Monday, March 12, 2012

How to Pass the Bar by Atty. Joan de Venecia


The entire phbar community would like to express its gratitude to Joan for sharing her time and effort in giving a lecture during the 2nd Gathering of the phbar community. Joan placed No. 1 during the 2005 Bar Exams. Here’s a summary of the lecture:
First: Make an honest assessment of the subjects you are good at, and the subjects you feel you have an inadequate foundation on. Adjust the number of days devoted to each subject accordingly.
Second: Compact reviewers might not necessarily help, especially for those subjects in which you are weak at, and the morning subjects.
Third: Choose the review classes you want to attend. (I enrolled at the law center but didn’t attend most of the lectures).
Fourth: Avoid unnecessary comparison to the pace of others. We all have our own rhythm according to the laws of inertia.
Fifth: Perfect your handwriting and grammar.
Sixth: Write things down. I had so many post-its in my codals, especially for Civ and Rem. It was like a mini-book where all the important doctrines were jotted down.
Seventh: No need to memorize laws. If you must memorize, memorize only the key words of important doctrines. Please, don’t memorize case titles and SCRA citations. Don’t clog your brain with useless clutter. Understanding is key.
Eighth: For the bar, short answers don’t necessarily work. The answer must be firm yet exhaustive. I did not cite cases nor specific provisions, but just went straight to the answers.
Ninth: Updates on latest jurisprudence are indispensable. Request that the updates come with short facts, because bar questions are often facts-based.
Tenth: Always make time for gimmicks and relaxation to keep you sane during the review.
The full presentation is attached at the bottom of the post at phBar.org
More at: Atty@Work.com

