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Court of Appeals of the Philippines
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Court of Appeals of the Philippines
please note:
- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
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{{Short description|Appellate court in the Philippines}}{{Multiple issues|{{Technical|date=April 2022}}{{More citations needed|date=June 2022}}}}{{Use mdy dates|date=May 2020}}{{Use Philippine English|date=December 2022}}- the content below is remote from Wikipedia
- it has been imported raw for GetWiki
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History
Organized on February 1, 1936, the Court of Appeals was initially composed of Justice Pedro Concepcion, as the first presiding judge, and ten appellate judges appointed by the president of the Philippines with the consent of the Commission on Appointments of the National Assembly. It had exclusive appellate jurisdiction of all cases not falling under the original and exclusive appellate jurisdiction of the seven-man Supreme Court. Its decisions in those cases were final, except when the Supreme Court upon petition for certiorari on questions of law required that the case be certified to it for review. It had also original jurisdiction to issue writs of mandamus, prohibition, injunction, certiorari, habeas corpus and all other auxiliary writs in aid of its appellate jurisdiction. The court then sat either en banc or in two divisions, one of six and another of five judges. The appellate judges had the same qualifications as those provided by the Constitution for Supreme Court justices.In March 1938, the appellate judges were named justices and their number increased from eleven to fifteen, with three divisions of five under Commonwealth Act No. 259. On December 24, 1941, the membership of the court was further increased to nineteen justices under Executive Order No. 395.(File:931United Nations Avenue Maria Orosa Padre Faura Streets 43.jpg|thumb|left|200px|Court of Appeals building in Manila)The court functioned during the Japanese occupation from 1941 to 1944. However, in March 1945, due to abnormal conditions at the time,{{Clarify|date=February 2022}} the court was abolished by President Sergio Osmeña through Executive Order No. 37. The end of World War II restored the democratic processes in the country. On October 4, 1946, Republic Act No. 52 was passed, recreating the Court of Appeals, with a presiding justice and fourteen associate justices. The court was composed of five divisions of three justices each.On August 23, 1956, the membership of the court was expanded to eighteen justices per Republic Act No. 1605. The number was hiked to twenty-four justices as decreed by Republic Act No. 5204 approved on June 15, 1968. Ten years later, the unabated swelling of the court's dockets called for a much bigger court of forty-five justices under Presidential Decree No. 1482 of June 10, 1978. Then came the judiciary reorganization on January 17, 1983, through Executive Order No. 864 of President Ferdinand Marcos. The court was renamed the Intermediate Appellate Court, and its membership was enlarged to fifty-one justices. However, only thirty-seven justices were appointed to this court.On July 28, 1986, President Corazon Aquino issued Executive Order No. 33, which restored the original name of the appellate court to the Court of Appeals and its presiding justice and fifty associate justices.On February 23, 1995, Republic Act No. 7902 was passed, which expanded the jurisdiction of the court effective March 18, 1995. On December 30, 1996, Republic Act No. 8246 created six more divisions in the court, thereby increasing its membership from fifty-one to sixty-nine justices. These additional divisionsâthree for the Visayas and three for Mindanaoâpaved the way for the appellate court's regionalization. The court in the Visayas sits in Cebu City, while Cagayan de Oro is home to the court for Mindanao.On August 18, 2007, the then-president of the Cebu City Chapter of the Integrated Bar of the Philippines, Briccio Joseph Boholst, opposed the abolition of the court in Cebu City, as he claimed that it would cause inconvenience for both litigants and lawyers. Supreme Court Associate Justice Ruben Reyes was tasked to investigate and submit his recommendations to the High Tribunal regarding the alleged massive graft and corruption of justices, especially in the issuance of temporary restraining orders.Manila Bulletin, IBP Cebu City opposes abolition of CA Cebu {{dead link|date=January 2017|bot=medic}}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}On February 1, 2018, the court celebrated its 82nd Anniversary.mb.com.ph, Court of Appeals 75th Anniversary {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110721054818weblink |date=July 21, 2011 }}Incumbent justices
{{hatnote|This list contains the current membership of the Court of Appeals as of {{currentdate}}.}}The Court of Appeals consists of a presiding justice and sixty-eight associate justices. Among the current members of the court, Fernanda Lampas-Peralta is the longest-serving associate justice, with a tenure of {{age in days nts|February 9, 2004}} days ({{ayd|February 9, 2004}}) as of {{FULLDATE}}; the most recent justice to enter the court are Selma Palacio Alaras and Wilhelmina Jorge-Wagan whose respective tenure began on October 11, 2022.{| class="wikitable sortable"Divisions
In view of the retirement of Executive Justice Oscar V. Badelles on April 20, 2024, and taking on to conideration9 the order of seniority under Rule 1 of the 2009 Internal Rules of the Court of Appeals, The Statements of Preference and in the exigency of service the new composition of the Divisions of the Court of Appeals-Mindanao Station effective {{dts|2024|04|22}} shall be as follows, this corresponds with the Office Order 209-24-MPC.{| class="wikitable"- R. Santos
- L. Bordios
- G. Legaspi
- R. Quiroz
- R. Martin
- A. Ruiz II
- G. Fiel-Macaraig
- J. Ong
- G. Robeniol
- M. Ong
- P. Atal-Paño
- M. De Leon
- R. Roxas
- E. Ramos Jr.
