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George A. Malcolm

George Arthur Malcolm (November 5, 1881 — May 16, 1961) was an American lawyer who emerged as an influential figure in the development of the practice of law in the Philippines in the 20th century. Constitutional scholar and academic Joaquin Bernas described Malcolm as "the man who more than any single American contributed most to early constitutional development in the Philippines."[1] At age 35, he was appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines, where he would serve for 19 years. His most enduring legacy perhaps lies in his role in the establishment of the College of Law at the University of the Philippines.

George Arthur Malcolm
Malcolm in 1926
17th Associate Justice
of the Philippine Supreme Court
In office
October 11, 1917 – February 1, 1936
Appointed byWoodrow Wilson
Preceded byGrant T. Trent
Succeeded byJose P. Laurel
Personal details
Born(1881-11-05)November 5, 1881
Concord, Michigan
DiedMay 16, 1961(1961-05-16) (aged 79)
Los Angeles, California
SpouseLucille Margaret (Wolf) Malcolm
Alma materUniversity of Michigan

Background

 
Malcolm (2nd row, 2nd from right), pictured in 1904 together with fellow founding members of the Acacia fraternity.

Born in Concord, Michigan, Malcolm obtained his degree in law from the University of Michigan in 1906. While at the university, he was among the founding members of the Acacia fraternity.[2]

Following his graduation, Malcolm proceeded to the Philippines, which was then a colony of the United States. Malcolm served in several minor positions in the colonial government, starting as a clerk in the Bureau of Health, then subsequently in the Bureau of Justice. He rose quickly in rank, and by 1911, he was acting attorney-general for the Philippines.[3]

Establishment of the U.P. College of Law

 
Malcolm Hall at the U.P. Diliman campus.

It was through Malcolm's efforts that the first English language law classes were established in the Philippines. The Board of Regents of the University of the Philippines had initially resisted Malcolm's proposal for the establishment of a law college within the University. Malcolm thus arranged for the Manila YMCA to offer law courses, which commenced in 1910. Malcolm acted as the Secretary of these law courses. Within a year, the Board of Regents relented and the University of the Philippines adopted these classes by formally establishing the College of Law on January 12, 1911.[4]

Supreme Court Associate Justice Sherman Moreland had initially been designated as the acting dean of the college, while Malcolm was appointed as the College Secretary. Almost immediately, Moreland turned over his office to Malcolm, who served as acting dean while the University tried in vain to recruit American law professors to become the permanent dean of the college.[5] While there was some resistance in the idea of appointing Malcolm as the first permanent Dean of the College of Law,[5] Malcolm was finally appointed to the post on October 11, 1911.[6]

Malcolm served as dean for the next six years. He also taught courses in constitutional law and in legal ethics. Three students who graduated during his deanship would eventually become Presidents of the Philippines — José P. Laurel, Manuel Roxas, and Elpidio Quirino. Several other of Malcolm's students would later serve in the Supreme Court, including also Laurel, who would actually succeed to Malcolm's seat on the Supreme Court in 1936.

Following the relocation of the university campus to Diliman, Quezon City after World War II, the building that housed the College of Law was named "Malcolm Hall" after Malcolm, a name that is carried as to this day.

Supreme Court Justice

In 1917, U.S. President Woodrow Wilson appointed Malcolm to sit on the Philippine Supreme Court. At age 35, he was the youngest person ever appointed as Justice to the High Court. He would serve in the Court until 1936, when he was forced to retire upon the enactment of the 1935 Constitution, which limited Supreme Court membership to Filipinos. Upon his retirement after 19 years, Malcolm had written 3,340 opinions for the Court.[7]

Several of Malcolm's opinions for the Court remain influential to date. In Villavicencio v. Lukban, 39 Phil. 778 (1919), he spoke for the Court in granting the writ of habeas corpus to counter the deportation of prostitutes to Mindanao as ordered by Manila mayor Justo Lukban. In Villaflor v. Summers, 41 Phil. 62 (1920), Malcolm wrote that a judicial order compelling a woman to submit to a physical examination to determine if she was pregnant did not violate the constitutional proscription against self-incrimination. In Borromeo v. Mariano, 41 Phil. 329 (1921), and Concepcion v. Paredes, 42 Phil. 499 (1921), Malcolm authored opinions that shielded the members of the judiciary from the diminution of their powers by legislative action. In Alejandrino v. Quezon, 46 Phil. 83 (1924), the Court through Malcolm ruled it had no power to reverse the suspension of a senator by his colleagues in the Senate. In Government v. Springer, Malcolm refused to affirm the law that granted the Senate President and Speaker of the House the right to vote shares in a government corporation, citing that such authority did not fall within the functions of the legislature. Malcolm's opinion would be affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States upon appellate review, 277 U.S. 189 (1928), though the dissent therein of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr. proved more memorable in time, with its eloquent pronouncement that "[t]he great ordinances of the Constitution do not establish and divide fields of black and white. Even the more specific of them are found to terminate in a penumbra shading gradually from one extreme to the other."

 
Bust of George Malcolm in Baguio
 
Malcolm Square in central Baguio 2017

Malcolm's majority opinion in Rubi v. Provincial Board, 33 Phil. 660 (1919), remains controversial to date. The Court therein affirmed a provincial government resolution directed at the Mangyan ethnic minority, requiring the confinement of members of "non-Christian tribes" to a specially created reservation. Likening the plight of the Mangyan to that of Native Americans, the Court classified the Mangyan as "wards of the Filipino". "By the fostering care of a wise Government, may not these unfortunates advance in the "habits and arts of civilization?" Would it be advisable for the courts to intrude upon a plan, carefully formulated, and apparently working out for the ultimate good of these people?"[8]

In Baguio housing the summer quarters of the Supreme Court, the city square on Session Road near the public market is named Malcolm Square in his honor, and a bronze bust of Malcolm is located in the square.[9]

Later years

 
Plaque Commemorating George Malcolm at the U.P. College of Law

After his retirement from the Philippine Supreme Court, Malcolm was appointed as a legal adviser to U.S. High Commissioners Frank Murphy and Paul V. McNutt. In 1939, he was appointed as Attorney General of Puerto Rico. However, he would later fall into dispute with Governor Rexford Tugwell, and he ended up being fired in 1942.[10] As a sign of great respect for him by the Philippine legal community, he was granted honorary Philippine citizenship by the Philippine Congress in 1955.[11]

Malcolm later settled back in the United States, though he would make occasional visits to the Philippines and to the law school housed in the building named after him.[12] He died aged 79 in Los Angeles on May 16, 1961.[13]

Personal life

In 1932 at age 51, long-time bachelor Malcolm married Lucille Margaret Wolf, age 27, on December 13, 1932. Lucille detailed their ship-board courtship and "her front row seat to history" during their nearly 30-year marriage in her memoir, My Touch of the Elephant, made publicly available for the first time in 2020.[14]

Their only daughter, Mary MacKenzie Malcolm Leydorf, was born of November 14, 1934, and died in 2013 at the age of 79 after a distinguished career as a doctor.[citation needed]

Malcolm was a godfather to Ameurfina Melencio-Herrera[15] who, in 1979, became the second woman to be appointed to the Supreme Court.

Papers

A collection of Malcolm's papers, including series relating to his service in the Philippines and in Puerto Rico, is housed at the Bentley Historical Library at the University of Michigan and open for research.[16]

Selected opinions

  • US v. Salaveria (1917)
  • Rubi v. Provincial Government (1919)
  • Villavicencio v. Lukban (1919)
  • Villaflor v. Summers (1920)
  • Alejandrino v. Quezon (1924)
  • Government v. Springer (1927)
  • Government v. Agoncillo (1927)

