Philippine Supreme Court Jurisprudence


Philippine Supreme Court Jurisprudence > Year 1996 > March 1996 Decisions > G.R. No. 101699 March 13, 1996 - BENJAMIN A. SANTOS v. NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION, ET AL.:




PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

FIRST DIVISION

[G.R. No. 101699. March 13, 1996.]

BENJAMIN A. SANTOS, Petitioner, v. NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION, HON. LABOR ARBITER FRUCTUOSO T. AURELLANO and MELVIN D. MILLENA, Respondents.

Norberto B. Tria for Petitioner.

The Solicitor General for Respondents.


SYLLABUS


1. REMEDIAL LAW; CIVIL PROCEDURE; JURISDICTION OVER THE PERSON OF THE DEFENDANT; ACQUIRED BY VOLUNTARY APPEARANCE BY A LEGAL ADVOCATE. — The fact that Atty. Romeo B. Perez has been able to timely ask for a deferment of the initial hearing on 14 November 1986, coupled with his subsequent active participation in the proceedings, should disprove the supposed want of service of legal process. Although as a rule, modes of service of summons are strictly followed in order that the court may acquire jurisdiction over the person of a defendant, such procedural modes, however, are liberally construed in quasi-judicial proceedings, substantial compliance with the same being considered adequate. Moreover, jurisdiction over the person of the defendant in civil cases is acquired not only by service of summons but also by voluntary appearance in court and submission to its authority. "Appearance" by a legal advocate is such "voluntary submission to a court’s jurisdiction. It may be made not only by actual physical appearance but likewise by the submission of pleadings in compliance with the order of the court or tribunal. To say that petitioner did not authorize Atty. Perez to represent him in the case is to unduly tax credulity. Like the Solicitor General, the Court likewise considers it unlikely that Atty. Perez would have been so irresponsible as to represent petitioner if he were not, in fact, authorized. Atty. Perez is an officer of the court, and he must be presumed to have acted with due propriety. The employment of a counsel or the authority to employ an attorney, it might be pointed out, need not be proved in writing; such fact could be inferred from circumstantial evidence. Petitioner was not just an ordinary official of the MMDC; he was the President of the company.

2. COMMERCIAL LAWS; CORPORATION; LIFTING OF CORPORATE VEIL; CONCEPT. — A corporation is a juridical entity with legal personality separate and distinct from those acting for and in its behalf and, in general, from the people comprising it. The rule is that obligations incurred by the corporation, acting through its directors, officers and employees, are its sole liabilities. Nevertheless, being a mere fiction of law, peculiar situations or valid grounds can exist to warrant, albeit done sparingly, the disregard of its independent being and the lifting of the corporate veil. As a rule, this situation might arise when a corporation is used to evade a just and due obligation or to justify a wrong, to shield or perpetrate fraud, to carry out similar other unjustifiable aims or intentions, or as a subterfuge to commit injustice and so circumvent the law.

3. ID.; ID.; ID.; INSTANCES WHEN PERSONAL CIVIL LIABILITY CAN BE LAWFULLY ATTACHED TO A CORPORATE DIRECTOR, TRUSTEE OR OFFICER. — In Tramat Mercantile, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, (238 SCRA 14, 19) the Court has collated the settled instances when, without necessarily piercing the veil of corporate fiction, personal civil liability can also be said to lawfully attach to a corporate director, trustee or officer; to wit: When —" (1) He assents (a) to a patently unlawful act of the corporation, or (b) for bad faith or gross negligence in directing its affairs, or (c) for conflict of interest, resulting in damages to the corporation, its stockholders or other persons; (2) He consents to the issuance of watered stocks or who, having knowledge thereof, does not forthwith file with the corporate secretary his written objection thereto; (3) He agrees to hold himself personally and solidarity liable with the corporation; or (4) He is made, by a specific provision of law, to personally answer for his corporate action."cralaw virtua1aw library

4. ID.; ID.; ID.; ID.; NOT APPLICABLE IN CASE IT WAS NOT SHOWN THAT THE OFFICER HAS HAD A DIRECT HAND IN THE DISMISSAL OF EMPLOYEES. — The case of petitioner is way off these exceptional instances. It is not even shown that petitioner has had a direct hand in the dismissal of private respondent enough to attribute to him (petitioner) a patently unlawful act while acting for the corporation. Neither can Article 289 of the Labor Code be applied since this law specifically refers only to the imposition of penalties under the Code. It is undisputed that the termination of petitioner’s employment has, instead, been due, collectively, to the need for a further mitigation of losses, the onset of the rainy season, the insurgency problem in Sorsogon and the lack of funds to further support the mining operation in Gatbo.

