TRADERS
ROYAL BANK vs. COURT OF APPEALS
G.R. No.
93397
FACTS OF THE CASE
Filriters Guaranty Assurance Corporation
(FGAC) is the owner of several Central Bank Certificates of Indebtedness
(CBCI). These certificates are actually proof that FGAC has the required
reserve investment with the Central Bank to operate as an insurer and to protect
third persons from whatever liabilities FGAC may incur.
In 1979, FGAC agreed to
assign said CBCI to Philippine Underwriters Finance Corporation (PUFC). Later,
PUFC sold said CBCI to Traders Royal Bank (TRB). Said sale with TRB comes with
a right to repurchase on a date certain. However, when the day to repurchase
arrived, PUFC failed to repurchase said CBCI hence TRB requested the Central
Bank to have said CBCI be registered in TRB’s name. Central Bank refused as it
alleged that the CBCI are not negotiable; that as such, the transfer from FGAC
to PUFC is not valid; that since it was invalid, PUFC acquired no valid title
over the CBCI; that the subsequent transfer from PUFC to TRB is likewise
invalid.
TRB then filed a petition for mandamus to
compel the Central Bank to register said CBCI in TRB’s name. TRB averred that
PUFC is the alter ego of FGAC; that PUFC owns 90% of FGAC; that the two
corporations have identical sets of directors; that payment of said CBCI to
PUFC is like a payment to FGAC hence the sale between PUFC and TRB is valid. In
short, TRB avers that that the veil of corporate fiction, between PUFC and
FGAC, should be pierced because the two corporations allegedly used their
separate identity to defraud TRD into buying said CBCI.
ISSUE
Whether or not Traders Royal
Bank is correct.
RULING
No. Traders Royal Bank failed to show that the corporate fiction is used
by the two corporations to defeat public convenience, justify wrong, protect
fraud or defend crime or where a corporation is a mere alter ego or business
conduit of a person. TRB merely showed that PUFC owns 90% of FGAC and that
their directors are the same.
The identity of PUFC can’t be maintained as that
of FGAC because of this mere fact; there is nothing else which could lead the
court under the circumstance to disregard their corporate personalities.
Further, TRB can’t argue that it was defrauded into buying those certificates.
In the first place, TRB as a banking institution is not ignorant about these
types of transactions. It should know for a fact that a certificate of
indebtedness is not negotiable because the payee therein is inscribed
specifically and that the Central Bank is obliged to pay the named payee only
and no one else.
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