2020 Corporate Law Outline
2020 Corporate Law Outline
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Unless indicated otherwise, all references to sections pertain to the Revised Corporation Code of the Philippines, Republic Act No. 11232
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CDCP v. Cuenca, 466 SCRA 714 (2005); EDSA Shangri-La Hotel and Resorts, v. BF Corp., 556 SCRA 25 (2008).
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De Liano v. Court of Appeals [“CA”], 370 SCRA 349 (2001); Monfort Hermanos Agricultural Dev. Corp. v. Monfort III, 434 SCRA 27 (2004); United
Paragon Mining Corp. v. CA, 497 SCRA 638 (2006); Cebu Bionic Builders Supply, v. DBP, 635 SCRA 13 (2010); Esguerra v. Holcim Phils., 704 SCRA 490
(2013).
enjoyed by the seller.” Villa Rey Transit, Inc. v. Ferrer, 25 SCRA 845 (1968).4
c. “JURIDICAL ENTITY” LEVEL: “The corporation’s juridical personality is primarily a medium through
which to pursue a business enterprise.”
c. “EXTRA-CORPORATE” RELATIONSHIPS: Deals with legal consequences arising from the relationships
of the corporation with the public it deals with or those affected by its business enterprise —
(1) Between the corporation and its employees, governed by Labor Laws;
(2) Between the corporation and those it contracts with, governed by Laws on
Contracts;
(3) Between the corporation and the public affected by its enterprise, governed by
Law on Torts or Quasi-Delicts.
Dealt with in Corporate Law under the emerging “Stakeholders Theory”
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Firme v. Bukal Enterprises and Dev. Corp., 414 SCRA 190 (2003).
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Aboitiz Equity Venture v. Chiongbian, 729 SCRA 580 (2014).
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he entered into and signed the contract clearly in his official capacity. Consolidated Bank and
Trust Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 356 SCRA 671 (2001).7
Obligations incurred by the corporation through its directors and officers, are its sole liabilities.
Malayang Samahan ng mga Manggagawa sa M. Greenfield v. Ramos, 357 SCRA 77 (2001).
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Ever Electrical Manufacturing, Inc. (EEMI) v. Samahang Manggagawa ng Ever Electrical/NAMAWU Local 224, 672 SCRA 562 (2012); Gotesco
Properties v. Fajardo, 692 SCRA 319 (2013).
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PNB v. Ritratto Group, Inc., 362 SCRA 216 (2001).
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ALPS Transportation v. Rodriguez, 698 SCRA 423 (2013); Stanley Fine Furniture v. Gallano, 743 SCRA 306 (2014).
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A joint account takes place when a third person is financially interested in the business of a
merchant, but does not give rise to the creation of a juridical person. Collector of Internal Revenue v.
Cojuangco, 109 Phil. 443 (1960).
f. Cooperatives (Art. 3, R.A. No. 6938)
8. x CLASSIFICATION OF CORPORATIONS
a. In Relation to the State:
(1) Private Corporations (Sec. 3, Act 1459)
(2) Public Corporations or Local Government Units (LGUs) (Sec. 3, Act No. 1459)
(3) Quasi-Public Corporations
(4) GOVERNMENT-OWNED-OR-CONTROLLED CORPORATIONS (GOCCS) – SEE R.A. No. 10149; Villanueva
& Reyes, The Great Restructuring of the Public Corporate Sector, 59 ATENEO L.J. 41 (2014).
Local water districts created under P.D. 198 by the different local legislative bodies by the
passage of a resolution to that effect, with the primary function to sell water to residents within their
territory, under such schedules of rates and charges as may be determined by their boards. In addition
to the powers granted in, and subject to such restrictions imposed under, the Act, they may also
exercise the powers, rights and privileges given to private corporations under existing laws. Such
juridical entities thus created and organized under P.D. 198 are considered quasi-public corporations,
performing public services and supplying public wants. Marilao Water Consumers Asso. v. IAC, 201
SCRA 437 (1991).
Local water districts existing as corporate entities under P.D. 198 are GOCCs, and their Board of
Directors and other personnel are government employees subject to civil service laws and anti-graft
laws. Feliciano v. Commission on Audit, 419 SCRA 363 (2004).
A private corporation is created by operation of law under the Corporation Code while a
government corporation is normally created by special law referred to often as a charter. Bliss Dev.
Corp. Employees Union v. Calleja, 237 SCRA 271 (1994).
The GOCC Governance Act (R.A. 10149) does not distinguish between chartered and
nonchartered GOCCs, and its provisions apply equally to both. GSIS Family Bank Employees Union v.
Villanueva, G.R. No. 210773, 23 January 2019.
(i) Charterred GOCCs
Although Boy Scouts of the Philippines does not receive any government financial subsidy, and
its funds and assets are not considered government in nature and not subject to COA audit, the fact
that it received a special charter, its governing board are appointed by the Government, and that its
purpose are of public character, for they pertain to the educational, civic and social development of the
youth which constitute a very substantial and important part of the nation, it is not a public corporation
in the same sense that local governments are public corporation since its does not govern a portion of
the state, but it also does not have proprietary functions in the same sense that the functions or
activities of GOCCs, is may still be considered as such, or under the 1987 Administrative Code as an
instrumentality of the Government, and it employees are subject to the Civil Service Law. Boy Scouts
of the Philippines v. NLRC, 196 SCRA 176 (1991).
Although it has a special charter, the Chairman of the Philippine National Red Cross is not
appointed by the President. Although Camporendodo v. NLRC had ruled that PNRC is GOCC
because it is constituted under a special charter, it failed to consider the definition of a GOCC as
provided under Sec. 2(13) of the Administrative Code of 1987, which requires that a GOCC to be such
must be owned by the government, and in the case of a stock corporation, at least a majority of its
capital stock must be owned by the government. Liban v. Gordon, 593 SCRA 68 (2009).
When the law vests in a government instrumentality corporate powers, it does not become
necessarily a corporation. A GOCC must be organized as a stock or nonstock corporation. The MIAA
is not a GOCC because it is not constituted of capital divided into shares of stock, and neither is it a
nonstock corporation because it has no members. MIAA is a government instrumentality vested with
corporate powers to perform efficiently its government functions. MIAA v. CA, 495 SCRA 591 (2006).
[Section 30 of the Revised Corporation Code (Liability of Directors and Officers)] is applicable to
corporations which have been organized by special charters since Sec. 4 thereof renders the
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provisions supplementarily applicable to all corporations, including those with special or individual
charters, such as cooperatives organized under P.D. 269, so long as those provisions are not
inconsistent with such charters. Benguet Electric Cooperative, Inc. v. NLRC, 209 SCRA 55 (1992).
While public benefit and welfare may be attributable to the operation of the Bases Conversion
and Development Authority (BCDA), yet it is certain that the functions it performs are basically
proprietary in nature—the promotion of economic and social development and the country’s goal for
enhancement. Therefore, the rule that prescription does not run against the State will not apply to
BCDA—when title of the Republic has been divested, its grantees, although artificial bodies of its own
creation, are in the same category as ordinary persons. Shipside Inc. v. CA, 352 SCRA 334 (2001).
In order to qualify as a GOCC, one must be organized either as a stock or nonstock corporation.
[Section 30 of Revised Corporation Code] defines a stock corporation as one whose “capital stock is
divided into shares and … authorized to distribute to the holders of such shares dividends.” Although
BCDA has an authorized capital of P100 Billion, however, it is not divided into shares of stock; it has
no voting shares; and has no provision which authorizes the distribution of dividends and allotment of
surplus and profits to BCDA’s stockholders. It cannot qualify also as a nonstock corporation because
its primary purpose do not fall within the purposes enumerated under Section 88. BCDA v. CIR, G.R.
No. 205925, 20 June 2018.
(ii) Noncharterred GOCCs (Organized under the Revised Corporation Code)
Government’s majority shares does not make an entity a public corporation, for it remains a
private corporation having been organized under the Corporation Law. National Coal Co., v. Collector
of Internal Revenue, 46 Phil. 583 (1924).
Being a GOCC makes a private corporation liable for laws applicable to the Government and
subject to the control of the Government. Cervantes v. Auditor General, 91 Phil. 359 (1952).
On the other hand, we have no doubt that over GOCCs established or organized under the
[Revised Corporation Code], SEC can exercise jurisdiction. These GOCCs are regarded as private
corporations despite common misconceptions. That the government may own the controlling shares
in the corporation does not diminish the fact that the latter owes its existence to the Corporation Code.
Philippine National Construction Corp. v. Pabion, 320 SCRA 188 (1999).
Whether a corporation is GOCC or private in nature is simple: Is it created by its own charter for
the exercise of a public function, or by incorporation under the general corporation law? Those with
special charters, are government corporations subject to its provisions, and its employees are under
the jurisdiction of the Civil Service Commission, and are compulsory members of the GSIS.
Camparedondo v. NLRC, 312 SCRA 47 (1999).
Beyond cavil, a GOCC has a personality of its own, distinct and separate from that of the
government, and the intervention in a transaction of the Office of the President through the Executive
Secretary does not change the independent existence of a government entity as it deals with another
government entity. PUP v. Court of Appeals, 368 SCRA 691 (2001).
The fact that Corregidor Foundation, Inc. was organized as a nonstock corporation and was
incorporated under a general law, not a special law has no merit. Firstly, the law includes within the
statutory definition of GOCCs those that are nonstock corporations. Secondly, it is immaterial whether
a government corporation is private or public for purposes of exercising COA’s audit—so long as the
government owns or controls the corporation, the COA may audit the corporation’s accounts. Finally,
just because CFI’s employees are not under Civil Service Commission’s jurisdiction, does not exempt
it from COA jurisdiction. Oriondo v. COA, G.R. No. 211293, 04 June 2019.
(iii) Emerging Rules on Labor and Civil Service Matters in GOCCs
The doctrine that employees of GOCCs, whether created by special law or formed as subsidiaries
under the general corporation law are governed by the Civil Service Law and not by the Labor Code,
has been supplanted by the 1987 Constitution. GOCCs created by special charter are subject the Civil
Service Law, while those incorporated under the Corporation Code are governed by the Labor Code.
PNOC-EDC. v. NLRC, 201 SCRA 487 (1991).1
b. As to Legal Status:
(1) De Jure Corporation
(2) De Facto Corporation (Sec. 19)
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Davao City Water District v. Civil Service Commission, 201 SCRA 593 (1991).
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(3) Corporation by Estoppel (Sec. 20)
d. As to Existence of Shares:
(1) Stock Corporation (Sec. 3)
(2) Nonstock Corporation (Secs. 3, 86 and 87)
e. As to Purpose of Incorporation:
(1) Business (for-Profit) Corporations
(2) Nonstock and Non-profit Corporations: Charitable, Scientific or Vocational Corporations
(3) Educational Corporations (Secs. 105; Sec. 25, B.P. Blg. 232)
(4) Religious Corporation (Sec. 107)
Decisions on purely ecclesiastical matters by proper church tribunals are conclusive upon civil
tribunals—a church member who is expelled or a priest or minister who is deprived of his office
by church authorities, is without remedy in the civil courts. Long v. Basa, 366 SCRA 113 (2001).
(5) Other Special Corporations (Sec. 4)
f. As to Number of Corporators:
(1) Aggregate Corporation—no limit of stockholders or members
(2) Close Corporation—not more than 20 stockholders of records (Sec. 95)
(3) One Person Corporation—availalble only for stock corporations (Sec. 115)
(4) Corporation Sole—religious corporation (Secs. 108)
A corporation sole has no nationality being an institution that existed prior to the Republic. But if
any nationality is to be accorded to a corporation sole it is to be judged from the nationality of the
majority of the faithfuls thereof. Roman Catholic Apostolic Administrator of Davao, Inc. v. LRC and the
Register of Deeds of Davao City, 102 Phil. 596 (1957).
The doctrine in Republic v. Villanueva, 114 SCRA 875 (1982) and Republic v. Iglesia ni Cristo,
127 SCRA 687 (1984), that a corporation sole is disqualified to acquire/hold alienable lands of the
public domain, because of the constitutional prohibition qualifying only individuals to acquire land and
the provision under the Public Land Act which applied only to Filipino citizens or natural persons, has
been expressly overturned in Director of Land v. IAC, 146 SCRA 509 (1986).2
g. As to Place of Incorporation:
(1) Domestic Corporation
(2) Foreign Corporation (Sec. 140)
3. Corporation Can Engage in Practice of Profession When Authorized by Law (Sec. 10)
Corporations cannot engage in the practice of a profession since they lack the moral and technical
competence required by the PRC. ULEP v. The Legal Clinic, 223 SCRA 378 (1993).
A corporation engaged in the selling of eyeglasses and which hires optometrists is not engaged in
the practice of optometry. Samahan ng Optometrists v. Acebedo Int’l Corp., 270 SCRA 298 (1997).7
SEE: Section 37 of the ARCHITECTURE ACT OF 2004 (R.A. 9266), allows the registration with the SEC of
“Architectural professional corporations”.
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White Light Corp. v. City of Manila, 576 SCRA 416 (2009).
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Citing earlier rulings in PCGG v. Sandiganbayan, 290 SCRA 639 (1998); Palm Holding Co. v. Sandiganbayan, 732 SCRA 156 (2014.
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Wilson v. United States, 221 U.S. 361 (1911); United States v. White, 322 U.S. 694 (1944).
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Alfafara v. Acebedo Optical Co., 381 SCRA 293 (2002).
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APT v. Court of Appeals, 300 SCRA 579 (1998).
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slander or any other form of defamation, and does not qualify whether the plaintiff is a natural or juridical
person. A juridical person can validly complain for libel or any other form of defamation and claim for
moral damages. Filipinas Broadcasting Network v. Ago Medical and Educational Center, 448 SCRA 413
(2005).
PREVAILING RULE: A corporation, being an artificial person has no feelings, emotions nor senses;
therefore, it cannot experience physical suffering and mental anguish. Mental suffering can be
experienced only by one having a nervous system and it flows from real ills, sorrows, and griefs of life—
all of which cannot be suffered by an artificial person. Prime White Cement Corp. v. IAC, 220 SCRA 103
(1993); Manila Electric Co. v. Nordec Philippines, 861 SCRA 515 (2018).9
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LBC Express, Inc. v. CA, 236 SCRA 602 (1994); Acme Shoe, Rubber & Plastic Corp. v. CA, 260 SCRA 714 (1996); Solid Homes v. CA 275 SCRA 267
(1997); NPC v. Philipp Brothers Oceanic, Inc., 369 SCRA 629 (2001); Flight Attendants and Stewards Assn. of the Phils. v. PAL, 559 SCRA 252 (2008);
Employees Union of Bayer Phils. v. Bayer Philippines, Inc., 636 SCRA 473 (2010); BUT THEN: San Fernando Regala Trading v. Cargill Philippines, 707 SCRA
187 (2013).
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Crisologo v. People, 686 SCRA 782 (2012).
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(2) SEC. 166: A corporation used for committing or concealing fraudulent, graft and corrupt
practices.
(3) SEC. 167: A corporation appoints an intermediary who engages in graft and corrupt practices.
d. Directors/Trustees Per Se Not Personally Liable for a Corporate Criminal Act (Sec. 171)
A criminal statute that forbids the corporation from doing an act actually extends to the Board,
and to each director individually. People v. Concepcion, 43 Phil. 653; 44 Phil. 129 (1922).
GENERAL RULE: The Board being be generally a policy-making body, directors as such cannot be
held liable under a criminal statute making those in charge of the management of the corporation
liable for the criminal acts done in pursuit of corporate operations. Even if the corporate powers of a
corporation are reposed in the Board under [Section 22 of Revised Corporation Code], it is of common
knowledge and practice that the Board is not directly engaged or charged with the running of the
recurring business affairs of the corporation. The members of the Board generally do not concern
themselves with the day-to-day affairs of the corporation, except those corporate officers who are
charged with the running of the business of the corporation and are concomitantly members of the
Board, like the President. Federated Dealers Assn. v. Del Rosario, 808 SCRA 272 (2016).
A corporation’s personality is separate and distinct from its officers, directors, and shareholders.
To be held criminally liable for the acts of a corporation, there must be a showing that its officers,
directors, and shareholders actively participated in or had the power to prevent the wrongful act. In this
case, there was no allegation of the specific acts of the corporate officers for which they could be
indicted for violations of the Securities Regulation Code and the Revised Penal Code. SEC v. Price
Richardson Corp., 832 SCRA 560 (2017)
BUT SEE: Veritably, Board members, being in direct control and supervision in the management
and conduct of the corporate affairs, must have known or were aware that the corporation is engaged
in trademark infringement and unfair competition. The existence of the corporate entity does not shield
from prosecution the corporate agent who knowingly and intentionally caused the corporation to
commit a crime. Republic Gas Corp. v. Petron Corp., 698 SCRA 666 (2013).
e. Acting Officers or Employees Shall Be Criminally Liable for the Criminal Corporate Act
A corporation can act only through its officers and agents, and where the business itself involves
a violation of the law, the correct rule is that all who participate in it are liable. Thus, when the manager
of a corporation made a false tax return of the total amount of sales made by said corporation in
violation of law, it is such manager, as the author of the illegal act, who must necessarily answer for
the criminal penalties for its consequences. People v. Tan Boon Kong, 54 Phil. 607 (1930).
Although all corporate powers are vested in the Board of Directors, it does not mean that the
officers other than directors cannot be made criminally liable for their criminal acts if it can be proven
that they participated therein. Singian, Jr. v. Sandiganbayan, 478 SCRA 348 (2005).
Apart from its sweeping allegation petitioner failed to establish the particular role or actual
participation of directors in the criminal act; neither was it shown that they assented to its commission.
Only officers shown to have participated in the alleged anomalous acts may be held criminally liable.
Cruzvale, Inc. v. Eduque, 589 SCRA 534 (2009).
Rule on Employees to Be Held Criminally Liable: The existence of the corporate entity does not
shield from prosecution the corporate agent who knowingly and intentionally causes the corporation to
commit a crime. The corporation obviously can act only by and through its human agents, and it is
their conduct which the law must deter. The employee of a corporation engaged in unlawful business
naturally aids and abets in the carrying on of such business and will be prosecuted as principal if, with
knowledge of the business, its purpose and effect, he consciously contributes his efforts to its conduct
and promotion, however slight his contribution may be. Where it is shown that the employee was
merely acting under the direction of his superiors and was unaware that his acts constituted a crime,
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he may not be held criminally liable for an act done for and in behalf of his employer. People v.
Chowdury, 325 SCRA 572 (2000).
Under SSS Law, even when the employer is a corporation, it shall still be held liable for the non-
remittance of SSS contributions; but it is, however, the head, directors or officers responsible for the
non-remittance that shall suffer the personal criminal liability. Although a corporation is invested by law
with a personality separate and distinct from that of the persons composing it, the corporate veil is
pierced when a director, trustee or officer is made personally liable by specific provision of law. Thus,
a corporation cannot invoke its separate judicial entity to escape its liability for non-payment of SSS
contributions. Ambassador Hotel, Inc. v. Social Security System, 827 SCRA 641 (2017).
7. CORPORATE NATIONALITY
a. Primary “Place of Incorporation Test ” (Sec. 140): The corporation is a national of the country
under whose laws it is organized or incorporated.
b. Ancillary “Control Test ”: In cases involving properties, business or industries reserved for Filipinos,
in addition to the place of incorporation test, the nationality of a corporation is determined by the
nationality of the “controlling stockholders”.
(2) Foreign Investment Act (FIA) Test of “Philippine National” : Section 3 of R.A. 7042
considers for purpose of investment a “Philippine National ” as a corporation organized under the
laws of the Philippines of which at least 60% of the capital stock outstanding and entitled to vote
is owned and held by Filipino citizens, or a trustee of funds for pension or other employee
retirement/separation benefits, where the trustee is a Philippine National and at least 60% of the
fund will accrue to the benefit of Philippine nationals. 11
(3) New SEC Control Test: The Constitution “provides for the Filipinization of public utilities by
requiring that any form of authorization for the operation of public utilities should be granted only
to ‘citizens of the Philippines or to corporation or associations organized under the laws of the
Philippines at least sixty per centum of whose capital is owned by such citizens.’ The provision
is [an express] recognition of the sensitive and vital position of public utilities both in the
national economy and for national security.” The evident purpose of the citizenship
requirement is to prevent aliens from assuming control of public utilities, which may be inimical to
the national interest. The term “capital” in Sec. 11, Art. XII of the Constitution should (a) the
control test that covers only shares of stock entitled to vote in the election of directors, and (b) the
beneficial interest test that shall apply to each and every class of shares, voting and non-voting.
Gamboa v. Teves, 652 SCRA 690 (2011), expanded in 682 SCRA 397 (2012).
As a result of the Gamboa rulings, SEC Memorandum Circular No. 8, s. 2013, was
issued and provides that: All covered corporations shall, at all times, observe the constitutional or
statutory ownership requirement in that “the required percentage of Filipino ownership shall be
applied to BOTH (a) the total number of outstanding shares of stock entitled to vote in the election
of directors; AND (b) the total number of outstanding shares of stock, whether or not entitled to
vote in the election of directors.” Affirmed in Roy III v. Herbosa, 810 SCRA 1 (2016).
The definition of “beneficial owner or beneficial ownership in the SRC-IRR, which is in
consonance with the concept of “full beneficial ownership” in the FIA-IRR, is relevant is resoling
only the question of who is the beneficial owner or has beneficial ownership of each “specific
stock” of the public utility whose stocks are under review. If the Filipino has the voting power of
the “specific stock”, i.e., he can vote the stock or direct another to vote for him, or the Filipino has
the investment power over the “specific stock”, i.e., he can dispose of that “specific stock” or
direct another to vote or dispose it for him, then such Filipino is the “beneficial owner” of that
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Affirmed in Unchuan v. Lozada, 585 SCRA 421 (2009).
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“specific stock.” Being considered Filipino, that “specific stock” is them to be counted as part of
the 60% Filipino ownership requirement under the Constitution. The right to the dividents, jus
fruendi—a right emanating from ownership of that “specific stock” necessary accrues to its
Filipino “beneficial owner.” Roy III v. Herbosa, 823 SCRA 133 (2017).