5. ID.; ID.; CORPORATE OFFICERS; WHEN PERSONALLY ACCOUNTABLE FOR THE PAYMENT OF WAGES AND MONEY CLAIMS TO ITS EMPLOYEES. — It is true, there were various cases when corporate officers were themselves held by the Court to be personally accountable for the payment of wages and money claims to its employees. In A.C . Ransom Labor Union-CCLU v. NLRC , for instance, the Court ruled that under the Minimum Wage Law, the responsible officer of an employer corporation could be held personally liable for nonpayment of backwages for" (i)f the policy of the law were otherwise, the corporation employer (would) have devious ways for evading payment of back wages." In the absence of a clear identification of the officer directly responsible for failure to pay the backwages, the Court considered the President of the corporation as such officer. The case was cited in Chua v. NLRC (182 SCRA 353) in holding personally liable the vice-president of the company, being the highest and most ranking official of the corporation next to President who was dismissed, for the latter’s claim for unpaid wages. The basic rule is still that which can be deduced from the Court’s pronouncement in Sunio v. National Labor Relations Commission (127 SCRA 390, 397-398); thus: "We come now to the personal liability of petitioner, Sunio, who was made jointly and severally responsible with petitioner company and CIPI for the payment of the backwages of private respondents. This is reversible error. The Assistant Regional Director’s Decision failed to disclose the reason why he was made personally liable. Respondents, however, alleged as grounds thereof, his being the owner of one-half (1/2) interest of said corporation, and his alleged arbitrary dismissal of private respondents. "Petitioner Sunio was impleaded in the Complaint in his capacity as General Manager of petitioner corporation. There appears to be no evidence on record that he acted maliciously or in bad faith in terminating the services of private respondents. His act, therefore, was within the scope of his authority and was a corporate act. "It is basic that a corporation is invested by law with a personality separate and distinct from those of the persons composing it as well as from that of any other legal entity to which it may be related. Mere ownership by a single stockholder or by another corporation of all or nearly all of the capital stock of a corporation is not of itself sufficient ground for disregarding the separate corporate personality. Petitioner Sunio, therefore, should not have been made personally answerable for the payment of private respondents’ back salaries."


D E C I S I O N


VITUG, J.:


In a petition for certiorari under Rule 5 of the Rules of Court, petitioner Benjamin A. Santos, former President of the Mana Mining and Development Corporation ("MMDC"), questions the resolution of the National Labor Relations Commission ("NLRC") affirming the decision of the Labor Arbiter Fructouso T. Aurellano who, having held illegal the termination of employment of private respondent Melvin D. Millena, has ordered petitioner MMDC, as well as its president (herein petitioner) and the executive vice-president in their personal capacities, to pay Millena his monetary claims.

Private respondent, on 01 October 1985, was hired to be the project accountant for MMDC’s mining operations in Gatbo, Bacon, Sorsogon. On 12 August 1986, private respondent sent to Mr. Gil Abaño, the MMDC corporate treasurer, a memorandum calling the latter’s attention to the failure of the company to comply with the withholding tax requirements of, and to make the corresponding monthly remittances to, the Bureau of Internal Revenue ("BIR") on account of delayed payments of accrued salaries to the company’s laborers and employees. 1

In a letter, dated 08 September 1986, Abaño advised private respondent thusly:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"Regarding Gatbo operations, as you also are aware, the rainy season is now upon us and the peace and order condition in Sorsogon has deteriorated. It is therefore, the board’s decision that it would be useless for us to continue operations, especially if we will always be in the hole, so to speak. Our first funds receipts will be used to pay all our debts. We will stop production until the advent of the dry season, and until the insurgency problem clears. We will undertake only necessary maintenance and repair work and will keep our overhead down to the minimum manageable level. Until we resume full-scale operations, we will not need a project accountant as there will be very little paper work at the site, which can be easily handled at Makati.

