I. Introduction
Oral defamation, commonly called slander, is a criminal offense under Philippine law involving defamatory words spoken against another person. It is an offense against honor because it attacks a person’s reputation, character, dignity, or social standing through spoken statements.
In the Philippines, oral defamation is governed primarily by the Revised Penal Code, particularly Article 358, in relation to the general provisions on defamation under Article 353 and the rules on malice under Article 354.
A person who has been insulted, falsely accused, publicly shamed, or maliciously spoken against may consider filing a criminal complaint for oral defamation, provided the legal elements are present and the complaint is filed within the proper period.
This article discusses what oral defamation is, its elements, kinds, penalties, evidence needed, defenses, prescription period, barangay conciliation requirements, and the step-by-step process for filing a case in the Philippine context.
II. Meaning of Oral Defamation or Slander
Oral defamation is the act of speaking defamatory words against another person in the presence of a third person or under circumstances where the words are heard by others.
It differs from libel, which generally involves defamatory imputations made in writing, print, broadcast, or similar means. Oral defamation is committed through spoken words.
A defamatory statement may involve an accusation that a person committed a crime, has a dishonorable character, suffers from a shameful condition, lacks integrity, engages in immoral conduct, or is otherwise unworthy of public respect.
Examples may include falsely calling a person a thief, swindler, adulterer, prostitute, corrupt official, scammer, criminal, or other insulting words, depending on the context and circumstances.
Not every insult automatically becomes oral defamation. The law looks at the exact words used, the intention of the speaker, the setting, the relationship of the parties, the presence of listeners, and the effect of the statement on the reputation of the offended party.
III. Governing Law
The main legal provisions are:
1. Article 353, Revised Penal Code
Article 353 defines defamatory imputation. Defamation involves a public and malicious imputation of a crime, vice, defect, act, omission, condition, status, or circumstance that tends to dishonor, discredit, or contempt a person.
2. Article 354, Revised Penal Code
Article 354 provides that every defamatory imputation is presumed malicious, even if true, if no good intention and justifiable motive are shown.
It also recognizes privileged communications, where malice is not presumed.
3. Article 358, Revised Penal Code
Article 358 punishes slander or oral defamation. It distinguishes between serious and less serious forms of oral defamation depending on the gravity of the words and circumstances.
IV. Elements of Oral Defamation
To establish oral defamation, the following elements are generally required:
1. There must be an imputation.
The accused must have spoken words imputing something dishonorable, discreditable, contemptuous, or damaging to the complainant.
The imputation may refer to:
- A crime;
- A vice or defect;
- An immoral act;
- A dishonorable condition;
- A shameful status;
- A circumstance that tends to damage reputation.
The statement need not be a long accusation. Even a short phrase may be defamatory if it attacks the person’s honor.
2. The imputation must be made publicly.
There must be publication. In oral defamation, publication means that the defamatory words were heard by at least one person other than the speaker and the offended party.
If the words were spoken only in private between the speaker and the offended party, without anyone else hearing them, the element of publication may be lacking.
3. The person defamed must be identifiable.
The defamatory words must refer to a specific person or to a person who can be identified from the circumstances.
The complainant need not be named directly. It is enough that listeners understood that the defamatory statement referred to the complainant.
4. The imputation must be malicious.
Malice is generally presumed in defamatory imputations. This is called malice in law.
However, the accused may attempt to overcome this presumption by showing good intention, justifiable motive, or that the statement was privileged.
5. The statement must tend to dishonor, discredit, or cause contempt.
The words must be capable of damaging the reputation, honor, dignity, or social standing of the complainant.
The test is not merely whether the complainant felt offended, but whether the words, viewed objectively and in context, tend to injure reputation.
V. Serious Oral Defamation vs. Simple Oral Defamation
Oral defamation may be classified as grave or serious, or simple, depending on the nature of the words and the circumstances.
A. Grave or Serious Oral Defamation
Serious oral defamation involves words of a highly insulting, defamatory, or serious character.
The seriousness may be determined by considering:
- The exact words used;
- The social standing of the offended party;
- The place where the words were spoken;
- The number of people who heard the words;
- The occasion;
- The relationship of the parties;
- Whether the words accused the complainant of a crime or serious immoral conduct;
- Whether the attack was deliberate or made in anger;
- Whether the speaker intended to publicly humiliate the complainant.
Examples that may be considered serious, depending on context, include falsely accusing someone of theft, fraud, adultery, prostitution, corruption, or criminal conduct in front of others.
