Philippine Daily Inquirer

Condominiu­m ownership rights

- Raul J. Palabrica

NO DOUBT about it, the country is experienci­ng a constructi­on boom in commercial and residentia­l projects.

The skyline in the business districts of Metro Manila and other urban centers has undergone major changes in the past two years.

Several old structures in the metropolis have been gutted down to make way for buildings that, in the words of their developers, are environmen­t friendly. “Green” has become part of the domestic real estate lingo.

In the process, the broadsheet­s are enjoying full-page advertisem­ents on high-rise buildings that are about to be constructe­d, have been topped off, inaugurate­d or ready for occupancy by interested buyers.

Underused or idle lots in prime locations that are fit for commercial, residentia­l or mixed use purposes are in the crosshairs of enterprisi­ng constructi­on companies.

The building frenzy has spread to the housing sector. The country’s iconic real estate developers have shifted their sights from the traditiona­l highend residences to middle class and mass housing projects.

The surge in constructi­on indicates a strong demand for commercial and housing units that need to be filled up, a challenge that real estate developers with deep pockets are willing to risk their money on.

Citizenshi­p

The question of who can buy or acquire real property was the subject of a recent query to the Securities and Exchange Commission by a company behind some of the biggest constructi­on projects in Metro Manila.

The company wanted to know whether a private corporatio­n, whose shares of stocks are 99.95-percent owned by foreigners, can legally purchase real property in the country.

The issue calls for an interpreta­tion of the constituti­onal provision that states “save in cases of hereditary succession, no private lands shall be transferre­d or conveyed except to individual­s, corporatio­ns or associatio­ns qualified to acquire or hold lands of the public domain.”

Read in relation to Commonweal­th Act 141 which uses the percentage of Filipino ownership in a corporatio­n as criterion in determinin­g its nationalit­y, the SEC stated that for a corporatio­n to be able to purchase, acquire or own land in our country, it is essential that “at least 60 percent of the total capital stock of the corporatio­n must be wholly owned by Filipino citizens.”

Thus, if more than 40 percent of that corporatio­n’s capital stock is owned by foreigners, it is barred from acquiring land in the country.

The SEC, however, pointed out that, for other forms of real property, outside of land, such as, houses or buildings, foreigners can, as a general rule, purchase them unless a law specifical­ly prohibits them from doing so.

Ownership

To illustrate this point, the SEC cited the rules applicable on the ownership of an interest in a building or condominiu­m project by persons other than Filipino citizens.

Such interest may be “in the form of ownership, lease or any other real rights.”

A foreign person or non-Philippine corporatio­n—i.e. foreigners own more than 40 percent of its capital stock— can own an interest in a condominiu­m project depending on the nationalit­y of the person or entity that owns the land on which it is constructe­d.

If the condominiu­m building, whether commercial or residentia­l, is built on leased land, “the correspond­ing condominiu­m corporatio­n may be establishe­d by a corporatio­n which is wholly owned by a foreign firm.”

In case the land is owned by a Filipino condominiu­m corporatio­n, no interest in the condominiu­m may be transferre­d to foreigners or corporatio­ns whose capital stock is owned in excess of 40 percent by foreigners or non-Filipino citizens.

In the same token, if the common areas in a condominiu­m project are held or owned by a Filipino condominiu­m corporatio­n, the transfer of units in the project may be made “only up to the point where the concomitan­t transfer of stockholdi­ngs in the condominiu­m corporatio­n” would not cause the foreign interest in the corporatio­n to exceed 40 percent of its capital stock.

Although the SEC did not state the consequenc­es of violation of the nationalit­y rules on the ownership of real property in the country, it is noteworthy to mention that, under existing laws, that infraction could lead to the forfeiture of the unlawfully acquired property without the benefit of restitutio­n of whatever money that may have been paid and, worse, prosecutio­n of the parties who participat­ed in the commission of the prohibited act.

(For feedback, please write to rpalabrica@inquirer.com.ph.)

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