PSE v. CA - G.R. No. 125469
PSE v. CA - G.R. No. 125469
PSE v. CA - G.R. No. 125469
Constitution Statutes Executive Issuances Judicial Issuances Other Issuances Jurisprudence International Legal Resources AUSL Exclusive
SECOND DIVISION
The Securities and Exchange Commission is the government agency, under the direct general supervision of the
Office of the President, 1 with the immense task of enforcing the Revised Securities Act, and all other duties
assigned to it by pertinent laws. Among its inumerable functions, and one of the most important, is the supervision of
all corporations, partnerships or associations, who are grantees of primary franchise and/or a license or permit
issued by the government to operate in the Philippines. 2 Just how far this regulatory authority extends, particularly,
with regard to the Petitioner Philippine Stock Exchange, Inc. is the issue in the case at bar.
In this Petition for Review on Certiorari, petitioner assails the resolution of the respondent Court of Appeals, dated
June 27, 1996, which affirmed the decision of the Securities and Exchange Commission ordering the petitioner
Philippine Stock Exchange, Inc. to allow the private respondent Puerto Azul Land, Inc. to be listed in its stock
market, thus paving the way for the public offering of PALI's shares.
The facts of the case are undisputed, and are hereby restated in sum.
The Puerto Azul Land, Inc. (PALI), a domestic real estate corporation, had sought to offer its shares to the public in
order to raise funds allegedly to develop its properties and pay its loans with several banking institutions. In January,
1995, PALI was issued a Permit to Sell its shares to the public by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC).
To facilitate the trading of its shares among investors, PALI sought to course the trading of its shares through the
Philippine Stock Exchange, Inc. (PSE), for which purpose it filed with the said stock exchange an application to list
its shares, with supporting documents attached.
On February 8, 1996, the Listing Committee of the PSE, upon a perusal of PALI's application, recommended to the
PSE's Board of Governors the approval of PALI's listing application.
On February 14, 1996, before it could act upon PALI's application, the Board of Governors of the PSE received a
letter from the heirs of Ferdinand E. Marcos, claiming that the late President Marcos was the legal and beneficial
owner of certain properties forming part of the Puerto Azul Beach Hotel and Resort Complex which PALI claims to
be among its assets and that the Ternate Development Corporation, which is among the stockholders of PALI,
likewise appears to have been held and continue to be held in trust by one Rebecco Panlilio for then President
Marcos and now, effectively for his estate, and requested PALI's application to be deferred. PALI was requested to
comment upon the said letter.
PALI's answer stated that the properties forming part of the Puerto Azul Beach Hotel and Resort Complex were not
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claimed by PALI as its assets. On the contrary, the resort is actually owned by Fantasia Filipina Resort, Inc. and the
Puerto Azul Country Club, entities distinct from PALI. Furthermore, the Ternate Development Corporation owns only
1.20% of PALI. The Marcoses responded that their claim is not confined to the facilities forming part of the Puerto
Azul Hotel and Resort Complex, thereby implying that they are also asserting legal and beneficial ownership of other
properties titled under the name of PALI.
On February 20, 1996, the PSE wrote Chairman Magtanggol Gunigundo of the Presidential Commission on Good
Government (PCGG) requesting for comments on the letters of the PALI and the Marcoses. On March 4, 1996, the
PSE was informed that the Marcoses received a Temporary Restraining Order on the same date, enjoining the
Marcoses from, among others, "further impeding, obstructing, delaying or interfering in any manner by or any means
with the consideration, processing and approval by the PSE of the initial public offering of PALI." The TRO was
issued by Judge Martin S. Villarama, Executive Judge of the RTC of Pasig City in Civil Case No. 65561, pending in
Branch 69 thereof.
In its regular meeting held on March 27, 1996, the Board of Governors of the PSE reached its decision to reject
PALI's application, citing the existence of serious claims, issues and circumstances surrounding PALI's ownership
over its assets that adversely affect the suitability of listing PALI's shares in the stock exchange.
On April 11, 1996, PALI wrote a letter to the SEC addressed to the then Acting Chairman, Perfecto R. Yasay, Jr.,
bringing to the SEC's attention the action taken by the PSE in the application of PALI for the listing of its shares with
the PSE, and requesting that the SEC, in the exercise of its supervisory and regulatory powers over stock
exchanges under Section 6(j) of P.D. No. 902-A, review the PSE's action on PALI's listing application and institute
such measures as are just and proper under the circumstances.
