EN BANC
[ G.R. No. 184389. November 16, 2021 ]ALLAN MADRILEJOS v. LOURDES GATDULA +
ALLAN MADRILEJOS, ALLAN HERNANDEZ, GLENDA GIL, AND LISA GOKONGWEI-CHENG, PETITIONERS, VS. LOURDES GATDULA, AGNES LOPEZ, HILARION BUBAN, AND THE OFFICE OF THE CITY PROSECUTOR OF MANILA, RESPONDENTS.
R E S O L U T I O N
ALLAN MADRILEJOS v. LOURDES GATDULA +
ALLAN MADRILEJOS, ALLAN HERNANDEZ, GLENDA GIL, AND LISA GOKONGWEI-CHENG, PETITIONERS, VS. LOURDES GATDULA, AGNES LOPEZ, HILARION BUBAN, AND THE OFFICE OF THE CITY PROSECUTOR OF MANILA, RESPONDENTS.
R E S O L U T I O N
ZALAMEDA, J.:
Petitioners - editors and publisher of FHM Philippines - sought to enjoin the conduct of preliminary investigation of a criminal complaint filed against them for grave scandal under Article 200 of the Revised Penal Code (RPC) and violation of Manila City Ordinance No. 7780 which penalizes the printing, distribution, circulation and sale of scandalous, obscene and pornographic materials.[3]
According to petitioners, the vague and expansive language of Ordinance No. 7780 is unconstitutional for being patently offensive to their rights to free speech and expression, due process, privacy and the principle of separation of church and state.[4]
On 11 November 2013, and while this case was still pending resolution, petitioners informed the Court that the Office of the City Prosecutor (OCP) of Manila had issued a Resolution dated 25 June 2013 dismissing the charges for violation of Article 200 of the RPC and Ordinance No. 7780. A criminal information for violation of Article 201(3) of the RPC[5] was ordered filed against petitioners instead. This case was docketed as Criminal Case No. 13-30084 and assigned to Branch 16 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Manila, which was eventually dismissed.[6]
In dismissing the Petition, the Court, voting 9 to 4, held that: (1) the dismissal of the criminal charges against petitioners for violation of the provisions of Ordinance No. 7780 has rendered this case moot and academic; and (2) Ordinance No. 7780, being an anti-obscenity law, cannot be facially attacked on the ground of overbreadth as obscenity is unprotected speech.[7]
Petitioners, in their Motion for Reconsideration dated 06 February 2020, ask the Court to revisit its dismissal of the case on the ground of mootness. They likewise reiterate their arguments for the declaration of Ordinance No. 7780's unconstitutionality.[8]
We DENY the Motion.
It is not disputed that the criminal charges against petitioners for violation of Ordinance No. 8870 have been dismissed.[9] This dismissal has clearly rendered the case for prohibition moot and academic.
Senior Associate Justice Estela Perlas-Bernabe and Associate Justices Marvic Leonen and Rosmari D. Carandang, however, are of the view that the case persists as the issue raised by petitioners against the constitutionality of Ordinance No. 7780 is separate and distinct form the matter of their criminal prosecution.[10] Senior Associate Justice Bernabe posits that a declaration on the matter of constitutionality would have practical legal value give its "expansive scope" and "subsistence in the legislative books of the City of Manila. . . "[11] Justice Leonen, on the other hand, sees the case as falling within the "capable of repetition, yet evading review" exception of the rule on mootness.[12]
First. Without doubt, any ruling from this Court, with respect to the constitutionality of a subsisting law would have legal value, this Court being the "final arbiter of the Constitution."[13] As some commentators have put it, Supreme Court decisions "change the law and, thus, the country, by their very publication."[14] This, however, surely does not mean that the Court must settle all constitutional controversies presented before it under all circumstances; hence, the constitutional policy of avoidance.[15] To borrow from the words of Justice Kapunan, "[w]here a controversy can be settled on a platform other than the one involving constitutional adjudication," as in this case, "the court should exercise becoming modesty and avoid the constitutional question."[16]
Second. As explained in the Decision, the "capable of repetition, yet evading review" exception has been applied in limited cases, that is, in cases where the following requisites have been shown to concur: (1) the challenged action is in its duration too short to be fully litigated prior to its cessation or expiration and (2) there is a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party would be subjected to the same action again.[17] Both of these requirements are absent in this case.
Petitioners have not shown that criminal prosecution under the Ordinance would be of such short duration as to prevent this Court from ever being able to rule on the constitutionality of its provisions. Neither have they demonstrated any reasonable likelihood that they would be subjected to criminal prosecution under the same Ordinance again. In Oclarino v. Navarro,[18] we clarified that reasonable expectation is something more than mere speculation that the complaining party would be subjected to the same action. As noted in the Decision, the OCP of Manila did not even bother to challenge the dismissal of the case against petitioners. In fact, petitioners were hard-pressed to show any other prosecution, whether against them or others, under said Ordinance, much less on the level of occurrence they argue they would be prosecuted. This, to this Court's mind, may also explain why, by petitioners' own admission, "no other case has been filed to question [Ordinance No. 7780]'s constitutionality."[19]
Third. Petitioners' arguments are facial attacks against Ordinance No. 7780 on the ground of overbreadth. A litigant, however, cannot mount a facial challenge against a criminal statute on either vagueness or overbreadth grounds. The overbreadth doctrine finds special application in free speech cases; it is not used to test the validity of penal laws.[20]
Fourth. Ordinance No. 7780 is a law which criminalizes obscenity and pornography. These are unprotected speech which the State has the right and mandate, as parens patriae, to protect the public from.[21] Laws regulating such materials cannot be facially invalidated precisely because there is no "transcendent value to society" that would justify such attack.[22] This is all the more important especially when one considers that the Manila City Council, arguably an indispensable party considering that Ordinance No. 7780 was its enactment, was not made party to the proceedings and therefore was not heard on this specific issue.[23]
We acknowledge that this Court has, in the past, seen fit to resolve questions even when subsequent events have rendered the resolution of said matter unnecessary at that time.[24] Further research would nevertheless also show an equally significant number of cases wherein this Court has seen fit to stay its hand and refrain from delving into the substantive aspects of a case where the case can be resolved on other grounds,[25] novelty or presence of constitutionality issues notwithstanding.
Finally, in dismissing this case, we do not mean to give short shrift to the constitutional freedoms sought to be protected by petitioners when they filed this case. However, it is one thing to strike down a legislative enactment (albeit in this case, a local ordinance) determined to be violative of fundamental rights in an actual case after a full-blown hearing, where all pertinent issues are sufficiently and exhaustively briefed by all indispensable parties, and quite another to cast aspersions on a law based on seemingly unfounded presumptions[26] and, on that basis, declare said law unconstitutional. We must be reminded of Justice Stone's admonition: "While unconstitutional exercise of power by the executive and legislative branches of the government is subject to judicial restraint, the only check upon our own exercise of power is our own sense of self-restraint."[27]
WHEREFORE, premises considered, petitioners' motion for reconsideration is DENIED.
Gesmundo, C.J., Hernando, Inting, M. Lopez, Gaerlan, Rosario, and Dimaampao, JJ., concur.
Perlas-Bernabe, J., on official leave but left vote. Please see Dissenting Opinion.
Leonen, J., dissent. See separate opinion.
Caguioa, J., see Dissent.
Carandang, J., join the dissent of Justice Leonen.
Lazaro-Javier, J., see Dissenting Opinion.
J. Lopez,* J., no part.
* Took no part due to prior participation as City Prosecutor of Manila.
[1] Rollo, pp. 544-559.
[2] Id. at 3-38.
[3] Id. at 457-461.
[4] Id. at 461.
[5] Art. 201. Immoral doctrines, obscene publications and exhibitions, and indecent shows. — The penalty of prision mayor or a fine ranging from six thousand to twelve thousand pesos, or both such imprisonment and fine, shall be imposed upon:
xxx
3. Those who shall sell, give away or exhibit films, prints, engravings, sculpture or literature which are offensive to morals. (As amended by PD Nos. 960 and 969).
[6] Rollo, pp. 462-463.
[7] Id. at 463-480.
[8] Id. at 544-556.
[9] Id. at 463-470.
[10] Senior Associate Justice Estela M. Perlas-Bernabe, Dissenting Opinion, p. 3; Associate Justice Marvic M. V. F. Leonen, Dissenting Opinion, p. 6.
[11] Senior Associate Justice Estela M. Perlas-Bernabe, Dissenting Opinion, p. 3.
[12] Associate Justice Marvic M. V. F. Leonen, Dissenting Opinion, p. 6.
[13] Gios-Samar, Inc. v. Department of Transportation and Communications, 896 Phil. 213, 257 (2019) [Per J. Jardeleza], citing Angara v. Electoral Commission, 63 Phil. 139 (1936) [Per J. Laurel].
[14] Tribe, Laurence & Matz, Joshua. (2014). Uncertain Justice: The Roberts Court and the Constitution. New York: Picador, p. 318.
[15] See Parcon-Song v. Parcon, G.R. No. 199582, 07 July 2020 [Per J. Leonen].
[16] Lim v. Pacquing, 310 Phil. 722 (1995) [Per J. Padilla].
[17] Pormento v. Estrada, 643 Phil. 735 (2010) [Per J. Corona], citing Lewis v. Continental Bank Corporation, 494 U.S. 472 (1990).
[18] G.R. No. 220514, 25 September 2019 [Per J. Reyes, J. Jr.].
[19] Rollo, p. 545.
[20] See Southern Hemisphere Engagement Network, Inc. v. Anti-Terrorism Council, 646 Phil. 452 (2010) [Per J. Carpio-Morales]; See also Separate Opinion of Justice Vicente V. Mendoza.
[21] See Fernando v. Court of Appeals, 539 Phil. 407 (2006) [Per J. Quisumbing].
[22] See Samahan ng mga Progresibong Kabataan v. Quezon City, 815 Phil. 1067, 1105 (2017) [Per J. Perlas-Bernabe].
[23] See Moldex Realty, Inc. v. HLURB, 552 Phil. 281 (2007) [Per J. Tinga].
[24] Associate Justice Marvic M.V. F. Leonen, Dissenting Opinion, p. 13.
[25] Versoza v. People, G.R. No. 184535, 03 September 2019 [Per Curiam]; Real v. House of Representative, G.R. No. 252187 (Notice), 30 June 2020; Alliance of Non-life Insurance Workers of the Philippines v. Mendoza, G.R. No. 206159, 26 August 2020 [Per J. Leonen]; ABS-CBN Corp. v. National Telecommunications Commission, G.R. No. 252119, 25 August 2020 [Per J. Perlas-Bernabe]; Islamic Da'wah Council of the Philippines, Inc. v. Office of the Executive Secretary of the Office of the President of the Philippines, G.R. No. 216870 (Notice), 30 June 2020; International Service for the Acquisition of Agri-Biotech Applications, Inc. v. Greenpeace Southeast Asia (Philippines), 791 Phil. 243 (2016) [Per J. Perlas-Bernabe]; Oclarino v. Navarro, supra at note 18; Estrada v. Sandiganbayan (Fifth Division), 836 Phil. 281 (2018) [Per J. Perlas-Bernabe]; Private Hospitals Association of the Philippines, Inc. v. Medialdea, G.R. No. 234448, 06 November 2018 [Per J. Tijam]; Purisima v. Security Pacific Assurance Corp., G.R. No. 223318, 15 July 2019 [Per J. J.C. Reyes];
[26] Associate Justice Marvic M. V. F. Leonen, Dissenting Opinion, pp. 13-14.
[27] Dissenting Opinion of Justice Harlan F. Stone in United States v. Butler, 297 U.S. 1, 78-79 (1936).
DISSENTING OPINION
PERLAS-BERNABE, J.:
I write to reiterate my dissent against the majority's ruling on the main. I maintain my view that the present petition assailing the constitutionality of Manila Ordinance No. 7780 or the "Anti-Obscenity and Pornography [O]rdinance of the City of Manila"[1] (Ordinance No. 7780) should not have been dismissed on the ground of mootness, and instead, should have been resolved by the Court on the merits, and consequently decreed unconstitutional based on the overbreadth doctrine.
To recount, petitioners Allan Madrilejos, Allan Hernandez, Glenda Gil, and Lisa Gokongwei-Cheng (petitioners) were the respective editor-in-chief, managing editor, circulation manager, and president of Summit Publishing Company, Inc., which published the FHM Magazine.[2] In 2008, they were charged before the City Prosecutor's Office of Manila under Ordinance No. 7780 which proscribes the "printing, distribution, circulation, sale, and exhibition[,]" as well as the "production, public showing[,] and viewing" of obscene and pornographic acts of materials.[3] Subsequently, petitioners filed this petition for prohibition assailing the constitutionality of Ordinance No. 7780 for being patently offensive to [the] constitutional right to free speech and expression, and for violating "privacy rights," among others. They claim that the definitions of obscenity and pornography in Ordinance No. 7780 are unduly expansive in that they disregard the guidelines prescribed in Miller v. California (Miller),[4] to wit:
(a) whether "the average person, applying contemporary community standards" would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest, x x x (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law, and (c) whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
Respondents Lourdes Gatdula, Agnes Lopez, and Hilarion Buban of the City Prosecutor's Office of Manila (respondents) countered that since our statutes do not define what is "obscene," the Ordinance's definition of obscenity could very well be the contemporary community standard under the Miller test.[5]
Pending resolution of the said petition, the criminal charge against petitioners was dismissed. This notwithstanding, petitioners did not move to withdraw the present action, arguing that the case has not become moot by the fact of the criminal case's dismissal since the distinct issue anent the constitutionality/validity of the Ordinance subsists. However, taking cognizance of the supervening dismissal of the criminal case, the Court likewise dismissed the present petition on the grounds that: (a) the dismissal of the criminal charge against petitioners rendered the case moot; and (b) Ordinance No. 7780, an anti-obscenity law, cannot be facially attacked on overbreadth grounds because obscenity is unprotected speech.[6] According to the ponencia on the main, petitioners' purpose in filing the petition was to stop the conduct of the preliminary investigation on their alleged violation of an unconstitutional ordinance. In any case, petitioners still failed to establish a cause of action to warrant a ruling in their favor, holding that they cannot mount a facial challenge against the Ordinance on the ground of overbreadth because the present petition does not involve a free speech case as it stemmed, rather, from an obscenity prosecution. Aggrieved, petitioners moved for reconsideration.[7]
The present ponencia denies petitioners' motion, reiterating that the dismissal of the criminal charges against petitioners has rendered moot this prohibition case. It then proceeds to counter the dissenting views by: (1) insisting on the constitutional policy of avoidance and judicial restraint when no full-blown hearing is conducted with all indispensable parties, such as the Manila City Council; (2) limiting the application of the "capable of repetition, yet evading review" exception to the mootness rule; (3) rejecting an overbreadth analysis on the ground that such doctrine is not used to test the validity of penal laws; and (4) noting that obscenity is unprotected speech that has no transcendent value to society.[8]
I maintain my dissent.
Verily, it is my view that the present prohibition case is not mooted by the dismissal of the criminal charge at the prosecutor level because the issue regarding the constitutionality of Ordinance No. 7780 is separate and distinct from the matter of petitioners' criminal prosecution. From the records, it is clear that petitioners not only questioned the legality of the criminal prosecution against them but also the validity of Ordinance No. 7780 itself, invoking their constitutional right to free speech and expression. Indeed, despite the dismissal of the criminal case, petitioners' proffered curtailment of their free speech rights — as well as other persons similarly situated as them — still looms in the horizon because Ordinance No. 7780 remains valid and subsisting.
To be sure, case law states that a case is moot "when it ceases to present a justiciable controversy by virtue of supervening events, so that an adjudication of the case or a declaration on the issue would be of no practical value or use." "[T]he judgment will not serve any useful purpose or have any practical legal effect because, in the nature of things, it cannot be enforced."[9]
To my mind, there remains to be practical legal value in resolving the constitutionality issue as regards Ordinance No. 7780, considering its chilling effect on protected speech. In view of its expansive scope, its subsistence in the legislative books of the City of Manila has the effect of chilling otherwise protected forms of speech because of the impending threat of further prosecution based on the same. This concern is particularly relevant for petitioners who regularly publish a magazine (i.e., monthly) in a particular genre. As asserted in their motion for reconsideration, petitioners' roles as editors and publishers of the monthly FHM Magazines render them continuously vulnerable to criminal charges under the assailed ordinance for every publication. Hence, the dismissal of the criminal charge against them alone does not remove their interest in pursuing this case on their own behalf and of other similarly situated publishers. Besides, the relief prayed for by petitioners in filing the present petition was not only to obtain the dismissal of the criminal charges against them but, moreover, to directly assail the validity of Ordinance No. 7780. Therefore, the constitutionality issue persists as a live controversy which the Court is duty-bound to resolve. Accordingly, since the constitutionality issue is not moot, the exception of capable of repetition yet evading review discussed in the ponencia is not even necessary to be applied in this case.
Furthermore, contrary to the ponencia, a facial challenge against Ordinance No. 7780 on overbreadth grounds is proper in this case. The overbreadth doctrine decrees that "a governmental purpose may not be achieved by means which sweep unnecessarily broadly and thereby invade the area of protected freedoms";[10] hence, a statute or ordinance may be declared as unconstitutional if it transgresses free speech. In this relation, jurisprudence illumines that "[b]y its nature, the overbreadth doctrine has to necessarily apply a facial type of invalidation in order to plot areas of protected speech, inevitably almost always under situations not before the court, that are impermissibly swept by the substantially overbroad regulation. Otherwise stated, a statute cannot be properly analyzed for being substantially overbroad if the court confines itself only to facts as applied to the litigants."[11]
The ponencia states that the "overbreadth doctrine finds special application in free speech cases" and "is not used to test the validity of penal laws."[12] I disagree. In the more recent case of Nicolas-Lewis v. Commission on Elections,[13] the Court En Banc invalidated a penal[14] provision for being overbroad[15] in view of its chilling effect. It explained that while facial invalidation of laws is generally disfavored, its use is justified "to avert the 'chilling effect' on protected speech,"[16] as in this case. Notably, even indecent speech not amounting to obscenity, may be considered as constitutionally protected depending on the context or the medium of communication.[17]
As in the main Decision, the ponencia refuses to examine Ordinance No. 7780's constitutionality under the lens of the overbreadth doctrine, stating that the subject regulation punishes "obscenity" which is not protected speech.[18] However, with all due respect, I submit that this is misplaced reasoning. It should be borne in mind that in this case, the Court is not asked to examine a material whether it is obscene and therefore unprotected, but rather, to evaluate whether or not the very parameters used by the Ordinance to determine obscenity itself is constitutionally valid. Indeed, there is a clear difference between the parameters to determine obscenity from a finding that the material itself is obscene. The former is the very issue in this case and not the latter. As I have explained in my opinion on the main, if a statute or ordinance foists unreasonable parameters for obscenity, then it will have the effect of sweeping unnecessarily and broadly against protected areas of free speech which would have otherwise been deemed as protected under our Constitution.[19] Thus, since this Court is asked to examine the validity of the obscenity parameters in Ordinance No. 7780, a facial challenge based on the overbreadth doctrine is proper in this case.
On this score, I join the opinion of Associate Justice Marvic M.V.F. Leonen that Ordinance No. 7780 is unconstitutional. However, I find it opportune to clarify that Ordinance No. 7780 is regarded as constitutionally infirm not because it transgresses the Miller test per se, but because it violates substantive due process under an "overbreadth" analysis. As will be briefly explained below, the Miller test is conceptually different from the overbreadth doctrine.
The Miller test is a test to determine if a certain material is obscene; in contrast to the overbreadth doctrine, the Miller test is not a test to determine an ordinance or law's constitutionality. To be sure, Miller traces its roots to a rich history of jurisprudence that demonstrates the constant struggle to capture, at its truest form, a reasonable definition of obscenity so as not to impinge on free speech and expression. The ultimate goal is to ensure that protected expression will not be lumped together with unprotected expression and be unduly restrained. Hence, an obscenity regulation that prohibits a wider range of expression than Miller runs the risk of being overbroad.
In Fernando v. Court of Appeals,[20] the Court observed that:
There is no perfect definition of "obscenity" but the latest word is that of Miller v. California which established basic guidelines, to wit: (a) whether to the average person, applying contemporary standards would find the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.[21]
The Miller test consists of three (3) parameters to determine whether or not a particular material is considered "obscene"; in consequence, if a material is considered obscene, then it can be the subject of government regulation without infringing on the author's freedom of speech and expression. Through these three (3) parameters, the Miller test aims to define into demonstrable criteria what material may be properly considered as "obscene" under judicial standards, and in so doing, seeks to delimit the conceptual malleability of "obscenity." Practically speaking, a person's appreciation of obscenity may be based on his or her disposition, mores, or values. As such, Miller is a jurisprudential attempt to set a uniform benchmark for such a highly subjective term as "obscenity."
Since Miller is a test to determine what is obscene or not, its proper application is to "zero-in" on the actual material. In this regard, Miller is not — strictly speaking — the test to determine the constitutionality of a particular ordinance or statute. However, this does not mean that the Miller parameters are completely taken out of the equation in constitutional entreaties related to free speech issues. Since Miller provides the prevailing proper standard to determine what is obscene, an obscenity regulation that fails to take into account Miller's three (3) parameters effectively foists an overbroad definition of obscenity and therefore, dangerously suppresses what should have been protected speech or expressions.
In this case, petitioners argue that the Ordinance's definitions of obscenity and pornography are unduly expansive as to disregard the guidelines prescribed in Miller. The relevant portions of the Ordinance read:
Section 2. Definition of Terms. — As used in this ordinance, the terms:
A. Obscene shall refer to any material or act that is indecent, erotic, lewd, or offensive, or contrary to morals, good customs, or religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, or to any material or act that tends to corrupt or deprive the human mind, or is calculated to excite impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, or is unfit to be seen or heard, or which violates the proprieties of language or behavior, regardless of the motive of the printer, publisher, seller, distributor, performer, or author of such act or material, such as but not limited to: 1. Printing, showing, depicting or describing sexual acts; 2. Printing, showing, depicting or describing children in sexual acts; 3. Printing, showing, depicting or describing completely nude human bodies; and 4. Printing, showing, depicting or describing the human sexual organs or the female breasts. B. Pornographic or pornography shall refer to such objects or subjects of photography, movies, music records, video and VHS tapes, laser discs, billboards, television, magazines, newspapers, tabloids, comics and live shows calculated to excite or stimulate sexual drive or impure imagination, regardless of motive of the author thereof, such as, but not limited to the following: 1. Performing live sexual acts in whatever form; 2. Those other than live performances showing, depicting or describing sexual acts; 3. Those showing, depicting or describing children in [sexual] acts; 4. Those showing, depicting or describing completely nude human body, or showing, depicting or describing the human sexual organs or the female breasts. C. Materials shall refer to magazines, newspapers, tabloids, comics, writings, photographs, drawings, paintings, billboards, decals, movies, music records, video and VHS tapes, laser discs, and similar matters.Section 3. Prohibited Acts. — The printing, publishing, distribution, circulation, sale, and exhibition of obscene and pornographic acts and materials and the production, public showing and viewing of video and VHS tapes, laser discs, theatrical or stage and other live performances and private showing for public consumption whether for free or for a fee, of pornographic pictures as herein defined are hereby prohibited within the City of Manila and accordingly penalized as provided herein.
Section 4. Penalty Clause: Any person violating this ordinance shall be punished as follows:
Provided, that in case the offender is a juridical person, the President and the members of the board of directors, shall be held criminally liable; Provided, further, that in case of conviction, all pertinent permits and licenses issued by the City Government to the offender shall be confiscated in favor of the City Government for destruction; Provided, furthermore, that in case the offender is a minor and unemancipated and unable to pay the fine, his parents or guardian shall be liable to pay such fine, Provided, finally, that this ordinance shall not apply to materials printed, distributed, exhibited, sold, filmed, rented, viewed, or produced by reason of or in connection with or in furtherance of science and scientific research and medical or medically related art, profession, and for scientific and for educational purposes. (emphases supplied)
To highlight the relevant points, the subject Ordinance criminally punishes the mere "showing, depicting, or describing" "sexual acts," "completely nude human bodies", and "human sexual organs or the female breasts" for being obscene or pornographic. A proviso exempts these expressions when used for science, scientific research, medical or medically related art, profession, and for educational purposes.
A perusal of Ordinance No. 7780 reveals that it utterly failed to take the Miller's guidelines into account in defining and penalizing obscenity under the parameters set therein.
In particular, Miller's first guideline ("whether the average person, applying contemporary community standards would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest") was exceeded, considering that Ordinance No. 7780 defines the mere depiction of "sexual acts" as obscene without looking at whether the dominant theme of the work has a tendency to excite lustful thoughts. While the phrase "act calculated to excite impure imagination or arouse prurient interest" appears in the Ordinance's definition of what is obscene, it is not the sole and definitive factor on what is obscene. Notably, such phrase is qualified by the conjunction "or," which means that it is an alternative to the other four (4) phrases contained in the passage (i.e., any material or act that is (1) indecent, erotic, lewd, or offensive; (2) contrary to morals, good customs, or religious beliefs, principles or doctrines; (3) unfit to be seen or heard; or (4) violative of the proprieties of language or behavior, regardless of the motive of the printer, publisher, seller, distributor, performer, or author of such act or material). As such, Ordinance No. 7780 is unduly expansive.
