Manuel Briones | |
Birth Date: | January 1, 1893 |
Birth Name: | Manuel Cabahug Briones |
Birth Place: | Mandaue, Cebu, Captaincy General of the Philippines |
Death Place: | Manila, Philippines |
Alma Mater: | Colegio-Seminario de San Carlos |
Office4: | Member of the Philippine House of Representatives from Cebu's 1st District |
Honorific Prefix: | The Honourable |
Term Start4: | 1919 |
Term End4: | 1931 |
Predecessor4: | José Hernaez |
Successor4: | Buenaventura Rodriguez |
Office: | Senator of the Philippines |
Constituency: | At-large |
Term Start1: | June 2, 1931 |
Term End1: | September 16, 1935 |
Constituency1: | 10th district |
Alongside1: | Sergio Osmeña |
Predecessor1: | Pedro Rodríguez |
Successor1: | Position abolished |
Term Start: | December 30, 1951 |
Term End: | December 30, 1953 |
Office2: | 51st Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Philippines |
Term Start2: | September 15, 1945 |
Term End2: | May 24, 1949 |
Appointer2: | Sergio Osmeña |
Office3: | Associate Justice of the Philippine Court of Appeals |
Term Start3: | 1942 |
Term End3: | 1945 |
Spouse: | Celestina Lorenzo |
Children: | 6, including Jose |
Relations: | Marcelo Briones Fernan |
Party: | Nacionalista |
Nationality: | Filipino |
Manuel Cabahug Briones (January 1, 1893 – September 29, 1957) was Filipino Visayan lawyer, judge, and politician from Cebu, Philippines. He was the first Supreme Court Associate Justice from Cebu, and he was a former Associate Justice of the Court of Appeals, two-term Senator, Member of the House of Representative for four consecutive terms, and editor from Cebu, Philippines.
Manuel C. Briones was born to parents Pedro Cabahug and Engracia Briones in Mandaue, Cebu[1] on January 1, 1893. After his mother died when he was young, his uncle from his mother's side, Reverend Father Domingo Briones, took care of him and looked after his studies in Cebu City. Manuel bore his uncle's last name for the rest of his life.
Briones studied in a private school owned by Antolin Frias, a writer and journalist in Cebu. Later, he acquired his bachelor's degree at the Colegio-Seminario de San Carlos (now University of San Carlos) and took up law at the Escuela de Derecho in Manila. On November 3, 1916, he became a lawyer.[2] He was part of the law firm together with Dionisio Abella Jakosalem and Paulino Gullas.[3] Additionally, he was a member of various international associations including the Royal Academy of Spanish-American Sciences and Arts, and of the Royal Academy of the Spanish Language.
He married Celestina Lorenzo and had six children, including former Cebu governor Jose L. Briones.[4]
While he was studying, he began his journalistic career as part of the first newspaper in Cebuano language, Vicente Sotto's Ang Suga (The Light), in 1910. Then in 1911, he worked as a reporter for El Ideal, the publication of the Nacionalista Party and edited the Spanish newspapers La Revolucion (The Revolution), a periodical founded by Filemon Sotto, the brother of Vicente Sotto, La Tribuna (The Tribune) and El Espectador (The Viewer).[5] Historian and scholar Epifanio delos Santos included his name on the list of promising young Filipino journalists.
Briones was elected as representative of Cebu's old first congressional district for the 5th Philippine Legislature on June 3, 1919 and served for three more terms until the 8th Philippine Legislature in 1931.[6] [7] The old first district was composed of the towns Bogo, Borbon, Carmen, Catmon, Danao, Pilar, Poro, San Francisco, Sogod Tabogon, and Tudela,. He once was the majority floor leader, coauthored the country's first labor code, the Workmen's Compensation Act, led the Mindanao legislative survey that resulted in infrastructure projects, and was the principal author of the Republic Act 1161, otherwise known as the Social Security Act of 1954.[8] [9]
In 1931, he ran and won as senator together with Sergio S. Osmeña Sr. During this time, the country was split into 12 districts with each district represented by 2 senators. He and Osmeña represented Cebu, which was the 10th senatorial district.
By July 10, 1934, he was voted Constitutional Convention delegate that drafted the 1935 Constitution by virtue of the Tydings-McDuffie Law.[10]
During the Philippine Presidential Election on November 8, 1949, Briones ran for vice-president under the Nacionalista Party. The two candidates lost to their rivals from the Liberal Party: Elpidio Quirino, who was elected president, and Fernando Lopez, who became vice-president. In the 1951 Philippine senate (midterm) election held on November 13, 1951 where 8 senatorial slots were to be voted, he was elected by the entire Philippine electorate and won as senator, no longer voted by district as was in the 1931 elections. He was the only candidate from Visayas who won and served in the Senate until 1953.[11]
On February 5, 1942, Briones became Court of Appeals Associate Justice and afterwards as the 51st Associate Justice of the Supreme Court by the appointment of Sergio S. Osmeña on September 15, 1945, becoming the first Cebuano to hold such position in the country's judiciary. He served in the Supreme Court until May 24, 1949.
Briones died on September 29, 1957.
In 2019, Briones was recognized as one of the Top 100 Cebuano personalities by The Freeman, Cebu's longest-running newspaper. He was recognized alongside Tomas Osmeña, Resil Mojares, Max Surban, and Rubilen Amit as part of the centennial anniversary of the local newspaper.[12]