[G.R. No. L-14441. December 17, 1966.]
PEDRO R. PALTING, petitioner, vs. SAN JOSE
PETROLEUM INCORPORATED, respondent.
SYLLABUS
1. CORPORATION; REGISTRATION AND SALE OF
SECURITIES; RIGHT TO FILE AN OPPOSITION TO APPEAL FROM AN ADVERSE RULING OF THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION; PURPOSES OF BLUE SKY LAWS. — The right to
file an opposition to the registration of securities for sale in the
Philippines, and, in case of an adverse order, ruling or decision by the
Securities and Exchange Commission, to appeal to the Supreme Court, is not
limited to issues, dealers or salesmen of securities. This is in consonance
with the generally accepted principle that BLUE Sky Laws are enacted to protect
investors and prospective purchasers and to prevent fraud and preclude the sale
of securities which are worthless or worth substantially less than the asking
price. Moreover, petitioner in the case at bar became to all intents and
purposes a party to the proceedings. And under the New Rules of Court, which
can be applied here pursuant to Rule 144, he can appeal from a final order,
ruling or decision of the Securities and Exchange Commission.
2. ID.; ID., ID.; WHEN SECURITIES ARE
DEEMED REGISTERED. — The order under review allowing the registration and sale
of respondent's securities is a final order that is appealable. This is so
because the securities are deemed registered seven days after publication of
the order (Section 7, Commonwealth Act 83, as amended). The mere fact that the
authority may be later suspended or revoked, depending on future developments,
does not give it the character of an interlocutory or provisional ruling.
3. ID.; ID.; WHEN INQUIRY AS TO THE WORTH
OR LEGALITY OF SECURITIES CAN BE MADE. — Where the securities are outstanding
and are placed in the channels of trade and commerce, members of the investing
public are entitled to have the question of the worth or legality of the
securities resolved one way or another. The purpose of the inquiry on the
matter is not fully served just because the securities has passed out of the
hands of the issuers and its dealers.
4. CONSTITUTIONAL LAW; UTILIZATION,
EXPLOITATION AND DEVELOPMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES; PERSONS WHO CAN EXERCISE THE
PRIVILEGE. — The privilege to utilize, exploit and develop the natural resources
of the Philippines was granted by Article XIII of the Constitution, to Filipino
citizens or to corporations or associations 60% of the capital of which is
owned by such citizens. With the Parity Amendment to the Constitution, the same
right was extended to citizens of the United States and business enterprise
owned or controlled, directly or indirectly, by citizens of the United States.
There can be no serious doubt as to the meaning of the word
"citizens" used in the aforementioned provisions of the Constitution.
The right was granted to two types of persons; natural persons (Filipino or
American citizen) and juridical persons (corporations 60% of which capital is
owned by Filipinos and business enterprises owned or controlled directly or
indirectly by citizens of the United States).
5. ID.; ID.; ID.; SAN JOSE PETROLEUM
INCORPORATED NOT AUTHORIZED TO EXERCISE PARITY PRIVILEGES. — San Jose Petroleum
Incorporated is not owned or controlled directly by citizens of the United
States, because it is owned and controlled by Oil Investments, Inc., another
foreign (Panamanian) corporation. Neither is it indirectly owned or controlled
by American citizens through Oil Investments, Inc., which is owned and
controlled, not by citizens of the United States, but by two foreign
(Venezuelan) corporations. There is no showing that the stockholders in these
two corporations are citizens of the United States. But even granting that they
are, it is still necessary to establish that the different states of which they
are citizens allow Filipino citizens or corporations or associations owned or
controlled by Filipino citizens to engage in the exploitation, etc. of the
natural resources of these states (par. 3, Art. VI of the Laurel-Langley
Agreement). And even if these requirements are satisfied, to hold that the
set-up disclosed in the present case, with a long chain of intervening foreign
corporations, comes within the purview of the Parity Amendment regarding
business enterprises indirectly owned or controlled by citizens of the United
States, is to unduly stretch and strain the language and intent of the law.
Hence, San Jose Petroleum. Incorporated as presently constituted, is not a
business enterprise that is authorized to exercise the parity privilege under
the Parity Ordinance, the Laurel-Langley Agreement and the Petroleum Law. Its
tie-up with San Jose Oil Company, Inc. is consequently, illegal.
