Heirs of Wilson P. Gamboa vs. Finance Secretary Margarito B. Teves, Et Al., G.R. No. 176579, Oct. 9, 2012
Heirs of Wilson P. Gamboa vs. Finance Secretary Margarito B. Teves, Et Al., G.R. No. 176579, Oct. 9, 2012
176579
CARPIO, J.:
This resolves the motions for reconsideration of the 28 June 2011 Decision
filed by (1) the Philippine Stock Exchange's (PSE) President,[1] (2) Manuel
V. Pangilinan (Pangilinan),[2] (3) Napoleon L. Nazareno (Nazareno),[3] and
(4) the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)[4] (collectively,
movants).
The Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) initially filed a motion for
reconsideration on behalf of the SEC,[5] assailing the 28 June 2011 Decision.
However, it subsequently filed a Consolidated Comment on behalf of the
State,[6] declaring expressly that it agrees with the Court's definition of the
term "capital" in Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution. During the Oral
Arguments on 26 June 2012, the OSG reiterated its position consistent with
the Court's 28 June 2011 Decision.
I.
Far-reaching implications of the legal issue justify
treatment of petition for declaratory relief as one for
mandamus.
II.
No change of any long-standing rule;
thus, no redefinition of the term "capital."
Movants contend that the term "capital" in Section 11, Article XII of the
Constitution has long been settled and defined to refer to the total
outstanding shares of stock, whether voting or non-voting. In fact, movants
claim that the SEC, which is the administrative agency tasked to enforce the
60-40 ownership requirement in favor of Filipino citizens in the
Constitution and various statutes, has consistently adopted this particular
definition in its numerous opinions. Movants point out that with the 28
June 2011 Decision, the Court in effect introduced a "new" definition or
"midstream redefinition"[9] of the term "capital" in Section 11, Article XII of
the Constitution.
In DOJ Opinion No. 130, s. 1985,[10] dated 7 October 1985, the scope of the
term "capital" in Section 9, Article XIV of the 1973 Constitution was raised,
that is, whether the term "capital" includes "both preferred and common
stocks." The issue was raised in relation to a stock-swap transaction
between a Filipino and a Japanese corporation, both stockholders of a
domestic corporation that owned lands in the Philippines. Then Minister of
Justice Estelito P. Mendoza ruled that the resulting ownership structure of
the corporation would be unconstitutional because 60% of the voting
stock would be owned by Japanese while Filipinos would own only 40% of
the voting stock, although when the non-voting stock is added, Filipinos
would own 60% of the combined voting and non-voting stock. This
ownership structure is remarkably similar to the current
ownership structure of PLDT. Minister Mendoza ruled:
xxxx
Thus, the Filipino group still owns sixty (60%) of the entire subscribed
capital stock (common and preferred) while the Japanese investors control
sixty percent (60%) of the common (voting) shares.
xxxx
On the other hand, in Opinion No. 23-10 dated 18 August 2010, addressed
to Castillo Laman Tan Pantaleon & San Jose, then SEC General Counsel
Vernette G. Umali-Paco applied the Voting Control Test, that is, using
only the voting stock to determine whether a corporation is a Philippine
national. The Opinion states:
Further, under, and for purposes of, the FIA, MLRC and BFDC are both
Philippine nationals, considering that: (1) sixty percent (60%) of their
respective outstanding capital stock entitled to vote is owned by a
Philippine national (i.e., by the Trustee, in the case of MLRC; and by
MLRC, in the case of BFDC); and (2) at least 60% of their respective board
of directors are Filipino citizens. (Boldfacing and italicization supplied)
Clearly, these DOJ and SEC opinions are compatible with the Court's
interpretation of the 60-40 ownership requirement in favor of Filipino
citizens mandated by the Constitution for certain economic activities. At the
same time, these opinions highlight the conflicting, contradictory, and
inconsistent positions taken by the DOJ and the SEC on the definition of
the term "capital" found in the economic provisions of the Constitution.
The opinions issued by SEC legal officers do not have the force and effect of
SEC rules and regulations because only the SEC en banc can adopt rules
and regulations. As expressly provided in Section 4.6 of the Securities
Regulation Code,[12] the SEC cannot delegate to any of its individual
Commissioner or staff the power to adopt any rule or regulation.
Further, under Section 5.1 of the same Code, it is the SEC as a
collegial body, and not any of its legal officers, that is
empowered to issue opinions and approve rules and regulations.
Thus:
4.6. The Commission may, for purposes of efficiency, delegate any of its
functions to any department or office of the Commission, an individual
Commissioner or staff member of the Commission except its review or
appellate authority and its power to adopt, alter and supplement
any rule or regulation.
