Corporate Crimes
Corporate Crimes
Corporate Crimes
CORPORATE ENTITIES
Alex Manolito C. Labador*
I. INTRODUCTION
The emerging problem of corporate crime poses a serious threat to nations around the world. This problem
is hard to control because of the large profit these crimes can yield plus the grim fact that most of the
perpetrators wield a wide sphere of influence, being corporate entities with huge financial resources at their
disposal. They can afford to offer hard to resist bribes to law enforcers and if bribes do not work, they can
also afford to hire the best lawyers in the world to defend them during court litigation. More so, with the aid
of modern technology, corporate crimes are mostly committed with a sophistication that gives prosecutors a
harder time proving their guilt in court.
Nonetheless, the difficulties in prosecuting the perpetrators for the aforesaid reasons must not serve as a
discouragement but rather a challenge among nations to persevere, co-operate, and support each other in
curbing this global menace.
Chief, Law Enforcement Division, Directorate for Operations, Philippine National Police, Philippines.
73
means that they will direct the affairs of the corporation only in accordance with the purposes for which it
was organized. Duty of diligence and duty of loyalty are reflected in the Corporation Code wherein directors
or trustees who acquire any personal or pecuniary interest in conflict with their duty as such directors or
trustees shall be liable jointly and severally for all damages resulting there from suffered by the corporation,
its stockholders or members and other persons.
The general rule on duties and liabilities of directors, trustees and officers is that the members of the
Board and officers of a corporation who signify to act for and on behalf of the corporation, keep within the
lawful scope of their authority in acting, and act in good faith, do not become liable, whether civilly or
otherwise, for the consequences of their acts. Those acts are properly attributed to the corporation alone
and no personal liability is incurred by such Board members and officers. The extent of liability of the
directors, trustees or officers are joint and several (in solidum) if they assent to patently unlawful acts of the
corporation or who are guilty of gross negligence or bad faith in directing the affairs of the corporation or
acquire any personal or pecuniary interest in conflict with their duty (Sec. 31, The Corporation Code of the
Philippines Batas Pambansa Blg. 68). This means that either of several persons may be liable for the entire
amount. The case of Philippine National Bank v. Court of Appeals, 83 Supreme Court Reports Annotated
237 (1978), laid out clearly the nature of liability of a corporation for the tortuous acts of its directors or
officers. The Supreme Court held in this case that a corporation is civilly liable in the same manner as
natural persons for torts, because generally speaking, the rules governing the liability of a principal or
master for a tort committed by an agent or servant are the same whether the principal or master be a natural
person or a corporation, and whether the servant or agent be a natural person or artificial person. All of the
authorities agree that a principal or master is liable for every tort which he expressly directs or authorizes,
and this is just as true of a corporation as of a natural person. A corporation is liable, therefore, whenever a
tortuous act is committed by an officer or agent under express direction or authority from the stockholders
or members acting as a body, or, generally, from the directors as the governing body.
In the case of Tramat Mercantile, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 238 Supreme Court Reports Annotated 450
(1994), holds that personal liability of a corporate director, trustee, or officer along (although not
necessarily) with the corporation may so validly attach, as a rule only when:
(a) He assents (i) to a patently unlawful act of the corporation, or (ii) for bad faith or gross negligence in
directing its affairs, (iii) for conflict of interest, resulting in damages to the corporation, its
stockholders or other persons (Section 31, Corporation Code);
(b) 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 (Section 65, Corporation Code);
(c) He agrees to hold himself personally and solidarily liable with the corporation;
(d) He is made, by a specific provision of law, to personally answer for his corporate action.
