Gamboa Vs Teves 2012 Resolution
Gamboa Vs Teves 2012 Resolution
Gamboa Vs Teves 2012 Resolution
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
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.