Ong Yong V Tiu Digest
Ong Yong V Tiu Digest
Ong Yong V Tiu Digest
Resolution which is 19 June 1996; and that the Tius shall be credited with 49,800 shares in
FLADC for their property
contribution, specifically, the 151 sq. m. parcel of land. The Court affirmed the fact that both the
Ongs and the Tius violated their respective obligations under the Pre-Subscription Agreement.
On 15 March 2002, the Tius filed before the Court a Motion for Issuance of a Writ of Execution.
Aside from their opposition to the Tius' Motion for Issuance of Writ of Execution, the Ongs filed
their own "Motion for Reconsideration; Alternatively, Motion for Modification (of the February 1,
2002 Decision)" on 15 March 2002. Willie Ong filed a separate "Motion for Partial
Reconsideration" dated 8 March 2002, pointing out that there was no violation of the PreSubscription Agreement on the part of the Ongs, among others. On 29 January 2003, the
Special Second Division of this Court held oral arguments on the respective positions of the
parties. On 27 February 2003, Dr. Willie Ong and the rest of the movants Ong filed their
respective memoranda. On 28 February 2003, the Tius submitted their memorandum.
Issue [1]: Whether the pre-Subscription Agreement executed by the Ongs is actually a
subscription contract.
Held [1]: FLADC was originally incorporated with an authorized capital stock of 500,000 shares
with the Tius owning 450,200 shares representing the paid-up capital. When the Tius invited the
Ongs to invest in FLADC as stockholders, an increase of the authorized capital stock became
necessary to give each group equal (50-50) shareholdings as agreed upon in the PreSubscription Agreement. The authorized capital stock was thus increased from 500,000 shares
to 2,000,000 shares with a par value of P100 each, with the Ongs subscribing to 1,000,000
shares and the Tius to 549,800 more shares in addition to their 450,200 shares to
complete 1,000,000 shares. Thus, the subject matter of the contract was the 1,000,000
unissued shares of FLADC stock allocated to the Ongs. Since these were unissued shares, the
parties' Pre-Subscription Agreement was in fact a subscription contract as defined under
Section 60, Title VII of the Corporation Code. A subscription contract necessarily involves the
corporation as one of the contracting parties since the subject matter of the transaction is
property owned by the corporation its shares of stock. Thus, the subscription
contract (denominated by the parties as a Pre-Subscription Agreement) whereby the Ongs
invested P100 million for 1,000,000 shares of stock was, from the viewpoint of the law, one
between the Ongs and FLADC, not between the Ongs and the Tius. Otherwise stated, the Tius
did not contract in their personal capacities with the Ongs since they were not selling any of
their own shares to them. It was FLADC that did. Considering therefore that the real contracting
parties to the subscription agreement were FLADC and the Ongs alone, a civil case for
rescission on the ground of breach of contract filed by the Tius in their personal
capacities will not prosper. Assuming it had valid reasons to do so, only FLADC (and certainly
not the Tius) had the legal personality to file suit rescinding the subscription agreement with the
Ongs inasmuch as it was the real party in interest therein. Article 1311 of the Civil Code
provides that "contracts take effect only between the parties, their assigns and heirs. . ."
Therefore, a party who has not taken part in the transaction cannot sue or be sued for
performance or for cancellation thereof, unless he shows that he has a real interest
affected thereby.
Issue [2]: Whether the rescission of Pre-Subscription Agreement would result in unauthorized
liquidation.
Held [2]: The rescission of the Pre-Subscription Agreement will effectively result in the
unauthorized distribution of the capital assets and property of the corporation, thereby violating
the Trust Fund Doctrine and the Corporation Code, since rescission of a subscription agreement
is not one of the instances when distribution of capital assets and property of the corporation is
allowed. Rescission will, in the final analysis, result in the premature liquidation of the
corporation without the benefit of prior dissolution in accordance with Sections 117, 118, 119
and 120 of the Corporation Code.