Who is Atty. Jayr?

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Atty. Eufemio A. Simtim, Jr. or Atty. Jayr is a licensed lawyer in the Philippines. He is a Partner at Simtim Gunay Viejo Sales Sobrejuanite Law Group, but he does only virtual consultations as he is presently out of the country. He has been in the litigation practice in most part of his legal career and has worked in the academe, in the government and in the corporate world. He also passed the PRC licensure exams for Real Estate Broker and for Real Estate Appraiser (Rank No. 5). He presently runs his Youtube Channel, @yourlawyer, providing free legal information and updates.

Friday, March 27, 2009

CONTINUING LEGAL EDUCATION

This week has been filled with so much challenges- great challenges. May pahabol pa talaga! Quite difficult but I learned a lot...especially on how the rules work in actual practice. Well, I'm relatively young in the profession...and it is going to be a long, long journey... Congratulations nga pala sa mga graduates! Especially to my students! May God bless you all in your journey...

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

SOMETHING BIZARRE

Weird indeed was it! There were only two lawyers in court today! The Honorable Judge, whom Atty. Dondon fondly called as Judge Mafia (LoL) and...I, respectfully appearing for the plaintiff. The rest of the SocGen IBP 'gang' are now in Bacolod for the IBP National Convention. I already made up my mind not to join the convention a month ago...or so. I was correct, my services would be needed - hence, necessitating my presence. I went to court three times! First, to file an urgent motion I prepared only this morning (I had to do the personal service and the mailing, as well as the filing of the same personally!). Second, to appear for the hearing of the said motion at 2 p.m., and therefore, I had to go home to get my barong. And third, to find out if Judge Mafia (judge no. 3) would hear the motion, in the absence of the absent pairing judge (judge no. 2) who should have substituted the absent judge (judge no. 1) in whose sala the case was previously raffled. See how it works?!

The lesson I learned? Make sure to obtain your 72-hour TRO either on a Monday or a Tuesday, so that you would have three business days within which to secure an extension to make it a 20-day TRO. The 72-hour TRO expires after 3 days from its issuance, not from the service to the defendant. Although it can be argued that when the last day falls on a Saturday or a Sunday, you have until the next business day to ask for the extension, still, you must have lost already the two days when you could have asked for the said extension; hence, your chance is rendered slim and there is always the danger of losing that chance. I'm reminded of that principle in Corporation Law that if the corporation has already been dissolved by the expiration of its corporate life, there is nothing more to be extended. You cannot resurrect the dead. Can you? :)

Thursday, March 19, 2009

WATCHMEN

I'm still trying to convince myself that somehow, I enjoyed watching Watchmen. That when I fell asleep inside the cinema, that was because of the exhaustion brought about by the day's (and night's) work congestion or because of its kilometric runtime - 2 hours and 55 minutes! I am still trying to recall the scenes that might have been captured by my then less discerning mind.
...Until I asked: Who were those characters again? ...of the olden times? Well, I could recall The Commedian, who was murdered at home; Dr. Manhattan, whom one review described as a "towering blue radiation mutant who's a lonely ironic humanoid", Nite Owl, whose costume is nice but I'd rather have another actor for the role (hehe! that's me...you would know why should you watch!) and sexy-wholesome Silk Spectre (there's the clue! LoL!). Boring? No, Watchmen isn't boring, but as Owen Gleiberman would correctly put it, it is just a fragmented sci-fi doomsday noir; it remains as detached from the viewer as it is from the zeitgeist. (What?!)
P.S. :
Noir refers to a film genre that offers dark or fatalistic interpretations of reality. The term is applied to U.S. films of the late 1940s and early '50s that often portrayed a seamy or criminal underworld and cynical characters. The films were noted for their use of stark, expressionistic lighting and stylized camera work, often employed in urban settings.
The word zeitgeist (a German word) describes the intellectual, cultural, ethical and political climate, ambience and morals of an era or also a trend.

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