Académique Documents
Professionnel Documents
Culture Documents
17, 1991
FACTS:
Consolidated Mines, Inc. (CMI) obtained loans from Citibank, Bank of America and
HSBC, all foreign corporations but with branches in the Philippines. Meanwhile,
State Investment House, Inc. (SIHI) and State Financing Center, Inc. (SFCI), also
creditors of CMI, filed collection suits against the latter with writs of preliminary
attachment. Subsequently, the three banks jointly filed with the court a petition
for involuntary insolvency of CMI. SHI and SFCI opposed the petition on the
ground that the petitioners are not resident creditors in contemplation of the
Insolvency Law.
ISSUE: Whether or not a foreign corporation with a branch in the Philippines and
doing business therein can be considered a resident
HELD:
Foreign corporations duly licensed to do business in the Philippines are
considered residents of the Philippines, as the word is understood in Sec. 20 of
the Insolvency Law, authorizing at least three resident creditors of the Philippines
to file a petition to declare a corporation insolvent. The Tax Code declares that the
term resident foreign corporation applies to foreign corporation engaged in trade
or business within the Philippines as distinguished from a non-resident foreign
corporation which is not engaged in trade or business within the Philippines. The
Offshore Banking Law sates that: Branches, subsidiaries, affiliates, extension
offices or any other units of corporation or juridical person organized under the
laws of any foreign country operating in the Philippines shall be considered
residents of the Philippines. The General Banking Act places branches and
agencies in the Philippines of foreign banks in the category as commercial
banks, rural banks, stock savings and loan association making no distinction
between the former ad the latter in so far as the terms banking institutions and
banks are used in said Act.
should decline to take jurisdiction; (d) that the amount of compensation paid to
the individual appellees was and is fair and reasonable by virtue of the valuable
services that they have rendered to the company, and, under the by-laws of the
corporation, the directors have the right to fix the compensation of its agents,
and the allotment under the plan was in accordance therewith as well as in
accordance with the statutes of New Jersey.
At a meeting of the directors on June 25, 1930, in accordance with section 2, c.
175, p. 354 of the Laws of 1920 (Comp. St. Supp. 47 184) they duly declared
the advisability, and directed the submission, to the stockholders of a plan for the
issuance and sale of its common B stock to employees and those actively
engaged in the conduct of the business, by way of compensation for services to
be rendered. Section 1, c. 175, of the Laws of 1920 (Comp. St. Supp. 47 183),
empowers a New Jersey corporation to provide and carry out a plan for the
following purposes: "(a) The issue or the purchase and sale of its capital stock to
any or all of its employees and those actively engaged in the conduct of its
business or to trustees on their behalf, and the payment for such stock in
installments or at one time with or without the right to vote thereon pending
payment therefor in full, and for aiding any such employees and said other
persons in paying for such stock by contributions, compensation for services, or
otherwise." The stockholders met July 28, 1930, and passed two resolutions, one
involving a change in the capital structure of the company, and the other
authorizing the adoption of this stock subscription plan. The change in capital
structure consisted in a decrease of the par value of the common stock and
common B stock of the corporation from $50 to $25, and an increase of the
authorized shares, in the case of common stock from one to two million shares,
and in the case of common B stock from two to four million shares. The resolution
also provided that the voting power of the preferred stock be increased from two
to four votes in order to maintain the proper ratio. Each stockholder was to
receive two shares of new stock, common or common B, for one share of old
stock. There was outstanding on this date 526,997 shares of preferred stock,
778,548 shares of common, and 1,535,850 shares of common B stock. The plan
was approved by a vote of 389,573 preferred, 620,268 common, and 1,220,855
shares of common B stock. There were voted against the resolutions 170 shares
of common, 1,995 shares of common B, and 10 shares of preferred stock.
On January 28, 1931, the directors held a meeting which neither the president nor
the vice president Penn attended. The board adopted a resolution providing that
there be submitted to the president a number of employees who, in the opinion of
the board, should be considered in the allotment of stock, together with a
statement of the services rendered by each and with an estimated rating, on a
percentage basis, of the value of the services to the company, as compared in
each department with the key executive in such department, and the annual rate
of compensation of each as of December 31, 1930, including all salary and other
compensation of any kind. The board recommended that in determining the
individual allotments under the plan there should be used as a general basis a
number of shares of stock having an aggregate par value equal to 33 1/3 per
cent. of the amount of compensation paid or accrued to such individual for his
services to the company for the calendar year 1930, and that, "in view of the
unusual ability and efficiency of the President George W. Hill, particularly in
connection with sales as well as the general oversight and supervision of all the
activities of the corporation and its subsidiaries, and in view of the unusual ability
and efficiency of the Vice-President Charles *117117 A. Penn in connection with
the manufacturing activities of the Company, this Board recommends that the
said George W. Hill and Charles A. Penn be given recognition on the basis of 100
per cent. rating of the value of their services to this corporation, as indicated on
the list hereinabove referred to."
As a result of the meeting, there was accorded to 535 employees, including
directors who were active employees, the right to subscribe to a number of
shares at $25 par value upon the terms and conditions described in an agreement
between the company, the respective employees, and the trustees who were
named in the agreement. Under the agreement, the stock certificates could not
be delivered to the allottee until the purchase price, and all interest accrued
thereon should be paid in full, and, in any event, should not be delivered to the
participant until after December 31, 1931. If on or before that date the connection
of any employee of the company should be severed by discharge, with or without
cause, or by resignation, then the trustees had the power to cancel forthwith any
right such employee had under the agreement for the delivery of the stock.
The American Tobacco Company, in 1912, by a decree of the United States
Supreme Court, was ordered to disintegrate. United States v. American Tobacco
Co., 221 U.S. 106, 31 S. Ct. 632, 55 L. Ed. 663. Those companies which were
permitted to continue under the decree were estimated to have at that time
37.11 per cent. of the cigarette business in the United States. However, between
1912 and 1925, due to competition, the percentage dropped to 21.81 per cent. In
December, 1925, the appellee, Hill, became president of the company. Under his
management, and in co-operation with Vice President Penn and the rest of the
board, most of whom were employees of the company, a new policy was
inaugurated in all the departments. The result of the change of policy in the
operation of the business made the American Tobacco Company the leader in the
cigarette industry. In 1931 the total increase of sales over 1929 of cigarettes of all
kinds in this country was approximately half a billion. The increase in the sale of
the company's most popular brand, "Lucky Strike," was nearly six billions. The
business is world-wide in scope, with many factories, branches, and organizations
in all parts of this country. The company in 1930 expended $20,400,000 in
advertising. In that year it sold 38.10 per cent. of the cigarettes produced in the
United States. Its net earnings, after deducting all charges for management and
taxes, amounted to $43,294,769. It paid dividends on its common stock of
$29,294,000 in 1930, with an extra dividend of $1 for the first quarter of 1931.
The total dividends on the common stock for the latter year exceeded
$28,300,000; on its preferred stock, $3,161,982. It paid the United States
government taxes of $150,000,000 in 1930. These figures give some idea of the
gigantic problem confronting those engaged in the active management of the
company's affairs. It has had most unusual commercial success. The services
rendered by the individual appellees have been extraordinary and unique.
On April 1, 1931, at a meeting of the stockholders, the directors were re-elected,
indicating a renewed confidence of those in charge of the corporation. On January
28, 1931, it was publicly announced through the newspapers that the directors
had voted to allot 56,712 shares of the company's common B stock, pursuant to
the authority conferred upon them under the plan. On March 12, 1931, each
reason of his being also a director of the Corporation." The later overwhelming
approval of the directors' management by their re-election after the allotment
was made to the employees, justified the claim that the stockholders had
reiterated their former approval of the plan. As to (b), upon issuance of the stock
and delivery to the trustees under the agreement, the Guaranty Trust Company
paid $25 a share for each share of stock so delivered to it. Thus the American
Tobacco Company received par value for the stock. The company during the
entire year received services which were rendered in part upon the agreement
that this stock had to be delivered to the employees to whom it was allotted
under the plan. The statute authorizes stock to be issued without being paid for in
full. The language is, "the issue * * * and the payment for such stock in
installments or at any one time with or without the right to vote thereon pending
payment therefor in full." See Morgan v. Bon Bon Co., 222 N.Y. 22, 118 N.E. 205;
Vineland Grape Juice Co. v. Chandler, 80 N.J. Eq. 437, 85 A. 213, Ann. Cas. 1914A,
679.
The charter of the corporation permitted compensation to employees and officers
in the form of a stock interest. It provides that the company shall have the powers
conferred by section 1 of the act concerning corporations (Laws of 1896, c. 185,
p. 278 [2 Comp. St. N.J. 1910, p. 1598, 1, par. 5]). Section 1 of that act provides:
"Every corporation shall have power: * * * V. To appoint such officers and agents
as the business of the corporation shall require, and to allow them suitable
compensation." The form of compensation, whether in stock or a share of the
profits, is within the implied powers of the corporation. Bennett v. Millville
Improvement Co., 67 N.J. Law, 320, 51 A. 706; Booth v. Beattie, 95 N.J. Eq.
776,118 A. 257, 123 A. 925; Harker v. Ralston Purina Co., 45 F.2d 929, 930 (C.C.A.
7); Church v. Harnit, 35 F.2d 499 (C.C.A. 6).
In the Harker Case, the Seventh Circuit said: "Every corporation has the right
incidental to its expressed powers and purposes to exercise such incidental power
as is necessarily implied in the legitimate achievement of its expressed powers.
Among such is the employment of efficient employees. At the time appellee made
the contract before us, it contracted for appellant's services for five years, and
obligated itself, in consideration therefor, to sell to him some of its capital stock
at a price less than its market value. By selling the stock to the employee,
appellee made sure that the employee would have a personal interest in the
welfare of the corporation. The natural tendency of such interest was to increase
the zeal of the employee and thus to forward the chances of success in the
corporation's legitimate operations. Furthermore, it enabled the faithful
employee, if he continued his employment to *119119 the maturity of his
contract, to partake of the profits of the corporation. In a word, the contract
contemplated the insurance of faithful efficient service to the corporation and a
corresponding reward to the employee. Such a contract was clearly praiseworthy
in its motives from the viewpoint of both parties, and the option to repurchase
was clearly included to encourage the stay of the employee to the end of the
period of his employment. In view of the fact that the performance of the option
would work none of the results condemned by the courts of Missouri, viz.,
damage to creditors, impairment of capital, or jeopardy to the financial interests
of any interested party, it follows that the contract was clearly within the implied
powers of the corporation."
The fact that the stock may have been selling at a higher price in the open
market does not brand the employees' subscription plan as fraudulent. The stock
was issued for par and in recognition of efficient services which had been
rendered and the promise of like services in the future. It was not necessary to
the validity of the plan that the stock allotted under it be offered first to the
appellee or any other stockholder of the company. The statutory right to such
offer applies only to an issue for cash at the time the stock is sold, whereas stock
allotted under this employees' plan passed first to the trustee, was paid for in
cash, and lawfully issued pursuant to chapter 175 of the Laws of 1920 (Comp. St.
Supp. 47 183 et seq.).
The allotment of the stock under the plan was authorized by 99.99 per cent. of
the stock represented in person or by proxy at the stockholders' meeting. This
overwhelming vote leaves little to be desired in the approval of the management
of the internal affairs of this corporation by its stockholders. It is only where
actual fraud, and not alleged constructive fraud, is established, that the courts
should interfere. The corporation had the right to aid and encourage its
employees; the board of directors and stockholders deemed it good business
policy. The selling price of the stock on the market (which is always subject to
fluctuation) will not justify an allegation of insufficient consideration amounting to
fraud. The corporation received what those in charge of its internal affairs
deemed to be sufficient as its par value. The directors had the right to select
employees who, in their judgment, were entitled to benefits under the plan and to
apportion to them their respective rights to subscription. This was a matter of
internal management of the corporation's affairs.
Moreover, there is no allegation in the complaint setting forth a demand upon the
stockholders to take action, nor are there reasons stated to excuse such failure
prior to the institution of these suits. Equity Rule 27 (28 USCA 723) provides:
"Every bill brought by one or more stockholders in a corporation against the
corporation and other parties, founded on rights which may properly be asserted
by the corporation, * * * must also set forth with particularity the efforts of the
plaintiff to secure such action as he desires on the part of the managing directors
or trustees, and, if necessary, of the shareholders, and the causes of his failure to
obtain such action, or the reasons for not making such effort."
The complaint does allege a demand upon the directors in the form of a letter,
and the refusal of the directors to take any action thereon within the twenty-day
period fixed by the plaintiff. But there were remedies, within the company, which
were open to the plaintiff as a stockholder under the laws of New Jersey.
(a) Section 3, c. 175, p. 357 of the Laws of 1920 (Comp. St. Supp. N.J. 47 185)
provides that "any plan adopted * * * may be recalled, abolished, revised,
amended, altered or changed in the same manner as is herein provided for its
adoption. * * *" (b) If the stockholders desire any change with respect to the
corporate affairs, any three such stockholders may call a meeting for that
purpose without even calling upon the directors to take such action. Laws of
1896, c. 185, p. 292, 46 (2 Comp. St. N.J. 1910, p. 1629, 46). See Watts v.
Vanderbilt, 45 F.2d 968 (C.C.A. 2); Stone v. Holly Hill Fruit Products, 56 F.2d 553,
554 (C.C.A. 5).
The appellee could have asserted these rights. The lapse of time since the plan
was approved and the stock allotted thereunder and the services performed by
the allottees was ample. In the Stone Case, the court said: "The minority have a
right to have the majority exercise their judgment, and to exercise it honestly and
not fraudulently, but have no right to have a court substitute their own ideas and
wishes for those of the majority, and that in advance of any refusal of the
majority to hear and decide on the matter at issue. Minority stockholders may not
in the absence of sudden emergency ask a court of equity to interfere in the
management of *120120 their corporation until they have earnestly and
unsuccessfully sought redress from the Board of Directors, and where appropriate
also from the stockholders in meeting, unless they can show sufficient reasons for
not doing so. This is implied in the provisions of Equity Rule 27 (28 USCA 723).
For defect in this respect a bill will be dismissed. Wathen v. Jackson Oil Ref.
Co., 235 U.S. 635, 35 S. Ct. 225, 59 L. Ed. 395; Corbus v. Gold Mining Co., 187
U.S. 463, 23 S. Ct. 157, 47 L. Ed. 256; Hawes v. Oakland, 104 U.S. 450, 26 L. Ed.
827; Dimpfel v. Ohio Miss. R.R. Co., 110 U.S. 209, 3 S. Ct. 573, 28 L. Ed. 121;
Memphis v. Dean, 8 Wall. at page 73, 19 L. Ed. 326.
The general averment that complainants had objected to the president does not
meet the particular requirements of the rule. There is alleged no dominance of
the board of directors or of the stockholders by those whose personal interests
are adverse to the relief sought by the bill such as to make it evidently futile to
expect fair consideration within the corporation. * * *"
Unless the directors were majority stockholders, it was the duty of the appellant
to go to the directors or show adequate reason why action in that respect would
be futile. Here the directors were not majority stockholders or, indeed, in control
of the company.
Courts seldom interfere in the control of the internal affairs of a corporation,
except where the directors are guilty of misconduct equivalent to a breach of
trust, or where they stand in a dual relationship which prevents an unprejudiced
exercise of judgment, and then, as a rule, only after an application to the
stockholders or a showing that there was no opportunity for such application.
United Copper Co. v. Amalgamated Copper Co.,244 U.S. 261, 37 S. Ct. 509, 61 L.
Ed. 1119.
For these reasons the bill of complaint was properly dismissed.
Decrees affirmed.
[Civ. No. 24018. Second Dist., Div. Two. Apr. 20, 1961.]
WESTERN AIR LINES, INC. (a Corporation), Respondent, v. JOHN G. SOBIESKI, as
Commissioner of Corporations, Appellant.
COUNSEL
Stanley Mosk, Attorney General, Lee B. Stanton, Deputy Attorney General, and
Richard W. Jennings for Appellant.
Darling, Shattuck & Edmonds, Hugh W. Darling, O'Melveny & Myers and Pierce
Works for Respondent.
OPINION
McMURRAY, J. pro tem. fn. *
This is an appeal by the Commissioner of Corporations of the State of California
from a judgment of the superior court in an action brought by Western Air Lines,
Inc., for a writ of mandate to review a final order rendered by the commissioner.
By its judgment, the superior court, in substance, determined that the
commissioner had exceeded his jurisdiction in purporting to act on a change in
voting rights of its shareholders attempted by Western Air Lines, Inc., by means of
amending its articles of incorporation.
Western, as the respondent herein will be called, is a Delaware corporation with
its principal place of business in California. Western's original predecessor was
incorporated in California in 1925; thereafter, in 1928, a Delaware incorporation
was effected. This Delaware corporation, under a permit [191 Cal. App. 2d
401] applied for and granted by the California Corporations Commissioner,
exchanged its shares for all of the outstanding shares of the California corporation
in 1929, and the California corporation then became a wholly owned subsidiary of
the Delaware corporation. This wholly owned subsidiary was dissolved in 1934.
The certificates of incorporation of both of these corporations contain provisions
for cumulative voting.
On April 19, 1956, a group of Western's minority shareholders voted their shares
cumulatively and elected two of Western's 13 directors. The board of directors
thereafter met and, by amendment of the by-laws, increased the number of
directors from 13 to 15. On July 12 and 13, 1956, the board resolved to eliminate
cumulative voting for directors and began proceedings in compliance with the
relevant Delaware laws to amend the certificate of incorporation with a view to
the elimination of cumulative voting rights.