Notes

  1. ^ Bernas, Joaquin G. (2009). The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines: A Commentary. Manila: Rex Publishing. p. 258. ISBN 978-971-23-5326-0.
  2. ^ Patrick m. Kirkwood (2014). "Patrick M. Kirkwood, "'Michigan Men' in the Philippines and the Limits of Self-Determination in the Progressive Era," Michigan Historical Review Vol. 40, No. 2 (Fall 2014): 80". Michigan Historical Review. 40 (2): 63–86. doi:10.5342/michhistrevi.40.2.0063. JSTOR 10.5342/michhistrevi.40.2.0063.
  3. ^ Justices of the Supreme Court of the Philippines Vol. I, p. 84
  4. ^ American Colonial Careerist, p. 96
  5. ^ a b American Colonial Careerist, p. 97
  6. ^ . Archived from the original on 2007-10-19. Retrieved 2007-10-29.
  7. ^ American Colonial Careerist, p. 139
  8. ^ "Rubi v. Provincial Board of Mindoro". Retrieved 2007-10-29.
  9. ^ "Famous Americans in Baguio". GoBaguio.com. Retrieved 27 Nov 2010.
  10. ^ American Colonial Careerist, p. 249-251
  11. ^ Republic Act No. 1386, Adopting the Honorable George A. Malcolm as Son of the Philippines and conferring upon him all the rights, privileges and prerogatives of Philippine citizenship. 20 Lawyers J 512 (Oct. 31, 1955)
  12. ^ Patrick M. Kirkwood, "'Michigan Men' in the Philippines and the Limits of Self-Determination in the Progressive Era," Michigan Historical Review, Vol. 40, No. 2 (Fall 2014): 83.
  13. ^ Justices of the Supreme Court of the Philippines Vol. I, p. 85
  14. ^ Malcolm, Lucille (October 2020). My Touch of the Elephant. Highlands Publishing, LLC. ISBN 978-0989469258.
  15. ^ American Colonial Careerist, p. 79
  16. ^ "George A. Malcolm Papers at the University of Michigan". Retrieved 20 June 2017.

References

  • Sevilla, Victor J. (1985). Justices of the Supreme Court of the Philippines Vol. I. Quezon City, Philippines: New Day Publishers. pp. 84–92. ISBN 978-971-10-0134-6.
  • Malcolm, George A. (1957). American Colonial Careerist. United States of America: Christopher Publishing House. pp. 79, 96–97, 139, 249–251.

External links

Academic offices
Preceded by
none
Dean of the U.P. College of Law
1911–1917
Succeeded by
Jorge C. Bocobo
Legal offices
Preceded by
Grant T. Trent
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines
1917–1936
Succeeded by

