History
The Board of Regents of the University of the Philippines
formally approved the establishment of the College of Law on
January 12, 1911.
The College, however, traces its beginnings to the law
courses opened in 1910 by the Educational Department Committee
of the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA), through the
efforts of George A. Malcolm who was later become the first
permanent dean of the College.
In June 1911, the College was formally opened with first and
second year classes. There was a total of 125 students
comprising freshmen and sophomores, the latter numbering fifty
when they started in the YMCA school. Of this first law class,
one became a President of the Philippines, one, a Chief Justice
of the Supreme Court, while others became legislators and legal
luminaries.
The faculty was at first predominantly American, but the
faculty profile changed when the American teachers were
supplanted by Filipinos. Sherman Moreland, Justice of the
Supreme Court, was acting Dean From July 1 to October 11, 1911;
George Malcolm was Secretary and subsequently Dean until 1917
when he was elevated to the Supreme Court. Jorge C. Bocobo, a
member of the 1911 faculty, succeeded Dean Malcolm and became
the first Filipino dean of the College. He held the position
until 1934.
In the early years of the College, classes were held after
five in the afternoon because most of the student held some
employment during the day. The College offered a three-year
course for students devoting full time to their studies in thee
College and a four-year course for students who were employed.
Commencing with the school year 1917-1918, the four-year course
was prescribed for all students.
By its twenty-fifth year, the enrollment in the College of
Law totaled 547 students; the faculty was composed of eight
full-time and nine part-time members. A graduate program leading
to the Master of Laws degree had been established; two earned
the degree in 1918. Classes were then held in Palma Hall on the
Padre Faura campus in Manila and the greater number of students
attended day classes. Evening classes were maintained for
students who were employed during the day.
Dean Jose A. Espiritu was appointed in 1934 to succeed Dean
Bocobo. Upon the outbreak of the war in 1941, the College was
closed and classes did not resume until August of 1945. On Dean
Espiritu, who returned to the deanship after a brief stint in
the Supreme Court, fell the difficult task of rehabilitating the
College. The University buildings were in ruins and law classes
were first held in the Cancer Institute at Padre Faura, later on
at the third floor of the Engineering building. The library of
the College, which had the largest law collection in the
Philippines before the war, was totally destroyed. With the help
of the Association of American Law Schools and different
foundations in the United States, law alumni and friends, the
library gradually rebuilt.
In December 1948, with the transfer of the main campus of the
University of the Philippines to Diliman, Quezon City, the
College was assigned first an army hut, and later, a
three-storey building named Malcolm Hall after his founder and
first permanent dean.
Dean Espiritu retired in 1953 and was succeeded by Dean
Vicente G. Sinco. Dean Sinco was appointed President of the
University in 1958 and Judge Vicente Abad Santos held the
deanship until 1969. Prof. Perfecto V. Fernandez was appointed
Officer-In-Charge of the College about a year until Prof. Irene
R. Cortes, was appointed dean in 1970. Thus, she became the
first woman to hold the position. In April 1978, Prof. Froilan
M. Bacungan, then the Director of the U.P. Law Center, succeeded
to the deanship. In October 1983, Prof. Bartolome S. Carale was
appointed Dean of the College and served until April 1989. The
College of Law and the Law Complex subsequently underwent a
process of reorganization, and a new dean was not appointed
until after its completion. Prof. Pacifico A. Agabin was
appointed dean in October 1989. Prof. Agabin was succeeded by
Prof. Merlin Magallona, who in turn was succeeded by Dr. Raul
Pangalangan and the present Dean Prof. Salvador T. Carlota.
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Purpose
The objectives of the College (including the Law
Center) have been restated thus:
To discover and transmit knowledge of the law so as to
achieve distributive justice for all; To train students
for the practice of law, instilling in them the ethical
responsibilities of the legal profession and the social
responsibility to work for the attainment of a just and
humane society; To contribute to the improvement of the
legal system and the quality and administration of the
system of justice in our society for the full protection
of human rights;
To train lawyers for leadership that is innovative and
responsive to the needs and aspirations of the Filipino
people;
To develop a new level of legal education with a view
to enhancing knowledge of the law on the part of
citizenry, and as part of general education.
The purpose is to produce lawyers who are not only
superior legal craftsmen but also socially conscious leaders
who would promote the public interest above that of
individual clients and pressure groups. This can be achieved
only by viewing the law as part of the social process and by
studying it in relation to related social services and
disciplines.
 THE BUSINESS OF A LAW SCHOOL IS NOT SUFFICIENTLY
DESCRIBED WHEN YOU MERELY SAY THAT IT IS TO TEACH LAW OR TO
MAKE LAWYERS IT IS TO TEACH LAW IN THE GRAND MANNER, AND
TO
MAKE GREAT LAWYERS.
-HOLMES
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