Statutory Deconstruction: Against Oracular Constitutionalism
Statutory Deconstruction: Against Oracular Constitutionalism
Statutory Deconstruction: Against Oracular Constitutionalism
Statutory Deconstruction:
Against Oracular Constitutionalism
JOSE DUKE S. BAGULAYA
Keywords:
Statutory deconstruction, Oracular constitutionalism, law and literature, constructed
purposivism, judicial decision as supplement
Indeed, De Castro is one of those decisions that show the limits of the
canons of statutory construction or rules of interpretation in providing a stable
answer to law’s inherent indeterminacy. It confirms the view that law as a
linguistic construct cannot avoid, following Jacques Derrida, a “dissemination”
of its “significations” which complicates the determination of its meaning.
This essay therefore revaluates and analyzes the interpretive strategy used
by the Court in De Castro from the view point of literary theory, particularly
deconstruction. Deconstruction is understood here as an “anti-structuralist
gesture” which aims to undo, de-compose, and de-sediment structures of
thought, language, and interpretation (Derrida 1999, 284). This gesture should
not be taken in its negative sense of destruction but in the positive sense of
setting meanings free. The word comes not from the English “to destroy” but
from the French se deconstruire which means “to lose its construction” or to
“disarrange(ing) the construction of words in a sentence” (Derrida 1999, 283).
This essay attempts to fill a gap within legal and literary scholarships
which have practically ignored the subject of statutory interpretation. As one
author notes, “[s]tatutory interpretation is the Cinderella of legal scholarship.
Once scorned and neglected, confined to the kitchen, it now dances in the
ballroom” (Eskridge 1994, 1). Indeed, this present work may be said to take its
cue from William Eskridge Jr.’s Dynamic Statutory Interpretation (1994), which
rejected the original intent and plain meaning rhetoric in American statutory
interpretation. However, I do not subscribe to Eskridge’s brand of Gadamerian
pragmatism because I find the political critiques done by the critical legal studies
(legal deconstructionists) more interesting and iconoclastic when applied to
the Philippine legal context.
The application of literary theory to law is not new in the field of legal
scholarship. There is now a growing field of law and literature in the United
States which has received important contributions ranging from legal luminaries
such as Judge Richard Posner and Sanford Levinson to literary critic Stanley
Fish. These academic developments led Duke University, in an unprecedented
move, to give Fish a joint appointment at the Duke Law School and the English
Department in spite of the obvious fact that the literary critic was bereft of a
law degree and traditional credentials (Schlag et al. 1996, 21).
The relationship between literature and law has long been established
since the publication of Levinson’s seminal article “Law as Literature.” “The
disputes currently raging through literary criticism,” argued Levinson, “precisely
mirror some of the central problems facing anyone who would take law
PHILIPPINE HUMANITIES REVIEW 7
seriously; the basis of this parallelism is the centrality to law of textual analysis.”
He added, “[i]f we consider law as literature, then we might better understand
the malaise that afflicts all contemporary legal analysis, nowhere more severely
than in constitutional theory” (Levinson 1994, 129-130). The article mainly
analyzed the opposition between what Levinson called weak textualists best
represented by John Hart Ely and strong textualists like Fish. The former group
“claims to have gotten the secret of the text” through a science of criticism,
while the latter group proposes that “meaning is created rather than discovered”
(Levinson 1994, 132).
Full length books have also appeared since then. Most worthy of note is
Robin West’s Narrative, Authority, and Law (1994) which argued that “narrative
is inherent in all legal reasoning because almost any vision of society or
justificatory ideology can find its place in Northrop Frye’s typology of narrative
myth” (Bender and Weisberg 2000, 283). A judge answered this thesis with a
critique in Law and Literature (2009), a book that explicitly argued the need to
abandon efforts to apply principles of literary interpretation to statutes and
constitutions (Posner 2009, 550).
