PNB Vs Andrada D

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 2

Jazem.

Ansama

11186631

G.R. No. 142936


April 17, 2002
PHILIPPINE NATIONAL BANK & NATIONAL SUGAR DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION, petitioners, vs. ANDRADA
ELECTRIC & ENGINEERING COMPANY, respondent.
Facts:
Andrada Electric is a partnership existing under the Philippine laws. PNB is a semi-government corporation
under Philippine laws. It organized NASUDECO to take ownership and possession of the assets and its interest in other
PNB controlled sugar mills. The latter is also a semi-government corporation and the sugar arm of the PNB. Its President
is also the Vice-President of the PNB. Pampanga Sugar Mills (PASUMIL) is a domestic corporation who engaged the
services of Andrada Electric for electrical rewinding and repair. It incurred the total obligation in the amount of
P777,263.80. However, PASUMIL had paid only P250,000 and made a partial payment of P14,000. Because PNB and
NASUDECO now owned and possessed the assets of PASUMIL, Andrada Electric seeks payment for its services
rendered.
Nevertheless, PASUMIL, PNB, and NASUDECO failed and refused to pay Andrada Electric. As a result,
Andrada filed a complaint against PASUMIL, PNB, and NASUDECO. PNB and NASUDECO filed a motion to dismiss on
the following grounds: a) NASUDECO and PNB is not privy to the contact between Andrada Electrical and PASUMIL; b)
the taking over by NASUDECO of the assets of PASUMIL was solely for the purpose of reconditioning the sugar central
of PASUMIL; c) nothing in the Letter of Instruction authorized or commanded the PNB or its subsidiary corporation, the
NASUDECO, to assume the corporate obligations of PASUMIL; d) what was mentioned by the said letter of instruction
insofar as the PASUMIL liabilities were concerned was for the PNB, or the NASUDECO, to make a study of, and submit
recommendation on the problems concerning the same; e) that the alleged services rendered by Andrada to the
PASUMIL was rendered long before PNB took possession of the assets of the PASUMIL; f) that the PNB and the
Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) entered into a Redemption Agreement whereby DBP sold, transferred and
conveyed in favor of the PNB, by way of redemption, all its (DBP) rights and interest in and over the foreclosed real
and/or personal properties of PASUMIL; g) that the PNB pursuant to a Deed of Assignment, conveyed, transferred, and
assigned for valuable consideration, in favor of NASUDECO, a distinct and independent corporation, all its (PNB) rights
and interest in and under the above Redemption Agreement.; h) that as a consequence of the said Deed of Assignment,
PNB ceased to managed and operate the above-mentioned assets of PASUMIL, which function was now actually
transferred to NASUDECO. TC rendered a judgment in favor of Andrada Electric. CA affirmed the ruling of the TC.
Hence, this petition.
Issue:
Whether or not PNB is liable for the unpaid debts of PASUMIL to Andrada Electric.
Held:
No. As a rule, a corporation that purchases the assets of another will not be liable for the debts of the selling
corporation, provided the former acted in good faith and paid adequate consideration for such assets, except when any
of the following circumstances is present: (1) where the purchaser expressly or impliedly agrees to assume the debts, (2)
where the transaction amounts to a consolidation or merger of the corporations, (3) where the purchasing corporation is
merely a continuation of the selling corporation, and (4) where the transaction is fraudulently entered into in order to
escape liability for those debts.
Piercing the veil of corporate fiction cannot be applied in this case because: First, other than the fact that
petitioners acquired the assets of PASUMIL, there is no showing that their control over it warrants the disregard of
corporate personalities. Second, there is no evidence that their juridical personality was used to commit a fraud or to do a
wrong; or that the separate corporate entity was farcically used as a mere alter ego of another entity or person. Lastly,
respondent was not defrauded or injured when petitioners acquired the assets of PASUMIL.
Respondent further claims that petitioners should be held liable for the unpaid obligations of PASUMIL by virtue
of LOI, which expressly authorized PASUMIL and PNB to merge or consolidate. On the other hand, petitioners contend
that their takeover of the operations of PASUMIL did not involve any corporate merger or consolidation, because the
latter had never lost its separate identity as a corporation. A consolidation is the union of two or more existing entities to
form a new entity called the consolidated corporation. A merger, on the other hand, is a union whereby one or more
existing corporations are absorbed by another corporation that survives and continues the combined business. The
merger, however, does not become effective upon the mere agreement of the constituent corporations. Since a merger or
consolidation involves fundamental changes in the corporation, there must be an express provision of law authorizing
them. For a valid merger or consolidation, the approval by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) and its
stockholders of the articles of merger or consolidation is required. In fact, PASUMILs corporate existence had not been

legally extinguished or terminated. There is no merger or consolidation. Neither did petitioner expressly or impliedly
agree to assume the debt of PASUMIL to respondent.

You might also like