A proxy statement and proxy form for voting against cumulative voting were sent
to each shareholder on July 31, 1956. The commissioner, by letter on August 28,
1956, advised counsel for Western that in his opinion the proposed amendment of
the articles of incorporation would constitute a "sale" of securities within the
provisions of section 25009, subdivision (a), of the Corporations Code, fn. 1 and,
further, that pursuant to section 25500 fn. 2 of the same code Western should not
engage in the solicitation of proxies or hold a shareholders meeting for the
purpose of amending the articles until Western had applied for and received a
permit authorizing such action from the commissioner.
Western applied for such a permit, reserving, however, the right to question the
jurisdiction of the commissioner to require such a permit. The commissioner
granted a negotiating permit, but expressly reserved the issue of "fairness" under
Corporations Code, section 25510, fn. 3 and conditioned the issuance [191 Cal.
App. 2d 402] of the permit upon nonfiling of the proposed amendment with the
Secretary of State of Delaware until a further permit had been obtained from the
commissioner. The negotiating permit granted further authorized the use of any
proxies received by management before its issuance, provided that such proxies
were not thereafter revoked. Western so advised its shareholders and clarified
certain matters contained in the original solicitation which had been objected to
by the Securities and Exchange Commission as misleading. It did not forward any
new proxy forms and subsequently voted those proxies which had been received
before the objection of the commissioner and the Securities and Exchange
Commission, except those proxies expressly revoked.
On October 10, 1956, at a shareholders' meeting, 442,780 shares voted in favor
of eliminating cumulative voting and 199,810 voted against such change.
Outstanding shares then numbered 743,963 shares, requiring a vote of 371,982
to abolish cumulative voting. Included in the voting were 194,278 proxies
obtained prior to sending the explanatory letter and the obtaining of the
negotiating permit. On October 15, 1956, Western applied for a supplemental
permit to effect the elimination of the provision for cumulative voting from its
articles. After notice to all shareholders, a hearing on the fairness of the proposed
amendment was held by the commissioner. Upon conclusion of the hearing, the
commissioner made detailed findings of unfair, unjust and inequitable actions and
conduct by Western and its management. Among the findings made by the
commissioner were specific findings that indicated that Western's business in
California was of a substantial nature and that California residents were the
holders of over 30 per cent of the outstanding shares in Western.
Western's certificate of incorporation, as permitted by the laws of Delaware,
contained an article providing for cumulative voting and an article reserving the
right to "amend, alter, change or repeal any provision" in the certificate. The
stock certificates issued by Western also contained a written provision to the
effect that by acceptance thereof the holder "assents to and agrees to be bound"
by all the provisions of the certificate of incorporation. The final step to effect
amendment of the articles of incorporation under Delaware law is the filing of
such amendment with the Delaware Secretary of State.
What the commissioner described as his "terminal findings" were, in essence, that
Western's management was determined [191 Cal. App. 2d 403] not to relinquish
control, nor to tolerate any interference from minority shareholders, or directors
representing them, and that the resolution enacted to eliminate the minority's
right to cumulative voting would be "... unfair, unjust and inequitable to the great
number of security holders residing in California." On the basis of the findings, the
commissioner concluded that he had jurisdiction under Corporations Code,
sections 25009, 25500, 25510, supra, and 22507, fn. 4 and that the change in the
right and privilege of the shares from cumulative to straight voting would
transfer of stock takes place in California although the ultimate act may take
place extraterritorially. (People v. Alison, 189 Cal. App. 2d 201, 205 [10 Cal. Rptr.
859].)
People v. Rankin, 169 Cal. App. 2d 150 [337 P.2d 182], specifically holds that even
though the last act necessary to the issuance of a security such as the signing of
documents occurs outside of California, the Corporations Commissioner is not
thereby deprived of jurisdiction over the subject matter.
Respondent cites Robbins v. Pacific Eastern Corp., 8 Cal. 2d 241 [65 P.2d 42]; B. C.
Turf & Country Club v. Dougherty, 94 Cal. App. 2d 320 [210 P.2d 760] and Jones v.
Re-Mine Oil Co., 47 Cal. App. 2d 832 [119 P.2d 219], to the effect that the
commissioner has no extraterritorial jurisdiction, and that such jurisdiction as he
has is limited to acts done or proposed to be done in California. The Robbins case,
supra, on page 284, contains the following language: "It, therefore, follows that
even if it be assumed that the negotiations in [191 Cal. App. 2d 407] California
were illegal, nevertheless the validity of the sale in New York was not affected.
This conclusion makes it unnecessary to pass upon the contention of
respondents, that the Corporate Securities Act, properly interpreted, has no
application at all to negotiations had in California that contemplate the issuance
and sale of stock in a foreign jurisdiction." (Emphasis added.)
B. C. Turf & Country Club v. Daugherty, supra, dealt with a state of facts which the
court felt did not amount to the solicitation or the type of preliminary negotiation
requiring a permit under California law. On page 332 of that opinion, it is
expressly stated: "... the discussions had in California by Fraser during his short
visit in September, did not amount to solicitation or the type of preliminary
negotiation requiring a permit under California law." The opinion further contains
the following language relative to the Corporate Securities Act (p. 329): "From a
standpoint of interpretation, there can be no reasonable doubt but that these
provisions of the statute require a foreign corporation to secure a permit to solicit
a sale of its stock in this state, or to engage in preliminary negotiations looking
towards such sale, even though the issuance of the securities and the transfer of
their title will, in good faith, be completed in a foreign state. The sections quoted
clearly prohibit a foreign corporation from soliciting in this state a sale of stock of
its own issue without first securing a permit, even though in good faith the
issuance of the stock and transfer of title are to take place in the foreign state.
We also have no doubt that, although such a regulation may impose some
restraint on interstate commerce and place some restriction on free speech, it is a
valid exercise of the state's police power, and is not unconstitutional. It is true
that in the Robbins case, supra, these problems were expressly left open and not
decided, and that no other California case seems to have expressly determined
these questions, but the suggested construction is so clear that reasonable minds
cannot differ thereon, and the question of constitutionality has been so long
settled that citation of authority would be superfluous."
As we interpret Jones v. Re-Mine Oil Co., supra, 47 Cal. App. 2d 832, that case,
insofar as it relates to the Corporate Securities Act, appears to rely upon the
Robbins case, supra, and states at page 840: "All the parties here did go in person
to Nevada; they there organized a corporation; they there paid for and had issued
shares of stock in that corporation, [191 Cal. App. 2d 408] and they there made
an agreement regarding the conditions on which they would hold the shares. No
suggestion is made that any of these acts were invalid under Nevada law.
California law can have no application to them and they must be regarded as
valid here." The instant case shows no such substantial extraterritorial dealing.
The case of Transportation Building Co. v. Daugherty, 74 Cal. App. 2d 604 [169
P.2d 470], relied upon by Western, was one wherein a corporation requested
approval of the amendment of its articles of incorporation to change its stock
structure. The appellate court upheld a trial court's determination that the
commissioner had acted improperly in denying such permit since such
reorganization was an internal affair of the corporation. It appears that at the
hearing held by the corporations commissioner, stockholders were invited to
attend but none did; and the court based its opinion upon the ground that the
commissioner did not find that the plan was unfair, unjust, or inequitable, nor that
a fraud would be worked upon those who would acquire the new stock. On page
615 it is said: "There was no dispute whatever as to the facts, and there was no
failure to disclose any facts in connection with the proposal. It is a fair, just, and
equitable plan unless it is the reverse. It is an honest plan if it is not dishonest.
There is no middle ground. The deputy commissioner evidently thought there
was, and that without any finding or evidence to support a finding that the plan
was unfair, unjust or inequitable, it was his duty to refuse the permit because of
his opinion that the shareholders should be able to work out a better deal for
themselves." The quoted language clearly distinguishes the instant case where
proper findings were made under the relevant Corporate Securities Act sections.
Western earnestly insists that under the authority of Southern Sierras Power Co. v.
Railroad Com., 205 Cal. 479 [271 P. 747], the commissioner had no jurisdiction to
act upon the amendment of the articles here proposed, again contending that
such amendment is essentially an internal affair of the corporation. The Southern
Sierras case was considered in Gillis v. Pan American Western Petroleum Co., 3
Cal. 2d 249 [44 P.2d 311], where it is put in its proper framework. In the last cited
case, on page 252, it is said with reference to the Southern Sierras case: "The
court held that the commission was without jurisdiction, for the reason that it was
never intended by the Public Utilities Act of this state 'to subject [191 Cal. App. 2d
409] foreign corporations to regulation concerning the exercise of the inherent
corporate powers conferred upon them by the legislative power of the
incorporating state.' It was largely grounded upon the Fryeburg case, which was
very similar in character. The Fryeburg Water Company was a Maine corporation
doing business in both Maine and New Hampshire. It sought to compel the public
service commission to approve that portion of a stock dividend which was
represented by its capital investment in New Hampshire. The court refused the
writ upon the statement that while the language of the act conferring authority
upon the commission was quite broad it would not be 'presumed that the
legislature intended to give the commission power to regulate the internal affairs
of such corporations.' We have no criticism of these authorities. Indeed, in
Commonwealth Acceptance Corp v. Jordan, 198 Cal. 618 [246 P. 796], this court
called attention to the well-known fact that the laws of the several states
authorize different capital stock structures for corporations, and under the
doctrine of comity they are allowed, in the absence of express constitutional or
statutory inhibitions, to enter other states for the purpose of doing business,
regardless of whether a corporation with like structure is permitted to be formed
in the latter states. However, these authorities are far from holding that the
issuance and sale of the stock in a state other than that in which the corporation
is formed is not a proper subject for legislative action. A number of authorities by
their conclusions confirm the right of the state to protect its citizens, by
legislative interposition, against the issuance or sale of stock in the state. Among
these we cite, Hohn v. Peters, 216 Cal. 406 [14 P.2d 519]; Hayden Plan Co. v.
Friedlander, 97 Cal. App. 12-16 [275 P. 248, 253]; In re Flesher, 81 Cal. App. 128
[252 P. 1057]. In the case of London, Paris & American Bank v. Aronstein, 117 F.
601-609, it is said: 'It is true that the courts in California cannot control the
internal affairs of any foreign corporation. Such matters are to be conducted in
pursuance of and in compliance with the provisions of the charter of the foreign
corporation, and the laws of the country where it was created; but in the
management and method of its business affairs in California with the citizens and
residents thereof, in the sale or disposition or transfer of the shares of stock, it
must conform to the laws of California in relation to such matters, and is bound
thereby. In the recent case of Williams v. Gaylord, supra, 186 U.S. 157 [22 S. Ct.
798, 46 L. Ed. 1102], the Supreme Court of the United States said: [191 Cal. App.
2d 410] "When a corporation sells or encumbers its property, incurs debts, or
gives securities, it does business; and a statute regulating such transactions does
not regulate the internal affairs of the corporation." ' (Italics ours.) In Hall v.
Geiger-Jones Co., 242 U.S. 539-550 [37 S. Ct. 217, 61 L. Ed. 480, Ann. Cas. 1917C
643, L.R.A. 1917F 514], we find a similar statement of the purpose of legislation
similar to that we are considering which is helpful in arriving at a sound
conclusion. It is as follows: 'It will be observed, therefore, that the law is a
regulation of business, constrains conduct only to that end, the purpose being to
protect the public against the imposition of unsubstantial schemes and the
securities based upon them. Whatever prohibition there is, is a means to the
same purpose, made necessary, it may be supposed, by the persistence of evil
and its insidious forms and the experience of the inadequacy of penalties or other
repressive measures.' To like effect is Merrick v. N.W. Halsey & Co., 242 U.S.
568 [37 S. Ct. 227, 61 L. Ed. 498]. The case of Biddle v. Smith, 148 Tenn. 489-494
[256 S.W. 453], is authority for the proposition that in order 'to protect residents
of the state against the imposition of worthless investments offered by domestic
and foreign investment companies under whatsoever guise presented,' the
legislature is empowered to restrict valid issues to those which are in accordance
with a permit therefor and to declare void other issues. To the same effect is
Edward v. Ioor, 205 Mich. 617 [172 N.W. 620, 15 A.L.R. 256]. Conceding,
therefore, the premise of respondents' argument that ordinarily speaking the
issuance of capital stock or the stock structure of a corporation is an internal
affair, yet the issuance and sale of stock within a state other than that of its
organization may be regulated in order to protect the residents and citizens of the
former state."
Western also urges that the case of Order of United Commercial Travelers of
America v. Wolfe, 331 U.S. 586 [67 S. Ct. 1355, 91 L. Ed. 1687, 173 A.L.R. 1107],
sustains the proposition that the commissioner had no jurisdiction to act as he did
here. A reading of that case persuades us that its holdings are necessarily
restricted by the facts therein to fraternal insurance associations. There were a
number of such cases before the United States Supreme Court before the decision
in Wolfe, and the court seems to have treated these cases as unique and to have
established rules of law applicable only thereto. [191 Cal. App. 2d 411]
The case of Watson v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp., 348 U.S. 66 [75 S. Ct.
166, 99 L. Ed. 74] was one wherein it was contended that no action might lie
against an insurer, where that insurance company was a foreign corporation
qualified to do business in Louisiana, until after the insured's liability to pay
damages had been finally determined either by judgment or agreement. The
Supreme Court dealt with a Louisiana statute which provided for direct actions for
injuries occurring in Louisiana (regardless of whether the insurance policy was
written or delivered in that state), and which conditioned the right of a foreign
liability insurer to do business in Louisiana upon the consent to allow suits under
such statute. The court rejected the argument that such statute was violative of
the equal protection, contract, due process and full faith and credit clauses of the
federal Constitution and realistically recognized that a state has a legitimate
interest in safeguarding the rights of persons injured there even though certain of
the activities affected occurred beyond its boundaries.
It would appear that the provisions of the Corporate Securities Act here before us
are a proper exercise of legislative discretion in requiring that corporate dealings
with residents of this state be authorized by the Commissioner of Corporations,
particularly where such corporation does a substantial amount of business within
the state, and the act is not violative of the constitutional clauses of equal
protection, contract, due process and full faith and credit if such legislative
enactments operate equally upon such foreign corporations and domestic
corporations in this state.
Furthermore, it appears here that since 1929 Western has recognized and
submitted to the continuing jurisdiction of the California Corporations
Commissioner. At that early date Western applied for and was granted a permit
by the commissioner to allow the exchange of its shares for those of its California
predecessor. At that time, the permittee represented to the commissioner that
the shareholders of the California corporation would not be hurt in any way by the
exchange. If the exchange had not taken place, the shareholders could not now
be deprived of their right to cumulative voting, for a California corporation, by
legislative act (Corp. Code, 2235) must provide its shareholders with the right to
vote cumulatively for directors. Thus it is apparent that the condition agreed to by
Western as a basis for the original exchange of stock now tacitly prevents the
company from [191 Cal. App. 2d 412] depriving its shareholders of a right which
they would now have had if the 1929 exchange had not taken place.
Western complains that the commissioner, since the institution of this action, has
created a new class of foreign corporation called a pseudo- foreign corporation,
and urges that such definition of such corporation is mere fiat; that the
commissioner has usurped the function of the Legislature which has seen fit to
divide corporations into only two classes--domestic and foreign; and that the
commissioner has seen fit by his arbitrary definition to create a third. Western's
position in this respect is not well taken. The commissioner did not create any
new class of corporation. He merely named a class of corporation which has, in
effect, existed for many years, one with its technical domicile outside of this state
but one which exercises most of its corporate vitality within this state. Unless it
can be said that the Corporations Commissioner's characterization of such
corporation as "pseudo-foreign" is arbitrary, it would appear to be a matter well
within his administrative discretion. The concept of a pseudo- foreign corporation
Western to its conclusion, would be to say that the commissioner might have the
power in the first instance to require certain rights to be guaranteed to
shareholders before he would permit the sale or issuance of a foreign
corporation's stock in this state, but that immediately thereafter, by the device of
amending the charter of such corporation in another state, the entire structure of
that corporation, even to substantial changes in the rights of shareholders in
California, might be legally effected. Such a holding would enable a foreign
corporation to destroy the [191 Cal. App. 2d 414] rights which the State of
California has deemed worthy of protection by the enactment of the Corporate
Securities Act.
This position is not without support in other jurisdictions. The mere fact that the
last act here necessary to effectuate the change in the voting rights of the
numerous California residents who are shareholders of Western will take place in
Delaware does not of itself necessitate a finding that the commissioner for that
reason was without jurisdiction in this matter. Also, a fair and impartial reading of
the pertinent Corporations Code sections convinces us that the amendment here
sought is a "change in the rights, preferences, privileges, or restrictions on
outstanding securities" (Corp. Code, 25009, subd. (a), supra) of such nature as
to be within the contemplation of the Legislature upon enactment of those
sections.
Numerous arguments relative to comity between states are advanced by
Western, but none of these appear to be sufficiently cogent to invalidate the
above interpretations of the Corporate Securities Act sections here involved. It
would seem too evident to require protracted dissertation that the right of
cumulative voting is a substantial right, and one which the Legislature may well
have had in mind when it enacted the code sections here under consideration.
While not binding upon the courts of this state, the reasoning and result reached
in State ex rel. Weede v. Iowa Southern Utilities Co. of Delaware, 231 Iowa 784 [2
N.W.2d 372], (State ex rel. Weede v. Bechtel, 239 Iowa 1298 [31 N.W.2d 853],
cert. den. 337 U.S. 918 [69 S. Ct. 1159, 63 L. Ed. 1727] [same case on merits])
are persuasive of the above result. That case, at 2 N.W.2d 395, succinctly states:
"Simply because that State [Delaware] chartered the appellee [corporation] does
not require Iowa to admit it to transact business within its border unconditionally"
in a case where the directors of the corporation proposed an amendment to the
certificate which would change the value of outstanding stock.
