Benguet Consolidated Mining Vs Pineda
Benguet Consolidated Mining Vs Pineda
Benguet Consolidated Mining Vs Pineda
PINEDA
[ GR No. L-7231, Mar 28, 1956 ]
DECISION
The petitioner, the Benguet Consolidated Mining Co. (hereafter termed "Benguet" for short), was
organized on June 24, 1903, as a sociedad anonima regulated by Articles 151 et seq, of the Spanish Code of
Commerce of 1886, then in force in the Philippines. The articles of association expressly provided that it
was organized for a term of fifty (50) years. In 1906, the governing Philippine Commission enacted Act
1469, commonly known as the Corporation Law, establishing in the islands the American type of juridical
entities known as corporation, to take effect on April 1, 1906. of its enactment, this Court said in its decision
in Harden vs. Benguet Consolidated Mining Co., 58 Phil., 141, at pp. 145-146, and 147:
"When the Philippine Islands passed to the sovereignty of the United States, the attention of the Philippine
Commission was early .drawn to the fact there is no entity in Spanish law exactly corresponding to the motion
of the corporation in English' and American law; and in the Philippine Bill, approved July 1, 1906, the
Congress of the United States inserted certain provisions, under the head of Franchises, which "were
intended to control the Lawmaking power in the Philippine Islands in the matter of granting of franchises,
privileges and concessions. These provisions are found in sections 74 and 75 of the Act, The provisions
of section 74 have been superseded' by section 28 of the Act of Congress of August 29, 1916, but in section
75 others is a provision referring to mining corporations, which still remains the law, as amended. This
provision, in its original form, reads as follows: * * * it shall be unlawful, for any member of a corporation
engaged in agriculture or mining; and for any corporation organized for any purpose except irrigation
to be in any wise interested in any other corporation engaged in agriculture or in mining.
Under the guidance of this and certain other provisions thus enacted by Congress, the Philippine
Commission entered upon the enactment of a general law authorizing the creation of corporations ' in the
Philippine Islands. This rather elaborate piece of legislation is embodied in what is called-our Corporation
Law (Act No. 1459 of the Philippine Commission). The evident purpose of the commission was to introduce
the American corporation into the Philippine Islands as the standard commercial entity and to hasten the
day when the sociedad anonima of the Spanish law would be obsolete. That statute is a sort of codification
of American corporate law."
"As it was the intention of our lawmakers to stimulate the introduction of the American corporation into
the Philippine law in the place . of the sociedad anonima, it was necessary to make certain adjustment
resulting from the continued co-existence, for a time, of the two forms of commercial entities.
Accordingly, in section 75 of the Corporation Law, a provision is found making the sociedad anonima
subject to the provisions of the Corporation Law 'so far as such provisions may be applicable and giving to
the sociedades anonimas previously created in the Islands the option to continue business as such or to
reform and organize under the provisions of the Corporation Law. Again, in section 191 of the Corporation
Law, the Code of Commerce is repealed in so far as it relates to sociedades anonimas. The purpose of the
commission in repealing this part of the Code of Commerce was :to compel commercial entities thereafter
organized to incorporate under the Corporation Law, unless they should prefer to adopt some form or
other of the partnership. To this provision was added" another to . the effect that existing sociedades
anonimas, which elected to continue their business as such, instead of reforming and reorganizing under
the Corporation Law, should continue to be governed by the laws that were in force prior to the passage of
this Act 'in relation to their organization and method of transacting business and to the rights of members
thereof as between themselves, but their relations to the public and public officials shall be governed by
the provisions of this Act.'"
Specifically, the two sections of Act No. 1459 referring to sociedades anonimas then already existing, provide
as follows:
"Sec, 75, Any corporation or a sociedad anonima formed, organized, and existing under the laws of the
Philippines on the date of the passage of this Act, shall be subject to" the provisions. hereof so far as
such 'provisions may be applicable and shall be entitled at its .option either to continue business as such
corporation or to reform and organize under and by virtue of the provisions of this Act, transferring all
corporate interests to the new corporation "which, if a stock corporation, is authorized to issue its shares
of stock at par to the stockholders or members of the old corporation according to. their interests."
"Sec. 191. The Code of Commerce, in so far as it relates to corporation or sociedades anonimas, and
all other Acts or parts of Acts in conflict or inconsistent with this Act, are hereby repealed. with the
exception of Act Numbered fifty-two, entitled An Act providing" for examinations of banking institutions,
in the Philippines, and for reports by their officers as amended, and Act Numbered 'Six hundred sixty-
seven, entitled An Act prescribing the method of applying to governments of municipalities, except the
city of Manila and of provinces for franchises to contract and operate street railway, electric light and
power and telephone lines, the conditions upon which the same maybe granted, certain powers of the
grantee of said franchises, and of grantees of similar franchises under special Act of the Commission,
and for other purposes.' Provided, however, That nothing in this Act contained shall be deemed to repeal
the existing law relating to those classes of associations which are termed sociedades colectivas, and
sociedades de cuentas en participation, as to which association the existing law shall be deemed to be still
in force; And provided further, That existing corporations or sociedades anonimas, lawfully organized as such,
which elect to continue their business as such sociedades anonimas instead of reforming and reorganizing
under and by' virtue of the provisions of this Act, shall continue to be governed by the laws that were
in force prior to the passage of this Act in relation to their organization and method of transacting business
and to the rights of members thereof as between themselves, but their relations to the public and
public officials.' shall be governed by the provisions of this Act."
As the expiration of its original- 50 year term of existence approached, the Board of Directors of Benguet
adopted in 1946 a resolution to extend its life for another 50 years from July 3, 1946 and submitted it for
registration.to the respondent Securities and Exchange Commissioner. Upon advice of the Secretary of
Justice (Op. No, 45, Ser. 1947) that such, extension was contrary to law, the registration was denied. The
matter was dropped, allegedly because the stockholders of Benguet did not approve of the Directors'
action.
Some six years later in 1953, the shareholders of Benguet adopted a resolution empowering the Director to
"effectuate the. extension of the Company's business life for not less than 20 and not more than 50 years,
and this by either (1) an amendment to the Articles of Association or Charter of this Company or (2) by
reforming and reorganizing the Company as a Philippine Corporation, or (3) by both or (4) -by any other
means." Accordingly, the , Board of Directors .on May 27, 1953, adopted a resolution to the following
effect
"Be It
Resolved, that the Company be reformed, reorganized and organized under the provisions of section 75 and
other provisions of the Philippine Corporation Law as a Philippine corporation with a corporate life and
corporate powers as set forth in the Articles of Incorporation attached hereto as Schedule 'I' and made a
part hereof by this reference; and
"Be It
'FURTHER RESOLVED, that any five, or more of the following share-holders of the Company be and they
hereby are authorized as instructed to act for and in behalf of the share holders of the Company and of
the Company as Incorporators in the reformation, reorganization and organization of the Company under
and in accordance with the provisions aforesaid of said Philippine Corporation Law, and in such capacity,
they are hereby authorized and instructed to execute the aforesaid . Articles of Incorporation attached to
these Minutes as Schedule T. hereof, with such amendments, deletion and additions thereto as any five or
more of those so acting shall deem necessary, proper, advisable or convenient to effect prompt registration
of said Articles under Philippine Law; and five or more of said Incorporators are hereby further authorized
and directed to do all things necessary, proper, advisable or convenient to effect such registration."
In pursuance of such resolution, Benguet submitted in June, 1953, to the Securities and Exchange
Commissioner, for alternative registration, two documents: (1) Certification as to the Modification of (the
articles of association of) the Benguet Consolidated Mining Company, extending the term of its existence to
another fifty years from June 15, 1953; and (2) articles of incorporation, covering its reformation or
reorganization as a corporation in accordance with section 75 of the Philippine Corporation Law.
Relying mainly upon the adverse opinion of the Secretary.of Justice (Op. No. 180, s. 1953), the Securities
and Exchange Commissioner denied the registration and ruled:
(1) That the Benguet, as sociedad anonima, had no right to extend the original term of corporate existence
stated in its Articles of Association, by subsequent amendment thereof adopted after enactment of the
Corporation Law (Act No. 1459); and
(2) That Benguet, by its conduct, had chosen to continue as sociedad anomina, under section 75 of Act No.
1459, and could no longer exercise the option to reform into a corporation, specially since it would,
indirectly produce the effect of extending its life.
(1) That the proviso of section 18 of the Corporation Law to the effect
"that the life of said corporation shall not be extended by amendment beyond the lime fixed in the original
articles."
does not apply to sociedades anomimas already in existence at the passage of the law, like petitioner herein;
(2) That to apply the said Restriction imposed by section 18 of the Corporation Law to sociedades anonimas
already functioning when the said law was enacted would be in violation of constitutional inhibitions;
(3) That even assuming that said restriction was applicable to it, Benguet could still exercise the option of
reforming and reorganizing under section 75 of the Corporation Law, thereby prolonging its corporate
existence, since the law is silent as to the time when such option may be exercised or availed of.
The first issue arises because the Code of Commerce of 1886 under which Benguet was organized, contains
no prohibition (to extend the period of corporate existence), equivalent to that set forth in section 18 of
the Corporation Law. Neither does it expressly authorize the extension. But the text of Article 223, reading:
"ART. 223. After the termination of the period for which commercial associations are constituted, it shall
not be understood as extended by the implied or presumed will of the members; and if the members
desire to continue in association, they shall draw up new articles, subject to all the formalities prescribed
for their creation as provided in Article 119." (Code of Commerce.)
would seem to imply that the period of existence of the sociedad anonimas (or of any other commercial
association for that matter) may be extended if the partners or members so agree before the expiration
of the original period.,
While the Code of Commerce, in so far as sociedades anonimas are concerned, was repealed by Act No.
1459, Benguet claims that article 223 is still operative in its favor under the last proviso of section 191 of
the Corporation law (ante, p. 4 to the effect that existing sociedades anonimas would continue to be
governed by the law in force before Act 1459,
"in relation to their organization and method of transacting business and to the rights of members among
themselves, but their relations to the' public and public officials shall be governed by the provisions of this
Act."
Benguet contends that the period of corporate life relates to its organization and the rights of its members
inter se,' and not to its relations to the, public or public officials.
The term of existence of association (partnership or sociedad anomima) is coterminous with their
possession of an independent legal personality, distinct from that of their component members. When the
period expires, the sociedad anomima loses the power to deal and enter into further legal relations with
other persons; it is no longer possible for it to acquire new rights or incur new obligations, have only as may
be required by the process of liquidating and winding up its affairs. By the same token, its officers and
agents can no longer represent it after the expiration of the life term prescribed, save for settling its
business. Necessarily, therefore, third persons or strangers have an interest in knowing the duration of
the juridical personality of the sociedad anonima,, .since the latter can not be dealt with after that period;
wherefore its prolongation or cessation is a matter directly involving the company's relations to the public
at large.
On the importance of the term of existence set in the articles of association of commercial companies under
the Spanish Code of Commerce, D. Lorenzo Benito y Endar, professor of mercantile law in the Universidad
Central de Madrid, has this to say:
"La duration de la Sociedad. La necesidad de' consignar este requisito en el cotitrato social tiene mi valor
analogo al qua dijinios tenia el mismo al tratar de las compafiias colectivas, aun cuando respecto de las
anonimas no haya de tenerse en cuenta para nada lo que dijimos entonces acerca da" la trascendencia quo
ello tiene para Ios socios; porque no existiendo en las mimimas la serie de responsibilidades de caracter
personal ;que afectan a Ios socios coleetivos, es claro que la duraci6n de la soeiedad iraporta conocerla a
Ios socios y los terceros, porque ella marca el limite natural del desenvolvimiento de la empresa constituida
y el comienzo de la Iiquidacion de la sociedad." (3 Benito, Dereclio Mercantil, 292-293.)
We can not assent to the thesis of Benguet that its period of corporate existence has relation to its
"organization". The latter term is defined in Webster's International Dictionary as:
"The executive structure of a business; the personnel of management, with its several duties and places in
administration; the various persons who conduct a business, considered as a unit."
The legal definitions of ,the term "organization" are concordant with that given above:
"Organize or 'organization, as used in Reference to corporations, lias, a well-understood meaning, which is
the election of officers, providing for the subscription and payment of the capital stock, the adoption of
by-laws, and such other steps as are necessary to endow the legal entity with the capacity to transact the
legitimate business for which it was created- Waltson vs. Oliver, SO P. 172, 173, 49 Kan. 107, 33 Am. St.
Sep. 355; Topeka Bridge Co. vs. Cummings, 3 Kan. 55, 77; limit vs. Kansas & M. Bridge Co., 11 Kan. 412,
439; Aspen Water & Light Co., to. City of Aspen, 37 P. 728, 730, 5 Colo. App. 12; Nemaha Coal & Mining
Co., vs. Settle 38 P. 4S3, 484, 54 Kan. 424.
Under a statute providing that, until articles of incorporation should be recorded, the corporation should
transact no business except its own organization, it is held that the term "organization" means simply the
process of forming and arranging into suitable disposition the parties who are to act together in, and denning
the objects of, the compound body, and that this process, even when complete in all its parts, does not
confer a franchise either valid or defective, but, on the contrary, it is only the act of the individuals, and
something else must be done to secure the corporate franchise. Abbott vs. Omaha Smelting & Refining Co.
4 Neb. 416,. 421." (30 Words and Phrases, p. 282.)
It is apparent from the foregoing definitions that the term "organization" relates merely to the
systematization and orderly arrangement of the internal and managerial affairs and organs of the petitioner
Benguet, and has nothing to do with the prorogation of its corporate life.
From the double fact that the duration of its corporate life (and juridical personality) has evident
connection with the petitioner's relations to the public, and that it bears none to the petitioner's
organization and method of transacting business, we derive the conclusion that the prohibition contained
in section 18 of the Corporation Law (Act No. 1459) against extension of corporate life by amendment of
the original articles was designed and intended to apply to "companios anonimas" that, like petitioner
Benguet, were already existing at the passage of said law. This conclusion is reinforced by the avowed policy
of the law to hasten the day when companias anonimas would, be extinct, and replace them with the
American type of corporation (Harden vs. Behguet Consolidated Mining Co., supra), for the indefinite
prorogation of the corporation life of sodedades anonimas would maintain the unnecessary duality of
organizational types, instead of reducing them to a "single one; and what is more, it would confer upon
these sodedades anonimas, whose obsolescence was sought, the advantageous privilege of perpetual
existence that the new corporation could not possess.
Of course, the retroactive application of the limitations on the terms of corporate existence could not be
made in violation of constitutional inhibitions specially those securing equal protection of the laws and
prohibiting impairment of the obligation of contracts. It needs no argument to show that if Act No. 1459
allowed existing compañias anonimas to be governed by the old law in respect to their organization,
methods.of transacting business and the rights . of the members among themselves, it was precisely in
deference to the vested rights already acquired by the entity and its members at the time the Corporation
Law was enacted. But we do not agree with petitioner Benguet (and here lies the second issue in this
appeal) that the possibility to extend its corporate life under the Code of Commerce constituted a right
already vested when Act No. 1459 was adopted. At that time, Benguet's existence was well within the 50
years period set in its articles of association; and its members had not entered into any agreement that
such period should be extended. It is safe to say that none of the members of Benguet anticipated in 1906
any need to reach an agreement to increase the term of its corporate life, barely three years after it had
started. The prorogation was purely speculative; a mere possibility that could not be taken for granted. It
was as yet conditional, depending upon the ultimate decision of the members and directors. They might
agree to extend Benguet's existence beyond the original 50 years; or again they might not. It must be
remembered that in 1906, the success, of Benguet in its mining ventures was by no means so certain as to
warrant continuation of its operations beyond the 50 years set in its articles. The records of this Court
show that Benguet ran into financial difficulties in the early part of its existence, to the extent that, as late
as 1913, ten years after it was found, 301,100 shares of its capital stock (with a par value of $1 per
share) were being offered for sale at 25 centavos per share in order to raise the sum of P75,000 that was
heeded to rehabilitate the company (Hanlon vs. Hausermann and Beam, 40 Phil., 790). Certainly the
prolongation of the corporate existence of Benguet in 1906 was merely a possibility in futuro, a contingency
that did not fulfill the requirements of a vested right entitled to constitutional protection, defined by this
Court in Balboa vs. Farrales, 51 Phil., 498, 502, as follows:
"Vested right is 'some right or interest in the property which has become fixed and established, and is no
longer open to doubt or controversy,"
"A 'vested' right is defined to be an immediate fixed right of present or future enjoyment, and rights are
'vested' in .contradistinction to being expectant or contingent" (Pearsall vs. Great Northern R. Co., 161 IT.
S. 646, 40 L. Ed. 838).
In Corpus Juris Secundum we find:
"Rights are vested when the right to enjoyment, present or prospective, has become the property of
some particular person or persons as a present interest. The right must be absolute, .complete, and
unconditional, independent of a contingency, and a mere expectancy of future benefit, or a contingent
interest in property founded on anticipated continuance of existing laws, does not constitute a vested right.
So, inchoate rights which have not been acted on. are not vested." (16 C. J, S. 214-215.)
Since there was no agreement as yet to extend the period of Benguet's corporate existence (beyond the
original 50 years) when the Corporation Law was adopted in 1906, neither Benguet nor its members had
any actual or vested right to such extension at that time. Therefore, when the Corporation Law, by section
18, forbade extensions of corporate life, neither Benguet nor its members were deprived of any actual or
fixed right constitutionally protected.
To hold, as petitioner Benguet asks, that the legislative power could not deprive Benguet or its members of
the imssibilitij to enter at some indefinite future time into an agreement to extend Benguet's corporate life,
solely because such 'agreements were authorized by the Code of Commerce, would be tantamount to saying
that the said Code was irrepealable on that point. It is a well settled rule that no person .has a vested
interest in any rule of law entitling him to insist that it shall, remain unchanged for his benefit. (New York
C. R. Co. vs. White, 61 L. Ed (U.S.) 667; Mondou vs. New York N: H. & H. E. Co., 56 L. Ed. 327; Rainey vs. V.
S., 58 L. Ed. 617; Lilly Co. vs. Saunders, 125 ALR. 1308; Shea vs. Olson, 111 ALR. 998).
"There can be no vested right in the continued existence of a statute or rule of the common law which
precludes its change or repeal, nor in any. omission to legislate on a particular matter or subject. Any right
conferred by statute may be taken away by statute before it has become vested, but after a right has
vested, repeal of the statute or ordinance which created the right does not and cannot affect much right."
(16 0. J. S. 222-228.) It is a general rule of constitutional law that a person has no vested right in statutory
privileges and exemptions" (Brearly School vs. Ward, 201 NY. S58, 40 LRA NS. 1215; also, Cooloy,
Constitutional Limitations, 7th ed., p. 546).
It is not amiss to recall here that after Act No. 1459 the Legislature found it advisable to impress further
restrictions upon the power of corporations to 'deal in public lands, or to hold real estate beyond a
maximum area; and to prohibit any corporation from endeavouring to control or hold more than 15 per
cent of the voting stock of an. agricultural or mining corporation (Act No. 3518). These prohibitions are so
closely integrated with our public policy that Commonwealth Act No^ 219 sought to extend such
restrictions to associations of all kinds. It would be subversive of that policy to enable Benguet to prolong
its peculiar status of sociedad ammimas, and enable it to cast doubt and uncertainty on whether it is, or not,
subject to those restrictions on corporate power, as it once endeavoured to do in the previous case of
Harden vs. Benguet Mining Corp. 58 Phil., 149.
Stress has been laid upon the fact that the Compania Maritima (like Benguet, a sociedad anonima
established before the enactment of the Corporation Law) has been twice permitted to extend its corporate
existence by, amendment of its articles of association, without objection from the officers of the defunct
Bureau of Commerce and Industry, then in charge of the enforcement of the Corporation Laws, although
the exact question was never raised then. Be that as it may, it is a well established rule in this jurisdiction
that the government is never estopped by mistake or error on the part of its agents" (Pineda vs. Court of
First Instance of Tayabas, 52 Phil., 803, 807), and that estopped can not give validity to an act that is
prohibited by law or is against public policy (Eugenio vs. Perdido, (97 Phil., 41, May 19, 1955; 19 Am. Jur.
802); so that the respondent, Securities and Exchange Commissioner, was not bound by the rulings of his
predecessor if they be inconsistent with law. Much less could erroneous decisions of executive officers bind
this Court and induce it to sanction an unwarranted interpretation or application of legal principles.
We now turn to the third and last issue of this appeal, concerning the exercise of the option granted by
section 75 of the Corporation Law to every sociedad anonima. "formed, organized and existing under the
laws of the Philippines on the date of the passage of this Act" to either continue business as such sociedad
anonima or. to reform and organize under the provisions of the Corporation Law. Petitioner-appellant
Benguet contends that as the law does not determine the period within which such option may be exercised,
Benguet may exercise it at any time during its corporate existence; and that in fact on June 22, 1953, it chose
to reform itself into a corporation for a period of 50 years from that date, filing the corresponding papers
The petitioner's argument proceeds from the unexpressed assumption that Benguet, as sociedad ammima,
had not exercised the option given by section 75 of the Corporation Law until 1953. This we find to be
incorrect. Under that section, by continuing to do business as sociedad anonima, Benguet in fact rejected
the alternative to reform as a corporation under Act No. 1459. It will be noted from the text of section 75
(quoted earlier in this opinion) that no special act or manifestation is required by the law from the existing
sociedades anonimas that prefer to remain and continue as such. It is when they choose to reform and
organize under the Corporation Law that they must in the words of the section, ''transfer all corporate
interests to the new corporation". Hence if they do not so transfer, the sociedades amdnimas affected are
to be understood to have elected the alternative" "to continue business as such corporation" (sociedad
amnima) [2].
The election of Benguet to remain a sociedad anonima after the enactment of the Corporation Law is
evidence, not only by its failure, from 1906 to 1953, to adopt the alternative to transfer its corporate
interests to a new corporation, as required by section 75; it also appears from positive acts. Thus around
1933, Benguet claimed and defended in court its acquisition of shares of the capital stock of the Balatoc
Mining Company, on the ground that as a sociedad anonima it (Benguet) was not a corporation. within the
purview of the laws prohibiting a mining corporation from becoming interested in another mining
corporation (Harden vs. Benguet Mining Corp., 58 Phi)., p. 1.49); Even in the present proceedings, Benguet
hag urged its right to amend its original articles of association as " sociedad anonima" and extend its life as
such under the provisions of the Spanish Code of Commerce. Such appeals to privileges as " sociedad
anonima" under the Code of 1886 necessarily imply that Benguet has rejected the alternative of reforming
under the Corporation Law. As respondent Commissioner's order, now under appeal, has stated
"A sociedad anonima could not claim the benefit of both, but must have to choose one and discard the
other. If it elected to become a corporation it could not continue as a sociedad anonima; and if it choose to
remain as a sociedad anonima it could not become a corporation."
Having thus made its choice, Benguet.may not now go back and seek to change its position and adppt the
reformation that it had formerly repudiated. The election of one of several alternatives, is irrevocable
once made (as now expressly recognized in article 940 of the new Civil Code of the Philippines) : such rule
is inherent in the nature of the choice, its purpose being to clarify and render definite the rights of the one
exercising the option, so that other persons may act in consequence. While successive choices may be
provided there' is nothing in section 75 of the Corporation Law to show or hint that a sociedad anonima
may make more than one choice thereunder, since only one option is provided for.
While no express period of time is fixed by the law within which sociedad.es wnonimas may elect under
section 75 of Act No, 1459 either to reform or to retain their status quo, there are powerful reasons to
conclude that the legislature, intended such choice to be made within a reasonable time from the effectivity
of the Act. To enable a sociedad amonitna to choose reformation when its stipulated period of existence
is nearly ended, would be to allow it to enjoy a term of existence far longer than that granted to corporations
organized under the Corporation Law; in Ben- guet's case, 50 years as sociedad ammdma, and another 50
years as an American type of corporation under Act 1459; a result incompatible with .the avowed purpose
of the Act to hasten the disappearance of the sociedades anonimas. Moreover, such belated election, if
permitted, would enable sociedades anonimas to reap the full advantage of both' types of organization.
Finally, it would permit sociedades awonimas to prolong their corporate existence indirectly by belated
reformation into corporations under Act No. 1459, when they could not do so directly by amending their
articles of association.
Much stress is laid upon allegedly improper motives on the part of the intervenor, Consolidated Mines, Inc.,
in supporting the orders appealed from, on the ground that intervenor,seeks to terminate Benguet's
operating contract and appropriate the profits that are the result of Benguet's efforts in developing the mines
of the intervenor. Suffice it to say that whatever such motives should be, they are wholly irrelevant to the
issues in this appeal, that exclusively concern the legal soundness of the order of the respondent Securities
and Exchange Commissioner rejecting the claims of the Benguet Consolidated Mining Company to extend
its corporate life.
Neither are we impressed by the prophesies of economic chaos that would allegedly ensure with the
cessation of Benguet's activities. If its mining properties are really susceptible of profitable operation,
inexorable economic. laws will ensure their exploitation; if, on the other hand, they can no longerj be worked
at a profit, then catastrophe becomes inevitable, whether or not petitioner Benguet retains corporate
existence. Sustaining the opinions of the respondent Securities and Exchange Commissioner and of the
Secretary of Justice, we rule that:
(1) The prohibition contained in section 18 of Act No. 1459, against extending the period of corporate
existence by amendment of the original articles, was intended to apply, and does apply, to sociedades
andnimas already formed, organized and existing at the time of the eff ectivity of the Corporation Law (Act
No. 1459) in 1906;
(2) The statutory prohibition is valid and impairs no vested rights or constitutional inhibition where no
agreement to extend the original period of corporate life was perfected before the enactment of the
Corporation Law;
(3) A soeiedad (minima, existing before the Corporation Law, that continues to do business as such for a
reasonable time after its enactments, is deemed to have made its election and may not subsequently claim
to reform into a corporation under section 75 of Act No. 1459.
In view of the foregoing, the order appealed from is affirmed. Costs against petitioner-appellant Benguet
Consolidated Mining Company.