Digests
There are 237 results on the current subject filter
| Title | IDs & Reference #s | Background | Primary Holding | Subject Matter |
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Malate Construction Development Corporation vs. Extraordinary Realty Agents & Brokers Cooperative (5th January 2022) |
AK558396 G.R. No. 243765 , 919 Phil. 146 |
The case arises from a dispute between a real estate developer and a realty cooperative concerning the payment of sales commissions under a Marketing Agreement for the promotion and sale of low-cost housing units in a residential subdivision project. |
Corporate directors or officers cannot be held personally liable for the corporation's obligations absent clear and convincing evidence that they acted in bad faith, with gross negligence, or knowingly assented to patently unlawful acts; mere allegations or speculation of wrongdoing are insufficient to pierce the corporate veil and disregard the corporation's separate juridical personality. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Liability of Directors |
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Salido vs. Aramaywan Metals Development Corporation (18th March 2021) |
AK223272 G.R. No. 233857 , UDK 16000 , CA-G.R. CV No. 98934 , SEC Case No. 07-89 |
The case arose from an Agreement to Incorporate between Cerlito San Juan (financier), Ernesto Mangune (technical officer), and Agapito Salido, Jr. and his faction (mining site operators) to form Aramaywan Metals Development Corporation and Narra Mining Corporation. Under the Agreement, San Juan advanced P2.5 million for paid-up subscriptions in exchange for 55% ownership of Aramaywan, while the Salido faction secured mining permits. After incorporation, disputes arose regarding San Juan's compliance with funding obligations, leading to a factional split between the San Juan and Salido groups over corporate control and the validity of board resolutions affecting share classification and corporate governance. |
A corporation cannot validly reduce a stockholder's fully paid shares or convert them into treasury shares without unrestricted retained earnings sufficient to cover the reacquisition, and such reduction cannot be effected merely by board resolution or stockholder agreement without complying with the statutory formalities for capital stock reduction under Section 38 of the Corporation Code and the procedural requirements for delinquency sales under Sections 67 and 68. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Classification of Shares |
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La Savoie Development Corporation vs. Buenavista Properties, Inc. (19th June 2019) |
AK487242 G.R. Nos. 200934-35 , 854 Phil. 125 |
The dispute arose from a Joint Venture Agreement (JVA) wherein La Savoie Development Corporation agreed to develop land into a subdivision by 1995, subject to a penalty of P10,000 per day for delay. After failing to meet extended deadlines, Buenavista Properties, Inc. filed suit in the Quezon City Regional Trial Court (QC RTC). While the case was pending, La Savoie filed for corporate rehabilitation, securing a Stay Order that suspended all claims. Despite this, the QC RTC rendered judgment awarding penalties. The rehabilitation court later approved a plan reducing these penalties and attempted to stop execution of the QC RTC decision, leading to consolidated petitions before the Court of Appeals and ultimately the Supreme Court. |
A court-approved rehabilitation plan may validly provide for the reduction of liability for contractual penalties incurred by a distressed corporation, even over creditor opposition, provided the underlying judgment awarding such penalties was rendered in violation of a stay order and is therefore void ab initio; however, a rehabilitation court cannot issue orders preventing a co-equal court from executing its final judgments, as only the Court of Appeals or Supreme Court may halt such execution. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Rehabilitation |
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Engineering Geoscience, Inc. vs. Philippine Savings Bank (10th January 2019) |
AK096287 G.R. No. 187262 |
The case arose from a loan obligation of EGI to PSBank secured by real estate mortgage. After EGI defaulted on the loan, PSBank initiated foreclosure proceedings. EGI filed a complaint before the Regional Trial Court (RTC) to annul the loan contract and obtained a writ of preliminary injunction. Before the case proceeded to trial, the parties entered into a compromise agreement which the RTC approved in 1993. When EGI failed to comply with the payment terms under the compromise, execution proceedings followed, culminating in the transfer of the mortgaged properties to PSBank. Twelve years after the approval of the compromise agreement, EGI sought to nullify it, claiming its former president acted without board authority and had fraudulently concealed the proceedings from the corporation. |
A corporation is bound by the acts of its officers under the doctrine of apparent authority when it knowingly permits an officer to act within the scope of apparent authority and holds him out to the public as possessing such power; moreover, a corporation is estopped from denying an officer's authority after benefiting from the officer's acts and unduly delaying its repudiation for twelve years. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Authority of Officers |
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Mabuhay Holdings vs. Sembcorp Logistics (5th December 2018) |
AK336582 G.R. No. 212734 , CA-G.R. CV No. 92296 |
The case involves a commercial dispute between Mabuhay Holdings Corporation (a Philippine corporation) and Sembcorp Logistics Limited (a Singaporean company) regarding a Shareholders' Agreement governing their joint venture through two corporations: Water Jet Shipping Corporation (WJSC) and Water Jet Netherlands Antilles, N.Y. (WJNA). The agreement contained an arbitration clause designating ICC arbitration in Singapore and excluded "intra-corporate controversies" from arbitration. After Sembcorp invested in the joint venture corporations, it claimed a guaranteed minimum return from Mabuhay and IDHI, which was not paid, leading to ICC arbitration. |
The recognition and enforcement of a foreign arbitral award may only be refused on the exclusive grounds enumerated under Article V of the 1958 New York Convention, as adopted in Republic Act No. 9285; courts may not re-examine the merits of the award or substitute their judgment for that of the arbitral tribunal, and the "public policy" exception must be interpreted narrowly to include only those awards that violate the State's fundamental tenets of justice and morality. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporations |
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Cezar Yatco Real Estate Services, Inc. vs. Bel-Air Village Association, Inc. (21st November 2018) |
AK878702 G.R. No. 211780 , 843 Phil. 678 , G.R No. 211780 |
Bel-Air Village was developed in the 1950s by Makati Development Corporation, with lot sales subject to Deed Restrictions annotated on Transfer Certificates of Title. These restrictions were initially effective for fifty years from January 15, 1957, to January 15, 2007, and were intended for the sanitation, security, and general welfare of the community. Bel-Air Village Association, Inc. (BAVA) was constituted as a non-stock, non-profit association with automatic membership for all lot owners. As the expiration date approached, BAVA initiated proceedings to amend and extend the Deed Restrictions, leading to a dispute regarding the validity of the extension and the proxies used in the ratification vote. |
The term of effectivity of restrictive covenants is an integral part of the restrictions themselves and may be validly extended by majority vote of the association members where the deed explicitly empowers the association to amend "particular restrictions or parts thereof"; furthermore, proxies for voting in homeowners' association meetings are valid if they comply with the requirements of Section 58 of the Corporation Code (in writing, signed by the member, filed with the corporate secretary) and the specific formalities prescribed in the association's by-laws, without requiring notarization under Articles 1358 and 1878 of the Civil Code. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Manner of Voting and Proxies |
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Noell Whessoe, Inc. v. Independent Testing Consultants, Inc. (7th November 2018) |
AK422916 G.R. No. 199851 |
The case arises from a construction project involving multiple layers of contracting and subcontracting relationships. It addresses the statutory protection afforded to suppliers and laborers under Article 1729 of the Civil Code, which creates an exception to the general rule on privity of contracts to shield suppliers from unscrupulous contractors and possible connivance between owners and contractors. The decision also clarifies the extent of a corporation's entitlement to moral damages, distinguishing between natural and artificial persons in the context of reparable injuries. |
A contractor may be solidarily liable with the owner and the subcontractor for unpaid obligations to the subcontractor's supplier under Article 1729 of the Civil Code despite the absence of a contract between the contractor and supplier; however, full payment to the subcontractor serves as a valid defense against this liability. Furthermore, a corporation, being an artificial being with no feelings, emotions, or senses, is incapable of experiencing mental suffering and cannot be awarded moral damages. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporation as an Artificial Being |
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Ku vs. RCBC Securities (17th October 2018) |
AK012904 G.R. No. 219491 , 842 Phil. 349 |
The case arises from a dispute between an investor and a securities broker regarding alleged unauthorized trading transactions, mismanagement of investment accounts, and fraudulent solicitation of investments. The controversy centers on the proper judicial venue for cases involving securities trading following the legislative transfer of jurisdiction over intra-corporate disputes from the Securities and Exchange Commission to the Regional Trial Courts, and the procedural mechanisms governing the assignment of cases to Special Commercial Courts. |
Jurisdiction over intra-corporate controversies under Section 5 of Presidential Decree No. 902-A was transferred by Republic Act No. 8799 to Regional Trial Courts as courts of general jurisdiction, not merely to specific branches designated as Special Commercial Courts; thus, an ordinary civil action erroneously re-raffled to a Special Commercial Court does not divest the RTC of subject matter jurisdiction, and insufficient payment of docket fees based on the clerk of court's assessment, without deliberate intent to defraud, does not automatically oust jurisdiction provided the party shows willingness to pay the deficiency. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Transfer of Jurisdiction |
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Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Fatima vs. Alzona (6th August 2018) |
AK635551 G.R. No. 224307 , 838 Phil. 283 |
The petitioner is a religious and charitable congregation established under the patronage of the Roman Catholic Bishop of San Pablo on May 30, 1989, dedicated to caring for abandoned and neglected elderly persons. Purificacion Y. Alzona, a spinster and registered owner of several parcels of land in Calamba City, Laguna, became a benefactor of the petitioner in 1996. After being diagnosed with lung cancer in 1997, Purificacion requested the petitioner's Superior General, Mother Ma. Concepcion R. Realon, to care for her in her home. In 1999, Purificacion expressed her intent to donate her properties to the petitioner to support its charitable mission. |
A donee that is not yet incorporated at the time of donation but is subsequently issued a Certificate of Incorporation may enforce a donation against the donor's heirs under the doctrine of corporation by estoppel, provided the donor dealt with the association as a corporation and derived benefit from the transaction; moreover, subsequent ratification by the corporation of its representative's acceptance cures any defect in the donation's perfection. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporations Created by Special Laws or Charters; De Facto Corporations; Corporation by Estoppel |
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Maricalum Mining Corporation vs. Florentino (23rd July 2018) |
AK247144 G.R. No. 221813 , G.R. No. 222723 , 836 Phil. 655 , G.R No. 221813 |
The dispute originated from the privatization of Maricalum Mining Corporation (MMC), a former government-owned non-performing asset. After the Asset Privatization Trust (APT) sold 90% of MMC's shares to G Holdings, Inc. in 1992, MMC's employees were allegedly compelled to form manpower cooperatives to continue working. When MMC ceased operations in 2001 and its assets were foreclosed and sold to G Holdings, the workers filed labor claims for illegal dismissal and monetary benefits. The central legal issue evolved into whether G Holdings, as the parent/holding company, should be held solidarily liable with MMC for these claims by piercing the veil of corporate fiction, or whether MMC's separate corporate personality should be respected. |
The doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction under the alter ego theory requires the concurrence of three elements: (1) complete domination or control by the parent or holding corporation over the subsidiary's finances, policy, and business practice; (2) use of such control to commit fraud, wrong, or perpetuate violation of a statutory or other positive legal duty; and (3) proximate causation of injury or unjust loss. Mere ownership and control by a holding company over a subsidiary's assets, without proof of fraudulent intent to evade labor obligations or gross negligence amounting to bad faith, is insufficient to pierce the corporate veil and impose liability on the holding company for the subsidiary's labor debts. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Piercing the Veil of Corporate Fiction |
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Ellao vs. BATELEC I (9th July 2018) |
AK892379 G.R. No. 209166 , 835 Phil. 914 |
The case involves the jurisdictional delineation between labor tribunals (Labor Arbiter and NLRC) and regular courts (Regional Trial Courts) regarding termination disputes involving electric cooperatives organized under Presidential Decree No. 269. These cooperatives are non-stock, non-profit entities vested with corporate powers. The controversy centers on whether the dismissal of a cooperative's General Manager is a labor dispute or an intra-corporate controversy, particularly in light of the transfer of jurisdiction over intra-corporate disputes from the Securities and Exchange Commission to the Regional Trial Courts under Republic Act No. 8799. |
The dismissal of a General Manager of an electric cooperative, where such position is expressly provided for in the cooperative's By-laws as a corporate office, constitutes an intra-cooperative controversy within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Courts pursuant to Republic Act No. 8799 (transferring jurisdiction over intra-corporate disputes from the Securities and Exchange Commission to the regular courts), and not the labor tribunals. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Transfer of Jurisdiction |
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Florete vs. Florete (2nd April 2018) |
AK125983 G.R. No. 223321 |
Marsal & Co., Inc. was organized in 1966 as a close corporation by members of the Florete family. Following the deaths of patriarch Marcelino Florete, Sr. and his daughter Teresita Florete Menchavez, disputes arose regarding the distribution of estate assets, including corporate shareholdings. A Compromise Agreement approved by the probate court transferred Teresita's shares to her brother Rogelio Florete, Sr. Seventeen years later, the remaining siblings sought to annul the transfer, claiming violation of preemptive rights under the Articles of Incorporation. |
In a close corporation, stockholders may waive strict compliance with procedural restrictions on the transfer of shares contained in the Articles of Incorporation through their actual knowledge of the transfer and acquiescence thereto for a substantial period; such waiver validates the transfer despite technical non-compliance with the formal notice requirements, and the corporation cannot refuse to register the transfer when all stockholders have effectively consented. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Close Corporations |
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Tee Ling Kiat vs. Ayala Corporation (7th March 2018) |
AK747574 G.R. No. 192530 , 827 Phil. 288 |
The case arose from a money judgment obtained by Ayala Corporation against Continental Manufacturing Corporation (CMC) and Spouses Dewey and Lily Dee in 1990. During execution of the judgment, the sheriff levied upon real properties registered under Vonnel Industrial Park, Inc. (VIP), on the basis that Dewey Dee was an incorporator thereof. Tee Ling Kiat intervened, claiming he purchased Dee's shares in VIP in December 1980, thereby asserting ownership over the levied corporate assets and seeking to nullify the levy. |
A transfer of shares of stock is not valid against the corporation and third persons unless recorded in the books of the corporation showing the names of the parties, the date of transfer, and the number of shares transferred, pursuant to Section 63 of the Corporation Code; mere presentation of cancelled checks and photocopies of deeds of sale, without recording in the corporate books, is insufficient to prove ownership of shares or establish standing to file a third-party claim against levied corporate properties. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Certificate of Stock and Transfer of Shares |
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Dr. Gil J. Rich vs. Guillermo Paloma III, Atty. Evarista Tarce and Ester L. Servacio (7th March 2018) |
AK159352 G.R. No. 210538 , 827 Phil. 398 |
The case involves a dispute over a foreclosed property where the original debtor allegedly mortgaged the same property to two different creditors at different times. The controversy centers on the validity of a redemption exercised by the second mortgagee, MTLC, which had already been dissolved by the SEC before executing the mortgage agreement, raising fundamental questions regarding the extent of corporate powers during the liquidation period following dissolution. |
A corporation dissolved prior to entering into a real estate mortgage agreement lacks juridical personality to execute such contract, as entering into new mortgage transactions constitutes a business activity beyond the liquidation powers authorized under Section 122 of the Corporation Code; therefore, the mortgage and any subsequent redemption thereunder are void ab initio. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporate Liquidation |
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De La Salle Montessori vs. De La Salle Brothers (7th February 2018) |
AK023441 G.R. No. 205548 , 825 Phil. 621 |
The case arises from the long-standing use of the "De La Salle" name by a group of educational institutions founded by or associated with the De La Salle Brothers in the Philippines. The dispute centers on the registration of a new corporate name by an unrelated educational institution and the scope of protection afforded to corporate names under Section 18 of the Corporation Code of the Philippines. |
A corporation acquires the exclusive right to use a corporate name by priority of adoption; the phrase "De La Salle" is not generic but arbitrary, fanciful, and suggestive, making it legally protectable against subsequent registrants in the same industry where confusing similarity is likely to occur. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporate Name |
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Cacho vs. Balagtas (7th February 2018) |
AK946998 G.R. No. 202974 , 825 Phil. 597 |
The dispute arose from the termination of Virginia D. Balagtas, who served North Star International Travel, Inc. for fourteen years in various capacities, including as General Manager and later as Executive Vice President/Chief Executive Officer. Following allegations of questionable transactions and misappropriation of company funds, the Board of Directors placed her under preventive suspension in March 2004 and subsequently prevented her from resuming her duties. Balagtas filed a complaint for constructive dismissal before the Labor Arbiter, while the employer contended that the dispute involved the removal of a corporate officer, thereby constituting an intra-corporate controversy outside labor jurisdiction. |
The dismissal of a corporate officer is an intra-corporate controversy falling under the exclusive jurisdiction of regular courts pursuant to Republic Act No. 8799 (the Securities Regulation Code), not a labor dispute cognizable by the Labor Arbiter or NLRC, where the dismissal relates to the incidents of the corporate office and the position was created by the corporation's by-laws and filled by the board of directors' appointment or election. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Transfer of Jurisdiction |
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International Academy of Management and Economics vs. Litton and Company (13th December 2017) |
AK162983 G.R. No. 191525 , 822 Phil. 610 |
The case arose from a long-standing dispute over unpaid rentals and realty taxes owed by Atty. Emmanuel T. Santos to Litton and Company, Inc. under lease agreements. After obtaining a final and executory judgment in an unlawful detainer case, Litton sought execution against Santos, who attempted to shield his assets by transferring them to I/AME, a non-stock educational corporation where he served as President, majority contributor, and controlling figure. |
The doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction applies to non-stock, non-profit corporations, and "reverse piercing" (outsider reverse piercing) is recognized in Philippine jurisprudence, allowing a judgment creditor to satisfy the personal debt of a controlling shareholder or member from the assets of the corporation when the corporation is merely the alter ego of the individual and is used to perpetrate fraud or evade existing obligations. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Piercing the Veil of Corporate Fiction |
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Belo Medical Group vs. Santos (30th August 2017) |
AK585633 G.R. No. 185894 , 817 Phil. 363 |
Following the enactment of Republic Act No. 8799 (The Securities Regulation Code), jurisdiction over intra-corporate disputes was transferred from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to the Regional Trial Courts designated as Special Commercial Courts. This case clarifies the scope of such jurisdiction and the proper appellate procedure. The dispute arose from a conflict between Jose Santos, a registered stockholder and former director of Belo Medical Group, Inc. (BMGI), and Victoria Belo, the majority stockholder (90%), regarding 25 shares of stock registered in Santos' name. Santos sought to inspect corporate records, invoking his rights under the Corporation Code. Belo opposed, claiming Santos held the shares in trust for her and that his request was in bad faith because he owned a competing business. BMGI, facing potential liability for denying inspection to a registered stockholder or accommodating a competitor, filed suit to compel the parties to interplead and litigate their conflicting claims. |
A conflict between stockholders regarding ownership of shares and the right to inspect corporate records constitutes an intra-corporate controversy subject to the jurisdiction of Special Commercial Courts under the Interim Rules of Procedure Governing Intra-Corporate Controversies, regardless of whether the complaint is styled as an interpleader; moreover, appeals from decisions of Special Commercial Courts in intra-corporate cases must be taken to the Court of Appeals via Rule 43, not directly to the Supreme Court via Rule 45. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Transfer of Jurisdiction |
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Bank of Commerce vs. Heirs of Rodolfo Dela Cruz (14th August 2017) |
AK555296 G.R. No. 211519 , 816 Phil. 747 |
The case arises from a banking relationship where a depositor discovered unauthorized withdrawals from his account due to a bank's negligence. Concurrently, the acquiring bank (Bank of Commerce) sought to collect on loans obtained by the depositor from the original bank (Panasia), leading to a dispute over whether the acquiring bank assumed all liabilities of the original bank or only selected assets and obligations. |
The terms of merger between two corporations, when determinative of their joint or respective liabilities towards third parties, cannot be assumed. The party alleging the corporations' joint liabilities must establish the allegation with competent evidence. Otherwise, the liabilities of each corporation remain separate and distinct. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Effects of Merger or Consolidation |
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Virata vs. Ng Wee (5th July 2017) |
AK360637 G.R. No. 220926 , G.R. No. 221058 , G.R. No. 221109 , G.R. No. 221135 , G.R. No. 221218 , 813 Phil. 252 |
The case arises from the aftermath of the Asian financial crisis, during which Westmont Investment Corporation (Wincorp), a licensed investment house, sought to conceal defaulted loans from Hottick Holdings Corporation. To remove Hottick's non-performing assets from its books, Wincorp orchestrated a scheme involving Power Merge Corporation—a shell company controlled by Luis Juan Virata—to issue promissory notes in exchange for Hottick's obligations. Wincorp then marketed these Power Merge obligations to investors, including Alejandro Ng Wee, as safe, high-yield "sans recourse" transactions, while secretly executing Side Agreements that released Power Merge from any payment obligation, rendering the promissory notes worthless. |
Transactions denominated as "sans recourse" money placements that pool investor funds to finance corporate borrowers, with investors expecting profits from the efforts of the investment house, constitute investment contracts under the Howey test and are therefore securities requiring registration under the Revised Securities Act. Investment houses that disguise direct borrowing as "sans recourse" brokerage, while secretly releasing borrowers from liability through side agreements, commit fraud and violate quasi-banking regulations. Corporate directors and officers may be held solidarily liable for such fraudulent schemes under Section 31 of the Corporation Code when they act in bad faith or gross negligence, and the corporate veil may be pierced when the corporation is merely an alter ego used to perpetrate injustice. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Securities - Definition |
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Bustos vs. Millians Shoe, Inc. (24th April 2017) |
AK342981 G.R. No. 185024 , 809 Phil. 226 |
The case arises from the intersection of local government tax enforcement and corporate rehabilitation proceedings. A winning bidder at a tax delinquency sale sought to exclude the auctioned property from the coverage of a stay order issued in rehabilitation proceedings involving Millians Shoe, Inc. (MSI), arguing that the property belonged to the corporate stockholders (Spouses Cruz) and not to the corporation itself. The lower courts ruled against the bidder, characterizing the corporation as a close corporation and holding the stockholders personally liable for corporate debts, thereby including their personal property in the rehabilitation proceedings. |
Properties owned by stockholders of a corporation are not assets of the corporation and cannot be included in rehabilitation proceedings or subjected to stay orders covering corporate assets, absent proof that the corporation is a close corporation under Section 96 of the Corporation Code and that the specific conditions for personal liability under Section 100(5) (active engagement in management, corporate torts, and lack of adequate liability insurance) are satisfied. The doctrine of separate juridical personality and limited liability shields stockholders from personal liability for corporate debts, and the 10-day opposition period under Rule 4, Section 6 of the Interim Rules on Corporate Rehabilitation applies only to creditors of the debtor corporation, not to claimants against stockholders personally. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Close Corporations; Rehabilitation |
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Land Bank vs. West Bay Colleges (17th April 2017) |
AK413208 G.R. No. 211287 , 808 Phil. 712 |
This case involves the Chiongbian Group of Companies (CGC), composed of West Bay Colleges, Inc. (an educational institution), PBR Management and Development Corporation (real estate), and BCP Trading Co., Inc. (construction), which obtained various loans from Land Bank of the Philippines secured by real and chattel mortgages. After experiencing financial difficulties and filing for corporate rehabilitation, a dispute arose regarding the proper application of insurance proceeds from a sunken vessel to the group's loan obligations, and whether the Stay Order issued in the rehabilitation proceedings affected the creditor's right to set off these proceeds against the debts. |
A creditor holding insurance proceeds from a mortgaged property must reimburse the debtor when no actual application of such proceeds to the loan obligations is evidenced in the rehabilitation plans, and any attempted application after the issuance of a Stay Order in corporate rehabilitation proceedings is prohibited because such order bars the debtor from making payments of pre-petition liabilities and suspends creditors' rights to enforce claims. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Rehabilitation |
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Sumifru (Philippines) Corporation vs. Bernabe Baya (17th April 2017) |
AK871804 G.R. No. 188269 , 808 Phil. 635 |
The case arose from a labor dispute involving an employee who formed an agrarian reform beneficiaries' cooperative (AMSKARBEMCO) in opposition to his employer's interests. Following the employee's refusal to shift loyalty to a pro-company cooperative and the subsequent implementation of agrarian reform covering portions of the employer's plantation, the employee was demoted from a supervisory position to rank-and-file status. During the appellate proceedings, DFC merged with Sumifru (Philippines) Corporation, which became the surviving entity. |
In a merger, the surviving corporation becomes responsible and liable for all liabilities and obligations of the constituent corporations in the same manner as if it had itself incurred such liabilities or obligations, pursuant to Section 80 of the Corporation Code of the Philippines. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Effects of Merger or Consolidation |
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Philippine Numismatic and Antiquarian Society vs. Genesis Aquino (30th January 2017) |
AK889012 G.R. No. 206617 , 804 Phil. 508 |
The case arose from a leadership dispute within the Philippine Numismatic and Antiquarian Society (PNAS), a non-stock, non-profit domestic corporation, where conflicting factions claimed authority to represent the corporation in litigation. This resulted in the filing of two separate complaints before the same Regional Trial Court branch represented by different counsels and different alleged officers, creating uncertainty as to the true leadership of the corporation. |
A corporation may only exercise its power to sue through its board of directors or officers duly authorized by board resolution; an individual corporate officer cannot solely exercise such corporate power without authority from the board, and courts are not required to take judicial notice of corporate board resolutions or an officer's authority to represent the corporation, such that failure to submit proof of authorization is a valid ground for dismissal for lack of cause of action. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporation as an Artificial Being |
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Lim vs. Moldex Land, Inc. (25th January 2017) |
AK734861 G.R. No. 206038 , 804 Phil. 341 |
The case arises from a dispute over the control and management of 1322 Golden Empire Tower, a condominium project developed by Moldex Land, Inc. Moldex retained ownership of 220 unsold units and sought to exercise control over the condominium corporation (Condocor) through its appointed representatives, who were elected as directors and officers during a controversial general membership meeting. This raised significant issues regarding the proper composition of the board of a condominium corporation and the rights of owner-developers versus unit buyers. |
In non-stock corporations, the existence of a quorum is determined by the numerical majority of actual members who are entitled to vote (members in good standing), not by the majority of the total voting rights or outstanding capital stock; consequently, non-members cannot be elected as directors or trustees of a non-stock corporation even if they represent a corporate member. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Quorum in Meetings; Right to Vote - Non-Stock Corporation |
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Ient vs. Tullett Prebon (11th January 2017) |
AK912823 G.R. No. 189158 , G.R. No. 189530 |
The case arises from the competitive landscape of the inter-dealer brokerage (IDB) industry in the Philippines. Tullett Prebon (Philippines), Inc. (Tullett), established in 1995, was a leading IDB servicing banks and financial institutions. Its competitor, the Tradition Group, sought to expand its Asian operations by establishing Tradition Financial Services Philippines, Inc. (Tradition Philippines). The dispute centers on the alleged mass resignation of Tullett's entire brokering staff, orchestrated by its former directors and officers (Villalon and Chuidian) in conspiracy with petitioners James Ient and Maharlika Schulze (officers of the Tradition Group), allegedly to sabotage Tullett's business and transfer its clientele to Tradition Philippines. |