D E C I S I O N
BARRERA, J p:
This is a petition for review of the order
of August 29, 1958, later supplemented and amplified by another dated September
9, 1958, of the Securities and Exchange Commissioner denying the opposition to,
and instead, granting the registration, and licensing the sale in the
Philippines, of 5,000.000 shares of the capital stock of the respondent-appellee
San Jose Petroleum, Inc. (hereafter referred to as SAN JOSE PETROLEUM), a
corporation organized and existing in the Republic of Panama.
On September 7, 1956, SAN JOSE PETROLEUM
filed with the Philippine Securities and Exchange Commission a sworn registration
statement, for the registration and licensing for sale in the Philippines
Voting Trust Certificates representing 2,000,000 shares of its capital stock
with a par value of $0.35 a share, at P1.00 per share. It was alleged that the
entire proceeds of the sale of said securities will be devoted or used
exclusively to finance the operations of San Jose Oil Company, Inc. (a domestic
mining corporation hereafter to be referred to as SAN JOSE OIL) which has 14
petroleum exploration concessions covering an area of a little less than
1,000,000 hectares, located in the provinces of Pangasinan, Tarlac, Nueva
Ecija, La Union, Iloilo, Cotabato, Davao and Agusan. It was the express
condition of the sale that every purchaser of the securities shall not receive
a stock certificate, but a registered or bearer-voting-trust certificate from
the voting trustees named therein James L. Buckley and Austin G. E. Taylor, the
first residing in Connecticut, U. S. A., and the second in New York City. While
this application for registration was pending consideration by the Securities
and Exchange Commission, SAN JOSE PETROLEUM filed an amended Statement on June
20, 1958, for registration of the sale in the Philippines of its shares of
capital stock, which was increased from 2,000,000 to 5,000,000, at a reduced
offering price of from P1.00 to P.70 per share. At this time the par value of
the shares has also been reduced from $.35 to $.01 per share.1
Pedro R. Palting and others, allegedly
prospective investors in the shares of SAN JOSE PETROLEUM, filed with the
Securities and Exchange Commission an opposition to the registration and
licensing of the securities on the grounds that (1) the tie-up between the
issuer, SAN JOSE PETROLEUM, a Panamanian corporation, and SAN JOSE OIL, a domestic
corporation, violates the Constitution of the Philippines, the Corporation Law
and the Petroleum Act of 1949; (2) the issuer has not been licensed to transact
business in the Philippines; (3) the sale of the share of the issuer is
fraudulent, and works or tends to work a fraud upon Philippine purchasers; and
(4) the issuer as an enterprise, as well as its business, is based upon unsound
business principles. Answering the foregoing opposition of Palting, et al., the
registrant SAN JOSE PETROLEUM claimed that it was a "business
enterprise" enjoying parity rights under the ordinance appended to the
Constitution, which parity right, with respect to mineral resources in the
Philippines, may be exercised, pursuant to the Laurel-Langley Agreement, only
through the medium of a corporation organized under the laws of the
Philippines. Thus, registrant which is allegedly qualified to exercise rights
under the Parity Amendment, had to do so through the medium of a domestic
corporation, which is the SAN JOSE OIL. It refuted the contention that the
Corporation Law was being violated, by alleging that Section 13 thereof applies
only to foreign corporations doing business in the Philippines, and registrant
was not doing business here. The mere fact that it was a holding company of SAN
JOSE OIL and that registrant undertook the financing of and giving technical
assistance to said corporation did not constitute transaction of business in
the Philippines. Registrant also denied that the offering for sale in the
Philippines of its shares of capital stock was fraudulent or would work or tend
to work fraud on the investors. On August 29, 1958, and on September 9, 1958
the Securities and Exchange Commissioner issued the orders object of the
present appeal.
The issues raised by the parties in this
appeal are as follows:
1. Whether or not petitioner Pedro R.
Palting, as a "prospective investor" in respondent's securities, has
personality to file the present petition for review of the order of the
Securities and Exchange Commissioner;
2. Whether or not the issue raised herein
is already moot and academic;
3. Whether or not the "tie-up"
between the respondent SAN JOSE PETROLEUM, a foreign corporation, and SAN JOSE
OIL COMPANY, INC., a domestic mining corporation, is violative of the
Constitution, the Laurel-Langley Agreement, the Petroleum Act of 1949, and the
Corporation Law; and
4. Whether or not the sale of respondent's
securities is fraudulent or would work or tend to work fraud to purchasers of
such securities in the Philippines.
1. In answer to the notice and order of the
Securities and Exchange Commissioner, published in 2 newspapers of general
circulation in the Philippines, for "any person who is opposed" to
the petition for registration and licensing of respondent's securities, to file
his opposition in 7 days, herein petitioner so filed an opposition. And, the
Commissioner, having denied his opposition and instead, directed the
registration of the securities to be offered for sale, oppositor Palting
instituted the present proceeding for review of said order.
Respondent raises the question of the
personality of petitioner to bring this appeal, contending that as a mere
"prospective investor", he is not an "aggrieved" or
"interested" person who may properly maintain the suit. Citing a 1931
ruling of Utah State supreme court,2 it is claimed that the phrase "party
aggrieved" used in the Securities Acts3 and the Rules of Court4 as having
the right to appeal should refer only to issuers, dealers and salesmen of
securities.
It is true that in the cited case, it was
ruled that the phrase "person aggrieved" is that party
"aggrieved by the judgment or decree where it operates on his rights of
property or bears directly upon his interest", that the word "aggrieved"
refers to "a substantial grievance, a denial of some personal property
right or the imposition upon a party of a burden or obligation." But a
careful reading of the case would show that the appeal therein was dismissed
because the court held that an order of registration was not final and
therefore not appealable. The foregoing pronouncement relied upon by herein
respondent was made in construing the provision regarding an order of
revocation which the court held was the one appealable. And since the law
provides that in revoking the registration of any security, only the issuer and
every registered dealer of the security are notified, excluding any person or
group of persons having no such interest in the securities, said court
concluded that the phrase "interested person" refers only to issuers,
dealers or salesmen of securities.
We cannot consider the foregoing ruling by
the Utah State Court as controlling on the issue in this case. Our Securities
Act in Section 7(c) thereof, requires the publication and notice of the
registration statement. Pursuant thereto, the Securities and Exchange
commissioner caused the publication of an order in part reading as follows:
". . . Any person who is opposed with
this petition must file his written opposition with this Commission within said
period (2 weeks) . . ."
In other words, as construed by the
administrative office entrusted with the enforcement of the Securities Act, any
person (who may not be "aggrieved" or " interested" within
the legal acceptation of the word) is allowed or permitted to file an
opposition to the registration of securities for sale in the Philippines. And
this is in consonance with the generally accepted principle that Blue Sky Laws
are enacted to protect investors and prospective purchasers and to prevent
fraud and preclude the sale of securities which are in fact worthless or worth
substantially less than the asking price. It is for this purpose that herein
petitioner duly filed his opposition giving grounds therefor. Respondent SAN
JOSE PETROLEUM was required to reply to the opposition. Subsequently, both the
petition and the opposition were set for hearing during which the petitioner
was allowed to actively participate and did so by cross-examining the
respondent's witnesses and filing his memorandum in support of his opposition.
He therefore to all intents and purposes became a party to the proceedings. And
under the New Rules of Court,5 such a party can appeal from a final order,
ruling or decision of the Securities and Exchange Commission. This new Rule
eliminating the word "aggrieved" appearing in the old Rule, being
procedural in nature,6 and in view of the express provision of Rule 144 that
the new rules made effective on January 1, 1964 shall govern not only cases
brought after they took effect but all further proceedings in cases then
pending, except to the extent that in the opinion of the Court their
application would not be feasible or would work injustice, in which event the
former procedure shall apply, we hold that the present appeal is properly
within the appellate jurisdiction of this Court.
The order allowing the registration and
sale of respondent's securities is clearly a final order that is appealable.
The mere fact that such authority may be later suspended or revoked, depending
on future developments, does not give it the character of an interlocutory or
provisional ruling. And the fact that seven days after the publication of the
order, the securities are deemed registered (Sec. 7, Com. Act 83, as amended),
points to the finality of the order. Rights and obligations necessarily arise
therefrom if not reviewed on appeal.
Our position on this procedural matter —
that the order is appealable and the appeal taken here is proper — is
strengthened by the intervention of the Solicitor General, under Section 23 of
Rule 3 of the Rules of Court, as the constitutional issues herein presented
affect the validity of Section 13 of the Corporation Law, which, according to
the respondent, conflicts with the Parity Ordinance and the Laurel-Langley Agreement
recognizing, it is claimed, its right to exploit our petroleum resources
notwithstanding said provisions of the Corporation Law.
2. Respondent likewise contends that since
the order of Registration/Licensing dated September 9, 1958 took effect 30 days
from September 3, 1958, and since no stay order has been issued by the Supreme
Court, respondent's shares became registered and licensed under the law as of
October 3, 1958. Consequently, it is asserted, the present appeal has become
academic. Frankly, we are unable to follow respondent's argumentation. First it
claims that the orders of August 29 and that of September 9, 1958 are not final
orders and therefore are not appealable. Then when these orders, according to
its theory, became final and were implemented, it argues that the orders can no
longer be appealed as the question of registration and licensing became moot
and academic.
But the fact is that because of the
authority to sell, the securities are, in all probabilities, still being traded
in the open market. Consequently, the issue is much alive as to whether
respondent's securities should continue to be the subject of sale. The purpose
of the inquiry on this matter is not fully served just because the securities
had passed out of the hands of the issuer and its dealers. Obviously, so long
as the securities are outstanding and are placed in the channels of trade and
commerce, members of the investing public are entitled to have the question of
the worth or legality of the securities resolved one way or another.
But more fundamental than this
consideration, we agree with the late Senator Claro M. Recto, who appeared as
amicus curiae in this case, that while apparently the immediate issue in this
appeal is the right of respondent SAN JOSE PETROLEUM to dispose of and sell its
securities to the Filipino public, the real and ultimate controversy here would
actually call for the construction of the constitutional provisions governing
the disposition, utilization, exploitation and development of our natural
resources. And certainly this is neither moot nor academic.
3. We now come to the meat of the
controversy — the "tie-up" between SAN JOSE OIL on the one hand, and
the respondent SAN JOSE PETROLEUM and its associates, on the other. The
relationship of these corporations involved or affected in this case is
admitted and established through the papers and documents which are parts of
the records: SAN JOSE OIL, is a domestic mining corporation, 90% of the
outstanding capital stock of which is owned by respondent SAN JOSE PETROLEUM, a
foreign (Panamanian) corporation, the majority interest of which is owned by
OIL INVESTMENTS, INC., another foreign (Panamanian) company. This latter
corporation in turn is wholly (100%) owned by PANTEPEC OIL COMPANY, C. A., and
PANCOASTAL PETROLEUM COMPANY, C. A., both organized and existing under the laws
of Venezuela. As of September 30, 1956, there were 9,979 stockholders of
PANCOASTAL PETROLEUM found in 49 American states and U.S. territories, holding
3,476,988 shares of stock; whereas, as of November 30, 1956, PANTEPEC OIL
COMPANY was said to have 3,077,916 shares held by 12,373 stockholders scattered
in 49 American states. In the two list of stockholders, there is no indication
of the citizenship of these stockholders,7 or of the total number of authorized
stocks of each corporation for the purpose of determining the corresponding
percentage of these listed stockholders in relation to the respective capital
stock of said corporation.
Petitioner, as well as the amicus curiae
and the Solicitor General8 contend that the relationship between herein
respondent SAN JOSE PETROLEUM and its subsidiary, SAN JOSE OIL, violates the
Petroleum Law of 1949, the Philippine Constitution, and Section 13 of the
Corporation Law, which inhibits a mining corporation from acquiring an interest
in another mining corporation. It is respondent's theory, on the other hand,
that far from violating the Constitution, such relationship between the two
corporations is in accordance with the Laurel-Langley Agreement which
implemented the Ordinance Appended to the Constitution, and that Section 13 of
the Corporation Law is not applicable because respondent is not licensed to do
business, as it is not doing business, in the Philippines.
