Republic of the Philippines
OFFICE OF THE CIVIL REGISTRAR GENERAL
National Statistics Office
Manila
ADMINISTRATIVE
ORDER NO. 1, SERIES OF 2005
SUBJECT: RULES
AND REGULATIONS GOVERNING REGISTRATION OF
ACTS AND EVENTS
CONCERNING CIVIL STATUS OF MUSLIM FILIPINOS
Pursuant to Section 2 of Act No. 3753, otherwise
known as the Civil Registry Law of the hilippines,
which took effect on 27 February 1931, in
conjunction with Section 3, Executive Order
No. 157 (E.O. 157), Establishing a Civil Registration
System for Muslim Filipinos, and Chapters
1 and 2, Title VI, Book II of Presidential
Decree No. 1083 (P.D. 1083), also known as
the Code of Muslim Personal Laws of the Philippines,
which took effect on 4 February 1977, the
following rules and regulations are hereby
promulgated for the information, guidance
and compliance of all concerned.
PRELIMINARY STATEMENT
Administrative Order No. 2, Series
of 1993 (AO No. 2, S. 1993) is hereby revised
to provide a more responsive civil registration
system for Muslim Filipinos whether residing
here or abroad.
The head of the National Statistics Office is
the Civil Registrar General (CRG). The City/Municipal
Civil Registrar (C/MCR) is in charge of recording
birth, marriage, death and other registrable
acts and events occurring among the Muslims
in cities and municipalities and is appointed
by the Mayor in accordance with the Local Government
Code of 1991 and/or the ARMM Local Government
Code. For Muslim marriage, divorce, revocation
of divorce and conversion to Islam, recording
thereof is the responsibility of the Clerk of
Court of the Sharia Circuit Court hereinafter
referred to as Circuit Registrar (Article 83,
P. D. 1083). All judicial decrees and legal
instruments concerning civil status of Muslim
Filipinos issued by the Sharia Court shall
be registered in accordance with AO No. 1, S.
1993 and this Order.
Rule 1. Civil Registration
System for Muslim Filipinos
Executive Order No.
157 issued on February 15, 1994 by the President
of the Republic of the Philippines established
the Civil Registration System for Muslim Filipinos.
Rule 2. Definition
of Terms:
As used in these rules:
- Muslim is a
person who testifies to the oneness of GOD
and the Prophethood of Muhammad (Peace Be
Upon Him) and professes Islam.
- Muslim Personal Law
includes all laws relating to personal status,
marriage and divorce, matrimonial and family
relations, succession and inheritance and
property relations between spouses as provided
for in the Muslim Code (P.D. 1083).
- Muslim Laws refer
to all the ordinances and resolutions governing
Muslims as found principally in the Quran
and the Hadith.
- Ada means customary
law.
- Circuit Registrar
is the Clerk of the Sharia Circuit Court
acting in the performance of their function
under Title VI, Book II of P.D. 1083 and this
Order.
- District Registrar
is the Clerk of the Court of the Sharia
District Court acting in the performance of
their function under Title VI, Book II of
P.D. 1083 and this Order.
- Idda is the
period of waiting prescribed for a woman whose
marriage has been dissolved by death or by
divorce the completion of which shall enable
her to contract a new marriage.
- Talaq is the
repudiation of the wife by the husband.
- Tafwid is the
exercise by the wife of the delegated right
to repudiate.
- Wali is the
guardian in marriage.
- Muslim Code
refers to Presidential Decree No. 1083 (P.D.
1083).
Rule 3. Registrable
Acts and Events Concerning Civil Status of Muslim
Filipinos
The following acts and
events concerning civil status of Muslim Filipinos
shall be recorded in the appropriate civil registry
book:
- Acts and events enumerated under Rule 7
of AO No. 1, S. 1993 insofar as they are applicable
to Muslim Filipinos; and
- Muslim marriages, divorces, revocation of
divorces, conversion to Islam, and other registrable
documents.
Rule 4. Registry
Book
The Circuit Registrar shall keep and preserve
in his office the following registry books:
- Register of Muslim Marriages;
- Register of Muslim Divorces;
- Register of Revocation of Muslim Divorces;
- Register of Conversion to Islam;
- Register of Legal Instruments; and
- Register of Court Decrees/Orders
Rule 5. Civil Registration
Forms
- Documents presented before the C/MCR for
registration of vital events of Muslim Filipinos
are the following:
- Accomplished Certificate of Live Birth
and attachment
- Accomplished Certificate of Death and
attachment
- Accomplished Certificate of Marriage
with attachment if the marriage was performed
in accordance with P.D. 1083 and there
is no Sharia Court in the place
where the marriage was solemnized.