The Commission may review upon its own initiative or upon the petition of
any interested party any action of any department or office, individual
Commissioner, or staff member of the Commission.
xxxx
x x x x (Emphasis supplied)
Thus, the act of the individual Commissioners or legal officers of the SEC in
issuing opinions that have the effect of SEC rules or regulations is ultra
vires. Under Sections 4.6 and 5.1(g) of the Code, only the SEC en banc can
"issue opinions" that have the force and effect of rules or regulations.
Section 4.6 of the Code bars the SEC en banc from delegating to any
individual Commissioner or staff the power to adopt rules or
regulations. In short, any opinion of individual Commissioners or
SEC legal officers does not constitute a rule or regulation of the
SEC.
The SEC admits during the Oral Arguments that only the SEC en banc, and
not any of its individual commissioners or legal staff, is empowered to issue
opinions which have the same binding effect as SEC rules and regulations,
thus:
JUSTICE CARPIO:
So, under the law, it is the Commission En Banc that can issue an SEC
Opinion, correct?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:[13]
That's correct, Your Honor.
JUSTICE CARPIO:
Can the Commission En Banc delegate this function to an SEC officer?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
Yes, Your Honor, we have delegated it to the General Counsel.
JUSTICE CARPIO:
It can be delegated. What cannot be delegated by the Commission En Banc
to a commissioner or an individual employee of the Commission?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
Novel opinions that [have] to be decided by the En Banc …
JUSTICE CARPIO:
What cannot be delegated, among others, is the power to adopt or amend
rules and regulations, correct?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
That's correct, Your Honor.
JUSTICE CARPIO:
So, you combine the two (2), the SEC officer, if delegated that power, can
issue an opinion but that opinion does not constitute a rule or regulation,
correct?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
Correct, Your Honor.
JUSTICE CARPIO:
So, all of these opinions that you mentioned they are not rules and
regulations, correct?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
They are not rules and regulations.
JUSTICE CARPIO:
If they are not rules and regulations, they apply only to that particular
situation and will not constitute a precedent, correct?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
Yes, Your Honor.[14] (Emphasis supplied)
MR. NOLLEDO. In teaching law, we are always faced with the question:
'Where do we base the equity requirement, is it on the authorized capital
stock, on the subscribed capital stock, or on the paid-up capital stock of a
corporation'? Will the Committee please enlighten me on this?
MR. VILLEGAS. We have just had a long discussion with the members of
the team from the UP Law Center who provided us a draft. The phrase that
is contained here which we adopted from the UP draft is '60 percent of
voting stock.'
This SEC en banc ruling conforms to our 28 June 2011 Decision that the
60-40 ownership requirement in favor of Filipino citizens in the
Constitution to engage in certain economic activities applies not only to
voting control of the corporation, but also to the beneficial ownership
of the corporation. Thus, in our 28 June 2011 Decision we stated:
Both the Voting Control Test and the Beneficial Ownership Test must be
applied to determine whether a corporation is a "Philippine national."
In his motion for reconsideration, the PSE President cites the cases
of National Telecommunications Commission v. Court of
Appeals[17] and Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company v. National
Telecommunications Commission[18] in arguing that the Court has already
defined the term "capital" in Section 11, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution.
[19]
(f) For the issue or increase of capital stock, twenty centavos for each one
hundred pesos or fraction thereof, of the increased capital. (Emphasis
supplied)
The Court's interpretation in these two cases of the terms "capital stock
subscribed or paid," "capital stock" and "capital" does not pertain to, and
cannot control, the definition of the term "capital" as used in Section 11,
Article XII of the Constitution, or any of the economic provisions of the
Constitution where the term "capital" is found. The definition of the term
"capital" found in the Constitution must not be taken out of context. A
careful reading of these two cases reveals that the terms "capital stock
subscribed or paid," "capital stock" and "capital" were defined solely to
determine the basis for computing the supervision and regulation fees
under Section 40(e) and (f) of the Public Service Act.
III.
Filipinization of Public Utilities
The Preamble of the 1987 Constitution, as the prologue of the supreme law
of the land, embodies the ideals that the Constitution intends to achieve.
[22]
The Preamble reads:
We, the sovereign Filipino people, imploring the aid of Almighty God, in
order to build a just and humane society, and establish a Government that
shall embody our ideals and aspirations, promote the common
good, conserve and develop our patrimony, and secure to ourselves
and our posterity, the blessings of independence and democracy under the
rule of law and a regime of truth, justice, freedom, love, equality, and peace,
do ordain and promulgate this Constitution. (Emphasis supplied)
Consistent with these ideals, Section 19, Article II of the 1987 Constitution
declares as State policy the development of a national economy
"effectively controlled" by Filipinos:
Section 19. The State shall develop a self-reliant and independent national
economy effectively controlled by Filipinos.
