Case Summary (G.R. No. 47129)
Factual Background
The Spanish text printed in adjacent columns conveyed the idea that L. R. Aguinaldo, described as a Filipino merchant, was in substance a “Japanese instrument” or “front,” alleging that he served as a tool of Japanese “insidious penetration” into Filipino commerce and industry. The article further insinuated that Aguinaldo’s participation in corporate organization, and his use of his name and prestige, enabled Japanese interests to circumvent restrictions found in the Ley de Corporaciones (together with the Commonwealth corporation statute) and the Constitution, while presenting the collaboration as a form of moral duplicity warranting public distrust and even a boycott. The article also characterized the offensive conduct as dishonoring and degrading, and invited the public to demand an explanation from Aguinaldo, asserting that his role justified suspicion among Filipinos and clientele.
Statutory Framework and Definitions in Issue
The decision quoted the statutory description of libel under the Revised Penal Code, explaining that written defamation proscribed and punished consists of any written, printed, lithographed, or engraved work containing an imputation of a crime, a vice or defect, real or supposed, or an admission, omission, condition, state, or circumstance that tends to dishonor, degrade, or hold a person in contempt, including an attack upon the memory of a deceased person (Arts. 353 and 355, Revised Penal Code). It also cited Art. 361 of the Revised Penal Code as the controlling rule on the completeness of the accused’s defense in written defamation after the fact of publication is admitted, and it referenced Art. 360 on the requirement of a complaint by the offended party for certain categories of defamatory imputations, distinguishing them from crimes requiring only general prosecution. The Court additionally relied on Art. 344 to identify the offenses that require the offended party’s complaint, stressing that written defamation was not among those categories.
Accused’s Arguments on Appeal
Before the Court, Pedro M. Blanco contended that the Tribunal de Apelaciones committed four errors. First, he argued that the tribunal erred in declaring the questioned article defamatory when, in his view, it was not. Second, he claimed that the tribunal improperly dismissed his defense by holding it incomplete because he had alleged only good motives and justifiable ends for publication, without proving the truth of his imputations. Third, he asserted that the tribunal lacked jurisdiction to act on appeal because the prosecution had not been initiated by a complaint of the offended party. Fourth, he challenged his conviction and penalties, including the P200 fine, the subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency, and the costs, which he claimed should not have been imposed.
Court’s Assessment of Defamation
The Court treated the article’s contents as determinative. It held that a reader could not avoid the impression that L. R. Aguinaldo, presented as a Filipino merchant devoted to commerce, was being depicted as an instrument or front of Japanese interests in their purported insidious infiltration of Filipino commerce and industry. The Court further held that the article implied violation of laws governing corporate organization and constitutional requirements of citizenship, by suggesting that Aguinaldo was among the incorporators of National Rubber Goods Mfg. Co. while allegedly not contributing capital, and that the collaboration aimed at compliance with the law in form while violating its spirit. The Court held that these imputations necessarily tended to dishonor and degrade, and therefore constituted written defamation under the statutory definition.
In addressing the nature of defamatory writings, the Court reaffirmed that for an article to be defamatory it need not contain explicit and precise terms directly imputing a crime or vice or defect in an unqualified manner. It cited E. U. v. O'Connell, 37 Jur. Fil. 803 for the proposition that defamatory character does not require explicit, express words. The Court then reasoned that the questioned publication, containing not only strong insinuations but also a clear imputation that Aguinaldo had allowed his name and prestige to serve as a tool for a practice prohibited by law, was defamatory per se.
Evaluation of the Defense and the Requirement to Prove the Truth
The Court addressed the second asserted error by focusing on what constituted a complete defense in written defamation after admission of publication. It held that, while it may be shown that there were good motives and justifiable ends for the act of publication, such proof was not sufficient. The Court held that the accused must also prove the truth of the charges, acts, or defect imputed. It pointed to Art. 361 of the Revised Penal Code, stating that it required proof of the truth in addition to good motives and justifiable ends. The Court further held that, as declared by the Tribunal de Apelaciones, Pedro M. Blanco had presented no evidence to show that Aguinaldo committed the acts imputed. It added that the evidence before the tribunal showed that Aguinaldo was not and had not been a front for Japanese interests in organizing the corporation, and that he had duly paid for his shares.
Jurisdiction and the Offended Party’s Complaint
On the third assigned error, the accused argued that the tribunal erred in acting on appeal for lack of jurisdiction because the case had not been initiated by a complaint from the offended party. The Court rejected that contention. It held that in written defamation proceedings, it was not necessary for the case to be initiated specifically by the offended party. It explained that Art. 360 required the complaint of the offended party only when the imputation made in writing was of the class of crimes that did not give rise to officio prosecution, and that such cr
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Case Syllabus (G.R. No. 47129)
- Pedro M. Blanco sought review and reversal of the Court of Appeals judgment in R. G. No. 1090 that convicted him of libel (difamacion por escrito) and imposed a fine of P200, with subsidiary imprisonment in case of insolvency, plus costs.
- The People of the Philippines opposed the petition and defended the Court of Appeals conviction and penalties.
- The Supreme Court reviewed the conviction and affirmed, holding that the asserted errors were unfounded.
Parties and Procedural Posture
- Blanco appealed to the Supreme Court to review and annul the Court of Appeals decision finding him guilty of difamacion por escrito.
- The Supreme Court acted on the petition by examining whether the Court of Appeals committed the four alleged errors.
- The Court ultimately confirmed the sentence of the Court of Appeals and imposed costs against the recurrent.
Key Factual Allegations
- Blanco caused the publication of an allegedly libelous article in The Commonwealth Advocate, a monthly periodical he edited, for February 1936.
- The publication appeared in both English and Spanish, and the Spanish text was substantially framed as follows: “ES L. R. AGUINALDO INSTRUMENTO DEL JAPON?”
- The Spanish article portrayed L. R. Aguinaldo as a pro-Japanese “instrument” or “front” (testaferro) used to enable Japan’s insidious penetration into Filipino commerce and industry.
- The article insinuated that Aguinaldo allowed his name and prestige to be used to facilitate prohibited corporate and constitutional arrangements relating to citizenship requirements.
- The article further suggested economic wrongdoing and moral duplicity, stating that Aguinaldo’s conduct made him subject to boycott in business.
Statutory Framework
- The Court identified the statutory definition of libel by written defamation, explaining that the penal prohibition in the Revised Penal Code covers written matter that contains an imputation of a crime or vice or an imputation of an admission, omission, condition, state, or circumstance that tends to dishonor, discredit, or hold in contempt.
- The Court cited Arts. 353 and 355, Revised Penal Code for the character of punishable written defamation.
- The Court invoked Art. 361, Revised Penal Code to explain the requisites for a complete defense after publication is admitted, emphasizing that it is not enough to show good motives and justifiable ends; the defender must also prove the truth of the imputations.
- The Court relied on Art. 360, Revised Penal Code in addressing whether the case needed to be initiated by the offended party, explaining the requirement for the offended party’s denunciation exists only in specified categories.
- The Court cited Art. 344, Revised Penal Code to contrast libel with the specific offenses that require prosecution only upon the offended party’s complaint and express denunciation.
- The Court referenced the Corporation Law and Commonwealth Act No. 108, as amended by Commonwealth Act No. 421, as well as the Constitution, to contextualize the citizenship requirements tied to certain rights, franchises, or privileges, including incorporation and enjoyment of privileges for commerce-related activities.
Issues Presented
- The first issue was whether the Court of Appeals erred in declaring the article defamatory despite Blanco’s claim that it was not.
- The second issue was whether the Court of Appeals erred by concluding that Blanc