Ang vs. Ang

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G.R. No. 201675. June 19, 2013.

*
JUANITO ANG, for and in behalf of SUNRISE MARKETING (BACOLOD), INC.,** petitioner, vs.
SPOUSES ROBERTO and RACHEL ANG, respondents.

FACTS:

The Petitioner and Respondents are brothers and they are stockholders of Sunrise Marketing (Bacolod),
Inc. (SMBI) is a duly registered corporation owned by the Ang family.

On 31 July 1995, Nancy Ang (Nancy), the sister of Juanito and Roberto, and her husband,
Theodore Ang (Theodore), agreed to extend a loan to settle the obligations of SMBI. issued a check
in the amount of $1,000,000.00 payable to “Juanito Ang and/or Anecita Ang and/or Roberto Ang and/or
Rachel Ang.”

Nancy was a former stockholder of SMBI, currently residing in the United States. There was no written
loan agreement, in view of the close relationship between the parties.

SMBI increased its authorized capital stock to P10,000,000.00. The Certificate of Increase of Capital
Stock was signed by Juanito, Anecita, Roberto, and Rachel as directors of SMBI.

Juanito claimed, however, that the increase of SMBI’s capital stock was done in contravention of
the Corporation Code.

According to Juanito, when he and Anecita left for Canada:, Sps. Roberto and Rachel Ang took over the
active management of [SMBI]. they were able to successfully manipulate the stocks sharings
between themselves at 50-50 under the condition that the procedures mandated by the
Corporation Code on increase of capital stock be strictly observed (valid Board Meeting). No such

Juanito claimed that payments to Nancy and Theodore ceased sometime after 2006. On 24
November 2008, Nancy and Theodore, through their counsel here in the Philippines, sent a
demand letter

Respondent spouse claimed that they are not complying with the demand letter because they have not
personally contracted a loan from Nancy and Theodore.

Petitioner executed executed a Deed of Acknowledgment and Settlement Agreement to settle the loan
from Nancy .

Thereafter, Petitioner filed a “Stockholder Derivative Suit against the respondent for their “the intentional
and malicious refusal of defendant Sps. Roberto and Rachel Ang to [settle] their 50% share x x x [of] the
total obligation .

The Complaint sought the following reliefs:

a) Issuance of an ex-parte Writ of Attachment and/or Garnishment, with a Break Open Order
covering the assets of the spouses Roberto and Rachel Ang, or any interest they may have
against third parties;

b) Placement of SMBI under Receivership pending resolution of the case;

The RTC Bacolod granted the writ of attachement


Respondent move for the dismissal of the action as it was not a bona fide derivative suit as defined under
the Interim Rules of Procedure for Intra-Corporate Controversies20 (Interim Rules) but is actually a
collection suit since the real party in interest is not SMBI, but Nancy and Theodore:

The RTC ruled that the action is a DERIVATIVE SUIT

On Appeal to the CA, the CA reversed the decision of the RTC and held that the complaint should
be dismissed because it is a harassment suit, and not a valid derivative suit as defined under the Interim
Rules.

The CA also found that Juanito failed to exhaust intra-corporate remedies and that the loan extended by
Nancy and Theodore was not SMBI’s corporate obligation. There is nothing on record to show that non-
payment of the loan will result in any damage or prejudice to SMBI.

ISSUE: WON ALLEGATIONS OF THE COMPLAINT, THE NATURE OF THE CASE IS ONE OF A
DERIVATIVE SUIT?

RULING: NO,

The complaint is not a derivative suit.

A derivative suit is an action brought by a stockholder on behalf of the


corporation to enforce corporate rights against the corporation’s directors,
officers or other insiders.

Under Sections 23 and 36 of the Corporation Code, the directors or officers, as provided under the by-
laws, have the right to decide whether or not a corporation should sue. Since these directors or officers
will never be willing to sue themselves, or impugn their wrongful or fraudulent decisions, stockholders are
permitted by law to bring an action in the name of the corporation to hold these directors and officers
accountable. In derivative suits, the real party in interest is the corporation, while the stockholder is a
mere nominal party.

The Court has recognized that a stockholder’s right to institute a derivative suit is not based on
any express provision of the Corporation Code, or even the Securities Regulation Code, but is
impliedly recognized when the said laws make corporate directors or officers liable for damages
suffered by the corporation and its stockholders for violation of their fiduciary duties.

Hence, a stockholder may sue for mismanagement, waste or dissipation of corporate assets
because of a special injury to him for which he is otherwise without redress. In effect, the suit is an
action for specific performance of an obligation owed by the corporation to the stockholders to assist its
rights of action when the corporation has been put in default by the wrongful refusal of the directors or
management to make suitable measures for its protection. The basis of a stockholder’s suit is always
one in equity. However, it cannot prosper without first complying with the legal requisites for its
institution.

Section 1, Rule 8 of the Interim Rules imposes the following requirements for derivative
suits:
(1) The person filing the suit must be a stockholder or member at the time the acts or
transactions subject of the action occurred and the time the action was filed;
(2) He must have exerted all reasonable efforts, and alleges the same with particularity in
the complaint, to exhaust all remedies available under the articles of incorporation, by-
laws, laws or rules governing the corporation or partnership to obtain the relief he desires;
(3) No appraisal rights are available for the act or acts complained of; and
(4) The suit is not a nuisance or harassment suit.
In the case at bar, the Complaint failed to show how the acts of Rachel and Roberto
resulted in any detriment to SMBI.
The loan was not a corporate obligation, but a personal debt of the Ang brothers and their
spouses. The check was issued to "Juanito Ang and/or Anecita Ang and/or Roberto Ang
and/or Rachel Ang" and not SMBI.
The proceeds of the loan were used for payment of the obligations of the other corporations
owned by the Angs as well as the purchase of real properties for the Ang brothers. SMBI
was never a party to the Settlement Agreement or the Mortgage.
It was never named as a co-debtor or guarantor of the loan. Both instruments were executed by
Juanito and Anecita in their personal capacity, and not in their capacity as directors or officers of
SMBI. Thus, SMBI is under no legal obligation to satisfy the obligation.

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