Violations of Sections 31 and 34 of the Corporation Code do not give rise to criminal liability under Section 144 because these sections already provide specific civil remedies (damages for bad faith or negligence under Section 31; accounting and refunding of profits under Section 34), and the legislative history confirms no intent to criminalize breaches of fiduciary duty. The term "not otherwise specifically penalized" in Section 144 encompasses both criminal and civil penalties, and applying the rule of lenity, the ambiguity must be resolved in favor of the accused. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Disloyalty of Director; Investigations Offenses and Penalties |
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SEC vs. CJH Development Corporation (28th November 2016) |
AK675790 G.R. No. 210316 , 801 Phil. 110 , CA-G.R. SP No. 125482 |
CJH Development Corporation (CJHDC), a domestic real estate corporation, entered into a 50-year lease agreement with the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) for a 247-hectare property within the John Hay Special Economic Zone in Baguio City. CJHDC developed the property into a tourism complex and constructed two condotel buildings ("The Manor" and "The Suites"). To finance the development, CJHDC and its wholly-owned subsidiary CJH Suites Corporation (CJHSC) offered residential units for sale under schemes that included "leaseback" or "money-back" arrangements, where buyers would receive income shares or guaranteed returns while the units were pooled and operated as hotel rooms. |
A Cease and Desist Order (CDO) issued by the SEC under Section 64.1 of the Securities Regulation Code is an interlocutory order based on prima facie evidence that is not subject to appeal; parties must exhaust administrative remedies by filing a motion to lift the CDO before the SEC rather than resorting to judicial review, and the SEC retains primary jurisdiction over technical determinations regarding whether a transaction constitutes an investment contract or security. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Reportorial Requirements |
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Agdao Residents Inc. vs. Maramion (17th October 2016) |
AK707664 G.R. Nos. 188642 & 189425 , G.R. Nos. 188888-89 , 797 Phil. 281 |
Agdao Landless Residents Association, Inc. (ALRAI) is a non-stock, non-profit corporation organized to assist landless residents in Davao City. Dakudao & Sons, Inc. donated 46 titled lots to ALRAI, subject to a five-year restriction in one deed prohibiting partition or distribution to individual members without written authority from the donor. Disputes arose when ALRAI's board of directors transferred several lots to themselves and other individuals allegedly as compensation for services and financial assistance, and subsequently expelled members who questioned these transactions. |
In non-stock corporations, membership termination must strictly comply with the procedures prescribed in the articles of incorporation or by-laws, including due notice and opportunity to be heard; and transfers of corporate property to directors or officers are voidable under Section 32 of the Corporation Code unless they are fair, reasonable, approved without the participation of the interested directors, and serve a legitimate corporate purpose, otherwise constituting a breach of fiduciary duty. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Dealings of Directors; Termination of Membership |
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Ursua vs. Republic (5th October 2016) |
AK913389 805 SCRA 1 , 796 Phil. 439 , G.R. Nos. 177857-58 , G.R. No. 178193 |
The case originates from the sequestration of assets, including SMC shares held by Coconut Industry Investment Fund (CIIF) Holding Companies, alleged to have been acquired using coco levy funds during the Marcos regime. A 1986 sale of 33.1 million SMC shares by CIIF Holding Companies (administered by UCPB) to the SMC Group was partially rescinded through a 1990 Compromise Agreement between UCPB Group and SMC Group, which required PCGG approval. This agreement recognized SMC's ownership of shares corresponding to its initial P500 million payment (which became 25.45 million shares due to stock dividends/splits) and designated them as SMC treasury shares, while the rest reverted to CIIF Holding Companies. The Republic later sought to include these 25.45 million treasury shares in the assets declared as publicly owned and subject to reconveyance. |
The Court lacks jurisdiction to order San Miguel Corporation (SMC), a non-party to Civil Case No. 0033-F, to deliver the 25.45 million SMC treasury shares (originating from the 1990 Compromise Agreement) to the Republic, as doing so without impleading SMC violates its constitutional right to due process. |
Civil Procedure I Corporation and Basic Securities Law |
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Philippine Geothermal, Inc. Employees Union vs. Unocal Philippines, Inc. (28th September 2016) |
AK023308 G.R. No. 190187 , 796 Phil. 96 |
This case addresses the intersection of corporate law and labor law, specifically interpreting the effects of a merger under Section 80 of the Corporation Code on the employment status of employees of the absorbed corporation. It clarifies the scope of constitutional protections for labor and security of tenure in the context of corporate restructuring, rejecting the notion that a merger automatically severs the employer-employee relationship or entitles employees to separation benefits. |
The merger of a corporation with another does not operate to dismiss the employees of the corporation absorbed by the surviving corporation; rather, the surviving corporation automatically assumes the employment contracts of the absorbed corporation by operation of law, and employees are not entitled to separation pay on account of such merger in the absence of just or authorized causes for termination under the Labor Code or express contractual stipulations providing for such benefit in the event of merger. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Effects of Merger or Consolidation |
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Chua vs. People of the Philippines (24th August 2016) |
AK603331 G.R. No. 216146 |
The case arises from a family dispute involving Chua Tee Corporation of Manila (CTCM), a family-owned corporation where the petitioners (uncles and accountant of the complainant) served as corporate officers. After the corporation ceased operations and its corporate term expired on May 26, 1999, a stockholder demanded to inspect corporate records in August 2000. The refusal by the corporate officers to allow inspection led to criminal prosecution, raising the legal question of whether officers retain duties to stockholders after corporate dissolution and during the winding-up period. |
A corporation dissolved by expiration of its corporate term or by involuntary means continues as a body corporate for three years after dissolution for purposes of prosecuting and defending suits and enabling it to settle and close its affairs, during which period the stockholder's right to inspect corporate records subsists, and officers may be held criminally liable for refusal to permit such inspection under Section 74 in relation to Section 144 of the Corporation Code, regardless of the absence of criminal intent, as the offense is malum prohibitum. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Involuntary Dissolution |
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Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Goodyear Philippines, Inc. (3rd August 2016) |
AK041710 G.R. No. 216130 |
The case involves the tax treatment of proceeds from the redemption of preferred shares issued by Goodyear Philippines, Inc. to its foreign parent company, Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company (GTRC), a non-resident foreign corporation organized under US law. The redemption price included the aggregate par value plus accrued dividends. The Bureau of Internal Revenue withheld 15% final withholding tax on the difference between the redemption price and par value, treating it as dividend income, prompting Goodyear to seek a refund. |
A redemption price paid to a non-resident foreign shareholder that exceeds the par value of the shares cannot be subjected to 15% final withholding tax as intercorporate dividends when the redeeming corporation has no unrestricted retained earnings, as the distribution does not constitute "dividends" under Section 73(A) of the National Internal Revenue Code and Section 43 of the Corporation Code, and the Board of Directors is legally incapacitated from declaring dividends absent such earnings. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporate Powers and Capacity |
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Indian Chamber of Commerce Phils., Inc. vs. Filipino Indian Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines, Inc. (3rd August 2016) |
AK239675 G.R. No. 184008 , 792 Phil. 277 |
The dispute arose from conflicting claims over corporate names derived from the defunct Filipino-Indian Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines, Inc. (defunct FICCPI), originally registered in 1951, whose corporate term expired in 2001 without extension. The controversy involved competing groups seeking to register successor organizations to promote Filipino-Indian business relations, leading to questions regarding the protection of dissolved corporations' names, the priority of adoption rule, and the test for confusing similarity under the Corporation Code. |
Under Section 18 of the Corporation Code, a corporate name is deceptively or confusingly similar to another when, despite minor differences in descriptive or geographical words, the overall impression is such as to mislead a person using ordinary care and discrimination; the prior registrant has the exclusive right to the use of the corporate name under the priority of adoption rule, and the SEC has absolute authority to order the change of corporate names to prevent confusion and protect the public. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporate Name |
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Andaya vs. Rural Bank of Cabadbaran (3rd August 2016) |
AK859584 G.R. No. 188769 , 792 Phil. 324 |
A transferee of shares of stock who presents duly endorsed certificates and evidence of sale is a real party in interest with a clear legal right to file an action for mandamus to compel a corporation to register the transfer in its stock and transfer book and issue new certificates in the transferee's name; the corporation's duty to effect such registration is ministerial and may only be refused if the corporation holds an unpaid claim against the shares, or if valid restrictions under Section 98 of the Corporation Code are proven to exist and bind the transferee. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Certificate of Stock and Transfer of Shares |
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Georg vs. Holy Trinity College (20th July 2016) |
AK062876 G.R. No. 190408 , 790 Phil. 631 |
The dispute arose from a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) executed to finance international airline tickets for the Holy Trinity College Grand Chorale and Dance Company's European tour. The Group, though composed of college students and supervised by the school administration, was not registered as a separate juridical entity. The central legal question is whether the college, as a corporation, is liable for the financial obligations contracted by its president for the benefit of this internal group, particularly under the doctrines of apparent authority and corporation by estoppel. |
A corporation is bound by contracts entered into by its president on behalf of an unregistered internal organization when the corporation knowingly permits the president to act within the scope of apparent authority by consistently providing financial support, supervision, and resources to the organization without board objection, thereby holding the president out as possessing the power to bind the corporation in transactions related to that organization. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Apparent Authority |
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Philippine Asset Growth Two, Inc. vs. Fastech Synergy Philippines, Inc. (28th June 2016) |
AK200119 G.R. No. 206528 , 788 Phil. 355 |
The case involves four affiliated corporations—Fastech Synergy Philippines, Inc., Fastech Microassembly & Test, Inc., Fastech Electronique, Inc., and Fastech Properties, Inc.—engaged in electronics manufacturing and property leasing. Facing financial distress, the corporations sought joint rehabilitation under the Financial Rehabilitation and Insolvency Act of 2010 (FRIA), claiming common management, shared assets, and interrelated liabilities. Planters Development Bank (PDB), a secured creditor holding mortgages over two parcels of land owned by Fastech Properties, had initiated extrajudicial foreclosure proceedings and emerged as the highest bidder in a foreclosure sale held shortly before the rehabilitation petition was filed. The central dispute concerned whether the proposed rehabilitation plan, which relied primarily on payment deferrals, interest waivers, and reduced interest rates rather than fresh capital infusion, could legally and economically restore the corporations to solvency. |
For a rehabilitation plan to be approved, it must strictly comply with the mandatory requirements under Section 18, Rule 3 of the 2008 Rules, specifically: (a) the inclusion of material financial commitments to support the rehabilitation plan, demonstrating the debtor's resolve and ability to finance continued operations; and (b) a liquidation analysis showing that the present value of payments to creditors under the plan exceeds what they would receive if the debtor were immediately liquidated. The absence of either requirement renders the plan legally insufficient and incapable of approval, regardless of the Rehabilitation Receiver's favorable recommendation. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Rehabilitation |
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Interport Resources Corp. vs. Securities Specialist, Inc. (6th June 2016) |
AK041544 G.R. No. 154069 , 786 Phil. 275 , C.A.-G.R. SP No. 66600 , SEC AC No. 501-502 |
In 1978, Oceanic Oil & Mineral Resources, Inc. merged with Interport Resources Corporation, with Interport as the surviving entity. Prior to the merger, R.C. Lee had subscribed to 5,000,000 shares of Oceanic stock, paying only 25% of the subscription price. In 1979, R.C. Lee assigned these subscription agreements to Securities Specialist, Inc. (SSI) through stock assignments indorsed in blank. A decade later, when Interport called for the payment of subscription balances, it refused to recognize SSI's rights despite the prior assignment, leading to a dispute over ownership of the shares and the validity of the transfer under the Corporation Code and Civil Code provisions on novation. |
The assignment of stock subscription agreements operates as a novation by substitution of debtor under Article 1293 of the Civil Code, requiring the corporation to recognize the assignee as the new subscriber entitled to pay the balance and receive the shares, notwithstanding the lack of registration in the stock and transfer book when the corporation has unduly refused to recognize the transfer; however, exemplary damages and attorney's fees may not be awarded solely on the basis of bad faith absent a showing of wanton, fraudulent, oppressive, or malevolent conduct. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Certificate of Stock and Transfer of Shares |
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Magallanes Watercraft Association, Inc. vs. Auguis (30th May 2016) |
AK062760 G.R. No. 211485 , 785 Phil. 866 |
The dispute arises from the enforcement of membership obligations within a local association of motorized banca operators. It addresses the scope of corporate powers of non-stock corporations, particularly whether disciplinary measures such as the suspension of membership privileges for non-payment of dues fall within the corporation's powers when not explicitly enumerated in its governing documents. |
A corporation possesses not only express powers conferred by law or its articles of incorporation, but also implied powers necessary or incidental to the exercise of those expressly conferred; an act reasonably necessary or proper to promote the interest or welfare of the corporation, and logically related to its corporate purpose, is not ultra vires even if not expressly provided in the charter or by-laws. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Ultra Vires Acts |
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Estate of Dr. Juvencio P. Ortañez vs. Jose C. Lee (9th March 2016) |
AK938953 G.R. No. 184251 , 783 Phil. 94 , CA-G.R. SP No. 97829 |
Dr. Juvencio P. Ortañez organized Philinterlife in 1956 and owned 90% of the subscribed capital stock at incorporation. Upon his death in 1980, his estate held 2,029 shares representing 50.725% of the then 4,000 outstanding shares. In 1989 and 1991, these shares were sold to Filipino Loan Assistance Group (FLAG), represented by Jose C. Lee, but this sale was later declared void ab initio in G.R. No. 146006. Meanwhile, pursuant to statutory mandates under the Insurance Code, Philinterlife increased its authorized capital stock multiple times between 1980 and 2003, reaching 50,000 shares, which progressively diluted the Estate's percentage ownership. |
A judicial declaration nullifying the sale of shares and voiding capital stock increases approved on the basis of such illegally acquired shares does not retroactively invalidate prior, legally effected capital increases that diluted the shareholding percentage of the original owner; challengers to a corporate election bear the burden of proving by preponderance of evidence that they hold majority shares to establish invalidity of the election or lack of quorum. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Election of Directors; Power to Increase or Decrease Capital Stock |
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Viva Shipping Lines, Inc. vs. Keppel Philippines Mining, Inc. (17th February 2016) |
AK005284 G.R. No. 177382 |
The case involves a shipping company facing financial distress due to currency devaluation, increased competition, and mismanagement. The company claimed ownership of multiple vessels and a shopping mall but faced substantial debts to banks, vessel repair companies, and government units. The dispute centers on the legal framework for corporate rehabilitation under the Interim Rules of Procedure on Corporate Rehabilitation, which aims to rescue financially distressed companies while balancing the interests of debtors, creditors, and the public, and the strict procedural requirements for appealing rehabilitation decisions under Rule 43 of the Rules of Court. |
Liberality in the construction of procedural rules is not an end in itself and cannot be invoked to excuse non-compliance with mandatory requirements for appeals under Rule 43, including the impleading of indispensable parties (creditors) and proof of service; moreover, a rehabilitation plan must demonstrate economic feasibility through a real opportunity to restore the debtor to solvency with present value recovery for creditors better than liquidation, otherwise the appropriate remedy is liquidation. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Rehabilitation |
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Teng vs. SEC (17th February 2016) |
AK199262 G.R. No. 184332 , G.R. No. 129777 , 402 Phil. 37 (2001) |
The case originated from respondent Ting Ping Lay's purchase of shares in TCL Sales Corporation from various stockholders between 1979 and 1989, including 480 shares from Peter Chiu and 1,440 shares from Ismaelita Maluto. Despite possessing valid deeds of sale, petitioner Anna Teng, as Corporate Secretary, refused to register the transfers in the Stock and Transfer Book and issue new certificates. This refusal led to SEC Case No. 3900, where the SEC ordered registration and issuance. After the Supreme Court affirmed this order in G.R. No. 129777 (2001), execution was delayed by an interpleader case involving competing claims to certain shares previously owned by Teng Ching. Following the resolution of the interpleader, the SEC issued an alias writ of execution for the shares acquired from Chiu and Maluto, prompting the instant petition. |
The surrender of stock certificates by the transferee to the corporation is not a mandatory prerequisite for the registration of share transfers in the corporate books under Section 63 of the Corporation Code; however, surrender is required before the issuance of new certificates to enable cancellation of the old certificates and prevent the existence of duplicate documentation covering the same shares. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Certificate of Stock and Transfer of Shares |
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University of Mindanao vs. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (11th January 2016) |
AK905378 G.R. Nos. 194964-65 , 776 Phil. 401 , G.R. No. 194964 |
University of Mindanao is an educational institution established to provide formal instruction. In 1982, its Board of Trustees was chaired by Guillermo B. Torres, whose wife, Dolores P. Torres, served as Assistant Treasurer. The Torres spouses also controlled two thrift banks: First Iligan Savings & Loan Association, Inc. (FISLAI) and Davao Savings and Loan Association, Inc. (DSLAI). When these banks faced financial distress and heavy depositor withdrawals, they obtained emergency credit from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas. To secure these loans, mortgages were executed over properties belonging to University of Mindanao, allegedly by authority of its officers. Years later, after the banks were merged and subsequently liquidated, BSP sought to foreclose on these mortgages, prompting University of Mindanao to file actions for nullification, claiming the mortgages were executed without authority and were beyond the University's corporate powers. |
A corporation, particularly an educational institution, cannot mortgage its properties to secure the loans of third persons where such act is not expressly authorized by its articles of incorporation and is not necessary or incidental to its stated purposes; such acts are ultra vires and unenforceable against the corporation. Acts of an officer not authorized by the board of directors/trustees do not bind the corporation unless the corporation ratifies the acts or holds the officer out as a person with authority to transact on its behalf. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Ultra Vires Acts |
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Orchard Golf & Country Club, Inc. vs. Yu (11th January 2016) |
AK979666 G.R. No. 191033 , 776 Phil. 352 |
The case arose from a long-standing dispute between The Orchard Golf & Country Club, Inc. and two of its members, Ernesto Yu and Manuel Yuhico, stemming from an incident on May 28, 2000, where the respondents violated the Club's "no twosome" policy and engaged in disrespectful conduct toward club management. This led to their suspension and subsequent multi-layered litigation involving the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Regional Trial Courts (RTC), and Court of Appeals (CA), culminating in this petition for review on certiorari. |
A corporation may validly suspend its members for violations of club rules and regulations despite an inconsistent bylaw provision requiring more votes than the number of existing directors when such provision is clearly an oversight; the recommendation of a house committee is not mandatory when the governing provision uses permissive language; and procedural rules may be relaxed to serve substantial justice when the delay is excusable, the appeal is meritorious, and no material prejudice is caused to the adverse party. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Contents of Bylaws; Termination of Membership |
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Querubin vs. COMELEC (8th December 2015) |
AK133176 G.R. No. 218787 , 774 Phil. 766 |
The case arises from the COMELEC’s procurement of 23,000 new units of precinct-based Optical Mark Readers (OMRs) for the May 9, 2016 National and Local Elections. The project involved a two-stage competitive bidding process with an Approved Budget for Contract of P2.5 billion. Smartmatic-TIM Corporation (SMTC), which previously supplied automated election equipment for the 2010 elections, participated as the majority partner (46.5% equity) in a joint venture. Controversy emerged when petitioners discovered that SMTC’s AOI, as submitted during the bidding stage, stated its primary purpose as solely for the "automation of the 2010 national and local elections," raising questions about its legal capacity to contract for the 2016 elections. |
The Supreme Court held that the COMELEC En Banc did not commit grave abuse of discretion in declaring the Smartmatic Joint Venture the bidder with the lowest calculated responsive bid for the 2016 election automation project, despite petitioners’ claims that SMTC’s corporate purpose was strictly limited to the 2010 elections. The Court ruled that (1) the submission of Articles of Incorporation was not a mandatory eligibility or post-qualification requirement under RA 9184 and the bidding documents; (2) even if considered, SMTC’s AOI was validly amended to include future elections before the post-qualification stage; and (3) SMTC’s participation was not an ultra vires act because it was incidental to its corporate purpose and supported by surviving contractual obligations (including a 10-year warranty) from the 2010 elections. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Ultra Vires Acts |
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GSIS Family Bank vs. BPI Family Bank (23rd September 2015) |
AK834206 G.R. No. 175278 , 770 Phil. 158 |
The case arises from the intersection of corporate law and intellectual property law concerning the registration and protection of corporate names in the banking industry. Following the acquisition of distressed thrift banks by government entities and the liberalization of the banking sector, the question of whether the term "Family Bank" constitutes a generic term available for public use or a protectable trade name with acquired goodwill became a significant issue for regulatory agencies including the SEC, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), and the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI). |
To obtain protection under Section 18 of the Corporation Code, a corporation must prove: (1) prior adoption and registration of the corporate name giving rise to a prior right, and (2) that the contested name is either identical or confusingly similar to its own; the SEC possesses absolute and exclusive jurisdiction to determine confusing similarity and prohibit the use of corporate names, and approvals by other agencies (DTI, BSP) do not override this authority; the addition of merely descriptive terms or acronyms (such as "GSIS" or "Thrift") does not render a corporate name distinct from a prior registered name when both entities engage in the same line of business. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporate Name |
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Y-I Leisure Philippines, Inc. vs. James Yu (8th September 2015) |
AK037348 G.R. No. 207161 , 769 Phil. 279 |
The case involves the sale of golf and country club shares by MADCI to respondent Yu in 1997. When the proposed project failed to materialize, Yu sought a refund. Meanwhile, MADCI entered into a Memorandum of Agreement with petitioners (the Yats Group), culminating in the sale of MADCI's entire 120-hectare landholding—its sole asset and the intended site for the golf course—to petitioners. This left MADCI incapable of fulfilling its obligations to Yu, raising the central issue of whether the asset transferees should be held liable for the transferor's debts under the business-enterprise transfer doctrine. |
Under Section 40 of the Corporation Code, a transferee of all or substantially all of a corporation's assets that renders the transferor incapable of continuing its business (a business-enterprise transfer) assumes the transferor's liabilities as a matter of law to protect creditors, regardless of whether the transfer was fraudulent or whether there was an express agreement to assume such liabilities. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporate Powers and Capacity; Sale or Other Disposition of Assets |
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SEC vs. Universal Rightfield Property Holdings, Inc. (20th July 2015) |
AK448577 G.R. No. 181381 , 764 Phil. 267 |
The case involves the SEC's enforcement of mandatory reportorial requirements under Section 17 of the Securities Regulation Code (SRC), which obligates registered issuers to file annual and quarterly reports to ensure full and fair disclosure to the investing public. The controversy clarifies the nature of the SEC's power to suspend or revoke registrations for violations, specifically addressing whether revocation requires a separate notice and hearing distinct from suspension proceedings, and whether such revocation constitutes an exercise of regulatory or quasi-judicial power. |
The Securities Regulation Code does not mandate separate notices and hearings for the suspension and revocation of securities registration; a single notice and opportunity to be heard may suffice for both sanctions, provided the registrant is adequately informed of the potential consequences and given a chance to explain its side, and any defect in procedural due process is cured by the filing of a motion for reconsideration where the party is afforded opportunity to be heard. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Power of the SEC; Suspension of Registration |
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Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. La Tondeña Distillers, Inc. (15th July 2015) |
AK661422 G.R. No. 175188 , 764 Phil. 42 |
The case arose from a Plan of Merger entered into by La Tondena Distillers, Inc. (later renamed Ginebra San Miguel, Inc.) with three other corporations. The Bureau of Internal Revenue ruled that while the merger qualified as a tax-free exchange under Section 40(C)(2) of the NIRC, the transfer of real properties was subject to DST under Section 196. Respondent paid the DST under protest and subsequently sought a refund, leading to litigation on whether the statutory exemption for transfers pursuant to merger applied. |
The transfer of real property to a surviving corporation pursuant to a merger is not subject to Documentary Stamp Tax under Section 196 of the NIRC because such transfer occurs by operation of law and does not constitute a sale, there being no purchaser or consideration as contemplated by the statute; consequently, the surviving corporation is entitled to a refund of any DST erroneously paid on such transfer. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Effects of Merger or Consolidation |
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Bernas vs. Cinco (1st July 2015) |
AK908090 G.R. Nos. 163356-57 , G.R. Nos. 163368-69 , 762 Phil. 386 |
The case involves a corporate governance dispute within Makati Sports Club, Inc. (MSC), a domestic corporation organized for social, cultural, recreational and athletic purposes. Allegations of anomalies in the handling of corporate funds by the incumbent directors (the Bernas Group) led to a power struggle between the incumbent board and a group of stockholders (the Cinco Group). The dispute centered on the validity of a special stockholders' meeting called by an ad hoc Oversight Committee to remove the sitting directors, and the subsequent ratification of such removal in annual stockholders' meetings, raising fundamental issues regarding statutory authority to call corporate meetings, the distinction between void and ultra vires acts, and the limits of the de facto officership doctrine. |
A special stockholders' meeting called for the removal of directors under Section 28 of the Corporation Code must be called strictly by the corporate secretary upon order of the president or written demand of stockholders representing at least a majority of the outstanding capital stock; a call by an unauthorized body (such as an Oversight Committee) renders the meeting void ab initio, incapable of ratification by subsequent corporate acts, and directors elected therein cannot invoke the de facto officership doctrine to validate internal disciplinary actions such as the expulsion of members and the sale of their shares. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Hold Over; Apparent Authority; Removal of Directors; Place and Time of Meetings |
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Fong vs. Dueñas (15th June 2015) |
AK028134 G.R. No. 185592 , 759 Phil. 373 |
The case arises from a failed business venture between former schoolmates who agreed to combine their resources to create a holding company that would consolidate the respondent's existing food manufacturing businesses (D.C. Danton, Inc. and Bakcom Food Industries, Inc.) and operate an international food franchise (Boboli). The dispute centers on the proper characterization of funds remitted as "advance subscriptions" to the unincorporated entity and the consequences of the parties' respective failures to perform their obligations under the verbal joint venture agreement. |
In a joint venture agreement to incorporate a corporation where both parties breach their reciprocal obligations and the first infractor cannot be determined, the contract is deemed extinguished under Article 1192 of the Civil Code, requiring mutual restitution but precluding damages for either party; specifically, pre-incorporation subscriptions must be used for the intended corporate purpose and not diverted to other business ventures without consent. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Incorporation |
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Co, Sr. vs. Philippine Canine Club, Inc. (22nd April 2015) |