(4) Beneficial Test Through “Corporate Layering”: The grandfather rule can only extend to
such levels of corporate layering as to those who have actual control of the affairs of the
corporation. Palting v. San Jose Petroleum Inc., 18 SCRA 924 (1966).
Although the control test is the prevailing mode of determining whether a corporation is a
Filipino corporation entitled under Sec. 2, Art. II of 1987 Constitution to undertake the exploration,
development and utilization of the natural resources of the Philippines, when there is doubt in the
minds of the courts, based on the attendant facts and circumstances of the case, in the 60%-40%
Filipino-foreign equity of the corporation, they may apply the grandfather rule. Narra Nickel
Mining Corp. v. Redmont Consolidated Mines, 722 SCRA 382 (2014).
The “grandfather rule” does not eschew, but in fact supplements the “control test”, as the
latter implements Filipinization provisions of the Constitution. There should be a distinction
between the “beneficial ownership” test from the “control test”. As further defined by Dean Cesar
Villanueva, the grandfather rule is ‘the method by which the percentage of Filipino equity in a
corporation engaged in nationalized and/or partly nationalized areas of activities, provided for
under the Constitution and other nationalization laws, is computed, in cases where corporate
shareholders are present, by attributing the nationality of the second or even subsequent tier of
ownership to determine the nationality of the corporate shareholder.’ Narra Nickel Mining
Corp. v. Redmont Consolidated Mines Corp., (Resolution), 748 SCRA 455 (2015), citing
VILLANUEVA, PHILIPPINE CORPORATE LAW (2011 ed.).
12
Filipinas Compania de Seguros v. Christern, Huenefeld & Co., 89 Phil. 54 (1951); Davis Winship v. Philippine Trust Co., 90 Phil. 744 (1952).
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be designated by Radstock is a circumvention of the constitutional prohibition against a private foreign
corporation owning lands in the Philippines. Strategic Alliance Dev. Corp. v. Radstock Securities Ltd.,
607 SCRA 413 (2009).
The nationality of a nonstock corporation in relation to land acquisition is computed not on
membership contribution but that the 60-40 minimum Filipino requirement applies to both the
nationality of the members, and their voting powers. SEC Opinion No. 16-15, 1 June 2016.
(4) Public Utilities (Sec. 11, Art. XII, Constitution)
The nationality test for public utilities applies not at the time of the grant of the primary franchise
that makes a corporation a juridical person, but at the grant of the secondary franchise that authorizes
the corporation to engage in a nationalized industry. People v. Quasha, 93 Phil. 333 (1953).
The primary franchise, that is, the right to exist as such, is vested in the stockholders or members
and not in the corporation itself and cannot be conveyed in the absence of a legislative authority to do
so. The secondary franchises are vested in the corporation and may ordinarily be conveyed or
mortgaged under a general power granted to a corporation to dispose of its property, except such
special or secondary franchises as are charged with a public use. J.R.S. Business Corp. v. Imperial
Insurance, 11 SCRA 634 (1964).
The Constitution requires a franchise for operating a public utility; however, it does not require a
franchise before one can own the facilities needed to operate a public utility so long as it does not
operate them to serve the public. There is a clear distinction between “operation” of a public utility and
ownership of the facilities used to serve the public. Tatad v. Garcia, Jr., 243 SCRA 436 (1995).
(5) Advertising Business (Sec. 11(2), Art. XVI, 1987 Constitution)
(6) Mass Media (Sec. 11(1), Art. XVI, 1987 Constitution; P.D. 36, amended by P.D.s 191 and
197; Sec. 2, P.D. 576; DOJ Opinion 163, s.1973; DOJ Opinion No. 120, s.1982; SEC Opinion, 24
March 1983; SEC Opinion, 15 July 1991, XXV SEC QUARTERLY BULLETIN No. 4, p. 31.)
a. Cable Industry: “Cable TV operations shall be governed by E.O. No. 205 (s.1987). If CATV
operators offer public telecommunications services, they shall be treated just like a public
telecommunications entity.” NTC Memo Circular No. 8-9-95.
Cable TV is “a form of mass media which must, therefore, be owned and managed by
Filipino citizens, or corporations, cooperatives or associations, wholly-owned and managed by
Filipino citizens pursuant to the mandate of the Constitution.” DOJ Opinion No. 95, s. 1999,
citing Allied Broadcasting, Inc. v. Federal Communications Commission, 435 F.2d 70.
e. NEDA May Set Limitations of Stock Ownership in Corporations Vested with Public
Interests (Sec. 176)
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Martinez v. CA 438 SCRA 139 (2004); Prudential Bank v. Alviar, 464 SCRA 353 (2005); EDSA Shangri-La Hotel and Resorts v. BF Corp., 556 SCRA
25 (2008); Siain Enterprises v. Cupertino Realty Corp., 590 SCRA 435 (2009).
15
Heirs of Fe Tan Uy v. International Exchange Bank, 690 SCRA 519 (2013); Land Bank of the Philippines v. Belle Corp., 769 SCRA 46 (2015); Ferro
Chemicals, Inc. v. Garcia, 804 SCRA 528 (2016).
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Land Bank of the Philippines v. Belle Corp., 769 SCRA 46 (2015).
17
Sunio v. NLRC, 127 SCRA 390 (1984); Asionics Phils., Inc. v. NLRC, 290 SCRA 164 (1998); Francisco v. Mejia, 362 SCRA 738 (2001); Matutina
Integrated Wood Products v. CA, 263 SCRA 490 (1996); Manila Hotel Corp. v. NLRC, 343 SCRA 1 (2000); Secosa v. Heirs of Erwin Suarez Fancisco, 433
SCRA 273 (2004); EDSA Shangri-La Hotel v. BF Corp., 556 SCRA 25 (2008); Pantranco Employees Assn. (PEA-PTGWO) v. NLRC, 581 SCRA 598 (2009);
Situs Dev. Corp. v. Asiatrust Bank, 677 SCRA 495 (2012); Saverio v. Puyat, 710 SCRA 747 (2013); Ferro Chemicals, Inc. v. Garcia, 804 SCRA 528 (2016);
Mayor v. Tiu, 810 SCRA 256 (2016).
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Also Suldao v. Cimech System Construction, Inc., 506 SCRA 256 (2006); Union Bank of the Phils. v. Ong, 491 SCRA 581 (2006); Shrimp Specialists,
Inc. v. Fuji-Triumph Agri-Industrial Corp., 608 SCRA 1 (2009); Hacienda Luisita, Inc. v. Presidential Agrarian Reform Council, 660 SCRA 525 (2011).
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Sesbreno v. CA, 222 SCRA 466 (1993); “G” Holdings, Inc. v. National Mines and Allied Workers Union Local, 604 SCRA 73 (2010); Malixi v. Mexicali
Phils., Inc. , 792 SCRA 586 (2016); Malixi v. Mexicali Philippines, Inc., 792 SCRA 586 (2016); Zaragoza v. Tan, 847 SCRA 437 (2017).
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(ii) On Being a Corporate Officer and Stockholder:
Being an officer or stockholder of a corporation does not by itself make one’s property also
that of the corporation, and vice-versa, for they are separate entities, and that shareholders who
are officers are in no legal sense the owners of corporate property which is owned by the
corporation as a distinct legal person. Good Earth Emporium, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 194 SCRA
544 (1991).20
It is hornbook law that corporate personality is a shield against personal liability of its officers
—a corporate officer and his spouse cannot be made personally (civilly) liable under a trust
receipt where he entered into and signed the contract clearly in his official capacity. Intestate
Estate of Alexander T. Ty v. Court of Appeals, 356 SCRA 61 (2001).21
The mere fact that one is President does not render the property he owns the property of the
corporation, since the president, as an individual, and the corporation are separate entities. Cruz
v. Dalisay, 152 SCRA 487 (1987); Booc v. Bantuas, 354 SCRA 279 (2001).
The President of the corporation which is liable for the accident caused by its truck driver
cannot be held solidarily liable for the judgment obligation arising from quasi-delict, since the fact
alone of being President is not sufficient to hold him solidarily liable for the liabilities adjudged
against the corporation. Secosa v. Heirs of Erwin Suarez Fancisco, 433 SCRA 273 (2004).
When the compulsory counterclaim filed against corporate officers for their alleged fraudulent
act indicate that such corporate officers are indispensable parties in the litigation, the original
inclusion of the corporation in the suit does not thereby allow the denial of a specific counter-
claim being filed to make the corporate officers personally liable. Lafarge Cement Phils., Inc. v.
Continental Cement Corp., 443 SCRA 522 (2004).
(iii) On Privileges Enjoyed: The tax exemption clause in the charter of a corporation cannot be
extended to nor enjoyed even by the controlling stockholders. Manila Gas Corp. v. CIR, 62 Phil.
895 (1936).
(iv) On Suits For or Against the Corporation:
A corporation has no legal standing to file a suit for recovery of certain parcels of land owned by
its members in their individual capacity, even when the corporation is organized for the benefit of
the members. Sulo ng Bayan v. Araneta, Inc., 72 SCRA 347 (1976).
Stockholders have no standing to intervene in a collection case covering the loans of the
corporation since shareholders’ interest in corporate property is purely inchoate. Saw v. CA, 195
SCRA 740 (1991); and vice-versa. Francisco Motors Corp. v. CA, 309 SCRA 72 (1999).
A corporate defendant against whom a writ of possession has been issued, cannot use the fact
that it has obtained controlling equities in the corporate plaintiffs to suspend enforcement of the
writ, for they are separate juridical persons, and thus their separate business and proprietary
interests remain. Silverio, Jr. v. Filipino Business Consultants, Inc., 466 SCRA 584 (2005).
Stockholders have no standing to recover damages arising from the wrongful attachment of the
corporation’s assets. Stronghold Insurance Co. v. Cuenca, 692 SCRA 473 (2013).
(i) It Is a Remedy of Last Resort: Piercing the corporate veil is remedy of last resort and is not
available when other remedies are still available. Umali v. CA, 189 SCRA 529 (1990).
(ii) Available Only to Prevent Fraud or to Achieve an Equitable End: Piercing doctrine is
meant to prevent fraud, and cannot be employed when the net result would be to perpetrate fraud
or a wrong. Gregorio Araneta, Inc. v. Tuason de Paterno, 91 Phil. 786 (1952).
The theory of corporate entity was not meant to promote unfair objectives or otherwise, nor to
shield them. Villanueva v. Adre, 172 SCRA 876 (1989).
The creation by DBP as the mother company of the three mining corporations to manage and
operate the assets acquired in the foreclosure sale lest they deteriorate from non-use and lose
their value, does not indicate fraud or wrongdoing and will not constitute application of the
piercing doctrine. DBP v. Court of Appeals, 363 SCRA 307 (2001).
(iii) Party Invoking Piercing Doctrine Must Have a “Victim Standing”: The bank cannot
successfully invoke the application of piercing doctrine when it was proven that the
assignment of the securities by the subsidiary company was contrary to existing rules of the
Central Bank of the Philippines, which were well-known to the officers of the lending bank.
Being merely an equitable remedy, employment of the piercing doctrine can only be for the
“protection of the interests of innocent third persons dealing with the corporate entity which
the law aims to protect by this doctrine.” Traders Royal Bank v. Court of Appeals, 269
SCRA 15 (1997).
(v) Piercing Must Therefore Be Based on Clear Evidence : To disregard the separate juridical
personality, it is elementary that the wrongdoing cannot be presumed and must be clearly and
convincingly established. Application of the doctrine of piercing should be done with caution.
Otherwise, an injustice that was never intended may result from an erroneous application. PNB v.
Andrada Electric & Engineering Co., 381 SCRA 244 (2002).28 CONSEQUENTLY:
Organizing the corporation when relationship between landowner and developer were still cordial
cannot be used as a basis to hold the corporation liable later on for landowner’s obligations to the
developer under the mere allegation that the corporation is being used to evade the performance of
obligation by its major stockholders. Luxuria Homes, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 302 SCRA 315 (1999).
The Court finds that the Remington failed to discharge its burden of proving bad faith on the part of
Marinduque Mining and its transferees in the mortgage and foreclosure of the subject properties to
justify the piercing of the corporate veil. DBP v. Court of Appeals, 363 SCRA 307 (2001).29
Neither has it been alleged or proven that Merryland is so organized and controlled and its affairs are
so conducted as to make it merely an instrumentality, agency conduit or adjunct of Cardale. Even
assuming that the businesses of Cardale and Merryland are interrelated, this alone is not justification
for disregarding their separate personalities, absent any showing that Merryland was purposely used
as a shield to defraud creditors and third persons. Francisco v. Mejia, 362 SCRA 738 (2001).30
The mere assertion by a Filipino litigant against the existence of a “tandem” between two Japanese
corporations cannot be the basis for piercing, which can only be applied by showing wrongdoing by
clear and convincing evidence. Marubeni Corp. v. Lirag, 362 SCRA 620 (2001).
Whether a corporation is a mere alter ego is a purely a question of fact, and the party
seeking to pierce has the burden of presenting clear and convincing evidence to justify the
28
Lim v. CA, 323 SCRA 102 (2000); General Credit Corp. v. Alsons Dev. and Investment Corp., 513 SCRA 225 (2007); Pantranco Employees Assn.
(PEA-PTGWO) v. NLRC, 581 SCRA 598 (2009); Halley v. Printwell, Inc. 649 SCRA 116 (2011); Ferro Chemicals, Inc. v. Garcia, 804 528 (2016).
29
McLeod v. NLRC, 512 SCRA 222 (2007); Uy v. Villanueva, 526 SCRA 73 (2007).
30
Ramoso v. CA, 347 SCRA 463 (2000); Guatson Int’l Travel and Tours v. NLRC, 230 SCRA 815 (1990).
18
setting aside of the separate corporate personality rule. Concept Builder, Inc. v. NLRC, 257
SCRA 149 (1996).31
(vi) Piercing Is a Power Belonging to the Courts and Cannot Be Assumed Improvidently
by a Sheriff. Cruz v. Dalisay, 152 SCRA 482 (1987).32
b. Shell or Fictitious Company: “Fictitious companies are by definition fraudulent and may also
serve as fronts for government officials. The typical scheme involves corrupt government officials
creating a fictitious company that will serve as a ‘vehicle’ to secure contract awards. Often, the
fictitious—or ghost—company will subcontract work to lower cost and sometimes unqualified firms.
The fictitious company may also utilize designated losers as subcontractors to deliver the work, thus
indicating collusion.” They have no significant assets, staff or operational capacity. They pose a
serious red flag as a bidder on public contracts, because they often hide the interests of project or
government officials, concealing a conflict of interest and opportunities for money laundering. Republic
v. Mega Pacific eSolutions, Inc., 794 SCRA 414 (2016), citing VILLANUEVA & TIANSAY, PHILIPPINE CORPORATE
LAW, p. 105 (2013 Ed.)
c. Guiding Principles in Fraud Cases: Why is there inordinate showing of alter-ego elements?
31
Heirs of Ramon Durano, Sr. v. Uy, 344 SCRA 238 (2000); MR Holdings, Ltd. V. Bajar, 380 SCRA 617 (2002); Ramirez v. Mar Fishing Co., 672 SCRA
137 (2012); Pacific Rehouse Corp. v. CA, 719 SCRA 665 (2014); Commissioner of Customs v. Oilink Int’l Corp., 728 SCRA 469 (2014); WPM Int’l Trading v.
Labayen, 735 SCRA 299 (2014); Ferro Chemicals, Inc. v. Garcia, 804 SCRA 528 (2016).
32
D.R. CATC Services v. Ramos, 477 SCRA 18 (2005).
33
Mendoza v. Banco Real Dev. Bank, 470 SCRA 86 (2005).
34
Dimson v. Chua, 811 SCRA 630 (2016).
19
There must have been fraud or an evil motive in the affected transaction, and the mere proof of
control of the corporation by itself would not authorize piercing;
Corporate fiction is used as a means to commit the fraud or avoid the consequences thereof; and
The main action should seek for the enforcement of pecuniary claims pertaining to the corporation
against corporate officers or stockholders.
Probative Factors for Fraud Piercing: The corporate fiction must be the very means by which
to commit fraud or avoid the consequences of ones unlawful or wrongful acts. Concept Builders,
Inc. v. NLRC, 257 SCRA 149 (1996).35 The absence of these elements prevents piercing the
corporate veil. Lim v. Court of Appeals, 323 SCRA 102 (2000).36
Two corporations may engage in the same business, share the same address, or have
interlocking incorporators, directors or officers, but in the absence of fraud or other public policy
consideration, does not warrant piercing the corporate veil. McLeod v. NLRC, 512 SCRA 222 (2007).37
Mere substantial identity of incorporators does not necessarily imply fraud, nor warrant the
piercing of the corporate veil. In the absence of clear and convincing evidence to show that the
corporate personalities were used to perpetuate fraud, or circumvent the law, the corporations are to
be rightly treated as distinct and separate from each other. Laguio v. NLRC, 262 SCRA 715 (1996).38
That a corporation owns all of the stocks of another corporation does not amount to fraud per se,
and does not justify their being treated as one entity. If used to perform legitimate functions, a
subsidiary’s separate existence shall be respected, and the liability of the parent corporation, as well
as the subsidiary shall be confined to those arising in their respective business. Nisce v. Equitable PCI
Bank, 516 SCRA 231 (2007).39
35
PNB v. Ritratto Group, Inc., 362 SCRA 216 (2001); Velarde v. Lopez, 419 SCRA 422 (2004); Jardine Davies, Inc. v. JRB Realty, Inc., 463 SCRA 555
(2005); Pantranco Employees Assn. (PEA-PTGWO) v. NLRC, 581 SCRA 598 (2009); Malarayat Rural Bank, 719 SCRA 565 (2014); Pacific Rehouse Corp. v.
Court of Appeals, 719 SCRA 665 (2014); Olongapo City v. Subic Water and Sewerage Co., 732 SCRA 133 (2014); Dutch Movers, Inc. v. Lequin, 824 SCRA
310 (2017); Veteran Federation of the Philippines v. Montenejo, 847 SCRA 1 (2017).
36
Child Learning Center, v. Tagorio, 475 SCRA 236 (2005); General Credit Corp. v. Alsons Dev. and Investment Corp., 513 SCRA 225 (2007); Nisce v.
Equitable PCI Bank, 516 SCRA 231 (2007).
37
Indophil Textile Mill Workers Union v. Calica, 205 SCRA 697 (1992); Del Rosario v. NLRC, 187 SCRA 777 (1990); Park Hotel v. Soriano, 680 SCRA
328 (2012); Heirs of Fe Tan Uy v. Int’l Exchange Bank, 690 SCRA 519 (2013).
38
Martinez v. Court of Appeals, 438 SCRA 130 (2004).
39
Tomas Lao Construction v. NLRC, 278 SCRA 716 (1997); Marques v. Far East Bank and Trust Co., 639 SCRA 312 (2011).
40
General Credit Corp. v. Alsons Dev. and Investment Corp., 513 SCRA 225 (2007); Sarona v. NLRC, 663 SCRA 394 (2012).
20
Where two business enterprises are owned, conducted and controlled by the same parties, both
law and equity will, when necessary to protect the rights of third persons, disregard their separate
legal fictions and treat them as identical. Sibagat Timber Corp. v. Garcia, 216 SCRA 70 (1992).41
The fact that the majority stockholder had used his own money to pay part of the loan of the
corporation cannot be used as the basis to pierce: “It is understandable that a shareholder would want
to help his corporation and in the process, assure that his stakes in the said corporation are secured.”
LBP v. Court of Appeals, 364 SCRA 375 (2001).
The fictive veil of corporate personality holds lesser sway for subsidiary corporations whose
shares are wholly if not almost wholly owned by its parent company. The structural and systems
overlap inherent in parent and subsidiary relations often render the subsidiary as mere local branch,
agency or adjunct of the foreign parent. Thus, when the foreign parent company leased a large parcel
of land purposely for the benefit of its subsidiary, which took over possession of the leased premises,
the subsidiary was a mere alter ego. Mariano v. Petron Corp., 610 SCRA 487 (2010).
When a corporation lawfully terminates its employees based on ceasure of operations, the
terminated employees cannot make a sister company liable for their claims. Although ownership by
one corporation of all or a great majority of stocks of another corporation and their interlocking
directorates may serve as indicia of control, by themselves and without more, they are insufficient to
establish an alter ego relationship or connection between Phil Carpet on the one hand and Pacific
Carpet on the other hand, that will justify the puncturing of the latter's corporate cover. Zambrano v.
Philippine Carpet Manufacturing Corp., 828 SCRA 144 (2017).
d. Guiding Principles in Alter-Ego Cases:
Doctrine applies even in the absence of evil intent, because of the direct violation of a central
corporate law principle of separating ownership from management;
Doctrine in such cased is based on estoppel: if stockholders do not respect the separate entity,
others cannot also be expected to be bound by the separate juridical entity;
Piercing in alter ego cases may prevail even when no monetary claims are sought to be enforced
against the stockholders or officers of the corporation.
Probative Factors in Alter Ego Piercing: The instrumentality or control test requires ot mere
majority or complete stock control, but complete domination of finances, policy and business practices
with respect to the transaction in question. California Manufacturing Co., Inc. v. Advanced
Technology System, Inc., 824 SCRA 295 (2017).42
The mere existence of a parent-subsidiary relationship between two corporation, or that one
corporation is affiliated with another company does not by itself allow the application of the alter ego
piercing doctrine. Koppel (Phil.), Inc. v. Yatco, 77 Phil. 97 (1946).43
Just because two foreign companies came from the same country and closely worked together
on certain projects would the conclusion arise that one was the conduit of the other, thus piercing the
veil of corporate fiction. Marubeni Corp. v. Lirag, 362 SCRA 620 (2001).
Use of a controlling stockholder’s initials in the corporate name is not sufficient reason to pierce,
since by that practice alone does it mean that the said corporation is merely a dummy of the individual
stockholder, provided such act is lawful. LBP v. Court of Appeals, 364 SCRA 375 (2001).
If used to perform legitimate functions, a subsidiary’s separate existence shall be respected, and
the liabilities of the parent corporation and the subsidiary will be confined to those arising in their
respective businesses. Even when the parent corporation agreed to the terms to support a standby
credit agreement in favor of the subsidiary, does not mean that its personality has merged with that of
the subsidiary. MR. Holdings, Ltd. V. Bajar, 380 SCRA 617 (2002).44
41
Shoemart v. NLRC, 225 SCRA 311 (1993).