- Documents presented before the District/Circuit
Registrar are the following:
- Accomplished Certificate of Marriage
and attachment
- Accomplished Certificate of Divorce
- Accomplished Certificate of Revocation
of Divorce
- Accomplished Certificate of Conversion
to Islam
Rule 6. Applicability
This Order shall apply
in all cities and municipalities in the Philippines
where acts and events concerning civil status
of Muslim may occur. However, in cases where
the act or event occur in a foreign country,
the same shall be governed by Rule 10 of AO
No. 1, S. 1993, and other applicable laws taking
into consideration the beliefs, customs and
practices of Muslims thereat. In addition, the
duty of the C/MCR or the Circuit Registrar insofar
as civil registration is concerned may be performed
by the authorized official of the Philippine
Foreign Service Establishment.
Rule 7. Registration
of Births
Registration of births of Muslim Filipinos shall
be governed by pertinent provisions of AO No.
1, S. 1993 and supplemented by the following
specific rules:
- Regardless of the period of intra-uterine
life of the fetus when born alive, however
briefly, the birth of the child shall be recorded
in the Register of Births as a live birth.
- The first name of the father or the surname
of either the father or the mother may be
used as the childs last name subject
to Islamic or Muslim Law or Ada (customary
laws).
- Upon receipt of the Certificate of Live
Birth or COLB (Municipal Form 102, revised
January 1993), the C/MCR shall examine Item
No. 15 (Religion of the Father). In case the
entry therein is "Islam", the C/MCR
shall accomplish Municipal Form 102 and require
the informant to give the following data in
the Attachment: Name of child, date of birth
in the Hijrah calendar and its equivalent
in Gregorian calendar and the ethnic affiliation
of parents.
- Municipal Form No. 102 and the attachment
shall be permanently kept together and shall
constitute the record of birth.
Rule 8. Registration
of Deaths
Registration of deaths of Muslim Filipinos shall
be governed by the pertinent provisions of AO
No. 1, S. 1993 and supplemented by the following
specific rules:
- In accordance with the Islamic law and jurisprudence,
the dead body shall be buried as soon as possible
even without the certificate of death; provided
that the death shall be reported by the person
who performed the burial rites (or by the
nearest kin) within forty-eight (48) hours
after the date of burial to the local health
authority who shall certify the cause of death.
In the absence of the health officer or his
authorized representative, the death shall
be reported to the Mayor or any member of
the Sangguniang Panlungsod/Bayan, or the Municipal
Secretary as the case may be, who shall certify
as to the possible cause of death.
- Upon receipt of the Certificate of Death
(Municipal Form 103, revised January 1993),
the C/MCR shall examine Item No. 3 (Religion).
In case the entry therein is "Islam",
the C/MCR shall require the informant to accomplish
or to give the following data in order to
accomplish Municipal Form 103 Attachment:
name of the deceased including Haj name if
any, date of birth, name of the person who
performed the burial rites and the name of
the surviving spouse(s).
- Municipal Form No. 103 and the attachment
shall be permanently kept together and shall
constitute the record of death.
Rule 9. Registration
of Marriages
Registration of marriages among Muslim Filipinos
shall be governed by the following rules:
- Marriage (Nikha) among Muslim Filipinos
is not only a civil contract but a social
institution. Its nature, consequences and
incidents are governed by P.D. 1083 and the
Sharia, and are not subject to stipulations,
except that the marriage settlements may,
to a certain extent, fix the property relations
of the spouses (Article 14, P.D. No. 1083).
- Marriage among Muslim Filipinos performed
under their customs, traditions, rites and
practices shall be reported within thirty
(30) days after the date of marriage by the
officiating person, or in his default, by
the parties to the marriage for registration,
to the Circuit Registrar of the city or municipality
where the Sharia Circuit Court exists.
Where there is no Sharia Circuit Court,
marriages among Muslim Filipinos shall be
registered at the Local Civil Registry Office
(LCRO) where the marriage was celebrated with
the annotation that the marriage is in accordance
with P.D. 1083 both in the Certificate of
Marriage and the Marriage Register.
- The person officiating the marriage shall
indicate in the Certificate of Marriage (Municipal
Form 97, revised January 1993) that said marriage
was solemnized in accordance with P.D. No.
1083, and fill up the attachment to the Certificate
of Marriage with the following information:
amount of mahr (dowry); first or subsequent
marriage; tafwid, if granted and such other
stipulations. The Certificate of Marriage
and the attachment shall be permanently kept
together and shall constitute the record of
marriage.
- The Certificate of Marriage shall be prepared
in five (5) copies and shall be distributed
by the Circuit Registrar, or by the C/MCR,
as the case may be, as follows: first copy
to the contracting parties; second copy to
the Civil Registrar General (CRG); third copy
to the Circuit Registrar/C/MCR; the fourth
copy to the District Registrar if marriage
was registered at the Sharia Court;
and the fifth copy to the solemnizing officer.
