ThatQuiz Test Library Take this test now
CRIMLAW NI JET
Contributed by: Reyes
  • 1. Under Article 171, a public officer commits falsification by "making untruthful statements in a narration of facts." For this specific mode to be consummated, which requirement must be met?
A) The untruthful statement must successfully cause material damage to a private party.
B) The document must be a commercial instrument payable to order or bearer
C) The officer must have a legal obligation to disclose the absolute truth of the facts narrated.
D) The statement must be made under oath before a notary public.
  • 2. A public school teacher desperately needs to sell a parcel of land. At home, she counterfeits the signature of the real owner on a Deed of Absolute Sale and successfully registers it. Under what provision should she be criminally charged?
A) Article 172, because she did not take advantage of her official position to commit the forgery
B) Article 48, for the complex crime of Estafa through Falsification of a Public Document.
C) Article 171, because she holds a public office as a teacher.
D) Article 170, because she is a government employee
  • 3. A legislative staff member notices a glaring typographical error in a pending city ordinance, the word "President" is spelled as "Prisident." Without authorization, he corrects the spelling. Is he liable under Article 170?
A) Yes, because changing any letter alters the form of an approved ordinance
B) No, because the correction did not change the essential meaning or legal effect of the document
C) No, because Article 170 applies exclusively to national bills passed by Congress, not local ordinances
D) Yes, because any unauthorized alteration of a pending legislative document completes the crime
  • 4. A public school principal desperately needs a personal loan from a private cooperative,
    To meet the requirements, he goes home and counterfeits the signature of a wealthy businessman on a private promissory note. He successfully gets the loan. Under what provision should the principal be charged?
A) Article 171, because he is a public officer holding a high-ranking government position.
B) Article 48, for the complex crime of Estafa through Falsification of a Public Document.
C) Article 172, Paragraph 1, because a promissory note used for a loan is automatically classified as a commercial document
D) Article 315 (Estafa) only, because he acted in a private capacity, and the falsification of the private document is absorbed by the deceit
  • 5. During a routine checkpoint, a private driver knowingly presents a beautifully forged fake driver's license to a Land Transportation Office (LTO) operative. The driver did not make or print the fake license; he merely bought it from a vendor in Recto. What crime did the driver commit?
A) No crime under the Revised Penal Code, because the driver was not the actual author or creator of the forgery
B) Counterfeiting of Legislative Documents under Article 170
C) Falsification by a Private Individual under Article 172, Paragraph 1.
D) Use of Falsified Documents under Article 172, Paragraph 3, because he introduced a false official document into a public proceeding knowing it was fake.
  • 6. Which of the following statements perfectly describes the legal character and application of Grave Scandal (Article 200) under the Revised Penal Code?
A) It is a crime malum prohibitum that can be committed through criminal negligence (culpa).
B) It is a subsidiary or residual offense that can only be charged if the highly scandalous conduct does not expressly fall under any other specific article of the Code
C) It requires proof of an intent to satisfy the lewd or lascivious desires of the offender before a conviction can be sustained
D) It is a principal crime that absorbs all other offenses against public order.
  • 7. A husband and wife get into a highly passionate, intoxicating reconciliation while sitting on a public park bench at midday. Entirely by mutual consent, without any intent to annoy anyone, and without any weapons or violent behavior, they proceed to engage in full sexual intercourse in plain view of shocked families and park visitors. Why is Article 200 (Grave Scandal) the correct charge here, rather than other provisions of the RPC?
A) Because the absence of a firearm or explosion completely prevents the act from being categorized under any other chapter of the Code.
B) Because any public display of affection between married couples is strictly penalized as a crime against the civil status of persons.
C) Because the act was consensual (ruling out Acts of Lasciviousness) and non-commercial/non-theatrical (ruling out Article 201 Indecent Shows), yet it deeply shocked public decency in an open space.
D) Because it involves more than one offender, which automatically rules out Unjust Vexation.
  • 8. Bato owns a legitimate local theater building. He leases the stage to Cayetano, a theatrical promoter. Cayetano organizes a live adult variety show and hires performers who unexpectedly strip entirely naked and engage in explicit, unscripted live acts on stage. Bato, the building owner, was present in the audience, realized the show had crossed into criminal obscenity, but took no action to stop it because the ticket sales were highly profitable. Who can be held criminally liable under Article 201?
A) The performers and Cayetano only; Bato is exempt because he is a mere lessor of the physical property
B) The performers only, because criminal liability is personal and cannot be extended to business managers or landlords who did not participate in the physical act.
C) Cayetano only, as the promoter who directly organized and executed the event.
D) The performers, Cayetano (the promoter), and Bato (the owner), because Article 201 explicitly extends criminal liability to the owners
  • 9. Kiko approaches Robin, a customs examiner, and offers P100,000 if Robin looks the other way when Kiko's container of undeclared luxury goods passes the inspection line. Robin agrees and takes the money. The next morning, before the container arrives at the port, Robin is unexpectedly reassigned by his supervisor to a different marine terminal, making it physically impossible for him to clear the shipment
    Question: What is the status of Robin's liability?
