Republic of the
Supreme Court
THIRD DIVISION
PHILIP
TURNER and ELNORA TURNER, Petitioners, -versus
- LORENZO SHIPPING CORPORATION, Respondent. |
G.R. No. 157479 Present: CARPIO MORALES, Chairperson, BRION, BERSAMIN, VILLARAMA, JR., and ARANAL-SERENO, JJ. Promulgated: November 24, 2010 |
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D E C I S I O N
BERSAMIN, J.:
This case concerns the right of
dissenting stockholders to demand payment of the value of their shareholdings.
In the stockholders’ suit to recover the value of their shareholdings
from the corporation, the Regional Trial Court (RTC) upheld the dissenting
stockholders, herein petitioners, and ordered the corporation, herein respondent,
to pay. Execution was partially carried out against the respondent. On the
respondent’s petition for certiorari,
however, the Court of Appeals (CA) corrected the RTC and dismissed the
petitioners’ suit on the ground that their cause of action for collection had
not yet accrued due to the lack of unrestricted retained earnings in the books
of the respondent.
Thus, the petitioners are now before the Court to challenge the CA’s
decision promulgated on
Antecedents
The petitioners held 1,010,000 shares of stock
of the respondent, a domestic corporation engaged primarily in cargo shipping
activities. In June
1999, the respondent decided to amend its articles of incorporation to remove the
stockholders’ pre-emptive rights to newly issued shares of stock. Feeling that
the corporate move would be prejudicial to their interest as stockholders, the petitioners
voted against the amendment and demanded payment of their shares at the rate of
P2.276/share based on the book value of the shares, or a total of P2,298,760.00.
The respondent found the fair value of
the shares demanded by the petitioners unacceptable. It insisted that the
market value on the date before the action to remove the pre-emptive right was
taken should be the value, or P0.41/share (or a total of P414,100.00),
considering that its shares were listed in the Philippine Stock Exchange, and
that the payment could be made only if the respondent had unrestricted retained
earnings in its books to cover the value of the shares, which was not the case.
The disagreement on the valuation of
the shares led the parties to constitute an appraisal committee pursuant to
Section 82 of the Corporation Code,
each of them nominating a representative, who together then nominated the third
member who would be chairman of the appraisal committee. Thus, the appraisal
committee came to be made up of Reynaldo Yatco, the petitioners’ nominee; Atty.
Antonio Acyatan, the respondent’s nominee; and Leo Anoche of the Asian Appraisal Company, Inc., the
third member/chairman.
On P2.54/share, for an
aggregate value of P2,565,400.00 for the petitioners.[2]
Subsequently, the petitioners demanded payment based on the valuation of
the appraisal committee, plus 2%/month penalty from the date of their original
demand for payment, as well as the reimbursement of the amounts advanced as
professional fees to the appraisers.[3]
In
its letter to the petitioners dated January 2, 2001,[4]
the respondent refused the petitioners’ demand, explaining that pursuant to the
Corporation Code, the dissenting
stockholders exercising their appraisal rights could be paid only when the
corporation had unrestricted retained earnings to cover the fair value of the
shares, but that it had no retained earnings at the time of the petitioners’ demand,
as borne out by its Financial Statements for Fiscal Year 1999 showing a deficit
of P72,973,114.00 as of December
31, 1999.
Upon
the respondent’s refusal to pay, the petitioners sued the respondent for collection
and damages in the RTC in
On
7) xxx the defendant has
an accumulated unrestricted retained earnings of ELEVEN MILLION NINE HUNDRED
SEVENTY FIVE THOUSAND FOUR HUNDRED NINETY (P11,975,490.00) PESOS, Philippine
Currency, evidenced by its Financial Statement as of the Quarter Ending March
31, 2002; xxx
8) xxx the fair value of the shares of the
petitioners as fixed by the Appraisal Committee is final, that the same cannot
be disputed xxx
9) xxx there is no genuine issue to material fact
and therefore, the plaintiffs are entitled, as a matter of right, to a summary
judgment. xxx [6]
The
respondent opposed the motion for partial
summary judgment, stating that the determination of the unrestricted
retained earnings should be made at the end of the fiscal year of the
respondent, and that the petitioners did not have a cause of action against the
respondent.
