Castillo Et - Al Vs Balinghasay
Castillo Et - Al Vs Balinghasay
Castillo Et - Al Vs Balinghasay
DECISION
QUISUMBING, J.:
For review on certiorari is the Partial Judgment1 dated November 26, 2001 in Civil
Case No. 01-0140, of the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Parañaque City, Branch 258.
The trial court declared the February 9, 2001, election of the board of directors of the
Medical Center Parañaque, Inc. (MCPI) valid. The Partial Judgment dismissed
petitioners’ first cause of action, specifically, to annul said election for depriving
petitioners their voting rights and to be voted on as members of the board.
Petitioners and the respondents are stockholders of MCPI, with the former
holding Class "B" shares and the latter owning Class "A" shares.
MCPI is a domestic corporation with offices at Dr. A. Santos Avenue, Sucat, Parañaque
City. It was organized sometime in September 1977. At the time of its incorporation, Act
No. 1459, the old Corporation Law was still in force and effect. Article VII of MCPI’s
original Articles of Incorporation, as approved by the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) on October 26, 1977, reads as follows:
SEVENTH. That the authorized capital stock of the corporation is TWO MILLION
(₱2,000,000.00) PESOS, Philippine Currency, divided into TWO THOUSAND
(2,000) SHARES at a par value of ₱100 each share, whereby the ONE
THOUSAND SHARES issued to, and subscribed by, the incorporating
stockholders shall be classified as Class A shares while the other ONE
THOUSAND unissued shares shall be considered as Class B shares. Only
holders of Class A shares can have the right to vote and the right to be elected
as directors or as corporate officers.2 (Stress supplied)
On July 31, 1981, Article VII of the Articles of Incorporation of MCPI was amended, to
read thus:
SEVENTH. That the authorized capital stock of the corporation is FIVE MILLION
(₱5,000,000.00) PESOS, divided as follows:
Only holders of Class A shares have the right to vote and the right to be elected
as directors or as corporate officers.3 (Emphasis supplied)
The foregoing amendment was approved by the SEC on June 7, 1983. While the
amendment granted the right to vote and to be elected as directors or corporate officers
only to holders of Class "A" shares, holders of Class "B" stocks were granted the same
rights and privileges as holders of Class "A" stocks with respect to the payment of
dividends.
SEVENTH: That the authorized capital stock of the corporation is THIRTY TWO
MILLION PESOS (P32,000,000.00) divided as follows:
Except when otherwise provided by law, only holders of Class "A" shares have
the right to vote and the right to be elected as directors or as corporate
officers4 (Stress and underscoring supplied).
On February 9, 2001, the shareholders of MCPI held their annual stockholders’ meeting
and election for directors. During the course of the proceedings, respondent Rustico
Jimenez, citing Article VII, as amended, and notwithstanding MCPI’s history, declared
over the objections of herein petitioners, that no Class "B" shareholder was qualified to
run or be voted upon as a director. In the past, MCPI had seen holders of Class "B"
shares voted for and serve as members of the corporate board and some Class "B"
share owners were in fact nominated for election as board members. Nonetheless,
Jimenez went on to announce that the candidates holding Class "A" shares were the
winners of all seats in the corporate board. The petitioners protested, claiming that
Article VII was null and void for depriving them, as Class "B" shareholders, of their right
to vote and to be voted upon, in violation of the Corporation Code (Batas Pambansa
Blg. 68), as amended.
On March 22, 2001, after their protest was given short shrift, herein petitioners filed a
Complaint for Injunction, Accounting and Damages, docketed as Civil Case No. CV-01-
0140 before the RTC of Parañaque City, Branch 258. Said complaint was founded on
two (2) principal causes of action, namely:
Before the trial court, the herein petitioners alleged that they were deprived of their right
to vote and to be voted on as directors at the annual stockholders’ meeting held on
February 9, 2001, because respondents had erroneously relied on Article VII of the
Articles of Incorporation of MCPI, despite Article VII being contrary to the Corporation
Code, thus null and void. Additionally, respondents were in estoppel, because in the
past, petitioners were allowed to vote and to be elected as members of the board. They
further claimed that the privilege granted to the Class "A" shareholders was more in the
nature of a right granted to founder’s shares.
