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Chief Justice of the Philippines

Highest judicial officer


Highest judicial officer

FieldValue
postChief Justice
bodythe Philippines
native_namePunong Mahistrado ng Pilipinas
insigniaSupreme Court of the Philippines.svg
insigniacaptionSeal of the Supreme Court
flagFlag of the Supreme Court of the Philippines.svg
flagsize180px
flagcaptionFlag of the Supreme Court
termlengthRetirement at the age of 70
styleThe Honorable (formal)
Your Honor (when addressed directly in court)
member_of* Supreme Court
imageFile:Chief-Justice-Alexander-G.-Gesmundo.jpg
incumbentAlexander Gesmundo
incumbentsinceApril 5, 2021
appointerPresidential appointment upon nomination by the Judicial and Bar Council
formationJune 11, 1901
inaugural*1583 - Santiago de Vera y Rivas, Captain-General of the Spanish East Indies (Real Audiencia, Spanish East Indies)
website[Official Website](http://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/)

Your Honor (when addressed directly in court)

  • Presidential Electoral Tribunal
  • Judicial and Bar Council
  • 1901 - Cayetano Arellano (Supreme Court of the Philippines) Chief Justice of the Philippines () is the title of the person who presides over the Supreme Court of the Philippines and who is the highest judicial officer of the government. As of April 5, 2021, the position is currently held by Alexander Gesmundo, who was appointed by then president Rodrigo Duterte following the early retirement of his predecessor, Diosdado Peralta, in March 2021.

The position of chief justice is the oldest major governmental office continually held by a Filipino. Cayetano Arellano became the first chief justice on June 11, 1901, predating the presidency and vice presidency (established in 1935), the Senate (1916, or September 1, 1901 if counting the Taft Commission), and the House of Representatives (1907, as the Philippine Assembly).

Duties and powers

The power to appoint the chief justice lies with the president of the Philippines, who makes the selection from a list of three nominees prepared by the Judicial and Bar Council. There is no material difference in the process of selecting a chief justice from that in the selection of associate justices. As with the other justices of the Supreme Court, the chief justice is obliged to retire upon reaching the age of 70; otherwise there is no term limit for the chief justice. In the 1935 constitution, any person appointed by the president has to be confirmed by the Commission on Appointments; in the 1973 constitution, the person whom the president appointed did not have to undergo confirmation under the Commission on Appointments.

The current 1987 constitution does not ascribe any formal role to the chief justice other than as an ex-officio chairman of the Judicial and Bar Council and as the presiding officer in any impeachment trial of the president. The chief justice is also required to personally certify every decision that is rendered by the court. The chief justice carries only 1 vote out of 15 in the court, and is generally regarded, vis-a-vis the other justices, as the primus inter pares rather than as the administrative superior of the other members of the court.

Still, the influence a chief justice may bear within the court and judiciary, and on the national government cannot be underestimated. In the public eye, any particular Supreme Court is widely identified with the identity of the incumbent chief justice, hence appellations such as "The Fernando Court" or "The Puno Court". Moreover, the chief justice usually retains high public visibility, unlike the associate justices, who tend to labor in relative anonymity, with exceptions such as Associate Justice J. B. L. Reyes in the 1950s to 1970s.

By tradition, it is also the chief justice who swears into office the president of the Philippines. One notable deviation from that tradition came in 1986, and later again in 2010. Due to the exceptional political circumstances culminating in the People Power Revolution, on February 25, 1986, Corazon Aquino took her oath of office as president before Associate Justice Claudio Teehankee in San Juan just minutes before Ferdinand Marcos took his own oath of office also as president before Chief Justice Ramon Aquino. Marcos fled into exile later that night. More than two decades afterwards, Benigno Simeon Aquino III followed in his mother's footsteps (with almost similar reasons) by having Associate Justice Conchita Carpio-Morales administer his oath of office, rather than Chief Justice Renato Corona (who was eventually impeached halfway through Aquino's term). Six years later, in 2016, Rodrigo Duterte took his oath of office before Associate Justice Bienvenido Reyes, his classmate at San Beda College of Law, instead of Chief Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno (who would eventually be removed from her position through quo warranto after it was determined that she had been unlawfully holding office ab initio).

The chief justice also names the three justices each from the Supreme Court in the memberships of the House of Representatives Electoral Tribunal and the Senate Electoral Tribunal.

The chief justice is the chief executive officer of the Philippine judiciary system and together with the whole Supreme Court, exercises administrative supervision over all courts and personnel.

List{{anchor|List of chief justices}}

No.PortraitName
(birth–death)Tenure startTenure endTenure lengthAppointed by
**1**[[File:Cayetano Arellano.jpg150x150px]]****
(1847–1920)June 15,
1901April 12,
1920
**2**[[File:Victorino Mapa.jpg154x154px]]****
(1852–1927)July 1,
1920October 31,
1921
**3**[[File:Manuel Araullo.jpg153x153px]]****
(1853–1924)November 1,
1921July 26,
1924
**4**[[File:Ramon Avancena.jpg150x150px]]****
(1872–1957)April 1,
1925December 24,
1941
**5**[[File:Chief_Justice_Jose_Abad_Santos.jpg151x151px]]****
(1886–1942)December 24,
1941May 1,
1942
**6**[[File:Yulo_Jose.jpg155x155px]]****
(1894–1976)January 26,
1942July 9,
1945
**7**[[File:Manuel_Moran.jpg159x159px]]****
(1893–1961)July 9,
1945March 20,
1951
**8**[[File:Ricardo_Paras.jpg153x153px]]****
(1891–1984)April 2,
1951February 17,
1961
**9**[[File:Cesar_Bengzon.jpg151x151px]]****
(1896–1992)April 28,
1961May 29,
1966
**10**[[File:Roberto_Concepcion.jpg155x155px]]****
(1903–1987)June 17,
1966April 18,
1973
**11**[[File:Querube_Makalintal.jpg157x157px]]****
(1910–2002)October 21,
1973December 22,
1975
**12**[[File:Fred_Ruiz_Castro.jpg156x156px]]****
(1914–1979)January 5,
1976April 19,
1979
**13**[[File:Enrique_Fernando.jpg154x154px]]****
(1915–2004)July 2,
1979July 24,
1985
**14**[[File:Felix_Makasiar.jpg152x152px]]****
(1915–1992)July 25,
1985November 19,
1985
**15**[[File:Ramon_Aquino.jpg152x152px]]****
(1917–1993)November 20,
1985March 6,
1986
**16**[[File:Claudio_Teehankee.jpg152x152px]]****
(1918–1989)April 2,
1986April 18,
1988
**17**[[File:Pedro_Yap.jpg152x152px]]****
(1918–2003)April 19,
1988June 30,
1988
**18**[[File:Marcelo_Fernan.jpg155x155px]]****
(1927–1999)July 1,
1988December 6,
1991
**19**[[File:Andres_Narvasa.jpg152x152px]]****
(1928–2013)December 8,
1991November 30,
1998
**20**[[File:Hilario Davide.jpg152x152px]]****
(born 1935)November 30,
1998December 20,
2005
**21**[[File:Artemio_Panganiban.jpg152x152px]]****
(born 1937)December 20,
2005December 7,
2007
**22**[[File:Reynato_Puno.jpg152x152px]]****
(born 1937)December 7,
2007May 17,
2010
**23**[[File:Renato_Corona_official_portrait.jpg151x151px]]****
(1948–2016)May 17,
2010May 29,
2012
**–**[[File:Chief_Justice_Maria_Lourdes_Sereno.jpg151x151px]]****
(born 1960)August 25,
2012May 11,
2018
**24**[[File:CJ-Decastro-2018.jpg145x145px]]****
(born 1948)August 28,
2018October 10,
2018
**25**[[File:Bersamin_in_robes.jpg145x145px]]****
(born 1949)November 26,
2018October 18,
2019
**26**[[File:Peralta_in_robes.jpgalt=145x145px]]****
(born 1952)October 23,
2019March 27,
2021
**27**[[File:Chief-Justice-Alexander-G.-Gesmundo.jpgalt=144x144px]]****
(born 1956)April 5,
2021Incumbent{{ayd202145}}

Acting chief justices

The following became senior associate justices in their tenure in the Supreme Court:

Senior Associate JusticeYear appointedTerm as AJTenure as Acting Chief Justice
Florentino Torres19011901-1920April 1, 1920
Elias Finley Johnson19031903-1933April 20, 1920
October 31, 1921November 1, 1921
July 26, 1924April 1, 1925
José Abad Santos19321932-1941December 24, 1941
Manuel V. Moran19381938-1945May 1, 1942
Ricardo M. Paras Jr.19411941-1951March 20, 1951
César F. Bengzon19451945-1961February 17, 1961
Roberto R. Concepcion19541954-1966May 29, 1966
Querube C. Makalintal19621962-1973April 18, 1973
Fred Ruiz Castro19661966-1975December 22, 1975
Enrique M. Fernando Sr.19671967-1979April 19, 1979
Claudio Teehankee Sr.19681979-1986July 24, 1985
November 19, 1985November 20, 1985
March 6, 1987April 1, 1987
Ameurfina Melencio-Herrera19791979-1992April 18, 1988
June 30, 1988July 1, 1988
December 6, 1991December 8, 1991
Flerida Ruth P. Romero19911991-1999November 30, 1998
Reynato S. Puno19931993December 20, 2005
Leonardo A. Quisumbing19981998-2009December 7, 2005
Antonio T. Carpio20012001-2019May 17, 2010
May 28, 2012August 25, 2012
May 11, 2018August 28, 2018
October 10, 2018November 28, 2018
October 17, 2019October 23, 2019
Estela M. Perlas-Bernabe20112011-2022March 27, 2022

Demographics

Longevity

OrderChief justice
BirthDeathAge
1
2
3Querube Makalintal
4Enrique Fernando
**5****Hilario Davide********Living******
**6****Artemio Panganiban********Living******
7
8
9Andres Narvasa
**10****Reynato Puno********Living******
11Roberto Concepcion
12José Yulo
13Felix Makasiar
14Ramon Aquino
**15****Teresita Leonardo-de Castro********Living******
**16****Lucas Bersamin********Living******
17Cayetano Arellano
18Marcelo Fernán
**19****Diosdado Peralta********Living******
20Victorino Mapa
21Manuel Araullo
22Claudio Teehankee, Sr.
23Manuel Moran
**24****Alexander Gesmundo********Living******
25Renato Corona
26Fred Ruiz Castro
27José Abad Santos

By age group

**Age group**Total%Chief justices:
Centenarians0
Nonagenarians3
Octogenarians8
Septugenarians9
Sexagenarian7
Quincagenarian1

By gender

**Gender**Total%Chief justices:
Male26
Female2

By appointing president

PresidentTotal%Chief justices:
Kilusang Bagong Lipunan}}"Ferdinand Marcos (KBL/Nacionalista)6
Nacionalista Party}}"
United Nationalist Democratic Organization}}"Corazon Aquino (UNIDO/Independent)4
Partido Demokratiko Pilipino-Lakas ng Bayan}}"Rodrigo Duterte (PDP–Laban)4
Lakas–CMD}}"Gloria Macapagal Arroyo (Lakas)3
Republican Party (United States)}}"William McKinley (Republican)1
Democratic Party (United States)}}"Woodrow Wilson (Democratic)1
Republican Party (United States)}}"Warren G. Harding (Republican)1
Republican Party (United States)}}"Calvin Coolidge (Republican)1
Nacionalista Party}}"Manuel L. Quezon (Nacionalista)1
Nacionalista Party}}"Sergio Osmeña (Nacionalista)1
Independent}}"Japanese Military Administration1
Liberal Party (Philippines)}}"Elpidio Quirino (Liberal)1
Nacionalista Party}}"Carlos P. Garcia (Nacionalista)1
Laban ng Makabayang Masang Pilipino}}"Joseph Estrada (LAMMP)1
Liberal Party (Philippines)}}"Benigno Aquino III (Liberal)1
28100%

By law school

Law schoolTotal%Chief justices:
University of the Philippines College of Law14
University of Santo Tomas Faculty of Civil Law7
Ateneo School of Law3
Escuela de Derecho1
Far Eastern University Institute of Law1
Northwestern University School of Law1
University of the East College of Law1
28

