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Gamboa Vs Teves 2012 Resolution

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The case discusses the interpretation of the term 'capital' in the Philippine Constitution with regards to foreign ownership limitations in public utilities.

Whether or not the Court made an erroneous interpretation of the term 'capital' in its 2011 decision ruling that the 60-40 ownership requirement applies to both voting control and beneficial ownership of corporations.

That the 60-40 ownership requirement in favor of Filipino citizens in the Constitution to engage in certain economic activities applies not only to voting control of the corporation, but also to the beneficial ownership of the corporation.

Gamboa v. Teves etal., GR No.

176579, October 9, 2012


Facts:
The issue started when petitioner Gamboa questioned the indirect
sale of shares involving almost 12 million shares of the Philippine
Long Distance Telephone Company (PLDT) owned by PTIC to First
Pacific. Thus, First Pacifics common shareholdings in PLDT increased
from 30.7 percent to 37 percent, thereby increasing the total
common shareholdings of foreigners in PLDT to about 81.47%. The
petitioner contends that it violates the Constitutional provision on
filipinazation of public utility, stated in Section 11, Article XII of the
1987 Philippine Constitution, which limits foreign ownership of the
capital of a public utility to not more than 40%. Then, in 2011, the
court ruled the case in favor of the petitioner, hence this new case,
resolving the motion for reconsideration for the 2011 decision filed
by the respondents.
Issue: Whether or not the Court made an erroneous interpretation
of the term capital in its 2011 decision?
Held/Reason: The Court said that the Constitution is clear in
expressing its State policy of developing an economy effectively
controlled by Filipinos. Asserting the ideals that our Constitutions
Preamble want to achieve, that is to conserve and develop our
patrimony , hence, the State should fortify a Filipino-controlled
economy. In the 2011 decision, the Court finds no wrong in the
construction of the term capital which refers to the shares with
voting rights, as well as with full beneficial ownership (Art. 12, sec.
10) which implies that the right to vote in the election of directors,
coupled with benefits, is tantamount to an effective control.
Therefore, the Courts interpretation of the term capital was not
erroneous. Thus, the motion for reconsideration is denied.

CASE
2012-0072:
HEIRS
OF
WILSON
P.
GAMBOA,
PETITIONERS, VS. FINANCE SECRETARY MARGARITO B.
TEVES, FINANCE UNDERSECRETARY JOHN P. SEVILLA, AND
COMMISSIONER RICARDO ABCEDE OF THE PRESIDENTIAL
COMMISSION ON GOOD GOVERNMENT (PCGG) IN THEIR
CAPACITIES AS CHAIR AND MEMBERS, RESPECTIVELY, OF THE
PRIVATIZATION COUNCIL, CHAIRMAN ANTHONI SALIM OF
FIRST PACIFIC CO., LTD. IN HIS CAPACITY AS DIRECTOR OF
METRO PACIFIC ASSET HOLDINGS INC., CHAIRMAN MANUEL
V. PANGILINAN OF PHILIPPINE LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE
COMPANY (PLDT) IN HIS CAPACITY AS MANAGING DIRECTOR
OF FIRST PACIFIC CO., LTD., PRESIDENT NAPOLEON L.
NAZARENO OF PHILIPPINE LONG DISTANCE TELEPHONE
COMPANY, CHAIR FE BARIN OF THE SECURITIES AND

EXCHANGE COMMISSION, AND PRESIDENT FRANCIS LIM OF


THE PHILIPPINE STOCK EXCHANGE, RESPONDENTS. (G.R. NO.
176579, 09 OCTOBER 2012, CARPIO, J.) SUBJECT/S:
DEFINITION OF CAPITAL IN CORPORATION LAW; THE
GODFATHER RULE (BRIEF TITLE: HEIRS OF GAMBOA VS.
TEVES)
=====================
DISPOSITIVE:
WHEREFORE, we DENY the motions for reconsideration WITH
FINALITY. No further pleadings shall be entertained.
SO ORDERED.
=====================
SUBJECTS/DOCTRINES/DIGEST:
SUPPOSE A PETITION FOR REVIEW IS PROCEDURALLY
DEFECTIVE. WILL THE SUPREME STILL ENTERTAIN THE
PETITION?
YES,
IF
THE
MAIN
ISSUE
IN
THE
CASE
IS
OF
TRANSCENDENTAL IMPORTANCE.
In Luzon Stevedoring Corp. v. Anti-Dummy Board,8 the Court
deemed it wise and expedient to resolve the case although the
petition for declaratory relief could be outrightly dismissed for being
procedurally defective. There, appellant admittedly had already
committed a breach of the Public Service Act in relation to the AntiDummy Law since it had been employing non-American aliens long
before the decision in a prior similar case. However, the main issue
in Luzon Stevedoring was of transcendental importance, involving
the exercise or enjoyment of rights, franchises, privileges, properties
and businesses which only Filipinos and qualified corporations could
exercise or enjoy under the Constitution and the statutes.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
WHAT IS TRANSCENDENTAL IN THE CASE AT HAND AND WHY?
THE INTERPRETATION OF THE TERM CAPITAL IN SECTION
11, ARTICLE XII OF THE CONSTITUTION HAS FAR-REACHING

