Juan Isaac Lovato

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Postage stamps Ecuador: Dedicated to Juan Isaac Lovato Vargas. 2005

Juan Isaac Lovato (born September 21, 1904 in Quito , † January 14, 2001 in ibid) was an Ecuadorian professor of law, politician and ambassador .

Life

Juan Isaac Lovato was a son of Emperatriz Vargas Gallardo and Juan Lovato Betancourt. He attended elementary school at the school of "El Cebollar" and the secondary school at the Colegio Nacional Mejía.

From 1926 to 1933 he studied law at the Universidad Central del Ecuador . In 1933 he decided to give an appointment lecture on Federico González Suárez and was dean of civil and criminal law at that university from 1934 to 1964 .

In 1933 he was admitted as a lawyer . In 1934 he replaced Alejandro Ponce Borja on the chair for civil procedure regulation and the constitution of justice, later he was also responsible for criminal law and civil law (inheritance and debt law). He held the university chair for more than 30 years and returned there in the last few years until October 2000. He was twice dean of the Faculty of Law and Social Sciences and rector of the Central University of Ecuador.

Politician

He was general secretary of the Executive Committee of the Partido Socialista - Frente Amplio and was the publisher of the party organ: La Tierra . On July 9, 1944, he and Pedro Antonio Saad Niyaim founded the Confederación de Trabajadores del Ecuador CTE, a trade union federation in Quito at the request of the writer and poet Aurora Estrada y Ayala , on the sidelines of a congress of the Partido Socialista - Frente Amplio. Saad became chairman and Lovato deputy.

He was a delegate of Pichincha Province to the National Constituent Assembly of 1945, Deputy National Congress, Minister of Social Affairs and Labor, Attorney General, Supreme Court Justice, President of the Permanent Legislative Commission, Member of the Supreme Electoral Court and the Supreme Court of the Referendum, legal advisor to numerous Workers' organizations, member of the Advisory Council on Foreign Relations and the Patriotic Committee on National Defense (1942), Councilor of the Quito Municipality, President of the Federation of Lawyers of Ecuador, the College and Court of Honor of Quito Lawyers, and member of the Quito Bar Academy.

The Ecuadorian delegation chaired the meeting of San José de Costa Rica for the Convention on Human Rights and the delegation to the United Nations for the meetings dealing with the law of the sea. From 1949 to 1950 he was chaired by Guillermo Bustamante, Cevallos with Mariano Suárez Veintimilla Modesto Larrea Jijón, José María Egas and Humberto García Ortiz to the Voceros of the Tibunal Supremo Elektoral de Ecuador to the electoral office.

From 1961 to 1963 he was in the government cabinet of Carlos Julio Arosemena Monroy with Luis Pallares Zaldumbide, Ministro de Previsión Social. From May 5, 1972 to June 20, 1973 he was the first ambassador of Ecuador to Moscow and was also accredited in Warsaw .

Award

  • Orden Nacional al Mérito en el grado de Gran Cruz
  • Condecoración del Ilustre Municipio de Quito “Eugenio Espejo”.

family

He was married and widowed to Inés Salvador. Her son is Juan José Lovato Salvador, married to Jimena Saltos, his grandchildren are Jimena del Pilar, Juan Isaac and María José. His great-grandchildren are María Paula, José Felipe Villacís Lovato and Matías Villacís Lovato.

He died at home on Sunday January 14, 2001. Since then he has been resting with his wife and parents at the Cementerio de San Diego (Quito) .

Publications

  • Programa Analítico de Derecho Procesal Civil Ecuatoriano ”, 10 tomos, obra por la que recibió el Premio Universidad Central.
  • Principios Constitucionales del Derecho Procesal Ecuatoriano.
  • Principios Constitucionales del Derecho Laboral Ecuatoriano.
  • Divorcio perfecto, Universitaria, 1957 - 350 pp.
  • El Derecho Contemporáneo
predecessor Office successor
Vincente Crespo Ordoñez Ecuadorian Ambassador in Moscow
May 5, 1972 to June 20, 1973
Jorge Icaza Coronel

Individual evidence

  1. Juan Isaac Lovato Vargas (1904-2001). Retrieved October 3, 2019 (Spanish).
  2. Biografía y pensamiento jurídico Dr. Juan Isaac Lovato Vargas. Retrieved October 3, 2019 (Spanish).