Hypothetically therefore, under the Ordinance's definition, a short section in a publication describing a sexual act would be sufficient to penalize the producer even though the effect of the work, taken as a whole, is not to excite the prurient interest. This depiction is a protected expression under Miller. It has long been understood that "sex and obscenity are not synonymous," such that the portrayal of sex, by itself, is not sufficient to deny a material of constitutional protection. However, Ordinance No. 7780 attempts to criminalize such portrayal without any regard as to whether the dominant theme of the material "appeals to the prurient interest" as required by Miller.
Miller's second guideline — that is, "whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct," was likewise ignored, since the Ordinance disallows even the mere showing of completely nude human bodies, as well as of sexual organs. As unanimously held in Jenkins v. Georgia,[22] the showing of nudity alone does not render a material patently offensive or obscene based on Miller's standards. However, as petitioners point out, a resident of Manila who invites a guest into his home where a nude painting or sculpture is casually displayed, can be held liable under the assailed ordinance.[23]
Finally, Miller's third guideline (i.e., whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value) was disregarded. While the Ordinance contains a proviso that it shall not apply to materials made or used for "science and scientific research and medical or medically related art, profession, and x x x educational purposes," this proviso does not include the full range of considerations in Miller such that those with serious literary, artistic, and political value are still considered obscene. It bears noting that the proviso exempts art only when it is medically related even though Miller does not contemplate such restrictive appreciation of a material's artistic value.
Accordingly, by failing to take into account the Miller guidelines, whether implicitly or explicitly, in its characterization of what is "obscene," the assailed Ordinance unduly sweeps towards protected forms of speech and expression in violation of Section 4,[24] Article III of the Constitution. Thus, it violates the overbreadth doctrine.
In Adiong v. Commission on Elections,[25] the Court has held that "[a] statute is considered void for overbreadth when 'it offends the constitutional principle that a governmental purpose to control or prevent activities constitutionally subject to state regulations may not be achieved by means which sweep unnecessarily broadly and thereby invade the area of protected freedoms."'[26] Notably, the "[o]verbreadth doctrine is a principle of judicial review that a law is invalid if it punishes constitutionally protected speech or conduct along with speech or conduct that the government may limit to further a compelling government interest. A statute that is broadly written which deters free expression can be struck down on its face because of its chilling effect even if it also prohibits acts that may legitimately be forbidden."[27] Truly, a facial evaluation of Ordinance No. 7780 reveals its undeniably expansive scope as it prohibits even protected expression.[28]
ACCORDINGLY, I vote to GRANT the motion for reconsideration, and to declare Ordinance No. 7780 VOID and UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
[1] Entitled "AN ORDINANCE PROHIBITING AND PENALIZING THE PRINTING, PUBLICATION, SALE, DISTRIBUTION AND EXHIBITION OF OBSCENE AND PORNOGRAPHIC ACTS AND MATERIALS AND THE PRODUCTION, RENTAL, PUBLIC SHOWING AND VIEWING OF INDECENT AND IMMORAL MOVIES, TELEVISION SHOWS, MUSIC RECORDS, VIDEO AND VHS TAPES, LASER DISCS, THEATRICAL OR STAGE AND OTHER LIVE PERFORMANCES, EXCEPT THOSE REVIEWED BY THE MOVIE, TELEVISION REVIEW AND CLASSIFICATION BOARD (MTRCB)," enacted by the City Council of Manila on January 28, 1993 and approved by the City Mayor on February 19, 1993.
[2] See rollo, pp. 4-5.
[3] See Section 3 of Ordinance No. 7780.
[4] 413 U.S. 15 (1973).
[5] See rollo, p. 364.
[6] See Main Decision dated September 24, 2019.
[7] Rollo, pp. 541-557.
[8] See Resolution, pp. 3-5.
[9] Peñafrancia Sugar Mill, Inc. v. Sugar Regulatory Administration, 728 Phil. 535 (2014); emphases supplied.
[10] See Concurring in the Judgment Opinion of Mr. Justice Vicente V. Mendoza in Estrada v. Sandiganbayan, 421 Phil. 290, 430 (2001); citing NAACP v. Alabama, 377 U.S. 288, 307, 12 L. Ed. 2d 325, 338 [1958]; and Shelton v. Tucker, 364 U.S. 479, 5 L. Ed. 2d 231 (1960)
[11] See Samahan ng mga Progresibong Kabataan v. Quezon City, 815 Phil 1067 (2017); emphasis and underscoring supplied.
[12] Resolution, p. 4.
[13] See G.R. No. 223705, August 14, 2019.
[14] See id. "Petitioner assails the constitutionality of Section 36.8 of R.A. No. 9189, as amended by R.A. No. 10590, which prohibits 'any person to engage in partisan political activity abroad during the 30-day overseas voting period.' A violation of this provision entails penal and administrative sanctions." (underscoring supplied)
[15] See id. The Court held that the assailed penal provision is "an impermissible content-neutral regulation for being overbroad, violating, thus, the free speech clause under Section 4, Article III of the 1987 Constitution." It stated further than "a facial invalidation of the questioned statute is warranted to counter the 'chilling effect' on protected speech that comes its overbreadth[.]" (emphases supplied)
[16] See id. "The allowance of a review of a law or statute on its face in free speech cases is justified, however, by the aim to avert the 'chilling effect' on protected speech, the exercise of which should not at all times be abridged." (emphases supplied)
[17] In Soriano v. Laguardia (605 Phil. 43 [2009]), the Court acknowledged that "indecent speech without [the] prurient appeal component" may fall "under the category of protected speech depending on the context within which it was made." In that case, the Court found the indecent speech unprotected because it was uttered using in a G-rated broadcast show. In contrast, the present case involves the print media, which is accorded broader protection. See also Chavez v. Gonzales (569 Phil. 155 [2008]) wherein the Court held that "[ w]hile all forms of communication are entitled to the broad protection of freedom of expression clause, the freedom of film, television and radio broadcasting is somewhat lesser in scope than the freedom accorded to newspapers and other print media x x x." (emphases and underscoring supplied)
Moreover, in FCC v. Pacifica Foundation, 438 U.S. 726 (1978), the Court held that the "Filthy Words" monologue was indecent using the broadcast mode of communication. It stressed that "the First Amendment has a special meaning in the broadcasting context," considering that it is a pervasive medium (e.g., radio) and "broadcasting is uniquely accessible to children." In his opinion, Justice Steven acknowledged that "[s]ome of the words used [in the monologue] have been held protected by the First Amendment in other cases and contexts." The monologue can be validly delivered to a live audience composed of adults who knows what to expect and chose to attend the performance. Adults may also validly purchase a recording or transcript of that monologue. (emphases and underscoring supplied)
[18] See Resolution, p. 2.
[19] See my Dissenting Opinion in the Main Decision dated September 24, 2019.
[20] 539 Phil. 407 (2006).
[21] Id. at 417.
[22] 418 U.S. 153 (1974).
[23] See Motion for Reconsideration, p. 12.
[24] Section 4. No law shall be passed abridging the freedom of speech, of expression, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble and petition the government for redress of grievances.
[25] G.R. No. 103956, March 31, 1992, 207 SCRA 712.
[26] Id. at 719-720.
[27] <
[28] Portrayal of sex, by itself, is not sufficient to deny a material of constitutional protection. (See Roth v. United States, 354 US 476 [1957]; see also Sable Communications v. FCC, 492 US 115 [1989]).
LEONEN, J.:
I dissent.
An ordinance previously held valid but whose terms are clearly so broad and vague as to easily allow repeated prosecution that will chill both creative and political expression, may still be reviewed by this Court.
This case arose from a Petition for Prohibition[1] questioning the constitutionality of Manila Ordinance No. 7780 or the "Anti-Obscenity and Pornography Ordinance of the City of Manila."
On February 19, 1993, the City of Manila enacted Ordinance No. 7780[2] which penalizes the printing, publishing, distribution, circulation, sale, production, exhibition, showing, and viewing of obscene and pornographic materials. Ordinance No. 7780 provides:
SECTION 2. Definition of Terms. – As used in this ordinance, the terms:
A. Obscene shall refer to any material or act that is indecent, or offensive or erotic, lewd or offensive, or contrary to morals, good customs, or religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, or to any material or act that tends to corrupt or deprive the human mind, or is calculated to excite impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, or is unfit to be seen or heard, or which violates the proprieties of language or behavior, regardless of the motive of the printer, publisher, seller, distributor, performer, or author of such act or material, such as but not limited to:
- Printing, showing, depicting or describing sexual acts;
- Printing, showing, depicting or describing children in sexual acts;
- Printing, showing, depicting or describing completely nude human bodies; and
- Printing, showing, depicting or describing the human sexual organs or the female breasts;
B. Pornographic or pornography shall refer to such objects or subjects of photography, movies, music records, video and VHS tapes, laser discs, billboards, television, magazines, newspapers, tabloids, comics and live shows calculated to excite or stimulate sexual drive or impure imagination, regardless of the motive of the author thereof, such as, but not limited to the following:
- Performing live sexual acts in whatever form;
- Those other than live performances showing, depicting or describing sexual acts;
- Those showing, depicting or describing children in sexual acts;
- Those showing, depicting or describing completely nude human body, or showing, depicting or describing the human sexual organs or the female breasts.
SECTION 3. Prohibited Acts. The printing, publishing, distribution, circulation, sale, and exhibition of obscene and pornographic acts and materials and the production, public showing and viewing of video and VHS tapes, laser discs, theatrical or stage and other live performances and private showing for public consumption, whether for free or for a fee, of pornographic pictures as herein defined are hereby prohibited within the City of Manila and accordingly penalized as provided herein.
SECTION 4. Penalty Clause. Any person violating this ordinance shall be punished as follows:
- For the printing, publishing, distribution or circulation of obscene or pornographic materials; the production or showing of obscene movies, television shows, stage and other live performances; for producing or renting obscene videos and VHS tapes, laser discs, for viewing obscene movies, television shows, videos and VHS tapes, laser discs or stage and other live performances; and for performing obscene act on stage and other live performances – imprisonment of one (1) year or fine of five thousand pesos (P5,000.00), or both, at the discretion of the court.
- For the selling of obscene or pornographic materials – imprisonment of not less than six (6) months nor more than one (1) year or a fine of not less than one thousand (P1,000.00), nor more than three thousand (P3,000.00) pesos.
Provided, that in case the offender is a juridical person, the President and the members of the board of directors, shall be held criminally liable; Provided, further, that in case of conviction, all pertinent permits and licenses issued by the City Government to the offender shall be confiscated in favor of the City Government for destruction; Provided, furthermore, that in case the offender is a minor and unemancipated and unable to pay the fine, his parents or guardian shall be liable to pay such fine; Provided, finally, that this ordinance shall not apply to materials printed, distributed, exhibited, sold, filmed, rented, viewed, or produced by reason of or in connection with or in furtherance of science and scientific research and medical or medically related art, profession, and for educational purposes.[3]
On July 7, 2008, 12 pastors and preachers filed a Joint Complaint-Affidavit[4] before the City Prosecutor's Office of Manila against the officers and publishers of various magazines and tabloids for violation of Articles 200[5] and 201, paragraph 2(a)[6] of the Revised Penal Code, and violation of Ordinance No. 7780. They were led by Pastor Bienvenido M. Abante, Jr., then Representative of the Sixth District of Manila and principal author of Ordinance No. 7780.[7]
Among those charged were petitioners Allan Madrilejos, Allen Hernandez, Glenda Gil, and Lisa Gokongwei-Cheng who were respectively the editor-in-chief, managing editor, circulation manager, and president of Summit Publications, which publishes FHM Magazine.[8] The criminal case, docketed as I.S. No. 08G-12234, was set for preliminary investigation.[9] The Office of the City Prosecutor created a special panel of prosecutors composed of Lourdes Gatdula, Agnes Lopez, and Hilarion Buban (Gatdula et al.).[10]
On September 12, 2008, petitioners filed a Petition for Prohibition with a Prayer for the Issuance of a Temporary Restraining Order and/or Writ of Preliminary Injunction[11] with this Court against respondents Gatdula et al. seeking to prevent the implementation of the Ordinance on the ground that it is invalid on its face for being patently offensive to the constitutional right to free speech and expression, repugnant to due process and privacy rights, and violative of the principle of separation of church and state.
Petitioners later manifested to this Court that I.S. No. 08G-12234 was dismissed with prejudice.[12] However, they argued that the Petition has not yet become moot as they questioned not only the validity of the criminal prosecution against them, but the validity of Ordinance No. 7780 itself.
In a September 24, 2019 Decision,[13] this Court dismissed the Petition on the ground of mootness, holding that the issue on the validity of the Ordinance cannot be addressed since it did not undergo a regular appeals process before it was filed with this Court. In particular, petitioners have not satisfied the two requirements in footnote 11 of Pormento v. Estrada[14] to warrant a review. The charge against them was "not of such inherently short duration that it will lapse before petitioners are able to see it challenged before a higher prosecutorial authority (i.e., the Department of Justice) or the courts."[15] They "have also failed to demonstrate a reasonable likelihood that they will once again be hailed before the OCP Manila for the same or another violation of Ordinance No. 7780."[16]
In their Motion for Reconsideration, petitioners assert that the case has not yet become moot since the issue of the constitutionality of a valid and existing Ordinance subsists. They maintain that both requirements of Pormento were present in this case, in that the period between the filing and dismissal of I.S. No. 08G-12234 was too short for it to be fully litigated and that the monthly publication of the magazine makes them vulnerable to criminal charges for every month.[17]
Petitioners insist that Ordinance No. 7780 was patently unconstitutional and susceptible to a facial challenge since its provisions are overbroad and violate the right to free speech and expression. They state that the Ordinance provides for a definition of "obscene" and "pornography" which disregards the doctrine in Miller vs. California.[18] They assert that the standards set forth in the Ordinance are vague as it uses expansive language for "Pastors and Preachers of different churches in Metro Manila, [who] are not within the class of the 'average person' referred to in [Miller], who may be called upon to apply 'contemporary community standards' in order to gauge whether or not a given work can be considered obscene."[19] They maintain that "it is not for ultra-conservatives or extreme liberalists to dictate upon society what they can or should not see or hear. Neither is it the place for militants, fanatics, radicals or traditionalists to determine the same."[20]
Petitioners assert that Ordinance No. 7780 is unduly expansive since that it considers as obscene and pornographic the mere printing, showing, depicting, or describing of sexual acts regardless of whether these are "patently offensive" according to the Miller test.[21] They maintain that the Ordinance "discounts any appreciation of 'whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value' in direct contravention to the Miller Test."[22]
They likewise contend that the ordinance violates their right to due process as the means employed were not reasonably necessary to accomplish its purpose. They allege that the Ordinance imposes criminal liability based on mere membership in a publication's board, regardless of actual involvement in the publication of the contentious material. Considering that their mother corporation Summit Media publishes several magazines other than FHM, they argue that the Ordinance effectively discourages persons from pursuing other legitimate businesses.[23] Petitioners also assert that the Ordinance offends privacy rights as it "intrude[s] into the privacy of one's home with no other purpose than to control individual thought."[24]
The majority is now dismissing this Motion for Reconsideration, invoking this Court's constitutional policy of avoidance.[25] It held that petitioners have not "demonstrated any reasonable likelihood that they would be subjected to criminal prosecution under the same Ordinance again."[26] Further, it held that facial challenges cannot be mounted against penal statutes,[27] that obscenity and pornography have always been unprotected speech, and that there should have been a full blown hearing before striking down a legislative enactment, so "all pertinent issues are sufficiently and exhaustively briefed by all indispensable parties."[28]
Respectfully, I maintain my dissent. An overbroad provision goes beyond punishing obscenity. It provides an uncontrolled, unbridled, and unregulated warrant to attack and prohibit protected creative speech. It clearly has a chilling effect on the fundamental right to expression contained in Article III, Section 4 of the Constitution:
SECTION 4. No law shall be passed abridging the freedom of speech, of expression, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble and petition the government for redress of grievances.
Ordinance No. 7780's broad and expansive language goes beyond punishing obscenity. It should be struck down as unconstitutional.
I
The dismissal of the criminal prosecution has not yet rendered the Petition moot.
As a general rule, cases which have become moot will no longer be reviewed by this Court. However, this Court "will decide cases, otherwise moot, if: first, there is a grave violation of the Constitution; second, the exceptional character of the situation and the paramount public interest is involved; third, when the constitutional issue raised requires formulation of controlling principles to guide the bench, the bar, and the public; and fourth, the case is capable of repetition yet evading review."[29]
Petitioners did not merely assail their criminal prosecution before this Court. They squarely addressed the apparent unconstitutionality of the criminal statute they were being charged under. As petitioners point out, Ordinance No. 7780 is still valid within the City of Manila. The dismissal of the criminal cases against them does not mean that no other person will be penalized under the Ordinance. Its constitutionality, therefore, is an issue that is precisely "capable of repetition, yet evading review."
The two requirements in footnote 11 of Pormento v. Estrada[30] are likewise present. Due to the short duration of the criminal prosecution, this Court had to pass upon the issue of mootness. Likewise, petitioners publish their magazines monthly. The continuing validity of Ordinance No. 7780 means that petitioners could be subjected to similar criminal charges for every monthly publication. Thus, there is a reasonable likelihood that petitioners could again be criminally charged under the Ordinance.
In any case, this Court has not hesitated in passing upon the merits of a case despite it already being rendered moot by subsequent events.
In Nicolas-Lewis v. Commission on Elections,[31] this Court entertained a petition questioning the prohibition against partisan political activities abroad during the 2019 National and Local Elections even if the petition had already become moot. This Court exercised its power of judicial review on the ground that the questioned provision might have a chilling effect on a citizen's fundamental right to speech, expression, and suffrage.
In Marquez v. Commission on Elections,[32] petitioner questioned the Commission on Elections' cancellation of his Certificate of for being a nuisance candidate. This Court, while conceding that the case should have been dismissed for mootness since winning candidates have already been proclaimed, still proceeded to rule on the case since the continuing application of the Commission on Elections of its rules on nuisance candidates is capable of repetition, yet evading review.
Considering that this case is a rare instance to examine a local legislation's effect on constitutional freedoms, it is more prudent for this Court to exercise its power of judicial review to settle the controversy:
There is no question that the issues being raised affect the public's interest, involving as they do the people's basic rights to freedom of expression, of assembly and of the press. Moreover, the Court has the duty to formulate guiding and controlling constitutional precepts, doctrines or rules. It has the symbolic function of educating the bench and the bar, and in the present petitions, the military and the police, on the extent of the protection given by constitutional guarantees. And lastly, respondents' contested actions are capable of repetition. Certainly, the petitions are subject to judicial review.[33] (Citation omitted)
II
An opinion in Soriano v. Laguardia[34] succinctly provides for a brief history of the test for determining whether a certain material is obscene and how the test was eventually applied in this jurisdiction:
One of the established exceptions in freedom of expression is speech characterized as obscene. I will briefly discuss obscenity as the majority opinion characterized the subject speech in this case as obscene thereby taking the speech out of the scope of constitutional protection.
The leading test for determining what material could be considered obscene was the famous Regina v. Hicklin case wherein Lord Cockburn enunciated thus:
I think the test of obscenity is this, whether the tendency of the matter charged as obscenity is to deprave and corrupt those whose minds are open to such immoral influences, and into whose hands a publication of this sort may fall.
Judge Learned Hand, in United States v. Kennerly, opposed the strictness of the Hicklin test even as he was obliged to follow the rule. He wrote:
I hope it is not improper for me to say that the rule as laid down, however consonant it may be with mid-Victorian morals, does not seem to me to answer to the understanding and morality of the present time.
Roth v. United States laid down the more reasonable and thus, more acceptable test for obscenity: "whether to the average person, applying contemporary community standards, the dominant theme of the material taken as a whole appeals to prurient interest." Such material is defined as that which has "a tendency to excite lustful thoughts," and "prurient interest" as "a shameful or morbid interest in nudity, sex, or excretion."
Miller v. California merely expanded the Roth test to include two additional criteria: "the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and the work, taken as whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value." The basic test, as applied in our jurisprudence, extracts the essence of both Roth and Miller – that is, whether the material appeals to prurient interest.[35] (Citations omitted)
In this case, we are not tasked to determine whether a certain work or publication is obscene. Rather, we are asked to resolve whether a certain local legislation follows the guidelines set by this Court to protect speech and expression.
While obscenity is considered unprotected speech which may be validly regulated, there must be a prior declaration stating that a certain speech is obscene before it can be regulated. Jurisprudence has yet to accept the idea of any speech or expression that is obscene per se.
With this, anti-obscenity statutes may still be subjected to a constitutional challenge to determine if they violate certain constitutional freedoms. In this case, petitioners assail the Ordinance for overbreadth, as its language and provisions are unduly expansive and transgress against constitutionally-protected freedoms.
While penal statutes are generally not subject to facial challenges, petitioners' argument that the provisions of the Ordinance have a chilling effect on protected speech and expression supports a facial challenge against it. As explained by Justice Mendoza in his opinion in Estrada v. Sandiganbayan:[36]
A facial challenge is allowed to be made to a vague statute and to one which is overbroad because of possible "chilling effect" upon protected speech. The theory is that "[w]hen statutes regulate or proscribe speech and no readily apparent construction suggests itself as a vehicle for rehabilitating the statutes in a single prosecution, the transcendent value to all society of constitutionally protected expression is deemed to justify allowing attacks on overly broad statutes with no requirement that the person making the attack demonstrate that his own conduct could not be regulated by a statute drawn with narrow specificity." The possible harm to society in permitting some unprotected speech to go unpunished is outweighed by the possibility that the protected speech of others may be deterred and perceived grievances left to fester because of possible inhibitory effects of overly broad statutes.
This rationale does not apply to penal statutes. Criminal statutes have general in terrorem effect resulting from their very existence, and, if facial challenge is allowed for this reason alone, the State may well be prevented from enacting laws against socially harmful conduct. In the area of criminal law, the law cannot take chances as in the area of free speech.
The overbreadth and vagueness doctrines then have special application only to free speech cases. They are inapt for testing the validity of penal statutes. As the U.S. Supreme Court put it, in an opinion by Chief Justice Rehnquist, "we have not recognized an 'overbreadth' doctrine outside the limited context of the First Amendment." In Broadrick v. Oklahoma, the Court ruled that "claims of facial overbreadth have been entertained in cases involving statutes which, by their terms, seek to regulate only spoken words" and, again, that "overbreadth claims, if entertained at all, have been curtailed when invoked against ordinary criminal laws that are sought to be applied to protected conduct." For this reason, it has been held that "a facial challenge to a legislative Act is ... the most difficult challenge to mount successfully, since the challenger must establish that no set of circumstances exists under which the Act would be valid." As for the vagueness doctrine, it is said that a litigant may challenge a statute on its face only if it is vague in all its possible applications. "A plaintiff who engages in some conduct that is clearly proscribed cannot complain of the vagueness of the law as applied to the conduct of others."
In sum, the doctrines of strict scrutiny, overbreadth, and vagueness are analytical tools developed for testing "on their faces" statutes in free speech cases or, as they are called in American law, First Amendment cases. They cannot be made to do service when what is involved is a criminal statute. With respect to such statute, the established rule is that "one to whom application of a statute is constitutional will not be heard to attack the statute on the ground that impliedly it might also be taken as applying to other persons or other situations in which its application might be unconstitutional." As has been pointed out, "vagueness challenges in the First Amendment context, like overbreadth challenges typically produce facial invalidation, while statutes found vague as a matter of due process typically are invalidated [only] 'as applied' to a particular defendant." Consequently, there is no basis for petitioner's claim that this Court review the Anti-Plunder Law on its face and in its entirety.[37] (Emphasis supplied)
The void-for-vagueness doctrine holds that a statute may be declared unconstitutional if its provisions are vague such that it fails to "inform those who are subject to it what conduct on their part will render them liable to its penalties."[38]
A statute or act suffers from the defect of vagueness when it lacks comprehensible standards that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at its meaning and differ as to its application. It is repugnant to the Constitution in two respects: (1) it violates due process for failure to accord persons, especially the parties targeted by it, fair notice of the conduct to avoid; and (2) it leaves law enforcers unbridled discretion in carrying out its provisions and becomes an arbitrary flexing of the Government muscle.[39] (Citation omitted)
In Southern Hemisphere Engagement Network, Inc. v. Anti-Terrorism Council,[40] this Court clarified that a vagueness challenge may only be invoked in "as applied" cases.[41] However, Disini v. Secretary of Justice,[42] broadened the scope of facial challenges based on vagueness to include cases where "a penal statute encroaches upon the freedom of speech."[43]
The overbreadth doctrine, on the other hand, invalidates statutes which aim to control or prevent activities constitutionally subject to state regulations "by means which sweep unnecessarily broadly and thereby invade the area of protected freedoms."[44]
In applying the overbreadth doctrine the primary criterion "is not whether the case is a freedom of speech case, but rather, whether the case involves an as-applied or a facial challenge."[45]
By its nature, the overbreadth doctrine has to necessarily apply a facial type of invalidation in order to plot areas of protected speech, inevitably almost always under situations not before the court, that are impermissibly swept by the substantially overbroad regulation. Otherwise stated, a statute cannot be properly analyzed for being substantially overbroad if the court confines itself only to facts as applied to the litigants.
