Corpo Page 7
Corpo Page 7
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CONTRARY TO LAW.
CONTRARY TO LAW.
Iloilo City, Philippines, November 22, 1991. 4 [Emphasis
ours]
Thereafter, trial for the two criminal cases, docketed as Criminal
Cases Nos. 37097 and 37098, was consolidated. After a full-blown
hearing, Judge Porfirio Parian handed down a verdict of acquittal
on both counts 5 dated September 6, 1993 without imposing any
civil liability against the accused therein.
Petitioners filed a Motion for Reconsideration 6 of the civil aspect
of the RTC Decision which was, however, denied in an Order
dated November 23, 1993. 7
Hence, the instant petition.
Significantly on December 8, 1994, a Motion for Intervention,
dated December 2, 1994, was filed before this Court by Western
Institute of Technology, Inc., supposedly one of the petitioners
herein, disowning its inclusion in the petition and submitting that
Atty. Tranquilino R. Gale, counsel for the other petitioners, had no
authority whatsoever to represent the corporation in filing the
petition. Intervenor likewise prayed for the dismissal of the
petition for being utterly without merit. The Motion for
Intervention was granted on January 16, 1995. 8
Petitioners would like us to hold private respondents civilly liable
despite their acquittal in Criminal Cases Nos. 37097 and 37098.
They base their claim on the alleged illegal issuance by private
respondents of Resolution No. 48, series of 1986 ordering the
disbursement of corporate funds in the amount of P186,470.70
representing retroactive compensation as of June 1, 1985 in favor
of private respondents, board members of WIT, plus
P1,453,970.79 for the subsequent collective salaries of private
respondents every 15th and 30th of the month until the filing of
the criminal complaints against them on March 1991. Petitioners
maintain that this grant of compensation to private respondents
is proscribed under Section 30 of the Corporation Code. Thus,
private respondents are obliged to return these amounts to the
corporation with interest.
We cannot sustain the petitioners. The pertinent section of the
Corporation Code provides:
Sec. 30. Compensation of directors In the absence of
any provision in the by-laws fixing their compensation,
the directors shall not receive any compensation, as
such directors, except for reasonable per
diems: Provided, however, That any such
compensation (other than per diems) may be granted
to directors by the vote of the stockholders
representing at least a majority of the outstanding
capital stock at a regular or special stockholders'
meeting. In no case shall the total yearly compensation
of directors, as such directors, exceed ten (10%)
percent of the net income before income tax of the
corporation during the preceding year. [Emphasis ours]
There is no argument that directors or trustees, as the case may
be, are not entitled to salary or other compensation when they
perform nothing more than the usual and ordinary duties of their
office. This rule is founded upon a presumption that
directors/trustees render service gratuitously, and that the return
upon their shares adequately furnishes the motives for service,
without compensation. 9 Under the foregoing section, there are
only two (2) ways by which members of the board can be granted
compensation apart from reasonable per diems: (1) when there is
a provision in the by-laws fixing their compensation; and (2) when
the stockholders representing a majority of the outstanding
capital stock at a regular or special stockholders' meeting agree to
give it to them.
This proscription, however, against granting compensation to
directors/trustees of a corporation is not a sweeping rule. Worthy
of note is the clear phraseology of Section 30 which states: ". . .
[T]he directors shall not receive any compensation, as such
directors, . . . ." The phrase as such directors is not without
significance for it delimits the scope of the prohibition to
compensation given to them for services performed purely in
their capacity as directors or trustees. The unambiguous
implication is that members of the board may receive
compensation, in addition to reasonable per diems, when they
render services to the corporation in a capacity other than as
directors/trustees.10 In the case at bench, Resolution No. 48, s.
1986 granted monthly compensation to private respondents not
in their capacity as members of the board, but rather as officers of
the judgment of acquittal holds that the accused did not commit
the criminal acts imputed to them. 20
WHEREFORE, the instant petition is hereby DENIED with costs
against petitioners.SO ORDERED.
19
[Emphasis ours]
From the foregoing factual findings, which we find to be amply
substantiated by the records, it is evident that there is simply no
basis to hold the accused, private respondents herein, civilly
liable. Section 2(b) of Rule 111 on the New Rules on Criminal
Procedure provides:
Sec. 2. Institution of separate civil action.
xxx xxx xxx
(b) Extinction of the penal action does not carry with it
extinction of the civil, unless the extinction proceeds
from a declaration in a final judgment that the fact
from which the civil might arise did not exist.
[Emphasis ours]
Likewise, the last paragraph of Section 2, Rule 120 reads:
Sec. 2. Form and contents of judgment.
xxx xxx xxx
In case of acquittal, unless there is a clear showing that
the act from which the civil liability might arise did not
exist, the judgment shall make a finding on the civil
liability of the accused in favor of the offended party.
[Emphasis ours]
The acquittal in Criminal Cases Nos. 37097 and 37098 is not
merely based on reasonable doubt but rather on a finding that
the accused-private respondents did not commit the criminal acts
complained of. Thus, pursuant to the above rule and settled
jurisprudence, any civil action ex delicto cannot prosper. Acquittal
in a criminal action bars the civil action arising therefrom where
SO ORDERED. 4
Petitioners filed a Motion for Reconsideration of the April 21,
1995 Resolution, which was denied in another Resolution 5 dated
May 24, 1995.
Hence, this petition.
We shall dismiss the petition. The law recognizes the right of
every business entity to reduce its work force if the same is made
necessary by compelling economic factors which would endanger
its existence or stability. In spite of overwhelming support granted
by the social justice provisions of our Constitution in favor of
labor, the fundamental law itself guarantees, even during the
process of tilting the scales of social justice towards workers and
employees, "the right of enterprises to reasonable returns of
investment and to expansion and growth. 6 To hold otherwise
would not only be oppressive and inhuman, 7 but also counterproductive and ultimately subversive of the nation's thrust
towards a resurgence in our economy which would ultimately
benefit the majority of our people. Where appropriate and where
conditions are in accord with law and jurisprudence, the Court has
authorized valid reductions in the work force to forestall business
losses, 8 the hemorrhaging of capital, or even to recognize an
obvious reduction in the volume of business which has rendered
certain employees redundant. 9 Thus, Article 283 of the Labor
Code, which covers retrenchment, reads as follows:
Art. 283. Closure of establishment and
reduction of personnel The employer
may also terminate the employment of any
employee due to the installation of labor
saving devices, redundancy,retrenchment to
is prejudicial to his
health or to the
health of his coemployees, the
employee shall be
entitled to
termination pay
equivalent to at least
one-half month pay
for every year of
service, a fraction of
at least six months
being considered as
one whole year. 15
The NLRC, in its September 30, 1993 Resolution, however,
reversed the foregoing findings of the Labor Arbiter and adjudged
Crispa, Inc. as well as the petitioners liable for illegal dismissal.
The NLRC ruled, thus:
We observe that the basis of the Labor
Arbiter in sustaining the argument of
financial reverses is the Statement of Profit
and Losses submitted by the respondent
(Supra.). The same however, does not bear
the signature of a certified public
accountant or audited by an independent
auditor. Briefly stated, it has no evidentiary
value. As such, the allege financial losses
which caused the temporary closure of
respondent CRISPA, Inc. has not been
sufficiently established. In the case of Lopez
Sugar Corp. vs. FFW, 189 SCRA 179, the
Supreme Court held that "alleged losses if
already realized and the expected losses
sought to be forestalled must be proved by
sufficient and commencing (sic)evidence.
Consequently, there being no financial
reverses for (sic) men (sic) the termination
of herein complainants from their
employment is perforce illegal. 16
We are more in accord with the aforequoted observations made
by the NLRC. It is true that administrative and quasi-judicial bodies
like the NLRC are not bound by the technical rules of procedure in
the adjudication of cases.17 However, this procedural rule should
not be construed as a license to disregard certain fundamental
evidentiary rules. While the rules of evidence prevailing in the
courts of law or equity are not controlling in proceedings before
the NLRC, the evidence presented before it must at least have a
modicum of admissibility for it to be given some probative
value. 18 The Statement of Profit and Losses submitted by Crispa,
Inc. to prove its alleged losses, without the accompanying
Dear Sir,
Re: Land of Eternit Corporation
I would like to confirm officially that our Group has decided not to
proceed with the sale of the land which was proposed to you.
The Committee for Asia of our Group met recently (meeting every
six months) and examined the position as far as the Philippines
are (sic) concerned. Considering the new political situation since
the departure of MR. MARCOS and a certain stabilization in the
Philippines, the Committee has decided not to stop our
operations in Manila[.] [I]n fact production started again last
week, and (sic) to reorganize the participation in the Corporation.
We regret that we could not make a deal with you this time, but
in case the policy would change at a later stage we would consult
you again.
C.F. DELSAUX19
Yours sincerely,
10
September 8, 2010
It appears that Marquez acted not only as real estate broker for
the petitioners but also as their agent. As gleaned from the letter
of Marquez to Glanville, on February 26, 1987, he confirmed, for
and in behalf of the petitioners, that the latter had accepted such
offer to sell the land and the improvements thereon. However,
we agree with the ruling of the appellate court that Marquez had
no authority to bind respondent EC to sell the subject properties.
A real estate broker is one who negotiates the sale of real
properties. His business, generally speaking, is only to find a
purchaser who is willing to buy the land upon terms fixed by the
owner. He has no authority to bind the principal by signing a
contract of sale. Indeed, an authority to find a purchaser of real
property does not include an authority to sell.47
Equally barren of merit is petitioners contention that respondent
EC is estopped to deny the existence of a principal-agency
relationship between it and Glanville or Delsaux. For an agency by
estoppel to exist, the following must be established: (1) the
principal manifested a representation of the agents authority or
knowlingly allowed the agent to assume such authority; (2) the
third person, in good faith, relied upon such representation; (3)
relying upon such representation, such third person has changed
his position to his detriment.48 An agency by estoppel, which is
similar to the doctrine of apparent authority, requires proof of
11
NACHURA, J.:
At bar is a petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the
Rules of Court filed by Queensland-Tokyo Commodities, Inc.
(QTCI), Romeo Y. Lau (Lau), and Charlie Collado (Collado),
challenging the September 30, 2005 Decision1 and the January 20,
2006 Resolution2 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP No.
58741.
QTCI is a duly licensed broker engaged in the trading of
commodity futures. In 1995, Guillermo Mendoza, Jr. (Mendoza)
and Oniler Lontoc (Lontoc) of QTCI met with respondent Thomas
George (respondent), encouraging the latter to invest with QTCI.
On July 7, 1995, upon Mendozas prodding, respondent finally
invested with QTCI. On the same day, Collado, in behalf of QTCI,
and respondent signed the Customers Agreement.3 Forming part
of the agreement was the Special Power of Attorney4 executed by
respondent, appointing Mendoza as his attorney-in-fact with full
authority to trade and manage his account.
On June 20, 1996, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
issued a Cease-and-Desist Order (CDO) against QTCI. Alarmed by
the issuance of the CDO, respondent demanded from QTCI the
SO ORDERED.12
Petitioners filed a motion for reconsideration,13 but the CA denied
it on January 20, 2006.14
Hence, this recourse by petitioners arguing that:
A.
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN CONCLUDING
THAT PETITIONERS KNOWINGLY PERMITTED AN UNLICENSED
TRADER TO SOLICIT AND HANDLE REPONDENTS ACCOUNT, AND
THAT PETITIONERS ARE GUILTY OF FRAUD AND
MISREPRESENTATION.
SO ORDERED.8
B.
Petitioners appealed to the Commission en banc, but the appeal
was dismissed because the Notice of Appeal and the
Memorandum on Appeal were not verified.9
Petitioners then went to the CA via a petition for review10 under
Rule 43, faulting the Commission en banc for dismissing their
appeal on purely technical ground. They insisted that they did not
violate the rules on commodity futures trading. Thus, they faulted
the SEC Hearing Officer for nullifying the Customers Agreement
and for holding them liable for respondents claims.
On September 30, 2005, the CA rendered the now challenged
Decision.11 It declared the dismissal of petitioners appeal by the
Commission en banc improper. Nevertheless, it did not order a
remand of the case to the Commission en banc because
jurisdiction over petitioners appeal had already been transferred
to the Regional Trial Court (RTC) by virtue of Republic Act No.
8799 or the Securities Regulation Code. The CA thus proceeded to
decide the merits of the case, affirming in toto the decision of the
SEC Hearing Officer. The appellate court failed to see any reason
to disturb the SEC Hearing Officers finding of liability on the part
of petitioners. It sustained the finding that petitioners violated the
Revised Rules and Regulations on Commodity Futures Trading
when they allowed
an unlicensed salesman, like Mendoza, to handle respondents
account. The CA also upheld the nullification of the Customers
Agreement, and the award of moral and exemplary damages, as
well attorneys fees, in favor of respondent. The CA disposed,
thus:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the petition is DISMISSED for
lack of merit. The assailed decision dated February 7, 2000 is
hereby AFFIRMED in toto.
12
Promulgated:
LORETA T. YUNG,
Respondent.
X -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------X
DECISION
MENDOZA, J.:
- versus -
14
Wensha. That same afternoon, Loreta went to the NLRC and filed
a case for illegal dismissal against Xu and Wensha.
GROUNDS
FOR
THE
ALLOWANCE OF THE PETITION
5.1
The following are the
reasons and arguments, which are purely
questions of law and some questions of
facts, which justify the appeal by certiorari
under Rule 45 of the 1997 Revised Rules of
Civil Procedure, as amended, to this
Honorable SUPREME COURT of the assailed
Decision and Resolution, to wit:
5.1.1
The
Honorabl
e COURT
OF
APPEALS
gravely
erred in
reversing
that
factual
findings
of
the
Honorabl
e Labor
Arbiter
and the
Honorabl
e NLRC
(Third
Division)
notwithst
anding
recognize
d
and
establish
ed rule in
our
jurisdicti
on that
findings
of facts
of quasijudicial
agencies
who
have
gained
expertise
on their
respectiv
e subject
matters
are given
respect
and
finality;
5.1.2 The Honorable
COURT OF
APPEALS
committed
grave
abuse of
discretion
and
serious
errors
when
it
ruled that
findings of
facts
of
the
Honorable
Labor
Arbiter
and
the
Honorable
NLRC are
not
supported
by
substantial
evidence
despite
the
fact
that the
records
clearly
show that
petitioner
therein
was
not
dismissed
but
is
under
investigati
on,
and
that she is
guilty of
serious
infractions
that
warranted
16
her
terminatio
n;
illegally
dismissed;
5.2
The same need to be
corrected as they would work injustice to
the herein petitioner, grave and irreparable
damage will be done to him, and would
pose dangerous precedent.[12]
THE COURTS RULING:
Loretas security of tenure is guaranteed by the
Constitution and the Labor Code. The 1987 Philippine
Constitution provides in Section 18, Article II that the State shall
protect the rights of workers and promote their welfare. Section
3, Article XIII also provides that all workers shall be entitled to
security of tenure. Along that line, Article 3 of the Labor Code
mandates that the State shall assure the rights of workers to
security of tenure.