AK201389 G.R. No. 190112 , 759 Phil. 134 |
The Philippine Canine Club, Inc. (PCCI) is a non-stock, non-profit corporation established to promote the breeding of purebred dogs. The petitioners were members of PCCI who registered their dogs with the Asian Kennel Club Union of the Philippines, Inc. (AKCUPI), a newly established rival organization. In response, PCCI amended its By-laws in May 2008 to include provisions allowing the suspension or expulsion of members for "membership in or participation in... an organization whose purposes and activities have been determined by the Board... to be prejudicial to the best interest of PCCI." Following this amendment, PCCI suspended or expelled several petitioners and threatened others with similar sanctions, prompting the filing of a suit for annulment of the amended By-laws and injunction. |
A writ of preliminary injunction is a preservative remedy intended solely to maintain the status quo until final adjudication of the merits; it cannot be used to correct wrongs already consummated, redress injuries already sustained, or restore membership already terminated. Consummated acts, such as completed expulsions from a corporation, are beyond the reach of injunctive relief, whereas merely threatened sanctions may still be enjoined. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Termination of Membership |
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Paz vs. New International Environmental Universality, Inc. (20th April 2015) |
AK524984 G.R. No. 203993 , 758 Phil. 510 , CA-G.R. CV No. 00903-MIN |
A party who enters into a contract recognizing the other party as a corporation is estopped from denying its corporate existence to avoid contractual liability under Section 21 of the Corporation Code, even if the corporation was not yet incorporated at the time of the contract's execution, provided the party dealt with the ostensible corporation as such. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Registration Incorporation; Corporation by Estoppel |
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Balinghasay vs. Castillo (8th April 2015) |
AK177646 G.R. No. 185664 , CA-G.R. SP No. 89279 |
Medical Center Parañaque, Inc. (MCPI) is a domestic corporation operating a hospital. In 1997, after concessions for auxiliary medical services expired, the Board of Directors awarded the operation of the ultrasound unit to a group of investors composed largely of Obstetrics-Gynecology doctors, nine of whom were also members of the Board of Directors. The group purchased ultrasound equipment worth ₱850,000.00 and operated the unit under an informal arrangement that was later formalized through a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) in 1999, dividing gross income between the investors and the corporation. |
A contract between a corporation and its directors is voidable under Section 32 of the Corporation Code when the presence of the interested directors was necessary to constitute a quorum and their votes were necessary for approval, unless ratified by the vote of stockholders representing at least two-thirds of the outstanding capital stock with full disclosure; the business judgment rule does not protect directors who act in bad faith or with gross negligence in acquiring an interest adverse to the corporation. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Dealings of Directors; Quorum in Meetings |
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Victorio-Aquino vs. Pacific Plans, Inc. (10th December 2014) |
AK027184 G.R. No. 193108 |
Pacific Plans, Inc. (now Abundance Providers and Entrepreneurs Corporation) engaged in the sale of pre-need educational plans, specifically traditional open-ended educational plans (PEPTrads), which guaranteed payment of full tuition fees regardless of actual costs at the time of enrollment. Due to financial distress arising from the deregulation of tuition fees and the 1997 Asian financial crisis, PPI found itself unable to meet obligations to approximately 34,000 planholders. In 2005, PPI filed for corporate rehabilitation under Presidential Decree No. 902-A, seeking to restructure its debts and continue operations as a going concern while providing equitable treatment to its creditors. |
A rehabilitation court possesses the authority under the Interim Rules of Procedure on Corporate Rehabilitation and the Financial Rehabilitation and Insolvency Act (FRIA) to approve modifications to an existing rehabilitation plan— including the conversion of currency denominations and suspension of certain benefits—over the objection of creditors ("cram-down" power), provided the modification is necessary to preserve the trust fund, ensure the debtor's viability, and secure equitable treatment of all stakeholders; such judicial approval does not constitute an impairment of contractual obligations under Article III, Section 10 of the Constitution because the non-impairment clause limits legislative, not judicial or quasi-judicial, power. |
Commercial Laws I Corporation and Basic Securities Law Rehabilitation |
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Lopez Realty, Inc. vs. Tanjangco (12th November 2014) |
AK564408 G.R. No. 154291 , 746 Phil. 565 |
Lopez Realty, Inc. (LRI) was the registered co-owner of the Trade Center Building together with Jose Tanjangco. Internal disputes arose among LRI's stockholders—primarily between Asuncion Lopez-Gonzales (Corporate Secretary and majority stockholder) and Arturo F. Lopez (brother and co-stockholder)—regarding the proper management and disposition of corporate assets, specifically the proposed sale of LRI's one-half interest in the property to the Tanjangcos. The dispute centered on the authority of the Board of Directors to sell corporate assets without proper notice to all directors, and the subsequent ratification of such actions by the stockholders. |
A board resolution authorizing the sale of corporate property, though initially defective due to lack of notice to a director as required by Section 53 of the Corporation Code, may be cured by subsequent express ratification by stockholders representing the majority of the outstanding capital stock in a joint stockholders and directors' meeting; furthermore, in the absence of certification by the corporate secretary, only those directors or stockholders whose signatures appear on the minutes can be deemed to have ratified the corporate action. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Board of Directors - Management |
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SEC vs. CA (22nd October 2014) |
AK206380 G.R. No. 187702 , G.R. No. 189014 , 746 Phil. 94 |
The case involves a dispute between Omico Corporation, a publicly listed company, and its minority stockholder Astra Securities Corporation regarding the validity of proxies issued in favor of Tommy Kin Hing Tia for Omico's annual stockholders' meeting. The controversy required the Supreme Court to delineate the jurisdictional boundaries between the SEC's regulatory powers under the Securities Regulation Code and the jurisdiction of regular courts over intra-corporate disputes, specifically concerning the manner of voting and the validation of proxies in corporate elections. |
Regular trial courts have original and exclusive jurisdiction over controversies involving the validation of proxies when such proxies are solicited for and used in the election of corporate directors, as these constitute "election contests" under Section 5(c) of Presidential Decree No. 902-A in relation to the Securities Regulation Code; the SEC retains jurisdiction only over proxy controversies unrelated to the election of directors. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Manner of Voting and Proxies |
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Philippine Bank of Communications vs. Basic Polyprinters and Packaging Corporation (20th October 2014) |
AK958173 G.R. No. 187581 , 745 Phil. 651 |
Basic Polyprinters, part of the Limtong Group of Companies, faced financial distress due to the Asian currency crisis, economic recession, increased competition from major malls, and a fire that destroyed significant inventory. After an initial joint petition with affiliates was remanded for individual filing, Basic Polyprinters sought rehabilitation to suspend payments to creditors, including Philippine Bank of Communications, and proposed a 15-year repayment scheme with substantial moratoriums on interest and principal payments. |
In corporate rehabilitation proceedings, the debtor need not be solvent at the time of filing; however, the rehabilitation plan must contain genuine and material financial commitments that demonstrate the debtor's resolve, earnestness, and ability to restore the corporation to viability, rather than mere reclassifications of liabilities or reliance on worthless assets. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Rehabilitation |
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Lanuza vs. BF Corporation (1st October 2014) |
AK923735 G.R. No. 174938 |
The case involves a construction dispute between BF Corporation (contractor) and Shangri-La Properties, Inc. (owner) regarding the construction of a mall and multilevel parking structure along EDSA. The dispute arose when Shangri-La allegedly defaulted on progress payments, prompting BF Corporation to file a collection suit not only against the corporation but also against its individual directors for alleged bad faith in directing the corporation's affairs under Section 31 of the Corporation Code. |
Corporate representatives may be compelled to submit to arbitration proceedings pursuant to a contract entered into by the corporation they represent if there are allegations of bad faith or malice in their acts representing the corporation, as the determination of whether to pierce the veil of corporate fiction must be made in a single proceeding participated in by all parties involved. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Piercing the Veil of Corporate Fiction |
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Villamor vs. Umale (24th September 2014) |
AK641034 G.R. No. 172843 , G.R. No. 172881 |
The case involves a dispute over corporate assets of Pasig Printing Corporation (PPC), specifically rental payments and goodwill money from MC Home Depot occupying the Rockland property in Pasig. The controversy arose when PPC's board waived the corporation's rights to lease income in favor of petitioner Villamor's law firm without consideration, and Villamor failed to remit the proceeds from MC Home Depot's checks to the corporation, prompting a stockholder to seek the appointment of a receiver and management committee. |
An action filed by a stockholder under Rule 1, Section 1(a)(1) of the Interim Rules for Intra-Corporate Controversies alleging fraud by directors detrimental to stockholder interests is not necessarily a derivative suit; to constitute a derivative suit, the plaintiff must implead the corporation as an indispensable party, exhaust intra-corporate remedies, allege the unavailability of appraisal rights, and clearly allege that the action is brought on behalf of the corporation. Additionally, the appointment of a receiver or management committee requires strict proof of both imminent danger of asset dissipation and paralyzation of business operations prejudicial to minority stockholders or the public, and only the Regional Trial Court has original and exclusive jurisdiction to appoint such receivers in intra-corporate controversies. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Rights of Unpaid Shares |
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WPM International Trading, Inc. and Manlapaz vs. Labayen (17th September 2014) |
AK824235 G.R. No. 182770 , 743 Phil. 192 |
The dispute arose from a management agreement between H.B.O. Systems Consultants (owned by Fe Corazon Labayen) and WPM International Trading, Inc. for the operation of Quickbite restaurants. When WPM failed to pay the full cost of renovations contracted by Labayen on its behalf, the contractor sued Labayen personally. After the trial court held Labayen liable for the unpaid balance, she sought indemnification from WPM and its president, Warlito P. Manlapaz, leading to the central question of whether the corporate veil could be pierced to hold Manlapaz personally liable for the corporation's obligations. |
Piercing the veil of corporate fiction under the alter ego theory requires strict proof of three concurrent elements: (1) complete domination by a stockholder of the corporation's finances, policies, and business practices such that the corporation has no separate mind, will, or existence of its own; (2) use of such control to commit fraud, wrong, or violation of a positive legal duty; and (3) proximate causation of the injury or unjust loss by such control and breach. Mere ownership of all or nearly all corporate stocks, or the concurrent holding of multiple corporate offices, is insufficient to establish the requisite control to disregard corporate personality. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Piercing the Veil of Corporate Fiction |
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Aboitiz Equity Ventures vs. Chiongbian (9th July 2014) |
AK266434 G.R. No. 197530 , 738 Phil. 773 |
This case arises from a complex corporate restructuring involving three major shipping families in the Philippines—the Aboitiz, Gothong, and Chiongbian families. In 1996, Aboitiz Shipping Corporation (ASC), Carlos A. Gothong Lines, Inc. (CAGLI), and William Lines, Inc. (WLI) executed a merger agreement transferring their shipping assets to WLI (later renamed WG&A, Inc., and subsequently Aboitiz Transport System Corporation or ATSC). A separate letter agreement (Annex SL-V) committed WLI to acquire spare parts inventories from CAGLI for a maximum of P400 million. When the actual inventories exceeded this value, a dispute arose regarding payment for the excess. After the Gothong and Chiongbian families sold their shares in WG&A to AEV in 2002, CAGLI sought to compel AEV to arbitrate the inventory dispute, despite AEV not being a party to the original 1996 Agreement or Annex SL-V. |
A dismissal for failure to state a cause of action may operate as res judicata on a subsequent case if it constitutes a judgment on the merits based on a definitive determination of the parties' rights and liabilities. Furthermore, the corporate veil cannot be pierced to hold a stockholder liable for corporate obligations based merely on ownership of all or nearly all of the capital stock; there must be clear and convincing proof of fraud or wrongdoing, which cannot be presumed. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Piercing the Veil of Corporate Fiction |
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Alabang Corporation vs. Alabang Hills Village Association (2nd June 2014) |
AK126665 G.R. No. 187456 , 734 Phil. 664 , CA-G.R. CV No. 88864 |
The case arose from a dispute between a subdivision developer and a homeowners' association regarding ownership and use of parcels of land within Alabang Hills Village. The developer's corporate existence had been revoked by the Securities and Exchange Commission several years prior to the filing of the suit, raising fundamental questions about corporate personality and the extent of the three-year liquidation period under the Corporation Code. |
A corporation whose existence has been terminated may continue as a body corporate for three years after dissolution solely for the purpose of prosecuting and defending suits, settling affairs, and distributing assets; it cannot initiate new complaints beyond this three-year liquidation period, and any suit filed by the corporation itself after such period is subject to dismissal for lack of capacity to sue. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporate Liquidation |
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Yujuico vs. Quiambao (2nd June 2014) |
AK670529 G.R. No. 180416 , 734 Phil. 606 |
The dispute arose from the annual stockholders' meeting of STRADEC on March 1, 2004, where new officers were elected to replace the incumbent management. The transition was contested when the outgoing president and corporate secretary refused to turn over corporate records, including accounting files and the stock and transfer book, to the newly elected officers. This led to a criminal complaint alleging violations of Section 74 (Books to be kept) in relation to Section 144 (Violations of the Code) of the Corporation Code, raising novel questions about the scope of criminal liability for withholding corporate records during management transitions. |
A criminal action for violation of a stockholder's right to examine corporate records and the stock and transfer book under Section 74 of the Corporation Code can only be maintained against corporate officers or persons acting on behalf of the corporation; while refusal to allow inspection of the stock and transfer book is punishable under Section 144, such criminal liability does not attach to individuals who merely withhold corporate records from new management in a personal capacity. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Books to Be Kept |
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Pacific Rehouse Corporation vs. Court of Appeals (24th March 2014) |
AK996871 G.R. No. 199687 , G.R. No. 201537 , 581 Phil. 62 , 233 Phil. 197 , 421 Phil. 883 , 527 Phil. 74 , 326 Phil. 955 , 414 Phil. 494 , 469 Phil. 928 , 530 Phil. 454 , 559 Phil. 593 |
The case stems from a complaint filed by Pacific Rehouse Corporation and other stockholders against EIB Securities, Inc. (E-Securities) for the unauthorized sale of 32,180,000 DMCI shares. After the Regional Trial Court rendered judgment on the pleadings ordering E-Securities to return the shares—a decision affirmed by the Supreme Court and which became final—the stockholders sought to enforce the judgment against Export and Industry Bank, Inc. (Export Bank), the parent company of E-Securities, by invoking the doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction during the execution stage. |
The doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction applies only to determine established liability and not to confer jurisdiction over a party not impleaded in the case; consequently, a parent corporation cannot be held liable under an alias writ of execution for the judgment obligations of its wholly-owned subsidiary when the parent corporation was never impleaded as a party and was not served with summons nor voluntarily appeared in the proceedings. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Piercing the Veil of Corporate Fiction |
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SEC vs. Oudine Santos (19th March 2014) |
AK955410 G.R. No. 195542 , 730 Phil. 181 |
The case arose from an investment scam involving Performance Investment Products Corporation (PIPC-BVI), a foreign corporation registered in the British Virgin Islands, and its Philippine arm, Philippine International Planning Center Corporation (PIPC Corporation). PIPC Corporation was registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) only as a financial research facility, but it solicited investments in a product called "Performance Managed Portfolio" (PMP), promising high returns of 12-18% per annum with guaranteed principal protection. Michael H.K. Liew, chairman of PIPC-BVI, disappeared with investors' funds, exposing the scam. The SEC filed complaints against officers and agents, including respondent Santos who acted as an investment consultant, for selling unregistered securities without the necessary licenses. |
An individual who solicits investments by providing information, making presentations, and inducing potential investors to purchase unregistered securities acts as an agent or salesman under Section 28 of the Securities Regulation Code, even if the actual contracts are signed directly between the investor and the issuer, and even if the solicitor claims to be merely an "information provider." Solicitation is defined as the act of seeking or asking for business with the end view of closing a sale, and constitutes prima facie evidence of participation in the unregistered sale of securities. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Securities - Definition |
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Funa vs. Manila Economic and Cultural Office (4th February 2014) |
AK221143 G.R. No. 193462 , 726 Phil. 63 |
Following the 1975 Joint Communiqué between the Philippines and the People’s Republic of China (PROC), the Philippines severed official diplomatic relations with Taiwan (Republic of China) in adherence to the “One China” policy. To maintain unofficial “people-to-people” relations with Taiwan without violating this policy, the Philippine government entrusted the MECO—a private non-stock, non-profit corporation incorporated under the Corporation Code—with the responsibility of fostering trade, economic cooperation, and cultural exchanges, as well as performing certain consular functions for Filipinos in Taiwan. |
The Manila Economic and Cultural Office (MECO), despite performing governmental functions analogous to consular and diplomatic activities and being under the policy supervision of the Department of Trade and Industry, is not a GOCC or government instrumentality because it was organized under the general Corporation Code (Batas Pambansa Blg. 68) and lacks the essential attribute of government ownership or control; however, its accounts pertaining to specific government funds—namely, the “verification fees” collected for the DOLE and the “consular fees” authorized under Section 2(6) of Executive Order No. 15, s. 2001—are subject to the audit jurisdiction of the COA as these are funds received by the MECO through or on behalf of the government. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporations Created by Special Laws or Charters |
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Advance Paper Corporation vs. Arma Traders Corporation (11th December 2013) |
AK800770 G.R. No. 176897 , 723 Phil. 401 , G.R. No. 176879 |
The case arose from a 14-year business relationship between Advance Paper Corporation, a manufacturer of paper products, and Arma Traders Corporation, a distributor of school and office supplies. The dispute centered on whether Arma Traders was liable for approximately P15 million in unpaid obligations arising from credit purchases and loans obtained by its President and Treasurer, which the corporation claimed were ultra vires acts and fraudulent rediscounting schemes designed to siphon corporate funds. |
A corporation is bound by loan contracts entered into by its president and treasurer despite the absence of a specific board resolution authorizing such loans, where the corporation knowingly permitted these officers to act as sole managers and hold themselves out as possessing authority to bind the corporation for 14 years, thereby clothing them with apparent authority; furthermore, evidence not objected to on the ground of hearsay during trial becomes admissible and forms part of the records of the case. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporate Powers and Capacity |
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Nuccio Saverio and NS International, Inc. vs. Alfonso G. Puyat (27th November 2013) |
AK150319 G.R. No. 186433 , 722 Phil. 211 |
The case arises from a failed business venture involving a fertilizer processing plant. The respondent extended credit to NSI, represented by Nuccio Saverio, who owned 40% of the corporation. When the business failed to materialize and the loan remained unpaid despite partial payments, the respondent sought to recover the remaining balance by imputing liability not only to the corporation but also to Nuccio personally by piercing the corporate veil. |
The doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction requires clear and convincing proof of complete control or domination of the corporation's finances and operations such that it has no separate existence, that such control was used to commit a wrong or fraud, and that such control was the proximate cause of the loss or injury; mere ownership of capital stock, absence of board resolutions, or business failure alone are insufficient grounds to disregard the separate corporate personality and hold stockholders personally liable for corporate obligations. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporation as an Artificial Being |
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Riosa vs. Tabaco La Suerte Corporation (23rd October 2013) |
AK553444 G.R. No. 203786 , 720 Phil. 586 |
Aquiles Riosa owned a 52-square meter commercial lot in Tabaco City, Albay, which he acquired from his parents. He borrowed money from Sia Ko Pio, the Chief Executive Officer of Tabaco La Suerte Corporation (La Suerte), believing he was signing a receipt for the loan. The document was later revealed to be a deed of absolute sale conveying the property to La Suerte, which was subsequently registered in the corporation's name. Riosa filed a suit to annul the sale, claiming he was fraudulently induced to sign and that Sia Ko Pio lacked authority to bind the corporation. |
A corporation can only exercise its power to purchase real property through its board of directors or a corporate agent duly authorized by the board; an individual officer, even the Chief Executive Officer, cannot bind the corporation in a contract for the sale of real property without a board resolution authorizing such transaction. Additionally, a contract of sale requires a meeting of the minds between the parties, and where consent is obtained through fraud (e.g., a party signs a document believing it to be a receipt for a loan when it is actually a deed of sale), no valid contract exists. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Board of Directors - Management |
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SME Bank Inc. vs. De Guzman (8th October 2013) |
AK457939 G.R. No. 184517 , G.R. No. 186641 , 719 Phil. 103 |
Small and Medium Enterprise Bank, Incorporated (SME Bank) experienced financial difficulties in 2001. To remedy the situation, the principal shareholders (Eduardo M. Agustin, Jr. and Peregrin de Guzman, Jr.) negotiated the sale of a controlling block of shares to Abelardo Samson. The prospective buyer imposed preconditions requiring the sellers to guarantee the termination or retirement of existing employees upon the transfer of shares, with a promise that the new management would honor retirement benefits and potentially rehire them. This led to the employees being induced to tender courtesy resignations, which the new management subsequently refused to honor by failing to rehire the majority of them. |
In a stock sale involving merely a change in the equity composition of a corporation, the corporation continues as the same juridical entity and employer; therefore, the employees remain employed by the same corporation and cannot be dismissed en masse solely because of the transfer of controlling shares to new majority shareholders. Such a change is neither a just nor an authorized cause for termination under the Labor Code. This is distinct from an asset sale, where the seller is liable for separation pay and the buyer in good faith has no obligation to absorb the seller’s employees. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporation Has the Right of Succession; Sale or Other Disposition of Assets |
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Pua vs. Citibank, N.A. (16th September 2013) |
AK093478 G.R. No. 180064 , 718 Phil. 1 , CA-G.R. SP No. 79297 , 705 SCRA 684 |
The case arose from transactions involving Filipino depositors of Citibank Binondo who were allegedly solicited and sold unregistered securities issued by offshore companies by officers of Citibank Hongkong. The transactions were allegedly facilitated and perfected at the Citibank Binondo branch. Upon discovering that the securities were not registered with the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the depositors sought judicial recourse, leading to a jurisdictional conflict between the judiciary and the administrative agency regarding which forum had authority to hear the dispute. |
Civil suits for damages arising from violations of the Securities Regulation Code (SRC), specifically those falling under Sections 56 to 61, are within the exclusive original jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Courts as explicitly provided in Section 63.1 of the SRC, and are not subject to the doctrine of primary jurisdiction which applies only to criminal prosecutions under Section 53 of the same Code. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law SRC - Jurisdiction |
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Yoshizaki vs. Joy Training Center of Aurora, Inc. (31st July 2013) |
AK485943 G.R. No. 174978 |
Joy Training Center of Aurora, Inc. was a non-stock, non-profit religious educational institution incorporated under Philippine law. Its Articles of Incorporation fixed the number of board of trustees at seven members. However, due to failure to hold subsequent elections after incorporation, only five individuals were actually serving as trustees. Two of these trustees, spouses Richard and Linda Johnson, sold real properties registered in the corporation's name to spouses Sally and Yoshio Yoshizaki, purportedly pursuant to a board resolution authorizing the sale. The corporation challenged the transaction, leading to a dispute over the extent of corporate authority required to validly alienate corporate real assets and the proper forum for resolving such disputes. |
For a corporate board resolution authorizing the sale of real property to be valid, the approval of a majority of the number of trustees or directors as fixed in the Articles of Incorporation—not merely a majority of the actual members currently serving—is required to constitute a quorum and validate the corporate act. Furthermore, a certificate of title indicating that certain individuals are "representatives" of the corporation does not constitute a special power of attorney to sell; a buyer dealing with corporate agents must ascertain not only the fact of agency but also the nature and extent of the agent's authority, and cannot rely solely on the face of the title to establish authority to sell. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporate Powers and Capacity |
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Zuellig Freight and Cargo Systems vs. NLRC (22nd July 2013) |
AK173579 G.R. No. 157900 |
The case involves an employer's attempt to terminate employment relationships by allegedly ceasing business operations through corporate name amendments. Zeta Brokerage Corporation, engaged in brokerage services, amended its articles of incorporation purportedly to cease operations, but which effectively only changed its corporate name to Zuellig Freight and Cargo Systems, Inc., broadened its primary purpose, and increased its capital stock, while maintaining the same business continuity. |
A change in corporate name does not result in the dissolution of the corporation or the creation of a new juridical entity; the corporation retains its original identity, property, rights, and liabilities, including obligations to its employees under labor laws, and cannot evade liability for illegal dismissal by merely adopting a new name. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporate Name |
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Sime Darby Pilipinas, Inc. vs. Mendoza (19th June 2013) |
AK570490 G.R. No. 202247 , 711 Phil. 696 |
The case arises from the common corporate practice of providing club membership benefits to senior managers and executives. Alabang Country Club (ACC) By-Laws prohibit juridical entities from owning club shares, limiting ownership to natural persons. This restriction necessitates the use of trust arrangements where corporations purchase shares but register them under the names of qualified employees who act as trustees. |
When a corporation purchases a club share but registers it in an employee’s name due to restrictions on corporate ownership, and the employee endorses the certificate of stock in blank, executes a blank deed of assignment, and delivers these documents to the corporation which pays the purchase price and all assessments, a resulting trust arises in favor of the corporation as the beneficial owner. The employee holds only legal title subject to the corporation’s right to use, enjoy, and dispose of the property, and this right extends beyond the employee’s termination until the property is formally transferred to a new owner. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Certificate of Stock and Transfer of Shares |
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Alps Transportation vs. Rodriguez (13th June 2013) |
AK297928 G.R. No. 186732 , 711 Phil. 122 |
The case arises from the common practice in the transportation industry of hiring employees through manpower agencies to avoid direct employer liability. The dispute centers on the termination of a bus conductor for alleged irregularities in the collection of fares, and the subsequent question of whether the bus company (operating as a sole proprietorship) or the manpower agency bears liability for the illegal dismissal. |
In cases of illegal dismissal where the employer is a sole proprietorship, the owner is personally and directly liable for the payment of backwages and other monetary awards, since a sole proprietorship does not possess a juridical personality separate and distinct from its owner, who has unlimited personal liability for all the debts and obligations of the business. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Sole Proprietorship |
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Vigilla vs. Philippine College of Criminology Inc. (10th June 2013) |
AK362926 G.R. No. 200094 , 710 Phil. 809 |
This case involves the dismissal of janitorial and maintenance personnel (janitors, janitresses, and supervisors) of Philippine College of Criminology Inc. (PCCr), a non-stock educational institution. The employees were made to understand that they were employed by Metropolitan Building Maintenance Services, Inc. (MBMSI), a corporation providing janitorial services, despite working directly under the supervision of PCCr's Senior Vice President for Administration, who was also the President of MBMSI. The controversy arose when PCCr discovered that MBMSI's Certificate of Incorporation had been revoked as early as July 2, 2003, prompting PCCr to terminate its contractual relationship with MBMSI and dismiss the employees in 2009. The employees challenged their dismissal and claimed that PCCr was their real employer, while PCCr presented releases, waivers, and quitclaims allegedly executed by the employees in favor of MBMSI to settle their monetary claims. |