2. Legal Framework of Criminal, Civil and Administrative Sanctions
In the Philippine setting there are various penal laws which corporations as such may violate. The
Supreme Court in numerous cases held that when a criminal statute forbids the corporation itself from doing
an act, the prohibition extends to the board of directors and to each director separately and individually. The
principle was laid down in People v. Tan Boon Kong, 54 Phil. Reports 607 (1930), that a corporation can act
only through its officers and agents, and where the business itself involves a violation of the law, the correct
rule is that all who participate in it are liable. It can be discerned that the court refuses to apply the fiction of
corporate entity to shield and protect the individual actors in the criminal act, although they do the criminal
act for or on behalf of the corporation they represent. Another rationale explaining why corporations cannot
be held liable for a crime is the impossibility or difficulty of imposing penal sanctions, i.e. imprisonment, on a
being that has no corporal existence and which cannot be put in jail. A crime cannot be attributed to a
corporation because it is just a mere artificial being without a mind: criminal intent is an important ingredient
of a crime; therefore in cases involving artificial beings there is lack of malice.
In civil cases a corporation can be a real-party-in-interest for the purpose of filing a civil action for
malicious prosecution for the damages incurred by the corporation in the criminal proceedings brought
against its officer.
74
The Republic Act No. 8799, otherwise known as the Securities Regulation Code, provides for administrative
sanctions against a corporation. Under Section 54 of the said code it is stated that if, after due notice and
hearing, the Securities and Exchange Commission finds that: (a) There is a violation of this Code, its rules
or its orders; (b) Any registered broker or dealer, associated person thereof has failed reasonably to
supervise, with a view to preventing violations, another person subject to supervision who commits any
such violation; (c) Any registrant or other person has, in a registration statement or in other reports,
applications, accounts, records or documents required by law or rules to be filed with the Commission, made
any untrue statement of a material fact, or omitted to state any material fact required to be stated therein or
necessary to make the statements therein not misleading; or, in case of an underwriter, has failed to conduct
an inquiry with reasonable diligence to insure that a registration statement is accurate and complete in all
material respects; or (d) Any person has refused to permit any lawful examinations into its affairs, it shall, in
its discretion, and subject only to the limitations hereinafter prescribed, impose any or all of the following
sanctions as may be appropriate in light of the facts and circumstances:
(1) Suspension, or revocation of any registration for the offering of securities;
(2) A fine of not less than PHP10,000 (Philippine pesos) nor more than PHP1,000,000 plus not more
than PHP2,000 for each day of continuing violation;
(3) In the case of a violation Section 19.2, 20, 24, 26 and 27, disqualification from being an officer,
member of the Board of Directors, or person performing similar functions, of an issuer required to
file reports under Section 17 of this Code or any other act, rule or regulation administered by the
Commission;
(4) In the case of a violation of Section 34, a fine of not more than three times the profit gained or loss
avoided as a result of the purchase, sale or communication proscribed by such Section; and
(5) Other penalties within the power of the Commission to impose.
The imposition of these administrative sanctions shall be without prejudice to the filing of criminal cases
against the individual responsible for such violation.
75
(ii) Layering
This is the second stage and involves a series of financial transactions during which the dirty money is
passed through a series of procedures, putting layer upon layer of persons and financial activities into the
laundering process. (Example: electronic transfer of funds, disguising the transfer as a payment for goods or
services.)
(iii) Integration
This is the last stage wherein the money is once again made available to the criminal with the occupational
and geographic origin concealed. The laundered funds are now integrated back into the legitimate economy
through the purchase of properties, businesses and other investments.
76
undertaking any and all anti-money laundering operations, which may include the use of its personnel, facilities
and resources, detection and investigation of money laundering offences and prosecution of offenders.