B. Simple Oral Defamation
Simple oral defamation involves defamatory words that are insulting but less serious in character.
This may include offensive language, abuse, name-calling, or insults that damage dignity but do not rise to the level of grave defamation.
Words uttered in the heat of anger may sometimes be treated as simple oral defamation, depending on the circumstances. Philippine jurisprudence has recognized that words spoken during a quarrel or emotional outburst may be viewed differently from words spoken with calculated malice.
VI. Oral Defamation Distinguished from Related Offenses
1. Oral Defamation vs. Libel
Oral defamation is spoken. Libel is generally written, printed, broadcast, or made through similar means.
If the defamatory statement is posted on Facebook, sent through a public online post, or published digitally, the issue may involve cyberlibel under the Cybercrime Prevention Act, not ordinary oral defamation.
2. Oral Defamation vs. Slander by Deed
Slander by deed involves acts, not words, that cast dishonor, discredit, or contempt upon another person.
Examples may include humiliating gestures or acts done publicly to shame a person.
If the defamation is spoken, the offense is oral defamation. If the insult is done through an act, it may be slander by deed.
3. Oral Defamation vs. Unjust Vexation
Unjust vexation punishes conduct that annoys, irritates, or causes distress without necessarily attacking reputation.
If the act merely causes annoyance or disturbance, unjust vexation may be considered. If the act attacks reputation through defamatory speech, oral defamation may be more appropriate.
4. Oral Defamation vs. Intriguing Against Honor
Intriguing against honor usually involves spreading rumors, insinuations, or gossip designed to blemish another person’s reputation, often without directly making a definite defamatory statement.
Oral defamation usually involves a more direct defamatory imputation.
VII. Penalties for Oral Defamation
Article 358 of the Revised Penal Code imposes different penalties depending on whether the oral defamation is serious or not.
For serious oral defamation, the penalty may involve imprisonment within the range provided by the Code. For less serious oral defamation, the penalty may be lighter.
Because penalty classifications and fine amounts may be affected by later amendatory laws, including changes to monetary fines, the exact imposable penalty should be checked against the current text of the Revised Penal Code and related amendments.
In practice, the classification of the offense affects:
- The court with jurisdiction;
- The applicable penalty;
- The prescriptive period;
- Bail;
- Plea bargaining possibilities;
- The seriousness with which the case may be evaluated by prosecutors and courts.
VIII. Prescription Period: When Must the Case Be Filed?
A criminal complaint for oral defamation must be filed within the period provided by law.
Oral defamation is generally subject to a short prescriptive period. Under the Revised Penal Code, oral defamation is commonly treated as prescribing in six months.
This means that the offended party must act promptly. Delay may result in the loss of the right to criminally prosecute.
The prescriptive period generally begins to run from the day the offense was discovered by the offended party, which is often the date the defamatory words were spoken or learned.
Filing the proper complaint before the appropriate authority may interrupt prescription, subject to procedural rules.
Because prescription can determine whether a case survives or is dismissed, it is one of the first issues a complainant must consider.
IX. Who May File the Complaint?
The offended party may file the complaint.
If the offended party is a minor, incapacitated, or otherwise unable to act, a parent, guardian, or authorized representative may assist or act in accordance with the Rules of Criminal Procedure.
Where the defamatory words concern a deceased person, the situation may involve different legal considerations, including whether the imputation affects the honor of the deceased’s heirs or family.
X. Where to File a Complaint for Oral Defamation
A complaint for oral defamation may generally be initiated before:
- The Office of the City Prosecutor or Office of the Provincial Prosecutor;
- The appropriate Municipal Trial Court, Metropolitan Trial Court, or Municipal Trial Court in Cities, depending on the procedure and jurisdiction;
- The barangay, if barangay conciliation is required before formal filing.
In many cases, the usual route is to file a complaint-affidavit with the prosecutor’s office for preliminary investigation or inquest-type evaluation, depending on the nature of the offense and local procedure.
For offenses punishable by lower penalties, the rules on summary procedure or direct filing may also become relevant.
XI. Venue: Where Should the Case Be Filed?
Venue is important. A criminal case is generally filed in the place where the offense was committed or where any essential element occurred.
For oral defamation, this is usually the place where the defamatory words were spoken and heard.
For example, if the defamatory words were uttered in Quezon City, the complaint would generally be filed in Quezon City, subject to jurisdictional and procedural rules.