george, malcolm, george, arthur, malcolm, november, 1881, 1961, american, lawyer, emerged, influential, figure, development, practice, philippines, 20th, century, constitutional, scholar, academic, joaquin, bernas, described, malcolm, more, than, single, ameri. George Arthur Malcolm November 5 1881 May 16 1961 was an American lawyer who emerged as an influential figure in the development of the practice of law in the Philippines in the 20th century Constitutional scholar and academic Joaquin Bernas described Malcolm as the man who more than any single American contributed most to early constitutional development in the Philippines 1 At age 35 he was appointed Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines where he would serve for 19 years His most enduring legacy perhaps lies in his role in the establishment of the College of Law at the University of the Philippines The HonorableGeorge Arthur MalcolmMalcolm in 192617th Associate Justice of the Philippine Supreme CourtIn office October 11 1917 February 1 1936Appointed byWoodrow WilsonPreceded byGrant T TrentSucceeded byJose P LaurelPersonal detailsBorn 1881 11 05 November 5 1881Concord MichiganDiedMay 16 1961 1961 05 16 aged 79 Los Angeles CaliforniaSpouseLucille Margaret Wolf MalcolmAlma materUniversity of Michigan Contents 1 Background 2 Establishment of the U P College of Law 3 Supreme Court Justice 4 Later years 5 Personal life 6 Papers 7 Selected opinions 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksBackground Edit Malcolm 2nd row 2nd from right pictured in 1904 together with fellow founding members of the Acacia fraternity Born in Concord Michigan Malcolm obtained his degree in law from the University of Michigan in 1906 While at the university he was among the founding members of the Acacia fraternity 2 Following his graduation Malcolm proceeded to the Philippines which was then a colony of the United States Malcolm served in several minor positions in the colonial government starting as a clerk in the Bureau of Health then subsequently in the Bureau of Justice He rose quickly in rank and by 1911 he was acting attorney general for the Philippines 3 Establishment of the U P College of Law Edit Malcolm Hall at the U P Diliman campus It was through Malcolm s efforts that the first English language law classes were established in the Philippines The Board of Regents of the University of the Philippines had initially resisted Malcolm s proposal for the establishment of a law college within the University Malcolm thus arranged for the Manila YMCA to offer law courses which commenced in 1910 Malcolm acted as the Secretary of these law courses Within a year the Board of Regents relented and the University of the Philippines adopted these classes by formally establishing the College of Law on January 12 1911 4 Supreme Court Associate Justice Sherman Moreland had initially been designated as the acting dean of the college while Malcolm was appointed as the College Secretary Almost immediately Moreland turned over his office to Malcolm who served as acting dean while the University tried in vain to recruit American law professors to become the permanent dean of the college 5 While there was some resistance in the idea of appointing Malcolm as the first permanent Dean of the College of Law 5 Malcolm was finally appointed to the post on October 11 1911 6 Malcolm served as dean for the next six years He also taught courses in constitutional law and in legal ethics Three students who graduated during his deanship would eventually become Presidents of the Philippines Jose P Laurel Manuel Roxas and Elpidio Quirino Several other of Malcolm s students would later serve in the Supreme Court including also Laurel who would actually succeed to Malcolm s seat on the Supreme Court in 1936 Following the relocation of the university campus to Diliman Quezon City after World War II the building that housed the College of Law was named Malcolm Hall after Malcolm a name that is carried as to this day Supreme Court Justice EditIn 1917 U S President Woodrow Wilson appointed Malcolm to sit on the Philippine Supreme Court At age 35 he was the youngest person ever appointed as Justice to the High Court He would serve in the Court until 1936 when he was forced to retire upon the enactment of the 1935 Constitution which limited Supreme Court membership to Filipinos Upon his retirement after 19 years Malcolm had written 3 340 opinions for the Court 7 Several of Malcolm s opinions for the Court remain influential to date In Villavicencio v Lukban 39 Phil 778 1919 he spoke for the Court in granting the writ of habeas corpus to counter the deportation of prostitutes to Mindanao as ordered by Manila mayor Justo Lukban In Villaflor v Summers 41 Phil 62 1920 Malcolm wrote that a judicial order compelling a woman to submit to a physical examination to determine if she was pregnant did not violate the constitutional proscription against self incrimination In Borromeo v Mariano 41 Phil 329 1921 and Concepcion v Paredes 42 Phil 499 1921 Malcolm authored opinions that shielded the members of the judiciary from the diminution of their powers by legislative action In Alejandrino v Quezon 46 Phil 83 1924 the Court through Malcolm ruled it had no power to reverse the suspension of a senator by his colleagues in the Senate In Government v Springer Malcolm refused to affirm the law that granted the Senate President and Speaker of the House the right to vote shares in a government corporation citing that such authority did not fall within the functions of the legislature Malcolm s opinion would be affirmed by the Supreme Court of the United States upon appellate review 277 U S 189 1928 though the dissent therein of Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr proved more memorable in time with its