BBL112 022415
BBL112 022415
BBL112 022415
147905
May 28, 2007
B. VAN ZUIDEN BROS., LTD., Petitioner, vs. GTVL MANUFACTURING INDUSTRIES,
INC., Respondent.
The Case
Before the Court is a petition for review of the 18 April 2001 Decision2 of the Court of
1
Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 66236. The Court of Appeals affirmed the Order 3 of the
Regional Trial Court, Branch 258, Paraaque City (trial court) dismissing the complaint for
sum of money filed by B. Van Zuiden Bros., Ltd. (petitioner) against GTVL Manufacturing
Industries, Inc. (respondent).
The Facts
On 13 July 1999, petitioner filed a complaint for sum of money against respondent,
docketed as Civil Case No. 99-0249. The pertinent portions of the complaint read:
1. Plaintiff, ZUIDEN, is a corporation, incorporated under the laws of Hong Kong. x
x x ZUIDEN is not engaged in business in the Philippines, but is suing before the
Philippine Courts, for the reasons hereinafter stated.
xxxx
3. ZUIDEN is engaged in the importation and exportation of several products,
including lace products.
4. On several occasions, GTVL purchased lace products from [ZUIDEN].
5. The procedure for these purchases, as per the instructions of GTVL, was that
ZUIDEN delivers the products purchased by GTVL, to a certain Hong Kong
corporation, known as Kenzar Ltd. (KENZAR), x x x and the products are then
considered as sold, upon receipt by KENZAR of the goods purchased by GTVL.
KENZAR had the obligation to deliver the products to the Philippines and/or to
follow whatever instructions GTVL had on the matter.
Insofar as ZUIDEN is concerned, upon delivery of the goods to KENZAR in Hong
Kong, the transaction is concluded; and GTVL became obligated to pay the agreed
purchase price.
xxxx
7. However, commencing October 31, 1994 up to the present, GTVL has failed and
refused to pay the agreed purchase price for several deliveries ordered by it and
delivered by ZUIDEN, as above-mentioned.
xxxx
9. In spite [sic] of said demands and in spite [sic] of promises to pay and/or
admissions of liability, GTVL has failed and refused, and continues to fail and
refuse, to pay the overdue amount of U.S.$32,088.02 [inclusive of interest]. 4
Instead of filing an answer, respondent filed a Motion to Dismiss 5 on the ground that
petitioner has no legal capacity to sue. Respondent alleged that petitioner is doing
business in the Philippines without securing the required license. Accordingly, petitioner
cannot sue before Philippine courts.
After an exchange of several pleadings6 between the parties, the trial court issued an Order
on 10 November 1999 dismissing the complaint.
On appeal, the Court of Appeals sustained the trial courts dismissal of the complaint.
Hence, this petition.
The Court of Appeals Ruling
In affirming the dismissal of the complaint, the Court of Appeals relied on Eriks Pte., Ltd.
v. Court of Appeals.7 In that case, Eriks, an unlicensed foreign corporation, sought to
collect US$41,939.63 from a Filipino businessman for goods which he purchased and
received on several occasions from January to May 1989. The transfers of goods took place
in Singapore, for the Filipinos account, F.O.B. Singapore, with a 90-day credit term. Since
the transactions involved were not isolated, this Court found Eriks to be doing business in
the Philippines. Hence, this Court upheld the dismissal of the complaint on the ground
that Eriks has no capacity to sue.
The Court of Appeals noted that in Eriks, while the deliveries of the goods were perfected
in Singapore, this Court still found Eriks to be engaged in business in the Philippines.
Thus, the Court of Appeals concluded that the place of delivery of the goods (or the place
where the transaction took place) is not material in determining whether a foreign
corporation is doing business in the Philippines. The Court of Appeals held that what is
material are the proponents to the transaction, as well as the parties to be benefited and
obligated by the transaction.
In this case, the Court of Appeals found that the parties entered into a contract of sale
whereby petitioner sold lace products to respondent in a series of transactions. While
petitioner delivered the goods in Hong Kong to Kenzar, Ltd. (Kenzar), another Hong Kong
company, the party with whom petitioner transacted was actually respondent, a Philippine
corporation, and not Kenzar. The Court of Appeals believed Kenzar is merely a shipping
company. The Court of Appeals concluded that the delivery of the goods in Hong Kong did
not exempt petitioner from being considered as doing business in the Philippines.
The Issue
The sole issue in this case is whether petitioner, an unlicensed foreign corporation, has
legal capacity to sue before Philippine courts. The resolution of this issue depends on
whether petitioner is doing business in the Philippines.
The Ruling of the Court
The petition is meritorious.
Section 133 of the Corporation Code provides:
Doing business without license. No foreign corporation transacting business in
the Philippines without a license, or its successors or assigns, shall be permitted to
maintain or intervene in any action, suit or proceeding in any court or
administrative agency of the Philippines; but such corporation may be sued or
proceeded against before Philippine courts or administrative tribunals on any valid
cause of action recognized under Philippine laws.
The law is clear. An unlicensed foreign corporation doing business in the Philippines
cannot sue before Philippine courts. On the other hand, an unlicensed foreign
corporation not doing business in the Philippines can sue before Philippine courts.
In the present controversy, petitioner is a foreign corporation which claims that it is not
doing business in the Philippines. As such, it needs no license to institute a collection suit
against respondent before Philippine courts.
Respondent argues otherwise. Respondent insists that petitioner is doing business in the
Philippines without the required license. Hence, petitioner has no legal capacity to sue
before Philippine courts.
Under Section 3(d) of Republic Act No. 7042 (RA 7042) or "The Foreign Investments Act of
1991," the phrase "doing business" includes:
discernible from the allegations of the complaint or from its attachments. Therefore, there
is no basis for ruling that petitioner is doing business in the Philippines.