. . . .
In restricting the overbreadth doctrine to free speech claims, the Court, in at least two cases, observed that the US Supreme Court has not recognized an overbreadth doctrine outside the limited context of the First Amendment, and that claims of facial overbreadth have been entertained in cases involving statutes which, by their terms, seek to regulate only spoken words. In Virginia v. Hicks, it was held that rarely, if ever, will an overbreadth challenge succeed against a law or regulation that is not specifically addressed to speech or speech-related conduct. Attacks on overly broad statutes are justified by the "transcendent value to all society of constitutionally protected expression."[46] (Citations omitted)
While both void-for-vagueness and overbreadth doctrines tackle freedom of expression cases, the primary consideration in applying them is still whether the assailed statute violates the fundamental right to due process. Further, the application of the overbreadth doctrine also considers whether the case involves a facial challenge or an "as applied" challenge.[47]
Here, petitioners assailed the constitutionality of Ordinance No. 7780 on the ground that its provisions were unduly expansive and encroaches upon protected expression. Thus, the overbreadth doctrine must be applied to determine the validity of Ordinance No. 7780.
In Nicolas-Lewis v. Commission on Elections,[48] this Court subjected Section 36.8[49] of Republic Act No. 9189,[50] as amended to a facial challenge for being overbroad, as it was alleged that the provision, on its face, violated the right to free speech, expression, and assembly, as well as the right to suffrage. This Court stated:
Foremost, a facial review of a law or statute encroaching upon the freedom of speech on the ground of overbreadth or vagueness is acceptable in our jurisdiction. Under the overbreadth doctrine, a proper governmental purpose, constitutionally subject to state regulation, may not be achieved by means that unnecessarily sweep its subject broadly, thereby invading the area of protected freedoms. Put differently, an overbroad law or statute needlessly restricts even constitutionally-protected rights. On the other hand, a law or statute suffers from vagueness when it lacks comprehensible standards that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess as its meaning and differ as to its application.
It is noteworthy, however, that facial invalidation of laws is generally disfavored as its results to entirely striking down the challenged law or statute on the ground that they may be applied to parties not before the Court whose activities are constitutionally protected. It disregards the case and controversy requirement of the Constitution in judicial review, and permits decisions to be made without concrete factual settings and in sterile abstract contexts, deviating thus from the traditional rules governing constitutional adjudication. Hence, an on-its-face invalidation of the law has consistently been considered as a "manifestly strong medicine to be used "sparingly and only as a last resort."
The allowance of a review of a law or statute on its face in free speech cases is justified, however, by the aim to avert the "chilling effect" on protected speech, the exercise of which should not be at all times abridged. The Court elucidated:
The theory that "[w]hen statutes regulate and proscribe speech and no readily apparent construction suggests itself as a vehicle for rehabilitating the statutes in a single prosecution, the transcendent value to all society of constitutionally protected expression is deemed to justify allowing attacks on overly broad statutes with no requirement that the person making the attack demonstrate that his own conduct could not be regulated by a statute drawn with narrow specificity.[51] (Citations omitted)
The question before this Court is whether the enumeration in the Ordinance is so overbroad that it invades the areas of protected freedoms. Otherwise stated, we are asked to resolve whether the statute' on its face, contains provisions that result in a "chilling effect" on constitutionally protected speech and expression.
The problem in this case lies on how to determine if the provisions of the Ordinance are overbroad. To resolve this, resort should be made to more specific tests. For this reason, this Court must apply the Miller Test, as this is the current and prevailing test within this jurisdiction.
In its September 24, 2019 Decision, this Court suggested that the case should have first undergone the appellate process before review by this Court, so that the trial court could rule on the factual issues, adopt the Miller Test, and receive evidence.[52]
However, it must be emphasized that there is no need to make a factual determination of the issues when the mode of analysis to be applied is a facial overbreadth challenge as the constitutionality of the statute is determined "on its face," rather than "as applied," which requires factual antecedence.
In recent cases of this Court, it was unnecessary to resolve questions of fact when subsequent events have already rendered the facts moot.
In Marquez v. Commission on Elections,[53] this Court did not delve into the factual issue of whether petitioner Marquez had the financial capacity to launch a nationwide senatorial campaign since the conduct of the elections already rendered this issue moot.
In Nicolas-Lewis v. Commission on Elections,[54] there were no questions of fact to be resolved since there was no allegation that petitioner in that case, a private citizen with dual citizenship, had been campaigning for certain candidates abroad. She merely argued that the questioned provision prevented her from doing so.
There are even certain obscenity cases which did not require the conduct of an appellate process before this Court exercised its power of judicial review.[55]
In Gonzalez v. Katigbak,[56] a petition was filed directly with this Court questioning the resolution of the Board of Review for Motion Pictures and Television, which classified the movie Kapit sa Patalim as "For Adults Only." There was no question raised as to whether the issue should first be resolved by the trial court or whether the trial court should first receive evidence that moviegoers and critics found the movie too obscene for commercial distribution. On the contrary, this Court assumed jurisdiction over the certiorari petition.
In Soriano v. Laguardia,[57] this Court did not hesitate to entertain a petition directly filed with this Court assailing decision of the Movie and Television Review and Classification Board suspending petitioner from his television program for allegedly uttering obscene words. It was unnecessary that the case be first reviewed by the Court of Appeals before this Court could fully resolve the issues raised by the parties.
Considering that this case presents a novel issue that is susceptible to a facial challenge on the basis of overbreadth, it is unnecessary to require the parties to complete the criminal prosecution and come to this Court on appeal before we can exercise our power of judicial review.
III
Petitioners argue that Ordinance No. 7780 violates the guidelines in the Miller Test in that first, its expansive language fails to consider contemporary community standards in its application; second, it considers as obscene certain acts without determining whether it was made in a patently offensive manner; and third, it fails to take into account whether a certain speech, when taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
The Ordinance considers as "obscene" and therefore, illegal, the following acts or materials:
A. Obscene shall refer to any material or act that is indecent, or offensive or erotic, lewd or offensive, or contrary to morals, good customs, or religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, or to any material or act that tends to corrupt or deprive the human mind, or is calculated to excite impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, or is unfit to be seen or heard, or which violates the proprieties of language or behavior, regardless of the motive of the printer, publisher, seller, distributor, performer, or author of such act or material, such as but not limited to:
- Printing, showing, depicting or describing sexual acts;
- Printing, showing, depicting or describing children in sexual acts;
- Printing, showing, depicting or describing completely nude human bodies; and
- Printing, showing, depicting or describing the human sexual organs or the female breasts[.][58] (Emphasis supplied)
As it is worded, the Ordinance does not take into account contemporary community standards in determining whether a print, show, depiction, or description is considered obscene. It does not define what may be considered "indecent, or offensive or erotic, lewd or offensive, or contrary to morals, good customs, or religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, or to any material or act that tends to corrupt or deprive the human mind, or is calculated to excite impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, or is unfit to be seen or heard, or which violates the proprieties of language or behavior." It encompasses all kinds of behavior without acknowledging what the present standards of the community are.
The language used by the Ordinance is likewise unduly expansive. It tends to punish every single print, show, depiction, or description of nudity and sex seemingly without distinction. For example, it unnecessarily lumps together eroticism with lewdness, "regardless of the motive of the printer, publisher, seller, distributor, performer, or author." It even singles out the female breast as lewder and more offensive than other sexual organs.
Under the Miller Test, material is obscene if it is "patently offensive." Of the examples listed, only that of child pornography is patently, on its face, offensive. Even without the Ordinance, child pornography would still be illegal under Republic Act No. 9775, or the Anti-Child Pornography Act of 2009.
Under the Ordinance's expansive language, the motive of the author, performer, or publisher is disregarded. Any work that is "indecent, or offensive or erotic, lewd or offensive, or contrary to morals, good customs, or religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, or to any material or act that tends to corrupt or deprive the human mind, or is calculated to excite impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, or is unfit to be seen or heard, or which violates the proprieties of language or behavior" is immediately categorized as obscene.
Disregard of the author, performer, or publisher's motives contradicts the last proviso of Section 4 of the Ordinance:
[T]his ordinance shall not apply to materials printed, distributed, exhibited, sold, filmed, rented, viewed, or produced by reason of or in connection with or in furtherance of science and scientific research and medical or medically related art, profession, and for educational purposes.
An artist may intend for his or her painting to be erotic and still be considered as art. There are instances where artists do not intend for their paintings to be patently offensive. The Ordinance penalizes the artist regardless of the motive. This is an arbitrary restraint on that artist's freedom of expression.
The Ordinance also fails to consider whether the materials, when taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
In disregarding the motives of the printer, publisher, distributor, or seller, the Ordinance makes broad presumptions that an entire publication can only contain obscene material and nothing more. There are certainly instances where parts of the magazine may appeal to prurient interests, but some parts may have serious literary value. Petitioners point out that the alleged offensive magazines featured "literature from award-winning writers such as Marguerite de Leon, Anna Felicia Sanchez and Norman Wilwayco."[59]
The prohibition in the Ordinance likewise includes materials that are contrary to religious beliefs but does not mention which religion's beliefs it seeks to protect.
Article II of the Constitution provides that there shall be an inviolable separation of Church and State.[60] Article III, Section 5 is even more explicit:
SECTION 5. No law shall be made respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof. The free exercise and enjoyment of religious profession and worship, without discrimination or preference, shall forever be allowed. No religious test shall be required for the exercise of civil or political rights.
Local legislation that bases its standards of morality on a particular religion only tends to establish a dominant religion, to the exclusion of all other faiths. It may be that certain material is not considered by one particular religion as offensive. One religion may even view human sexuality as part of the religious experience. To arbitrarily create legislation based on the puritanical views of one religion is not merely insensitive; it is unconstitutional.
The Ordinance likewise imposes criminal liability on the president and board members of a publication, regardless of whether they were personally involved in the actual publication of the alleged obscene publication. Petitioners' publishing corporation also publishes several other magazines that are not, under the Ordinance's provision, considered obscene. However, because of the Ordinance, the president and the board may be held criminally liable for offenses they may have no personal knowledge of which may prevent them from doing their jobs. This is an arbitrary restraint on their legitimate pursuit of business.
The Ordinance does not give due regard to measures that may have been undertaken by the publishing corporation to ensure that only adults, who have full autonomy over all their moral choices, are in possession of the materials. As petitioners point out, "a clear 18+ mark appears prominently on the covers of all FHM magazines, together with the words 'CONTENTS MAY NOT BE SUITABLE FOR MINORS' . . . [they] are released to distributors sealed in plastic covers, for sale only in legitimate magazine stands and only to adults."[61]
Measures have already been taken to protect the "unwary consumers," which is less restrictive than the penal provisions provided in the Ordinance. As this Court aptly observed:
The promotion of public welfare and a sense of morality among citizens deserves the full endorsement of the judiciary provided that such measures do not trample rights this Court is sworn to protect. The notion that the promotion of public morality is a function of the State is as old as Aristotle. The advancement of moral relativism as a school of philosophy does not de-legitimize the role of morality in law, even if it may foster wider debate on which particular behavior to penalize. It is conceivable that a society with relatively little shared morality among its citizens could be functional so long as the pursuit of sharply variant moral perspectives yields an adequate accommodation of different interests.
To be candid about it, the oft-quoted American maxim that "you cannot legislate morality" is ultimately illegitimate as a matter of law, since as explained by Calabresi, that phrase is more accurately interpreted as meaning that efforts to legislate morality will fail if they are widely at variance with public attitudes about right and wrong. Our penal laws, for one, are founded on age-old moral traditions, and as long as there are widely accepted distinctions between right and wrong, they will remain so oriented.
Yet the continuing progression of the human story has seen not only the acceptance of the right-wrong distinction, but also the advent of fundamental liberties as the key to the enjoyment of life to the fullest. Our democracy is distinguished from non-free societies not with any more extensive elaboration on our part of what is moral and immoral, but from our recognition that the individual liberty to make the choices in our lives is innate, and protected by the State. Independent and fair-minded judges themselves are under a moral duty to uphold the Constitution as the embodiment of the rule of law, by reason of their expression of consent to do so when they take the oath of office, and because they are entrusted by the people to uphold the law.
Even as the implementation of moral norms remains an indispensable complement to governance, that prerogative is hardly absolute, especially in the face of the norms of due process of liberty. And while the tension may often be left to the courts to relieve, it is possible for the government to avoid the constitutional conflict by employing more judicious, less drastic means to promote morality.[62]
The alleged legislative intent of the Ordinance was to eradicate greed, "which preys on and appeals [to] the baser instincts of unwary consumers."[63] This purpose being "far superior to the 'property rights' of the petitioners in the hierarchy of values within the due process clause."[64]
However, in achieving this, the local government of Manila made an unnecessary intrusion into the private rights of its citizens based on its own pre-determined standard of morality. Whatever baser instinct an adult consumer may have is not for local government to legislate. Consumers may buy the publications not merely to satisfy their prurient curiosity but because the publication actually contains serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value. The State cannot likewise interfere if they, who have complete autonomy over their morals and choices, choose to buy these publications for prurient reasons.
Neither the State nor this Court can attempt to legislate morality. Ordinance No. 7780 does not penalize mere possession of obscene material; it relies heavily on inserting perceived values into each individual's thoughts.
While this Court is granted the discretion to decide what is and what is not obscene, standards for determination must be done on a case-to-case basis and must evolve over time. Any legislation passed, whether local or national, that seeks to restrain the free exercise of speech and expression must be stricken down.
ACCORDINGLY, I vote to GRANT the Motion for Reconsideration. City of Manila Ordinance No. 7780 should be declared VOID for being UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
[1] Rollo, pp. 3-38.
[2] Id. at 373-375.
[3] Ordinance No. 7780 (1993), secs. 2-4.
[4] Rollo, pp. 44-46.
[5] REV. PEN. CODE, art. 200 provides:
ARTICLE 200. Grave scandal. - The penalties of arresto mayor and public censure shall be imposed upon any person who shall offend against decency or good customs by any highly scandalous conduct not expressly falling within any other article of this Code.
[6] REV. PEN. CODE, art. 201, par. 2(a) provides:
ARTICLE 201. Immoral doctrines, obscene publications and exhibitions and indecent shows. - The penalty of prision mayor or a fine ranging from six thousand to twelve thousand pesos, or both such imprisonment and fine, shall be imposed upon:
. . . .
(2) (a) the authors of obscene literature, published with their knowledge in any form; the editors publishing such literature; and the owners/operators of the establishment selling the same[.]
[7] Rollo, p. 6, Petition.
[8] Id. at 4-5
[9] Id. at 352.
[10] Id. at 7.
[11] Id. at 3-38. On November 11, 2013, petitioners received a copy of a Resolution dated June 25, 2013 of the Office of the City Prosecutor of Manila which recommended the filing of Information against the petitioners for violation of Section 201, paragraph 2(a) of the Revised Penal Code. The charge against petitioner Lisa Gokongwei-Cheng for violation of Article 201 of the Revised Penal Code was dismissed. The Resolution also dismissed the complaint against them for violation of Article 200 of the Revised Penal Code and Ordinance No. 7780. Petitioners point out that although the charge for violation of Ordinance No. 7780 was dismissed, it is the constitutionality of the Ordinance itself that is being brought into question with this Petition; hence, the issue has not become moot.
[12] Id. at 438-439.
[13] Madrilejos v. Gatdula, G.R. No. 184389, September 24, 2019, <
[14] 643 Phil. 735, 738 (2010) [Per C.J. Corona, En Banc]. Footnote 11 states:
[T]he "capable of repetition yet evading review" exception. . . applies only where the following two circumstances concur: (1) the challenged action is in its duration too short to be fully litigated prior to its cessation or expiration and (2) there is a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party would be subjected to the same action again.
[15] Madrilejos v. Gatdula, G.R. No. 184389, September 24, 2019, <
[16] Id.
[17] Motion for Reconsideration, pp. 2-3.
[18] 413 U.S. 15 (1973); rollo, p. 15.
[19] Motion for Reconsideration, p. 6.
[20] Id.
[21] Id. at 6-7.
[22] Id. at 8.
[23] Id. at 10-11.
[24] Id. at 12.
[25] Ponencia, p. 3.
[26] Id.
[27] Id. at 3-4.
[28] Id. at 4.
[29] Belgica v. Ochoa, 721 Phil. 416, 522 [Per J. Perlas-Bernabe, En Banc] citing Mattel, Inc. v. Francisco, 582 Phil. 492 (2008) [Per J. Austria-Martinez, Third Division]; and Constantino v. Sandiganbayan, 559 Phil. 622 (2007) [Per J. Tinga, Second Division].
[30] 643 Phil. 735, 738 (2010) [Per C.J. Corona, En Banc]. The Decision states:
[T]he "capable of repetition yet evading review" exception . . . applies only where the following two circumstances concur: (1) the challenged action is in its duration too short to be fully litigated prior to its cessation or expiration and (2) there is a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party would be subjected to the same action again[.]
[31] G.R. No. 223705, August 13, 2019, <
[32] G.R. No. 244274, September 10, 2019 <
[33] David v. Macapagal-Arroyo, 522 Phil. 705, 755 (2006) [Per J. Sandoval-Gutierrez, En Banc].
[34] 629 Phil. 262 (2010) [Per J. Velasco, Jr., En Banc].
[35] J. Carpio, Dissenting Opinion in Soriano v. Laguardia, 629 Phil. 262, 286-287 (2010) [Per J. Velasco, Jr., En Banc], citing Regina v. Hicklin, L.R. 3 Q.B. 360, 371 (1868); United States v. Kennerly, 209 F. 119, 120 (S.D.N.Y. 1913); Roth v. United States, 354 U.S. 476 (1957); Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15 (1973); and Gonzalez v. Katigbak, G.R. No. L-69500, July 22, 1985 [Per J. Fernando, En Banc].
[36] 421 Phil. 290, 430 (2001) [Per J. Bellosillo, En Banc].
[37] Id. at 430-432 citing People v. De la Piedra, 403 Phil. 31 (2001) [Per J. Kapunan, First Division]; United States v. Salerno, 481 U.S. 739, 745, 95 L.Ed.2d 697, 707 (1987); Village of Hoffman Estates v. Flipside, Hoffman Estates, Inc., 455 U.S. 489, 494-95, 71 L.Ed.2d 362, 369 (1982); Gooding v. Wilson, 405 U.S. 518, 521, 31 L.Ed.2d 408, 413 (1972); Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 413 U.S. 601, 612-613, 37 L.Ed. 2d 830, 840-841 (1973); United States v. Raines, 362 U.S. 17, 21, 4 L.Ed.2d 524, 529 (1960); and Yazoo & Mississippi Valley RR. v. Jackson Vinegar Co., 226 U.S. 217, 57 L.Ed. 193 (1912).
[38] J. Leonen, Dissenting Opinion in Lagman v. Medialdea, 812 Phil. 179, 749-750 (2017) [Per J. Del Castillo, En Banc] citing People v. Piedra, 403 Phil. 31 (2001) [Per J. Kapunan, First Division].
[39] Southern Hemisphere Engagement Network, Inc. v. Anti-Terrorism Council, 646 Phil. 452, 488 (2010) [Per J. Carpio Morales, En Banc].
[40] 646 Phil. 452 (2010) [Per J. Carpio Morales, En Banc].
[41] See J. Mendoza, Separate Opinion in Cruz v. Secretary of Environment and Natural Resources, 400 Phil. 904, 1092 (2000) [Per Curiam, En Banc].
[42] 727 Phil. 28 (2014) [Per J. Abad, En Banc].
[43] Id. at 121.
[44] Adiong v. Commission on Elections, G.R. No. 103956, March 31, 1992, 207 SCRA 712, 719 [Per Gutierrez, Jr., En Banc].
[45] J. Leonen, Dissenting Opinion in Lagman v. Medialdea, 812 Phil. 179, 754-755 (2017) [Per J. Del Castillo, En Banc].
[46]Southern Hemisphere Engagement Network, Inc., v. Anti-Terrorism Council, 646 Phil. 452, 490-491 (2010) [Per J. Carpio-Morales, En Banc].
[47] See J. Leonen, Dissenting Opinion in Lagman v. Medialdea, 812 Phil. 179 (2017) [Per J. Del Castillo, En Banc].
[48] G.R. No. 223705, August 13, 2019, <
[49] SECTION 36. Prohibited Acts. - In addition to the prohibited acts provided by law, it shall be unlawful:
. . . .
36.8. For any person to engage in partisan political activity abroad during the thirty (30)-day overseas voting period[.]
[50] The Overseas Voting Act of 2013.
[51] Lewis-Nicolas v. Commission on Elections, G.R. No. 223705, August 13, 2019, <
[52] Madrilejos v. Gatdula, G.R. No. 184389, September 24, 2009, <
[53] G.R. No. 244274, September 10, 2019, <
[54] G.R. No. 223705, August 13, 2019, <
[55] See Gonzalez v. Katigbak, 222 Phil. 225 (1985) [Per J. Fernando, En Banc]; and Soriano v. Laguardia, 629 Phil. 262 (2010) [Per J. Velasco, Jr., En Banc].
[56] 222 Phil. 225 (1985) [Per J. Fernando, En Banc].
[57] 605 Phil. 43 (2009) [Per J. Velasco, Jr., En Banc].
[58] Ordinance No. 7780 (1993), sec. 2.
[59] Motion for Reconsideration, p. 8.
[60] CONST, art. II, sec. 6.
[61] Rollo, p. 24.
[62] White Light Corporation, et al. v. City of Manila, 596 Phil. 444, 469-471 (2009) [Per J. Tinga, En Banc] citing City of Manila v. Hon. Laguio, Jr., 495 Phil. 289 (2005) [Per J. Tinga, En Banc]; De la Cruz, et al. v. Hon. Paras, et al., 208 Phil. 490 (1983) [Per J. Fernando, En Banc]; Ermita-Malate Hotel and Motel Operations Association, Inc. v. City Mayor of Manila, 127 Phil. 306 (1967) [Per J. Fernando, En Banc]; MAX HAMBURGER, MORALS AND LAW: THE GROWTH OF ARISTOTLE'S LEGAL THEORY, 178 (1951 ed.); KENT GREENWALT CONFLICTS OF LAW AND MORALITY, 38 (1989 ed.); STEVEN CALABRESI, Render Unto Caesar that which is Caesars, and unto God that which is God's, 31 Harv. J.L. & Pub. Pol'y 495; RICHARD POSNER, The Problematics of Moral And Legal Theory, THE BELKNAP PRESS OF HARVARD UNIVERSITY PRESS (2002); and STEVEN BURTON, JUDGING IN GOOD FAITH, 218 (1992 ed.).
[63] Rollo, pp. 364-365, Comment.
[64] Id.
CAGUIOA, J.:
After a careful re-evaluation of the merits of the instant case, aided by the sharp Dissenting Opinion of Senior Associate Justice Estela M. Perlas-Bernabe, I am now reconsidering my vote in the main Decision.[1]
To recall, the dismissal of the petition in the main Decision was hinged on two grounds: (1) the dismissal of the criminal charges against petitioners for violation of Manila Ordinance No. 7780[2] has rendered the case moot and academic; and (2) Ordinance No. 7780, an anti-obscenity law, cannot be facially attacked on the ground of overbreadth because obscenity is unprotected speech. On the first ground, the main Decision held that a justiciable controversy has ceased to exist with the dismissal of the charge against petitioners for violation of Ordinance No. 7780, as well as the dismissal with prejudice of the criminal case filed against them for violation of Article 201(3)[3] of the Revised Penal Code. While acknowledging several exceptions to the moot and academic doctrine laid down in various jurisprudence over the years, the main Decision zeroed in on the inapplicability of one of the exceptions, which was the "capable of repetition, yet evading review." The discussion on the evolution of this principle being sound and exhaustive notwithstanding, upon my re-assessment of the issues in this case, I submit that the Court should not have felt precluded from taking cognizance of the case despite the dismissal of the criminal charges against petitioners. I join Senior Associate Justice Perlas-Bernabe's observation that with petitioners also questioning the validity of the Ordinance, there remains a live controversy which is ripe for adjudication.
The dismissal of the criminal charges against petitioners did not strip their petition before the Court of the requirement of actual case or controversy in judicial review. "[A]n actual case or controversy is one which 'involves a conflict of legal rights, an assertion of opposite legal claims, susceptible of judicial resolution as distinguished from a hypothetical or abstract difference or dispute.' In other words, 'there must be a contrariety of legal rights that can be interpreted and enforced on the basis of existing law and jurisprudence."'[4] In relation to this requirement, the case must also be ripe for adjudication. A question is ripe for adjudication when the act being challenged has had a direct adverse effect on the individual challenging it. It is a prerequisite that something has then been accomplished or performed by either the executive or legislative branch before a court may come into the picture, and petitioner must allege the existence of an immediate or threatened injury to himself or herself as a result of the challenged action. He or she must show that he or she has sustained or is immediately in danger of sustaining some direct injury as a result of the act complained of.[5]
In Imbong v. Ochoa, Jr.[6] (Imbong), the Court rejected the arguments of the proponent of the Reproductive Health Law (RH Law) or Republic Act No. (R.A.) 10354[7] that the petitions did not present any actual case or controversy because the RH Law has yet to be implemented, no one has been charged with violating any of its provisions, and that there was no showing that any of petitioners' rights has been adversely affected by its operation. In finding that there was, on the contrary, an actual case or controversy that was ripe for judicial determination, the Court explained:
In this case, the Court is of the view that an actual case or controversy exists and that the same is ripe for judicial determination. Considering that the RH Law and its implementing rules have already taken effect and that budgetary measures to carry out the law have already been passed, it is evident that the subject petitions present a justiciable controversy. As stated earlier, when an action of the legislative branch is seriously alleged to have infringed the Constitution, it not only becomes a right, but also a duty of the Judiciary to settle the dispute.
