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12 Ateneo L.J. 1 (1962-1963)

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SEPTEMBER 1962


ATENEO LAW JOURNAL




PROBLEMS AND PRINCIPLES
TOWARD A LEGAL bEFINITION OF THE OBSCENE


Joaquin G.  Bernas, S.J.#


    When   the issue of obscenity found it any medium of communication
is brought before a court for adjudication, the court is faced with a di-
lemma.   On the one hand it must respect the freedoms of speech and the
press guaranteed by  the Constitution. On  the other hand  it must re-
cognize the duty of the state to protect the public against the social evil
presented by the purveyance of pornography.  How  avoid the two horns?
Or, is the dilemma a mere  figment of judicial imagination?
    For  a judicial bystander upon whose head neither praise nor blame
will fall for a decision, the problem might appear unreal, especially be-
cause, in a case which has now become a landmark in American obscenity
cases, the U.S. Supreme  Court  declared in unequivocal  language that
obscenity is not within the area of constitutionally protected speech or
press.' To suppress what  is obscene, therefore, to censor it, to prohibit
it, is not a violation of constitutional freedom but a legitimate act of gov-
ernment.  But the judicial problem does not end thereby.  The problem
is merely focalized on what really is the core question of obscenity cases:
WHAT IS OBSCENE? The subsequent pages will show what answer
has been  given to this question by the U.S. Supreme Court and  by the
Philippine Supreme Court  and Court of Appeals.  This done, an attempt
will be made  to isolate the roadblocks which legal development still has
to hurdle.'-

      Ll.B. Ateneo de Manila, 1962.
      Roth v U.S. 354 U.S. 476 485 (1957); Alberts v. California _it, 76,
485 (1957). The same decision pronounced, as a corollary, that since obscenity is
not constitutionally protected, it does not enjoy the benefits of the clear and pre-
sent danger rule.' Id. 486-7.
    Is It is interesting to note that the U.S. Supreme Court has struck down quite a
number of censorship standards for being vague or indefinite. Such for example
were the standards sacrilegious (Burstyn v Wilson 343 U.S. 495 (1952), pre-
judicial to the best interests of the people of said City (Gelling v Texas 343 U.S.
960 (1952), immoral (Commercial Fictues Corp v Regents 346 U.S. 587 (1954),


Digitized from  Best Copy   Available


VOLUME XII


NUMBER 1

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