In Eriks, respondent therein alleged the existence of a distributorship agreement between
him and the foreign corporation. If duly established, such distributorship agreement could
support respondents claim that petitioner was indeed doing business in the Philippines.
Here, there is no such or similar agreement between petitioner and respondent.
We disagree with the Court of Appeals ruling that the proponents to the transaction
determine whether a foreign corporation is doing business in the Philippines, regardless of
the place of delivery or place where the transaction took place. To accede to such theory
makes it possible to classify, for instance, a series of transactions between a Filipino in the
United States and an American company based in the United States as "doing business in
the Philippines," even when these transactions are negotiated and consummated only
within the United States.
An exporter in one country may export its products to many foreign importing countries
without performing in the importing countries specific commercial acts that would
constitute doing business in the importing countries. The mere act of exporting from ones
own country, without doing any specific commercial act within the territory of the
importing country, cannot be deemed as doing business in the importing country. The
importing country does not acquire jurisdiction over the foreign exporter who has not
performed any specific commercial act within the territory of the importing country.
Without jurisdiction over the foreign exporter, the importing country cannot compel the
foreign exporter to secure a license to do business in the importing country.
Otherwise, Philippine exporters, by the mere act alone of exporting their products, could
be considered by the importing countries to be doing business in those countries. This will
require Philippine exporters to secure a business license in every foreign country where
they usually export their products, even if they do not perform any specific commercial act
within the territory of such importing countries. Such a legal concept will have a
deleterious effect not only on Philippine exports, but also on global trade.
To be doing or "transacting business in the Philippines" for purposes of Section 133 of the
Corporation Code, the foreign corporation must actually transact business in the
Philippines, that is, perform specific business transactions within the Philippine territory
on a continuing basis in its own name and for its own account. Actual transaction of
business within the Philippine territory is an essential requisite for the Philippines to
acquire jurisdiction over a foreign corporation and thus require the foreign corporation to
secure a Philippine business license. If a foreign corporation does not transact such kind
of business in the Philippines, even if it exports its products to the Philippines, the
Philippines has no jurisdiction to require such foreign corporation to secure a Philippine
business license.
Considering that petitioner is not doing business in the Philippines, it does not need a
license in order to initiate and maintain a collection suit against respondent for the unpaid
balance of respondents purchases.
WHEREFORE, we GRANT the petition. We REVERSE the Decision dated 18 April 2001 of
the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. CV No. 66236. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
fittings. The ordered materials were delivered via airfreight under the following invoices: 3
The transfers of goods were perfected in Singapore, for private respondent's account,
F.O.B. Singapore, with a 90-day credit term. Subsequently, demands were made by
petitioner upon private respondent to settle his account, but the latter failed/refused to do
so.
On August 28, 1991, petitioner corporation filed with the Regional Trial Court of Makati,
Branch 138, 4 Civil Case No. 91-2373 entitled "Eriks Pte. Ltd. vs. Delfin Enriquez, Jr." for the
recovery of S$41,939.63 or its equivalent in Philippine currency, plus interest thereon and
damages. Private respondent responded with a Motion to Dismiss, contending that petitioner
corporation had no legal capacity to sue. In an Order dated March 8, 1993, 5 the trial court
dismissed the action on the ground that petitioner is a foreign corporation doing business in
the Philippines without a license. The dispositive portion of said order reads: 6
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, the motion to dismiss is hereby
GRANTED and accordingly, the above-entitled case is hereby DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.
On appeal, respondent Court affirmed said order as it deemed the series of transactions
between petitioner, corporation and private respondent not to be an "isolated or casual
transaction." Thus, respondent Court likewise found petitioner to be without legal capacity
to sue, and disposed of the appeal as follows: 7
WHEREFORE, the appealed Order should be, as it is hereby AFFIRMED. The
complaint is dismissed. No costs.
SO ORDERED.
Hence, this petition.
The Issue
The main issue in this petition is whether petitioner corporation may maintain an action in
Philippine courts considering that it has no license to do business in the country. The
resolution of this issue depends on whether petitioner's business with private respondent
may be treated as isolated transactions.
Petitioner insists that the series of sales made to private respondent would still constitute
isolated transactions despite the number of invoices covering several separate and distinct
items sold and shipped over a span of four to five months, and that an affirmation of
respondent Court's ruling would result in injustice and unjust enrichment.
Private respondent counters that to declare petitioner as possessing capacity to sue will
render nugatory the provisions of the Corporation Code and constitute a gross violation of
our laws. Thus, he argues, petitioner is undeserving of legal protection.
The Court's Ruling
The petition has no merit.
The Concept of Doing Business
The Corporation Code provides:
Sec. 133. Doing business without a license. No foreign corporation
transacting business in the Philippines without a license, or its successors
or assigns, shall be permitted to maintain or intervene in any action, suit or
proceeding in any court or administrative agency of the Philippines; but
such corporation may be sued or proceeded against before Philippine courts
10
13
Equally important is the absence of any fact or circumstance which might tend even
remotely to negate such intention to continue the progressive prosecution of petitioner's
business activities in this country. Had private respondent not turned out to be a bad risk,
in all likelihood petitioner would have indefinitely continued its commercial transactions
with him, and not surprisingly, in ever increasing volumes.
Thus, we hold that the series of transactions in question could not have been isolated or
casual transactions. What is determinative of "doing business" is not really the number or
the quantity of the transactions, but more importantly, the intention of an entity to
continue the body of its business in the country. The number and quantity are merely
evidence of such intention. The phrase "isolated transaction" has a definite and fixed
meaning, i.e. a transaction or series of transactions set apart from the common business
of a foreign enterprise in the sense that there is no intention to engage in a progressive
pursuit of the purpose and object of the business organization. Whether a foreign
corporation is "doing business" does not necessarily depend upon the frequency of its
transactions, but more upon the nature and character of the transactions.