Moreover, the petitioners have shown that the case is so because medical practitioners or medical providers are in danger of being criminally prosecuted under the RH Law for vague violations thereof, particularly public health officers who are threatened to be dismissed from the service with forfeiture of retirement and other benefits. They must, at least, be heard on the matter NOW.[8] (Emphasis in the original)
Imbong relied on the case of The Province of North Cotabato v. The Government of the Republic of the Philippines Peace Panel on Ancestral Domain (GRP),[9] where the Court ruled that the fact of the law or act in question being not yet effective does not negate ripeness. Concrete acts under a law are not necessary to render the controversy ripe. Even a singular violation of the Constitution and/or the law is enough to awaken judicial duty.[10]
Similarly, in Samahan ng mga Progresibong Kabataan (SPARK) v. Quezon City[11] (SPARK), which involved an original Petition for Certiorari and Prohibition before the Court assailing the constitutionality of the curfew ordinances issued by the local governments of Quezon City, Manila, and Navotas, the Court found the existence of an actual justiciable controversy in the case in this wise:
x x x [T]his Court finds that there exists an actual justiciable controversy in this case given the evident clash of the parties' legal claims, particularly on whether the Curfew Ordinances impair the minors' and parents' constitutional rights, and whether the Manila Ordinance goes against the provisions of RA 9344. Based on their asseverations, petitioners have — as will be gleaned from the substantive discussions below — conveyed a prima facie case of grave abuse of discretion, which perforce impels this Court to exercise its expanded jurisdiction. The case is likewise ripe for adjudication, considering that the Curfew Ordinances were being implemented until the Court issued the TRO enjoining their enforcement. The purported threat or incidence of injury is, therefore, not merely speculative or hypothetical but rather, real and apparent.[12]
Applying the foregoing cases here, there remains an actual case or controversy with the continued presence of Ordinance No. 7780. Not having been struck down and declared void, the Ordinance remains good law. As in SPARK, there is, in this case, an "evident clash of the parties' legal claims," particularly on whether the Ordinance is violative of the constitutional rights of petitioners and of others who are similarly situated like them. Evidently, this issue is purely legal and therefore does not require the presence of prevailing, concrete, or overt facts before the Court may be taken to task to adjudicate.
On this score, I further concur with Senior Associate Justice Perlas-Bernabe's position that there remains a practical legal value to judicially pass upon the facial challenge posed by petitioners against Ordinance No. 7780. Specifically, petitioners filed the case on the ground that it is "invalid on its face for being patently offensive to their constitutional right to free speech and expression, repugnant to due process and privacy rights, and violative of the constitutionally established principle of separation of church and state."[13] As will be further discussed below, the chilling effect of the overbroad provisions of the Ordinance on the exercise of the fundamental freedom of speech and expression warrants the judicial review of the Court. As a matter of fact, by this very reason, the facial challenge can prosper even without further facts that usually animate an actual case or controversy.
In Romualdez v. Sandiganbayan,[14] the Court explained why facial invalidation is generally disfavored and employed sparingly and as a last resort in facial challenges involving penal statutes. The concern was that an "on-its-face" invalidation of statutes would result in a mass acquittal of parties whose cases may not have even reached the courts. Such invalidation would constitute a departure from the usual requirement of "actual case and controversy" and permit decisions to be made in a sterile abstract context having no factual concreteness.[15]
Subsequently in Imbong, the Court, veering away from the restrictive application of facial challenges to strictly penal statutes, held that it has expanded the scope of facial challenges to cover statutes not only regulating free speech, but also those involving religious freedom, and other fundamental rights in a modified approach from that of the Supreme Court of the United States (SCOTUS). The Court elucidated that unlike its counterpart in the U.S., its expanded jurisdiction under the Constitution mandates it to not only settle actual controversies involving rights which are legally demandable and enforceable, but also to determine whether or not there has been a grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction on the part of any branch or instrumentality of the Government. The Court then concluded that the framers of our Constitution envisioned a proactive Judiciary, ever vigilant with its duty to maintain the supremacy of the Constitution.[16] Verily, the Court expounded on the requirement of justiciable controversy and notably held that to dismiss the petitions before it on the "simple expedient that there exist(s) no actual case or controversy, would diminish this Court as a reactive branch of government, acting only when the Fundamental Law has been transgressed, to the detriment of the Filipino people."[17]
Insofar as overbreadth is concerned, in particular, the explanation of the Court on the necessity to apply a facial type of invalidation in Southern Hemisphere Engagement Network, Inc. v. Anti-Terrorism Council[18] (Southern Hemisphere) which was later reiterated in SPARK, bears emphasis. The discussion, albeit done in the context of third-party standing, is consonant and closely related with the principle of actual case or controversy. Southern Hemisphere instructed that, by its nature, the overbreadth doctrine has to necessarily apply a facial type of invalidation in order to plot areas of protected speech, inevitably almost always under situations not before the court, that are impermissibly swept by the substantially overbroad regulation. Otherwise stated, a statute cannot be properly analyzed for being substantially overbroad if the court confines itself only to facts as applied to the litigants.[19] The Court expounded on this "exception to some of the usual rules of constitutional litigation" and to the factor that motivates the departure, to wit:
"The most distinctive feature of the overbreadth technique is that it marks an exception to some of the usual rules of constitutional litigation. Ordinarily, a particular litigant claims that a statute is unconstitutional as applied to him or her; if the litigant prevails, the courts carve away the unconstitutional aspects of the law by invalidating its improper applications on a case to case basis. Moreover, challengers to a law are not permitted to raise the rights of third parties and can only assert their own interests. In overbreadth analysis, those rules give way; challenges are permitted to raise the rights of third parties; and the court invalidates the entire statute "on its face," not merely "as applied for" so that the overbroad law becomes unenforceable until a properly authorized court construes it more narrowly. The factor that motivates courts to depart from the normal adjudicatory rules is the concern with the "chilling;" deterrent effect of the overbroad statute on third parties not courageous enough to bring suit. The Court assumes that an overbroad law's "very existence may cause others not before the court to refrain from constitutionally protected speech or expression." An overbreadth ruling is designed to remove that deterrent effect on the speech of those third parties." x x x[20] (Emphasis, italics and underscoring supplied; underscoring in the original omitted)
Hence, under pain of repetition, the continued effectivity of Ordinance No. 7780, which has overbroad provisions that infringe on freedom of speech and expression, should impel the Court to take cognizance of the facial challenge by petitioners despite the dismissal of the criminal charges against them. True, it has been pointed out that "procedures for testing the constitutionality of a statue 'on its face' xx x are fundamentally at odds with the function of courts in our constitutional plan."[21] When an accused is guilty of conduct that can constitutionally be prohibited and that the State has endeavored to prohibit, the State should be able to inflict its punishment. Such punishment violates no personal right of the accused.[22] I submit, however, that this precept should never remain unbending when fundamental rights are violated by a law. In such cases, it cannot be gainsaid that the legislature has repudiated its duty to uphold the Constitution.[23] It becomes the Court's duty then not to reward or accommodate the legislature's failure, but to protect individual rights from it.[24] Complete, pre-enforcement invalidation of the law in such circumstances satisfies constitutional norms and vindicates the courts' critical role in protecting individual rights from majority oppression.[25]
The main Decision dismissed the petition also on the ground that petitioners cannot mount a facial challenge against Ordinance No. 7780 because it is a penal statute proscribing obscenity, which is unprotected speech. Again, on reconsideration, I now demur from this restrictive interpretation.
Indeed, what has been often repeated in cases involving the constitutionality of a penal law is the observations of former Associate Justice Vicente V. Mendoza adopted in the ponencia of Estrada v. Sandiganbayan[26] (Estrada). Ruling on whether the allegations that the Plunder Law is vague and overbroad justify a facial review of the law's validity, Justice Mendoza answered in the negative. He concluded that the overbreadth and vagueness doctrines have special application only to free speech cases and are inapt for testing the validity of penal statutes.[27] The challenge is allowed because of the possible "chilling effect" upon protected speech. This possibility outweighs the possible harm to society in permitting some unprotected speech to go unpunished, a rationale that, according to Justice Mendoza, does not apply to penal statutes. Criminal statutes have general in terrorem effect resulting from their very existence, and, if facial challenge is allowed for this reason alone, the State may well be prevented from enacting laws against socially harmful conduct. In the area of criminal law, the law cannot take chances as in the area of free speech.[28]
However, in his opinion in the resolution of the motion for reconsideration in Estrada, Justice Mendoza clarified the observations he made in the main ponencia, to wit:
Before discussing these cases, let it be clearly stated that, when we said that "the doctrines of strict scrutiny, overbreadth and vagueness are analytical tools for testing 'on their faces' statutes in free speech cases or, as they are called in American law, First Amendment cases [and therefore] cannot be made to do service when what is involved is a criminal statute," we did not mean to suggest that the doctrines do not apply to criminal statutes at all. They do, although they do not justify a facial challenge, but only an as-applied challenge, to those statutes. Parties can only challenge such provisions of the statutes as applied to them. Neither did we mean to suggest that the doctrines justify facial challenges only in free speech or First Amendment cases. To be sure, they also justify facial challenges in cases under the Due Process and Equal Protection Clauses of the Constitution with respect to so-called "fundamental rights." In short, a facial challenge1 as distinguished from as-applied challenge, may be made on the ground that, because of vagueness or overbreadth, a statute has a chilling effect on freedom of speech or religion or other fundamental rights. But the doctrines cannot be invoked to justify a facial challenge to statute where no interest of speech or religion or fundamental freedom is involved, as when what is being enforced is an ordinary criminal statute like the Anti-Plunder law.[29] (Emphasis, italics and underscoring supplied)
Later, the Dissenting Opinion of former Associate Justice Dante O. Tinga in Spouses Romualdez v. Commission on Elections[30] pointed out that "[i]n light of Justice Mendoza's subsequent clarification, it is a disputable matter whether Estrada established a doctrine that 'void-for-vagueness or overbreadth challenges do not apply to penal statutes.'"[31]
The foregoing interpretation on the application of facial challenges to penal statutes made by Justice Mendoza and Justice Tinga is, I submit, the correct position. The nature of the assailed law should not be controlling — rather, what should be key is whether fundamental rights or freedoms can be demonstrated to have been implicated by the law. To once again take a cue from the clarificatory opinion of Justice Mendoza in Estrada:
x x x For the question in the case at bar, it cannot be overemphasized, is not whither (sic) the vagueness and overbreadth doctrines apply to facial challenges to criminal statutes. The question rather is whether the mere assertion that a penal statute is vague or overbroad — without a showing that interests of speech (or, it may be added, freedom of religion) or other fundamental rights are infringed — triggers a facial review of the said statutes, using strict scrutiny as the standard of judicial review. We hold it does not.
As the Anti-Plunder Law implicates neither free speech nor freedom of religion or other fundamental rights of petitioner, a facial review of the law cannot be required nor the burden of proving its validity placed on the State. Mere assertions that it is vague or overbroad only justify an "as-applied" review of its challenged-provisions. x x x[32]
Hence, to deny a facial attack on Ordinance No. 7780 on the basis alone that it is a penal statute would foreclose a prompt examination by the Court on whether it truly impinges on constitutionally protected speech and expression. Moreover, to await an as-applied challenge would render, in the meantime, petitioners and those who are similarly situated like them, to exist in uncertainty about the limits of Ordinance No. 7780. Excessive uncertainty, however, about the limits of a criminal law can chill even innocent expression.[33]
Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union[34] (Reno) is instructive. At issue in said case was the constitutionality of two statutory provisions under the Communications Decency Act of 1996 (CDA) enacted to protect minors from "indecent" and "patently offensive" communications on the Internet. Notwithstanding the legitimacy and importance of the congressional goal of protecting children from harmful materials, Reno held that the CDA abridges "the freedom of speech" protected by the First Amendment because it effectively suppresses a large amount of speech that adults have a constitutional right to receive and to address to one another. Ruling in favor of the facial invalidation of the CDA, the concern in Reno included, in fact, the punitive nature of the law:
The vagueness of the CDA is a matter of special concern for two reasons. First, the CDA is a content-based regulation of speech. The vagueness of such a regulation raises special First Amendment concerns because of its obvious chilling effect on free speech. See, e.g., Gentile v. State Bar of Nev., 501 U. S. 1030, 1048-1051 (1991). Second, the CDA is a criminal statute. In addition to the opprobrium and stigma of a criminal conviction, the CDA threatens violators with penalties including up to two years in prison for each act of violation. The severity of criminal sanctions may well cause speakers to remain silent rather than communicate even arguably unlawful words, ideas, and images. See, e.g., Dombrowski v. Pfister, 380 U. S. 479, 494 (1965). As a practical matter, this increased deterrent effect, coupled with the "risk of discriminatory enforcement" of vague regulations, poses greater First Amendment concerns than those implicated by the civil regulation reviewed in Denver Area Ed. Telecommunications Consortium, Inc. v. FCC, 518 U. S. 727 (1996).[35] (Emphasis supplied)
Furthermore, to ban altogether and unqualifiedly a facial attack against a penal statute that professedly aims to regulate obscenity is quite dangerous. Obscenity is, indeed, outside the mantle of protection of protected speech and expression. But it is also true that its definition has consistently been regarded as a term that eludes precise definition, so much so that the SCOTUS' logic of what makes frank depictions and descriptions of sex dangerous has fluctuated wildly from case to case.[36]
Over time, the consensus that has developed is to confine the definition of obscenity to the unduly dangerous and morally corrupting expression.[37] To clearly set out this delimitation, the SCOTUS, in the leading case of Miller v. California[38] (Miller), established basic guidelines which remain relevant to this day. These are: (a) whether to the average person, applying contemporary standards would find the work, taken as a whole, appealing to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.[39] Significantly, in our jurisdiction, this Court has recognized that the latest word on the definition of obscenity is that of Miller,[40] and has applied its "contextual lessons" in deciding what constitutes obscenity.[41]
Simply put, the Miller guidelines were set out to define and circumscribe what obscene is from what is not. In this case, the provisions of Ordinance No. 7780 have overstepped the Miller guidelines and the chilling effect presented by this overbreadth is unmistakable. The relevant portion of Ordinance No. 7780 reads in part:
Sec. 2. Definition of Terms: As used in this ordinance, the terms:
A. Obscene shall refer to any material or act that is indecent, erotic, lewd or offensive, or contrary to morals, good customs or religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, or to any material or act that tends to corrupt or deprive the human mind, or is calculated to excite impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, or is unfit to be seen or heard, or which violates the proprieties of language or behavior, regardless of the motive of the printer, publisher, seller, distributor, performer or author of such act or material, such as but not limited to:
1. Printing, showing, depicting or describing sexual acts;
2. Printing, showing, depicting or describing children in sexual acts;
3. Printing, showing, depicting or describing completely nude human bodies; and
4. Printing, showing, depicting or describing the human sexual organs or the female breasts.
B. Pornographic or pornography shall refer to such objects or subjects of photography, movies, music records, video and VHS tapes, laser discs, billboards, television, magazines, newspapers, tabloids, comics and live shows calculated to excite or stimulate sexual drive or impure imagination, regardless of the motive of the author thereof, such as but not limited to the following:
1. Performing live sexual acts in whatever form;
2. Those other than live performances showing, depicting or describing sexual acts;
3. Those showing, depicting or describing children in sex acts;
4. Those showing, depicting or describing completely nude human body, or showing, depicting or describing the human sexual organs or the female breasts.
C. Materials shall refer to magazines, newspapers, tabloids, comics, writings, photographs, drawings, paintings, billboards, decals, movies, music records, video and VHS tapes, laser discs, and similar matters.
Sec. 3. Prohibited Acts[:] The printing, publishing, distribution, circulation, sale and exhibition of obscene and pornographic acts and materials and the production, public showing and viewing of video and VHS tapes, laser discs, theatrical or stage and other live performances and private showing for public consumption, whether for free or for a fee, of pornographic pictures as herein defined are hereby prohibited within the City of Manila and accordingly penalized as provided herein.
Sec. 4. Penalty Clause: Any person violating this ordinance shall be punished as follows:
x x x x
Provided, that in case the offender is a juridical person, the President and the members of the board of directors, shall be held criminally liable; Provided, further, that in case of conviction, all pertinent permits and licenses issued by the City of Government to the offender shall be confiscated in favor of the City Government for destruction; Provided, furthermore, that in case the offender is a minor and unemancipated and unable to pay the fine, his parents or guardian shall be liable to pay such fine; provided, finally, that this ordinance shall not apply to materials printed, distributed, exhibited, sold, filmed, rented, viewed, or produced by reason of or in connection with or in furtherance of science and scientific research and medical or medically related art, profession, and for educational purposes.
As summarized by Senior Associate Justice Perlas-Bernabe, the Ordinance criminally punishes the mere "showing, depicting, or describing" of "sexual acts," "completely nude human bodies," and "human sexual organs or the female breasts" for being obscene or pornographic. These materials or acts are not so narrowly tailored as to what the Miller guidelines define as unprotected speech and expression. Specifically, the definitions of obscenity and pornography under the Ordinance lack the elements of appealing to prurient interest when taken as a whole and of being a patently offensive depiction or description of sexual conduct. Senior Associate Justice Perlas-Bernabe aptly observes that while the definition of obscenity includes the phrase calculated to excite impure imagination or arouse prurient interest (or calculated to excite or stimulate sexual drive or impure imagination in pornography), it is only one of the factors to be considered in determining what is obscene under the Ordinance. Equally important, the dominant theme of the work is completely disregarded. This absence is crucial because material appealing to the prurient interest or having a tendency to excite lustful thoughts is confined to that which appeals to shameful or morbid interests in sex and excludes as obscene material that provokes only normal, healthy sexual desires.[42]
In the same vein, the materials and acts sought to be punished do not fall within being patently offensive depictions or descriptions of sexual conduct. In Jenkins v. Georgia[43] (Jenkins), the SCOTUS recounted on the pains it took in Miller to "'give a few plain examples of what a state statute could define for regulation under part (b) of the standard announced,' that is, the requirement of patent offensiveness."[44] These examples, Jenkins further held, included "representations or descriptions of ultimate sexual acts, normal or perverted, actual or simulated," and "representations or descriptions of masturbation, excretory functions, and lewd exhibition of the genitals."[45] Jenkins explained that while this did not purport to be an exhaustive catalog of what juries might find patently offensive, it was certainly intended to fix substantive constitutional limitations, deriving from the First Amendment, on the type of material subject to such a determination.[46] In reversing the conviction of the appellant for showing an allegedly obscene film in a movie theater,[47] Jenkins' disquisition on why the standard of being patently offensive depictions or descriptions of sexual conduct is important in determining obscenity is illuminating:
Our own viewing of the film satisfies us that "Carnal Knowledge" could not be found under the Miller standards to depict sexual conduct in a patently offensive way. Nothing in the movie falls within either of the two examples given in Miller of material which may constitutionally be found to meet the "patently offensive" element of those standards, nor is there anything sufficiently similar to such material to justify similar treatment. While the subject matter of the picture is, in a broader sense, sex, and there are scenes in which sexual conduct including "ultimate sexual acts" is to be understood to be taking place, the camera does not focus on the bodies of the actors at such times. There is no exhibition whatever of the actors' genitals, lewd or otherwise, during these scenes. There are occasional scenes of nudity, but nudity alone is not enough to make material legally obscene under the Miller standards.
Appellant's showing of the film "Carnal Knowledge" is simply not the "public portrayal of hard core sexual conduct for its own sake and for the ensuing commercial gain" which we said was punishable in Miller. Id., at 35. We hold that the film could not, as a matter of constitutional law be found to depict sexual conduct in a patently offensive way, and that it is therefore not outside the protection of the First and Fourteenth Amendments because it is obscene. No other basis appearing in the record upon which the judgment of conviction can be sustained, we reverse the judgment of the Supreme Court of Georgia.[48] (Emphasis supplied)
Finally, it may be argued that the constitutionality of Ordinance No. 7780 may be saved by its proviso which exempts from the definition of obscenity materials printed, distributed, exhibited, sold, filmed, rented, viewed, or produced by reason of or in connection with or in furtherance of science and scientific research and medical or medically-related art, profession, and for educational purposes. This proviso, however, is utterly incomplete in what Miller requires, that is, whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value. Consequently, as again correctly observed by Senior Associate Justice Perlas-Bernabe, those with serious literary, artistic, and political value are still considered obscene under the Ordinance. I hasten to add that the problem with overbreadth cannot be saved by simply reading or interpreting the proviso to nonetheless include these textually excluded values, considering that the definitions of obscenity and pornography under the Ordinance contain the express clause regardless of the motive of the printer, publisher, seller, distributor, performer or author of the act or material.
Notably, the third standard in Miller is an evolution of the "value" element in U.S. obscenity cases. The exclusion of obscenity from the protection of the First Amendment began on a mere assumption that it was utterly without redeeming social importance in Roth v. United States.[49] Later, the element was expressly incorporated as a component into the obscenity test for the first time in Memoirs v. Massachusetts[50] (Memoirs). It bears to stress that Memoirs held that the work remains constitutionally protected even if it appeals to prurient interests or is patently offensive, so long as it has social value. The social value of the work can neither be weighed against nor canceled by its prurient appeal or patent offensiveness. Subsequently, in Miller, the "value" element was drastically recast. The test of utterly without redeeming social value articulated in Memoirs was rejected as a constitutional standard and in its stead, the test now is "whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value."[51] As with the first guideline, the dominant theme of the work is similarly taken into consideration, with the end in view of limiting obscenity to materials that depict or describe patently offensive "hard core" sexual conduct and, at the same time, remaining sensitive to any infringement of genuinely serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific expression.[52]
All told, the continued presence of Ordinance No. 7780, which is, on its face, overbroad, justifies the Court's judicial review. The mere fact that a statutory regulation of speech was enacted for the important purpose of curbing obscenity does not foreclose inquiry into its validity.[53] That inquiry embodies an "overarching commitment" to make sure that Congress has designed its statute to accomplish its purpose "without imposing an unnecessarily great restriction on speech."[54] Certainly, while obscenity is outside the realm of protected speech and may therefore be a proper subject of regulation by the local government of Manila, the regulation may not be done by means which sweep unnecessarily broadly and invade the area of the cherished and protected freedom of speech and expression.[55]
To reiterate, what is obscene has been carefully defined under the prevailing guidelines set forth in Miller, which this Court has likewise recognized and adhered to. What is outside or excluded from this definition merits the protection of the Constitution, even if such material is of a sexually provocative nature. To be sure, sex and obscenity are not synonymous,[56] and it is likewise well-settled that all ideas having even the slightest redeeming social importance generally have the full protection of the Constitution.[57] Hence, regulations that aim to restrict or stifle materials and acts falling outside of the limiting definition established in Miller must be guarded against, lest the guaranteed freedom of speech and expression is deprived of the breathing space it needs to survive.[58]
In view of the foregoing, I vote to GRANT the motion for reconsideration of petitioners and to declare Ordinance No. 7780 VOID and UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
[1] Madrilejos v. Gatdula, G.R. No. 184389, September 24, 2019.
[2] AN ORDINANCE PROHIBITING AND PENALIZING THE PRINTING, PUBLICATION, SALE, DISTRIBUTION AND EXHIBITION OF OBSCENE AND PORNOGRAPHIC ACTS AND MATERIALS AND THE PRODUCTION, RENTAL, PUBLIC SHOWING AND VIEWING OF INDECENT AND IMMORAL MOVIES, TELEVISION SHOWS, MUSIC RECORDS, VIDEO AND VHS TAPES, LASER DISCS, THEATRICAL OR STAGE AND OTHER LIVE PERFORMANCES, EXCEPT THOSE REVIEWED BY THE MOVIE, TELEVISION REVIEW AND CLASSIFICATION BOARD (MTRCB), approved on February 19, 1993.
[3] Art. 201. Immoral doctrines, obscene publications and exhibitions, and indecent shows. - The penalty of prision mayor or a fine ranging from six thousand to twelve thousand pesos, or both such imprisonment and fine, shall be imposed upon:
x x x x
3. Those who shall sell, give away, or exhibit films, prints, engravings, sculptures, or literature which are offensive to morals.
[4] Samahan ng mga Progresibong Kabataan (SPARK) v. Quezon City, G.R. No. 225442, August 8, 2017, 835 SCRA 350, 385. Emphasis supplied; emphasis and underscoring in the original omitted.
[5] Id. at 385.
