The Philippine Star

A believer in the majesty of the law

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Some are late bloomers; others are fast-rising meteors. Those who bloom late, however, rise faster at a defining moment in their life. The meteors? Well, that’s why we have the phrase “meteoric rise,” because as soon as they scale the heights, they dive as quickly from the firmament and hit the ground of obscurity.

At first blush, we can say that Solicitor General Francis H. Jardeleza is a late bloomer. But that is not quite right. He is the kind of guy to whom you pose this question: “Where have you been hiding all these years?”

Francis has been in the limelight only since mid-2011 when he was appointed deputy ombudsman for Luzon. Then, after only seven months, he became the solicitor general in February 2012. Then, the public took notice.

Recently, he was nominated for the lofty post of Chief Justice of the Supreme Court by the most number of current and past deans of the College of Law of the University of the Philippine­s. Then, the public took notice again — nay, a closer scrutiny this time — of the man who could be the highest official of the third branch of the Philippine government.

Can we call this Francis’ defining moment? Defining moments come when a certain challenge confronts an individual at one chapter of his life, and that individual does not shrink from that encounter, crosses the line — and thus keeps his appointmen­t with destiny.

Is the Supreme Court’s highest post a serendipit­ous moment for Francis, or is it a logical denouement, a fitting conclusion to a sure and steady career rise in the profession of law — marked by an excellent academic record, a sterling achievemen­t in the Bar, and a rich and impressive career track in the most respected law firms and in one of the country’s biggest conglomera­tes?

It must be logic, then. He finished his bachelor of laws from the University of the Philippine­s in Diliman, and emerged salutatori­an and cum laude. Then he placed third in the Bar examinatio­ns in 1974 with a general average of 88.35 percent. That’s nothing to sneeze at; some senators just got past 75 percent to 80 percent and are thankful they passed that last hurdle to become a barrister!

He went on to finish his master of laws at Harvard Law School in Cambridge, Massachuse­tts, and submitted a thesis titled “Toward a Recognitio­n of the Special Function Model of Philippine Judicial Review.”

Bar topnotcher­s like him are lured to the best law offices of the land. So, Francis, the young lawyer joined ACCRALAW, short for Angara Abello Concepcion Regala and Cruz. He joined the law firm in 1975 and was made partner in only six years, in 1981. He was the only junior partner who became a member of both the litigation and corporate department­s.

Soon, it was time to be on his own when he founded Jardeleza Sobrevinas Diaz Hayudini and Bodegon, where he began practicing labor law. Then, he went solo and establishe­d the Jardeleza Law Offices. In 1992, he joined Roco Bunag Kapunan Migallos and Jardeleza as partner. Again, he headed the litigation and labor law practice groups. That was the law firm of former Senator Raul Roco and former Commission­er of the Bureau of Internal Revenue Jojo Bunag.

Francis bade goodbye to independen­t law practice when he joined San Miguel Corporatio­n as general counsel, supervisin­g a battery of lawyers and managing the legal needs of eight SMC publicly-listed companies here and abroad.

His mastery of the law was also put to good use in his pro bono work. One case that briefly placed him in the headlines was his defense of a journalist in 1994, when he successful­ly secured a Supreme Court injunction to lift a holddepart­ure order on Maritess DanguilanV­itug. His legal victory enabled Maritess to pursue a master’s degree in a United Kingdom-based university. He also defended a senator before the High Tribunal, also in 1994, on presidenti­al veto powers over appropriat­ion bills.

Francis, 62, is a mild- mannered man and, with his salt- and- pepper crown of hair — more salt actually — he strikes you as one fit for the academe. Actually, Francis is a noted professor in constituti­onal law, civil procedure and administra­tive law at the UP College of Law.

He has given up teaching while serving the government, and it looks like he would serve our people longer.

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