"We appreciate the work you have done for Mana and we will not hesitate to take you back when we resume work at Gatbo. However it would be unfair to you if we kept you in the payroll and deprive you of the opportunity to earn more, during this period of Mana’s crisis." 2

Private respondent expressed "shock" over the termination of his employment. He complained that he would not have resigned from the Sycip, Gores & Velayo accounting firm, where he was already a senior staff auditor, had it not been for the assurance of a "continuous job" by MMDC’s Eng. Rodillano E. Velasquez. Private respondent requested that he be reimbursed the "advances" he had made for the company and be paid his "accrued salaries/claims." 3

The claim was not heed; on October 1986, private respondent filed with the NLRC Regional Arbitration, Branch No. V, in Legazpi City, a complaint for illegal dismissal, unpaid salaries, 13th month pay, overtime pay, separation pay and incentive leave pay against MMDC and its two top officials, namely, herein petitioner Benjamin A Santos (the President) and Rodillano A. Velasquez (the executive vice-president). In his complaint-affidavit (position paper), submitted on 27 October 1986, Millena alleged, among other things, that his dismissal was merely an offshoot of his letter of 12 August 1986 to Abaño about the company’s inability to pay its workers and to remit withholding taxes to the BIR. 4

A copy of the notice and summons was served on therein respondent (MMDC, Santos and Velasquez) on 29 October 1986. 5 At the initial hearing on 14 November 1986 before the Labor Arbiter, only the complaint, Millena, appeared; however, Atty. Romero Perez, in representation of the respondents, requested by telegram that the hearing be reset to 01 December 1986. Although the request was granted by the Labor Arbiter, private respondent was allowed, nevertheless, to present his evidence ex parte at that initial hearing.

The scheduled 01st December 1986 hearing was itself later reset to 19 December 1986. On 05 December 1986, the NLRC in Legazpi City again received a telegram from Atty. Perez asking for fifteen (15) days within which to submit the respondent’ position paper. On 19 December 1986, Atty., Perez sent yet another telegram seeking a further postponement of the hearing and asking for a period until 15 January 1987 within which to submit the position paper.

On 15 January 1987, Atty. Perez advised the NLRC in Legazpi City that the position paper had finally been transmitted through the mail and that he was submitting the case for resolution without further hearing. The position paper was receives by the Legazpi City NLRC office on 19 January 1987. Complaint Millena filed, on 2 February 1987, his rejoinder to the position paper.

On 27 July 1988, Labor Arbiter Fructouso T. Aurellano, finding no valid cause for terminating complaint’s employment, ruled, citing this Court’s pronouncement in Construction & Development Corporation of the Philippines v. Leogardo, Jr. 6 that a partial closure of an establishment due to losses was a retrenchment measure that rendered the employer liable for unpaid salaries and other monetary claims. The Labor Arbiter adjudged:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"WHEREFORE, the respondents are hereby ordered to pay the petitioner the amount of P37,132.25 corresponding to the latter’s unpaid salaries and advances: P5,400.00 for petitioner’s 13th month pay; P3,340.95 as service incentive leave pay; and P5, 400.00 as separation pay. The respondents are further ordered to pay the petitioner 10% of the monetary awards as attorney’s fees.

"All other claims are dismissed for lack of sufficient evidence.

"SO ORDERED." 7

Alleging abuse of discretion by the Labor Arbiter, the company and its co-respondents filed a "motion for reconsideration and /or appeal." 8 The motion/appeal was forthwith indorsed to the Executive Director of the NLRC in Manila.

