Bar excellence from the province: Romualdez hails DVOREF College of Law's achievement
At A Glance
- The success achieved by the Dr. V. Orestes Romualdez Educational Foundation (DVOREF) College of Law in the 2025 Bar Examinations proved that law schools outside the National Capital Region (NCR) can have excellence, too.
Leyte 1st district Rep. Martin Romualdez (PPAB)
The success achieved by the Dr. V. Orestes Romualdez Educational Foundation (DVOREF) College of Law in the 2025 Bar Examinations proved that law schools outside the National Capital Region (NCR) can have excellence, too.
Thus, said Leyte 1st district Rep. Martin Romualdez, head of the college of law and former two-time Speaker of the House of Representatives.
“This achievement shows that excellence in legal education is not confined to Metro Manila,” Romualdez said in a statement Wednesday, Jan. 7.
Romualdez credited the strong Bar performance to disciplined preparation, faculty mentorship, and an academic culture anchored on ethics and public service.
“I thank our administrative staff, faculty members, students, and parents for standing with us every step of the way and for helping turn our shared goal into reality,” added Romualdez, a lawyer who earned his Bachelor of Laws degree from the University of the Philippines (UP) College of Law.
Earlier Wednesday, the Supreme Court (SC) released its “Performance of Law Schools” report. It covers first-time Bar examinees nationwide and serves as the official benchmark for institutional performance in the 2025 Bar Examinations.
The report showed that DVOREF College of Law--located in Tacloban City, Leyte--cracked the top five law schools nationwide with the highest passing percentage.
DVOREF recorded an 80.19 percent passing rate among first-time examinees from schools with more than 100 candidates, ranking fourth overall—placing it ahead of San Beda College of Law–Alabang and alongside the country’s leading institutions, including Ateneo de Manila University (ADMU), UP, and University of Santo Tomas (UST)
Out of 106 examinees, 85 passed the Bar, making DVOREF the only law school from the provinces to enter the national top five in its category.
Romualdez, chairman of the dominant Lakas-Christian Muslim Democrats (Lakas-CMD) said the achievement was widely seen as a breakthrough for regional legal education.
The three-day exams were held on Sept. 7, 10, and 14, 2025.