Third Division G.R. No. 185894, August 30, 2017BELO MEDICAL GROUP, INC., Petitioner, v. JOSE L. Santos and Victoria G. Belo, Respondents. Leonen, J.
Third Division G.R. No. 185894, August 30, 2017BELO MEDICAL GROUP, INC., Petitioner, v. JOSE L. Santos and Victoria G. Belo, Respondents. Leonen, J.
THIRD DIVISION
LEONEN, J.:
A conflict between two (2) stockholders of a corporation does not automatically render their
dispute as intra-corporate. The nature of the controversy must also be examined.1
In this Petition for Review on Certiorari2 under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, Belo Medical Group,
Inc. (Belo Medical Group) assails the Regional Trial Court December 8, 2008 Joint Resolution in
Civil Case No. 08-397.3 This Joint Resolution granted respondent Jose L. Santos' (Santos) Motion
to Dismiss and Belo Medical Group's Complaint for interpleader and Supplemental Complaint for
Declaratory Relief against Santos and Victoria G. Belo (Belo), and declared all other pending
incidents as moot.4
The controversy began on May 5, 20085 when Belo Medical Group received a request from Santos
for the inspection of corporate records.6 Santos claimed that he was a registered shareholder and a
co-owner of Belo's shares, as these were acquired while they cohabited as husband and
wife.7 Santos sought advice on his probable removal as director of the corporation considering that
he was not notified of meetings where he could have been removed. He also inquired on the
election of Alfredo Henares (Henares) as Corporate Secretary in 2007 when Santos had not been
notified of a meeting for Henares' possible election. Finally, he sought explanation on the
corporation's failure to inform him of the 2007 annual meeting and the holding of an annual
meeting in 2008.8 Santos' concern over the corporate operations arose from the alleged death of a
patient in one (1) of its clinics.9
Santos was unsuccessful in inspecting the corporate books as Henares, the officer-in-charge of
corporate records, was travelling. Belo Medical Group asked for time in order for Henares to
accommodate Santos' request.10
After the first attempt to inspect, Belo wrote Belo Medical Group on May 14, 2007 to repudiate
Santos' co-ownership of her shares and his interest in the corporation. She claimed that Santos
held the 25 shares in his name merely in trust for her, as she, and not Santos, paid for these
shares. She informed Belo Medical Group that Santos already had a pending petition with the
Regional Trial Court to be declared as co-owner of her properties. She asserted that unless a
decision was rendered in Santos' favor, he could not exercise ownership rights over her
properties.11
Belo also informed Belo Medical Group that Santos had a business in direct competition with it.
She suspected that Santos' request to inspect the records of Belo Medical Group was a means to
obtain a competitor's business information, and was, therefore, in bad faith.12
A second inspection was attempted through a written demand by Santos on May 15,
2008.13 Again, he was unsuccessful.
Belo wrote to Belo Medical Group on May 20, 2008 to reiterate her objections to Santos' attempts
at inspecting corporate books and his inquiry regarding a patient. Belo further manifested that she
was exercising her right as a shareholder to inspect the books herself to establish that the 25
shares were not owned by Santos, and that he did not pay for these shares.14
Thus, Belo Medical Group filed a Complaint for Interpleader15 with Branch 149, Regional Trial
Court, Makati City on May 21, 2008. Belo Medical Group alleged that while Santos appeared to be
a registered stockholder, there was nothing on the record to show that he had paid for the shares
under his name. The Complaint was filed "to protect its interest and compel [Belo and Santos] to
interplead and litigate their conflicting claims of ownership of, as well as the corresponding right of
inspection arising from, the twenty-five (25) [Belo Medical Group] shares between themselves
pursuant to Rule 62 of the 1997 Rules of Civil Procedure . . ."16 The following reliefs were prayed
for:
2
(i) issue an Order summoning and requiring defendants Santos and Belo to interplead with each
other to resolve their conflicting claims of ownership of the 25 shares of stock of [Belo Medical
Group], including their opposing claims of exclusive entitlement to inspect [Belo Medical Group]
corporate records;
(ii) after due proceedings render judgment in favor of the proper defendant; and
(iii) allow plaintiff [Belo Medical Group] to recover attorney's fees and litigation expenses in the
amount of at least Php1,000,000.00 jointly and solidarity against both defendants and for them to
pay the costs of suit.17
On the same day, Henares wrote Belo's and Santos' respective counsels to inform them of the
Complaint.18 Despite receipt, Santos' counsel still proceeded to Belo Medical Group's Makati office
on May 22, 2008, where, again, they were unsuccessful in inspecting the corporate books.19
Santos, for the third time, sent a letter on May 22, 2008 to schedule an inspection of the corporate
books and warned that continued rejection of his request exposed the corporation to criminal
liability.20 Nothing came out of this last attempt as well.