Article XIII, Section 1 of the Philippine
Constitution provides:
"Sec. 1. All agricultural, timber, and
mineral lands of the public domain, waters, minerals, coal, petroleum, and
other mineral oils, all forces of potential energy, and other natural resources
of the Philippines belong to the State, and their disposition, exploitation,
development, or utilization shall be limited to citizens of the Philippines or
to corporations or associations of least sixty per centum of the capital of
which is owned by such citizens, subject to any existing right, grant, lease or
concession at the time of the inauguration of this Government established under
this Constitution . . ." (Emphasis supplied)
In the 1946 Ordinance Appended to the
Constitution, this right (to utilize and exploit our natural resources) was
extended to citizens of the United States, thus:
"Notwithstanding the provisions of
Section one, Article Thirteen, and section eight, Article Fourteen, of the
foregoing Constitution, during the effectivity of the Executive Agreement
entered into by the President of the Philippines with the President of the
United States on the fourth of July, nineteen hundred and forty-six, pursuant
to the provisions of Commonwealth Act numbered Seven hundred and Thirty-Three,
but in no case to extend beyond the third of July, nineteen hundred and
seventy-four, the disposition, exploitation, development, and utilization of
all agricultural, timber, and mineral lands of the public domain, waters,
minerals, coal, petroleum, and other mineral oils, all sources of potential
energy, and other natural resources of the Philippines, and the operation of
public utilities shall, if open to any person, be open to citizens of the
United States, and to all forms of business enterprise owned or controlled,
directly or indirectly, by citizens of the United States in the same manner as
to, and under the same conditions imposed upon citizens of the Philippines or
Corporations or associations owned or controlled by citizens of the Philippines
(Emphasis Supplied.)
In the 1954 Revised Trade Agreement
concluded between the United States and the Philippines, also known as the
Laurel-Langley Agreement, embodied in Republic Act 1355, the following
provisions appear:
"ARTICLE VI
"1. The disposition, exploitation,
development and utilization of all agricultural, timber, and mineral lands of
the public domain, waters, minerals, coal, petroleum and other mineral oils,
all forces and of sources of potential energy, and other natural resources of
either Party, and the operation of public utilities, shall, if open to any
person, be open to citizens of the other Party and to all forms of business
enterprise owned or controlled directly or indirectly, by citizens of such
other Party in the same manner as to and under the same conditions imposed upon
citizens or corporations or associations owned or controlled by citizens of the
Party granting the right.
"2. The rights provided for in
Paragraph 1 may be exercised, . . . in the case of citizens of the United
States, with respect to natural resources in the public domain in the
Philippines, only through the medium of a corporation organized under the laws
of the Philippines and at least 60% of the capital stock of which is owned and
controlled by citizens of the United States . . .
"3. The United States of America
reserves the rights of the several States of the United States to limit the
extent to which citizens or corporations or associations owned or controlled by
citizens of the Philippines may engage in the activities specified in this
article. The Republic of the Philippines reserves the power to deny and of the
rights specified in this Article to citizens of the United States who are
citizens of States, or to corporations or associations at least 60% of whose
capital stock or capital is owned or controlled by citizens of States, which
deny like rights to citizens of the Philippines, or to corporations or
associations which ore owned or controlled by citizens of the Philippines . .
." (Emphasis supplied.)
Re-stated, the privilege to utilize,
exploit, and develop the natural resources of this country was granted, by
Article III of the Constitution, to Filipino citizens or to corporations or
associations 60% of the capital of which is owned by such citizens. With the
Parity Amendment to the Constitution, the same right was extended to citizens
of the United States and business enterprises owned or controlled, directly or
indirectly, by citizens of the United States.
There could be no serious doubt as to the
meaning of the word "citizens" used in the aforementioned provisions
of the Constitution. The right was granted to 2 types of persons: natural
persons (Filipino or American citizens) and juridical persons (corporations 60%
of which capital is owned by Filipinos and business enterprises owned or
controlled directly or indirectly, by citizens of the United States). In
American law, "citizen" has been defined as "one who, under the
constitution and laws of the United States, has a right to vote for
representatives in congress and other public officers, and who is qualified to
fill offices in the gift of the people." (1 Bouvier's Law Dictionary, p.
490.) A citizen is —
"One of the sovereign people. A
constituent member of the sovereignty, synonymous with the people." (Scott
vs. Sandford, 19 Ho. [U.S.]404, 15 L. Ed. 691.)
"A member of the civil state entitled
to all its privileges. (Cooley, Const. Lim. 77. See U.S. vs. Cruikshank, 92
U.S. 542, 23 L. Ed. 588; Minor vs. Happersett, 21 Wall. [U.S.]162, 22 L. Ed.
627.)
These concepts clarified, is herein
respondent SAN JOSE PETROLEUM an American business enterprise entitled to
parity rights in the Philippines? The answer must be in the negative for the
following reasons:
Firstly — It is not owned or controlled
directly by citizens of the United States, because it is owned and controlled
by a corporation, the OIL INVESTMENTS, another foreign (Panamanian)
corporation.
