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Saturday, November 23, 2024

CJ: Digital age here, but can’t replace lawyers

Chief Justice Alexander Gesmundo on Thursday said lawyers’ services will always stay relevant and needed despite the dawn of the digital age that affects all human activities including court processes and proceedings.

In his speech before the Joint Regional Convention of the Eastern and Western Visayas Regions of the Integrated Bar of the Philippines in Cebu City, Gesmundo exhorted the lawyers to “confront developments in information technology that particularly impact on traditional routine legal tasks and activities.”

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Gesmundo stressed that since the digital age has dawned on the legal profession, there is now a trend towards new models of legal service delivery that are more technology-driven than “labor-intensive,” such as in drafting contracts, gathering data, and procuring license from administrative bodies, among others.

However, Gesmundo emphasized that the practice of law will still be important even if traditional tasks become fully automated.

“Conflicts never cease in human society and courts exist to resolve them in the light of particular facts and laws in force at the time…. For as long as governments cannot function without a judicial system, the legal profession stays since counsels and advocates have an indispensable role in the administration of justice,” he said.

According to him, the prosecution and defense of criminal cases are tasks that cannot be standardized in a computer program.

“Lawyers may be outperformed by computer applications involving routine tasks and those which dispense basic information on provisions of the law and procedural rules. But (computers) cannot argue for a client’s cause or evaluate evidentiary values in any given case,” he observed.

“Indeed, for as long as adjudication involves a process of human reasoning in the application and interpretation of the law, the legal profession will never fade into the virtual future,” he said.

The Chief Justice also said the interface of technology and justice systems involves more than the infusion of technology into court processes.

“As advocates and counsels, you are first and foremost, officers of the court, whose duty it is to defend your client’s cause by fair, licit, and honorable means only. This implies honesty and good faith in gathering and presenting evidence before the courts to enable the judge to consider all the facts and the law (even if not favorable to your side) and to render fair and correct decisions,” he added.

Citing the equal importance of the courts and the lawyers, Gesmundo said that “counsels and advocates (Bar) play a crucial role as principal actors – alongside judges (Bench) – in the administration of justice like two wheels steering together towards one direction. The malfunctioning of either wheel results in a catastrophic miscarriage of justice.”

The Chief Justice also issued a reminder to lawyers that all these innovations, even the latest technology, will not guarantee that justice will be served on litigants.

“For the quality of justice that is dispensed by the courts largely depends on the services of lawyers. And while the rendition of legal services may have transitioned online, lawyers must bear in mind that they remain strictly bound by their oath and the ethical rules of the legal profession,” the top magistrate said.

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