A labor-only contractor is solidarily liable with the principal employer for the rightful claims of the employees under Article 106 of the Labor Code; consequently, a valid release, waiver, or quitclaim executed in favor of the labor-only contractor extinguishes the solidary obligation of the principal employer pursuant to Article 1217 of the Civil Code. Furthermore, a corporation whose charter has been revoked may validly enter into agreements to settle its affairs and liabilities beyond the three-year winding up period under Section 122 of the Corporation Code, as the corporation continues as a body corporate for liquidation purposes, and Section 145 preserves all rights and remedies notwithstanding dissolution. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporate Liquidation |
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Philippine National Bank vs. Hydro Resources Contractors Corporation (13th March 2013) |
AK973801 G.R. No. 167530 , G.R. No. 167561 , G.R. No. 167603 , 706 Phil. 297 , 693 SCRA 294 |
The case arose from the foreclosure by DBP and PNB of mortgages on the properties of Marinduque Mining and Industrial Corporation (MMIC) in 1984. Following the foreclosure, the two government banks acquired substantially all of MMIC's assets and organized Nonoc Mining and Industrial Corporation (NMIC) to continue the mining operations, with DBP owning 57% and PNB owning 43% of NMIC's shares. Subsequently, NMIC engaged Hercon, Inc. (later merged into HRCC) for mine stripping and road construction services. When NMIC failed to pay the remaining contract balance, HRCC filed suit seeking to hold DBP and PNB solidarily liable with NMIC, alleging that NMIC was merely the banks' alter ego. The case was complicated by the subsequent transfer of DBP and PNB's interests in NMIC to the National Government under Proclamation No. 50, and then to the APT as trustee. |
The doctrine of piercing the corporate veil based on the alter ego theory requires the concurrence of three elements: (1) complete domination by the parent corporation of the subsidiary's finances, policies, and business practices such that the subsidiary has no separate mind, will, or existence of its own; (2) use of such control to commit fraud or wrong, perpetuate violation of legal duty, or commit dishonest/unjust acts; and (3) proximate causation of injury or unjust loss to the plaintiff. The absence of any element prevents piercing. Mere ownership of all or nearly all capital stock and the existence of interlocking directorates, standing alone, do not justify piercing the corporate veil absent fraud or other public policy considerations. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporation as an Artificial Being |
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Loreli Lim Po vs. Department of Justice (11th February 2013) |
AK426219 G.R. No. 195198 , G.R. No. 197098 |
The dispute arose from Coastal Highpoint Ventures, Inc. (CHVI), a real estate development company, where Jasper T. Tan was a stockholder, Antonio Ng Chiu was the President, and Loreli Lim Po served as accountant. When Tan was repeatedly denied access to inspect corporate books and records despite formal written demands, he filed a criminal complaint for violation of the Corporation Code, triggering a protracted battle through the prosecutorial and judicial system regarding the scope of a stockholder's inspection rights and the standard for criminal liability. |
The determination of probable cause by the Department of Justice during preliminary investigation is an executive function that courts will not interfere with unless grave abuse of discretion is shown; moreover, under Section 74 of the Corporation Code, a stockholder's right to inspect corporate records includes all business transactions such as books of inventories, contracts, correspondence, and supporting tax documents, and the unjustified refusal to allow such inspection gives rise to criminal liability under Section 144. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Books to Be Kept |
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Barba vs. Liceo de Cagayan University (28th November 2012) |
AK505471 G.R. No. 193857 , 699 Phil. 622 |
The case arose from the closure of the College of Physical Therapy at Liceo de Cagayan University due to declining enrollment. Petitioner, who served as Dean under a fixed-term appointment and was bound by a scholarship contract to serve the university, was reassigned to the College of Nursing as a faculty member. When she refused the assignment and claimed constructive dismissal, the university raised the jurisdictional defense that she was a corporate officer, rendering the labor tribunals without authority to hear the case. |
A position must be expressly mentioned in the corporation's bylaws to be considered a corporate office under Section 25 of the Corporation Code; positions created by board resolution or administrative manual without corresponding bylaw amendment do not qualify as corporate offices. The approval by the board of directors of an appointment to a non-corporate position does not transform the appointee into a corporate officer, and labor tribunals retain jurisdiction over termination disputes involving such positions. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Contents of Bylaws |
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Ellice Agro-Industrial Corporation vs. Rodel T. Young (21st November 2012) |
AK880213 G.R. No. 174077 |
The case arose from a Contract to Sell involving a parcel of land in Sariaya, Quezon, where respondents paid partial consideration to the petitioner corporation through an individual claiming to be its corporate secretary. When the corporation failed to deliver the title, respondents filed suit. The dispute centered on whether the corporation was properly served with summons through this individual, who was later shown not to be listed as an officer or director in the corporate records filed with the SEC. |
For service of summons upon a domestic corporation to be valid and binding, it must be made strictly upon the president, manager, secretary, cashier, agent, or director as enumerated in Section 13, Rule 14 of the Rules of Civil Procedure and as conclusively shown in the General Information Sheets (GIS) filed with the SEC. Service upon any other person, even one claiming to be corporate secretary, is invalid and fails to confer jurisdiction over the corporation. Actual knowledge of the pending action or the filing of an answer by an unauthorized representative does not constitute voluntary appearance or cure the jurisdictional defect. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Report of Election of Directors |
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Arroyo vs. Rosal Homeowners Association (22nd October 2012) |
AK088718 G.R. No. 175155 , 697 Phil. 568 |
The case arises from the implementation of the Community Mortgage Program (CMP), a government socialized housing initiative administered by the National Home Mortgage Finance Corporation (NHMFC) to enable urban poor communities to acquire land they occupy. The respondent Rosal Homeowners Association, Inc. (RHAI) was organized by occupants of a parcel of land in Bacolod City to avail of CMP financing and purchase the land from its former owner, Philippine Commercial International Bank (PCIB). The dispute centers on the rights of actual occupants who refuse to comply with the procedural and financial requirements of the CMP and the association's By-Laws, and the association's authority to terminate their membership and recover possession of the land allocated to them. |
The termination or expulsion of a member from a homeowners association is valid when conducted in accordance with the association's By-Laws, which require notice and opportunity to be heard, and members who are expelled for non-compliance with the Community Mortgage Program requirements (such as refusal to sign the Lease Purchase Agreement and failure to pay dues) may be ejected from the property as their possession becomes merely by tolerance, not entitling them to ownership rights under the socialized housing program. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Termination of Membership |
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Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc. (26th September 2012) |
AK359298 G.R. No. 195909 , G.R. No. 195960 , 695 Phil. 867 , 682 SCRA 66 |
The case arises from the interpretation of the interplay between Section 27(B) and Section 30 of the NIRC of 1997 concerning the tax treatment of non-stock, non-profit hospitals. Prior to the 1997 NIRC, charitable institutions were generally exempt from income tax under Section 27(E) of the 1977 NIRC. The 1997 Code introduced Section 27(B), establishing a 10% preferential income tax rate for proprietary non-profit hospitals. The Bureau of Internal Revenue interpreted this new provision as removing the exemption previously enjoyed by such hospitals under Section 30(E), effectively subjecting all their income to the 10% rate. St. Luke’s Medical Center, Inc., a hospital organized as a non-stock, non-profit corporation, contested this interpretation, asserting that it remained a charitable institution entitled to full income tax exemption under Section 30(E) and (G). |
Section 27(B) of the NIRC does not repeal the income tax exemption for charitable institutions under Section 30(E) and (G); rather, it provides that proprietary non-profit hospitals engaging in activities conducted for profit are subject to a preferential 10% tax rate on such income instead of the regular 30% corporate rate. A hospital receiving substantial revenues from paying patients is not “operated exclusively” for charitable purposes and thus cannot claim complete income tax exemption, but remains entitled to the 10% preferential rate applicable to proprietary non-profit hospitals. |
Basic Taxation Law Corporation and Basic Securities Law |
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Atilano II vs. Asaali (10th September 2012) |
AK652172 G.R. No. 174982 , 694 Phil. 488 |
The case arose from a 1990 action for revival of judgment filed by Atlantic Merchandising, Inc. against Zamboanga Alta Consolidated, Inc. (ZACI) to enforce a prior monetary judgment. After the RTC revived the judgment and ordered ZACI to pay, execution proceedings were initiated but proved unsuccessful. Atlantic Merchandising then sought to examine third parties, including ZACI's stockholders, claiming they owed unpaid subscriptions to ZACI that could satisfy the judgment debt. |
When a third party alleged to be indebted to a judgment debtor denies such indebtedness, the court cannot summarily order the third party to pay the alleged debt during execution proceedings; instead, the judgment creditor must file a separate action to recover the debt in accordance with Section 43, Rule 39 of the Rules of Court, as execution against third parties who deny liability violates due process absent a trial on the merits. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Payment of Balance of Subscription |
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Guy vs. Guy (5th September 2012) |
AK314386 G.R. No. 189486 , G.R. No. 189699 , 694 Phil. 354 |
The case involves a family dispute over the ownership of shares in GoodGold Realty & Development Corporation, a family corporation. Respondent Gilbert Guy claimed ownership of approximately 80% of the corporation's shares, alleging that his parents placed the shares under his name but retained possession of the certificates. In 1999, his father redistributed the shares evenly among family members. Gilbert initially challenged this in 2004 but withdrew his complaint after the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) authenticated his signatures. He filed a substantially similar complaint in 2008, leading to the present controversy regarding the validity of the transfers and the rights of shareholders, including Gilbert's claim as the sole paid subscriber. |
An intra-corporate complaint that fails to allege fraud with particularity, fails to implead indispensable parties, and is filed merely to harass constitutes a nuisance suit that must be dismissed; stock certificates endorsed in blank by the owner and delivered to another constitute "street certificates" entitling the holder to demand transfer of the shares, regardless of the subscriber's payment status or subsequent allegations of fraudulent transfer. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Rights of Unpaid Shares |
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University of the Philippines vs. Dizon (23rd August 2012) |
AK560575 679 SCRA 54 , 693 Phil. 226 , G.R. No. 171182 |
The case arose from a construction contract dispute between the University of the Philippines (UP), a government instrumentality and national university, and Stern Builders, Inc., a private contractor. After UP failed to pay a progress billing (initially disallowed by COA but later lifted), Stern Builders sued for collection. The RTC awarded not only the unpaid billing but also substantial actual damages, moral damages, and attorney's fees. The procedural history involves multiple layers of litigation concerning the timeliness of UP's appeal and the validity of execution against public funds. |
Government funds and properties may not be seized under writs of execution or garnishment to satisfy money judgments against the State or its instrumentalities absent a specific appropriation law covering the liability, and money claims against the Government must first be filed with and adjudicated by the Commission on Audit (COA) before execution can proceed. |
Constitutional Law I Corporation and Basic Securities Law |
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Rep. of the Phils. vs. City of Parañaque (18th July 2012) |
AK990874 G.R. No. 191109 , 691 Phil. 476 |
PRA (formerly Public Estates Authority or PEA) was created by P.D. 1084 to integrate, direct, and coordinate all reclamation projects for and on behalf of the National Government. It holds titles to several reclaimed foreshore and offshore areas in Manila Bay. |
An incorporated instrumentality of the National Government that is neither a stock nor a non-stock corporation is not a GOCC, and is exempt from local real property taxes under Sections 133(o) and 234(a) of the Local Government Code. |
Administrative Law Corporation and Basic Securities Law |
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United Church of Christ in the Philippines, Inc. vs. Bradford United Church of Christ, Inc., et al. (20th June 2012) |
AK736563 688 Phil. 408 , G.R. No. 171905 |
The dispute arose from a property conflict between UCCP and BUCCI in the late 1980s, culminating in BUCCI’s formal disaffiliation from UCCP in 1992 and the SEC’s approval of BUCCI’s amended Articles of Incorporation in 1993 excising UCCP references. UCCP contested these amendments before the SEC, triggering questions about the intersection of religious authority and corporate law. |
A local church’s disaffiliation from a national religious federation is a secular corporate matter within the jurisdiction of civil courts, not a purely ecclesiastical affair; and under a congregationalist polity, local churches possess autonomy to sever ties with the national body through proper corporate mechanisms. |
Constitutional Law I Corporation and Basic Securities Law |
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Legaspi Towers 300, Inc. vs. Muer (18th June 2012) |
AK486522 G.R. No. 170783 , 688 Phil. 104 |
The case arose from a contested annual meeting and election of directors of Legaspi Towers 300, Inc., a condominium corporation. The dispute centered on the validity of the election held on April 2, 2004, where the incumbent board declared adjournment due to lack of quorum, while a group of members claimed a valid quorum existed and proceeded to elect a new board. The controversy further involved procedural questions regarding the amendment of complaints to implead the corporation as plaintiff and the nature of the suit as derivative or direct. |
A suit to nullify the election of directors is a direct action by stockholders to protect their personal right to vote and be voted upon, not a derivative suit by the corporation. Since the corporation does not possess the right to vote, it is not the real party-in-interest in an action to invalidate a board election, and any attempt to include the corporation as plaintiff is improper. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Election of Directors |
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Ever Electrical Manufacturing, Inc. vs. Samahang Manggagawa ng Ever Electrical/NAMAWU Local 224 (13th June 2012) |
AK038881 G.R. No. 194795 , 687 Phil. 529 |
The case arose from a labor dispute involving Ever Electrical Manufacturing, Inc., a corporation engaged in manufacturing electrical parts and supplies, which closed its operations in 2006 following foreclosure proceedings by United Coconut Planters Bank. The closure resulted from a complex series of financial transactions, including a failed investment in Orient Commercial Banking Corporation, a substantial loan secured by a mortgage on corporate assets, and an eventual dacion en pago arrangement that transferred ownership of the factory premises to the bank. |
Corporate directors and officers may be held solidarily liable with the corporation for the termination of employment only if done with malice or in bad faith; mere closure of business due to financial difficulties or negligence, without evidence of fraudulent intent or wrongful conduct, does not justify piercing the corporate veil to hold officers personally liable for separation pay. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Liability of Directors |
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Metrobank vs. Centro Development Corporation (13th June 2012) |
AK026125 G.R. No. 180974 , 687 Phil. 304 , G.R. No. 180975 |
The appointment of a successor-trustee to an existing mortgage trust indenture, without creating a new encumbrance or substantially altering the terms of the original mortgage, constitutes a regular business transaction that requires only a majority vote of the board of directors present at a meeting with a quorum under Section 25 of the Corporation Code, rather than the two-thirds stockholder vote and written notice required by Section 40 for the sale or other disposition of substantially all corporate assets; however, a trustee-creditor may not foreclose on mortgaged properties securing obligations exceeding the maximum amount stipulated in the indenture where no amendment was executed to accommodate such additional loans, and banks must observe a degree of diligence higher than that of a good father of a family in handling trust indentures and loan transactions. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Sale or Other Disposition of Assets |
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Steelcase, Inc. vs. Design International Selections, Inc. (18th April 2012) |
AK627613 G.R. No. 171995 , 686 Phil. 59 |
The case arises from a commercial dispute between an American furniture manufacturer and its Philippine distributor, presenting significant implications for foreign investment and trade relations. The controversy centers on the interpretation of "doing business" under the Foreign Investments Act of 1991, specifically whether a dealership agreement constitutes doing business requiring a license, and the application of the doctrine of estoppel to prevent defaulting local companies from avoiding contractual obligations by invoking technical defects in foreign corporations' compliance with licensing requirements. |
A foreign corporation does not engage in "doing business" in the Philippines when it appoints a local distributor that operates as an independent contractor, transacts in its own name, and for its own account; furthermore, a domestic entity that knowingly contracts with and derives benefits from a foreign corporation is estopped from subsequently challenging the foreign corporation's legal capacity to sue based on alleged lack of license to do business, as this would violate the principle that no person should derive advantage from his own wrong (commodum ex injuria sua non habere debet). |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Issuance of License - Foreign Corporations |
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Jiao vs. NLRC (18th April 2012) |
AK811479 G.R. No. 182331 , 686 Phil. 171 |
The case arises from the merger of Philippine Banking Corporation (Philbank) with Global Business Bank, Inc. (Globalbank) in 2000, which resulted in redundancy of positions. Subsequently, in 2002, Metrobank acquired the assets and liabilities of Globalbank through a Deed of Assignment of Assets and Assumption of Liabilities. The dispute centers on whether the affected employees are entitled to additional gratuity pay under Philbank's 1970 Gratuity Pay Plan (Old Plan) on top of the separation package received under the Special Separation Program (SSP), and whether Metrobank is liable for such claims as the acquiring entity. |
An employer may validly implement a new gratuity plan that supersedes an old plan, provided the new plan meets or exceeds the statutory minimum requirements under the Labor Code; employees separated under such plan cannot claim vested rights under the superseded plan. Additionally, a corporation acquiring the assets of another corporation is not liable for the seller's employment obligations unless the transaction amounts to a merger or consolidation, the purchaser expressly assumes such liabilities, the purchaser is merely a continuation of the seller, or the transaction is fraudulent. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Sale or Other Disposition of Assets |
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China Banking Corporation vs. QBRO Fishing Enterprises, Inc. (22nd February 2012) |
AK763545 G.R. No. 184556 , 682 Phil. 564 |
The dispute arose from a lending transaction where Trans-Filipinas Realty Corporation (TFRC) obtained a credit line from China Banking Corporation. When TFRC sought to increase its loan facility, QBRO Fishing Enterprises, Inc.—a sister company sharing the same board of directors and incorporators—agreed to mortgage its own properties as additional collateral to accommodate TFRC's increased borrowing requirements. |
A corporation may validly exercise its corporate powers by mortgaging its properties as a third-party mortgagor to secure the obligation of another corporation; where such mortgage secures the same principal debt as that of the principal debtor, the separate juridical personalities of the corporations do not preclude the foreclosure of both mortgaged properties under a single extrajudicial foreclosure proceeding, and the third-party mortgagor is estopped from subsequently denying the validity of such foreclosure after recognizing the mortgagee's rights. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporate Powers and Capacity |
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Securities and Exchange Commission vs. Prosperity.com, Inc. (25th January 2012) |
AK626734 G.R. No. 164197 , 680 Phil. 28 , 664 SCRA 28 |
Prosperity.Com, Inc. (PCI) was engaged in selling computer software and hosting websites. It devised a marketing scheme patterned after Golconda Ventures, Inc. (GVI), which had previously been issued a cease and desist order by the SEC. Under the scheme, PCI offered internet websites for sale with the opportunity for buyers to earn commissions and other incentives by recruiting down-line buyers, creating a multi-level marketing structure. Following complaints from former GVI members, the SEC investigated PCI's operations to determine if it was offering unregistered securities in the form of investment contracts. |
For a transaction to qualify as an "investment contract" (and thus as a "security" requiring SEC registration under R.A. 8799), all five elements of the Howey test must concur: (1) a contract, transaction, or scheme; (2) an investment of money; (3) in a common enterprise; (4) with an expectation of profits; and (5) where profits arise primarily from the efforts of others. A scheme involving the sale of a tangible product with referral commissions does not constitute an investment contract where the consideration paid is for the product itself and any returns are derived from the buyer's own efforts in referring customers rather than from the promoter's management efforts. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Securities - Definition |
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Siochi Fishery Enterprises, Inc. vs. Bank of the Philippine Islands (19th October 2011) |
AK246123 G.R. No. 193872 , 675 Phil. 916 |
The case arises from the financial distress of five domestic corporations controlled by the Siochi family, engaged in fishing operations and property ventures, which collectively owed substantial sums to secured creditors including the Bank of the Philippine Islands. Seeking to avoid liquidation and continue operations, the corporations filed a joint petition for rehabilitation under the Interim Rules of Procedure on Corporate Rehabilitation, triggering disputes over procedural compliance, the scope of assets available for rehabilitation, and the proper role of the rehabilitation receiver in evaluating the feasibility of the proposed plan. |
The Supreme Court held that the Regional Trial Court committed serious procedural errors by approving the rehabilitation plan without referring it to the rehabilitation receiver for evaluation and recommendation as mandated by the Interim Rules, and by failing to recognize that corporations possess a juridical personality separate and distinct from their stockholders and directors, thus precluding the inclusion of officers' personal properties as corporate assets in determining rehabilitation feasibility. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporation as an Artificial Being |
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Philippine Veterans Bank vs. Callangan (3rd August 2011) |
AK555898 G.R. No. 191995 , 670 Phil. 570 |
The case involves the Philippine Veterans Bank, a corporation established to serve World War II veterans, whose articles of incorporation restrict share ownership to veterans, their widows, orphans, and compulsory heirs. The dispute arose when the SEC determined that despite these restrictions, the Bank qualified as a "public company" under the Securities Regulation Code, thereby triggering mandatory reportorial obligations including the filing of annual reports and the furnishing of information statements to shareholders. The Bank contested this classification, arguing that the legislative intent behind the SRC was to regulate only publicly traded companies and that compliance would be financially ruinous. |
A corporation is considered a "public company" subject to mandatory reportorial requirements under Section 17.2(c) of the Securities Regulation Code if it has assets of at least P50 million and two hundred or more holders each holding at least one hundred shares of a class of its equity securities, even if its shares are not publicly listed and are limited to a specific class of persons; the duty of the court is to apply clear and unambiguous laws as written, and interpretation or construction is only resorted to when application is impossible or inadequate without it. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Reportorial Requirements |
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Gamboa vs. Finance Secretary Teves, et al. (28th June 2011) |
AK128498 668 Phil. 1 , G.R. No. 176579 |
The case arises from the privatization of sequestered government shares in PTIC, a holding company that owns a significant stake in PLDT, a telecommunications public utility. The dispute centers on the interpretation of the constitutional limit on foreign ownership, specifically whether non-voting preferred shares can be used to dilute the voting power of foreign-held common shares while technically satisfying the 60-40 ownership ratio. |
The term "capital" in Section 11, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution refers only to shares of stock entitled to vote in the election of directors (common shares), and not to the total outstanding capital stock (combined common and non-voting preferred shares). Consequently, the 60-40 Filipino-foreign ownership requirement in public utilities applies to the voting stock to ensure effective Filipino control. |
Constitutional Law I Corporation and Basic Securities Law |
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Boy Scouts of the Philippines vs. Commission on Audit (7th June 2011) |
AK109293 G.R. No. 177131 , 666 Phil. 140 |
The controversy centers on the Commission on Audit's (COA) assertion of audit jurisdiction over the Boy Scouts of the Philippines (BSP) pursuant to its constitutional mandate. The BSP was created by Commonwealth Act No. 111 in 1936 as a "public corporation" to promote youth development and citizenship. Its charter underwent significant amendments, notably Presidential Decree No. 460 (1974), which increased government participation in its governance, and Republic Act No. 7278 (1992), which reduced government representation to a single ex-officio member (the Secretary of Education). The BSP contended that the latter amendment effectively privatized the organization, removing it from COA jurisdiction, while the COA maintained that the BSP remains a government instrumentality subject to audit. |
A corporation created by special law to serve a public interest or constitutional policy, classified as an attached agency of the government under the Administrative Code of 1987, remains subject to the Commission on Audit's jurisdiction despite the reduction of government representation in its governing body, provided it continues to perform governmental functions. Such entities constitute a distinct class of "public corporations" under Article 44 of the Civil Code and are not subject to the economic viability test under Section 16, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution, which applies only to GOCCs engaged in proprietary or business functions. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporations Created by Special Laws or Charters |
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Majority Stockholders of Ruby Industrial Corporation vs. Lim (6th June 2011) |
AK680554 G.R. No. 165887 , G.R. No. 165929 , 665 Phil. 600 |
Ruby Industrial Corporation (RUBY) was a domestic corporation engaged in glass manufacturing that faced severe liquidity problems beginning in 1980. In 1983, it filed for suspension of payments with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), leading to the creation of a Management Committee (MANCOM) in 1984 to oversee rehabilitation. The case involves a protracted battle between majority stockholders (the Yu family) allied with Benhar International, Inc. (BENHAR), and minority stockholders led by Miguel Lim. The majority proposed rehabilitation plans involving capital infusion and credit facilities through BENHAR, which were opposed by minority stockholders and unsecured creditors as giving undue preference to BENHAR and prejudicing other creditors. After the Supreme Court nullified the Revised BENHAR/RUBY Plan in 1998, the majority stockholders attempted to enforce a capital stock increase and corporate term extension that had been approved in 1991 in anticipation of the void rehabilitation plan. |
A corporation's power to increase capital stock by issuing unissued shares from its authorized capital stock, while generally vested in the board of directors, is subject to the pre-emptive rights of existing stockholders under Section 39 of the Corporation Code and may be restricted or denied only under the articles of incorporation. Even where pre-emptive rights are denied under the articles, an issuance of shares may still be declared invalid if the controlling stockholders act in breach of trust and the primary purpose is to perpetuate control or "freeze out" the minority interest. During rehabilitation proceedings under SEC supervision, any capital increase must be coordinated with the Management Committee, and issuances made to implement a void rehabilitation plan are invalid. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Power to Increase or Decrease Capital Stock; Power to Deny Pre-Emptive Right |
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People vs. Morales (30th May 2011) |
AK440654 G.R. No. 166355 , 664 Phil. 429 |
In preparation for the Philippine Centennial Celebration in 1998, the National Centennial Commission (NCC) was created by Executive Order No. 128 to oversee nationwide preparations. The NCC, together with the Bases Conversion Development Authority (BCDA), organized the Philippine Centennial Expo '98 Corporation (Expocorp) to manage the Centennial International Exposition. Following allegations of anomalies in the project, including the lack of public biddings, the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee and the Ad Hoc and Independent Citizen's Committee investigated and recommended further action. This led to the Ombudsman filing criminal charges against Morales, then acting president of Expocorp, for allegedly selling a government vehicle without public bidding and failing to remit the proceeds. |
A corporation organized under the general Corporation Code, in which the Government does not own a majority of the capital stock, is a private corporation despite being organized by government agencies to implement public projects; consequently, its officers are not public officers subject to the jurisdiction of the Sandiganbayan. |
Corporation and Basic Securities Law Corporations Created by Special Laws or Charters |
Malate Construction Development Corporation vs. Extraordinary Realty Agents & Brokers Cooperative
5th January 2022
AK558396Corporate directors or officers cannot be held personally liable for the corporation's obligations absent clear and convincing evidence that they acted in bad faith, with gross negligence, or knowingly assented to patently unlawful acts; mere allegations or speculation of wrongdoing are insufficient to pierce the corporate veil and disregard the corporation's separate juridical personality.