14
Given the facts of this case, we cannot see how petitioner's business dealings will fit the
category of "isolated transactions" considering that its intention to continue and pursue
the corpus of its business in the country had been clearly established. It has not
presented any convincing argument with equally convincing evidence for us to rule
otherwise.
Incapacitated to Maintain Suit
Accordingly and ineluctably, petitioner must be held to be incapacitated to maintain the
action a quo against private respondent.
It was never the intent of the legislature to bar court access to a foreign corporation or
entity which happens to obtain an isolated order for business in the Philippines. Neither,
did it intend to shield debtors from their legitimate liabilities or obligations. 15 But it cannot
allow foreign corporations or entities which conduct regular business any access to courts
without the fulfillment by such corporations of the necessary requisites to be subjected to our
government's regulation and authority. By securing a license, the foreign entity would be giving
assurance that it will abide by the decisions of our courts, even if adverse to it.
Other Remedy Still Available
By this judgment, we are not foreclosing petitioner's right to collect payment. Res
judicata does not set in a case dismissed for lack of capacity to sue, because there has
been no determination on the merits. 16Moreover, this Court has ruled that subsequent
acquisition of the license will cure the lack of capacity at the time of the execution of the
contract.
17
18
19
On November 23, 1987, Merrill Lynch Futures, Inc. (hereafter, simply ML FUTURES) filed a
complaint with the Regional Trial Court at Quezon City against the Spouses Pedro M. Lara
and Elisa G. Lara for the recovery of a debt and interest thereon, damages, and attorney's
fees. 1 In its complaint ML FUTURES described itself as
a) a non-resident foreign corporation, not doing business in the Philippines,
duly organized and existing under and by virtue of the laws of the state of
Delaware, U.S.A.;" as well as
b) a "futures commission merchant" duly licensed to act as such in the
futures markets and exchanges in the United States, . . essentially
functioning as a broker . . (executing) orders to buy and sell futures
contracts received from its customers on U.S. futures exchanges.
It also defined a "futures contract" as a "contractual commitment to buy and sell a
standardized quantity of a particular item at a specified future settlement date and at a
price agreed upon, with the purchase or sale being executed on a regulated futures
exchange."
In its complaint ML FUTURES alleged the following:
1) that on September 28, 1983 it entered into a Futures Customer Agreement with
the defendant spouses (Account No. 138-12161), in virtue of which it agreed to act
as the latter's broker for the purchase and sale of futures contracts in the U.S.;
2) that pursuant to the contract, orders to buy and sell futures contracts were
transmitted to ML FUTURES by the Lara Spouses "through the facilities of Merrill
Lynch Philippines, Inc., a Philippine corporation and a company servicing plaintiffs
customers;
3) that from the outset, the Lara Spouses "knew and were duly advised that Merrill
Lynch Philippines, Inc. was not a broker in futures contracts," and that it "did not
have a license from the Securities and Exchange Commission to operate as a
commodity trading advisor (i.e., 'an entity which, not being a broker, furnishes
advice on commodity futures to persons who trade in futures contracts');
4) that in line with the above mentioned agreement and through said Merrill Lynch
Philippines, Inc., the Lara Spouses actively traded in futures contracts, including
"stock index futures" for four years or so, i.e., from 1983 to October, 1987, 3 there
being more or less regular accounting and corresponding remittances of money (or
crediting or debiting) made between the spouses and ML FUTURES;
b) they had never been informed that Merrill Lynch Philippines, Inc. was not
licensed to do business in this country; and contrary to the allegations of the
complaint, all their transactions had actually been with MERRILL LYNCH PIERCE
FENNER & SMITH, INC., and not with ML FUTURES (Merrill Lynch Futures, Inc.), in
proof of which they attached to their motion to dismiss copies of eight (8)
agreements, receipts or reminders, etc., executed on standard printed forms of said
Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith Inc.
In its own decision promulgated on November 27, 1990, 7 the Court of Appeals affirmed the
Trial Court's judgment. It declared that the Trial Court had seen "through the charade in the
representation of MLPI and the plaintiff that MLPI is only a trading advisor and in fact it is a
conduit in the plaintiff's business transactions in the Philippines as a basis for invoking the
provisions of Section 133 of the Corporation Code,"
8 viz.:
Sec. 1. Definition and scope of this ACT . (1) As used in this Act, the term
"investment" shall mean equity participation in any enterprise formed,
organized, or existing under the laws of the Philippines; and the phrase "doing
business" shall INCLUDE soliciting orders, purchases, service contracts, opening
offices, whether called "liaison" offices or branches; appointing representatives or
distributors who are domiciled in the Philippines or who in any calendar year
stay in the Philippines for a period or periods totalling one hundred eighty days or
more; participating in the management, supervision or control of any domestic
business firm, entity or corporation in the Philippines; AND ANY OTHER ACT
OR ACTS THAT IMPLY A CONTINUITY OF COMMERCIAL DEALINGS OR
ARRANGEMENTS AND CONTEMPLATE TO THAT EXTENT THE PERFORMANCE
OF ACTS OR WORKS, OR THE EXERCISE OF SOME FUNCTIONS NORMALLY
INCIDENT TO, AND IN PROGRESSIVE PROSECUTION OF COMMERCIAL GAIN
OR OF THE PURPOSE AND OBJECT OF THE BUSINESS ORGANIZATION.
As regards the claim that it was error for the Trial Court to place reliance on the decision
of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. No. 10821-SP sustaining the finding of the Securities
& Exchange Commission that ML FUTURES was doing business in the Philippines since
that judgment was not yet final and ML FUTURES was not a party to that proceeding, the
Court of Appeals ruled that there was no need to belabor the point considering that there
was, in any event, "adequate proof of the activities of MLPI . . . which manifestly show that
the plaintiff (ML FUTURES) performed a series of business acts, consummated contracts
and undertook transactions for the period from 1983 to October 1987," "and because ML
FUTURES had done so without license, it consequently had "no legal personality to bring
suit in Philippine courts."