Secondly — Neither can it be said that it
is indirectly owned and controlled by American citizens through the OIL
INVESTMENTS, for this latter corporation is in turn owned and controlled, not
by citizens of the United States, but still by two foreign (Venezuelan)
corporations, the PANTEPEC OIL COMPANY and PANCOASTAL PETROLEUM.
Thirdly — Although it is claimed that these
two last corporations are owned and controlled respectively by 12,373 and 9,979
stockholders residing in the different American states, there is no showing in
the certification furnished by respondent that the stockholders of PANCOASTAL
or those of them holding the controlling stock, are citizens of the United
States.
Fourthly — Granting that these individual
stockholders are American citizens, it is yet necessary to establish that the
different states of which they are citizens, allow Filipino citizens or
corporations or associations owned or controlled by Filipino citizens, to
engage in the exploitation, etc. of the natural resources of those states (see
paragraph 3, Article VI of the Laurel-Langley Agreement, supra.). Respondent
has presented no proof to this effect.
Fifthly — But even if the requirements
mentioned in the two immediately preceding paragraphs are satisfied,
nevertheless to hold that the set-up disclosed in this case, with a long chain
of intervening foreign corporations, comes within the purview of the Parity
Amendment regarding business enterprises indirectly owned or controlled by
citizens of the United States, is to unduly stretch and strain the language and
intent of the law. For, to what extent must the word "indirectly" be
carried? Must we trace the ownership or control of these various corporations
ad infinitum for the purpose of determining whether the American ownership
control-requirement is satisfied? Add to this the admitted fact that the shares
of stock of the PANTEPEC and PANCOASTAL which are allegedly owned or controlled
directly by citizens of the United States, are traded in the stock exchange in
New York, and you have a situation where it becomes a practical impossibility
to determine at any given time, the citizenship of the controlling stock
required by the law. In the circumstances, we have to hold that the respondent
SAN JOSE PETROLEUM, as presently constituted, is not a business enterprise that
is authorized to exercise the parity privileges under the Parity Ordinance, the
Laurel-Langley Agreement and the Petroleum Law. Its tie-up with SAN JOSE OIL
is, consequently, illegal.
What, then, would be the status of SAN JOSE
OIL, about 90% of whose stock is owned by SAN JOSE PETROLEUM? This is a query
which we need not resolve in this case as SAN JOSE OIL is not a party and it is
not necessary to do so to dispose of the present controversy. But it is a
matter that probably the Solicitor General would want to look into.
There is another issue which has been
discussed extensively by the parties. This is whether or not an American mining
corporation may lawfully "be in any wise interested in any other
corporation (domestic or foreign) organized for the purpose of engaging in
agriculture or in mining," in the Philippines or whether an American
citizen owning stock in more than one corporation organized for the purpose of
engaging in agriculture, or in mining, may own more than 15% of the capital
stock then outstanding and entitled to vote, of each of such corporations, in
view of the express prohibition contained in Section 13 of the Philippine
Corporation Law. The petitioner in this case contends that provisions of the
Corporation Law must be applied to American citizens and business enterprise
otherwise entitled to exercise the parity privileges, because both the
Laurel-Langley Agreement (Art. VI, par. 1) and the Petroleum Act of 1949 (Art.
31), specifically provide that the enjoyment by them of the same rights and
obligations granted under the provisions of both laws shall be "in the same
manner as to, and under the same conditions imposed upon, citizens of the
Philippines or corporations or associations owned or controlled by citizens of
the Philippines." The petitioner further contends that, as the enjoyment
of the privilege of exploiting mineral resources in the Philippines by Filipino
citizens or corporations owned or controlled by citizens of the Philippines
(which corporation must necessarily be organized under the Corporation Law), is
made subject to the limitations provided in Section 13 of the Corporation Law,
so necessarily the exercise of the parity rights by citizens of the United
States or business enterprise owned or controlled, directly or indirectly, by
citizens of the United States, must equally be subject to the same limitations
contained in the aforesaid Section 13 of the Corporation Law.
In view of the conclusions we have already
arrived at, we deem it not indispensable for us to pass upon this legal
question, especially taking into account the statement of the respondent (SAN
JOSE PETROLEUM) that it is essentially a holding company, and as found by the
Securities and Exchange Commissioner, its principal activity is limited to the
financing and giving technical assistance to SAN JOSE OIL.