42
Virata v. Ng Wee, 830 SCRA 271 (2017).
43
PHIVIDEC v. Court of Appeals, 181 SCRA 669 (1990); Jardine Davies, Inc. v. JRB Realty, Inc., 463 SCRA 555 (2005); Mendoza and Yotoko v. Banco
Real Dev. Bank, 470 SCRA 86 (2005).
44
Pacific Rehouse Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 719 SCRA 665 (2014).
21
In a situation where employee in the mother company was detailed/assigned to a sister company
whereat the employee died by reason of work-related illness, and workmen’s compensation benefits
were sought against the sister company, there would be proper basis to pierce the veil of corporate
fiction to treat the two companies as one to allow jurisdiction over the case to be retained by the
Workmen’s Compensation Commission to rule on the defense of the lack of employer-employee
relationship. The separate juridical personality should not be used to confuse legitimate issues.
Telephone Engineering and Service Co. v. WCC, 104 SCRA 354 (1981).
b. Fraud Piercing: The DOJ Resolution explicitly identified the false pretense, fraudulent act or
fraudulent means perpetrated upon the investing public who were made to believe that ASBHI had the
financial capacity to repay the loans it enticed petitioners to extend, despite the fact that the deficient
capitalization evidenced by its articles of incorporation, the treasurer’s affidavit, the audited financial
statements. “Moreover, respondent’s argument assumes that there is legal obligation on the part of
petitioners to undertake an investigation of ASBHI before agreeing to provide the loans. There is no
such obligation. It is unfair to expect a person to procure every available public record concerning an
45
Also
22
applicant for credit to satisfy himself of the latter’s financial standing. At least, that is not the way an
average person takes care of his concerns.” Gabionza v. Court of Appeals, 565 SCRA 38 (2008).
c. Equity Piercing: Where the corporation was under the control of its stockholders who ran-up quite a
high obligation with the printing company knowing fully well that their corporation was not in a position
to pay for the accounts, and where in fact they personally benefited from the operations of the
company to which they never paid their subscription in full, would constitute piercing of the veil to allow
the creditor to be able to collect what otherwise were debts owed by the company which has no visible
assets and has ceased all operations. Halley v. Printwell, Inc. 649 SCRA 116 (2011).
b. To Make Acting Officers Personally Liable under the Piercing Doctrine, Is There a Need to
Bring a New Case Against the Officer?
Application of the piercing doctrine may be made even during the enforcement of the judgment
debt of the corporation against the controlling stockholders. McConnel v. Court of Appeals, 1
SCRA 723 (1961).
There is no denial of due process to hold officers liable under the piercing doctrine, provided that
evidential basis has been adduced during trial to apply the piercing doctrine. Jacinto v. Court of
Appeals, 198 SCRA 211 (1991).
We suggested as much in Arcilla v. Court of Appeals, 215 SCRA 120 (1992), where we found
lawful the Court of Appeal’s application of the piercing doctrine to hold the President liable for the
obligations incurred in the name of the corporation although it was not a party to the collection suit
before the trial court. Violago v. BA Finance Corp., 559 SCRA 69 (2008).
The elements of “control” laid down in Concept Builders to allow the application of the piercing
doctrine must be properly pleaded and proved during the hearing on the merits, and cannot be merely
raised for the first time in the motion for the issuance of an alias writ of execution. Pacific Rehouse
Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 719 SCRA 665 (2014).
b. Nature of Doctrine: Founded on principles of equity and designed to prevent injustice and
unfairness, the doctrine applies when persons assume to form a corporation and exercise corporate
functions and enter into business relations with third persons. Where no third person is involved in the
conflict, there is no corporation by estoppel. A failed consolidation therefore cannot result in a
consolidated corporation by estoppel. Lozano v. De Los Santos, 274 SCRA 452 (1997)
A party cannot challenge the personality of the plaintiff as a duly organized corporation after
having acknowledged same when entering into the contract with the plaintiff as such corporation for
the transportation of its merchandise. Ohta Dev. Co. v. Steamship Pompey, 49 Phil. 117 (1926).48
A person who accepts employment in an unincorporated charitable association is estopped from
alleging its lack of juridical personality. Christian Children’s Fund v. NLRC, 174 SCRA 681 (1989).
[Section 20 of the Revised Corporation Code] explicitly provides that one who assumes an
obligation to an ostensible corporation, as such, cannot resist performance thereof on the ground that
there was in fact no corporation. Clearly, petitioner is bound by his obligation under the MOA not only
on estoppel but by express provision of law. Paz v. New Int’l Environmental Universality, Inc.,
756 SCRA 284 (2015).
The corporation by estoppel doctrine rest on the idea that if the Court were to disregard the
existence of an entity which entered into a transaction with a third party, unjust enrichment would
result as some form of benefit have already accrued on the part of one of the parties. Thus, in that
instance, the Court affords upon the unorganized entity corporate fiction and juridical personality for
47
Citing Behn Meyer & Co. v. Rosatzin, 5 Phil. 660 (1906); Chamber of Commerce v. Pua Te Choing, 14 Phil. 222 (1909).
48
The same principle applied in Compania Agricole de Ultramar v. Reyes, 4 Phil. 1 (1911), but that case pertained to a commercial partnership which
required registration in the registry under the terms of the Code of Commerce).
25
the sole purpose of upholding the contract or transaction. Missionary Sisters of Our Lady of
Fatima v. Alzona, G.R. No. 224307, 06 Aug 2018.
c. Two Levels: (i) With “Fraud;” and (ii) Without “Fraud”
When the incorporators represent themselves to be officers of the corporation which was never
registered with SEC, and engaged in the name of the purported corporation in illegal recruitment, they
are estopped from claiming that they are not liable as corporate officers under [Section 20 of the
Revised Corporation Code] which provides that all persons who assume to act as a corporation
knowing it to be without authority to do so shall be liable as general partners for all the debts, liabilities
and damages incurred or arising as a result thereof. People v. Garcia, 271 SCRA 621 (1997).
We cannot subscribe to the position that even assuming that the Federation was defectively
incorporated, the petitioner cannot deny its corporate existence because it had contracted and dealt
with the Federation in such a manner as to recognize and in effect admit its existence. The doctrine of
corporation by estoppel is mistakenly applied. The application of the doctrine applies to a third party
only when he tries to escape liabilities on a contract from which he has benefited on the irrelevant
ground of defective incorporation. In the case at bar, the petitioner is not trying to escape liability from
the contract but rather is the one claiming from the contract. However, one who deals with an
unincorporated association is not estopped to deny its corporate existence when his purpose is not to
avoid liability, but precisely to enforce the contract against the action for the purported corporation.
Int’l Express Travel & Tour Services v. Court of Appeals, 343 SCRA 674 (2000).
d. Can a Defective Attempt to Form a Corporation Result at Least into a Partnership?
While ordinarily persons who attempt, but fail, to form a corporation and who carry on business
under the corporate name occupy the position of partners inter se; such a relation, however, does not
necessarily exist, for ordinarily persons cannot be made to assume the relation of partners when their
purpose is that no partnership shall exist, and it should be implied only when necessary to do justice
between the parties. Thus, one who takes no part except to subscribe for stock in a proposed
corporation which is never legally formed does not become a partner with other subscribers who
engage in business under the name of the pretended corporation, so as to be liable as such in an
action for settlement of the alleged partnership and contribution. A partnership relation between
certain stockholders and other stockholders, who were also directors, will not be implied in the
absence of an agreement, so as to make the former liable to contribute for payment of debts illegally
contracted by the latter. Pioneer Insurance v. Court of Appeals, 175 SCRA 668 (1989).
Under the law on estoppel including that under Sec. 21, those acting on behalf of an ostensible
corporation and those benefited by it, knowing it to be without valid existence, are held liable as
general partners. Lim Tong Lim v. Phils. Fishing Gear Industries, Inc., 317 SCRA 728 (1999).
49
CIR v. Court of Appeals, 301 SCRA 152 (1999).
26
Even when foreclosure on corporate assets was wrongful done, stockholders have no standing to
recover for themselves moral damages; otherwise, it would amount to the appropriation by, and the
distribution to, such stockholders of part of the corporation’s assets before the dissolution and the
liquidation of its debts and liabilities. APT v. Court of Appeals, 300 SCRA 579 (1998).
The “trust fund” doctrine considers the subscribed capital stock as a trust fund for the payment of
the debts of the corporation, to which the creditors may look for satisfaction. Until the liquidation of the
corporation, no part of the subscribed capital stock may be turned over or released to the stockholder
(except in the redemption of the redeemable shares) without violating this principle. Thus dividends
must never impair the subscribed capital stock; subscription commitments cannot be condoned or
remitted; nor can the corporation buy its own shares using the subscribed capital as the consideration
therefore. NTC v. Court of Appeals, 311 SCRA 508 (1999).
We clarify that the trust fund doctrine is not limited to reaching the stockholders’ unpaid
subscriptions. The scope of the doctrine when the corporation is insolvent encompasses not only the
capital stock, but also other property and assets generally regarded in equity as a trust fund for the
payment of corporate debts. All assets and property belonging to the corporation held in trust for the
benefit of creditors that were distributed or in the possession of the stockholders, regardless of full
payment of their subscriptions may be reached by the creditors in satisfaction of its claim. Halley v.
Printwell, Inc. 649 SCRA 116 (2011), citing VILLANUEVA, PHILIPPINE CORPORATE LAW (2001), p. 558.
b. Power to Purchase Own Shares (Secs. 8, 40, 42 and 139, last paragraph)
Under common law, there were originally conflicting views on whether a corporation had the power
to purchase its own stocks. Only a few American jurisdictions adopted the strict English rule forbidding a
corporation from purchasing its own shares. In some American states where the English rule used to be
adopted, statutes granting authority to purchase out of surplus funds were enacted, while in others,
shares might be purchased even out of capital provided the rights of creditors were not prejudiced. The
reason underlying the limitation of share purchases sprang from the necessity of imposing safeguards
against the depletion by a corporation of its assets and against the impairment of its capital needed for
the protection of creditors. Turner v. Lorenzo Shipping Corp., 636 SCRA 13 (2010).
c. Rescission of Subscription Agreement
Violation of terms embodied in a Subscription Agreement, with are personal commitments, do not
constitute legal ground to rescind the such agreement: “In the instant case, the rescission of the Pre-
Subscription Agreement will effectively result in the unauthorized distribution of the capital assets and
property of the corporation, thereby violating the Trust Fund Doctrine and the Corporation Code, since
the rescission of a subscription agreement is not one of the instances when distribution of capital assets
and property of the corporation is allowed.” Distribution of corporate assets among the stockholders
cannot even be resorted to achieve “corporate peace.” Ong Yong v. Tiu, 401 SCRA 1 (2003).
V. ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
1. Nature of Charter: The charter is in the nature of a contract between the corporation and the State.
Government of P.I. v. Manila Railroad Co., 52 Phil. 699 (1929).
The articles of incorporation defines the charter of the corporation and the contractual relationships
between the State and the corporation, the stockholders and the State, and between the corporation and
its stockholders. Lanuza v. Court of Appeals, 454 SCRA 54 (2005).
a. Commencement of Corporate Existence (Sec. 18).
2. Procedure and Documentary Requirements (Sec. 13 and 14)
a. As to Who May Be and the Number of Incorporators (Sec. 10): SEC Guidelines on
Incorporators under the RCC50
It is possible for a business to be wholly owned by one individual, and the validity of its
incorporation is not affected when he gives nominal ownership of only one share of stock to each of
the other four incorporators. This arrangement is not necessarily illegal, but it valid only between and
among the incorporators privy to the agreement. It does not bind the corporation that will consider all
50
SEC Memorandum Circular No. 16-2019.
27
stockholders of record as the lawful owners of their registered shares. As between the corporation on
the one hand, and its stockholders and third persons on the other, the corporation looks only to its
books to determine who its shareholders are. Nautica Canny Corp. v. Yumul, 473 SCRA 415 (2005).
b. Corporate Name (Secs. 14[a], 17 and 18)
The name of a corporation is essential not only for its existence as a juridical person, but also in
manner of dealing with it, and in the exercise of its juridical capacities; it cannot be changed except in
the manner provided for by law. Red Line Trans. v. Rural Transit, 60 Phil. 549 (1934).
A corporation has no right to intervene in a suit using a name, not even its acronym, other than its
registered name, as the law requires and not another name which it had not registered. Laureano
Investment and Dev. Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 272 SCRA 253 (1997).
HOWEVER: There is no denial of due process when a corporation is sued and judgment is rendered
against it under an unregistered name: “A corporation may be sued under the name by which it makes
itself known to its workers.” Pison-Arceo Agri. Dev. Corp. v. NLRC, 279 SCRA 312 (1997).
A corporation’s corporate name is a property right, a right in rem, which it may assert and protect
against the world in the same manner as it may protect its tangible property, real or personal, against
trespass or conversion. The policy under [Section 17 of the Revised Corporation Code] on “identical or
deceptively or confusing similar” corporate name is the avoidance of fraud upon the public which
would have occasion to deal with the entity concerned, the evasion of legal obligation and duties, and
the reduction of difficulties of administration and supervision over corporations. De La Salle
Montessori Int’l of Malolos, Inc. v. De La Sale Brothers, Inc., 855 SCRA 38 (2018).
(i) Old Formula: “Deceptively Similar Corporate Names”: xSEC Memo Circular No. 21, s. 2013.
Similarity in corporate names between two corporations would cause confusion to the public
especially when the purposes stated in their charter are also the same type of business.
Universal Mills Corp. v. Universal Textile Mills Inc., 78 SCRA 62 (1977).
To fall within the prohibition of the law Revised Guidelines in the Approval of Corporate and
Partnership Names, two requisites must be proven, to wit: (a) That the complainant corporation
acquired a prior right over the use of such corporate name; and (b) the proposed name is either:
(i) identical, or (ii) deceptively or confusingly similar to that of any existing corporation or to any
other name already protected by law; or (iii) patently deceptive, confusing or contrary to existing
laws. Philips Export B.V. v. Court of Appeals, 206 SCRA 457 (1992).
Incorporators must choose a name at their peril; and the use of a name similar to one adopted
by another corporation, whether a business or a nonprofit organization, if misleading or likely to
injure the exercise of its corporate functions, regardless of intent, may be prevented by the
corporation having a prior right. Ang Mga Kaanib sa Iglesia ng Dios Kay Kristo Hesus v. Iglesia
ng Dios Kay Kristo Jesus, 372 SCRA 171 (2001).
The policy behind Sec. 18 which expressly prohibits the use of a corporate name which is
“identical or deceptively or confusingly similar to that of any existing corporation or to any other
name already protected by law or is patently deceptive, confusing or contrary to existing laws,” is
to avoid fraud upon the public that will occasion to deal with the entity concerned, the evasion of
legal obligations and duties, and the reduction of difficulties of administration and supervision
over corporations. Industrial Refractories Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 390 SCRA 252 (2002).51
Enforcement of protection accorded by Sec. 18 to corporate names is lodged exclusively in
the SEC which has absolute jurisdiction, supervision and control over all corporations. It is the
SEC’s duty to prevent confusion in the use of corporate names not only for the protection of the
corporations involved, but more so for the protection of the public. It has authority to de-register at
all times, and under all circumstances corporate names which in its estimation are likely to
generate confusion.” GSIS Family Bank v. BPI Family Bank, 771 SCRA 284 (2015).
(ii) No Corporate Name Shall Be Allowed if: SEC Memo Circular No. 13-2019
“Not Distinguishable From That Already Reserved or Registered ”
“Name Already Protected by Law”
“When Use of Name is Contrary to Law”
51
Also Lyceum of the Phils. v. Court of Appeals, 219 SCRA 610 (1993).
28
(iii) Effect of Change of Corporate Name: A corporation may change its name by the amendment
of its articles of incorporation, but the same is not effective until approved by the SEC. Phil. First
Insurance Co. v. Hartigan, 34 SCRA 252 (1970).
A change in the corporate name does not make a new corporation, and has no effect on the
identity of the corporation, or on its property, rights, or liabilities. Republic Planters Bank v. Court
of Appeals, 216 SCRA 738 (1992).52
(iv) Use of Corporate Names of Dissolved Corporations – In accordance with xSEC Memo
Circular No. 6, s. 2015, a dissolved corporation’s name shall not be allowed to be used within 3-
years after approval of dissolution by the SEC, unless allowed by the last stockholders
representing at least majority of the outstanding capital stock. Indian Chamber of Commerce
Phils. Inc. v. Filipino Indian Chamber of Commerce in the Phils., 799 SCRA 27 (2016).
52
P.C. Javier & Sons v. CA, 462 SCRA 36 (2005); Zuellig Freight and Cargo Systems v. NLRC, 701 SCRA 562 (2013).
29
Why Is Maximum Capitalization (Authorized Capital Stock) Required to Be Stated under
Sec. 13(h)?
g. No More Subscription and Paid-Up Requirements (Sec. 13 of old Corporation Code)
BUT SEE: 25% Subscription – 25% Paid-up Requirement under Section 37 for Increasing
the Authorized Capital Stock
3. Grounds for Disapproval of the Articles (Sec. 16)
When the proposed articles show that the object is to organize a barrio into a separate corporation
for the purpose of taking possession and having control of all municipal property within the incorporated
barrio and administer it exclusively for the benefit of the residents, the object is unlawful and the articles
can be denied registration. Asuncion v. De Yriarte, 28 Phil. 67 (1914).
VI. BYLAWS
1. Nature and Function and Contents of Bylaws (Sec. 46)
The power to adopt bylaws is an inherent power on the part of those forming a corporation or any
other form of association. Gokongwei v. SEC, 89 SCRA 337 (1979).
As the “rules and regulations or private laws enacted by the corporation to regulate, govern and
control its own actions, affairs and concerns and its stockholders/members and directors and officers with
relation thereto and among themselves in their relation to it,” bylaws are indispensable to corporations.
These may not be essential to corporate birth but certainly, these are required for an orderly governance
and management of corporations. Loyola Grand Villas Homeowners v. CA, 276 SCRA 681 (1997).
Bylaws are traditionally defined as regulations, ordinances, rules or laws adopted by a corporation
for its internal governance, including rules for routine matters such as calling meetings and the like. If
those key bylaw provisions on matters such as quorum requirements, meetings, or on the internal
governance of the local/chapter are themselves already provided for in the constitution, then it would be
feasible to overlook the requirements for bylaws. Indeed in such an event, to insist on the submission of a
separate document denominated as “ByLaws” would be an undue technicality, as well as a redundancy.
San Miguel Corp. v. Mandaue Packing Products Plants Union-FFW, 467 SCRA 107 (2005).
Bylaws are the self-imposed rules resulting from the agreement between the country club and its
members to conduct the corporate business in a particular way. In that sense, the bylaws are the private
“statutes” by which the country club is regulated, and will function. Until repealed, they are the continuing
rules for the government of the country club and its officers, the proper function being to regulate the
transaction of the incidental business of the country club. Bylaws constitute a binding contract as between
the country club and its members, and as among the members themselves. They are self-imposed
private laws binding on all members, directors, and officers of the country club. The prevailing rule is that
the provisions of the articles of incorporation and the bylaws must be strictly complied with and applied to
the letter. Ching v. Quezon City Sports Club, Inc., 807 SCRA 46 (2016).53
53
Forest Hills Golf and Country Club v. Gardpro, Inc., 739 SCRA 28 (2014).
30
due process in any democratic institution, agency or society. In other words, the incorporators must be
given the chance to explain their neglect or omission and remedy the same. Loyola Grand Villas
Homeowners v. Court of Appeals, 276 SCRA 681 (1997).
A corporation which has failed to file its bylaws within the prescribed period does not ipso facto
lose its powers as such, and may be considered a de facto corporation whose right to exercise
corporate powers may not be inquired into collaterally in any private suit to which such corporations
may be a party. Sawadjaan v. Court of Appeals, 459 SCRA 516 (2005).
b. Failure to Adopt and Maintain the Bylaws Now Criminally Punishable and Subject to SEC’s
Contempt Power (Sec. 161)
31
stockholders, they cannot affect or prejudice third persons who deal with the corporation, unless they
have knowledge of the same.” PMI Colleges v. NLRC, 277 SCRA 462 (1997).
b. Implied Powers: When the articles expressly provide that the purpose was to “engage in the
transportation of person by water,” such corporation cannot engage in the business of land
transportation, which is an entirely different line of business. Luneta Motor Co. v. A.D. Santos, Inc., 5
SCRA 809 (1962).
A corporation whose primary purpose is to generate electric power has no authority to undertake
stevedoring services to unload coal into its pier since it is not reasonably necessary for the operation
of its power plant. National Power Corp. v. Vera, 170 SCRA 721 (1989).
A corporation organized to engage as a lending investor cannot engage in pawnbroker. Pilipinas
Loan Co. v. SEC, 356 SCRA 193 (2001).
A mining company has not power to engage in real estate development. Heirs of Antonio Pael v.
Court of Appeals, 372 SCRA 587 (2001).
c. Incidental Powers: The act of issuing checks is within the ambit of a valid corporate act, for it as for
securing a loan to finance the activities of the corporation, hence, not an ultra vires act. Atrium
Management Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 353 SCRA 23 (2001).
54
Salenga v. CA, 664 SCRA 635 (2012); Ellice Agro-Industrial Corp. v. Young, 686 SCRA 51 (2012); Ignacio v. Home Bankers Savings and Trust Co.,
689 SCRA 173 (2013).
55
Magallanes Watercraft Assn. v. Auguis, 791 SCRA 445 (2016).
32
c. Incur, Create or Increase Bonded Indebtedness (Sec. 37)
d. Sell, Dispose, Mortgage or Encumber All or Substantially All Assets (Sec. 39)
Corporate property is not property of the stockholders or members, and as such, may not be sold
without express authority from the Board of Directors. Litonjua v. Eternit Corp., 490 SCRA 204 (2006).
Sale by Board of the only corporate property without compliance with Sec. 40 requiring
ratification of members representing at least two-thirds of the membership, would make the sale null
and void. Islamic Directorate v. CA, 272 SCRA 454 (1997); Peña v. CA, 193 SCRA 717 (1991).