Under the security of tenure guarantee, a worker can
only be terminated from his employment for cause and after due
process. For a valid termination by the employer: (1) the dismissal
must be for a valid cause as provided in Article 282, or for any of
the authorized causes under Articles 283 and 284 of the Labor
Code; and (2) the employee must be afforded an opportunity to
be heard and to defend himself. A just and valid cause for an
employees dismissal must be supported by substantial evidence,
and before the employee can be dismissed, he must be given
notice and an adequate opportunity to be heard.[13] In the
process, the employer bears the burden of proving that the
dismissal of an employee was for a valid cause. Its failure to
discharge this burden renders the dismissal unjustified and,
therefore, illegal.[14]
As a rule, the factual findings of the court below are
conclusive on Us in a petition for review on certiorari where We
review only errors of law. This case, however, is an exception
because the CAs factual findings are not congruent with those of
the NLRC and the LA.
According to Wensha in its position paper,[15] it
dismissed Loreta on August 31, 2004 after investigating the
complaints against her. Wensha asserted that her dismissal was a
valid exercise of an employers right to terminate a managerial
employee for loss of trust and confidence. It claimed that she
caused the resignation of an employee because of gossips
initiated by her. It was the reason she was asked to take a leave
of absence with pay for one month starting August 10, 2004.[16]
Wensha also alleged that Loreta was sowing intrigues
in the company which was inimical to Wensha. She was also
accused of dishonesty, serious breach of trust reposed in her,
tardiness, and abuse of authority.[17]
TO ALL EMPLOYEES
OF WENSHA SPA CENTER
WE WOULD LIKE TO INFORM YOU
THAT MS. LORIE TSE YUNG, FORMER
ADMINISTRATIVE
OFFICER
OF WENSHA SPA CENTER IS
NO
LONGER CONNECTED TO THIS COMPANY
STARTING TODAY SEPTEMBER 10, 2004.
ANY TRANSACTION MADE BY
HER IS NO LONGER A LIABILITY OF THE
COMPANY.
(SGD.) THE MANAGEMENT [Italics were in
red letters.][29]
18
- versus -
Acting
Chairperso
n,
ChicoNazario,***
Brion, and
Abad, JJ.
REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES,
Represented by the Department of
Education, Culture and Sports,
Respondent.
Promulgated:
October 9, 2009
x --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- x
DECISION
ABAD, J.:
1992 up to 1996, there could have been nothing left of the rentals
it collected from the lessees of the Complex.
II
THE DECISION AND RESOLUTION OF THE
INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT ARE
CONTRARY TO THE ESTABLISHED
JURISPRUDENCE, PRINCIPLE AND RULE ON
FIDUCIARY DUTY OF DIRECTORS AND
OFFICERS OF THE CORPORATION.
III
THE DECISION AND RESOLUTION OF THE
INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT
DISREGARDED THE PRINCIPLE AND
JURISPRUDENCE, PRINCIPLE AND RULE ON
UNENFORCEABLE CONTRACTS AS
PROVIDED IN ARTICLE 1317 OF THE NEW
CIVIL CODE.
IV
THE DECISION AND RESOLUTION OF THE
INTERMEDIATE APPELLATE COURT
DISREGARDED THE PRINCIPLE AND
JURISPRUDENCE AS TO WHEN AWARD OF
ACTUAL AND MORAL DAMAGES IS PROPER.
V
IN NOT AWARDING PETITIONER'S CAUSE OF
ACTION AS STATED IN ITS ANSWER WITH
SPECIAL AND AFFIRMATIVE DEFENSES WITH
COUNTERCLAIM THE INTERMEDIATE
APPELLATE COURT HAS CLEARLY DEPARTED
FROM THE ACCEPTED USUAL, COURSE OF
JUDICIAL PROCEEDINGS.
There is only one legal issue to be resolved by this Court: whether
or not the "dealership agreement" referred by the President and
Chairman of the Board of petitioner corporation is a valid and
enforceable contract. We do not agree with the conclusion of the
respondent Court that it is.
Under the Corporation Law, which was then in force at the time
this case arose, 5 as well as under the present Corporation Code,
all corporate powers shall be exercised by the Board of Directors,
except as otherwise provided by law. 6Although it cannot
completely abdicate its power and responsibility to act for the
juridical entity, the Board may expressly delegate specific powers
to its President or any of its officers. In the absence of such
xxx
xxx
25
ORDERED."8
Hi-Cement on its part submitted that the trial court erred in ruling
that even if Hi-Cement did not authorize the issuance of the
checks, it could still be held liable for the checks. And assuming
that the checks were issued with its authorization, the same was
without any consideration, which is a defense against a holder in
due course and that the liability shall be borne alone by E.T.
Henry.11
On March 17, 1993, the Court of Appeals promulgated its decision
modifying the ruling of the trial court, the dispositive portion of
which reads:
"Judgement is hereby rendered:
(1) dismissing the plaintiff's complaint as against
defendants Hi-Cement Corporation and Antonio De las
Alas;
(2) ordering the defendants E.T. Henry and Co., Inc.
and Lourdes M. de Leon, jointly and severally to pay
the plaintiff the sum of TWO MILLION PESOS
(P2,000,000.00) with interest at the legal rate from the
filling of the complaint until fully paid, plus P20,000.00
for attorney's fees.
(3) Ordering the plaintiff and defendants E.T. Henry
and Co., Inc. and Lourdes M. de Leon, jointly and
severally to pay defendant Hi-Cement Corporation, the
sum of P20,000.00 as and for attorney's fees.
With cost in this instance against the appellee Atrium
Management Corporation and appellant Lourdes
Victoria M. de Leon.
So ordered."12
Hence, the recourse to this Court.13
The issues raised are the following:
In G. R. No. 109491 (Atrium, petitioner):
1. Whether the issuance of the questioned checks was
an ultra vires act;
2. Whether Atrium was not a holder in due course and
for value; and
27
"An ultra vires act is one committed outside the object for which a
corporation is created as defined by the law of its organization
and therefore beyond the power conferred upon it by law"16 The
term "ultra vires" is "distinguished from an illegal act for the
former is merely voidable which may be enforced by
performance, ratification, or estoppel, while the latter is void and
cannot be validated."17
The next question to determine is whether Lourdes M. de Leon
and Antonio de las Alas were personally liable for the checks
issued as corporate officers and authorized signatories of the
check.
"Personal liability of a corporate director, trustee or officer along
(although not necessarily) with the corporation may so validly
attach, as a rule, only when:
"1. He assents (a) to a patently unlawful act of the
corporation, or (b) for bad faith or gross negligence in
directing its affairs, or (c) for conflict of interest,
resulting in damages to the corporation, its
stockholders or other persons;
"2. He consents to the issuance of watered down
stocks or who, having knowledge thereof, does not
forthwith file with the corporate secretary his written
objection thereto;
"3. He agrees to hold himself personally and solidarily
liable with the corporation; or
"4. He is made, by a specific provision of law, to
personally answer for his corporate action."18
In the case at bar, Lourdes M. de Leon and Antonio de las Alas as
treasurer and Chairman of Hi-Cement were authorized to issue
the checks. However, Ms. de Leon was negligent when she signed
the confirmation letter requested by Mr. Yap of Atrium and Mr.
Henry of E.T. Henry for the rediscounting of the crossed checks
issued in favor of E.T. Henry. She was aware that the checks were
strictly endorsed for deposit only to the payee's account and not
to be further negotiated. What is more, the confirmation letter
contained a clause that was not true, that is, "that the checks
issued to E.T. Henry were in payment of Hydro oil bought by HiCement from E.T. Henry". Her negligence resulted in damage to
the corporation. Hence, Ms. de Leon may be held personally liable
therefor.1wphi1.nt
The next issue is whether or not petitioner Atrium was a holder of
the checks in due course. The Negotiable Instruments Law,
Section 52 defines a holder in due course, thus:
the counsel, who must certify under oath to all of the facts and
undertakings required therein."
Issue
DECISION
In its Memorandum, petitioner submits the following issues for
the consideration of the Court:
PANGANIBAN, J.:
The certificate of non-forum shopping required by Supreme Court
Circular 28-91 may be signed, for and on behalf of a corporation,
by a specifically authorized lawyer who has personal knowledge of
the facts required to be disclosed in such document. Unlike
natural persons, corporations may perform physical actions only
through properly delegated individuals; namely, its officers and/or
agents.
The Case
Before us is a Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45 of
the Rules of Court, assailing the August 6, 1997 Resolution1 of the
Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-GR SP No. 43209.2
Main Issue:
Authority of Counsel
A corporation, such as the petitioner, has no powers except those
expressly conferred on it by the Corporation Code and those that
are implied by or are incidental to its existence. In turn, a
corporation exercises said powers through its board of directors
and/or its duly authorized officers and agents. Physical acts, like
the signing of documents, can be performed only by natural
persons duly authorized for the purpose by corporate bylaws or
by a specific act of the board of directors. "All acts within the
powers of a corporation may be performed by agents of its
selection; and, except so far as limitations or restrictions which
may be imposed by special charter, by-law, or statutory
provisions, the same general principles of law which govern the
relation of agency for a natural person govern the officer or agent
of a corporation, of whatever status or rank, in respect to his
power to act for the corporation; and agents once appointed, or
members acting in their stead, are subject to the same rules,
Respondents.
"x x x. Indeed, while the requirement as to certificate of nonforum shopping is mandatory, nonetheless the requirements
must not be interpreted too literally and thus defeat the objective
of preventing the undesirable practice of forum-shopping."
x------------------------------------------------x
PUNO, C.J.:
DECISION
RESORT CORP.,
Petitioner,
Present:
PUNO, C.J.
,
Chairperso
n,
- versus -
CARPIO,
CORONA,
AZCUNA, and
Shop Attendant:
1998[5]
RESOURCE DEVELOPMENT
Waitress:
1997
CORP.,
29
30
After his dismissal by Matling as its Vice President for Finance and
Administration, the respondent filed on August 10, 2000 a
complaint for illegal suspension and illegal dismissal against
Matling and some of its corporate officers (petitioners) in the
NLRC, Sub-Regional Arbitration Branch XII, Iligan City.3
The petitioners moved to dismiss the complaint,4 raising the
ground, among others, that the complaint pertained to the
jurisdiction of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) due
to the controversy being intra-corporate inasmuch as the
respondent was a member of Matlings Board of Directors aside
from being its Vice-President for Finance and Administration prior
to his termination.
The respondent opposed the petitioners motion to
dismiss,5 insisting that his status as a member of Matlings Board
of Directors was doubtful, considering that he had not been
formally elected as such; that he did not own a single share of
stock in Matling, considering that he had been made to sign in
blank an undated indorsement of the certificate of stock he had
been given in 1992; that Matling had taken back and retained the
certificate of stock in its custody; and that even assuming that he
had been a Director of Matling, he had been removed as the Vice
President for Finance and Administration, not as a Director, a fact
that the notice of his termination dated April 10, 2000 showed.
On October 16, 2000, the LA granted the petitioners motion to
dismiss,6 ruling that the respondent was a corporate officer
because he was occupying the position of Vice President for
Finance and Administration and at the same time was a Member
of the Board of Directors of Matling; and that, consequently, his
removal was a corporate act of Matling and the controversy
resulting from such removal was under the jurisdiction of the SEC,
pursuant to Section 5, paragraph (c) of Presidential Decree No.
902.
Ruling of the NLRC
On March 13, 2001, the NLRC set aside the dismissal, concluding
that the respondents complaint for illegal dismissal was properly
cognizable by the LA, not by the SEC, because he was not a
corporate officer by virtue of his position in Matling, albeit high
ranking and managerial, not being among the positions listed in
Matlings Constitution and By-Laws.8 The NLRC disposed thuswise:
WHEREFORE, the Order appealed from is SET ASIDE. A new one is
entered declaring and holding that the case at bench does not
involve any intracorporate matter. Hence, jurisdiction to hear and
act on said case is vested with the Labor Arbiter, not the SEC,
considering that the position of Vice-President for Finance and
Administration being held by complainant-appellant is not listed
as among respondent's corporate officers.
Accordingly, let the records of this case be REMANDED to the
Arbitration Branch of origin in order that the Labor Arbiter below
could act on the case at bench, hear both parties, receive their
respective evidence and position papers fully observing the
requirements of due process, and resolve the same with
reasonable dispatch.
SO ORDERED.
The petitioners sought reconsideration,9 reiterating that the
respondent, being a member of the Board of Directors, was a
corporate officer whose removal was not within the LAs
jurisdiction.
The petitioners later submitted to the NLRC in support of the
motion for reconsideration the certified machine copies of
Matlings Amended Articles of Incorporation and By Laws to prove
that the President of Matling was thereby granted "full power to
create new offices and appoint the officers thereto, and the
minutes of special meeting held on June 7, 1999 by Matlings
Board of Directors to prove that the respondent was, indeed, a
Member of the Board of Directors.10
Antecedents
31
32
Issue
Thus, the petitioners are now before the Court for a review on
certiorari, positing that the respondent was a
stockholder/member of the Matlings Board of Directors as well
as its Vice President for Finance and Administration; and that the
CA consequently erred in holding that the LA had jurisdiction.
The decisive issue is whether the respondent was a corporate
officer of Matling or not. The resolution of the issue determines
whether the LA or the RTC had jurisdiction over his complaint for
illegal dismissal.
Ruling
The appeal fails.
I
The Law on Jurisdiction in Dismissal Cases
As a rule, the illegal dismissal of an officer or other employee of a
private employer is properly cognizable by the LA. This is pursuant
to Article 217 (a) 2 of the Labor Code, as amended, which
provides as follows:
Article 217. Jurisdiction of the Labor Arbiters and the
Commission. - (a) Except as otherwise provided under this Code,
the Labor Arbiters shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction to
hear and decide, within thirty (30) calendar days after the
submission of the case by the parties for decision without
extension, even in the absence of stenographic notes, the
following cases involving all workers, whether agricultural or nonagricultural:
1. Unfair labor practice cases;
2. Termination disputes;
3. If accompanied with a claim for
reinstatement, those cases that workers
may file involving wages, rates of pay, hours
of work and other terms and conditions of
employment;
III
Did Respondents Status as Director and
Stockholder Automatically Convert his Dismissal
into an Intra-Corporate Dispute?
Yet, the petitioners insist that because the respondent was a
Director/stockholder of Matling, and relying onPaguio v. National
Labor Relations Commission24 and Ongkingko v. National Labor
Relations Commission,25 the NLRC had no jurisdiction over his
complaint, considering that any case for illegal dismissal brought
by a stockholder/officer against the corporation was an intracorporate matter that must fall under the jurisdiction of the SEC
conformably with the context of PD No. 902-A.
The petitioners insistence is bereft of basis.
To begin with, the reliance on Paguio and Ongkingko is misplaced.