4. Respondent SAN JOSE PETROLEUM, whose
shares of stock were allowed registration for sale in the Philippines, was
incorporated under the laws of Panama in April, 1956, with an authorized
capital of $500,000.00, American currency, divided into 50,000,000 shares at
par value of $0.01 per share. By virtue of a 3-party Agreement of June 14,
1956, respondent was supposed to have received from OIL INVESTMENTS 8,000,000
shares of the capital stock of SAN JOSE OIL (at par value of $0.01 per share),
plus a note for $250,000.00 due in 6 months, for which respondent issued in
favor of OIL INVESTMENTS 16,000,000 shares of its capital stock, at $0.01 per
share or with a value of $160,000.00 plus a note for $230,297.97 maturing in 2
years at 6% per annum interest,9 and the assumption of payment of the unpaid
price of 7,500,000 (of the 8,000,000 shares of SAN JOSE OIL.
On June 27, 1956, the capitalization of SAN
JOSE PETROLEUM was increased from $500,000.00 to $17,500,000.00 by increasing
the par value of the same 50,000,000 shares, from $0.01 to $0.35. Without any
additional consideration, the 16,000,000 shares of $0.01 previously issued at
OIL INVESTMENTS with a total value of $160,000.00 were changed with 16,000,000
shares of the recapitalized stock, at $0.35 per share, or valued at
$5,600,000.00. And, to make it appear that cash was received for these
re-issued 16,000,000 shares, the board of directors of respondent corporation
placed a valuation of $5,900,000.00 on the 8,000,000 shares of SAN JOSE OIL
(still having par value of $0.10 per share) which were received from OIL
INVESTMENTS as part-consideration for the 16,000,000 shares at $.01 per share.
In the Balance Sheet of respondent, dated
July 12, 1956, from the $5,900,000.00, supposedly the value of the 8,000,000
shares of SAN JOSE OIL, the sum of $5,100,000.00 was deducted, corresponding to
the alleged difference between the "value" of the said shares and the
subscription price thereof which is $800,000.00 (at $0.10 per share). From this
$800,000.00, the subscription price of the SAN JOSE OIL shares, the amount of
$319,702.03 was deducted, as allegedly unpaid subscription price, thereby
giving a difference of $480,297.97, which was placed the amount allegedly paid
in on the subscription price of the 8,000,000 SAN JOSE OIL-shares. Then, by
adding thereto the note receivable from OIL INVESTMENTS, for $250,000.00
(part-consideration for the 16,000,000 SAN JOSE PETROLEUM shares) and the sum
of $6,516.21, as deferred expenses SAN JOSE PETROLEUM appeared to have assets
in the sum of $736,814.18.
These figures are highly questionable. Take
the item $5,900,000.00 the valuation placed on the 8,000,000 shares of SAN JOSE
OIL. There appears no basis for such valuation other than belief by the board
of directors of respondent that "should San Jose Oil Company be granted
the bulk of the concessions applied for upon reasonable terms, that it would
have a reasonable value of approximately $10,000,000." 10 Then, of this
amount, the subscription price of $800,000.00 was deducted and called it
"difference between the (above) valuation and the subscription price for
the 8,000,000 shares." Of this $800,000.00 subscription price, they
deducted the sum of $488,297.97 and the difference was placed as the unpaid
portion of the subscription price. In other words, it was made to appear that
they paid in $480,297.97 for the 8,000,000 shares of SAN JOSE OIL. This amount
($480,297.97) was supposedly that $250,000.00 paid by OIL INVESTMENTS for
7,500,000 shares of SAN JOSE OIL, embodied in the June 14-Agreement, and a sum
of $230,297.97 the amount expended or advanced by OIL INVESTMENTS to SAN JOSE
OIL. And yet, there is still an item among respondent's liabilities, for
$230,297.97 appearing as note payable to Oil Investments, maturing in 2 years
at 6% interest per annum. 11 As far as it appears from the records, for the
16,000,000 shares at $0.35 per share issued to OIL INVESTMENTS, respondent SAN
JOSE PETROLEUM received from OIL INVESTMENTS only the note for $250,000.00 plus
8,000,000 shares of SAN JOSE OIL, with par value of $0.10 per share or a total
of $1,050,000.00 - the only assets of the corporation. In other words,
respondent actually lost $4,550,000.00, which was received by OIL INVESTMENTS.
