A Practical Legal Article in the Philippine Context
A legal position paper is one of the most important forms of persuasive legal writing in Philippine practice. It is the document where a party states the facts, frames the issues, presents the governing law and jurisprudence, applies them to the case, and asks for specific relief. In labor cases, administrative proceedings, quasi-judicial disputes, internal investigations, regulatory matters, and even some court-related incidents, the position paper often becomes the core written advocacy of a party. It is not merely a summary of allegations. It is the party’s theory of the case in disciplined written form.
In the Philippine setting, a position paper must do more than sound formal. It must be useful to the tribunal, agency, hearing officer, labor arbiter, prosecutor, regulator, or deciding authority. It must be clear, complete, legally grounded, factually supported, procedurally proper, and strategically organized. A weak paper merely repeats accusations and denials. A strong paper tells the decision-maker exactly why the law and evidence justify a particular outcome.
This article explains how to prepare and structure a legal position paper in the Philippine context, from planning and research through drafting, evidence handling, style, argument structure, and common mistakes.
I. Nature and Purpose of a Position Paper
A position paper is a formal written submission stating a party’s stance on the facts and the law. Its purpose is to persuade the deciding authority to adopt the party’s position and grant the relief sought.
In Philippine legal practice, position papers commonly appear in:
- labor disputes before the National Labor Relations Commission or Labor Arbiters
- administrative complaints before government agencies, offices, commissions, and local bodies
- disciplinary proceedings
- quasi-judicial proceedings
- regulatory compliance disputes
- internal corporate or institutional proceedings
- grievance and complaint mechanisms where written submissions are required
- some court-directed submissions on specific incidents or issues
A position paper usually serves five functions:
First, it organizes the facts into a coherent story.
Second, it identifies the legal issues requiring resolution.
Third, it presents the relevant law, rules, and jurisprudence.
Fourth, it applies the law to the evidence.
Fifth, it requests concrete relief.
A position paper is persuasive, but it is also analytical. Its role is not to display anger, rhetoric, or volume. Its role is to help the adjudicator decide.
II. The Philippine Context: Why Structure Matters
Philippine legal writing is shaped by several realities.
One, many cases are decided heavily on the basis of the written submissions and attached evidence.
Two, judges, labor arbiters, hearing officers, and agency lawyers handle many cases and have limited time.
Three, the quality of presentation often affects whether a meritorious point is understood.
Four, procedural compliance matters. A strong argument may be weakened by poor form, missing annexes, lack of verification when required, or failure to attach supporting records.
Five, Philippine legal reasoning depends greatly on statutes, administrative rules, and Supreme Court jurisprudence.
Because of this, structure is not cosmetic. Structure is part of persuasion. A scattered paper burdens the reader. A well-ordered paper leads the reader toward the result you seek.
III. Before Writing: Build the Case First
A common mistake is to draft immediately. Good position papers are built before they are written.
A. Identify the exact nature of the proceeding
Ask:
- What type of case is this?
- What rules govern the submission?
- Is there a prescribed format?
- Is there a deadline?
- Are there page limits?
- Is verification, certification, or notarization required?
- Must affidavits or witness statements be attached?
- Are annexes required to be marked in a certain manner?
In the Philippines, different bodies have different procedural rules. A labor position paper is not drafted exactly like an administrative answer. A submission to a regulator is not identical to a complaint-affidavit or memorandum. The first task is to know the governing procedure.
B. Determine the party’s theory of the case
Every strong position paper has a theory of the case. This is the short, central explanation of why your client should win.
Examples:
- The employee was dismissed without just or authorized cause and without due process.
- The respondent did not commit grave misconduct because the essential elements are absent.
- The contract was validly rescinded due to substantial breach by the other party.
- The administrative complaint is unsupported by competent evidence and is procedurally defective.
- The agency action was lawful, reasonable, and within statutory authority.