Notable chief justices

  • José Yulo is the only former speaker of the House of Representatives to be subsequently appointed as chief justice. Meanwhile, Fred Ruiz Castro previously served as Executive Secretary before his subsequent appointment as chief justice. Another, Querube Makalintal, would be elected as Speaker of the Interim Batasang Pambansa (parliament) after his retirement from the court. On the other hand, Marcelo Fernan would, after his resignation from the court, be elected to the Senate and later serve as president of the Senate. Other chief justices served in prominent positions in public service after their retirement include Manuel Moran (ambassador to Spain and the Vatican), Hilario Davide, Jr. (ambassador to the United Nations), and Lucas Bersamin (Executive Secretary). In addition, César Bengzon was elected as the first Filipino to sit as a judge on the International Court of Justice shortly after his retirement in 1966.
  • Roberto Concepcion was reputedly so disappointed with the court's ruling in Javellana v. Executive Secretary where the majority affirmed the validity of the 1973 Constitution despite recognizing the flaws in its ratification, that he retired two months prior to his reaching the mandatory retirement age of 70. Thirteen years later, after the ouster of Marcos, the 83-year-old Concepcion was appointed a member of the 1986 Constitutional Commission tasked with drafting a new constitution. Drawing from his experiences as chief justice in the early days of martial law, Concepcion introduced several new innovations designed to assure the independence of the Supreme Court, such as the Judicial and Bar Council and the express conferment on the court the power to review any acts of government.
  • The longest period one person served as chief justice was 18 years, 294 days in the case of Cayetano Arellano, who served from 1901 to 1920. Arellano was 73 years, 29 days old upon his resignation, the greatest age ever reached by an incumbent chief justice, and a record unlikely to be broken with the current mandatory retirement age of 70.
  • The shortest tenure of any chief justice was of Teresita Leonardo-de Castro, who served as chief justice for a mere 43 days upon reaching her mandatory retirement age of 70. The previous record was that of Pedro Yap, who served as chief justice for 73 days in 1988. Other chief justices who served for less than a year were Felix Makasiar (85 days), Ramon Aquino (78 days), and Artemio Panganiban (352 days). Of these chief justices, all but Aquino left office upon reaching the mandatory retirement age of 70; Aquino resigned in 1986 after the newly installed President Corazon Aquino asked for the courtesy resignations of all the members of the court.
  • The oldest person appointed as chief justice was Teresita Leonardo-de Castro, who was 69 years, 324 days old upon her appointment in 2018. Other persons appointed as chief justice in their 69th year were Pedro Yap (69 years, 292 days old); Felix Makasiar (69 years, 280 days old); Artemio Panganiban (69 years, 13 days old); and Lucas Bersamin (69 years, 41 days). The youngest person named as chief justice was Manuel Moran, who was 51 years, 256 days old upon his appointment.
  • Claudio Teehankee had to wait for nearly 18 years as associate justice before he was appointed as chief justice. He was twice bypassed by Ferdinand Marcos in favor a more junior associate justice before he was finally appointed chief justice by Corazon Aquino. Of the Filipino associate justices, Florentino Torres, J. B. L. Reyes, and Antonio Carpio served at least 18 years in the court without getting the appointment to become chief justice. In contrast, Pedro Yap had served as associate justice for only 2 years, 10 days before he was promoted as chief justice. Also notable is Maria Lourdes Sereno's 2 year and 12 day term as associate justice before her de facto term as chief justice.
  • The longest-lived chief justice was César Bengzon, who died in 1992 aged 96 years, 97 days old. Two other chief justices lived past 90: Ricardo Paras (93 years, 235 days) and Querube Makalintal (91 years, 322 days).
  • The youngest chief justice to die was José Abad Santos, who was executed by the Japanese army in 1942 at age 56 years, 77 days. The youngest chief justice to die from non-violent causes was Fred Ruiz Castro, who died in 1979 of a heart attack inflight to India, at age 64 years, 231 days. Abad Santos, Castro, and Manuel Araullo are the only chief justices to die while in office.
  • The first chief justice to be impeached is Renato Corona. On December 12, 2011, 188 of the 285 members of House of Representatives voted to transmit to the Senate the Articles of Impeachment filed against him. On May 29, 2012, the Senate, voting 20–3, convicted Corona under Article II pertaining to his failure to disclose to the public his statement of assets, liabilities, and net worth.
  • Maria Lourdes Sereno was the first female appointed to serve as chief justice, following the impeachment of Renato Corona and deliberations by the Judicial and Bar Council in 2012 (her successor Teresita Leonardo-de Castro is the de jure first female chief justice). If not for the quo warranto petition which was granted on May 11, 2018, that removed her from the post as well as voiding her appointment and declaring her tenure as a de facto term, she would have been the second chief justice to similarly undergo impeachment proceedings as her late predecessor, Corona. Her ouster was made final on June 19, 2018, by the denial with finality (meaning no further pleading would be entertained, as well as for the immediate entry for judgment) of her ad cautelam motion for reconsideration filed on May 31, 2018, pleading for the reversal of her ouster via quo warranto.