Its motion for reconsideration having been denied, 10 ML FUTURES has appealed to this
Court on certiorari. Here, it submits the following issues for resolution:
(a) Whether or not the annexes appended by the Laras to their Motion to
Dismiss and Reply filed with the Regional Trial Court, but never
authenticated or offered, constitute admissible evidence.
(b) Whether or not in the proceedings below, ML FUTURES has been
accorded procedural due process.
(c) Whether or not the annexes, assuming them to be admissible, established
that ML FUTURES was doing business in the Philippines without a license.
As just stated, the Lara Spouse's motion to dismiss was founded on two (2) grounds: (a)
that the plaintiff has no legal capacity to sue, and (b) that the complaint states no cause of
action (Sec. 1 [d], and [g], Rule 16, Rules of Court).
As regards the second ground, i.e., that the complaint states no cause of action, the settled
doctrine of course is that said ground must appear on the face of the complaint, and its
existence may be determined only by the allegations of the complaint, consideration of
other facts being proscribed, and any attempt to prove extraneous circumstances not being
allowed. 11 The test of the sufficiency of the facts alleged in a complaint as constituting a cause
of action is whether or not, admitting the facts alleged, the court might render a valid judgment
upon the same in accordance with the prayer of the complaint. 12 Indeed, it is error for a judge
to conduct a preliminary hearing and receive evidence on the affirmative defense of failure of
the complaint to state a cause of action. 13
The other ground for dismissal relied upon, i.e., that the plaintiff has no legal capacity to
sue may be understood in two senses: one, that the plaintiff is prohibited or otherwise
incapacitated by law to institute suit in Philippine Courts,
14
incapacitated in the sense just stated, that it is not a real party in interest. 15 Now, the Lara
Spouses contend that ML Futures has no capacity to sue them because the transactions
subject of the complaint were had by them, not with the plaintiff ML FUTURES, but
with Merrill Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith, Inc. Evidence is quite obviously needed in this
situation, for it is not to be expected that said ground, or any facts from which its existence
may be inferred, will be found in the averments of the complaint. When such a ground is
asserted in a motion to dismiss, the general rule governing evidence on motions applies. The
rule is embodied in Section 7, Rule 133 of the Rules of Court.
depositions presented by the respective parties, but the court may direct
that the matter be heard wholly or partly on oral testimony or depositions.
There was, to be sure, no affidavit or deposition attached to the Lara Spouses' motion to
dismiss or thereafter proffered in proof of the averments of their motion. The motion itself
was not verified. What the spouses did do was to refer in their motion to documents which
purported to establish that it was not with ML FUTURES that they had theretofore been
dealing, but another, distinct entity, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc., copies of
which documents were attached to the motion. It is significant that ML FUTURES raised
no issue relative to the authenticity of the documents thus annexed to the Laras' motion.
In fact, its arguments subsumed the genuineness thereof and even adverted to one or two
of them. Its objection was centered on the propriety of taking account of those documents
as evidence, considering the established principle that no evidence should be received in
the resolution of a motion to dismiss based on an alleged failure of the complaint to state a
cause of action.
There being otherwise no question respecting the genuineness of the documents, nor of
their relevance to at least one of the grounds for dismissal i.e., the prohibition on suits
in Philippine Courts by foreign corporations doing business in the country without license
it would have been a superfluity for the Court to require prior proof of their authenticity,
and no error may be ascribed to the Trial Court in taking account of them in the
determination of the motion on the ground, not that the complaint fails to state a cause of
action as regards which evidence is improper and impermissible but that the plaintiff
has no legal capacity to sue respecting which proof may and should be presented.
Neither may ML FUTURES argue with any degree of tenability that it had been denied due
process in the premises. As just pointed out, it was very clear from the outset that the
claim of lack of its capacity to sue was being made to rest squarely on the documents
annexed thereto, and ML FUTURES had more than ample opportunity to impugn those
documents and require their authentication, but did not do so. To sustain its theory that
there should have been identification and authentication, and formal offer, of those
documents in the Trial Court pursuant to the rules of evidence would be to give
unwarranted importance to technicality and make it prevail over the substance of the
issue.
The first question then, is, as ML FUTURES formulates it, whether or not the annexes,
assuming them to be admissible, establish that (a) ML FUTURES is prohibited from suing
in Philippine Courts because doing business in the country without a license, and that (b)
it is not a real party in interest since the Lara Spouses had not been doing business with
it, but with another corporation, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith, Inc.
The Court is satisfied that the facts on record adequately establish that ML FUTURES,
operating in the United States, had indeed done business with the Lara Spouses in the
Philippines over several years, had done so at all times through Merrill Lynch Philippines,
Inc. (MLPI), a corporation organized in this country, and had executed all these
transactions without ML FUTURES being licensed to so transact business here, and
without MLPI being authorized to operate as a commodity futures trading advisor. These
are the factual findings of both the Trial Court and the Court of Appeals. These, too, are
the conclusions of the Securities & Exchange Commission which denied MLPI's application
to operate as a commodity futures trading advisor, a denial subsequently affirmed by the
Court of Appeals. Prescinding from the proposition that factual findings of the Court of
Appeals are generally conclusive this Court has been cited to no circumstance of
substance to warrant reversal of said Appellate Court's findings or conclusions in this
case.
The Court is satisfied, too, that the Laras did transact business with ML FUTURES
through its agent corporation organized in the Philippines, it being unnecessary to
determine whether this domestic firm was MLPI (Merrill Lynch Philippines, Inc.) or Merrill
Lynch Pierce Fenner & Smith (MLPI's alleged predecessor). The fact is that ML FUTURES
did deal with futures contracts in exchanges in the United States in behalf and for the
account of the Lara Spouses, and that on several occasions the latter received account
documents and money in connection with those transactions.