On the same date, or on April 11, 1996, the SEC wrote to the PSE, attaching thereto the letter of PALI and directing
the PSE to file its comments thereto within five days from its receipt and for its authorized representative to appear
for an "inquiry" on the matter. On April 22, 1996, the PSE submitted a letter to the SEC containing its comments to
the April 11, 1996 letter of PALI.
On April 24, 1996, the SEC rendered its Order, reversing the PSE's decision. The dispositive portion of the said
order reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, and invoking the Commissioner's authority and jurisdiction under
Section 3 of the Revised Securities Act, in conjunction with Section 3, 6(j) and 6(m) of Presidential
Decree No. 902-A, the decision of the Board of Governors of the Philippine Stock Exchange denying
the listing of shares of Puerto Azul Land, Inc., is hereby set aside, and the PSE is hereby ordered to
immediately cause the listing of the PALI shares in the Exchange, without prejudice to its authority to
require PALI to disclose such other material information it deems necessary for the protection of the
investigating public.
SO ORDERED.
PSE filed a motion for reconsideration of the said order on April 29, 1996, which was, however denied by the
Commission in its May 9, 1996 Order which states:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Commission finds no compelling reason to reconsider its
order dated April 24, 1996, and in the light of recent developments on the adverse claim against the
PALI properties, PSE should require PALI to submit full disclosure of material facts and information to
protect the investing public. In this regard, PALI is hereby ordered to amend its registration statements
filed with the Commission to incorporate the full disclosure of these material facts and information.
Dissatisfied with this ruling, the PSE filed with the Court of Appeals on May 17, 1996 a Petition for Review (with
Application for Writ of Preliminary Injunction and Temporary Restraining Order), assailing the above mentioned
orders of the SEC, submitting the following as errors of the SEC:
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III. THE ASSAILED ORDERS OF SEC ARE ILLEGAL AND VOID FOR ALLOWING
FURTHER DISPOSITION OF PROPERTIES IN CUSTODIA LEGIS AND WHICH FORM
PART OF NAVAL/MILITARY RESERVATION; AND
IV. THE FULL DISCLOSURE OF THE SEC WAS NOT PROPERLY PROMULGATED AND
ITS IMPLEMENTATION AND APPLICATION IN THIS CASE VIOLATES THE DUE
PROCESS CLAUSE OF THE CONSTITUTION.
On June 4, 1996, PALI filed its Comment to the Petition for Review and subsequently, a Comment and Motion to
Dismiss. On June 10, 1996, PSE fled its Reply to Comment and Opposition to Motion to Dismiss.
On June 27, 1996, the Court of Appeals promulgated its Resolution dismissing the PSE's Petition for Review.
Hence, this Petition by the PSE.
The appellate court had ruled that the SEC had both jurisdiction and authority to look into the decision of the
petitioner PSE, pursuant to Section 3 3 of the Revised Securities Act in relation to Section 6(j) and 6(m) 4 of P.D. No.
902-A, and Section 38(b)5 of the Revised Securities Act, and for the purpose of ensuring fair administration of the
exchange. Both as a corporation and as a stock exchange, the petitioner is subject to public respondent's
jurisdiction, regulation and control. Accepting the argument that the public respondent has the authority merely to
supervise or regulate, would amount to serious consequences, considering that the petitioner is a stock exchange
whose business is impressed with public interest. Abuse is not remote if the public respondent is left without any
system of control. If the securities act vested the public respondent with jurisdiction and control over all corporations;
the power to authorize the establishment of stock exchanges; the right to supervise and regulate the same; and the
power to alter and supplement rules of the exchange in the listing or delisting of securities, then the law certainly
granted to the public respondent the plenary authority over the petitioner; and the power of review necessarily
comes within its authority.
All in all, the court held that PALI complied with all the requirements for public listing, affirming the SEC's ruling to
the effect that:
. . . the Philippine Stock Exchange has acted in an arbitrary and abusive manner in disapproving the
application of PALI for listing of its shares in the face of the following considerations:
1. PALI has clearly and admittedly complied with the Listing Rules and full disclosure requirements of
the Exchange;
2. In applying its clear and reasonable standards on the suitability for listing of shares, PSE has failed
to justify why it acted differently on the application of PALI, as compared to the IPOs of other
companies similarly situated that were allowed listing in the Exchange;
3. It appears that the claims and issues on the title to PALI's properties were even less serious than the
claims against the assets of the other companies in that, the assertions of the Marcoses that they are
owners of the disputed properties were not substantiated enough to overcome the strength of a title to
properties issued under the Torrens System as evidence of ownership thereof;
4. No action has been filed in any court of competent jurisdiction seeking to nullify PALI's ownership
over the disputed properties, neither has the government instituted recovery proceedings against these
properties. Yet the import of PSE's decision in denying PALI's application is that it would be PALI, not
the Marcoses, that must go to court to prove the legality of its ownership on these properties before its
shares can be listed.
In addition, the argument that the PALI properties belong to the Military/Naval Reservation does not inspire belief.
The point is, the PALI properties are now titled. A property losses its public character the moment it is covered by a
title. As a matter of fact, the titles have long been settled by a final judgment; and the final decree having been
registered, they can no longer be re-opened considering that the one year period has already passed. Lastly, the
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determination of what standard to apply in allowing PALI's application for listing, whether the discretion method or
the system of public disclosure adhered to by the SEC, should be addressed to the Securities Commission, it being
the government agency that exercises both supervisory and regulatory authority over all corporations.
On August 15, 19961 the PSE, after it was granted an extension, filed the instant Petition for Review on Certiorari,
taking exception to the rulings of the SEC and the Court of Appeals. Respondent PALI filed its Comment to the
petition on October 17, 1996. On the same date, the PCGG filed a Motion for Leave to file a Petition for Intervention.
This was followed up by the PCGG's Petition for Intervention on October 21, 1996. A supplemental Comment was
filed by PALI on October 25, 1997. The Office of the Solicitor General, representing the SEC and the Court of
Appeals, likewise filed its Comment on December 26, 1996. In answer to the PCGG's motion for leave to file petition
for intervention, PALI filed its Comment thereto on January 17, 1997, whereas the PSE filed its own Comment on
January 20, 1997.
On February 25, 1996, the PSE filed its Consolidated Reply to the comments of respondent PALI (October 17,
1996) and the Solicitor General (December 26, 1996). On May 16, 1997, PALI filed its Rejoinder to the said
consolidated reply of PSE.
PSE submits that the Court of Appeals erred in ruling that the SEC had authority to order the PSE to list the shares
of PALI in the stock exchange. Under presidential decree No. 902-A, the powers of the SEC over stock exchanges
are more limited as compared to its authority over ordinary corporations. In connection with this, the powers of the
SEC over stock exchanges under the Revised Securities Act are specifically enumerated, and these do not include
the power to reverse the decisions of the stock exchange. Authorities are in abundance even in the United States,
from which the country's security policies are patterned, to the effect of giving the Securities Commission less
control over stock exchanges, which in turn are given more lee-way in making the decision whether or not to allow
corporations to offer their stock to the public through the stock exchange. This is in accord with the "business
judgment rule" whereby the SEC and the courts are barred from intruding into business judgments of corporations,
when the same are made in good faith. the said rule precludes the reversal of the decision of the PSE to deny
PALI's listing application, absent a showing of bad faith on the part of the PSE. Under the listing rules of the PSE, to
which PALI had previously agreed to comply, the PSE retains the discretion to accept or reject applications for
listing. Thus, even if an issuer has complied with the PSE listing rules and requirements, PSE retains the discretion
to accept or reject the issuer's listing application if the PSE determines that the listing shall not serve the interests of
the investing public.
Moreover, PSE argues that the SEC has no jurisdiction over sequestered corporations, nor with corporations whose
properties are under sequestration. A reading of Republic of the Philippines vs. Sadiganbayan, G.R. No. 105205,
240 SCRA 376, would reveal that the properties of PALI, which were derived from the Ternate Development
Corporation (TDC) and the Monte del Sol Development Corporation (MSDC). are under sequestration by the PCGG,
and subject of forfeiture proceedings in the Sandiganbayan. This ruling of the Court is the "law of the case" between
the Republic and TDC and MSDC. It categorically declares that the assets of these corporations were sequestered
by the PCGG on March 10, 1986 and April 4, 1988.