The case arises from a dispute between a real estate developer and a realty cooperative concerning the payment of sales commissions under a Marketing Agreement for the promotion and sale of low-cost housing units in a residential subdivision project.
Salido vs. Aramaywan Metals Development Corporation
18th March 2021
AK223272A corporation cannot validly reduce a stockholder's fully paid shares or convert them into treasury shares without unrestricted retained earnings sufficient to cover the reacquisition, and such reduction cannot be effected merely by board resolution or stockholder agreement without complying with the statutory formalities for capital stock reduction under Section 38 of the Corporation Code and the procedural requirements for delinquency sales under Sections 67 and 68.
The case arose from an Agreement to Incorporate between Cerlito San Juan (financier), Ernesto Mangune (technical officer), and Agapito Salido, Jr. and his faction (mining site operators) to form Aramaywan Metals Development Corporation and Narra Mining Corporation. Under the Agreement, San Juan advanced P2.5 million for paid-up subscriptions in exchange for 55% ownership of Aramaywan, while the Salido faction secured mining permits. After incorporation, disputes arose regarding San Juan's compliance with funding obligations, leading to a factional split between the San Juan and Salido groups over corporate control and the validity of board resolutions affecting share classification and corporate governance.
La Savoie Development Corporation vs. Buenavista Properties, Inc.
19th June 2019
AK487242A court-approved rehabilitation plan may validly provide for the reduction of liability for contractual penalties incurred by a distressed corporation, even over creditor opposition, provided the underlying judgment awarding such penalties was rendered in violation of a stay order and is therefore void ab initio; however, a rehabilitation court cannot issue orders preventing a co-equal court from executing its final judgments, as only the Court of Appeals or Supreme Court may halt such execution.
The dispute arose from a Joint Venture Agreement (JVA) wherein La Savoie Development Corporation agreed to develop land into a subdivision by 1995, subject to a penalty of P10,000 per day for delay. After failing to meet extended deadlines, Buenavista Properties, Inc. filed suit in the Quezon City Regional Trial Court (QC RTC). While the case was pending, La Savoie filed for corporate rehabilitation, securing a Stay Order that suspended all claims. Despite this, the QC RTC rendered judgment awarding penalties. The rehabilitation court later approved a plan reducing these penalties and attempted to stop execution of the QC RTC decision, leading to consolidated petitions before the Court of Appeals and ultimately the Supreme Court.
Engineering Geoscience, Inc. vs. Philippine Savings Bank
10th January 2019
AK096287A corporation is bound by the acts of its officers under the doctrine of apparent authority when it knowingly permits an officer to act within the scope of apparent authority and holds him out to the public as possessing such power; moreover, a corporation is estopped from denying an officer's authority after benefiting from the officer's acts and unduly delaying its repudiation for twelve years.
The case arose from a loan obligation of EGI to PSBank secured by real estate mortgage. After EGI defaulted on the loan, PSBank initiated foreclosure proceedings. EGI filed a complaint before the Regional Trial Court (RTC) to annul the loan contract and obtained a writ of preliminary injunction. Before the case proceeded to trial, the parties entered into a compromise agreement which the RTC approved in 1993. When EGI failed to comply with the payment terms under the compromise, execution proceedings followed, culminating in the transfer of the mortgaged properties to PSBank. Twelve years after the approval of the compromise agreement, EGI sought to nullify it, claiming its former president acted without board authority and had fraudulently concealed the proceedings from the corporation.
Mabuhay Holdings vs. Sembcorp Logistics
5th December 2018
AK336582The recognition and enforcement of a foreign arbitral award may only be refused on the exclusive grounds enumerated under Article V of the 1958 New York Convention, as adopted in Republic Act No. 9285; courts may not re-examine the merits of the award or substitute their judgment for that of the arbitral tribunal, and the "public policy" exception must be interpreted narrowly to include only those awards that violate the State's fundamental tenets of justice and morality.
The case involves a commercial dispute between Mabuhay Holdings Corporation (a Philippine corporation) and Sembcorp Logistics Limited (a Singaporean company) regarding a Shareholders' Agreement governing their joint venture through two corporations: Water Jet Shipping Corporation (WJSC) and Water Jet Netherlands Antilles, N.Y. (WJNA). The agreement contained an arbitration clause designating ICC arbitration in Singapore and excluded "intra-corporate controversies" from arbitration. After Sembcorp invested in the joint venture corporations, it claimed a guaranteed minimum return from Mabuhay and IDHI, which was not paid, leading to ICC arbitration.
Cezar Yatco Real Estate Services, Inc. vs. Bel-Air Village Association, Inc.
21st November 2018
AK878702The term of effectivity of restrictive covenants is an integral part of the restrictions themselves and may be validly extended by majority vote of the association members where the deed explicitly empowers the association to amend "particular restrictions or parts thereof"; furthermore, proxies for voting in homeowners' association meetings are valid if they comply with the requirements of Section 58 of the Corporation Code (in writing, signed by the member, filed with the corporate secretary) and the specific formalities prescribed in the association's by-laws, without requiring notarization under Articles 1358 and 1878 of the Civil Code.
Bel-Air Village was developed in the 1950s by Makati Development Corporation, with lot sales subject to Deed Restrictions annotated on Transfer Certificates of Title. These restrictions were initially effective for fifty years from January 15, 1957, to January 15, 2007, and were intended for the sanitation, security, and general welfare of the community. Bel-Air Village Association, Inc. (BAVA) was constituted as a non-stock, non-profit association with automatic membership for all lot owners. As the expiration date approached, BAVA initiated proceedings to amend and extend the Deed Restrictions, leading to a dispute regarding the validity of the extension and the proxies used in the ratification vote.
Noell Whessoe, Inc. v. Independent Testing Consultants, Inc.
7th November 2018
AK422916A contractor may be solidarily liable with the owner and the subcontractor for unpaid obligations to the subcontractor's supplier under Article 1729 of the Civil Code despite the absence of a contract between the contractor and supplier; however, full payment to the subcontractor serves as a valid defense against this liability. Furthermore, a corporation, being an artificial being with no feelings, emotions, or senses, is incapable of experiencing mental suffering and cannot be awarded moral damages.
The case arises from a construction project involving multiple layers of contracting and subcontracting relationships. It addresses the statutory protection afforded to suppliers and laborers under Article 1729 of the Civil Code, which creates an exception to the general rule on privity of contracts to shield suppliers from unscrupulous contractors and possible connivance between owners and contractors. The decision also clarifies the extent of a corporation's entitlement to moral damages, distinguishing between natural and artificial persons in the context of reparable injuries.
Ku vs. RCBC Securities
17th October 2018
AK012904Jurisdiction over intra-corporate controversies under Section 5 of Presidential Decree No. 902-A was transferred by Republic Act No. 8799 to Regional Trial Courts as courts of general jurisdiction, not merely to specific branches designated as Special Commercial Courts; thus, an ordinary civil action erroneously re-raffled to a Special Commercial Court does not divest the RTC of subject matter jurisdiction, and insufficient payment of docket fees based on the clerk of court's assessment, without deliberate intent to defraud, does not automatically oust jurisdiction provided the party shows willingness to pay the deficiency.
The case arises from a dispute between an investor and a securities broker regarding alleged unauthorized trading transactions, mismanagement of investment accounts, and fraudulent solicitation of investments. The controversy centers on the proper judicial venue for cases involving securities trading following the legislative transfer of jurisdiction over intra-corporate disputes from the Securities and Exchange Commission to the Regional Trial Courts, and the procedural mechanisms governing the assignment of cases to Special Commercial Courts.
Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of Fatima vs. Alzona
6th August 2018
AK635551A donee that is not yet incorporated at the time of donation but is subsequently issued a Certificate of Incorporation may enforce a donation against the donor's heirs under the doctrine of corporation by estoppel, provided the donor dealt with the association as a corporation and derived benefit from the transaction; moreover, subsequent ratification by the corporation of its representative's acceptance cures any defect in the donation's perfection.
The petitioner is a religious and charitable congregation established under the patronage of the Roman Catholic Bishop of San Pablo on May 30, 1989, dedicated to caring for abandoned and neglected elderly persons. Purificacion Y. Alzona, a spinster and registered owner of several parcels of land in Calamba City, Laguna, became a benefactor of the petitioner in 1996. After being diagnosed with lung cancer in 1997, Purificacion requested the petitioner's Superior General, Mother Ma. Concepcion R. Realon, to care for her in her home. In 1999, Purificacion expressed her intent to donate her properties to the petitioner to support its charitable mission.
Maricalum Mining Corporation vs. Florentino
23rd July 2018
AK247144The doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction under the alter ego theory requires the concurrence of three elements: (1) complete domination or control by the parent or holding corporation over the subsidiary's finances, policy, and business practice; (2) use of such control to commit fraud, wrong, or perpetuate violation of a statutory or other positive legal duty; and (3) proximate causation of injury or unjust loss. Mere ownership and control by a holding company over a subsidiary's assets, without proof of fraudulent intent to evade labor obligations or gross negligence amounting to bad faith, is insufficient to pierce the corporate veil and impose liability on the holding company for the subsidiary's labor debts.
The dispute originated from the privatization of Maricalum Mining Corporation (MMC), a former government-owned non-performing asset. After the Asset Privatization Trust (APT) sold 90% of MMC's shares to G Holdings, Inc. in 1992, MMC's employees were allegedly compelled to form manpower cooperatives to continue working. When MMC ceased operations in 2001 and its assets were foreclosed and sold to G Holdings, the workers filed labor claims for illegal dismissal and monetary benefits. The central legal issue evolved into whether G Holdings, as the parent/holding company, should be held solidarily liable with MMC for these claims by piercing the veil of corporate fiction, or whether MMC's separate corporate personality should be respected.
Ellao vs. BATELEC I
9th July 2018
AK892379The dismissal of a General Manager of an electric cooperative, where such position is expressly provided for in the cooperative's By-laws as a corporate office, constitutes an intra-cooperative controversy within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Courts pursuant to Republic Act No. 8799 (transferring jurisdiction over intra-corporate disputes from the Securities and Exchange Commission to the regular courts), and not the labor tribunals.
The case involves the jurisdictional delineation between labor tribunals (Labor Arbiter and NLRC) and regular courts (Regional Trial Courts) regarding termination disputes involving electric cooperatives organized under Presidential Decree No. 269. These cooperatives are non-stock, non-profit entities vested with corporate powers. The controversy centers on whether the dismissal of a cooperative's General Manager is a labor dispute or an intra-corporate controversy, particularly in light of the transfer of jurisdiction over intra-corporate disputes from the Securities and Exchange Commission to the Regional Trial Courts under Republic Act No. 8799.
Florete vs. Florete
2nd April 2018
AK125983In a close corporation, stockholders may waive strict compliance with procedural restrictions on the transfer of shares contained in the Articles of Incorporation through their actual knowledge of the transfer and acquiescence thereto for a substantial period; such waiver validates the transfer despite technical non-compliance with the formal notice requirements, and the corporation cannot refuse to register the transfer when all stockholders have effectively consented.
Marsal & Co., Inc. was organized in 1966 as a close corporation by members of the Florete family. Following the deaths of patriarch Marcelino Florete, Sr. and his daughter Teresita Florete Menchavez, disputes arose regarding the distribution of estate assets, including corporate shareholdings. A Compromise Agreement approved by the probate court transferred Teresita's shares to her brother Rogelio Florete, Sr. Seventeen years later, the remaining siblings sought to annul the transfer, claiming violation of preemptive rights under the Articles of Incorporation.
Tee Ling Kiat vs. Ayala Corporation
7th March 2018
AK747574A transfer of shares of stock is not valid against the corporation and third persons unless recorded in the books of the corporation showing the names of the parties, the date of transfer, and the number of shares transferred, pursuant to Section 63 of the Corporation Code; mere presentation of cancelled checks and photocopies of deeds of sale, without recording in the corporate books, is insufficient to prove ownership of shares or establish standing to file a third-party claim against levied corporate properties.
The case arose from a money judgment obtained by Ayala Corporation against Continental Manufacturing Corporation (CMC) and Spouses Dewey and Lily Dee in 1990. During execution of the judgment, the sheriff levied upon real properties registered under Vonnel Industrial Park, Inc. (VIP), on the basis that Dewey Dee was an incorporator thereof. Tee Ling Kiat intervened, claiming he purchased Dee's shares in VIP in December 1980, thereby asserting ownership over the levied corporate assets and seeking to nullify the levy.
Dr. Gil J. Rich vs. Guillermo Paloma III, Atty. Evarista Tarce and Ester L. Servacio
7th March 2018
AK159352A corporation dissolved prior to entering into a real estate mortgage agreement lacks juridical personality to execute such contract, as entering into new mortgage transactions constitutes a business activity beyond the liquidation powers authorized under Section 122 of the Corporation Code; therefore, the mortgage and any subsequent redemption thereunder are void ab initio.
The case involves a dispute over a foreclosed property where the original debtor allegedly mortgaged the same property to two different creditors at different times. The controversy centers on the validity of a redemption exercised by the second mortgagee, MTLC, which had already been dissolved by the SEC before executing the mortgage agreement, raising fundamental questions regarding the extent of corporate powers during the liquidation period following dissolution.
De La Salle Montessori vs. De La Salle Brothers
7th February 2018
AK023441A corporation acquires the exclusive right to use a corporate name by priority of adoption; the phrase "De La Salle" is not generic but arbitrary, fanciful, and suggestive, making it legally protectable against subsequent registrants in the same industry where confusing similarity is likely to occur.
The case arises from the long-standing use of the "De La Salle" name by a group of educational institutions founded by or associated with the De La Salle Brothers in the Philippines. The dispute centers on the registration of a new corporate name by an unrelated educational institution and the scope of protection afforded to corporate names under Section 18 of the Corporation Code of the Philippines.
Cacho vs. Balagtas
7th February 2018
AK946998The dismissal of a corporate officer is an intra-corporate controversy falling under the exclusive jurisdiction of regular courts pursuant to Republic Act No. 8799 (the Securities Regulation Code), not a labor dispute cognizable by the Labor Arbiter or NLRC, where the dismissal relates to the incidents of the corporate office and the position was created by the corporation's by-laws and filled by the board of directors' appointment or election.
The dispute arose from the termination of Virginia D. Balagtas, who served North Star International Travel, Inc. for fourteen years in various capacities, including as General Manager and later as Executive Vice President/Chief Executive Officer. Following allegations of questionable transactions and misappropriation of company funds, the Board of Directors placed her under preventive suspension in March 2004 and subsequently prevented her from resuming her duties. Balagtas filed a complaint for constructive dismissal before the Labor Arbiter, while the employer contended that the dispute involved the removal of a corporate officer, thereby constituting an intra-corporate controversy outside labor jurisdiction.
International Academy of Management and Economics vs. Litton and Company
13th December 2017
AK162983The doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction applies to non-stock, non-profit corporations, and "reverse piercing" (outsider reverse piercing) is recognized in Philippine jurisprudence, allowing a judgment creditor to satisfy the personal debt of a controlling shareholder or member from the assets of the corporation when the corporation is merely the alter ego of the individual and is used to perpetrate fraud or evade existing obligations.
The case arose from a long-standing dispute over unpaid rentals and realty taxes owed by Atty. Emmanuel T. Santos to Litton and Company, Inc. under lease agreements. After obtaining a final and executory judgment in an unlawful detainer case, Litton sought execution against Santos, who attempted to shield his assets by transferring them to I/AME, a non-stock educational corporation where he served as President, majority contributor, and controlling figure.
Belo Medical Group vs. Santos
30th August 2017
AK585633A conflict between stockholders regarding ownership of shares and the right to inspect corporate records constitutes an intra-corporate controversy subject to the jurisdiction of Special Commercial Courts under the Interim Rules of Procedure Governing Intra-Corporate Controversies, regardless of whether the complaint is styled as an interpleader; moreover, appeals from decisions of Special Commercial Courts in intra-corporate cases must be taken to the Court of Appeals via Rule 43, not directly to the Supreme Court via Rule 45.
Following the enactment of Republic Act No. 8799 (The Securities Regulation Code), jurisdiction over intra-corporate disputes was transferred from the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to the Regional Trial Courts designated as Special Commercial Courts. This case clarifies the scope of such jurisdiction and the proper appellate procedure. The dispute arose from a conflict between Jose Santos, a registered stockholder and former director of Belo Medical Group, Inc. (BMGI), and Victoria Belo, the majority stockholder (90%), regarding 25 shares of stock registered in Santos' name. Santos sought to inspect corporate records, invoking his rights under the Corporation Code. Belo opposed, claiming Santos held the shares in trust for her and that his request was in bad faith because he owned a competing business. BMGI, facing potential liability for denying inspection to a registered stockholder or accommodating a competitor, filed suit to compel the parties to interplead and litigate their conflicting claims.
Bank of Commerce vs. Heirs of Rodolfo Dela Cruz
14th August 2017
AK555296The terms of merger between two corporations, when determinative of their joint or respective liabilities towards third parties, cannot be assumed. The party alleging the corporations' joint liabilities must establish the allegation with competent evidence. Otherwise, the liabilities of each corporation remain separate and distinct.
The case arises from a banking relationship where a depositor discovered unauthorized withdrawals from his account due to a bank's negligence. Concurrently, the acquiring bank (Bank of Commerce) sought to collect on loans obtained by the depositor from the original bank (Panasia), leading to a dispute over whether the acquiring bank assumed all liabilities of the original bank or only selected assets and obligations.
Virata vs. Ng Wee
5th July 2017
AK360637Transactions denominated as "sans recourse" money placements that pool investor funds to finance corporate borrowers, with investors expecting profits from the efforts of the investment house, constitute investment contracts under the Howey test and are therefore securities requiring registration under the Revised Securities Act. Investment houses that disguise direct borrowing as "sans recourse" brokerage, while secretly releasing borrowers from liability through side agreements, commit fraud and violate quasi-banking regulations. Corporate directors and officers may be held solidarily liable for such fraudulent schemes under Section 31 of the Corporation Code when they act in bad faith or gross negligence, and the corporate veil may be pierced when the corporation is merely an alter ego used to perpetrate injustice.
The case arises from the aftermath of the Asian financial crisis, during which Westmont Investment Corporation (Wincorp), a licensed investment house, sought to conceal defaulted loans from Hottick Holdings Corporation. To remove Hottick's non-performing assets from its books, Wincorp orchestrated a scheme involving Power Merge Corporation—a shell company controlled by Luis Juan Virata—to issue promissory notes in exchange for Hottick's obligations. Wincorp then marketed these Power Merge obligations to investors, including Alejandro Ng Wee, as safe, high-yield "sans recourse" transactions, while secretly executing Side Agreements that released Power Merge from any payment obligation, rendering the promissory notes worthless.
Bustos vs. Millians Shoe, Inc.