- Other matters related to registration of
marriages among Muslim Filipinos not covered
by this Rule shall be governed by the pertinent
provisions of Administrative Order No. 1,
Series of 1993.
Rule 10.
Registration of Divorces
Registration of divorces among Muslim Filipinos
shall be governed by the following rules:
- Divorce is the formal dissolution of the
marriage bond in accordance with P.D. 1083
to be granted only after the exhaustion of
all possible means of reconciliation between
the spouses. It may be effected by the following:
- Repudiation of the wife by the husband
(talaq);
- Vow of continence by the husband (ila);
- Injurious assimilation of the wife by
the husband (zihar);
- Acts of imprecation (lian);
- Redemption by the wife (khul);
- Exercise by the wife of the delegated
right to repudiate (tafwid); or
- Judicial decree (faskh) (P.D. 1083).
- A divorce pronounced by the husband or by
the wife in case of tafwid and such other
forms of divorce shall not become irrevocable
until the expiration of the prescribed "idda".
The first and second divorce (talaq) are revocable
during the "idda" and the third
is irrevocable. If the spouses fail to reconcile
during the "idda" they can only
reconcile through a new contract of marriage.
In case of the third divorce, they cannot
anymore reconcile to each other unless the
wife is married by an intervening husband
and the latter divorces her and after the
expiration of the "idda," the former
husband may remarry her.
- Any Muslim husband who has pronounced a
talaq shall, without delay, file with the
Clerk of Court of the Sharia Circuit
Court of the place where his family resides
or domiciles, or in the most accessible Sharia
Court, a written notice of such fact and the
circumstances attendant thereto, after having
served a copy thereof to the wife concerned.
The notice filed shall be conclusive evidence
that talaq has been pronounced and shall constitute
the Certificate of Divorce. In case the divorce
is through a court decree, the corresponding
decision shall constitute the Certificate
of Divorce.
- All Certificates of Divorce or Court Decrees
shall be registered in the Sharia Circuit
Court. The Sharia Circuit Court or LCRO
where the marriage was registered shall be
furnished a copy of the Certificate of Divorce
or Court Decree for annotation in the Certificate
of Marriage and the Marriage Register. Five
(5) copies of the Certificate of Divorce or
Court Decree shall be submitted for registration
within thirty (30) days after the date of
divorce by the interested party.
- The Circuit Registrar shall distribute the
five (5) copies of the Certificate of Divorce
or court decree of divorce as follows: first
copy to the husband; second copy to the wife;
third copy to the OCRG; the fourth copy to
the District Registrar; and the fifth copy
for his file.
Rule 11.
Registration of Revocation of Divorces
Registration of revocation of divorces among
Muslim Filipinos shall be governed by the following
rules:
- Within seven (7) days after the revocation
of a divorce by reconciliation (ruju), the
husband shall, with the wifes written
consent, file a sworn statement thereof in
five (5) copies with the Circuit Registrar
of the city or municipality where the Certificate
of Divorce or court decree of divorce was
previously registered. The fact of revocation
of divorce shall be annotated in the Certificate
of Divorce or court decree of divorce and
the Marriage Register. Such revocation shall
also be forwarded to the Circuit Registrar
or C/MCR of the place where the marriage was
registered for proper annotation in the Certificate
of Marriage and Marriage Register.
- The five (5) copies of the sworn statement
of the revocation of divorce, after registration,
shall be distributed by the Circuit Registrar
as follows: first copy to the husband; second
copy to the wife; third copy to the OCRG;
fourth copy to the Clerk of the Sharia
District Court; and the fifth copy for his
file.
Rule 12.
Registration of Conversion to Islam
Registration of a persons conversion to
Islam is prima facie proof that he professes
the Islamic faith and thus becomes a Muslim.
It shall be governed by the following rules:
- A person who desires to embrace Islamic
faith shall accomplish the Certificate of
Conversion to Islam by providing the following
information: his or her full name, sex, civil
status, date of birth and age, place of birth,
occupation, residence, citizenship, parents
and their respective religions. The certificate
shall be attested to by at least two witnesses
who must be Muslim Filipinos. In case the
convert is a minor, the consent of the parents,
or the guardian is necessary.
- In addition, the Convert shall submit a
certification that he/she has undergone an
orientation on basic principles and practices
of Islam from any accredited Muslim organization
by the Office on Muslim Affairs or from any
recognized and competent Ustadz or Ulama.
The Circuit Registrar shall require submission
of such certification.
- Four (4) copies of the Certificate of Conversion
to Islam shall be submitted for registration
within thirty (30) days after the date of
its execution by the convert or his authorized
representative to the Sharia Circuit
Court where conversion occurred. In the city
or municipality where there is no Sharia
Circuit Court, conversion to Islam shall be
reported by the same person to the LCRO of
the place of conversion who shall forward
the same to the Sharia Circuit Court
where the convert is domiciled under the procedures
of out-of-town reporting.