During the pendency of the motion for partial summary judgment, however,
the Presiding Judge of Branch 133 transmitted the records to the Clerk of Court
for re-raffling to any of the RTC’s special commercial courts in
Nevertheless, because the principal office of the respondent was in
Manila, Civil Case No. 01-086 was
ultimately transferred to Branch 46 of the RTC in Manila, presided by Judge
Artemio Tipon,[7] pursuant
to the Interim Rules of Procedure on
Intra-Corporate Controversies (Interim Rules) requiring intra-corporate
cases to be brought in the RTC exercising jurisdiction over the place where the
principal office of the corporation was found.
After
the conference in Civil Case No. 01-086
set on
As to the motion for partial summary judgment, there is no
question that the 3-man committee mandated to appraise the shareholdings of
plaintiff submitted its recommendation on
“The findings of the majority of the appraisers shall be final, and the award shall be paid by the corporation within thirty (30) days after the award is made.”
“The only restriction imposed by the Corporation Code is–”
“That no payment shall be made to any dissenting stockholder unless the corporation has unrestricted retained earning in its books to cover such payment.”
The evidence submitted by plaintiffs shows that in its
quarterly financial statement it submitted to the Securities and Exchange
Commission, the defendant has retained earnings of P11,975,490 as of
This certainly is a very narrow concept of the appraisal right of a stockholder. The law does not say that the unrestricted retained earnings must exist at the time of the demand. Even if there are no retained earnings at the time the demand is made if there are retained earnings later, the fair value of such stocks must be paid. The only restriction is that there must be sufficient funds to cover the creditors after the dissenting stockholder is paid. No such allegations have been made by the defendant.[9]
On
On the scheduled hearing of the motion
for reconsideration on
Subsequently, on
Aggrieved,
the respondent commenced a special civil action for certiorari in the CA to challenge the two aforecited orders of Judge
Tipon, claiming that:
A.
JUDGE TIPON GRAVELY ABUSED HIS DISCRETION IN GRANTING SUMMARY JUDGMENT TO THE SPOUSES TURNER, BECAUSE AT THE TIME THE “COMPLAINT” WAS FILED, LSC HAD NO RETAINED EARNINGS, AND THUS WAS COMPLYING WITH THE LAW, AND NOT VIOLATING ANY RIGHTS OF THE SPOUSES TURNER, WHEN IT REFUSED TO PAY THEM THE VALUE OF THEIR LSC SHARES. ANY RETAINED EARNINGS MADE A YEAR AFTER THE “COMPLAINT” WAS FILED ARE IRRELEVANT TO THE SPOUSES TURNER’S RIGHT TO RECOVER UNDER THE “COMPLAINT”, BECAUSE THE WELL-SETTLED RULE, REPEATEDLY BROUGHT TO JUDGE TIPON’S ATTENTION, IS “IF NO RIGHT EXISTED AT THE TIME (T)HE ACTION WAS COMMENCED THE SUIT CANNOT BE MAINTAINED, ALTHOUGH SUCH RIGHT OF ACTION MAY HAVE ACCRUED THEREAFTER.
B.
JUDGE
TIPON IGNORED CONTROLLING CASE LAW, AND THUS GRAVELY ABUSED HIS DISCRETION,
WHEN HE GRANTED AND ISSUED THE QUESTIONED “WRIT OF EXECUTION” DIRECTING THE
EXECUTION OF HIS PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT IN FAVOR OF THE SPOUSES TURNER,
BECAUSE THAT JUDGMENT IS NOT A FINAL JUDGMENT UNDER SECTION 1 OF RULE 39 OF THE
RULES OF COURT AND THEREFORE CANNOT BE SUBJECT OF EXECUTION UNDER THE SUPREME
COURT’S CATEGORICAL HOLDING IN PROVINCE OF PANGASINAN VS. COURT OF APPEALS.