24th April 2017
AK342981Properties owned by stockholders of a corporation are not assets of the corporation and cannot be included in rehabilitation proceedings or subjected to stay orders covering corporate assets, absent proof that the corporation is a close corporation under Section 96 of the Corporation Code and that the specific conditions for personal liability under Section 100(5) (active engagement in management, corporate torts, and lack of adequate liability insurance) are satisfied. The doctrine of separate juridical personality and limited liability shields stockholders from personal liability for corporate debts, and the 10-day opposition period under Rule 4, Section 6 of the Interim Rules on Corporate Rehabilitation applies only to creditors of the debtor corporation, not to claimants against stockholders personally.
The case arises from the intersection of local government tax enforcement and corporate rehabilitation proceedings. A winning bidder at a tax delinquency sale sought to exclude the auctioned property from the coverage of a stay order issued in rehabilitation proceedings involving Millians Shoe, Inc. (MSI), arguing that the property belonged to the corporate stockholders (Spouses Cruz) and not to the corporation itself. The lower courts ruled against the bidder, characterizing the corporation as a close corporation and holding the stockholders personally liable for corporate debts, thereby including their personal property in the rehabilitation proceedings.
Land Bank vs. West Bay Colleges
17th April 2017
AK413208A creditor holding insurance proceeds from a mortgaged property must reimburse the debtor when no actual application of such proceeds to the loan obligations is evidenced in the rehabilitation plans, and any attempted application after the issuance of a Stay Order in corporate rehabilitation proceedings is prohibited because such order bars the debtor from making payments of pre-petition liabilities and suspends creditors' rights to enforce claims.
This case involves the Chiongbian Group of Companies (CGC), composed of West Bay Colleges, Inc. (an educational institution), PBR Management and Development Corporation (real estate), and BCP Trading Co., Inc. (construction), which obtained various loans from Land Bank of the Philippines secured by real and chattel mortgages. After experiencing financial difficulties and filing for corporate rehabilitation, a dispute arose regarding the proper application of insurance proceeds from a sunken vessel to the group's loan obligations, and whether the Stay Order issued in the rehabilitation proceedings affected the creditor's right to set off these proceeds against the debts.
Sumifru (Philippines) Corporation vs. Bernabe Baya
17th April 2017
AK871804In a merger, the surviving corporation becomes responsible and liable for all liabilities and obligations of the constituent corporations in the same manner as if it had itself incurred such liabilities or obligations, pursuant to Section 80 of the Corporation Code of the Philippines.
The case arose from a labor dispute involving an employee who formed an agrarian reform beneficiaries' cooperative (AMSKARBEMCO) in opposition to his employer's interests. Following the employee's refusal to shift loyalty to a pro-company cooperative and the subsequent implementation of agrarian reform covering portions of the employer's plantation, the employee was demoted from a supervisory position to rank-and-file status. During the appellate proceedings, DFC merged with Sumifru (Philippines) Corporation, which became the surviving entity.
Philippine Numismatic and Antiquarian Society vs. Genesis Aquino
30th January 2017
AK889012A corporation may only exercise its power to sue through its board of directors or officers duly authorized by board resolution; an individual corporate officer cannot solely exercise such corporate power without authority from the board, and courts are not required to take judicial notice of corporate board resolutions or an officer's authority to represent the corporation, such that failure to submit proof of authorization is a valid ground for dismissal for lack of cause of action.
The case arose from a leadership dispute within the Philippine Numismatic and Antiquarian Society (PNAS), a non-stock, non-profit domestic corporation, where conflicting factions claimed authority to represent the corporation in litigation. This resulted in the filing of two separate complaints before the same Regional Trial Court branch represented by different counsels and different alleged officers, creating uncertainty as to the true leadership of the corporation.
Lim vs. Moldex Land, Inc.
25th January 2017
AK734861In non-stock corporations, the existence of a quorum is determined by the numerical majority of actual members who are entitled to vote (members in good standing), not by the majority of the total voting rights or outstanding capital stock; consequently, non-members cannot be elected as directors or trustees of a non-stock corporation even if they represent a corporate member.
The case arises from a dispute over the control and management of 1322 Golden Empire Tower, a condominium project developed by Moldex Land, Inc. Moldex retained ownership of 220 unsold units and sought to exercise control over the condominium corporation (Condocor) through its appointed representatives, who were elected as directors and officers during a controversial general membership meeting. This raised significant issues regarding the proper composition of the board of a condominium corporation and the rights of owner-developers versus unit buyers.
Ient vs. Tullett Prebon
11th January 2017
AK912823Violations of Sections 31 and 34 of the Corporation Code do not give rise to criminal liability under Section 144 because these sections already provide specific civil remedies (damages for bad faith or negligence under Section 31; accounting and refunding of profits under Section 34), and the legislative history confirms no intent to criminalize breaches of fiduciary duty. The term "not otherwise specifically penalized" in Section 144 encompasses both criminal and civil penalties, and applying the rule of lenity, the ambiguity must be resolved in favor of the accused.
The case arises from the competitive landscape of the inter-dealer brokerage (IDB) industry in the Philippines. Tullett Prebon (Philippines), Inc. (Tullett), established in 1995, was a leading IDB servicing banks and financial institutions. Its competitor, the Tradition Group, sought to expand its Asian operations by establishing Tradition Financial Services Philippines, Inc. (Tradition Philippines). The dispute centers on the alleged mass resignation of Tullett's entire brokering staff, orchestrated by its former directors and officers (Villalon and Chuidian) in conspiracy with petitioners James Ient and Maharlika Schulze (officers of the Tradition Group), allegedly to sabotage Tullett's business and transfer its clientele to Tradition Philippines.
SEC vs. CJH Development Corporation
28th November 2016
AK675790A Cease and Desist Order (CDO) issued by the SEC under Section 64.1 of the Securities Regulation Code is an interlocutory order based on prima facie evidence that is not subject to appeal; parties must exhaust administrative remedies by filing a motion to lift the CDO before the SEC rather than resorting to judicial review, and the SEC retains primary jurisdiction over technical determinations regarding whether a transaction constitutes an investment contract or security.
CJH Development Corporation (CJHDC), a domestic real estate corporation, entered into a 50-year lease agreement with the Bases Conversion and Development Authority (BCDA) for a 247-hectare property within the John Hay Special Economic Zone in Baguio City. CJHDC developed the property into a tourism complex and constructed two condotel buildings ("The Manor" and "The Suites"). To finance the development, CJHDC and its wholly-owned subsidiary CJH Suites Corporation (CJHSC) offered residential units for sale under schemes that included "leaseback" or "money-back" arrangements, where buyers would receive income shares or guaranteed returns while the units were pooled and operated as hotel rooms.
Agdao Residents Inc. vs. Maramion
17th October 2016
AK707664In non-stock corporations, membership termination must strictly comply with the procedures prescribed in the articles of incorporation or by-laws, including due notice and opportunity to be heard; and transfers of corporate property to directors or officers are voidable under Section 32 of the Corporation Code unless they are fair, reasonable, approved without the participation of the interested directors, and serve a legitimate corporate purpose, otherwise constituting a breach of fiduciary duty.
Agdao Landless Residents Association, Inc. (ALRAI) is a non-stock, non-profit corporation organized to assist landless residents in Davao City. Dakudao & Sons, Inc. donated 46 titled lots to ALRAI, subject to a five-year restriction in one deed prohibiting partition or distribution to individual members without written authority from the donor. Disputes arose when ALRAI's board of directors transferred several lots to themselves and other individuals allegedly as compensation for services and financial assistance, and subsequently expelled members who questioned these transactions.
Ursua vs. Republic
5th October 2016
AK913389The Court lacks jurisdiction to order San Miguel Corporation (SMC), a non-party to Civil Case No. 0033-F, to deliver the 25.45 million SMC treasury shares (originating from the 1990 Compromise Agreement) to the Republic, as doing so without impleading SMC violates its constitutional right to due process.
The case originates from the sequestration of assets, including SMC shares held by Coconut Industry Investment Fund (CIIF) Holding Companies, alleged to have been acquired using coco levy funds during the Marcos regime. A 1986 sale of 33.1 million SMC shares by CIIF Holding Companies (administered by UCPB) to the SMC Group was partially rescinded through a 1990 Compromise Agreement between UCPB Group and SMC Group, which required PCGG approval. This agreement recognized SMC's ownership of shares corresponding to its initial P500 million payment (which became 25.45 million shares due to stock dividends/splits) and designated them as SMC treasury shares, while the rest reverted to CIIF Holding Companies. The Republic later sought to include these 25.45 million treasury shares in the assets declared as publicly owned and subject to reconveyance.
Philippine Geothermal, Inc. Employees Union vs. Unocal Philippines, Inc.
28th September 2016
AK023308The merger of a corporation with another does not operate to dismiss the employees of the corporation absorbed by the surviving corporation; rather, the surviving corporation automatically assumes the employment contracts of the absorbed corporation by operation of law, and employees are not entitled to separation pay on account of such merger in the absence of just or authorized causes for termination under the Labor Code or express contractual stipulations providing for such benefit in the event of merger.
This case addresses the intersection of corporate law and labor law, specifically interpreting the effects of a merger under Section 80 of the Corporation Code on the employment status of employees of the absorbed corporation. It clarifies the scope of constitutional protections for labor and security of tenure in the context of corporate restructuring, rejecting the notion that a merger automatically severs the employer-employee relationship or entitles employees to separation benefits.
Chua vs. People of the Philippines
24th August 2016
AK603331A corporation dissolved by expiration of its corporate term or by involuntary means continues as a body corporate for three years after dissolution for purposes of prosecuting and defending suits and enabling it to settle and close its affairs, during which period the stockholder's right to inspect corporate records subsists, and officers may be held criminally liable for refusal to permit such inspection under Section 74 in relation to Section 144 of the Corporation Code, regardless of the absence of criminal intent, as the offense is malum prohibitum.
The case arises from a family dispute involving Chua Tee Corporation of Manila (CTCM), a family-owned corporation where the petitioners (uncles and accountant of the complainant) served as corporate officers. After the corporation ceased operations and its corporate term expired on May 26, 1999, a stockholder demanded to inspect corporate records in August 2000. The refusal by the corporate officers to allow inspection led to criminal prosecution, raising the legal question of whether officers retain duties to stockholders after corporate dissolution and during the winding-up period.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. Goodyear Philippines, Inc.
3rd August 2016
AK041710A redemption price paid to a non-resident foreign shareholder that exceeds the par value of the shares cannot be subjected to 15% final withholding tax as intercorporate dividends when the redeeming corporation has no unrestricted retained earnings, as the distribution does not constitute "dividends" under Section 73(A) of the National Internal Revenue Code and Section 43 of the Corporation Code, and the Board of Directors is legally incapacitated from declaring dividends absent such earnings.
The case involves the tax treatment of proceeds from the redemption of preferred shares issued by Goodyear Philippines, Inc. to its foreign parent company, Goodyear Tire and Rubber Company (GTRC), a non-resident foreign corporation organized under US law. The redemption price included the aggregate par value plus accrued dividends. The Bureau of Internal Revenue withheld 15% final withholding tax on the difference between the redemption price and par value, treating it as dividend income, prompting Goodyear to seek a refund.
Indian Chamber of Commerce Phils., Inc. vs. Filipino Indian Chamber of Commerce in the Philippines, Inc.
3rd August 2016
AK239675Under Section 18 of the Corporation Code, a corporate name is deceptively or confusingly similar to another when, despite minor differences in descriptive or geographical words, the overall impression is such as to mislead a person using ordinary care and discrimination; the prior registrant has the exclusive right to the use of the corporate name under the priority of adoption rule, and the SEC has absolute authority to order the change of corporate names to prevent confusion and protect the public.
The dispute arose from conflicting claims over corporate names derived from the defunct Filipino-Indian Chamber of Commerce of the Philippines, Inc. (defunct FICCPI), originally registered in 1951, whose corporate term expired in 2001 without extension. The controversy involved competing groups seeking to register successor organizations to promote Filipino-Indian business relations, leading to questions regarding the protection of dissolved corporations' names, the priority of adoption rule, and the test for confusing similarity under the Corporation Code.
Andaya vs. Rural Bank of Cabadbaran
3rd August 2016
AK859584A transferee of shares of stock who presents duly endorsed certificates and evidence of sale is a real party in interest with a clear legal right to file an action for mandamus to compel a corporation to register the transfer in its stock and transfer book and issue new certificates in the transferee's name; the corporation's duty to effect such registration is ministerial and may only be refused if the corporation holds an unpaid claim against the shares, or if valid restrictions under Section 98 of the Corporation Code are proven to exist and bind the transferee.
Georg vs. Holy Trinity College
20th July 2016
AK062876A corporation is bound by contracts entered into by its president on behalf of an unregistered internal organization when the corporation knowingly permits the president to act within the scope of apparent authority by consistently providing financial support, supervision, and resources to the organization without board objection, thereby holding the president out as possessing the power to bind the corporation in transactions related to that organization.
The dispute arose from a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) executed to finance international airline tickets for the Holy Trinity College Grand Chorale and Dance Company's European tour. The Group, though composed of college students and supervised by the school administration, was not registered as a separate juridical entity. The central legal question is whether the college, as a corporation, is liable for the financial obligations contracted by its president for the benefit of this internal group, particularly under the doctrines of apparent authority and corporation by estoppel.
Philippine Asset Growth Two, Inc. vs. Fastech Synergy Philippines, Inc.
28th June 2016
AK200119For a rehabilitation plan to be approved, it must strictly comply with the mandatory requirements under Section 18, Rule 3 of the 2008 Rules, specifically: (a) the inclusion of material financial commitments to support the rehabilitation plan, demonstrating the debtor's resolve and ability to finance continued operations; and (b) a liquidation analysis showing that the present value of payments to creditors under the plan exceeds what they would receive if the debtor were immediately liquidated. The absence of either requirement renders the plan legally insufficient and incapable of approval, regardless of the Rehabilitation Receiver's favorable recommendation.
The case involves four affiliated corporations—Fastech Synergy Philippines, Inc., Fastech Microassembly & Test, Inc., Fastech Electronique, Inc., and Fastech Properties, Inc.—engaged in electronics manufacturing and property leasing. Facing financial distress, the corporations sought joint rehabilitation under the Financial Rehabilitation and Insolvency Act of 2010 (FRIA), claiming common management, shared assets, and interrelated liabilities. Planters Development Bank (PDB), a secured creditor holding mortgages over two parcels of land owned by Fastech Properties, had initiated extrajudicial foreclosure proceedings and emerged as the highest bidder in a foreclosure sale held shortly before the rehabilitation petition was filed. The central dispute concerned whether the proposed rehabilitation plan, which relied primarily on payment deferrals, interest waivers, and reduced interest rates rather than fresh capital infusion, could legally and economically restore the corporations to solvency.
Interport Resources Corp. vs. Securities Specialist, Inc.
6th June 2016
AK041544The assignment of stock subscription agreements operates as a novation by substitution of debtor under Article 1293 of the Civil Code, requiring the corporation to recognize the assignee as the new subscriber entitled to pay the balance and receive the shares, notwithstanding the lack of registration in the stock and transfer book when the corporation has unduly refused to recognize the transfer; however, exemplary damages and attorney's fees may not be awarded solely on the basis of bad faith absent a showing of wanton, fraudulent, oppressive, or malevolent conduct.
In 1978, Oceanic Oil & Mineral Resources, Inc. merged with Interport Resources Corporation, with Interport as the surviving entity. Prior to the merger, R.C. Lee had subscribed to 5,000,000 shares of Oceanic stock, paying only 25% of the subscription price. In 1979, R.C. Lee assigned these subscription agreements to Securities Specialist, Inc. (SSI) through stock assignments indorsed in blank. A decade later, when Interport called for the payment of subscription balances, it refused to recognize SSI's rights despite the prior assignment, leading to a dispute over ownership of the shares and the validity of the transfer under the Corporation Code and Civil Code provisions on novation.
Magallanes Watercraft Association, Inc. vs. Auguis
30th May 2016
AK062760A corporation possesses not only express powers conferred by law or its articles of incorporation, but also implied powers necessary or incidental to the exercise of those expressly conferred; an act reasonably necessary or proper to promote the interest or welfare of the corporation, and logically related to its corporate purpose, is not ultra vires even if not expressly provided in the charter or by-laws.
The dispute arises from the enforcement of membership obligations within a local association of motorized banca operators. It addresses the scope of corporate powers of non-stock corporations, particularly whether disciplinary measures such as the suspension of membership privileges for non-payment of dues fall within the corporation's powers when not explicitly enumerated in its governing documents.
Estate of Dr. Juvencio P. Ortañez vs. Jose C. Lee
9th March 2016
AK938953A judicial declaration nullifying the sale of shares and voiding capital stock increases approved on the basis of such illegally acquired shares does not retroactively invalidate prior, legally effected capital increases that diluted the shareholding percentage of the original owner; challengers to a corporate election bear the burden of proving by preponderance of evidence that they hold majority shares to establish invalidity of the election or lack of quorum.
Dr. Juvencio P. Ortañez organized Philinterlife in 1956 and owned 90% of the subscribed capital stock at incorporation. Upon his death in 1980, his estate held 2,029 shares representing 50.725% of the then 4,000 outstanding shares. In 1989 and 1991, these shares were sold to Filipino Loan Assistance Group (FLAG), represented by Jose C. Lee, but this sale was later declared void ab initio in G.R. No. 146006. Meanwhile, pursuant to statutory mandates under the Insurance Code, Philinterlife increased its authorized capital stock multiple times between 1980 and 2003, reaching 50,000 shares, which progressively diluted the Estate's percentage ownership.
Viva Shipping Lines, Inc. vs. Keppel Philippines Mining, Inc.
17th February 2016
AK005284Liberality in the construction of procedural rules is not an end in itself and cannot be invoked to excuse non-compliance with mandatory requirements for appeals under Rule 43, including the impleading of indispensable parties (creditors) and proof of service; moreover, a rehabilitation plan must demonstrate economic feasibility through a real opportunity to restore the debtor to solvency with present value recovery for creditors better than liquidation, otherwise the appropriate remedy is liquidation.
The case involves a shipping company facing financial distress due to currency devaluation, increased competition, and mismanagement. The company claimed ownership of multiple vessels and a shopping mall but faced substantial debts to banks, vessel repair companies, and government units. The dispute centers on the legal framework for corporate rehabilitation under the Interim Rules of Procedure on Corporate Rehabilitation, which aims to rescue financially distressed companies while balancing the interests of debtors, creditors, and the public, and the strict procedural requirements for appealing rehabilitation decisions under Rule 43 of the Rules of Court.
Teng vs. SEC
17th February 2016
AK199262The surrender of stock certificates by the transferee to the corporation is not a mandatory prerequisite for the registration of share transfers in the corporate books under Section 63 of the Corporation Code; however, surrender is required before the issuance of new certificates to enable cancellation of the old certificates and prevent the existence of duplicate documentation covering the same shares.
The case originated from respondent Ting Ping Lay's purchase of shares in TCL Sales Corporation from various stockholders between 1979 and 1989, including 480 shares from Peter Chiu and 1,440 shares from Ismaelita Maluto. Despite possessing valid deeds of sale, petitioner Anna Teng, as Corporate Secretary, refused to register the transfers in the Stock and Transfer Book and issue new certificates. This refusal led to SEC Case No. 3900, where the SEC ordered registration and issuance. After the Supreme Court affirmed this order in G.R. No. 129777 (2001), execution was delayed by an interpleader case involving competing claims to certain shares previously owned by Teng Ching. Following the resolution of the interpleader, the SEC issued an alias writ of execution for the shares acquired from Chiu and Maluto, prompting the instant petition.
University of Mindanao vs. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas
11th January 2016
AK905378A corporation, particularly an educational institution, cannot mortgage its properties to secure the loans of third persons where such act is not expressly authorized by its articles of incorporation and is not necessary or incidental to its stated purposes; such acts are ultra vires and unenforceable against the corporation. Acts of an officer not authorized by the board of directors/trustees do not bind the corporation unless the corporation ratifies the acts or holds the officer out as a person with authority to transact on its behalf.
University of Mindanao is an educational institution established to provide formal instruction. In 1982, its Board of Trustees was chaired by Guillermo B. Torres, whose wife, Dolores P. Torres, served as Assistant Treasurer. The Torres spouses also controlled two thrift banks: First Iligan Savings & Loan Association, Inc. (FISLAI) and Davao Savings and Loan Association, Inc. (DSLAI). When these banks faced financial distress and heavy depositor withdrawals, they obtained emergency credit from the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas. To secure these loans, mortgages were executed over properties belonging to University of Mindanao, allegedly by authority of its officers. Years later, after the banks were merged and subsequently liquidated, BSP sought to foreclose on these mortgages, prompting University of Mindanao to file actions for nullification, claiming the mortgages were executed without authority and were beyond the University's corporate powers.
Orchard Golf & Country Club, Inc. vs. Yu
11th January 2016
AK979666A corporation may validly suspend its members for violations of club rules and regulations despite an inconsistent bylaw provision requiring more votes than the number of existing directors when such provision is clearly an oversight; the recommendation of a house committee is not mandatory when the governing provision uses permissive language; and procedural rules may be relaxed to serve substantial justice when the delay is excusable, the appeal is meritorious, and no material prejudice is caused to the adverse party.
The case arose from a long-standing dispute between The Orchard Golf & Country Club, Inc. and two of its members, Ernesto Yu and Manuel Yuhico, stemming from an incident on May 28, 2000, where the respondents violated the Club's "no twosome" policy and engaged in disrespectful conduct toward club management. This led to their suspension and subsequent multi-layered litigation involving the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), Regional Trial Courts (RTC), and Court of Appeals (CA), culminating in this petition for review on certiorari.
Querubin vs. COMELEC
8th December 2015
AK133176The Supreme Court held that the COMELEC En Banc did not commit grave abuse of discretion in declaring the Smartmatic Joint Venture the bidder with the lowest calculated responsive bid for the 2016 election automation project, despite petitioners’ claims that SMTC’s corporate purpose was strictly limited to the 2010 elections. The Court ruled that (1) the submission of Articles of Incorporation was not a mandatory eligibility or post-qualification requirement under RA 9184 and the bidding documents; (2) even if considered, SMTC’s AOI was validly amended to include future elections before the post-qualification stage; and (3) SMTC’s participation was not an ultra vires act because it was incidental to its corporate purpose and supported by surviving contractual obligations (including a 10-year warranty) from the 2010 elections.
The case arises from the COMELEC’s procurement of 23,000 new units of precinct-based Optical Mark Readers (OMRs) for the May 9, 2016 National and Local Elections. The project involved a two-stage competitive bidding process with an Approved Budget for Contract of P2.5 billion. Smartmatic-TIM Corporation (SMTC), which previously supplied automated election equipment for the 2010 elections, participated as the majority partner (46.5% equity) in a joint venture. Controversy emerged when petitioners discovered that SMTC’s AOI, as submitted during the bidding stage, stated its primary purpose as solely for the "automation of the 2010 national and local elections," raising questions about its legal capacity to contract for the 2016 elections.
GSIS Family Bank vs. BPI Family Bank
23rd September 2015
AK834206To obtain protection under Section 18 of the Corporation Code, a corporation must prove: (1) prior adoption and registration of the corporate name giving rise to a prior right, and (2) that the contested name is either identical or confusingly similar to its own; the SEC possesses absolute and exclusive jurisdiction to determine confusing similarity and prohibit the use of corporate names, and approvals by other agencies (DTI, BSP) do not override this authority; the addition of merely descriptive terms or acronyms (such as "GSIS" or "Thrift") does not render a corporate name distinct from a prior registered name when both entities engage in the same line of business.
The case arises from the intersection of corporate law and intellectual property law concerning the registration and protection of corporate names in the banking industry. Following the acquisition of distressed thrift banks by government entities and the liberalization of the banking sector, the question of whether the term "Family Bank" constitutes a generic term available for public use or a protectable trade name with acquired goodwill became a significant issue for regulatory agencies including the SEC, Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), and the Department of Trade and Industry (DTI).
Y-I Leisure Philippines, Inc. vs. James Yu
8th September 2015
AK037348Under Section 40 of the Corporation Code, a transferee of all or substantially all of a corporation's assets that renders the transferor incapable of continuing its business (a business-enterprise transfer) assumes the transferor's liabilities as a matter of law to protect creditors, regardless of whether the transfer was fraudulent or whether there was an express agreement to assume such liabilities.
The case involves the sale of golf and country club shares by MADCI to respondent Yu in 1997. When the proposed project failed to materialize, Yu sought a refund. Meanwhile, MADCI entered into a Memorandum of Agreement with petitioners (the Yats Group), culminating in the sale of MADCI's entire 120-hectare landholding—its sole asset and the intended site for the golf course—to petitioners. This left MADCI incapable of fulfilling its obligations to Yu, raising the central issue of whether the asset transferees should be held liable for the transferor's debts under the business-enterprise transfer doctrine.
SEC vs. Universal Rightfield Property Holdings, Inc.
20th July 2015
AK448577The Securities Regulation Code does not mandate separate notices and hearings for the suspension and revocation of securities registration; a single notice and opportunity to be heard may suffice for both sanctions, provided the registrant is adequately informed of the potential consequences and given a chance to explain its side, and any defect in procedural due process is cured by the filing of a motion for reconsideration where the party is afforded opportunity to be heard.