In both rulings, the complainants were undeniably corporate
officers due to their positions being expressly mentioned in the
By-Laws, aside from the fact that both of them had been duly
elected by the respective Boards of Directors. But the herein
respondents position of Vice President for Finance and
Administration was not expressly mentioned in the By-Laws;
neither was the position of Vice President for Finance and
Administration created by Matlings Board of Directors. Lastly, the
President, not the Board of Directors, appointed him.
True it is that the Court pronounced in Tabang as follows:
Also, an intra-corporate controversy is one which arises between
a stockholder and the corporation. There is no distinction,
qualification or any exemption whatsoever. The provision is broad
and covers all kinds of controversies between stockholders and
corporations.26
However, the Tabang pronouncement is not controlling because it
is too sweeping and does not accord with reason, justice, and fair
play. In order to determine whether a dispute constitutes an
intra-corporate controversy or not, the Court considers two
elements instead, namely: (a) the status or relationship of the
parties; and (b) the nature of the question that is the subject of
their controversy. This was our thrust in Viray v. Court of
Appeals:27
The establishment of any of the relationships mentioned above
will not necessarily always confer jurisdiction over the dispute on
the SEC to the exclusion of regular courts. The statement made in
one case that the rule admits of no exceptions or distinctions is
not that absolute. The better policy in determining which body
has jurisdiction over a case would be to consider not only the
status or relationship of the parties but also the nature of the
question that is the subject of their controversy.
Not every conflict between a corporation and its stockholders
involves corporate matters that only the SEC can resolve in the
exercise of its adjudicatory or quasi-judicial powers. If, for
example, a person leases an apartment owned by a corporation of
which he is a stockholder, there should be no question that a
complaint for his ejectment for non-payment of rentals would still
come under the jurisdiction of the regular courts and not of the
SEC. By the same token, if one person injures another in a
vehicular accident, the complaint for damages filed by the victim
will not come under the jurisdiction of the SEC simply because of
the happenstance that both parties are stockholders of the same
corporation. A contrary interpretation would dissipate the powers
of the regular courts and distort the meaning and intent of PD No.
902-A.
In another case, Mainland Construction Co., Inc. v. Movilla,28 the
Court reiterated these determinants thuswise:
In order that the SEC (now the regular courts) can take cognizance
of a case, the controversy must pertain to any of the following
relationships:
a) between the corporation, partnership or association
and the public;
b) between the corporation, partnership or association
and its stockholders, partners, members or officers;
c) between the corporation, partnership or association
and the State as far as its franchise, permit or license
to operate is concerned; and
d) among the stockholders, partners or associates
themselves.
The fact that the parties involved in the controversy are all
stockholders or that the parties involved are the stockholders and
the corporation does not necessarily place the dispute within the
ambit of the jurisdiction of SEC. The better policy to be followed in
determining jurisdiction over a case should be to consider
concurrent factors such as the status or relationship of the parties
or the nature of the question that is the subject of their
controversy. In the absence of any one of these factors, the SEC
will not have jurisdiction. Furthermore, it does not necessarily
follow that every conflict between the corporation and its
stockholders would involve such corporate matters as only the
SEC can resolve in the exercise of its adjudicatory or quasi-judicial
powers.29
The criteria for distinguishing between corporate officers who
may be ousted from office at will, on one hand, and ordinary
corporate employees who may only be terminated for just cause,
on the other hand, do not depend on the nature of the services
performed, but on the manner of creation of the office. In the
respondents case, he was supposedly at once an employee, a
stockholder, and a Director of Matling. The circumstances
surrounding his appointment to office must be fully considered to
determine whether the dismissal constituted an intra-corporate
controversy or a labor termination dispute. We must also consider
whether his status as Director and stockholder had any relation at
all to his appointment and subsequent dismissal as Vice President
for Finance and Administration.
Obviously enough, the respondent was not appointed as Vice
President for Finance and Administration because of his being a
stockholder or Director of Matling. He had started working for
Matling on September 8, 1966, and had been employed
continuously for 33 years until his termination on April 17, 2000,
first as a bookkeeper, and his climb in 1987 to his last position as
Vice President for Finance and Administration had been gradual
but steady, as the following sequence indicates:
1966 Bookkeeper
1968 Senior Accountant
1969 Chief Accountant
1972 Office Supervisor
1973 Assistant Treasurer
1978 Special Assistant for Finance
1980 Assistant Comptroller
1983 Finance and Administrative Manager
35
DECISION
More than three years later, on August 23, 1991, the Republic
once more amended the complaint apparently to avert the
nullification of the writs of sequestration issued against properties
of Cojuangco. The amended complaint dated August 19, 1991,
designated as Third Amended Complaint [Expanded Per CourtApproved Plaintiffs Manifestation/Motion Dated Dec. 8,
1987],8 impleaded in addition to Cojuangco, President Marcos,
and First Lady Imelda R. Marcos nine other individuals, namely:
Edgardo J. Angara, Jose C. Concepcion, Avelino V. Cruz, Eduardo
U. Escueta, Paraja G. Hayudini, Juan Ponce Enrile, Teodoro D.
Regala, and Rogelio Vinluan, collectively, the ACCRA lawyers, and
Danilo Ursua, and 71 corporations.
BERSAMIN, J.:
For over two decades, the issue of whether the sequestered
sizable block of shares representing 20% of the outstanding
capital stock of San Miguel Corporation (SMC) at the time of
acquisition belonged to their registered owners or to the coconut
farmers has remained unresolved. Through this decision, the
Court aims to finally resolve the issue and terminate the
uncertainty that has plagued that sizable block of shares since
then.
These consolidated cases were initiated on various dates by the
Republic of the Philippines (Republic) via petitions for certiorari in
G.R. Nos. 1668591 and 169023,2 and via petition for review on
certiorari in 180702,3 the first two petitions being brought to
assail the following resolutions issued in Civil Case No. 0033-F by
the Sandiganbayan, and the third being brought to appeal the
adverse decision promulgated on November 28, 2007 in Civil Case
No. 0033-F by the Sandiganbayan.
Subdivided Complaint
1. Civil Case No.
0033-A
2. Civil Case No.
0033-B
3. Civil Case No.
0033-C
4. Civil Case No.
0033-D
5. Civil Case No.
0033-E
6. Civil Case No.
0033-F
hereafter
Subject
Matterto Cojuangco and the Cojuangco corporations or
companies shall be as Cojuangco, et al., unless the context
requires
individualization.
Anomalous Purchase and Use of First United
Bank (now
United Coconut Planters Bank)
The material averments of the Republics Third Amended
Creation of Companies Out of Coco Levy Funds
Complaint (Subdivided)10 in Civil Case No. 0033-F included the
following:
Creation and Operation of Bugsuk Project and Award of P998 Million Damages to
Agricultural Investors, Inc.
12. Defendant Eduardo Cojuangco, Jr., served as a
public officer during the Marcos administration. During
Disadvantageous Purchases and Settlement of the Accounts
of Oil
Mills
Out of CocoasLevy
the period
of his
incumbency
a public officer, he
Funds
acquired assets, funds, and other property grossly and
disproportionate to his salaries, lawful
Unlawful Disbursement and Dissipation of Coco Levy manifestly
Funds
income and income from legitimately acquired
property.
Acquisition of SMC shares of stock
Acquisition of Pepsi-Cola
37
a) Soriano Shares,
Inc.
1,249,163
b) ASC Investors,
Inc.
1,562,449
c) Roxas Shares,
Inc.
2,190,860
d) ARC Investors,
Inc.
4,431,798
e) Toda Holdings,
Inc.
3,424,618
f) AP Holdings, Inc.
1,580,997
g) Fernandez
Holdings, Inc.
838,837
h) SMC Officers
Corps., Inc.
2,385,987
i) Te Deum
Resources, Inc.
2,674,899
j) Anglo Ventures
Corp.
1,000.000
k) Randy Allied
Ventures, Inc.
1,000,000
l) Rock Steel
Resources, Inc.
2,432,625
m) Valhalla
Properties Ltd.,
Inc.
1,361,033
n) First Meridian
Development, Inc.
1,000,000
33,133,266
3.1. The same fourteen companies were in
turn owned by the following six (6) so-called
CIIF Companies which were:
38
a) San Pablo
Manufacturing Corp.
19%
b) Southern Luzon
Coconut Oil Mills, Inc.
11%
c) Granexport
Manufacturing
Corporation
19%
18%
18%
f) Iligan Coconut
Industries, Inc.
15%
100%
(h) Defendant Corporations are but "shell"
corporations owned by interlocking
shareholders who have previously admitted
that they are just "nominee stockholders"
who do not have any proprietary interest
over the shares in their names. The
respective affidavits of the following,
namely: Jose C. Concepcion, Florentino M.
Herrera III, Teresita J. Herbosa, Teodoro D.
Regala, Victoria C. de los Reyes, Manuel R.
Roxas, Rogelio A. Vinluan, Eduardo U.
Escuete and Franklin M. Drilon, who were
all, at the time they became such
stockholders, lawyers of the Angara Abello
Concepcion Regala & Cruz (ACCRA) Law
Offices, the previous counsel who
incorporated said corporations, prove that
they were merely nominee stockholders
thereof.
(i) Mr. Eduardo M. Cojuangco, Jr., acquired
a total of 16,276,879 shares of San Miguel
Corporation from the Ayala group: of said
shares, a total of 8,138,440 (broken into
7,128,227 Class A and 1,010,213 Class B
shares) were placed in the names of
Meadowlark Plantations, Inc. (2,034,610)
and Primavera Farms, Inc. (4,069,220). The
Articles of Incorporation of these three
companies show that Atty. Jose C.
Concepcion of ACCRA owns 99.6% of the
entire outstanding stock. The same
shareholder executed three (3) separate
"Declaration of Trust and Assignment of
Subscription:" in favor of a BLANK assignee
pertaining to his shareholdings in Primavera
Farms, Inc., Silver Leaf Plantations, Inc. and
Meadowlark Plantations, Inc.
(k) The other respondent Corporations are
owned by interlocking shareholders who
are likewise lawyers in the ACCRA Law
Offices and had admitted their status as
"nominee stockholders" only.
(k-1) The corporations:
Agricultural Consultancy
Services, Inc., Archipelago Realty
Corporation, Balete Ranch, Inc.,
Black Stallion Ranch, Inc.,
Discovery Realty Corporation,
Amount
(in
Source
Purpose
million)
$22.26
Oil
Mills
equity in
holding
companies
$65.6
Oil
Mills
loan to
holding
companies
UCPB
loan to
holding
companies
[164]
$61.2
Owner
coconut levy
money
18%
companies linked
to Cojuangco
5.2%
government
5.2%
SMC employee
retirement fund
Enrile &
ACCRA
39
1.8%
Enrile
1.8%
Jaka Investment
Corporation
1.8%
ACCRA Investment
Corporation
18, 1992 and May 21, 1992 are hereby ANNULLED and SET ASIDE.
Respondent Sandiganbayan is further ordered to exclude
petitioners Teodoro D. Regala, Edgardo J. Angara, Avelino V. Cruz,
Jose C. Concepcion, Victor P. Lazatin, Eduardo U. Escueta and
Paraja G. Hayudini as parties-defendants in SB Civil Case No. 0033
entitled "Republic of the Philippines v. Eduardo Cojuangco, Jr., et
al."
SO ORDERED.
Conformably with the ruling, the Sandiganbayan excluded the
ACCRA lawyers from the case on May 24, 2000.14
On June 23, 1999, Cojuangco filed his Answer to the Third
Amended Complaint,15 averring the following affirmative
defenses, to wit:
7.00. The Presidential Commission on Good
Government (PCGG) is without authority to act in the
name and in behalf of the "Republic of the
Philippines".
7.01. As constituted in E.O. No. 1, the PCGG was
composed of "Minister Jovito R. Salonga, as Chairman,
Mr. Ramon Diaz, Mr. Pedro L. Yap, Mr. Raul Daza and
Ms. Mary Concepcion Bautista, as Commissioners".
When the complaint in the instant case was filed,
Minister Salonga, Mr. Pedro L. Yap and Mr. Raul Daza
had already left the PCGG. By then the PCGG had
become functus officio.
7.02. The Sandiganbayan has no jurisdiction over the
complaint or over the transaction alleged in the
complaint.
7.03. The complaint does not allege any cause of
action.
7.04. The complaint is not brought in the name of the
real parties in interest, assuming any cause of action
exists.
7.05. Indispensable and necessary parties have not
been impleaded.
7.06. There is improper joinder of causes of action
(Sec. 6, Rule 2, Rules of Civil Procedure). The causes of
action alleged, if any, do not arise out of the same
contract, transaction or relation between the parties,
On December 20, 1999, the Sandiganbayan scheduled the pretrial in Civil Case No. 0033-F on March 8, 2000, giving the parties
sufficient time to file their Pre-Trial Briefs prior to that date.
Subsequently, the parties filed their respective Pre-Trial Briefs, as
follows: Cojuangco and the Cojuangco corporations, jointly on
February 14, 2000; Enrile, on March 1, 2000; the CIIF Oil Mills, on
March 3, 2000; and Ursua, on March 6, 2000. However, the
Republic sought several extensions to file its own Pre-Trial Brief,
and eventually did so on May 9, 2000.
In the meanwhile, some non-parties sought to intervene. On
November 22, 1999, GABAY Foundation, Inc. (GABAY) filed its
complaint-in-intervention. On February 24, 2000, the Philippine
Coconut Producers Federation, Inc., Maria Clara L. Lobregat, Jose
R. Eleazar, Jr., Domingo Espina, Jose Gomez, Celestino Sabate,
Manuel del Rosario, Jose Martinez, Jr., and Eladio Chato
(collectively referred to as COCOFED, considering that the cointervenors were its officers) also sought to intervene, citing the
October 2, 1989 ruling in G.R. No. 75713 entitled COCOFED v.
PCGG whereby the Court recognized COCOFED as the "private
national association of coconut producers certified in 1971 by the
PHILCOA as having the largest membership among such
producers" and as such "entrusted it with the task of maintaining
continuing liaison with the different sectors of the industry, the
government and its mass base." Pending resolution of its motion
for intervention, COCOFED filed a Pre-Trial Brief on March 2,
2000.
On May 24, 2000, the Sandiganbayan denied GABAYs
intervention without prejudice because it found "that the
allowance of GABAY to enter under the special character in which
it presents itself would be to open the doors to other groups of
coconut farmers whether of the same kind or of any other kind
which could be considered a sub-class or a sub-classification of
the coconut planters or the coconut industry of this country."20
COCOFEDs intervention as defendant was allowed on May 24,
2000, however, because "the position taken by the COCOFED is
relevant to the proceedings herein, if only to state that there is a
special function which the COCOFED and the coconut planters
have in the matter of the coconut levy funds and the utilization of
those funds, part of which is in dispute in the instant matter."21
The pre-trial was actually held on May 24, 2000,22 during which
the Sandiganbayan sought clarification from the parties,
particularly the Republic, on their respective positions, but at the
end it found the clarifications "inadequately" enlightening.