The Corporation Code defines a sale or disposition of substantially all assets and property of a
corporation as one by which the corporation “would be rendered incapable of continuing the business
or accomplishing the purpose for which it was incorporated” – any sale or disposition short of this will
not need stockholder ratification, and may be pursued by the majority vote of the Board of Directors.
Strategic Alliance Dev. Corp. v. Radstock Securities Ltd., 607 SCRA 413 (2009).
e. Invest Corporate Funds for Non-Primary Purpose Endeavor (Sec. 41)
Investment by a sugar central in the equity of a jute-bag manufacturing company used in packing
sugar falls within the implied powers of the sugar central as part of its primary purpose; it does not
need stockholders’ ratification. De la Rama v. Ma-ao Sugar Central Co., 27 SCRA 247 (1969).
f. Enter into Management Contracts (Sec. 43)
A management contract is not an agency contract, and therefore is not revocable at will. Nielson
& Co. v. Lepanto Consolidated Mining, 26 SCRA 540 (1968); Ricafort v. Moya, 195 SCRA 247 (1991).
b. Borrow Funds
The power to borrow money is one of those cases where even a special power of attorney is
required under Art. 1878 of Civil Code. There is invariably a need of an enabling act of the corporation
to be approved by its Board of Directors. The argument that the obtaining of loan was in accordance
with the ordinary course of business usages and practices of the corporation is devoid of merit
because the prevailing practice in the corporation was to explicitly authorize an officer to contract
loans in behalf of the corporation. China Banking Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 270 SCRA 503 (1997).
56
AF Realty & Dev., Inc. v. Dieselman Freight Services Co., 373 SCRA 385 (2002); Firme v. Bukal Enterprises and Dev. Corp., 414 SCRA 190 (2003);
Cosco Phils. Shipping v. Kemper Insurance Co., 670 SCRA 343 (2012).
57
Shipside Inc. v. CA, 352 SCRA 334 (2001); SSS v. COA, 384 SCRA 548 (2002); United Paragon Mining Corp. v. CA, 497 SCRA 638 (2006); Mediserv,
Inc. v. CA, 617 SCRA 284 (2010); Cebu Bionic Builders Supply, Inc. v. DBP, 635 SCRA 13 (2010); Ellice Agro-Industrial Corp. v. Young, 686 SCRA 51
(2012); Swedish Match Phils v. Treasurer of Manila, 700 SCRA 428 (2013); Esguerra v. Holcim Phils., 704 SCRA 490 (2013); Philippine Numismatic and
Antiquarian Society v. Aquino, 816 SCRA 161 (2017).
33
(i) xCertificate of Non-Forum Shopping
Where petitioner is a corporation, a Board resolution authorizing an officer to execute the certi-
ficate against forum shopping is necessary—a certification not signed by a duly authorized person
renders the petition dismissable, Gonzales v. Climax Mining Ltd., 452 SCRA 607 (2005);58 such as
the administrator or project manager, Esteban, Jr. v. Vda. de Onorio, 360 SCRA 230 (2001); or the
General Manager, Central Cooperative Exchange Inc. v. Enciso, 162 SCRA 706 (1988).
The corporate veil cannot be used to blatantly violate the prohibition against forum-shopping.
Where the corporation itself has not been remiss in vigorously prosecuting or defending corporate
causes and in using and applying remedies available to it, then shareholders, whether suing as the
majority in direct actions or as the minority in a derivative suit, cannot be allowed to pursue the
same claims. First Philippine International Bank v. Court of Appeals, 252 SCRA 259 (1996).
For counsel to sign the certification for the corporation, he must specifically be authorized by the
Board of Directors. BPI Leasing Corp. v. CA, 416 SCRA 4 (2003).59 Nonetheless, such lack of
authority may be cured: even if the counsel executed the verification and certificate of non-forum
shopping before the board authorized him, the passing of the board resolution of authorization
before the actual filing of the complaint. Median Container Corp. v. Metropolitan Bank and Trust
Co., 561 SCRA 622 (2008); the submission in the motion for reconsideration of the authority to sign
the verification and certification constitutes substantial compliance with the procedural
requirements. Asean Pacific Planners v. City of Urdaneta, 566 SCRA 219 (2008).
When a corporate officers has been granted express power by the Board of Directors to institute
a suit, the same is considered broad enough to include the power of said corporate officer to
execute the verification and certification against forum shopping required in initiatory pleadings
under the Rules of Court. Cunanan v. Jumping Jap Trading Corp., 586 SCRA 620 (2009).
A President, among other enumerated corporate officers and employees, can sign the
verification and certification against non-forum shopping in behalf of the corporation without the
benefit of a board resolution. South Cotabato Communications Corp. v. Sto. Tomas, 638 SCRA
566 (2011).
However, the following officials or employees of the company can sign a verification and
certification against forum-shopping without need of a board resolution: (1) the Chairperson of the
Board of Directors, (2) the President of a corporation, (3) the General Manager or Acting General
Manager, (4) Personnel Officer, and (5) an Employment Specialist in a labor case. While the above
cases do not provide a complete listing of authorized signatories to the verification and certification
required by the rules, the determination of the sufficiency of the authority was done on a case to
case basis. Pasos v. PNCC, 700 SCRA 608 (2013).
(ii) xService of Summons on Corporations
Section 11, Rule 14 of the Rules of Civil Procedure uses the term “general manager” and unlike
the old provision in the Rules of Court, it does not include the term “agent”. Consequently, the
enumeration of persons to whom summons may be served is “restricted, limited and exclusive”
following the rule on statutory construction expressio unios est exclusio alterius. Therefore, the
earlier cases that uphold service of summons upon a construction project manager; 60 a
corporation’s assistant manager;61 ordinary clerk of a corporation;62 private secretary of corporate
executives;63 retained counsel;64 officials who had charge or control of the operations of the
corporation, like the assistant general manager;65 or the corporation’s Chief Finance and
Administrative Officer;66 no longer apply since they were decided under the old rule that allows
58
DBP v. CA, 440 SCRA 200 (2004); Public Estates Authority v. Uy, 372 SCRA 180 (2001); PAL v. Flight Attendance and Stewards Assn. of the Phils.
(FASAP), 479 SCRA 605 (2006); Metro Drug Distribution v. Narcisco, 495 SCRA 286 (2006); Cagayan Valley Drug Corp. v. CIR, 545 SCRA 10 (2008)
Mediserv, Inc. v. CA, 617 SCRA 284 (2010); Cosco Phils. Shipping v. Kemper Insurance Co., 670 SCRA 343 (2012); Almeda v. Heirs of Ponciano Almeda,
839 SCRA 630 (2017).
59
Mariveles Shipyard Corp. v. CA, 415 SCRA 573 (2003); Nissan Car Lease Phils. v. Lica Management Inc., 780 SCRA 400 (2016); Steamship Mutual
Underwirting Assn. (Bermuda) Ltd. v. Sulpicio Lines, Inc., 840 SCRA 203 (2017).
60
Kanlaon Construction Enterprises Co. v. NLRC, 279 SCRA 337 (1997).
61
Gesulgon v. NLRC, 219 SCRA 561 (1993).
62
Golden Country Farms, Inc. v. Sanvar Dev.t Corp., 214 SCRA 295 (1992); G&G Trading Corp. v. CA, 158 SCRA 466 (1988).
63
Summit Trading and Dev. Corp. v. Avendaño, 135 SCRA 397 (1985); Vlason Enterprises Corp. v. CA, 310 SCRA 26 (1999).
64
Republic v. Ker & Co., 18 SCRA 207 (1966).
65
Villa Rey Transit v. Far East Motor Corp., 81 SCRA 298 (1978).
66
Far Corp. v. Francisco, 146 SCRA 197 (1986).
34
service of summons upon an “agent”67 of the corporation. E.B. Villarosa & Partners Co., Ltd. v.
Benito, 312 SCRA 65 (1999).68
67
Filoil Marketing Corp. v. Marine Dev. Corp. of the Phils., 177 SCRA 86 (1982).
68
Ellice Agro-Industrial Corp. v. Young, 686 SCRA 51 (2012).
69
Republic v. Acoje Mining Co., 3 SCRA 361 (1963); Crisologo Jose v. CA, 177 SCRA 594 (1989).
35
b. Ultra Vires of the Second Type: Doctrine of Centralized Management (Sec. 22)
Acts done in excess of corporate officers’ scope of authority cannot bind the corporation.
However, when subsequently a compromise agreement was on behalf of the corporation being
represented by its President acting pursuant to a Board of Directors’ resolution, such constituted as a
confirmatory act signifying ratification of all prior acts of its officers. NPC v. Alonzo-Legasto, 443 SCRA
342 (2004).
Contracts or acts of a corporation must be made either by the Board of Directors or by a
corporate agent duly authorized by the Board—absent such valid delegation/authorization, the rule is
that the declaration of an individual directors relating to the affairs of the corporation, but not in the
course of, or connected with the performance of authorized duties of such director, are held not
binding on the corporation. Manila Metal Container Corp. v. PNB, 511 SCRA 444 (2006).
Application of the First and Second Types of Ultra Vires – Corporations are artificial entities
granted legal personalities upon their creation by their incorporators in accordance with law. Unlike
natural persons, they have no inherent powers (?) Third persons dealing with corporations cannot
assume that corporations have powers. It is up to those persons dealing with corporations to
determine their competence as expressly defined by the law and their articles of incorporation.
Corporate acts that are outside those express definitions under the law or articles of incorporation or
those “committed outside the object for which a corporation is created” are ultra vires. The only
exception to this rule is when acts are necessary and incidental to carry out a corporation's purposes,
and to the exercise of powers conferred by the Corporation Code and under a corporation's articles of
incorporation. This exception is specifically included in the general powers of a corporation under
Section 36 of the Corporation Code University of Mindanao v. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, 778
SCRA 458 (2016).
c. Ultra Vires of the Third Type: Although arrangements between the two mining companies was
prohibited under the terms of the old Corporation Law, the Supreme Court did not declare the nullity of
the agreements on the ground that only private rights and interests, not public interests, were involved
in the case.Harden v. Benguet Consolidated Mining Co., 58 Phil. 140 (1933).
36
director, are held not binding on the corporation. Manila Metal Container Corp. v. PNB, 511 SCRA 444
(2006).70
A corporation is an artificial being and can only exercise its powers and transact its business through
the instrumentalities of its Board of Directors, and through its officers and agents, when authorized by
resolution or by its bylaws. Consequently, when legal counsel was clothed with authority through formal
board resolution, his acts bind the corporation. De Liano v. Court of Appeals, 370 SCRA 349 (2001).71
Although the best proof of the authority of the officer to represent or bind the corporation would be
the board resolution itself, the Court has considered a Secretary’s Certificate of the existence of such
board resolution as sufficient proof of authority for a person named in it to represent the corporation.
Meatworld Int’l Inc. v. Hechanova, 842 SCRA 620 (2017).
a. BJR FIRST BRANCH: On the Transactions Entered Into: When resolutions are passed in good faith
by the Board of Directors, it is valid and binding, and whether or not it will cause losses or decrease
the corporation’s profits, the courts have no authority to review them. Questions of policy or
management are left solely to the honest decision of officers and directors of a corporation, and the
court is without authority to substitute its judgment [for that] of the Board. The Board is the
corporation’s business manager, and so long as it acts in good faith its orders are not reviewable by
the courts. Montelibano v. Bacolod-Murcia Miling Co., 5 SCRA 36 (1962).72
While SEC is the agency with the primary say as to whether or not securities, including shares of
stock of a corporation, may be traded or not in the stock exchange, it does not mean that PSE’s
management prerogatives are under the absolute control of the SEC. The PSE is, after all, a
corporation authorized by its corporate franchise to engage in its proposed and duly approved
business. One of the PSE’s main concerns, as such, is still the generation of profit for its stockholders .
Philippine Stock Exchange v. Court of Appeals, 281 SCRA 232 (1997).
No court can, in resolving the issues between squabbling stockholders, order the corporation to
undertake certain corporate acts, since it would be in violation of the business judgment rule. Ong
Yong v. Tiu, 401 SCRA 1 (2003), citing VILLANUEVA, PHILIPPINE CORPORATE LAW (1998 ed), p. 288.
b. BJR SECOND BRANCH: On the Personal Liability of the Acting Directors and/or Officers:
Directors and officers who purport to act for the corporation, keep within the lawful scope of their
authority and act in good faith, do not become liable, whether civilly or otherwise, for the
consequences of their acts, which are properly attributed to the corporation alone. Benguet Electric
Cooperative, Inc. v. NLRC, 209 SCRA 55 (1992).
If the cause of the losses is merely error in business judgment, not amounting to bad faith or
negligence, directors and/or officers are not liable. For them to be held accountable, the
mismanagement and the resulting losses must be proven to have resulted from bad faith and with
malice in doing the assailed acts. Bad faith does not simply connote bad judgment or negligence; it
imports a dishonest purpose or some moral obliquity and conscious doing of a wrong, a breach of a
known duty through some motive or interest or ill-will partaking of the nature of fraud. Filipinas Port
Services, Inc. v. Go, 518 SCRA 453 (2007).
72
Estacio v. Pampanga I Electric Cooperative, Inc., 596 SCRA 542 (2009); Cua, Jr. v. Tan, 607 SCRA 645 (2009).
38
connected with the transaction to which it relates. Ratification can never be made by the same person
who wrongfully assume the power to make the contract, but the ratification must be by the officer or
governing body having authority to make such contract. Vicente v. Geraldez, 52 SCRA 210 (1973).
The admission by counsel on behalf of the corporation of the latter’s culpability for personal loans
obtained by its corporate officers cannot be given legal effect when the admission was “without any
enabling act or attendant ratification of corporate act,” as would authorize or even ratify such
admission. In the absence of such ratification or authority, such admission does not bind the
corporation. Aguenza v. Metropolitan Bank and Trust Co., 271 SCRA 1 (1997).
Doctrine of Laches or Stale Demands: The failure or neglect, for an unreasonable and
unexplained length of time, to do that which by exercising due diligence could or should have been
done earlier, or the negligence or omission to assert a right within a reasonable time, warrants a
presumption that the party entitled to assert it either has abandoned it or declined to assert it. Rovels
Enterprises, Inc. v. Ocampo, 391 SCRA 176 (2002).
When an officer in a bank arranges a credit line agreement and forwards the same to the legal
department at its head office, and the bank did no disaffirm the contract, then it is bound by it. Premier
Dev. Bank v. Court of Appeals, 427 SCRA 686 (2004).
Under Art. 1910 of the Civil Code, acts done by such officers beyond the scope of their authority
cannot bind the corporation unless it has ratified such acts expressly or tacitly, or is estopped from
denying them. Thus, contracts entered into by corporate officers beyond the scope of authority are
unenforceable against the corporation unless ratified by the Board. Woodchild Holdings, Inc. v.
Roxas Electric Constructions Co., 436 SCRA 235 (2004).
Acts done in excess of officers’ scope of authority cannot bind the corporation; however, when
subsequently a compromise agreement was on behalf of the corporation being represented by its
President acting pursuant to a Board resolution, such constituted as ratification of all prior acts of its
officers. National Power Corp. v. Alonzo-Legasto, 443 SCRA 342 (2004).
b. Doctrines of Apparent Authority (Art. 1883, Civil Code): If a corporation knowingly permits one
of its officers to act within the scope of an apparent authority, it holds him out to the public as
possessing the power to do those acts, the corporation will, as against anyone who has in good faith
dealt with it through such agent, be estopped from denying the agent’s authority. Francisco v.
GSIS, 7 SCRA 577 (1963).73
A corporation cannot disown its President’s act of obtain a loan from the bank, on the ground that
it never authorized the President by the lack of any formal Board resolution. The following placed the
Board in estoppel in pais: (a) bylaws provides for the powers of the President, which includes
executing contracts and agreements, borrowing money, signing, indorsing and delivering checks; (b)
there were already previous transaction of discounting the checks involving the same personalities
wherein any enabling resolution from the Board was dispensed with and yet the bank was able to
collect from the corporation. Nyco Sales Corp. v. BA Finance Corp., 200 SCRA 637 (1991).
The authority of a corporate officer dealing with third persons may be actual or apparent . . . the
principal is liable for the obligations contracted by the agent. The agent’s apparent representation
yields to the principal’s true representation and the contract is considered as entered into between the
principal and the third person. First Philippine Int’l Bank v. Court of Appeals, 252 SCRA 259 (1996).
Persons who deal with corporate agents within circumstances showing that the agents are acting
in excess of corporate authority, may not hold the corporation liable. Traders Royal Bank v. Court of
Appeals, 269 SCRA 601 (1997).
Estoppel precludes a corporation’s Board from denying the validity of the transaction entered into
by its officer with a third party who in good faith, relied on the authority of the former as manager to act
on behalf of the corporation. Lipat v. Pacific Banking Corp., 402 SCRA 339 (2003).
Naturally, the third person has little or no information as to what occurs in corporate meeting,
since what transpires in the Board room is entirely an internal matter, and must necessarily rely upon
the external manifestations of corporate consent. The integrity of commercial transactions can only be
maintained by holding the corporation strictly to the liability fixed upon it by its agents in accordance
with law. Hence, petitioner may not impute negligence on the part of the respondents in failing to find
73
Rural Bank of Milaor (Camarines Sur) v. Ocfemia, 325 SCRA 99 (2000); Soler v. CA, 358 SCRA 57 (2001); United Coconut Planters Bank v. Planters
Products, Inc., 672 SCRA 285 (2012).
39
out the scope of Atty. Soluta’s authority. Indeed, the public has the right to rely on the trustworthiness
of bank officers and their acts. Associated Bank v. Pronstroller, 558 SCRA 113 (2008).
The general rule remains that, in the absence of authority from the Board of Directors, no person,
not even its officers, can validly bind a corporation. If a corporation, however, consciously lets one of
its officers, or any other agent, to act within the scope of an apparent authority, it will be estopped from
denying such officer’s authority. … Unmistakably, the Court’s directive in Yao Ka Sin Trading is that a
corporation should first prove by clear evidence that its corporate officer is not in fact authorized to act
on its behalf before the burden of evidence shifts to the other party to prove, by previous specific acts,
that an officer was clothes by the corporation with apparent authority. Westmont Bank v. Inland
Construction and Dev. Corp., 582 SCRA 230 (2009).
The doctrine of apparent authority provides that a corporation will be estopped from denying the
agent’s authority if it knowingly permits one of its officers or any other agent to act within the scope of
an apparent authority, and it holds him out to the public as possessing the power to do those acts.
The doctrine does not apply if the principal did not commit any acts or conduct which a third party
knew and relied upon in good faith as a result of the exercise of reasonable prudence. Moreover, the
agent’s acts or conduct must have produced a change of position to the third party’s
detriment. Advance Paper Corp. v. Arma Traders Corp., 712 SCRA 313 (2013).
The existence of apparent authority may be ascertained through (1) the general manner in
which the corporation holds out an officer or agent as having the power to act or, in other words, the
apparent authority to act in general, with which it clothes him; or (2) the acquiescence in his acts of
a particular nature, with actual or constructive knowledge thereof, whether within or beyond the
scope of his ordinary powers. Georg v. Holy Trinity College, Inc., 797 SCRA 550 (2016).74
a. CUMULATIVE VOTING (Sec. 23; Cumulative Voting in Corporate Elections: Introducing Strategy
in the Equation, 35 SOUTH CAROLINA L. REV. 295)
b. xElection Contests (Rule 6, Interim Rules of Procedure for Intra-Corporate Controversies)
The proper remedy to question the legality and proper qualification of persons elected to the
board is a quo warranto proceeding. Ponce v. Encarnacion, 94 Phil. 81 (1953). – Now an election
contest under the Interim Rule of Procedure for Intra-Corporate Controversies
All election contests over directors and trustees fall within the original and exclusive jurisdiction of
the RTC Special Commercial Courts and no longer with the SEC. GSIS v. CA, 585 SCRA 679 (2009).
SEC retains its regulatory power over proxy issues on matters other than election of directors or
trustees, but not on matters relating to elections of directors or trustees. The test is whether the
controversy relates to such election. All matters affecting the manner and conduct of the election of
directors are properly cognizable by the regular courts. Otherwise, these matters may be brought
before the SEC for resolution based on the regulatory powers it exercises over corporations,
partnerships and associations. SEC v. Court of Appeals, 739 SCRA 99 (2014).
Under Secs. 1 to 3 of Rule 6 of the Interim Rules, an election contest should be dismissed when
filed beyond the 15-day prescriptive period allowed for an election protect. In substance, the main
issues herein are on all fours with Yujuico v. Quiambao, 513 SCRA 243 (2007), where we expressly
ruled that where one of the reliefs sought in the complaint is to nullify the election of the Board of
Directors as the annual stockholders’ meeting, the complaint involves an election contest. Ricafort v.
Dicdican, 787 SCRA 163 (2016).
6. INDEPENDENT DIRECTORS (Sec. 22): The Board of the following corporations “vested with public
interests” shall have independent directors constituting at least 20% of such Board:
(a) Securities Regulation Code Companies: publicly-held and publicly-listed companies,
and those whose securities are registered with the SEC;
(b) Financial Intermediaries: Banks and quasi-banks, NSSLAs, pawnshops, corporations
engaged in money service business, preneed, trust and insurance companies, and
others similar;
(c) Other Corporations Engaged in Business Vested with Public Interests Similar to Above,
as may be determined by SEC based on given factors (see Section 95)
41
c. Increase in the Number of the Board
d. All Vacancies Occuring Other than by Removal or Expiration of Term
e. Emergency Board
Directors may lawfully fill vacancies occurring in the Board, and such officials, as well as the original
directors, hold-over until qualification of their successors. Gov’t v. El Hogar Filipino, 50 Phil. 399 (1927).