Bela and Bela Medical Group wrote to Santos on May 27, 2008 to inform him that he was barred
from accessing corporate records because doing so would be inimical to Belo Medical Group's
interests.21 Through another letter on May 28, 2008, Santos was reminded of his majority share in
The Obagi Skin Health, Inc. the owner and operator of the House of Obagi (House of Obagi) clinics.
He was likewise reminded of the service of a notice of the 2007 special meeting of stockholders to
his address at Valero Street, Makati City, contrary to his claim.22
On May 29, 2008, Belo Medical Group filed a Supplemental Complaint23 for declaratory relief under
Rule 63 of the Rules of Court. In its Supplemental Complaint, Belo Medical Group relied on Section
7424 of the Corporation Code to deny Santos' request for inspection. It prayed that Santos be
perpetually barred from inspecting its books due to his business interest in a competitor.25 Should
the ruling for interpleader be in favor of Santos, Belo Medical Group prayed that the trial court:
a. exercise its power under Rule 63 of the Revised Rules of Civil Procedure and give a proper
construction of Sections 74 and 75 of the Corporation Code in relation to the facts presented
above, and declare that plaintiff can rightfully decline defendant Santos's request for inspection
under those sections and related provisions and jurisprudence; and
b. allow plaintiff to recover attorney's fees and litigation expenses from defendant Santos in the
amount of at least PHP1,000,000.00 and the costs of suit.26
Belo Medical Group's Complaint and Supplemental Complaint were raffled to Branch 149 of the
Regional Trial Court of Makati, a special commercial court,27 thus classifying them as intra-
corporate.28
Belo filed her Answer Ad Cautelam with Cross-Claim to put on record her defenses that Santos had
no right to inspect the books as he was not the owner of the 25 shares of stock in his name and
that he was acting in bad faith because he was a majority owner of House of Obagi.29
Belo further argued that the proceedings should not have been classified as intra-corporate
because while their right of inspection as shareholders may be considered intra-corporate, "it
ceases to be that and becomes a full-blown civil law question if competing rights of ownership are
asserted as the basis for the right of inspection."30
Meanwhile, on several dates, the trial court sheriff attempted to personally serve Santos with
summons.31 After unsuccessful attempts,32 the sheriff resorted to substituted service in Santos'
Makati office condominium unit.33
On July 4, 2008, Belo Medical Group filed an Omnibus Motion for Clarificatory Hearing and for
Leave to File Consolidated Reply,34 praying that the case be tried as a civil case and not as an
intra-corporate controversy. It argued that the Interim Rules of Procedure Governing Intra-
Corporate Controversies35 did not include special civil actions for interpleader and declaratory relief
found under the Rules of Court. Belo Medical Group clarified that the issue on ownership of the
shares of stock must first be resolved before the issue on inspection could even be considered ripe
for determination.36
3
Belo Medical Group later on moved that Santos be declared in default.37 Instead of filing an answer
Santos filed a Motion to Dismiss.38
Apart from procedural infirmities, Santos argued that Belo Medical Group's Complaint and
Supplemental Complaint must be dismissed "for its failure to state, and ultimately, lack of, a cause
of action."39 No ultimate facts were given to establish the act or omission of Santos and Belo that
violated Belo Medical Group's rights. There was simply no conflict on the ownership of the 25
shares of stock under Santos' name. Based on the corporation's 2007 Articles of Incorporation and
General Information Sheet, Santos was reflected as a stockholder and owner of the 25 shares of
stock. No documentary evidence was submitted to prove that Belo owned these shares and merely
transferred them to Santos as nominal shares.40
Santos further argued that the filing of the complaints was an afterthought to take attention away
from Belo Medical Group's criminal liability when it refused Santos' demand to inspect the records
of the corporation. For years, neither Belo Medica1 Group nor Belo questioned Santos' standing in
the corporation. No change in ownership from Santos to another person was reflected in the
company's General Information Sheet.41
Santos also invoked the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil as Belo owned 90% of Belo Medical
Group. Her claim over the 25 shares was a ploy to defeat Santos' right to inspect corporate
records. He asserts that the Complaint for interpleader was an anticipatory move by the company
to evade criminal liability upon its denial of Santos' requests.42
In addition, Santos argued that a prerequisite to filing these cases is that the plaintiff has not yet
incurred liability to any of the parties. Since Belo Medical Group had already incurred criminal
liability, it could no longer file a complaint for interpleader or declaratory relief.43
Santos denied any conflict of interest because Belo Medical Group's products and services differed
from House of Obagi's44 Belo Medical Group's primary purpose was the management and operation
of skin clinics45 while the House of Obagi's main purpose was the sale and distribution of high-end
facial products.46
On October 29, 2008, Belo Medical Group filed its Opposition47 and argued that the Motion to
Dismiss was a prohibited pleading under Section 8 of the Interim Rules of Procedure Governing
Intra-Corporate Controversies.
