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People V Padan

The Supreme Court of the Philippines upheld the convictions of individuals involved in exhibiting obscene and lewd acts at a nightclub in Manila. The accused allowed women to perform sexual intercourse in front of paying spectators. While one defendant pleaded guilty, the others claimed innocence. However, the evidence presented established that the manager Jose Fajardo actively organized and conducted the obscene show for profit. The Court found the acts had no redeeming artistic value and were clearly obscene, indecent, and offensive to public morals. It held the acts were rightfully punishable under Article 201 of the Revised Penal Code.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
191 views2 pages

People V Padan

The Supreme Court of the Philippines upheld the convictions of individuals involved in exhibiting obscene and lewd acts at a nightclub in Manila. The accused allowed women to perform sexual intercourse in front of paying spectators. While one defendant pleaded guilty, the others claimed innocence. However, the evidence presented established that the manager Jose Fajardo actively organized and conducted the obscene show for profit. The Court found the acts had no redeeming artistic value and were clearly obscene, indecent, and offensive to public morals. It held the acts were rightfully punishable under Article 201 of the Revised Penal Code.
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People v Padan G.R. No.

L-7295 June 28, 1957


J. Montemayor

Facts:
The accused exhibited immoral scenes and acts in one of the Manila nightclubs. Moreover,
the manager and ticket collector were also part of the accused for hiring the women to perform
sexual intercourse in the presence of many spectators.
They were charged with a violation of the RPC Article 201 in the trial court. All pleaded not guilty.
One of the accused however, changed her mind and pleaded guilty. All were convicted. The
evidence of the lewd show was confiscated.
The accused filed an appeal in the Supreme Court. 2 of the appellants, manager Fajardo and ticket
collector Yabut, failed to file their briefs within the period prescribed by law and their appeal was
dismissed by resolution of this Court of November 25, 1955, and the decision as to them became
final and executory on January 7, 1956.
The defendant who pleaded guilty, Marina Padan, in her appeal did not question her conviction; she
merely urged the reduction of the penalty by eliminating the prison sentence. The Supereme Court
did not consider this because the trial court judge reduced the fine from 600 to 200.

Issue: Were the acts obscene and thereby punishable by Art 201 of the RPC?

Held: Yes.

Ratio:
This is the first time that the courts in this jurisdiction, have been called upon to take cognizance of
an offense against morals and decency of this kind. We have had occasion to consider offenses like
the exhibition of still moving pictures of women in the nude, which we have condemned for obscenity
and as offensive to morals. In those cases, one might yet claim that there was involved the element
of art; that connoisseurs of the same, and painters and sculptors might find inspiration in the
showing of pictures in the nude, or the human body exhibited in sheer nakedness.
But an actual exhibition of the sexual act, preceded by acts of lasciviousness, can have no
redeeming feature. In it, there is no room for art. One can see nothing in it but clear and unmitigated
obscenity, indecency, and an offense to public morals, inspiring and causing as it does, nothing but
lust and lewdness, and exerting a corrupting influence specially on the youth of the land. We repeat
that because of all this, the penalty imposed by the trial court on Marina, despite her plea of guilty, is
neither excessive nor unreasonable.
On the appeal of Fajardo, he claimed that he was an innocent bystander but that because of his
popularity in the neighborhood, he was requested by the spectators to select the man and the
woman to engage or indulge in the actual act of coitus before the spectators. After making the
selection, he did not even care to witness the act but left the scene and returned to it only when he
heard a commotion produced by the raid conducted by the police.
The evidence on his active participation and that he was the manager and one in charge of the show
is however ample, even conclusive. In 1953, the place used for ping-pong was used for an exhibition
of human "fighting fish", the actual act of coitus or copulation. Tickets were sold at P3 each, and the
show was supposed to begin at 8:00 o'clock in the evening.
The Manila Police Department must have gotten wind of the affair; it bought tickets and provided
several of its members who later attended the show, but in plain clothes, and after the show
conducted a raid and made arrests. At the trial, said policemen testified as to what actually took
place inside the building. About two civilians who attended the affair gave testimony as to what they
saw.
The customers not provided with tickets actually paid P3 at the entrance to defendant Ernesto
Reyes. He also collected tickets. In all, there were about ninety paying customers, while about
sixteen were allowed to enter free, presumably friends of the management. Jose Fajardo y Garcia
was clearly the manager of the show. He was at the door to see to it that the customers either were
provided with tickets or paid P3.00 entrance fee. He even asked them from whom they had bought
the tickets. He ordered that an army steel bed be placed at the center of the floor, covered with an
army blanket and provided with a pillow. Once the spectators, about 106 in number, were crowded
inside that small building, the show started.
Besides, as found by the trial court and as shown by some of the tickets collected from the
spectators, submitted as exhibits, said tickets while bearing on one side superimposed with rubber
stamped name "Pepe Fajardo," which defendant Fajardo admits to be his name.
Considering all the above circumstances, we agree with the trial court that Jose Fajardo is the most
guilty of the four, for he was the one who conducted the show and presumably derived the most
profit or gain from the same.

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