[6] G.R. Nos. 204819, 204934, 204957, 204988, 205003, 205043, 205138, 205478, 205491, 205720, 206355, 207111, 207172 & 207563, April 8, 2014, 721 SCRA 146.
[7] AN ACT PROVIDING FOR A NATIONAL POLICY ON RESPONSIBLE PARENTHOOD AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH, otherwise known as "THE RESPONSIBLE PARENTHOOD AND REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH ACT OF 2012," approved on December 21, 2012.
[8] Imbong v. Ochoa, Jr., supra note 6, at 281. Citation omitted.
[9] G.R. Nos. 183591, 183752, 183893, 183951 & 183962, October 14, 2008, 568 SCRA 402.
[10] Imbong v. Ochoa, Jr., supra note 6, at 280-281.
[11] Supra note 4.
[12] Id. at 385-386.
[13] See Madrilejos v. Gatdula, supra note 1, at 5.
[14] G.R. No. 152259, July 29, 2004, 435 SCRA 371.
[15] Id. at 383.
[16] Imbong v. Ochoa, Jr., supra note 6, at 282.
[17] Id. at 283. Emphasis and underscoring supplied.
[18] G.R. Nos. 178552, 178554, 178581, 178890, 179157 & 179461, October 5, 2010, 632 SCRA 146.
[19] Id. at 187.
[20] Id. at 188. Citation omitted.
[21] Separate Opinion of Associate Justice Vicente V. Mendoza in Estrada v. Sandiganbayan, G.R. No. 148560, January 29, 2002, citing Younger v. Harris, 401 U.S. 37, 52 (1971), accessed at <
[22] Id.
[23] Borgmann, C., HOLDING LEGISLATURES CONSTITUTIONALLY ACCOUNTABLE THROUGH FACIAL CHALLENGES, CUNY Academic Works, City University of New York (2009), accessed at <
[24] Id.
[25] Id.
[26] G.R. No. 148560, November 19, 2001, 369 SCRA 394.
[27] Id. at 465.
[28] Id. at 464-465.
[29] Separate Opinion of Associate Justice Vicente V. Mendoza in Estrada v. Sandiganbayan, supra note 21.
[30] G.R. No. 167011, April 30, 2008, 553 SCRA 370.
[31] Id. at 468. Emphasis and underscoring supplied.
[32] Separate Opinion of Associate Justice Vicente V. Mendoza in Estrada v. Sandiganbayan, supra note 21.
[33] Tribe, L. and Matz, J., UNCERTAIN JUSTICE: THE ROBERTS COURT AND THE CONSTITUTION, Henry Holt and Company, LLC (2014), p. 121, citing Schauer, F., FEAR, RISK AND THE FIRST AMENDMENT: UNRAVELING THE CHILLING EFFECT, College of William & Mary Law School William & Mary Law School Scholarship Repository (1978), p. 121.
[34] 521 U.S. 844 (1997).
[35] Id. at 871-872.
[36] Tribe, L. and Matz, J., supra note 33.
[37] Id.
[38] 413 U.S. 15 (1973).
[39] Id. at 24.
[40] Fernando v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 159751, December 6, 2006, 510 SCRA 351, 360.
[41] See Soriano v. Laguardia, G.R. Nos. 164785 & 165636, April 29, 2009, 587 SCRA 79, 100-101.
[42] Brockett v. Spokane Arcades Inc., 472 U.S. 491 (1985).
[43] 418 U.S. 153 (1974).
[44] Id. at 160.
[45] Id.
[46] Id. at 160-161.
[47] The statute as enacted in the State of Georgia and defined "[m]aterial is obscene if considered as a whole, applying community standards, its predominant appeal is to prurient interest, that is a, shameful or morbid interest in nudity, sex or excretion, and utterly without redeeming social value and if, in addition, it goes substantially beyond customary limits of candor in describing or representing such matters." Id. at 154-155.
[48] Id. at 161.
[49] 354 U.S. 476 (1957). See Montgomery, D., OBSCENITY: 30 YEARS OF CONFUSION AND STILL COUNTING—POPE v. ILLINOIS, Creighton Law Review (1987), accessed at <
[50] 383 U.S. 413 (1966).
[51] Miller v. California, supra note 38, at 24, 39.
[52] Id. at 23, 27.
[53] Reno v. American Civil Liberties Union, supra note 34, at 875, citing Sable Communications of Cal., Inc. v. FCC, 492 U.S. 115, 129 (1989).
[54] Id. at 876, citing Denver Area Ed. Telecommunications Consortium, Inc. v. FCC, 518 U.S. 727, 741 (1996).
[55] See NAACP v. Alabama ex rel. Patterson, 357 U.S. 449 (1958).
[56] Roth v. United States, supra note 49, at 487.
[57] See id. at 484.
[58] See NAACP v. Button, 371 U.S. 415 (1963).
DISSENTING OPINION
LAZARO-JAVIER, J.:
ANTECEDENTS
Petitioners are Allan Madrilejos, Allan Hernandez, and Glenda Gil, Editor-in-Chief, Managing Editor, and Circulation Manager, respectively, of For Him Magazine Philippines (FHM), with Lance Y. Gokongwei and Lisa Gokongwei-Cheng, Chairman and President, respectively, of Summit Publishing, FHM Philippines' publisher. They were among the respondents in a criminal complaint filed by pastors and preachers from various churches with the Office of the City Prosecutor, City of Manila. The complaint was docketed I.S. No. 08G-12234. It alleged, among others, that from 2007 to 2008 respondents printed, published, distributed, circulated and/or sold in the city "scandalous, obscene and pornographic" identified magazines and tabloids in violation of Articles 200 and 201 of The Revised Penal Code (RPC) and Ordinance No. 7780 of the City of Manila.
Articles 200 and 201 of the RPC provide:
Article 200. Grave scandal. — The penalties of arresto mayor and public censure shall be imposed upon any person who shall offend against decency or good customs by any highly scandalous conduct not expressly falling within any other article of this Code.
Article 201. Immoral doctrines, obscene publications and exhibitions, and indecent shows. — The penalty of prision mayor or a fine ranging from six thousand to twelve thousand pesos, or both such imprisonment and fine, shall be imposed upon:
1. Those who shall publicly expound or proclaim doctrines openly contrary to public morals;
2. (a) The authors of obscene literature, published with their knowledge in any form; the editors publishing such literature; and the owners/operators of the establishment selling the same;
(b) Those who in theaters, fairs, cinematographs or any other place, exhibit indecent or immoral plays, scenes, acts or shows, it being understood that the obscene literature or indecent or immoral plays, scenes or shows, whether live or in film, which are prescribed by virtue hereof, shall include those which: (1) glorify criminals or condone crimes; (2) serve no other purpose but to satisfy the market for violence, lust or pornography; (3) offend any race or religion; (4) tend to abet traffic in and use of prohibited drugs; and (5) are contrary to law, public order, morals, and good customs, established policies, lawful orders, decrees and edicts;
3. Those who shall sell, give away or exhibit films, prints, engravings, sculptures, or literature which are offensive to morals.
On the other hand, the pertinent portions of Ordinance No. 7780 read:
x x x x
Sec. 2. Definition of Terms: As used in this ordinance, the terms:
A. Obscene shall refer to any material or act that is indecent, erotic, lewd or offensive, or contrary to morals, good customs or religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, or to any material or act that tends to corrupt or depr[a]ve the human mind, or is calculated to excite impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, or is unfit to be seen or heard, or which violates the proprieties of language or behavior, regardless of the motive of the printer, publisher, seller, distributor, performer or author of such act or material, such as but not limited to:
1. Printing, showing, depicting or describing sexual acts; 2. Printing, showing, depicting or describing children in sexual acts; 3. Printing, showing, depicting or describing completely nude human bodies; and 4. Printing, showing, depicting or describing the human sexual organs or the female breasts.B. Pornographic or pornography shall refer to such objects or subjects of photography, movies, music records, video and VHS tapes, laser discs, billboards, television, magazines, newspapers, tabloids, comics and live shows calculated to excite or stimulate sexual drive or impure imagination, regardless of motive of the author thereof, such as, but not limited to the following:
1. Performing live sexual acts in whatever form; 2. Those other than live performances showing, depicting or describing sexual acts; 3. Those showing, depicting or describing children in sex acts; 4. Those showing, depicting or describing completely nude human body, or showing, depicting or describing the human sexual organs or the female breasts.C. Materials shall refer to magazines, newspapers, tabloids, comics, writings, photographs, drawings, paintings, billboards, decals, movies, music records, video and VHS tapes, laser discs, and similar matters.
Sec. 3. Prohibited Acts. — The printing, publishing, distribution, circulation, sale and exhibition of obscene and pornographic acts and materials and the production, public showing and viewing of video and VHS tapes, laser discs, theatrical or stage and other live performances and private showing for public consumption, whether for free or for a fee, of pornographic pictures as herein defined are hereby prohibited within the City of Manila and accordingly penalized as provided herein.
Sec. 4. Penalty Clause: Any person violating this ordinance shall be punished as follows:
1. For printing, publishing, distribution or circulation of obscene or pornographic materials; the production or showing of obscene movies, television shows, stage and other live performances; for producing or renting obscene videos and VHS tapes, laser discs, for viewing obscene movies, television shows, videos and VHS tapes, laser discs or stage and other live performances; and for performing obscene act on stage and other live performances — imprisonment of one (1) year or fine of five thousand pesos (P5,000.00), or both, at the discretion of the court.
2. For the selling of obscene or pornographic materials — imprisonment of not less than six (6) months nor more than one (1) year or a fine of not less than one (1) thousand (P1,000.00), nor more than three thousand (P3,000.00) pesos.
Provided, that in case the offender is a juridical person, the President and the members of the board of directors, shall be held criminally liable; Provided, further, that in case of conviction. all pertinent permits and licenses issued by the City of Government to the offender shall be confiscated in favor of the City Government for destruction; Provided, furthermore, that in case the offender is a minor and unemancipated and unable to pay the fine, his parents or guardian shall be liable to pay such fine; provided, finally, that this ordinance shall not apply to materials printed, distributed, exhibited, sold, filmed, rented, viewed, or produced by reason of or in connection with or in furtherance of science and scientific research and medical or medically related art, profession, and for educational purposes. (Emphases supplied.)
Meantime, the Office of the City Prosecutor formed a panel of prosecutors to conduct the preliminary investigation. While it was ongoing, petitioners filed the present petition which, in the words of the ponencia of Honorable Associate Justice Francis H. Jardeleza (now retired) is premised "on the ground that Ordinance No. 7780 is invalid on its face for being patently offensive to their constitutional right to free speech and expression, repugnant to due process and privacy rights, and violative of the constitutionally established principle of separation of church and state."
In so many words, petitioners themselves described the present petition as both an as-applied and a facial challenge to the validity of Ordinance No. 7780.[1] Petitioners prayed for a writ of prohibition restraining the conduct of the preliminary investigation and a declaration nullifying the Ordinance and enjoining its implementation.
As aptly summarized in the ponencia, petitioners particularized their as-applied and facial challenge to the constitutionality of Ordinance No. 7780 by -
x x x alleging that [Ordinance No. 7780] defines the terms "obscene" and "pornography" in such a way that a very broad range of speech and expression are placed beyond the protection of the Constitution, thus violating the constitutional guarantee to free speech and expression. Specifically, petitioners take issue with the "expansive" language of Ordinance No. 7780 which, petitioners claim, paved the way for complainants, a group of pastors and preachers, to impose their view of what is "unfit to be seen or heard" and "violate[s] the proprieties of language and behavior."[2] x x x Petitioners' arguments are facial attacks against Ordinance No. 7780 on the ground of overbreadth.
x x x x
The Office of the City Prosecutor filed its own Comment on the petition arguing in the strongest terms possible in favor of the constitutionality of the assailed Ordinance.
Meanwhile, the Office of the City Prosecutor issued Resolution dated June 25, 2013 dismissing the charges for violation of Article 200 and Ordinance No. 7780 but ordering the filing of an Information for violation of Article 201 (3) of the RPC. The pertinent portion of the Resolution, as quoted in the ponencia, reads:
x x x x
If the act or acts of the offender are punished under another article of the Revised Penal Code, Article 200 is not applicable. Considering that the subject matter of the complaint is the obscene publication under Article 201 of the Revised Penal Code, [petitioners] should not be liable for Grave Scandal; hence, the complaint for Grave Scandal should be dismissed.
On the other hand, considering that the subject matter covered by the city ordinance of Manila is likewise the printing, publication, sale, distribution and exhibition of obscene and pornographic acts and materials, it is already absorbed in Article 201 of the Revised Penal Code and the complaint for violation of the city ordinance should likewise be dismissed.
x x x x
Any person who has something to do with the printing, publication, circulation and sale of the obscene publications should be made liable. Hence, except for respondents Eugenio Lopez III, who was charged being the Chairman of the Board of ABS-CBN Publishing, Inc., Ernesto M. Lopez, being the President of the said publishing company, Lance Y. Gokongwei and Lisa Y. Gokongwei-Cheng, being the Chairman of the Board and President, respectively of Summit Publishing, their actual knowledge, consent, and/or participation in the obscene publications not having been clearly established by the evidence, said respondents should not be made liable thereto. However, all the other respondents being persons responsible for the publication, circulation and sale of the subject obscene publications should be made liable thereto.
All the other respondents, either being the Editor-in-Chief, Managing Director, General Manager or Circulation Manager of their respective publishing companies should be made liable for Violation of Section 201 paragraph 2(a) of the Revised Penal Code.
x x x x
The criminal case against petitioners for violation of Article 201 (3) of the RPC was docketed Criminal Case No. 13-30084 and raffled to Branch 16 of the Regional Trial Court (RTC), City of Manila.
The ponencia further recounted: "Despite the dismissal of the charge for violation of Ordinance No. 7780, petitioners did not move to withdraw the present action, adamant that the Ordinance 'violates the constitutional guarantees to free speech and expression, violates the right to due process, and offends privacy rights." (Emphasis supplied.)
Back to Criminal Case No. 13-30084, the same was ordered dismissed with prejudice, upon petitioners' motion on account of the People's failure to prosecute.
THE COURT'S RULING
The ponencia dismissed the present petition on the following grounds:
(1) The dismissal of the criminal charges against petitioners for violation of the provisions of Ordinance No. 7780 has rendered this case moot and academic.
One. The ponencia characterized the present petition as one "for prohibition with prayer for the issuance of a preliminary injunction and/or temporary restraining order, seeking to prevent respondents from carrying out the preliminary investigation of the criminal complaint entitled Abante, et al. v. Asumbrado, et al., docketed as I.S. No. 08G-12234, on the ground that Ordinance No. 7780 is unconstitutional." This characterization is clarified by the ponencia's understanding of the petition's sole thrust, which " ... was to stop the conduct of the preliminary investigation into their alleged violation of an unconstitutional statute — a process that concludes with an Order whether or not to indict petitioners," and inferentially, of the unconstitutionality of Ordinance No. 7780 as a tool meant merely to terminate the preliminary investigation of the criminal complaint against petitioners. Therefore, as the ponencia ruled, with the dismissal on preliminary investigation of the complaint for violation of the Ordinance (along with Article 200 of the RPC) and during the trial of the criminal case for violation of Article 201 (3) of the RPC, it should follow that the outcome of the present petition as to the unconstitutionality of the Ordinance would have no practical use or value to petitioners.
Two. The ponencia defined a "moot and academic case" as "one that ceases to present a justiciable controversy by virtue of supervening events, so that a declaration thereon would be of no practical use or value." A moot case lacks "actual controversies involving rights which are legally demandable and enforceable x x x" without which courts have no jurisdiction to act.
The ponencia, however, did not explain (at least in this section) why an actual controversy had ceased to exist after the dismissal of the criminal case and why the declaration sought by petitioners would have no practical use or value to them or those similarly situated.
Instead, the ponencia went on to explain why the exception to the general rule that this Court should decline to act upon moot cases – the case is capable of repetition yet evading review.
The ponencia explained that this exception has two (2) requisites: (1) the challenged action was in its duration too short to be fully litigated prior to its cessation or expiration, and (2) there was a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party would be subjected to the same action again. The ponencia ruled that neither of these requisites applied to the present petition.
The ponencia held that the preliminary investigation which the present petition sought to stop did not involve a very short duration:
In this case, it must be noted that petitioners' purpose in filing the present action was to stop the conduct of the preliminary investigation into their alleged violation of an unconstitutional statute — a process that concludes with an Order whether or not to indict petitioners. Relatedly, and as it happened in this case, such an Order, if and when issued, is not of such inherently short duration that it will lapse before petitioners are able to see it challenged before a higher prosecutorial authority (i.e., the Department of Justice) or the courts. In fact, and unless reversed by the Secretary of Justice or by the courts, an order to indict does not lapse. Thus, the time constraint that justified the application of the exception in Southern Pacific Terminal Co. v. ICC[3] (two-year validity of an Interstate Commerce Commission (ICC) cease and desist order) and Roe v. Wade[4] (266-day human gestation period) does not exist here.
It also ruled that there was no reasonable expectation that petitioners would be subjected to the same action again because:
x x x when the criminal charges against petitioners were dismissed with prejudice, they can no longer be refiled without offending the constitutional proscription against double jeopardy. Petitioners have also failed to demonstrate a reasonable likelihood that they will once again be hailed before the Office of the City Prosecutor of Manila (OCP) for the same or another violation of Ordinance No. 7780. It should be noted that the OCP Manila did not even question the dismissal of the case. There is likewise no showing that the pastors and preachers who initiated the complaint here filed, or have threatened to file, new charges against petitioners, over new material published in FMH Philippines alleged to be obscene, after the case below was dismissed as early as July 19, 2016.
The ponencia took an exacting interpretation of the second requisite. The Court required reasonable expectation or a demonstrated probability that the same complaining party would be subjected to the same action again. This second element is missing if it were highly speculative and hypothetical, or highly doubtful if he or she can demonstrate a substantial likelihood, that the same complaining party would be subjected to the same action again.
This ruling stressed that this second element may refer to history that it was not far-fetched that the same complaining party would be subjected to the same action again. An affair of annual occurrence is one where there exists a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party would be subjected to the same action again.
(2) Ordinance No. 7780, an anti-obscenity law, cannot be facially attacked on the ground of overbreadth because obscenity is unprotected speech.
One. The ponencia held that petitioners' facial challenge based on the overbreadth doctrine was improper because this ground applied only to free speech cases – which the present petition was not. According to the ponencia, as this petition stemmed from an obscenity and a criminal prosecution, such facial challenge is not available. (Emphasis supplied)
The ponencia explained –
First, a facial overbreadth challenge is limited to cases involving protected speech, and obscenity is not a protected speech. The ponencia justified this conclusion by holding that "laws that regulate or proscribe classes of speech falling beyond the ambit of constitutional protection cannot, therefore, be subject to facial invalidation because there is no 'transcendent value to all society' that would justify such attack." (Emphasis supplied)
And, second, a facial overbreadth challenge does not apply even to vague and overbroad penal statutes since the latter have no possible "chilling effect" upon protected speech.[5] Thus:
x x x The theory is that "[w]hen statutes regulate or proscribe speech and no readily apparent construction suggests itself as a vehicle for rehabilitating the statutes in a single prosecution, the transcendent value to all society of constitutionally protected expression is deemed to justify allowing attacks on overly broad statutes with no requirement that the person making the attack demonstrate that his own conduct could not be regulated by a statute drawn with narrow specificity." The possible harm to society in permitting some unprotected speech to go unpunished is outweighed by the possibility that the protected speech of others may be deterred and perceived grievances left to fester because of possible inhibitory effects of overly broad statutes.
This rationale does not apply to penal statutes. Criminal statutes have general in terrorem effect resulting from their very existence, and, if facial challenge is allowed for this reason alone, the State may well be prevented from enacting laws against socially harmful conduct. In the area of criminal law, the law cannot take chances as in the area of free speech.
The overbreadth and vagueness doctrines then have special application only to free speech cases. They are inapt for testing the validity of penal statutes. As the US Supreme Court put it, in an opinion by Chief Justice Rehnquist, "we have not recognized an 'overbreadth' doctrine outside the limited context of the First Amendment." x x x
In sum, the doctrines of strict scrutiny, overbreadth, and vagueness are analytical tools developed for testing "on their faces" statutes in free speech cases or, as they are called in American law, First Amendment cases. They cannot be made to do service when what is involved is a criminal statute. With respect to such statute, the established rule is that "one to whom application of a statute is constitutional will not be heard to attack the statute on the ground that impliedly it might also be taken as applying to other persons or other situations in which its application might be unconstitutional." (Emphases supplied)
x x x x
The ponencia further affirmed the rule that "only statutes on free speech, religious freedom, and other fundamental rights may be facially challenged. Under no case may ordinary penal statutes be subjected to a facial challenge. The rationale is obvious. If a facial challenge to a penal statute is permitted, the prosecution of crimes may be hampered. No prosecution would be possible."
Two. The ponencia then characterized Ordinance No. 7780 as a criminal or penal statute that criminalizes or penalizes an unprotected speech –obscenity. As thus characterized, this Court ruled that the Ordinance cannot be challenged on its face.
On obscenity being an unprotected speech, the ponencia expounded:
It was in 1942 when the US Supreme Court first held in the landmark case of Chaplinsky v. New Hampshire[6] that the lewd and the obscene are not protected speech and therefore falls outside the protection of the First Amendment. x x x These include the lewd and obscene, the profane, the libelous, and the insulting or "fighting" words – those which by their very utterance inflict injury or tend to incite an immediate breach of the peace. It has been well observed that such utterances are no essential part of any exposition of ideas, and are of such slight social value as a step to truth that any benefit that may be derived from them is clearly outweighed by the social interest in order and morality.
Beginning from Roth v. United States[7] (implicit in the history of the First Amendment is the rejection of obscenity) to Miller v. California, (this much has been categorically settled by the Court, that obscene material is unprotected by the First Amendment), the US Supreme Court has invariably held that obscene materials do not come under the protection of the First Amendment x x x
As earlier stated, this Court has long accepted Chaplinsky's analysis that obscenity is unprotected speech. In 1985, We held, in the case of Gonzalez v. Katigbak,[8] that the law on freedom of expression frowns on obscenity.
x x xx x x But implicit in the history of the First Amendment is the rejection of obscenity as utterly without redeeming social importance. This rejection for that reason is mirrored in the universal judgment that obscenity should be restrained, reflected in the international agreement of over 50 nations, in the obscenity laws of all of the 48 States, and in the 20 obscenity laws enacted by the Congress from 1842 to 1956. (Emphases supplied)
x x x x
Three. The ponencia held that while petitioners had no right to assail a law that regulates unprotected speech, such as Ordinance No. 7780, using a facial challenge, they may do so as-applied, viz:
This is not to suggest, however, that these laws are absolutely invulnerable to constitutional attack.
A litigant who stands charged under a law that regulates unprotected speech can still mount a challenge that a statute is unconstitutional as it is applied to him or her. In such a case, courts are left to examine the provisions of the law allegedly violated in light of the conduct with which the litigant has been charged. If the litigant prevails, the courts carve away the unconstitutional aspects of the law by invalidating its improper applications on a case to case basis. (Emphases supplied)
The ponencia outlined the steps in assailing the Ordinance as-applied.
An as-applied challenge would require petitioners to go to trial to allow the trial court to determine whether "the materials complained of as obscene were indeed proscribed under the language of Ordinance No. 7780." This might also entail the adoption of the Miller[9] standards if petitioners raise them as a defense:
x x x x
(a) whether "the average person, applying contemporary community standards" would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
The next steps in the as-applied challenge would be as follows:
x x x petitioners could argue based on the Miller standards as applied to the specific material over which they were being prosecuted, they should be acquitted.
On the other hand, the trial court, assuming it adopts Miller, will then have to receive evidence and render opinion on such issues as to: (a) who is the "average" Filipino; (b) what is the "community" against which "contemporary standards" are to be measured; (c) whether the subject material appeals to the "prurient" interest; (d) whether the material depicts "patently offensive" sexual conduct: and (e) whether the material "taken as a whole" has serious value.
The decision of the RTC, whether or not in favor of petitioners, may then be brought up on appeal to the Court of Appeals (CA), whose decision may later on be brought to this Court for review. Such is the process observed by the US Supreme Court in all of the obscenity cases cited by the ponencia which led to the adoption of the Miller standards in the US. The cases, including Miller, all involved appellate review conducted with the benefit of a full record.
x x x x
The ponencia stressed that none of the cases challenging anti-obscenity laws involved a facial attack on the ground of overbreadth. It also rejected, on separation of powers rationale, petitioners' plea to superimpose the Miller standards on Ordinance No. 7780, thus:
x x x x
We stress at this point that the Court in Miller did not impose that the standards it laid down be legislated. On the contrary, the Court there was very careful not to overstep its judicial boundaries:
We emphasize that it is not our function to propose regulatory schemes for the States. That must await their concrete legislative efforts. It is possible, however, to give a few plain examples of what a state statute could define for regulation under part (b) of the standard announced in this opinion, supra:
(a) Patently offensive representations or descriptions of ultimate sexual acts, normal or perverted, actual or simulated.
