Cases 1st Week Corpo
Cases 1st Week Corpo
Cases 1st Week Corpo
CONCESSION THEORY
It is a basic postulate that before a corporation may acquire juridical personality, the State
must give its consent either in the form of a special law or a general enabling act, and the
procedure and conditions provided under the law for the acquisition of such juridical
personality must be complied with. Although the statutory grant to an association of the
powers to purchase, sell, lease and encumber property can only be construed the grant of a
juridical personality to such an association nevertheless, the failure to comply with the
statutory procedure and conditions does not warrant a finding that such association acquired
a juridical personality, even when it adopts constitution and by-laws.
It is ordinarily held that persons who attempt, but fail, to form a corporation and who
carry on business under the corporate name occupy the position of partners inter
se. Thus, where persons associate themselves together under articles to purchase
property to carry on a business, and their organization is so defective, as to come short of
creating a corporation within the statute, they become in legal effect partners inter se, and
their rights as members of the company to the property acquired by the company will be
recognized.
However, such a relation does not necessarily exist, for ordinarily persons cannot be
made to assume the relation of partners, as between themselves, when their
purpose is that no partnership shall exist , and it should be implied only when
necessary to do justice between the parties; thus, one who takes no part except to
subscribe for stock in a proposed corporation which is never legally formed does not
become a partner with other subscribers who engage in business under the name of the
pretended corporation, so as to be liable as such in an action for settlement of the alleged
partnership and contribution .
The primary franchise of a corporation that is, the right to exist as such, is vested "in the
individuals who compose the corporation and not in the corporation itself", and cannot be
conveyed in the absence of a legislative authority to do so, but the specific or secondary
franchises of a corporation are vested in the corporation and may ordinarily be
conveyed or mortgaged under a general power granted to a corporation to dispose of
its property, except such special or secondary franchises as are charged with a public use.
The right to operate a messenger and express delivery service, by virtue of a legislative
enactment, is admittedly a secondary franchise under the law, and is subject to levy and
sale on execution together and including all the property necessary for the enjoyment
thereof. The law, however, indicates the procedure under which the secondary franchise and
the properties necessary for its enjoyment may be sold under execution. Said franchise
can be sold under execution, when such sale is especially decreed and ordered in the
judgment and it becomes effective only when the sale is confirmed by the Court after
due notice (Sec. 56, Corp. Law).
Incidentally, the trade name or business name corresponds to the initials of the
President of the petitioner corporation and there can be no serious dispute regarding the
fact that a trade name or business name and capital stock are necessarily included in
the enjoyment of the franchise. Like that of a franchise, the law mandates, that property
necessary for the enjoyment of said franchise, can only be sold to satisfy a judgment debt if
the decision especially so provides. As we have stated heretofore, no such directive appears
in the decision. Moreover, a trade name or business name cannot be sold separately
from the franchise, and the capital stock of the petitioner corporation or any other
corporation, because it represents the interest and is the property of stockholders in the
corporation, who can only be deprived thereof in the manner provided by law
ARTIFICIAL BEING
In this case, the corporation was held solidary liable with its employee, but the president
of the corporation was not held solidary liable with the employee of the corporation
because
Exception: However, if a corporation has good reputation, and such was besmirched, it
may be a ground for the award of moral damages.
While the Court may allow the grant of moral damages to corporations, it is not
automatically granted; there must still be proof of the existence of the factual basis
of the damage and its causal relation to the defendants acts. This is so because
moral damages, though incapable of pecuniary estimation, are in the category of an
award designed to compensate the claimant for actual injury suffered and not to impose
a penalty on the wrongdoer.
In the case, the SC summarized the FACTORS that are to be considered when
the corporate mask may be lifted and the corporate veil pierced, or when to consider a
corporation as but the alter ego of the controlling person or of another corporation: