Corpo Case Digest Compilation
Corpo Case Digest Compilation
Corpo Case Digest Compilation
ISSUE
Whether or not the Corporation Bank (PNB) is liable to Tapnio?
RULING
YES.
The Supreme court said “As observed by the trial court, time is of the essence in the approval of
the lease of sugar quota allotments, since the same must be utilized during the milling season, because
any allotment which is not filled during such milling season may be reallocated by the Sugar Quota
Administration to other holders of allotments. There was no proof that there was any other person at that
time willing to lease the sugar quota allotment of private respondents for a price higher than P2.80 per
picul.
While PNB had the ultimate authority of approving or disapproving the proposed lease since
the quota was mortgaged to the Bank, the latter certainly cannot escape its responsibility of observing,
for the protection of the interest of private respondents, that degree of care, precaution and vigilance
which the circumstances justly demand in approving or disapproving the lease of said sugar quota. The
law makes it imperative that every person "must in the exercise of his rights and in the performance of
his duties, act with justice, give everyone his due, and observe honesty and good faith, This petitioner
failed to do.
Certainly, it knew that the agricultural year was about to expire, that by its disapproval of the
lease private respondents would be unable to utilize the sugar quota in question. In failing to observe the
reasonable degree of care and vigilance which the surrounding circumstances reasonably impose,
petitioner is consequently liable for the damages caused on private respondents. Under Article 21 of the
New Civil Code, "any person who willfully causes loss or injury to another in a manner that is contrary to
morals, good customs or public policy shall compensate the latter for the damage." The afore-cited
provisions on human relations were intended to expand the concept of torts in this jurisdiction by granting
adequate legal remedy for the untold number of moral wrongs which is impossible for human foresight
to specifically provide in the statutes.
A corporation is civilly liable in the same manner as natural persons for torts because the rules
governing the liability of a principal or master for a tort committed by an agent or servant are the same
whether the principal or master be a natural person or a corporation, and whether the servant or agent
be a natural or artificial person. All of the authorities agree that a principal or master is liable for every
tort which he expressly directs or authorizes, and this is just as true of a corporation as of a natural person,
A corporation is liable, therefore, whenever a tortious act is committed by an officer or agent under
express direction or authority from the stockholders or members acting as a body, or, generally, from
the directors as the governing body."
TITLE: REYNOSO VS. COURT OF APPEALS
REFERENCE: 345 SCRA 335 [GR No. 116124-25 November 23, 2000]
FACTS
In early 1960s, the Commercial Credit Corporation (CCC), a financing company and investment
firm, decided to organize franchise companies in different parts of the country, wherein it shall hold 30%
equity. Employees of the CCC were designated as resident managers of the franchise companies.
Petitioner Reynoso was designated as the resident manager of the franchise in Quezon City, known as the
Commercial Credit Corporation of Quezon City (CCC-QC).
CCC-QC entered into an exclusive agreement management contract with CCC whereby the latter
was granted the management and full control of the business activities of the former. Under the contract,
CCC-QC shall sell, discount and/or assign its receivables to CCC. Subsequently, however, this discounting
arrangement was discontinued pursuant to the so called DOSRI rule, prohibiting the lending of funds by
corporations to its directors, officers, stockholders and other persons with related interest therein.
On account of the new restrictions imposed by the Central Bank policy by virtue of the DOSRI rule,
CCC decided to form CCC Equity Corporation, a wholly-owned subsidiary, to which CCC transferred its 30%
equity in CCC-QC, together with 2 seats in the latter’s Board of Directors.
Under the new set-up, several officials of Commercial Credit Corporation, including petitioner
Reynoso, became employees of CCC-Equity. While petitioner continued to be the Resident Manager of
CCC-QC, he drew his salaries and allowances from CCCEquity. Furthermore, although an employee of CCC-
Equity, petitioner, as well as all employees of CCC-QC, became qualified members of the Commercial
Credit Corporation Employees Pension Plan.
As Resident Manager of CCC-QC, petitioner oversaw the operations of CCC-QC and supervised its
employees. The business activities of CCC-QC pertain to the acceptance of funds from depositors who are
issued interest-bearing promissory notes. The amounts deposited are then loaned out to various
borrowers. Petitioner, in order to boost the business activities of CCC-QC, deposited his personal funds in
the company. In return, CCC-QC issued to him its interest-bearing promissory notes.
A complaint filed by CCC-equity against petitioner which alleged that petitioner embezzled the
funds of CCC-QC which was used for the purchase of a house and lot. The property was mortgaged to CCC,
and was later foreclosed.
RTC dismissed the complaint for lack of merit and ordered CCC to pay Reynoso for damages.
Judgement remained unsatisfied, so Reynoso filed a motion for alias Writ of Execution.
Meanwhile, CCC became known as the General Credit Corporation, in which case the court issued an
Order directing General Credit Corporation to file its comment on petitioner’s motion for alias writ of
execution. General Credit Corporation alleges that that it was not a party to the case. GCC contends that
it is a corporation separate and distinct from CCC-QC and, therefore, its properties may not be levied upon
to satisfy the monetary judgment in favor of petitioner. In short, respondent raises corporate fiction as its
defense.
ISSUE
Whether or not the judgement in favor of the petitioner may be executed against respondent
General Credit Corporation?
RULING
YES.
A corporation is an artificial being created by operation of law, having the right of succession and
the powers, attributes, and properties expressly authorized by law or incident to its existence. It is an
artificial being invested by law with a personality separate and distinct from those of the persons
composing it as well as from that of any other legal entity to which it may be related. It was evolved to
make possible the aggregation and assembling of huge amounts of capital upon which big business
depends. It also has the advantage of non-dependence on the lives of those who compose it even as it
enjoys certain rights and conducts activities of natural persons.
Any piercing of the corporate veil has to be done with caution. However, the court will not hesitate
to use its supervisory and adjudicative powers where the corporate fiction is used as an unfair device to
achieve an inequitable result defraud creditors, evade contracts and obligations, or to shield it from the
effects of a court decision. The corporate fiction has to be disregarded when necessary in the interest of
justice.
The defense of separateness will be disregarded when the business affairs of a subsidiary
corporation are so controlled by the mother corporation to the extent that it becomes an instrument or
agent of its parent. But even when there is dominance over the affairs of the subsidiary, the doctrine of
piercing the veil of corporate fiction applies only when such fiction is used to defeat public convenience,
justify wrong, protect fraud or defend crime.
It is obvious that the use by CCC-QC of the same name of Commercial Credit Corporation was
intended to publicly identify it as a component of the CCC group of companies engaged in one and the
same business, i.e., investment and financing. Aside from CCCQuezon City, other franchise companies
were organized such as CCC-North Manila and CCC-Cagayan Valley.
The organization of subsidiary corporations as what was done here is usually resorted to for
aggrupation of capital the ability to cover more territory and population, the decentralization of activities
best decentralized, and the securing of other legitimate advantages. But when the mother corporation
and its subsidiary cease to act in good faith and honest business judgement, when the corporate device
is used by the parent to avoid its liability for legitimate obligations of the subsidiary, and when the
corporate fiction is used to perpetrate fraud or promote injustice, the law steps in to remedy the
problem. When that happens, the corporate character is not necessarily abrogated. It continues for
legitimate objectives. However, it is pursued in order to remedy injustice, such as that inflicted in this
case.
The discounting agreements through which CCC controlled the finances of its subordinates
became unlawful when Central Bank adopted the DOSRI prohibitions. Under this rule the directors,
officers, and stockholders are prohibited from borrowing from their company. Instead of adhering to the
letter and spirit of the regulations by avoiding DOSRI loans altogether, CCC used the corporate device to
continue the prohibited practice. CCC organized still another corporation, the CCC-Equity Corporation.
However, as a wholly owned subsidiary, CCC-Equity was in fact only another name for CCC. Key officials
of CCC, including the resident managers of subsidiary corporations, were appointed to positions in CCC-
Equity.
It is very obvious; that respondent “seeks the protective shield of a corporate fiction whose veil
the present case could, and should, be pierced as it was deliberately and maliciously designed to evade
its financial obligation of its employees.
If the corporate fiction is sustained, it becomes a handy deception to avoid a judgment debt and
work an injustice.
TITLE: SAW VS. COURT OF APPEAL
REFERENCE: G.R. No. 90580 April 8, 1991.
FACTS
A collection suit with preliminary attachment was filed by Equitable Banking Corporation against
Freeman, Inc. and Saw Chiao Lian, its President and General Manager. The petitioners moved to intervene,
alleging that (1) the loan transactions between Saw Chiao Lian and Equitable Banking Corp. were not
approved by the stockholders representing at least 2/3 of corporate capital; (2) Saw Chiao Lian had no
authority to contract such loans; and (3) there was collusion between the officials of Freeman, Inc. and
Equitable Banking Corp. in securing the loans. The motion to intervene was denied, and the petitioners
appealed to the Court of Appeals.
Meanwhile, Equitable and Saw Chiao Lian entered into a compromise agreement which they
submitted to and was approved by the lower court. But because it was not complied with, Equitable
secured a writ of execution, and two lots owned by Freeman, Inc. were levied upon and sold at public
auction to Freeman Management and Development Corp.