Upon the respondent’s application, the CA issued a temporary restraining
order (TRO), enjoining the petitioners, and their agents and representatives
from enforcing the writ of execution.
By then, however, the writ of execution
had been partially enforced.
The TRO lapsed without the CA issuing a writ of preliminary injunction to
prevent the execution. Thereupon, the sheriff resumed the enforcement of the writ of execution.
The CA promulgated its assailed decision on
However, it is clear from the foregoing that the Turners’ appraisal right is subject to the legal condition that no payment shall be made to any dissenting stockholder unless the corporation has unrestricted retained earnings in its books to cover such payment. Thus, the Supreme Court held that:
The requirement of unrestricted retained earnings to cover the shares is based on the trust fund doctrine which means that the capital stock, property and other assets of a corporation are regarded as equity in trust for the payment of corporate creditors. The reason is that creditors of a corporation are preferred over the stockholders in the distribution of corporate assets. There can be no distribution of assets among the stockholders without first paying corporate creditors. Hence, any disposition of corporate funds to the prejudice of creditors is null and void. Creditors of a corporation have the right to assume that so long as there are outstanding debts and liabilities, the board of directors will not use the assets of the corporation to purchase its own stock.
In the instant case, it was established that there were no
unrestricted retained earnings when the Turners filed their Complaint. In a letter dated P72,973,114.00, a matter which has not been disputed by
private respondents. Hence, in
accordance with the second paragraph of sec. 82, BP 68 supra, the Turners’ right to payment had not yet accrued when they
filed their Complaint on
In Philippine American General Insurance Co. Inc. vs. Sweet Lines, Inc., the Supreme Court declared that:
Now, before an action can properly be commenced all the essential elements of the cause of action must be in existence, that is, the cause of action must be complete. All valid conditions precedent to the institution of the particular action, whether prescribed by statute, fixed by agreement of the parties or implied by law must be performed or complied with before commencing the action, unless the conduct of the adverse party has been such as to prevent or waive performance or excuse non-performance of the condition.
It bears restating that a right of action is the right to presently enforce a cause of action, while a cause of action consists of the operative facts which give rise to such right of action. The right of action does not arise until the performance of all conditions precedent to the action and may be taken away by the running of the statute of limitations, through estoppel, or by other circumstances which do not affect the cause of action. Performance or fulfillment of all conditions precedent upon which a right of action depends must be sufficiently alleged, considering that the burden of proof to show that a party has a right of action is upon the person initiating the suit.
The Turners’ right of action arose only when petitioner had
already retained earnings in the amount of P11,975,490.00 on
In the doctrinal case of Surigao Mine Exploration Co. Inc., vs. Harris, the Supreme Court ruled:
Subject to certain qualifications, and except as otherwise provided by law, an action commenced before the cause of action has accrued is prematurely brought and should be dismissed. The fact that the cause of action accrues after the action is commenced and while it is pending is of no moment. It is a rule of law to which there is, perhaps, no exception, either at law or in equity, that to recover at all there must be some cause of action at the commencement of the suit. There are reasons of public policy why there should be no needless haste in bringing up litigation, and why people who are in no default and against whom there is as yet no cause of action should not be summoned before the public tribunals to answer complaints which are groundless. An action prematurely brought is a groundless suit. Unless the plaintiff has a valid and subsisting cause of action at the time his action is commenced, the defect cannot be cured or remedied by the acquisition or accrual of one while the action is pending, and a supplemental complaint or an amendment setting up such after-accrued cause of action is not permissible.
The afore-quoted ruling was reiterated in Young vs Court of Appeals and Lao vs. Court of Appeals.
The Turners’ apprehension that their claim for payment may prescribe if they wait for the petitioner to have unrestricted retained earnings is misplaced. It is the legal possibility of bringing the action that determines the starting point for the computation of the period of prescription. Stated otherwise, the prescriptive period is to be reckoned from the accrual of their right of action.