Given these facts, if indeed the last transaction executed by ML FUTURES in the Laras's
behalf had resulted in a loss amounting to US $160,749.69; that in relation to this loss,
ML FUTURES had credited the Laras with the amount of US$75,913.42 which it (ML
FUTURES) then admittedly owed the spouses and thereafter sought to collect the
balance, US$84,836.27, but the Laras had refused to pay (for the reasons already above
stated), the crucial question is whether or not ML FUTURES may sue in Philippine Courts
to establish and enforce its rights against said spouses, in light of the undeniable fact that
it had transacted business in this country without being licensed to do so. In other words,
if it be true that during all the time that they were transacting with ML FUTURES, the
Laras were fully aware of its lack of license to do business in the Philippines, and in
relation to those transactions had made payments to, and received money from it for
several years, the question is whether or not the Lara Spouses are now estopped to impugn
ML FUTURES' capacity to sue them in the courts of the forum.
The rule is that a party is estopped to challenge the personality of a corporation after
having acknowledged the same by entering into a contract with it.
16
17
"one who has dealt with a corporation of foreign origin as a corporate entity is
18
prevent a person contracting with a foreign corporation from later taking advantage of its
noncompliance with the statutes, chiefly in cases where such person has received the benefits
of the contract (Sherwood v. Alvis, 83 Ala 115, 3 So 307, limited and distinguished in Dudley v.
Collier, 87 Ala 431, 6 So 304; Spinney v. Miller, 114 Iowa 210, 86 NW 317), where such person
has acted as agent for the corporation and has violated his fiduciary obligations as such, and
where the statute does not provide that the contract shall be void, but merely fixes a special
penalty for violation of the statute. . . ."
19
The doctrine was adopted by this Court as early as 1924 in Asia Banking Corporation
v. Standard Products Co.,20 in which the following pronouncement was made:
21
The general rule that in the absence of fraud of person who has contracted
or otherwise dealt with an association in such a way as to recognize and in
effect admit its legal existence as a corporate body is thereby estopped to
deny its corporate existence in any action leading out of or involving such
contract or dealing, unless its existence is attacked for causes which have
arisen since making the contract or other dealing relied on as an estoppel
and this applies to foreign as well as domestic corporations. (14 C.J .7;
Chinese Chamber of Commerce vs. Pua Te Ching, 14 Phil. 222).
There would seem to be no question that the Laras received benefits generated by their
business relations with ML FUTURES. Those business relations, according to the Laras
themselves, spanned a period of seven (7) years; and they evidently found those relations
to be of such profitability as warranted their maintaining them for that not insignificant
period of time; otherwise, it is reasonably certain that they would have terminated their
dealings with ML FUTURES much, much earlier. In fact, even as regards their last
transaction, in which the Laras allegedly suffered a loss in the sum of US$160,749.69, the
Laras nonetheless still received some monetary advantage, for ML FUTURES credited them
with the amount of US$75,913.42 then due to them, thus reducing their debt to
US$84,836.27. Given these facts, and assuming that the Lara Spouses were aware from
the outset that ML FUTURES had no license to do business in this country and MLPI, no
authority to act as broker for it, it would appear quite inequitable for the Laras to evade
payment of an otherwise legitimate indebtedness due and owing to ML FUTURES upon the
plea that it should not have done business in this country in the first place, or that its
agent in this country, MLPI, had no license either to operate as a "commodity and/or
financial futures broker."
Considerations of equity dictate that, at the very least, the issue of whether the Laras are
in truth liable to ML FUTURES and if so in what amount, and whether they were so far
aware of the absence of the requisite licenses on the part of ML FUTURES and its
preventing the enforcement of the tax assessments was patent. Respondents, on the other
hand, cite the case of Geronimo v. Commission on Elections,23 where the urgent necessity of
resolving a disqualification case for a position in local government warranted the
expeditious resort to certiorari. In the case at bar, there is no analogously urgent
circumstance which would necessitate the relaxation of the rule on a Motion for
Reconsideration.
Indeed, none of the exceptions for dispensing with a Motion for Reconsideration is present
here. None of the following cases cited by respondents serves as adequate basis for their
procedural lapse.
In Vigan Electric Light Co., Inc. v. Public Service Commission, 24 the questioned order was
null and void for failure of respondent tribunal to comply with due process requirements;
in Matanguihan v. Tengco,25 the questioned order was a patent nullity for failure to acquire
jurisdiction over the defendants, which fact the records plainly disclosed; and in National
Electrification Administration v. Court of Appeals,26 the questioned orders were void for
vagueness. No such patent nullity is evident in the Order issued by the trial court in this
case. Finally, while urgency may be a ground for dispensing with a Motion for
Reconsideration, in the case of Vivo v. Cloribel,27 cited by respondents, the slow progress of
the case would have rendered the issues moot had a motion for reconsideration been
availed of. We find no such urgent circumstance in the case at bar.
Respondents, therefore, availed of a premature remedy when they immediately raised the
matter to the Court of Appeals on certiorari; and the appellate court committed reversible
error when it took cognizance of respondents petition instead of dismissing the same
outright.
We come now to the substantive issues of the petition.
Litis pendentia is a Latin term which literally means "a pending suit." It is variously
referred to in some decisions as lis pendens and auter action pendant. While it is normally
connected with the control which the court has on a property involved in a suit during the
continuance proceedings, it is more interposed as a ground for the dismissal of a civil
action pending in court.