IMPLICATIONS TO THE NATIONAL ECONOMY. IN FACT, A


RESOLUTION OF THIS ISSUE WILL DETERMINE WHETHER
FILIPINOS ARE MASTERS, OR SECOND-CLASS CITIZENS, IN
THEIR OWN COUNTRY. WHAT IS AT STAKE HERE IS WHETHER
FILIPINOS OR FOREIGNERS WILL HAVE EFFECTIVE CONTROL
OF THE PHILIPPINE NATIONAL ECONOMY.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
PANGILINAN ET AL CONTEND THAT THE TERM CAPITAL IN
SECTION 11, ARTICLE XII OF THE CONSTITUTION HAS LONG
BEEN SETTLED AND DEFINED TO REFER TO THE TOTAL
OUTSTANDING SHARES OF STOCK, WHETHER VOTING OR
NON-VOTING. IS THEIR CONTENTION CORRECT?
NO. THE SUPREME COURT HAS NEVER YET INTERPRETED THE
MEANING OF CAPITAL IN THE CONTEXT OF SECTION 11,
ARTICLE XII OF THE CONSTITUTION.
For more than 75 years since the 1935 Constitution, the Court has
not interpreted or defined the term capital found in various
economic provisions of the 1935, 1973 and 1987 Constitutions.
There has never been a judicial precedent interpreting the term
capital in the 1935, 1973 and 1987 Constitutions, until now.
Hence, it is patently wrong and utterly baseless to claim that the
Court in defining the term capital in its 28 June 2011 Decision
modified, reversed, or set aside the purported long-standing
definition of the term capital, which supposedly refers to the total
outstanding shares of stock, whether voting or non-voting.

To repeat, until the present case there has never been a Court ruling
categorically defining the term capital found in the various
economic provisions of the 1935, 1973 and 1987 Philippine
Constitutions.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
PANGILINAN ET AL CONTENDS THAT SEC AND DOJ HAVE
ALWAYS INTERPRETED CAPITAL TO REFER TO THE TOTAL
OUTSTANDING SHARES OF STOCK WHETHER VOTING OR NOT.
IS THEIR CONTENTION CORRECT?
NO.
DOJ
AND
SEC
HAVE
ISSUED
CONFLICTING
INTERPRETATIONS.
.....
The opinions of the SEC, as well as of the Department of Justice
(DOJ), on the definition of the term capital as referring to both
voting and non-voting shares (combined total of common and
preferred shares) are, in the first place, conflicting and inconsistent.

XXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
IS THERE ANY DOJ OPINION WHICH IS CONSISTENT WITH
THE SC RULING, BEING NOW CONTESTED, ON THE MATTER?
YES IN DOJ OPINION NO. 130 DATED 07 OCTOBER 1985, DOJ
RULED THAT THE RESULTING OWNERSHIP STRUCTURE OF
THE SUBJECT CORPORATION WOULD BE UNCONSTITUTIONAL
BECAUSE 60% OF THE VOTING STOCK WOULD BE OWNED BY
JAPANESE WHILE FILIPINOS WOULD OWN ONLY 40% OF THE
VOTING STOCK, ALTHOUGH WHEN THE NON-VOTING STOCK
IS ADDED, FILIPINOS WOULD OWN 60% OF THE COMBINED
VOTING AND NON-VOTING STOCK.
In DOJ Opinion No. 130, s. 1985,10 dated 7 October 1985, the scope
of the term capital in Section 9, Article XIV of the 1973
Constitution was raised, that is, whether the term capital includes
both preferred and common stocks. The issue was raised in
relation to a stock-swap transaction between a Filipino and a
Japanese corporation, both stockholders of a domestic corporation
that owned lands in the Philippines. Then Minister of Justice Estelito
P. Mendoza ruled that the resulting ownership structure of the
corporation would be unconstitutional because 60% of the voting
stock would be owned by Japanese while Filipinos would own only
40% of the voting stock, although when the non-voting stock is
added, Filipinos would own 60% of the combined voting and nonvoting stock.

In short, Minister Mendoza categorically rejected the theory that


the term capital in Section 9, Article XIV of the 1973 Constitution
includes both preferred and common stocks treated as the same
class of shares regardless of differences in voting rights and
privileges. Minister Mendoza stressed that the 60-40 ownership
requirement in favor of Filipino citizens in the Constitution is not
complied with unless the corporation satisfies the criterion of
beneficial ownership and that in applying the same the
primordial consideration is situs of control.
XXXXXXXXXXXXX
IS THERE ANY SEC OPINION WHICH IS CONSISTENT WITH
THE SC RULING, BEING NOW CONTESTED, ON THE MATTER?
YES. IN OPINION NO. 23-10 DATED18 AUGUST 2012, SEC
APPLIED THE VOTING CONTROL TEST, THAT IS USING ONLY
THE
VOTING
STOCK
TO
DETERMINE
WHETHER
A
CORPORATION IS A PHILIPPINE NATIONAL.
On the other hand, in Opinion No. 23-10 dated 18 August 2010,
addressed to Castillo Laman Tan Pantaleon & San Jose, then SEC

