Matling Industrial Commercial Corp. Vs Coros
Matling Industrial Commercial Corp. Vs Coros
Matling Industrial Commercial Corp. Vs Coros
Supreme Court
Manila
THIRD DIVISION
MATLING INDUSTRIAL
AND COMMERCIAL
CORPORATION,
RICHARD K. SPENCER,
CATHERINE SPENCER,
AND ALEX MANCILLA,
Petitioners,
-versus -
RICARDO R. COROS,
Respondent.
x-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------x
DECISION
BERSAMIN, J.:
This case reprises the jurisdictional conundrum of whether a complaint for illegal
dismissal is cognizable by the Labor Arbiter (LA) or by the Regional Trial Court (RTC).
The determination of whether the dismissed officer was a regular employee or a
corporate officer unravels the conundrum. In the case of the regular employee, the LA
has jurisdiction; otherwise, the RTC exercises the legal authority to adjudicate.
In this appeal via petition for review on certiorari, the petitioners challenge the decision
dated September 13, 2002[1] and the resolution dated April 2, 2003,[2] both
promulgated in C.A.-G.R. SP No. 65714 entitled Matling Industrial and Commercial
Corporation, et al. v. Ricardo R. Coros and National Labor Relations Commission,
whereby by the Court of Appeals (CA) sustained the ruling of the National Labor
Relations Commission (NLRC) to the effect that the LA had jurisdiction because the
respondent was not a corporate officer of petitioner Matling Industrial and Commercial
Corporation (Matling).
Antecedents
After his dismissal by Matling as its Vice President for Finance and Administration, the
respondent filed on August 10, 2000 a complaint for illegal suspension and illegal
dismissal against Matling and some of its corporate officers (petitioners) in the NLRC,
Sub-Regional Arbitration Branch XII, Iligan City.[3]
The petitioners moved to dismiss the complaint,[4] raising the ground, among others,
that the complaint pertained to the jurisdiction of the Securities and Exchange
Commission (SEC) due to the controversy being intra-corporate inasmuch as the
respondent was a member of Matlings Board of Directors aside from being its VicePresident for Finance and Administration prior to his termination.
The respondent opposed the petitioners motion to dismiss,[5] insisting that his status as a
member of Matlings Board of Directors was doubtful, considering that he had not been
formally elected as such; that he did not own a single share of stock in Matling,
considering that he had been made to sign in blank an undated indorsement of the
certificate of stock he had been given in 1992; that Matling had taken back and retained
the certificate of stock in its custody; and that even assuming that he had been a Director
of Matling, he had been removed as the Vice President for Finance and Administration,
not as a Director, a fact that the notice of his termination dated April 10, 2000 showed.
On October 16, 2000, the LA granted the petitioners motion to dismiss,[6] ruling that the
respondent was a corporate officer because he was occupying the position of Vice
President for Finance and Administration and at the same time was a Member of the
Board of Directors of Matling; and that, consequently, his removal was a corporate act
of Matling and the controversy resulting from such removal was under the jurisdiction
of the SEC, pursuant to Section 5, paragraph (c) of Presidential Decree No. 902.
Ruling of the NLRC
The petitioners later submitted to the NLRC in support of the motion for
reconsideration the certified machine copies of Matlings Amended Articles of
Incorporation and By Laws to prove that the President of Matling was thereby granted
full power to create new offices and appoint the officers thereto, and the minutes of
special meeting held on June 7, 1999 by Matlings Board of Directors to prove that the
respondent was, indeed, a Member of the Board of Directors.[10]
Nonetheless, on April 30, 2001, the NLRC denied the petitioners motion for
reconsideration.[11]
Ruling of the CA
The petitioners elevated the issue to the CA by petition for certiorari, docketed as C.A.G.R. No. SP 65714, contending that the NLRC committed grave abuse of discretion
amounting to lack of jurisdiction in reversing the correct decision of the LA.
In its assailed decision promulgated on September 13, 2002,[12] the CA dismissed the
petition for certiorari, explaining:
For a position to be considered as a corporate office, or, for that matter, for
one to be considered as a corporate officer, the position must, if not listed in
the by-laws, have been created by the corporation's board of directors, and
the occupant thereof appointed or elected by the same board of directors or
stockholders. This is the implication of the ruling in Tabang v. National
Labor Relations Commission, which reads:
The president, vice president, secretary and treasurer are commonly
regarded as the principal or executive officers of a corporation, and
modern corporation statutes usually designate them as the officers
of the corporation. However, other offices are sometimes created by
the charter or by-laws of a corporation, or the board of directors
may be empowered under the by-laws of a corporation to create
additional offices as may be necessary.
It has been held that an 'office' is created by the charter of the
corporation and the officer is elected by the directors or
stockholders. On the other hand, an 'employee' usually occupies no
office and generally is employed not by action of the directors or
stockholders but by the managing officer of the corporation who
Where the complaint for illegal dismissal concerns a corporate officer, however, the
controversy falls under the jurisdiction of the Securities and Exchange Commission
(SEC), because the controversy arises out of intra-corporate or partnership relations
between and among stockholders, members, or associates, or between any or all of them
and the corporation, partnership, or association of which they are stockholders,
members, or associates, respectively; and between such corporation, partnership, or
association and the State insofar as the controversy concerns their individual franchise or
right to exist as such entity; or because the controversy involves the election or
appointment of a director, trustee, officer, or manager of such corporation, partnership,
or association.[14] Such controversy, among others, is known as an intra-corporate
dispute.