- L. Acosta
- J. Caringal
- T. Payoyo-Villordon
- R. Pascual
- W. Ong
- E. San Gaspar-Gito
- E. Aliño-Geluz
- J. Dela Rosa
- F. Manauag
- M. Hernandez-Azura
- A. Ampuan
- S. Palacio-Alaras
- A. Quimpo-Sale
- W. Jorge-Wagan
- A. Quimpo-Sale
- W. Jorge-Wagan
- B. Pascua
- R. Javier
- R. Lauigan
- E. Bathan (acting)
- N. Palmones
- R. Tolentino
- J. Fajardo Jr
- R. Largo
- M. Dadole-Ignacio
- M. Gengos-Ignalaga
- A. Amanodin-Umpa
- J. Jaugan-Lo
- A. Mas
- L. Chua-Cheng
- J. Lee
- L. Chua-Cheng (acting)
Demographics
By appointing president {| class"wikitable"
- L. Acosta
- E. Aliño-Geluz
- A. Amanodin-Umpa
- A. Ampuan
- E. Arellano-Morales
- E. Bathan
- L. Biton
- L. Bordios
- C. Calpatura
- J. Caringal
- B. Corpin Jr.
- M. Dadole-Ygnacio
- J. Dela Rosa
- M. De Leon
- J. Fajardo Jr.
- M. Hernandez-Azura
- J. Jaugan-Lo
- R. Largo
- R. Lauigan
- J. Lee
- F. Mamauag Jr.
- A. Mas
- R. Moderno
- J. Ong
- M. Ong
- W. Ong
- B. Pascua
- R. Pascual
- T. Payoyo-Villordon
- A. Quimpo-Sale
- R. Quiroz
- E. Ramos Jr.
- N. Rivas-Palmones
- A. Ruiz II
- E. San Gaspar-Gito
- R. Tolentino
- P. Abella-Maximo
- P. Atal-Paño
- M. Azcarraga-Jacob
- O. Badelles
- P. Corales
- G. Fiel-Macaraig
- Z. Galapate-Laguelles
- M. Lagura-Yap
- G. Legaspi
- R. Martin
- V. Paredes
- P. Perez
- G. Robeniol
- R. Roxas
- R. Santos
- M. Sempio Diy
- N. Antonio-Valenzuela
- R. Bato, Jr.
- A. Bruselas, Jr.
- R. Cruz
- R. Garcia
- M. Garcia-Fernandez
- M. Gonzales-Sison
- F. Lampas-Peralta{{small|Senior Associate Justice}}
- E. Peralta, Jr.
- M. Punzalan-Castillo{{small|Presiding Justice}}
- E. Sorongon
- W. Jorge-Wagan
- S. Palacio-Alaras
- R. Javier
- M. Gengos-Ipalanga
- L. Chua-Cheng
By Gender {| class"wikitable sortable" style"width:auto; font-size:100%;"
- L. Acosta
- A. Ampuan
- O. Badelles
- E. Bathan
- R. Bato, Jr.
- A. Bruselas, Jr.
- C. Calpatura
- J. Caringal
- P. Corales
- B. Corpin Jr.
- R. Cruz
- J. Dela Rosa
- M. De Leon
- J. Fajardo Jr.
- R. Garcia
- R. Guevarra
- R. Largo
- R. Lauigan
- J. Lee
- G. Legaspi
- F. Mamauag, Jr.
- R. Martin
- R. Mordeno
- M. Ong
- W. Ong
- B. Pascua
- R. Pascual
- E. Peralta, Jr.
- P. Perez
- R. Quroz
- E. Ramos Jr.
- R. Robeniol
- R. Roxas
- A. Ruiz II
- R. Santos
- E. Sorongon
- R. Tolentino
- P. Abella-Maxino
- M. Antonio-Valenzuela
- E. Aliño-Geluz
- A. Amanodin-Umpa
- E. Arellano-Morales
- P. Atal-Paño
- M. Azcarraga-Jacob
- L. Biton
- L. Bordios
- L. Chua-Cheng
- M. Dadole-Ygnacio
- G. Fiel-Macaraig
- Z. Galapate-Laguelles
- M. Garcia-Fernandez
- M. Gengos-Ipalanga
- M. Gonzales-Sison
- M. Hernandez-Azura
- J. Jaugan-Lo
- W. Jorge-Wagan
- M. Lagura-Yap
- F. Lampas-Peralta{{small|Senior Associate Justice}}
- A. Train-Mas
- J. Chua-Ong
- S. Palacio-Alaras
- V. Paredes
- T. Payoyo-Villordon
- M. Punzalan-Castillo{{small|Presiding Justice}}
- A. Quimpo-Sale
- N. Rivas-Palmones
- E. San Gaspar-Gito
- M. Sempio-Diy
By tenure{| class"wikitable sortable"
- O. Bdelles
- R. Garcia
- A. Aampuan
- V. Paredes
- M. Punzalan-Castillo
- E. Sorongon
- J. Fajardo
- R. Javier
Former justices{| class"wikitable sortable"
Court of Appeals presiding justices of the Philippines{| class"wikitable sortable"
See also
- Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines
- Court of Tax Appeals of the Philippines
- Sandiganbayan
- Philippines
- Political history of the Philippines
- Constitution of the Philippines
References
{{reflist}}- Sources
External links
- weblink" title="web.archive.org/web/20020308161529weblink">Philippines: Gov.Ph: About the Philippines â Justice category
- The Philippines Court of Appeals â Official website
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- "Court of Appeals of the Philippines" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
- time: 9:23am EDT - Sat, May 18 2024
- "Court of Appeals of the Philippines" does not exist on GetWiki (yet)
- time: 9:23am EDT - Sat, May 18 2024
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