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22-Vda de Roxas v. Our Lady's Foundation Inc.

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22. Vda De Roxas v Our Lady's Foundation Inc.

GR 182378 Mar 6, 2013

DOCTRINE:

A corporation is a juridical entity with a legal personality separate and distinct


from those acting for and on its behalf and, in general, of the people comprising it. The
obligations incurred by the corporation, acting through its officers, are its sole liabilities.
To hold corporate officers personally liable alone for the debts of the corporation and
thus pierce the veil of corporate fiction, it is required that the bad faith of the officer be
established clearly and convincingly. A court should be mindful of the milieu where
piercing of the veil should be applied. It must be certain that the corporate fiction was
misused to such an extent that injustice, fraud, or crime was committed against another,
in disregard of rights.

FACTS:

1. Salve Latosa filed a Complaint for the recovery of ownership of a portion of her
residential land located at Our Lady’s Village, Bibincahan, Sorsogon, Sorsogon
before the RTC

2. She alleged that, Atty. Henry Amado Roxas, represented by petitioner herein,
encroached on a quarter of her property by arbitrarily extending his concrete
fence beyond the correct limits. In Atty. Roxas’ answer, he imputed the blame to
Our Lady’s Foundation, Inc. (OLFI), respondent. He filed a Third-Party Complaint
against respondent which was admitted by the trial court.

3. The trial court ruled in favor of Latosa. The trial court found Roxas occupying a
total of 112 square meters of Latosa’s lots, and in turn, OLFI trimmed his
property by 92 square meters. Thereafter, Roxas appealed to the CA, which later
denied the appeal. The RTC issued a Writ of Execution to implement the ruling
ordering OLFI to reimburse Roxas for the value of the 92-square-meter property
plus legal interest at a rate of P1800 per square meter to be reckoned from the
time the amount was paid to the third-party defendant when the Decision became
final.

4. To collect the amount, Notices of Garnishment were issued by the sheriff to the
managers of the Development Bank of the Philippines and the United Coconut
Planters Bank for them to garnish the account of Bishop Robert Arcilla-Maullon
(Arcilla-Maullon), OLFI’s general manager. OLFI refused to pay Roxas and filed
a Rule 65 Petition before the CA. The CA nullified the Notices of Garnishment. It
noted that since the general manager of OLFI was not impleaded in the
proceedings, he could not be held personally liable for the obligation of the
corporation.
ISSUE:

Whether or not the issuance of Notices of Garnishment against the bank


accounts of Arcilla-Maullon as OLFI’s general manager justifiable.

DECISION:

The Supreme Court affirmed the decision of the Court of Appeals. The appellate
court appreciated that in the main case for the recovery of ownership before the court of
origin, only OLFI was named as Respondent Corporation, and that its general manager
was never impleaded in the proceedings a quo.

Given this finding, the Court held that since OLFI’s general manager was not a
party to the case, the CA correctly ruled that Arcilla-Maullon cannot be held personally
liable for the obligation of the corporation. The Court relied in the case of Santos vs.
NLRC where the doctrine of separate personality was discussed.

To hold the general manager of OLFI liable, petitioner claims that it is a mere
business conduit of Arcilla-Maullon, hence, the corporation does not maintain a bank
account separate and distinct from the bank accounts of its members. In support of this
claim, petitioner submits that because OLFI did not rebut the attack on its legal
personality, as alleged in petitioner’s Opposition and Comments on the Motion to Quash
Notice/Writ of Garnishment respondent effectively admitted by its silence that it was a
mere dummy corporation.

The argument did not persuade the Court, for any piercing of the corporate veil
has to be done with caution. Save for its rhetoric, petitioner failed to adduce any
evidence that would prove OLFI's status as a dummy corporation.

A court should be mindful of the milieu where piercing of the veil should be
applied. It must be certain that the corporate fiction was misused to such an extent that
injustice, fraud, or crime was committed against another, in disregard of rights. The
wrongdoing must be clearly and convincingly established; it cannot be presumed.
Otherwise, an injustice that was never unintended may result from an erroneous
application.
To hold Arcilla-Maullon personally liable alone for the debts of the corporation and thus
pierce the veil of corporate fiction, it is required that the bad faith of the officer be
established clearly and convincingly. Petitioner, however, has failed to include any
submission pertaining to any wrongdoing of the general manager. Necessarily, it would
be unjust to hold the latter personally liable. Therefore, the execution of a corporate
judgment debt against the general manager of the corporation has no basis.

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