But this is not all. Some of the provisions
of the Articles of Incorporation of respondent SAN JOSE PETROLEUM are
noteworthy; viz:
(1) the director of the Company need not be
share-holders;
(2) that in the meeting of the board of
directors, any director may be represented and may vote through a proxy who
also need not be a director or stockholder; and
(3) that no contract or transaction between
the corporation and any other association or partnership will be affected,
except in case of fraud, by the fact that any of the directors or officers of
the corporation is interested in, or is a director or officer of, such other
association or partnership, and that no such contract or transaction of the
corporation with any other person or persons, firm, association or partnership
shall be affected by the fact that any director or officer of the corporation
is a party to or has an interest in, such contract or transaction, or has in
anyway connection with such other person or persons, firm, association or
partnership; and finally, that all and any of the persons who may become
director or officer of the corporation shall be relieved from all
responsibility for which they may otherwise be liable by reason of any contract
entered into with the corporation, whether it be for his benefit or for the
benefit of any other person, firm, association or partnership in which he may
be interested.
These provisions are in direct opposition
to our corporation law and corporate practices in this country. These
provisions alone would outlaw any corporation locally organized or doing
business in this jurisdiction. Consider the unique and unusual provision that
no contract or transaction between the company and any other association or
corporation shall be affected except in case of fraud, by the fact that any of
the directors or officers of the company may be interested in or are directors
or officers of such other association or corporation; and that none of such
contracts or transactions of this company with any person or persons, firms,
associations or corporations shall be affected by the fact that any director or
officer of this company is a party to or has an interest in such contract or
transaction or has any connection with such person or persons, firms,
associations or corporations: and that any and all persons who may become
directors or officers of this company are hereby relieved of all responsibility
which they would otherwise incur by reason of any contract entered into which
this company either for their own benefit, or for the benefit of any person,
firm, association or corporation in which they may be interested.
The impact of these provisions upon the
traditional judiciary* relationship between the directors and the stockholders
of a corporation is too obvious to escape notice by those who are called upon
to protect the interest of investors. The directors and officers of the company
can do anything, short of actual fraud, with the affairs of the corporation
even to benefit themselves directly or other persons or entities in which they
are interested, and with immunity because of the advance condonation or relief
from responsibility by reason of such acts. This and the other provision which
authorize the election of non-stockholders as directors, completely
disassociate the stockholders from the government and management of the
business in which they have invested.
To cap it all on April 17, 1957, admittedly
to assure continuity of the management and stability of SAN JOSE PETROLEUM, OIL
INVESTMENTS, as holder of the only subscribed stock of the former corporation
and acting "on behalf of All future holders of voting trust
certificates", entered into a voting trust agreement 12 with James L.
Buckley and Austin E. Taylor whereby said Trustees were given authority to vote
the shares represented by the outstanding trust certificate (including those that
may henceforth be issued) in the following manner:
(a) At all elections of directors, the
Trustees will designate a suitable proxy or proxies 'to vote for the election
of directors designated by the Trustees in their own discretion, having in mind
the best interests of the holders of the voting trust certificates, it being
understood that any and all of the Trustees shall be eligible for election as
directors;
(b) On any proposition for removal of a
director, the Trustees shall designate a suitable proxy or proxies to vote for
or against such proposition as the Trustees their own discretion may determine,
having in mind the best interest of the holders of the voting trust
certificates;
(c) With respect to all other matters
arising at any meeting of stockholders, the Trustees will instruct such proxy
or proxies attending each meetings to vote the shares of stock held by the
Trustee in accordance with the written instructions of each holder of voting
trust certificates. (Emphasis supplied.)
It was also therein provided that the said
Agreement shall be binding upon the parties thereto, their successors, and upon
all holders of voting trust certificates.
And these are the voting trust certificates
that are offered to investors as authorized by the Security and Exchange
Commissioner. It can not be doubted that the sale of respondent's securities
would, to say the least, work or tend to work fraud to Philippine investors.
FOR ALL THE FOREGOING CONSIDERATIONS, the
motion of respondent to dismiss this appeal, is denied, and the orders of the
Securities and Exchange Commissioner, allowing the registration of Respondent's
securities and licensing their sale in the Philippines are hereby set aside.
The case is remanded to the Securities and Exchange Commission for appropriate
action in consonance with this decision. With costs. Let a copy of this
decision be furnished the Solicitor General for whatever action he may deem
advisable to take in the premises. So ordered.
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