Philippine Bar Topnotchers of All Time | Legal History
Passing the BAR exam itself is already feat, but how about topping it?
Bar topnotchers are bar examinees who garnered the highest bar exam grades in a particular year. Every year, the Supreme Court releases the bar top ten
 list. 
The list contains the names of bar examinees who obtained the ten highest grades. It is possible for more than ten examinees to place in the top ten because numerical ties in the computation of grades usually occur.
Top School Performers
- University of the Philippines College of Law - forty-six (46) bar topnotchers
- Ateneo de Manila Law School - twenty-one (21) bar topnotchers
- San Beda College of Law - seven (7) bar topnotchers
- Philippine Law School - five (5) bar topnotchers
- Far Eastern University Institute of Law - four (4) bar topnotchers
- University of Manila College of Law - four (4) bar topnotchers
- University of Santo Tomas Faculty of Civil Law - three (3) bar topnotchers
- University of the Cordilleras (formerly Baguio Colleges Foundation) College of Law - two (2) bar topnotchers
- Manila Law College Foundation (formerly Escuela de Derecho de Manila) - one (1) bar topnotcher
- Manuel L. Quezon University College of Law - one (1) bar topnotcher
- Holy Name University (formerly Divine Word College of Tagbilaran) - one (1) bar topnotcher
- University of the East College of Law - one (1) bar topnotcher
- San Sebastian College - Recoletos - one (1) bar topnotcher
Two Lions of Bar Exams
Two bar examinees topped the bar exams without officially graduating from any Philippine law school:
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| Jose W. Diokno | 
- Jose W. Diokno - former Senator of the Philippines; 1st placer, 1945 bar exams. Mr. Diokno, who tied for Number One with Mr. Jovito Salonga in the 1945 Bar Exams, would have graduated from the University of Santo Tomas had not World War II supervened. Mr. Diokno's success in the bar exams is further underscored by the fact that he was also under-age and that he also placed number 1 in the 1940 CPA Board exams which he took while in law school, after graduating summa cum laude from then De La Salle College at the age of 17. This double number 1 feat may never be paralleled. The closest may have been Cesar L. Villanueva (from the Ateneo Law School) who placed second in the 1981 Bar Exams and sixth place in the 1982 CPA Board Exams.
- Carolina C. Griño-Aquino - former Associate Justice of the Supreme Court; 1st placer, 1950 bar exams. Ms. Aquino (who later became the wife of Mr. Ramon Aquino, 6th placer in 1939 Bar Exams) was a special student of the UP College of Law, where she finished her last two years of law school having taken her first two years of law school at the Colegio de San Agustin in Iloilo. Ms. Aquino was advised to take her last two years of law school in UP by Colegio de San Agustin Law Dean Felipe Ysmael. Coincidentally, Mr. Ysmael (a UP Law graduate himself) placed number 1 in the 1917 Bar Exams. Since Ms. Aquino only took her last two years of law at UP, she can't be certified as an official UP law graduate. Both spouses Aquino (in addition to being topnotchers) also served as Justices of the Supreme Court.
In the past, non-law school graduates were allowed to take the bar. 
However, the Revised Rules of Court and Supreme Court Circulars allow 
Filipino graduates of Philippine law schools (and subject to certain 
conditions, Filipino graduates of foreign law schools) to take the bar, 
necessarily excluding non-law graduates and foreigners who have law 
degrees from taking part in the exercise.
Topnotchers from the Big Leagues
While not a guarantee for topping the bar, academic excellence in law
 school is a good indicator of an examinee's fortune in the bar exams. 
Ateneo Law School's only summa cum laude graduate, Claudio Teehankee, 
placed number one in the 1940 Bar Exams. 
It is worth noting that Teehankee's son, Manuel Antonio, followed in 
his footsteps by graduating at the top of his Ateneo Law School class 
(albeit, not as summa cum laude) and placing first in the 1983 bar 
exams. Claudio's nephew, Enrique (a cum laude graduate from the UP 
College of Law), also placed number one in the 1976 bar exams. Claudio 
eventually became Supreme Court Chief Justice, Manuel was formerly 
Department of Justice Undersecretary and Ambassador and Permanent 
Representative to the World Trade Organization in Geneva, Switzerland 
while Enrique is a successful private practitioner.
This father-son-nephew feat has yet to (and, perhaps, may never) be 
equalled in the annals of Philippine Bar. For siblings, the closest is 
when Manuel B. Zamora, Jr. placed third in the 1961 Bar Exams and 
younger brother Ronaldo placed first in the 1969 Bar Exams.
The UST Faculty of Civil Law's sole summa cum laude graduate, Roberto B. Concepcion, placed first in the 1924 Bar Exams.He later served as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court.
The San Beda College of Law's sole magna cum laude graduate, Florenz Regalado,ranked 1st in the 1954 Bar exams with a mark of 96.70%. The record is 
the highest average in the Philippine Bar Examinations, to date. 
Regalado later served as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court.
