Article 142 of the Revised Penal Code, as amended entitled "Inciting to Sedition", provides:
"The penalty of prision correccional in its maximum period and a fine not exceeding 2,000 pesos shall be imposed upon any person who, without taking any direct part in the crime of sedition, should incite others to the accomplishment of any of the acts which constitute sedition, by means of speeches, proclamations, writings, emblems, cartoons, banners, or other representations tending to the same end, or upon any person or persons who shall utter seditious words or speeches, write, publish, or circulate scurrilous libels against the Government of the United States or the Government of the Commonwealth of the Philippines, or any of the duly constituted authorities thereof, or which tend to disturb or obstruct any lawful officer in executing the functions of his office, or which tend to instigate others to cabal and meet together for unlawful purposes, or which suggest or incite rebellious conspiracies or riots, or which lead or tend to stir up the people against the lawful authorities or to disturb the peace of the community, the safety and order of the Government, or who shall knowingly conceal such evil practices."
In the case of U. S. vs. Dorr, 2 Phil. 332, this Court traced the origin and history of the predecessor of Article 142 and expounded its meaning. Mr. Justice Ladd, who wrote the decision, saids
"Several allied offenses or modes of committing the same offense are defined in that section, viz: (1) The uttering of seditious words or speeches; (2) the writing, publishing, or circulating of scurrilous libels against the Government of the United States or the Insular Government of the Philippine Islands; (3) the writing, publishing or circulating of libels which tend to disturb or obstruct any lawful officer in executing his office; (if) or which tend to instigate others to cabal or meet together for unlawful purposes; (5) or which suggest or incite rebellious conspiracies or riots; (6) or which tend to stir up the people against the lawful authorities or to disturb the peace of the community, the safety and order of the Government; (7) knowingly concealing such evil practices."
Referring to case (2) scurrilous libels against the Government of the United States or the Insular Government of the Philippine Islands which the Court said may stand on a somewhat different footing from the rest the Court went on to say:
"In the determination of this question we have encountered great difficulty, by reason of the almost entire lack of American precedents which might serve as a guide in the construction of the law. There are, indeed, numerous English decisions, most of them of the eighteenth century, on the subject of libelous attacks upon the 'Government, the constitution, or the law generally,1 attacks upon the Houses of Parliament, the Cabinet, the Established Church, and other governmental organisms, but these decisions are not now accessible to us, and, if they were, they were made under such different conditions fan those which prevail at the present day, and are founded upon theories of government so foreign to those which have inspired the legislation of which the enactment in question forms a part, that they would probably afford but little light in the present inquiry. In England, in the latter part of the eighteenth century, any 'written censure upon public men for their conduct as such,' as well as any written censure 'upon the laws or upon the institutions of the country,' would probably . have been regarded as a libel upon the Government. G. Stephen, History of the Criminal Law of England, 348.) This has ceased to be the law in England, and it is doubtful whether it was ever the common law of any American State. 'It is true that there are ancient dicta to the effect that any publication tending to "possess the people with an ill opinion of the Government" is a seditious libel (per Holt, C.J., in R. vs. Tuchin, 1704, 5 St. Tr., 532, and ELlenborough, C.J., in R. vs. Cobbett, 1804, 29 How. St. Tr., 49), but no one would accept that doctrine now. Unless the words used directly tend to foment riot or rebellion or otherwise to disturb the peace and tranquility of the Kingdom, the utmost latitude is allowed in the discussion of all public affairs.' (11 Enc. of the Laws of England 450.) Judge Cooley says (Const, Lim., 528) : 'The English common law rule which made libels on the constitution or the government indictable, as it was administered by the courts, seems to unsuited to the condition and circumstances of the people of America, and therefore never to have been adopted in the several States."
After citing the Act of Congress of July 14, 1798, commonly-and historically known as the "Sedition Act," and after noting that "the term 'government1 would appear to be used herein the abstract sense of the existing political system, as distinguished from the concrete organisms of the Government the Houses of Congress and the Executive which are also specially mentioned," the Court reached the opinion that "this is the (abstract) sense in which the term is used in the enactment under consideration." The Court pointed out that, "while libels upon forms of government, unconnected with defamation of individuals, must in the nature of things be of uncommon occurrence, the offense is by no means an imaginary one," and cited a case (Republica vs. Dennie, 4 Yeates [Pa.], 267) in which the defendant was indicted ' for bringing into contempt and hatred the independence of the United States, the constitution of this Commonwealth and of the United States; for exciting popular discontent and dissatisfaction against the scheme of polity instituted; for condemning the principles of the Revolution, and reviling the characters of the patriots and statesmen; for endangering, subverting, and totally destroying the republican constitutions and free governments of the said United States and the Commonwealth of-Pennsylvania.