Litis pendentia as a ground for the dismissal of a civil action refers to that situation
wherein another action is pending between the same parties for the same cause of action,
such that the second action becomes unnecessary and vexatious. For litis pendentia to be
invoked, the concurrence of the following requisites is necessary:
(a) identity of parties or at least such as represent the same interest in both actions;
(b) identity of rights asserted and reliefs prayed for, the reliefs being founded on the
same facts; and
(c) the identity in the two cases should be such that the judgment that may be
rendered in one would, regardless of which party is successful, amount to res
judicata in the other.28
The Court of Appeals correctly appreciated the identity of parties in Civil Cases No. 31232001-C and 3110-2001-C. Well-settled is the rule that lis pendens requires
only substantial, and not absolute, identity of parties.29 There is substantial identity of
parties when there is a community of interest between a party in the first case and a party
in the second case, even if the latter was not impleaded in the first case. 30 The parties in
these cases are vying over the interests of the two opposing corporations; the individuals
are only incidentally impleaded, being the natural persons purportedly accused of violating
these corporations rights.
Likewise, the fact that the positions of the parties are reversed, i.e., the plaintiffs in the
first case are the defendants in the second case or vice versa, does not negate the identity
of parties for purposes of determining whether the case is dismissible on the ground
of litis pendentia.31
The identity of parties notwithstanding, litis pendentia does not obtain in this case
because of the absence of the second and third requisites. The rights asserted in each of
the cases involved are separate and distinct; there are two subjects of controversy
presented for adjudication; and two causes of action are clearly involved. The fact that
respondents instituted a prior action for "Specific Performance and Damages" is not a
ground for defeating the petitioners action for "Specific Performance, Recovery of
Possession, and Sum of Money with Replevin, Preliminary Mandatory Injunction, and
Damages."
In Civil Case No. 3110-2001-C filed by respondents, the issue is whether or not there was
a breach of an oral promise to renew of the VAASA. The issue in Civil Case No. 3123-2001C, filed by petitioner, is whether petitioner has the right to take possession of the subject
properties. Petitioners right of possession is founded on the ownership of the subject
goods, which ownership is not disputed and is not contingent on the extension or nonextension of the VAASA. Hence, the replevin suit can validly be tried even while the prior
suit is being litigated in the Regional Trial Court.
Possession of the subject properties is not an issue in Civil Case No. 3110-2001-C. The
reliefs sought by respondent Integrated Silicon therein are as follows: (1) execution of a
written extension or renewal of the VAASA; (2) compliance with the extended VAASA; and
(3) payment of overdue accounts, damages, and attorneys fees. The reliefs sought by
petitioner Agilent in Civil Case No. 3123-2001-C, on the other hand, are as follows: (1)
issuance of a Writ of Replevin or Writ of Preliminary Mandatory Injunction; (2) recovery of
possession of the subject properties; (3) damages and attorneys fees.
Concededly, some items or pieces of evidence may be admissible in both actions. It cannot
be said, however, thatexactly the same evidence will support the decisions in both, since
the legally significant and controlling facts in each case are entirely different. Although the
VAASA figures prominently in both suits, Civil Case No. 3110-2001-C is premised on a
purported breach of an oral obligation to extend the VAASA, and damages arising out of
Agilents alleged failure to comply with such purported extension. Civil Case No. 31232001-C, on the other hand, is premised on a breach of the VAASA itself, and damages
arising to Agilent out of that purported breach.
It necessarily follows that the third requisite for litis pendentia is also absent. The following
are the elements of res judicata:
(a) The former judgment must be final;
(b) The court which rendered judgment must have jurisdiction over the parties and
the subject matter;
(c) It must be a judgment on the merits; and
(d) There must be between the first and second actions identity of parties, subject
matter, and cause of action.32
In this case, any judgment rendered in one of the actions will not amount to res judicata in
the other action. There being different causes of action, the decision in one case will not
constitute res judicata as to the other.
Of course, a decision in one case may, to a certain extent, affect the other case. This,
however, is not the test to determine the identity of the causes of action. Whatever
difficulties or inconvenience may be entailed if both causes of action are pursued on
separate remedies, the proper solution is not the dismissal order of the Court of Appeals.
The possible consolidation of said cases, as well as stipulations and appropriate modes of
discovery, may well be considered by the court below to subserve not only procedural
expedience but, more important, the ends of justice. 33
We now proceed to the issue of forum shopping.
The test for determining whether a party violated the rule against forum-shopping was laid
down in the case ofBuan v. Lopez.34 Forum shopping exists where the elements of litis
pendentia are present, or where a final judgment in one case will amount to res judicata in
the final other. There being no litis pendentia in this case, a judgment in the said case will
not amount to res judicata in Civil Case No. 3110-2001-C, and respondents contention on
forum shopping must likewise fail.
We are not unmindful of the afflictive consequences that may be suffered by both
petitioner and respondents if replevin is granted by the trial court in Civil Case No. 31232001-C. If respondent Integrated Silicon eventually wins Civil Case No. 3110-2001-C, and
the VAASAs terms are extended, petitioner corporation will have to comply with its
obligations thereunder, which would include the consignment of properties similar to
those it may recover by way of replevin in Civil Case No. 3123-2001-C. However, petitioner
will also suffer an injustice if denied the remedy of replevin, resort to which is not only
allowed but encouraged by law.
