CUI vs. CUI Case Digest
CUI vs. CUI Case Digest
CUI vs. CUI Case Digest
Ma. Cui, on the other hand, is a member of the Bar and although
disbarred by this Court, he was reinstated by resolution
promulgated on 10 February1960, about two weeks before he
assumed the position of administrator of the Hospiciode Barili.
- C o u r t
a quo
- decided in favor of the plaintif, said that the phrase
"titulo de abogado,"taken alone, means that of a full-fledged
lawyer, but that has used in the deed of donation and considering
the function or purpose of the administrator, it should not be
given astrict interpretation but a liberal one," and therefore
means a law degree or diploma of Bachelor of Laws. This ruling is
assailed as erroneous both by the defendant and by the
intervenor.
ISSUE:
WON the plaintif is not entitled, as against the
defendant, to the office of administrator.
(YES)
RATIO:
Whether taken alone or in context the term "titulo de
abogado" means not mere possession of the academic degree of
Bachelor of Laws but membership in the Bar after due admission
thereto, qualifying one for the practice of law. A Bachelor's degree
alone, conferred by a law school upon completion of certain
academic requirements, does not entitle its holder to exercise the
legal profession. The English equivalent of "abogado" is lawyer or
attorney-at-law. This term has a fixed and general signification,
and has reference to that class of persons who are by license
officers of the courts, empowered to appear, prosecute and
defend, and upon whom peculiar duties, responsibilities and
liabilities are devolved by law as a consequence. In this
jurisdiction admission to the Bar and to the practice of law is
under the authority of the Supreme Court. According to Rule 138
such admission requires passing the Bar examinations, taking the
lawyer's oath and receiving a certificate from the Clerk of Court,
this certificate being his license to practice the profession. The
academic degree of Bachelor of Laws in itself has little to do with
admission to the Bar, except as evidence of compliance with the
requirements that an applicant to the examinations has
"successfully completed all the prescribed courses, in a law school
or university, officially approved by the Secretary of Education."
For this purpose, however, possession of the degree itself is not
indispensable: completion of the prescribed courses may be
shown in some other way. Indeed there are instances, particularly
under the former Code of Civil Procedure, where persons who had
not gone through any formal legal education in college were