The UP College of Law
 (which has yet to produce a summa cum laude graduate) had five of its 
seventeen magna cum laude graduates (the College of Law first conferred 
the honor to Rafael Dinglasan in 1925 and, to date, last conferred the 
same honor to Dionne Marie Sanchez in 2007) place number one in their 
respective bar exams: Rafael Dinglasan in 1925, Lorenzo Sumulong in 
1929, Deogracias Eufemio in 1962, Roberto San Jose in 1966 and Ronaldo 
Zamora in 1969. Dinglasan became a Judge of the Court of First Instance of Manila, 
Sumulong became Senator of the Republic and a renowned statesman, 
Eufemio and San Jose established their respective successful private law
 practices while Zamora became Executive Secretary to then President 
Joseph Estrada and is currently the Minority Leader in the House of 
Representatives.
Highest and lowest topnotcher grades
In the Philippine Bar's recorded history, the highest grade first 
recorded was the 92% garnered in 1913 by Manuel A. Roxas of the UP 
College of Law. The following year, 1914, Atty. Roxas' feat was bested 
by the 93% obtained by first placer Manuel C. Goyena (also from the UP 
College of Law). Atty. Goyena's top mark was tied by 1916-first placer 
Paulino Gullas (future Congressman from Cebu), another alumnus of the UP
 College of Law.
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| Jovito Salonga. Together with Atty. Diokno (above), they topped the 1944 Bar Exams. Both are considered legends in legal world. | 
Another standard was created in 1940, when Claudio Teehankee (future 
Supreme Court Chief Justice), from the Ateneo Law School, got a grade of
 94.35% when he topped the examinations. This record was obliterated 
four years later in 1944 when Jovito Salonga and Jose W. Diokno
 tied with the highest score of 95.3%. This was the first time that 
first place ended in a tie. When they took the 1944 Bar Exams, Atty. 
Salonga was an undergraduate at the UP College of Law while Atty. Diokno
 (future Senator) was an undergraduate of the University of Santo Tomas 
Faculty of Civil Law. After passing the bar, Atty. Salonga (future 
Senate President) went back to UP to complete his bacholer's degree in 
law, earning it in 1946. The only other instance of a tie at first place
 of the bar exams was when Edwin Enrile (salutatorian of his Ateneo Law 
School class) and Florin Hilbay (an honor student of the UP College of 
Law) both garnered the same score in 1999. Atty. Enrile served as Deputy
 Executive Secretary to President Gloria Arroyo and as a Professorial 
Lecturer at the Ateneo Law School while Atty. Hilbay is a Professor of 
Law at the UP College of Law.
After another four years, the "bar" was raised a few notches when 
Manuel G. Montecillo of the Far Eastern University Institute of Law got a
 grade of 95.50% when he bested all the bar examinees of 1948. The 
following year, another record was set when Anacleto C. Mañgaser, an 
alumnus of the Philippine Law School, got a grade of 95.85% when he 
topped the 1949 bar exams.
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| Florenz Regalado, highest bar topnotcher | 
But the diamond standard (the highest general average ever obtained 
among all bar topnotchers in recorded history) was set in 1954 when Florenz D. Regalado (future Supreme Court Associate Justice) of the San Beda College of Law
 scored 96.7% when he topped the 1954 Philippine Bar Examinations. To 
date, Atty. Regalado's feat remains unsurpassed and may never be 
equalled (much less topped)
The lowest grade was obtained by Ateneo Law School's
 Mercedita L. Ona, 83.55%, 2008, which erased the prior record of 
84.10%, obtained by Adolfo Brillantes of Escuela de Derecho de Manila 
(now Manila Law College Foundation) in 1920.
 Atty. Ona was the just the latest of women first placers. In 1930, 
Tecla San Andres (an alumna of the UP College of Law and future Senator)
 broke the proverbial "glass ceiling" when she became the first woman to
 top the bar with a grade of 89.4%. Ameurfina A. Melencio (also an 
alumna of the UP College of Law and who later became a Justice of the 
Supreme Court) has the highest grade of all female bar topnotchers in 
recorded history, when she obtained a 93.85% rating in 1947.
Source: wikipedia.org 
 
There are really the best lawyers in the Philippines. Hoping to become one someday. :)
ReplyDeleteAtty. Ferdinand E. Marcos still holds the highest score ever in the history of Philippine Bar. His score was so high, a near-perfect one, a remarkable 98.8 percent. Had it not because of some jealous individuals from competing law schools who never really understood how brilliant Marcos is, his score could still have been the highest in history. He was also the only person in Philippine history to take an oral bar exam, after the Supreme Court stepped in to end the suspicion. For me, Marcos is still and will always be the best lawyer in Philippine history. So bad many people wanted him down.
ReplyDeleteYes, Marcos is brilliant. But he is also crooked and the most corrupt in the history of the Philippines.
DeleteThis comment has been removed by a blog administrator.
DeleteGet your facts straight. He's not the highest record holder for the grade in the bar exam. It's in fact the late Justice Florenz D. Regalado. He got 96.7% and is a grade that remained uncontested even now. Marcos Sr. only had 92.35% rate. Even the said poster claiming his record was doctored. You got fooled so easily lol
DeleteThat's what your professors taught you in school. The history written in the books are invented by the yellow tae who are the true corrupt and villains in our country. All good informations about Pres. Ferdinand marcos was controlled or rather changed by people like you.so fucking shut your mouth boy..you don't know history.
ReplyDeleteshut up Big Mom DDS
ReplyDelete