If the writer cannot explain the case theory in two or three sentences, the paper is not yet ready to be drafted.
C. Gather and sort all facts
Prepare a chronology. In Philippine practice, chronology is crucial because disputes often turn on sequence: notice, receipt, meetings, payments, demand letters, notices to explain, hearings, resignation letters, affidavits, board actions, filing dates, and official communications.
Prepare a timeline containing:
- exact dates
- places
- persons involved
- documents created or received
- actions taken
- legal significance of each event
Separate material facts from background facts. Material facts are those that affect the legal issues. Background facts may help context but should not overwhelm the paper.
D. Gather all documentary evidence
Collect and review:
- contracts
- letters
- email printouts
- text message screenshots
- payrolls
- company policies
- memoranda
- notices
- minutes
- certifications
- official receipts
- photographs
- medical records
- government records
- affidavits
- reports
- transcripts, if available
- screenshots and electronic records, properly identified
Each document should answer a question: What fact does this prove?
E. Research the law
In Philippine legal writing, research usually includes:
- constitutional provisions, if relevant
- statutes and codes
- administrative rules and regulations
- departmental orders, circulars, and issuances
- local ordinances, if relevant
- procedural rules
- Supreme Court decisions
- occasionally Court of Appeals doctrine if useful for discussion, though Supreme Court authority is controlling
- persuasive secondary sources where helpful, but not as substitutes for primary authority
The research must be issue-driven. Do not collect cases randomly. Research the legal elements you must prove or defeat.
IV. The Core Question: What Makes a Good Position Paper?
A good position paper has these characteristics:
It is accurate.
It is organized.
It is concise without being thin.
It is complete without being bloading.
It is supported by evidence.
It applies the law, not merely quotes it.
It anticipates the opposing side’s arguments.
It asks for clear relief.
It is procedurally compliant.
It is credible.
Credibility is essential. Overstatement, distortion, selective omission, or exaggerated accusations may damage the whole paper. In Philippine advocacy, a measured and well-supported submission is often more persuasive than an aggressive but unsupported one.
V. Standard Structure of a Legal Position Paper
There is no single universal format for all Philippine position papers, because different proceedings may require different captions and components. Still, a strong position paper generally follows a recognizable structure.
VI. Recommended Format and Parts
1. Caption and Title
The first part is the caption. It identifies the forum, the parties, the case number if any, and the nature of the submission.
A typical heading includes:
- name of the office, tribunal, agency, or commission
- title of the case
- docket or case number
- title of the pleading, such as “Position Paper,” “Respondent’s Position Paper,” or “Complainant’s Position Paper”
The caption must follow the required form of the forum. In labor cases and administrative proceedings, the caption often mirrors standard pleading format.
The title should immediately identify whose position paper it is.
2. Preliminary Statement or Introduction
This is a short opening section stating what the case is about and why the party should prevail.
This section should:
- identify the party filing the paper
- state the nature of the dispute
- summarize the key reason for the requested outcome
- set the direction of the argument
This part should be brief. It is not yet the full discussion. It is the opening frame.
Example style:
“The present complaint for illegal dismissal must fail because respondent validly terminated complainant for serious misconduct and willful breach of trust, after observance of procedural due process, as shown by the notices, conference records, and complainant’s own admissions.”
That kind of sentence gives the tribunal a roadmap.
3. Statement of Facts
This is one of the most important sections. Facts should be stated clearly, chronologically, and with references to annexes or records.
A proper statement of facts in Philippine legal writing should be:
- objective in tone, even when favorable to your side
- chronological where possible
- limited to relevant facts
- tied to supporting evidence
- written in short paragraphs for readability
Facts should not be argued too heavily in this section. Mild framing is acceptable, but the deeper analysis belongs in the argument section.
Each factual assertion should, where appropriate, be supported by a citation to an annex, document, affidavit, or record. A position paper gains strength when facts are traceable.
A weak statement of facts is vague:
“Complainant was repeatedly harassed and denied rights.”