Belo Medical Group reiterated that Belo and Santos must litigate against each other to determine
who rightfully owned the 25 shares. An accommodation of one of them, absent a resolution to this
issue, would make Belo Medical Group liable to the other.48
On its supposed criminal liability when it refused Santos access to corporate records, Belo Medical
Group explained that the independent liability necessary to defeat complaints for interpleader
arose from a final judgment and not merely a cause of action that has accrued.49
Finally, Belo Medical Group averred that substantiation must be done during trial. The dismissal of
the case would be premature.50
Belo's Opposition dated October 29, 2008 raised the same arguments of Belo Medical Group.51
Santos filed his Reply to the Oppositions on November 18, 2008.52 He agreed that the controversy
was not intra-corporate but civil in nature, as it involved ownership.53 However, he stood firm on
his arguments that the case should be dismissed due to the Complaints' failure to state a cause of
action54 and the trial court's failure to acquire jurisdiction over his person.55
On December 8, 2008, the assailed Joint Resolution56 was issued by the trial court resolving the
following incidents: Belo Medical Group's Omnibus Motion for Clarificatory Hearing and for Leave to
File Consolidated Reply and Motion to Declare Santos in Default, and Santos' Motion to Dismiss.
The trial court declared the case as an intra-corporate controversy but dismissed the Complaints.57
The trial court characterized the dispute as "intrinsically connected with the regulation of the
corporation as it involves the right of inspection of corporate records."58 Included in Santos and
4
Belo's conflict was a shareholder's exclusive right to inspect corporate records. In addition, the
issue on the ownership of shares requires the application of laws and principles regarding
corporations.59
However, the Complaint could not flourish as Belo Medical Group "failed to sufficiently allege
conflicting claims of ownership over the subject shares."60 In justifying failure to state a cause of
action, the trial court reasoned:
Plaintiff clearly admits in the complaint that defendant Santos is the registered stockholder of the
subject shares albeit no records show that he made any payments thereof. Also, notwithstanding
defendant Belo's claim that she is the true owner thereof, there was no allegation that defendant
Santos is no longer the holder on record of the same or that it is now defendant Belo who is the
registered stockholder thereof. In fact, the complaint even alleges that defendant Santos holds the
25 BMGI shares merely as nominal qualifying shares in trust for defendant Belo. Thus, the
complaint failed to state a cause of action that would warrant the resort to an action for
interpleader.61
Though a motion to dismiss is a prohibited pleading under the Interim Rules of Procedure
Governing Intra-Corporate Controversies, the trial court ruled that Section 2, Rule 1 of these rules
allowed for the Rules of Court to apply suppletorily. According to the Rules of Court, motions to
dismiss are allowed in interpleader cases.62
Finally, the Complaint for Declaratory Relief was struck down as improper because it sought an
initial determination on whether Santos was in bad faith and if he should be barred from inspecting
the books of the corporation. Only after resolving these issues can the trial court determine his
rights under Sections 74 and 75 of the Corporation Code. The act of resolving these issues is not
within the province of the special civil action as declaratory relief is limited to the construction and
declaration of actual rights and does not include the determination of issues.63
From the Joint Resolution, Belo and Belo Medical Group pursued different remedies.