It is, likewise, intimated that the Court of Appeals' sanction that PALI's ownership over its properties can no longer
be questioned, since certificates of title have been issued to PALI and more than one year has since lapsed, is
erroneous and ignores well settled jurisprudence on land titles. That a certificate of title issued under the Torrens
System is a conclusive evidence of ownership is not an absolute rule and admits certain exceptions. It is
fundamental that forest lands or military reservations are non-alienable. Thus, when a title covers a forest reserve or
a government reservation, such title is void.
PSE, likewise, assails the SEC's and the Court of Appeals reliance on the alleged policy of "full disclosure" to uphold
the listing of PALI's shares with the PSE, in the absence of a clear mandate for the effectivity of such policy. As it is,
the case records reveal the truth that PALI did not comply with the listing rules and disclosure requirements. In fact,
PALI's documents supporting its application contained misrepresentations and misleading statements, and
concealed material information. The matter of sequestration of PALI's properties and the fact that the same form part
of military/naval/forest reservations were not reflected in PALI's application.
It is undeniable that the petitioner PSE is not an ordinary corporation, in that although it is clothed with the markings
of a corporate entity, it functions as the primary channel through which the vessels of capital trade ply. The PSE's
relevance to the continued operation and filtration of the securities transactions in the country gives it a distinct color
of importance such that government intervention in its affairs becomes justified, if not necessarily. Indeed, as the
only operational stock exchange in the country today, the PSE enjoys a monopoly of securities transactions, and as
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Due to this special nature of stock exchanges, the country's lawmakers has seen it wise to give special treatment to
the administration and regulation of stock exchanges. 6
These provisions, read together with the general grant of jurisdiction, and right of supervision and control over all
corporations under Sec. 3 of P.D. 902-A, give the SEC the special mandate to be vigilant in the supervision of the
affairs of stock exchanges so that the interests of the investing public may be fully safeguard.
Section 3 of Presidential Decree 902-A, standing alone, is enough authority to uphold the SEC's challenged control
authority over the petitioner PSE even as it provides that "the Commission shall have absolute jurisdiction,
supervision, and control over all corporations, partnerships or associations, who are the grantees of primary
franchises and/or a license or permit issued by the government to operate in the Philippines. . ." The SEC's
regulatory authority over private corporations encompasses a wide margin of areas, touching nearly all of a
corporation's concerns. This authority springs from the fact that a corporation owes its existence to the concession
of its corporate franchise from the state.
The SEC's power to look into the subject ruling of the PSE, therefore, may be implied from or be considered as
necessary or incidental to the carrying out of the SEC's express power to insure fair dealing in securities traded
upon a stock exchange or to ensure the fair administration of such exchange. 7 It is, likewise, observed that the
principal function of the SEC is the supervision and control over corporations, partnerships and associations with the
end in view that investment in these entities may be encouraged and protected, and their activities for the promotion
of economic development. 8
Thus, it was in the alleged exercise of this authority that the SEC reversed the decision of the PSE to deny the
application for listing in the stock exchange of the private respondent PALI. The SEC's action was affirmed by the
Court of Appeals.
We affirm that the SEC is the entity with the primary say as to whether or not securities, including shares of stock of
a corporation, may be traded or not in the stock exchange. This is in line with the SEC's mission to ensure proper
compliance with the laws, such as the Revised Securities Act and to regulate the sale and disposition of securities in
the country. 9 As the appellate court explains:
Paramount policy also supports the authority of the public respondent to review petitioner's denial of
the listing. Being a stock exchange, the petitioner performs a function that is vital to the national
economy, as the business is affected with public interest. As a matter of fact, it has often been said that
the economy moves on the basis of the rise and fall of stocks being traded. By its economic power, the
petitioner certainly can dictate which and how many users are allowed to sell securities thru the
facilities of a stock exchange, if allowed to interpret its own rules liberally as it may please. Petitioner
can either allow or deny the entry to the market of securities. To repeat, the monopoly, unless
accompanied by control, becomes subject to abuse; hence, considering public interest, then it should
be subject to government regulation.
The role of the SEC in our national economy cannot be minimized. The legislature, through the Revised Securities
Act, Presidential Decree No. 902-A, and other pertinent laws, has entrusted to it the serious responsibility of
enforcing all laws affecting corporations and other forms of associations not otherwise vested in some other
government office. 10
This is not to say, however, that the PSE's management prerogatives are under the absolute control of the SEC. The
PSE is, alter all, a corporation authorized by its corporate franchise to engage in its proposed and duly approved
business. One of the PSE's main concerns, as such, is still the generation of profit for its stockholders. Moreover,
the PSE has all the rights pertaining to corporations, including the right to sue and be sued, to hold property in its
own name, to enter (or not to enter) into contracts with third persons, and to perform all other legal acts within its
allocated express or implied powers.
A corporation is but an association of individuals, allowed to transact under an assumed corporate name, and with a
distinct legal personality. In organizing itself as a collective body, it waives no constitutional immunities and
perquisites appropriate to such a body. 11 As to its corporate and management decisions, therefore, the state will
generally not interfere with the same. Questions of policy and of management are left to the honest decision of the
officers and directors of a corporation, and the courts are without authority to substitute their judgment for the
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judgment of the board of directors. The board is the business manager of the corporation, and so long as it acts in
good faith, its orders are not reviewable by the courts. 12
Thus, notwithstanding the regulatory power of the SEC over the PSE, and the resultant authority to reverse the
PSE's decision in matters of application for listing in the market, the SEC may exercise such power only if the PSE's
judgment is attended by bad faith. In Board of Liquidators vs. Kalaw,13 it was held that bad faith does not simply
connote bad judgment or negligence. It imports a dishonest purpose or some moral obliquity and conscious doing of
wrong. It means a breach of a known duty through some motive or interest of ill will, partaking of the nature of fraud.
In reaching its decision to deny the application for listing of PALI, the PSE considered important facts, which, in the
general scheme, brings to serious question the qualification of PALI to sell its shares to the public through the stock
exchange. During the time for receiving objections to the application, the PSE heard from the representative of the
late President Ferdinand E. Marcos and his family who claim the properties of the private respondent to be part of
the Marcos estate. In time, the PCGG confirmed this claim. In fact, an order of sequestration has been issued
covering the properties of PALI, and suit for reconveyance to the state has been filed in the Sandiganbayan Court.
How the properties were effectively transferred, despite the sequestration order, from the TDC and MSDC to
Rebecco Panlilio, and to the private respondent PALI, in only a short span of time, are not yet explained to the
Court, but it is clear that such circumstances give rise to serious doubt as to the integrity of PALI as a stock issuer.
The petitioner was in the right when it refused application of PALI, for a contrary ruling was not to the best interest of
the general public. The purpose of the Revised Securities Act, after all, is to give adequate and effective protection
to the investing public against fraudulent representations, or false promises, and the imposition of worthless
ventures. 14
It is to be observed that the U.S. Securities Act emphasized its avowed protection to acts detrimental to legitimate
business, thus:
The Securities Act, often referred to as the "truth in securities" Act, was designed not only to provide
investors with adequate information upon which to base their decisions to buy and sell securities, but
also to protect legitimate business seeking to obtain capital through honest presentation against
competition from crooked promoters and to prevent fraud in the sale of securities. (Tenth Annual
Report, U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission, p. 14).
As has been pointed out, the effects of such an act are chiefly (1) prevention of excesses and
fraudulent transactions, merely by requirement of that their details be revealed; (2) placing the market
during the early stages of the offering of a security a body of information, which operating indirectly
through investment services and expert investors, will tend to produce a more accurate appraisal of a
security, . . . Thus, the Commission may refuse to permit a registration statement to become effective if
it appears on its face to be incomplete or inaccurate in any material respect, and empower the
Commission to issue a stop order suspending the effectiveness of any registration statement which is
found to include any untrue statement of a material fact or to omit to state any material fact required to
be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein not misleading. (Idem).
Also, as the primary market for securities, the PSE has established its name and goodwill, and it has the right to
protect such goodwill by maintaining a reasonable standard of propriety in the entities who choose to transact
through its facilities. It was reasonable for the PSE, therefore, to exercise its judgment in the manner it deems
appropriate for its business identity, as long as no rights are trampled upon, and public welfare is safeguarded.
In this connection, it is proper to observe that the concept of government absolutism is a thing of the past, and
should remain so.
The observation that the title of PALI over its properties is absolute and can no longer be assailed is of no moment.