In consonance with the principles laid down, the Court held that the article published by Dorr, in which he virulently attacked the policy of the Civil Commission in appointing Filipinos to office, did not come within the purview of the law, although it "may have had the effect of exciting among certain classes dissatisfaction with the Commission and its measures." It found that there was nothing in the article which could "be regarded as having a tendency to produce anything like what may be called dissafection, or, in other words, a state of feeling incompatible with a disposition to remain loyal to the Government and obedient to the laws."
The message which the accused herein caused to be published with his picture contained no libel or criticism against the instituted system of government as distinct from the administration. On the contrary, the gist of the, message was that the author was desperate and was going to kill himself because many men in the government were following the practices of absolute and despotic rulers in other parts of the world. He wanted President Truman and Mr. Churchill, leading exponents of such democratic institutions as are consecrated in the Philippine Constitution, to be informed that President Roxas and others in his administration were unfaithful to the tenets of constitutional government. He pointed to the turbulent situation in Central Luzon, the rampant banditry in Leyte, the attempted assassination of President Roxas by Guillen, etc., not as examples to be emulated but as the direct outcome of what he claimed widespread graft and corruption in the Government. He pretended to have decided to take his life because he was impotent to remedy or suppress this deplorable state of affairs, and he was ashamed of the way the Government was being conducted. He likened some men in the government, whom he did not specify, to Hitler and Mussolini, not that he idolized those notorious characters but because, he felt, evil forces that undermined the ideas and ideals of the Constitution were at work in our republic. In short, far from advocating the overthrow or change of the present scheme of polity, the article evinced intense feeling of devotion to the welfare of the country and its institutions.
President Roxas was the only official named in the article. But the defendant did not counsel violence in his reference to the President and the unnamed officials. In his statement to the effect that he was going to kill himself because he could not kill President Roxas and the men who surrounded the Executive, it is not a necessary deduction that he wished others to do it. Let it be remembered that the message was addressed to the writer's "wife" and "children" who, it turned out, were imaginary.
At best, the meaning of the sentence is doubtful and the norm is that, where the defendant's intention is ambiguous he should be given the benefit of the doubt. The courts may not subject an act or utterance to a microscopic examination in an endeavor to find in it germs of seditious purpose. In prosecutions for sedition utmost caution is called for lest the freedom of expression be impaired. Although statutes against sedition have been held not to violate the constitutional guaranty to the freedom of expression, the courts are warned to so construe or interpret them as not to abridge that freedom. (33 C.J. l64, citing U. S. vs. Apurado et al., 7 Phil. 422.) It is axiomatic that the Constitution is the paramount law and that legislation has to be adjusted thereto. Accordingly in the solution of clashes, which frequently occur, between liberty of free speech and prosecution for sedition, the criterion, it is submitted, should be the presence or absence of real, not imaginary, danger of the utterance materializing or inciting others to disloyalty to the Government and Its laws.
There is no inciting to sedition unless, according to Mr. Justice Holmes1 theory expressed in connection with a similar topic, "the words used are used in such circumstances and are of such a nature as to create clear and present danger that they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress has a right to prevent." In the very law punishing inciting to sedition there is the requirement that the words alleged to be seditious or libelous lead or tend to the consummation of the evils sought to be prevented. Even in the ordinary offenses of threat and defamation, words are not taken at face value, hut their import or gravity is gauged by the circumstances surrounding each particular case.
The terms "lead" and "tend" are used in Article 142 of the Revised Penal Code in their ordinary signification. Thus understood, lead as a verb means "to draw or direct by influence" or "to prevail on," and tend means "to conduce to an end." (Webster's International Dictionary)
Judged by these tests, and granting for the present purposes that the defendant did intend to incite others to sedition, the article was harmless as far as the safety of the Government and its officers was concerned, and should have been ignored, as many others more serious than this one have been. The message, like an evil imagining from which no harm proceeds except to the individual himself, was not conducive to the attainment of the prisoner's aims. If words are "the keys of persuasion" and " the triggers of action," the article under consideration was far from possessing either of these qualities, taking into consideration the personality of the man who wrote it and what he "did". The reaction of the readers could not have been other than that the whole thing was comical if it were not "tragic." The general reaction, it is fairly safe to say, was one of regret for a man of eccentric and unbalanced mind or ridicule and curiosity for a grotesque stunt. The witnesses for the Government themselves, some of whom were constabulary officers stationed at Tagbilaran, stated that upon reading the article and seeing the author's picture they Just laughed it off, "thinking, that this fellow must be crazy." That was akin to our own reaction, and there is little or no doubt that it exemplified the general effect upon the minds of other readers of the article. It "is certain that none would commit a rash act upon a vague suggestion of a man who hanged himself and whom they had never heard of before, while those who had known him, like the constabulary officers above mentioned, were aware that the picture was a fake and thought the subject was a crank.