In case the convert is not domiciled within
the territorial jurisdiction of the five (5)
Sharia judicial districts, the registration
shall be at the nearest Sharia Circuit
Court. In such case, the convert, in addition
to the requirements under Rule 12 (1) and
(2), certify under oath that he has not registered
such conversion before any Circuit Registrar.
The same shall be annexed to the Certificate
of Conversion and simultaneously filed therewith.
- The four (4) copies of the Certificate of
Conversion shall be distributed, after registration,
by the Circuit Registrar as follows: first
copy to the convert; second copy to the CRG;
third copy to the District Registrar, and
the fourth copy for his file.
Rule 13.
Revocation of Conversion to Islam
After registration by the District Registrar,
the court order of revocation of conversion
to Islam shall be forwarded to the Circuit Registrar
where the conversion was registered for annotation.
The revocation shall be annotated
to the Certificate of Conversion to Islam as
follows:
"Conversion to Islam is hereby
revoked pursuant to court order issued by
(state the name of the district judge) of
(state the name of the Sharia District
Court and location) in special proceedings
number (state the case number) on (state
the date of the order)."
The Circuit Registrar shall endorse
to the OCRG a certified true copy of the court
order of the revocation of conversion to Islam
which shall be annexed to the annotated Certificate
of Conversion.
Rule 14. Miscellaneous
and Transitory Provisions
- A Muslim foster child or those who have
been under guardianship may use the surname
of the foster parent or guardian in accordance
with Ada. The foster parent or guardian shall
execute an affidavit (Shahada) declaring that
the child is under their care.
The Shahada shall be submitted to the C/MCR
of the place of birth of the foster child,
as a supporting document for the annotation
of the COLB. The use of the foster parents
surname shall also be annotated in the remarks
portions of the COLB, that the surname being
used is pursuant to the Shahada executed by
the foster parent or guardian. The C/MCR upon
verification of the authenticity of all the
documents submitted shall endorse the request
and its supporting documents including the
filing fee in postal money order or in any
other mode of payment addressed to the OCRG.
- Any Muslim Filipino who has performed Haj
(Muslim pilgrimage to Mecca, Kingdom of Saudi
Arabia) and has acquired new name by virtue
thereof, may request for the corresponding
annotation of his or her COLB. A Muslim Filipino
who has acquired traditional title pursuant
to Ada may likewise request for annotation
thereof in the COLB.
The request for annotation in the COLB for
the use of the Haj name shall be submitted
to the C/MCR of his/her place of birth with
the following supporting documents: Certification
from OMA that he/she has performed Haj; certification
from pilgrimage authorities that the new name
acquired was conferred during the Haj; and
certified true copy of his/her passport. The
request for annotation in the COLB for the
recognition of traditional titles acquired
pursuant to Ada shall be attested by at least
two witnesses of the conferment. Along with
the request, a Certification from OMA that
the title was conferred in accordance with
Ada shall be submitted to the C/MCR of the
place of birth of the person bestowed with
the traditional title.
The C/MCR upon examining and verifying the
authenticity of all the documents submitted
shall then endorse the request and its supporting
documents, including the filing fee in postal
money order or in any other mode of payment
addressed to the OCRG.
- A married Muslim Filipino woman may use
the surname of her husband or may retain her
maiden name in all her public records and
other documents.
- Muslim marriages contracted anywhere in
the Philippines before the effectivity of
P.D. 1083 shall be registered with LCRO of
the place where such marriage took place.
- Subsequent marriages entered into by a Muslim
Filipino man though there was previous existing
marriage can be registered. The registration
of subsequent marriages shall follow the registration
procedure of prior marriages. In addition,
such marriage and its corresponding registration
shall be subject to the provisions of P.D.
1083.
- Insofar as applicable, the duties of the
District and Circuit Registrar provided under
P.D. 1083 shall form part of this Administrative
Order.
Rule 15.
Penalty - Any person found violating
this Order shall be liable under the existing
civil registry laws, P.D. 1083, civil service
laws and other pertinent laws.
Rule 16.
Repealing Clause - AO No. 2, S. 1993
and all other rules and regulations, orders,
memoranda or circulars issued by the Civil Registrar
General which are inconsistent with these rules
and regulations are hereby repealed or modified
accordingly.
Rule 17.
Separability Clause - If any provision
of this Order is declared invalid or unconstitutional,
the remaining provisions not affected thereby
shall continue in full force and effect.
Rule 18.
Effectivity Clause - This Order shall
take effect fifteen (15) days after its publication
in a newspaper of general circulation in the
Philippines.
Approved this 20th day of June
2005.
(Sgd.) CARMELITA N. ERICTA
Civil Registrar General
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