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June 6, 1945 N/A Osmeña: Yulo: Jun. 6, 1946 June 4, 1980 96 years, 163 days 45 Felicisimo Feria: AJ Aug. 6, 1883 June 6, 1945 N/A Osmeña: Yulo: Aug. 6, 1953 June 2, 1957 73 years, 300 days 46 Mariano de Joya: AJ Sept. 8, 1887 June 6, 1945 N/A Osmeña: Yulo: Jun. 25, 1946 July 5, 1964 76 years, 301 days 47 Guillermo Pablo: AJ Jun. 25, 1886 Jun ...
"Philippine Judicial Academy". Johnson, David Cecil (February 1916). "Courts in the Philippines, Old: New". Michigan Law Review. 14 (4): 300– 319. doi:10.2307/1274449. JSTOR 1274449. Valle-Corpuz, Menrado. "The role and function of the prosecution in the Philippine criminal justice system" (PDF). United Nations Asia and Far East Institute
Justices of the Supreme Court of the Philippines (2 C, 1 P) Pages in category "Filipino judges" ... By using this site, ...
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From the original number of six (1901–1916), this was increased to eight (1916–1935), then to ten (1935–1940). During the years 1940–1945, the membership varied from five to seven. After liberation in 1945, the number was reset to ten, and the current number of fourteen was first set in place with the enactment of the 1973 Constitution.
The Judicial and Bar Council (JBC; Filipino: Sangguniang Panghukuman at Pang-abogasya [1]) of the Philippines is a constitutionally-created body that recommends appointees for vacancies that may arise in the composition of the Supreme Court, other lower courts, and the Legal Education Board, and in the offices of the Ombudsman, Deputy Ombudsman and the Special Prosecutor.
Community portal; Recent changes; Upload file; Search. ... Courts in the Philippines (5 C, 5 P) J. Filipino judges (8 C, 27 P) Pages in category "Judiciary of the ...
The September 14, 2008, Political and Economic Risk Consultancy survey, ranked the Philippines 6th (6.10) among corrupt Asian judicial systems. PERC stated that "despite India and the Philippines being democracies, expatriates did not look favourably on their judicial systems because of corruption."