Gregorio S. Araneta | |
Office: | Member of Philippine Commission |
Term Start: | February 25, 1909 |
Term End: | October 27, 1913 |
Office2: | Secretary of Finance and Justice |
Term Start2: | July 1, 1908 |
Term End2: | October 10, 1913 |
Appointer2: | Governor-General James Francis Smith |
Predecessor2: | Henry C. Ide |
Successor2: | Victorino Mapa |
Office3: | Attorney General of the Philippines |
Term Start3: | July 16, 1906 |
Term End3: | July 1, 1908 |
Predecessor3: | Lebbeus R. Wilfley |
Successor3: | Ignacio Villamor |
Office4: | Solicitor-General of the Philippines |
Term Start4: | June 15, 1901 |
Term End4: | July 16, 1906 |
Predecessor4: | Office created |
Successor4: | Ignacio Villamor |
Office5: | Secretary of the Malolos Congress |
Term Start5: | September 15, 1898 |
Term End5: | November 13, 1899 |
Office6: | Secretary of Justice |
Term Start6: | September 1, 1897 |
Term End6: | May 19, 1899 |
President6: | Emilio Aguinaldo |
Predecessor6: | Severino de las Alas |
Successor6: | Florentino Torres |
Birth Name: | Gregorio Araneta y Soriano |
Birth Date: | April 19, 1869[1] [2] [3] |
Birth Place: | Molo, Iloilo, Captaincy General of the Philippines |
Death Place: | Manila, Philippine Islands |
Resting Place: | La Loma Cemetery |
Alma Mater: | University of Santo Tomas |
Occupation: | Lawyer and businessman |
Nationality: | Filipino |
Children: | 14, including Salvador |
Don Gregorio Soriano Araneta (born Gregorio Araneta y Soriano; April 19, 1869 – May 9, 1930) was a Filipino lawyer, businessman, and nationalist, during the Spanish and American colonial periods.[4]
In 1891, he graduated from the University of Santo Tomas with a degree in law. He defended prominent Filipinos accused of financially supporting the Katipunan.
In May 1898, Araneta was appointed member of the 21-man Consultative Assembly, which the Spanish Governor-General of the Philippines Basilio Agustin formed in an attempt to rally Filipinos to the Spanish side of the Spanish–American War. This assembly, however, failed.
Araneta participated in the drafting of the Malolos Constitution. He resigned as Secretary and accepted his appointment as Justice of the Ministry of Justice.
On January 25, 1899, the Diplomatic Corps of the First Philippine Republic was organized and Araneta was among those appointed as member but he chose to abandon the revolutionary government. Months after the Philippine–American War broke out, America established the civil courts in the Philippines. In May 1899, General Elwell Otis appointed Araneta as Associate Justice of the Philippine Supreme Court, the youngest to occupy the position at 30 years old. Araneta's sympathies became clearer when he joined the Federal Party that favored America's annexation of the Philippines.
On June 15, 1901, he was appointed Solicitor General. When Attorney General Lebbeus R. Wilfley accepted a post in China, Araneta was made his successor. He took his oath of office as Attorney General on July 16, 1906. Two years after, July 1, 1908, he was appointed to the Philippine Commission and at the same time Secretary of Justice and Finance. He was the first Filipino to hold a sensitive post, being a commissioner with portfolio. He resigned from government service on October 10, 1913. With Salvador Zaragoza, he established a law office, which attracted many clients.
During the first Senatorial election in 1916, he ran for a seat in the Senate but lost to Rafael Palma. That same year, he accepted a teaching post in the University of Santo Tomas and at the same attended to his private law practice. Araneta convinced the Supreme Court to reverse its previous decision on two cases. Araneta also gained respect for his ethical principles. He turned down the offer of House Speaker Sergio Osmeña to seat as Chief Justice of the Supreme Court in favor of Manuel Araullo, who he thought to be more deserving for the post. He was again offered the same position during the time of Senate President Manuel L. Quezon but he also declined, this time for delicadeza, because he was then involved in a case pending before the Supreme Court.
Araneta married Carmen Zaragoza y Rojas on March 7, 1896. The couple had 14 children: Carmen, Jose, Salvador, Consuelo, Paz, Rosa, Antonio, Teresa, Ramon, Vicente, Conchita, Margarita, Luis and Francisco.
He died on May 9, 1930, of myocardial infarction. His remains were interred at the La Loma Cemetery on the next day.