dissenting.
Because in my judgment it defeats the effectiveness in >ne of its primary social objectives of Act No. 229 of May .2, 1942, as amended by Act No. 243 of May 12, 1945, I [issent from the opinion of the Court adjudging the plaintiff ninor to continue bearing her mother’s surname — Vargas— *370and not that of her father — Jusino—despite the fact that her paternity was fully established in this special action for recognition which, for the purposes of bearing the surname of the father, is prescribed by Act No. 229, above mentioned. I dissent because I consider that the decisions of this Court— cited in the opinion — 1 dealing with actions for recognition of natural children under prior legislation are not applicable to the action of special recognition provided by Act No. 229; and because I think that the opinion of the Court, far from giving full expression to the sense of human equities which ■inspired the legislation under consideration, implies a denial of the evident intention of the lawmaker in adopting such a remedial social statute. I shall explain.
The second paragraph of § 2 of Act No. 229, which was added to it by Act No. 243 of May 12, 1945, established a special action for the recognition of children who, lacking the qualifications of natural children according to prior legislation, were born out of wedlock prior to May 12,1942, effective date of Act No. 229. Pursuant to the first paragraph of § 2, in force since the approval of the original Act, such children could be recognized for all legal purposes by the voluntary action of their parents, and in their default, by that of persons having the right to inherit therefrom. It was for the benefit of these children, when not recognized in the foregoing manner, that the second paragraph was added. This paragraph provides:
“In case the children referred to in this Section are no' recognized by the voluntary action of their parents, and in de fault of the latter, by that of the persons having the right t< inherit therefrom, said children shall be considered as natura children for the sole purpose of bearing, the surname of thei: parents. The action for this recognition shall be prosecuted ii accordance with the procedure fixed by the Civil Code of Puerti Rico for the recognition of natural children; It being under *371stood, however, that such a recognition shall only have the scope herein expressed.”
The case at bar involves the special action of recognition of a child born prior to the approval of Act No. 229, as amended, of parents who lacked the qualification of being able to contract marriage, with or without dispensation, since one of them was already lawfully, married. ■ What did the lawmaker mean for the purposes of this kind of actions when he stated “The action for this recognition shall be prosecuted in accordance with the procedure fixed by the Civil Code of Puerto Rico for the recognition of natural children”? Analyzing the scope of the amendment of May 12,1945, the views of the illustrious commentator Dr. Luis Muñoz Morales, set forth in his Annotations to the Civil Code of Puerto Rico, Vol. I, p. 414, are the following:
“The action for this recognition, says the amendment cited, shall be prosecuted in accordance with the procedure fixed by the Civil Code for recognition of natural children; and, therefore, we should refer to § 126 according to which these actions can only be established during the life of the parents or one year after their death, except if the parents shall have died during the minority of the child, in which case, the child may bring this action before the first four years of his having attained his majority.” 2
Despite the fact that in my dissenting opinion in Eli*372cier v. Heirs of Cautiño, 70 P.R.R. 415, 427 (which dealt exclusively with the interpretation of the phrase “may be recognized by the voluntary action of their parents...” contained in the first paragraph of § 2 of Act No. 229, and not — as in the instant one — with the evidence necessary to sustain the special action of recognition exercised herein for the sole purpose of bearing the surname of her father) I stated as dictum that what the lawmaker had set forth in the second paragraph of § 2 was applicable “to the cases included in subdivisions 3 and 4 of § 125 [of the Civil Code] which are the true cases of forced recognition, and not those of subdivisions 1 and 2 already mentioned,” 3 my judgment with respect to the application of those subdivisions to this kind of actions, now yields to the more authoritative discernment of the learned civilian above-mentioned.
His theory is more patent and clear if we bear in mind that the provisions of § 125 of the Civil Code, in its third paragraph, establish as substantive law — and not as a mere procedural step— the right of the child to the recognition by the father and the obligation of the latter to recognize him. To require in this action of special recognition for the sole purpose of bearing the surname of the father the same evidence required in cases of recognition of natural children according to the meaning of § 125 of the Civil Code, first paragraph, in force prior to the approval of Act No. 229, and according to the decisions rendered in the light of such concept, would be to interpose between-the adulterine or in*373cestuous child — to whom the legislation under consideration refers — and the surname of the father an unsurmduntable obstacle, since it is a human rule of conduct, that it is not usual that a father who begets a child under circumstances which make it a crime, should be inclined to make a public and continuous ostentation of his status of father — which is equivalent to making an ostentation of the fault committed. To require from an adulterine or incestuous child, who brings an action of special recognition for the sole purpose of bearing the surname of his father, proof of the uninterrupted possession of the status of natural child, is a contradiction within the juridical system prevailing prior to the taking effect of Act No. 229, since the status of adulterine or incestuous child precludes the possibility of having enjoyed such condition. To require such a thing would be to attribute to the lawmaker when approving the amendment of May 12, 1945, an idle purpose.