Because of the foregoing the judgment of the superior court must be reversed.
[3] This, however, raises another disagreement between the parties, the
commissioner contending that this court has before it the entire record of the
proceedings before the Corporations Commissioner and must therefore review the
entire record, citing Code of Civil Procedure, section 1094.5, supra. Western,
however, argues that since the trial court never appraised the commissioner's
findings from either the standpoint [191 Cal. App. 2d 415] of substantial evidence
or, as it contends should have been done, an independent review of the evidence,
the matter must be remanded to the superior court for trial. Western's position in
this regard appears to be correct. The superior court's determination was
confined to establishing whether or not the commissioner had jurisdiction. In so
examining the record, the full review contemplated by section 1094.5 of the Code
of Civil Procedure was not made. The court below determined there was no
jurisdiction, and thus made no determination of the merits of the case, that is,
whether there was substantial evidence to support the commissioner's findings.
(See Martin v. Alcoholic Beverage etc. Appeals Board, 52 Cal. 2d 259, 264-265
[341 P.2d 291].)
There is no express grant of the right of an appellate court to conduct a review in
such a case without remand, and it would appear to be of doubtful wisdom to
attempt such review in a court which is constituted as an appellate court when
trial courts are established for that very purpose.
Reversed and remanded.
The opinion and order granting the temporary injunction were reported at
D.C., 143 F. Supp. 826. This order was affirmed at 5 Cir., 242 F.2d 45. This case
was reported on the merits at159 F. Supp. 104 in a twenty-seven page opinion
where District Judge Benjamin C. Dawkins, Jr., preludes:
"The crux of the case is that, had it not been for this suit, the majority six
people who proceeded to *751751 sell and liquidate the corporate assets
immediately after the minority stock was bought, notwithstanding promises that
this would not be done would have reaped a profit for themselves, before
taxes, of more than $3,400,000, at the expense of the minority, and in addition to
nearly $6,000,000 rightly to be received by them in the liquidation for their own
stock.
NO. 17299.
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS, FIFTH CIRCUIT.
*750750
"All persons involved are educated, cultured, refined. They have enjoyed, and still
occupy, positions of prestige in their home communities. Until this tragic
controversy arose, they appeared to be fairly congenial, at least on the surface.
"Now, regrettably, they are publicly and irreconcilably divided into two warring
camps. One group the former minority stockholders is convinced that its
members are victims of deliberate fraud perpetrated upon them by the majority.
For their part, the majority resists and resents, with equal fervor, the charges
made against them.
"While the suit is one which ought not to have been necessary, and clearly should
have been settled, the depth of feeling is such that compromise has not even
been discussed. Consequently, this litigation must run its bitter course, for better
or for worse.
******
"After a full trial on the merits, lasting more than a week; having heard all of the
parties and their witnesses; having considered the lengthy briefs (totaling
approximately 300 pages), and the authorities cited; having studied the transcript
of testimony and exhibits (some 1255 pages); having heard the oral arguments of
respective counsel, lasting nearly three hours; and having reached our findings of
fact and conclusions of law, we now set them down for the record. They represent
to us the only result which justly could come from the evidence before us.
"While there are some facts not in dispute, there are many more which are hotly
controverted, especially as to what was said or not said, done or not done, known
or not known, with regard to the purchase of plaintiffs' stock. In stating the facts
we have found, our statements are based upon what we believe to be the truth,
notwithstanding some testimony to the contrary. We also have drawn inferences,
which we believe to be reasonable and correct, from the facts and circumstances
in evidence." 159 F. Supp. at pages 106, 107-108.
This case concerns the purchase of minority shares from the plaintiffs as treasury
stock by the defendant-corporation and a subsequent liquidation of the
corporation, the transaction alleged (1) to have been fraudulent upon the interest
of the plaintiffs, or (2) to have unjustly enriched the defendant, or (3) to have had
no "serious" consideration under Art. 2464, L.S.A.-Civil Code.1
1.
"Art. 2464. The price of the sale * * * ought not to be out of all proportion with the
value of the thing; for instance the sale of a plantation for a dollar could not be
considered as a fair sale; it would be considered as a donation disguised."
The gist of the complaint is in paragraph 28 thereof, which states:
"28. Plaintiffs aver that A.S. Johnson and Brown McCullough (acting in their
capacities as President and Vice President, respectively, of Defendant, and who
actually dominated the business policies of the Company and without securing
the prior approval of the directors or stockholders of Defendant) conceived a
fraudulent scheme acquiesced in by those stockholders whom they controlled and
constituting a majority of the outstanding stock, whereby they conspired to cause
Mansfield Hardwood Lumber Company *752752 to buy as treasury stock all the
stock of the remaining stockholders for an inadequate price and then to cause the
company to sell its assets and distribute the proceeds upon liquidation at a
tremendous profit to the conspiring group. The plan or artifice of the scheme was
to cause Mansfield Hardwood Lumber Company to falsely notify the minority
stockholders that dividend payments would be virtually discontinued for a period
of the next 15 to 20 years, this to be the consequence of the company's entering
upon a long range plan of extensive reforestation and improvement of its assets.
The company was to negotiate for and purchase the stock at a price
approximating its value as reflected by the books of the company, which value
the conspirators knew to be grossly understated. The company was to falsely
deny any intention of disposing of its assets and liquidating. Plaintiffs aver that
the representations made to each of them in the purchase of their stock were in
furtherance of this fraudulent scheme."
The intricate facts are set out fully in the opinion below at159 F. Supp. 104, 106117, and it would be redundant for us to reiterate them here. However, for the
purpose of this opinion, we must attempt a brief summary.
The sole defendant is a corporation formed in 1901 by two men, the predecessors
of the parties in interest here. The corporation engaged in the business of
growing timber and sawmilling and by 1955 had acquired extensive holdings
some 93,000 acres of timberlands, two sawmills, several lumber companies, and
a small railroad. Out of the 4,836 shares of stock outstanding in 1953 (par value
of $100 per share), the defendant's three officers and their immediate families
owned some 2,751 shares. These three officers A.S. (Bud) Johnson, Brown
McCullough, and T.W.M. Long and their families will be referred to as the
majority stockholders. The remaining shares were spread out among the plaintiffs
and others, the two largest holders being plaintiffs, Mrs. Hattie A. Johnson and
Mrs. Jeanette Johnson Jennette. The corporation began purchasing the minority
shares in the Spring of 1953 for $350 per share and made its last purchase from
Mrs. Johnson and Mrs. Jennette in the Fall of 1953 for $400 per share. The
defendant purchased a total of 1,567 shares. There was some evidence that the
fair market value of the stock, considering all elements, was about $320 per
share.
2. See, Richardson v. Ainsa, 218 U.S. 289, 31 S.Ct. 23,54 L.Ed. 1044; Federal
Reserve Bank of Kansas City, Mo. v. Omaha National Bank, 8 Cir., 1930, 45 F.2d
511, 514; cf. Lowry v. International Brotherhood, etc., 5 Cir., 1958, 259 F.2d
568,575.
"The power of a court of equity so to mold its decree as to do complete justice
between the parties without adversely affecting those not before the court is
exceedingly broad and elastic." Mackintosh v. Mark's Estate, 5 Cir., 1955, 225 F.2d
211, 215.
This brings us to consider whether defendant's motion to dismiss should have
been granted for failure to state a claim, which also raises substantially the same
question presented in its argument concerning the joinder of defendant's officers
as indispensable parties. In defendant's brief, it summarizes:
"In summary, it is submitted that the Court below erred in failing to dismiss this
action because the complaint fails to state a claim upon which relief can be
granted in three important respects: (1) the complaint affirmatively alleged that
the sale of plaintiffs' stock was induced by the alleged fraud of defendant's
officers who are alleged to have acted without authority and for their own benefit;
(2) the complaint fails to state the value of the stock in its then condition, at the
time of the sale; and (3) the alleged representations by the officers with reference
to future dividends and future liquidation of the corporation were mere indefinite
expressions of opinion, relating solely to future prospects of the Corporation, and
could not, if made, constitute grounds for an action for rescission for fraud."
We feel it unnecessary to dwell upon these contentions because, after carefully
studying all of the evidence in this cause, we are of the opinion that the district
court was clearly erroneous in finding that fraud per se of defendant through its
officers was established beyond a reasonable doubt 3 to the extent of "grasping
greed" and "moral bankruptcy." We so hold because of our *754754 doubt that
the "intent" element necessary as the basis for actual fraud was adequately
established. In other words, we doubt that defendant's officers during the stock
purchases from plaintiffs had the necessary mens rea for a predication of
actionable fraud.
3. Belcher v. Booth, 1927, 164 La. 514, 114 So. 116; American Guaranty Co. v.
Sunset Realty Planting Co., 1944, 208 La. 772,23 So.2d 409, 430.
However, the results were correct and are soundly predicated, we think, upon the
liability for breach of the fiduciary duty owed by a corporation's officers to its
individual stockholders. Practically all jurisdictions recognize a fiduciary
relationship arising from the directors and officers to their corporation and to the
stockholders as a whole, while a "growing minority" accord this duty to individual
stockholders,4 especially concerning the purchase of stock from a
shareholder.5 Whether this relationship between officers and directors and their
stockholders is termed fiduciary or quasifiduciary or trust or confidence is
immaterial, and, likewise, is it immaterial whether its breach is described as
constructive fraud, unjust enrichment, fraudulent breach of trust, breach of
fiduciary obligation, gross negligence, or otherwise, and whether the remedy is
given by a constructive trust, restitution, or accounting. These are all relative
faith, and with that diligence, care, judgment, and skill which ordinarily prudent
men would exercise under similar circumstances in like positions."
For brevity, these decisions are discussed in the margin. 6 We feel that these
decisions fully answer appellant's contentions *756756 that Louisiana's limited
equity jurisprudence will prevent our imposition of a "constructive trust" or
"equitable lien" or "right of restitution" for the breach of the fiduciary duty owed
to the plaintiffs by defendant's officers.
6. See the case of Markey v. Hibernia Homestead Ass'n, La.App. 1939, 186 So.
757, 763, quoted at length in footnote 7 of the lower court's first opinion,
D.C., 143 F. Supp. 826, 839, 840; and Commercial Nat. Bank in Shreveport v.
Parsons, 5 Cir., 1944,144 F.2d 231, 238-239, quoted in the lower court's opinion
on the merits at 159 F. Supp. at page 119.
In Dawkins v. Mitchell, 1922, 149 La. 1038, 90 So. 396,398-399, the Supreme
Court of Louisiana stated:
"The directors of the bank were its agents, charged under the law with an implied
trust to use its funds only for the purposes permitted by law, and to preserve
them for its creditors and stockholders * * *. The obligation which the directors
incurred in favor of the bank was a special one, due to it in particular, and to the
stockholders. It was not a general duty due to every one. They were elected by
the stockholders to administer the affairs of the bank and accepted the trust.
We agree with the district court that the fiduciary relationship in this case
necessitated a disclosure of the following facts admittedly not disclosed by
defendant's officers to the plaintiffs:
"1) The $5,000,000 offer, for 55% of defendant's timberlands, made by R.O.
Martin to Bud Johnson in 1952;
"2) The instructions given to C.L. Brooke, in 1952, to assume that defendant's
assets possessed a value in excess of $9,000,000;
"3) The opinion of W.C. Postle, defendant's Chief Forester, in 1953, that its
timberlands then had a market value `in the neighborhood of a hundred dollars
an acre', which the officers knew about;
"4) The letters containing tax advice, written by Brooke on August 29 and October
14, 1952, wherein contemplated plans for sale of defendant's assets, liquidation,
merger, stock sales, etc., were discussed;
"5) The officers' secret consideration of various plans of liquidation,
reorganization, merger, etc., before the stock-buying program was begun."
Johnson v. Mansfield Hardwood Lumber Co., D.C.W.D.La. 1958,159 F. Supp. 104,
118, note 9. Furthermore, the special relationship between defendant's officers
and the plaintiffs demanded that restitution be made to plaintiffs for the
difference of price in their sold shares and their value upon the almost immediate
liquidation especially where the defendant's officers made promises concerning
curtailment of future dividends and disclosed plans for no liquidation in the near
future and used economic coercion to secure the sale of the minority shares.
As the district court found, defendant's officers were the corporation. Other than
their official nature, they were directors and also had in their control over one-half
of the voting stock. They knew the intricate workings of the corporation, its total
assets, and they knew more than the other stockholders about the value of the
stock both for sale and upon liquidation. They used promises and representations
as to their intended future running of the corporation which exerted economic
influence on the plaintiffs, forcing them to sell, and then immediately began plans
to liquidate in contradiction of their representations. Certainly, their fiduciary duty
was violated to the plaintiffs-stockholders.
The district court answered appellant's contention that the officers rather than it
or in conjunction with it were the proper parties defendant, as raised in its motion
to dismiss, by quoting part of the following from Kohler v. Jacobs, 5 Cir., 1943,138
F.2d 440, 442-443, which, in our opinion, is good law:
"* * * As to the Corporation, it is true that it owes the stockholder no duty of
disclosure when he trades with others in its stock, and since he has access to the
corporate books diligence might well lead him to them when he desires
information from the Corporation. But if a corporation (which ordinarily does not
deal in its own stock) for its own lawful purposes sets out to buy shares through
its managing officers, and they by intentional misrepresentation and concealment
deceive a selling stockholder who is ignorant of the truth, though he be an
inactive director who ought to know, so that he is damaged, we see no reason
why the corporation is not bound for the consequences. The deceit practiced by
the corporation's high officers in the corporation's business and for its benefit
must be taken to be a corporate act, and not ultra vires. 19 C.J.S., Corporations,
1278(a)(b); 13 Am.Jur., Corporations, 1125. If on trial it should appear that the
transaction *757757 was a deceit committed by Jacobs for the benefit of the
Corporation, both the Corporation and himself as an individual might be liable;
because the action is not one to rescind a fraudulent transaction, or to recover an
unjust enrichment, but for the damages done by a wilful tort for which a
perpetrator may be held liable though he realized no benefit from it. United
States v. City of Brookhaven, 5 Cir., 134 F.2d 442. * * *"
Actually, however, the acts of defendant's officers in inducing the plaintiffs to sell
were in all respects within their authority and not ultra vires both
Louisiana,7 where the acts occurred, and Delaware,8 where defendant is
incorporated, allow a corporation to purchase its own stock after meeting certain
requirements (apparently satisfied here), and such acts were well within the
implied, if not the express, authority of the officers' agency. Further, as covered
by the trial court, there is no doubt about ratification by the corporation, if
necessary at all, for breach of confidence. In fact, here, the corporation was the
proper party defendant for satisfying all claims of all plaintiffs in one lawsuit. A
stockholder derivative action certainly is not proper for, here, the wrong is to the
individual plaintiffs and not to the corporation.9 And the general rule that "a
corporation is not relieved from liability for the fraudulent acts of its officer within
the apparent scope of his authority, by the fact that the officer in committing the
fraud is acting for his own benefit, and the corporation does not profit from
it,"10 applies as strongly where a fiduciary breach is substituted for fraud.
7. Louisiana allows the purchase of treasury stock [State v. Stewart Bros. Cotton
Co., 1939, 193 La. 16, 190 So. 317,321-322], as Section 23, paragraph A of Act
250 of 1928 permits:
"A. Unless the articles otherwise provide, a corporation may purchase its own
shares of any class issued by it, but only out of surplus available for dividends,
and only if the purchase does not violate the contractual right of any other class
of shares * * *." LSA-R.S. 12:23, subd. A.
8. Ashman v. Miller, 6 Cir., 1939, 101 F.2d 85, 90:
"Section 19 of the General Corporation Act of Delaware (Rev. Code 1935, 2051
[8 Del.C. 160]) expressly confers on a corporation the power to purchase its own
stock provided it can do so without impairing its capital."
See also, Bankers Securities Corp. v. Kresge Department Stores, D.C.D.Del.
1944, 54 F. Supp. 378.
9. See Fletcher, Cyclopedia Corporations, Perm.ed., 5911.
10. Annotation, 43 A.L.R. 615.
Appellant earnestly predicates separate defenses to the claims of four plaintiffs,
Max Brown, Mrs. Hattie A. Johnson, Mrs. Jeanette Johnson Jennette, and Ben Drew
Velvin, Executor, who collectively assert more than eighty-four per cent in value
of the claims. As to these first three plaintiffs, discussed by the lower court at 159
F. Supp. at pages 127-131, we must summarily hold that the facts conclusively
warrant an affirmance on the basis of the breach of fiduciary relationship existing
to them from the corporate officers and especially on the "business duress"
practiced on Brown. Their special defenses are of no avail. To further elucidate
would be repetitious. Ben Drew Velvin, as executor and sole heir of his mother, a
party plaintiff having died during this litigation, may pursue the claim which she
had asserted. We do not feel that his opinion testimony that there was no fraud
would prevent him from pursuing his claim as executor.
We do hold that the trial court was clearly erroneous in its findings as to the
Shreveport Lumber Sales, in commenting on the excessiveness of the officers'
salaries and expense accounts, and in holding "that the officers probably bought
a large amount of timber from outside sources, instead of cutting from
defendant's timberlands, thus maintaining their value for purposes of later
liquidation," all found at 159 F. Supp. at *758758 page 111. In fairness to
defendant's officers, we record our opinion that such findings are clearly
erroneous, notwithstanding that our so holding does not change the result.
The judgment is
PANGANIBAN, J.:
Well established in our jurisprudence is the rule that the residence of a
corporation is the place where its principal office is located, as stated in its
Articles of Incorporation.
The Case
Before us is a Petition for Review[1] on Certiorari, under Rule 45 of the Rules of
Court, assailing the June 26, 2003 Decision[2] and the November 27, 2003
Resolution[3] of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-GR SP No. 74319. The decretal
portion of the Decision reads as follows:
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the assailed Orders dated May 27, 2002
and October 1, 2002 of the RTC, Branch 213, Mandaluyong City in Civil Case No.
99-600, are hereby SET ASIDE. The said case is hereby ordered DISMISSED on the
ground of improper venue.[4]
The assailed Resolution denied petitioners Motion for Reconsideration.
Affirmed.
The Facts
The relevant facts of the case are summarized by the CA in this wise:
On February 23, 1999, HYATT filed a Complaint for unfair trade practices and
damages under Articles 19, 20 and 21 of the Civil Code of the Philippines against
LG Industrial Systems Co. Ltd. (LGISC) and LG International Corporation (LGIC),
alleging among others, that: in 1988, it was appointed by LGIC and LGISC as the
exclusive distributor of LG elevators and escalators in the Philippines under a
Distributorship Agreement; x x x LGISC, in the latter part of 1996, made a
proposal to change the exclusive distributorship agency to that of a joint venture
partnership; while it looked forward to a healthy and fruitful negotiation for a joint
venture, however, the various meetings it had with LGISC and LGIC, through the
latters representatives, were conducted in utmost bad faith and with malevolent
intentions; in the middle of the negotiations, in order to put pressures upon it,
LGISC and LGIC terminated the Exclusive Distributorship Agreement; x x x [A]s a
consequence, [HYATT] suffered P120,000,000.00 as actual damages, representing
loss of earnings and business opportunities, P20,000,000.00 as damages for its
reputation and goodwill, P1,000,000.00 as and by way of exemplary damages,
and P500,000.00 as and by way of attorneys fees.
On March 17, 1999, LGISC and LGIC filed a Motion to Dismiss raising the following
grounds: (1) lack of jurisdiction over the persons of defendants, summons not
having been served on its resident agent; (2) improper venue; and (3) failure to
state a cause of action. The [trial] court denied the said motion in an Order dated
January 7, 2000.
On March 6, 2000, LGISC and LGIC filed an Answer with Compulsory
Counterclaim ex abundante cautela. Thereafter, they filed a Motion for
Reconsideration and to Expunge Complaint which was denied.
On December 4, 2000, HYATT filed a motion for leave of court to amend the
complaint, alleging that subsequent to the filing of the complaint, it learned that
LGISC transferred all its organization, assets and goodwill, as a consequence of a
joint venture agreement with Otis Elevator Company of the USA, to LG Otis
Elevator Company (LG OTIS, for brevity). Thus, LGISC was to be substituted or
changed to LG OTIS, its successor-in-interest. Likewise, the motion averred that x
x x GOLDSTAR was being utilized by LG OTIS and LGIC in perpetrating their
unlawful and unjustified acts against HYATT. Consequently, in order to afford
complete relief, GOLDSTAR was to be additionally impleaded as a party-
The CA ruled that the trial court had committed palpable error amounting to
grave abuse of discretion when the latter denied respondents Motion to Dismiss.
The appellate court held that the venue was clearly improper, because none of
the litigants resided in Mandaluyong City, where the case was filed.
According to the appellate court, since Makati was the principal place of business
of both respondent and petitioner, as stated in the latters Articles of
Incorporation, that place was controlling for purposes of determining the proper
venue. The fact that petitioner had abandoned its principal office in Makati years
prior to the filing of the original case did not affect the venue where personal
actions could be commenced and tried.
This Court has also definitively ruled that for purposes of venue, the term
residence is synonymous with domicile.[14] Correspondingly, the Civil Code
provides:
Art. 51. When the law creating or recognizing them, or any other provision does
not fix the domicile of juridical persons, the same shall be understood to be the
place where their legal representation is established or where they exercise their
principal functions.[15]
It now becomes apparent that the residence or domicile of a juridical person is
fixed by the law creating or recognizing it. Under Section 14(3) of the Corporation
Code, the place where the principal office of the corporation is to be located is
one of the required contents of the articles of incorporation, which shall be filed
with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
In the present case, there is no question as to the residence of respondent. What
needs to be examined is that of petitioner. Admittedly,[16] the latters principal
place of business is Makati, as indicated in its Articles of Incorporation. Since the
principal place of business of a corporation determines its residence or domicile,
then the place indicated in petitioners articles of incorporation becomes
controlling in determining the venue for this case.
Petitioner argues that the Rules of Court do not provide that when the plaintiff is a
corporation, the complaint should be filed in the location of its principal office as
indicated in its articles of incorporation.[17] Jurisprudence has, however, settled
that the place where the principal office of a corporation is located, as stated in
the articles, indeed establishes its residence. [18] This ruling is important in
determining the venue of an action by or against a corporation,[19] as in the
present case.
Without merit is the argument of petitioner that the locality stated in its Articles
of Incorporation does not conclusively indicate that its principal office is still in the
same place. We agree with the appellate court in its observation that the
requirement to state in the articles the place where the principal office of the
corporation is to be located is not a meaningless requirement. That proviso would
be rendered nugatory if corporations were to be allowed to simply disregard what
is expressly stated in their Articles of Incorporation.[20]
Inconclusive are the bare allegations of petitioner that it had closed its Makati
office and relocated to Mandaluyong City, and that respondent was well aware of
those circumstances. Assuming arguendo that they transacted business with each
other in the Mandaluyong office of petitioner, the fact remains that, in law, the
latters residence was still the place indicated in its Articles of Incorporation.
Further unacceptable is its faulty reasoning that the ground for the CAs dismissal
It appears that on June 22, 1963, the New Cagayan Grocery filed a complaint
against the Clavecilla Radio System alleging, in effect, that on March 12, 1963,
the following message, addressed to the former, was filed at the latter's Bacolod
Branch Office for transmittal thru its branch office at Cagayan de Oro:
NECAGRO CAGAYAN DE ORO (CLAVECILLA)
REURTEL WASHED NOT AVAILABLE REFINED TWENTY FIFTY IF AGREEABLE SHALL
SHIP LATER REPLY POHANG
The Cagayan de Oro branch office having received the said message omitted, in
delivering the same to the New Cagayan Grocery, the word "NOT" between the
words "WASHED" and "AVAILABLE," thus changing entirely the contents and
purport of the same and causing the said addressee to suffer damages. After
service of summons, the Clavecilla Radio System filed a motion to dismiss the
complaint on the grounds that it states no cause of action and that the venue is
improperly laid. The New Cagayan Grocery interposed an opposition to which the
Clavecilla Radio System filed its rejoinder. Thereafter, the City Judge, on
September 18, 1963, denied the motion to dismiss for lack of merit and set the
case for hearing.1wph1.t
Hence, the Clavecilla Radio System filed a petition for prohibition with preliminary
injunction with the Court of First Instance praying that the City Judge, Honorable
Agustin Antillon, be enjoined from further proceeding with the case on the ground
of improper venue. The respondents filed a motion to dismiss the petition but this
was opposed by the petitioner. Later, the motion was submitted for resolution on
the pleadings.
served with summons in that city where it maintains a branch office. This Court
has already held in the case of Cohen vs. Benguet Commercial Co., Ltd., 34 Phil.
526; that the term "may be served with summons" does not apply when the
defendant resides in the Philippines for, in such case, he may be sued only in the
municipality of his residence, regardless of the place where he may be found and
served with summons. As any other corporation, the Clavecilla Radio System
maintains a residence which is Manila in this case, and a person can have only
one residence at a time (See Alcantara vs. Secretary of the Interior, 61 Phil. 459;
Evangelists vs. Santos, 86 Phil. 387). The fact that it maintains branch offices in
some parts of the country does not mean that it can be sued in any of these
places. To allow an action to be instituted in any place where a corporate entity
has its branch offices would create confusion and work untold inconvenience to
the corporation.
It is important to remember, as was stated by this Court in Evangelista vs.
Santos, et al., supra, that the laying of the venue of an action is not left to
plaintiff's caprice because the matter is regulated by the Rules of Court. Applying
the provision of the Rules of Court, the venue in this case was improperly laid.
The order appealed from is therefore reversed, but without prejudice to the filing
of the action in Which the venue shall be laid properly. With costs against the
respondents-appellees.
In dismissing the case, the lower court held that the Clavecilla Radio System may
be sued either in Manila where it has its principal office or in Cagayan de Oro City
where it may be served, as in fact it was served, with summons through the
Manager of its branch office in said city. In other words, the court upheld the
authority of the city court to take cognizance of the case.1wph1.t
In appealing, the Clavecilla Radio System contends that the suit against it should
be filed in Manila where it holds its principal office.
It is clear that the case for damages filed with the city court is based upon tort
and not upon a written contract. Section 1 of Rule 4 of the New Rules of Court,
governing venue of actions in inferior courts, provides in its paragraph (b) (3) that
when "the action is not upon a written contract, then in the municipality where
the defendant or any of the defendants resides or may be served with summons."
(Emphasis supplied)
Settled is the principle in corporation law that the residence of a corporation is
the place where its principal office is established. Since it is not disputed that the
Clavecilla Radio System has its principal office in Manila, it follows that the suit
against it may properly be filed in the City of Manila.
The appellee maintain, however, that with the filing of the action in Cagayan de
Oro City, venue was properly laid on the principle that the appellant may also be
FACTS:
Idonah Slade Perkins, an American citizen who died in New York City, left among
others, two stock certificates issued by Benguet Consolidated,
a corporation domiciled in the Philippines. As ancillary administrator of Perkins
estate in the Philippines, Tayag now wants to take possession of these stock
certificates but County Trust Company of New York, the domiciliary administrator,
refused to part with them. Thus, the probate court of the Philippines was forced to
issue an order declaring the stock certificates as lost and ordering Benguet
Consolidated to issue new stock certificates representing Perkins shares. Benguet
Consolidated appealed the order, arguing that the stock certificates are not lost
as they are in existence and currently in the possession of County Trust Company
of New York.
HELD:
The appeal lacks merit.
Tayag, as ancillary administrator, has the power to gain control and possession of
all assets of the decedent within the jurisdiction of the Philippines
It is to be noted that the scope of the power of the ancillary administrator was, in
an earlier case, set forth by Justice Malcolm. Thus: "It is often necessary to have
more than one administration of an estate. When a person dies intestate owning
property in the country of his domicile as well as in a foreign country,
administration is had in both countries. That which is granted in the jurisdiction of
decedent's last domicile is termed the principal administration, while any other
administration is termed the ancillary administration. The reason for the latter is
because a grant of administration does not ex proprio vigore have any effect
beyond the limits of the country in which it is granted. Hence, an administrator
appointed in a foreign state has no authority in the [Philippines].
The ancillary administration is proper, whenever a person dies, leaving in a
country other than that of his last domicile, property to be administered in the
nature of assets of the deceased liable for his individual debts or to be distributed
among his heirs."
DECISION
FERNANDO, J.:
Confronted by an obstinate and adamant refusal of the domiciliary administrator,
the County Trust Company of New York, United States of America, of the estate of
the deceased Idonah Slade Perkins, who died in New York City on March 27, 1960,
to surrender to the ancillary administrator in the Philippines the stock certificates
owned by her in a Philippine corporation, Benguet Consolidated, Inc., to satisfy
the legitimate claims of local creditors, the lower court, then presided by the
Honorable Arsenio Santos, now retired, issued on May 18, 1964, an order of this
tenor: After considering the motion of the ancillary administrator, dated February
11, 1964, as well as the opposition filed by the Benguet Consolidated, Inc., the
Court hereby (1) considers as lost for all purposes in connection with the
administration and liquidation of the Philippine estate of Idonah Slade Perkins the
stock certificates covering the 33,002 shares of stock standing in her name in the
books of the Benguet Consolidated, Inc., (2) orders said certificates cancelled,
and (3) directs said corporation to issue new certificates in lieu thereof, the same
to be delivered by said corporation to either the incumbent ancillary
administrator or to the Probate Division of this Court. 1
From such an order, an appeal was taken to this Court not by the domiciliary
administrator, the County Trust Company of New York, but by the Philippine
corporation, the Benguet Consolidated, Inc. The appeal cannot possibly prosper.
The order challenged represents a response and expresses a policy, to
paraphrase Frankfurter, arising out of a specific problem, addressed to the
attainment of specific ends by the use of specific remedies, with full and ample
support from legal doctrines of weight and significance.
The facts will explain why. As set forth in the brief of appellant Benguet
Consolidated, Inc., Idonah Slade Perkins, who died on March 27, 1960 in New York
City, left among others, two stock certificates covering 33,002 shares of
appellant, the certificates being in the possession of the County Trust Company of
New York, which as noted, is the domiciliary administrator of the estate of the
deceased2 Then came this portion of the appellants brief: On August 12, 1960,
Prospero Sanidad instituted ancillary administration proceedings in the Court of
First Instance of Manila; Lazaro A. Marquez was appointed ancillary administrator;
and on January 22, 1963, he was substituted by the appellee Renato D. Tayag. A
dispute arose between the domiciliary administrator in New York and the ancillary
administrator in the Philippines as to which of them was entitled to the possession
of the stock certificates in question. On January 27, 1964, the Court of First
Instance of Manila ordered the domiciliary administrator, County Trust Company,
to `produce and deposit them with the ancillary administrator or with the Clerk of
Court. The domiciliary administrator did not comply with the order, and on
February 11, 1964, the ancillary administrator petitioned the court to issue an
order declaring the certificate or certificates of stocks covering the 33,002 shares
issued in the name of Idonah Slade Perkins by Benguet Consolidated, Inc. be
declared [or] considered as lost. 3
It is to be noted further that appellant Benguet Consolidated, Inc. admits that it
is immaterial as far as it is concerned as to who is entitled to the possession of
the stock certificates in question; appellant opposed the petition of the ancillary
administrator because the said stock certificates are in existence, they are today
in the possession of the domiciliary administrator, the County Trust Company, in
New York, U.S.A.. . . . 4
It is its view, therefore, that under the circumstances, the stock certificates
cannot be declared or considered as lost. Moreover, it would allege that there was
a failure to observe certain requirements of its by-laws before new stock
certificates could be issued. Hence, its appeal.
As was made clear at the outset of this opinion, the appeal lacks merit. The
challenged order constitutes an emphatic affirmation of judicial authority sought
to be emasculated by the willful conduct of the domiciliary administrator in
refusing to accord obedience to a court decree. How, then, can this order be
stigmatized as illegal?
As is true of many problems confronting the judiciary, such a response was called
for by the realities of the situation. What cannot be ignored is that conduct
bordering on willful defiance, if it had not actually reached it, cannot without
undue loss of judicial prestige, be condoned or tolerated. For the law is not so
lacking in flexibility and resourcefulness as to preclude such a solution, the more
so as deeper reflection would make clear its being buttressed by indisputable
principles and supported by the strongest policy considerations.
It can truly be said then that the result arrived at upheld and vindicated the honor
of the judiciary no less than that of the country. Through this challenged order,
there is thus dispelled the atmosphere of contingent frustration brought about by
the persistence of the domiciliary administrator to hold on to the stock
certificates after it had, as admitted, voluntarily submitted itself to the jurisdiction
of the lower court by entering its appearance through counsel on June 27, 1963,
and filing a petition for relief from a previous order of March 15, 1963. Thus did
the lower court, in the order now on appeal, impart vitality and effectiveness to
what was decreed. For without it, what it had been decided would be set at
naught and nullified. Unless such a blatant disregard by the domiciliary
administrator, with residence abroad, of what was previously ordained by a court
order could be thus remedied, it would have entailed, insofar as this matter was
concerned, not a partial but a well-nigh complete paralysis of judicial authority.
1.
Appellant Benguet Consolidated, Inc. did not dispute the power of
the appellee ancillary administrator to gain control and possession of all assets of
the decedent within the jurisdiction of the Philippines. Nor could it. Such a power
is inherent in his duty to settle her estate and satisfy the claims of local
creditors. 5 As Justice Tuason speaking for this Court made clear, it is a general
rule universally recognized that administration, whether principal or ancillary,
certainly extends to the assets of a decedent found within the state or country
where it was granted, the corollary being that an administrator appointed in
one state or country has no power over property in another state or country. 6
It is to be noted that the scope of the power of the ancillary administrator was, in
an earlier case, set forth by Justice Malcolm. Thus: It is often necessary to have
more than one administration of an estate. When a person dies intestate owning
property in the country of his domicile as well as in a foreign country,
administration is had in both countries. That which is granted in the jurisdiction of
decedents last domicile is termed the principal administration, while any other
administration is termed the ancillary administration. The reason for the latter is
because a grant of administration does not ex proprio vigore have any effect
beyond the limits of the country in which it is granted. Hence, an administrator
appointed in a foreign state has no authority in the [Philippines]. The ancillary
administration is proper, whenever a person dies, leaving in a country other than
that of his last domicile, property to be administered in the nature of assets of the
deceased liable for his individual debts or to be distributed among his heirs. 7
It would follow then that the authority of the probate court to require that
ancillary administrators right to the stock certificates covering the 33,002
shares .. standing in her name in the books of [appellant] Benguet Consolidated,
Inc.. be respected is equally beyond question. For appellant is a Philippine
corporation owing full allegiance and subject to the unrestricted jurisdiction of
local courts. Its shares of stock cannot therefore be considered in any wise as
immune from lawful court orders.
Our holding in Wells Fargo Bank and Union v. Collector of Internal Revenue 8 finds
application. In the instant case, the actual situs of the shares of stock is in the
Philippines, the corporation being domiciled [here]. To the force of the above
undeniable proposition, not even appellant is insensible. It does not dispute it.
