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Ferro Chemicals, Inc., V. Antonio Garcia, Et Al. G.R. No. 168134 Facts

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FERRO CHEMICALS, INC., v. ANTONIO GARCIA, ET AL.

G.R. No. 168134

Facts:

Ferro Chemicals Incorporated (Ferro) is a domestic corporation duly


authorized by existing law to engage in business in the Philippines. It is
represented in this action by its President, Ramon M. Garcia. Chemical
Industries of the Philippines Inc. (Chemical), on the other hand, is also a
domestic corporation duly organized and existing by virtue of Philippine laws.
Antonio Garcia, one of the parties in the instant case, is the Chairman of the
Board of Directors (BOD) of Chemical and a brother of Ferro Chemical's
President, Ramon Garcia. Antonio Garcia entered into a contract with Ferro
for the purchase of the latter of 1,717,678 shares of the latter in Chemical.
Antonio, being the judgment creditor of various banks (consortium), entered
into a compromise agreement with the consortium involving said shares of
stocks.

The consortium was then awarded through a judgment of the court of a


notice of garnishment for said shares of stocks which led to Antonio and
Ferro to enter another agreement for the former to have the right to
repurchase the said shares of stocks from the latter. Antonio sent written
notices to Ferro for him to exercise his right of repurchase of the said shares
of stocks; the shares were however already transferred to Chemphil Export,
Inc. Subsequently, Antonio was able to recover the shares through an action
of Specific Performance against Ferro. The consortium was then able to
garnish 1,000,000 of the said shares for partial satisfaction of Antonios
obligation with them. Chemphil, feeling aggrieved then filed a collection suit
against Ferro for the value of the garnished shares. Ferro then filed an action
for recovery of sum of money and damages for the amount of the 1,000,000
shares.

The lower courts then found Chemical and Antonio, solidarily liable for
the amount of the 1,000,000 shares in favor of Ferro.

Issue:

Whether or not Antonio and Chemical should be held solidarily liable


for the award of the court in favor of Ferro for damages
Held:

A corporation, upon coming to existence, is invested by law with a


personality separate and distinct from those of the persons composing it.
Ownership by a single or a small group of stockholders of nearly all of the
capital stock of the corroration is not, without more, sufficient to disregard
the fiction of separate corporate personality. Thus, obligations incurred by
corporate officers, acting as corporate agents, are not theirs, but direct
accountabilities of the corporation they represent. Solidary liability on the
part of corporate officers may at times attach, but only under exceptional
circumstances, such as when they act with malice or in bad faith. Also, in
appropriate cases, the veil of corporate fiction shall be disregarded when the
separate juridical personality of a corporation is abused or used to commit
fraud and perpetrate a social injustice, or used as a vehicle to evade
obligations. It must be stressed at the onset that the sale contract was
entered by Antonio Garcia in his personal capacity and not as the President
of Chemical Industries. The imputation of liability Chemical Industries for the
acts of its corporate officer and the consequent shedding of corporate shroud
cannot rest on flimsy grounds. The application of the doctrine of piercing the
veil of corporate fiction is frowned upon. 66 It can only be done if it has been
clearly established that the separate and distinct personality of the
corporation is used to justify a wrong, protect fraud, or perpetrate a
deception. In the case at bar, Ferro Chemicals failed to adduce satisfactory
evidence to prove that Chemical Industries' separate corporate personality
was being used by Antonio Garcia to protect fraud or perpetrate deception
warranting the shedding of its veil and the consequent imposition of solidary
liability upon it.

Antonio Garcia was selling his shares of stocks in the Chemical


Industries, the corporation was neither made a party to the contract nor did
the sale redound to its benefit. As a matter of fact, the subject of the
purchase agreement was not limited to Antonio Garcia's shares in Chemical
Industries, but likewise included his shares in Vision Insurance Consultants,
Inc., Alabang Country Club, Inc. and Manila Polo Club, Inc.64 His shares of
capital stocks with Chemical lndustries became the subject of controversy
because of the allegation that he intentionally withheld the information from
Ferro Chemicals that these shares were subject of the Consortium Banks'
claim. Notably, the purported misrepresentation was: not alleged to have
been authorized or abetted by the corporation. It was a purely personal act
of the seller desirous to dispose conveniently his shares in the corporation.

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