Belo filed her Petition for Review before the Court of Appeals docketed as CA G.R. No. 08-397.64
Belo Medical Group, on the other hand, directly filed its Petition for Review with this Court, alleging
that purely questions of law are at issue.
Belo Medical Group argues that it is enough that there are two (2) people who have adverse claims
against each other and who are in positions to make effective claims for interpleader to be given
due course.65 Belo Medical Group cites Lim v. Continental Development Corporation,66 which
allowed a complaint for interpleader to continue because two (2) parties claimed ownership over
the same shares of stock.67
On January 30, 2009, Belo Medical Group filed a Manifestation/Disclosure68 informing this Court
that on January 28, 2009, it received Belo's Petition for Review filed before the Court of Appeals.
On February 4, 2009, this Court also received Belo's Manifestation69 that she filed a Petition for
Review before the Court of Appeals, assailing the Joint Resolution primarily because it dismissed
her counterclaims. She also furnished this Court a copy of her Manifestation filed with the Court of
Appeals to inform it of Belo Medical Group's Petition for Review before this Court.70
On April 15, 2009, Belo filed her Comment71 and manifested that she agrees with the arguments
raised by Belo Medical Group.
On April 28, 2009, Santos filed his Comment.72 He argues that the Petition filed by Belo Medical
Group should be dismissed as the wrong mode of appeal. It should have filed an appeal under Rule
43, pursuant to the Interim Rules on Intra-Corporate Disputes.73 He alleges that Belo Medical
Group committed forum shopping. It filed the present Petition for Review after Belo had already
filed an appeal under Rule 43 before the Court of Appeals. He asserts that Belo and Belo Medical
Group have the san1e interest. Belo, owner of 90% of the shares of stock of the corporation,
dictates Belo Medical Group's actions, which were ultimately for Belo's benefit and interests.74
Meanwhile, on July 31, 2009, the Court of Appeals dismissed Belo's Petition for Review and ruled
that the pending case before this Court was the more appropriate vehicle to determine the
issues.75
First, whether or not Belo Medical Group, Inc. committed forum shopping;
Second, whether or not the present controversy is intra-corporate; Third, whether or not Belo
Medical Group, Inc. came to this Court using the correct mode of appeal; and
Finally, whether or not the trial court had basis in dismissing Belo Medica] Group, Inc.'s Complaint
for Declaratory Relief.
Neither Belo nor the Belo Medical Group is guilty of forum shopping.
Forum shopping exists when parties seek multiple judicial remedies simultaneously or
successively, involving the same causes of action, facts, circumstances, and transactions, in the
hopes of obtaining a favorable decision.76 It may be accomplished by a party defeated in one
forum, in an attempt to obtain a favorable outcome in another, "other than by appeal or a special
civil action for certiorari."77
Forum shopping trivializes rulings of courts, abuses their processes, cheapens the administration
of justice, and clogs court dockets.78 In Top Rate Construction & General Services, Inc. v. Paxton
Development Corporation:79
What is critical is the vexation brought upon the courts and the litigants by a party who asks
different courts to rule on the same or related causes and grant the same or substantially the
same reliefs and in the process creates the possibility of conflicting decisions being rendered by
the different fora upon the same issues.80
Rule 7, Section 5 of the Rules of Court contains the rule against forum shopping:
Section 5. Certification against forum shopping. - The plaintiff or principal party shall certify under
oath in the complaint or other initiatory pleading asserting a claim for relief, or in a sworn
certification annexed thereto and simultaneously filed therewith: (a) that he has not theretofore
commenced any action or filed any claim involving the same issues in any court, tribunal or quasi-
judicial agency and, to the best of his knowledge, no such other action or claim is pending therein;
(b) if there is such other per ding action or claim, a complete statement of the present status
thereof; and (c) if he should thereafter learn that the same or similar action or claim has been filed
or is pending, he shall report that fact within five (5) days therefrom to the court wherein his
aforesaid complaint or initiatory pleading has been filed.
Failure to comply with the foregoing requirements shall not be curable by mere amendment of the
complaint or other initiatory pleading but shall be cause for the dismissal of the case without
prejudice; unless otherwise provided, upon motion and after hearing. The submission of a false
certification or non-compliance with any of the undertakings therein shall constitute indirect
contempt of court, without prejudice to the corresponding administrative and criminal actions. If
the acts of the party or his counsel clearly constitute willful and deliberate forum shopping, the
same shall be ground for summary dismissal with prejudice and shall constitute direct contempt,
as well as a cause for administrative sanctions.