(Republic Act No. 9160)
3. Acquisition of Information on Money Laundering
The information on money laundering can be acquired through the reports of the covered institutions by
requiring them to submit and receive covered or suspicious transactions. Covered Institutions refers to: (a)
Banks, non-banks, quasi-banks, trust entities, and all other institutions and their subsidiaries and affiliates
supervised or regulated by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas; (b) Insurance companies and all other institutions
supervised or regulated by the Insurance Commission; and (c) All those supervised and regulated by the
Securities and Exchange Commission, including securities dealers, brokers, pre-need companies, foreign
exchange corporations, investment houses, trading advisers, and other entities administering or otherwise
dealing in currency, commodities or financial derivates based thereon. (Republic Act No. 9160)
Covered institutions shall make an effort to guarantee that a corporate juridical entity has not been or is
not being dissolved, wound up or voided. The business or operations of the said corporation has not been or
is not being closed, shut down, phased out, or terminated and that shell companies should be dealt with
extremely cautiously. Shell companies refer to business entities without active business or significant
assets. There are three major requirements for compliance by the covered institutions to be forwarded to
the Anti-Money Laundering Council. One is customer identification and due diligence; second is record
keeping; third is reporting of suspicious and covered transactions. The Anti-Money Laundering Council have
prepared forms together with the Securities and Exchange Commission to be filled up and submitted by the
covered institutions; these are a compliance form, a covered transaction report and a suspicious transaction
report. The AMLC and SEC have prepared examination rules and procedures on Anti-Money Laundering.
The Anti-Money Laundering Council has special powers to inquire into bank deposits/investments with
or without court order; to cause a freeze/restraint on suspected dirty money/property, the court issuing a
freeze order; to cause forfeiture of dirty money/property; and to implement necessary/justified measures to
counteract money laundering.
77
published or aired in any manner or form by the mass media, electronic mail or other similar devices.
I. International Co-operation
The Philippines is no longer subject to the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) on money laundering
monitoring, because it complied with the necessary requirements of FATF. The FATF was established by
the G7 Summit in 1989. Recognizing the threat posed to the banking system and to financial institutions, the
G7 Heads of State and the President of the European Commission convened the Task Force.
The Philippines is still encountering difficulties and challenges in the investigation and prosecution of
violations of the Anti-Money Laundering Act for reasons that not all covered institutions co-operate in
reporting covered and suspicious transactions. The success in hampering money laundering is in the
monitoring and reporting of the covered institutions; it is therefore imperative that covered institutions cooperate and actively participate in the campaign to prevent money trails of criminal syndicates and terrorists
through corporations, banks and other institutions from circulating in the Philippines. The Financial Action
Task Force supports the Philippines fight against money laundering by lending mutual assistance and giving
information as international co-operation.
78
B. Money Laundering
As of 31 July 2007, the AMLC has filed civil forfeiture cases against nine corporations. Among them is
one company A, which is facing a forfeiture case involving more than PHP20,000,000. Below is the
synopsis of company As money laundering case as obtained from the AMLC.
Company A sold, offered for sale, and distributed securities in the form of investment contracts to the
public, with promises of interest at fifteen percent (15%) per month if the investments were PHP50,000 or
more. In cases of investments worth less than PHP50,000, the interest rates were pegged at ten percent
(10%).
At least 100 investors went to company As offices daily to place their respective investments. Unusually
large deposits were made in As accounts per day from PHP54.472 million to PHP91.742 million and
massive withdrawals within a day amounting to PHP545 million. The aforesaid transactions were likewise
reported by a bank because they exceeded the threshold limit and they were highly unusual given the
purposes for which A was incorporated.
Investigations disclosed that several companies were being used by A as conduits for the money
invested with it, B International Corporation and C International Corporation, the incorporators of which are
members of the Ruiz and Cortel (not their real names) families. The common incorporator among the
aforementioned companies was Mario J. Ruiz. A series of checks amounting to more than PHP80 million
drawn from As account were deposited to Ruizs accounts.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) found A to be engaged in activities of selling, offering
for sale, or distributing securities to the public without authority to do so, in violation of Section 8.1 of the
Securities Regulation Code, and directed A to cease and desist from further engaging in these activities.
Considering that violations of the Securities Regulation Code are among the unlawful activities defined
by the Anti-Money Laundering Act and based on the facts of the case, the bank accounts of A, B, C, and
Mario Ruiz were ordered frozen by the AMLC.
Examination is still ongoing to obtain additional information on the transactions made by the account
holders relating to money laundering through the bank accounts.