eloquent pronouncement that t he great ordinances of the Constitution do not establish and divide fields of black and white Even the more specific of them are found to terminate in a penumbra shading gradually from one extreme to the other Bust of George Malcolm in Baguio Malcolm Square in central Baguio 2017Malcolm s majority opinion in Rubi v Provincial Board 33 Phil 660 1919 remains controversial to date The Court therein affirmed a provincial government resolution directed at the Mangyan ethnic minority requiring the confinement of members of non Christian tribes to a specially created reservation Likening the plight of the Mangyan to that of Native Americans the Court classified the Mangyan as wards of the Filipino By the fostering care of a wise Government may not these unfortunates advance in the habits and arts of civilization Would it be advisable for the courts to intrude upon a plan carefully formulated and apparently working out for the ultimate good of these people 8 In Baguio housing the summer quarters of the Supreme Court the city square on Session Road near the public market is named Malcolm Square in his honor and a bronze bust of Malcolm is located in the square 9 Later years Edit Plaque Commemorating George Malcolm at the U P College of LawAfter his retirement from the Philippine Supreme Court Malcolm was appointed as a legal adviser to U S High Commissioners Frank Murphy and Paul V McNutt In 1939 he was appointed as Attorney General of Puerto Rico However he would later fall into dispute with Governor Rexford Tugwell and he ended up being fired in 1942 10 As a sign of great respect for him by the Philippine legal community he was granted honorary Philippine citizenship by the Philippine Congress in 1955 11 Malcolm later settled back in the United States though he would make occasional visits to the Philippines and to the law school housed in the building named after him 12 He died aged 79 in Los Angeles on May 16 1961 13 Personal life EditIn 1932 at age 51 long time bachelor Malcolm married Lucille Margaret Wolf age 27 on December 13 1932 Lucille detailed their ship board courtship and her front row seat to history during their nearly 30 year marriage in her memoir My Touch of the Elephant made publicly available for the first time in 2020 14 Their only daughter Mary MacKenzie Malcolm Leydorf was born of November 14 1934 and died in 2013 at the age of 79 after a distinguished career as a doctor citation needed Malcolm was a godfather to Ameurfina Melencio Herrera 15 who in 1979 became the second woman to be appointed to the Supreme Court Papers EditA collection of Malcolm s papers including series relating to his service in the Philippines and in Puerto Rico is housed at the Bentley Historical Library at the University of Michigan and open for research 16 Selected opinions EditUS v Salaveria 1917 Rubi v Provincial Government 1919 Villavicencio v Lukban 1919 Villaflor v Summers 1920 Alejandrino v Quezon 1924 Government v Springer 1927 Government v Agoncillo 1927 Notes Edit Bernas Joaquin G 2009 The 1987 Constitution of the Republic of the Philippines A Commentary Manila Rex Publishing p 258 ISBN 978 971 23 5326 0 Patrick m Kirkwood 2014 Patrick M Kirkwood Michigan Men in the Philippines and the Limits of Self Determination in the Progressive Era Michigan Historical Review Vol 40 No 2 Fall 2014 80 Michigan Historical Review 40 2 63 86 doi 10 5342 michhistrevi 40 2 0063 JSTOR 10 5342 michhistrevi 40 2 0063 Justices of the Supreme Court of the Philippines Vol I p 84 American Colonial Careerist p 96 a b American Colonial Careerist p 97 History of the U P College of Law Archived from the original on 2007 10 19 Retrieved 2007 10 29 American Colonial Careerist p 139 Rubi v Provincial Board of Mindoro Retrieved 2007 10 29 Famous Americans in Baguio GoBaguio com Retrieved 27 Nov 2010 American Colonial Careerist p 249 251 Republic Act No 1386 Adopting the Honorable George A Malcolm as Son of the Philippines and conferring upon him all the rights privileges and prerogatives of Philippine citizenship 20 Lawyers J 512 Oct 31 1955 Patrick M Kirkwood Michigan Men in the Philippines and the Limits of Self Determination in the Progressive Era Michigan Historical Review Vol 40 No 2 Fall 2014 83 Justices of the Supreme Court of the Philippines Vol I p 85 Malcolm Lucille October 2020 My Touch of the Elephant Highlands Publishing LLC ISBN 978 0989469258 American Colonial Careerist p 79 George A Malcolm Papers at the University of Michigan Retrieved 20 June 2017 References EditSevilla Victor J 1985 Justices of the Supreme Court of the Philippines Vol I Quezon City Philippines New Day Publishers pp 84 92 ISBN 978 971 10 0134 6 Malcolm George A 1957 American Colonial Careerist United States of America Christopher Publishing House pp 79 96 97 139 249 251 External links Edit George A Malcolm Dies at 79 Former Justice in the Philippines New York Times 1961 05 18 Retrieved 2008 01 07 Memorabilia Page Supreme Court E Library Supreme Court of the Philippines Retrieved 2008 01 07 permanent dead link Tan Michael 2008 01 22 Three American presidents of UP Pinoy Kasi Philippine Daily Inquirer Archived from the original on 2008 01 28 Retrieved 2008 02 08 George A Malcolm papers 1896 1965 Bentley Historical Library University of Michigan Finders aid retrieved 30 September 2013 Works by or about George A Malcolm at Internet ArchiveAcademic officesPreceded bynone Dean of the U P College of Law1911 1917 Succeeded byJorge C BocoboLegal officesPreceded byGrant T Trent Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines1917 1936 Succeeded byJose P Laurel Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title George A Malcolm amp oldid 1168746730, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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