When willful and deliberate violation is clearly shown, it can be a ground for all pending cases'
summary dismissal with prejudice81 and direct contempt 82
Belo Medical Group filed its Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45 before this Court to
appeal against the Joint Resolution of the trial court. It did not file any other petition related to the
case, as indicated in it verification and certification against forum shopping. It was Belo, a
defendant in Belo Medical Groups Complaint, who filed a separate appeal under Rule 43 with the
Court of Appeals primarily to protect her counterclaims. Belo and Belo Medical Group both filed
their respective Petitions for Review on January 28, 2009, the lat day within the period allowed to
do so.83 The Court of Appeals already ruled that litis pendencia was present when Belo and Belo
Medical Group filed their respective petitions on the same date before different fora. The two
petitions involved the same parties, rights and reliefs sought, and causes of action.84 This is a
decision this Court can no longer disturb.
Neither Belo Medical Group nor Belo can be faulted for willful and deliberate violation of the rule
against forum shopping. Their prompt compliance of the certification against forum shopping
appended to their Petitions negates willful and deliberate intent.
6
Belo Medical Group was not remiss in its duty to inform this Court of a similar action or proceeding
related to its Petition. It promptly manifested before this Court its receipt of Belo's Petition before
the Court of Appeals. Belo Medical Group and Belo manifested before this Court that Belo filed a
Rule 43 petition to protect her counterclaims and to question the same Joint Resolution issued by
the trial court. Both did so within five (5) days from discovery, as they undertook in their
respective certificates against forum shopping.
The issue of forum shopping has become moot. The appeal under Rule 43 filed by Belo has been
dismissed by the Court of Appeals on the ground of litis pendencia.85 The purpose of proscribing
forum shopping is the proliferation of contradictory decisions on the same controversy.86 This
possibility no longer exists in this case.
II
Belo Medical Group filed a case for interpleader, the proceedings of which are covered by the Rules
of Court. At its core, however, it is an intra-corporate controversy.
A.M. No. 01-2-04-SC, or the Interim Rules of Procedure Governing Intra-Corporate Controversies,
enumerates the cases where the rules will apply:
Section 1. (a) Cases Covered - These Rules shall govern the procedure to be observed in civil
cases involving the following:
1. Devices or schemes employed by, or any act of, the board of directors, business
associates, officers or partners, amounting to fraud or misrepresentation which
may be detrimental to the interest of the public and/or of the stockholders,
partners, or members of any corporation, partnership, or association;
(3) Motion for new trial or for reconsideration of judgment or order, or for reopening of trial;
(4) Motion for extension of time to file pleadings, affidavits or any other paper, except those filed
due to clearly compelling reasons. Such motion must be verified and under oath; and
(5) Motion for postponement and other motions of similar intent, except those filed due to clearly
compelling reasons. Such motion must be verified and under oath.
To determine whether an intra-corporate dispute exists and whether this case requires the
application of these rules of procedure, this Court evaluated the relationship of the parties. The
types of intra-corporate relationships were reviewed in Union Glass & Container Corporation v.
Securities and Exchange Commission:88
[a] between the corporation, partnership or association and the public; [b] between the
corporation, partnership or association and its stockholders, partners, members, or officers; [c]
between the corporation, partnership or association and the state in so far as its franchise, permit
or license to operate is concerned; and [d] among the stockholders, partners or associates
themselves.89
7
For as long as any of these intra-corporate relationships exist between the parties, the controversy
would be characterized as intra-corporate.90 This is known as the "relationship test."
DMRC Enterprises v. Este del Sol Mountain Reserve, Inc. 91 employed what would later be called as
the "nature of controversy test." It became another means to determine if the dispute should be
considered as intra-corporate.
