Cessante Ratione Legis Cessat Ipsa Lex: The Spectral Authority of Avelino v. Cuenco in the Constitutional Ontology of the Philippine Republic
Cessante Ratione Legis Cessat Ipsa Lex: The Spectral Authority of Avelino v. Cuenco in the Constitutional Ontology of the Philippine Republic Amiel Gerald A. Roldan™ June 6, 2026 In the labyrinthine corridors of Philippine constitutional jurisprudence, where the ghosts of past textual regimes haunt the living law, the Integrated Bar of the Philippines (IBP) invokes *Avelino v. Cuenco* (G.R. No. L-2821, March 4, 1949) as a talismanic precedent amid contemporary senatorial turbulence. Yet this citation invites a profound philosophical and hermeneutic interrogation. The premise under examination—that reliance on this 1949 decision under the 1935 Constitution is misplaced, its core holdings confined to jurisdictional dismissal as *obiter dictum* beyond the political question doctrine, and its authority eroded by the maxim *cessante ratione legis cessat ipsa lex*—unfolds as a meditation on the temporality of legal reason, the ontology of constitutional text, and the dialectic between ...