If the words were spoken in one place but heard or published in another under unusual circumstances, venue may require closer legal analysis.
XII. Barangay Conciliation Requirement
Before filing a criminal complaint in court or with the prosecutor, the parties may need to undergo barangay conciliation under the Katarungang Pambarangay Law.
Barangay conciliation may be required when:
- The complainant and respondent are natural persons;
- Both reside in the same city or municipality, or in adjoining barangays within the same city or municipality;
- The offense is punishable by imprisonment not exceeding one year or a fine not exceeding the statutory threshold;
- The case is not excluded by law.
If barangay conciliation is required, the complainant must first file a complaint before the barangay. The barangay may conduct mediation or conciliation.
If settlement fails, the barangay issues a Certification to File Action, which is then attached to the complaint filed with the prosecutor or court.
Failure to comply with mandatory barangay conciliation may result in dismissal or suspension of the case.
Barangay conciliation is not always required. It may not apply when the parties live in different cities or municipalities, when one party is a juridical entity, when the offense exceeds the covered penalty, or when urgent legal action is necessary under recognized exceptions.
XIII. Evidence Needed in an Oral Defamation Case
Because oral defamation is spoken, evidence often depends heavily on witnesses.
Useful evidence may include:
1. Witness affidavits
Witnesses who heard the defamatory words should execute sworn statements.
Their affidavits should state:
- The date, time, and place of the incident;
- The exact words spoken, as much as possible;
- The language or dialect used;
- Who said the words;
- Who heard the words;
- The circumstances before, during, and after the incident;
- How the complainant was identified;
- The reaction of those present.
2. Complainant’s affidavit
The complainant must execute a detailed complaint-affidavit narrating the incident.
It should include:
- Personal details of the complainant;
- Identity of the respondent;
- Relationship between the parties;
- Exact defamatory words used;
- Place and time of utterance;
- Names of witnesses;
- Harm caused to reputation, dignity, business, employment, family, or social standing;
- Prior incidents, if relevant;
- Statement that the allegations are true based on personal knowledge.
3. Audio or video recording
Recordings may be useful if lawfully obtained.
However, Philippine law has strict rules on privacy and wiretapping. Secret recordings of private conversations may raise legal issues under the Anti-Wiretapping Law.
Recordings made in public settings, CCTV footage, or recordings where consent issues are not problematic may be more useful, but admissibility should be carefully evaluated.
4. CCTV footage
If the incident happened in a store, office, street, barangay hall, workplace, or public area, CCTV footage may help prove the occurrence of the confrontation, the presence of witnesses, and the behavior of the parties.
CCTV may not capture audio, but it may still support the timeline and circumstances.
5. Documentary evidence
Although oral defamation is spoken, documents may still help prove damages or context, such as:
- Incident reports;
- Barangay blotter;
- Police blotter;
- Written apologies;
- Messages admitting the incident;
- Employment records showing consequences;
- Business records showing loss of clients;
- Medical records if emotional distress required treatment.
6. Proof of identity and location
The complainant should prepare valid IDs and documents showing residence, especially if barangay conciliation or venue is in issue.
XIV. Importance of Exact Words
In oral defamation cases, the exact words matter.
A complaint should not merely say, “The respondent insulted me,” or “The respondent defamed me.”
It should state the actual words used, preferably in the original language or dialect, with an English or Filipino translation if needed.
For example:
“On 15 March 2026, at around 3:00 p.m., in front of our neighbors at Barangay X, respondent shouted at me: ‘Magnanakaw ka! Ninakaw mo ang pera ng opisina!’”
The complaint should identify who heard the statement and why the statement is false, malicious, and damaging.
Courts and prosecutors examine the words themselves to determine whether they are defamatory and whether they are grave or simple.
XV. Step-by-Step Guide to Filing a Case for Oral Defamation
Step 1: Write down the incident immediately.
The complainant should make a written account while the memory is fresh.
Include:
- Date;
- Time;
- Place;
- Exact words used;
- Names of witnesses;
- Circumstances;
- Any prior conflict;
- Effect on reputation or dignity.
Delay may weaken the case, especially because oral defamation has a short prescriptive period.
Step 2: Identify and talk to witnesses.
The complainant should list all persons who heard the defamatory words.
Witnesses should be asked whether they are willing to execute affidavits. A case based only on the complainant’s statement may still be filed, but corroborating witnesses are very important.