(b) Patently offensive representations or descriptions of masturbation, excretory functions, and lewd exhibition of the genitals.In fact, Miller explicitly held that the obscene conduct depicted or described in materials which is sought to be regulated "must be specifically defined by the applicable state law, as written or authoritatively construed." x x x Accordingly, whether a material is obscene or not is still for the Court to decide as it applies or construes a specific statute in a particular case.
x x x x
Finally, x x x as applied to the actual facts of the case is the proper precedent to follow if the Court were to consider adopting the Miller standard in our jurisdiction. Thus, and until the proper case presents itself, prudence dictates that the Court should exercise judicial restraint.
x x x x
Petitioners moved for reconsideration of the dismissal of the petition. The Resolution penned by the learned Honorable Chief Justice Diosdado M. Peralta affirmed the dismissal by reiterating the ponencia's rationale.
Since 2018, FHM has shifted from paper-based to digital publications.[10] There is no reason to believe that this shift has exempted petitioners as publishers and distributers of these magazines in digital format from the coverage of Ordinance No. 7780. If at all, this shift may have far worse adverse implications upon them due to Section 6 of RA 10175 (2012), Cybercrime Prevention Act of 2012, which states:
SECTION 6. All crimes defined and penalized by the Revised Penal Code, as amended, and special laws, if committed by, through and with the use of information and communications technologies shall be covered by the relevant provisions of this Act: Provided, That the penalty to be imposed shall be one (1) degree higher than that provided for by the Revised Penal Code, as amended, and special laws, as the case may be.
MY RESPECTFUL DISSENT
I joined the ponencia when the case was first decided. My vote was based on my assessment then of the cogency of its ratio decidendi.
On petitioners' motion, however, and after a more introspective analysis of the arguments raised in my senior colleagues' respective Opinions and relevant case law both new and old, I now vote to grant the petition and to declare Ordinance No. 7780 as unconstitutional.
A. The Issues
The dispositive issues are:
One. Is the petition a freedom of expression (or free speech) case?
Two. Has the petition seeking to declare Ordinance No. 7780 as unconstitutional been rendered moot –
1. When, after preliminary investigation, the criminal complaint for violation of Ordinance No. 7780 (along with Article 200 of the RPC but upon another ground) was dismissed per Resolution dated June 25, 2013 of the OCP of Manila, since "the subject matter covered by the city ordinance of Manila is already absorbed in Article 201 of the Revised Penal Code."
2. When, during the trial, Criminal Case No. 13-30084 for violation of Article 201 (3) of the RPC was dismissed with prejudice upon petitioners' motion due to the People's failure to prosecute?
Three. May Ordinance No. 7780 be challenged on its face on the ground of overbreadth though it is a penal statute that seeks to punish alleged obscene and indecent expressions?
Four. If Ordinance No. 7780 may be challenged facially, does Ordinance No. 7780 on its face violate freedom of expression for being overbroad; and as a content-based criminalization, the strict scrutiny test?
Five. As applied to petitioners, did Ordinance No. 7780 violate their freedom of expression when it sought to prohibit and penalize their acts of printing, publishing, distributing, circulating and/or selling certain identified issue of their FHM Magazine?
B. My Submissions
One. The present petition is a freedom of expression (or free speech) case. |
It is my respectful submission that the pitfalls in the original ponencia started with its characterization of the petition as not being a freedom of expression or free speech case, and its approach to lump Ordinance No. 7780 together with penal laws that has nothing to do with expression.
The ponencia held that this case is not about free speech because obscene expression is unprotected speech. This, however, begs the question.
The petition was initiated precisely to test whether indeed Ordinance No. 7780 impacts on expression, and if it does, whether it only penalizes obscene expression or includes within its ambit protected speech. To at once concede that the assailed Ordinance is all about obscenities is to assume the truthfulness of the issues that in the first place are precisely the subject of the petition.
The characterization of the petition as not being a free speech case is erroneous because the subject matter of Ordinance No. 7780 – materials or acts such as photography, movies, music records, video and VHS tapes, laser discs, billboards, television, magazines, newspapers, tabloids, comics and live shows – is a form of speech or expression, and the assailed Ordinance punishes on its face the printing, publishing, distributing, circulating and/or selling of these materials or acts on account of their respective contents or messages.
The materials or acts subject of Ordinance No. 7780 are forms of speech or expression since they each intend to convey a particularized message, and each of the messages they intend to convey is most likely to be understood as such by those who heard, read, or viewed it.[11]
Here, the particularized messages targeted by the Ordinance are indecency, eroticism, lewdness, offensiveness to morals, good customs, religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, tendency to corrupt or depr[a]ve the human mind, calculation to excite impure imagination or stimulate sexual drive or impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, unfitness to be seen or heard, or violation of the proprieties of language or behavior. As stated, this Ordinance punishes on its face the printing, publishing, distributing, circulating and/or selling of these materials or acts on account of these contents or messages.
It is accepted that:
x x x x
The First Amendment literally forbids the abridgment only of "speech," but we have long recognized that its protection does not end at the spoken or written word. While we have rejected "the view that an apparently limitless variety of conduct can be labeled 'speech' whenever the person engaging in the conduct intends thereby to express an idea," we have acknowledged that conduct may be "sufficiently imbued with elements of communication to fall within the scope of the First and Fourteenth Amendments." x x x Hence, we have recognized the expressive nature of students' wearing of black armbands to protest American military involvement in Vietnam, of a sit-in by blacks in a "whites only" area to protest segregation; of the wearing of American military uniforms in a dramatic presentation criticizing American involvement in Vietnam; and of picketing about a wide variety of causes.[12] (Emphasis supplied)
x x x x
Here, the petition challenges Ordinance No. 7780 precisely because it seeks to control by criminalizing the expressions of petitioners and those similarly situated because of the criminalized meanings the expressions convey.
Note that laws regulating speech or expression are classified as either content-based or content-neutral. For this reason, challenges to such laws are treated and analyzed as free speech cases.
Content-neutral laws involve regulations that impact upon the time, place, and manner of the expression or the secondary effects of the speech and only minimally the message or meaning conveyed or imparted. Ordinance No. 7780 is not a content-neutral penal law because it has nothing to do with the time, place, and manner of the subject-matter expression or its secondary effects.
On the other hand content-based laws target speech based on its communicative content.[13] These laws ask what the subject materials or acts communicate as meanings and what punishments or regulations are to be imposed these materials or acts on account of these meanings. Stated differently, the test to determine whether a government regulation is content-based is as follows:
x x x x
Government regulation of speech is content based if a law applies to particular speech because of the topic discussed or the idea or message expressed. This common-sense meaning of the phrase "content based" requires a court to consider whether a regulation of speech "on its face" draws distinctions based on the message a speaker conveys.[14]
x x x x
As held in Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, Inc. v. Joyce,[15] [a] statute 'would not be content neutral if it were concerned with undesirable effects that arise from 'the direct impact of speech on its audience' or '[l]isteners' reactions to speech."' To illustrate:
In Boos, a District of Columbia provision banned display of any sign within 500 feet of a foreign embassy which tended to bring the foreign government into ''public odium" or ''disrepute." 485 U.S. at 315 (internal quotation marks omitted). The Court decided that the District's law was content based and unconstitutional, for its ban on sign displays sought to regulate "speech due to its potential primary impact" – that is the effect "that speech has on its listeners." Id. at 321, 329. Because the law sought "'to protect the dignity of foreign diplomatic personnel by shielding them from speech that is critical of their governments," it was content based.[16]
To elucidate further, a rule is "content-based on its face" if it defines several terms based on the message the material or act conveys, and then subjects each message or category of message to different restrictions,[17] or in this case, to different criminal penalties.
Ordinance No. 7780's ban on allegedly indecent and obscene materials and acts is obviously designed to protect against these materials and acts' "potential primary impact." The Ordinance thus seeks to criminalize their printing, publishing, distributing circulating and/or selling. Some of the messages which petitioners seek to communicate may well be considered indecent and obscene by their target audience. The very topics which petitioners wish to address, including eroticism, sexuality, sex stories, sexual abuse, women and LGBTQ rights, sectarian and religious beliefs and quirks, fashion, anything and everything that a reader may not find in broadsheets and regular publications, can elicit strong emotional responses whether from the religious (such as the complainants against petitioners), church members, victims of abuse and their supporters, those erotically inclined, or any other member of the public. Others may take exception to the materials or acts demonstrations, others may accept and embrace the messages – the fact remains that the control sought by the Ordinance emanates from the materials and acts' respective communicative actual and perceived intent.
Once a law is determined to be either content-based or content-neutral, it necessarily follows that the analysis in the challenge to that law would have to take account of the standards inherent in free speech cases.
Ordinance No. 7780 is thus a content-based criminal prohibition. It operates upon the materials or acts therein mentioned precisely because of the topic they discuss or the idea or message they express. This Ordinance draws distinctions on what is criminal and what is not criminal based on the message a speaker conveys. As stated, the criminal messages are indecency, eroticism, lewdness, offensiveness to morals, good customs, religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, tendency to corrupt or depr[a]ve the human mind, calculation to excite impure imagination or stimulate sexual drive or impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, unfitness to be seen or heard, or violation of the proprieties of language or behavior. The Ordinance punishes on its face the printing, publishing, distributing, circulating and/or selling of materials or acts that convey these contents or messages.
The petition seeks to declare Ordinance No. 7780 because of its adverse impact on petitioners' free expression as a content-based criminal law. The analysis of the arguments raised in the petition necessarily calls for the application of free speech standards. To reject this petition as a free speech case is to undermine progressive generations of human rights jurisprudence on the right to free expression.
Additionally, the characterization of the petition as not a free speech case is especially problematic since'"[i]n evaluating the free speech rights of adults,' the Supreme Court has "made it perfectly clear that 'sexual expression which is indecent but not obscene is protected by the First Amendment."'[18] To illustrate, nude dancing of a certain type is expressive conduct, so that "any ordinance regulating nude dancing must be analyzed to ensure it does not unduly impair the exercise of First Amendment rights."[19]
To repeat, the holding that ordinances aimed at regulating adult entertainment businesses may constitute content-based or content-neutral regulations[20] seriously and necessarily implies that such ordinances must be reviewed as free speech cases.
It is of course true that obscene expressions are beyond the succor of the right to expression. But, before we may even reach the conclusion that Ordinance No. 7780 penalizes only speech outside of constitutional protection, which in this case would be obscene, and is therefore, constitutionally permissible, we must first examine the Ordinance from the perspectives of free speech.
In other words: we must treat the petition as a free speech case. Thus: Is the Ordinance one that impacts on expression? And because the Ordinance does, is it a content-based or a content-neutral prohibition? Here, I have explained that the Ordinance is a content-based prohibition. Further: What injuries have been caused to petitioners' expression? Do these injuries persist? Or have they been mooted? May these injuries be still remedied through this petition? How do we test the validity of the criminal punishment of expression as specified in the assailed Ordinance? And, what is the result of the application of the appropriate test?
Free speech cases allow both on-its-face challenge and as-applied challenge. A facial challenge alleges overbreadth and as a result covers instances or illustrative incidents that may not be the petitioner or plaintiff's own situation or situations. The offending law may be invalidated on the ground of overbreadth – this is because the chilling effect on one's expression is an injury-in-fact in free speech cases[21] that may be remedied by the invalidation. Content-based regulations of expression are presumptively unconstitutional and may be justified only under strict scrutiny if the government proves that they are narrowly tailored to serve compelling state interests.
This Court's ruling also erred in lumping Ordinance No. 7780 together with penal laws that have nothing to do with expression, such as the criminal law against plunder referred to in the ponencia's citations.
With utmost respect, this approach is erroneous since laws that impact on free expression are analyzed differently from other penal laws. Thus, in American Civil Liberties Union v. The Florida Bar:[22]
x x x As this court stated in Fire Fighters:
The injury requirement is most loosely applied--particularly in terms of how directly the injury must result from the challenged governmental action--where First Amendment rights are involved, because of the fear that free speech will be chilled [*1494] even before the law, regulation, or policy is enforced.
922 F.2d at 760 (citing Solomon v. City of Gainesville, 763 F.2d 1212 (11th Cir.1985) [**25] (allowing pre-enforcement challenge to local ordinance based on the First Amendment); Eaves, 601 F.2d 809). Schack's fear of disciplinary action was reasonable and thus, the harm he suffered was an objective chill of his First Amendment rights.
x x x x
Further:
x x x x
This is precisely the approach taken by the Third Circuit in Stretton, 944 F.2d 137. There, a judicial candidate brought a pre-enforcement challenge to a section of Pennsylvania's Code of Judicial Conduct that bars judicial candidates from announcing their views on disputed legal or political issues. The plaintiff alleged a chill of his protected speech rights and the disciplinary authorities disclaimed that the proposed speech would violate the canon. Nevertheless, the court held that a case or controversy existed. The court wrote:
The Boards take the position here as they did in the district court that the topics plaintiff proposes to discuss in the course of his campaign do not violate the Code. The Boards, however, do not have the final word [**32] on interpretation of the Code. Moreover, plaintiff has also challenged the Canon on overbreadth grounds and may maintain the action on that basis. See Board of Trustees of the State Univ. of New York v. Fox, 492 U.S. 469, 484, 109 S. Ct. 3028, 3037, 106 L. Ed. 2d 388 (1989)[23] (Emphasis supplied)
Two. The present petition seeking to declare Ordinance No. 7780 as unconstitutional has not been rendered moot when (a) after preliminary investigation, the criminal complaint for violation of Ordinance No. 7780 was dismissed (along with Article 200 of the RPC but upon another ground) through the Resolution dated June 25, 2013 of the Office of the City Prosecutor since "the subject matter covered by the city ordinance of Manila x x x is already absorbed in Article 201 of the Revised Penal Code x x x" and (b) during trial, Criminal Case No. 13-30084 for violation of Article 201 (3) of The Revised Penal Code was dismissed with prejudice upon petitioners' motion due to the People's failure to prosecute. |
The ponencia correctly defined a "moot and academic case" as "one that ceases to present a justiciable controversy by virtue of supervening events, so that a declaration thereon would be of no practical use or value." A moot case lacks "actual controversies involving rights which are legally demandable and enforceable x x x" without which courts have no jurisdiction to act.
I respectfully beg to differ.
a. The Doctrine of Mootness is inapplicable.
The doctrine of mootness is intimately connected with the interrelated requirements of standing, injury and case and controversy. This is because only if an actual controversy ceases to exist at any stage of litigation would the case become moot and should be dismissed.[24] Hence, if standing, injury and case and controversy have been established to exist and continues to exist, it necessarily follows that the case is not moot.
The case or controversy requirement must be met throughout the entirety of the proceedings.[25] Whether an actual and live controversy exists over the constitutionality of a law, when a party brings a pre-enforcement challenge or a challenge after-the-fact, that is, when the government has voluntarily ceased the challenged conduct, the court must ask whether "the conflicting parties present a real, substantial controversy which is definite and concrete rather than hypothetical and abstract."[26]
In order to prove that a real and substantial controversy exists, a plaintiff must show "a realistic danger of sustaining direct injury as a result of the statute's operation or enforcement."[27]
On the other hand, to have standing, a plaintiff must (1) have suffered an injury in fact, (2) that is fairly traceable to the challenged action of the defendant, and (3) that will likely be redressed by a favorable decision.[28]
Standing and case and controversy depend upon, among others, the existence and continued existence of an injury in fact. Where the case points to these three (3) items, it cannot be said that mootness adversely impacts on the case.
Here, the dismissal of the complaint for violation of Ordinance No. 7780 on preliminary investigation and the dismissal on trial of the criminal case for violation of Article 201 (3) of The RPC did not stop the injury-in-fact to petitioners, did not end the enforceability of the Ordinance, and did not render ineffectual the declaration of the Ordinance as void for being unconstitutional. It must be stressed that the instant petition is not just about halting the criminal proceedings against petitioners but also involves making sure that the criminal proceedings do not happen again and that petitioners are not ever chilled, unsettled, alarmed, petrified, and terrified in making the speech or expression they have been doing. In sum, these matters clarify why the case has not been rendered moot and is not moot, and why petitioners have retained their standing and are still entitled to seek relief on judicial review.
i. Injury-in-fact and Case and Controversy
In a pre-enforcement challenge, when a plaintiff has stated that he or she "intends to engage in a specific course of conduct 'arguably affected with a constitutional interest,' he or she "does not have to expose himself [or herself] to enforcement to be able to challenge the law. If the injury is certainly impending, that is enough."[29]
Thus, a plaintiff has "suffered an injury in fact if he or she (1) has an "intention to engage in a course of conduct arguably affected with a constitutional interest, (2) his or her intended future conduct is 'arguably . . . proscribed by [the policy in question],' and (3) the threat of future enforcement of the [challenged policies] is substantial."[30]
In a challenge after-the-fact, that is, when the government has voluntarily ceased the challenged conduct, as in here, a live case or controversy remains if there is some possibility that "the defendants will seek to enforce the challenged regulation." This is the case if, as in the present case, the prosecutors continue to assert that, despite their acquiescence in the dismissal of the complaint for violation of Ordinance No. 7780, the latter is constitutional.[31] This assertion of the prosecutors is found in the Comment they filed against the present petition.
Therefore, I have no reason to think that Ordinance No. 7780 would not be enforced again in the future against petitioners or others similarly situated.[32] This is because neither the prosecutors at the Office of the City Prosecutor in the City of Manila nor any panel to be constituted by that office is bound by the Resolution dated June 25, 2013. More, the panel of prosecutors that investigated the criminal complaint against petitioners is not the final arbiter of whether a violation of the Ordinance cannot be pursued simultaneously with a charge for violating Articles 200 and 201 of The RPC as was resolved in the preliminary investigation against petitioners.
An absolute bar from any re-filing of similar criminal complaints would moot this case.[33] Unfortunately, however, that bar is not yet in place. The "[v]oluntary cessation of challenged conduct" moots a case "only if it is 'absolutely clear that the allegedly wrongful behavior could not be reasonably expected to recur."' Certainly, the continuing existence of the unaltered Ordinance No. 7780 and the Office of the City Protector's continuous assertion of its constitutionality and enforceability do not make it "absolutely clear" that the Office of the City Prosecutor will not change its mind as expressed in its Resolution dated June 25, 2013.[34]
ii. Injury-in-fact, Case and Controversy and Causation (fairly traceable to defendant's action)
There is a real and immediate fear of indictment and prosecution against petitioners, together with their collateral negative effects of again violating and chilling their right to free speech when the Office of the City Prosecutor again accepts a criminal complaint for violation of Ordinance No. 7780 against petitioners or those similarly situated, entertains the criminal complaint by forming a panel of prosecutors to interrogate them and resolve the criminal complaint, and files and prosecutes the Information against them for violating the Ordinance, with the trial court issuing warrants for their arrest, requiring bail for their continuous appearance, limiting their right to travel or movement, and entering criminal records under their respective names.
The same facts – the continuing existence of the unaltered Ordinance No. 7780 and the Office of the City Prosecutor's continuous assertion of the constitutionality and enforceability of Ordinance No. 7780 – represent a "very real, and very fearsome, possibility of [a criminal complaint and] prosecution," and "ample demonstration that [petitioners'] concern with [criminal complaint and prosecution] has not been 'chimerical."[35] To be sure, past enforcement of speech-related laws and the continuing assertions of their validity and enforceability can legitimately assure injury-in-fact.[36]
As held in American Civil Liberties Union v. The Florida Bar,[37] a live case or controversy continues to exist where "plaintiffs 'wanted to pursue a specific course of action which they knew was at least arguably forbidden by the pertinent law'; and (2) "all that remained between the plaintiff and impending harm was the defendant's discretionary decision – which could be changed – to withhold [enforcement]."
American Civil Liberties Union v. The Florida Bar further notes that the United States Supreme Court has held that a case or controversy remains after a defendant voluntarily ceases an alleged improper behaviour but is free to resume it at any time, a situation that often arises when the parties enter into a voluntary dismissal of the action to which the defendant is not bound – as in this.
This situation could result in hardship and absurdity. If the defendant resumes the harmful activity, and plaintiff goes back to court, the defendant can again cease to engage in the harmful conduct and argue that the case is moot. To address this hardship and absurdity, American Civil Liberties Union v. The Florida Bar cited United States v. W.T. Grant Co., 345 U.S. 629, 73 S. Ct. 894, 97 L. Ed. 1303 (1953) and held that in this situation, the only way the case would be rendered moot is if "the defendant can demonstrate that there is no reasonable expectation that the wrong will be repeated."
Here, the wrong that would reasonably be repeated is the continuous assertion by the Office of the City Prosecutor that Ordinance No. 7780 is constitutional and enforceable as well as the continued enforcement of the assailed Ordinance. Because it is not bound by the dismissal of the criminal complaint against petitioners in other criminal complaints, a reasonable expectation exists that this wrong will be repeated. This straightforward assertion of constitutionality and enforceability would be enough to chill speech and would cause and perpetuate the aforementioned correlative negative consequences. These constitute petitioners' injury-in-fact that would then establish the live case or controversy in the present free speech case.
In Willson v. City of Bel-Nor,[38] the plaintiff was charged with a violation of a sign-regulation ordinance, and as a result, sought an injunction against the charge and a declaratory relief against the sign-regulation ordinance. But before this action could be resolved, the City nolle prosequi the Information. The court held that the nolle prosequi of the Information did not moot the case for injunction and declaratory relief. It explained:
x x x "A case becomes moot if it can be said with assurance that there is no reasonable expectation that the violation will recur or if interim relief or events have completely and irrevocably eradicated the effects of the alleged violation." Kennedy Bldg. Assocs. v. Viacom, Inc., 375 F.3d 731, 745 (8th Cir. 2004). "The heavy burden of persua[ding] the court that the challenged conduct cannot reasonably be expected to start up again lies with the party asserting mootness." Friends of the Earth, Inc. v. Laidlaw Envtl. Servs. (TOC), Inc., 528 U.S. 167, 189, 120 S. Ct. 693, 145 L. Ed. 2d 610 (2000) (internal quotation marks omitted)." Here, there is no change to the Ordinance and the Court finds Plaintiff is still in violation of it.
x x x x
As in Willson, respondents did not discharge their burden of proving that the challenged conduct cannot reasonably be expected to start up again. Actually, respondents could not have discharged this burden because they have consistently asserted the constitutionality and enforceability of Ordinance No. 7780.
In City of Erie v. Pap's A.M.,[39] the United States Supreme Court rejected the claim that the case for injunction and declaratory relief as regards an anti-nudity ordinance has been mooted by the closure of the subject establishment offering public nudity. This is because: (1) the establishment was then "still incorporated under Pennsylvania law, and it could again decide to operate a nude dancing establishment in Erie;" and (2) the City that enacted the ordinance would be suffering an ongoing injury because it lost the court case in the Pennsylvania Supreme Court and as a result would be barred from enforcing the public nudity provisions of its ordinance. The respective interests of the nudity establishment, the City, and the administration of justice itself demanded a resolution of the case of injunction and declaratory relief to its finality:
x x x If the challenged ordinance is found constitutional, then Erie can enforce it, and the availability of such relief is sufficient to prevent the case from being moot. And Pap's still has a concrete stake in the outcome of this case because, to the extent Pap's has an interest in resuming operations, it has an interest in preserving the judgment of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court. Our interest in preventing litigants from attempting to manipulate the Court's jurisdiction to insulate a favorable decision from review further counsels against a finding of mootness here.[40] (Emphasis supplied)
x x x x
The same interests are impacted here. The City of Manila can enforce without challenge Ordinance No. 7780. Petitioners can operate its publications business without fear of prosecution and public relations backlash. This Court would have an interest in precluding litigants from insulating a favorable decision, as in the case of the Office of the City Prosecutor's Resolution dated June 25, 2013, from our review.
Hence, the controversy here is not moot.
Notably, in both types of challenge, pre-enforcement and after-the fact, the injury requirement is most loosely applied – particularly in terms of how directly the injury must result from the challenged governmental action – where the right to free expression is involved, because of the fear that free speech will be chilled even before the law, regulation, or policy is enforced[41] or when the enforcement is voluntarily stopped.
Here, petitioners' fear of prosecution was and remains reasonable because of the continued assertion by the Office of the City Prosecutor of the constitutionality and enforceability of Ordinance No. 7780. The harm they have suffered and will continue to suffer was and remain to be an objective chill of their right to free expression and the aforesaid negative collateral consequences of the filing of a criminal complaint and its prosecution. This harm substantiates the claim that a case or controversy existed and continues to exist.[42]
The nature of the petition as a facial challenge is also significant. It is a factor in determining whether it is clearly likely that "the future threat of enforcement of the [challenged policy] is substantial."[43] Thus:
At this point, "[t]he distinction between facial and as-applied challenges bears legal significance." See Schlissel, 939 F.3d at 766. Whereas "[t]here must be some evidence that [a] rule would be applied to the plaintiff in order for that plaintiff to bring an as-applied challenge," that is not the case for facial challenges. Instead, "when dealing with pre-enforcement challenges to recently enacted (or, at least, non-moribund) statutes that facially restrict expressive activity by the class to which the plaintiff belongs, courts will assume a credible threat of prosecution in the absence. of compelling contrary evidence."[44] (Emphasis supplied)
This presumption of a credible threat of prosecution applies to this case at bar. There is no evidence to the contrary.
iii. Causation and Redressability
Lastly, mootness is defeated as well by the existence of causation and redressability.[45] Here, the enforcement though aborted and the continued threat of enforcement of the challenged Ordinance have caused petitioners' chill of their expression and negative collateral consequences from their adverse involvement in the criminal justice system. These injuries could be redressed by a categorical and non-discretionary ruling enjoining the enforcement of Ordinance No. 7780.[46]
b. At any rate, the exceptions to the Doctrine of Mootness apply.
i. Capable-of-repetition-yet-evading-review Exception
In any event, assuming without conceding that the present case appears technically mooted, it still has in reality a live controversy because the legal questions it presents for decision will recur and again evade review.[47] The petition falls within the category of cases that are "capable of repetition, yet evading review" exception to mootness.