Section 10. The Congress shall, upon recommendation of the economic and
planning agency, when the national interest dictates, reserve to citizens of
the Philippines or to corporations or associations at least sixty per
centum of whose capital is owned by such citizens, or such higher
percentage as Congress may prescribe, certain areas of investments. The
Congress shall enact measures that will encourage the formation and
operation of enterprises whose capital is wholly owned by Filipinos.
The State shall regulate and exercise authority over foreign investments
within its national jurisdiction and in accordance with its national goals
and priorities.[23]
Under Section 10, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution, Congress may
"reserve to citizens of the Philippines or to corporations or associations at
least sixty per centum of whose capital is owned by such citizens, or such
higher percentage as Congress may prescribe, certain areas of investments."
Thus, in numerous laws Congress has reserved certain areas of investments
to Filipino citizens or to corporations at least sixty percent of the "capital"
of which is owned by Filipino citizens. Some of these laws are: (1)
Regulation of Award of Government Contracts or R.A. No. 5183; (2)
Philippine Inventors Incentives Act or R.A. No. 3850; (3) Magna Carta for
Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises or R.A. No. 6977; (4) Philippine
Overseas Shipping Development Act or R.A. No. 7471; (5) Domestic
Shipping Development Act of 2004 or R.A. No. 9295; (6) Philippine
Technology Transfer Act of 2009 or R.A. No. 10055; and (7) Ship Mortgage
Decree or P.D. No. 1521.
IV.
Definition of "Philippine National"
Pursuant to the express mandate of Section 11, Article XII of the 1987
Constitution, Congress enacted Republic Act No. 7042 or the Foreign
Investments Act of 1991 (FIA), as amended, which defined a "Philippine
national" as follows:
The FIA is the basic law governing foreign investments in the Philippines,
irrespective of the nature of business and area of investment. The FIA spells
out the procedures by which non-Philippine nationals can invest in the
Philippines. Among the key features of this law is the concept of a negative
list or the Foreign Investments Negative List.[32] Section 8 of the law states:
Clearly, from the effectivity of the Investment Incentives Act of 1967 to the
adoption of the Omnibus Investments Code of 1981, to the enactment of the
Omnibus Investments Code of 1987, and to the passage of the present
Foreign Investments Act of 1991, or for more than four decades, the
statutory definition of the term "Philippine national" has been
uniform and consistent: it means a Filipino citizen, or a domestic
corporation at least 60% of the voting stock is owned by
Filipinos. Likewise, these same statutes have uniformly and
consistently required that only "Philippine nationals" could own
and operate public utilities in the Philippines. The following
exchange during the Oral Arguments is revealing:
JUSTICE CARPIO:
Counsel, I have some questions. You are aware of the Foreign Investments
Act of 1991, x x x? And the FIA of 1991 took effect in 1991, correct? That's
over twenty (20) years ago, correct?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
Correct, Your Honor.
JUSTICE CARPIO:
And Section 8 of the Foreign Investments Act of 1991 states that []only
Philippine nationals can own and operate public utilities[], correct?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
Yes, Your Honor.
JUSTICE CARPIO:
And the same Foreign Investments Act of 1991 defines a "Philippine
national" either as a citizen of the Philippines, or if it is a corporation at
least sixty percent (60%) of the voting stock is owned by citizens of the
Philippines, correct?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
Correct, Your Honor.
JUSTICE CARPIO:
And, you are also aware that under the predecessor law of the Foreign
Investments Act of 1991, the Omnibus Investments Act of 1987, the same
provisions apply: x x x only Philippine nationals can own and operate a
public utility and the Philippine national, if it is a corporation, x x x sixty
percent (60%) of the capital stock of that corporation must be owned by
citizens of the Philippines, correct?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
Correct, Your Honor.
JUSTICE CARPIO:
And even prior to the Omnibus Investments Act of 1987, under the
Omnibus Investments Act of 1981, the same rules apply: x x x only a
Philippine national can own and operate a public utility and a Philippine
national, if it is a corporation, sixty percent (60%) of its x x x voting stock,
must be owned by citizens of the Philippines, correct?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
Correct, Your Honor.
JUSTICE CARPIO:
And even prior to that, under [the]1967 Investments Incentives Act and the
Foreign Company Act of 1968, the same rules applied, correct?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
Correct, Your Honor.
JUSTICE CARPIO:
So, for the last four (4) decades, x x x, the law has been very
consistent only a Philippine national can own and operate a
public utility, and a Philippine national, if it is a corporation, x x
x at least sixty percent (60%) of the voting stock must be owned
by citizens of the Philippines, correct?
COMMISSIONER GAITE:
Correct, Your Honor.[33] (Emphasis supplied)
Government agencies like the SEC cannot simply ignore Sections 3(a) and 8
of the FIA which categorically prescribe that certain economic activities,
like the ownership and operation of public utilities, are reserved to
corporations "at least sixty percent (60%) of the capital stock
outstanding and entitled to vote is owned and held by citizens of the
Philippines." Foreign Investment Negative List A refers to "activities
reserved to Philippine nationals by mandate of the Constitution and
specific laws." The FIA is the basic statute regulating foreign
investments in the Philippines. Government agencies tasked with
regulating or monitoring foreign investments, as well as counsels of foreign
investors, should start with the FIA in determining to what extent a
particular foreign investment is allowed in the Philippines. Foreign
investors and their counsels who ignore the FIA do so at their own peril.
Foreign investors and their counsels who rely on opinions of SEC legal
officers that obviously contradict the FIA do so also at their own peril.
Occasional opinions of SEC legal officers that obviously contradict the FIA
should immediately raise a red flag. There are already numerous opinions
of SEC legal officers that cite the definition of a "Philippine national" in
Section 3(a) of the FIA in determining whether a particular corporation is
qualified to own and operate a nationalized or partially nationalized
business in the Philippines. This shows that SEC legal officers are not only
aware of, but also rely on and invoke, the provisions of the FIA in
ascertaining the eligibility of a corporation to engage in partially
nationalized industries. The following are some of such opinions:
The SEC legal officers' occasional but blatant disregard of the definition of
the term "Philippine national" in the FIA signifies their lack of integrity and
competence in resolving issues on the 60-40 ownership requirement in
favor of Filipino citizens in Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution.
The PSE President argues that the term "Philippine national" defined in the
FIA should be limited and interpreted to refer to corporations seeking to
avail of tax and fiscal incentives under investment incentives laws and
cannot be equated with the term "capital" in Section 11, Article XII of the
1987 Constitution. Pangilinan similarly contends that the FIA and its
predecessor statutes do not apply to "companies which have not registered
and obtained special incentives under the schemes established by those
laws."
Both are desperately grasping at straws. The FIA does not grant tax or fiscal
incentives to any enterprise. Tax and fiscal incentives to investments are
granted separately under the Omnibus Investments Code of 1987, not
under the FIA. In fact, the FIA expressly repealed Articles 44 to 56 of Book
II of the Omnibus Investments Code of 1987, which articles previously
regulated foreign investments in nationalized or partially nationalized
industries.
Investors who do not seek incentives and/or whose chosen activities do not
qualify for incentives, (i.e., the activity is not listed in the IPP, and they are
not exporting at least 70% of their production) may go ahead and make the
investments without seeking incentives. They only have to be guided
by the Foreign Investments Negative List (FINL).
The FINL clearly defines investment areas requiring at least 60% Filipino
ownership. All other areas outside of this list are fully open to foreign
investors. (Emphasis supplied)
V.
Right to elect directors, coupled with beneficial ownership,
translates to effective control.
The 28 June 2011 Decision declares that the 60 percent Filipino ownership
required by the Constitution to engage in certain economic activities
applies not only to voting control of the corporation, but also to the
beneficial ownership of the corporation. To repeat, we held:
This is consistent with Section 3 of the FIA which provides that where 100%
of the capital stock is held by "a trustee of funds for pension or other
employee retirement or separation benefits," the trustee is a Philippine
national if "at least sixty percent (60%) of the fund will accrue to the benefit
of Philippine nationals." Likewise, Section 1(b) of the Implementing Rules
of the FIA provides that "for stocks to be deemed owned and held by
Philippine citizens or Philippine nationals, mere legal title is not enough to
meet the required Filipino equity. Full beneficial ownership of the
stocks, coupled with appropriate voting rights, is essential."
The Corporation Code allows denial of the right to vote to preferred and
redeemable shares, but disallows denial of the right to vote in specific
corporate matters. Thus, common shares have the right to vote in the
election of directors, while preferred shares may be denied such right.
Nonetheless, preferred shares, even if denied the right to vote in the
election of directors, are entitled to vote on the following corporate matters:
(1) amendment of articles of incorporation; (2) increase and decrease of
capital stock; (3) incurring, creating or increasing bonded indebtedness; (4)
sale, lease, mortgage or other disposition of substantially all corporate
assets; (5) investment of funds in another business or corporation or for a
purpose other than the primary purpose for which the corporation was
organized; (6) adoption, amendment and repeal of by-laws; (7) merger and
consolidation; and (8) dissolution of corporation.[37]
Since a specific class of shares may have rights and privileges or restrictions
different from the rest of the shares in a corporation, the 60-40 ownership
requirement in favor of Filipino citizens in Section 11, Article XII of the
Constitution must apply not only to shares with voting rights but also to
shares without voting rights. Preferred shares, denied the right to vote in
the election of directors, are anyway still entitled to vote on the eight
specific corporate matters mentioned above. Thus, if a corporation,
engaged in a partially nationalized industry, issues a mixture of
common and preferred non-voting shares, at least 60 percent of
the common shares and at least 60 percent of the preferred non-
voting shares must be owned by Filipinos. Of course, if a corporation
issues only a single class of shares, at least 60 percent of such shares must
necessarily be owned by Filipinos. In short, the 60-40 ownership
requirement in favor of Filipino citizens must apply separately to
each class of shares, whether common, preferred non-voting,
preferred voting or any other class of shares. This uniform
application of the 60-40 ownership requirement in favor of Filipino citizens
clearly breathes life to the constitutional command that the ownership and
operation of public utilities shall be reserved exclusively to corporations at
least 60 percent of whose capital is Filipino-owned. Applying uniformly the
60-40 ownership requirement in favor of Filipino citizens to each class of
shares, regardless of differences in voting rights, privileges and restrictions,
guarantees effective Filipino control of public utilities, as mandated by the
Constitution.
Moreover, such uniform application to each class of shares insures that the
"controlling interest" in public utilities always lies in the hands of Filipino
citizens. This addresses and extinguishes Pangilinan's worry that
foreigners, owning most of the non-voting shares, will exercise greater
control over fundamental corporate matters requiring two-thirds or
majority vote of all shareholders.
VI.
Intent of the framers of the Constitution
MR. NOLLEDO. In teaching law, we are always faced with this question:
"Where do we base the equity requirement, is it on the authorized capital
stock, on the subscribed capital stock, or on the paid-up capital stock of a
corporation"? Will the Committee please enlighten me on this?
MR. VILLEGAS. We have just had a long discussion with the members of
the team from the UP Law Center who provided us a draft. The phrase
that is contained here which we adopted from the UP draft is "60
percent of voting stock."
xxxx
MR. AZCUNA. May I be clarified as to that portion that was accepted by the
Committee.
MR. AZCUNA. But the control can be with the foreigners even if
they are the minority. Let us say 40 percent of the capital is
owned by them, but it is the voting capital, whereas, the Filipinos
own the nonvoting shares. So we can have a situation where the
corporation is controlled by foreigners despite being the
minority because they have the voting capital. That is the
anomaly that would result here.
The use of the term "capital" was intended to replace the word "stock"
because associations without stocks can operate public utilities as long as
they meet the 60-40 ownership requirement in favor of Filipino citizens
prescribed in Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution. However, this did
not change the intent of the framers of the Constitution to reserve
exclusively to Philippine nationals the "controlling interest" in public
utilities.
The OSG, in its own behalf and as counsel for the State,[43] agrees fully with
the Court's interpretation of the term "capital." In its Consolidated
Comment, the OSG explains that the deletion of the phrase "controlling
interest" and replacement of the word "stock" with the term "capital" were
intended specifically to extend the scope of the entities qualified to operate
public utilities to include associations without stocks. The framers'
omission of the phrase "controlling interest" did not mean the inclusion of
all shares of stock, whether voting or non-voting. The OSG reiterated
essentially the Court's declaration that the Constitution reserved exclusively
to Philippine nationals the ownership and operation of public utilities
consistent with the State's policy to "develop a self-reliant and independent
national economy effectively controlled by Filipinos."
In the example given, only the foreigners holding the common shares have
voting rights in the election of directors, even if they hold only 100 shares.
The foreigners, with a minuscule equity of less than 0.001 percent, exercise
control over the public utility. On the other hand, the Filipinos, holding
more than 99.999 percent of the equity, cannot vote in the election of
directors and hence, have no control over the public utility. This starkly
circumvents the intent of the framers of the Constitution, as well as the
clear language of the Constitution, to place the control of public utilities in
the hands of Filipinos. x x x
Further, even if foreigners who own more than forty percent of the voting
shares elect an all-Filipino board of directors, this situation does not
guarantee Filipino control and does not in any way cure the violation of the
Constitution. The independence of the Filipino board members so elected
by such foreign shareholders is highly doubtful. As the OSG pointed out,
quoting Justice George Sutherland's words in Humphrey's Executor v. US,
[44]
"x x x it is quite evident that one who holds his office only during the
pleasure of another cannot be depended upon to maintain an attitude of
independence against the latter's will." Allowing foreign shareholders to
elect a controlling majority of the board, even if all the directors are
Filipinos, grossly circumvents the letter and intent of the Constitution and
defeats the very purpose of our nationalization laws.
VII.
Last sentence of Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution
The last sentence of Section 11, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution reads:
During the Oral Arguments, the OSG emphasized that there was never a
question on the intent of the framers of the Constitution to limit foreign
ownership, and assure majority Filipino ownership and control of public
utilities. The OSG argued, "while the delegates disagreed as to the
percentage threshold to adopt, x x x the records show they clearly
understood that Filipino control of the public utility corporation can only
be and is obtained only through the election of a majority of the members
of the board."
xxxx
MR. JAMIR. Yes, in this Article on National Economy and Patrimony, there
were two previous sections in which we fixed the Filipino equity to 60
percent as against 40 percent for foreigners. It is only in this Section 15
with respect to public utilities that the committee proposal was increased to
two-thirds. I think it would be better to harmonize this provision by
providing that even in the case of public utilities, the minimum equity for
Filipino citizens should be 60 percent.
Their second point is that under the Corporation Code, the management
and control of a corporation is vested in the board of directors, not in the
officers but in the board of directors. The officers are only agents of the
board. And they believe that with 60 percent of the equity, the Filipino
majority stockholders undeniably control the board. Only on important
corporate acts can the 40-percent foreign equity exercise a veto, x x x.
x x x x[45]
MS. ROSARIO BRAID. Yes, in the interest of equal time, may I also read
from a memorandum by the spokesman of the Philippine Chamber of
Communications on why they would like to maintain the present equity, I
am referring to the 66 2/3. They would prefer to have a 75-25 ratio but
would settle for 66 2/3. x x x
xxxx
x x x x[46]
MS. ROSARIO BRAID. x x x They also like to suggest that we amend this
provision by adding a phrase which states: "THE MANAGEMENT BODY
OF EVERY CORPORATION OR ASSOCIATION SHALL IN ALL CASES BE
CONTROLLED BY CITIZENS OF THE PHILIPPINES." I have with me
their position paper.
MS. ROSARIO BRAID. The three major international record carriers in the
Philippines, which Commissioner Romulo mentioned Philippine Global
Communications, Eastern Telecommunications, Globe Mackay Cable are
40-percent owned by foreign multinational companies and 60-percent
owned by their respective Filipino partners. All three, however, also have
management contracts with these foreign companies Philcom with RCA,
ETPI with Cable and Wireless PLC, and GMCR with ITT. Up to the present
time, the general managers of these carriers are foreigners. While the
foreigners in these common carriers are only minority owners, the foreign
multinationals are the ones managing and controlling their operations by
virtue of their management contracts and by virtue of their strength in the
governing bodies of these carriers.[47]
xxxx
Thank you.
xxxx
FR. BERNAS. Will the committee accept a reformulation of the first part?
FR. BERNAS. The reformulation will be essentially the formula of the 1973
Constitution which reads: "THE PARTICIPATION OF FOREIGN
INVESTORS IN THE GOVERNING BODY OF ANY PUBLIC UTILITY
ENTERPRISE SHALL BE LIMITED TO THEIR PROPORTIONATE SHARE
IN THE CAPITAL THEREOF AND..."
MR. BENGZON. Will Commissioner Bernas read the whole thing again?
MR. BENGZON. Madam President, I think that was said in a more elegant
language. We accept the amendment. Is that all right with Commissioner
Rosario Braid?
xxxx
MR. DE LOS REYES. The governing body refers to the board of directors
and trustees.
MR. BENGZON. Yes, the governing body refers to the board of directors.
VOTING
xxxx
The results show 29 votes in favor and none against; so the proposed
amendment is approved.
xxxx
THE PRESIDENT. All right. Can we proceed now to vote on Section 15?
THE PRESIDENT. Will the chairman of the committee please read Section
15?
MR. VILLEGAS. The entire Section 15, as amended, reads: "No franchise,
certificate, or any other form of authorization for the operation of a public
utility shall be granted except to citizens of the Philippines or to
corporations or associations organized under the laws of the Philippines at
least 60 PERCENT OF WHOSE CAPITAL is owned by such citizens." May I
request Commissioner Bengzon to please continue reading.
VOTING
xxxx
The results show 29 votes in favor and 4 against; Section 15, as amended, is
approved.[48] (Emphasis supplied)
The last sentence of Section 11, Article XII of the 1987 Constitution,
particularly the provision on the limited participation of foreign investors
in the governing body of public utilities, is a reiteration of the last sentence
of Section 5, Article XIV of the 1973 Constitution,[49] signifying its
importance in reserving ownership and control of public utilities to Filipino
citizens.
VIII.
The undisputed facts
There is no dispute, and respondents do not claim the contrary, that (1)
foreigners own 64.27% of the common shares of PLDT, which class of
shares exercises the sole right to vote in the election of directors, and thus
foreigners control PLDT; (2) Filipinos own only 35.73% of PLDT's common
shares, constituting a minority of the voting stock, and thus Filipinos do not
control PLDT; (3) preferred shares, 99.44% owned by Filipinos, have no
voting rights; (4) preferred shares earn only 1/70 of the dividends that
common shares earn;[50] (5) preferred shares have twice the par value of
common shares; and (6) preferred shares constitute 77.85% of the
authorized capital stock of PLDT and common shares only 22.15%.
Despite the foregoing facts, the Court did not decide, and in fact refrained
from ruling on the question of whether PLDT violated the 60-40 ownership
requirement in favor of Filipino citizens in Section 11, Article XII of the
1987 Constitution. Such question indisputably calls for a presentation and
determination of evidence through a hearing, which is generally outside the
province of the Court's jurisdiction, but well within the SEC's statutory
powers. Thus, for obvious reasons, the Court limited its decision on the
purely legal and threshold issue on the definition of the term "capital" in
Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution and directed the SEC to apply
such definition in determining the exact percentage of foreign ownership in
PLDT.
IX.
PLDT is not an indispensable party;
SEC is impleaded in this case.
xxxx
6. For the Honorable Court to declare null and void all sales of common
stocks to foreigners in excess of 40 percent of the total subscribed common
shareholdings; and
Other relief(s) just and equitable are likewise prayed for. (Emphasis
supplied)
As can be gleaned from his prayer, Gamboa clearly asks this Court to
compel the SEC to perform its statutory duty to investigate whether "the
required percentage of ownership of the capital stock to be owned by
citizens of the Philippines has been complied with [by PLDT] as required by
x x x the Constitution."[51] Such plea clearly negates SEC's argument that it
was not impleaded.
Granting that only the SEC Chairman was impleaded in this case, the Court
has ample powers to order the SEC's compliance with its directive
contained in the 28 June 2011 Decision in view of the far-reaching
implications of this case. In Domingo v. Scheer,[52] the Court dispensed with
the amendment of the pleadings to implead the Bureau of Customs
considering (1) the unique backdrop of the case; (2) the utmost need to
avoid further delays; and (3) the issue of public interest involved. The Court
held:
The Court may be curing the defect in this case by adding the BOC as party-
petitioner. The petition should not be dismissed because the second action
would only be a repetition of the first. In Salvador, et al., v. Court of
Appeals, et al., we held that this Court has full powers, apart from that
power and authority which is inherent, to amend the processes, pleadings,
proceedings and decisions by substituting as party-plaintiff the real party-
in-interest. The Court has the power to avoid delay in the
disposition of this case, to order its amendment as to implead
the BOC as party-respondent. Indeed, it may no longer be
necessary to do so taking into account the unique backdrop in
this case, involving as it does an issue of public interest. After all,
the Office of the Solicitor General has represented the petitioner in the
instant proceedings, as well as in the appellate court, and maintained the
validity of the deportation order and of the BOC's Omnibus Resolution. It
cannot, thus, be claimed by the State that the BOC was not afforded its day
in court, simply because only the petitioner, the Chairperson of the BOC,
was the respondent in the CA, and the petitioner in the instant recourse.
In Alonso v. Villamor, we had the occasion to state:
In any event, the SEC has expressly manifested [54] that it will
abide by the Court's decision and defer to the Court's definition
of the term "capital" in Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution.
Further, the SEC entered its special appearance in this case and
argued during the Oral Arguments, indicating its submission to
the Court's jurisdiction. It is clear, therefore, that there exists no
legal impediment against the proper and immediate
implementation of the Court's directive to the SEC.
Needless to state, the Court can validly, properly, and fully dispose of the
fundamental legal issue in this case even without the participation of PLDT
since defining the term "capital" in Section 11, Article XII of the
Constitution does not, in any way, depend on whether PLDT was
impleaded. Simply put, PLDT is not indispensable for a complete resolution
of the purely legal question in this case.[55] In fact, the Court, by treating the
petition as one for mandamus,[56] merely directed the SEC to apply the
Court's definition of the term "capital" in Section 11, Article XII of the
Constitution in determining whether PLDT committed any violation of the
said constitutional provision. The dispositive portion of the Court's
ruling is addressed not to PLDT but solely to the SEC, which is
the administrative agency tasked to enforce the 60-40 ownership
requirement in favor of Filipino citizens in Section 11, Article XII
of the Constitution.
Since the Court limited its resolution on the purely legal issue on the
definition of the term "capital" in Section 11, Article XII of the 1987
Constitution, and directed the SEC to investigate any violation by PLDT of
the 60-40 ownership requirement in favor of Filipino citizens under the
Constitution,[57] there is no deprivation of PLDT's property or denial of
PLDT's right to due process, contrary to Pangilinan and Nazareno's
misimpression. Due process will be afforded to PLDT when it presents
proof to the SEC that it complies, as it claims here, with Section 11, Article
XII of the Constitution.
X.
Foreign Investments in the Philippines
Movants fear that the 28 June 2011 Decision would spell disaster to our
economy, as it may result in a sudden flight of existing foreign investors to
"friendlier" countries and simultaneously deterring new foreign investors to
our country. In particular, the PSE claims that the 28 June 2011 Decision
may result in the following: (1) loss of more than P630 billion in foreign
investments in PSE-listed shares; (2) massive decrease in foreign trading
transactions; (3) lower PSE Composite Index; and (4) local investors not
investing in PSE-listed shares.[58]
Dr. Bernardo M. Villegas, one of the amici curiae in the Oral Arguments,
shared movants' apprehension. Without providing specific details, he
pointed out the depressing state of the Philippine economy compared to
our neighboring countries which boast of growing economies. Further, Dr.
Villegas explained that the solution to our economic woes is for the
government to "take-over" strategic industries, such as the public utilities
sector, thus:
JUSTICE CARPIO:
I would like also to get from you Dr. Villegas if you have additional
information on whether this high FDI[59] countries in East Asia have
allowed foreigners x x x control [of] their public utilities, so that we can
compare apples with apples.
DR. VILLEGAS:
Correct, but let me just make a comment. When these neighbors of ours
find an industry strategic, their solution is not to "Filipinize" or
"Vietnamize" or "Singaporize." Their solution is to make sure that
those industries are in the hands of state enterprises. So, in
these countries, nationalization means the government takes
over. And because their governments are competent and honest
enough to the public, that is the solution. x x x [60] (Emphasis
supplied)
XI.
Prospective Application of Sanctions
In its Motion for Partial Reconsideration, the SEC sought to clarify the
reckoning period of the application and imposition of appropriate sanctions
against PLDT if found violating Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution.
As discussed, the Court has directed the SEC to investigate and determine
whether PLDT violated Section 11, Article XII of the Constitution. Thus,
there is no dispute that it is only after the SEC has determined PLDT's
violation, if any exists at the time of the commencement of the
administrative case or investigation, that the SEC may impose the statutory
sanctions against PLDT. In other words, once the 28 June 2011 Decision
becomes final, the SEC shall impose the appropriate sanctions only if it
finds after due hearing that, at the start of the administrative case or
investigation, there is an existing violation of Section 11, Article XII of the
Constitution. Under prevailing jurisprudence, public utilities that fail to
comply with the nationality requirement under Section 11, Article XII and
the FIA can cure their deficiencies prior to the start of the administrative
case or investigation.[61]
XII.
Final Word
Any other construction of the term "capital" in Section 11, Article XII of the
Constitution contravenes the letter and intent of the Constitution. Any
other meaning of the term "capital" openly invites alien domination of
economic activities reserved exclusively to Philippine nationals. Therefore,
respondents' interpretation will ultimately result in handing over effective
control of our national economy to foreigners in patent violation of the
Constitution, making Filipinos second-class citizens in their own country.
Filipinos have only to remind themselves of how this country was exploited
under the Parity Amendment, which gave Americans the same rights as
Filipinos in the exploitation of natural resources, and in the ownership and
control of public utilities, in the Philippines. To do this the 1935
Constitution, which contained the same 60 percent Filipino ownership and
control requirement as the present 1987 Constitution, had to be amended
to give Americans parity rights with Filipinos. There was bitter opposition
to the Parity Amendment[62] and many Filipinos eagerly awaited its
expiration. In late 1968, PLDT was one of the American-controlled public
utilities that became Filipino-controlled when the controlling American
stockholders divested in anticipation of the expiration of the Parity
Amendment on 3 July 1974.63 No economic suicide happened when
control of public utilities and mining corporations passed to Filipinos'
hands upon expiration of the Parity Amendment.
The 1935, 1973 and 1987 Constitutions have the same 60 percent Filipino
ownership and control requirement for public utilities like PLDT. Any
deviation from this requirement necessitates an amendment to the
Constitution as exemplified by the Parity Amendment. This Court has no
power to amend the Constitution for its power and duty is only to faithfully
apply and interpret the Constitution.
SO ORDERED.