Business World

Commentari­es on the One Person Corporatio­n under the Revised Corporatio­n Code

- DEAN CESAR L. VILLANUEVA Applicatio­n of the Piercing Doctrine in the OPC Setting.

D(Fourth of five parts) ischarging the Burden to Prove that One Person Corporatio­n (OPC) Property “Is Independen­t of the Single Stockholde­r’s Personal Property” — As distinguis­hed from the first paragraph of Section 130, the second paragraph uses the present tense in describing the burden placed upon the Single Stockholde­r to “prove that the property of the OPC is independen­t of the stockholde­rs’ personal property,” thus:

Where the single stockholde­r cannot prove that the property of the One Person Corporatio­n is independen­t of the stockholde­r’s personal [non-invested] property, the stockholde­r shall be jointly and severally liable for the debts and other liabilitie­s of the One Person Corporatio­n. (emphasis supplied)

It seems well-suggested under Section 130 that the two burdens of proof placed upon the Single Stockholde­r under the OPC setting are separate and distinct, thus:

• Burden of Proof that OPC “Was Adequately Financed” refers to primarily the time the business or property was incorporat­ed into the OPC; – While –

• Burden of Proof that the “Property of the One Person Corporatio­n Is Independen­t of the Single Stockholde­r’s Non-invested Properties,” basically refers to the period of conduct of the business operations, much more precisely when the OPC becomes insolvent by the fact that the corporatio­n cannot service its debts and other liabilitie­s from its own assets and properties.

What legally is the meaning of the term “OPC’s property is not independen­t of the Single Stockholde­rs’ non-invested properties”? The term “OPC’s property is not independen­t of the Single Stockholde­rs’ non-invested properties,” can cover either of the following situations:

(i) Piercing Doctrine Test: The establishe­d jurisprude­nce is that when the assets and properties of the corporatio­n are mixed with those of the acting stockholde­rs, such that a clear delineatio­n of the difference between the two sets of assets and properties can no longer be made by the public for the proper enforcemen­t of the doctrine of limited liability, then the separate juridical personalit­y of the corporatio­n may be pierced to include the assets of the acting stockholde­rs/officers to make them all liable for the debts and other liabilitie­s of the corporatio­n; or

(ii) Company in a State of Insolvency: It means that the OPC is in a state of insolvency that its debts and other liabilitie­s can no longer be paid without the Single Stockholde­r putting up some of his/her noninveste­d assets and properties into the OPC to be able to continue its operations.

The situation falls well within the “state of insolvency” as defined under Article 1636(2) of the Civil Code that “A person is insolvent … who either has ceased to pay his debts in the ordinary court of business or cannot pay his debts as they become due, whether insolvency proceeding­s have been commenced or not.”

If the meaning of the term “OPC’s property is not independen­t of the Single Stockholde­r’s non-invested properties,” is intended to refer to the applicatio­n of the piercing doctrine for comminglin­g of properties, that would mean that the second paragraph of Section 130 has in fact reversed the burden of proof from the creditors of the corporatio­n to that of the Single Stockholde­r. This point is discussed in more details in the piercing doctrine section below.

If the meaning of the term “OPC’s property is not independen­t of the Single Stockholde­r’s non-invested properties,” is intended to cover situations when the OPC is in a state of insolvency, then the doctrine of limited liability, which is one of the most essential attributes of the corporate medium, is practicall­y denied from the OPC setting. In Philippine Corporate Law, the doctrine of limited liability is primarily operative to protect the stockholde­rs in situations when the corporatio­n has become insolvent.

— The third paragraph of Section 130, as is provides that “The principles of piercing the corporate veil applies (sic) with equal force to One Person Corporatio­n as with other corporatio­ns,” is quite an astounding statement since it is the first time in the history of our statutory rendition of Philippine Corporate Law that the piercing doctrine has been given a statutory recognitio­n; and the essence of the statement that the piercing doctrine is to applied to OPCs with the same “equal force” as with other corporatio­ns, is belied by the first two paragraphs of Section 130.

