[The Burden of Proof in Inheritance Claims] in GR L 5458
March 22, 2026[Municipal Land Registration and State Authority in Early American Colonial Philippines] in GR L 5631
March 22, 2026[The Crime of Displaying a Nationalist Symbol in American-Colonial Philippines] in GR L 5584
The case of The United States vs. Juan Panganiban is not a literary or mythological text, but a potent historical document revealing the political tensions in the American colonial Philippines. The defendant was convicted under Act No. 1696 for publicly displaying a wooden tablet featuring a rising sun, three stars, and the name “UNION NACIONALISTA PARTY,” along with a fragmentary inscription celebrating a mass meeting to assert Filipino capacity for independence. The legal question was whether this display violated the law, but the subtext is a colonial government criminalizing nationalist symbolism. The tablet’s imagery—particularly the rising sun and three stars—would later become iconic elements of the Philippine flag, making Panganiban’s act a quiet, public assertion of national identity deemed seditious by the authorities.
The “BIBLICAL” or “MYTHOLOGICAL” resonance lies in the symbolism itself, which functions as a secular creed for the nascent nation. The display acted as a public profession of faith in the political “religion” of independence, with the tablet serving as a revered icon. Its placement on a public post transformed a mundane space into a site of political expression, akin to posting a dissenting creed. The prosecution by the colonial state mirrors historical persecutions for heresy, where displaying the wrong symbol becomes a criminal act of defiance against the orthodox power.
Ultimately, the case is a literary narrative of suppression and resistance. The incomplete inscription, cut off at “independe…” (for independence), is itself a metaphor for the interrupted struggle for sovereignty. The court’s dry legal analysis of the sign’s dimensions and duration of display contrasts starkly with its explosive political meaning. This legal snippet, therefore, is a story about the battle over public memory and national imagery, where a simple wooden plaque becomes a contested text, and its exhibitor, Juan Panganiban, becomes an unwitting protagonist in the Philippines’ long narrative toward self-determination.
SOURCE: GR L 5584; (October, 1910)