Step 3: Secure evidence.
The complainant should preserve recordings, CCTV footage, messages, blotter entries, written admissions, or other evidence.
If CCTV footage exists, request a copy as soon as possible because many systems automatically delete footage after a short period.
Step 4: Determine whether barangay conciliation is required.
If the parties are covered by the Katarungang Pambarangay system, file first with the barangay.
The barangay process may result in:
- Settlement;
- Apology;
- Retraction;
- Payment of damages;
- Agreement not to repeat the act;
- Certification to File Action if settlement fails.
Step 5: Prepare the complaint-affidavit.
The complaint-affidavit should be clear, specific, and sworn.
It should include:
- Name and address of complainant;
- Name and address of respondent;
- Jurisdictional facts;
- Narration of events;
- Exact defamatory words;
- Identification of witnesses;
- Explanation of why the words are false and malicious;
- Prayer that the respondent be charged with oral defamation.
Attach supporting affidavits and documents.
Step 6: File the complaint with the proper prosecutor’s office or court.
The complaint is usually filed with the prosecutor’s office having jurisdiction over the place of the offense.
The complainant should bring:
- Complaint-affidavit;
- Witness affidavits;
- Evidence;
- Barangay Certification to File Action, if required;
- Valid IDs;
- Copies for filing and service.
The prosecutor may require the respondent to file a counter-affidavit.
Step 7: Participate in preliminary investigation or prosecutor evaluation.
The prosecutor evaluates whether probable cause exists.
Probable cause means there is enough reason to believe that a crime was committed and that the respondent is probably guilty.
The prosecutor may:
- Dismiss the complaint;
- Require further evidence;
- Recommend filing of an Information in court;
- Refer the matter to appropriate proceedings;
- Direct clarificatory hearings if necessary.
Step 8: If the Information is filed, the case proceeds in court.
Once the prosecutor files the Information in court, the respondent becomes the accused.
The case may proceed through:
- Issuance of summons or warrant, depending on the offense and procedure;
- Posting of bail, if applicable;
- Arraignment;
- Pre-trial;
- Mediation or plea bargaining, where allowed;
- Trial;
- Judgment.
Step 9: Prove the case beyond reasonable doubt.
In a criminal case, the prosecution must prove guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
The complainant and witnesses may be required to testify in court.
The defense may cross-examine them and present contrary evidence.
Step 10: Seek civil liability.
A criminal case may include civil liability unless the civil action is reserved, waived, or separately filed.
Civil liability may include moral damages, nominal damages, exemplary damages, attorney’s fees, and costs, depending on proof and circumstances.
XVI. Sample Structure of a Complaint-Affidavit
A complaint-affidavit for oral defamation may follow this structure:
- Title: Complaint-Affidavit;
- Personal circumstances of complainant;
- Personal circumstances of respondent;
- Statement of relationship between parties;
- Date, time, and place of incident;
- Exact defamatory words spoken;
- Persons who heard the words;
- Explanation of falsity and malice;
- Damage to honor, reputation, business, employment, or family;
- Prior or subsequent acts showing malice, if any;
- List of attached evidence;
- Prayer for prosecution;
- Jurat before a notary public or authorized officer.
XVII. Possible Defenses in Oral Defamation Cases
A respondent accused of oral defamation may raise several defenses.
1. Denial
The respondent may deny making the statement.
This makes witness credibility and corroboration very important.
2. Lack of publication
The respondent may argue that no third person heard the alleged defamatory words.
Without publication, oral defamation may fail.
3. Lack of identification
The respondent may argue that the words did not refer to the complainant.
If the complainant was not named, the prosecution must show that those who heard the words understood them to refer to the complainant.
4. Absence of defamatory meaning
The respondent may argue that the words were not defamatory, but merely expressions of anger, opinion, annoyance, or criticism.
5. Privileged communication
Some statements are privileged.
Privileged communication may be absolute or qualified. In qualified privileged communication, malice is not presumed, and the complainant must show actual malice.
Examples may include statements made in the performance of a legal, moral, or social duty, or fair comments made in appropriate circumstances.
6. Truth with good motives and justifiable ends
Truth alone is not always enough in defamation. The accused may need to show good motives and justifiable ends, especially where the imputation is defamatory.
7. Words uttered in the heat of anger
Words spoken during a quarrel may still be punishable, but the circumstances may reduce the gravity of the offense.