Accordingly, We hold that public respondent exceeded its jurisdiction when it entertained the herein Complaint and issued the assailed Orders. Excess of jurisdiction is the state of being beyond or outside the limits of jurisdiction, and as distinguished from the entire absence of jurisdiction, means that the act although within the general power of the judge, is not authorized and therefore void, with respect to the particular case, because the conditions which authorize the exercise of his general power in that particular case are wanting, and hence, the judicial power is not in fact lawfully invoked.
We find no necessity to discuss the second ground raised in this petition.
WHEREFORE, upon the premises, the petition is GRANTED. The assailed Orders and the corresponding Writs of Garnishment are NULLIFIED. Civil Case No. 02-104692 is hereby ordered DISMISSED without prejudice to refiling by the private respondents of the action for enforcement of their right to payment as withdrawing stockholders.
SO ORDERED.
The petitioners now come to the Court for a review on certiorari of the CA’s decision,
submitting that:
I.
THE COURT OF APPEALS COMMITTED SERIOUS ERRORS OF LAW WHEN IT GRANTED THE PETITION FOR CERTIORARI WHEN THE REGIONAL TRIAL COURT OF MANILA DID NOT ACT BEYOND ITS JURISDICTION AMOUNTING TO LACK OF JURISDICTION IN GRANTING THE MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND IN GRANTING THE MOTION FOR IMMEDIATE EXECUTION OF JUDGMENT;
II.
THE COURT OF APPEALS COMMITTED SERIOUS ERRORS OF LAW WHEN IT ORDERED THE DISMISSAL OF THE CASE, WHEN THE PETITION FOR CERTIORARI MERELY SOUGHT THE ANNULMENT OF THE ORDER GRANTING THE MOTION FOR PARTIAL SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND OF THE ORDER GRANTING THE MOTION FOR IMMEDIATE EXECUTION OF THE JUDGMENT;
III.
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS HAS DECIDED QUESTIONS OF SUBSTANCE NOT THEREFORE DETERMINED BY THIS HONORABLE COURT AND/OR DECIDED IT IN A WAY NOT IN ACCORD WITH LAW OR WITH JURISPRUDENCE.
Ruling
The petition fails.
The CA correctly concluded that the RTC had exceeded its jurisdiction in entertaining
the petitioners’ complaint in Civil Case
No. 01-086, and in rendering the summary judgment and issuing writ of
execution.
A.
Stockholder’s Right of Appraisal, In
General
A stockholder who dissents from certain corporate actions has the right
to demand payment of the fair value of his or her shares. This right, known as
the right of appraisal, is expressly recognized in Section 81 of the Corporation Code, to wit:
Section
81. Instances of appraisal right. - Any stockholder of a corporation shall have the right to
dissent and demand payment of the fair value of his shares in the following
instances:
1. In case any amendment to the
articles of incorporation has the effect of changing or restricting the rights
of any stockholder or class of shares, or of authorizing preferences in any
respect superior to those of outstanding shares of any class, or of extending
or shortening the term of corporate existence;
2. In case of sale, lease,
exchange, transfer, mortgage, pledge or other disposition of all or
substantially all of the corporate property and assets as provided in the Code;
and
3. In case of merger or
consolidation. (n)
Clearly, the right of appraisal may be exercised when there is a
fundamental change in the charter or articles of incorporation substantially
prejudicing the rights of the stockholders. It does not vest unless
objectionable corporate action is taken.[13] It serves the purpose of enabling
the dissenting stockholder to have his interests purchased and to retire from
the corporation.[14]
Under the common law, there were originally
conflicting views on whether a corporation had the power to acquire or purchase
its own stocks. In
Now,
however, a corporation can purchase its own shares, provided payment is made out of surplus profits and the
acquisition is for a legitimate corporate purpose.[18] In the
Section 41. Power to acquire own shares. - A stock corporation shall have the power to purchase or
acquire its own shares for a legitimate corporate purpose or purposes,
including but not limited to the following cases: Provided, That the
corporation has unrestricted retained earnings in its books to cover the shares
to be purchased or acquired:
1.