A stronger one is specific:
“On 10 January 2025, complainant received a memorandum directing him to explain within 24 hours why he should not be disciplined for alleged absence without leave. The memorandum did not specify the dates of the alleged absences and attached no supporting attendance report.”
Specificity persuades.
4. Statement of Issues
The issues are the legal questions that the deciding authority must resolve.
Good issue statements are clear and answerable.
Examples:
- Whether complainant was illegally dismissed.
- Whether respondent observed substantive and procedural due process.
- Whether the complaint is barred by prescription.
- Whether the respondent committed grave misconduct.
- Whether the questioned contract is void, voidable, rescissible, or enforceable.
- Whether the complainant is entitled to damages, backwages, separation pay, attorney’s fees, or other relief.
The issues should not be too broad or too many. They should track the actual dispute. Sometimes it helps to divide them into principal and incidental issues.
5. Applicable Law, Rules, and Jurisprudence
This section states the governing legal framework. Depending on style, this can either stand as a separate section or be integrated into each issue.
In Philippine practice, the best approach is often issue-by-issue integration: for each issue, state the rule and then apply it immediately. Still, a separate short overview of the governing law may be helpful in technical cases.
This section may include:
- statutes
- implementing rules
- administrative issuances
- procedural rules
- case law
The key is not to dump large quotations. A position paper is not improved by excessive block quotations. It is improved by correct extraction of controlling doctrines.
State the legal rule in plain terms first, then cite authority.
6. Argument and Discussion
This is the heart of the paper. It is where the law is applied to the facts.
A strong argument section typically follows this pattern:
- state the issue
- state the rule
- explain the rule
- apply the rule to the proven facts
- address the opposing argument
- conclude the point
This is the classic legal method of analysis. Even where the format is not explicitly labeled, the logic should be present.
For each argument, use headings. Good headings are persuasive. Compare these:
Weak heading:
“Discussion”
Better heading:
“Complainant Was Not Illegally Dismissed Because Respondent Established a Just Cause and Observed Due Process”
The second heading already advances the argument.
7. Treatment of Evidence
Evidence should not be left floating in the annexes. The paper must explain what each important document proves.
For example:
- a memorandum proves notice
- a payroll proves payment
- a signed acknowledgment proves receipt
- board minutes prove authority
- a certification proves employment dates
- CCTV stills, incident reports, and admissions may prove conduct
- a contract clause may prove obligation
- an affidavit may support personal knowledge, subject to its weight
A position paper should connect evidence to elements. Never attach fifty annexes and assume the tribunal will do the synthesis for you.
8. Relief or Prayer
The prayer states exactly what the party is asking for.
Examples of relief include:
- dismissal of the complaint
- declaration of illegal dismissal
- reinstatement
- backwages
- separation pay in lieu of reinstatement
- nominal damages
- moral and exemplary damages
- attorney’s fees
- cancellation or affirmation of an order
- dismissal for lack of merit
- imposition or dismissal of administrative liability
- costs
- other just and equitable relief
The prayer should be concrete. It should not merely say “grant justice.” It should specify the result sought.
9. Signature Block and Required Formalities
The paper must be signed by counsel if represented, or by the party if appearing personally where allowed. Depending on the forum, verification, certification against forum shopping, notarization, or proof of service may be required.
This part is procedural but essential. Many otherwise strong submissions are weakened by technical noncompliance.
VII. The Best Analytical Method: Issue, Rule, Application, Conclusion
A useful structure for Philippine position papers is the classic legal reasoning format, often expressed as:
- Issue
- Rule
- Application
- Conclusion
This keeps the writing disciplined.
Example
Issue: Whether the employee was illegally dismissed.
Rule: Illegal dismissal exists when the employer fails to prove a just or authorized cause and fails to comply with procedural due process. The employer bears the burden of proving lawful dismissal.