Courts may consider whether the words were spontaneous, emotional, provoked, or uttered without deliberate intent to destroy reputation.
8. Lack of malice
The respondent may show that the words were not made maliciously, but in good faith or under circumstances that negate criminal intent.
XVIII. Malice in Oral Defamation
Malice is central to defamation.
There are two concepts:
1. Malice in law
This is presumed from the defamatory character of the statement.
If a person publicly makes a defamatory imputation, the law generally presumes malice.
2. Malice in fact
This refers to actual ill will, spite, hatred, or intent to injure.
Actual malice may be shown through prior disputes, repeated attacks, public humiliation, refusal to retract, or circumstances showing intent to damage reputation.
In privileged communications, malice in law may not apply, and the complainant may need to prove malice in fact.
XIX. Public Officials and Matters of Public Interest
When the offended party is a public official, employee, candidate, or public figure, additional constitutional considerations may arise.
Criticism of official conduct may receive broader protection, especially where the matter is of public interest.
However, freedom of speech does not protect knowingly false statements or malicious attacks on private character unrelated to public duty.
A statement criticizing a public official’s performance may be protected opinion. A false accusation of criminal conduct made maliciously may still be actionable.
The line between fair criticism and defamation depends on the facts.
XX. Workplace, School, Barangay, and Social Media Contexts
A. Workplace
Oral defamation may occur in offices, meetings, staff rooms, or workplace confrontations.
Possible consequences may include:
- Criminal complaint for oral defamation;
- Administrative complaint;
- Labor complaint, depending on employment context;
- Company disciplinary proceedings;
- Civil action for damages.
Statements made in internal investigations may be privileged if made in good faith and in the proper forum.
B. School
Defamatory statements by students, parents, teachers, or administrators may lead to disciplinary, civil, administrative, or criminal consequences.
The age of the offender matters. If the respondent is a minor, the Juvenile Justice and Welfare Act and child protection rules may apply.
C. Barangay
Many oral defamation disputes occur between neighbors. Barangay conciliation is often relevant in these cases.
A barangay blotter does not by itself prove guilt, but it may help document the incident and date.
D. Social Media
If the defamatory statement is spoken in a livestream, video, or recorded online broadcast, classification may be more complicated.
Depending on the medium, the case may involve oral defamation, libel, cyberlibel, unjust vexation, or other offenses.
XXI. Can an Apology Stop the Case?
An apology may help settle the dispute, especially at the barangay level.
However, once a criminal complaint is filed, an apology does not automatically extinguish criminal liability.
A complainant may execute an affidavit of desistance, but courts and prosecutors are not always bound by it. The State prosecutes criminal offenses, and the case may continue if evidence supports prosecution.
Still, apology, retraction, settlement, or restitution may affect the practical handling of the case, civil liability, or penalty.
XXII. Civil Damages for Oral Defamation
A complainant may seek damages arising from oral defamation.
Possible damages include:
1. Moral damages
For mental anguish, wounded feelings, social humiliation, besmirched reputation, and similar injury.
2. Nominal damages
To vindicate a right violated, even without substantial proof of actual loss.
3. Exemplary damages
To set an example or deter similar conduct, where circumstances justify.
4. Actual damages
If the complainant can prove measurable financial loss, such as lost employment, lost business, or lost clients.
5. Attorney’s fees and litigation expenses
These may be awarded when legally justified.
The complainant must prove damages with competent evidence.
XXIII. Practical Considerations Before Filing
Before filing a case, consider the following:
1. Strength of evidence
A strong case usually has witnesses who clearly heard the defamatory words.
2. Exactness of the statement
The more precise the complaint is about the words used, the stronger it becomes.
3. Presence of publication
At least one third person must have heard the statement.
4. Timeliness
Oral defamation prescribes quickly. Delay can be fatal.
5. Barangay conciliation
Failure to comply with barangay conciliation, when required, can delay or weaken the case.
6. Possibility of settlement
Some disputes are resolved through apology, retraction, undertaking, or damages.
7. Risk of countercharges
Defamation cases often arise from heated disputes. The respondent may file countercharges such as unjust vexation, grave threats, physical injuries, harassment, malicious prosecution, or another defamation complaint.
8. Emotional and financial cost
Criminal litigation may take time and resources. The complainant should weigh the seriousness of the harm and the available evidence.