Effective on August 8, 2000, upon the passage of Republic Act No. 8799,[15] otherwise
known as The Securities Regulation Code, the SECs jurisdiction over all intra-corporate
disputes was transferred to the RTC, pursuant to Section 5.2 of RA No. 8799, to wit:
5.2. The Commissions jurisdiction over all cases enumerated under Section
5 of Presidential Decree No. 902-A is hereby transferred to the Courts of
general jurisdiction or the appropriate Regional Trial Court: Provided,
that the Supreme Court in the exercise of its authority may designate the
Regional Trial Court branches that shall exercise jurisdiction over these
cases. The Commission shall retain jurisdiction over pending cases
involving intra-corporate disputes submitted for final resolution which
should be resolved within one (1) year from the enactment of this
Code. The Commission shall retain jurisdiction over pending suspension of
payments/rehabilitation cases filed as of 30 June 2000 until finally
disposed.
Considering that the respondents complaint for illegal dismissal was commenced on
August 10, 2000, it might come under the coverage of Section 5.2 of RA No.
8799,supra, should it turn out that the respondent was a corporate, not a regular, officer
of Matling.
II
Was the Respondents Position of Vice President
for Administration and Finance a Corporate Office?
We must first resolve whether or not the respondents position as Vice President for
Finance and Administration was a corporate office. If it was, his dismissal by the Board
of Directors rendered the matter an intra-corporate dispute cognizable by the RTC
pursuant to RA No. 8799.
The petitioners contend that the position of Vice President for Finance and
Administration was a corporate office, having been created by Matlings President
pursuant to By-Law No. V, as amended,[16] to wit:
BY LAW NO. V
Officers
The President shall be the executive head of the corporation; shall preside
over the meetings of the stockholders and directors; shall countersign all
certificates, contracts and other instruments of the corporation as authorized
by the Board of Directors; shall have full power to hire and discharge any
or all employees of the corporation; shall have full power to create new
offices and to appoint the officers thereto as he may deem proper and
necessary in the operations of the corporation and as the progress of
the business and welfare of the corporation may demand; shall make
reports to the directors and stockholders and perform all such other duties
and functions as are incident to his office or are properly required of him by
the Board of Directors. In case of the absence or disability of the President,
the Executive Vice President shall have the power to exercise his functions.
The petitioners argue that the power to create corporate offices and to appoint the
individuals to assume the offices was delegated by Matlings Board of Directors to its
President through By-Law No. V, as amended; and that any office the President created,
like the position of the respondent, was as valid and effective a creation as that made by
the Board of Directors, making the office a corporate office. In justification, they
cite Tabang v. National Labor Relations Commission,[17] which held that other offices
Conformably with Section 25, a position must be expressly mentioned in the By-Laws
in order to be considered as a corporate office. Thus, the creation of an office pursuant to
or under a By-Law enabling provision is not enough to make a position a corporate
office. Guerrea v. Lezama,[19] the first ruling on the matter, held that the only officers of
a corporation were those given that character either by the Corporation Code or by the
By-Laws; the rest of the corporate officers could be considered only as employees or
subordinate officials. Thus, it was held in Easycall Communications Phils., Inc. v. King:
[20]
An office is created by the charter of the corporation and the officer is
elected by the directors or stockholders. On the other hand, an employee
occupies no office and generally is employed not by the action of the
directors or stockholders but by the managing officer of the corporation
who also determines the compensation to be paid to such employee.
In this case, respondent was appointed vice president for nationwide
expansion by Malonzo, petitioner's general manager, not by the board of
directors of petitioner. It was also Malonzo who determined the
compensation package of respondent. Thus, respondent was an employee,
not a corporate officer. The CA was therefore correct in ruling that
jurisdiction over the case was properly with the NLRC, not the SEC (now
the RTC).
This interpretation is the correct application of Section 25 of the Corporation Code,
which plainly states that the corporate officers are the President, Secretary,
Treasurerand such other officers as may be provided for in the By-Laws. Accordingly,
the corporate officers in the context of PD No. 902-A are exclusively those who are
given that character either by the Corporation Code or by the corporations By-Laws.
A different interpretation can easily leave the way open for the Board of Directors to
circumvent the constitutionally guaranteed security of tenure of the employee by the
expedient inclusion in the By-Laws of an enabling clause on the creation of just any
corporate officer position.
It is relevant to state in this connection that the SEC, the primary agency administering
the Corporation Code, adopted a similar interpretation of Section 25 of theCorporation
Code in its Opinion dated November 25, 1993,[21] to wit:
Thus, pursuant to the above provision (Section 25 of the Corporation
Code), whoever are the corporate officers enumerated in the by-laws
are the exclusive Officers of the corporation and the Board has no
power to create other Offices without amending first the corporate Bylaws. However, the Board may create appointive positions other than
the positions of corporate Officers, but the persons occupying such
positions are not considered as corporate officers within the meaning of
Section 25 of the Corporation Code and are not empowered to exercise
the functions of the corporate Officers, except those functions lawfully
delegated to them. Their functions and duties are to be determined by
the Board of Directors/Trustees.