Application: Here, respondent failed to establish the specific acts alleged as misconduct. The notices are general, unsupported by records, and inconsistent with payroll and attendance reports. No hearing or meaningful opportunity to explain was given. Thus, both substantive and procedural due process are lacking.
Conclusion: The dismissal is illegal.
This method prevents drifting into mere narration or abstract recitation.
VIII. How to Write the Facts Persuasively Without Arguing Too Early
The statement of facts should not read like fiction, but it must still persuade through selection, order, and emphasis.
Good factual writing in a Philippine position paper does the following:
- starts at the legally relevant point
- uses precise dates
- identifies documents by name and date
- avoids adjectives unless justified
- avoids speculation
- separates fact from accusation
- highlights undisputed facts where helpful
- emphasizes procedural events like notice, hearing, receipt, and filing
For example, in a labor case, these facts often matter:
- date of hiring
- position and duties
- salary and employment status
- alleged infraction or reason for dismissal
- notices given
- conference or hearing details
- date and manner of termination
- post-termination steps
- payments made or not made
In an administrative case, relevant facts may include:
- official position of respondent
- specific act complained of
- date and place
- governing duty violated
- documents and witnesses
- prior notices and explanations
- prejudice caused
- jurisdictional facts
Facts should be arranged for legal significance, not just chronology for its own sake.
IX. Using Jurisprudence Properly in the Philippine Setting
Philippine position papers often rely heavily on Supreme Court decisions. This is appropriate, but many writers misuse cases.
Common errors in using jurisprudence
One, quoting long portions without analysis.
Two, citing cases for broad slogans rather than their actual holdings.
Three, failing to compare facts.
Four, relying on outdated or inapplicable doctrine.
Five, using too many cases where one controlling case would suffice.
Better method
State the doctrine briefly.
Explain why that doctrine applies to your facts.
Show factual similarity or legal parallel.
Where there is adverse doctrine, distinguish it honestly.
Example:
Instead of writing five paragraphs of quoted doctrine on due process, summarize the rule, cite the controlling cases, and then explain how your notices and conference records satisfy or fail that standard.
Cases are persuasive when integrated, not piled.
X. Handling Conflicting Facts and Weak Points
Every case has weak points. A good position paper addresses them directly.
Do not hide the difficult fact if it is already in the record or likely to be raised by the other side. Confront it and explain it.
Examples:
- A delayed complaint may be explained by prior settlement efforts, fear, or ongoing employment relation if legally relevant.
- A signed resignation letter may be attacked as involuntary if there is evidence of pressure, coercion, or immediate protest.
- A missing hearing may be defended if the applicable process required opportunity to explain and that opportunity was in fact given, depending on the context.
- A defective document may be cured or its effect limited depending on the rule.
A position paper that pretends obvious problems do not exist appears unreliable.
XI. Annexes and Documentary Support
In Philippine practice, annexes are vital. The paper and the annexes must work together.
A. Marking annexes
Annexes are usually labeled sequentially: Annex “A,” Annex “B,” Annex “C,” and so on. If there are subparts, these may be marked more specifically.
B. Referencing annexes in the text
Each important factual statement should cite the corresponding annex.
Example:
“The Notice to Explain dated 12 March 2025 required complainant to submit a written explanation within 48 hours (Annex ‘D’).”
This makes the paper easy to verify.
C. Organizing annexes
Arrange annexes in logical order, usually chronological or by topic. Include separators if possible. Ensure legibility. Poorly scanned or disorganized annexes reduce persuasive force.
D. Authenticity and relevance
Not every document should be attached. Attach the documents that matter. Too many irrelevant annexes distract. Too few key annexes weaken credibility.
E. Affidavits
Where affidavits are used, ensure they are clear, fact-based, and from persons with actual knowledge. A conclusory affidavit is less useful than a detailed one.
XII. Tone and Style in Philippine Legal Writing
A position paper should sound professional, measured, and firm.