The Court of Appeals sustained the denial of the petitioners’ motion for intervention, holding that
“the compromise agreement between Freeman, Inc., through its President, and Equitable Banking Corp.
will not necessarily prejudice petitioners whose rights to corporate assets are at most inchoate, prior to
the dissolution of Freeman, Inc. and intervention under Sec. 2, Rule 12 of the Revised Rules of Court is
proper only when one’s right is actual, material, direct and immediate and not simply contingent or
expectant.
ISSUE
Whether or not the denial of petitioner’s motion for intervention was proper?
RULING
YES.
Petitioners have no legal interest in the subject matter in litigation so as to entitle them to
intervene in the proceedings below.
In a case, the court held that, “As clearly stated in Section 2 of Rule 12 of the Rules of Court, to be
permitted to intervene in a pending action, the party must have a legal interest in the matter in
litigation, or in the success of either of the parties or an interest against both, or he must be so situated
as to be adversely affected by a distribution or other disposition of the property in the custody of the
court or an officer thereof.”
To allow intervention, [a] it must be shown that the movant has legal interest in the matter in
litigation, or otherwise qualified; and [b] consideration must be given as to whether the adjudication of
the rights of the original parties may be delayed or prejudiced, or whether the intervenor’s rights may
be protected in a separate proceeding or not. Both requirements must concur as the first is not more
important than the second. The interest which entitles a person to intervene in a suit between other
parties must be in the matter in litigation and of such direct and immediate character that the intervenor
will either gain or lose by the direct legal operation and effect of the judgment. Otherwise, if persons not
parties of the action could be allowed to intervene, proceedings will become unnecessarily complicated,
expensive and interminable.
The words “an interest in the subject” mean a direct interest in the cause of action as pleaded,
and which would put the intervenor in a legal position to litigate a fact alleged in the complaint, without
the establishment of which plaintiff could not recover.
In the present case, the interest, if it exists at all, of petitioners/movants is indirect, contingent,
remote, conjectural, consequential and collateral. At the very least, their interest is purely inchoate, or in
sheer expectancy of a right in the management of the corporation and to share in the profits thereof and
in the properties and assets thereof on dissolution, after payment of the corporate debts and obligations.
While a share of stock represents a proportionate or aliquot interest in the property of the corporation,
it does not vest the owner thereof with any legal right or title to any of the property, his interest in the
corporate property being equitable or beneficial in nature. Shareholders are in no legal sense the
owners of corporate property, which is owned by the corporation as a distinct legal person.
TITLE: SIA VS. COURT OF APPEALS
REFERENCE: 166 SCRA 263
FACTS
Jose O. Sia (appellant herein), President and General Manager of the Metal Manufacturing of the
Philippines, Inc. for and in its behalf, applied for and was granted a Letter of Credit with the Continental
Bank, Manila to cover the importation of 100 pieces of Safe Deposit Locks No. 4440. A marginal deposit
was made with the Bank and the Letter of Credit was confirmed with its foreign correspondent.
Thereafter, appellant, for and in behalf of the Metal Manufacturing of the Philippines, Inc., executed a
trust receipt in favor of the Continental Bank. When the said trust receipt became due and demandable,
the Metal Manufacturing of the Philippines, Inc. failed to pay or deliver the merchandise to the Bank
despite the latter’s demands.
Consequently, an information for estafa was filed against petitioner for violation of the trust
receipt agreement executed by him in his capacity as President and General Manager of Metal
Manufacturing of the Philippines, Inc. in favor of Continental Bank.
The trial court entered a verdict of guilty beyond reasonable doubt for the offense of estafa.
CA affirmed with the modification to the effect that the accused is to indemnify the offended
party. A motion for reconsideration followed, but was denied for lack of merit. Hence, this petition for
review on certiorari.
ISSUE
Whether or not petitioner Sia, as President and General Manager of Metal Manufacturing of the
Phil., Inc. having acted for and on its behalf in executing the Trust Receipt Agreement in favor of the
Continental Bank may be held liable for the crime charged?
RULING
NO.
The court ruled that if the acts herein involved occurred after 29 January 1975, petitioner would
be criminally liable for estafa under paragraph 1(b), Article 315 of the Revised Penal Code, pursuant to
the following provisions of PD 115 covered by a trust receipt to the extent of the amount owing to the
entruster or as appears in the trust receipt or to return said goods, documents or instruments if they were
not sold or disposed of in accordance with the terms of the trust receipt shall constitute the crime of
estafa, punishable under the provisions of Article 315, par 1(b) of the Revised Penal Code. If the violation
or offense is committed by a corporation, partnership, association or other juridical entities, the penalty
shall be imposed upon the directors, officers, employees or other officials or persons therein
responsible for the offense, without prejudice to the civil liabilities arising from the criminal offense.