Respondents argue that since Agilent is an unlicensed foreign corporation doing business
in the Philippines, it lacks the legal capacity to file suit. 35 The assailed acts of petitioner
Agilent, purportedly in the nature of "doing business" in the Philippines, are the following:
(1) mere entering into the VAASA, which is a "service contract"; 36(2) appointment of a fulltime representative in Integrated Silicon, to "oversee and supervise the production" of
Agilents products;37 (3) the appointment by Agilent of six full-time staff members, who
were permanently stationed at Integrated Silicons facilities in order to inspect the finished
goods for Agilent;38 and (4) Agilents participation in the management, supervision and
control of Integrated Silicon,39 including instructing Integrated Silicon to hire more
employees to meet Agilents increasing production needs,40 regularly performing quality
audit, evaluation and supervision of Integrated Silicons employees, 41 regularly performing
inventory audit of raw materials to be used by Integrated Silicon, which was also required
to provide weekly inventory updates to Agilent,42 and providing and dictating Integrated
Silicon on the daily production schedule, volume and models of the products to
manufacture and ship for Agilent.43
A foreign corporation without a license is not ipso facto incapacitated from bringing an
action in Philippine courts. A license is necessary only if a foreign corporation is
"transacting" or "doing business" in the country. The Corporation Code provides:
Sec. 133. Doing business without a license. No foreign corporation
transacting business in the Philippines without a license, or its successors or
assigns, shall be permitted to maintain or intervene in any action, suit or
proceeding in any court or administrative agency of the Philippines; but such
In Mentholatum,52 this Court discoursed on the two general tests to determine whether or
not a foreign corporation can be considered as "doing business" in the Philippines. The
first of these is the substance test, thus:53
The true test [for doing business], however, seems to be whether the foreign
corporation is continuing the body of the business or enterprise for which it was
organized or whether it has substantially retired from it and turned it over to
another.
The second test is the continuity test, expressed thus:54
The term [doing business] implies a continuity of commercial dealings and
arrangements, and contemplates, to that extent, the performance of acts or works
or the exercise of some of the functions normally incident to, and in the progressive
prosecution of, the purpose and object of its organization.
Although each case must be judged in light of its attendant circumstances, jurisprudence
has evolved several guiding principles for the application of these tests. For instance,
considering that it transacted with its Philippine counterpart for seven years, engaging in
futures contracts, this Court concluded that the foreign corporation inMerrill Lynch
Futures, Inc. v. Court of Appeals and Spouses Lara,55 was doing business in the Philippines.
InCommissioner of Internal Revenue v. Japan Airlines ("JAL"),56 the Court held that JAL was
doing business in the Philippines, i.e., its commercial dealings in the country were
continuous despite the fact that no JAL aircraft landed in the country as it sold tickets
in the Philippines through a general sales agent, and opened a promotions office here as
well.
In General Corp. of the Phils. v. Union Insurance Society of Canton and Firemans Fund
Insurance,57 a foreign insurance corporation was held to be doing business in the
Philippines, as it appointed a settling agent here, and issued 12 marine insurance policies.
We held that these transactions were not isolated or casual, but manifested the continuity
of the foreign corporations conduct and its intent to establish a continuous business in
the country. In Eriks PTE Ltd. v. Court of Appeals and Enriquez,58 the foreign corporation
sold its products to a Filipino buyer who ordered the goods 16 times within an eightmonth period. Accordingly, this Court ruled that the corporation was doing business in
the Philippines, as there was a clear intention on its part to continue the body of its
business here, despite the relatively short span of time involved. Communication Materials
and Design, Inc., et al. v. Court of Appeals, ITEC, et al. 59 and Top-Weld Manufacturing v.
ECED, IRTI, et al.60 both involved the License and Technical Agreement and Distributor
Agreement of foreign corporations with their respective local counterparts that were the
primary bases for the Courts ruling that the foreign corporations were doing business in
the Philippines.61 In particular, the Court cited the highly restrictive nature of certain
provisions in the agreements involved, such that, as stated in Communication Materials,
the Philippine entity is reduced to a mere extension or instrument of the foreign
corporation. For example, in Communication Materials, the Court deemed the "No
Competing Product" provision of the Representative Agreement therein restrictive. 62
The case law definition has evolved into a statutory definition, having been adopted with
some qualifications in various pieces of legislation. The Foreign Investments Act of 1991
(the "FIA"; Republic Act No. 7042, as amended), defines "doing business" as follows:
Sec. 3, par. (d). The phrase "doing business" shall include soliciting orders, service
contracts, opening offices, whether called "liaison" offices or branches; appointing
representatives or distributors domiciled in the Philippines or who in any calendar
year stay in the country for a period or periods totaling one hundred eighty (180)
days or more; participating in the management, supervision or control of any
domestic business, firm, entity, or corporation in the Philippines; and any other act
or acts that imply a continuity of commercial dealings or arrangements, and
contemplate to that extent the performance of acts or works, or the exercise of some
of the functions normally incident to, and in the progressive prosecution of,
commercial gain or of the purpose and object of the business organization.
An analysis of the relevant case law, in conjunction with Section 1 of the
Implementing Rules and Regulations of the FIA (as amended by Republic Act No.
8179), would demonstrate that the acts enumerated in the VAASA do not constitute
"doing business" in the Philippines.
Section 1 of the Implementing Rules and Regulations of the FIA (as amended by
Republic Act No. 8179) provides that the following shall not be deemed "doing
business":
(5) Maintaining a stock of goods in the Philippines solely for the purpose
of having the same processed by another entity in the Philippines;
(6) Consignment by a foreign entity of equipment with a local company to
be used in the processing of products for export;
(7) Collecting information in the Philippines; and
(8) Performing services auxiliary to an existing isolated contract of sale
which are not on a continuing basis, such as installing in the Philippines
machinery it has manufactured or exported to the Philippines, servicing
the same, training domestic workers to operate it, and similar incidental
services.
By and large, to constitute "doing business", the activity to be undertaken in the
Philippines is one that is for profit-making.63
By the clear terms of the VAASA, Agilents activities in the Philippines were confined to (1)
maintaining a stock of goods in the Philippines solely for the purpose of having the same
processed by Integrated Silicon; and (2) consignment of equipment with Integrated Silicon
to be used in the processing of products for export. As such, we hold that, based on the
evidence presented thus far, Agilent cannot be deemed to be "doing business" in the
Philippines. Respondents contention that Agilent lacks the legal capacity to file suit is
therefore devoid of merit. As a foreign corporation not doing business in the Philippines, it
needed no license before it can sue before our courts.
Finally, as to Agilents purported failure to state a cause of action against the individual
respondents, we likewise rule in favor of petitioner. A Motion to Dismiss hypothetically
admits all the allegations in the Complaint, which plainly alleges that these individual
respondents had committed or permitted the commission of acts prejudicial to Agilent.
Whether or not these individuals had divested themselves of their interests in Integrated
Silicon, or are no longer members of Integrated Silicons Board of Directors, is a matter of
defense best threshed out during trial.
WHEREFORE, PREMISES CONSIDERED, the petition is GRANTED. The Decision of the
Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 66574 dated August 12, 2002, which dismissed Civil
Case No. 3123-2001-C,
is REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The Order dated September 4, 2001 issued by the
Regional Trial Court of Calamba, Laguna, Branch 92, in Civil Case No. 3123-2001-C,
is REINSTATED. Agilents application for a Writ of Replevin is GRANTED.
No pronouncement as to costs.
SO ORDERED.
Eriks Pte. Ltd. vs. Court of Appeals [GR 118843, 6 February 1997]
Third Division, Panganiban (J): 4 concur
Facts: Eriks Pte. Ltd. is a non-resident foreign corporation engaged in the
manufacture and sale of elements used in sealing pumps, valves and pipes for
industrial purposes, valves and control equipment used for industrial fluid control and
PVC pipes and fittings for industrial uses. On various dates covering the period
January 17 August 16, 1989, Delfin Enriquez, Jr., doing business under the name
and style of Delrene EB Controls Center and/or EB Karmine Commercial, ordered and
received from Eriks Pte. Ltd., various elements used in sealing pumps, valves, pipes
and control equipment, PVC pipes and fittings. The transfers of goods were perfected
in Singapore, for Enriquez's account, F.O.B. Singapore, with a 90-day credit term.
Subsequently, demands were made by Eriks upon Enriquez to settle his account, but
the latter failed/refused to do so. On 28 August 1991, Eriks filed with the Regional
Trial Court of Makati, Branch 138, Civil Case 91- 2373 for the recovery of
S$41,939.63 or its equivalent in Philippine currency, plus interest thereon and
damages. Enriquez responded with a Motion to Dismiss, contending that Eriks had no
legal capacity to sue. In an Order dated 8 March 1993, the trial court dismissed the
action on the ground that Eriks is a foreign corporation doing business in the
Philippines without a license. On appeal and on 25 January 1995, the appellate court
(CA GR CV 41275) affirmed said order as it deemed the series of transactions between
Eriks and Enriquez not to be an "isolated or casual transaction." Thus, the appellate
court likewise found Eriks to be without legal capacity to sue. Eriks filed the petition
for review.
Issue: Whether a foreign corporation which sold its products 16 times over a fivemonth period to the same Filipino buyer without first obtaining a license to do
PVC pipes and fittings for industrial use. Thus, the sale by Eriks of the items covered
by the receipts, which are part and parcel of its main product line, was actually
carried out in the progressive prosecution of commercial gain and the pursuit of the
purpose and object of its business, pure and simple. Further, its grant and extension
of 90-day credit terms to Enriquez for every purchase made, unarguably shows an
intention to continue transacting with Enriquez, since in the usual course of
commercial transactions, credit is extended only to customers in good standing or to
those on whom there is an intention to maintain long-term relationship. The series of
transactions in question could not have been isolated or casual transactions. What is
determinative of "doing business" is not really the number or the quantity of the
transactions, but more importantly, the intention of an entity to continue the body of
its business in the country. The number and quantity are merely evidence of such
intention. The phrase "isolated transaction" has a definite and fixed meaning, i.e. a
transaction or series of transactions set apart from the common business of a foreign
enterprise in the sense that there is no intention to engage in a progressive pursuit of
the purpose and object of the business organization. Whether a foreign corporation is
"doing business" does not necessarily depend upon the frequency of its transactions,
but more upon the nature and character of the transactions. Given the facts of the
case, the Court cannot see how Eriks' business dealings will fit the category of
"isolated transactions" considering that its intention to continue and pursue the
corpus of its business in the country had been clearly established. It has not
presented any convincing argument with equally convincing evidence for the Court to
rule otherwise. Accordingly and ineluctably, Eriks must be held to be incapacitated to
maintain the action a quo against Enriquez
broker in futures contracts," and that it "did not have a license from the SEC to
operate as a commodity trading advisor; the Lara Spouses actively traded in futures
contracts for four years; that because of a loss incurred said spouses became
indebted to ML FUTURES; that the Lara Spouses refused to pay this balance, "alleging
that the transactions were null and void because Merrill Lynch Philippines, Inc., had
no license to operate as a 'commodity and/or financial futures broker.'"
ISSUE: Whether or not a foreign corporation has a capacity to maintain an action in
the Philippines against residents thereof
HELD: The Court is satisfied that the facts on record adequately establish that ML
FUTURES, operating in the United States, had indeed done business with the Lara
Spouses in the Philippines over several years, had done so at all times through Merrill
Lynch Philippines, Inc, a corporation organized in this country, and had executed all
these transactions without ML FUTURES being licensed to so transact business here,
and without MLPI being authorized to operate as a commodity futures trading advisor.
The rule is that a party is estopped to challenge the personality of a corporation after
having acknowledged the same by entering into a contract with it. And the "doctrine
of estoppel to deny corporate existence applies to foreign as well as to domestic
corporations;" "one who has dealt with a corporation of foreign origin as a corporate
entity is estopped to deny its corporate existence and capacity." The principle "will be
applied to prevent a person contracting with a foreign corporation from later taking
advantage of its noncompliance with the statutes, chiefly in cases where such person
has received the benefits of the contract, where such person has acted as agent for the
corporation and has violated his fiduciary obligations as such, and where the statute
does not provide that the contract shall be void, but merely fixes a special penalty for
violation of the statute"