Preferred qualities
- clarity
- restraint
- precision
- logical flow
- respectful language
- confident but supported assertions
Avoid
- insults
- emotional overstatement
- unnecessary Latin phrases
- archaic clutter
- repetitive accusations
- rhetorical excess
- all-caps emphasis
- dramatic language unsupported by evidence
A tribunal is persuaded by reasoning, not outrage. Strong advocacy can be direct without being rude.
XIII. Plain English in Legal Writing
Philippine legal documents have traditionally been formal, but the best modern legal writing is plain, precise, and readable.
Instead of:
“Complainant categorically asseverates that respondent’s actuations are bereft of any legal mooring.”
Write:
“Complainant submits that respondent’s actions had no legal basis.”
Plain writing is not less intelligent. It is more persuasive.
XIV. The Importance of Headings
Good headings improve both readability and persuasion.
Use headings to signal the argument:
- The Complaint Must Be Dismissed for Lack of Jurisdiction
- Respondent Observed Procedural Due Process
- No Employer-Employee Relationship Existed
- The Charge of Grave Misconduct Is Unsupported by Substantial Evidence
- Complainant Is Not Entitled to Moral and Exemplary Damages
These headings help the decision-maker navigate the paper and remember your theory.
XV. Common Structures by Type of Philippine Position Paper
Although the general principles are similar, the structure may slightly vary depending on the context.
A. Labor position paper
A labor position paper commonly includes:
- employment background
- material dates and acts
- issues on just cause or authorized cause
- due process discussion
- monetary claims
- computation or challenge to computation
- discussion of reinstatement, backwages, separation pay, damages, and attorney’s fees if relevant
In labor disputes, burden of proof, substantial evidence, and procedural due process are recurring themes.
B. Administrative position paper
An administrative position paper often focuses on:
- jurisdiction
- sufficiency of complaint
- nature of public duty or institutional rule
- elements of the administrative offense
- quantum of evidence, often substantial evidence
- due process in administrative proceedings
- aggravating or mitigating circumstances if penalty is in issue
C. Regulatory or compliance position paper
This may emphasize:
- statutory and regulatory framework
- license, permit, compliance history
- technical records
- inspection reports
- notices and responses
- proportionality of sanction
- procedural fairness
- interpretation of agency rules
D. Internal corporate or institutional proceedings
These often require:
- policy provisions
- internal notices
- committee findings
- procedural steps taken
- documentary proof
- authority of officers or bodies
- due process and fairness considerations
XVI. Quantum of Evidence and Why It Matters
A position paper must be written with the applicable standard of proof in mind. In the Philippine context, different proceedings use different standards.
A criminal case requires proof beyond reasonable doubt.
A civil case generally requires preponderance of evidence.
Many administrative and labor matters use substantial evidence.
This matters greatly. A writer must know how much proof is legally required and write accordingly.
For example, in administrative and labor cases, the paper should show that there is substantial evidence, meaning such relevant evidence as a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to support a conclusion. This is different from criminal proof.
A good paper does not argue under the wrong standard.
XVII. How to Frame Issues Strategically
The party that frames the issues often shapes the decision.
Compare these two issue statements:
- Whether respondent is liable.
- Whether complainant proved by substantial evidence the essential elements of grave misconduct.
The second is better because it incorporates the legal standard and narrows the inquiry.
Issue-framing should reflect:
- burden of proof
- legal elements
- favorable characterization of the dispute
- the actual remedy sought
This does not mean manipulating the issues unfairly. It means presenting them accurately in legally meaningful form.
XVIII. The Role of Burden of Proof
In Philippine legal writing, burden of proof is often decisive.
Ask:
- Who must prove what?
- Has the opposing party met that burden?
- What happens if the evidence is evenly balanced or inadequate?
Examples:
- In illegal dismissal cases, the employer must prove the validity of the dismissal.
- In many claims for money or damages, the claimant must prove entitlement.