The remaining members of the Board cannot elect another director to fill in a vacancy caused by the
resignation of a hold-over director. The hold-over period is not part of the term of office of a member of
the board of directors. Consequently, when during the hold-over period, a director resigns from the board,
the vacancy can only be filled-up by the stockholders, since there is no term left to fill-up pursuant to the
provisions of Section 29 which mandates that a vacancy occurring in the board of directors caused by the
expiration of a member’s term shall be filled by the corporation’s stockholders. That a director continues
to serve after one year from his election (i.e., on a holdover capacity) cannot be considered as extending
his term. This hold-over period, however, is not to be considered as part of his term, which, as declared,
had already expired. Valle Verde Country Club, Inc. v. Africa, 598 SCRA 202 (2009).
d. Recusal of Directors/Trustess with Potential Interest in Related Paty Transactions (Sec. 52)
e. Minutes of Meetings: There is no provision in Corporation Code that requires that the minutes of the
meeting should be signed by all the members of the Board—the signature of the corporate secretary
gives the minutes the probative value and credibility. The entries contained in the minutes are prima
facie evidence of what actually took place during the meeting, pursuant to Sec. 44, Rule 130 of the
Revised Rule on Evidence. People v. Dumlao, 580 SCRA 409 (2009).
When there is evidence to show that other directors and the corporate secretary refused to sign
the minutes, then the presumption in Dumlao does not prevail. Lopez Realty, Inc. v. Spouses
Tanjangco, 739 SCRA 644 (2014).
Resolution versus Minutes: A resolution is distinct and different from the minutes of the meeting.
A Board resolution is a formal action by a corporate board of directors or other corporate body
authorizing a particular act, transaction, or appointment; while minutes are a brief statement not only
of what transpired at a meeting, usually of stockholders/members or directors/trustees, but also at a
meeting of an executive committee. People v. Dumlao, 580 SCRA 409 (2009).
76
Lim v. Moldex Land, Inc., 815 SCA 619 (2017).
77
Singson v. COA, 627 SCRA 36 (2010).
42
It is well settled that directors presumptively serve without compensation. Hence, even though
director assigning themselves additional duties which still fall within their power much less do they
amount to extraordinary or unusual services to the company, they would then be acting in excess of their
authority by voting for themselves compensation for such additional duties. Thus, transfer of corporate
properties by way of payment of compensation amounts to self-dealing covered by Sec. 32 of Corporation
Code. Agdao Landless Residents Assn. v. Maramion, 806 SCRA 74 (2016).
43
The general principles of agency govern the relation between the corporation and its officers or
agents, subject to the articles of incorporation, bylaws, or relevant provisions of law—when authorized,
their acts bind the corporation; otherwise, their acts cannot bind it. Yasuma v. Heirs of Cecilio S. De
Villa, 499 SCRA 466 (2006); Litonjua v. Eternit Corp., 490 SCRA 204 (2006).
As a general rule, the acts of corporate officers within the scope of their authority are binding on
the corporation, but when these officers exceeded their authority, their actions cannot bind the
corporation, unless it has ratified such acts or is estopped from disclaiming them. Reyes v. RCPI
Employees Credit Union, Inc., 499 SCRA 319 (2006).
While it is a general rule that, in the absence of authority from the Board, no person, not even its
officers, can validly bind a corporation; however, just as a natural person may authorize another to do
certain acts for and on his behalf, the Board of Directors may validly delegate some of its functions
and powers to officers, committees or agents—the authority of such individuals to bind the corporation
is generally derived from law, corporate bylaws or authorization from the board, either expressly or
impliedly by habit, custom or acquiescence in the general course of business. Cebu Mactan Members
Center Inc. v. Tsukahara, 593 SCRA 172 (2009). 78
The general principles of agency govern the relationship between a corporation and its
representatives. Article 1317 of the Civil Code similarly provides that the principal must delegate the
necessary authority before anyone can act on his or her behalf. Nonetheless, law and jurisprudence
recognize actual authority and apparent authority as the two types of authorities conferred upon a
corporate officer or agent in dealing with third persons: Actual authority can either be express or
implied. Express actual authority refers to the power delegated to the agent by the corporation, while
an agent's implied authority can be measured by his or her prior acts which have been ratified by the
corporation or whose benefits have been accepted by the corporation. On the other hand, apparent
authority is based on the principle of estoppel, as provided under Articles 1431 and 1869 of the Civil
Code. Calubad v. Ricarcen Dev. Corp., 838 SCRA 303 (2017)
(i) President: In the absence of a charter or bylaw provision to the contrary, the President is
presumed to have the authority to act within the domain of the general objectives of the
corporation’s business and within the scope of his usual duties. Hence, it has been ruled in other
jurisdiction that the president of the corporation possesses the power to enter into a contract for
the corporation, when the “conduct on the part of both the president and the corporation [shows]
that he had been in the habit of acting in similar matters on behalf of the company and that the
company had authorized him so to act and had recognized, approved and ratified his former and
similar actions.” People’s Aircargo v. Court of Appeals, 297 SCRA 170 (1998).79
Section [24] mandates that the President shall be a director. If the person appointed as
President was not qualified to be a director or member of the company, it should also follow
that he cannot validly be appointed President. Lim v. Moldex Land, Inc., 815 SCRA 619
(2017).
It is the Board of Directors, not the President, that exercises corporate powers. It must be
emphasized that the basis for agency is representation and a person dealing with an agent is put
upon inquiry and must discover upon his peril the authority of the agent. Safic Alcan & Cie v.
Imperial Vegetable Oil Co., Inc., 355 SCRA 559 (2001).
The President is considered as the corporation’s agent, and as such, his knowledge of the
repeal of a resolution in another juridical person in which his corporation has an interest, is
ascribed to his principal under the theory of imputed knowledge. Rovels Enterprises v. Ocampo,
392 SCRA 176 (2002).
The President of the corporation which becomes liable for the accident caused by its truck
driver cannot be held solidarily liable for the judgment obligation arising from quasi-delict, since
being President is not sufficient to hold him solidarily liable for the liabilities adjudged against the
corporation and its employee. Secosa v. Heirs of Erwin Suarez Fancisco, 433 SCRA 273 (2004).
The President is a corporate officers under Sec. 25, and issues of dismissal relating to him
would be considered an intra-corporate dispute, not a labor dispute. Malcaba v. ProHealth
Pharma Phils., Inc., G.R. No. 209085, 06 June 2018.
78
Yu Chuck v. “Kong Li Po,” 46 Phil. 608 (1924); Vicente v. Geraldez, 52 SCRA 210 (1973); Boyer-Roxas v. CA, 211 SCRA 470 (1992); Associated Bank
v. Pronstroller, 558 SCRA 113 (2008); Pasos v. PNCC, 700 SCRA 608 (2013).
79
Advance Paper Corp. v. Arma Traders Corp., 712 SCRA 313 (2013).
44
(ii) Vice-President: The law does not require that a Vice-President be a stockholder. Baguio v. Court
of Appeals, 226 SCRA 366 (1993).
When the Bylaws provide that the Vice-President and Secretary must have the same
qualifications as those of the President (i.e., must be a member of the Board), then the
appointment of persons who are not members to such positions would also be unlawful. Lim
v. Moldex Land, Inc., 815 SCRA 619 (2017).
(iii) Corporate Secretary: The Corporate Secretary is the custodian of corporate records—he keeps
the stock and transfer book and makes proper and necessary entries therein. It is his duty and
obligation to register valid transfers of stock in the books of the corporation; and in the event he
refuses to comply with such duty, the transferor-stockholder may rightfully bring suit to compel
performance. Torres, Jr. v. Court of Appeals, 278 SCRA 793 (1997).
A sale that fails to comply with Sec. 40 of Corporation Code, cannot be invalidated when the
buyer relies upon a Secretary’s Certificate confirming authority. A Secretary’s Certificate regular
on its face can be relied upon by a third party who does not have to investigate the truths of the
facts contained in such certification; otherwise corporate business transactions would become
tortuously slow and unnecessarily hampered. Esguerra v. CA, 267 SCRA 380 (1997).
Although the Corporate Secretary’s duty to record transfers of stock is ministerial, he cannot
be compelled to do so when the transferee’s title to said shares has no prima facie validity or is
uncertain. More specifically, a pledgor, prior to foreclosure and sale, does not acquire ownership
rights over the pledged shares and thus cannot compel the corporate secretary to record his
alleged ownership of such shares on the basis merely of the contract of pledge. Mandamus will
not issue to establish a right, but only to enforce one that is already established. Lim Tay v. Court
of Appeals, 293 SCRA 634 (1998);
Per its Secretary’s Certificate, the Foundation had given its President ostensible and apparent
authority to inter alia deal with the respondent bank, and therefore the Foundation is estopped
from questioning the President’s authority to obtain the subject loans from the respondent bank.
Lapulapu Foundation, Inc., v. Court of Appeals, 421SCRA 328 (2004).
(iv) Corporate Treasurer: A Corporate Treasurer’s function have generally been described as “to
receive and keeps funds of the corporation, and to disburse them in accordance with the authority
given him by the board or the properly authorized officers.” Unless duly authorized, a treasurer,
whose power are limited, cannot bind the corporation in a sale of its assets, which obviously is
foreign to a corporate treasurer’s function. San Juan Structural v. CA, 296 SCRA 631 (1998).
A Corporate Treasurer whose negligence in signing a confirmation letter for rediscounting of
crossed checks, knowing fully well that the checks were strictly endorsed for deposit only to the
payee’s account and not to be further negotiated, may be personally liable for the damaged
caused the corporation. Atrium Management Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 353 SCRA 23 (2001).
(v) Compliance Officer (Sec. 24): For corporations vested with public interests, the Board shall
appoint a compliance officer.
(vi) Manager: Although a branch manager of a bank, within his field and as to third persons, is the
general agent and is in general charge of the corporation, with apparent authority commensurate
with the ordinary business entrusted him and the usual course and conduct thereof, yet the power
to modify contracts of the bank remains generally with the Board. Being a branch manager alone
is insufficient to support the conclusion that he has been clothed with “apparent authority” to
verbally alter terms of the bank’s written contract, such the mortgage contract. Bañate v.
Philippine Countryside Rural Bank (Liloan, Cebu), Inc., 625 SCRA 21 (2010).
81
PSBA v. Leaño, 127 SCRA 778 (1984); Dy v. NLRC, 145 SCRA 211 (1986); Visayan v. NLRC, 196 SCRA 410 (1991); Easycall Communications
Phils., v. King, 478 SCRA 102 (2005); Marc II Marketing, Inc. v. Joson, 662 SCRA 35 (2011); Barba v. Liceo de Cagayan University, 686 SCRA 648 (2012);
Cosare v. Broadcom Asia, 715 SCRA 534 (2014).
82
Garcia v. Eastern Telecommunications Philippines, 585 SCRA 450 (2009).
83
Okol v. Slimmers World Int’l, 608 SCRA 97 (2009); FVR Skills and Services Exponents v. Seva, 739 SCRA 271 (2014).
84
Marc II Marketing, Inc. v. Joson, 662 SCRA 35 (2011); Barba v. Liceo de Cagayan University, 686 SCRA 648 (2012); Cosare v. Broadcom Asia, Inc.,
715 SCRA 534 (2014); Ellao y Dela Vega v. Batanga I Electric Cooperative, G.R. No. 209166, 09 July 2018.
46
relieved of all responsibilities which they would otherwise incur by reason of any contracted entered
into which this company either for their own benefit or for the benefit of any person, firm, or corporation
to which they may be interested. The impact of these provisions upon the traditional fiduciary
relationship between the directors and the stockholders of the company is too obvious to escape
notice by the SEC which is called upon to protect the interests of investors. Palting v. San Jose
Petroleum, 18 SCRA 924 (1966).
In Philippine jurisdiction, the members of the Board of Directors have a three-fold duty: duty of
obedience, duty of diligence, and the duty of loyalty. Accordingly, the members of the Board (1) shall
direct the affairs of the corporation only in accordance with the purpose for which it was organized; (2)
shall not willfully and knowingly vote for or assent to patently unlawful acts of the corporation or act in
bad faith or with gross negligence in directing the affairs of the corporation; and (3) shall not acquire
any personal or pecuniary interest in conflict with their duty as such directors or trustees. Strategic
Alliance Dev. Corp. v. Radstock Securities Ltd., 607 SCRA 413 (2009), citing VILLANUEVA, PHILIPPINE
CORPORATE LAW, 2001, p. 318.
(ii) Using Inside Information: When a director and majority stockholder, who is the administrator
of corporate affairs directly negotiating the sale of corporate landholdings to the Government at
great prices, purchases the stocks of a shareholder without informing the latter of the on-going
negotiations, such director is deemed to have fraudulently acquired the shareholdings by way of
deceit practiced by means of concealing his knowledge of important corporate affairs. Strong v.
Repide, 41 Phil. 947 (1909).
Doctrine of corporate opportunity applies to confidential employees of the corporation. cf. Sing
Juco v. Llorente, 43 Phil. 589 (1922).
(iii) Self-Dealings of Directors and Officers (Sec. 31): See SEC Memo Circular No. 10-2019
[Section 31 of Revised Corporation Code] on self-dealings by directors and officers merely incorporate
well-established principles in Corporate Law. A director who enters into a distributorship
agreement with the corporation would make the contract voidable at the option of the corporation
47
especially when the terms are disadvantageous to the corporation. Such director cannot claim the
same doctrine as an outsider dealing in good faith with the corporation. Prime White Cement
Corp. v. IAC, 220 SCRA 103 (1993).
Philippine Bank of Commerce v. Court of Appeals [“CA”], 269 SCRA 695 (1997); Bank of P.I. v. CA, 326 SCRA 641 (2000); Bank of P.I. v. Casa
Montessori Internationale, 430 SCRA 261 (2004); Bank of P.I. v. Lifetime Marketing Corp., 555 SCRA 373 (2008); Philippine Savings Bank v.
Chowking Food Corp., 557 SCRA 318 (2008); Bank of America v. Philippine Racing Club, 594 SCRA 301 (20019); Metropolitan Bank v. Mariñas,
625 SCRA 511 (2011).
86
Associated Bank v. Tan, 446 SCRA 282 (2004); Sandejar v. Ignacio, 541 SCRA 61 (2007); Bank of P.I. v. Lifetime Marketing Corp., 555 SCRA
373 (2008); PNB v. Velasco, 564 SCRA 512 (2008); Security Bank v. RCBC, 577 SCRA 407 (2009); Equitable PCI Bank v. Tan, 628 SCRA 346
(2010); Citibank v. Dinopol, 635 SCRA 649 (2010); PCI Bank v. Balmaceda, 658 SCRA 33 (2011); Metropolitan Bank v. Tobias III, 664 SCRA 165
(2012); Metropolitan Bank v. Centro Dev. Corp., 672 SCRA 325 (2012); Comsaving Bank v. Capistrano, 704 SCRA 72 (2013).
49
liability but the direct responsibility of the corporation they represent. Polymer Rubber Corp. v.
Salamuding, 702 SCRA 153 (2013).
Unless they have exceeded their authority, corporate officers are not personally liable for their
official acts, because a corporation, by legal fiction, has a personality separate and distinct from its
officers, stockholders and members. Price v. Innodata Phils., Inc., 567 SCRA 269 (2008).87
Mere ownership by an officer (President) of majority of the equity of the corporation do not
warrant a piercing of the veil of corporate fiction to make such officer personally liable for the debts of
the corporation. Palay, Inc. v. Clave, 124 SCRA 638 (1993).88
A corporation has a personality separate and distinct from the persons composing or
representing it; hence, personal liability attaches only in exceptional cases, such as when the director,
trustee, or officer is guilty of bad faith or gross negligence in directing the affairs of the corporation.
Continental Cement Corp. v. Asea Brown Boveri, Inc., 659 SCRA 137 (2011).89
To hold a director personally liable for debts of the corporation, and thus pierce the veil of
corporate fiction, the bad faith or wrongdoing of the director must be established clearly and
convincingly. Bad faith is never presumed. Bad faith does not connote bad judgment or negligence.
Bad faith imports a dishonest purpose. Bad faith means [a] breach of a known duty through some ill
motive or interest. Bad faith partakes of the nature of fraud. Carag v. NLRC, 520 SCRA 28 (2007).90
“Bad faith” does not arise just because a corporation fails to pay its obligation, because the
inability to pay one’s obligation is not synonymous with fraudulent intent not to honor the obligations.
In order to piece the veil of corporate fiction, for reasons of negligence by the director, trustee or
officer in the conduct of the transactions of the corporation, such negligence must be “gross”.
Magaling v. Ong, 562 SCRA 152 (2008).
Holding an officer personally liable for directing the corporate affairs with gross negligence or in
bad faith does not amount to an application of the doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction, for
such personal liability is imposed directly under [Section 30 of Revised Corporation Code] to directors
and officers who are guilty of violating their duty of diligence. Sanchez v. Republic, 603 SCRA 229
(2009).
c. xJURISPRUDENCE IN LABOR LAW: Under Article 283 of the Labor Code, since a corporate employer is
an artificial person, it must have an officer who can be presumed to be the employer, “acting in the
interest of (the) employer” and therefore the highest officer becomes personally liable for labor claims.
A.C. Ransom Labor Union-CCLU v. NLRC, 142 SCRA 269 (1986).
(i) Overturning the A.C. Ransom Ruling: Only the responsible officer who had a hand in illegally
dismissing an employee should be held personally liable for the corporate obligations arising from
such act. Maglutac v. NLRC, 189 SCRA 767 (1990);95 for the separate juridical personality of a
corporation to be disregarded as to make the highest corporate officer personally liable on labor
claims, the wrongdoing must be clearly and convincingly established. Del Rosario v. NLRC, 187
SCRA 777 (1990).
Corporate officers are not personally liable for money claims of discharged employees unless
they acted with evident malice and bad faith in terminating their employment. AHS/Philippines v.
Court of Appeals, 257 SCRA 319 (1996).96
In labor cases, directors and officers are solidarily liable for the termination of employment of
employees done with malice or in bad faith. In this case, it is undisputed that the officers have a
direct hand in the illegal dismissal of the employees. They were the one, who as high-ranking
officers and directors of the corporation, signed the Board resolution retrenching the employees
on the feigned ground of serious business losses that had no basis apart from an unsigned and
unaudited Income Statement. Uichico v. NLRC, 273 SCRA 35 (1997).
A corporation, being a juridical entity, may act only through its directors, officers and
employees and obligations incurred by them, acting as corporate agents, are not theirs but the
direct accountabilities of the corporation. In labor cases, directors and officers are solidarily liable
with the corporation for the termination of employment of employees done with malice or bad
faith. Brent Hospital, Inc. v. NLRC, 292 SCRA 304 (1998).97
93
Emilio Cano Enterprises v. CIR, 13 SCRA 291 (1965); Arcilla v. CA, 215 SCRA 120 (1992).
94
Singian, Jr. v. Sandiganbayan, 478 SCRA 348 (2005); EDSA Shangri-La Hotel and Resorts, Inc. v. BF Corp., 556 SCRA 25 (2008).
95
Gudez v. NLRC, 183 SCRA 644 (1990); Chua v. NLRC, 182 SCRA 353 (1990); Reahs Corp. v. NLRC, 271 SCRA 247 (1997)
96
Nicario v. NLRC, 295 SCRA 619 (1998); Flight Attendants and Stewards Assn. of the Phils. v. PAL, 559 SCRA 252 (2008); M+W Zander Phils. v.
Enriquez, 588 SCRA 590 (2009); AMA Computer College-East Rizal v. Ignacio, 590 SCRA 633, (2009); Lowe, Inc. v. CA, 596 SCRA 140 (2009); Peñaflor v.
Outdoor Clothing Manufacturing Corp., 618 SCRA 208 (2010).
97
Culili v. Eastern Telecommunications Phils., 642 SCRA 338 (2011); Grandteq Industrial Steel Products v. Estrella, 646 SCRA 391 (2011); Alert
Security and Investigation Agency, v. Pasawilan, 657 SCRA 655 (2011); Lynvil Fishing Enterprises v. Ariola, 664 SCRA 679 (2012); Blue Sky Trading Co. v.
Blas, 667 SCRA 727 (2012); Polymer Rubber Corp. v. Salamuding, 702 SCRA 153 (2013); Ico v. STI, Inc., 729 SCRA 439 (2014); De Castro v. CA, 805
SCRA 265 (2016); Lozada v. Mendoza, 805 SCRA 673 (2016).
51
Officers cannot be held personally liable for damages on account of employees dismissal
because the employer corporation has a personality distinct from its officers who merely acted as
agents. Malayang Samahan… sa M. Greenfields v. Ramos, 357 SCRA 77 (2001).98
(ii) Limiting the A.C. Ransom Ruling to Insolvent Corporation: A.C. Ransom is not in point
because there the corporation actually ceased operations after the decision of the court was
promulgated against it, making it necessary to enforce it against its former president. When the
corporation is still existing and able to satisfy the judgment in favor of the private respondent,
corporate officers cannot be held personally liable. Lim v. NLRC, 171 SCRA 328 (1989).
A.C. Ransom will apply only where the persons who are made personally liable for the
employees’ claims are stockholders-officers of employer corporation. Here, a mere general
manager while admittedly the highest ranking corporate representative, is nevertheless not a
stockholder and much less a member of the Board nor an officer thereof. De Guzman v. NLRC,
211 SCRA 723 (1992).
(iii) A.C. Ransom Reiterated Again in Restuarante Las Conchas v. Llego, 314 SCRA 24 (1999).99
(iv) Definitive Overturning of A.C. Ransom Ruling: It is settled that in the absence of malice, bad
faith, or specific provisions of law, a stockholder or an officer of a corporation cannot be made
personally liable for corporate liabilities. McLeod v. NLRC, 512 SCRA 222 (2007).100
Clearly, in A.C. Ransom, President organized ROSARIO to evade payment of backwages to
the 22 strikers. This situation, or anything similar showing malice or bad faith on the part of
Patricio, does not obtain in the present case. [What applies therefore is the ruling [i]n Santos v.
NLRC, [254 SCRA 673 (1996)]. McLeod v. NLRC, 512 SCRA 222 (2007).101
It was clarified in Carag v. NLRC, 520 SCRA 28 (2007), and McLeod v. NLRC, 512 SCRA 22
(2007), that Article 212(e) of Labor Code, by itself, does not make an officer personally liable for
corporate debts—the governing law on personal liability of directors or officers for debts of the
corporation is still Sec. 31 of Corporation Code. Pantranco Employees Assn. (PEA-PTGWO) v.