In DMRC Enterprises, Este del Sol leased equipment from DMRC Enterprises. Part of Este del Sol's
payment was shares of stock in the company. When Este del Sol defaulted, DMRC Enterprises filed
a collection case before the Regional Trial Court. Este del Sol argued that it should have been filed
before the Securities and Exchange Commission as it involved an intra-corporate dispute where a
corporation was being compelled to issue its shares of stock to subscribers. This Court held that it
was not just the relationship of the parties that mattered but also the conflict between them:
The purpose and the wording of the law escapes the respondent. Nowhere in said decree do we
find even so much as an intimidation that absolute jurisdiction and control is vested in the
Securities and Exchange Commission in all matters affecting corporations. To uphold the
respondent's argument would remove without legal imprimatur from the regular courts all conflicts
over matters involving or affecting corporations, regardless of the nature of the transactions which
give rise to such disputes. The courts would then be divested of jurisdiction not by reason of the
nature of the dispute submitted to them for adjudication, but solely for the reason that the dispute
involves a corporation. This cannot be done. To do so would not only be to encroach on the
legislative prerogative to grant and revoke jurisdiction of the courts but such a sweeping
interpretation may suffer constitutional infirmity. Neither can we reduce jurisdiction of the courts
by judicial fiat (Article X, Section 1, The Constitution).92
This Court now uses both the relationship test and the nature of the controversy test to determine
if an intra-corporate controversy is present.93
Applying the relationship test, this Court notes that both Belo and Santos are named shareholders
in Belo Medical Group's Articles of Incorporation94 and General Information Sheet for 2007.95 The
conflict is clearly intra-corporate as it involves two (2) shareholders although the ownership of
stocks of one stockholder is questioned. Unless Santos is adjudged as a stranger to the corporation
because he holds his shares only in trust for Belo, then both he and Belo, based on official records,
are stockholders of the corporation. Belo Medical Group argues that the case should not have been
characterized as intra-corporate because it is not between two shareholders as only Santos or Belo
can be the rightful stockholder of the 25 shares of stock. This may be true. But this finding can
only be made after trial where ownership of the shares of stock is decided.
The trial court cannot classify the case based on potentialities. The two defendants in that case are
both stockholders on record. They continue to be stockholders until a decision is rendered on the
true ownership of the 25 shares of stock in Santos' name. If Santos' subscription is declared
fictitious and he still insists on inspecting corporate books and exercising rights incidental to being
a stockholder, then, and only then, shall the case cease to be intra-corporate.
Applying the nature of the controversy test, this is still an intra-corporate dispute. The Complaint
for interpleader seeks a determination of the true owner of the shares of stock registered in
Santos' name. Ultimately, however, the goal is to stop Santos from inspecting corporate books.
This goal is so apparent that, even if Santos is declared the true owner of the shares of stock upon
completion of the interpleader case, Belo Medical Group still seeks his disqualification from
inspecting the corporate books based on bad faith. Therefore, the controversy shifts from a mere
question of ownership over movable property to the exercise of a registered stockholder's
proprietary right to inspect corporate books.
Belo Medical Group argues that to include inspection of corporate books to the controversy is
premature considering that there is still no determination as to who, between Belo and Santos, is
the rightful owner of the 25 shares of stock. Its actions belie its arguments. Belo Medical Group
wants the trial court not to prematurely characterize the dispute as intra-corporate when, in the
same breath, it prospectively seeks Santos' perpetual disqualification from inspecting its books.
This case was never about putting into light the ownership of the shares of stock in Santos' name.
If that was a concern at all, it was merely secondary. The primary aim of Belo and Belo Medical
Group was to defeat his right to inspect the corporate books, as can be seen by the filing of a
Supplemental Complaint for declaratory relief.
The circumstances of the case and the aims of the parties must not be taken in isolation from one
8
another. The totality of the controversy must be taken into account to improve upon the existing
tests. This Court notes that Belo Medical Group used its Complaint for interpleader as a subterfuge
in order to stop Santos, a registered stockholder, from exercising his right to inspect corporate
books.
Belo made no claims to Santos' shares before he attempted to inspect corporate books, and
inquired about the Henares' election as corporate secretary and the conduct of stockholders'
meetings. Even as she claimed Santos' shares as hers, Belo proffered no initial proof that she had
paid for these shares. She failed to produce any document except her bare allegation that she had
done so. Even her Answer Ad Cautelam with Cross-Claim96 contained bare allegations of
ownership.
According to its Complaint, although Belo Medical Group's records reflect Santos as the registered
stockholder of the 25 shares, they did not show that Santos had made payments to Belo Medical
Group for these shares, "consistent with Bela's claim of ownership over them."97 The absence of
any document to establish that Santos had paid for his shares does not bolster Belo's claim of
ownership of the same shares. Santos remains a stockholder on record until the contrary is shown.