The most important survey of the field of law and literature came in with
the publication of Guyora Binder and Robert Weisberg’s Literary Criticisms of
Law (2000).5 In this unparalleled work, the authors argued that the literary
criticisms of law examined in their book should be seen as “a larger development
within literary studies” (Binder and Weisberg 2000, ix). This in turn makes the
literary criticism of law “central to the new conception of literary studies as
cultural studies, and part of any contemporary education in literature” (Binder
and Weisberg 2000, ix). But one distinctive feature of the survey was a single
chapter treatment of deconstructive criticism of law, thereby admitting that
deconstruction has been the most influential form of literary theory to deluge
legal scholarship (Binder and Weisberg 2000, 378). The authors then mentioned
four major reasons why this sort of literary imperialism happened in law schools.
First, the interpretation debates in the United States raised the “salience of
literary theory in the legal academy.” Second, structuralism broke into law
reviews via the theoretical work of the critical legal studies such as Duncan
Kennedy and Mark Tushnet. Third, the translation of Jacques Derrida’s De la
Grammatologie made post-structuralism influential in American Universities.
Finally, the economic decline of the humanities led to an exodus of aspiring
academics into law schools, many of them have just been trained under post-
structuralist professors in college and graduate courses. All these trends have
8 BAGULAYA
“resulted in a genre of critical scholarship that treats law as language and views
all language use as a figurative or literary practice or signification” (Binder and
Weisberg 2000, 378).
Oracles
These statements from traditional textbooks tell us that when the courts
refuse to apply the “plain-meaning rule,” they generally search for the “intent”
of the law. The decision is therefore formulated on the basis of a “discovered”
intent of the law. The intent is supposed to be waving to the reader from the
“language of the document” itself; however, when it plays hide and seek with
the reader, the latter is advised to look for “the intent of the framers” with the
help of extrinsic aids (Sutherland 1943, 322; Francisco v. NMMP, 415 SCRA
126). These extrinsic aids include the background circumstances, the reports
of the proponents of the law, the statements made during the deliberation, the
course of the enactment (Sutherland 1943, 322).
The concept of original intent has been controversial in the United States.
The most eloquent and polemical theoreticians of this form of interpretation
are defeated Supreme Court nominee Robert Bork and Justice Antonin Scalia.
Bork’s originalism can be familiar, because our own jurisprudence echoes it:
For Bork, this is the only way for any judge to be “neutral” when deciding
a case. A decision that is based on neutral principles is more legitimate than
any non-originalist interpretation.
The critics of originalism are not few. The liberal democrat Edward
Kennedy, who led the assault on Bork’s nomination, accused Bork of a form
of barbaric constitutionalism. “Robert Bork’s America,” he said, “is a land in
which women would be forced into back alley abortions, rogue police could
break down citizens’ doors in midnight raids, schoolchildren could not be taught
about evolution” (cited in Crapanzano 2000, 200). For the originalists, the equal
protection clause could not be applied to women, gays, lesbians, because at the
time of its enactment, Congress meant to protect the African-Americans only
(Sunstein 2005, 56). Thus, originalism “idealizes and idolizes a moment in time
and surrenders himself (and us) to the values and structures, the laws, produced
in that moment” (Crapanzano 2000, 267). “We must reject,” according to
another philosopher, “the suggestion that the legitimacy of a well-entrenched
10 BAGULAYA
two key provisions must be favored over the actual, demonstrated intent of
the Constitution’s framers.”
It may be observed that while the editorial criticizes the decision for
accepting Regalado’s word, it in turn appeals to the “actual, demonstrated intent
of the Constitution’s framers.” What happens is a battle of intents; an
originalism against originalism. I believe this is not the road that constitutional
interpretation should tread on.