XXIV. Checklist for Filing an Oral Defamation Complaint
Before filing, prepare the following:
- Written narrative of the incident;
- Full name and address of respondent;
- Date, time, and place of incident;
- Exact defamatory words used;
- Names and contact details of witnesses;
- Witness affidavits;
- Complaint-affidavit;
- Barangay Certification to File Action, if required;
- Police or barangay blotter, if any;
- Recordings, CCTV, or other evidence, if lawfully available;
- Proof of damages, if any;
- Valid IDs;
- Multiple copies of all documents.
XXV. Common Mistakes in Filing Oral Defamation Cases
1. Failing to state the exact words
A vague allegation that the respondent “defamed” or “insulted” the complainant is weak.
2. Filing late
Because the prescriptive period is short, delay may lead to dismissal.
3. Ignoring barangay conciliation
If barangay conciliation is required, skipping it can cause procedural problems.
4. Relying only on feelings of insult
The law protects reputation, not merely sensitivity. The statement must be defamatory in the legal sense.
5. Having no witnesses
Oral defamation requires publication. Witnesses are often crucial.
6. Using illegally obtained recordings
Evidence obtained in violation of privacy or wiretapping laws may create problems.
7. Filing in the wrong venue
The complaint should be filed where the offense was committed or where an essential element occurred.
XXVI. Sample Allegation
A basic allegation in a complaint-affidavit may read:
On 10 February 2026, at around 4:30 p.m., while I was standing in front of our sari-sari store at Barangay Maligaya, Quezon City, respondent Juan Santos, in the presence of our neighbors Maria Reyes, Pedro Cruz, and Ana Lopez, shouted at me: “Magnanakaw ka! Ikaw ang kumuha ng pera ng samahan!” The statement was false, malicious, and publicly made. Because of respondent’s words, our neighbors began avoiding me, and my reputation in the community was damaged.
This kind of allegation identifies the time, place, speaker, words used, witnesses, falsity, malice, and resulting harm.
XXVII. Burden of Proof
In a criminal case for oral defamation, the prosecution bears the burden of proving the accused’s guilt beyond reasonable doubt.
The complainant must be ready to testify. Witnesses must also be prepared to affirm their affidavits in court.
The accused is presumed innocent until proven guilty.
Even if the complainant was truly hurt, the court must acquit if the legal elements are not proven beyond reasonable doubt.
XXVIII. Remedies if the Prosecutor Dismisses the Complaint
If the prosecutor dismisses the complaint, the complainant may consider available remedies under the rules, such as filing a motion for reconsideration with the prosecutor’s office or pursuing review before the Department of Justice, where applicable.
The availability, period, and procedure for these remedies depend on the rules and the office involved.
A complainant should act promptly because remedies are time-bound.
XXIX. Remedies if the Accused Is Convicted
If the accused is convicted, the court may impose the appropriate penalty and civil liability.
The judgment may include:
- Imprisonment or fine, depending on the offense and applicable law;
- Moral damages;
- Other damages;
- Costs.
The accused may also have appellate remedies.
XXX. Remedies if the Accused Is Acquitted
If the accused is acquitted, criminal liability ends.
Civil liability may also be affected depending on the ground of acquittal. If the court finds that the act did not exist or the accused did not commit it, civil liability may not prosper. If acquittal is based on reasonable doubt, civil liability may still be possible in certain cases if proven by the required civil standard.
XXXI. Constitutional Balance: Reputation and Free Speech
Oral defamation cases require balancing two important interests:
- The right of a person to reputation, dignity, and honor; and
- The right to free speech, fair comment, and legitimate criticism.
Philippine law does not punish every rude, angry, or offensive statement. It punishes defamatory imputations made publicly and maliciously.
At the same time, freedom of expression is not a license to destroy another person’s reputation through false and malicious accusations.
XXXII. Practical Summary
A person may file a case for oral defamation in the Philippines when another person publicly and maliciously speaks words that dishonor, discredit, or cause contempt against him or her.
The complainant should act quickly because oral defamation has a short prescriptive period. The complainant should gather witnesses, preserve evidence, comply with barangay conciliation when required, prepare a detailed complaint-affidavit, and file before the proper prosecutor’s office or court.
The most important parts of the case are the exact defamatory words, proof that someone else heard them, proof that the complainant was identifiable, and proof that the statement was malicious and damaging to honor or reputation.
Oral defamation is not merely about hurt feelings. It is about a legally punishable attack on reputation through spoken words. A well-prepared complaint must therefore be specific, timely, evidence-based, and procedurally proper.