If there were any doubt, however, regarding the scope of the provisions of the statute we should recall that “The most effectual and universal manner of discovering the true meaning of a law, when its expressions are dubious is by considering the reason and spirit thereof, or the cause or motives which induced its enactment.” Section 19, Civil Code, 1930 ed. The fundamental purpose of the amendment of May 12, 1945, establishing the special action of recognition for the sole purpose of bearing the surname of the father, was undoubtedly to furnish a name to the child who can not be blamed for being an ill-begotten child, demanding it from the person who should not continue to shield himself under his own guilt to deny his child the natural right to be so. The above-cited amendment, in my judgment, has the effect of destroying to a limited extent the immunity given to such father by the juridical order established by previous legislation, without altering in the economic order, the rights to the legitimate or natural succession. Therefore, I think that in this kind of actioiis once the paternity is satisfactorily *374established, as in the instant case, the child’s right to bear the surname of his father should be recognized. If the father is considered as such in order to compel him to furnish support to the child, according to § 128 of the Civil Code,' 1980 ed., it is sufficient to compel him to give his name to the child. In this manner the legislative intent would be fully accomplished and no alteration would be imposed on the father or — in the established social order — inasmuch as once society discovers the fact that he is a father because he is imposed the obligation to support a child born in the above-stated conditions, nothing is suffered by society or by the father in recognizing to such child the right to bear his surname.
To that effect, I consider that the amendment of May 12, 1945, operates to enlarge the rights of the child who under legislation prior to that of Act No. 229 was considered as adulterine or incestuous, including in § 128 of the Civil Code besides the right to support, the right to bear the surname of the father.
I shall not close this opinion without setting forth the liberal views adopted by this Court in the past in cases of recognition of natural children under legislation prior to that of Act No. 229 — Colón v. Heirs of A. J. Tristani (1932), 44 P.R.R. 163 — in which case speaking through Mr. Justice Cor-dova Dávila, it was stated:
“THe decisions of the Supreme Court of Spain require a strong, vigorous, and convincing evidence, revealing with indubitable certainty the blood ties which join him with the person from whom he demands acknowledgment. The severity of the decisions of Spain has its explanation in the prohibition regarding the investigation of paternity, which prevents that these blood tiés be established with evidence regarding the relations of an intimate character existing between its alleged parents. But when the natural condition of the child may be established by evidence of his paternity, once the trial court considers that this fact is proved, judicial discretion should be humane, judicious and liberal, without going beyond the limits of the law, *375in order that the natural child may find feasible the way to make effective the duties contracted by his father of acknowledging him■ once the child is engendered and to demand the rights inherent to his filiation. Paternity is an element which may not be ignored by the trial judge, when evidence to that effect has been presented, in order to reach a conclusion. This evidence could have been ignored in Spain, where the child was not allowed to investigate his origin and where he ‘continues to !be a legitimate child of chance and the unknown,’ as correctly stated by Scaevola, ‘although it may -be shown that there existed sexual relations between man and woman and that the claimant was born as a result thereof.’ This may not happen at present in Spain, where the new Spanish Constitution provides that filiation can not be the ground of legal privileges, imposes on the parents the same duties toward their children, whether legitimate or illegitimate, and leaves to the civil laws the.regulation of the investigation of paternity.' This should not happen in Puerto Rico where the investigation of paternity is not prohibited by our latos. (Italics ours):
Nor shall I close the opinion without pointing out, with deep reverence, the words of ample social justice of retired Mr. Chief Justice Del Toro in his dissenting opinion in Ortiz v. Dragoni (1941), 59 P.R.R. 14, 29:
“There should be no fatherless children. The responsibility ;hat binds the man who begets a human being to his offspring should not be eluded. Once his paternity is established and it s shown that the same has been in any way acknowledged by ;he father, it should not be permitted that selfishness, family sonnections, or, the serious material and moral consequences generally attaching thereto, should destroy the first spontaneous irge to which nature itself responded, because that first act mbodies truth and justice.”
The opinion of the Court herein proclaims that despite laving a father there is a daughter without a name. Consequently, I think that the judgment of the lower court should liso be affirmed in the action of filiation, recognizing to the ilaintiff minor the right to bear the surname of her father.
Fontánez v. Heirs of Buxó, 36 P.R.R. 202; Vega v. Heirs of Vega, 82 P.R.R. 548; Montalvo v. Montalvo et al., 25 P.R.R. 800; Méndez v. Martínez, 21 P.R.R. 238.
Section 126 of the Civil Code, 1930 ed. provides:
“The action for the recognition of natural children, can only be established during the life of the presumptive parents, and a year beyond their death except in the following instances:
“1. If the father or the mother shall have died during the minority of the child, in which case, the child may bring his action before the first four years of his having attained his majority, shall have elapsed.
“2. If after the death of the father or mother there shall appear a written statement or document, of which no notice was previously had, wherein the child is expressly recognized.
“In this case the action shall be established within the next six months after the document has been discovered.
“The recognition of a child not having the qualifications provided for in paragraph first of section 125 can be disputed by whomsoever may be affected thereby.”
Section 125 of the Civil Code, in its third paragraph provides that: “The father is obliged to recognize the natural child:
“1. When there exists an indubitable statement in writing of the father wherein he expressly acknowledges his paternity.
“2. Where the child has uninterruptedly enjoyed the conditions as of a natural child of the defendant father justified by acts of the same father or of his family.
“3. When the mother was known to have lived in concubinage with the father, both during her pregnancy and at the time of the birth of the child.
“4. When the child may present any authentic evidence of his paternity.”