To eliminate
fractional shares arising out of stock dividends;
2. To collect or compromise an
indebtedness to the corporation, arising out of unpaid subscription, in a
delinquency sale, and to purchase delinquent shares sold during said sale; and
3. To pay dissenting or
withdrawing stockholders entitled to payment for their shares under the
provisions of this Code. (n)
The Corporation Code defines how
the right of appraisal is exercised, as well as the implications of the right
of appraisal, as follows:
1. The appraisal right is exercised by any stockholder who
has voted against the proposed corporate action by making a written demand on
the corporation within 30 days after the date on which the vote was taken for
the payment of the fair value of his shares. The failure to make the demand
within the period is deemed a waiver of the appraisal right.[19]
2. If the withdrawing stockholder and the corporation
cannot agree on the fair value of the shares within a period of 60 days from
the date the stockholders approved the corporate action, the fair value shall
be determined and appraised by three disinterested persons, one of whom shall be
named by the stockholder, another by the corporation, and the third by the two
thus chosen. The findings and award of the majority of the appraisers shall be
final, and the corporation shall pay their award within 30 days after the award
is made. Upon payment by the corporation of the agreed or awarded price, the
stockholder shall forthwith transfer his or her shares to the corporation.[20]
3. All rights accruing to the withdrawing stockholder’s
shares, including voting and dividend rights, shall be suspended from the time
of demand for the payment of the fair value of the shares until either the
abandonment of the corporate action involved or the purchase of the shares by
the corporation, except the right of such stockholder to receive payment of the
fair value of the shares.[21]
4. Within 10 days after demanding payment for his or her shares,
a dissenting stockholder shall submit to the corporation the certificates of
stock representing his shares for notation thereon that such shares are
dissenting shares. A failure to do so shall, at the option of the corporation,
terminate his rights under this Title X of the Corporation Code. If shares represented
by the certificates bearing such notation are transferred, and the certificates
are consequently canceled, the rights of the transferor as a dissenting
stockholder under this Title shall cease and the transferee shall have all the
rights of a regular stockholder; and all dividend distributions that would have
accrued on such shares shall be paid to the transferee.[22]
5. If the proposed corporate action is implemented or
effected, the corporation shall pay to such stockholder, upon the surrender of
the certificates of stock representing his shares, the fair value thereof as of
the day prior to the date on which the vote was taken, excluding any
appreciation or depreciation in anticipation of such corporate action.[23]
Notwithstanding the foregoing, no payment shall be made to any dissenting
stockholder unless the corporation has unrestricted retained earnings in its
books to cover the payment. In case the corporation has no available
unrestricted retained earnings in its books, Section 83 of the Corporation Code provides that if the
dissenting stockholder is not paid the value of his shares within 30 days after
the award, his voting and dividend rights shall immediately be restored.
The
trust fund doctrine backstops the requirement of unrestricted retained
earnings to fund the payment of the shares of stocks of the withdrawing
stockholders. Under the doctrine, the capital stock, property, and other assets
of a corporation are regarded as equity in trust for the payment of corporate
creditors, who are preferred in the distribution of corporate assets.[24] The creditors of a corporation have
the right to assume that the board of directors will not use the assets of the
corporation to purchase its own stock for as long as the corporation has
outstanding debts and liabilities.[25] There can be no distribution of
assets among the stockholders without first paying corporate debts. Thus, any
disposition of corporate funds and assets to the prejudice of creditors is null
and void.[26]
B.
Petitioners’ cause of action was
premature
That the respondent had indisputably
no unrestricted retained earnings in its books at the time the petitioners
commenced Civil Case No. 01-086 on
January 22, 2001 proved that the respondent’s legal obligation to pay the value
of the petitioners’ shares did not yet arise. Thus, the CA did not err in holding that the petitioners
had no cause of action, and in
ruling that the RTC did not validly render the partial summary judgment.