NLRC, 581 SCRA 598 (2009).102
98
AMA Computer College-East Rizal v. Ignacio, 590 SCRA 633 (2009).
99
Villanueva v. Adre, 172 SCRA 876 (1989); Carmelcraft Corp. v. NLRC, 186 SCRA 393 (1990); Valderrama v. NLRC, 256 SCRA 466 (1996); NYK Int’l
Knitwear Corp. Phil. v. NLRC, 397 SCRA 607 (2003).
100
LBP v. CA, 364 SCRA 375 (2001); Bogo-Medellin Sugarcane Planters Assn., Inc. v. NLRC, 296 SCRA 108 (1998); Complex Electronics Employees
Assn. v. NLRC, 310 SCRA 403 (1999); Acesite Corp. v. NLRC, 449 SCRA 360 (2005); Coca-Cola Bottlers Phils. v. Daniel, 460 SCRA 494 (2005); Suldao v.
Cimech System Construction, 506 SCRA 256 (2006); Supreme Steel Pipe Corp. v. Bardaje, 522 SCRA 155 (2007); Culili v. Eastern Telecommunications
Phils., 642 SCRA 338 (2011). Grandteq Industrial Steel Products v. Estrella, 646 SCRA 391 (2011); Mirant (Phils.) Corp. v. Caro, 723 SCRA 465 (2014);
PNOC Energy Dev. Corp. v. Buenfiaje, 795 SCRA 79 (2016).
101
H.R. Carlos Construction v. Marina Properties Corp., 421 SCRA 428 (2004); Pamplona Plantation Co. v. Acosta, 510 SCRA 249 (2006); Elcee Farms,
Inc. v. NLRC, 512 SCRA 602 (2007); Uy v. Villanueva, 526 SCRA 73 (2007).
102
David v.National Federation of Labor Unions, 586 SCRA 100 (2009); Alert Security Investigation Agency v. Pasawilan, 657 SCRA 655 (2011).
52
The registration of shares in a stockholder’s name, the issuance of stock certificates, and the right to
receive dividends are all rights that flow from ownership. Lim Tay v. CA, 293 SCRA 634 (1998).103
As early as the case of Fisher v. Trinidad, We already declared that “[t]he distinction between the title
of a corporation, and the interest of its members or stockholders in the property of the corporation, is
familiar and well-settled. The ownership of that property is in the corporation, and not in the holders of
shares of its stock. The interest of each stockholder consists in the right to a proportionate part of the
profits whenever dividends are declared by the corporation, during its existence, under its charter, and to
a like proportion of the property remaining, upon the termination or dissolution of the corporation, after
payment of its debts.” Mobilia Products, Inc. v. Umezawa, 452 SCRA 736 (2005).
A person who desires to be recognized as stockholder to exercise stockholders’ right must secure
standing by having his ownership of share recorded on the stock and transfer book. Thus, only those
whose ownership of shares are duly registered in the stock and transfer book are considered
stockholders of record and are entitled to all rights of a stockholder. Guy v. Guy, 790 SCRA 288 (2016).
103
TCL Sales Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 349 SCRA 35 (2001).
53
In a landholding corporation which by constitutional mandate is limited to 40% foreign equity,
where there is a right of first refusal t between the co-shareholders, the fact that the corporation owns
land cannot deprive stockholders of their right of first refusal. No law disqualifies a person from
purchasing shares in a landholding corporation even if the latter will exceed the allowed foreign equity,
what the law disqualifies is the corporation from owning land. J.G. Summit Holdings v. Court of
Appeals, 450 SCRA 169 (2005).
c. Remedy If Registration Refused:
Mandamus will not lie to compel the corporate secretary to register the transfer of shares in the
corporate books when the petitioner is not the registered stockholder nor does he hold a power of
attorney from the latter. This is under the general rule that as between the corporation and its
shareholders, the corporation looks only to its books for the purpose of determining who its share-
holders are, so that a mere indorsee of a certificate of stock, claiming to be the owner, will not
necessarily be recognized as such by the corporation and its officers, in absence of express
instructions of the registered owner to make such transfer to the indorsee, or a power of attorney
authorizing such transfer. Hager v. Bryan, 19 Phil. 138 (1911).104
BUT SEE: It is already settled jurisprudence that the registration of a transfer of shares of stock is
a ministerial duty on the part of the corporation. Aggrieved parties may then resort to the remedy of
mandamus to compel corporations that wrongfully or unjustifiably refuse to record the transfer or to
issue new certificates of stock. This remedy is available even upon the instance of a bona fide
transferee who is able to establish a clear legal right to the registration of the transfer. Andaya v.
Rural Bank of Cabadbaran, 799 SCRA 325 (2016).
A stipulation on the stock certificate that any assignment would not be binding on the corporation
unless registered in the corporate books as required under the bylaws and without providing when
registration should be made, would mean that the cause of action and the determination of
prescription period would begin only when demand for registration is made and not at the time of the
assignment of the certificate. Won v. Wack Wack Golf & Country Club, 104 Phil. 466 (1958).
Since the law does not prescribe a period within which the registration of purchase of shares
should be effected, the action to enforce the right does not accrue until there has been a demand and
a refusal concerning the transfer.” Ponce v. Alsons Cement Corp., 393 SCRA 602 (2002).105
The claim for damages of what the shares could have sold had the demand for their registration
in the name of the buyer been complied with is deemed to be speculative damage and non-
recoverable. Batong Buhay Gold Mines v. Court of Appeals, 147 SCRA 4 (1987).
d. Pre-Meeting Procedures
Closure of the Stock and Transfer Book: 20 days regular; 7 days special (Sec. 49)
Postponing of Meeting: 2 weeks unless Bylaws provides otherwise (Sec. 49)
d. When Right to Vote Exercisable Thru Remote Communication or In Absentia (Sec. 23)
e. Right to Vote of Secured Creditors and Administrators (Sec. 54)
When shares are pledged by means of endorsement in blank and delivery of the covering
certificates to lender, the pledgee does not become the owner thereof simply by the failure of the
registered stockholder to pay his loan. Consequently, without proper foreclosure, the lender cannot
demand that the shares be registered in his name. Lim Tay v. CA, 293 SCRA 634 (1998).
Although the Rules of Court, while permitting an executor or administrator to represent or to bring
suits on behalf of the deceased, do no prohibit the heirs from representing the deceased. When no
administrator has been appointed, there is all the more reason to recognize the heirs as the proper
representatives of the deceased. Gochan v. Young, 354 SCRA 207 (2001).
e. Voting in Case of Joint Ownership (Sec. 55)
f. Treasury Shares Have No Voting Rights (Sec. 57) Tan v. Sycip, 499 SCRA 216 (2006).
56
a. PROXY (Sec. 57)
Proxy solicitation involves the securing and submission of proxies, while proxy validation concerns
the validation of such secured and submitted proxies. It is possible that an intra-corporate controversy
may animate a disgruntled shareholder to complain to the SEC, corporation’s violations of SEC rules
and regulations, but that motive alone should not be sufficient to deprive the SEC of its investigatory
and regulatory powers, especially when such powers are exercisable on a motu proprio basis. GSIS v.
Court of Appeals, 585 SCRA 679 (2009).
SEC’s power to pass upon the validity of proxies in election contests has effectively been
withdrawn, tied as it is to its abrogated jurisdictional powers. The fact that the jurisdiction of the regular
courts under Section 5(c) is confined to the voting on election of officers, and not on all matters which
may be voted upon by stockholders, elucidates that the power of SEC to regulate proxies remains
extant and could very well be exercised when stockholders vote on matters other than the election of
directors. GSIS v. Court of Appeals, 585 SCRA 679 (2009).
b. VOTING TRUST AGREEMENTS (Sec. 58): A VTA separates the voting rights and other rights covered of
the stock from other attributes of ownership, intended to be irrevocable for a definite period of time and
the purpose of which is to give to the trustee to acquire voting control of the corporation. Lee v. Court
of Appeals, 205 SCRA 752 (1992).
The trustor has a right to terminate the voting trust agreement for breach thereof. Everett v. Asia
Banking Corporation, 49 Phil. 512 (1926).
Voting trust agreement as part of a loan arrangement. NIDC v. Aquino, 163 SCRA 153 (1988).
107
Puno v. Puno Enterprises, 599 SCRA 585 (2009).
108
Roque v. People, 826 SCRA 618 (2017).
57
a legitimate purpose in making his demand. The exercising stockholder must set forth the reasons and
the purposes for which he desires such inspection. Gonzales v. PNB, 122 SCRA 489 (1983).
The only express limitations on the right of inspection under [Section 734 of Revised Corporation
Code] are: (a) it should be exercised at reasonable hours on business days; (b) the person demanding
the right to examine and copy excerpts from the corporate records and minutes has not improperly
used any information secured through any previous examination of records; and (c) the demand is
made in good faith or for a legitimate purpose. Africa v. PCGG, 205 SCRA 39 (1992).
[Section 73 of Revised Corporation Code[ places the burden of showing unlawful intention on the
part of corporate officers who refuse a registered stockholder from exercise his right to inspect.
Republic v. Sandiganbayan, 199 SCRA 39 (1999); Terelay Investment and Dev. Corp. v. Yulo, 765
SCRA 1 (2015).
Summary of Rulings: The right to inspect corporate books and records:
Is exercisable through agents and representatives, otherwise it would often be useless to the
stockholder who does not know corporate intricacies. W.G. Philpotts v. Philippine Manufacturing Co.,
40 Phil. 471 (1919).
Cannot be denied on the ground that the director is on unfriendly terms with the officers of the
corporation whose records are sought to be inspected. Veraguth v. Isabela Sugar Co., 57 Phil. 266
(1932).
Although it includes the right to make copies, does not authorize bringing the books or records outside
of corporate premises. Veraguth v. Isabela Sugar Co., 57 Phil. 266 (1932).
Does not include the right of access to minutes until such minutes have been written up and approved
by the directors. Veraguth v. Isabela Sugar Co., 57 Phil. 266 (1932).
Cannot be limited to a period of ten days shortly prior to the annual stockholders’ meeting, as such
would be an unreasonable restriction and violates the legal provision granting the exercise of such
right “at reasonable hours.” Pardo v. Hercules Lumber Co., 47 Phil. 964 (1924).
109
Spouses Hiteroza v. Cruzada, 794 SCRA 511 (2016).
58
any other corporation, or was not acting in good faith or for a legitimate purpose in making his
demand, the contrary must be shown or proved. Ang-Abaya v. Ang, 573 SCRA 129 (2008).110
Officer’s refusal to allow a stockholder to review any corporate record, including the stock and
transfer book, provided for in [Section 73 of Revised Corporation Code] would constitute a criminal
offense under [Section 161 thereof] whch anyway punishes all violations of the [Revised Corporation
Code.] Yujuico v. Quimbao, 724 SCRA 262 (2014).
While a cloud of doubt is cast upon the existence of criminal intent on the part of the corporate
officers, it is jurisprudentially settled that proof of malice or deliberate intent (men rea) is not essential
in offenses punishable by special laws, which are mala prohibita. [Section 73, in relation to Sec. 161,
of the Revised Corporation Code], a special law, provides for penalties relative to the commission of
offenses, which cannot be trivialized, lest the public purpose for which they are crafter be defeated
and put to naught. Chua v. People, 801 SCRA 436, 451 (2016).
e. Criminal Sanction under Section 158 for “Stockholder” Who Abuse the Right of Inspection
or Reproduction (Sec. 73)
b. Condition Precedent: When Board Cannot Properly Exercise Its Business Judgment
GENERAL RULE: In the absence of a special authority from the Board of Directors to institute a suit in
behalf of the corporation, the President or managing director is disqualified by law to sue in her own
name or for the corporation. The power to sue and be sued is lodged in the Board that exercises its
corporate powers and not in the President. Bitong v. Court of Appeals, 292 SCRA 503 (1998).
Under Sec. 36, in relation to Sec. 23, a corporation’s power to sue is lodged with its Board. An
individual stockholder is permitted to institute a derivative suit on behalf of the corporation in order to
protect or vindicate corporate rights, whenever the officials of the corporation refuse to sue, or are the
ones to be sued, or hold the control of the corporation. In such actions, the suing stockholder is
110
Sy Tiong Shiou v. Sy Chim, 582 SCRA 517 (2009); Roque v. People, 826 SCRA 618 (2017).
111
Ang v. Ang, 699 SCRA 272 (2013).
112
Hi-Yield Realty v. CA, 590 SCRA 548, 556 (2009); Strategic Alliance Dev. Corp. v. Radstock Securities Ltd., 607 SCRA 413 (2009).
59
regarded as a nominal party, with the corporation as the real party in interest. Chua v. Court of
Appeals, 443 SCRA 259 (2004).113
Minority stockholders do not have any statutory right to override the business judgments of the
officers and Boards of Directors. It is settled that a stockholder's right to institute a derivative suit is not
based on any express provision of the Corporation Code, or even the Securities Regulation Code, but
is impliedly recognized when the said laws make corporate directors or officers liable for damages
suffered by the corporation and its stockholders for violation of their fiduciary duties. Ching v. Subic
Bay Golf and Country Club, Inc., 734 SCRA 569 (2014).114
While questions of policy and management are left to the honest decision of the officers and
directors of a corporation, and the courts are without authority to substitute their judgment for the
judgment of the Board of Directors; yet where the corporate directors are guilty of breach of trust—not
of mere error of judgment or abuse of discretion—and intracorporate remedy is futile or useless, a
stockholder may institute a suit in behalf of himself and other stockholders and for the benefit of the
corporation. However, the corporation is the real party in interest in a derivative suit and the suing
stockholder is only a nominal party. A derivative suit must be differentiated from a class suit. Cua, Jr.
v. Tan, 607 SCRA 645 (2009).115
In Cua, v. Tan, We held that by virtue of ratification, the acts of the Board of Directors become the
acts of the stockholders themselves, even if those acts were, at the outset, unauthorized. To declare
the Board resolution null and void will serve no practical use or value, or affect any of the rights of the
parties, because the subsequent stockholders’ resolution approving and ratifying said acquisition and
the manner in which PRCI shall constitute the JTH Board of Directors, will still remain valid and
binding. Lopez Realty, Inc. v. Spouses Tanjangco, 739 SCRA 644 (2014).
113
Filipinas Port Services v. Go, 518 SCRA 453 (2007); Yu v. Yukayguan, 589 SCRA 588 (2009); Hi-Yield Realty v. CA, 590 SCRA 548 (2009).
114
Yu v. Yukayguan, 589 SCRA 588 (2009); BSP v. Campa,r., 671 SCRA 461 (2012); Florete, Jr. v. Florete, Sr., 781 SCRA 285 (2016).
115
Majority Stockholders of Ruby Industrial Corp. v. Lim, 650 SCRA 461 (2011).
116
Filipinas Port Services v. Go, 518 SCRA 453 (2007); Reyes v. RTC of Makati, 561 SCRA 593 (2008); Hi-Yield Realty v. CA, 590 SCRA 548 (2009).
117
Hi-Yield Realty v. CA, 590 SCRA 548, 556 (2009); Strategic Alliance Dev. Corp. v. Radstock Securities Ltd., 607 SCRA 413 (2009); Cua, Jr. v. Tan,
607 SCRA 645 (2009); Ang v. Ang, 699 SCRA 272 (2013).
118
Gochan v. Young, 354 SCRA 207 (2001).
60
third person in favor of the corporation. Similarly, if a corporation has a defense to an action
against it and is not asserting it, a stockholder may intervene and defend on behalf of the
corporation. Chua v. Court of Appeals, 443 SCRA 259 (2004).119
In a derivative suit, a stockholder may validly institute a derivative suit to vindicate the alleged
corporate injury; in which case such stockholders is only a nominal party while the corporation is
the real party-in-interest. Filipinas Port Services v. Go, 518 SCRA 453 (2007).
A minority stockholder-director has no power or authority to sue on the corporation’s behalf.
Nor can we uphold this as a derivative suit, since it is required that the minority stockholder suing
for and on behalf of the corporation must allege in his complaint that he is suing on a derivative
cause of action on behalf of the corporation and all other stockholders similarly situated who may
wish to join him in the suit. There is now showing that petitioner has complied with the foregoing
requisites. Tam Wing Tak v. Makasiar, 350 SCRA 475 (2001).120
The status of heirs as co-owners of shares of stocks prior to the partition of the decedent’s
estate does not immediately and necessarily make them stockholders of the corporation–-unless
and until there is compliance with the Sec. 63 on the manner of transferring shares, the heirs do
not become registered stockholders of the corporation. Puno and Puno Enterprises, Inc., 599
SCRA 585 (2009).121
(ii) Exhaustion of Intra-Corporate Remedies: A condition precedent to the filing of a derivative
suit is that the party has tried to exhaust intra-corporate remedies, i.e., has made a demand on
the Board of Directors for the appropriate relief, but the latter has failed or refused to heed his
plea. Everett v. Asia Banking Corp., 49 Phil. 512 (1927); Angeles v. Santos, 64 Phil. 697 (1937).
A derivative suit to question the validity of the foreclosure of the mortgage on corporate assets
can be filed without prior demand upon the Board of Directors where the legality of the
constitution of the Board lies at the center of the issues. DBP v. Pundogar, 218 SCRA 118
(1993).
The obvious intent behind the rule requiring the stockholder filing a derivative suit to first exert
all reasonable efforts to exhaust all remedies available under the articles of incorporation, by
laws, laws or rules governing the corporation to obtain relief he desires is to make the derivative
suit the final recourse of the stockholders, after all other remedies to obtain the relief sought had
failed. Yu v. Yukayguan, 589 SCRA 588 (2009).122
While it is true that the complaining stockholder must satisfactorily show that he has
exhausted all means to redress his grievances within the corporation, except when such remedy
is complete control of the person against whom the suit is being filed. The reason is obvious: a
demand upon the board to institute an action and prosecute the same effectively would have
been useless and an exercise in futility. Hi-Yield Realty, Inc. v. CA, 590 SCRA 548, 557 (2009).
(iii) Relief/Remedies Must Be for the Benefit of the Corporation: The complaint cannot
demand for the defendants to pay the suing stockholders the value of their respective
participation in the assets that have been damaged, for a derivative suit must have cause of
action for the benefit of the corporation. Evangelista v. Santos, 86 Phil. 387 (1950).123
Appointment of receiver can be an ancillary remedy in a derivative suit. Chase v. CFI of
Manila, 18 SCRA 602 (1966).
A suit to enforce preemptive rights in a corporation is not a derivative suit, and therefore a
temporary restraining order enjoining a person from representing the corporation will not bar such
action, because it is instituted on behalf and for the benefit of the shareholder, not the
corporation. Lim v. Lim-Yu, 352 SCRA 216 (2001).
Allegations of injury to the relators can co-exist with those pertaining to the corporation—
merely gives an additional cause of action against the erring directors and does not disqualify
them from filing a derivative suit on behalf of the corporation. Gochan v. Young, 354 SCRA 207
(2001).
119
Go v. Distinction Properties Dev. and Construction, Inc., 671 SCRA 461 (2012).
120
Hi-Yield Realty. v. CA, 590 SCRA 548 (2009).
121
Reyes v. RTC of Makati, Br. 142, 561 SCRA 593 (2008).
122
Ching v. Subic Bay Golf and Country Club, Inc., 734 SCRA 569 (2014).
123
Reyes v. Tan, 3 SCRA 198 (1961); Republic Bank v. Cuaderno, 19 SCRA 671 (1967).
61
Where directors have committed a breach of trust either by their fraud, ultra vires acts, or
negligence, and the corporation is unable or unwilling to institute suit to remedy the wrong, a
stockholder may sue on behalf of himself and other stockholders and for the benefit of the
corporation, to bring about a redress of the wrong done directly to the corporation and indirectly to
the stockholders. In such derivative suit, the corporation is the real party in interest while the
stockholder filing suit is only nominal party. Hornilla v. Salunat, 405 SCRA 220 (2003).
Since it is the corporation that is the real party-in-interest in a derivative suit, then the reliefs
prayed for must be for the benefit or interest of the corporation. When the relief prayed for does
not pertain to the corporation, then it is an improper derivative suit. Legaspi Towers 300, Inc. v.
Muer, 673 SCRA 453 (2012),124 citing VILLANUEVA, PHILIPPINE CORPORATE LAW, 1998 ed., p. 375.
A derivative suit presupposes that the corporation is the injured party and the individual
stockholder who files the suit seeks to protect or vindicate corporate rights whenever the officials
of the corporation refuse to sue, or are the ones to be sued, or hold control of the corporation.
Here, the harm or injury that Aliño sought to be prevented pertains to properties registered under
Aliño and other third-party mortgagors. x x x Furthermore, the prayer in the complaint seeks for
recovery of the properties belonging to Aliño and other third party mortgagors, some of whom are
not stockholders of VR Holdings, who mortgaged their properties to BSP. BSP v. Campa, Jr.,
783 SCRA 476 (2016).
(iv) Lack of Appraisal Right: An allegation that appraisal rights were not available for the acts
complained of is another requisite for filing derivative suits under Rule 8, Section 1(3) of the
Interim Rules. Also a distinction must be made between an individual stockholder’s suit, a class
suit for stockholders from derivative suits. Villamor, Jr. v. Umale, 736 SCRA 325 (2014).125
(v) Must Not Be a Nuisance or Harassment Suit : Nuisance and harassment suits are prohibited,
and in determining whether a suit is a nuisance or harassment suit, the court shall consider,
among others, the follow: (a) The extent of the shareholding or interest of the initiating
stockholder or member; (b) subject matter of the suit; (c) legal and factual basis of the complaint;
(d) availability of appraisal rights for the act or acts complained of; and (e) prejudice or damage to
the corporation. In case of nuisance or harassments suits, the court may motu proprio or upon
motion dismiss the case. Ang v. Ang, 699 SCRA 272 (2013); BSP v. Campa, Jr., 787 SCRA
476 (2016).
d. Venue for Derivative Suit – Under Section 5, Rule 1 of the Interim Rules, the proper venue for
derivative suit would be in the RTC which has jurisdiction over the principal office of the corporation.
Hi-Yield Realty, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 590 SCRA 548 (2009).