The question of whether the President under the 1987 Constitution may
appoint judges during the election period was first raised in the election year
of 1998. Pres. Fidel Ramos signed the appointments of Mateo Valenzuela and
Placido Villarta on 30 March 1998, less than two months before the May
elections. He also requested the Judicial and Bar Council through the Chief
Justice to submit a list of nominees for the vacant judicial positions. When the
Chief Justice declined, it appeared that the Justice Secretary and some regular
members of the Judicial and Bar Council “met at some undisclosed place” and
wrote a resolution to the Chief Justice requesting the latter to convene the
Council and submit the list of nominations. The members threatened the Chief
Justice: “Should the Chief Justice be not disposed to call for the meeting
aforesaid, the undersigned members constituting the majority will be constrained
to convene the Council for the purpose of complying with its Constitutional
Mandate.” The President wrote the Chief Justice that the prohibition under
Article VII only pertains to appointments in the executive branch and so it is
the duty of the Council to submit the list. With the President insisting on his
power to appoint and the members of the JBC threatening a coup, the Chief
Justice submitted the issue to the Supreme Court en Banc and the result was
the In Re: Hon. Mateo A. Valenzuela and Hon. Placido B. Vallarta (1998) (298
SCRA 408).
The Members of the Supreme Court and judges in lower courts shall be
appointed by the President from a list of at least three nominees prepared by
the Judicial and Bar Council for every vacancy. Such appointments need no
confirmation.
For the lower courts, the President shall issue appointments within ninety
days from the submission of the list.
The Court said that the exceptions under Section 15 only apply to
“temporary appointments to executive positions” when continued vacancies
will prejudice public service. Balancing between the time frame to make
appointments and a restriction on the President’s power of appointment, the
Court decided that “the former shall yield to the latter” (426). It implicitly
suggested that the rule on the period of appointment was proposed primarily
to prevent the Court from having a decapitating vacancy because at the time it
was proposed the fifteen-member Court was yet unforeseen (423). The rule,
the Court seems to say, has less weight now that a fifteen-member Court was
approved. The original intent of the rule was weakened by the increase of the
Court’s membership. Most importantly, the Court ignored “the view expressed”
by retired Associate Justice Regalado that the prohibition “had no application
PHILIPPINE HUMANITIES REVIEW 13
This interpretation stood as the meaning of these provisions for the next
twelve years. Numerous law students were taught that the power to appoint
within ninety days applies only during the period not covered by Section 15
(Bernas 2003, 83). The meaning seemed settled until the Arroyo regime, made
confident by its numerous appointments to the Supreme Court since 2001,
launched a renewed constitutional attack on the meaning of the provisions.
This was particularly made timely by the impending retirement of Chief Justice
Reynato Puno by 17 May 2010. Hence, petitions were filed in behalf of the
regime asking the Court to compel the Judicial and Bar Council to submit a list
of nominees for Chief Justice even before the vacancy occurs. A divided
Supreme Court reversed the previous decision in In Re: Valenzuela and ruled
that the President can appoint the Chief Justice during the election period.
Justices Bersamin, Mendoza, Villarama, Abad, Del Castillo, Brion, and Peralta
voted in favor of Presidential appointment, with the latter four limiting the
power to appointments to the highest court. Justices Nachura and Velasco
voted for dismissal on procedural grounds. Justice Conchita Carpio-Morales
wrote a lone but scathing dissent. Chief Justice Puno and Justices Carpio and
Corona inhibited themselves (615 SCRA 755).
The fault of the fifteen Justices, including three future Chief Justices,
was that they “accorded no weight and due consideration to the confirmation
of Justice Regalado” (744). The word “confirmation” is important; it is the
most significant portion of oracular constitutionalism. If the reader thinks he
has just discovered the intent of the text, let him ask the author for confirmation.
In this particular case, the Court transformed a member of the Constitutional
Commission not only into an author but the author of the Constitution. The
newly-transmogrified author is now treated as an oracle which is the source of
meaning and life of the Constitution (supposedly) authored by the people.