Nonetheless, the Sandiganbayan, not disposed to reset,
terminated the pre-trial:
xxx primarily because the Court is given a very clear impression
that the plaintiff does not know what documents will be or
of PCGG vs. Eduardo Cojuangco, Jr., et al., G.R. No. 13319 which
included the Sandiganbayan as one of the respondents. In these
two cases, the Supreme Court ruled that the voting of
sequestered shares of stock is governed by two considerations,
namely:
1. whether there is prima facie evidence showing that
the said shares are ill-gotten and thus belong to the
State; and
2. whether there is an imminent danger of dissipation
thus necessitating their continued sequestration and
voting by the PCGG while the main issue pends with
the Sandiganbayan.
xxx
xxx
xxx
xxx
xxx
"b) the Republic through the PCGG shall be given twenty (20) days
written notice by Defendants Eduardo Cojuangco, et al. prior to
any sale, pledge, mortgage or other disposition of the shares.
"SO ORDERED."40
Pending resolution of the motions relative to the lifting of the
writs of sequestration, SMC filed a Motion for Intervention with
attached Complaint-in-Intervention,41 alleging, among other
things, that it had an interest in the matter in dispute between
the Republic and defendants CIIF Companies for being the owner
by purchase of a portion (i.e., 25,450,000 SMC shares covered by
Stock Certificate Nos. A0004129 and B0015556 of the so-called
"CIIF block of SMC shares of stock" sought to be recovered as
alleged ill-gotten wealth).
Although Cojuangco, et al. interposed no objection to SMCs
intervention, the Republic opposed,42 averring that the
intervention would be improper and was a mere attempt to
litigate anew issues already raised and passed upon by the
Supreme Court. COCOFED similarly opposed SMCs
intervention,43 and Ursua adopted its opposition.
On May 6, 2004, the Sandiganbayan denied SMCs motion to
intervene.44 SMC sought reconsideration,45 and its motion to that
effect was opposed by COCOFED and the Republic.
On May 7, 2004, the Sandiganbyan granted the Republics Motion
for Judgment on the Pleadings and/or Partial Summary Judgment
(Re: Defendants CIIF Companies, 14 Holding Companies and
COCOFED, et al.) and rendered a Partial Summary Judgment,46 the
dispositive portion of which reads as follows:
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, we hold that:
The Motion for Partial Summary Judgment (Re: Defendants CIIF
Companies, 14 Holding Companies and Cocofed, et al.) filed by
Plaintiff is hereby GRANTED. ACCORDINGLY, THE CIIF COMPANIES,
NAMELY:
1. Southern Luzon Coconut Oil Mills (SOLCOM);
2. Cagayan de Oro Oil Co., Inc. (CAGOIL);
3. Iligan Coconut Industries, Inc. (ILICOCO);
Let the trial of this Civil Case proceed with respect to the issues
which have not been disposed of in this partial Summary
Judgment, including the determination of whether the CIIF Block
of SMC Shares adjudged to be owned by the Government
represents 27% of the issued and outstanding capital stock of
43
SO ORDERED.
SO ORDERED.54
SO ORDERED.63
(GRANEX); and
44
46
II.
WHETHER OR NOT THE SUBJECT SHARES IN SMC,
WHICH WERE ACQUIRED BY, AND ARE IN THE
RESPECTIVE NAMES OF RESPONDENTS COJUANGCO,
JR. AND THE COJUANGCO COMPANIES, SHOULD BE
RECONVEYED TO THE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES
FOR HAVING BEEN ACQUIRED USING COCONUT LEVY
FUNDS.84
On their part, the petitioners-in-intervention85 submit the
following issues, to wit:
I
WHETHER OR NOT THE COURT A QUO GRAVELY ERRED
AND DECIDED THE CASE A QUO IN VIOLATION OF LAW
AND APPLICABLE RULINGS OF THE HONORABLE COURT
IN RULING THAT, WHILE ADMITTEDLY THE SUBJECT
SMC SHARES WERE PURCHASED FROM LOAN
PROCEEDS FROM UCPB AND ADVANCES FROM THE
CIIF OIL MILLS, SAID SUBJECT SMC SHARES ARE NOT
PUBLIC PROPERTY
II
I.
COCONUT LEVY FUNDS ARE PUBLIC FUNDS. THE SMC
SHARES, WHICH WERE ACQUIRED BY RESPONDENTS
COJUANGCO, JR. AND THE COJUANGCO COMPANIES
WITH THE USE OF COCONUT LEVY FUNDS IN
VIOLATION OF RESPONDENT COJUANGCO, JR.S
FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION ARE, NECESSARILY, PUBLIC
IN CHARACTER AND SHOULD BE RECONVEYED TO THE
GOVERNMENT.
II.
PETITIONER HAS CLEARLY DEMONSTRATED ITS
ENTITLEMENT, AS A MATTER OF LAW, TO THE RELIEFS
PRAYED FOR.83
and urging the following issues to be resolved, to wit:
I.
WHETHER THE HONORABLE SANDIGANBAYAN
COMMITTED A REVERSIBLE ERROR WHEN IT
DISMISSED CIVIL CASE NO. 0033-F; AND
xxx
xxx
Even assuming arguendo that Atty. Ramirez had been given prior
authority by the PCGG to place Dio Island Resort under
sequestration, nevertheless, the sequestration order he issued is
still void since PCGG may not delegate its authority to sequester
to its representatives and subordinates, and any such delegation
is valid and ineffective."
We further said:
"In the instant case, there was clearly no prior determination
made by the PCGG of a prima facie basis for the sequestration of
Dio Island Resort, Inc. x x x
xxx
xxx
xxx
II
The Concept and Genesis of
Ill-Gotten Wealth in the Philippine Setting
Similarly, WOS No. 86-0042 dated April 8, 1986 and WOS No. 870218 dated May 27, 1987 were lawfully and correctly nullified
notwithstanding that WOS No. 86-0042, albeit signed by only one
Commissioner (i.e., Commissioner Mary Concepcion Bautista),
was not at the time of its issuance subject to the twoCommissioners rule, and WOS No. 87-0218, albeit already issued
under the signatures of two Commissioners considering that both
had been issued without a prior determination by the PCGG of a
prima facie basis for the sequestration.
Although E.O. No. 1 and the other issuances dealing with ill-gotten
wealth (i.e., E.O. No. 2, E.O. No. 14, and E.O. No. 14-A) only
identified the subject matter of ill-gotten wealth and the persons
who could amass ill-gotten wealth and did not include an explicit
definition of ill-gotten wealth, we can still discern the meaning
and concept of ill-gotten wealth from the WHEREAS Clauses
themselves of E.O. No. 1, in that ill-gotten wealth consisted of the
"vast resources of the government" amassed by "former
President Ferdinand E. Marcos, his immediate family, relatives
and close associates both here and abroad." It is clear, therefore,
that ill-gotten wealth would not include all the properties of
President Marcos, his immediate family, relatives, and close
associates but only the part that originated from the "vast
resources of the government."
In time and unavoidably, the Supreme Court elaborated on the
meaning and concept of ill-gotten wealth. In Bataan Shipyard &
Engineering Co., Inc. v. Presidential Commission on Good
Government,89 or BASECO, for the sake of brevity, the Court held
that:
xxx until it can be determined, through appropriate judicial
proceedings, whether the property was in truth "ill-gotten," i.e.,
acquired through or as a result of improper or illegal use of or the
conversion of funds belonging to the Government or any of its
branches, instrumentalities, enterprises, banks or financial
institutions, or by taking undue advantage of official position,
authority, relationship, connection or influence, resulting in unjust
enrichment of the ostensible owner and grave damage and
prejudice to the State. And this, too, is the sense in which the
term is commonly understood in other jurisdictions.90
The BASECO definition of ill-gotten wealth was reiterated in
Presidential Commission on Good Government v. Lucio C.
Tan,91 where the Court said:
On this point, we find it relevant to define "ill-gotten wealth." In
Bataan Shipyard and Engineering Co., Inc., this Court described
"ill-gotten wealth" as follows:
"Ill-gotten wealth is that acquired through or as a result of
improper or illegal use of or the conversion of funds belonging to
the Government or any of its branches, instrumentalities,
enterprises, banks or financial institutions, or by taking undue
advantage of official position, authority, relationship, connection
or influence, resulting in unjust enrichment of the ostensible
owner and grave damage and prejudice to the State. And this,
too, is the sense in which the term is commonly understood in
other jurisdiction."
49
But however plain and valid that right and duty may be, still a
balance must be sought with the equally compelling necessity
that a proper respect be accorded and adequate protection
assured, the fundamental rights of private property and free
enterprise which are deemed pillars of a free society such as ours,
and to which all members of that society may without exception
lay claim.
xxx Democracy, as a way of life enshrined in the Constitution,
embraces as its necessary components freedom of conscience,
freedom of expression, and freedom in the pursuit of happiness.
Along with these freedoms are included economic freedom and
freedom of enterprise within reasonable bounds and under
proper control. xxx Evincing much concern for the protection of
property, the Constitution distinctly recognizes the preferred
position which real estate has occupied in law for ages. Property is
bound up with every aspect of social life in a democracy as
democracy is conceived in the Constitution. The Constitution
realizes the indispensable role which property, owned in
reasonable quantities and used legitimately, plays in the
stimulation to economic effort and the formation and growth of a
solid social middle class that is said to be the bulwark of
democracy and the backbone of every progressive and happy
country.
a. Need of Evidentiary Substantiation in Proper Suit
Consequently, the factual premises of the Executive Orders
cannot simply be assumed. They will have to be duly established
by adequate proof in each case, in a proper judicial proceeding, so
that the recovery of the ill-gotten wealth may be validly and
properly adjudged and consummated; although there are some
who maintain that the fact that an immense fortune, and "vast
resources of the government have been amassed by former
President Ferdinand E. Marcos, his immediate family, relatives,
and close associates both here and abroad," and they have
resorted to all sorts of clever schemes and manipulations to
disguise and hide their illicit acquisitions is within the realm of
judicial notice, being of so extensive notoriety as to dispense with
proof thereof. Be this as it may, the requirement of evidentiary
substantiation has been expressly acknowledged, and the
procedure to be followed explicitly laid down, in Executive Order
No. 14. 97
50
xxx
xxx
xxx
xxx
And, with the above-findings of the Court, the CIIF block of SMC
shares were subsequently declared to be of public character and
should be reconveyed to the government in trust for coconut
farmers. The foregoing findings notwithstanding, a question now
arises on whether the same laws can likewise serve as ultimate
basis for a finding that the Cojuangco, et al. block of SMC shares
are also imbued with public character and should rightfully be
reconveyed to the government.
On this point, the Court disagrees with plaintiff that reliance on
said laws would suffice to prove that defendants Cojuangco, et
al.s acquisition of SMC shares of stock was illegal as public funds
were used. For one, plaintiffs reliance thereon has always had
reference only to the CIIF block of shares, and the Court has
already settled the same by going over the laws and quoting
related findings in the Partial Summary judgment rendered in Civil
Case No. 0033-A. For another, the allegations of plaintiff
pertaining to the Cojuangco block representing twenty percent
Even assuming that, as plaintiff prayed for, the Court takes judicial
notice of the evidence it offered with respect to the Cojuangco
block of SMC shares of stock, as contained in plaintiffs
manifestation of purposes, still its evidence do not suffice to
prove the material allegations in the complaint that Cojuangco
took advantage of his positions in UCPB and PCA in order to
acquire the said shares. As above-quoted, the Court, itself, has
already ruled, and hereby stress that "UCPB records must be
produced and the CIIF witness must be heard to ensure that the
conclusions that will be derived have factual basis and are thus,
valid." Besides, the Court found that there are genuine factual
issues raised by defendants that need to be threshed out in a fullblown trial, and which plaintiff had the burden to substantially
prove. Thus, the Court outlined these genuine factual issues as
follows:
1) What are the "various sources" of funds, which
defendant Cojuangco and his companies claim they
utilized to acquire the disputed SMC shares?
2) Whether or not such funds acquired from alleged
"various sources" can be considered coconut levy
funds;
3) Whether or not defendant Cojuangco had indeed
served in the governing bodies of PCA, UCPB and/or
CIIF Oil Mills at the time the funds used to purchase
the SMC shares were obtained such that he owed a
fiduciary duty to render an account to these entities as
well as to the coconut farmers;
4) Whether or not defendant Cojuangco took
advantage of his position and/or close ties with then
President Marcos to obtain favorable concessions or
exemptions from the usual financial requirements
from the lending banks and/or coco-levy funded
companies, in order to raise the funds to acquire the
disputed SMC shares; and if so, what are these
favorable concessions or exemptions?101
Answers to these issues are not evident from the submissions of
plaintiff and must therefore be proven through the presentation
of relevant and competent evidence during trial. A perusal of the
subject Motion shows that the plaintiff hastily derived conclusions
from the defendants statements in their previous pleadings
although such conclusions were not supported by categorical
facts but only mere inferences. xxx xxx xxx." (Emphasis
supplied)102
(Emphasis supplied)
Despite the foregoing pronouncement of the Court, plaintiff did
not present any other evidence during the trial of this case but
51
(a) The fact of the UCPB and the CIIF Oil Mills being
public corporations or government-owned or
government-controlled corporations precisely
remained controverted by Cojuangco, et al. in light of
the lack of any competent to that effect being in the
records;
(b) Cojuangco explicitly averred in paragraph 2.01.(b)
of his Answer that the UCPB was a "private
corporation;" and
(c) The Republic did not competently identify or
establish which ones of the Cojuangco corporations
had supposedly received advances from the CIIF Oil
Mills.
Fourthly, the Republic asserts that the contested block of shares
had been paid for with "borrowings" from the UCPB and
"advances" from the CIIF Oil Mills, and that such borrowings and
advances had been illegal because the shares had not been
purchased for the "benefit of the Coconut Farmers." To buttress
its assertion, the Republic relied on the admissions supposedly
made in paragraph 2.01 of Cojuangcos Answer in relation to
paragraph 4 of the Republics Amended Complaint.
of the fact which makes for the one side with the qualifications
which limit, modify or destroy its effect on the other side. The
reason for this is, where part of a statement of a party is used
against him as an admission, the court should weigh any other
portion connected with the statement, which tends to neutralize
or explain the portion which is against interest.
In other words, while the admission is admissible in evidence, its
probative value is to be determined from the whole statement
and others intimately related or connected therewith as an
integrated unit. Although acts or facts admitted do not require
proof and cannot be contradicted, however, evidence aliunde can
be presented to show that the admission was made through
palpable mistake. The rule is always in favor of liberality in
construction of pleadings so that the real matter in dispute may
be submitted to the judgment of the court.
And, lastly, the Republic cites the following portions of the joint
Pre-Trial Brief of Cojuangco, et al.,111 to wit:
IV.
PROPOSED EVIDENCE
xxx
4.01. xxx Assuming, however, that plaintiff presents evidence to
support its principal contentions, defendants evidence in rebuttal
would include testimonial and documentary evidence showing: a)
the ownership of the shares of stock prior to their acquisition by
respondents (listed in Annexes A" and B"); b) the consideration
for the acquisition of the shares of stock by the persons or
companies in whose names the shares of stock are now
registered; and c) the source of the funds used to pay the
purchase price.