Attacks more serious, virulent and inflamatory than the one at bar, by persons well known in politics and public life and having influence and large following, have frequently appeared in the press or been launched on the platforms. What the defendant did or said was very tame and mild by comparison. Nevertheless, those critics have not been brought to court; and it is to the everlasting credit of the administration and, in the long run, for the good of the Government, that the parties reviled and the prosecutors have adopted a tolerant attitude. A well-known author on criminal law quoting classical writers on the same subject has truly said.
"Yet while such is no doubt the law, prosecutions of this class have recently fallen, in England as well as in the United States, for several reasons, into disuse. In the first place, it is now generally felt that unless criticism be permitted to penetrate even to the foundations of government, revolution rather than reform may result. Time, says Bacon, is the greatest of destructives; and truth is to be constantly employed in repairing the breaches which time makes. The wise conservative, therefore, is often apparently the most destructive radical; as he is the most prudent repairer who, when the piers of a bridge are weakened by a storm, advises that the work of reconstruction should begin at the foundation. To prevent the application of revolutionary criticism to government is of all modes of government the most revolutionary. And closely allied with this position is another, that among countries used to freedom libels only begin to bring the state into contempt when they are prosecuted by the state as contemptuous. The sedition laws, for instance, were among the chief causes of the overthrow of the administration of John Adams; and their repeal one of the . chief causes of the popularity of that of Jefferson, If, however, seditious libels are to be prosecuted, it is well to keep in mind the noble words of princes from whose edicts the English common law, imbued as it is in so many other respects with the spirit of freedom, has much, in reference to the law of libel, to learn: 'Imppp. Theodosius, Arcadius et Honorius, A.A.A. Rufino P. P. Si quis modestiae nescius et pudoris ignarus improbo petulantique maledicto nomina nostra crediderit lacessenda, ac temulentla turbulentus obtrectator teraporarum nostrorum fuerit, eum poenae nolumus subiugari neque durum aliquid nee asperum sustinere, quoniam, si ex levitate processerit, contemnedum est, si ex insania. miseratione dignissimum. si ab injuria. remlttendum. ' " (2 Wharton's Criminal Law; Section 1947.)
In somewhat parallel vein is the dissent of Mr. Justice Holmes, joined in by Mr. Justice Brandeis, in U. S. vs. Abraxas, 250 U. S. 621, 629. Said Justice Holmes:
"Persecution for the expression of opinions seems to me perfectly logical. If you have no doubt of your premises or your power and want a certain result with all your heart you naturally express your wishes in law and sweep away all opposition. To allow opposition by speech seems to indicate that you think the speech impotent, as when a man says that he has squared the circle, or that you do not care whole heartedly for the result, or that you doubt either your power or your premises. But when men have realized that time has upset many fighting faiths, they may come to believe even more than they believe the very foundations of their own conduct that the ultimate good desired is better reached oy free trade in ideasthat the best twist of truth is the power of the thought to get itself accepted in the competition of the market, and that truth is the only ground upon which their wishes safely can be carried out. That at any rate is the theory of our Constitution. It is an experiment, as all life is an experiment. Every year if not every day we have to wager our salvation upon some prophecy based upon imperfect knowledge. While that experiment is part of our system I think that we should be eternally vigilant against attempts to check the expresssion of opinions that we loathe and believe to be fraught with death, unless they so imminently threaten immediate interference with the lawful and pressing purposes of the law that an immediate check is required to save the country. I regret that I cannot put into more impressive words my belief that in their conviction upon this indictment the defendants were deprived of their rights under the Constitution of the United States."
Moreover, the subject of this prosecution does not reveal personal malice or hatred. Except for the "Juez de cuchillo" item which, like words coming from a babe's mouth, did not have the weight or chance to sway the listeners, the article was but a statement of grievances against official abuses and misgovernment that already were of common knowledge and which more influential and responsible speakers and writers had denounced in terms and ways more dangerous and revolutionary.
Paras, C.J., and Feria, J., concur.