By: Atty. Gregorio B. Austral, CPA
The Rights of the Dead
In the Philippines, the law does not forget the dead. While a person’s civil personality ends at death, the law continues to protect the dignity of the deceased and regulate what happens to their remains. But what exactly are the “rights of the dead,” and who gets to decide how they are honored and laid to rest?
Legal personality and death
Civil personality ends at death, but the effects of death—on rights and obligations, and on the treatment of remains—are governed by law, contracts, and wills. This is the baseline from which our funeral and burial rules flow.
Who decides on funeral and burial?
Disputes sometimes arise over who has the right to arrange the funeral or decide where a loved one is buried. The Supreme Court has made two key points:
- First, the law gives the right and duty to make funeral arrangements to the legal spouse and, failing that, to the next of kin, unless the deceased’s contrary wishes were validly expressed in the form the law recognizes. See Valino v. Adriano, G.R. No. 182894, April 22, 2014. In Valino, the Court upheld the legal wife’s right over the remains against the claim of a common-law partner.
- Second, a more recent case arose from a family dispute over exhumation and transfer of remains. The Court of Appeals allowed the transfer; on further review the Supreme Court dismissed the appeal on supervening events without resolving the substantive issues. See Ang v. Ang Sy, G.R. No. 234631, March 28, 2023. The takeaway is practical: these conflicts are intensely fact-specific, and clear, legally effective expressions of the deceased’s wishes prevent litigation.
As a matter of black-letter law, the Civil Code provisions often invoked are Articles 305–308: the funeral should respect the deceased’s expressed wishes; absent such, the spouse and then the nearest relatives have priority; and no remains may be retained, interred, disposed of, or exhumed without the consent of the persons designated by law.
Special rule for Muslim burials
Congress recently enacted a specific protection for Filipino Muslims:
“In accordance with Islamic rites, the burial of Muslim cadavers shall be performed as soon as possible, with or without certificate of death: Provided, That the death shall be reported … within fourteen (14) days after the date of burial to the local health officer who shall prepare the death certificate and certify the cause of death.”
— Republic Act No. 12160 (Philippine Islamic Burial Act), April 11, 2025, Sec. 3
The law also requires hospitals, clinics, and morgues to release Muslim remains within 24 hours regardless of unpaid bills, subject to reporting and any forensic requirements. Non-compliance carries criminal penalties. See Republic Act No. 12160 (2025).
Public health and order still matter
Public funerals and burials are also subject to health regulations that go back more than a century. Among other rules, burials generally must be in lawfully existing cemeteries, and authorities may regulate exhumations, shipping of remains, and sanitary practices:
“Except in cases of emergency, any person who shall bury or inter … in any place except in a burial ground or cemetery now or hereafter lawfully existing shall, upon conviction, be punished…” — Act No. 1458 (1906), Sec. 29
These provisions reflect the State’s duty to protect public health while respecting family decisions and religious customs. See Act No. 1458 (1906).
Why do all these matter
The rights of the dead are, in truth, the rights of the living to honor, remember, and lay to rest those who have gone before us—without needless conflict. Philippine law seeks to balance the deceased’s wishes, the rights of the family, religious customs, and public health. Clear, legally effective instructions (for example, in a will) and early family dialogue can prevent painful disputes.