In their Answer, the respondents averred that the provisions of Article VII clearly and
categorically state that only holders of Class "A" shares have the exclusive right to vote
and be elected as directors and officers of the corporation. They denied that the
exclusivity was intended only as a privilege granted to founder’s shares, as no such
proviso is found in the Articles of Incorporation. The respondents further claimed that
the exclusivity of the right granted to Class "A" holders cannot be defeated or impaired
by any subsequent legislative enactment, e.g. the New Corporation Code, as the
Articles of Incorporation is an intra-corporate contract between the corporation and its
members; between the corporation and its stockholders; and among the stockholders.
They submit that to allow Class "B" shareholders to vote and be elected as directors
would constitute a violation of MCPI’s franchise or charter as granted by the State.
At the pre-trial, the trial court ruled that a partial judgment could be rendered on the first
cause of action and required the parties to submit their respective position papers or
memoranda.
On November 26, 2001, the RTC rendered the Partial Judgment, the dispositive portion
of which reads:
WHEREFORE, viewed in the light of the foregoing, the election held on February
9, 2001 is VALID as the holders of CLASS "B" shares are not entitled to vote and
be voted for and this case based on the First Cause of Action is DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.6
In finding for the respondents, the trial court ruled that corporations had the power to
classify their shares of stocks, such as "voting and non-voting" shares, conformably with
Section 67 of the Corporation Code of the Philippines. It pointed out that Article VII of
both the original and amended Articles of Incorporation clearly provided that only Class
"A" shareholders could vote and be voted for to the exclusion of Class "B" shareholders,
the exception being in instances provided by law, such as those enumerated in Section
6, paragraph 6 of the Corporation Code. The RTC found merit in the respondents’
theory that the Articles of Incorporation, which defines the rights and limitations of all its
shareholders, is a contract between MCPI and its shareholders. It is thus the law
between the parties and should be strictly enforced as to them. It brushed aside the
petitioners’ claim that the Class "A" shareholders were in estoppel, as the election of
Class "B" shareholders to the corporate board may be deemed as a mere act of
benevolence on the part of the officers. Finally, the court brushed aside the "founder’s
shares" theory of the petitioners for lack of factual basis.
Hence, this petition submitting the sole legal issue of whether or not the Court a quo, in
rendering the Partial Judgment dated November 26, 2001, has decided a question of
substance in a way not in accord with law and jurisprudence considering that:
1. Under the Corporation Code, the exclusive voting right and right to be voted
granted by the Articles of Incorporation of the MCPI to Class A shareholders is
null and void, or already extinguished;
2. Hence, the declaration of directors made during the February 9, 2001 Annual
Stockholders’ Meeting on the basis of the purported exclusive voting rights is null
and void for having been done without the benefit of an election and in violation
of the rights of plaintiffs and Class B shareholders; and
The issue for our resolution is whether or not holders of Class "B" shares of the MCPI
may be deprived of the right to vote and be voted for as directors in MCPI.
Before us, petitioners assert that Article VII of the Articles of Incorporation of MCPI,
which denied them voting rights, is null and void for being contrary to Section 6 of the
Corporation Code. They point out that Section 6 prohibits the deprivation of voting rights
except as to preferred and redeemable shares only. Hence, under the present law on
corporations, all shareholders, regardless of classification, other than holders of
preferred or redeemable shares, are entitled to vote and to be elected as corporate
directors or officers. Since the Class "B" shareholders are not classified as holders of
either preferred or redeemable shares, then it necessarily follows that they are entitled
to vote and to be voted for as directors or officers.
The respondents, in turn, maintain that the grant of exclusive voting rights to Class "A"
shares is clearly provided in the Articles of Incorporation and is in accord with Section
59 of the Corporation Law (Act No. 1459), which was the prevailing law when MCPI was
incorporated in 1977. They likewise submit that as the Articles of Incorporation of MCPI
is in the nature of a contract between the corporation and its shareholders and Section
6 of the Corporation Code could not retroactively apply to it without violating the non-
impairment clause10 of the Constitution.
When Article VII of the Articles of Incorporation of MCPI was amended in 1992, the
phrase "except when otherwise provided by law" was inserted in the provision
governing the grant of voting powers to Class "A" shareholders. This particular
amendment is relevant for it speaks of a law providing for exceptions to the exclusive
grant of voting rights to Class "A" stockholders. Which law was the amendment referring
to? The determination of which law to apply is necessary. There are two laws being
cited and relied upon by the parties in this case. In this instance, the law in force at the
time of the 1992 amendment was the Corporation Code (B.P. Blg. 68), not the
Corporation Law (Act No. 1459), which had been repealed by then.