C. Fraud/Swindling
In the Philippines, lots of people are being victimized by pyramiding or Ponzi schemes. This scheme is
a fraudulent investment operation that involves paying abnormally high, short-term returns to investors out
of the money raised from new investors, rather than from profits generated by any real business
undertaking. As reported in the news on 18 August 2007, the National Bureau of Investigation (NBI) of the
79
Philippines has filed charges against 27 officers and investors of Francswiss Investment, one of the
pyramiding scams proliferating on the Internet.
The case stemmed from the complaints of at least 41 investors who claimed they lost a total of $75,000 to
the investment scheme, the NBI said, adding: Francswiss, which started operating in March, was believed to
have gypped unsuspecting investors in the Philippines of PHP1 billion. The news report further said: The
respondents allegedly lured unsuspecting victims over the Internet using the websites http://www.francswiss.biz
and http://deutchfrancs.com. Investors were asked to invest $1,000 in francswiss.biz and $10,000 in
deutchfrancs.com which promised to double their money in 22 days. They were told that their investment
would earn daily interest of 4.5 percent or $45 which they could cash through Internet-to-bank transactions.
The investors were likewise promised additional 10 percent commission as e-points for every investor they
recruited.
Francswiss Investment promised interests bigger than those offered by banks, said director Ruel
Lasala, head of the NBI-National Capital Region. These types of investment schemes usually collapse as
fast as they are created while investors are left unable to recover their investments, Lasala said. The
investors were also told that their money would be re-invested in other lines of Francswiss Investment like
overnight casinos and pawnshops, foreign exchange trading, sports betting, and mutual funds. But we found
out that none of these operations exist, Lasala said.
80
said, thus, it was in violation of the Philippine constitution that allows foreigners to own only up to 40
percent of Philippine local companies.
Moreover, the report of Lala Rimando of Newsbreak on 11 February 2007 states that, contrary to
FRAPORTs assertion in ICSID that the completed airport terminal stands in Manila as pretty good
evidence that an investment has been made, Terminal 3 stands incomplete, largely untested, and replete
with structural defects. She added: The quality assurance inspectors, the Japan Airport Consultants,
raised these concerns during their inspection in 2002, and did not sign off on the terminal.
Also reported by the newspaper Philippine Star, a 100-square meter portion of the airports ceiling
collapsed a day before it was scheduled for soft opening in March 2006 thus confirming the report of Lala
Rimando.
With regard to the arbitration case filed by PIATCO before the ICC in Singapore, the next hearing is
reportedly set for November 2007.
81
IV. CONCLUSION
Curbing the commission of corporate crimes is really a daunting task that needs a synergized effort from
all sectors of society in order to succeed. Since the scope of the problem is global, the corresponding effort
to stop it must also be global. Therefore, there is a need for countries all over the world to co-operate
towards this end.
Moreover, vigilance must be exercised by every concerned entity to prevent the commission of corporate
crimes. The government for its part must exhibit political will and apply the full force of the law to whoever
violates it. This political will becomes a good deterrent to the commission of crimes not only to ordinary
citizens but also to influential people in the so called corporate world, as well.
82
REFERENCES
Campos, Jose Jr. and Campos, Maria Clara L., The Corporation Code Comments, Notes and Selected
Cases Volume I and II, Phoenix Press, Inc., Philippines, 1996.
Paras, Dr. Justice Edgardo L., Corporate Law Practice and Litigation, 1994 Edition, Rex Printing
Company, Inc., Philippines, December, 1996.
Philippines. The Anti-Money Laundering Act of 2001, Republic Act No. 9160 as amended by Republic Act
No. 9194.
Philippines. The Corporation Code of the Philippines, Batas Pambansa Bilang 68.
Philippines. The Revised Implementing Rules and Regulations of 2003 AMLA.
Philippines. Securities and Exchange Commission Examination Rules and Procedure on Anti-Money
Laundering, SEC-EXS. Resolution No. 66, series of 2004.
Philippines. The Securities Regulation Code, Republic Act No. 8799.
The Internet and various media reports were also used as background reading for this paper.
83