Belo Medical Group cites Lim v. Continental Development Corporation98 as its basis for filing its
Complaint for interpleader. In Lim, Benito Gervasio Tan (Tan) appeared as a stockholder of
Continental Development Corporation. He repeatedly requested the corporation to issue
certificates of shares of stock in his name but Continental Development Corporation could not do
this due to the claims of Zoila Co Lim (Lim). Lim alleged that her mother, So Bi, was the actual
owner of the shares that were already registered in the corporate books as Lim's, and she
delivered these in trust to Lim before she died. Lim wanted to have the certificates of shares
cancelled and new ones re-issued in his name. This Court ruled that Continental Development
Corporation was correct in filing a case for interpleader:
Since there is an active conflict of interests between the two defendants, now herein respondent
Benito Gervasio Tan and petitioner Zoila Co Lim, over the disputed shares of stock, the trial court
gravely abused its discretion in dismissing the complaint for interpleader, which practically decided
ownership of the shares of stock in favor of defendant Benito Gervasio Tan. The two defendants,
now respondents in G.R. No. L-41831, should be given full opportunity to litigate their respective
claims.
Rule 63, Section 1 of the New Rules of Court tells us when a cause of action exists to support a
complaint in interpleader:
Whenever conflicting claims upon the same subject matter are or may be made against a person,
who claims no interest whatever in the subject matter, or an interest which in whole or in part is
not disputed by the claimants, he may bring an action against the conflicting claimants to compel
them to interplead and litigate their several claims among themselves . . .
This provision only requires as an indispensable requisite:
that conflicting claims upon the same subject matter are or may be made against the plaintiff-in-
interpleader who claims no interest whatever in the subject matter or an interest which in whole or
in part is not disputed by the claimants (Beltran vs. People's Homesite and Housing Corporation,
No. L-25138, 29 SCRA 145).
This ruling, penned by Mr. Justice Teehankee, reiterated the principle in Alvarez vs.
Commonwealth (65 Phil. 302), that
The action of interpleader, under section 120, is a remedy whereby a person who has personal
property in his possession. or an obligation to render wholly or partially, without claiming any right
in both comes to court and asks that the persons who claim the said personal property or who
consider themselves entitled to demand compliance with the obligation. be required to litigate
among themselves, in order to determine finally who is entitled to one or the other thing. The
remedy is afforded not to protect a person against a double liability but to protect him against a
double vexation in respect of one liability.
An interpleader merely demands as a sine qua non element
. . . that there be two or more claimants to the fund or thing in dispute through separate and
different interests. The claims must be adverse before relief can be granted and the parties sought
to be interpleaded must be in a position to make effective claims (33 C.J. 430).
Additionally, the fund thing, or duty over which the parties assert adverse claims must be one and
the same and derived from the same source (33 C.J., 328; Martin, Rules of Court, 1969 ed., Vol.
3, 133-134; Moran, Rules of Court, 1970 ed., Vol. 3, 134-136).
9
Indeed, petitioner corporation is placed in the same situation as a lessee who does not know the
person to whom he will pay the rentals due to the conflicting claims over t[h]e property leased, or
a sheriff who finds himself puzzled by conflicting claims to a property seized by him. In these
examples, the lessee (Pangkalinawan vs. Rodas, 80 Phil. 28) and the sheriff (Sy-Quia vs. Sheriff,
46 Phil. 400) were each allowed to file a complaint in interpleader to determine the respective
rights of the claimants.99
In Lim, the corporation was presented certificates of shares of stock in So Bi's name. This proof
was sufficient for Continental Development Corporation to reasonably conclude that controversy on
ownership of the shares of stock existed.
Furthermore, the controversy in Lim was between a registered stockholder in the books of the
corporation and a stranger who claimed to be the rightful transferee of the shares of stock of her
mother. The relationship of the parties and the circumstances of the case establish the civil nature
of the controversy, which was plainly, ownership of shares of stock. Interpleader was not filed to
evade or defeat a registered stockholder's right to inspect corporate books. It was borne by the
sincere desire of a corporation, not interested in the certificates of stock to be issued to either
claimant, to eliminate its liability should it favor one over the other.
On the other hand, based on the facts of this case and applying the relationship and nature of the
controversy tests, it was understandable how the trial court could classify the interpleader case as
intra-corporate and dismiss it. There was no ostensible debate on the ownership of the shares that
called for an interpleader case. The issues and remedies sought have been muddled when,
ultimately, at the front and center of the controversy is a registered stockholder's right to inspect
corporate books.