General Counsel Vernette G. Umali-Paco applied the Voting Control


Test, that is, using only the voting stock to determine whether a
corporation is a Philippine national.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
WILL THE OPINION ISSUED BY A SEC LEGAL OFFICER OR A
SEC COMMISSIONER ESTABLISH PRECEDENCE?
NO. THEIR OPINION APPLIES ONLY TO A PARTICULAR CASE. IT
IS THE OPINION OF THE WHOLE COMMISSION THAT
ESTABLISHES A PRECEDENCE.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXX
The opinions issued by SEC legal officers do not have the force and
effect of SEC rules and regulations because only the SEC en banc
can adopt rules and regulations. As expressly provided in Section
4.6 of the Securities Regulation Code,12 the SEC cannot delegate to
any of its individual Commissioner or staff the power to adopt any
rule or regulation. Further, under Section 5.1 of the same Code,
it is the SEC as a collegial body, and not any of its legal
officers, that is empowered to issue opinions and approve
rules and regulations.
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
IS THE GRANDFATHER RULE APPLICABLE TO THIS CASE?
YES. EVEN SEC APPLIED IT.
Significantly, the SEC en banc, which is the collegial body statutorily
empowered to issue rules and opinions on behalf of the SEC, has
adopted the 60-40 ownership requirement in favor of Filipino
citizens mandated by the Constitution for certain economic
activities. This prevailing SEC ruling, which the SEC correctly
adopted to thwart any circumvention of the required Filipino
ownership and control, is laid down in the 25 March 2010 SEC
en banc ruling in Redmont Consolidated Mines, Corp. v. McArthur
Mining, Inc., et al.,15 to wit:
The avowed purpose of the Constitution is to place in the hands of
Filipinos the exploitation of our natural resources. Necessarily,
therefore, the Rule interpreting the constitutional provision
should not diminish that right through the legal fiction of
corporate ownership and control. But the constitutional
provision, as interpreted and practiced via the 1967 SEC Rules, has
favored foreigners contrary to the command of the Constitution.
Hence, the Grandfather Rule must be applied to accurately
determine the actual participation, both direct and indirect,

of foreigners in a corporation engaged in a nationalized


activity or business.
XXXXXXXXXXXXX
WHAT IS THE GRANDFATHER RULE?
COMPLIANCE WITH THE CONSTITUTIONAL LIMITATION(S) ON
ENGAGING
IN
NATIONALIZED
ACTIVITIES
MUST
BE
DETERMINED BY ASCERTAINING IF 60% OF THE INVESTING
CORPORATIONS OUTSTANDING CAPITAL STOCK IS OWNED
BY FILIPINO CITIZENS, OR AS INTERPRETED, BY NATURAL
OR INDIVIDUAL FILIPINO CITIZENS. IF SUCH INVESTING
CORPORATION IS IN TURN OWNED TO SOME EXTENT BY
ANOTHER INVESTING CORPORATION, THE SAME PROCESS
MUST BE OBSERVED. ONE MUST NOT STOP UNTIL THE
CITIZENSHIPS
OF
THE
INDIVIDUAL
OR
NATURAL
STOCKHOLDERS OF LAYER AFTER LAYER OF INVESTING
CORPORATIONS HAVE BEEN ESTABLISHED.
xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
WHAT WAS THE MAIN RULING IN THE 28 JUNE 2011 DECISION
OF THE SC REGARDING THIS CASE?
THAT THE 60-40 OWNERSHIP REQUIREMENT IN FAVOR OF
FILIPINO CITIZENS IN THE CONSTITUTION TO ENGAGE IN
CERTAIN ECONOMIC ACTIVITIES APPLIES NOT ONLY TO
VOTING CONTROL OF THE CORPORATION, BUT ALSO TO THE
BENEFICIAL OWNERSHIP OF THE CORPORATION. MERE LEGAL
TITLE IS INSUFFICIENT TO MEET THE 60 PERCENT FILIPINO
OWNED CAPITAL REQUIRED IN THE CONSTITUTION. FULL
BENEFICIAL
OWNERSHIP
OF
60
PERCENT
OF
THE
OUTSTANDING CAPITAL STOCK, COUPLED WITH 60 PERCENT
OF THE VOTING RIGHTS, IS REQUIRED. THE LEGAL AND
BENEFICIAL
OWNERSHIP
OF
60
PERCENT
OF
THE
OUTSTANDING CAPITAL STOCK MUST REST IN THE HANDS OF
FILIPINO
NATIONALS
IN
ACCORDANCE
WITH
THE
CONSTITUTIONAL MANDATE. OTHERWISE, THE CORPORATION
IS CONSIDERED AS NON-PHILIPPINE NATIONAL[S]. BOTH
THE VOTING CONTROL TEST AND THE BENEFICIAL
OWNERSHIP TEST MUST BE APPLIED TO DETERMINE
WHETHER A CORPORATION IS A PHILIPPINE NATIONAL.

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