At this juncture, there is the claim that the properties were owned by TDC and MSDC and were transferred in
violation of sequestration orders, to Rebecco Panlilio and later on to PALI, besides the claim of the Marcoses that
such properties belong to the Marcos estate, and were held only in trust by Rebecco Panlilio. It is also alleged by
the petitioner that these properties belong to naval and forest reserves, and therefore beyond private dominion. If
any of these claims is established to be true, the certificates of title over the subject properties now held by PALI
map be disregarded, as it is an established rule that a registration of a certificate of title does not confer ownership
over the properties described therein to the person named as owner. The inscription in the registry, to be effective,
must be made in good faith. The defense of indefeasibility of a Torrens Title does not extend to a transferee who
takes the certificate of title with notice of a flaw.
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In any case, for the purpose of determining whether PSE acted correctly in refusing the application of PALI, the true
ownership of the properties of PALI need not be determined as an absolute fact. What is material is that the
uncertainty of the properties' ownership and alienability exists, and this puts to question the qualification of PALI's
public offering. In sum, the Court finds that the SEC had acted arbitrarily in arrogating unto itself the discretion of
approving the application for listing in the PSE of the private respondent PALI, since this is a matter addressed to
the sound discretion of the PSE, a corporation entity, whose business judgments are respected in the absence of
bad faith.
The question as to what policy is, or should be relied upon in approving the registration and sale of securities in the
SEC is not for the Court to determine, but is left to the sound discretion of the Securities and Exchange
Commission. In mandating the SEC to administer the Revised Securities Act, and in performing its other functions
under pertinent laws, the Revised Securities Act, under Section 3 thereof, gives the SEC the power to promulgate
such rules and regulations as it may consider appropriate in the public interest for the enforcement of the said laws.
The second paragraph of Section 4 of the said law, on the other hand, provides that no security, unless exempt by
law, shall be issued, endorsed, sold, transferred or in any other manner conveyed to the public, unless registered in
accordance with the rules and regulations that shall be promulgated in the public interest and for the protection of
investors by the Commission. Presidential Decree No. 902-A, on the other hand, provides that the SEC, as
regulatory agency, has supervision and control over all corporations and over the securities market as a whole, and
as such, is given ample authority in determining appropriate policies. Pursuant to this regulatory authority, the SEC
has manifested that it has adopted the policy of "full material disclosure" where all companies, listed or applying for
listing, are required to divulge truthfully and accurately, all material information about themselves and the securities
they sell, for the protection of the investing public, and under pain of administrative, criminal and civil sanctions. In
connection with this, a fact is deemed material if it tends to induce or otherwise effect the sale or purchase of its
securities. 15 While the employment of this policy is recognized and sanctioned by the laws, nonetheless, the
Revised Securities Act sets substantial and procedural standards which a proposed issuer of securities must satisfy.
16
Pertinently, Section 9 of the Revised Securities Act sets forth the possible Grounds for the Rejection of the
registration of a security:
— The Commission may reject a registration statement and refuse to issue a permit to sell the
securities included in such registration statement if it finds that —
(1) The registration statement is on its face incomplete or inaccurate in any material respect or includes
any untrue statement of a material fact or omits to state a material fact required to be stated therein or
necessary to make the statements therein not misleading; or
(ii) has violated or has not complied with the provisions of this Act, or the rules
promulgated pursuant thereto, or any order of the Commission;
(iii) has failed to comply with any of the applicable requirements and conditions that the
Commission may, in the public interest and for the protection of investors, impose before
the security can be registered;
(vi) does not conduct its business in accordance with law or is engaged in a business that
is illegal or contrary to government rules and regulations.
(3) The enterprise or the business of the issuer is not shown to be sound or to be based on sound
business principles;
(4) An officer, member of the board of directors, or principal stockholder of the issuer is disqualified to
be such officer, director or principal stockholder; or
(5) The issuer or registrant has not shown to the satisfaction of the Commission that the sale of its
security would not work to the prejudice of the public interest or as a fraud upon the purchasers or
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A reading of the foregoing grounds reveals the intention of the lawmakers to make the registration and issuance of
securities dependent, to a certain extent, on the merits of the securities themselves, and of the issuer, to be
determined by the Securities and Exchange Commission. This measure was meant to protect the interests of the
investing public against fraudulent and worthless securities, and the SEC is mandated by law to safeguard these
interests, following the policies and rules therefore provided. The absolute reliance on the full disclosure method in
the registration of securities is, therefore, untenable. As it is, the Court finds that the private respondent PALI, on at
least two points (nos. 1 and 5) has failed to support the propriety of the issue of its shares with unfailing clarity,
thereby lending support to the conclusion that the PSE acted correctly in refusing the listing of PALI in its stock
exchange. This does not discount the effectivity of whatever method the SEC, in the exercise of its vested authority,
chooses in setting the standard for public offerings of corporations wishing to do so. However, the SEC must
recognize and implement the mandate of the law, particularly the Revised Securities Act, the provisions of which
cannot be amended or supplanted by mere administrative issuance.