Bar Exam Statistics


by Ralph A. Sarmiento

Philippine Bar Exams Trivia

1st Bar Exams:
  • 1901 with 13 examinees.
Highest Grade of All Time:
  • 96.7 in the 1954 Bar Exams by Florenz Regalado of San Beda College.
2nd Highest Grade of All Time:
  • 95.95 in the 1954 Bar Exams by Renato L. de la Fuente of San Beda College.
3rd Highest Grade of All Time:
  • 95.85 in the 1949 Bar Exams by Anacleto C. Mañgaser of the Philippine Law School (PLS).
4th Highest Grade of All Time:
  • 95.5 held by Manuel G. Montecillo of Far Eastern University (FEU) in the 1948 Bar Exams & Antonio R. Quintos of Ateneo de Manila University in the 1954 Bar Exams.
5th Highest Grade of All Time:
  • 95.3 in the 1944 Bar Exams held by Jovito R. Salonga of the University of the Philippines & Jose W. Diokno, who did not finish his law studies.
Bar Topnotchers (1st Placers) to become Presidents of the Philippines:
  • Manuel A. Roxas (University of the Philippines), 1913 Bar Exams with a grade of 92.
  • Diosdado P. Macapagal of the University of Sto. Tomas, 1936 with a grade of 89.85
  • Ferdinand E. Marcos of the University of the Philippines, 1939 with a grade of 92.35
Other Bar Topnotchers to become Presidents of the Philippines:
  • Sergio S. Osmeña (University of Santo Tomas), 2nd Place - 1903 Bar Exams
  • Manuel L. Quezon, (University of Santo Tomas), 4th Place - 1903 Bar Exams
  • Elpidio R. Quirino (University of the Philippines), 2nd Place - 1915 Bar
  • Carlos P. Garcia (Philippine Law School), 6th Place - 1923 Bar
Facts about the Jose W. Diokno Legend:
  • Diokno was born on February 26, 1922.
  • Diokno earned his Bachelor's Degree in Commerce Summa Cum Laude in 1940 at De La Salle College (now De La Salle University).
  • He took the CPA Board Exam in 1940 while he was on his second year in law school and placed No. 1.
  • In 1944, he petitioned the Supreme Court to take the Bar Exams without a law degree.
  • The Supreme Court granted his petition and he took the Bar Exams in 1944 and tied with the Class Valedictorian of U.P. for the 1st Place with a grade of 95.3.
  • Diokno is perhaps the only one who placed 1st in both the CPA board exams & the Bar Exams.
Facts about the Claro M. Recto Legend:
  • Recto was born on February 8, 1890 at Tiaong, Tayabas (now Quezon Province).
  • He graduated with a Bachelor of Arts degree from Ateneo de Manila where his grades were all perfect (1.0), except only for one 1.3. He was conferred by Ateneo with Maxima Cum Laude honors (highest honors conferred by Ateneo).
  • He took the Bar Exams in 1913 while he was still in his senior year in law school at the University of Santo Tomas - and FLUNKED.
  • He finished his law degree in 1913, Class Valedictorian, University of Santo Tomas.
  • The 1913 Bar Exams marked the first time that the test questions in Civil Procedure were in English, a new language in which Recto could not express himself very well.
  • Justice Fischer, the examiner in Civil Procedure, also noted that Recto's handwriting was very difficult to understand.
  • Justice Fischer gave Recto a grade of 41 which automatically disqualified him.
  • Recto took the Bar Exams again in 1914 and passed. However, I have not yet seen any official record in my research whether he placed in the Bar Exams of 1914. But it appears that Recto could not have been No. 1 in the 1914 Bar because the official records of the Supreme Court list Manuel Goyena as the no. 1 of that year.
  • After passing, Recto wrote two books on Civil Procedure.
  • When Recto studied in Ateneo and UST, the medium of instruction was Spanish. Manuel Roxas, on the other hand, UP's Class Valedictorian who topped the 1913 Bar Exams was a product of the US public school system and had spent a year in Hong Kong to better equip himself with American English before taking the Bar.
Facts about the Ferdinand E. Marcos Legend:
  • Marcos was born on September 11, 1917.
  • In college, Marcos' principal interest was the .22-caliber college pistol team.
  • On September 20, 1935, Julio Nalundasan was at home celebrating that day's Congressional election victory over Mariano Marcos when he was shot and killed with a .22-caliber bullet fired by the 18-year-old Marcos.
  • On December 13, 1938, Marcos was arrested for Nalundasan's murder but he successfully petitioned for release on bail, allowing him to complete his law degree from the University of the Philippines.
  • In 1939, Marcos was found guilty and sentence to a minimum of 10 years in prison.
  • Jailed, Marcos spent six months writing his own 830-page appeal while reviewing for the Bar Exams at the same time.
  • Marcos posted bail to take the 1939 Bar Exams and passed with scores so high he was suspected of cheating.
  • Legends say that his unofficial Grade was 98.5 and so he was summoned to appear before the Supreme Court en banc for an oral re-examination, after which his official grade was released as 92.35.
  • Marcos is the only Bar candidate who was called by the Supreme Court for an oral re-examinations.
  • In 1940, Marcos orally argued his own case in front of Supreme Court Justice Jose P. Laurel and on October 22, 1940, he was acquitted of the charge of murder and forthwith liberated from imprisonment.
  • The next day, he returned to the Supreme Court where he was administered his oath as a lawyer.
1st woman to Top the Bar (1st Place):
  • Tecla San Andres-Ziga of the University of the Philippines placed No. 1 in the Bar Exams of 1930 with a grade of 89.4. She served as Senator of the Republic of the Philippines from 1963 to 1969.
2nd woman to Top the Bar (1st Place):
  • Cecilia Munoz-Palma (University of the Philippines) became the 2nd woman to place No. 1 in the Bar Exams in 1937 with a grade of 92.6. She later became the 1st woman Supreme Court Justice in 1973 and the 1st female President of a constitutional commission in 1986.
Bar Flunker who Placed 1st on his Second Take:
  • Francisco Noel R. Fernandez (University of the Philippines) failed in the 1993 Bar Exams but placed No. 1 in the 1994 Bar Exams with a grade of 89.2.
1st Aeta Lawyer
  • Wayda Cosme (Harvardian Colleges) passed the Bar Exam in 2001 to become the 1st Aeta Lawyer.

    For more details visit: AttyRalph.Com