As the ponencia correctly said, this exception applies when "(1) the challenged action was in its duration too short to be fully litigated prior to its cessation or expiration, and (2) there [i]s a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party would be subjected to the same action again."[48] As the party asserting the exception, petitioners bear the burden of establishing that it applies.[49]
Petitioners satisfied the first prong of the capable-of-repetition-yet-evading-review exception.
Ordinarily, there is no preliminary investigation of criminal complaints for violations of ordinances since the penalties for these violations do not exceed imprisonment for four (4) years.[50] Under the Rules of Court, the process should be finished in no more than ten days from the date of filing of the criminal complaint.[51] This timing discrepancy virtually guarantees that the direct filing will expire before the constitutional challenge reaches the courts, let alone, the Supreme Court.
Notably, too, the power of judicial review, or the power to declare unconstitutional a statute, treaty, international or executive agreement, presidential decree, order, instruction, ordinance, or regulation lies in the courts and not with an administrative officer or agency such as the Office of the City Prosecutor in Manila City or its panels.[52] Hence, it would not be the proper office to resolve; and therefore would be useless to raise, the issue of constitutionality of Ordinance No. 7780 before the Office of the City Prosecutor.
The second prong of the requisites – ''a reasonable expectation that the same complaining party would be subjected to the same action again" – presents a more difficult question. It has been affirmed that the "reasonable expectation" of repetition must be more than "a mere physical or theoretical possibility."
But what exactly must be capable of repetition? Nathan M. v. Harrison Sch. Dist. No. 2,[53] illustrated the different ways this question has been answered:
x x x This difficulty stems, in part, from a lack of precision in our cases describing exactly what must be likely to recur. In Fischbach, vve asked whether the complaining party would be "subjected to the action again." Fischbach, 38 F.3d at 1161 (quoting Gannett Co. v. DePasquale, 443 U.S. 368, 377, 99 S. Ct. 2898, 61 L. Ed. 2d 608 (1979)). Then in Wyoming v. U.S. Dep't of Agric. 414 F.3d 1207, 1212 (10th Cir. 2005), we asked the same question, but about potentially recurrent "conduct." We reframed the question again in McKeen v. U.S. Forest Serv., 615 F.3d 1244, 1255-56 (10th Cir. 2010), which spoke in terms of an "issue" or an "alleged injury" that could be repeated, and in Parker v. Winter, 645 F. App'x 632, 635 (10th Cir. 2016) (unpublished) (quoting Honig, 484 U.S. at 319 n.6), asking whether a claimant had demonstrated that a recurrence of the "dispute" was more [*1042] probable than not and whether the "controversy" was capable of repetition. (Emphases supplied)
As summarized in Nathan M. v. Harrison Sch. Dist. No. 2,[54] "the 'wrong' that is, or is not, 'capable of repetition' must be defined in terms of the precise controversy it spawns." The alleged 'wrong' must be put in terms of the legal questions it presents for decision."
Pulling these various threads together, to satisfy the second prong of the capable-of-repetition exception to mootness, petitioners bear the burden of establishing that it is reasonably likely[55] that the Office of the City Prosecutor, to repeat, will again violate and chill their right to free speech by accepting a criminal complaint for violation of Ordinance No. 7780 against petitioners or those similarly situated, entertaining the criminal complaint by forming a panel of prosecutors to interrogate them and resolve the criminal complaint, and filing and prosecuting the Information against them for violating the Ordinance, with the trial court issuing warrants for their arrest, requiring bail for their continuous appearance, limiting their right to travel or movement, and entering criminal records under their respective names.
Petitioners have clearly discharged their burden of proving the wrongs that will likely happen if the present case would continue to be declared moot, as was done by this Court in its present ruling. The second prong of the capable-of-repetition-yet-evading-review exception has also been satisfied.
But to justify its ruling that the present case has been rendered moot, the ponencia held that the dismissal with prejudice of the criminal case against petitioners before the trial court would ensure that they would not be prosecuted again for violation of Ordinance No. 7780.
With utmost respect, this ruling is based on an erroneous appreciation of the facts, and as result, inaccurate conclusion of law.
The dismissal with prejudice by the trial court referred solely to the charge for violation of Article 201 (3) of the RPC, and not to the charge for violation of Ordinance No. 7780. The dismissal with prejudice precludes only the re-filing of the same acts complained of as constituting the offense under Article 201 (3) of the RPC. The dismissal with prejudice has nothing to do with the violation of the City Ordinance or with the other issues of the condemned publications whether prior or subsequent to the latter.
To recall, the complaint for violation of Ordinance No. 7780 was processed at the level of the Office of the City Prosecutor in the City of Manila. It was dismissed by said office in its Resolution dated June 25, 2013 not because the complaint was unmeritorious; rather, the dismissal was based on its theory that the elements of this offense were absorbed by the complainants' other claims for violations of the RPC. There is also no res judicata or double jeopardy in proceedings before the Office of the City Prosecutor.[56]
Hence, both requisites for the application of the capable-of repetition-yet-evading-review exception to mootness are present. There is no way the present petition has been mooted.
ii. Negative collateral consequences
Another exception to mootness justifies the foregoing conclusion – negative collateral consequences.[57] To recall, the doctrine of mootness is justified by the requirement of an "actual controversy arising between adverse litigants who have a legally cognizable interest in the outcome of the case."[58] This requirement is in turn warranted by the lack of constitutional authority to render mere advisory opinions.[59]
A case becomes moot when a court "can no longer grant effective relief."[60] And even if a case was not moot when it was first filed' intervening events since its filing can render it moot.[61]
As explained, the present petition was not moot when it was filed. It has not been rendered moot by changes in circumstances. Assuming without conceding that it has become moot, the negative collateral consequences apply to support this Court's action on the merits.
The exception for negative collateral consequences means what it says: negative collateral consequences are likely to result from the action being reviewed. This exception is based on the premise that –
x x x the Court should still consider a case – even if it no longer involves a live controversy – if the action challenged by the appellant will continue to pose negative consequences for the appellant if it is not addressed. It is a natural extension of the concept that "[t]he central question of all mootness problems is 'whether decision of a once living dispute continues to be justified by a sufficient prospect that the decision will have an impact on the parties."' For example, we have held that the exception applied in a mental health case in which an involuntary hospitalization order – which had expired – nevertheless could have resulted in "legal disabilities" and "social stigmatization" for the patient past its effective date. "[D]espite [the] appellant's continued hospitalization under an order for continued treatment, the negative collateral consequences of being initially adjudicated mentally ill and then involuntarily hospitalized may continue to plague [the] appellant with both legal disabilities and social stigmatization."[62] x x x (Emphasis supplied)
For the negative collateral consequences exception to apply, "the contemplated prospective 'impact on the parties' that justifies the exception must be specific to the claimant.[63] It may not be a generalized grievance shared widely among the public.
Petitioners' case meets the negative collateral consequences exception because of these negative collateral consequences: (i) their right to free speech continues to be chilled by the real and reasonable fear of complaint and prosecution, which arises from respondents' continuous assertion of the constitutionality and enforceability of Ordinance No. 7780; (ii) the legal disabilities and other collateral consequences resulting from the filing of the criminal complaint, its prosecution and the actions of the trial court; and (iii) the social stigmatization of being referred to as purveyors of smut and kindred terms.
These negative collateral consequences are specific to petitioners. They have actually suffered these consequences. They may be shared with others similarly situated, but these others are certainly not the shared widely-among- the-public-as-a-whole disqualified by the exception. The similarly situated is a very small and compact community of publishers engaged in the same erotic and benign expressions as petitioners.
In sum, the present petition is not moot. But even assuming it has become moot, two (2) exceptions to mootness apply, as heretofore discussed.
Three. Ordinance No. 7780 may be challenged on its face on the ground of overbreadth even though it is a penal statute that seeks to punish alleged obscene and indecent expressions. |
I also respectfully submit that the ponencia was mistaken when it disallowed petitioners, facial challenge of Ordinance No. 7780 to insist only on an as-applied challenge.
It has long been settled that a law impacting on speech or expression is reviewable not only on the basis of a plaintiff's own injuries but also upon its overbreadth.[64] Willson v. City of Bel-Nor[65] explained:
"[A] law may be invalidated as overbroad if 'a substantial number of its applications are unconstitutional, judged in relation to the statute's plainly legitimate sweep."' United States v. Stevens, 559 U.S. 460, 473, 130 S. Ct. 1577, 176 L. Ed. 2d 435 (2010) (quoting Wash. State Orange v. Wash. State Repub. Party, 522 U.S. 442, 449 n.6 (2008)); Langford v. City of St. Louis, 2020 WL 1227347. at *6 (E.D. Mo. Mar. 5, 2020). "The First Amendment doctrine of overbreadth is an exception to [the] normal rule regarding the standards for facial challenges." Virginia v. Hicks, 539 U.S. 113; 118, 123 S. Ct. 2191, 156 L. Ed. 2d 148 (2003). "[T]he overbreadth doctrine permits the facial invalidation of laws that inhibit the exercise of First Amendment rights if the impermissible applications of the law are substantial when 'judged in relation to the statute's plainly legitimate sweep.'" City of Chicago v. Morales, 527 U.S. 41, 52, 119 S. Ct. 1849, 144 L. Ed. 2d 67 (1999) (quoting Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 413 U.S. 601, 615, 93 S. Ct. 2908, 37 L. Ed. 2d 830 (1973)). "The aim of facial overbreadth analysis is to eliminate the deterrent or 'chilling' effect an overbroad law may have on those contemplating conduct protected by the First Amendment." Turchick v. United States, 561 F.2d 719, 721 (8th Cir. 1977).
To stress, the overbreadth doctrine exists "to prevent the chilling of future protected expression."[66] Therefore, any law imposing restrictions so broad that it chills speech outside the purview of its legitimate regulatory purpose will be struck down.[67] For the same reason, petitioners would "have standing to challenge the Ordinance's overbreadth even though they do not dispute that the Ordinance applies to each of them." The overbreadth doctrine constitutes an exception to traditional rules of standing and allows claimants to assert the rights of parties not before the court."[68]
To conclude, the assailed Ordinance, as it criminalizes certain forms of speech, may be challenged on its face on the ground of overbreadth as a free speech or expression issue. More, since the Ordinance is a content-based criminalization, it is presumptively unconstitutional and may only be validated if it passes the strict scrutiny test.
Four. As Ordinance No. 7780 may be challenged facially, on its face, it violates freedom of expression for being overbroad, and as a content-based criminalization, the strict scrutiny test. |
a. Overbreadth
First, I discuss the objection on the overbreadth of Ordinance No. 7780.
A three-part test is used to determine whether a statute is unconstitutionally overbroad.[69] Thus:
"The first step in overbreadth analysis is to construe the challenged statute; it is impossible to determine whether a statute reaches too far without first knowing what the statute covers." Snider v. City of Cape Girardeau, 752 F.3d 1149, 1158 (8th Cir. 2014) (quoting United States v. Williams, 553 U.S. 285. 293, 128 S. Ct. 1830, 170 L. Ed. 2d 650 (2008)). "After construing the statute, the second step is to examine whether the statute criminalizes a 'substantial amount' of expressive conduct." Id., citing Williams, 553 U.S. at 292). Third, courts must "ask whether [*20] the statute is readily susceptible to a limiting construction which would render it constitutional." (Id., citing Virginia v. American Booksellers Ass'n, 484 U.S. 383, 397, 108 S. Ct. 636, 98 L. Ed. 2d 782 (1988)). (Emphasis supplied)
The Ordinance's expansive definition of what is obscene – the particularized messages targeted by the Ordinance are indecency, eroticism, lewdness, offensiveness to morals, good customs, religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, tendency to corrupt or depr[a]ve the human mind, calculation to excite impure imagination or stimulate sexual drive or impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, unfitness to be seen or heard, or violation of the proprieties of language or behavior – and its criminalization of the printing, publishing, distributing, circulating and/or selling of these materials or acts on account of these contents or messages, applies to a substantial amount of expressive conduct. The Ordinance is not vague. It is clear as to its meanings and implications. But it is overbroad.
I can illustrate numerous examples of expressive conduct that the Ordinance prohibits beyond what it should only be criminalizing:
- Rigoberto Tiglao’s op-ed entitled "Did Jesus Exist?"[70] This appears to be offensive to religious beliefs. Mr. Tiglao in fact prefaces his op-ed with this opening paragraph: "AT this time, when our culture, dominated for nearly four centuries by the Hispanic model of late-medieval Catholicism, imposes on us several days of contemplating the Christian Messiah, I dare post again a piece I wrote two years ago, discussing whether Christ did exist in the first place. Someday, sometime in your lives, you will have to choose: the Red or the Blue pill."
- Mr. Tiglao's op-ed "The Real Origins of Christmas."[71] This appears to be offensive not just to religious beliefs but also to good customs, principles or doctrines, one having a tendency to corrupt or depr[a]ve the human mind, characterized by unfitness to be seen or heard, or violation of the proprieties of language or behavior.
- Nadine Lustre's sexy photos published in ABS-CBN's Lifestyle webpage.[72] The photos appear to be erotic.
- Same-sex stories as narrated and depicted in the internet.[73] They appear to be a smorgasbord of everything the Ordinance criminalizes – indecency, eroticism, lewdness, offensiveness to morals, good customs, religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, tendency to corrupt or depr[a]ve the human mind, calculation to excite impure imagination or stimulate sexual drive or impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, unfitness to be seen or heard, or violation of the proprieties of language or behavior.
- As illustrated in Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, Inc. v. Joyce:[74]
As amici point out, critical portrayals of Muhammad outside a mosque or of the Pope outside a Catholic Church might well be considered profane or indecent by their audiences. Others may find language using the name of holy figures as swear words not only disrespectful, but profane as well. Similar expressions in the near vicinity of a house of worship have the potential to disturb or disquiet those present for worship. The meaning of "profane," or irreverence to the sacred, is not a well defined legislative term familiar to people of different faiths. Any silent demonstration outside a house of worship would likely be able to create a disturbance only by the content of its message. Even expression that may be perceived as offensive, rude, or disruptive remains protected by the First Amendment.
Some of the messages which appellants seek to communicate may well be considered rude and offensive by their target audience. The very topics which the record indicates appellants wish to address, including sexual abuse and the concealment of such crimes, can elicit strong emotional responses whether from clergy accused of wrongdoing, victims of abuse and their supporters, or church members. Others may take exception to the demonstrations by Call to Action advocating for the ordination of women and church acceptance of gay, lesbian, and transgender people. (Emphasis supplied)
- Any movie or video featuring a single shot of a person's nude or partially-covered buttocks or a woman's partially covered breast is an obscene material or act under the Ordinance, irrespective of whether the content constitutes "adult entertainment" or causes the type of secondary effects, such as crime (sexual and nonsexual) and public health risks, that any government may seek to regulate.[75]
- A painting of a nude person or several nude persons.
- Compelling narration in a court decision of sexual acts.
Any enlightened court would find these examples to illustrate that Ordinance No. 7780 creates a "prohibition of alarming breadth."[76] Making things even more problematical is the fact the the ponencia did not identify the compelling state interests that the Ordinance would want to pursue and accomplish. Thus, the Ordinance is overbroad and facially invalid because the impermissible applications of the law are substantial when judged in relation to its plainly legitimate sweep if at all.
Further, the Ordinance is not readily susceptible to a limiting construction because it would have to be rewritten in order to conform to constitutional requirements.[77] Indeed:
The courts do not rewrite laws in these circumstances, as this would invade the "legislative domain." (citing Stevens, 559 U.S. at 481); Snider, 752 F.3d at 1158 ("No limiting construction would be consistent with any plausible understanding of the legislature's intent"). "Limiting constructions of state and local legislation are more appropriately done by a state court or an enforcement agency." Willson, 924 F.3d at 1004 (quoting Ways v. City of Lincoln, 274 F.3d 514, 519 (8th Cir. 2001)).[78]
The free expression rights of adults are not the same as or identical to the free speech rights vis-à-vis minors. "In evaluating the free speech rights of adults," the United States Supreme Court has "made it perfectly clear that 'sexual expression which is indecent but not obscene is protected by the First Amendment."[79] Also, "[s]peech within the rights of adults to hear may not be silenced completely in an attempt to shield children from it."[80]
Here, there is nothing in Ordinance No. 7780 which limits its scope to any established criminal practice, much less to, for example, the transmission of harmful material to a minor with the intent of facilitating the sexual exploitation of the minor. The Ordinance is actually very broad in scope when it comes to online speech, notably, the assailed FHM magazines that have been transformed into digital editions. The Ordinance is especially offensive to free expression in the digital platform because it forces every speaker on the internet in every state or community anywhere in the Philippines or even the world to abide by the alleged prevailing community standards of the City of Manila, even if the online speech would not be found harmful in any other location. Truly:
To paraphrase the Supreme Court, it is neither realistic nor constitutionally sound to read the First Amendment as forcing the people of New York City or San Francisco to restrict their speech to abide by what is deemed acceptable speech in Vermont. See Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15, 32, 37 L. Ed. 2d 419, 93 S. Ct. 2607 (1973). "People in different States vary in their tastes and attitudes and this diversity is not to be strangled by the absolutism of imposed uniformity. x x x"[81] (Emphases supplied)
Ordinance No. 7780 also lacks "practical safe harbors or exceptions"[82] for most publishers. With the exception of "materials printed, distributed, exhibited, sold, filmed, rented, viewed, or produced by reason of or in connection with or in furtherance of science and scientific research and medical or medically related art, profession, and for educational purposes," the Ordinance applies to an entities and individuals that communicate the prohibited messages on whatever platform. Thus, the Ordinance "effectively drives protected and valuable speech for adults out of the 'marketplace of ideas."'[83]
b. Content-Based and Strict scrutiny
The constitutionality of a restriction on speech depends in large part on whether it is content-based and thus subject to the most exacting or strict scrutiny, or a content-neutral time, place, manner or secondary effects regulation subject to intermediate scrutiny.[84]
To recall, content-based laws are those that target speech based on its communicative content. As already explained above, Ordinance No. 7780 is a content-based criminalization of overly broad forms of speech. It defines obscenity based on the message the subject material or act conveys and then subjects each category to varying criminal penalties. It is also content-based because enforcement authorities must determine[85] whether a material or act evokes indecency, eroticism, lewdness, offensiveness to morals, good customs, religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, tendency to corrupt or depr[a]ve the human mind, calculation to excite impure imagination or stimulate sexual drive or impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, unfitness to be seen or heard, or violation of the proprieties of language or behavior.
Because the Ordinance is a content-based prohibition, it must satisfy strict scrutiny regardless of the City of Manila's "benign motive, content-neutral justification, or lack of 'animus toward the ideas contained' in the [prohibited] speech."[86] They are presumptively unconstitutional. They may be justified only if the government proves that they are narrowly tailored to serve compelling state interests. If the restriction is not narrowly tailored to achieve a compelling interest, it is an unconstitutional restraint on free speech.[87]
There is nothing on record about the government interests sought to be advanced by Ordinance No. 7780. If it was meant to curb prurient interests or patently offensive sexual conduct, the broad sweep of the messages it criminalizes – indecency, eroticism, lewdness, offensiveness to morals, good customs, religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, tendency to corrupt or depr[a]ve the human mind, calculation to excite impure imagination or stimulate sexual drive or impure imagination or arouse prurient interest, unfitness to be seen or heard, or violation of the proprieties of language or behavior – are not narrowly tailored to meet its objectives.
These messages may capture even contrarian ideas simply because they offend others and may be interpreted by them as indecent, erotic, lewd, offensive to morals, good customs, religious beliefs, principles or doctrines, etc. The Ordinance therefore runs a substantial risk of suppressing ideas in the process, as it impermissibly requires enforcement authorities to look into the content of the speaker's message in order to enforce it. This is not permissible. The right to free expression guarantees that the government ought not to prohibit and inhibit the expression of an idea merely because society finds the idea itself offensive or disagreeable.[88]
It must also be stressed that:
The tailoring requirement does not simply guard against an impermissible desire to censor. The government may attempt to suppress speech not only because it disagrees with the message being expressed, but also for mere convenience. [B]y demanding a close fir between ends and means, the tailoring requirement prevents the government from too readily sacrificing speech for efficiency.[89]
Here, the approach of Ordinance No. 7780 to lump together everything contrarian under the criminal term obscene manifests its overwhelming intention not only to censor ideas disagreed with, but also to use the most convenient mode of doing so, that is, by banning and criminalizing everything not to a complainant's or the Ordinance enforcer's liking.
The Ordinance also fails strict scrutiny analysis because respondents have failed to demonstrate why a less restrictive provision would not be as effective in addressing the goal of curbing prurient interest and patently offensive sexual conduct.[90] There are several other criminal statutes that are potentially less restrictive alternatives to Ordinance No. 7780. Although very insistent on the continuing validity and enforceability of this Ordinance, the Office of the City Prosecutor was in fact able to identify provisions in the RPC that appear to be narrowly tailored to suppressing prurient and patently offensive sexual conduct.
"When First Amendment compliance is the point to be proved, the risk of non-persuasion – operative in all trials – must rest with the Government, not with the citizen."[91] The Ordinance remains presumptively invalid, and this presumption has not been rebutted here because the Ordinance has drawn content-based distinctions that are not necessary to achieve the asserted interest against prurient and patently offensive sexual conduct.
Five. As applied to petitioners, Ordinance No. 7780 has violated their freedom of expression when it sought to prohibit and penalize their acts of printing, publishing, distributing, circulating and/or selling certain identified issues or editions of FHM Magazine. |
An as-applied challenge consists of a challenge to the law's application only as-applied to the party before the court.[92] To prevail, a plaintiff must show that the law is unconstitutional because of the way it was applied to the particular facts of his or her case.[93]
For the same reasons discussed with respect to facial overbreadth and failed strict scrutiny, Ordinance No. 7780 has the effect of unconstitutionally circumscribing petitioners' free speech as-applied to the assailed FHM magazines. For sure, not all of their expressive content would be unprotected speech. But unfortunately, the standards set forth in the Ordinance are so broad that they prohibit and criminalize even those portions in petitioners' magazines that are protected speech. The Ordinance is incapable of distinguishing between protected and unprotected speech. As a result of this sweeping coverage, the entirety of the content of petitioners' magazines is deemed criminal by the Ordinance simply because they are offensive to the religious beliefs of the pastors and preachers who filed the criminal complaint and what they deem to be the appropriate language and behavior.
In any event, I do not find the assailed issues or editions of FHM Magazine to be obscene or in any other manner unprotected by the right to free expression. As-applied to these magazines, Ordinance No. 7780 unconstitutionally curtails petitioners' free speech.
The prevailing test of obscenity in our jurisdiction[94] is founded upon Miller v. California.[95] Under Miller, the basic guidelines to determine whether a work is obscene and, therefore, subject to state regulation, are as follows:
(a) whether "the average person, applying contemporary community standards" would find that the work, taken as a whole, appeals to the prurient interest; (b) whether the work depicts or describes, in a patently offensive way, sexual conduct specifically defined by the applicable state law; and (c) whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
All three prongs of the Miller test must be satisfied for a work to be found obscene.[96]
The key terms in the Miller test have been explained in this manner:
1. Community Standards
Analysis of obscenity under the Miller test looks to local, as opposed to national, community standards. The "community standards" test seeks to ensure that jurors assess the potentially obscene material from the point of view of an average person, not the most sensitive member of the community. The court or the jury can define the relevant community. The community can include a state as large as California or a small, rural community in Georgia. Thus, First Amendment protection might be afforded in New York to materials deemed obscene, and therefore prohibited, in Maine.
Despite the apparent repudiation of a national standards test in Miller, the Supreme Court has allowed courts to apply both national and local standards of decency. In Hamling v. United States, the Court stated that the purpose of the community standards test was "to assure that the material is judged neither on the basis of each juror's personal opinion, nor by its effect on a particularly sensitive or insensitive person or group." Referencing national standards as well as community standards fulfilled this goal. Further, when instructing jurors on the community standards test, courts are not required to define which community jurors should consider. Both parties may choose to use expert witnesses to help explain what the community standard should be; however, that determination is ultimately left up to the juror.