The case involves the SEC's enforcement of mandatory reportorial requirements under Section 17 of the Securities Regulation Code (SRC), which obligates registered issuers to file annual and quarterly reports to ensure full and fair disclosure to the investing public. The controversy clarifies the nature of the SEC's power to suspend or revoke registrations for violations, specifically addressing whether revocation requires a separate notice and hearing distinct from suspension proceedings, and whether such revocation constitutes an exercise of regulatory or quasi-judicial power.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. La Tondeña Distillers, Inc.
15th July 2015
AK661422The transfer of real property to a surviving corporation pursuant to a merger is not subject to Documentary Stamp Tax under Section 196 of the NIRC because such transfer occurs by operation of law and does not constitute a sale, there being no purchaser or consideration as contemplated by the statute; consequently, the surviving corporation is entitled to a refund of any DST erroneously paid on such transfer.
The case arose from a Plan of Merger entered into by La Tondena Distillers, Inc. (later renamed Ginebra San Miguel, Inc.) with three other corporations. The Bureau of Internal Revenue ruled that while the merger qualified as a tax-free exchange under Section 40(C)(2) of the NIRC, the transfer of real properties was subject to DST under Section 196. Respondent paid the DST under protest and subsequently sought a refund, leading to litigation on whether the statutory exemption for transfers pursuant to merger applied.
Bernas vs. Cinco
1st July 2015
AK908090A special stockholders' meeting called for the removal of directors under Section 28 of the Corporation Code must be called strictly by the corporate secretary upon order of the president or written demand of stockholders representing at least a majority of the outstanding capital stock; a call by an unauthorized body (such as an Oversight Committee) renders the meeting void ab initio, incapable of ratification by subsequent corporate acts, and directors elected therein cannot invoke the de facto officership doctrine to validate internal disciplinary actions such as the expulsion of members and the sale of their shares.
The case involves a corporate governance dispute within Makati Sports Club, Inc. (MSC), a domestic corporation organized for social, cultural, recreational and athletic purposes. Allegations of anomalies in the handling of corporate funds by the incumbent directors (the Bernas Group) led to a power struggle between the incumbent board and a group of stockholders (the Cinco Group). The dispute centered on the validity of a special stockholders' meeting called by an ad hoc Oversight Committee to remove the sitting directors, and the subsequent ratification of such removal in annual stockholders' meetings, raising fundamental issues regarding statutory authority to call corporate meetings, the distinction between void and ultra vires acts, and the limits of the de facto officership doctrine.
Fong vs. Dueñas
15th June 2015
AK028134In a joint venture agreement to incorporate a corporation where both parties breach their reciprocal obligations and the first infractor cannot be determined, the contract is deemed extinguished under Article 1192 of the Civil Code, requiring mutual restitution but precluding damages for either party; specifically, pre-incorporation subscriptions must be used for the intended corporate purpose and not diverted to other business ventures without consent.
The case arises from a failed business venture between former schoolmates who agreed to combine their resources to create a holding company that would consolidate the respondent's existing food manufacturing businesses (D.C. Danton, Inc. and Bakcom Food Industries, Inc.) and operate an international food franchise (Boboli). The dispute centers on the proper characterization of funds remitted as "advance subscriptions" to the unincorporated entity and the consequences of the parties' respective failures to perform their obligations under the verbal joint venture agreement.
Co, Sr. vs. Philippine Canine Club, Inc.
22nd April 2015
AK201389A writ of preliminary injunction is a preservative remedy intended solely to maintain the status quo until final adjudication of the merits; it cannot be used to correct wrongs already consummated, redress injuries already sustained, or restore membership already terminated. Consummated acts, such as completed expulsions from a corporation, are beyond the reach of injunctive relief, whereas merely threatened sanctions may still be enjoined.
The Philippine Canine Club, Inc. (PCCI) is a non-stock, non-profit corporation established to promote the breeding of purebred dogs. The petitioners were members of PCCI who registered their dogs with the Asian Kennel Club Union of the Philippines, Inc. (AKCUPI), a newly established rival organization. In response, PCCI amended its By-laws in May 2008 to include provisions allowing the suspension or expulsion of members for "membership in or participation in... an organization whose purposes and activities have been determined by the Board... to be prejudicial to the best interest of PCCI." Following this amendment, PCCI suspended or expelled several petitioners and threatened others with similar sanctions, prompting the filing of a suit for annulment of the amended By-laws and injunction.
Paz vs. New International Environmental Universality, Inc.
20th April 2015
AK524984A party who enters into a contract recognizing the other party as a corporation is estopped from denying its corporate existence to avoid contractual liability under Section 21 of the Corporation Code, even if the corporation was not yet incorporated at the time of the contract's execution, provided the party dealt with the ostensible corporation as such.
Balinghasay vs. Castillo
8th April 2015
AK177646A contract between a corporation and its directors is voidable under Section 32 of the Corporation Code when the presence of the interested directors was necessary to constitute a quorum and their votes were necessary for approval, unless ratified by the vote of stockholders representing at least two-thirds of the outstanding capital stock with full disclosure; the business judgment rule does not protect directors who act in bad faith or with gross negligence in acquiring an interest adverse to the corporation.
Medical Center Parañaque, Inc. (MCPI) is a domestic corporation operating a hospital. In 1997, after concessions for auxiliary medical services expired, the Board of Directors awarded the operation of the ultrasound unit to a group of investors composed largely of Obstetrics-Gynecology doctors, nine of whom were also members of the Board of Directors. The group purchased ultrasound equipment worth ₱850,000.00 and operated the unit under an informal arrangement that was later formalized through a Memorandum of Agreement (MOA) in 1999, dividing gross income between the investors and the corporation.
Victorio-Aquino vs. Pacific Plans, Inc.
10th December 2014
AK027184A rehabilitation court possesses the authority under the Interim Rules of Procedure on Corporate Rehabilitation and the Financial Rehabilitation and Insolvency Act (FRIA) to approve modifications to an existing rehabilitation plan— including the conversion of currency denominations and suspension of certain benefits—over the objection of creditors ("cram-down" power), provided the modification is necessary to preserve the trust fund, ensure the debtor's viability, and secure equitable treatment of all stakeholders; such judicial approval does not constitute an impairment of contractual obligations under Article III, Section 10 of the Constitution because the non-impairment clause limits legislative, not judicial or quasi-judicial, power.
Pacific Plans, Inc. (now Abundance Providers and Entrepreneurs Corporation) engaged in the sale of pre-need educational plans, specifically traditional open-ended educational plans (PEPTrads), which guaranteed payment of full tuition fees regardless of actual costs at the time of enrollment. Due to financial distress arising from the deregulation of tuition fees and the 1997 Asian financial crisis, PPI found itself unable to meet obligations to approximately 34,000 planholders. In 2005, PPI filed for corporate rehabilitation under Presidential Decree No. 902-A, seeking to restructure its debts and continue operations as a going concern while providing equitable treatment to its creditors.
Lopez Realty, Inc. vs. Tanjangco
12th November 2014
AK564408A board resolution authorizing the sale of corporate property, though initially defective due to lack of notice to a director as required by Section 53 of the Corporation Code, may be cured by subsequent express ratification by stockholders representing the majority of the outstanding capital stock in a joint stockholders and directors' meeting; furthermore, in the absence of certification by the corporate secretary, only those directors or stockholders whose signatures appear on the minutes can be deemed to have ratified the corporate action.
Lopez Realty, Inc. (LRI) was the registered co-owner of the Trade Center Building together with Jose Tanjangco. Internal disputes arose among LRI's stockholders—primarily between Asuncion Lopez-Gonzales (Corporate Secretary and majority stockholder) and Arturo F. Lopez (brother and co-stockholder)—regarding the proper management and disposition of corporate assets, specifically the proposed sale of LRI's one-half interest in the property to the Tanjangcos. The dispute centered on the authority of the Board of Directors to sell corporate assets without proper notice to all directors, and the subsequent ratification of such actions by the stockholders.
SEC vs. CA
22nd October 2014
AK206380Regular trial courts have original and exclusive jurisdiction over controversies involving the validation of proxies when such proxies are solicited for and used in the election of corporate directors, as these constitute "election contests" under Section 5(c) of Presidential Decree No. 902-A in relation to the Securities Regulation Code; the SEC retains jurisdiction only over proxy controversies unrelated to the election of directors.
The case involves a dispute between Omico Corporation, a publicly listed company, and its minority stockholder Astra Securities Corporation regarding the validity of proxies issued in favor of Tommy Kin Hing Tia for Omico's annual stockholders' meeting. The controversy required the Supreme Court to delineate the jurisdictional boundaries between the SEC's regulatory powers under the Securities Regulation Code and the jurisdiction of regular courts over intra-corporate disputes, specifically concerning the manner of voting and the validation of proxies in corporate elections.
Philippine Bank of Communications vs. Basic Polyprinters and Packaging Corporation
20th October 2014
AK958173In corporate rehabilitation proceedings, the debtor need not be solvent at the time of filing; however, the rehabilitation plan must contain genuine and material financial commitments that demonstrate the debtor's resolve, earnestness, and ability to restore the corporation to viability, rather than mere reclassifications of liabilities or reliance on worthless assets.
Basic Polyprinters, part of the Limtong Group of Companies, faced financial distress due to the Asian currency crisis, economic recession, increased competition from major malls, and a fire that destroyed significant inventory. After an initial joint petition with affiliates was remanded for individual filing, Basic Polyprinters sought rehabilitation to suspend payments to creditors, including Philippine Bank of Communications, and proposed a 15-year repayment scheme with substantial moratoriums on interest and principal payments.
Lanuza vs. BF Corporation
1st October 2014
AK923735Corporate representatives may be compelled to submit to arbitration proceedings pursuant to a contract entered into by the corporation they represent if there are allegations of bad faith or malice in their acts representing the corporation, as the determination of whether to pierce the veil of corporate fiction must be made in a single proceeding participated in by all parties involved.
The case involves a construction dispute between BF Corporation (contractor) and Shangri-La Properties, Inc. (owner) regarding the construction of a mall and multilevel parking structure along EDSA. The dispute arose when Shangri-La allegedly defaulted on progress payments, prompting BF Corporation to file a collection suit not only against the corporation but also against its individual directors for alleged bad faith in directing the corporation's affairs under Section 31 of the Corporation Code.
Villamor vs. Umale
24th September 2014
AK641034An action filed by a stockholder under Rule 1, Section 1(a)(1) of the Interim Rules for Intra-Corporate Controversies alleging fraud by directors detrimental to stockholder interests is not necessarily a derivative suit; to constitute a derivative suit, the plaintiff must implead the corporation as an indispensable party, exhaust intra-corporate remedies, allege the unavailability of appraisal rights, and clearly allege that the action is brought on behalf of the corporation. Additionally, the appointment of a receiver or management committee requires strict proof of both imminent danger of asset dissipation and paralyzation of business operations prejudicial to minority stockholders or the public, and only the Regional Trial Court has original and exclusive jurisdiction to appoint such receivers in intra-corporate controversies.
The case involves a dispute over corporate assets of Pasig Printing Corporation (PPC), specifically rental payments and goodwill money from MC Home Depot occupying the Rockland property in Pasig. The controversy arose when PPC's board waived the corporation's rights to lease income in favor of petitioner Villamor's law firm without consideration, and Villamor failed to remit the proceeds from MC Home Depot's checks to the corporation, prompting a stockholder to seek the appointment of a receiver and management committee.
WPM International Trading, Inc. and Manlapaz vs. Labayen
17th September 2014
AK824235Piercing the veil of corporate fiction under the alter ego theory requires strict proof of three concurrent elements: (1) complete domination by a stockholder of the corporation's finances, policies, and business practices such that the corporation has no separate mind, will, or existence of its own; (2) use of such control to commit fraud, wrong, or violation of a positive legal duty; and (3) proximate causation of the injury or unjust loss by such control and breach. Mere ownership of all or nearly all corporate stocks, or the concurrent holding of multiple corporate offices, is insufficient to establish the requisite control to disregard corporate personality.
The dispute arose from a management agreement between H.B.O. Systems Consultants (owned by Fe Corazon Labayen) and WPM International Trading, Inc. for the operation of Quickbite restaurants. When WPM failed to pay the full cost of renovations contracted by Labayen on its behalf, the contractor sued Labayen personally. After the trial court held Labayen liable for the unpaid balance, she sought indemnification from WPM and its president, Warlito P. Manlapaz, leading to the central question of whether the corporate veil could be pierced to hold Manlapaz personally liable for the corporation's obligations.
Aboitiz Equity Ventures vs. Chiongbian
9th July 2014
AK266434A dismissal for failure to state a cause of action may operate as res judicata on a subsequent case if it constitutes a judgment on the merits based on a definitive determination of the parties' rights and liabilities. Furthermore, the corporate veil cannot be pierced to hold a stockholder liable for corporate obligations based merely on ownership of all or nearly all of the capital stock; there must be clear and convincing proof of fraud or wrongdoing, which cannot be presumed.
This case arises from a complex corporate restructuring involving three major shipping families in the Philippines—the Aboitiz, Gothong, and Chiongbian families. In 1996, Aboitiz Shipping Corporation (ASC), Carlos A. Gothong Lines, Inc. (CAGLI), and William Lines, Inc. (WLI) executed a merger agreement transferring their shipping assets to WLI (later renamed WG&A, Inc., and subsequently Aboitiz Transport System Corporation or ATSC). A separate letter agreement (Annex SL-V) committed WLI to acquire spare parts inventories from CAGLI for a maximum of P400 million. When the actual inventories exceeded this value, a dispute arose regarding payment for the excess. After the Gothong and Chiongbian families sold their shares in WG&A to AEV in 2002, CAGLI sought to compel AEV to arbitrate the inventory dispute, despite AEV not being a party to the original 1996 Agreement or Annex SL-V.
Alabang Corporation vs. Alabang Hills Village Association
2nd June 2014
AK126665A corporation whose existence has been terminated may continue as a body corporate for three years after dissolution solely for the purpose of prosecuting and defending suits, settling affairs, and distributing assets; it cannot initiate new complaints beyond this three-year liquidation period, and any suit filed by the corporation itself after such period is subject to dismissal for lack of capacity to sue.
The case arose from a dispute between a subdivision developer and a homeowners' association regarding ownership and use of parcels of land within Alabang Hills Village. The developer's corporate existence had been revoked by the Securities and Exchange Commission several years prior to the filing of the suit, raising fundamental questions about corporate personality and the extent of the three-year liquidation period under the Corporation Code.
Yujuico vs. Quiambao
2nd June 2014
AK670529A criminal action for violation of a stockholder's right to examine corporate records and the stock and transfer book under Section 74 of the Corporation Code can only be maintained against corporate officers or persons acting on behalf of the corporation; while refusal to allow inspection of the stock and transfer book is punishable under Section 144, such criminal liability does not attach to individuals who merely withhold corporate records from new management in a personal capacity.
The dispute arose from the annual stockholders' meeting of STRADEC on March 1, 2004, where new officers were elected to replace the incumbent management. The transition was contested when the outgoing president and corporate secretary refused to turn over corporate records, including accounting files and the stock and transfer book, to the newly elected officers. This led to a criminal complaint alleging violations of Section 74 (Books to be kept) in relation to Section 144 (Violations of the Code) of the Corporation Code, raising novel questions about the scope of criminal liability for withholding corporate records during management transitions.
Pacific Rehouse Corporation vs. Court of Appeals
24th March 2014
AK996871The doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction applies only to determine established liability and not to confer jurisdiction over a party not impleaded in the case; consequently, a parent corporation cannot be held liable under an alias writ of execution for the judgment obligations of its wholly-owned subsidiary when the parent corporation was never impleaded as a party and was not served with summons nor voluntarily appeared in the proceedings.
The case stems from a complaint filed by Pacific Rehouse Corporation and other stockholders against EIB Securities, Inc. (E-Securities) for the unauthorized sale of 32,180,000 DMCI shares. After the Regional Trial Court rendered judgment on the pleadings ordering E-Securities to return the shares—a decision affirmed by the Supreme Court and which became final—the stockholders sought to enforce the judgment against Export and Industry Bank, Inc. (Export Bank), the parent company of E-Securities, by invoking the doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction during the execution stage.
SEC vs. Oudine Santos
19th March 2014
AK955410An individual who solicits investments by providing information, making presentations, and inducing potential investors to purchase unregistered securities acts as an agent or salesman under Section 28 of the Securities Regulation Code, even if the actual contracts are signed directly between the investor and the issuer, and even if the solicitor claims to be merely an "information provider." Solicitation is defined as the act of seeking or asking for business with the end view of closing a sale, and constitutes prima facie evidence of participation in the unregistered sale of securities.
The case arose from an investment scam involving Performance Investment Products Corporation (PIPC-BVI), a foreign corporation registered in the British Virgin Islands, and its Philippine arm, Philippine International Planning Center Corporation (PIPC Corporation). PIPC Corporation was registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) only as a financial research facility, but it solicited investments in a product called "Performance Managed Portfolio" (PMP), promising high returns of 12-18% per annum with guaranteed principal protection. Michael H.K. Liew, chairman of PIPC-BVI, disappeared with investors' funds, exposing the scam. The SEC filed complaints against officers and agents, including respondent Santos who acted as an investment consultant, for selling unregistered securities without the necessary licenses.
Funa vs. Manila Economic and Cultural Office
4th February 2014
AK221143The Manila Economic and Cultural Office (MECO), despite performing governmental functions analogous to consular and diplomatic activities and being under the policy supervision of the Department of Trade and Industry, is not a GOCC or government instrumentality because it was organized under the general Corporation Code (Batas Pambansa Blg. 68) and lacks the essential attribute of government ownership or control; however, its accounts pertaining to specific government funds—namely, the “verification fees” collected for the DOLE and the “consular fees” authorized under Section 2(6) of Executive Order No. 15, s. 2001—are subject to the audit jurisdiction of the COA as these are funds received by the MECO through or on behalf of the government.
Following the 1975 Joint Communiqué between the Philippines and the People’s Republic of China (PROC), the Philippines severed official diplomatic relations with Taiwan (Republic of China) in adherence to the “One China” policy. To maintain unofficial “people-to-people” relations with Taiwan without violating this policy, the Philippine government entrusted the MECO—a private non-stock, non-profit corporation incorporated under the Corporation Code—with the responsibility of fostering trade, economic cooperation, and cultural exchanges, as well as performing certain consular functions for Filipinos in Taiwan.
Advance Paper Corporation vs. Arma Traders Corporation
11th December 2013
AK800770A corporation is bound by loan contracts entered into by its president and treasurer despite the absence of a specific board resolution authorizing such loans, where the corporation knowingly permitted these officers to act as sole managers and hold themselves out as possessing authority to bind the corporation for 14 years, thereby clothing them with apparent authority; furthermore, evidence not objected to on the ground of hearsay during trial becomes admissible and forms part of the records of the case.
The case arose from a 14-year business relationship between Advance Paper Corporation, a manufacturer of paper products, and Arma Traders Corporation, a distributor of school and office supplies. The dispute centered on whether Arma Traders was liable for approximately P15 million in unpaid obligations arising from credit purchases and loans obtained by its President and Treasurer, which the corporation claimed were ultra vires acts and fraudulent rediscounting schemes designed to siphon corporate funds.
Nuccio Saverio and NS International, Inc. vs. Alfonso G. Puyat
27th November 2013
AK150319The doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction requires clear and convincing proof of complete control or domination of the corporation's finances and operations such that it has no separate existence, that such control was used to commit a wrong or fraud, and that such control was the proximate cause of the loss or injury; mere ownership of capital stock, absence of board resolutions, or business failure alone are insufficient grounds to disregard the separate corporate personality and hold stockholders personally liable for corporate obligations.
The case arises from a failed business venture involving a fertilizer processing plant. The respondent extended credit to NSI, represented by Nuccio Saverio, who owned 40% of the corporation. When the business failed to materialize and the loan remained unpaid despite partial payments, the respondent sought to recover the remaining balance by imputing liability not only to the corporation but also to Nuccio personally by piercing the corporate veil.
Riosa vs. Tabaco La Suerte Corporation
23rd October 2013
AK553444A corporation can only exercise its power to purchase real property through its board of directors or a corporate agent duly authorized by the board; an individual officer, even the Chief Executive Officer, cannot bind the corporation in a contract for the sale of real property without a board resolution authorizing such transaction. Additionally, a contract of sale requires a meeting of the minds between the parties, and where consent is obtained through fraud (e.g., a party signs a document believing it to be a receipt for a loan when it is actually a deed of sale), no valid contract exists.
Aquiles Riosa owned a 52-square meter commercial lot in Tabaco City, Albay, which he acquired from his parents. He borrowed money from Sia Ko Pio, the Chief Executive Officer of Tabaco La Suerte Corporation (La Suerte), believing he was signing a receipt for the loan. The document was later revealed to be a deed of absolute sale conveying the property to La Suerte, which was subsequently registered in the corporation's name. Riosa filed a suit to annul the sale, claiming he was fraudulently induced to sign and that Sia Ko Pio lacked authority to bind the corporation.
SME Bank Inc. vs. De Guzman
8th October 2013
AK457939In a stock sale involving merely a change in the equity composition of a corporation, the corporation continues as the same juridical entity and employer; therefore, the employees remain employed by the same corporation and cannot be dismissed en masse solely because of the transfer of controlling shares to new majority shareholders. Such a change is neither a just nor an authorized cause for termination under the Labor Code. This is distinct from an asset sale, where the seller is liable for separation pay and the buyer in good faith has no obligation to absorb the seller’s employees.
Small and Medium Enterprise Bank, Incorporated (SME Bank) experienced financial difficulties in 2001. To remedy the situation, the principal shareholders (Eduardo M. Agustin, Jr. and Peregrin de Guzman, Jr.) negotiated the sale of a controlling block of shares to Abelardo Samson. The prospective buyer imposed preconditions requiring the sellers to guarantee the termination or retirement of existing employees upon the transfer of shares, with a promise that the new management would honor retirement benefits and potentially rehire them. This led to the employees being induced to tender courtesy resignations, which the new management subsequently refused to honor by failing to rehire the majority of them.
Pua vs. Citibank, N.A.
16th September 2013
AK093478Civil suits for damages arising from violations of the Securities Regulation Code (SRC), specifically those falling under Sections 56 to 61, are within the exclusive original jurisdiction of the Regional Trial Courts as explicitly provided in Section 63.1 of the SRC, and are not subject to the doctrine of primary jurisdiction which applies only to criminal prosecutions under Section 53 of the same Code.
The case arose from transactions involving Filipino depositors of Citibank Binondo who were allegedly solicited and sold unregistered securities issued by offshore companies by officers of Citibank Hongkong. The transactions were allegedly facilitated and perfected at the Citibank Binondo branch. Upon discovering that the securities were not registered with the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the depositors sought judicial recourse, leading to a jurisdictional conflict between the judiciary and the administrative agency regarding which forum had authority to hear the dispute.
Yoshizaki vs. Joy Training Center of Aurora, Inc.
31st July 2013
AK485943For a corporate board resolution authorizing the sale of real property to be valid, the approval of a majority of the number of trustees or directors as fixed in the Articles of Incorporation—not merely a majority of the actual members currently serving—is required to constitute a quorum and validate the corporate act. Furthermore, a certificate of title indicating that certain individuals are "representatives" of the corporation does not constitute a special power of attorney to sell; a buyer dealing with corporate agents must ascertain not only the fact of agency but also the nature and extent of the agent's authority, and cannot rely solely on the face of the title to establish authority to sell.
Joy Training Center of Aurora, Inc. was a non-stock, non-profit religious educational institution incorporated under Philippine law. Its Articles of Incorporation fixed the number of board of trustees at seven members. However, due to failure to hold subsequent elections after incorporation, only five individuals were actually serving as trustees. Two of these trustees, spouses Richard and Linda Johnson, sold real properties registered in the corporation's name to spouses Sally and Yoshio Yoshizaki, purportedly pursuant to a board resolution authorizing the sale. The corporation challenged the transaction, leading to a dispute over the extent of corporate authority required to validly alienate corporate real assets and the proper forum for resolving such disputes.
Zuellig Freight and Cargo Systems vs. NLRC
22nd July 2013
AK173579A change in corporate name does not result in the dissolution of the corporation or the creation of a new juridical entity; the corporation retains its original identity, property, rights, and liabilities, including obligations to its employees under labor laws, and cannot evade liability for illegal dismissal by merely adopting a new name.
The case involves an employer's attempt to terminate employment relationships by allegedly ceasing business operations through corporate name amendments. Zeta Brokerage Corporation, engaged in brokerage services, amended its articles of incorporation purportedly to cease operations, but which effectively only changed its corporate name to Zuellig Freight and Cargo Systems, Inc., broadened its primary purpose, and increased its capital stock, while maintaining the same business continuity.
Sime Darby Pilipinas, Inc. vs. Mendoza
19th June 2013
AK570490When a corporation purchases a club share but registers it in an employee’s name due to restrictions on corporate ownership, and the employee endorses the certificate of stock in blank, executes a blank deed of assignment, and delivers these documents to the corporation which pays the purchase price and all assessments, a resulting trust arises in favor of the corporation as the beneficial owner. The employee holds only legal title subject to the corporation’s right to use, enjoy, and dispose of the property, and this right extends beyond the employee’s termination until the property is formally transferred to a new owner.
