his favor for the reason that the same has already been
expressly overruled in the case of Tan Chong vs. Secretary of Labor, 79 Phil., 249. Said the Court in
said case:.
Considering that the common law principle or rule of jus soli obtaining in England and in the
United States, as embodied in the Fourteenth Amendment to the Constitution of the United
States, has never been extended to this jurisdiction (section 1, Act of 1 July 1902; sec. 5, Act
of 29 August 1916); considering that the law in force and applicable to the petitioner and the
applicant in the two cases at the time of their birth is sec. 4 of Philippine Bill (Act of 1 July
1902), as amended by Act of 23 March 1912, which provides that only those inhabitants of
the Philippine Islands continuing to reside therein who were Spanish subjects on the 11th
day of April, 1899, and then resided in said Islands, and their children born subsequent
thereto, shall be deemed and held to be citizens of the Philippine Islands, we are of the
opinion and so hold that the petitioner in the first case and the applicant in the second case,
who were born of alien parentage, were not and are not, under said section, citizens of the
Philippine Islands.
Neither can petitioner invoke the benefit of the Roa decision even if he is similarly situated for the
reason that he has not been declared a Filipino citizen by judicial pronouncement before the
overruling of said decision. This is clearly inferred from our decision in the Tan Chong case wherein
we stated: "this decision is not intended or designed to deprive, as it cannot divest, of their Filipino
citizenship, those who had been declared to be Filipino citizens, or upon whom such citizenship had
been conferred, by the courts because of the doctrine or principle of res adjudicata. (Emphasis
supplied).
We believe, however, that petitioner can be given the benefit of our naturalization law considering
that, as his evidence shows, he possesses all the qualifications and none of the disqualifications
prescribed in the law for the acquisition of Philippine citizenship. Indeed, the Government has not
presented any evidence that may serve as basis for his disqualification, except the testimony of
Mauro Magsaysay who declared on a supposed investigation conducted by an agent of his office,
wherein one Sonia Tiu gave sworn statement as to an alleged illicit relation had by petitioner with a
woman, which evidence however is hearsay and incompetent not only because the supposed sworn
statement was not presented as evidence. but also because Sonia Tiu never appeared to testify in
spite of the opportunity given her by the court to do so. The claim of the Government that petitioner
is disqualified to be naturalized because he does not possess good moral character or has not
behaved in a proper and irreproachable manner during his stay in the Philippines, cannot therefore
be sustained.
Wherefore, the decision appealed from is modified in the sense that petitioner is granted Philippine
citizenship subject to the requirements of Republic Act No. 530.