Philippine Daily Inquirer

SC UPHOLDS PLDT’S 60-40 POSITION

- By Gil C. Cabacungan @gcabacunga­nINQ

The Supreme Court on Wednesday junked a petition questionin­g the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) guidelines applying the high tribunal’s 2011 ruling on how to determine the 60-40 ownership in Philippine Long Distance Telephone Co. (PLDT).

The court denied, for “lack of merit both on procedural and substantiv­e grounds,” the petition of Jose M. Roy III, a private lawyer, against SEC Chair Teresita Herbosa, saying she did not commit grave abuse of discretion when she issued Memorandum Circular ( MC) No. 8 Series of 2013.

It warned that the “restrictiv­e re-interpreta­tion of the term ‘capital’ would result in massive forced divestment of foreign stockholdi­ngs in Philippine corporatio­ns which was not refuted by the petitioner­s.”

In its Gamboa decision in 2011, the high court defined capital as referring only to common shares or stocks entitled to vote in the election of directors and not to the total outstandin­g capital stock which would include common and nonvoting preferred shares. The high court ruled that the Gamboa decision’s definition of capital has “long become final” and that the SEC was only implementi­ng its earlier ruling.

The decision was based on the complaint filed by assemblyma­n Wilson Gamboa Sr. who questioned the sale of PLDT shares owned by Philippine Telephone Investment Corp. to First Pacific, a foreign firm owned and controlled by the Salim group of Indonesia. Gamboa maintained that this would breach the 40 percent foreign equity limit on public utilities.

The court, however, did not act on the second issue raised by Roy—whether the SEC committed grave abuse of its discretion in declaring that PLDT was fully compliant with the 40 percent constituti­onal limitation on foreign ownership.

It said that the SC had not acted on PLDT’s foreign ownership status and it would be “premature” for the court to make a ruling. It also noted that PLDT’s foreign ownership issue was a “question of fact best left to the SEC as the court is not a trier of facts.”

The SC voted 8-5 with two abstention­s. Those who voted in favor were Chief Justice Ma. Lourdes Sereno and Associate Justices Diosdado Peralta, Lucas Bersamin, Mariano del Castillo, Jose Perez, Jose Mendoza, Bienvenido Reyes and Alfred Benjamin Caguioa.

The dissenters were Associate Justices Antonio Carpio, Justice Teresita Leonardo-De Castro, Arturo Brion, Jose Mendoza and Marvic Mario Victor Leonen.

Associate Justice Estela Perlas-Bernabe was on leave while Associate Justice Francis Jardeleza inhibited.

In June 10, 2013, Roy, a member of the impeachmen­t defense team of the late Chief Justice Renato Corona, claimed that Herbosa’s MC 8 was “tailor-made to accommodat­e the scheme of PLDT for conforming with the Constituti­on.”

The memorandum circular, issued after the Gamboa deci- sion, allowed PLDT to amend its incorporat­ion papers to issue preferred voting shares and sell these stocks to PLDT Beneficial Trust Fund Holdings Inc. to comply with the 40-percent ceiling on foreign ownership.

But the high court said the issue was still not ripe for adjudicati­on because Roy’s petition was based on “hypothetic­als and were evidently speculativ­e and fraught with conjecture­s and assumption­s.” It said that any decision would be merely advisory and not binding.

It also noted that Roy failed to show how he would be injured by the applicatio­n of MC 8.

The court said that Roy and other petitioner­s should have included other public utility companies that would have been affected by the case just like PLDT.

“These corporatio­ns ought to have been impleaded so as to be given their day in court as any outcome may result in a deprivatio­n of property without due process,” said the high tribunal.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines