Heirs of Fe Tan Uy V
Heirs of Fe Tan Uy V
Heirs of Fe Tan Uy V
FACTS:
1. International Exchange Bank (iBank), granted loans to Hammer Garments
Corporation (Hammer) amounting to 24 million pesos based on the letter-
agreement by the International exchange bank and Hammer represented by
Manuel Chua. The loans were also secured by 9 million pesos real estate
morgage by Goldkey Development Corporation over several of its properties
and a 25 million surety agreement signed by Manuel Chua and his wife Fe
Tan Uy.
2. Hammer had an outstanding balance amounting to 25 million pesos and
they also defaulted in the payment of its loans because of this the bank
foreclose the real properties of Goldkey and were sold for 12 million pesos
leaving an unpaid balance of 13.5 million pesos. For the failure to pay the
unpaid balance the International exchange bank file a complaint against
hummer, chua and goldkey.
3. Despite service of summons Hammer and Chua never filed their answers
and were declared in default. Uy on the other hand claimed that she was not
liable because she never executed a surety agreement in favour of the bank
and goldkey argued that it only acted as a third party mortgagor and it has a
separate and distinct personality from Hammer.
4. The RTC, in its Decision,15 dated December 27, 2000, ruled in favor of
iBank. While it made the pronouncement that the signature of Uy on the
Surety Agreement was a forgery, it nevertheless held her liable for the
outstanding obligation of Hammer because she was an officer and
stockholder of the said corporation. The RTC agreed with Goldkey that as a
third-party mortgagor, its liability was limited to the properties mortgaged.
It came to the conclusion, however, that Goldkey and Hammer were one and
the same entity for the following reasons: (1) both were family corporations
of Chua and Uy, with Chua as the President and Chief Operating Officer; (2)
both corporations shared the same office and transacted business from the
same place, (3) the assets of Hammer and Goldkey were co-mingled; and
(4) when Chua absconded, both Hammer and Goldkey ceased to operate. As
such, the piercing of the veil of corporate fiction was warranted. Uy, as an
officer and stockholder of Hammer and Goldkey, was found liable to iBank
together with Chua, Hammer and Goldkey for the deficiency of
P13,420,177.62.
5. Aggrieved, the heirs of Uy and Goldkey (petitioners) elevated the case to
the CA. On August 16, 2004, it promulgated its decision affirming the
findings of the RTC. The CA found that iBank was not negligent in evaluating
the financial stability of Hammer. According to the appellate court, iBank
was induced to grant the loan because petitioners, with intent to defraud the
bank, submitted a falsified Financial Report for 1996 which incorrectly
declared the assets and cashflow of Hammer.16 Because petitioners acted
maliciously and in bad faith and used the corporate fiction to defraud iBank,
they should be treated as one and the same as Hammer. Thus, this case
consolidated with the other case.
ISSUES:
(1) whether Uy can be held liable to iBank for the loan obligation of Hammer
as an officer and stockholder of the said corporation; and (2) whether
Goldkey can be held liable for the obligation of Hammer for being a mere
alter ego of the latter.
RULING:
1. The heirs of Uy argue that the latter could not be held liable for being
merely an officer of Hammer and Goldkey because it was not shown that she
had committed any actionable wrong22 or that she had participated in the
transaction between Hammer and iBank. They further claim that she had cut
all ties with Hammer and her husband long before the execution of the loan.
The Court finds in favor of Uy. Basic is the rule in corporation law that a
corporation is a juridical entity which is vested with a legal personality
separate and distinct from those acting for and in its behalf and, in general,
from the people comprising it. Following this principle, obligations incurred
by the corporation, acting through its directors, officers and employees, are
its sole liabilities. A director, officer or employee of a corporation is generally
not held personally liable for obligations incurred by the corporation.24
Nevertheless, this legal fiction may be disregarded if it is used as a means to
perpetrate fraud or an illegal act, or as a vehicle for the evasion of an
existing obligation, the circumvention of statutes, or to confuse legitimate
issues. Solidary liability will then attach to the directors, officers or
employees of the corporation in certain circumstances, such as:
Considering that the only basis for holding Uy liable for the payment of the
loan was proven to be a falsified document, there was no sufficient
justification for the RTC to have ruled that Uy should be held jointly and
severally liable to iBank for the unpaid loan of Hammer. Neither did the CA
explain its affirmation of the RTCs ruling against Uy. The Court cannot give
credence to the simplistic declaration of the RTC that liability would attach
directly to Uy for the sole reason that she was an officer and stockholder of
Hammer.
While the conditions for the disregard of the juridical entity may vary, the
following are some probative factors of identity that will justify the
application of the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil, as laid down in
Concept Builders, Inc. v NLRC:40
2. Hammer Garments and Goldkey share the same office and practically
transact their business from the same place.
4. The assets of Goldkey and Hammer are co-mingled. The real properties of
Goldkey are mortgaged to secure Hammers obligation with creditor banks.
The proceed of at least two loans which Hammer obtained from plaintiff
"iBank", purportedly to finance its export to Wal-Mart are instead used to
finance the purchase of a managers check payable to Goldkey. The
defendants claim that Goldkey is a creditor of Hammer to justify its receipt
of the Managers check is not substantiated by evidence. Despite subpoenas
issued by this Court, Goldkey thru its treasurer, defendant Fe Tan Uy and or
its corporate secretary Manling Uy failed to produce the Financial Statement
of Goldkey.
Based on the foregoing findings of the RTC, it was apparent that Goldkey
was merely an adjunct of Hammer and, as such, the legal fiction that it has
a separate personality from that of Hammer should be brushed aside as they
are, undeniably, one and the same.