A cause of action is the act or
omission by which a party violates a right of another.[27] The essential elements of a cause of
action are: (a) the existence of a
legal right in favor of the plaintiff; (b)
a correlative legal duty of the defendant to respect such right; and (c) an act or omission by such defendant
in violation of the right of the plaintiff with a resulting injury or damage to
the plaintiff for which the latter may maintain an action for the recovery of
relief from the defendant.[28] Although the first two elements may
exist, a cause of action arises only upon the occurrence of the last element,
giving the plaintiff the right to maintain an action in court for recovery of
damages or other appropriate relief.[29]
Section 1, Rule 2, of the Rules of Court requires that every
ordinary civil action must be based on a cause of action. Accordingly, Civil Case No. 01-086 was dismissible from
the beginning for being without any cause of action.
The RTC concluded that the respondent’s
obligation to pay had accrued by its having the unrestricted retained earnings
after the making of the demand by the petitioners. It based its conclusion on
the fact that the Corporation Code
did not provide that the unrestricted retained earnings must already exist at the time of the demand.
The RTC’s construal of the Corporation
Code was unsustainable, because it
did not take into account the petitioners’ lack of a cause of action
against the respondent. In order to give rise to any obligation to pay on the
part of the respondent, the petitioners should first make a valid demand that the
respondent refused to pay despite having unrestricted retained earnings. Otherwise,
the respondent could not be said to be guilty of any actionable omission that
could sustain their action to collect.
Neither did the subsequent existence
of unrestricted retained earnings after the filing of the complaint cure the lack
of cause of action in Civil Case No.
01-086. The petitioners’ right of action could only spring from an existing cause of action. Thus, a
complaint whose cause of action has not yet accrued cannot be cured by an
amended or supplemental pleading alleging the existence or accrual of a cause
of action during the pendency of the action.[30]
For, only when there is an
invasion of primary rights, not before, does the adjective or remedial law
become operative.[31] Verily, a premature invocation of the
court’s intervention renders the complaint without a cause of action and
dismissible on such ground.[32] In short, Civil Case No. 01-086, being a groundless suit, should be
dismissed.
Even the fact that the respondent
already had unrestricted retained earnings more than sufficient to cover the petitioners’
claims on June 26, 2002 (when they filed their motion for partial summary judgment) did not rectify the absence of the cause of action at the time of
the commencement of Civil Case No.
01-086. The motion for partial
summary judgment, being a mere application for relief other than by a
pleading,[33] was not the same as the complaint in Civil Case No. 01-086. Thereby, the petitioners did not meet
the requirement of the Rules of Court
that a cause of action must exist at the commencement of an action, which is “commenced
by the filing of the original complaint in court.”[34]
The petitioners claim that the respondent’s petition for certiorari sought only the annulment of
the assailed orders of the RTC (i.e.,
granting the motion for partial summary
judgment and the motion for immediate
execution); hence, the CA had no right to direct the dismissal of Civil Case No. 01-086.
The
claim of the petitioners cannot stand.
Although the respondent’s petition for
certiorari targeted only the RTC’s
orders granting the motion for partial
summary judgment and the motion for
immediate execution, the CA’s directive for the dismissal of Civil Case No. 01-086 was not an abuse of
discretion, least of all grave, because such dismissal was the only proper
thing to be done under the circumstances. According to Surigao Mine
Exploration Co., Inc. v. Harris:[35]
Subject to certain qualification, and except as otherwise provided by law, an action commenced before the cause of action has accrued is prematurely brought and should be dismissed. The fact that the cause of action accrues after the action is commenced and while the case is pending is of no moment. It is a rule of law to which there is, perhaps no exception, either in law or in equity, that to recover at all there must be some cause of action at the commencement of the suit. There are reasons of public policy why there should be no needless haste in bringing up litigation, and why people who are in no default and against whom there is as yet no cause of action should not be summoned before the public tribunals to answer complaints which are groundless. An action prematurely brought is a groundless suit. Unless the plaintiff has a valid and subsisting cause of action at the time his action is commenced, the defect cannot be cured or remedied by the acquisition or accrual of one while the action is pending, and a supplemental complaint or an amendment setting up such after-accrued cause of action is not permissible.