- In administrative complaints, the complainant generally must establish the material allegations by the applicable standard.
A strong position paper repeatedly returns to burden of proof. It does not merely say, “We deny.” It says, “The other side failed to prove the required elements.”
XIX. How to Discuss Legal Elements
Most legal issues consist of elements. Good advocacy breaks down the claim or defense into those elements.
Example: serious misconduct may require discussion of:
- improper conduct
- seriousness of the misconduct
- relation to performance of duties
- unfitness to continue working
Example: grave misconduct in administrative law may require discussion of:
- corruption, clear intent to violate the law, or flagrant disregard of established rule, depending on the doctrine applied to the case
Example: contract breach may require:
- existence of a valid contract
- specific obligation
- breach
- causation
- damages or consequences
Break the issue into elements, then show which elements are present or absent. This is far stronger than general conclusions.
XX. The Best Order of Arguments
The usual best order is:
- strongest threshold argument
- strongest merits argument
- alternative arguments
- relief-related arguments
For example, if there is a clear jurisdictional defect, that should often come first. If not, begin with the issue most likely to dispose of the case.
Do not bury your best point on page 18.
XXI. How Long Should a Position Paper Be?
There is no fixed ideal length. It must be long enough to fully present the case, but short enough to remain readable.
A simple case may require only a few pages. A complex case may require much more. What matters is density of relevance.
A bloated paper often contains:
- repetitive facts
- copied allegations
- long quotations
- unnecessary case summaries
- emotional language
- irrelevant annex discussions
A disciplined paper says what matters and stops when the point is complete.
XXII. Drafting Method That Works
A practical drafting sequence is:
First, prepare the chronology.
Second, list the issues.
Third, identify the elements for each issue.
Fourth, assign supporting evidence to each element.
Fifth, identify governing law and cases.
Sixth, make a detailed outline.
Seventh, write the facts.
Eighth, write the arguments issue by issue.
Ninth, write the introduction and prayer last.
Tenth, revise for clarity, accuracy, and format.
The introduction is often easier to write after the analysis is done.
XXIII. Sample Detailed Outline of a Position Paper
A practical model may look like this:
Caption
Respondent’s Position Paper
I. Preliminary Statement
Brief summary of theory and relief sought.
II. Statement of Facts
Chronological presentation with annex references.
III. Issues
- Whether the complaint states a valid cause of action.
- Whether respondent violated the law or rule invoked.
- Whether complainant is entitled to relief.
IV. Discussion
A. The complaint should be dismissed because the essential elements are not proven.
- Governing rule
- Elements
- Application to facts
- Supporting annexes
- Distinction from opposing authorities
B. Assuming arguendo that liability exists, the claimed relief is excessive or unsupported.
- Damages not proven
- No factual basis for attorney’s fees
- Penalty or sanction should be mitigated
C. Procedural objections, if any
- Lack of jurisdiction
- Prescription
- Prematurity
- Failure to exhaust required remedies, where applicable
V. Prayer
Signature block
Verification/Certification/Proof of Service if required
List of Annexes
This outline is adaptable across many Philippine proceedings.
XXIV. How to Write the Introduction Well
The introduction should answer three questions:
- What is this case about?
- Why should your side win?
- What exact result should the tribunal reach?
A useful formula is:
- identify the nature of the action
- state the decisive point
- state the requested outcome
Example:
“This Position Paper is submitted to show that the complaint for illegal dismissal is without basis. The records establish that complainant voluntarily resigned, executed a clearance, and received his final pay. Even assuming no resignation, respondent observed due process and had lawful grounds to terminate employment. Accordingly, the complaint and money claims should be dismissed.”
That opening is focused and functional.
XXV. How to Write the Conclusion for Each Argument
Every major section should end with a mini-conclusion. This helps the reader absorb the point.
Example:
“For these reasons, the charge of grave misconduct cannot stand. At most, the records show an isolated procedural lapse unsupported by proof of corrupt intent or flagrant disregard of rule.”