Through the oracle, all doubts are swept away by the Author-God and the
Justices are finally enlightened on the Constitution’s theological meaning
(Barthes 2001, 1468). The meaning of the holy constitution is discovered and
the faithful are inspired.
If this is how the charter is read, we might as well replace the preamble’s
“we the people” with “the distinguished member of the Constitutional
Commission.” The dissent of Justice Carpio-Morales expressed it so well: “The
line of reasoning is specious. If that is the case and for accuracy’s sake, we
16 BAGULAYA
might as well reconvene all ConCom members and put the matter to a vote
among them” (766). My suggestion is that they do a pompiang.9
Dangerous Supplements
As we know by now, a word acquires its meaning only from its difference
with another word but the chain of differentiation could go on and on that the
meanings produced by the process proliferate. Being made up of words, the
law is a terrain where advocates of various and sometimes opposing
significations clash. The solution to this indeterminacy has always been the
attempt to fix a meaning through the suppression of other significations. The
players must “struggle to maintain coherence of its world view in the face of
the proliferation of rival values, the multiplicity of meaning” (Clayton 1993,
13). Hence, there is a tendency for the legal order to be imperial, an order that
must both “restrict the proliferation of meaning and itself be meaningful”
(Clayton 1993, 14). In pursuing this tendency, the readers of imperial law use
oracular constitutionalism to stabilize the meaning in the most “objective”
manner and make their particular choice be meaningful.14 However, what this
strategy produces is merely what Derrida calls supplement, a substitute that
can be replaced through “an infinite chain” of significations where
supplementary meanings are produced and replaced (Derrida 1997, 157). These
two strategies have provided us with nothing but supplements. In the words
of Derrida: “there have never been anything but supplements, substitutive
significations which could only come forth in a chain of differential references”
(Derrida 1997, 159).
COMELEC where she expressed the thought that while fair elections has been
“dealt a fatal blow,” her dissent will not “be viewed as an effort made in vain if
in the future,” it will be “revisited and somehow rectified” (605 SCRA 605).15
A dissent therefore is a suppressed meaning, a hidden supplement reserved for
the future. The vindication of a dissent reaffirms the view that what is involved
in adjudication is not pure law but “an interplay of law, economics, politics and
society generally” (Tushnet 2008, xxiv).
Notes
1
The impeachment of CJ Renato Corona does not make this article moot. De Castro v. Judicial and Bar
Council remains a standing decision of the Supreme Court and the oracular interpretation used in the
said case may be used again by the Court.
2
The verba legis or plain meaning rule is the more popular strategy used by the Supreme Court. A
critique of this canon is the subject of my paper “Problems of the Plain-Meaning Rule in Legal
Interpretation.” The most obvious problem is that meanings are not plain and so words cannot be
applied without any interpretation. Stanley Fish writes that “a sentence that seems to need no
PHILIPPINE HUMANITIES REVIEW 21
interpretation is already the product of one” (Is there a text in this class, 1980). Even Antonin Scalia
and Bryan A. Garner say: “As we see things, if you seem to meet an utterance which does not have to
be interpreted, it is because you have interpreted it already” (Reading Law, 2012). Thus, the canon that
says “where the law is clear, there is no room for construction” should be rejected. Courts should just
admit that they have interpreted the text and that their interpretation is the most acceptable ordinary
meaning of the text and not a plain meaning of the text.
3
This oracular form of interpretation is by no means limited to De Castro. Francisco v. The House of
Representatives 415 SCRA 45 (2003) also uses this method through the adoption of the position of
Commissioners Joaquin Bernas and Florenz Regalado. The word “constitutionalism” is used here in a
limited sense as “interpretation” of the Constitution to distinguish it from the interpretation of other
texts. In its broader sense, the word “constitutionalism” really refers to the “conjoining” of the linguistic
order and the political order, which is called by William F. Harris II as the “constitutional enterprise”
(Harris 1993, 1).