10. Right to Proportionate Share of Remaining Assets Upon Dissolution (Sec. 139)
In the liquidation of a corporation, after the payment of all corporate liabilities, the remaining assets, if
any, must be distributed to the stockholders in proportion to their interests in the corporation, which is
referred to as liquidating dividend. President of PDIC v. Reyes, 460 SCRA 473 (2005).
126
Central Textile Mills v. NWPC, 260 SCRA 368 (1996); CIR v. First Express Pawnshop Co., Inc., 589 SCRA 253 (2009).
63
previously issued is used as a veil for the constructive distribution of cash dividends, and therefore
subject to tax. Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Court of Appeals, 301 SCRA 152 (1999).
d. Founders’ Shares (Sec. 7)127
e. Treasury Shares (Sec. 9): Treasury shares are stocks issued and fully paid for and re-acquired by
the corporation either by purchase, donation, forfeiture or other means, and do not have the status of
being outstanding shares and are not entitled to be voted upon nor participate in dividend
declarations. Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Manning, 66 SCRA 14 (1975).
A treasury share, either common or preferred, may be used for a variety of corporate purposes,
such as for a stock bonus plan for management and employees, or for acquiring another company. It
may be held indefinitely, resold or retired. While held in the company’s treasury, the stock earns no
dividends and has no vote in company affairs. COCOFED v. Republic, 600 SCRA 102 (2009).
f. Stock Warrants and Stock Options
g. Re-Classification and Exchange of Shares
“Reclassification of shares does not always bring any substantial alteration in the subscriber’s
proportional interest. But the exchange is different—there would be a shifting of the balance of stock
features like priority in dividend declarations or absence of voting rights. Yet neither the reclassification
nor exchange per se yields income for tax purposes. … In this case, the exchange of shares, without
more, produces no realized income to the subscriber. There is only a modification of the subscriber’s
rights and privileges—which is not a flow of wealth for tax purposes. The issue of taxable dividend
may arise only once a subscriber disposes of his entire interests and not when there is still
maintenance of proprietary interest.” CIR v. Court of Appeals, 301 SCRA 152 (1999).
Conversion of common shares into preferred shares through amendment of articles of
incorporation, is a legitimate exercise of corporate powers. Conversion does not amount to SMC using
its funds to effect conversion, but would amount merely to a reconfiguration of said (common) shares
into preferred shares. COCFED v. Republic, 600 SCRA 102 (2009).
127
In Castillo v. Balinghasay, 440 SCRA 442 (2004), the position that when the articles of incorporation provide expressly a class of shares to have the
exclusive right to vote and be voted for into the Board of Directors, that such shares would essentially be founder’s share was raised but not resolved.
64
Property, tangible or intangible, actually received by the corporation and necessary or
convenient for its use and lawful purposes at a fair valuation equal to the par value or
issued value of the stock issued
Labor performed for or services actually rendered to the corporation
Previously incurred indebtedness of the corporation
Amount transferred from unrestricted retained earnings to stated capital
Outstanding shares exchanged for stocks in the event of reclassification or conversion
Shares of stock in another corporation; and/or
Other generally accepted form of consideration
Stock dividends are in the nature of shares of stock issued to the stockholders, whereby amount of
unrestricted retained earnings converted into equity in the corporation’s books. Lincoln Phil. Life v. Court
of Appeals, 293 SCRA 92 (1998).128
131
Batangas Laguna Tayabas Bus Company, Inc. v. Bitanga, 362 SCRA 635 (2001).
132
Magsaysay-Labrador v. CA, 180 SCRA 266 (1989); Ponce v. Alsons Cement Corp., 393 SCRA 602 (2002).
68
unpaid subscription, and not to any indebtedness which a stockholder may owe the corporation arising
from any other transactions, like unpaid monthly dues. Fua Cun v. Summers, 44 Phil. 704 (1923).133
When the shares are covered by a stock certificate issued in the name of the usufructuary by the
original owner with the agreement between them that they should not be disposed or sold, but the
registered owner had pledged the shares by endorsement and delivery of the certificate to one who took
them in good faith and for value, the latter shall be preferred since registration of a security arrangement
covering shares of stock does not require, for its validity and binding effect on the world, to be registered
in the stock and transfer book. Monserrat v. Ceran, 58 Phil. 469 (1933).
In order for the chattel mortgage on shares of stock be valid and binding on third parties, registration
thereof in the stock and transfer book is not required and not legally effective. What is necessary is that
the chattel mortgage over the shares be registered in the Registry of Deeds of the principal place of
business of the corporation, as well as in the Registry of Deeds of the stockholders’ domicile. Chua
Guan v. Samahang Magsasaka, Inc., 62 Phil. 472 (1935).
The pledge of shares of stock covered by a certificate is valid and binding on third parties, when the
certificate of stock has been endorsed and delivered to the creditor, notwithstanding the fact that the
contract does not appear in a public instrument (chattel mortgage). “Certificates of stock … are quasi-
negotiable instruments in the sense that they may be given in pledge or mortgage to secure an
obligation.” Bachrach Motor Co. v. Lacson Ledesma, 64 Phil. 681 (1937).
Only fully paid shares for which certificates of stock have been issued are subject to the registration
requirement in the stock and transfer book in cases dealing with their sales and absolute disposition.
Nava v. Peers Marketing Corp., 74 SCRA 65 (1976).
The process of registering lis pendens is inapplicable to shares of stock which are personal
properties; however, however, formal notice given to the Corporate Secretary of claims to the shares of
stock shall be deemed equivalent of registration of an encumbrance or assignment of the shares on the
corporate books; and that by virtue of such registration through notice to the corporation, pending
litigation, third parties, or potential transferees pendente lite, may therefore be charged with constructive
notice of claimants line/title over the subject shares and the pending litigation involving the same. MR
Holdings, Ltd. V. Bajar, 683 SCRA 336 (2012).
a. Equitable Mortgage Assignment: The assignment of voting shares as security for a loan operates
to give the assignee not only the right to vote on the shares, but would also treat the assignee as the
owner of the shares (not just an equitable mortgage): “It is true that the assignment was predicated on
the intention that it would serve as security vis-à-vis DBP’s financial accommodation extended to PJI,
but it was a valid and duly executed assignment, subject to a resolutory condition, which was the
settlement of PJI’s loan obligation with DBP.” APT v. Sandiganbayan, 341 SCRA 551, 560 (2000).
133
China Banking Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 270 SCRA 503 (1997).
69
Situs of shares of stock is the domicile of the corporation to which they pertain to. Wells Fargo Bank
and Union v. Collector, 70 Phil. 325 (1940).134
3. “EQUITY” TRANSFERS
134
Tayag v. Benguet Consolidated, Inc., 26 SCRA 242 (1968); cf. Perkins v. Dizon, 69 Phil. 186 (1939).
135
Jiao v. NLRC, 670 SCRA 184 (2012).
136
Oromeca Lumber Co. v. SSS, 4 SCRA 1188 (1962); San Teodoro Dev. v. SSS, 8 SCRA 96 (1963).
70
The disposition by the controlling shareholder of all of its equity in the corporation warrants the
application of the alter ego piercing doctrine since it shows that the transferor had complete control of the
corporation (?). PHIVIDEC v. Court of Appeals, 181 SCRA 669 (1990).
PROPER DOCTRINE: The fact that a stockholder sells his equity in the corporation during the pendency
of a collection case against the corporation, does not make such stockholder personally liable for the
corporate debt, since disposing stockholder has no personal obligation to the creditor, and it is the
inherent right of stockholder to dispose of his shares anytime he desires. Remo, Jr. v. IAC, 172 SCRA
405 (1989).
f. Approval by PCC for Mergers Exceeding P1.0 Billion in Value (Secs. 16 and 17, R.A. 10667)
137
McLeod v. NLRC, 512 SCRA 222 (2007).
138
Associated Bank v. CA, 291 SCRA 511 (1998); Mindanao Savings and Loan Assn. v. Willkom, 634 SCRA 291 (2010).
71
Global is bound by the terms of the contract entered into by its predecessor-in-interest, Asian Bank.
Due to Global’s merger with Asian Bank and because it is the surviving corporation, it is as if it was the
one which entered into contract with Surecomp. In the same way, Global also has the right to exercise all
defenses, rights, privileges, and counter-claims of every kind and nature which Asian Bank may have or
invoke under the law. Global Business Holdings Inc. v. Surecompsoftware, B.V., 633 SCRA 94 (2010).
In a merger of two banks, the surviving bank cannot claim to be in good faith for the default
committed by the absorbed bank, since it is not an excuse from the legal consequences of the effects of a
merger or consolidation. Under [Section 79 of Revised Corporation Code], the surviving entity not only
acquires all the rights, privileges and assets of the absorbed corporation, but also the liabilities and
obligations of the latter as if the surviving company itself incurred it. In this case, since BSA was remised
in its obligations under the loan agreement, BPI as the surviving bank in the merger with BSA cannot
feign ignorance of transactions entered into by the former especially when it seeks to benefit from the
same by foreclosing the mortgage thereon. Ong v. BPI Family Savings Bank, Inc., 852 SCRA 614 (2017).
4. De Facto Mergers
In his book, Philippine Corporate Law, Dean Cesar Villanueva explained that under the Corporation
Code, “a de facto merger can be pursued by one corporation acquiring all or substantially all of the
properties of another corporation in exchange of shares of stock of the acquiring corporation. The
acquiring corporation would end up with the business enterprise of the target corporation; whereas, the
target corporation would end up with basically its only remaining assets being the shares of stock of the
acquiring corporation.” No de facto merger took place in the present case simply because the TRB
owners did not get in exchange for the bank’s assets and liabilities an equivalent value in Bancommerce
shares of stock. Bancommerce and TRB agreed with BSP approval to exclude from the sale the TRB's
contingent judicial liabilities, including those owing to RPN. Bank of Commerce v. RPN 9, 722 SCRA
520 (2014).
2. “Business-Enterprise” Transfers
There is no law requiring that the purchaser should absorb the employees of the selling company.
Well-established is the principle “that it is within the employer’s legitimate sphere of management control
of the business to adopt economic policies to make some changes or adjustments in their organization or
operations that would insure profit to itself or protect the investments of its stockholders. As in the
exercise of such management prerogative, the employer may merge or consolidate its business with
another, or sell or dispose all or substantially all of its assets and properties which may bring about the
dismissal or termination of its employees in the process Central Azucarera del Danao v. CA, 137
SCRA 295 (1985).
Where a corporation is closed for alleged losses and its equipment are transferred to another
company which engaged in the same operations, the separate juridical personality of the latter can be
pierced to make it liable for the labor claims of the employees of the closed company. National Federation
of Labor Union v. Ople, 143 SCRA 124 (1986).
Although a corporation may have ceased business operations and an entirely new company has
been organized to take over the same type of operations, it does not necessarily follow that no one may
now be held liable for illegal acts committed by the earlier firm. Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co., v. NLRC, 210
SCRA 277 (1992).139
139
Pepsi Cola Distributors v. NLRC, 247 SCRA 386 (1995)
72
Under the principle of absorption, a bona fide buyer or transferee of all, or substantially all, the
properties of the seller or transferor is not obliged to absorb the latter’s employees. The most that the
purchasing company may do, for reasons of public policy and social justice, is to give preference of
reemployment to the selling company’s qualified separated employees, who in its judgment are
necessary to the continued operation of the business establishment. In the case of a transfer of all or
substantially all of the assets of a corporation (i.e., business enterprise transfers), the liabilities of the
previous owners to its employees are not enforceable against the buyer or transferee, unless (a) the latter
unequivocally assumes them; or (b) the sale or transfer was made in bad faith. Barayoga v. APT, 473
SCRA 690 (2005). 140
Where a corporation transferred all its assets to another corporation “to settle its obligations” and not
amounting to a fraudulent transfer, that does not authorize application of the piercing doctrine to make the
transferee liable for labor claims against the transferor. McLeod v. NLRC, 512 SCRA 222 (2007).
Settled now is the rule that where one corporation sells or otherwise transfers all its assets to
another corporation for value, the latter is not, by that fact alone, liable for the debts and liabilities of the
transferor. Pantranco Employees Association (PEA-PTGWO) v. NLRC, 581 SCRA 598 (2009).
3. “Equity” Transfers
Where the change of ownership is done in bad faith, or is used to defeat the rights of labor, the
successor-employer is deemed to have absorbed the employees and is held liable for the transgressions
of his or her predecessor. Peñafrancia Tours and Travel Transport v. Sarmiento, 634 SCRA 279 (2010).
Where transfer of ownership is in good faith, the transferee is under no legal duty to absorb the
transferor’s employees as there is no law compelling such absorption. For reasons of public policy and
social justice, transferee may give preference to the qualified separated employees in the filling of
vacancies in the facilities of the purchaser. Manlimos v. NLRC, 242 SCRA 145 (1995).141
5. SPIN-OFFS
140
Sunio v. NLRC, 127 SCRA 390 (1984); San Felipe Neri School of Mandaluyong, Inc. v. NLRC, 201 SCRA 478 (1991); Yu v. NLRC, 245 SCRA 134
(1995); Complex Electronics Employees Assn. v. NLRC, 310 SCRA 403 (1999).
141
Robledo v. NLRC, 238 SCRA 52 (1994); Pepsi-Cola Bottling Co. v. NLRC, 210 SCRA 277 (1992); DBP v. NLRC, 186 SCRA 841 (1990); Coral v.
NLRC, 258 SCRA 704 (1996); Avon Dale Garments, Inc. v. NLRC, 246 SCRA 733 (1995).
142
National Union Bank Employees v. Lazaro, 156 SCRA 123 (1988); First Gen. Marketing Corp. v. NLRC, 223 SCRA 337 (1993); Pharmacia and
Upjohn, Inc. v. Albayda, 628 SCRA 544 (2010).
143
Philippine Geothermal, Inc. Employees Union v. Unocal Philippines, Inc., 804 SCRA 286 (2016).
73
Where a spin-off by the corporation of a division into another corporation is done for a valid business
reason and in good faith, the employees in the spun-off unit no longer belong to the bargaining unit of the
mother company, and that the employees in the new corporations constitute new bargaining unit. SMC
Employees Union-PTGWO v. Confessor, 262 SCRA 81 (1996).
In business parlance, a corporate spin-off occurs when a department, division or portions of the
corporate business enterprise is sold-off or assigned to a new corporation that will arise by the process
which may constitute it into a subsidiary of the original corporation. To spin-off and the attendant transfer
of employees are legitimate business interests of Marsman. The transfer of employees through the
Memorandum of Agreement was proper and did not violate any existing law and jurisprudence. Thus, the
employment of the doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction cannot be applied in the case of a spin-
off since no fraud attended the transaction. Marsman & Company, Inc. v. Sta. Rita, 862 SCRA 211
(2018), citing VILLANUEVA, PHILIPPINE CORPORATE LAW, p. 705 (2010).
74
The failure to file the bylaws does not automatically operate to dissolve a corporation but is now
considered only a ground for such dissolution. Chung Ka Bio v. IAC, 163 SCRA 534 (1988).
144
Atienza v. Saluta, G.R. No. 233413, 17 June 2019.
145
Majority Stockholders of Ruby Industrial Corp. v. Lim, 650 SCRA 461 (2011).
75
After the expiration of the 3-year period, corporate creditors can still pursue their claims against
corporate assets against the officers or stockholders who have taken over the properties of the
corporation. Tan Tiong Bio v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 100 Phil. 86 (1956).146
Although a corporate officer is not liable for corporate obligations, such as claims for wages,
when, however, such corporate officer takes corporate property to apply to his own claims against the
corporation, he shall be liable to the extent thereof to corporate liabilities, since knowing fully well that
certain creditors had similarly valid claims, he took advantage of his position as general manager and
applied the assets exclusively to his own claims. De Guzman v. NLRC, 211 SCRA 723 (1992).
It immaterial that the present action was filed after the expiration of the 3-year period, for at the
very least, and assuming that judicial enforcement of taxes may not be initiated after said three years
despite the fact that actual liquidation has not terminated and the one in charge thereof is still holding
the assets of the corporation, obviously for the benefit of all the creditors thereof, the assessment
aforementioned, made within the three years, definitely established the Government as a creditor for
whom the liquidator is supposed to hold assets of the corporation.” Republic v. Marsman Dev. Co., 44
SCRA 418 (1972).147
A corporation’s Board is not rendered functus officio by its dissolution, since [Section 139 of
Revised Corporation Code] prohibits a dissolved corporation from continuing its business, but allows it
to continue with a limited personality in order to settle and close it affairs, including its complete
liquidation. Necessarily there must be a Board that will continue acting for that purpose. Aguirre II v.
FQB+7, Inc., 688 SCRA 242 (2013).
146
Republic v. Marsman Dev. Co., 44 SCRA 418 (1972).
147
Paramount Insurance Corp. v. A.C. Ordonez Corp., 561 SCRA 327 (2008).
76
If the 3-year extended life has expired without a trustee or receiver having been designated, the
Board of Directors itself, following the rationale of the decision in Gelano, may be permitted to so
continue as “trustees” to complete liquidation; and in the absence of a Board, those having pecuniary
interest in the assets, including the shareholders and the creditors of the corporation, acting for and in
its behalf, might make proper representations with the appropriate body for working out a final
settlement of the corporate concerns. Clemente v. Court of Appeals, 242 SCRA 717 (1995).148
A trustee appointed for purposes of liquidation does not become personally liable for the
outstanding obligations of the corporation. Republic v. Tancinco, 394 SCRA 386 (2003).
There is no time limit within which the trustees must complete a liquidation placed in their hands.
What is provided in [Section 139 of Revised Corporation Code] is that the conveyance to the trustees
must be made within the 3-year period. But it may be found impossible to complete the work of
liquidation within the 3-year period or to reduce disputed claims to judgment. Furthermore, [Section
184 of Revised Corporation Code] clearly provides that “no right or remedy in favor of or against any
corporation, its stockholders, members, directors, trustees, or officers, nor any liability incurred by any
such corporation, stockholders, members, directors, trustees, or officers, shall be removed or impaired
either by the subsequent dissolution of said corporation.” Vigilla v. Philippine College of
Criminology, Inc., 698 SCRA 247 (2013).
Trustee may continue to prosecute a case commenced by the corporation within 3 years from its
dissolution until rendition of the final judgment, even if such judgment is rendered beyond the 3-year
period allowed by [Section 139 of Revised Corporation Code]. However, there is nothing in the said
cases that allows an already defunct corporation to initiate a suit after the lapse of the said 3-year
period. To allow petitioner to initiate the subject complaint and pursue it until final judgment, on the
ground that such complaint was filed for the sole purpose of liquidating its assets, would be to
circumvent the provisions of Sec. 122 of the Corporation Code. Alabang Dev. Corp. v. Alabang
Hills Village Assn., 724 SCRA 321 (2014).149
148
Reburiano v. CA, 301 SCRA 342 (1999); Knecht v. United Cigarette Corp., 384 SCRA 48 (2002); Pepsi-Cola Products Phils. v. CA, 443 SCRA 571
(2004).
149
NEA v. Maguindanao Electric Cooperative, Inc., 861 SCRA 1 (2018).
77
The application of [Section 97 of Revised Corporation Code (validity of restrictions on transfer of
shares)] applies only to close corporations. Before courts can allow the operation of [Section 97 of
Revised Corporation Code] to a case, there must first be a factual determination that the corporation is
indeed a close corporation. There needs to be a presentation of evidence on the relevant restrictions in
the articles and bylaws. Here, there is no such determination or even allegation based on the records or
the RTC decision that would assist this Court in ruling on these two major factual matters. Andaya v.
Rural Bank of Cabadbaran, 799 SCRA 325 (2016).150
Even if the transfer of stock is made in violation of the restrictions enumerated under [Section 98
of Revised Corporation Code], such transfer is still valid if it has been consented to by all the
stockholders of the close corporation and the corporation cannot refuse to register the transfer of stock
in the name of the transferee. Florete, Sr. v. Florete, Jr., 861 SCRA 157 (2018).
2. Liability of the Stockholders for Managing the Corporation (Secs. 97 and 100)
It was wrong for the CA, citing Sec. 97, to conclude that “in a close corporation, the stockholders
and/or officers usually manage the business of the corporation and are subject to all liabilities of directors,
i.e., personally liable for corporate debts and obligations.” Section 97 only specifies that “the stockholders
of the corporation shall be subject to all liabilities of directors.” Nowhere in that provision do we find any
inference that stockholders of a close corporation are automatically liable for corporate debts and
obligations. Parenthetically, only Sec. 100(5) explicitly provides for personal liability of stockholders of
close corporation, viz.: “5. To the extent that the stockholders are actively engaged in the management
or operation of the business and affairs of a close corporation, the stockholders shall be held to strict
fiduciary duties to each other and among themselves. Said stockholders shall be personally liable for
corporate torts unless the corporation has obtained reasonably adequate liability insurance.” As can
be read in that provision, several requisites must be present for its applicability. None of these were
alleged in the case to hold the spouses liable, and no factual circumstances where discussed for this
Court to discuss the personally liability of respondents to their creditors because of “corporate torts.” We
thus apply the general doctrine of separate juridical personality and limited liability. Bustos v. Millians
Shoe, Inc., 824 SCRA 67 (2017).
150
Bustos v. Millians Shoe, Inc., 824 SCRA 67 (2017).
78
XIV. ONE PERSON CORPORATIONS
1. Concept and Purpose of the OPC (Secs. 10 and 95)
a. Single Stockholder: Natural Person, “Trust” or “Estate”
b. Businesses Not Allowed for OPC
2. Incorporation of the OPC: SEC Memorandum Circular No. 07-2019
a. Articles of Incorporation and Bylaws (Secs. 118 and 119)
b. Corporate Name (Sec. 120)
c. Capital Structure for OPC (Sec. 117)
3. Corporate Officers in an OPC
a. Single Stockholder Is Sole Director and President (Sec. 121)
b. Corporate Secretary (Secs. 122 and 123)
c. Corporate Treasurer (Sec. 122)
d. Nominee and Alternate Nominee (Secs. 124, 125 and 126)
4. Operations and Transactions of the OPC
a. Minutes Book (Sec. 127)
b. Records in Lieu of Meetings (Sec. 128)
c. Reportorial Requirements (Sec. 129)
79
The incurring of profit or losses does not determine whether an activity is for profit or non-profit, and
the courts will consider whether dividends have been declared or its members or that is property, effects
or profit was ever used for personal or individual gain, and not for the purpose of carrying out the
objectives of the enterprise. Manila Sanitarium and Hospital v. Gabuco, 7 SCRA 14 (1963).