Nor could it successfully do so even if it were so minded.
2.
In the face of such incontrovertible doctrines that argue in a rather
conclusive fashion for the legality of the challenged order, how does appellant
Benguet Consolidated, Inc. propose to carry the extremely heavy burden of
persuasion of precisely demonstrating the contrary? It would assign as the basic
error allegedly committed by the lower court its considering as lost the stock
certificates covering 33,002 shares of Benguet belonging to the deceased Idonah
Slade Perkins, . . . 9More specifically, appellant would stress that the lower court
could not `consider as lost the stock certificates in question when, as a matter of
fact, his Honor the trial Judge knew, and does know, and it is admitted by the
appellee, that the said stock certificates are in existence and are today in the
possession of the domiciliary administrator in New York. 10
There may be an element of fiction in the above view of the lower court. That
certainly does not suffice to call for the reversal of the appealed order. Since
there is a refusal, persistently adhered to by the domiciliary administrator in New
York, to deliver the shares of stocks of appellant corporation owned by the
decedent to the ancillary administrator in the Philippines, there was nothing
and finality. Assuming that a contrariety exists between the above by-law and the
command of a court decree, the latter is to be followed.
It is understandable, as Cardozo pointed out, that the Constitution overrides a
statute, to which, however, the judiciary must yield deference, when
appropriately invoked and deemed applicable. It would be most highly
unorthodox, however, if a corporate by-law would be accorded such a high estate
in the jural order that a court must not only take note of it but yield to its alleged
controlling force.
The fear of appellant of a contingent liability with which it could be saddled unless
the appealed order be set aside for its inconsistency with one of its by-laws does
not impress us. Its obedience to a lawful court order certainly constitutes a valid
defense, assuming that such apprehension of a possible court action against it
could possibly materialize. Thus far, nothing in the circumstances as they have
developed gives substance to such a fear. Gossamer possibilities of a future
prejudice to appellant do not suffice to nullify the lawful exercise of judicial
authority.
4.
What is more the view adopted by appellant Benguet Consolidated,
Inc. is fraught with implications at war with the basic postulates of corporate
theory.
We start with the undeniable premise that, a corporation is an artificial being
created by operation of law . . . 16 It owes its life to the state, its birth being
purely dependent on its will. As Berle so aptly stated: Classically, a corporation
was conceived as an artificial person, owing its existence through creation by a
sovereign power. 17 As a matter of fact, the statutory language employed owes
much to Chief Justice Marshall, who in the Dartmouth College decision, defined a
corporation precisely as an artificial being invisible, intangible, and existing only
in contemplation of law. 18
The well-known authority Fletcher could summarize the matter thus: A
corporation is not in fact and in reality a person, but the law treats it as though it
were a person by process of fiction, or by regarding it as an artificial person
distinct and separate from its individual stockholders. It owes its existence to law.
It is an artificial person created by law for certain specific purposes, the extent of
whose existence, powers and liberties is fixed by its charter. 19 Dean Pounds
terse summary, a juristic person, resulting from an association of human beings
granted legal personality by the state, puts the matter neatly. 20
There is thus a rejection of Gierkes genosssenchaft theory, the basic theme of
which to quote from Friedmann, is the reality of the group as a social and legal
entity, independent of state recognition and concession. 21 A corporation as
known to Philippine jurisprudence is a creature without any existence until it has
received the imprimatur of the state acting according to law. It is logically
inconceivable therefore that it will have rights and privileges of a higher priority
than that of its creator. More than that, it cannot legitimately refuse to yield
obedience to acts of its state organs, certainly not excluding the judiciary,
whenever called upon to do so.
Yet that would be the effect, even if unintended, of the proposition to which
appellant Benguet Consolidated seems to be firmly committed as shown by its
failure to accept the validity of the order complained of; it seeks its reversal.
Certainly we must at all pains see to it that it does not succeed. The deplorable
consequences attendant on appellant prevailing attest to the necessity of a
negative response from us. That is what appellant will get.
Before this Court is a Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45 filed by Narra
Nickel and Mining Development Corp. (Narra), Tesoro Mining and Development,
Inc. (Tesoro), and McArthur Mining Inc. (McArthur), which seeks to reverse the
October 1, 2010 Decision1 and the February 15, 2011 Resolution of the Court of
Appeals (CA).
The Facts
That is all then that this case presents. It is obvious why the appeal cannot
succeed. It is always easy to conjure extreme and even oppressive possibilities.
That is not decisive. It does not settle the issue. What carries weight and
conviction is the result arrived at, the just solution obtained, grounded in the
soundest of legal doctrines and distinguished by its correspondence with what a
sense of realism requires. For through the appealed order, the imperative
requirement of justice according to law is satisfied and national dignity and honor
maintained.
WHEREFORE, the appealed order of the Honorable Arsenio Santos, the Judge of
the Court of First Instance, dated May 18, 1964, is affirmed. With costs against
oppositor-appellant Benguet Consolidated, Inc.
Makalintal, Zaldivar, and Capistrano, JJ., concur.
Concepcion, C.J., Reyes, J.B.L., Dizon, Sanchez and Ruiz Castro, JJ., concur in the
result.
Another MPSA application of SMMI was filed with the DENR Region IV-B, labeled as
MPSA-AMA-IVB-154 (formerly EPA-IVB-47) over 3,402 hectares in Barangays
Malinao and Princesa Urduja, Municipality of Narra, Province of Palawan. SMMI
subsequently conveyed, transferred and assigned its rights and interest over the
said MPSA application to Tesoro.
On January 2, 2007, Redmont filed before the Panel of Arbitrators (POA) of the
DENR three (3) separate petitions for the denial of petitioners applications for
MPSA designated as AMA-IVB-153, AMA-IVB-154 and MPSA IV-1-12.
In the petitions, Redmont alleged that at least 60% of the capital stock of
McArthur, Tesoro and Narra are owned and controlled by MBMI Resources, Inc.
(MBMI), a 100% Canadian corporation. Redmont reasoned that since MBMI is a
considerable stockholder of petitioners, it was the driving force behind
petitioners filing of the MPSAs over the areas covered by applications since it
knows that it can only participate in mining activities through corporations which
are deemed Filipino citizens. Redmont argued that given that petitioners capital
stocks were mostly owned by MBMI, they were likewise disqualified from
engaging in mining activities through MPSAs, which are reserved only for Filipino
citizens.
violation of the requirements for the issuance and/or grant of permits over mining
areas is clearly established thus, there is reason to believe that the cancellation
and/or revocation of permits already issued under the premises is in order and
open the areas covered to other qualified applicants.
In their Answers, petitioners averred that they were qualified persons under
Section 3(aq) of Republic Act No. (RA) 7942 or the Philippine Mining Act of 1995
which provided:
Sec. 3 Definition of Terms. As used in and for purposes of this Act, the following
terms, whether in singular or plural, shall mean:
xxxx
(aq) "Qualified person" means any citizen of the Philippines with capacity to
contract, or a corporation, partnership, association, or cooperative organized or
authorized for the purpose of engaging in mining, with technical and financial
capability to undertake mineral resources development and duly registered in
accordance with law at least sixty per cent (60%) of the capital of which is owned
by citizens of the Philippines: Provided, That a legally organized foreign-owned
corporation shall be deemed a qualified person for purposes of granting an
exploration permit, financial or technical assistance agreement or mineral
processing permit.
Additionally, they stated that their nationality as applicants is immaterial because
they also applied for Financial or Technical Assistance Agreements (FTAA)
denominated as AFTA-IVB-09 for McArthur, AFTA-IVB-08 for Tesoro and AFTA-IVB07 for Narra, which are granted to foreign-owned corporations. Nevertheless, they
claimed that the issue on nationality should not be raised since McArthur, Tesoro
and Narra are in fact Philippine Nationals as 60% of their capital is owned by
citizens of the Philippines. They asserted that though MBMI owns 40% of the
shares of PLMC (which owns 5,997 shares of Narra),3 40% of the shares of MMC
(which owns 5,997 shares of McArthur)4and 40% of the shares of SLMC (which, in
turn, owns 5,997 shares of Tesoro),5 the shares of MBMI will not make it the owner
of at least 60% of the capital stock of each of petitioners. They added that the
best tool used in determining the nationality of a corporation is the "control test,"
embodied in Sec. 3 of RA 7042 or the Foreign Investments Act of 1991. They also
claimed that the POA of DENR did not have jurisdiction over the issues in
Redmonts petition since they are not enumerated in Sec. 77 of RA 7942. Finally,
they stressed that Redmont has no personality to sue them because it has no
pending claim or application over the areas applied for by petitioners.
On December 14, 2007, the POA issued a Resolution disqualifying petitioners from
gaining MPSAs. It held:
[I]t is clearly established that respondents are not qualified applicants to engage
in mining activities. On the other hand, [Redmont] having filed its own
applications for an EPA over the areas earlier covered by the MPSA application of
respondents may be considered if and when they are qualified under the law. The
xxxx
After a careful review of the records, the CA found that there was doubt as to the
nationality of petitioners when it realized that petitioners had a common major
investor, MBMI, a corporation composed of 100% Canadians. Pursuant to the first
sentence of paragraph 7 of Department of Justice (DOJ) Opinion No. 020, Series of
2005, adopting the 1967 SEC Rules which implemented the requirement of the
Constitution and other laws pertaining to the exploitation of natural resources, the
CA used the "grandfather rule" to determine the nationality of petitioners. It
provided:
Shares belonging to corporations or partnerships at least 60% of the capital of
which is owned by Filipino citizens shall be considered as of Philippine nationality,
but if the percentage of Filipino ownership in the corporation or partnership is less
than 60%, only the number of shares corresponding to such percentage shall be
counted as of Philippine nationality. Thus, if 100,000 shares are registered in the
name of a corporation or partnership at least 60% of the capital stock or capital,
respectively, of which belong to Filipino citizens, all of the shares shall be
recorded as owned by Filipinos. But if less than 60%, or say, 50% of the capital
stock or capital of the corporation or partnership, respectively, belongs to Filipino
citizens, only 50,000 shares shall be recorded as belonging to aliens. 24 (emphasis
supplied)
In determining the nationality of petitioners, the CA looked into their corporate
structures and their corresponding common shareholders. Using the grandfather
rule, the CA discovered that MBMI in effect owned majority of the common stocks
of the petitioners as well as at least 60% equity interest of other majority
shareholders of petitioners through joint venture agreements. The CA found that
through a "web of corporate layering, it is clear that one common controlling
investor in all mining corporations involved x x x is MBMI." 25 Thus, it concluded
that petitioners McArthur, Tesoro and Narra are also in partnership with, or
privies-in-interest of, MBMI.
Furthermore, the CA viewed the conversion of the MPSA applications of
petitioners into FTAA applications suspicious in nature and, as a consequence, it
recommended the rejection of petitioners MPSA applications by the Secretary of
the DENR.
With regard to the settlement of disputes over rights to mining areas, the CA
pointed out that the POA has jurisdiction over them and that it also has the power
to determine the of nationality of petitioners as a prerequisite of the Constitution
prior the conferring of rights to "co-production, joint venture or production-sharing
agreements" of the state to mining rights. However, it also stated that the POAs
jurisdiction is limited only to the resolution of the dispute and not on the approval
or rejection of the MPSAs. It stipulated that only the Secretary of the DENR is
vested with the power to approve or reject applications for MPSA.
Finally, the CA upheld the findings of the POA in its December 14, 2007 Resolution
which considered petitioners McArthur, Tesoro and Narra as foreign corporations.
Nevertheless, the CA determined that the POAs declaration that the MPSAs of
McArthur, Tesoro and Narra are void is highly improper.
While the petition was pending with the CA, Redmont filed with the Office of the
President (OP) a petition dated May 7, 2010 seeking the cancellation of
petitioners FTAAs. The OP rendered a Decision26 on April 6, 2011, wherein it
canceled and revoked petitioners FTAAs for violating and circumventing the
"Constitution x x x[,] the Small Scale Mining Law and Environmental Compliance
Certificate as well as Sections 3 and 8 of the Foreign Investment Act and E.O.
584."27 The OP, in affirming the cancellation of the issued FTAAs, agreed with
Redmont stating that petitioners committed violations against the
abovementioned laws and failed to submit evidence to negate them. The Decision
further quoted the December 14, 2007 Order of the POA focusing on the alleged
misrepresentation and claims made by petitioners of being domestic or Filipino
corporations and the admitted continued mining operation of PMDC using their
locally secured Small Scale Mining Permit inside the area earlier applied for an
MPSA application which was eventually transferred to Narra. It also agreed with
the POAs estimation that the filing of the FTAA applications by petitioners is a
clear admission that they are "not capable of conducting a large scale mining
operation and that they need the financial and technical assistance of a foreign
entity in their operation, that is why they sought the participation of MBMI
Resources, Inc."28 The Decision further quoted:
The filing of the FTAA application on June 15, 2007, during the pendency of the
case only demonstrate the violations and lack of qualification of the respondent
corporations to engage in mining. The filing of the FTAA application conversion
which is allowed foreign corporation of the earlier MPSA is an admission that
indeed the respondent is not Filipino but rather of foreign nationality who is
disqualified under the laws. Corporate documents of MBMI Resources, Inc.
furnished its stockholders in their head office in Canada suggest that they are
conducting operation only through their local counterparts. 29
The Motion for Reconsideration of the Decision was further denied by the OP in a
Resolution30 dated July 6, 2011. Petitioners then filed a Petition for Review on
Certiorari of the OPs Decision and Resolution with the CA, docketed as CA-G.R. SP
No. 120409. In the CA Decision dated February 29, 2012, the CA affirmed the
Decision and Resolution of the OP. Thereafter, petitioners appealed the same CA
decision to this Court which is now pending with a different division.
Thus, the instant petition for review against the October 1, 2010 Decision of the
CA. Petitioners put forth the following errors of the CA:
I.
The Court of Appeals erred when it did not dismiss the case for mootness despite
the fact that the subject matter of the controversy, the MPSA Applications, have
already been converted into FTAA applications and that the same have already
been granted.
II.
The Court of Appeals erred when it did not dismiss the case for lack of jurisdiction
considering that the Panel of Arbitrators has no jurisdiction to determine the
nationality of Narra, Tesoro and McArthur.
III.
The Court of Appeals erred when it did not dismiss the case on account of
Redmonts willful forum shopping.
IV.
The Court of Appeals ruling that Narra, Tesoro and McArthur are foreign
corporations based on the "Grandfather Rule" is contrary to law, particularly the
express mandate of the Foreign Investments Act of 1991, as amended, and the
FIA Rules.
V.
The Court of Appeals erred when it applied the exceptions to the res inter alios
acta rule.
VI.
The Court of Appeals erred when it concluded that the conversion of the MPSA
Applications into FTAA Applications were of "suspicious nature" as the same is
based on mere conjectures and surmises without any shred of evidence to show
the same.31
We find the petition to be without merit.
This case not moot and academic
The claim of petitioners that the CA erred in not rendering the instant case as
moot is without merit.
Basically, a case is said to be moot and/or academic when it "ceases to present a
justiciable controversy by virtue of supervening events, so that a declaration
thereon would be of no practical use or value." 32 Thus, the courts "generally
decline jurisdiction over the case or dismiss it on the ground of mootness." 33
The "mootness" principle, however, does accept certain exceptions and the mere
raising of an issue of "mootness" will not deter the courts from trying a case when
there is a valid reason to do so. In David v. Macapagal-Arroyo (David), the Court
provided four instances where courts can decide an otherwise moot case, thus:
1.) There is a grave violation of the Constitution;
2.) The exceptional character of the situation and paramount public interest is
involved;
3.) When constitutional issue raised requires formulation of controlling principles
to guide the bench, the bar, and the public; and
4.) The case is capable of repetition yet evading review. 34
All of the exceptions stated above are present in the instant case. We of this
Court note that a grave violation of the Constitution, specifically Section 2 of
Article XII, is being committed by a foreign corporation right under our countrys
nose through a myriad of corporate layering under different, allegedly, Filipino
corporations. The intricate corporate layering utilized by the Canadian company,
MBMI, is of exceptional character and involves paramount public interest since it
undeniably affects the exploitation of our Countrys natural resources. The
corresponding actions of petitioners during the lifetime and existence of the
instant case raise questions as what principle is to be applied to cases with
similar issues. No definite ruling on such principle has been pronounced by the
Court; hence, the disposition of the issues or errors in the instant case will serve
as a guide "to the bench, the bar and the public."35 Finally, the instant case is
capable of repetition yet evading review, since the Canadian company, MBMI, can
keep on utilizing dummy Filipino corporations through various schemes of
corporate layering and conversion of applications to skirt the constitutional
prohibition against foreign mining in Philippine soil.
Resources, Inc. The participation of MBMI in the corporation only proves the fact
that it is the Canadian company that will provide the finances and the resources
to operate the mining areas for the greater benefit and interest of the same and
not the Filipino stockholders who only have a less substantial financial stake in
the corporation.
We shall discuss the first error in conjunction with the sixth error presented by
petitioners since both involve the conversion of MPSA applications to FTAA
applications. Petitioners propound that the CA erred in ruling against them since
the questioned MPSA applications were already converted into FTAA applications;
thus, the issue on the prohibition relating to MPSA applications of foreign mining
corporations is academic. Also, petitioners would want us to correct the CAs
finding which deemed the aforementioned conversions of applications as
suspicious in nature, since it is based on mere conjectures and surmises and not
supported with evidence.
We disagree.