4.02. Herein respondents intend to present the following
evidence:
4.03. Witnesses.
xxx
(b) A representative of the United Coconut Planters
Bank who will testify in regard the loans which were
used to source the payment of the price of SMC shares
of stock.
(c) A representative from the CIIF Oil Mills who will
testify in regard the loans or credit advances which
were used to source the payment of the purchase
price of the SMC shares of stock.
The Republic insists that the aforequoted portions of the joint
Pre-Trial Brief were Cojuangco, et al.s admission that:
(a) Cojuangco had received money from the UCPB, a
bank entrusted by law with the administration of the
coconut levy funds; and
(b) Cojuangco had received more money from the CIIF
Oil Mills in which part of the CIIF funds had been
placed, and thereby used the funds of the UCPB and
the CIIF as capital to buy his SMC shares.112
We disagree with the Republics posture.
The statements found in the joint Pre-Trial Brief of Cojuangco, et
al. were noticeably written beneath the heading of Proposed
Evidence. Such location indicated that the statements were only
being proposed, that is, they were not yet intended or offered as
admission of any fact stated therein. In other words, the matters
stated or set forth therein might or might not be presented at all.
Also, the text and tenor of the statements expressly conditioned
the proposal on the Republic ultimately presenting its evidence in
the action. After the Republic opted not to present its evidence,
the condition did not transpire; hence, the proposed admissions,
assuming that they were that, did not materialize.
xxx
b. Proposed Exhibits ____, ____, ____
Records of the United Coconut Planters Bank which would show
borrowings of the companies listed in Annexes "A" and "B", or
companies affiliated or associated with them, which were used to
source payment of the shares of stock of the San Miguel
Corporation subject of this case.
UCPB and/or the unidentified or unnamed CIIF Oil Mills were the
only sources of funding, or that such institutions, assuming them
to be the sources of the funding, had been the only sources of
funding. Such ambiguousness disqualified the statements from
being relied upon as admissions. It is fundamental that any
statement, to be considered as an admission for purposes of
judicial proceedings, should be definite, certain and
unequivocal;113 otherwise, the disputed fact will not get settled.
Lastly, the Rules of Court has no rule that treats the statements
found under the heading Proposed Evidence as admissions
binding Cojuangco, et al. On the contrary, the Rules of Court has
even distinguished between admitted facts and facts proposed to
be admitted during the stage of pre-trial. Section 6 (b),114 Rule 18
of the Rules of Court, requires a Pre-Trial Brief to include a
summary of admitted facts and a proposed stipulation of facts.
Complying with the requirement, the joint Pre-Trial Brief of
Cojuangco, et al. included the summary of admitted facts in its
paragraph 3.00 of its Item III, separately and distinctly from the
Proposed Evidence, to wit:
III.
SUMMARY OF UNDISPUTED FACTS
3.00. Based on the complaint and the answer, the acquisition of
the San Miguel shares by, and their registration in the names of,
the companies listed in Annexes "A" and "B" may be deemed
undisputed.
3.01. All other allegations in the complaint are disputed.115
The burden of proof, according to Section 1, Rule 131 of the Rules
of Court, is "the duty of a party to present evidence on the facts in
issue necessary to establish his claim or defense by the amount of
evidence required by law." Here, the Republic, being the plaintiff,
was the party that carried the burden of proof. That burden
required it to demonstrate through competent evidence that the
respondents, as defendants, had purchased the SMC shares of
stock with the use of public funds; and that the affected shares of
54
(b) The amount of the loans from the UCPB and of the
credit advances from the CIIF Oil Mills, including the
specific CIIF Oil Mills involved;
(c) The identities of the borrowers, that is, all of the
respondent corporations together, or separately; and
the amounts of the borrowings;
evidence; and that with the Republic having shown that the SMC
shares came into fruition from coco levy funds that are prima
facie public funds, Cojuangco, et al. had to go forward with
contradicting evidence, but did not.
The Court disagrees. We cannot reverse the decision of November
28, 2007 on the basis alone of judicial pronouncements to the
effect that the coconut levy funds were prima facie public
funds,125 but without any competent evidence linking the
acquisition of the block of SMC shares by Cojuangco, et al. to the
coconut levy funds.
V.
No violation of the DOSRI and
Single Borrowers Limit restrictions
The Republics lack of proof on the source of the funds by which
Cojuangco, et al. had acquired their block of SMC shares has made
it shift its position, that it now suggests that Cojuangco had been
enabled to obtain the loans by the issuance of LOI 926 exempting
the UCPB from the DOSRI and the Single Borrowers Limit
restrictions.
We reject the Republics suggestion.
Firstly, as earlier pointed out, the Republic adduced no evidence
on the significant particulars of the supposed loan, like the
amount, the actual borrower, the approving official, etc. It did not
also establish whether or not the loans were DOSRI126 or issued in
violation of the Single Borrowers Limit. Secondly, the Republic
could not outrightly assume that President Marcos had issued LOI
926 for the purpose of allowing the loans by the UCPB in favor of
Cojuangco. There must be competent evidence to that effect.
And, finally, the loans, assuming that they were of a DOSRI nature
or without the benefit of the required approvals or in excess of
the Single Borrowers Limit, would not be void for that reason.
Instead, the bank or the officers responsible for the approval and
grant of the DOSRI loan would be subject only to sanctions under
the law.127
VI.
Cojuangco violated no fiduciary duties
The Republic invokes the following pertinent statutory provisions
of the Civil Code, to wit:
Article 1455. When any trustee, guardian or other person holding
a fiduciary relationship uses trust funds for the purchase of
55
August 9, 2010
PICCIs sole stockholder, BSP (through its own governing body, the
Monetary Board), per MB Resolution No. 15 dated January 5,
1994, as amended by MB Resolution No. 34 dated January 12,
1994.
Respondent counters that said provision does not apply to
petitioners as Section 8 of the PICCI By-laws provides that the
compensation of the members of the PICCI Board of Directors
shall be given only through per diems.
Section 30 of the Corporation Code, which authorizes the
stockholders to grant compensation to its directors, states:
Sec. 30. Compensation of Directors. In the absence of any
provision in the by-laws fixing their compensation, the directors
shall not receive any compensation, as such directors, except for
reasonable per diems; Provided, however, that any such
compensation (other than per diems) may be granted to directors
by the vote of the stockholders representing at least a majority of
the outstanding capital stock at a regular or special stockholders
meeting. In no case shall the total yearly compensation of
directors, as such directors, exceed ten (10%) percent of the net
income before income tax of the corporation during the preceding
year.
II.
THE RESPONDENT COA COMMITTED GRAVE ABUSE OF
DISCRETION IN FINDING THAT THE PAYMENT OF RATA TO BSP
OFFICIALS WHO ARE MEMBERS OF THE PICCI BOARD VIOLATED
ITEM NO. 4 OF NATIONAL COMPENSATION CIRCULAR (NCC) NO.
67 DATED JANUARY [1], 1992 ISSUED BY THE DEPARTMENT OF
BUDGET AND MANAGEMENT (DBM) AS SAID NCC SPECIFICALLY
APPLIES ONLY TO "NATIONAL GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS AND
EMPLOYEES."
III.
THE RESPONDENT COA COMMITTED GRAVE ABUSE OF
DISCRETION IN DIRECTING THE AUDITOR TO ENFORCE REFUND OF
THE PAYMENTS TO THE PETITIONERS [WHO ARE] DIRECTORS AS
THE PETITIONERS ENJOY THE PRESUMPTION OF GOOD FAITH AND
ARE CONVINCED THAT THEY ARE LEGALLY ENTITLED THERETO IN
THE LIGHT OF THE SUPREME COURT DECISION IN ASSOCIATION
OF DEDICATED EMPLOYEES OF THE PHILIPPINE TOURISM
AUTHORITY (ADEPT) VS. COA, 295 SCRA 366.13
Petitioners contend that since PICCI was incorporated with the
Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) (SEC Regulation No.
68840) and has no original charter, it should be governed by
Section 30 of the Corporation Code. According to petitioners,
their receipt of RATA as directors of PICCI was sanctioned by
57
xxx
4. Funding Source:
In all cases, commutable and reimbursable RATA shall be paid
from the amount appropriated for the purpose and other personal
services savings of the agency or project from where the officials
and employees covered under this Circular draw their salaries. No
one shall be allowed to collect RATA from more than one
source. (Italics ours)
In construing NCC No. 67, we apply the principle in statutory
construction that force and effect should not be narrowly given to
isolated and disjoined clauses of the law but to its spirit, broadly
taking all its provisions together in one rational view. Because a
statute is enacted as a whole and not in parts or sections, that is,
one part is as important as the others, the statute should be
construed and given effect as a whole. A provision or section
which is unclear by itself may be clarified by reading and
construing it in relation to the whole statute.
Taking NCC No. 67 as a whole then, what it seeks to prevent is the
dual collection of RATA by a national official from the budgets of
"more than one national agency." We emphasize that the other
source referred to in the prohibition is another national agency.
This can be gleaned from the fact that the sentence "no one shall
be allowed to collect RATA from more than one source" (the
controversial prohibition) immediately follows the sentence that
RATA shall be paid from the budget of the national agency where
the concerned national officials and employees draw their
salaries. The fact that the other source is another national agency
is supported by RA 7645 (the GAA of 1993) invoked by respondent
COA itself and, in fact, by all subsequent GAAs for that matter,
because the GAAs all essentially provide that (1) the RATA of
national officials shall be payable from the budgets of their
respective national agencies and (2) those officials on detail with
other national agencies shall be paid their RATA only from the
budget of their parent national agency:
xxx
58
xxx
xxx
xxx
Director; Holdover
G.R. No. 151969
September 4, 2009
60
Citing law and jurisprudence, VVCC posits that the power to fill in
a vacancy created by the resignation of a hold-over director is
expressly granted to the remaining members of the corporations
board of directors.
THE PETITION
VVCC now appeals to the Court to assail the RTCs January 23,
2002 partial decision for being contrary to law and jurisprudence.
VVCC made a direct resort to the Court via a petition for review
on certiorari, claiming that the sole issue in the present case
involves a purely legal question.
The Case
Before us is a Petition for Certiorari1 under Rule 65 with a prayer
for a temporary restraining order and/or preliminary injunction to
nullify and enjoin the implementation of the Resolution2 dated
July 19, 2007 of the Commission on Elections (COMELEC), which
declared respondent Melquiades Robles (Robles) as the President
of Buhay Hayaan Yumabong (Buhay).
On July 20, 2007, the first three (3) listed nominees of BUHAY for
the May 2007 elections, as per the Certificate of Nomination filed
by Robles, namely Rene M. Velarde, Ma. Carissa Coscolluela, and
William Irwin C. Tieng, took their oaths of office as BUHAY partylist representatives in the current Congress.19 Accordingly, on
September 3, 2007, the COMELEC, sitting as National Board of
Canvassers, issued a Certificate of Proclamation to BUHAY and its
nominees as representatives to the House of Representatives.20
Aggrieved, petitioner filed the instant petition.
The Issue
Whether or not the COMELEC acted without or in excess of
jurisdiction or with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or
excess of jurisdiction in issuing its challenged Resolution dated
June 19, 2007, which declared respondent Robles as the duly
authorized representative of BUHAY, and there is no appeal or
any other plain, speedy or adequate remedy in the ordinary
course of law except the instant petition.
Our Ruling
The petition should be dismissed for lack of merit.
Petition for Certiorari Is an Improper Remedy
A crucial matter in this recourse is whether the petition for
certiorari filed by Seeres is the proper remedy.
A special civil action for certiorari may be availed of when the
tribunal, board, or officer exercising judicial or quasi-judicial
functions has acted without or in excess of jurisdiction and there
is no appeal or any plain, speedy, and adequate remedy in the
ordinary course of law for the purpose of annulling the
proceeding.21 It is the "proper remedy to question any final order,
ruling and decision of the COMELEC rendered in the exercise of its
adjudicatory or quasi-judicial powers."22 For certiorari to prosper,
however, there must be a showing that the COMELEC acted with
grave abuse of discretion and that there is no appeal or any plain,
speedy and adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law.
In the present case, a plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the
ordinary course of law was available to Seeres. The 1987
Constitution cannot be more explicit in this regard. Its Article VI,
Section 17 states:
Sec. 17. The Senate and the House of Representatives shall each
have an Electoral Tribunal which shall be the sole judge of all
63
The following day, on July 19, 2007, the COMELEC issued the
assailed resolution declaring "Melquiades A. Robles as the duly
authorized representative of Buhay Hayaan Yumabong (Buhay)
and to act in its behalf pursuant to its Constitution and By-Laws."
COMELEC affirmed that his Certificate of Nomination was a valid
one as it ruled that "Robles is the President of Buhay Party-List
and therefore duly authorized to sign documents in behalf of the
party particularly the Manifestation to participate in the pary-list
system of representation and theCertificate of Nomination of its
nominees."29 The September 3, 2007 proclamation merely
confirmed the challenged July 19, 2007 Resolution. The July 19,
2007 Resolution coupled with the July 9, 2007 and July 18, 2007
proclamations vested the Robles nominees the right to represent
BUHAY as its sectoral representatives.
Officers
G.R. No. 111008 November 7, 1994
TRAMAT MERCANTILE, INC. AND DAVID ONG, petitioners,
vs.
HON. COURT OF APPEALS AND MELCHOR DE LA
CUESTA, respondents.
Emilio G. Abrogena for petitioners.
2. Ordering the
defendants, jointly
and severally, to pay
the plaintiff the sum
of P10,000.00 as
attorney's fees, and
the costs of this suit.
SO ORDERED. 1
An appeal was timely interposed by the defendants. On 04 March
1993, the Court of Appeals affirmed in toto the decision of the
66
REYES, J.:
This Petition for Review on Certiorari,1 under Rule 45 of the Rules
of Court, seeks to reverse and set aside the Decision2 dated
February 21, 2008 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP No.
94690 dismissing the complaint for illegal dismissal filed by
petitioner Rolando OS. Torres (petitioner) against respondent
Rural Bank of San Juan, Inc. (RBSJT) and its officers who are the
herein individual respondents, namely: Andres Cano Chua
(Andres), Jobel Go Chua (Jobel), Jesus Cano Chua (Jesus),
Meinrado Dalisay, Jose Manalansan III (Jose), Ofelia Ginabe
(Ofelia) and Naty Astrero (collectively referred to as
respondents).3
Likewise assailed is the CA Resolution4 dated June 3, 2008 which
denied reconsideration.
The antecedents
Culled from the rulings of the labor tribunals and the appellate
court are the ensuing factual milieu:5
like him, who have worked hard for the good image and market
acceptability of RBSJI. The petitioner requested for his transfer to
the operations or marketing department. His request was,
however, not acted upon.
The petitioner claimed that on March 19, 1997, respondent Jesus
verbally terminated him from employment but he later on
retracted the same and instead asked the petitioner to tender a
resignation letter. The petitioner refused. A month thereafter, the
petitioner received the memorandum asking him to explain why
he cleared Jacinto of financial accountabilities and thereafter
another memorandum terminating him from employment.