In resume, the Court finds that the PSE has acted with justified circumspection, discounting, therefore, any
imputation of arbitrariness and whimsical animation on its part. Its action in refusing to allow the listing of PALI in the
stock exchange is justified by the law and by the circumstances attendant to this case.
ACCORDINGLY, in view of the foregoing considerations, the Court hereby GRANTS the Petition for Review on
Certiorari. The Decisions of the Court of Appeals and the Securities and Exchange Commission dated July 27, 1996
and April 24, 1996 respectively, are hereby REVERSED and SET ASIDE, and a new Judgment is hereby
ENTERED, affirming the decision of the Philippine Stock Exchange to deny the application for listing of the private
respondent Puerto Azul Land, Inc.
SO ORDERED.
Footnotes
2 Section 3, Ibid.
3 Sec. 3. Administrative Agency. — This Act shall be administered by the (Securities and Exchange)
Commission which shall continue to have the organization, powers, and functions provided by
Presidential Decree Numbered 902-A, 1653, 1758, and 1799 and Executive Order No. 708. The
Commission shall, except as otherwise expressly provided, have the power to promulgate such rules
and regulations as it may consider appropriate in the public interest for the enforcement of the
provisions hereof.
4 Sec. 6. In order to effectively exercise such jurisdiction, the (Securities and Exchange) Commission
shall possess the following powers:
(j) To authorize the establishment and operation of stock exchanges, commodity exchanges and such
other similar organizations and to supervise and regulale the same; including the authority to determine
their number, size and location, in the light of national or regional requirements for such activities with
the view to promote, conserve or rationalize investment;
(m) To exercise such other powers as may be provided by law as well as those which may be implied
from, or which are necessary or incidental to the carrying out of, the express powers granted to the
Commission or to achieve the objectives and purposes of this Decree.
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(b) The Commission is further authorized, if after making appropriate request in writing to a securities
exchange that such exchange effect on its own behalf specified changes in the rules and practices and,
after appropriate notice and opportunity for hearing, it determines that such exchange has not made
the changes so requested, and that such changes are necessary or appropriate for the protection of
investors or to insure fair dealing in securities traded upon such exchange, by rules or regulations or by
order, to alter or supplement the rules of such exchange (insofar as necessary or appropriate to effect
such changes) in respect of such matters as
(1) Safeguards in respect of the financial responsibility of members and adequate provision against the
evasion of financial responsibility through the use of corporate forms or special partnerships;
(2) The limitation or prohibition of the registration or trading in any security within a specified period
after the issuance or primary distribution thereof;
(7) The time and method of making settlements, payments, and deliveries, and of closing accounts;
(8) he reporting of transactions on the exchange upon tickets maintained by or with the consent of the
exchange, including the method of reporting short sales, stopped sales, sales of securities of issuers in
default, bankruptcy or receivership, and sales involving other special circumstances;
(9) The fixing of reasonable rates of commission, interests, listing, and other charges;
8 Abad vs. CFI of Pangasinan, Branch VIII, et. al., G.R. Nos. 58507-08, February 26, 1992, 206 SCRA
567.
9 Securities and Exchange Commission vs Court of Appeals, G.R. Nos. 106425 & 106431-32, July
21,1995, 246 SCRA 738.
10 Pineda vs. Lantin, No. L-15350, November 30, 1962, 6 SCRA 757.
11 Bache & Co. (Phil.), Inc. vs. Hon. Judge Ruiz, et al., No. L-32409, February 27, 1971, 37 SCRA 823.
12 Sales vs. Securities and Exchange Commission, G.R. No. 54330, January 13, 1989, 169 SCRA
109.
14 Makati Stock Exchange, Inc. vs. Securities and Exchange Commission, No. L-23004, June 30,
1965, 14 SCRA 620.
15 See SEC Rules Requiring Disclosure of Material Facts by Corporations Whose Securities are Listed
in Any Stock Exchange or Registered/Licensed under the Revised Securities Act. (Approved by the
SEC Chairman on February 8, 1973, and published in the Bulletin Today on February 19, 1973).
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