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In a speech delivered by Justice Dante O. Tinga at the Commencement Exercises of the Ateneo de Manila School of Law on
1. The rise of the globalized economy has led to the growing acceptance by many states of cross-border practice of law by foreign lawyers. Cross-border practice has been allowed within the European Union since the late 1970s as a consequence of the adoption of a common market. It has been regulated through Directives, which established guidelines governing the provision of services, the mutual recognition of diplomas, and the establishment of permanent professional law practices in foreign states. The allowance of the cross-border practice of law in the European Union has not led to any major problems or scandals, despite initial fears that there would be an unacceptable increase in unregulated or uncontrollable behavior, fears which have proved unfounded.
2. The accession by the
3. This definition of “services” clearly includes the provision of professional legal services. The GATS mandates that “each Member shall accord immediately and unconditionally to services and service suppliers of any other Member treatment no less favourable than that it accords to like services and service suppliers of any other country.” However, it is also recognized that such treatment may not be possible for every service activity, thus the parties are authorized to specify exemptions, which are included as an annex to the GATS, and subject to review after five years and a normal limitation of 10 years in their duration. The GATS also provides guidelines for allowing the automatic and mutual recognition of education and experience obtained, requirements met, or licences or certifications granted, in a particular country.
4. There are, as should be expected, potential problem areas with respect to cross-border practice. An especially sensitive topic is the applicable code of conduct that applies to a lawyer engaged in cross-border practice. Since most nations have adopted their own legal codes of conduct, the question arises whether such codes bind the foreign lawyer practicing in that country, or whether the foreign lawyer remains bound to her or his own national code. The European Union has mandated that such lawyer be subject to both home and host rules, a situation which has come to be known as ‘double deontology’. Perhaps, as cross-border practice becomes more prevalent worldwide, the need will arise for the adoption of international agreements governing the code of conduct of lawyers in cross-border practice.
5. Section 14, Article XII of our Constitution states that “[t]he practice of all professions in the
6. There are understandable qualms within the Philippine legal community, especially among the old-guard, to the allowance of cross-border practice in the
7. Nonetheless, if we refuse to allow cross-border practice of law in the
8. A legal curriculum that is designed solely to gain the law student’s eventual admission to the Philippine bar through rote memorization of Philippine legal provisions will be woefully insufficient to train such student in this fast evolving legal environment. A more viable curriculum is one designed to help the law student absorb the fundamentals that permeate all the legal systems of the world. A student who is grounded in these basics, as well as in legal methodology, will be better equipped in interacting with the international legal community and the transnational business circles, as well as in grasping the inevitable changes in Philippine law.
Atty. Manuel J. Laserna Jr.