The CAs analysis of the actions of petitioners after the case was filed against
them by respondent is on point. The changing of applications by petitioners from
one type to another just because a case was filed against them, in truth, would
raise not a few sceptics eyebrows. What is the reason for such conversion? Did
the said conversion not stem from the case challenging their citizenship and to
have the case dismissed against them for being "moot"? It is quite obvious that it
is petitioners strategy to have the case dismissed against them for being "moot."
Consider the history of this case and how petitioners responded to every action
done by the court or appropriate government agency: on January 2, 2007,
Redmont filed three separate petitions for denial of the MPSA applications of
petitioners before the POA. On June 15, 2007, petitioners filed a conversion of
their MPSA applications to FTAAs. The POA, in its December 14, 2007 Resolution,
observed this suspect change of applications while the case was pending before it
and held:
The filing of the Financial or Technical Assistance Agreement application is a clear
admission that the respondents are not capable of conducting a large scale
mining operation and that they need the financial and technical assistance of a
foreign entity in their operation that is why they sought the participation of MBMI
xxxx
x x x The filing of the FTAA application on June 15, 2007, during the pendency of
the case only demonstrate the violations and lack of qualification of the
respondent corporations to engage in mining. The filing of the FTAA application
conversion which is allowed foreign corporation of the earlier MPSA is an
admission that indeed the respondent is not Filipino but rather of foreign
nationality who is disqualified under the laws. Corporate documents of MBMI
Resources, Inc. furnished its stockholders in their head office in Canada suggest
that they are conducting operation only through their local counterparts. 36
In their Motion for Reconsideration dated October 26, 2010, petitioners prayed for
the dismissal of the petition asserting that on April 5, 2010, then President Gloria
Macapagal-Arroyo signed and issued in their favor FTAA No. 05-2010-IVB, which
rendered the petition moot and academic. However, the CA, in a Resolution dated
February 15, 2011 denied their motion for being a mere "rehash of their claims
and defenses."38 Standing firm on its Decision, the CA affirmed the ruling that
petitioners are, in fact, foreign corporations. On April 5, 2011, petitioners elevated
the case to us via a Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45, questioning
the Decision of the CA. Interestingly, the OP rendered a Decision dated April 6,
2011, a day after this petition for review was filed, cancelling and revoking the
FTAAs, quoting the Order of the POA and stating that petitioners are foreign
corporations since they needed the financial strength of MBMI, Inc. in order to
conduct large scale mining operations. The OP Decision also based the
cancellation on the misrepresentation of facts and the violation of the "Small
Scale Mining Law and Environmental Compliance Certificate as well as Sections 3
and 8 of the Foreign Investment Act and E.O. 584." 39 On July 6, 2011, the OP
issued a Resolution, denying the Motion for Reconsideration filed by the
petitioners.
Respondent Redmont, in its Comment dated October 10, 2011, made known to
the Court the fact of the OPs Decision and Resolution. In their Reply, petitioners
chose to ignore the OP Decision and continued to reuse their old arguments
claiming that they were granted FTAAs and, thus, the case was moot. Petitioners
filed a Manifestation and Submission dated October 19, 2012, 40 wherein they
asserted that the present petition is moot since, in a remarkable turn of events,
MBMI was able to sell/assign all its shares/interest in the "holding companies" to
DMCI Mining Corporation (DMCI), a Filipino corporation and, in effect, making their
respective corporations fully-Filipino owned.
Again, it is quite evident that petitioners have been trying to have this case
dismissed for being "moot." Their final act, wherein MBMI was able to allegedly
sell/assign all its shares and interest in the petitioner "holding companies" to
DMCI, only proves that they were in fact not Filipino corporations from the start.
The recent divesting of interest by MBMI will not change the stand of this Court
with respect to the nationality of petitioners prior the suspicious change in their
corporate structures. The new documents filed by petitioners are factual evidence
that this Court has no power to verify.
The only thing clear and proved in this Court is the fact that the OP declared that
petitioner corporations have violated several mining laws and made
misrepresentations and falsehood in their applications for FTAA which lead to the
revocation of the said FTAAs, demonstrating that petitioners are not beyond going
against or around the law using shifty actions and strategies. Thus, in this
instance, we can say that their claim of mootness is moot in itself because their
defense of conversion of MPSAs to FTAAs has been discredited by the OP
Decision.
Grandfather test
The main issue in this case is centered on the issue of petitioners nationality,
whether Filipino or foreign. In their previous petitions, they had been adamant in
insisting that they were Filipino corporations, until they submitted their
Manifestation and Submission dated October 19, 2012 where they stated the
alleged change of corporate ownership to reflect their Filipino ownership. Thus,
there is a need to determine the nationality of petitioner corporations.
Basically, there are two acknowledged tests in determining the nationality of a
corporation: the control test and the grandfather rule. Paragraph 7 of DOJ Opinion
No. 020, Series of 2005, adopting the 1967 SEC Rules which implemented the
requirement of the Constitution and other laws pertaining to the controlling
interests in enterprises engaged in the exploitation of natural resources owned by
Filipino citizens, provides:
Shares belonging to corporations or partnerships at least 60% of the capital of
which is owned by Filipino citizens shall be considered as of Philippine nationality,
but if the percentage of Filipino ownership in the corporation or partnership is less
than 60%, only the number of shares corresponding to such percentage shall be
counted as of Philippine nationality. Thus, if 100,000 shares are registered in the
name of a corporation or partnership at least 60% of the capital stock or capital,
respectively, of which belong to Filipino citizens, all of the shares shall be
recorded as owned by Filipinos. But if less than 60%, or say, 50% of the capital
stock or capital of the corporation or partnership, respectively, belongs to Filipino
citizens, only 50,000 shares shall be counted as owned by Filipinos and the other
50,000 shall be recorded as belonging to aliens.
The first part of paragraph 7, DOJ Opinion No. 020, stating "shares belonging to
corporations or partnerships at least 60% of the capital of which is owned by
Filipino citizens shall be considered as of Philippine nationality," pertains to the
control test or the liberal rule. On the other hand, the second part of the DOJ
Opinion which provides, "if the percentage of the Filipino ownership in the
corporation or partnership is less than 60%, only the number of shares
corresponding to such percentage shall be counted as Philippine nationality,"
pertains to the stricter, more stringent grandfather rule.
Prior to this recent change of events, petitioners were constant in advocating the
application of the "control test" under RA 7042, as amended by RA 8179,
otherwise known as the Foreign Investments Act (FIA), rather than using the
stricter grandfather rule. The pertinent provision under Sec. 3 of the FIA provides:
SECTION 3. Definitions. - As used in this Act:
a.) The term Philippine national shall mean a citizen of the Philippines; or a
domestic partnership or association wholly owned by the citizens of the
Philippines; a corporation organized under the laws of the Philippines of which at
least sixty percent (60%) of the capital stock outstanding and entitled to vote is
wholly owned by Filipinos or a trustee of funds for pension or other employee
retirement or separation benefits, where the trustee is a Philippine national and at
least sixty percent (60%) of the fund will accrue to the benefit of Philippine
nationals: Provided, That were a corporation and its non-Filipino stockholders own
stocks in a Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) registered enterprise, at
least sixty percent (60%) of the capital stock outstanding and entitled to vote of
each of both corporations must be owned and held by citizens of the Philippines
and at least sixty percent (60%) of the members of the Board of Directors, in
order that the corporation shall be considered a Philippine national. (emphasis
supplied)
The grandfather rule, petitioners reasoned, has no leg to stand on in the instant
case since the definition of a "Philippine National" under Sec. 3 of the FIA does
not provide for it. They further claim that the grandfather rule "has been
abandoned and is no longer the applicable rule."41 They also opined that the last
portion of Sec. 3 of the FIA admits the application of a "corporate layering"
scheme of corporations. Petitioners claim that the clear and unambiguous
wordings of the statute preclude the court from construing it and prevent the
courts use of discretion in applying the law. They said that the plain, literal
meaning of the statute meant the application of the control test is obligatory.
We disagree. "Corporate layering" is admittedly allowed by the FIA; but if it is
used to circumvent the Constitution and pertinent laws, then it becomes illegal.
Further, the pronouncement of petitioners that the grandfather rule has already
been abandoned must be discredited for lack of basis.
Art. XII, Sec. 2 of the Constitution provides:
Sec. 2. All lands of the public domain, waters, minerals, coal, petroleum and other
mineral oils, all forces of potential energy, fisheries, forests or timber, wildlife,
flora and fauna, and other natural resources are owned by the State. With the
exception of agricultural lands, all other natural resources shall not be alienated.
The exploration, development, and utilization of natural resources shall be under
the full control and supervision of the State. The State may directly undertake
such activities, or it may enter into co-production, joint venture or productionsharing agreements with Filipino citizens, or corporations or associations at least
sixty per centum of whose capital is owned by such citizens. Such agreements
may be for a period not exceeding twenty-five years, renewable for not more than
twenty-five years, and under such terms and conditions as may be provided by
law.
xxxx
MR. NOLLEDO: In teaching law, we are always faced with the question: Where do
we base the equity requirement, is it on the authorized capital stock, on the
subscribed capital stock, or on the paid-up capital stock of a corporation? Will the
Committee please enlighten me on this?
The emphasized portion of Sec. 2 which focuses on the State entering into
different types of agreements for the exploration, development, and utilization of
natural resources with entities who are deemed Filipino due to 60 percent
ownership of capital is pertinent to this case, since the issues are centered on the
utilization of our countrys natural resources or specifically, mining. Thus, there is
a need to ascertain the nationality of petitioners since, as the Constitution so
provides, such agreements are only allowed corporations or associations "at least
60 percent of such capital is owned by such citizens." The deliberations in the
Records of the 1986 Constitutional Commission shed light on how a citizenship of
a corporation will be determined:
Mr. BENNAGEN: Did I hear right that the Chairmans interpretation of an
independent national economy is freedom from undue foreign control? What is
the meaning of undue foreign control?
MR. VILLEGAS: Undue foreign control is foreign control which sacrifices national
sovereignty and the welfare of the Filipino in the economic sphere.
MR. BENNAGEN: Why does it have to be qualified still with the word "undue"? Why
not simply freedom from foreign control? I think that is the meaning of
independence, because as phrased, it still allows for foreign control.
MR. VILLEGAS: It will now depend on the interpretation because if, for example,
we retain the 60/40 possibility in the cultivation of natural resources, 40 percent
involves some control; not total control, but some control.
MR. BENNAGEN: In any case, I think in due time we will propose some
amendments.
MR. VILLEGAS: Yes. But we will be open to improvement of the phraseology.
MR. VILLEGAS: We have just had a long discussion with the members of the team
from the UP Law Center who provided us with a draft. The phrase that is
contained here which we adopted from the UP draft is 60 percent of the voting
stock.
MR. NOLLEDO: That must be based on the subscribed capital stock, because
unless declared delinquent, unpaid capital stock shall be entitled to vote.
MR. VILLEGAS: That is right.
MR. NOLLEDO: Thank you.
With respect to an investment by one corporation in another corporation, say, a
corporation with 60-40 percent equity invests in another corporation which is
permitted by the Corporation Code, does the Committee adopt the grandfather
rule?
MR. VILLEGAS: Yes, that is the understanding of the Committee.
MR. NOLLEDO: Therefore, we need additional Filipino capital?
MR. VILLEGAS: Yes.42 (emphasis supplied)
It is apparent that it is the intention of the framers of the Constitution to apply the
grandfather rule in cases where corporate layering is present.
Elementary in statutory construction is when there is conflict between the
Constitution and a statute, the Constitution will prevail. In this instance,
specifically pertaining to the provisions under Art. XII of the Constitution on
National Economy and Patrimony, Sec. 3 of the FIA will have no place of
application. As decreed by the honorable framers of our Constitution, the
grandfather rule prevails and must be applied.
Likewise, paragraph 7, DOJ Opinion No. 020, Series of 2005 provides:
The above-quoted SEC Rules provide for the manner of calculating the Filipino
interest in a corporation for purposes, among others, of determining compliance
with nationality requirements (the Investee Corporation). Such manner of
computation is necessary since the shares in the Investee Corporation may be
owned both by individual stockholders (Investing Individuals) and by
corporations and partnerships (Investing Corporation). The said rules thus
provide for the determination of nationality depending on the ownership of the
Investee Corporation and, in certain instances, the Investing Corporation.
Under the above-quoted SEC Rules, there are two cases in determining the
nationality of the Investee Corporation. The first case is the liberal rule, later
coined by the SEC as the Control Test in its 30 May 1990 Opinion, and pertains to
the portion in said Paragraph 7 of the 1967 SEC Rules which states, (s)hares
belonging to corporations or partnerships at least 60% of the capital of which is
owned by Filipino citizens shall be considered as of Philippine nationality. Under
the liberal Control Test, there is no need to further trace the ownership of the 60%
(or more) Filipino stockholdings of the Investing Corporation since a corporation
which is at least 60% Filipino-owned is considered as Filipino.
The second case is the Strict Rule or the Grandfather Rule Proper and pertains to
the portion in said Paragraph 7 of the 1967 SEC Rules which states, "but if the
percentage of Filipino ownership in the corporation or partnership is less than
60%, only the number of shares corresponding to such percentage shall be
counted as of Philippine nationality." Under the Strict Rule or Grandfather Rule
Proper, the combined totals in the Investing Corporation and the Investee
Corporation must be traced (i.e., "grandfathered") to determine the total
percentage of Filipino ownership.
Moreover, the ultimate Filipino ownership of the shares must first be traced to the
level of the Investing Corporation and added to the shares directly owned in the
Investee Corporation x x x.
xxxx
In other words, based on the said SEC Rule and DOJ Opinion, the Grandfather Rule
or the second part of the SEC Rule applies only when the 60-40 Filipino-foreign
equity ownership is in doubt (i.e., in cases where the joint venture corporation
with Filipino and foreign stockholders with less than 60% Filipino stockholdings [or
59%] invests in other joint venture corporation which is either 60-40% Filipinoalien or the 59% less Filipino). Stated differently, where the 60-40 Filipino- foreign
equity ownership is not in doubt, the Grandfather Rule will not apply. (emphasis
supplied)
After a scrutiny of the evidence extant on record, the Court finds that this case
calls for the application of the grandfather rule since, as ruled by the POA and
affirmed by the OP, doubt prevails and persists in the corporate ownership of
petitioners. Also, as found by the CA, doubt is present in the 60-40 Filipino equity
ownership of petitioners Narra, McArthur and Tesoro, since their common
investor, the 100% Canadian corporationMBMI, funded them. However,
petitioners also claim that there is "doubt" only when the stockholdings of
Filipinos are less than 60%.43
The assertion of petitioners that "doubt" only exists when the stockholdings are
less than 60% fails to convince this Court. DOJ Opinion No. 20, which petitioners
quoted in their petition, only made an example of an instance where "doubt" as to
the ownership of the corporation exists. It would be ludicrous to limit the
application of the said word only to the instances where the stockholdings of nonFilipino stockholders are more than 40% of the total stockholdings in a
corporation. The corporations interested in circumventing our laws would clearly
strive to have "60% Filipino Ownership" at face value. It would be senseless for
these applying corporations to state in their respective articles of incorporation
that they have less than 60% Filipino stockholders since the applications will be
denied instantly. Thus, various corporate schemes and layerings are utilized to
circumvent the application of the Constitution.
Obviously, the instant case presents a situation which exhibits a scheme
employed by stockholders to circumvent the law, creating a cloud of doubt in the
Courts mind. To determine, therefore, the actual participation, direct or indirect,
of MBMI, the grandfather rule must be used.
McArthur Mining, Inc.
To establish the actual ownership, interest or participation of MBMI in each of
petitioners corporate structure, they have to be "grandfathered."
As previously discussed, McArthur acquired its MPSA application from MMC, which
acquired its application from SMMI. McArthur has a capital stock of ten million
pesos (PhP 10,000,000) divided into 10,000 common shares at one thousand
pesos (PhP 1,000) per share, subscribed to by the following: 44
Name
National
ity
Number of
Shares
Amount
Subscribed
Amount Paid
Madridejos
Mining
Corporation
Filipino
5,997
PhP
5,997,000.00
PhP 825,000.00
MBMI Resources,
Inc.
Canadia
n
3,998
PhP
3,998,000.0
PhP 1,878,174.60
Lauro L. Salazar
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Fernando B.
Esguerra
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Manuel A.
Agcaoili
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Hernando
Kenneth Cawkell
Canadia
n
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Michael T.
Mason
America
n
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Total
10,000
PhP
10,000,000.00
PhP 2,708,174.60
(emphasis
supplied)
Kenneth
Cawkell
Canadia
n
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Total
10,000
PhP
10,000,000.00
PhP 2,809,900.00
Interestingly, looking at the corporate structure of MMC, we take note that it has a
similar structure and composition as McArthur. In fact, it would seem that MBMI is
also a major investor and "controls"45 MBMI and also, similar nominal shareholders
were present, i.e. Fernando B. Esguerra (Esguerra), Lauro L. Salazar (Salazar),
Michael T. Mason (Mason) and Kenneth Cawkell (Cawkell):
Madridejos Mining Corporation
Name
Nationali
ty
Number of
Shares
Amount
Subscribed
Amount Paid
Olympic Mines
&
Filipino
6,663
PhP
6,663,000.00
PhP 0
Canadia
n
3,331
PhP
3,331,000.00
PhP 2,803,900.00
Development
Corp.
MBMI
Resources,
Inc.
Amanti
Limson
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Fernando B.
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
(emphasis
supplied)
Noticeably, Olympic Mines & Development Corporation (Olympic) did not pay any
amount with respect to the number of shares they subscribed to in the
corporation, which is quite absurd since Olympic is the major stockholder in MMC.