The case arises from the common corporate practice of providing club membership benefits to senior managers and executives. Alabang Country Club (ACC) By-Laws prohibit juridical entities from owning club shares, limiting ownership to natural persons. This restriction necessitates the use of trust arrangements where corporations purchase shares but register them under the names of qualified employees who act as trustees.
Alps Transportation vs. Rodriguez
13th June 2013
AK297928In cases of illegal dismissal where the employer is a sole proprietorship, the owner is personally and directly liable for the payment of backwages and other monetary awards, since a sole proprietorship does not possess a juridical personality separate and distinct from its owner, who has unlimited personal liability for all the debts and obligations of the business.
The case arises from the common practice in the transportation industry of hiring employees through manpower agencies to avoid direct employer liability. The dispute centers on the termination of a bus conductor for alleged irregularities in the collection of fares, and the subsequent question of whether the bus company (operating as a sole proprietorship) or the manpower agency bears liability for the illegal dismissal.
Vigilla vs. Philippine College of Criminology Inc.
10th June 2013
AK362926A labor-only contractor is solidarily liable with the principal employer for the rightful claims of the employees under Article 106 of the Labor Code; consequently, a valid release, waiver, or quitclaim executed in favor of the labor-only contractor extinguishes the solidary obligation of the principal employer pursuant to Article 1217 of the Civil Code. Furthermore, a corporation whose charter has been revoked may validly enter into agreements to settle its affairs and liabilities beyond the three-year winding up period under Section 122 of the Corporation Code, as the corporation continues as a body corporate for liquidation purposes, and Section 145 preserves all rights and remedies notwithstanding dissolution.
This case involves the dismissal of janitorial and maintenance personnel (janitors, janitresses, and supervisors) of Philippine College of Criminology Inc. (PCCr), a non-stock educational institution. The employees were made to understand that they were employed by Metropolitan Building Maintenance Services, Inc. (MBMSI), a corporation providing janitorial services, despite working directly under the supervision of PCCr's Senior Vice President for Administration, who was also the President of MBMSI. The controversy arose when PCCr discovered that MBMSI's Certificate of Incorporation had been revoked as early as July 2, 2003, prompting PCCr to terminate its contractual relationship with MBMSI and dismiss the employees in 2009. The employees challenged their dismissal and claimed that PCCr was their real employer, while PCCr presented releases, waivers, and quitclaims allegedly executed by the employees in favor of MBMSI to settle their monetary claims.
Philippine National Bank vs. Hydro Resources Contractors Corporation
13th March 2013
AK973801The doctrine of piercing the corporate veil based on the alter ego theory requires the concurrence of three elements: (1) complete domination by the parent corporation of the subsidiary's finances, policies, and business practices such that the subsidiary has no separate mind, will, or existence of its own; (2) use of such control to commit fraud or wrong, perpetuate violation of legal duty, or commit dishonest/unjust acts; and (3) proximate causation of injury or unjust loss to the plaintiff. The absence of any element prevents piercing. Mere ownership of all or nearly all capital stock and the existence of interlocking directorates, standing alone, do not justify piercing the corporate veil absent fraud or other public policy considerations.
The case arose from the foreclosure by DBP and PNB of mortgages on the properties of Marinduque Mining and Industrial Corporation (MMIC) in 1984. Following the foreclosure, the two government banks acquired substantially all of MMIC's assets and organized Nonoc Mining and Industrial Corporation (NMIC) to continue the mining operations, with DBP owning 57% and PNB owning 43% of NMIC's shares. Subsequently, NMIC engaged Hercon, Inc. (later merged into HRCC) for mine stripping and road construction services. When NMIC failed to pay the remaining contract balance, HRCC filed suit seeking to hold DBP and PNB solidarily liable with NMIC, alleging that NMIC was merely the banks' alter ego. The case was complicated by the subsequent transfer of DBP and PNB's interests in NMIC to the National Government under Proclamation No. 50, and then to the APT as trustee.
Loreli Lim Po vs. Department of Justice
11th February 2013
AK426219The determination of probable cause by the Department of Justice during preliminary investigation is an executive function that courts will not interfere with unless grave abuse of discretion is shown; moreover, under Section 74 of the Corporation Code, a stockholder's right to inspect corporate records includes all business transactions such as books of inventories, contracts, correspondence, and supporting tax documents, and the unjustified refusal to allow such inspection gives rise to criminal liability under Section 144.
The dispute arose from Coastal Highpoint Ventures, Inc. (CHVI), a real estate development company, where Jasper T. Tan was a stockholder, Antonio Ng Chiu was the President, and Loreli Lim Po served as accountant. When Tan was repeatedly denied access to inspect corporate books and records despite formal written demands, he filed a criminal complaint for violation of the Corporation Code, triggering a protracted battle through the prosecutorial and judicial system regarding the scope of a stockholder's inspection rights and the standard for criminal liability.
Barba vs. Liceo de Cagayan University
28th November 2012
AK505471A position must be expressly mentioned in the corporation's bylaws to be considered a corporate office under Section 25 of the Corporation Code; positions created by board resolution or administrative manual without corresponding bylaw amendment do not qualify as corporate offices. The approval by the board of directors of an appointment to a non-corporate position does not transform the appointee into a corporate officer, and labor tribunals retain jurisdiction over termination disputes involving such positions.
The case arose from the closure of the College of Physical Therapy at Liceo de Cagayan University due to declining enrollment. Petitioner, who served as Dean under a fixed-term appointment and was bound by a scholarship contract to serve the university, was reassigned to the College of Nursing as a faculty member. When she refused the assignment and claimed constructive dismissal, the university raised the jurisdictional defense that she was a corporate officer, rendering the labor tribunals without authority to hear the case.
Ellice Agro-Industrial Corporation vs. Rodel T. Young
21st November 2012
AK880213For service of summons upon a domestic corporation to be valid and binding, it must be made strictly upon the president, manager, secretary, cashier, agent, or director as enumerated in Section 13, Rule 14 of the Rules of Civil Procedure and as conclusively shown in the General Information Sheets (GIS) filed with the SEC. Service upon any other person, even one claiming to be corporate secretary, is invalid and fails to confer jurisdiction over the corporation. Actual knowledge of the pending action or the filing of an answer by an unauthorized representative does not constitute voluntary appearance or cure the jurisdictional defect.
The case arose from a Contract to Sell involving a parcel of land in Sariaya, Quezon, where respondents paid partial consideration to the petitioner corporation through an individual claiming to be its corporate secretary. When the corporation failed to deliver the title, respondents filed suit. The dispute centered on whether the corporation was properly served with summons through this individual, who was later shown not to be listed as an officer or director in the corporate records filed with the SEC.
Arroyo vs. Rosal Homeowners Association
22nd October 2012
AK088718The termination or expulsion of a member from a homeowners association is valid when conducted in accordance with the association's By-Laws, which require notice and opportunity to be heard, and members who are expelled for non-compliance with the Community Mortgage Program requirements (such as refusal to sign the Lease Purchase Agreement and failure to pay dues) may be ejected from the property as their possession becomes merely by tolerance, not entitling them to ownership rights under the socialized housing program.
The case arises from the implementation of the Community Mortgage Program (CMP), a government socialized housing initiative administered by the National Home Mortgage Finance Corporation (NHMFC) to enable urban poor communities to acquire land they occupy. The respondent Rosal Homeowners Association, Inc. (RHAI) was organized by occupants of a parcel of land in Bacolod City to avail of CMP financing and purchase the land from its former owner, Philippine Commercial International Bank (PCIB). The dispute centers on the rights of actual occupants who refuse to comply with the procedural and financial requirements of the CMP and the association's By-Laws, and the association's authority to terminate their membership and recover possession of the land allocated to them.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
26th September 2012
AK359298Section 27(B) of the NIRC does not repeal the income tax exemption for charitable institutions under Section 30(E) and (G); rather, it provides that proprietary non-profit hospitals engaging in activities conducted for profit are subject to a preferential 10% tax rate on such income instead of the regular 30% corporate rate. A hospital receiving substantial revenues from paying patients is not “operated exclusively” for charitable purposes and thus cannot claim complete income tax exemption, but remains entitled to the 10% preferential rate applicable to proprietary non-profit hospitals.
The case arises from the interpretation of the interplay between Section 27(B) and Section 30 of the NIRC of 1997 concerning the tax treatment of non-stock, non-profit hospitals. Prior to the 1997 NIRC, charitable institutions were generally exempt from income tax under Section 27(E) of the 1977 NIRC. The 1997 Code introduced Section 27(B), establishing a 10% preferential income tax rate for proprietary non-profit hospitals. The Bureau of Internal Revenue interpreted this new provision as removing the exemption previously enjoyed by such hospitals under Section 30(E), effectively subjecting all their income to the 10% rate. St. Luke’s Medical Center, Inc., a hospital organized as a non-stock, non-profit corporation, contested this interpretation, asserting that it remained a charitable institution entitled to full income tax exemption under Section 30(E) and (G).
Atilano II vs. Asaali
10th September 2012
AK652172When a third party alleged to be indebted to a judgment debtor denies such indebtedness, the court cannot summarily order the third party to pay the alleged debt during execution proceedings; instead, the judgment creditor must file a separate action to recover the debt in accordance with Section 43, Rule 39 of the Rules of Court, as execution against third parties who deny liability violates due process absent a trial on the merits.
The case arose from a 1990 action for revival of judgment filed by Atlantic Merchandising, Inc. against Zamboanga Alta Consolidated, Inc. (ZACI) to enforce a prior monetary judgment. After the RTC revived the judgment and ordered ZACI to pay, execution proceedings were initiated but proved unsuccessful. Atlantic Merchandising then sought to examine third parties, including ZACI's stockholders, claiming they owed unpaid subscriptions to ZACI that could satisfy the judgment debt.
Guy vs. Guy
5th September 2012
AK314386An intra-corporate complaint that fails to allege fraud with particularity, fails to implead indispensable parties, and is filed merely to harass constitutes a nuisance suit that must be dismissed; stock certificates endorsed in blank by the owner and delivered to another constitute "street certificates" entitling the holder to demand transfer of the shares, regardless of the subscriber's payment status or subsequent allegations of fraudulent transfer.
The case involves a family dispute over the ownership of shares in GoodGold Realty & Development Corporation, a family corporation. Respondent Gilbert Guy claimed ownership of approximately 80% of the corporation's shares, alleging that his parents placed the shares under his name but retained possession of the certificates. In 1999, his father redistributed the shares evenly among family members. Gilbert initially challenged this in 2004 but withdrew his complaint after the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) authenticated his signatures. He filed a substantially similar complaint in 2008, leading to the present controversy regarding the validity of the transfers and the rights of shareholders, including Gilbert's claim as the sole paid subscriber.
University of the Philippines vs. Dizon
23rd August 2012
AK560575Government funds and properties may not be seized under writs of execution or garnishment to satisfy money judgments against the State or its instrumentalities absent a specific appropriation law covering the liability, and money claims against the Government must first be filed with and adjudicated by the Commission on Audit (COA) before execution can proceed.
The case arose from a construction contract dispute between the University of the Philippines (UP), a government instrumentality and national university, and Stern Builders, Inc., a private contractor. After UP failed to pay a progress billing (initially disallowed by COA but later lifted), Stern Builders sued for collection. The RTC awarded not only the unpaid billing but also substantial actual damages, moral damages, and attorney's fees. The procedural history involves multiple layers of litigation concerning the timeliness of UP's appeal and the validity of execution against public funds.
Rep. of the Phils. vs. City of Parañaque
18th July 2012
AK990874An incorporated instrumentality of the National Government that is neither a stock nor a non-stock corporation is not a GOCC, and is exempt from local real property taxes under Sections 133(o) and 234(a) of the Local Government Code.
PRA (formerly Public Estates Authority or PEA) was created by P.D. 1084 to integrate, direct, and coordinate all reclamation projects for and on behalf of the National Government. It holds titles to several reclaimed foreshore and offshore areas in Manila Bay.
United Church of Christ in the Philippines, Inc. vs. Bradford United Church of Christ, Inc., et al.
20th June 2012
AK736563A local church’s disaffiliation from a national religious federation is a secular corporate matter within the jurisdiction of civil courts, not a purely ecclesiastical affair; and under a congregationalist polity, local churches possess autonomy to sever ties with the national body through proper corporate mechanisms.
The dispute arose from a property conflict between UCCP and BUCCI in the late 1980s, culminating in BUCCI’s formal disaffiliation from UCCP in 1992 and the SEC’s approval of BUCCI’s amended Articles of Incorporation in 1993 excising UCCP references. UCCP contested these amendments before the SEC, triggering questions about the intersection of religious authority and corporate law.
Legaspi Towers 300, Inc. vs. Muer
18th June 2012
AK486522A suit to nullify the election of directors is a direct action by stockholders to protect their personal right to vote and be voted upon, not a derivative suit by the corporation. Since the corporation does not possess the right to vote, it is not the real party-in-interest in an action to invalidate a board election, and any attempt to include the corporation as plaintiff is improper.
The case arose from a contested annual meeting and election of directors of Legaspi Towers 300, Inc., a condominium corporation. The dispute centered on the validity of the election held on April 2, 2004, where the incumbent board declared adjournment due to lack of quorum, while a group of members claimed a valid quorum existed and proceeded to elect a new board. The controversy further involved procedural questions regarding the amendment of complaints to implead the corporation as plaintiff and the nature of the suit as derivative or direct.
Ever Electrical Manufacturing, Inc. vs. Samahang Manggagawa ng Ever Electrical/NAMAWU Local 224
13th June 2012
AK038881Corporate directors and officers may be held solidarily liable with the corporation for the termination of employment only if done with malice or in bad faith; mere closure of business due to financial difficulties or negligence, without evidence of fraudulent intent or wrongful conduct, does not justify piercing the corporate veil to hold officers personally liable for separation pay.
The case arose from a labor dispute involving Ever Electrical Manufacturing, Inc., a corporation engaged in manufacturing electrical parts and supplies, which closed its operations in 2006 following foreclosure proceedings by United Coconut Planters Bank. The closure resulted from a complex series of financial transactions, including a failed investment in Orient Commercial Banking Corporation, a substantial loan secured by a mortgage on corporate assets, and an eventual dacion en pago arrangement that transferred ownership of the factory premises to the bank.
Metrobank vs. Centro Development Corporation
13th June 2012
AK026125The appointment of a successor-trustee to an existing mortgage trust indenture, without creating a new encumbrance or substantially altering the terms of the original mortgage, constitutes a regular business transaction that requires only a majority vote of the board of directors present at a meeting with a quorum under Section 25 of the Corporation Code, rather than the two-thirds stockholder vote and written notice required by Section 40 for the sale or other disposition of substantially all corporate assets; however, a trustee-creditor may not foreclose on mortgaged properties securing obligations exceeding the maximum amount stipulated in the indenture where no amendment was executed to accommodate such additional loans, and banks must observe a degree of diligence higher than that of a good father of a family in handling trust indentures and loan transactions.
Steelcase, Inc. vs. Design International Selections, Inc.
18th April 2012
AK627613A foreign corporation does not engage in "doing business" in the Philippines when it appoints a local distributor that operates as an independent contractor, transacts in its own name, and for its own account; furthermore, a domestic entity that knowingly contracts with and derives benefits from a foreign corporation is estopped from subsequently challenging the foreign corporation's legal capacity to sue based on alleged lack of license to do business, as this would violate the principle that no person should derive advantage from his own wrong (commodum ex injuria sua non habere debet).
The case arises from a commercial dispute between an American furniture manufacturer and its Philippine distributor, presenting significant implications for foreign investment and trade relations. The controversy centers on the interpretation of "doing business" under the Foreign Investments Act of 1991, specifically whether a dealership agreement constitutes doing business requiring a license, and the application of the doctrine of estoppel to prevent defaulting local companies from avoiding contractual obligations by invoking technical defects in foreign corporations' compliance with licensing requirements.
Jiao vs. NLRC
18th April 2012
AK811479An employer may validly implement a new gratuity plan that supersedes an old plan, provided the new plan meets or exceeds the statutory minimum requirements under the Labor Code; employees separated under such plan cannot claim vested rights under the superseded plan. Additionally, a corporation acquiring the assets of another corporation is not liable for the seller's employment obligations unless the transaction amounts to a merger or consolidation, the purchaser expressly assumes such liabilities, the purchaser is merely a continuation of the seller, or the transaction is fraudulent.
The case arises from the merger of Philippine Banking Corporation (Philbank) with Global Business Bank, Inc. (Globalbank) in 2000, which resulted in redundancy of positions. Subsequently, in 2002, Metrobank acquired the assets and liabilities of Globalbank through a Deed of Assignment of Assets and Assumption of Liabilities. The dispute centers on whether the affected employees are entitled to additional gratuity pay under Philbank's 1970 Gratuity Pay Plan (Old Plan) on top of the separation package received under the Special Separation Program (SSP), and whether Metrobank is liable for such claims as the acquiring entity.
China Banking Corporation vs. QBRO Fishing Enterprises, Inc.
22nd February 2012
AK763545A corporation may validly exercise its corporate powers by mortgaging its properties as a third-party mortgagor to secure the obligation of another corporation; where such mortgage secures the same principal debt as that of the principal debtor, the separate juridical personalities of the corporations do not preclude the foreclosure of both mortgaged properties under a single extrajudicial foreclosure proceeding, and the third-party mortgagor is estopped from subsequently denying the validity of such foreclosure after recognizing the mortgagee's rights.
The dispute arose from a lending transaction where Trans-Filipinas Realty Corporation (TFRC) obtained a credit line from China Banking Corporation. When TFRC sought to increase its loan facility, QBRO Fishing Enterprises, Inc.—a sister company sharing the same board of directors and incorporators—agreed to mortgage its own properties as additional collateral to accommodate TFRC's increased borrowing requirements.
Securities and Exchange Commission vs. Prosperity.com, Inc.
25th January 2012
AK626734For a transaction to qualify as an "investment contract" (and thus as a "security" requiring SEC registration under R.A. 8799), all five elements of the Howey test must concur: (1) a contract, transaction, or scheme; (2) an investment of money; (3) in a common enterprise; (4) with an expectation of profits; and (5) where profits arise primarily from the efforts of others. A scheme involving the sale of a tangible product with referral commissions does not constitute an investment contract where the consideration paid is for the product itself and any returns are derived from the buyer's own efforts in referring customers rather than from the promoter's management efforts.
Prosperity.Com, Inc. (PCI) was engaged in selling computer software and hosting websites. It devised a marketing scheme patterned after Golconda Ventures, Inc. (GVI), which had previously been issued a cease and desist order by the SEC. Under the scheme, PCI offered internet websites for sale with the opportunity for buyers to earn commissions and other incentives by recruiting down-line buyers, creating a multi-level marketing structure. Following complaints from former GVI members, the SEC investigated PCI's operations to determine if it was offering unregistered securities in the form of investment contracts.
Siochi Fishery Enterprises, Inc. vs. Bank of the Philippine Islands
19th October 2011
AK246123The Supreme Court held that the Regional Trial Court committed serious procedural errors by approving the rehabilitation plan without referring it to the rehabilitation receiver for evaluation and recommendation as mandated by the Interim Rules, and by failing to recognize that corporations possess a juridical personality separate and distinct from their stockholders and directors, thus precluding the inclusion of officers' personal properties as corporate assets in determining rehabilitation feasibility.
The case arises from the financial distress of five domestic corporations controlled by the Siochi family, engaged in fishing operations and property ventures, which collectively owed substantial sums to secured creditors including the Bank of the Philippine Islands. Seeking to avoid liquidation and continue operations, the corporations filed a joint petition for rehabilitation under the Interim Rules of Procedure on Corporate Rehabilitation, triggering disputes over procedural compliance, the scope of assets available for rehabilitation, and the proper role of the rehabilitation receiver in evaluating the feasibility of the proposed plan.
Philippine Veterans Bank vs. Callangan
3rd August 2011
AK555898A corporation is considered a "public company" subject to mandatory reportorial requirements under Section 17.2(c) of the Securities Regulation Code if it has assets of at least P50 million and two hundred or more holders each holding at least one hundred shares of a class of its equity securities, even if its shares are not publicly listed and are limited to a specific class of persons; the duty of the court is to apply clear and unambiguous laws as written, and interpretation or construction is only resorted to when application is impossible or inadequate without it.
The case involves the Philippine Veterans Bank, a corporation established to serve World War II veterans, whose articles of incorporation restrict share ownership to veterans, their widows, orphans, and compulsory heirs. The dispute arose when the SEC determined that despite these restrictions, the Bank qualified as a "public company" under the Securities Regulation Code, thereby triggering mandatory reportorial obligations including the filing of annual reports and the furnishing of information statements to shareholders. The Bank contested this classification, arguing that the legislative intent behind the SRC was to regulate only publicly traded companies and that compliance would be financially ruinous.
Gamboa vs. Finance Secretary Teves, et al.
28th June 2011
AK128498The term "capital" in Section 11, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution refers only to shares of stock entitled to vote in the election of directors (common shares), and not to the total outstanding capital stock (combined common and non-voting preferred shares). Consequently, the 60-40 Filipino-foreign ownership requirement in public utilities applies to the voting stock to ensure effective Filipino control.
The case arises from the privatization of sequestered government shares in PTIC, a holding company that owns a significant stake in PLDT, a telecommunications public utility. The dispute centers on the interpretation of the constitutional limit on foreign ownership, specifically whether non-voting preferred shares can be used to dilute the voting power of foreign-held common shares while technically satisfying the 60-40 ownership ratio.
Boy Scouts of the Philippines vs. Commission on Audit
7th June 2011
AK109293A corporation created by special law to serve a public interest or constitutional policy, classified as an attached agency of the government under the Administrative Code of 1987, remains subject to the Commission on Audit's jurisdiction despite the reduction of government representation in its governing body, provided it continues to perform governmental functions. Such entities constitute a distinct class of "public corporations" under Article 44 of the Civil Code and are not subject to the economic viability test under Section 16, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution, which applies only to GOCCs engaged in proprietary or business functions.
The controversy centers on the Commission on Audit's (COA) assertion of audit jurisdiction over the Boy Scouts of the Philippines (BSP) pursuant to its constitutional mandate. The BSP was created by Commonwealth Act No. 111 in 1936 as a "public corporation" to promote youth development and citizenship. Its charter underwent significant amendments, notably Presidential Decree No. 460 (1974), which increased government participation in its governance, and Republic Act No. 7278 (1992), which reduced government representation to a single ex-officio member (the Secretary of Education). The BSP contended that the latter amendment effectively privatized the organization, removing it from COA jurisdiction, while the COA maintained that the BSP remains a government instrumentality subject to audit.
Majority Stockholders of Ruby Industrial Corporation vs. Lim
6th June 2011
AK680554A corporation's power to increase capital stock by issuing unissued shares from its authorized capital stock, while generally vested in the board of directors, is subject to the pre-emptive rights of existing stockholders under Section 39 of the Corporation Code and may be restricted or denied only under the articles of incorporation. Even where pre-emptive rights are denied under the articles, an issuance of shares may still be declared invalid if the controlling stockholders act in breach of trust and the primary purpose is to perpetuate control or "freeze out" the minority interest. During rehabilitation proceedings under SEC supervision, any capital increase must be coordinated with the Management Committee, and issuances made to implement a void rehabilitation plan are invalid.
Ruby Industrial Corporation (RUBY) was a domestic corporation engaged in glass manufacturing that faced severe liquidity problems beginning in 1980. In 1983, it filed for suspension of payments with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), leading to the creation of a Management Committee (MANCOM) in 1984 to oversee rehabilitation. The case involves a protracted battle between majority stockholders (the Yu family) allied with Benhar International, Inc. (BENHAR), and minority stockholders led by Miguel Lim. The majority proposed rehabilitation plans involving capital infusion and credit facilities through BENHAR, which were opposed by minority stockholders and unsecured creditors as giving undue preference to BENHAR and prejudicing other creditors. After the Supreme Court nullified the Revised BENHAR/RUBY Plan in 1998, the majority stockholders attempted to enforce a capital stock increase and corporate term extension that had been approved in 1991 in anticipation of the void rehabilitation plan.
People vs. Morales
30th May 2011
AK440654A corporation organized under the general Corporation Code, in which the Government does not own a majority of the capital stock, is a private corporation despite being organized by government agencies to implement public projects; consequently, its officers are not public officers subject to the jurisdiction of the Sandiganbayan.
In preparation for the Philippine Centennial Celebration in 1998, the National Centennial Commission (NCC) was created by Executive Order No. 128 to oversee nationwide preparations. The NCC, together with the Bases Conversion Development Authority (BCDA), organized the Philippine Centennial Expo '98 Corporation (Expocorp) to manage the Centennial International Exposition. Following allegations of anomalies in the project, including the lack of public biddings, the Senate Blue Ribbon Committee and the Ad Hoc and Independent Citizen's Committee investigated and recommended further action. This led to the Ombudsman filing criminal charges against Morales, then acting president of Expocorp, for allegedly selling a government vehicle without public bidding and failing to remit the proceeds.