For their part, the respondents maintained that the petitioner was
validly dismissed for loss of trust and confidence precipitated by
his unauthorized issuance of a financial accountability clearance
sans audit to a resigned employee. They averred that a copy of
the clearance mysteriously disappeared from RBSJIs records
hence, the petitioners claim that it pertained only to Jacintos
paid cash advances and salary loan cannot stand for being
uncorroborated.
Attempts at an amicable settlement were made but the same
proved futile hence, the Labor Arbiter11 (LA) proceeded to rule on
the complaint.
Ruling of LA
In its Decision12 dated November 27, 1998, the LA sustained the
claims of the petitioner as against the factually unsubstantiated
allegation of loss of trust and confidence propounded by the
respondents. The LA observed that the petitioners selfless
dedication to his job and efforts to achieve RBSJIs stability, which
the respondents failed to dispute, negate any finding of bad faith
on his part when he issued a clearance of accountabilities in favor
of Jacinto. As such, the said act cannot serve as a valid and
justifiable ground for the respondents to lose trust and
confidence in him.
The LA further held that the failure of both parties to present a
copy of the subject clearance amidst the petitioners explanation
that it did not absolutely release Jacinto from liability, should
work against the respondents since it is the proof that will provide
basis for their supposed loss of trust and confidence.
The LA upheld the petitioners contention that the loss of trust
and confidence in him was indeed a mere afterthought to justify
the respondents premeditated plan to ease him out of RBSJI. The
LAs conclusion was premised on the convergence of the following
circumstances: (1) the petitioners stint from 1991-1996 was not
marred with any controversy or complaint regarding his
SO ORDERED.21
SO ORDERED.15
The petitioner sought reconsideration16 which was admitted by
the NLRC in an Order dated September 30, 2005. From such
Order, the respondents filed a motion for reconsideration on the
ground that the petitioner failed to present a copy of his
purported motion bearing the requisite proof of filing.17
Traversing both motions, the NLRC issued its Decision18 dated
March 3, 2006: (1) granting the petitioners plea for the
68
Ruling of the CA
The respondents sought recourse with the CA,22 which in its
Decision23 dated February 21, 2008 reversed and set aside the
NLRC Decision dated March 3, 2006 and ruled that the petitioner
was dismissed for a just cause. The appellate court articulated
that as the Acting Manager of RBSJIs N. Domingo branch, the
petitioner held a highly sensitive and critical position which
entailed the conscientious observance of company procedures.
Not only was he unauthorized to issue the clearance, he also
failed to exercise prudence in clearing Jacinto of his
accountabilities given the fact that the same were yet to be
audited. Such omission financially prejudiced RBSJI and it
amounted to gross negligence and incompetence sufficient to sow
The act alleged to have caused the loss of trust and confidence of
the respondents in the petitioner was his issuance, without prior
authority and audit, of a clearance to Jacinto who turned out to
be still liable for unpaid cash advances and for an P11-million
fraudulent transaction that exposed RBSJI to suit. According to the
respondents, the clearance barred RBSJI from running after
Jacinto. The records are, however, barren of any evidence in
support of these claims.
As correctly argued by the petitioner and as above set forth, the
onus of submitting a copy of the clearance allegedly exonerating
Jacinto from all his accountabilities fell on the respondents. It was
the single and absolute evidence of the petitioners act that
purportedly kindled the respondents loss of trust. Without it, the
respondents allegation of loss of trust and confidence has no leg
to stand on and must thus be rejected. Moreover, one can
reasonably expect that a copy of the clearance, an essential
personnel document, is with the respondents. Their failure to
present it and the lack of explanation for such failure or the
documents unavailability props up the presumption that its
contents are unfavorable to the respondents assertions.
At any rate, the absence of the clearance upon which the
contradicting claims of the parties could ideally be resolved,
should work against the respondents. With only sworn pleadings
as proof of their opposite claims on the true contents of the
clearance, the Court is bound to apply the principle that the scales
of justice should be tilted in favor of labor in case of doubt in the
evidence presented.37
RBSJI also failed to substantiate its claim that the petitioners act
estopped them from pursuing Jacinto for his standing obligations.
There is no proof that RBSJI attempted or at least considered to
demand from Jacinto the payment of his unpaid cash advances.
Neither was RBSJI able to show that it filed a civil or criminal suit
against Jacinto to make him responsible for the alleged fraud.
There is thus no factual basis for RBSJIs allegation that it incurred
damages or was financially prejudiced by the clearance issued by
the petitioner.
More importantly, the complained act of the petitioner did not
evince intentional breach of the respondents trust and
confidence. Neither was the petitioner grossly negligent or
unjustified in pursuing the course of action he took.
It must be pointed out that the petitioner was caught in the
quandary of signing on the spot a standard employment clearance
for the furious Jacinto sans any information on his outstanding
accountabilities, and refusing to so sign but risk alarming or
scandalizing RBSJI, its employees and clients. Contrary to the
respondents allegation, the petitioner did not concede to
Jacintos demands. He was, in fact, able to equalize two equally
September 2, 2013
REYES, J.:
The present petition is an offshoot of our final and executory
decision promulgated on December 27, 2002 in G.R. No. 120004,
entitled "Iluminada de Guzman v. Court of Appeals and Jorge
Esguerra."1 Ligaya Esguerra (Ligaya), Lowell Esguerra (Lowell), and
Liesell Esguerra (Liesell) (petitioners) are heirs of Jorge Esguerra
(Esguerra) while herein respondent, HOLCIM Philippines, Inc.
(HOLCIM) is the successor-in-interest of Iluminada de Guzman (de
Guzman).
In the instant petition, the petitioners assail the Decision2 dated
August 31, 2007 and Resolution3 dated April 14, 2008 of the Court
of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP No. 94838 which reversed and set
aside the: (a) Order4 dated December 1, 2005 of the Regional Trial
Court (RTC) of Malolos, Bulacan, Branch 16 granting the
petitioners motion for the issuance of the alias writ of execution
of the Decision dated December 27, 2002 in G.R. No. 120004,
which ordered HOLCIM to pay the amount equivalent to the total
volume of limestones extracted from the subject property in the
sum of P91,872,576.72; (b) Order5 dated December 20, 2005,
which reiterated the issuance of the alias writ of execution; and
(c) Order6 dated June 7, 2006, which denied the motion for
reconsideration of the above-mentioned orders and the
manifestation and motion for ocular inspection filed by HOLCIM.
The CAs Resolution dated April 14, 2008 denied herein
72
102661 (Annex A) was properly proven during the hearing for the
examination of judgment debtors showing the claim of
Php91,872,576.72 to be substantiated based on the Monthly
Mineral Commodity Price Monitor for January 2005 (Annex B),
together with the O.R. for Certification fee (Annex C).
AS PRAYED FOR, let an alias writ of execution be issued for the
implementation of the Decision of the Supreme Court in relation
to the total volume extracted by Hi-Cement (now HOLCIM) which
is now the successor of defendant Iluminada de Guzman.21
On December 8, 2005, the petitioners filed an Urgent Motion for
Clarification22 praying that the alias writ of execution be clarified
for the purpose of directing [de Guzman] and/or Hi-Cement
Corporation and/or HOLCIM to pay the petitioners the amount
of P91,872,576.72.
As prayed for, the RTC issued an Order23 on December 20, 2005,
stating thus:
In view of the Urgent Motion for Clarification filed by the
[petitioners], through counsel, and there being no
comment/opposition filed by [de Guzman], let an alias writ of
execution be issued directing [de Guzman] and/or Hi-Cement
Corporation and/or HOLCIM to pay the [petitioners] the amount
of Php 91,872,576.72 representing their liability for the minerals
extracted from the subject property pursuant to the Order of the
Court, dated December 01, 2005.24
Subsequently, an alias writ of execution and notices of
garnishment on several banks, garnishing all amounts that may
have been deposited or owned by HOLCIM, were issued on
December 20, 2005 and December 21, 2005 respectively.25
On January 5, 2006, HOLCIM filed a motion for
reconsideration.26 It alleged that it did not owe any amount of
royalty to the petitioners for the extracted limestone from the
subject land. HOLCIM averred that it had actually entered into an
Agreement27 dated March 23, 1993 (Agreement) with the
petitioners governing their respective rights and obligations in
relation to the limestone allegedly extracted from the land in
question. HOLCIM further asserted that it had paid advance
royalty to the petitioners from year 1993, in an aggregate sum
of P694,184.22, an amount more than the P218,693.10 which the
petitioners were entitled under the Agreement.28
On January 13, 2006, the petitioners filed its Opposition to [the]
Motion for Reconsideration29 dated January 7, 2006, claiming that
the Motion for Reconsideration is barred by the omnibus motion
rule because HOLCIM failed to question the petitioners motion
for execution of this Courts decision in G.R. No. 120004. The
73
Thus, the petitioners filed the present petition for review under
Rule 45 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure, raising the following
assignment of errors:
A. THE [CA] GRAVELY ERRED IN NOT HOLDING THAT
[HOLCIM] IS ESTOPPED TO QUESTION THE
JURISDICTION OF THE TRIAL COURT TO CONDUCT A
HEARING ON THE EXACT PAYMENT WHICH [HOLCIM]
WAS SUPPOSED TO PAY TO THE PETITIONERS;
B. THE [CA] GRAVELY ERRED IN NOT DISMISSING
[HOLCIMS] PETITION FOR CERTIORARI ON [THE]
GROUND OF LACK OF BOARD RESOLUTION
AUTHORIZING THE FILING OF THE PETITION;
C. THE [CA] GRAVELY ERRED IN NOT DISMISSING THE
PETITION FOR [CERTIORARI], IT BEING NOT THE
PROPER REMEDY, BUT AN APPEAL;
D. THE [CA] GRAVELY ERRED IN HOLDING THAT THE
TRIAL COURT GRAVELY ABUSED ITS DISCRETION IN THE
EXECUTION OF THE DECISION BY CALLING FOR
EVIDENCE TO PROVE THE EXACT AMOUNT WHICH
[HOLCIM] HAS TO PAY TO THE PETITIONERS;
E. THE [CA] GRAVELY ERRED IN HOLDING THAT THE
ORDERS OF THE TRIAL COURT OF DECEMBER 1, 2005,
DECEMBER 20, 2005, AND JUNE 7, 2006 MODIFIED THE
DECISION OF THE CA G.R. CV NO. 40140 OF FEBRUARY
28, 1995[.]39
Our Ruling
The present petition has substantially complied with the
requirements.
HOLCIM alleged that the present petition is fatally defective since
all of the most important pleadings before the RTC and the CA
have not been attached to the present petition. However, a
review of the records of the case shows that the petitioners
attached to their petition the following: (a) the CAs Decision in
CA-G.R. SP No. 94838 dated August 31, 2007;40 (b) the CAs
Resolution in CA-G.R. SP No. 94838 dated April 14, 2008;41 (c) the
RTCs Order in Civil Case No. 725-M-89 dated December 1,
2005;42 (d) the RTCs Order in Civil Case No. 725-M-89 dated
December 20, 2005;43 (e) the RTCs Order in Civil Case No. 725-M89 dated June 7, 2006;44 (f) HOLCIMs Manifestation and Motion
(for Ocular Inspection) in Civil Case No. 725-M-89 dated February
21, 2006 and its attachments;45 (g) the Memorandum of
Agreement between Republic Cement Corporation and Spouses
Juan and Maria Bernabe dated December 1, 1991;46 (h) the Price
In the instant case, the CAs decision which this Court affirmed in
G.R. No. 120004 rendered, among others, the following judgment:
(a) Insofar as then defendant-appellee de Guzman is
concerned, the CA declared OCT No. P-3876 in her
possession null and void in relation to the disputed
area of 38,641 sq m; the same CAs decision
subsequently ordered de Guzman
[i] to segregate at her expense the disputed
area of 38,641 sq m from OCT No. P-3876;
[ii] to surrender her owners copy of OCT
No. P-3876 to the Register of Deeds of
Bulacan;
[iii] to immediately vacate and surrender to
then plaintiff-appellant Esguerra possession
of the disputed area;
[iv] to pay and turn over to plaintiffappellant Esguerra all the amount she
received from her co-defendant Hi-Cement
Corporation (now HOLCIM) as
compensation or royalty for marbles
extracted or quarried from the disputed
area of 38,451 sq m beginning March 23,
1990; and
[v] to pay the costs.
(b) Insofar as HOLCIM is concerned, the CAs decision
ordered HOLCIM
[i] to immediately cease and desist from
quarrying or extracting marble from the
disputed area; and
[ii] to make an accounting of the royalty it
paid to de Guzman.
Indeed, the final judgment does not direct HOLCIM nor its
predecessor Hi-Cement to pay a certain amount to Esguerra and
his heirs. What was required from HOLCIM to do was merely to
account for the payments it made to de Guzman. Apparently, this
was not enforced. It may be deduced from the records that when
the petitioners filed the Omnibus Motion dated September 28,
2004, they asked for the examination of de Guzman and HiCement (HOLCIM) under Sections 36 and 37 of Rule 39 of the
75
by the court which issued it, or by the court in which the action is
brought, upon such terms as may be just. (Emphasis ours)
Finally, the Court does not agree with petitioners argument that
the person of de Guzman is "now merged in the person of
HOLCIM or that HOLCIM has assumed her personal liability or the
judgment rendered against her."74Nothing in the records shows
that HOLCIM admitted of assuming all the liabilities of de Guzman
prior to the sale of the subject property. HOLCIM, however,
expresses its willingness to pay royalty only to the rightful owner
of the disputed area. Thus, in the event that the amount paid by
HOLCIM to de Guzman has been proven, de Guzman is ordered to
turn over the payment to the petitioners.75 If the petitioners insist
that HOLCIM owed them more than what it paid to de Guzman,
the petitioners cannot invoke the CAs decision which was
affirmed by the Court in G.R. No. 120004 to ask for additional
royalty. As earlier discussed, this must be addressed in a separate
action for the purpose. All told, the Court finds no reversible error
with the decision of the CA in nullifying the orders of the RTC for
having been issued in excess of its jurisdiction.
WHEREFORE, the Decision dated August 31, 2007 and the
Resolution dated April 14, 2008 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R.
SP No. 94838 are hereby AFFIRMED.SO ORDERED.
March 2, 2011
II
(October 1999 17 May 2002)
WHETHER THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED WHEN IT RULED THAT
THERE WAS AN ILLEGAL DISMISSAL IN THE SEPARATION FROM
EMPLOYMENT OF FERNAN H. FRANCISCO NOTWITHSTANDING
THE FACT THAT HE WAS HABITUALLY ABSENT, SUBSEQUENTLY
WENT ON AWOL, AND HAD ABANDONED HIS WORK AND
CORRELATIVELY, WHETHER HE IS ENTITLED TO BACKWAGES AND
SEPARATION PAY.
TOTAL P342,666.33
The NLRC, in its Decision dated June 30, 2003,21 modified its
previous ruling and held that respondents dismissal was illegal.