A) Consummated Direct Bribery, because the offense is perfected by the mere agreement to perform or omit an act in exchange for a bribe.
B) No liability, because the unexpected transfer stripped him of the opportunity to execute the favor
C) Attempted Direct Bribery, because the plan was interrupted before inspection day arrived.
D) Frustrated Direct Bribery, since the intended omission was cut short by an external cause.
  • 10. Robin, a biological male, is apprehended by local law enforcement during a targeted operation at an entertainment lounge. The evidence conclusively demonstrates that Robin habitually charges and accepts money from clients to engage in explicit lascivious conduct. The arresting officers file a criminal complaint against Robin specifically for violation of Article 202 of the Revised Penal Code.
    Question: As the handling prosecutor reviewing the inception of the case, can you validly file an Information for Prostitution under Article 202 against Robin?
A) Yes, because modern equal protection doctrines automatically expand restrictive statutory terms to include males in commercial sex work
B) No, because the statutory definition under Article 202 is restricted strictly to "women," and criminal laws must be construed strictly against the State and liberally in favor of the accused.
C) No, because Article 202 requires the element of full "sexual intercourse," and Robin's actions only amounted to "lascivious conduct
D) Yes, because the phrase "any person found guilty" in the penalty paragraph allows the law to be applied to any gender
  • 11. A market collector of a municipal government demands 1,500 from a vegetable vendor for the renewal of her stall lease. The vendor complains that the legally prescribed ordinance fee is only 1,000. The collector insists on the 1,500, stating that the extra P500 is an "approved municipal administrative surcharge," and pockets the excess P500 for his personal use. What crime did the collector commit under the Revised Penal Code?
A) Frauds Against the Public Treasury (Illegal Exaction) under Article 213
B) Direct Bribery under Article 210
C) Estafa under Article 315
D) Robbery/Extortion under Article 294
  • 12. The elected City Mayor of a highly urbanized city serves as the final approving authority for all local infrastructure spending. The city government is currently bidding out a multi-million peso contract for the bulk purchase of high-grade construction materials needed for a new evacuation center.

    Recognizing a lucrative business opportunity, the Mayor uses a corporate dummy to acquire a 40% financial stake in the hardware supply corporation bidding for the contract, actively intending to award them the project. Before the bidding is finalized, the scheme is exposed by an internal whistleblower. Under the Revised Penal Code, what is the proper criminal liability of the City Mayor?
A) Frustrated Frauds Against the Public Treasury under Article 213
B) No criminal liability under Article 215 of the Revised Penal Code
C) Attempted Prohibited
D) Consummated Prohibited Transactions under Article 215
  • 13. In Philippine criminal law, public officers are strictly restricted from entering into certain financial or commercial dealings to maintain absolute public trust. Which of the following correctly distinguishes the crime of Prohibited Transactions (Article 215) from Possession of Prohibited Interest (Article 216) under the Revised Penal Code?
A) Article 215 applies to any public officer regardless of status, whereas Article 216 applies exclusively to elective public officials.
B) Article 215 applies strictly to appointive public officers engaging in transactions of exchange or speculation within their territory, whereas Article 216 applies broadly to public officers becoming interested in a contract or business in which they have an official duty to intervene.
C) Article 215 requires that the public officer has an active, official duty to intervene in the transaction, whereas Article 216 merely requires that the business transaction occurs within his administrative
D) Article 215 is an offense against public property, whereas Article 216 is classified as an offense against public morals.
  • 14. To secure a conviction for the crime of Possession of Prohibited Interest by a Public Officer under Article 216 of the Revised Penal Code, the prosecution must present evidence establishing the elements of the offense. Which of the following is NOT an essential element of this felony?
A) The public officer must have successfully obtained actual financial profit, kickback, or material gain from the contract or business.
B) The offender is a public officer (or an expert, arbitrator, or private accountant appointed by public authority).
C) The offender directly or indirectly becomes interested in a contract or business transaction.
D) It is the official duty of the public officer to intervene in such contract or business transaction.
  • 15. A municipal court clerk receives $50,000 in cash from an accused as a cash bail bond for temporary liberty. Desperate to pay for his child's urgent surgical operation, the clerk takes the 50,000 cash from the court vault and uses it to settle the hospital bill. Two weeks later, before any audit is conducted or demand is made, the clerk secures a personal loan, replaces the exact 50,000 cash, and returns it to the vault. A subsequent routine audit reveals the temporary tracking gap. What crime was consummated by the court clerk?
A) Consummated Malversation of Public Funds under Article 217, with the return of the money serving only as a mitigating circumstance.
B) No criminal liability exists because the full amount was completely restituted prior to any government demand or audit
C) Consummated Estafa under Article 315 because the cash bail bond was private property belonging to a litigant.
D) Frustrated Malversation of Public Funds because the public treasury suffered zero permanent financial loss or damage
Created with That Quiz — where a math practice test is always one click away.