4
In other words, the paper does not necessarily reject the ratio-legis method. What it provides is a
critique of one method of ascertaining the ratio-legis, which is what is called here as “oracular
constitutionalism,” a strategy of relying on the living voice of the Constitutional commissioners. The
author of the present critique believes that the intent of the law may still be read from the words of
the law and the records. Thus, it offers a particular version of constructed purposivism.
5
As a critic of the law and literature movement, Richard Posner considers the book to be a “minefield”
which should be avoided by scholars belonging to the group. He wrote in the third edition of Law and
Literature (2009, 7): “Binder and Weisberg are fascinated by…an assortment of scholarly literatures
that have no significance for law. “ Nonetheless, this paper argues that literary theory can illuminate
problems of authorial intent, language, and narratives of law. Posner, in fact, admits that Binder and
Weisberg’s book has a first-rate chapter on narrative.
6
Another case of oracular constitutionalism is Francisco v. The House of Representatives. The Court
adopted the Bernas and Regalado position that the word “initiate” means the filing and referral of the
impeachment complaint and not merely the filing. It also rejected the position that the word means
the “transmission” of the impeachment complaint from the House of Representatives to the Senate.
7
This means volume 615 of the Supreme Court Reports Annotated and page 667.
8
The following quotation comes from volume 208 of the Supreme Court Reports Annotated (SCRA).
The page is indicated and the year is omitted in order to avoid repetition.
9
Pompiang or pompiyang is literally a cymbal but it also refers to a game of elimination played by
children.
10
De Castro v. JBC 615 SCRA 737 (2010): Mr. De Castro. I understand that our justices now in the
Supreme Court, together with Chief Justice, are only 11. Mr. Concepcion. Yes. Mr. De Castro. And
the second sentence of this subsection reads: “Any vacancy shall be filled within ninety days from the
occurrence thereof.” Mr. Concepcion. That is right. Mr. De Castro. Is this now a mandate to the
executive to fill the vacancy? Mr. Concepcion. That is right. That is borne out of the fact that in the
past 30 years, seldom has the Court had a complete complement.
11
Justice Carpio-Morales cites another excerpt from the Records which equivocally suggests the intent
to ban midnight appointments: “Mr. Davide: The idea of the proposal is that about the end of the
term of the President, he may prolong his rule indirectly by appointing people to these sensitive
positions, like the commissions, the Ombudsman, the Judiciary, so he could perpetuate himself in
power…”(615 SCRA 760 2010). It is not only the law that is contradictory, but also the historical
22 BAGULAYA
records. In other words, the Record is also indeterminate and its meaning also depends on construction.
The majority noted that the excerpt refers to the discussion on nepotism and not midnight appointments
(De Castro v. JBC II 618 SCRA 661 2010).
12
It is also interesting to note the section of Justice Carpio-Morales’s dissent subtitled “All rules of
statutory construction revolt against the interpretation arrived at by the ponencia.” The section argues
that the Bersamin ponencia virtually violates the following rules: Ubi lex non distinguit nec nos
distinguire debemos, Expressio Unius et exclusion alterius, Casus omissus pro omisso habendus est,
including Verba legis non est recedendum” (615 SCRA 764-767 2010). Indeed, the majority decision
may be said to have replaced legal logic with theological logic.
13
The best example of this method is Civil Liberties Union v. Executive Secretary 194 SCRA 317 (1991),
which explained the purpose of Sec. 13 of Art. VII of the 1987 Constitution. This decision states: “A
foolproof yardstick in constitutional construction is the intention underlying the provision under
consideration. Thus, it has been held that the Court in construing a Constitution should bear in mind
the object sought to be accomplished by its adoption, and the evils, if any, sought to be prevented or
remedied. A doubtful provision will be examined in the light of the history of the times, and the
condition and circumstances under which the Constitution was framed. The object is to ascertain the
reason which induced the framers of the Constitution to enact the particular provision and the purpose
sought to be accomplished thereby, in order to construe the whole as to make the words consonant to
that reason and calculated to effect that purpose “(Citing Maxwell vs. Dow, 176 U.S. 581). This
reconstruction of purpose is also used in In re Appointment of Valenzuela, AM 98-0501, 9 November
1998. Indeed, reconstructing the Constitution’s intent has always been done by the Court through the
use of historical records. Cases like Bayan v. Zamora (2000), Senate v. Executive Secretary (2006), and
the more recent Gutierrez v. House of Representatives (2011) are representative of this method of
historical interpretation. This purposivist and historical method of interpretation retains its validity
when the reader is confronted with constitutional provisions adopted from the U.S. Constitution.