These mini-conclusions give momentum to the paper.
XXVI. Addressing the Other Side’s Arguments
Do not merely restate your own theory. A strong position paper also neutralizes the opposing side.
You may do this by:
- showing factual inaccuracy
- pointing out missing elements
- highlighting lack of documentary support
- exposing internal inconsistency
- distinguishing cited cases
- showing wrong legal standard
- explaining why the requested remedy does not follow even from their facts
This should be done respectfully. Attack the argument, not the person.
XXVII. Ethical Discipline in Drafting
Legal writing in the Philippines is not only technical; it is ethical. A position paper should not:
- misquote the record
- cite cases dishonestly
- suppress directly controlling adverse doctrine in a misleading way
- present fabricated annexes
- rely on factual assertions with no basis
- confuse allegations with established facts
The writer’s duty is persuasive advocacy within the bounds of truth and professional responsibility.
XXVIII. Citations and Referencing
A legal position paper should have usable citations. The exact format may vary by office or counsel preference, but consistency matters.
Citations may refer to:
- annexes
- page references
- statutory provisions
- rules
- case titles
The goal is usability. The reader should be able to verify every key point.
Avoid cluttered citation style that interrupts readability. But do not leave major assertions unsupported.
XXIX. Special Attention to Procedure
In Philippine practice, even strong substantive arguments can be undermined by procedural mistakes. Always check:
- filing deadline
- number of copies
- service requirements
- authorized signatory
- verification
- certification against forum shopping, if applicable
- notarization, where required
- annex completeness
- proper case caption
- page numbering
- legibility of attachments
Procedure is part of advocacy.
XXX. Common Mistakes in Philippine Position Papers
1. Turning the paper into a rant
Anger is not argument. Emotional writing rarely helps.
2. Copying the complaint or answer word for word
A position paper is not a recycled pleading. It must synthesize facts, evidence, and law.
3. Too much quotation
Long quotations often signal weak analysis.
4. No clear theory of the case
Without a central theory, the paper feels scattered.
5. No annex references
Unsupported factual claims lose weight.
6. Ignoring burden of proof
A party may win by showing the other side failed to prove the claim.
7. Treating facts and arguments as the same section
Narration and analysis should be distinct enough for readability.
8. Failing to address adverse facts
Silence on obvious weak points hurts credibility.
9. Asking for vague relief
The prayer must be specific.
10. Poor formatting
Dense blocks, inconsistent headings, and disorganized annexes reduce persuasion.
XXXI. Good Style Rules for Drafting
Use short paragraphs.
Prefer direct sentences.
Put important points at the start of paragraphs.
Use headings and subheadings.
Name the legal issue clearly.
Use dates and names precisely.
Avoid unnecessary repetition.
Use active voice when possible.
Keep quotations short.
End major sections with a conclusion.
XXXII. Revision Checklist
Before finalizing, ask:
- Is the theory of the case clear from the first page?
- Are the facts chronological and relevant?
- Are all important facts supported by evidence?
- Are the legal issues correctly framed?
- Is the governing law accurate?
- Did the discussion apply the law to the facts?
- Did the paper address the other side’s strongest points?
- Are the annexes complete and properly marked?
- Is the prayer specific?
- Are all procedural requirements complied with?
- Is the writing clear and credible?
Revision is where many papers become truly persuasive.
XXXIII. A Practical Template
Below is a general model that may be adapted depending on the forum:
REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES
[Name of Office / Tribunal / Agency]
[City]
[Case Title]
[Case Number]
[Party],
Complainant,
-versus-
[Party],
Respondent.
x--------------------------------x
RESPONDENT’S POSITION PAPER
Respondent, through counsel, respectfully states:
I. Preliminary Statement
This case concerns [brief nature of dispute]. The complaint should be dismissed because [main theory]. The records show that [key factual basis], and the governing law provides that [key legal basis].