The interaction between obscene speech and the Internet also creates interesting problems in determining community standards. For example, when obscenity is posted to the internet it cannot be prevented from entering any community. Accordingly, the Sixth Circuit has applied the standard of the local community in which the materials are received rather than a national community standard. In effect, this means if distributors of sexual material wish to receive First Amendment protection, they must comply with the community standards where the materials are disseminated. However, more recently, the Ninth Circuit has interpreted the plurality in Ashcroft v. American Civil Liberties Union to give us a clearer way in how to define community standards. In United States v. Kilbride, the court followed the position of the Justices who concurred in the judgment on the narrowest grounds. The court concluded that Justice O'Connor's and Justice Breyer's concurrences in the judgment were the correct standards to follow, and that a national community standard must be used to determine obscene material on the Internet. Justice O'Connor reasoned that "given internet speakers' inability to control the geographic location of their audience, expecting them to bear the burden of controlling the recipients of their speech, as we did in Hamling and Sable, may be entirely too much to ask, and would potentially suppress an inordinate amount of expression" and that a national community standard would avoid this First Amendment problem. Justice Breyer reasoned that a local community standard would "provide the most puritan of communities with a heckler's Internet veto affecting the rest of the Nation."
2. Prurient Interest
Before Miller, the Supreme Court defined "prurient" as "material having a tendency to excite lustful thoughts" including "itching; longing; uneasy with desire or longing . . . lascivious desire or thought." Prurient interest, as used in the Miller test, is understood as "that which appeals to shameful or morbid interest in sex." Triers of fact need not be aroused by material to judge it prurient. Instead, they merely need to determine whether the material in question would appeal to a member of the target group in a prurient manner and is intended to arouse members of the target group. Triers of fact have recognized that not all nudity appeals to a prurient interest; alternative lifestyles, such as that of a nudist, sometimes encompass materials that do not necessarily appeal to a prurient interest.
3. Patently Offensive
Miller did not require states to define "patently offensive" in a uniform way. In fact, many obscenity statutes "[go] substantially beyond customary limits of candor in description or representation." The Miller Court explained that "patently offensive," for example, could include "representations or descriptions of ultimate sexual acts, normal or perverted, actual or simulated x x x [or] masturbation, excretory functions, [and] a lewd exhibition of the genitals." Some states have included sexual acts not mentioned in Miller, such as bestiality, sadomasochism, and sexual bondage. These additions have been found to be permissible examples of "patently offensive" behavior that states may restrict or ban as obscene.
4. Societal Value
Sexually explicit materials that have "serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value" when viewed as a whole receive full First Amendment protection under Miller, according some protection for sexual materials with societal value. Context is important in this determination. For example, "medical books for the education of physicians and related personnel" with explicit illustrations and descriptions are protected. Also, videogames with fleeting nudity can be protected. In Entertainment Software Ass'n v. Blagojevich, the court held that the video game God of War was essentially an interactive version of Homer's Odyssey, and its fleeting nudity in one scene should be protected because the game as a whole has literary value for the youths who play it. In contrast, merely putting a quotation from a famous author in the flyleaf of a book does not render it a work of serious literature such that it will merit full First Amendment protection.[97]
The assailed FHM magazines do not exhibit any of these three prongs.
For one, the assailed FHM magazine contains both texts and pictures that cover a variety of general interest topics – women, pop culture, fashion and grooming, sports, music, movies, gadgets, sex and relationship, and humor. The magazines have edgy photos of women in various stages of undress but not totally nude, but nudity per se, much less sexy pictorials, is not obscenity. To the average person using contemporary community standards, especially when each page of an issue of the magazine is read with its other pages and the other issues or editions of the magazines in toto, the magazines cannot be adjudged as pandering solely to prurient interests.
Neither do the magazines depict sexual conduct in a patently offensive manner. United States v. Various Articles of Merch.[98] has explained this second prong as follows:
The Supreme Court emphasized in Miller that "no one will be subject to prosecution for the sale or exposure of obscene materials unless these materials depict or describe patently offensive 'hard core' sexual conduct." The Court, recognizing the difficulty and the dangers of attempting to regulate any form of expression, gave a few examples of what a state statute could define for regulation under part (b) of the Miller standard:
(a) Patently offensive representations or descriptions of ultimate sexual acts, normal or perverted, actual or simulated.
(b) Patently offensive representation or descriptions of masturbation, excretory functions, and lewd exhibition of the genitals.
x x x x
In Fernando v. Court of Appeals,[99] this Court adopted the foregoing formulation of patently offensive to define this phrase and prevent unbridled discretion in its invocation.
The photographs in the assailed magazines do not depict private parts at all. Though there are photographs of women and at times men in various stages of undress, their private parts, however, are not exposed. Neither of these private parts is being exhibited nor being shown off. While their bodies, including provocative imaginings or inciting to sensual imagination of their private parts, are the focal point of the photos, the fact remains that none of these photos actually shows off the model's private parts. At a minimum, the exposure of one's private parts would be necessary to aggravate the images as being patently offensive sexual conduct.
Nor can I conclude that the magazines depict or describe patently offensive hard core sexual conduct. Nudity, much less near nudity is not enough to make the magazines legally obscene under the Miller standards. We need more than nudity to up the ante. Unfortunately, there are no explicit sexual positions on display. Only the titillating pictures and postures and sultry looks are all there is to even suggest that the materials are obscene. The magazines thus fall far outside the zone of hardcore sexual conduct that may constitutionally be found to be patently offensive.
The final prong of the Miller test, as stated, is whether the work, taken as a whole, lacks serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value.
The assailed FHM magazines possess political value. "The term 'political' which we employ here is broad enough to encompass that which might tend to bring about 'political and social changes."'[100] The magazines espouse alternative lifestyles and alternative communities, which celebrate sexuality and sensuality as acceptable behavior, values and mindset. It is true that the political value of these magazines is not as immediately evident as the political value of, say, the Economist or the Political Science Review. "However, publications dedicated to presenting a visual depiction of an alternative lifestyle, a depiction with a decidedly Utopian flavor, have political value similar to the political value of articles criticizing government regulation of that and other lifestyles."[101]
I would suggest that the subject FHM magazines do not even reach the status of an indecent speech, which at any rate is a category of protected speech:
Indecent speech is protected by the First Amendment but is disfavored and may be regulated. Indecent speech, while not defined by the Supreme Court, has been explained by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) as that which "in context, depicts or describes, in terms patently offensive as measured by contemporary community standards x x x sexual or excretory activities or organs." The FCC uses a contextual balancing test of three factors when looking at broadcast material to determine whether or not it is indecent: "(1) whether the description or depiction is explicit or graphic, (2) whether that material dwells on or repeats at length descriptions or depictions of sexual or excretory organs, and (3) whether the material appears to pander or is used to titillate or shock." Thus, unlike obscene speech, indecent speech need not appeal to the prurient interest or lack serious literary, artistic, political, or scientific value in order to be regulated.
The First Amendment protects sexual speech not rising to the level of obscenity, but provides less protection than it does for more valuable forms of speech. The Supreme Court has explained that:
[E]ven though we recognized that the First Amendment will not tolerate the total suppression of erotic materials x x x society's interest in protecting this type of expression is of a wholly different, and lesser, magnitude than the interest in untrammeled political debate x x x Whether political oratory or philosophical discussion moves us to applaud or to despise what is said, every school child can understand why our duty to defend the right to speak remains the same. But few of us would march our sons and daughters off to war to preserve the citizen's right to see "Specified Sexual Activities" exhibited in the theaters of our choice.
Generally, when the government regulates speech on the basis of its indecent content, courts must apply strict scrutiny.[102] (Emphasis supplied)
Sexual speech is a specie of indecent speech.[103] It is disfavored but still protected. On the other hand, free speech does not protect obscenity. The government may ban or regulate it. But it must do so narrowly. Laws that prohibit obscenity may be found unconstitutional if they potentially prohibit an excessive amount of non-obscene speech.[104] Private possession of obscene materials is generally protected, while distribution and transmission of such materials is not.[105]
The subject FHM magazines are benign expressions of sexuality and sensuality. They are playful flirtations with beauty and sexiness. But they are not obscene by Miller's standards. Neither are they even indecent expression as defined by the United States' Federal Communications Commission. Thus, as applied to these magazines, the Ordinance has violated petitioners' free speech when it was used to prohibit and penalize, as well as shame and bring opprobrium to, their acts of printing, publishing, distributing, circulating and/or selling these protected magazines.
TOWARDS A MORE INCLUSIVE OBSCENITY AND OTHER SEXUAL
SPEECH TEST
A final point. I agree with the learned Associate Justice Marvic F. Leonen that the constitutional protection given to sexual speech has ridden the crest of the commodification of women, the sexual gratification of the heterosexual male specie, and the dehumanization and demonization of the other (female, lesbian, gay, bisexual and queer) bodies. I find it both funny and disconcerting that in defining the obscene and indecent, the puerileness of the expression to the male penis or its exposure of the female nipple has been the standard of constitutional protection. Justice Leonen could be correct that this jurisprudential development is largely a reflection of the communities we live in – the rise and power of the macho society within and outside of the family and into institutions of power and authority, the courts included.
Helen Longino[106] describes the sexual speech that has also greatly benefitted from the constitutional protection to free speech:
Pornography lies when it says that our sexual life is or ought to be subordinate to the service of men, that our pleasure consists in pleasing men and not ourselves, that we are depraved, that we are fit subjects for rape, bondage, torture, and murder ... [this] fosters more lies about our humanity, our dignity, and our personhood. (Emphases supplied)
Catherine MacKinnon explains, sexual expression causes harm not because it leads to a particular violent act against women; rather, the harm of sexual expression lies in its negative impact on a consumer's understanding of gender and sexuality – it generates a social environment in which women are devalued and in which sex is eroticized violence by which men seek gratification.[107]
Andrea Dworkin[108] would thus advocate:
The oppression of women occurs through sexual subordination. It is the use of sex as the medium of oppression that makes the subordination of women so distinct from racism or prejudice against a group based on religion or national origin. Social inequality is created in many different ways x x x the radical responsibility is to isolate the material means of creating the inequality so that material remedies can be found for it. (Emphases supplied)
The Miller test references community standards and societal values. The question is the locus of these standards and values. Upon whose standards and values do we anchor what is obscene and what is not obscene, what is protected and what is unprotected? It is said that the standards and values should be that of the average person – what was intolerable to the average member of the national community would determine obscenity.
But the average person is also situated somewhere, sometime, and somehow. We do not live in homogenous communities. There will always be those who would be the majority, the minority, the marginalized, and the underrepresented and unrepresented. Substantive equality will have to account as well for their standards and values.
I believe that majoritarian community standards tolerate if not accept the materials and acts published in the challenged FHM magazines. The popularity and acceptability of this magazine as a whole are off-the-roof. They are considered fashionable and rarely referred to as smut. The magazines provide political, entertainment, and aesthetic values to the communities in which they are read. Therefore, the magazines should easily pass the Miller test.
But, I do not accept that what is tolerated and accepted by the majority is necessarily liberating and progressive. We recognize as a rule of law the equality of the dignities and personhood of all peoples regardless of race, age, sexual orientation, ethnicity and other indicators of one's autonomy and actualization in society. The community standards test must account for these differences and allow for the distinctiveness of individuals and communities in our midst.
In place of the standards-of-the-community-of-the-average-person test, I respectfully endorse the harm-based approach in assessing the community standards of tolerance.[109] The approach requires the courts to determine using evidence about the harmful effects of the expression and inference from the expression itself "what the community would tolerate others being exposed to on the basis of the degree of harm [to the others] that may flow from such exposure."[110]
Harm in this context has three types: "(1) harm to those whose autonomy and liberty may be restricted by being confronted with inappropriate conduct; (2) harm to society by predisposing others to anti social conduct; and (3) harm to individuals participating in the conduct."[111]
Harm may either be in the form of anti-social conduct or anti-social attitudes.[112] In terms of conduct, "criminal law may limit conduct and expression in order to prevent people who may see it from becoming predisposed to acting in an anti-social manner."[113] As regards attitudinal harm, the expression must be one (i) to which the public has been exposed and (ii) which "perpetuates negative and demeaning images of humanity and is likely to undermine respect for members of the targeted groups and hence to predispose others to act in an anti-social manner towards them."[114]
The degree of harm that would necessitate regulation, prohibition or even criminalization, was assessed by ascertaining whether the material or conduct was "incompatible with the proper functioning of society."[115] The threshold for establishing such a standard must be high, since membership in a diverse society mandates tolerance of conduct or material of which one disapproves.[116] High means it must be "objectively shown beyond a reasonable doubt to interfere with the proper functioning of society."
The proof of harm demands more than speculation and vague generalizations.[117] There must be a real risk that the expression will cause any one of the types of harm – the sexual act or speech at issue will lead to attitudinal changes and hence to anti-social behaviour.[118] The causal link between images of sexuality and anti-social behaviour cannot be assumed; rather, a link must be established first between the sexual act or speech and the formation of negative attitudes, and second between those attitudes and real risk of antisocial behaviour.[119] Expert evidence may help to establish actual harm, while the probability (and not merely the possibility) of the risk of harm may be shown from the act or expression itself.
In Regina v. Labaye,[120] the accused was charged with operating a "common bawdy-house," a violation under Section 210(1) of the Criminal Code of Canada, for owning the club, in which persons who paid membership fees and their guests could assemble and engage in group and oral sex and masturbate. These activities were consensual and, while members paid the club membership fees, the members did not pay each other in exchange for sex. In determining whether the accused was guilty of owning a bawdy-house, the Canadian Supreme Court had to decide whether the activities taking place within should be classified as indecent, since bawdy-houses are, by definition, houses in which prostitution or indecency occurs or is planned to occur. The accused was found guilty.
The Canadian Supreme Court acquitted the accused. Using the harm-based approach in arriving at the community standards of tolerance, the Court found no evidence that the degree of alleged harm rose to the level of incompatibility with the proper functioning of society. It held that consensual conduct behind code-locked doors can hardly be supposed to jeopardize society. Nothing was involved that encouraged sexist and misogynist attitudes. The sex was consensual and not prostitution. The threat of sexually transmitted diseases are more of a health issue than a harm that comes exclusively from deviant sex.
The harm-based approach could help in pursuing inclusive community standards. It allows courts to consider all of the stakeholders, not only the community of the average person, in a meaningful manner.
Admittedly, though, Labaye was decided the way it did on the ground that no harm to others that the community would have been unwilling to tolerate and accept happened. The cognitive lens was still the perspective of the others, and not the autonomy of the participants in the bawdy-house. Indeed, the "swingers might have been more concerned that the practice at issue was central to the way in which they lived their lives – to their actualization in society."[121]
Further:
Rather than recognizing the integral nature of the practice to the aggrieved community and then utilizing that affirmative principle to buttress the right to practice the lifestyle, the Court instead arrives at its conclusion by considering the negative implications of swinging as a lifestyle. The underlying messages are that swinging appeals to base interests, that the average member of society is not likely to suffer, and that swingers are not harmed since they are already attitudinally changed; therefore the practice in the case at bar was permissible.
The focus does not consider all of the stakeholders in a meaningful manner, most notably the beliefs of the aggrieved swingers. The members outside of mainstream society were analyzed as "others" and were left to behave as they wished so long as "our" interests were not harmed.[122]
Just the same, the harm-based approach can be enriched "with a multitude of variables that would fully situate the harm analysis in a contextually sensitive manner."[123] In determining whether the sexual act or speech is harmful as it unduly exploits sex and would be accepted or tolerated by society, the harms test may take into account factors such as the sex, race, age, disability, and sexual orientation of the participants; the purposes of the materials; the intended audience, the existence of real or apparent violence; the existence of consent; the nature of the publication, including the relationship of the impugned materials to the entirety of the publication; the framework and manner of production, distribution and consumption; and the benefits to viewers and readers from the production and dissemination of the materials.[124]
Arguably, an enriched harm-based context would satisfy the concerns for equality and against stereotyping and discrimination. This would be the case in the context of sexually explicit materials that challenge the dominant heterosexual male perspective and are enriched by factors that are tailored to account for members of the other communities.
I am aware that developments in jurisprudence as remedies to societal inequities take time to percolate, and the thoughts I have discussed would likely remain just that, idle thoughts. In any event, the law is only one among many forums for change. As Brenda Cossman cautions, "while the law is busy trying to discipline these unruly sexual subjects, these sexual subjects are actually being normalized through other competing discourses."[125]
CONCLUSION
I conclude that petitioners have established that they are entitled to a declaration that Ordinance No. 7780 is unconstitutional on its face and as applied to them.
ACCORDINGLY, I vote to GRANT the Petition. City of Manila Ordinance No. 7780 should be declared UNCONSTITUTIONAL.
[1] Petition, paragraph 12.
[2] David v. Arroyo, 489 SCRA 160, 213-214 (2006).
[3] 219 U.S. 498 (1911).
[4] 410 U.S. 113 (1973).
[5] Estrada v. Sandiganbayan, 369 SCRA 394.
[6] 315 U.S. 568 (1942).
[7] 354 U.S. 476 (1957).
[8] 137 SCRA 717 (1985).
[9] Miller v. California, 413 U.S. 15 (1973).
[10] End of an era: FHM PH reveals final print cover girl, at
[11] Texas v. Johnson, 491 U.S. 397, 109 S. Ct. 2533, 350, 105 L. Ed. 2d 342, 350, 1989 U.S. LEXIS 3115, *1-4-, 57 U.S.L.W. 4770 (U.S. June 21, 1989).
[12] Id.
[13] Willson v. City of Bel-Nor, 2020 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 117818.
[14] Id.
[15] 779 F.3d 785 (8th Cir. Mo. March 9, 2015).
[16] Id.
[17] Supra note 13.
[18] American Booksellers Foundation for Free Expression v. Dean, 202 F. Supp. 2d 300 *, 2002 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 8901 **, 30 Media L. Rep. 2121.
[19] See Deja Vu of Nashville, Inc. v. Metro Gov’t of Nashville & Davidson County, 274 F.3d 377 *, 2001 U.S. App. LEXIS 26007 **, 2001 FED App. 0415P (6th Cir.) ***, City of Erie v. Pup’s A.M., 529 U.S. 277 (U.S. March 29, 2000).
[20] Id.
[21] See Speech First, Inc. v. Fenves, 2020 U.S. App. LEXIS 34087 *; 979 F.3d 319: "This court has repeatedly held, in the pre-enforcement context, that '[c]hilling a plaintiff's speech is a constitutional harm adequate to satisfy the injury-in-fact requirement.' Ctr. for Individual Freedom v. Carmouche, 449 F.3d 655, 660 (5th Cir. 2010) (same) ("As the district court noted, '[t]he First Amendment challenge has unique standing issues because of the chilling effect, self-censorship, and in fact the very special nature of political speech itself."'). It is not hard to sustain standing for a pre-enforcement challenge in the highly sensitive area of public regulations governing bedrock political speech."
[22] 999 F.2d 1486, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 22340 **, 7 Fla. L. Weekly Fed. C 749.
[23] Id.
[24] Nathan M. v. Harrison Sch. Dist. No. 2, 9-12 F.3d 1034 *, 2019 U.S. App. LEXIS 34082 **, 2019 WL 5997387.
[25] American Civil Liberties Union v. The Florida Bar, Supra note at 22.
[26] Id.
[27] Id.
[28]Supra note at 21.
[29] Supra note at 22.
[30] Supra note at 22.
[31] Id.
[32] Id.
[33] Playboy Enterprises, Inc. v. Public Service Com., 698 F. Supp. 401 *; 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 12416 **
[34] Supra note at 21.
[35] Supra note 33.
[36] Supra note 21.
[37] Supra note 22.
[38] Supra note at 13.
[39] See 529 U.S. 277 (U.S. March 29, 2000).
[40] Id.
[41] Supra note at 22.
[42] Id.
[43] Supra note at 21.
[44] Id.
[45] Id.
[46] Id.
[47] Nathan M. v. Harrison Sch. Dist. No. 2, 942 F.3d 1034 *; 2019 U.S. App. LEXIS 34082 **; 2019 WL 5997387.
[48] Id.
[49] Id.
[50] Rules of Criminal Procedure (2000), Rule 110, Section 1 and Rule 112, Section 8.
[51] SECTION 8. Cases not requiring a preliminary investigation not covered by the Rule on Summary Procedure. — (a) If filed with the prosecutor. — If the complaint is filed directly with the prosecutor involving an offense punishable by an imprisonment of less than four (4) years, two (2) months and one (1) day, the procedure outlined in Section 3(a) of this Rule shall be observed. The prosecutor shall act on the complaint within ten (10) days from its filing.
[52] See Serrano v. Gallant Maritime Services, Inc., 601 Phil. 245 (2009). "Nonetheless, the issue is deemed seasonably raised because it is not the NLRC but the CA which has the competence to resolve the constitutional issue. The NLRC is a labor tribunal that merely performs a quasi-judicial function — its function in the present case is limited to determining questions of fact to which the legislative policy of R.A. No. 8042 is to be applied and to resolving such questions in accordance with the standards laid down by the law itself; thus, its foremost function is to administer and enforce R.A. No. 8042, and not to inquire into the validity of its provisions." Also, Parreño v. Commission on Audit, 551 Phil. 368 (2007); Presidential Anti-Dollar Salting Task Force v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 83578, March 16, 1989.
[53] Supra note at 47.
[54] Id.
[55] Id.
[56] See Pavlow v. Mendenilla, 809 Phil. 24 (2017).
[57] Paige v. State, 2017 VT 54 *; 205 Vt. 287 **, 171 A.3d 1011 ***, 2017 Vt. LEXIS 73 ****.
[58] Id.
[59] See Doria v. Univ. of Vt., 156 Vt. 114, 117, 589 A.2d 317, 318 (1991).
[60] Supra note at 57
[61] In re Moriarty, 156 Vt. 160, 163, 588 A.2d 1063, 1064 (1991).
[62] Supra note at 57.
[63] Id.
[64] Supra note at 22.
[65] Supra note at 13.
[66] Staley v. Jones, 239 F.3d 769, 770 (6th Cir. 2001).
[67] Supra note at 18.
[68] Triplett Grille, Inc. v. City of Akron, 40 F3d 129 (6th Cir. 1994).
[69] Supra note at 13.
[70]
[71]
[72] Ang init! Nadine Lustre sizzles in these hot photos, at
[73]
[74] 779 F.3d 785 (8th Cir. Mo. March 9, 2015).
[75] Supra note at 19.
[76] Supra note at 13.
[77] Id; Supra note at 18.
[78] Id.
[79] Id.
[80] Ashcroft v. Free Speech Coalition, 122 S. Ct. 1389 (2002).
[81] Supra note at 22.
[82] Id.
[83] Id.
[84] See supra note 13; Phelps-Roper v. City of Manchester, Mo., 697 F.3d 678 (8th Cir. 2012); Survivors Network of Those Abused by Priests, Inc. v. Joyce, supra note 74.
[85] Supra note at 13
[86] Id.
[87] R.A.V. v. City of St. Paul, 505 U.S. 377, 395, 112 S. Ct. 2538, 120 L. Ed. 2d 305 (1992).
[88] Supra note at 74.
[89] McCullen v. Coakley, 573 U.S. 464, 486, 134 S. Ct. 2518, 189 L. Ed. 2d 502 (2014).
[90] Blitch v. City of Slidell, 260 F. Supp. 3d 656, 665-666, 2017 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 93751, *15-18, 2017 WL 2634342 (E.D. La. June 19, 2017).
[91] Supra note at 33.
[92] Republican Party of Minn., Third Cong. Dist. v. Klobuchar, 381 F.3d 785, 790 (8th Cir. 2004).
[93] Phelps-Roper v. Ricketts, 867 F.3d 883, 895 (8th Cir. 2017).
[94] Soriano v. Laguardia, 605 Phil. 43, 148 (2009).
[95] See 413 U.S. 15, 37 L. Ed. 2d 419, 93 S. Ct. 2607 (1973).
[96] See United States v. Various Articles of Merch., 230 F.3d 649, 652, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 26627, *4-5 (3d Cir. N.J. October 23, 2000).
[97] "Sixteenth Annual Gender and Sexuality Law; Annual Review Article: Constitutionality of Sexually Oriented Speech: Obscenity, Indecency and Child Pornography," 16 Geo. J. Gender & L. 81, 84-91.
[98] Supra note at 96.
[99] See 539 Phil. 407 (2006).
[100] Supra note at 96.
[101] Id.
[102] Supra note at 97.
[103] Id.
[104] Id.
[105] Id.
[106] Richard Jochelson, After Labaye: The Harm Test of Obscenity, The New Judicial Vacuum and the Relevance of Familiar Voices, 46 Alberta Law Review 749 (2009), 2009 CanLIIDocs 233, quoting from "Pornography, Oppression, and Freedom: A Closer Look" in Laura Lederer, ed., Take Back the Night: Women on Pornography (New York: William Morrow, 1980).
[107] Id.
[108] Id.
[109] Regina v. Lab Regina v. Labaye, 2005 SCC 80, [2005] 3 S.C.R. 728 (Supreme Court of Canada).
[110] Id.
[111] Supra note at 106.
[112] Supra note at 109.
[113] Id.
[114] Id.
[115] Id.
[116] Id.
[117] Id.
[118] Id.
[119] Supra note at 106.
[120] Supra note 109.
[121] Supra note 106.
[122] Id.
[123] Id.
[124] Id.
[125] Brenda Cossman, "Disciplining the Unruly: Sexual Outlaws, Little Sisters and the Legacy of Butler" (2003) 36 U.B.C. L. Rev. 77.