MBMIs 2006 Annual Report sheds light on why Olympic failed to pay any amount
with respect to the number of shares it subscribed to. It states that Olympic
entered into joint venture agreements with several Philippine companies, wherein
it holds directly and indirectly a 60% effective equity interest in the Olympic
Properties.46 Quoting the said Annual report:
On September 9, 2004, the Company and Olympic Mines & Development
Corporation ("Olympic") entered into a series of agreements including a Property
Purchase and Development Agreement (the Transaction Documents) with respect
to three nickel laterite properties in Palawan, Philippines (the "Olympic
Properties"). The Transaction Documents effectively establish a joint venture
between the Company and Olympic for purposes of developing the Olympic
Properties. The Company holds directly and indirectly an initial 60% interest in the
joint venture. Under certain circumstances and upon achieving certain
milestones, the Company may earn up to a 100% interest, subject to a 2.5% net
revenue royalty.47 (emphasis supplied)
Thus, as demonstrated in this first corporation, McArthur, when it is
"grandfathered," company layering was utilized by MBMI to gain control over
McArthur. It is apparent that MBMI has more than 60% or more equity interest in
McArthur, making the latter a foreign corporation.
Tesoro Mining and Development, Inc.
Tesoro, which acquired its MPSA application from SMMI, has a capital stock of ten
million pesos (PhP 10,000,000) divided into ten thousand (10,000) common
shares at PhP 1,000 per share, as demonstrated below:
Esguerra
Lauro Salazar
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Emmanuel G.
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
[[reference = http://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/pdf/web/viewer.html?
file=/jurisprudence/2014/april2014/195580.pdf]]
Name
Nationalit
y
Number
of
Shares
Sara Marie
Filipino
5,997
Amount
Amount Paid
Subscribed
"Amount Subscribed," and "Amount Paid" are exactly the same. Delving deeper,
we scrutinize SMMIs corporate structure:
Sara Marie Mining, Inc.
PhP
5,997,000.00
PhP 825,000.00
PhP
3,998,000.00
PhP
1,878,174.60
[[reference = http://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/pdf/web/viewer.html?
file=/jurisprudence/2014/april2014/195580.pdf]]
Name
Mining, Inc.
Nationalit
y
Number
of
Amount
Amount Paid
Subscribed
MBMI
Canadian
3,998
Resources, Inc.
Olympic Mines
&
Lauro L. Salazar
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Fernando B.
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Esguerra
Manuel A.
Shares
Filipino
6,663
PhP
6,663,000.00
PhP 0
Canadian
3,331
PhP
3,331,000.00
PhP
2,794,000.00
Amanti Limson
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Fernando B.
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Lauro Salazar
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Emmanuel G.
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
American
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Development
Corp.
MBMI
Resources,
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Michael T.
Mason
American
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Kenneth
Cawkell
Canadian
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Total
10,000
PhP
10,000,000.00
PhP
2,708,174.60
Inc.
Agcaoili
(emphasis
supplied)
Except for the name "Sara Marie Mining, Inc.," the table above shows exactly the
same figures as the corporate structure of petitioner McArthur, down to the last
centavo. All the other shareholders are the same: MBMI, Salazar, Esguerra,
Agcaoili, Mason and Cawkell. The figures under "Nationality," "Number of Shares,"
Esguerra
Hernando
Michael T.
Mason
Kenneth
Cawkell
Canadian
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Patricia Louise
Filipino
5,997
PhP
5,997,000.00
PhP
1,677,000.00
Canadian
3,998
PhP
3,996,000.00
PhP
1,116,000.00
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Bayani H.
Agabin
Filipino
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Robert L.
American
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Canadian
PhP 1,000.00
PhP 1,000.00
Total
10,000
PhP
PhP
Mining &
Total
10,000
PhP
10,000,000.00
PhP
2,809,900.00
Development
Corp.
(emphasis
supplied)
MBMI
After subsequently studying SMMIs corporate structure, it is not farfetched for us
to spot the glaring similarity between SMMI and MMCs corporate structure.
Again, the presence of identical stockholders, namely: Olympic, MBMI, Amanti
Limson (Limson), Esguerra, Salazar, Hernando, Mason and Cawkell. The figures
under the headings "Nationality," "Number of Shares," "Amount Subscribed," and
"Amount Paid" are exactly the same except for the amount paid by MBMI which
now reflects the amount of two million seven hundred ninety four thousand pesos
(PhP 2,794,000). Oddly, the total value of the amount paid is two million eight
hundred nine thousand nine hundred pesos (PhP 2,809,900).
Resources, Inc.
Higinio C.
Mendoza, Jr.
Henry E.
Accordingly, after "grandfathering" petitioner Tesoro and factoring in Olympics
participation in SMMIs corporate structure, it is clear that MBMI is in control of
Tesoro and owns 60% or more equity interest in Tesoro. This makes petitioner
Tesoro a non-Filipino corporation and, thus, disqualifies it to participate in the
exploitation, utilization and development of our natural resources.
Narra Nickel Mining and Development Corporation
[[reference = http://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/pdf/web/viewer.html?
file=/jurisprudence/2014/april2014/195580.pdf]]
Nationalit
y
Number
of
Shares
Amount
Subscribed
Manuel A.
Agcaoili
Moving on to the last petitioner, Narra, which is the transferee and assignee of
PLMDCs MPSA application, whose corporate structures arrangement is similar to
that of the first two petitioners discussed. The capital stock of Narra is ten million
pesos (PhP 10,000,000), which is divided into ten thousand common shares
(10,000) at one thousand pesos (PhP 1,000) per share, shown as follows:
Name
Fernandez
Amount Paid
Ma. Elena A.
Bocalan
McCurdy
Kenneth
Cawkell
10,000,000.00
2,800,000.00
(emphasis
supplied)
Again, MBMI, along with other nominal stockholders, i.e., Mason, Agcaoili and
Esguerra, is present in this corporate structure.
Michael T. Mason
America
n
PhP
1,000.00
PhP
1,000.00
Kenneth Cawkell
Canadia
n
PhP
1,000.00
PhP
1,000.00
Total
10,000
PhP
10,000,00
0.00
PhP
2,708,174
.60
(emphasis
supplied)
National
ity
Number
of
Shares
Amount
Subscribed
Amount
Paid
Filipino
6,596
PhP
6,596,000.
00
PhP 0
MBMI Resources,
Canadia
n
3,396
PhP
3,396,000.
00
PhP
2,796,000
.00
Filipino
PhP
1,000.00
PhP
1,000.00
The Philippine companies holding the Olympic Property, and the ownership and
interests therein, are as follows:
Fernando B. Esguerra
Filipino
PhP
1,000.00
PhP
1,000.00
PhP
1,000.00
PhP
1,000.00
Inc.
Yet again, the usual players in petitioners corporate structures are present.
Similarly, the amount of money paid by the 2nd tier majority stock holder, in this
case, Palawan Alpha South Resources and Development Corp. (PASRDC), is zero.
Studying MBMIs Summary of Significant Accounting Policies dated October 31,
2005 explains the reason behind the intricate corporate layering that MBMI
immersed itself in:
JOINT VENTURES The Companys ownership interests in various mining ventures
engaged in the acquisition, exploration and development of mineral properties in
the Philippines is described as follows:
(a) Olympic Group
Henry E. Fernandez
Filipino
Lauro L. Salazar
Filipino
PhP
1,000.00
PhP
1,000.00
Manuel A. Agcaoili
Filipino
PhP
1,000.00
PhP
1,000.00
PhP
1,000.00
PhP
1,000.00
Bayani H. Agabin
Filipino
Pursuant to the Olympic joint venture agreement the Company holds directly and
indirectly an effective equity interest in the Olympic Property of 60.0%. Pursuant
to a shareholders agreement, the Company exercises joint control over the
companies in the Olympic Group.
(b) Alpha Group
The Philippine companies holding the Alpha Property, and the ownership interests
therein, are as follows:
Alpha- Philippines (the "Alpha Group")
Patricia Louise Mining Development Inc. ("Patricia") 34.0%
Petitioners claim that the CA erred in applying Sec. 29, Rule 130 of the Rules by
stating that "by entering into a joint venture, MBMI have a joint interest" with
Narra, Tesoro and McArthur. They challenged the conclusion of the CA which
pertains to the close characteristics of
"partnerships" and "joint venture agreements." Further, they asserted that before
this particular partnership can be formed, it should have been formally reduced
into writing since the capital involved is more than three thousand pesos (PhP
3,000). Being that there is no evidence of written agreement to form a
partnership between petitioners and MBMI, no partnership was created.
We disagree.
A partnership is defined as two or more persons who bind themselves to
contribute money, property, or industry to a common fund with the intention of
dividing the profits among themselves.50 On the other hand, joint ventures have
been deemed to be "akin" to partnerships since it is difficult to distinguish
between joint ventures and partnerships. Thus:
[T]he relations of the parties to a joint venture and the nature of their association
are so similar and closely akin to a partnership that it is ordinarily held that their
rights, duties, and liabilities are to be tested by rules which are closely analogous
to and substantially the same, if not exactly the same, as those which govern
partnership. In fact, it has been said that the trend in the law has been to blur the
distinctions between a partnership and a joint venture, very little law being found
applicable to one that does not apply to the other.51
Though some claim that partnerships and joint ventures are totally different
animals, there are very few rules that differentiate one from the other; thus, joint
ventures are deemed "akin" or similar to a partnership. In fact, in joint venture
agreements, rules and legal incidents governing partnerships are applied. 52
Secs. 29 and 31, Rule 130 of the Revised Rules of Court provide:
Sec. 29. Admission by co-partner or agent.- The act or declaration of a partner or
agent of the party within the scope of his authority and during the existence of
the partnership or agency, may be given in evidence against such party after the
partnership or agency is shown by evidence other than such act or declaration
itself. The same rule applies to the act or declaration of a joint owner, joint
debtor, or other person jointly interested with the party.
Sec. 31. Admission by privies.- Where one derives title to property from another,
the act, declaration, or omission of the latter, while holding the title, in relation to
the property, is evidence against the former.
Petitioners claim that before the above-mentioned Rule can be applied to a case,
"the partnership relation must be shown, and that proof of the fact must be made
by evidence other than the admission itself."49 Thus, petitioners assert that the CA
erred in finding that a partnership relationship exists between them and MBMI
because, in fact, no such partnership exists.
Partnerships vs. joint venture agreements
Accordingly, culled from the incidents and records of this case, it can be assumed
that the relationships entered between and among petitioners and MBMI are no
simple "joint venture agreements." As a rule, corporations are prohibited from
entering into partnership agreements; consequently, corporations enter into joint
venture agreements with other corporations or partnerships for certain
transactions in order to form "pseudo partnerships."
Obviously, as the intricate web of "ventures" entered into by and among
petitioners and MBMI was executed to circumvent the legal prohibition against
corporations entering into partnerships, then the relationship created should be
deemed as "partnerships," and the laws on partnership should be applied. Thus, a
joint venture agreement between and among corporations may be seen as similar
to partnerships since the elements of partnership are present.
Considering that the relationships found between petitioners and MBMI are
considered to be partnerships, then the CA is justified in applying Sec. 29, Rule
130 of the Rules by stating that "by entering into a joint venture, MBMI have a
joint interest" with Narra, Tesoro and McArthur.
Sec. 41.
We affirm the ruling of the CA in declaring that the POA has jurisdiction over the
instant case. The POA has jurisdiction to settle disputes over rights to mining
areas which definitely involve the petitions filed by Redmont against petitioners
Narra, McArthur and Tesoro. Redmont, by filing its petition against petitioners, is
asserting the right of Filipinos over mining areas in the Philippines against alleged
foreign-owned mining corporations. Such claim constitutes a "dispute" found in
Sec. 77 of RA 7942:
xxxx
Within thirty (30) days, after the submission of the case by the parties for the
decision, the panel shall have exclusive and original jurisdiction to hear and
decide the following:
(a) Disputes involving rights to mining areas
(b) Disputes involving mineral agreements or permits
We held in Celestial Nickel Mining Exploration Corporation v. Macroasia Corp.: 53
The phrase "disputes involving rights to mining areas" refers to any adverse
claim, protest, or opposition to an application for mineral agreement. The POA
therefore has the jurisdiction to resolve any adverse claim, protest, or opposition
to a pending application for a mineral agreement filed with the concerned
Regional Office of the MGB. This is clear from Secs. 38 and 41 of the DENR AO 9640, which provide:
Sec. 38.
xxxx
Within thirty (30) calendar days from the last date of publication/posting/radio
announcements, the authorized officer(s) of the concerned office(s) shall issue a
certification(s) that the publication/posting/radio announcement have been
complied with. Any adverse claim, protest, opposition shall be filed directly, within
thirty (30) calendar days from the last date of publication/posting/radio
announcement, with the concerned Regional Office or through any concerned
PENRO or CENRO for filing in the concerned Regional Office for purposes of its
resolution by the Panel of Arbitrators pursuant to the provisions of this Act and
these implementing rules and regulations. Upon final resolution of any adverse
claim, protest or opposition, the Panel of Arbitrators shall likewise issue a
certification to that effect within five (5) working days from the date of finality of
resolution thereof. Where there is no adverse claim, protest or opposition, the
Panel of Arbitrators shall likewise issue a Certification to that effect within five
working days therefrom.
xxxx
No Mineral Agreement shall be approved unless the requirements under this
Section are fully complied with and any adverse claim/protest/opposition is finally
resolved by the Panel of Arbitrators.
Within fifteen (15) working days form the receipt of the Certification issued by the
Panel of Arbitrators as provided in Section 38 hereof, the concerned Regional
Director shall initially evaluate the Mineral Agreement applications in areas
outside Mineral reservations. He/She shall thereafter endorse his/her findings to
the Bureau for further evaluation by the Director within fifteen (15) working days
from receipt of forwarded documents. Thereafter, the Director shall endorse the
same to the secretary for consideration/approval within fifteen working days from
receipt of such endorsement.
In case of Mineral Agreement applications in areas with Mineral Reservations,
within fifteen (15) working days from receipt of the Certification issued by the
Panel of Arbitrators as provided for in Section 38 hereof, the same shall be
evaluated and endorsed by the Director to the Secretary for
consideration/approval within fifteen days from receipt of such endorsement.
(emphasis supplied)
It has been made clear from the aforecited provisions that the "disputes involving
rights to mining areas" under Sec. 77(a) specifically refer only to those disputes
relative to the applications for a mineral agreement or conferment of mining
rights.
The jurisdiction of the POA over adverse claims, protest, or oppositions to a
mining right application is further elucidated by Secs. 219 and 43 of DENR AO 95936, which read:
Sec. 219. Filing of Adverse Claims/Conflicts/Oppositions.- Notwithstanding the
provisions of Sections 28, 43 and 57 above, any adverse claim, protest or
opposition specified in said sections may also be filed directly with the Panel of
Arbitrators within the concerned periods for filing such claim, protest or
opposition as specified in said Sections.
Sec. 43. Publication/Posting of Mineral Agreement.xxxx
The Regional Director or concerned Regional Director shall also cause the posting
of the application on the bulletin boards of the Bureau, concerned Regional
office(s) and in the concerned province(s) and municipality(ies), copy furnished
the barangays where the proposed contract area is located once a week for two
(2) consecutive weeks in a language generally understood in the locality. After
forty-five (45) days from the last date of publication/posting has been made and
no adverse claim, protest or opposition was filed within the said forty-five (45)
days, the concerned offices shall issue a certification that publication/posting has
been made and that no adverse claim, protest or opposition of whatever nature
has been filed. On the other hand, if there be any adverse claim, protest or
opposition, the same shall be filed within forty-five (45) days from the last date of
publication/posting, with the Regional Offices concerned, or through the
Justice Marvic Mario Victor F. Leonen, in his Dissent, asserts that it is the regular
courts, not the POA, that has jurisdiction over the MPSA applications of
petitioners.
xxxx
The Regional Director or concerned Regional Director shall also cause the posting
of the application on the bulletin boards of the Bureau, concerned Regional
office(s) and in the concerned province(s) and municipality(ies), copy furnished
the barangays where the proposed contract area is located once a week for two
(2) consecutive weeks in a language generally understood in the locality. After
forty-five (45) days from the last date of publication/posting has been made and
no adverse claim, protest or opposition was filed within the said forty-five (45)
days, the concerned offices shall issue a certification that publication/posting has
been made and that no adverse claim, protest or opposition of whatever nature
has been filed. On the other hand, if there be any adverse claim, protest or
opposition, the same shall be filed within forty-five (45) days from the last date of
publication/posting, with the Regional offices concerned, or through the
Departments Community Environment and Natural Resources Officers (CENRO)
or Provincial Environment and Natural Resources Officers (PENRO), to be filed at
the Regional Office for resolution of the Panel of Arbitrators. However, previously
published valid and subsisting mining claims are exempted from posted/posting
required under this Section.
It is basic that the jurisdiction of the court is determined by the statute in force at
the time of the commencement of the action.54
Sec. 19, Batas Pambansa Blg. 129 or "The Judiciary Reorganization
Act of 1980" reads:
Sec. 19. Jurisdiction in Civil Cases.Regional Trial Courts shall exercise exclusive
original jurisdiction:
1. In all civil actions in which the subject of the litigation is incapable of pecuniary
estimation.
On the other hand, the jurisdiction of POA is unequivocal from Sec. 77 of RA 7942:
Section 77. Panel of Arbitrators.
x x x Within thirty (30) days, after the submission of the case by the parties for
the decision, the panel shall have exclusive and original jurisdiction to hear and
decide the following:
The sale of the MBMI shareholdings to DMCI does not have any bearing in the
instant case and said fact should be disregarded. The manifestation can no longer
be considered by us since it is being tackled in G.R. No. 202877 pending before
this Court.1wphi1 Thus, the question of whether petitioners, allegedly a
Philippine-owned corporation due to the sale of MBMI's shareholdings to DMCI,
are allowed to enter into FTAAs with the State is a non-issue in this case.
