In Re Cunanan March 18, 1954
In Re Cunanan March 18, 1954
In Re Cunanan March 18, 1954
94 Phil. 534
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AN
ACT TO
FIX
THE
PASSING
MARKS
FOR
BAR
EXAMINATIONS
FROM
NINETEEN
HUNDRED AND FORTYSIX UP TO AND INCLUDING NINETEEN HUNDRED AND
FIFTY-FIVE.
Sec. 3.
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1946
1946
1947
1948
1949
1950
1951
1952
1953
(August)
(November) ...
.
.
.
.
.
.
.
206
477
749
899
1,218
1,316
2,068
2,738
_2,555
Total. 12,230
121
228
340
409
532
893
879
1,033
__986
5,421
18
43
0
11
164
26
196
426
__284
1,168
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Republic Act No. 972 has for its object, according to its author,
to admit to the Bar, those candidates who suffered from
insufficiency of reading materials and inadequate preparation.
Quoting a portion of the Explanatory Note of the proposed bill,
its author Honorable Senator Pablo Angeles David stated:
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the
object
of
the
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(1) The law of New York does not require that any
candidate of Columbia College who failed in the bar
examinations be admitted to the practice of
law.
(2)
The law of New York according to the very
decision of Cooper, has not taken from the court its
jurisdiction over the question of admission of
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(3)
The Constitution of New York at that time and
that of the Philippines are entirely different on the
matter of admission to the practice of law.
In the judicial system from which ours has been evolved, the
admission, suspension, disbarment and reinstatement of
attorneys at law in the practice of the profession and their
supervision have been indisputably a judicial function and
responsibility. Because of this attribute, its continuous and
zealous possession and exercise by the judicial power have
been demonstrated during more than six centuries, which
certainly "constitutes the most solid of titles." Even considering
the power granted to Congress by our Constitution to repeal,
alter and supplement the rules promulgated by this Court
regarding the admission to the practice of law, to our judgment
the proposition that the admission, suspension, disbarment and
reinstatement of attorneys at law is a legislative function,
properly belonging to Congress, is unacceptable. The function
requires (1) previously established rules and principles, (2)
concrete facts, whether past or present, affecting determinate
individuals, and (3) decision as to whether these facts are
governed by the rules and principles; in effect, a judicial
function of the highest degree. And it becomes more
undisputably judicial, and not legislative, if previous judicial
resolutions on the petitions of these same individuals, are
attempted to be revoked or modified.
We have said that in the judicial system from which ours has
been derived, the act of admitting, suspending, disbarring and
reinstating attorneys at law in the practice of the profession is
concededly judicial. A comprehensive and conscientious study of
this matter had been undertaken in the case of State vs.
Cannon (1932) 240 NW 441, in which the validity of a
legislative enactment providing that Cannon be permitted to
practice before the courts was discussed. From the text of this
decision we quote the following paragraphs:
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"The judicial
department of government is
responsible for the plane upon which the
administration of justice is maintained. Its
responsibility in this respect is exclusive. By
committing a portion of the powers of sovereignty to
the judical department of our state government,
under a scheme which it was supposed rendered it
immune from embarrassment or interference by any
other department of government, the courts cannot
escape responsibility for the manner in which the
powers of sovereignty thus committed to the judicial
department are exercised, (p. 445)
After explaining the history of the case, the Court ends thus:
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the
exercise
functions." (pp.
of
their
650-651).
appropriate
judicial
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The law in question, like those in the case of Day and Cannon,
has been found also to suffer from the fatal defect of being a
class legislation, and that if it has intended to make a
classification, it is arbitrary and unreasonable.
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system is that it does not take into account that the laws and
jurisprudence are not stationary, and when a candidate finally
receives his certificate, it may happen that the existing laws and
jurisprudence are already different, seriously affecting in this
manner his usefulness. The system that the said law prescribes
was used in the first bar examinations of this country, but was
abandoned for this and other disadvantages. In this case,
however, the fatal defect is that the article is not expressed in
the title of the Act. While this law according to its title will have
temporary effect only from 1946 to 1955, the text of article 2
establishes a permanent system for an indefinite time. This is
contrary to Section 21(1), article VI of the Constitution, which
vitiates and annuls article 2 completely; and because it is
inseparable from article 1, it is obvious that its nullity affects
the entire law.
