1) Why this topic matters
In Philippine law, “acts of lasciviousness” and “sexual harassment” are related but distinct wrongs. The first is primarily a criminal offense under the Revised Penal Code (RPC) (and sometimes special laws). The second is addressed by special statutes that create criminal, civil, and administrative liability depending on the setting. Understanding penalties (punishments imposed by the State) versus damages (money awarded to the victim) is essential for practitioners, HR/administrators, and complainants.
2) Key concepts: penalties vs. damages
Penalties
Penalties are criminal sanctions such as imprisonment, fines, disqualification, or other punishments imposed after proof beyond reasonable doubt in a criminal case.
Damages
Damages are civil monetary awards to compensate the victim or to punish deterrently. These can be awarded:
- in the civil aspect of a criminal case, or
- through a separate civil action (sometimes even if the criminal case fails, depending on the cause of action and proof).
Standard of proof for damages in civil actions is preponderance of evidence.
3) Acts of Lasciviousness (Art. 336, RPC)
3.1 Definition and elements
Acts of lasciviousness is committed when a person:
Commits any lascivious act upon another (touching, fondling, kissing, rubbing, etc., with sexual design),
Without consent, and
Under circumstances of:
- use of force or intimidation, or
- when the offended party is deprived of reason/unconscious, or
- under 12 years old (now read alongside the higher age-of-consent regime, discussed below).
The law targets sexual acts short of rape but still involving sexual assault through coercion or incapacity.
Important distinction: If penetration (even slight) is proven, the case may fall under rape by sexual assault (Art. 266-A(2), RPC) rather than acts of lasciviousness.
3.2 Criminal penalties under Art. 336
The penalty is prisión correccional.
- This generally ranges from 6 months and 1 day to 6 years imprisonment.
- Courts determine the exact period based on mitigating/aggravating circumstances.
3.3 Situations with higher or different penalties
Acts that look like Art. 336 can be punished more severely under special laws, especially involving minors:
(a) When the victim is a child
If the offended party is a minor, prosecutors often consider:
RA 7610 (Special Protection of Children Against Abuse, Exploitation and Discrimination Act) “Lascivious conduct” under RA 7610 carries higher penalties than Art. 336 and is frequently used when the victim is under 18 and abuse/exploitation is present.
RA 11648 (2022) raised the age of sexual consent from 12 to 16. Sexual acts with children under 16 are treated more strictly, and consent is generally not a defense unless close-in-age exceptions apply. This affects charging decisions and the assessment of force/consent.
(b) When the offender is in a position of authority
Authority relationships (teacher, guardian, step-parent, coach) can:
- support aggravating circumstances,
- justify filing under RA 7610, or
- trigger separate administrative cases (e.g., teacher disciplinary rules, barangay protection orders, etc.).
4) Damages in Acts of Lasciviousness Cases
Even when the criminal case is for acts of lasciviousness, courts commonly award civil damages once guilt is established.
4.1 Types of damages typically awarded
Civil indemnity
- Awarded as a matter of course upon conviction.
- It recognizes the fact of injury to the victim’s rights.
Moral damages
- For mental anguish, shame, trauma, emotional suffering.
- In sexual offenses, moral damages are almost automatic once the act is proven because trauma is presumed.
Exemplary damages
- Awarded when there is an aggravating circumstance or to set a public example and deter similar acts.
- Often given in sex crimes to show societal condemnation.
Actual/compensatory damages
- Requires proof of specific expenses (therapy, medical costs, lost income).
- Receipts or credible testimony needed.
Temperate damages
- Awarded when some pecuniary loss is certain but exact amount cannot be proven.
Attorney’s fees and litigation costs
- May be granted when justified by law/equity.
4.2 How courts decide amounts
Philippine jurisprudence has developed standard ranges for sex crimes, but amounts vary depending on:
- severity and manner of the assault,
- age and vulnerability of victim,
- relationship/authority of offender,
- presence of aggravating circumstances,
- documented expenses and impact.
Even without exact receipts, courts may still award moral and civil indemnity in fixed or increasing amounts consistent with precedent.
5) Sexual Harassment in the Philippines: Two Core Statutes
5.1 RA 7877 (Anti-Sexual Harassment Act of 1995)
Covers sexual harassment in work, education, or training environments where:
- the offender has authority, influence, or moral ascendancy, and
- the act is tied to conditions of employment/education, or creates a hostile environment.
Examples: demand for sexual favors for grades/promotion, unwanted sexual advances by a superior.
5.2 RA 11313 (Safe Spaces Act, 2019)
Expanded protection to:
- public spaces and streets (catcalling, stalking, lewd remarks),
- online sexual harassment,
- workplaces and schools even without a strict superior-subordinate demand element,
- gender-based harassment more broadly.
RA 11313 complements RA 7877; some cases may be prosecuted under either depending on facts.
6) Criminal and Administrative Penalties for Sexual Harassment
6.1 Under RA 7877
RA 7877 provides:
- criminal liability (imprisonment and/or fine), and
- mandatory administrative liability, especially in workplaces and schools.
Penalties depend on the gravity of the offense as determined by the court or administrative body. The law authorizes:
- imprisonment (typically within the RPC arresto/prisión framework), and/or
- fines set by statute and jurisprudence,
- plus administrative sanctions.
Administrative sanctions may include:
- dismissal/termination,
- suspension,
- demotion,
- disqualification from promotion,
- expulsion (schools),
- other penalties under company/agency rules.
Employers and school heads also have statutory duties to:
- prevent harassment,
- create a Committee on Decorum and Investigation (CODI),
- promulgate internal rules and procedures.
Failure to act can lead to institutional liability.
6.2 Under RA 11313
RA 11313 creates graded offenses with escalating penalties based on:
- nature of act (verbal, physical, stalking, online),
- repetition,
- location and context,
- age or vulnerability of victim.
Sanctions may include:
- fines,
- community service and gender-sensitivity seminars,
- imprisonment for more serious or repeated acts,
- administrative penalties for workplace or school-based harassment.
The Safe Spaces Act also imposes obligations on:
- LGUs (public space enforcement),
- employers and schools (policies, reporting pathways, safe space officers).
7) Damages in Sexual Harassment Cases
7.1 Civil damages possible
Victims may recover damages through:
- the civil aspect of the criminal case, or
- a separate civil action (e.g., based on quasi-delict, violation of human dignity, or labor-related causes).
Common awards:
- Moral damages — for distress, humiliation, anxiety, reputational harm.
- Exemplary damages — to deter abuse of power/hostile environment.
- Actual damages — therapy, medical expenses, lost wages, relocation costs.
- Nominal damages — for violation of rights even without big quantified loss.
- Attorney’s fees — in proper cases.
7.2 Labor and administrative contexts
In workplaces:
- A victim may seek labor damages (e.g., backwages, reinstatement, separation pay, disability/benefits, or damages for constructive dismissal if harassment forced resignation).
- Employers may be held liable if they were negligent in prevention or response.
In government service:
- Civil Service rules allow administrative penalties on the offender and may support civil claims.
8) Overlaps and charging strategy
8.1 When both crimes may apply
A single incident can trigger multiple liabilities:
- Acts of lasciviousness (RPC) +
- Sexual harassment (RA 7877/RA 11313) +
- Child abuse/lascivious conduct (RA 7610), if a minor is involved +
- Administrative case (workplace/school/CS rules).
8.2 Factors affecting which law is used
Prosecutors and complainants consider:
- victim’s age,
- penetration vs. non-penetration,
- setting (workplace/school/public/online),
- presence of authority relationship,
- available evidence for each statute.
9) Evidence and burden considerations (practical impact on penalties/damages)
9.1 Criminal cases
- Proof beyond reasonable doubt required.
- Testimony of the victim is often central; credibility and consistency are crucial.
- In child cases, courts apply child-sensitive rules of evidence.
9.2 Civil damages
- Even if the criminal case fails, civil claims may still prosper under lower proof standards depending on the cause.
9.3 Administrative cases
- Typically substantial evidence standard.
- Faster timelines and protective measures (e.g., temporary reassignment).
10) Protective remedies that often accompany these cases
While not “damages,” these remedies affect victim safety:
- Barangay Protection Orders / court protection orders in some contexts involving minors or violence.
- Workplace or school interim measures: no-contact directives, schedule changes, remote setup.
- Psychological or medical intervention programs ordered by courts or agencies.
11) Summary cheat-sheet
Acts of Lasciviousness (RPC Art. 336)
- Nature: Criminal sexual offense short of rape.
- Penalty: Prisión correccional (6 months 1 day to 6 years), adjustable by circumstances.
- Damages: civil indemnity, moral, exemplary, plus actual/temperate and attorney’s fees where proven.
- If victim is a child: often prosecuted under RA 7610 with higher penalties; age of consent now 16.
Sexual Harassment (RA 7877 / RA 11313)
- Nature: Special-law offenses in workplace/school and public/online spaces.
- Penalties: fines and/or imprisonment under statute; mandatory administrative sanctions in institutions.
- Damages: moral, exemplary, actual/nominal, attorney’s fees; labor/civil service remedies can add monetary awards.
12) Final notes
Philippine law treats sexual violations as both public wrongs and private injuries. Penalties aim to punish and deter; damages aim to restore dignity, compensate trauma, and, through exemplary awards, affirm social condemnation. Because the statutory landscape includes the RPC and multiple special laws, careful case framing (age, context, evidence, authority relations) strongly influences both the degree of punishment and the scope of monetary recovery.