Thus, U.S. jurisprudence (like Escobedo and Miranda) which was followed in the formulation of Sec.
12 of Article III should be considered in the interpretation of said provision and U.S. jurisprudence
limiting or even reversing Miranda should be ignored. The same purposivist interpretation should not
prevent the Court from adopting decisions like Texas v. Johnson (491 U.S. 397) and Lawrence v. Texas
(539 U.S. 588) (which declared laws prohibiting flag burning and anal sex unconstitutional) in reading
the freedom of expression and due process clauses.
14
The illusion of objectivity is perpetuated through the pretense that the judge only applied the law and
the intent came not from the reader but from the text’s intent as shown by the records and confirmed
by the oracle.
15
The majority in De Castro v. JBC downplayed the rule of precedent or stare decisis et non quieta
movere (not to unsettle things that are settled). It claimed that the Court is not controlled by precedents,
especially when it has a new membership (618 SCRA 658 2010). The statement is double-edged because
it weakens the present Court’s claim to finality. The argument suggests that future members of the
Court may of course reverse its present interpretation.
16
There are few ponencias that are explicitly defensive, but nothing beats the De Castro v. JBC II ruling:
“It has been insinuated as part of the polemics attendant to the controversy…that because all the
members of the present Court were appointed by the incumbent President, a majority of them are
now granting to her the authority to appoint the successor of the retiring Chief Justice. The insinuation
is misguided and utterly unfair. The Members of the Court vote on the sole basis of their conscience
and the merits of the issues. Any claim to the contrary proceeds from malice and condescension” (618
SCRA 662 2010). This statement shows that there was widespread public skepticism about the Court’s
Constitutional interpretation. (The concept of a dangerous supplement comes from Derrida’s of
Grammatology. It is the title of chapter 2 of Part II Nature, Culture, Writing.)
PHILIPPINE HUMANITIES REVIEW 23
17
Harry Roque accused Justice Mariano Del Castillo of plagiarizing articles from law journals published
abroad. The Supreme Court later ruled that there was no plagiarism for lack of intent despite the
failure to attribute the numerous statements and notes to the authors (A.M. 10-7-17-SC, Oct. 12,
2010). See the dissenting opinion of Justice Maria Lourdes Sereno. Ironically, she herself was accused
of plagiarism by Justice Roberto Abad in a separate opinion released on 8 February 2011. Meanwhile,
Marvic Leonen, Dean of the U.P. College of Law (now a justice of the Supreme Court), one of the
signatories of the statement accusing Justice Del Castillo of plagiarism, was also accused of plagiarism.
Indeed, vindictiveness and resentment seem to have been the answer to an otherwise academic issue.
Not to be outdone, the Court also ran after the U.P. law professors who demanded the resignation of
Justice Del Castillo and required the latter to show cause why they should not be cited for contempt.
Two months later, the Court issued another controversial decision declaring unconstitutional the creation
of the Truth Commission set up by President Aquino to investigate the Arroyo administration (G.R.
192935, 7 December 2010). This decision seems to confirm the popular observation that there is an
“Arroyo Court.” Of course, the history of the Arroyo Court does not end with the recent impeachment
of Corona. One may also add to this litany the League of Cities v. COMELEC case which has
accumulated four decisions!
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