In a resolution, dated 04 September 1989, the NLRC 9 affirmed the decision of the Labor Arbiter. It held that the reasons relied upon by MMDC and its co-respondents in the dismissal of Millena, i.e., the rainy season, deteriorating peace and order situation and little paperwork, were "not causes mentioned under Article 282 of the Labor Code of the Philippines" and that Millena, being a regular employee, was "shielded by the tenurial clause mandated under the law." 10

A writ of execution correspondingly issued; however, it was returned unsatisfied for the failure of the sheriff to locate the offices of the corporation in the addressed indicated. Another writ of execution and an order of garnishment was thereupon served on petitioner at his residence.

Contending that he had been denied due process, petitioner filed a motion for reconsideration of the NLRC’s resolution along with a prayer for the quashal of the writ of execution and order of garnishment. He averred that he had never received any notice, summons or even a copy of the complaint; hence, he said, the Labor Arbiter at no time had acquired jurisdiction over him.

On 16 August 1991, the NLRC 11 dismissed the motion for reconsideration. Citing Section 2, Rule 13 12 and Section 13, Rule 14, 13 of the Rules of Court, it ruled that the Regional Arbitration office had not, in fact, been remiss in the observance of the legal processes for acquiring jurisdiction over the case and over the persons of the respondents therein. The NLRC was also convinced that Atty. Perez had been the authorized counsel of MMDC and its two most ranking officers.

In holding petitioner personally liable for private respondent’s claim, the NLRC cited Article 289 14 of the Labor Code and the ruling in A.C. Ransom Labor Union-CCLU v. NLRC 15 to the effect that" (t)he responsible officer of an employer corporation (could) be held personally, not to say even criminally, liable for non-payment of backwages," and that of Gudez v. NLRC 16 which amplified that "where the employer corporation (was) no longer existing and unable to satisfy the judgment in favor of the employee, the officer should be liable for acting on behalf of the corporation."cralaw virtua1aw library

In the instant petition for certiorari, petitioner Santos reiterates that he should not have been adjudged personally liable by public respondents, the latter not having validly acquired jurisdiction over his person whether by personal service of summons or by substituted service under Rule 19 of the Rules of Court.

Petitioner’s contention is unacceptable. The fact that Atty. Romeo B. Perez has been able to timely ask for a deferment of the Initial hearing on 14 November 1986, coupled with his subsequent active participation in the proceedings, should disprove the supposed want of service of legal process. Although as a rule, modes of service of summons are strictly followed in order that the court may acquire jurisdiction over the person of a defendant, 17 such procedural modes, however, are liberally construed in quasi-judicial proceedings, substantial compliance with the same being considered adequate. 18 Moreover, jurisdiction over the person of the defendant in civil cases is acquired not only by service of summons but also by voluntary appearance in court and submission to its authority. 19 "Appearance" by a legal advocate is such "voluntary submission to a court’s jurisdiction." 20 It may be made not only by actual physical appearance but likewise by the submission of pleadings in compliance with the order of the or tribunal.

To say that petitioner did not authorize Atty. Perez to represent him in the case 21 is to unduly tax credulity. Like the Solicitor General, the Court likewise considers it unlikely that Atty. Perez would have been so irresponsible as to represent petitioner if he were not, in fact, authorized. 22 Atty. Perez is an officer of the court, and he must be presumed to have acted with due propriety. The employment of a counsel or the authority to employ an attorney, it might be pointed out, need not be proved in writing; such fact could inferred from circumstantial evidence. 23 Petitioner was not just an ordinary official of the MMDC; he was the President of the company.

Petitioner, in any event, argues that public respondents have gravely abused their discretion "in finding petitioner solidarily liable with MMDC even (in) the absence of bad faith and malice on its part." 24 There is merit in this plea.