Timeline

ImageSize = width:800 height:auto barincrement:11 PlotArea = top:10 bottom:60 right:130 left:20 AlignBars = late

DateFormat = mm/dd/yyyy Period = from:01/01/1901 till:12/31/2026 TimeAxis = orientation:horizontal ScaleMajor = unit:year increment:10 start:1910

Colors = id:Vacant value:black id:None value:gray(0.3) id:abolished value:gray(0.6) id:ADMU value:brightblue legend:Ateneo_de_Manila id:Esc value:claret legend:Escuela_de_Derecho id:FEU value:green legend:FEU id:Northwestern value:purple legend:Northwestern id:UE value:red legend: UE id:UP value:rgb(0.45,0,0) legend:UP id:UST value:yelloworange legend:UST id:linemark value:gray(0.8) id:linemark2 value:gray(0.9)

Legend = columns:1 left:130 top:40 columnwidth:200

BarData = barset:PM

PlotData= width:5 align:left fontsize:S shift:(5,-4) anchor:till barset:PM from:06/11/1901 till:04/01/1920 text:"Cayetano Arellano" color:UST from:07/01/1920 till:10/31/1921 text:"Victorino Mapa" color:UST from:11/01/1921 till:07/26/1924 text:"Manuel Araullo" color:UST from:04/01/1925 till:12/24/1941 text:"Ramon Avanceña" color:UST from:12/24/1941 till:05/07/1942 text:"José Abad Santos" color:Northwestern from:02/05/1942 till:07/09/1945 text:"Jose Yulo" color:UP from:07/09/1945 till:03/20/1951 text:"Manuel Moran" color:Esc from:04/02/1951 till:02/16/1961 text:"Ricardo Paras" color:UP from:04/28/1961 till:05/29/1966 text:"Cesar Bengzon" color:UP from:06/17/1966 till:04/18/1973 text:"Roberto Concepcion" color:UST from:10/21/1973 till:12/22/1975 text:"Querebe Macalintal" color:UP from:01/05/1976 till:04/19/1979 text:"Fred Ruiz Castro" color:UP from:07/02/1979 till:07/24/1985 text:"Enrique Fernando" color:UP from:07/25/1985 till:11/19/1985 text:"Felix Makasiar" color:UP from:11/20/1985 till:03/06/1986 text:"Ramon Aquino" color:UP from:04/02/1986 till:04/18/1988 text:"Claudio Teehankee" color:ADMU from:04/18/1988 till:07/01/1988 text:"Pedro Yap" color:UP from:07/01/1988 till:12/06/1991 text:"Marcelo Fernan" color:UP from:12/08/1991 till:12/30/1998 text:"Andres Narvasa" color:UST from:12/30/1998 till:12/20/2005 text:"Hilario Davide" color:UP from:12/20/2005 till:12/07/2006 text:"Artemio Panganiban" color:FEU from:12/08/2006 till:05/17/2010 text:"Reynato Puno" color:UP from:05/17/2010 till:05/29/2012 text:"Renato Corona" color:ADMU from:08/25/2012 till:05/11/2018 text:"Maria Lourdes Sereno (de facto)" color:UP from:08/28/2018 till:10/10/2018 text:"Teresita Leonardo-de Castro" color:UP from:11/28/2018 till:10/18/2019 text:"Lucas Bersamin" color:UE from:10/23/2019 till:03/27/2021 text:"Diosdado Peralta" color:UST from:04/05/2021 till:04/05/2021 text:"Alexander Gesmundo" color:ADMU

References

References

  1. (May 29, 2012). "Senate votes 20-3 to convict Corona". [[Inquirer.net]].
  2. (May 11, 2018). "G.R. No. 237428. May 11, 2018". [[Supreme Court of the Philippines]].
  3. (June 19, 2018). "G.R. No. 237428. June 19, 2018". [[Supreme Court of the Philippines]].
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