We find and so hold that the law referred to in the amendment to Article VII refers to the
Corporation Code and no other law. At the time of the incorporation of MCPI in 1977,
the right of a corporation to classify its shares of stock was sanctioned by Section 5 of
Act No. 1459. The law repealing Act No. 1459, B.P. Blg. 68, retained the same grant of
right of classification of stock shares to corporations, but with a significant change.
Under Section 6 of B.P. Blg. 68, the requirements and restrictions on voting rights were
explicitly provided for, such that "no share may be deprived of voting rights except those
classified and issued as "preferred" or "redeemable" shares, unless otherwise provided
in this Code" and that "there shall always be a class or series of shares which have
complete voting rights." Section 6 of the Corporation Code being deemed written into
Article VII of the Articles of Incorporation of MCPI, it necessarily follows that unless
Class "B" shares of MCPI stocks are clearly categorized to be "preferred" or
"redeemable" shares, the holders of said Class "B" shares may not be deprived of their
voting rights. Note that there is nothing in the Articles of Incorporation nor an iota of
evidence on record to show that Class "B" shares were categorized as either "preferred"
or "redeemable" shares. The only possible conclusion is that Class "B" shares fall under
neither category and thus, under the law, are allowed to exercise voting rights.
One of the rights of a stockholder is the right to participate in the control and
management of the corporation that is exercised through his vote. The right to vote is a
right inherent in and incidental to the ownership of corporate stock, and as such is a
property right. The stockholder cannot be deprived of the right to vote his stock nor may
the right be essentially impaired, either by the legislature or by the corporation, without
his consent, through amending the charter, or the by-laws.11
Neither do we find merit in respondents’ position that Section 6 of the Corporation Code
cannot apply to MCPI without running afoul of the non-impairment clause of the Bill of
Rights. Section 14812 of the Corporation Code expressly provides that it shall apply to
corporations in existence at the time of the effectivity of the Code. Hence, the non-
impairment clause is inapplicable in this instance. When Article VII of the Articles of
Incorporation of MCPI were amended in 1992, the board of directors and stockholders
must have been aware of Section 6 of the Corporation Code and intended that Article
VII be construed in harmony with the Code, which was then already in force and effect.
Since Section 6 of the Corporation Code expressly prohibits the deprivation of voting
rights, except as to "preferred" and "redeemable" shares, then Article VII of the Articles
of Incorporation cannot be construed as granting exclusive voting rights to Class "A"
shareholders, to the prejudice of Class "B" shareholders, without running afoul of the
letter and spirit of the Corporation Code.
The respondents then take the tack that the phrase "except when otherwise provided by
law" found in the amended Articles is only a handwritten insertion and could have been
inserted by anybody and that no board resolution was ever passed authorizing or
approving said amendment.
Said contention is not for this Court to pass upon, involving as it does a factual question,
which is not proper in this petition. In an appeal via certiorari, only questions of law may
be reviewed.13 Besides, respondents did not adduce persuasive evidence, but only bare
allegations, to support their suspicion. The presumption that in the amendment process,
the ordinary course of business has been followed14 and that official duty has been
regularly performed15on the part of the SEC, applies in this case.
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The Partial Judgment dated November 26,
2001 of the Regional Trial Court of Parañaque City, Branch 258, in Civil Case No. 01-
0140 is REVERSED AND SET ASIDE. No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
LEONARDO A. QUISUMBING
Footnotes
* On Leave.
Shares of capital stock issued without par value shall be deemed fully paid
and non-assessable and the holder of such shares shall not be liable to
the corporation or to its creditors in respect thereto: Provided, That shares
without par value may not be issued for a consideration less than the
value of five (₱5.00) pesos per share; Provided, further, That the entire
consideration received by the corporation for its no-par value shares shall
be treated as capital and shall not be available for distribution as
dividends.
A corporation may, furthermore, classify its shares for the purpose of
insuring compliance with constitutional or legal requirements.
The entire consideration received by the corporation for its no-par value
shares shall be treated as capital, and shall not be available for
distribution as dividends.
10THE 1987 CONSTITUTION OF THE REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES,
Article III.