A corporation is a judicial entity with legal personality separated and distinct from those acting for and in its behalf and, in general, from the people comprising it. The rule is that obligations incurred by the corporation, acting through its directors, officers and employees, are its sole liabilities. Nevertheless, being a mere fiction of law, peculiar situations or valid grounds can exist to warrant, albeit done sparingly, the disregard of its independent being and the lifting of the corporate veil. 25 As a rule, this situation might arise a corporation is used to evade a just and due obligation or to justify a wrong, 26 to shield or perpetrate fraud, 27 to carry out similar other unjustifiable aims or intentions, or as a subterfuge to commit injustice and so circumvent the law. 28 In TRanmat Mercantile, Inc., v. Court of Appeals, 29 the Court has collated the settled instances when, without necessarily piercing the veil of corporate fiction, person civil liability can also be said to lawfully attach to a corporate director, trustee or officer; to wit: When —

"(1) He assents (a) to a patently unlawful act of the corporation, or (b) for bad faith or gross negligence in directing its affairs, or (b) for conflict of interest, resulting in damages to the corporation, its stockholders or other persons;

"(2) He consents to the issuance of watered stocks or who, having knowledge thereof, does not forthwith file with the corporate secretary his written objection thereto;

"(3) He agrees to hold himself personally and solidarily liable with the corporation; or

"(4) He is made, by a specific provision of law, to personally answer for his corporate action."cralaw virtua1aw library

The case of petitioner is way of these exceptional instances. It is not even shown that petitioner has had a direct hand in the dismissal of private respondent enough to attribute to him (petitioner) a patently unlawful act while acting for the corporation. Neither can Article 289 30 of the Labor Code be applied since this specifically refers only to the imposition of penalties under the Code. It is undisputed that the termination of petitioner’s employment has, instead, been due, collectively, to the need for a further mitigation of losses, the onset of the rainy season, the insurgency problem, in Sorsogon and the lack of funds to further support the mining operation in Gatbo.

It is true, there were various cases when corporate officers were themselves held by the Court to be personally accountable for the payment of wages and money claims to its employees. In A.C. Ransom Labor Union-CCLU v. NLRC, 31 for instance the Court ruled that under the Minimum Wage Law, the responsible officer of an employer corporation could be held personally liable for nonpayment of backwages for" (i)f the policy of the law were otherwise, the corporation employer (would) have devious ways for evading payment of back wages." In the absence of a clear identification of the officer directly responsible foe failure to pay the backwages, the Court considered the President of the corporation as such officer. The case was cited in Chua v. NLRC 32 in holding personally liable the vice-president of the company, being the highest and most ranking official of the corporation next to the President who was dismissed for the latter’s claim unpaid wages.

A review of the above exceptional cases would readily disclose the attendance of facts and circumstances that could rightly sanction personal liability of the part of the company officer. in A.C. Ransom, the corporate entity was a family corporation and execution against it could not be implemented because of the disposition posthaste of its leviable assets evidently in order to evade its just and due obligations. The doctrine of piercing the veil of corporate fiction" was thus clearly appropriate. Chua likewise involved another family corporation, and this time the conflict was between two brothers occupying the highest ranking positions in the company. There were incontrovertible facts which pointed to extreme personal animosity that resulted, evidently in bad faith, in the easing out from the company of one of the brothers by the other.

The basic rule is still that which can be deducted from the Court’s pronouncement in Sunio v. National Labor Relations Commission; 33 thus:jgc:chanrobles.com.ph

"We come now to the personal liability of petitioner, Sunio, who was made jointly and severally responsible with petitioner company and CIPI for the payment of the backwages of private respondents. This is reversible error. The Assistant Regional Director’s Decision failed to disclose the reason why he was made personally liable. Respondents, however, alleged as grounds thereof, his the being owner of one-half (1/2) interest of said corporation, and his alleged arbitrary dismissal of private respondents.

"Petitioner Sunio was impleaded in the Complaint in his capacity as General Manager of petitioner corporation. There appears to be no evidence on record that he acted maliciously or in bad faith in terminating the services of private respondents. His act, therefore, was within the scope of his authority and was a corporate act.

"It is basic that a corporation is invested by law with a personally separate and distinct from those of the persons composing it as well as from that of any, other legal entity to which it may be related. Mere ownership by a single stockholder or by another corporation of all nearly all of the capital stock of a corporation is not of itself sufficient ground for disregarding the separate corporate personally. Petitioner Sunio, therefore, should not have been made personally answerable for the payment of private respondent’s back salaries."cralaw virtua1aw library

The Court, to be sure, did appear to have deviated somewhat in Gudez v. NLRC; 34 however, it should be clear from our recent pronouncement in Mam Realty Development Corporation and Manuel Ceteno v. NLRC 35 that the Sunio doctrine still prevails.