II. Statement of Facts
Set out the relevant facts in numbered paragraphs, with dates, documents, and annex references.
III. Issues
- Whether [main issue].
- Whether [secondary issue].
- Whether [relief issue].
IV. Discussion
A. [Main persuasive heading]
State the rule.
Cite the law and cases.
Apply the law to the facts and annexes.
Conclude.
B. [Second persuasive heading]
Repeat the same analytical structure.
C. [Alternative argument, if needed]
V. Prayer
WHEREFORE, premises considered, it is respectfully prayed that [specific relief].
Other reliefs just and equitable under the premises are likewise prayed for.
Respectfully submitted.
[Signature block]
This template is not universal, but it is a reliable starting point.
XXXIV. How to Make the Paper Persuasive to a Philippine Decision-Maker
A Philippine decision-maker usually wants these questions answered quickly:
- What happened?
- What is the actual issue?
- What law governs?
- What evidence supports each side?
- Why should one side prevail?
- What exact ruling should be made?
A good position paper answers those questions in that order, without making the reader search for the point.
XXXV. Substantive Depth: Writing Beyond Form
To “write all there is to know” on the topic requires going beyond format. A superior legal position paper is built on deeper habits of legal reasoning.
A. Separate legal relevance from narrative drama
Not every unfair event is legally material. The paper must focus on facts tied to legal elements.
B. Think in terms of remedies
Do not argue only about wrongdoing. Always ask what remedy follows and whether the law allows it.
C. Anticipate decision-writing
Write in a way that the adjudicator can adopt in an order or decision. If your argument is easy to quote into a ruling, it has greater practical force.
D. Use alternative arguments wisely
A primary argument may seek outright dismissal. An alternative argument may limit damages, contest jurisdiction over part of the claim, reduce penalty, or challenge attorney’s fees.
E. Build from strongest uncontested facts
Undisputed facts provide stable ground. Start there when possible.
F. Keep legal and factual credibility aligned
An excellent doctrinal argument cannot rescue a factually unsupported claim. Likewise, sympathetic facts cannot overcome clear legal deficiency.
XXXVI. Position Paper Versus Other Legal Documents
It helps to distinguish a position paper from related legal documents.
A complaint initiates a claim.
An answer responds to allegations.
A memorandum usually discusses legal issues after trial or hearing.
An affidavit presents sworn factual statements.
A petition seeks judicial relief under procedural rules.
A position paper combines factual narrative, legal analysis, evidence discussion, and prayer in one persuasive written submission.
It is thus broader than a simple pleading and more application-focused than an abstract memorandum.
XXXVII. Final Guidance on Strategy
The best Philippine position papers do not try to say everything that can be said. They say everything necessary, in the right order, supported by the right proof, in a style the tribunal can trust.
A strong paper usually has these strategic features:
- one dominant theory of the case
- two or three major arguments, not ten weak ones
- disciplined treatment of facts
- proper use of annexes
- concise statement of doctrine
- detailed application of law to evidence
- a specific prayer
The writer must keep asking throughout the draft: Does this sentence help win the issue? If not, remove it.
XXXVIII. Conclusion
Preparing and structuring a legal position paper in the Philippine context is a disciplined exercise in advocacy. It requires mastery of facts, evidence, procedure, and legal analysis. The writer must identify the precise dispute, frame the correct issues, gather competent proof, research controlling law and jurisprudence, and present a coherent argument directed toward specific relief.
The ideal position paper is not ornamental. It is practical, strategic, and credible. It tells the tribunal what happened, what the law is, why the law favors the client, and what ruling should be made. Its structure should guide the reader naturally from facts to issues, from issues to rules, from rules to application, and from application to relief.
In Philippine legal practice, the most persuasive position papers are those that combine procedural care, factual precision, doctrinal accuracy, and plain but forceful writing. A well-prepared paper does not merely state a position. It earns it.