- Irene Cortes
Infobox Philippine Supreme Court Associate Justice|small
name=Irene R. Cortes
order=
term start=February 1 ,1987
term end=October 20 ,1990
predecessor=Jose Feria
successor=Hilario G. Davide, Jr.
appointer=Corazon Aquino
date of birth= birth date|1921|10|20|mf=y
place of birth=Legazpi City
date of death= death date and age|1996|10|28|1921|10|20|mf=y
place of death=Manila
spouse= "none"Irene R. Cortes (
October 20 ,1921 —October 28 ,1996 ) was an Associate Justice of theSupreme Court of the Philippines and a respected law academician. She was also the first female dean of theUniversity of the Philippines College of Law .Professor and Dean
Cortes was born in
Legazpi City , where she completed her intermediate studies. She studied law in theUniversity of the Philippines College of Law , where she obtained herlaw degree in 1948. She then pursued graduate studies in theUniversity of Michigan , obtaining from that university her masteral and doctoral degrees in law. Upon her return to thePhilippines , Cortes joined the faculty of the U.P. College of Law, with which she would be associated for the rest of her life. She established herself as an expert inadministrative law , among other fields.In 1970, following the appointment of Dean
Vicente Abad Santos as Secretary of Justice, Cortes was named as Dean of the U.P. College of Law, the first woman named to that position. She would serve as Dean until 1978. During the 1970s, Cortes was also active in the Integrated Bar of the Philippines, chairing its Committee on Professional Responsibility, Discipline and Disbarment from 1977 to 1984.upreme Court Justice
Cortes was named Associate Justice of the Supreme Court on
February 1 ,1987 , by PresidentCorazon Aquino . Cortes was the third woman named to the Court, followingCecilia Muñoz-Palma andAmeurfina Melencio-Herrera . She served on the Court until she retired in 1990.Despite her relatively brief stint on the Court, Cortes made considerable contributions to jurisprudence. Her
opinion for the Court in [http://www.lawphil.net/judjuris/juri1989/feb1989/gr_74930_1989.html "Valmonte v. Belmonte (1989)"] set forth the parameters for the constitutional right to information, as guaranteed under Article III, Sec. 7 of the Constitution. More controversial was hermajority opinion in [http://www.lawphil.net/judjuris/juri1989/sep1989/gr_88211_1989.html "Marcos v. Manglapus (1989)"] which carried a sharply divided 8-7 Court. Reflecting views she had previously published before she was appointed to the Court, Cortes wrote that the President possessed "residual unstated powers" beyond those granted by the Constitution "to protect the general welfare"; and that the exercise of these powers justified the presidential ban against the return to the Philippines of the deposedFerdinand Marcos . These views on "residual powers", similar to those expressed by U.S. Associate JusticeRobert H. Jackson in his concurring opinion in "Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer", 343 U.S. 579 (1952), remain the subject of academic debate.Retirement and death
Cortes resumed teaching at the University of the Philippines after her retirement from the Court. She was the first female Supreme Court Justice to die, passing away on
October 28 ,1996 .
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