A nonstock corporation may only be formed or organized for charitable, religious, educational,
professional, cultural, fraternal, literary, scientific, social, civic or other similar purposes. It may not
engage in investment business where profit is the main or underlying purpose. Although it may obtain
profits as an incident to its operation, such profits are not to be distributed among its members but must
be used for the furtherance of its purposes. People v. Menil, 340 SCRA 125 (2000).
In a mutual life insurance company organized as a nonstock non-profit corporation, the so-called
“dividends” received by members-policyholders are not a portion of profits set aside for distribution to the
stockholders. One, a mutual company has no capital stock to which subscription is necessary; there are
no stockholders to speak of, but only members. Two, the amount they receive does not partake of the
nature of a profit or income, such distribution represents overpayment, a benefit to which the member-
policyholder is equitably entitled. Republic v. Sunlife Assurance Co., 473 SCRA 129 (2005).
1
Magallanes Watercraft Assn. v. Auguis, 791 SCRA 445 (2016)
80
[Section 106 of Revised Corporation Code], although setting the term of the members of the Board of
Trustees at 5 years, has a proviso subjecting the duration to what is otherwise provided in the articles of
incorporation or bylaws of the educational corporation—that contrary provision control on the term of
office. A trustee occupying his office in a hold-over capacity could be removed at any time, without cause,
upon the election or appointment of his successor. Barayuga v. Advestist University of the Philippines,
655 SCRA 640 (2011).
Bylaws provisions which allows the election of members of the Board of Trustees distributed to two
per district, is not contrary to [Section 23 of Revised Corporation Code] which requires that in the election
of trustees of a nonstock corporation it is necessary that at least “a majority of the members entitled to
vote” must be present. [Section 88 of Revised Corporation Code] pertaining to nonstock corporations
provides that “(t)he right of the members of any class or classes (of a nonstock corporation) to vote may
be limited, broadened or denied to the extent specified in the articles of incorporation or the bylaws.” This
is an exception to Section 6 that provides that “no share may be deprived of voting rights except those
classified and issued as ‘preferred’ or ‘redeemable’ shares, unless otherwise provided in this Code.” Ao-
as v. Court of Appeals, 491 SCRA 339 (2006).
81
9. Right of Members to Proportionate Share of Remaining Assets Upon
Dissolution (Secs. 93 and 94; Sec. 34(H)(2)(c), 1997 NIRC)
As provided for under [Sections 93 and 94 of Revised Corporation Code], in the event of dissolution of
a nonstock corporation, its assets shall be distributed in accordance with the rules. Unless, it is so provided
in the articles of incorporation or bylaws, the members are not entitled to any beneficial or vested interest
over the assets of the nonstock corporation. In other words, nonstock, non-profit corporations hold their
funds in trust for the carrying out of the objectives and purposes expressed in its charter. SEC Opinion
dated 24 February 2003; SEC Opinion dated 13 May 1992.
d. Effects of Failure to Obtain License (Secs. 143): The contract itself is valid, but it is the standing
to sue of the foreign corporation that is missing, which can be remedied with the subsequent obtaining
of the license to do business. Home Insurance Co. v. Eastern Shipping Lines, 123 SCRA 424
(1983).
Under [Section 122], a foreign corporation must first obtain a license to do business before it can
transact business in the Philippines. Without the proper license, it cannot maintain any action or
proceeding before Philippine courts as provided in Section 133 of the Corporation Code. Cargill, Inc. v.
Intra Strata Assurance Corp., 615 SCRA 304 (2010).
Summary of Rulings on Doing Business: (1) if a foreign corporation does business in the
Philippines without a license, it cannot sue before Philippine courts; (2) if a foreign corporation is not
doing business in the Philippines, it needs no license to sue before Philippine courts on an isolated
transaction or on a cause of action entirely independent of any business transaction; (3) if a foreign
corporation does business in the Philippines without a license, a Philippine citizen or entity which has
contracted with said corporation may be estopped from challenging the foreign corporation’s corporate
personality in a suit brought before the Philippine courts; and (4) if a foreign corporation does business
in the Philippines with the required license, it can sue before Philippine courts on any transaction. MR.
Holdings, Ltd. V. Bajar, 380 SCRA 617 (2002).2
e. Amendment of License (Sec. 148)
f. Revocation of License (Sec. 151)
2
Agilent Technologies Singapore (PTE) Ltd. v. Integrated Silicon Technology Phil. Corp., 427 SCRA 593 (2004).
82
3. CONCEPTS OF “DOING BUSINESS IN THE PHILIPPINES”
a. Effect of Doing Business in PHL Without a License (Sec. 150)
b. Statutory Definition of Doing Business (R.A. 7042, FOREIGN INVESTMENT ACT OF 1991)
FIA ’91 repealed Arts. 44-56 of the Omnibus Investments Code, and enumerates in Sec. 3(d) not
only the acts or activities which constitute “doing business” but also those activities which are not
deemed “doing business”. Cargill, Inc. v. Intra Strata Assurance Corp., 615 SCRA 304 (2010).
(i) Soliciting Orders or Contracts in the Philippines: When a foreign corporation, through its
affiliate company licensed to do business in the Philippines, solicits within the Philippines for the
design and supplying of equipment for the contruction of a local lime plant business, said foreign
corporation is doing business in the Philippines under R.A. 5455 that defines “Soliciting orders,
purchases (sales) or service contracts,” even though the final contract was executed in Japan.
Marubeni Nederland B.V. v. Tensuan, 190 SCRA 105 (1990).
(ii) Opening of Offices or Branches in the Philippines: Section 3(d) that provides that “The
phrase ‘doing business’ shall include … opening offices, whether called ‘liaison’ offices or
branches,” leads to no other conclusion than that Saudia is a foreign corporation doing business
in the Philippines, and it may be sued in the Philippines and is subject to the jurisdiction of
Philippine tribunals. Saudi Arabian Airlines v. Rebesencio, 746 SCRA 140 (2015).
(iii) Appointment of Indentors or Broker: When it is shown that the foreign corporation exercised
control over the business of its brokers, then it is deemed doing business in the country.
Granger Associates v. Microwave Systems, Inc., 189 SCRA 631 (1990).3
Under Sec. 3(d) of FIA ‘91, and Sec. 1(f), Rule I of its IRR, the appointment of a distributor is
not sufficient to constitute “doing business” unless it is under the full control of the foreign
corporation. If the distributor is an independent entity that buys and distributes products, other
than those of the foreign corporation, for its own name and its own account, the latter cannot be
considered to be doing business in the Philippines. Steelcase, Inc. v. Design Int’l Selections, Inc.,
670 SCRA 64 (2012).
(i) “Territoriality Rule” – To be doing or “transaction business in the Philippines” for purposes of
Section 133 of the Corporation Code, the foreign corporation must actually transact business in
the Philippines, that is, perform specific business transactions within the Philippine territory on a
continuing basis in its own name and for its own account. B. Van Zuiden Bros., Ltd v. GTVL
Manufacturing Industries, Inc., 523 SCRA 233 (2007), citing VILLANUEVA, PHILIPPINE CORPORATE
LAW 813 (2001).
(ii) “Contract Test” – Pacific Vegetable Oil Corp. v. Singson, G.R. No. L-7917, 29 April 1955,
Advanced Decision Supreme Court, April 1955 Vol., p. 100-A; Aetna Casualty & Surety Co.
v. Pacific Star Line, 80 SCRA 635 (1977).4
(iii) “Profit-Seeking Transactions Rule” – Although each case must be judged in light of attendant
circumstances, jurisprudence has evolved several guiding principles for the application of these
tests. “By and large, to constitute ‘doing business,’ the activity to be undertaken in the Philippines
is one that is for profit-making.” Agilent Technologies Singapore (PTE) Ltd. v. Integrated
Silicon Technology Phil. Corp., 427 SCRA 593 (2004), citing VILLANUEVA, PHILIPPINE CORPORATE
LAW 596 et seq. (1998 ed.); Cargill, Inc. v. Intra Strata Assurance Corp., 615 SCRA 304 (2010), citing
VILLANUEVA, PHILIPPINE CORPORATE LAW 801-802 (2001).
Examples:
3
La Chemise Lacoste, S.A. v. Fernandez, 129 SCRA 373 (1984); Schmid & Oberly v. RJL, 166 SCRA 493 (1988); Wang Laboratories v. Mendoza, 156
SCRA 44 (1974).
4
Universal Shipping Lines, Inc. v. IAC, 188 SCRA 170 (1990).
83
Insurance Business – A foreign corporation with a Philippine settling agent that issues twelve
marine policies covering different shipments to the Philippines is doing business here. General
Corp. of the Phil. v. Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ltd., 87 Phil. 313 (1950).
A foreign corporation which had been collecting premiums on outstanding policies is doing
business in the Philippines. Manufacturing Life Ins. v. Meer, 89 Phil. 351 (1951).
Those that file collection suits with Philippine courts arising from insurance contracts
entered into and premiums paid abroad are not doing business in the Philippines. Aetna
Casualty & Surety Co. v. Pacific Star Line, 80 SCRA 635 (1977).5
Air Carriers – Off-line air carriers having general sales agents in the Philippines are engaged
in business in the Philippines and that their income from sales of passage here ( i.e., uplifts of
passengers and cargo occur to or from the Philippines) is income from within the Philippines.
South African Airways v. Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 612 SCRA 665 (2010).
d. Special Cases on Infringement of Business Names and Trademarks: The right to corporate
name and trade name of a foreign corporation is a property right in rem, which it may assert and
protect in any of the courts of the world even in countries where it does not personally transact any
business. Western Equipment & Supply Co. v. Reyes, 51 Phil. 115 (1927).
Infringement of trademark may be pursued in local courts separate from the issue of whether
there is the proper license to do business in the Philippines. General Garments Corp. v. Director of
Patens, 41 SCRA 50 (1971).6
e. Doctrine on Unrelated or Isolated Transactions: Isolated acts, contracts, or transactions of
foreign corporations are not regarded as carrying on of business. Typical examples: making of a single
contract, sale with the taking of a note and mortgage in the state to secure payment thereof, purchase,
or note, or the mere commission of a tort. MR. Holdings, Ltd. V. Bajar, 380 SCRA 617 (2002).7
A foreign corporation needs no license to sue before Philippine courts on an isolated transaction.
Even a series of transactions which are occasional, incidental and casual—not of a character to
indicate a purpose to engage in business—do not constitute the doing or engaging in business as
contemplated by law. Lorenzo Shipping v. Chubb and Sons, Inc., 431 SCRA 266 (2004).
The performance of services auxiliary to an existing isolated contract of sale which are not on a
continuing basis do not constitute “doing business in the Philippines.” Antam Consolidated v.
Court of Appeals, 143 SCRA 288 (1986).8
(i) Examples of Isolated Transactions:
Recovery on the collision of two vessels at the Manila Harbor. Dampfschieffs Rhederei Union v.
La Campañia Transatlantica, 8 Phil. 766 (1907).
Loss of goods bound for Hongkong but erroneously discharged in Manila. The Swedish East
Asia Co., Ltd. v. Manila Port Service, 25 SCRA 633 (1968).
Recovery of damages on cargo shipped to the Philippines. Bulakhidas v. Navarro, 142 SCRA 1
(1986).
Sale of construction equipment to the Government with no intent of continuity of transaction.
Gonzales v. Raquiza, 180 SCRA 254 (1989).
Recovering a Hongkong judgment from local resident. Hang Lung Bank v. Saulog, 201 SCRA 137
(1991).
Appointment of local lawyer by foreign movie companies who have registered intellectual
property rights over their movies in the Philippines, to protect such rights for piracy: “We fail to
see how exercising one's legal and property rights and taking steps for the vigilant protection of
said rights, particularly the appointment of an attorney-in-fact, can be deemed by and of
themselves to be doing business here.” Columbia Pictures Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 261 SCRA
144 (1996).
(ii) When Single Transactions Constitute Doing Business
5
Universal Shipping Lines v. IAC, 188 SCRA 170 (1990).
6
Universal Rubber Products, Inc. v. CA, 130 SCRA 104 (1988).
7
Aboitiz Shipping Corp. v. Insurance Co. of North America, 561 SCRA 262 (2008).
8
Eastboard Navigation, Ltd. v. Juan Ysmael and Co., 102 Phil. 1 (1957).
84
Where a single act or transaction is not merely incidental or casual but indicates the foreign
corporation’s intention to do other business in the Philippines, said single act or transaction
constitutes doing business. Far East Int'l v. Nankai Kogyo, 6 SCRA 725 (1962).
When a foreign corporation engaged in the manufacture of uniforms purchases through a local
agent 7,770 dozens of soccer jerseys from a local company, it was engaged in business here
for the single act was not merely incidental or casual but is of such character as distinctly to
indicate a purpose on the part of the foreign corporation to do other business in the state. Litton
Mills, Inc. v. CA, 256 SCRA 696 (1996).
Participating in a bidding process constitutes “doing business” because it shows the foreign
corporation’s intention to engage in business in the Philippines. In this regard, it is the
performance by a foreign corporation of the acts for which it was created, regardless of volume
of business, that determines whether a foreign corporation needs a license or not. European
Resources and Technologies, Inc. v. Ingenieuburo Birkhanh + Nolte, 435 SCRA 246 (2004).
5. Local Suits AGAINST Foreign Corporations: A fundamental international law principle is that no
state can by its laws, and no court as a creature thereof, can by its judgments and decrees directly bind
or affect property or persons beyond state limits. Times, Inc. v. Reyes, 39 SCRA 303 (1971).
a. Jurisdiction Over Foreign Corporations (Sec. 12, Rule 14, Rules of Court)
9
This overturned the previous doctrine in Marshall-Wells (as well as in In re Liquidation of the Mercantile Bank of China, etc., 65 Phil. 385 (1938), that the
lack of authority of foreign corporation to sue in Philippine courts for failure to obtain the license is a matter of affirmative defense. Also Commissioner of
Customs v. K.M.K. Gani, 182 SCRA 591 (1990).
10
Georg Grotjahn GMBH & C. v. Isnani, 235 SCRA 216 (1994); Communications Material and Design, Inc. v. CA, 260 SCRA 673 (1996); Agilent
Technologies Singapore (PTE) Ltd. v. Integrated Silicon Technology Phil. Corp., 427 SCRA 593 (2004); European Resources and Technologies, Inc. v.
Ingenieuburo Birkhanh+Nolte, 435 SCRA 246 (2004); Rimbunan Hijau Group of Companies v. Oriental Wood Processing Corp., 470 SCRA 650 (2005);
Global Business Holdings, Inc. v. Surecomp Software, B.V., 633 SCRA 470 (2010); Steelcase, Inc. v. Design International Selections, Inc., 670 SCRA 64
(2012).
85
For purposes of venue, a foreign corporation, its “residence” includes the country where it
exercises corporate functions or the place where its business is done. State Investment House v.
Citibank, 203 SCRA 9 (1991); Northwest Orient Airlines v. Court of Appeals, 241 SCRA 192 (1995).
For service of summons under Sec. 14, Rule 14, it is sufficient that it be alleged in the complaint
that the foreign corporation is doing business in the Philippines. Hahn v. CA, 266 SCRA 537 (1997).
When a foreign corporation has designated a person to receive service of summon, the
designation is exclusive and service of summons on any other person is inefficacious. H.B. Zachry
Company Int’l v. Court of Appeals, 232 SCRA 329 (1994).
When a foreign corporation is doing business in the Philippines, summons may be served on (a)
its designated resident agent; (b) if there is no resident agent, the government official designated by
law to that effect; or (c) any of its officers or agent within the Philippines. The mere allegation in the
complaint that a local company is the agent of the foreign corporation is not sufficient to allow proper
service to such alleged agent; it is necessary that there must be specific allegations that establishes
the connection between the foreign corporation and its alleged agent with respect to the transaction in
question. French Oil Mills Machinery Co.v. CA, 295 SCRA 462 (1998).
b. Objection to Jurisdiction: Appearance of a foreign corporation to a suit precisely to question the
tribunal’s jurisdiction over its person is not equivalent to service of summons, nor does it constitute
acquiescence to the court’s jurisdiction. Avon Insurance PLC v. CA, 278 SCRA 312 (1997).
Participation of a foreign corporation’s counsel in the trial process, e.g., cross-examination of
witnesses, agreement and objection to documentary evidence, and the introduction of witnesses and
documentary evidence, vacates the plea of lack of jurisdiction over such foreign corporation.
General Corp. of the Phil. v. Union Insurance Society of Canton, Ltd., 87 Phil. 313 (1950).11
c. ODD DOCTRINE: “Indeed, if a foreign corporation, not engaged in business in the Philippines, is not
barred from seeking redress from the courts in the Philippines, a fortiori, that same corporation cannot
claim exemption from being sued in Philippine courts for acts done against a person or persons in the
Philippines.” Facilities Management Corp. v. De la Osa, 89 SCRA 131 (1979).12
CONTRA: Sine qua non requirement for service of summons and other legal processes or any such
agent or representative is that the foreign corporation is doing business in the Philippines. Signetics
Corp. v. Court of Appeals, 225 SCRA 737 (1993).13
PRESENT RULE: There is no reason to subject to Philippine jurisdiction foreign corporations not doing
business here; insofar as the State is concerned, such foreign corporations have no legal existence,
and to subject foreign corporations not doing business to the courts’ jurisdiction would violate the
essence of sovereignty. The Court is not persuaded by the position taken invoking the ruling in
Facilities Management. Avon Insurance PLC v. Court of Appeals, 278 SCRA 312 (1997).
d. STIPULATION ON VENUE: When the contract sued upon has a venue clause within the Philippines, it is
deemed a confirmation by the foreign corporation, even though not doing business in the Philippines,
to be sued in local courts. Linger & Fisher GMBH v. IAC, 125 SCRA 522 (1983).
11
Johnlo Trading Co., v. Flores, 88 Phil. 741 (1951); Johnlo Trading Co. v. Zulueta, 88 Phil. 750 (1951); Pacific Micronisian Line v. Del Rosario, 96 Phil.
23 (1954); Far East Int’l Import and Export Corp. v. Nankai Kogyo Co., Ltd., 6 SCRA 725 (1962).
12
FBA Aircraft v. Zosa, 110 SCRA 1 (1981); Royal Crown Int’l v. NLRC, 178 SCRA 569 (1989); Wang Laboratories v. Mendoza, 156 SCRA 44 (1987).
13
Hyopsung Maritime Co., Ltd. v. CA, 165 SCRA 258 1(988).
86
XVII. SANCTIONS, OFFENSES AND PENALTIES
1. SEC Has Been Granted the Following Powers:
(a) To Investigate and Prosecute Offenses Defined under the RCC and to Publish Its
Findings, Orders, Opinions, Advisories or Information (Sec. 154)
(b) To Issue Cease and Desist Orders (Sec. 156)
6. Obtaining Corporate Registration Through Fraud: Those responsible for the formation of
a corporation through fraud, or who assisted directly or indirectly therein, shall be
punished with a fine.
8. Acting as Intermediaries for Graft and Corrupt Practices: Corporation Use for Fraud, or
For Committing or Concealing Graft and Corrupt Practices as Defined by Pertinent
Statutes (Sec. 166)
10. Tolerating Graft and Corrupt Practices: A Director, Trustee, or Officer Who Knowingly
Fails to Sanction, Reporet, or File the Appropriate Action, Allows or Tolerates the Graft
and Corrupt Practices or Fraudulent Acts Committed by a Corporation’s Directors,
Trustees, Officers, or Employees (Sec. 168)
11. Retaliation Against Whistleblowers: Any Person Who knowingly and With Intent to
Retaliate, Commits Acts Detrimental to a Whistleblower such as Interfering with the
Lawful Employment or Livelihood of the Whistleblower (Sec. 169)
12. Violations of the RCC Not Specifically Penalized: Violations of Any Other Provisions of
the RCC, its Amendments, Not Otherwise Specifically Penalized Therein;
87
BUT: If Violation is Committed by a Corporation, it shall be dissolved in appropriate
proceedings with the SEC;
ALSO: Liability for the foregoing shall be separate from any other administrative, civil,
criminal liability under this Code and other laws. (Sec. 170)
a. Historical Background of Sec. 170 (Sec. 144 of the old Corporation Code; Sec. 190 of the
old Corporation Law)
Sec. 190 was not intended to make every casual violation of one of the Corporation Law
provisions ground for involuntary dissolution of the corporation and that the court was entitled to
exercise discretion in such matters. Government of P.I. v. El Hogar Filipino, 50 Phil. 399 (1927).
Penalties imposed in Sec. 190(A) of the old Corporation Law for the violation of the prohibition in
question are of such nature that they can be enforced only by a criminal prosecution or by an action of
quo warranto. These proceedings can be maintained only by the Solicitor General in representation of
the Government. Harden v. Benguet Consolidated Mining Co., 58 Phil. 141 (1933).
14. Aiders and Abettors: “Anyone who shall aid, abet, counsel, command, induce, or cause
any violation of the [RCC, its IRR, or SEC orders] shall be punished with a fine not
exceeding that imposed on the principal offenders, at the discretion of the court, after
taking into account their participation in the offense.” (Sec. 172)
88
IX. MISCELLANY
1. NEDA and Congress Power to Set Maximum Limits for Stock Ownership in Corporations
Vested with Public Interests (Sec. 176)
2. Provision of Arbitration Agreement in the Articles or Bylaws (Sec. 181)
3. Effect of Repeal of the Code: No Right or Remedy in Favor or Against Any Corporation, Its
Stockholders, Members, Directors, Trustees or Officers, Nor any Liability Incurred by Any
Such Corporation, Stockholders, Members, Directors, Trustees or Officers, Shall be Removed
or Impaired Either by the Subsequent Amendment or Repal of this Code or Any part Thereof.
(Sec. 184)
4. Existing Corporation at Adoption of RCC: A corporation lalwlfully existing ana ddoing
business in the Philippines affected by the new requirements of the Revised Corporation
Code shall be given a period of not more than two (2) years from its effectivity within which to
comply. (Sec. 185).
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