According to the NLRC, the only evidence presented by the
petitioners to prove respondents habitual absenteeism and
tardiness is his time card for the period covering June 1-15, 2001.
However, said time card reveals that respondent incurred only
three absences for the said period, which cannot be considered as
gross and habitual. With regard to the award of commissions, the
NLRC affirmed the Labor Arbiter because of petitioners failure to
question the authenticity of the check vouchers in the first
instance before the Labor Arbiter. It, nevertheless, sustained the
deletion of the award of attorneys fees in the absence of proof
that petitioners acted in bad faith. Thus, for being illegally
dismissed, the NLRC granted respondent backwages and
separation pay in addition to the commissions, as contained in the
dispositive portion of its Decision, as follows:
1. Backwages = P218,066.33
(15 June 2001 17 May 2002)
a) Salary P18,200.00 x 11.06 months = P201,292.00
b) 13th month pay: P201,292.00/12 = 16,774.33
---------------77
III
WHETHER THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED WHEN IT RULED THAT
FERNAN H. FRANCISCO IS ENTITLED TO COMMISSIONS IN THE
AMOUNT OF P70,000 EVEN THOUGH NO SUBSTANTIAL
EVIDENCE WAS SHOWN TO SUPPORT THE CLAIM.
SO ORDERED.22
I
WHETHER THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED WHEN IT FAILED TO
REVERSE THE FINDINGS OF THE NLRC AND OF THE LABOR
ARBITER A QUO BECAUSE THESE FINDINGS ARE NOT SUPPORTED
BY SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE[;] ARE CONFLICTING AND
CONTRADICTORY; GROUNDED UPON SPECULATION,
CONJECTURES, AND ASSUMPTIONS; [AND] ARE MERE
IV
WHETHER THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED WHEN IT RULED THAT
THERE WAS BAD FAITH ON THE PART OF PETITIONER ROSIT
EVEN THOUGH NO SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE WAS PRESENTED TO
PROVE THIS AND CORRELATIVELY, WHETHER PETITIONER ROSIT
CAN BE HELD SOLIDARILY LIABLE WITH PETITIONER HARPOON.24
Petitioners submit that there was no basis for the CA to rule that
respondent was illegally dismissed since more than sufficient
proof was adduced to show his habitual absenteeism and
abandonment of work as when he further incurred additional
absences after June 15, 2001 and subsequently went on AWOL;
when he completely ignored all the notices/memoranda sent to
him; when he never demanded for reinstatement in his
September 24, 2001 demand letter, complaint and position paper
before the Labor Arbiter; when it took him four months before
filing an illegal dismissal complaint; and when he was later found
to have been working for another company.
Petitioners also question the veracity of the documents presented
by respondent to prove his entitlement to commissions, to wit:
the two check vouchers25 and the purported list26 of vessels
allegedly constructed and repaired by the company. Petitioners
insist that the check vouchers neither prove that commissions
were paid on account of a repair or construction of a vessel nor
were admissible to prove that a regular commission is given for
every vessel that is constructed/repaired by the company under
respondents supervision. The list of the vessels, on the other
hand, cannot be used as basis in arriving at the amount of
commissions due because it is self-serving, unsigned, unverified
78
In fine, both the NLRC and the CA did not commit manifest error
in finding that there was illegal dismissal. The award of backwages
and separation pay in favor of respondent is therefore proper.
Rosit could not be held solidarily liable with Harpoon for lack of
substantial evidence of bad faith and malice on his part in
terminating respondent.
Although we find no error on the part of the NLRC and the CA in
declaring the dismissal of respondent illegal, we, however, are not
in accord with the ruling that petitioner Rosit should be held
solidarily liable with petitioner Harpoon for the payment of
respondents backwages and separation pay.
As held in the case of MAM Realty Development Corporation v.
National Labor Relations Commission,33"obligations incurred by
[corporate officers], acting as such corporate agents, are not
theirs but the direct accountabilities of the corporation they
represent."34 As such, they should not be generally held jointly
and solidarily liable with the corporation. The Court, however,
cited circumstances when solidary liabilities may be imposed, as
exceptions:
1. When directors and trustees or, in appropriate
cases, the officers of a corporation
(a) vote for or assent to [patently] unlawful
acts of the corporation;
(b) act in bad faith or with gross negligence
in directing the corporate affairs;
(c) are guilty of conflict of interest to the
prejudice of the corporation, its
stockholders or members, and other
persons.
2. When the director or officer has consented to the
issuance of watered stock or who, having knowledge
thereof, did not forthwith file with the corporate
secretary his written objection thereto.
DECISION
DEL CASTILLO, J.:
Before the CA, petitioner imputed upon the NLRC grave abuse of
discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction in declaring
him a corporate officer and in holding that his action against
respondents is an intra-corporate controversy and thus beyond
the jurisdiction of the Labor Arbiter.
While admitting that he is indeed a stockholder of respondent
corporation, petitioner nevertheless disputed the declaration of
the NLRC that he is a corporate officer thereof. He posited that his
being a stockholder and his being a managerial employee do
not ipso facto confer upon him the status of a corporate officer.
To support this contention, petitioner called the CAs attention to
the same GIS relied upon by the NLRC when it declared him to be
a corporate officer. He pointed out that although said information
sheet clearly indicates that he is a stockholder of respondent
corporation, he is not an officer thereof as shown by the entry
"N/A" or "not applicable" opposite his name in the officer column.
Said column requires that the particular position be indicated if
the person is an officer and if not, the entry "N/A". Petitioner
further argued that the fact that his dismissal was effected
through a board resolution does not likewise mean that he is a
corporate officer. Otherwise, all that an employer has to do in
order to avoid compliance with the requisites of a valid dismissal
under the Labor Code is to dismiss a managerial employee
through a board resolution. Moreover, he insisted that his action
for illegal dismissal is not an intra-corporate controversy as same
stemmed from employee-employer relationship which is well
within the jurisdiction of the Labor Arbiter. This can be deduced
and is bolstered by the last paragraph of the termination letter
the parties, and (2) the nature of the question that is the subject
of their controversy.
The first element requires that the controversy must arise out of
intra-corporate or partnership relations between any or all of the
parties and the corporation, partnership, or association of which
they are not stockholders, members or associates, between any
or all of them and the corporation, partnership or association of
which they are stockholders, members or associates, respectively;
and between such corporation, partnership, or association and
the State insofar as it concerns the individual franchises. The
second element requires that the dispute among the parties be
intrinsically connected with the regulation of the corporation. If
the nature of the controversy involves matters that are purely civil
in character, necessarily, the case does not involve an intracorporate controversy. [Citations omitted.]
ARTICLE IV
OFFICER
Section 1. Election/Appointment Immediately after their
election, the Board of Directors shall formally organize by electing
the President, Vice-President, the Secretary at said meeting.
The Board, may from time to time, appoint such other officers as
it may determine to be necessary or proper. Any two (2) or more
positions may be held concurrently by the same person, except
that no one shall act as President and Treasurer or Secretary at
the same time.
x x x x23 (Emphasis ours)
We have however examined the records of this case and we find
nothing to prove that petitioners appointment was made
pursuant to the above-quoted provision of respondent
corporations By-Laws. No copy of board resolution appointing
petitioner as Manager or any other document showing that he
84
The Facts
Petitioner is a domestic corporation, which was organized in the
middle of 1986 to operate a customs bonded warehouse at the
old Manila International Airport in Pasay City. 6
To obtain a license for the corporation from the Bureau of
Customs, Antonio Punsalan Jr., the corporation president,
solicited a proposal from private respondent for the preparation
of a feasibility study. 7 Private respondent submitted a letterproposal dated October 17, 1986 ("First Contract" hereafter) to
Punsalan, which is reproduced hereunder: 8
Dear Mr. Punsalan:
With reference to your request for
professional engineering consultancy
services for your proposed MIA
Warehousing Project may we offer the
following outputs and the corresponding
rate and terms of agreement:
====================================
===
Project Feasibility Study consisting of
Market Study
Technical Study
Financial Feasibility Study
Preparation of pertinent documentation
requirements for the application
__________________
__________________
_________
Thank you.
Yours truly, CONFORME:
(S)STEFANI C. SAO (S)ANTONIO C.
PUNSALAN, JR.
(T)STEFANI C. SAO (T)ANTONIO C.
PUNSALAN, JR.
Consultant for President,
PAIRCARGO
Industrial Engineering
85
15 March1987 53,333.00
(S)STEFANI C. SAO
30 March 1987 53,333.00
(T)STEFANI C. SAO
Accordingly, private respondent prepared a feasibility study for
petitioner which eventually paid him the balance of the contract
price, although not according to the schedule agreed upon. 11
"Hinanakit".
Yours truly,
(S)STEFANI C. SAO
(T)STEFANI C. SAO
Industrial Engineering
Consultant
CONFORME:
(S)ANTONIO C. PUNSALAN JR.
(T)PAIRCARGO CO. INC.
During the trial, the lower court observed that the Second
Contract bore, at the lower right portion of the letter, the
following notations in pencil:
1. Operations Manual
2. Seminar/workshop for your employees
P400,000 package
deal
50% upon completion
of seminar/workshop
50% upon approval
by the Commissioner
The Manual has already been approved by
the Commissioner but payment has not yet
been made.
The lower left corner of the letter also contained the following
notations:
1st letter 4 Dec.
1986
2nd letter 15 June
1987 with
86
Court will lay aside for the nonce this procedural lapse and
consider the allegations of "grave abuse" as statements of
reversible errors of law.
Petitioner does not contest its liability; it merely disputes the
amount of such accountability. Hence, the resolution of this
petition rests on the sole issue of the enforceability and validity of
the Second Contract, more specifically: (1) whether the president
of the petitioner-corporation had apparent authority to bind
petitioner to the Second Contract; and (2) whether the said
contract was valid and not merely simulated.
The Court's Ruling
The petition is not meritorious.
First Issue:
Apparent Authority of a Corporate President
Petitioner argues that the disputed contract is unenforceable,
because Punsalan, its president, was not authorized by its board
of directors to enter into said contract.
The general rule is that, in the absence of authority from the
board of directors, no person, not even its officers, can validly
bind a corporation. 21 A corporation is a juridical person, separate
and distinct from its stockholders and members, "having . . .
powers, attributes and properties expressly authorized by law or
incident to its existence." 22
Being a juridical entity, a corporation may board of directors,
which exercises almost all corporate powers, lays down all
corporate business policies and is responsible for the efficiency of
management, 23 as provided in Section 23 of the Corporation Code
of the Philippines:
Sec. 23. The Board of Directors or Trustees.
Unless otherwise provided in this Code,
the corporate powers of all corporations
formed under this Code shall be exercised,
all business conducted and all property of
such corporations controlled and held by
the board of directors or trustees . . . .
Under this provision, the power and the responsibility to decide
whether the corporation should enter into a contract that will
bind the corporation is lodged in the board, subject to the articles
of incorporaration, bylaws, or relevant provisions of
law. 24 Howeever, just as a natural person may authorize another
87
to do certain acts for and on his behalf, the board of directors may
validly delegate some of its functions and powers to officers,
committees or agents. The authority of such individuals to bind
the corporation is generally derived from law, corporate bylaws or
authorization from the board, either expressly or impliedly by
habit, custom or acquiescence in the general course of
business, viz.: 25
A corporate officer or agent may represent
and bind the corporation in transactions
with third persons to the extent that [the]
authority to do so has been conferred upon
him, and this includes powers which have
been intentionally conferred, and also such
powers as, in the usual course of the
particular business, are incidental to, or
may be implied from, the powers
intentionally conferred, powers added by
custom and usage, as usually pertaining to
the particular officer or agent, and such
apparent powers as the corporation has
caused persons dealing with the officer or
agent to believe that it has conferred.
Accordingly, the appellate court ruled in this case that the
authority to act for and to bind a corporation may be presumed
from acts of recognition in other instances, wherein the power
was in fact exercised without any objection from its board or
shareholders. Petitioner had previously allowed its president to
enter into the First Contract with private respondent without a
board resolution expressly authorizing him; thus, it had clothed its
president with apparent authority to execute the subject contract.
Petitioner rebuts, arguing that a single isolated agreement prior
to the subject contract does not constitute corporate practice,
which Webster defines as "frequent or custmary action." It
cites Board of Liquidators v. Kalaw,26 in which the practice of
NACOCO allowing its general manager to negotiate and execute
contract in its copra trading activities for and on its behalf,
without prior board approval, was inferred from sixty contract
not one, as in present case previously entered into by the
corporation without such board resolution.
Petitioner's argument is not persuasive. Apparent authority is
derived not merely from practice. Its existence may be
ascertained through (1) the general manner in which the
corporation holds out an officer or agent as having the power to
act or, in other words, the apparent authority to act in general,
with which it clothes him; or (2) the acquiescence in his acts of a
particular nature, with actual or constructive knowledge thereof,
whether within or beyond the scope of his ordinary powers. 27 It
requires presentation of evidence of similar act(s) executed either
CARPIO-MORALES, J.:
The present petition for review on certiorari assails the Court of
Appeals Decision1 of January 25, 1996 and Resolution2 of July 11,
1996.
The material facts of the case are as follows:
On September 1, 1978, Inter-Asia Industries, Inc. (petitioner), by a
Stock Purchase Agreement3 (the Agreement), sold to Asia
Industries, Inc. (private respondent) for and in consideration of
the sum of P19,500,000.00 all its right, title and interest in and to
89
90
February 8, 2000
91
92
Respondents based their action before the trial court on the Deed
of Sale, the substance of which was alleged in and a copy thereof
was attached to the Petition for Mandamus. The Deed named Fe
S. Tena as the representative of the bank. Petitioner, however,
failed to specifically deny under oath the allegations in that
contract. In fact, it filed no answer at all, for which reason it was
declared in default. Pertinent provisions of the Rules of Court
read:
Sec. 7. Action or defense based on document.
Whenever an action or defense is based upon a
written instrument or document, the substance of
such instrument or document shall be set forth in the
pleading, and the original or a copy thereof shall be
attached to the pleading as an exhibit, which shall be
deemed to be a part of the pleading, or said copy may
with like effect be set forth in the pleading.
Sec. 8. How to contest genuineness of such
documents. When an action or defense is founded
upon a written instrument, copied in or attached to
the corresponding pleading as provided in the
preceding section, the genuineness and due execution
of the instrument shall be deemed admitted unless the
adverse party, under oath, specifically denies them,
and sets forth what he claims to be the facts; but this
provision does not apply when the adverse party does
not appear to be a party to the instrument or when
compliance with an order for an inspection of the
original instrument is refused. 12
In failing to file its answer specifically denying under oath the
Deed of Sale, the bank admitted the due execution of the said
contract. Such admission means that it acknowledged that Tena
was authorized to sign the Deed of Sale on its behalf. 13 Thus,
defenses that are inconsistent with the due execution and the
genuineness of the written instrument are cut off by an admission
implied from a failure to make a verified specific denial.