WHEREFORE, the instant petition for certiorari is given DUE COURSE and the decision of the Labor Arbiter, affirmed by the NLRC, is hereby MODIFIED insofar saw it holds herein petitioner Benjamin Santos personally liable with Mana Mining and Development Corporation, which portion of the questioned in now SET ASIDE. In all other respects, the questioned decision remains unaffected. No costs.

SO ORDERED.

Padilla, Bellosillo, Kapunan and Hermosisima, Jr., JJ., concur.

Endnotes:



1. Rollo, p. 165.

2. Ibid., p. 166.

3. Ibid., p. 168.

4. Ibid., p. 152.

5. Per the sheriff’s return of service.

6. 125 SCRA 863.

7. Ibid., pp. 45-46.

8. Ibid., p. 47.

9. Thru Commissioner Mirasol Viniegra-Corleto, with the concurrence of Presiding Commissioner Ceferino E. Dulay and Commissioner Roberto P. Tolentino.

10. Rollo, p. 27.

11. Thru Commissioner Rogelio I. Rayala and with the concurrence of Presiding Commissioner Lourdes C. Javier and Commissioner Ireneo B. Bernardo.

12. "Sec. 2. Papers to be filed and served. — Every order required by its terms to be served, every pleading subsequent to the complaint, every written motion other that one which may be heard ex parte, and every written notice, appearance, demand, offer of judgment or similar papers shall be filled with the count, and served the parties affected thereby. If any of such parties has appeared by an attorney to attorneys, service upon him shall be made upon his attorneys or one of them, unless service upon the party himself is ordered by the court. Where one attorney appears for several parties, he shall only be entitled to one copy of any paper served upon him by the opposite side."cralaw virtua1aw library

13. "Sec 13. Service upon private domestic corporation or partnership. — If the defendant is a corporation organized under the laws of the Philippines or a partnership duly registered, service may be made on the president, manager, cashier, agent, or any of its directors."cralaw virtua1aw library

14. "Art. 289. Who are liable when committed by other than natural person. — If the offense is committed by a corporation, trust, firm, partnership, association or any other entity, the penalty shall be imposed upon the guilty officer of officers of such corporation, trust, firm, partnership association or entity.

15. 142 SCRA 269, 274.

16. 183 SCRA 644, 650.

17. Gan Hock v. Court of Appeals, 197 SCRA 223.

18. Eden v. Ministry of Labor and Employment, 182 SCRA 840.

19. See Munar v. Court of Appeals, 238 SCRA 372.

20. MORENO, PHILIPPINE LAW DICTIONARY, 3rd ed., p. 66 citing Villegas v. Legaspi, 113 SCRA 39, 44.

21. Petitioner’s Memorandum, p. 8.

22. See Paramount Insurance Corp. v. Japzon, 211 SCRA 879.

23. Tan Luna v. O’Brien, 55 Phil. 53.

24. Petition, pp. 5-.6

25. See Guatson International Travel and Tours, Inc. v. NLRC, 230 SCRA 815.

26. See Claparols v. Court of Industrial Relations, 65 SCRA 613; National Federation of Labor Union v. Ople, 143 SCRA 124; Tan Boon Bee & Co., Inc. v. Jarencio, 13 SCRA 205.

27. See Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. Norton and Harrison Company, 11 SCRA 714.

28. See Indino v. NLRC, 178 SCRA 168.

29. 238 SCRA 14, 19.

30. See Footnote No. 14.

31. Supra, 274.

32. 182 SCRA 353.

33. 127 SCRA 390, 397-398.

34. Supra, followed by Maglutac v. NLRC, 189 SCRA 77, where the Court held the most ranking officer of the corporation, solidarily and personally, liable, for the employees’ monetary claims, citing, but beyond context, the ruling in A. C. Ransom Labor Union CCLU v. NLRC.

35. 244 SCRA 797.




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