Lastly, the petitioners argue that the
respondent’s recourse of a special action for certiorari was the wrong remedy,
in view of the fact that the granting of the motion for partial summary judgment constituted only an error of
law correctible by appeal, not of jurisdiction.
The argument of the petitioners is baseless.
The RTC was guilty of an error of jurisdiction, for it exceeded its
jurisdiction by taking cognizance of the complaint that was not based on an
existing cause of action.
WHEREFORE,
the petition for review on certiorari
is denied for lack of merit.
We affirm the decision promulgated on
Costs of suit to be paid by the petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
LUCAS P. BERSAMIN
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES
Associate Justice
Chairperson
ARTURO D. BRION
MARTIN S. VILLARAMA, JR.
Associate Justice Associate Justice
MARIA
Associate Justice
A T T E S T A T I O N
I
attest that the conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in
consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the
Court’s Division.
CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES
Associate Justice
Chairperson
C E R T I F I C A T I O N
Pursuant
to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, and the Division Chairperson’s
Attestation, I certify that the conclusions in the above Decision had been
reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the
opinion of the Court’s Division.
RENATO C. CORONA
Chief Justice
[1] Rollo, pp. 20-35; penned by Associate
Justice Portia Aliño-Hormachuelos, with Associate Justice Jose L. Sabio, Jr.
(retired) and Associate Justice Amelita G. Tolentino concurring.
[2]
[3]
[4]
[5]
[6]
[7] Already
retired.
[8] Rollo, pp. 91-93.
[9]
[10]
[11]
[12]
[13] 18 CJS, Corporations, §314, pp. 641-642.
[14] Ibid.
[15] Ballantine, Law of Corporations, Revised Edition,
Callaghan and Co.,
[16]
[17]
[18] II Campos Jr., The Corporation Code,
Comments, Notes and Selected Cases (1990).
[19] Section 82, Corporation Code.
[20] Ibid.
[21]
[22]
[23]
[24] Boman
Environment Development Corporation v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. L-77860,
According to 42A, Words and Phrases, Trust Fund Doctrine, p. 445, the “trust fund doctrine” is a “rule
that the property of a corporation is a trust fund for the payment of
creditors, but such property can be called a trust fund ‘only by way of analogy
or metaphor.’ As between the corporation itself and its creditors it is a
simple debtor, and as between its creditors and stockholders its assets are in
equity a fund for the payment of its debts” (citing McIver v. Young Hardware Co., 57 S.E. 169, 171, 144 N.C. 478, 119
Am. St. Rep. 970; Gallagher v. Asphalt
Co. of America, 55 A. 259, 262, 65 N.J. Eq. 258).
[25] Boman Environment Development Corporation
v. Court of Appeals, supra.
[26]
[27] Section 2, Rule 2, Rules of Court.
[28] Rebollido v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No.
81123, February 28, 1989, 170 SCRA 800; Heirs
of Ildefonso Coscolluela v. Rico General Insurance Corporation, G.R. No.
84628, November 16, 1989, 179 SCRA 511; Nabus
v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 91670, February 7, 1990, 193 SCRA 732;Mathay v. Consolidated Bank, G.R. No.
L-23136,
[29] Swagman
Hotels and Travel, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 161135, April 8, 2005, 455 SCRA 175.
[30] Lao
v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 47013,
[31]
[32] Estrada
v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 137862,
[33] Section
1, Rule 15, Rules of Court.
[34] Section
5, Rule 1, Rules of Court; A.G. Development Corporation v. Court of
Appeals, G.R. No. 111662,
October 23, 1997, 281 SCRA 155.
[35] 68 Phil 113 (1939).