Other Acts of the Bank
94
ARNEL U. TY, MARIE ANTONETTE TY, JASON ONG, WILLY DY, and
ALVIN TY, Petitioners,
vs.
NBI SUPERVISING AGENT MARVIN E. DE JEMIL, PETRON GASUL
DEALERS ASSOCIATION, and TOTALGAZ DEALERS
ASSOCIATION, Respondents.
D E C I S I O NVELASCO, JR., J.:
The Case
In this Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45, petitioners
seek the reversal of the Decision1 dated September 28, 2007 of
the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP No. 98054, which reversed
and set aside the Resolutions dated October 9, 20062 and
December 14, 20063 of the Secretary of Justice, and reinstated the
November 7, 2005 Joint Resolution4 of the Office of the Chief
State Prosecutor. Petitioners assail also the CA Resolution5 dated
March 14, 2008, denying their motion for reconsideration.
The Facts
Petitioners are stockholders of Omni Gas Corporation (Omni) as
per Omnis General Information Sheet6 (GIS) dated March 6, 2004
submitted to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
Omni is in the business of trading and refilling of Liquefied
Petrons Comment-in-Intervention
On April 14, 2009, Petron entered its appearance by filing a
Motion for Leave to Intervene and to Admit Comment-inIntervention45 and its Comment-in-Intervention [To petition for
Review on Certiorari dated 13 May 2008].46 It asserted vested
interest in the seizure of several Gasul LPG cylinders and the right
to prosecute petitioners for unauthorized refilling of its branded
LPG cylinders by Omni. Petitioners duly filed their
Comment/Opposition47 to Petrons motion to intervene. It is clear,
however, that Petron has substantial interest to protect in so far
as its business relative to the sale and refilling of Petron Gasul LPG
cylinders is concerned, and therefore its intervention in the
instant case is proper.
96
17
Quantity/Unit
Description
29
23
21
97
xxxx
After all, once a consumer buys a branded LPG cylinder from the
brand owner or its authorized dealer, said consumer is practically
free to do what he pleases with the branded LPG cylinder. He can
simply store the cylinder once it is empty or he can even destroy it
since he has paid a deposit for it which answers for the loss or
cost of the empty branded LPG cylinder. Given such fact, what the
law manifestly prohibits is the refilling of a branded LPG cylinder
by a refiller who has no written authority from the brand owner.
Apropos, a refiller cannot and ought not to refill branded LPG
cylinders if it has no written authority from the brand
owner.1avvphi1
Besides, persuasive are the opinions and pronouncements by the
DOE: brand owners are deemed owners of their duly embossed,
stamped and marked LPG cylinders even if these are possessed by
customers or consumers. The Court recognizes this right pursuant
to our laws, i.e., Intellectual Property Code of the Philippines.
Thus the issuance by the DOE Circular No. 2000-05-007,61 the
letter-opinion62 dated December 9, 2004 of then DOE Secretary
Vincent S. Perez addressed to Pilipinas Shell, the June 6, 2007
letter63 of then DOE Secretary Raphael P.M. Lotilla to the LPGIA,
and DOE Department Circular No. 2007-10-000764 on LPG Cylinder
Ownership and Obligations Related Thereto issued on October 13,
2007 by DOE Secretary Angelo T. Reyes.
Fifth. The ownership of the seized branded LPG cylinders,
allegedly owned by Omni customers as petitioners adamantly
profess, is of no consequence.
The law does not require that the property to be seized should be
owned by the person against whom the search warrants is
directed. Ownership, therefore, is of no consequence, and it is
sufficient that the person against whom the warrant is directed
has control or possession of the property sought to be
seized.65 Petitioners cannot deny that the seized LPG cylinders
were in the possession of Omni, found as they were inside the
Omni compound.
In fine, we also note that among those seized by the NBI are 16
LPG cylinders bearing the embossed brand names
of Shellane, Gasul and Totalgaz but were marked as Omnigas.
Evidently, this pernicious practice of tampering or changing the
appearance of a branded LPG cylinder to look like another brand
violates the brand owners property rights as infringement under
Sec. 155.1 of RA 8293. Moreover, tampering of LPG cylinders is a
mode of perpetrating the criminal offenses under BP 33, as
amended, and clearly enunciated under DOE Circular No. 200006-010 which provided penalties on a per cylinder basis for each
violation.
Foregoing considered, in the backdrop of the quantum of
evidence required to support a finding of probable cause, we
98
agree with the appellate court and the Office of the Chief State
Prosecutor, which conducted the preliminary investigation, that
there exists probable cause for the violation of Sec. 2 (a) in
relation to Sec. 3 (c) of BP 33, as amended. Probable cause has
been defined as the existence of such facts and circumstances as
would excite belief in a reasonable mind, acting on the facts
within the knowledge of the prosecutor, that the person charged
was guilty of the crime for which he was prosecuted.66 After all,
probable cause need not be based on clear and convincing
evidence of guilt, as the investigating officer acts upon reasonable
beliefprobable cause implies probability of guilt and requires
more than bare suspicion but less than evidence which would
justify a conviction.67
Probable violation of Sec. 2 (c) of BP 33, as amended
Anent the alleged violation of Sec. 2 (c) in relation to Sec. 4 of BP
33, as amended, petitioners strongly argue that there is no
probable cause for said violation based upon an underfilling of a
lone cylinder of the eight branded LPG cylinders refilled during the
test-buy. Besides, they point out that there was no finding of
underfilling in any of the filled LPG cylinders seized during the
service of the search warrants. Citing DOEs Bureau of Energy
Utilization Circular No. 85-3-348, they maintain that some
deviation is allowed from the exact filled weight. Considering the
fact that an isolated underfilling happened in so many LPG
cylinders filled, petitioners are of the view that such is due to
human or equipment error and does not in any way constitute
deliberate underfilling within the contemplation of the law.
Moreover, petitioners cast aspersion on the report and findings of
LPG Inspector Navio of the LPGIA by assailing his independence
for being a representative of the major petroleum companies and
that the inspection he conducted was made without the presence
of any DOE representative or any independent body having
technical expertise in determining LPG cylinder underfilling
beyond the authorized quantity.
Again, we are not persuaded.
Contrary to petitioners arguments, a single underfilling
constitutes an offense under BP 33, as amended by PD 1865,
which clearly criminalizes these offenses. In Perez v. LPG Refillers
Association of the Philippines, Inc.,68 the Court affirmed the
validity of DOE Circular No. 2000-06-010 which provided penalties
on a per cylinder basis for each violation, thus:
B.P. Blg. 33, as amended, criminalizes illegal trading,
adulteration, underfilling, hoarding, and overpricing of petroleum
products. Under this general description of what constitutes
criminal acts involving petroleum products, the Circular merely
lists the various modes by which the said criminal acts may be
perpetrated, namely: no price display board, no weighing scale,
no tare weight or incorrect tare weight markings, no authorized
LPG seal, no trade name, unbranded LPG cylinders, no serial
number, no distinguishing color, no embossed identifying
markings on cylinder, underfilling LPG cylinders, tampering LPG
cylinders, and unauthorized decanting of LPG cylinders. These
specific acts and omissions are obviously within the
contemplation of the law, which seeks to curb the pernicious
practices of some petroleum merchants.69 (Emphasis supplied.)
Moreover, in denying the motion for reconsideration of the LPG
Refillers Association of the Philippines, Inc., the Court upheld the
basis of said DOE Circular No. 2000-06-010 on the imposition of
penalties on a per cylinder basis, thus:
Respondents position is untenable. The Circular is not
confiscatory in providing penalties on a per cylinder basis. Those
penalties do not exceed the ceiling prescribed in Section 4 of B.P.
Blg. 33, as amended, which penalizes "any person who
commits any act [t]herein prohibited." Thus, violation on a per
cylinder basis falls within the phrase "any act" as mandated in
Section 4. To provide the same penalty for one who violates a
prohibited act in B.P. Blg. 33, as amended, regardless of the
number of cylinders involved would result in an indiscriminate,
oppressive and impractical operation of B.P. Blg. 33, as amended.
The equal protection clause demands that "all persons subject to
such legislation shall be treated alike, under like
circumstances and conditions, both in the privileges conferred and
in the liabilities imposed."70
The Court made it clear that a violation, like underfilling, on a per
cylinder basis falls within the phrase of any actas mandated under
Sec. 4 of BP 33, as amended. Ineluctably, the underfilling of one
LPG cylinder constitutes a clear violation of BP 33, as amended.
The finding of underfilling by LPG Inspector Navio of the LPGIA, as
aptly noted by Manila Assistant City Prosecutor Catalo who
conducted the preliminary investigation, was indeed not
controverted by petitioners.
On the issue of manifest bias and partiality, suffice it to say that
aside from the allegation by petitioners, they have not shown that
LPG Inspector Navio is neither an expert nor qualified to
determine underfilling. Besides, it must be noted that the
inspection by LPG Inspector Navio was conducted in the presence
of NBI agents on April 23, 2004 who attested to that fact through
their affidavits. Moreover, no rules require and petitioners have
not cited any that the inspection be conducted in the presence of
DOE representatives.
Second Core Issue: Petitioners Liability for Violations
A scrutiny of the GIS reveals that among the petitioners who are
members of the board of directors are the following who are
likewise elected as corporate officers of Omni: (1) Petitioner Arnel
U. Ty (Arnel) as President; (2) petitioner Mari Antonette Ty as
Treasurer; and (3) petitioner Jason Ong as Corporate Secretary.
Sec. 4 of BP 33, as amended, clearly indicated firstly the president
of a corporation or juridical entity to be criminally liable for
violations of BP 33, as amended.
Evidently, petitioner Arnel, as President, who manages the
business affairs of Omni, can be held liable for probable violations
by Omni of BP 33, as amended. The fact that petitioner Arnel is
ostensibly the operations manager of Multi-Gas Corporation, a
family owned business, does not deter him from managing Omni
as well. It is well-settled that where the language of the law is
clear and unequivocal, it must be taken to mean exactly what it
says.75 As to the other petitioners, unless otherwise shown that
they are situated under the catch-all "such other officer charged
with the management of the business affairs," they may not be
held liable under BP 33, as amended, for probable violations.
Consequently, with the exception of petitioner Arnel, the charges
against other petitioners must perforce be dismissed or dropped.
WHEREFORE, premises considered, we PARTIALLY GRANT the
instant petition. Accordingly, the assailed September 28, 2007
Decision and March 14, 2008 Resolution of the Court of Appeals in
CA-G.R. SP No. 98054 are AFFIRMED with MODIFICATION that
petitioners Mari Antonette Ty, Jason Ong, Willy Dy and Alvin Ty
are excluded from the two Informations charging probable
violations of Batas Pambansa Bilang 33, as amended. The Joint
Resolution dated November 7, 2005 of the Office of the Chief
State Prosecutor is modified accordingly.
No pronouncement as to costs.SO ORDERED.
102
D E C I S I O NMENDOZA, J.:
Petitioners, by way of this petition for review on certiorari under
Rule 45, seek to annul and set aside the December 23, 2008
Decision1 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in CA-G.R. SP No. 100015,
which reversed and set aside the December 29, 2006
Resolution2 of the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC).
The NLRC Resolution, in turn, reversed and set aside the June 15,
2006 Decision3 of the Labor Arbiter (LA).4
THE FACTS
DAILY/GENERAL DUTIES:
NAME
TITLE/STATUS
LOCATION
REPORTS TO
Normal Working
Hours
OVERTIME
: ________________________
AGREED:
who withheld wages without valid cause. The LA also held that
respondents probationary employment was deemed regularized
because petitioners failed to conduct a prior evaluation of his
performance and to give notice two days prior to his termination
as required by the Probationary Contract of Employment and
Article 281 of the Labor Code. Petitioners contention that they
lost trust and confidence in respondent as a managerial employee
was not given credence for lack of notice to explain the supposed
loss of trust and confidence and absence of an evaluation of
respondents performance.
The LA believed that the respondent complied with the
obligations in his contract as evidenced by his electronic mail
messages to petitioners. He ruled that petitioners are jointly and
severally liable to respondent for backwages including 13th
month pay as there was no showing in the salary vouchers
presented that such was integrated in the salary; for moral and
exemplary damages for having in bad faith harassed respondent
into resigning; and for attorneys fees.
THE RULING OF THE NLRC
On appeal, the NLRC reversed the decision of the LA in its
December 29, 2006 Resolution, the dispositive portion of which
reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the appeal is hereby
GRANTED.
The Decision dated June 15, 2006 is hereby REVERSED and SET
ASIDE and a new one is hereby entered:
(1) dismissing the complaint for illegal dismissal for
want of merit;
(2) dismissing the claims for 13th month pay, moral
and exemplary damages and attorneys fees for lack of
factual and legal basis; and
105
THE ISSUES
petitioners claim that they prepared the check ready for pick-up
cannot undo the unlawful withholding.
It is worthy to note that in his resignation letter, respondent cited
petitioners "illegal and unfair labor practice"26as his cause for
resignation. As correctly noted by the CA, respondent lost no time
in submitting his resignation letter and eventually filing a
complaint for illegal dismissal just a few days after his salary was
withheld. These circumstances are inconsistent with voluntary
resignation and bolster the finding of constructive dismissal.
Petitioners cite the case of Solas v. Power & Telephone Supply
Phils., Inc.27 to support their contention that the mere withholding
of an employees salary does not by itself constitute constructive
dismissal. Petitioners are mistaken in anchoring their argument on
said case, where the withholding of the salary was deemed lawful.
In the above-cited case, the employees salary was withheld for a
valid reason - it was applied as partial payment of a debt due to
the employer, for withholding taxes on his income and for his
absence without leave. The partial payment of a debt due to the
employer and the withholding of taxes on income were valid
deductions under Article 113 paragraph (c) of the Labor Code. The
deduction from an employees salary for a due and demandable
debt to an employer was likewise sanctioned under Article 1706
of the Civil Code. As to the withholding for income tax purposes, it
was prescribed by the National Internal Revenue Code. Moreover,
the employee therein was indeed absent without leave.
In this case, the withholding of respondents salary does not fall
under any of the circumstances provided under Article 113.
Neither was it established with certainty that respondent did not
work from November 16 to November 30, 2005. Hence, the Court
agrees with the LA and the CA that the unlawful withholding of
respondents salary amounts to constructive dismissal.
Respondent was constructively dismissed and, therefore, illegally
dismissed.1avvphi1 Although respondent was a probationary
employee, he was still entitled to security of tenure. Section 3 (2)
Article 13 of the Constitution guarantees the right of all workers
to security of tenure. In using the expression "all workers," the
Constitution puts no distinction between a probationary and a
permanent or regular employee. This means that probationary
employees cannot be dismissed except for cause or for failure to
qualify as regular employees.28
This Court has held that probationary employees who are unjustly
dismissed during the probationary period are entitled to
reinstatement and payment of full backwages and other benefits
and privileges from the time they were dismissed up to their
actual reinstatement.29 Respondent is, thus, entitled to
reinstatement without loss of seniority rights and other privileges
as well as to full backwages, inclusive of allowances, and other
107