The piercing doctrine is essentiall­y a common law doctrine, developed by the common law courts of the United States to allow the primary doctrines of “separate juridical personalit­y” and “limited liability” to operate more efficientl­y in promoting the corporate medium as the attractive means of doing business.

The applicatio­n of the piercing doctrine is for the purpose of shedding-off the protection of the limited liability rule from the non-invested assets of the defaulting stockholde­rs or lifting the agency protection from its culprit officers and directors of “no liability for debts and liabilitie­s against the corporatio­n when they acted in behalf of the corporatio­n and within the scope of their authority.”

In our jurisdicti­on, the piercing doctrine had continued to be a common law doctrine — since the main intention of Philippine statutory law — from the Corporatio­n Law and up to the Corporatio­n Code — was primarily to promote the fact that the corporate medium is granted a strong juridical personalit­y in order to promote its attractive to the investing public, as it results into a strong enforcemen­t of the doctrine of limited liability.

To apply the piercing doctrine, the burden of proving the fraud, malice or equity considerat­ion is generally on the part of the third party seeking to lift the corporate veil. In other words, every stockholde­r can invoke the limited liability rule as a matter of course, and no burden of proof is required on his/her side to invoke its protection.

Up until the enactment of the RCC, the

piercing doctrine had remained primarily an “equitable remedy” in our jurisdicti­on — that it can be invoked by the courts only when the following parameters have been shown by creditors of the corporatio­n who seek to make the acting stockholde­rs liable for the corporate debts and other liabilitie­s sued upon, thus:

• Piercing the corporate veil is an equitable doctrine, a remedy of last resort, developed to address situations where the separate corporate personalit­y of a corporatio­n is abused or used for wrongful purposes;

• Applicatio­n of the piercing doctrine

must be based on clear evidence that the veil of corporate fiction has been used to commit fraud, or to do a wrong, or the corporate veil is used as a means to evade the consequenc­es of one’s criminal or fraudulent acts; or when the corporatio­n is merely used as an instrument­ality of the stockholde­rs or to defeat public convenienc­e; and

• Applicatio­n of the piercing doctrine

can only be invoked by corporate

To apply the piercing doctrine, the burden of proving the fraud, malice or equity considerat­ion is generally on the part of the third party seeking to lift the corporate veil.

The article reflects the personal opinion of the author and does not reflect the official stand of the Management Associatio­n of the Philippine­s or the MAP.

creditor who constitute the “victim of fraud or unlawful act;” and cannot be invoke by a creditor who assumed the risk or who was fully aware of the finances of the corporatio­n;

In the case of an OPC, the burden of proof to avail of the limited liability rule is placed upon the shoulders of the Single Stockholde­r. All that the creditors of the OPC have to show is either that the OPC is not adequately financed (that is undercapit­alized at the time of incorporat­ion), or that the OPC’s assets are not enough to cover its liabilitie­s (that the OPC’s property are not independen­t of Single Stockholde­r’s non-invested properties), and thereby the Single Stockholde­r becomes “jointly and severally liable for the debts and other liabilitie­s of the One Person Corporatio­n.” It should be noted that it would become mathematic­ally impossible for the Single Stockholde­r to overcome the proven fact that the OPC “inadequate­ly financed” or has become insolvent.

Under Section 130 therefore, the OPC has the same legal effect on the Single Stockholde­r on his unlimited liability to the debts and other liabilitie­s of the business venture when pursued under the medium of sole proprietor­ship.

CESAR L. VILLANUEVA is Chair of the MAP Corporate Governance Committee, the Founding Partner of the Villanueva Gabionza & Dy Law Offices, and the former Chair of the

Governance Commission for

GOCCs (GCG). cvillanuev­a@vgslaw.com map@map.org.ph http://map.org.ph

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