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RESOLUTION
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The President vetoed the bill on June 16, 1951, stating the
following:
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Be it enacted
Representatives
assembled:
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(Sgd.)
Ricardo Paras
The President allowed the period within which the bill should be
signed to pass without vetoing it, by virtue of which it became a
law on June 21, 1953 (Sec. 20, Art. VI, Constitution) numbered
972 (many times erroneously cited as No. 974).
The right to admit members to the Bar is, and has always been,
the exclusive privilege of this Court, because lawyers are
members of the Court and only this Court should be allowed to
determine admission thereto in the interest of the principle of
the separation of powers. The power to admit is judicial in the
sense that discretion is used in its exercise. This power should
be distinguished from the power to promulgate rules Which
regulate admission. It is only this power (to promulgate
amendments to the rules) that is given in the Constitution to
the Congress, not the exercise of the discretion to admit or not
to admit. Thus the rules on the holding of examination, the
qualifications of applicants, the passing grades, etc. are within
the scope, of the legislative power. But the power to determine
when a candidate has made or has not made the required grade
is judicial, and lies completely with this Court.
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DISSENTING OPINION
Paras, C.J.:
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In the year 1951, the Congress, after public hearings where law
deans and professors, practising attorneys, presidents of bar
associations, and law graduates appeared and argued lengthily
pro or con, approved a bill providing, among others, for the
reduction of the passing general average from 75 per cent to 70
per cent, retroactive to any bar examination held after July 4,
1946. This bill was vetoed by the President mainly in view of an
unfavorable comment of Justices Padilla, Tuason, Montemayor,
Reyes, Bautista and Jugo. In 1953, the Congress passed
another bill similar to the previous bill vetoed by the President,
with the important difference that in the later bill the provisions
in the first bill regarding (1) the supervision and regulation by
the Supreme Court of the study of law, (2) the inclusion of
Social Legislation and Taxation as new bar subjects, (3) the
publication of names of the bar examiners before the holding of
the examinations, and (4) the equal division among the
examiners of all the admission fees paid by bar applicants, were
eliminated. This second bill was allowed to become a law,
Republic Act No. 972, by the President by merely not signing it
within the required period; and in doing so the President gave
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due respect to the will of the Congress which, speaking for the
people, chose to repass the bill first vetoed by him.
Under Republic Act No. 972, any bar candidates who obtained a
general average of 70 per cent in any examinations after July 4,
1946 up to August 1951; 71 per cent in the 1952 bar
examinations; 72 per cent in 1953 bar examinations; 73 per
cent in the 1954 bar examinations; and 74 per cent in the 1955
bar examinations, without obtaining a grade below 50 per cent
in any subject, shall be allowed to pass. Said Act also provides
that any bar candidate who obtained a grade of 75 per cent in
any subject in any examination after July 4, 1946, shall be
deemed to have passed in such subject or subjects and such
grade or grades shall be included in computing the passing in
any subsequent examinations.
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The opponents of Republic Act No. 972 argue that this Act, in so
far as it covers bar examinations held prior to its approval, is
unconstitutional, because it sets aside the final resolutions of
the Supreme Court refusing to admit to the practice of law the
various petitioners, thereby resulting in a legislative
encroachment upon the judicial power. In my opinion this view
is erroneous. In the first place, resolutions on the rejection of
bar candidates do not have the finality of decisions in justiciable
cases where the Rules of Court expressly fix certain periods
after which they become executory and unalterable. Resolutions
on bar matters, specially on motions for reconsiderations filed
by flunkers in any given year, are subject to revision by this
Court at any time, regardless of the period within which the
motions were filed, and this has been the practice heretofore.
The obvious reason is that bar examinations and admission to
the practice of law may be deemed as a judicial function only
because said matters happen to be entrusted, under the
Constitution and our Rules of Court, to the Supreme Court.
There is no judicial function involved, in the strict and
constitutional sense of the word, because bar examinations and
the admission to the practice of law, unlike justiciable cases, do
not affect opposing litigants. It is no more than the function of
other examining boards. In the second place, retroactive laws
are not prohibited by the Constitution, except only when they
would be ex post facto, would impair obligations and contracts
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