In ending, the "control test" is still the prevailing mode of determining whether or
not a corporation is a Filipino corporation, within the ambit of Sec. 2, Art. II of the
1987 Constitution, entitled to undertake the exploration, development and
utilization of the natural resources of the Philippines. When in the mind of the
Court there is doubt, based on the attendant facts and circumstances of the case,
in the 60-40 Filipino-equity ownership in the corporation, then it may apply the
"grandfather rule."
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the instant petition is DENIED. The assailed
Court of Appeals Decision dated October 1, 2010 and Resolution dated February
15, 2011 are hereby AFFIRMED.
SO ORDERED.
In Luzon Stevedoring Corp. v. Anti-Dummy Board,8 the Court deemed it wise and
expedient to resolve the case although the petition for declaratory relief could be
outrightly dismissed for being procedurally defective. There, appellant admittedly
had already committed a breach of the Public Service Act in relation to the AntiDummy Law since it had been employing non-American aliens long before the
decision in a prior similar case. However, the main issue in Luzon
Stevedoring was of transcendental importance, involving the exercise or
enjoyment of rights, franchises, privileges, properties and businesses which only
Filipinos and qualified corporations could exercise or enjoy under the Constitution
and the statutes.
November 4, 2012
THE INTERPRETATION OF THE TERM CAPITAL IN SECTION 11, ARTICLE XII OF THE
CONSTITUTION HAS FAR-REACHING IMPLICATIONS TO THE NATIONAL ECONOMY.
IN FACT, A RESOLUTION OF THIS ISSUE WILL DETERMINE WHETHER FILIPINOS ARE
MASTERS, OR SECOND-CLASS CITIZENS, IN THEIR OWN COUNTRY. WHAT IS AT
STAKE HERE IS WHETHER FILIPINOS OR FOREIGNERS WILL HAVE EFFECTIVE
CONTROL OF THE PHILIPPINE NATIONAL ECONOMY.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
WHAT IS TRANSCENDENTAL IN THE CASE AT HAND AND WHY?
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
PANGILINAN ET AL CONTEND THAT THE TERM CAPITAL IN SECTION 11, ARTICLE
XII OF THE CONSTITUTION HAS LONG BEEN SETTLED AND DEFINED TO REFER TO
THE TOTAL OUTSTANDING SHARES OF STOCK, WHETHER VOTING OR NONVOTING. IS THEIR CONTENTION CORRECT?
NO. THE SUPREME COURT HAS NEVER YET INTERPRETED THE MEANING OF
CAPITAL IN THE CONTEXT OF SECTION 11, ARTICLE XII OF THE CONSTITUTION.
For more than 75 years since the 1935 Constitution, the Court has not interpreted
or defined the term capital found in various economic provisions of the 1935,
1973 and 1987 Constitutions. There has never been a judicial precedent
interpreting the term capital in the 1935, 1973 and 1987 Constitutions, until
now. Hence, it is patently wrong and utterly baseless to claim that the Court in
defining the term capital in its 28 June 2011 Decision modified, reversed, or set
aside the purported long-standing
=====================
definition of the term capital, which supposedly refers to the total outstanding
shares of stock, whether voting or non-voting.
SUBJECTS/DOCTRINES/DIGEST:
To repeat, until the present case there has never been a Court ruling categorically
defining the term capital found in the various economic provisions of the 1935,
1973 and 1987 Philippine Constitutions.
XXXXXXXXXXXXX
IS THERE ANY SEC OPINION WHICH IS CONSISTENT WITH THE SC RULING, BEING
NOW CONTESTED, ON THE MATTER?
PANGILINAN ET AL CONTENDS THAT SEC AND DOJ HAVE ALWAYS INTERPRETED
CAPITAL TO REFER TO THE TOTAL OUTSTANDING SHARES OF STOCK WHETHER
VOTING OR NOT. IS THEIR CONTENTION CORRECT?
YES. IN OPINION NO. 23-10 DATED18 AUGUST 2012, SEC APPLIED THE VOTING
CONTROL TEST, THAT IS USING ONLY THE VOTING STOCK TO DETERMINE
WHETHER A CORPORATION IS A PHILIPPINE NATIONAL.
On the other hand, in Opinion No. 23-10 dated 18 August 2010, addressed to
Castillo Laman Tan Pantaleon & San Jose, then SEC General Counsel Vernette G.
Umali-Paco applied the Voting Control Test, that is, using only the voting stock to
determine whether a corporation is a Philippine national.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
IS THERE ANY DOJ OPINION WHICH IS CONSISTENT WITH THE SC RULING, BEING
NOW CONTESTED, ON THE MATTER?
YES IN DOJ OPINION NO. 130 DATED 07 OCTOBER 1985, DOJ RULED THAT THE
RESULTING OWNERSHIP STRUCTURE OF THE SUBJECT CORPORATION WOULD BE
UNCONSTITUTIONAL BECAUSE 60% OF THE VOTING STOCK WOULD BE OWNED
BY JAPANESE WHILE FILIPINOS WOULD OWN ONLY 40% OF THE VOTING STOCK,
ALTHOUGH WHEN THE NON-VOTING STOCK IS ADDED, FILIPINOS WOULD OWN
60% OF THE COMBINED VOTING AND NON-VOTING STOCK.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXX
In DOJ Opinion No. 130, s. 1985,10 dated 7 October 1985, the scope of the term
capital in Section 9, Article XIV of the 1973 Constitution was raised, that is,
whether the term capital includes both preferred and common stocks. The
issue was raised in relation to a stock-swap transaction between a Filipino and a
Japanese corporation, both stockholders of a domestic corporation that owned
lands in the Philippines. Then Minister of Justice Estelito P. Mendoza ruled that the
resulting ownership structure of the corporation would
be unconstitutional because 60% of the voting stock would be owned by Japanese
while Filipinos would own only 40% of the voting stock, although when the nonvoting stock is added, Filipinos would own 60% of the combined voting and nonvoting stock.
In short, Minister Mendoza categorically rejected the theory that the term
capital in Section 9, Article XIV of the 1973 Constitution includes both
preferred and common stocks treated as the same class of shares regardless of
differences in voting rights and privileges. Minister Mendoza stressed that the 6040 ownership requirement in favor of Filipino citizens in the Constitution is not
complied with unless the corporation satisfies the criterion of beneficial
ownership and that in applying the same the primordial consideration is situs of
control.
The opinions issued by SEC legal officers do not have the force and effect of SEC
rules and regulations because only the SEC en banc can adopt rules and
regulations. As expressly provided in Section 4.6 of the Securities Regulation
Code,12 the SEC cannot delegate to any of its individual Commissioner or staff
the power to adopt any rule or regulation. Further, under Section 5.1 of the same
Code, it is the SEC as a collegial body, and not any of its legal officers, that is
empowered to issue opinions and approve rules and regulations.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
IS THE GRANDFATHER RULE APPLICABLE TO THIS CASE?
YES. EVEN SEC APPLIED IT.
Significantly, the SEC en banc, which is the collegial body statutorily empowered
to issue rules and opinions on behalf of the SEC, has adopted the 60-40
ownership requirement in favor of Filipino citizens mandated by the Constitution
for certain economic activities. This prevailing SEC ruling, which the SEC correctly
adopted to thwart any circumvention of the required Filipino ownership and
control, is laid down in the 25 March 2010 SEC en banc ruling in Redmont
Consolidated Mines, Corp. v. McArthur Mining, Inc., et al.,15 to wit:
The avowed purpose of the Constitution is to place in the hands of Filipinos the
exploitation of our natural resources. Necessarily, therefore, the Rule interpreting
the constitutional provision should not diminish that right through the legal fiction
of corporate ownership and control. But the constitutional provision, as
interpreted and practiced via the 1967 SEC Rules, has favored foreigners contrary
XXXXXXXXXXXXX
II.
WHAT IS THE GRANDFATHER RULE?
COMPLIANCE WITH THE CONSTITUTIONAL LIMITATION(S) ON ENGAGING IN
NATIONALIZED ACTIVITIES MUST BE DETERMINED BY ASCERTAINING IF 60% OF
THE INVESTING CORPORATIONS OUTSTANDING CAPITAL STOCK IS OWNED BY
FILIPINO CITIZENS, OR AS INTERPRETED, BY NATURAL OR INDIVIDUAL FILIPINO
CITIZENS. IF SUCH INVESTING CORPORATION IS IN TURN OWNED TO SOME
EXTENT BY ANOTHER INVESTING CORPORATION, THE SAME PROCESS MUST BE
OBSERVED. ONE MUST NOT STOP UNTIL THE CITIZENSHIPS OF THE INDIVIDUAL
OR NATURAL STOCKHOLDERS OF LAYER AFTER LAYER OF INVESTING
CORPORATIONS HAVE BEEN ESTABLISHED.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
WHAT WAS THE MAIN RULING IN THE 28 JUNE 2011 DECISION OF THE SC
REGARDING THIS CASE?
THAT THE 60-40 OWNERSHIP REQUIREMENT IN FAVOR OF FILIPINO CITIZENS IN
THE CONSTITUTION TO ENGAGE IN CERTAIN ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES APPLIES NOT
ONLY TO VOTING CONTROL OF THE CORPORATION, BUT ALSO TO THE BENEFICIAL
OWNERSHIP OF THE CORPORATION. MERE LEGAL TITLE IS INSUFFICIENT TO MEET
THE 60 PERCENT FILIPINO OWNED CAPITAL REQUIRED IN THE CONSTITUTION.
FULL BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF 60 PERCENT OF THE OUTSTANDING CAPITAL
STOCK, COUPLED WITH 60 PERCENT OF THE VOTING RIGHTS, IS REQUIRED. THE
LEGAL AND BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF 60 PERCENT OF THE OUTSTANDING
CAPITAL STOCK MUST REST IN THE HANDS OF FILIPINO NATIONALS IN
ACCORDANCE WITH THE CONSTITUTIONAL MANDATE. OTHERWISE, THE
CORPORATION IS CONSIDERED AS NON-PHILIPPINE NATIONAL[S]. BOTH THE
VOTING CONTROL TEST AND THE BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP TEST MUST BE
APPLIED TO DETERMINE WHETHER A CORPORATION IS A PHILIPPINE NATIONAL.
I.
THE FACTS
THE ISSUE
Does the term capital in Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution refer to the
total common shares only, or to the total outstanding capital stock (combined
total of common and non-voting preferred shares) of PLDT, a public utility?
III. THE RULING
[The Court partly granted the petition and held that the term capital in Section
11, Article XII of the Constitution refers only to shares of stock entitled to vote in
the election of directors of a public utility, or in the instant case, to the total
common shares of PLDT.]
Section 11, Article XII (National Economy and Patrimony) of the 1987 Constitution
mandates the Filipinization of public utilities, to wit:
Section 11. No franchise, certificate, or any other form of authorization
for the operation of a public utility shall be granted except to citizens of
the Philippines or to corporations or associations organized under the
laws of the Philippines, at least sixty per centum of whose capital is
owned by such citizens; nor shall such franchise, certificate, or authorization
be exclusive in character or for a longer period than fifty years. Neither shall any
such franchise or right be granted except under the condition that it shall be
subject to amendment, alteration, or repeal by the Congress when the common
good so requires. The State shall encourage equity participation in public utilities
by the general public. The participation of foreign investors in the governing body
of any public utility enterprise shall be limited to their proportionate share in its
capital, and all the executive and managing officers of such corporation or
association must be citizens of the Philippines. (Emphasis supplied)
The term capital in Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution refers only to
shares of stock entitled to vote in the election of directors, and thus in the present
case only to common shares, and not to the total outstanding capital stock
comprising both common and non-voting preferred shares [of PLDT].
xxx
xxx
xxx
xxx
xxx
xxx
xxx
To construe broadly the term capital as the total outstanding capital stock,
including both common and non-voting preferred shares, grossly contravenes the
intent and letter of the Constitution that the State shall develop a self-reliant and
independent national economy effectively controlled by Filipinos. A broad
definition unjustifiably disregards who owns the all-important voting stock, which
necessarily equates to control of the public utility.
We shall illustrate the glaring anomaly in giving a broad definition to the term
capital. Let us assume that a corporation has 100 common shares owned by
foreigners and 1,000,000 non-voting preferred shares owned by Filipinos, with
both classes of share having a par value of one peso (P1.00) per share. Under the
broad definition of the term capital, such corporation would be considered
compliant with the 40 percent constitutional limit on foreign equity of public
utilities since the overwhelming majority, or more than 99.999 percent, of the
total outstanding capital stock is Filipino owned. This is obviously absurd.
In the example given, only the foreigners holding the common shares have voting
rights in the election of directors, even if they hold only 100 shares. The
foreigners, with a minuscule equity of less than 0.001 percent, exercise control
over the public utility. On the other hand, the Filipinos, holding more than 99.999
percent of the equity, cannot vote in the election of directors and hence, have no
control over the public utility. This starkly circumvents the intent of the framers of
the Constitution, as well as the clear language of the Constitution, to place the
control of public utilities in the hands of Filipinos. It also renders illusory the State
policy of an independent national economy effectively controlled by Filipinos.
The example given is not theoretical but can be found in the real world, and in
fact exists in the present case.
xxx
xxx
xxx
[O]nly holders of common shares can vote in the election of directors [of PLDT],
meaning only common shareholders exercise control over PLDT. Conversely,
holders of preferred shares, who have no voting rights in the election of directors,
do not have any control over PLDT. In fact, under PLDTs Articles of Incorporation,
holders of common shares have voting rights for all purposes, while holders of
preferred shares have no voting right for any purpose whatsoever.
It must be stressed, and respondents do not dispute, that foreigners hold a
majority of the common shares of PLDT. In fact, based on PLDTs 2010 General
Information Sheet (GIS), which is a document required to be submitted annually
to the Securities and Exchange Commission, foreigners hold 120,046,690
common shares of PLDT whereas Filipinos hold only 66,750,622 common
shares. In other words, foreigners hold 64.27% of the total number of PLDTs
common shares, while Filipinos hold only 35.73%. Since holding a majority of the
common shares equates to control, it is clear that foreigners exercise control over
PLDT. Such amount of control unmistakably exceeds the allowable 40 percent
limit on foreign ownership of public utilities expressly mandated in Section 11,
Article XII of the Constitution.
As shown in PLDTs 2010 GIS, as submitted to the SEC, the par value of PLDT
common shares is P5.00 per share, whereas the par value of preferred shares
is P10.00 per share. In other words, preferred shares have twice the par value of
common shares but cannot elect directors and have only 1/70 of the dividends of
common shares. Moreover, 99.44% of the preferred shares are owned by Filipinos
while foreigners own only a minuscule 0.56% of the preferred shares. Worse,
preferred shares constitute 77.85% of the authorized capital stock of PLDT while
common shares constitute only 22.15%. This undeniably shows that beneficial
interest in PLDT is not with the non-voting preferred shares but with the common
shares, blatantly violating the constitutional requirement of 60 percent Filipino
control and Filipino beneficial ownership in a public utility.
The legal and beneficial ownership of 60 percent of the outstanding capital stock
must rest in the hands of Filipinos in accordance with the constitutional mandate.
Full beneficial ownership of 60 percent of the outstanding capital stock, coupled
with 60 percent of the voting rights, is constitutionally required for the States
grant of authority to operate a public utility. The undisputed fact that the PLDT
preferred shares, 99.44% owned by Filipinos, are non-voting and earn only 1/70 of
the dividends that PLDT common shares earn, grossly violates the constitutional
requirement of 60 percent Filipino control and Filipino beneficial ownership of a
public utility.
In short, Filipinos hold less than 60 percent of the voting stock, and earn less than
60 percent of the dividends, of PLDT. This directly contravenes the express
command in Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution that [n]o franchise,
certificate, or any other form of authorization for the operation of a public utility
shall be granted except to x x x corporations x x x organized under the laws of
the Philippines, at least sixty per centum of whose capital is owned by such
citizens x x x.
To repeat, (1) foreigners own 64.27% of the common shares of PLDT, which class
of shares exercises the sole right to vote in the election of directors, and thus
exercise control over PLDT; (2) Filipinos own only 35.73% of PLDTs common
shares, constituting a minority of the voting stock, and thus do not exercise
control over PLDT; (3) preferred shares, 99.44% owned by Filipinos, have no
voting rights; (4) preferred shares earn only 1/70 of the dividends that common
shares earn; (5) preferred shares have twice the par value of common shares; and
(6) preferred shares constitute 77.85% of the authorized capital stock of PLDT and
common shares only 22.15%. This kind of ownership and control of a public utility
is a mockery of the Constitution.
Incidentally, the fact that PLDT common shares with a par value of P5.00 have a
current stock market value of P2,328.00 per share, while PLDT preferred shares
with a par value of P10.00 per share have a current stock market value ranging
from only P10.92 to P11.06 per share, is a glaring confirmation by the market that
control and beneficial ownership of PLDT rest with the common shares, not with
the preferred shares.
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WHEREFORE, we PARTLY GRANT the petition and rule that the term capital in
Section 11, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution refers only to shares of stock
entitled to vote in the election of directors, and thus in the present case only to
common shares, and not to the total outstanding capital stock (common and nonvoting preferred shares). Respondent Chairperson of the Securities and Exchange
Commission is DIRECTED to apply this definition of the term capital in
determining the extent of allowable foreign ownership in respondent Philippine
Long Distance Telephone Company, and if there is a violation of Section 11,
Article XII of the Constitution, to impose the appropriate sanctions under the law.