As an intra-corporate dispute, Santos should not have been allowed to file a Motion to
Dismiss.100 The trial court should have continued on with the case as an intra-corporate dispute
considering that it called for the judgments on the relationship between a corporation and its two
warring stockholders and the relationship of these two stockholders with each other.
III
A.M. No. 04-9-07-SC promulgated by this Court En Banc on September 14, 2004 laid down the
rules on modes of appeal m cases formerly cognizable by the Securities and Exchange
Commission:
1. All decisions and final orders in cases falling under the Interim Rules of Corporate Rehabilitation
and the Interim Rules of Procedure Governing Intra-Corporate Controversies under Republic Act
No. 8799 shall be appealable to the Court of Appeals through a petition for review under Rule 43
of the Rules of Court.
2. The petition for review shall be taken within fifteen (15) days from notice of the decision or final
order of the Regional Trial Court. Upon proper motion and the payment of the full amount of the
legal fee prescribed in Rule 141 as amended before the expiration of the reglementary period, the
Court of Appeals may grant an additional period of fifteen (15) days within which to file the
petition for review. No further extension shall be granted except for the most compelling reasons
and in no case to exceed fifteen (15) days.
On the other hand, Rule 43 of the Rules of Court allows for appeals to the Court of Appeals to raise
questions of fact, of law, or a mix of both. Hence, a party assailing a decision or a final order of the
trial court acting as a special commercial court, purely on questions of law, must raise these issues
before the Court of Appeals through a petition for review.101 A.M. No. 04-9-07-SC mandates it.
Rule 43 allows it.
Belo Medical Group argues that since it raises only questions of law, the proper mode of appeal is
Rule 45 filed directly to this Court. This is correct assuming there were no rules specific to intra-
corporate disputes. Considering that the controversy was still classified as intra-corporate upon
filing of appeal, special rules, over general ones, must apply.
Based on the policy of judicial economy and for practical considerations,102 this Court will not
dismiss the case despite the wrong mode of appeal utilized. For one, it would be taxing in time and
10
resources not just for Belo Medical Group but also for Santos and Belo to dismiss this case and
have them refile their petitions for review before the Court of Appeals. There would be no benefit
to any of the parties to dismiss the case especially since the issues can already be resolved based
n the records before this Court. Also, the Court of Appeals already referred the matter to this
Court when it dismissed Belo's Petition for Review. Remanding this case to the Court of Appeals
would not only be unprecedented, it would further delay its resolution.
IV
At the outset, this Court notes that two cases were filed by Belo Medical Group: the Complaint for
interpleader and the Supplemental Complaint for Declaratory Relief. Under Rule 2, Section 5 of the
Rules of Court, a joinder of cause of action is allowed, provided that it follows the conditions
enumerated below:
Section 5. Joinder of Causes of Action. A party may in one pleading assert, in the alternative or
otherwise, as many causes of action as he may have against an opposing party, subject to the
following conditions:
(a) The party joining the causes of action shall comply with the rules on joinder of parties;
(b) The joinder shall not include special civil actions or actions governed by special
rules;
(c) Where the causes of action are between the same parties but pertain to different venues or
jurisdictions, the joinder may be allowed in the Regional Trial Court provided one of the causes of
action falls within the jurisdiction of said court and the venue lies therein; and
(d) Where the claims in all the causes of action are principally for recovery of money, the
aggregate amount claimed shall be the test of jurisdiction. (Emphasis supplied)
Assuming this case continues on as an interpleader, it cannot be joined with the Supplemental
Complaint for declaratory relief as both are special civil actions. However, as the case was
classified and will continue as an intra-corporate dispute, the simultaneous complaint for
declaratory relief becomes superfluous. The right of Santos to inspect the books of Belo Medical
Group and the appreciation for his motives to do so will necessarily be determined by the trial
court together with determining the ownership of the shares of stock under Santos' name.
The trial court may make a declaration first on who owns the shares of stock and suspend its
ruling on whether Santos should be allowed to inspect corporate records. Or, it may rule on
whether Santos has the right to inspect corporate books in the meantime while there has yet to be
a resolution on the ownership of shares. Remedies are available to Belo Medical Group and Belo at
any stage of the proceeding, should they carry on in prohibiting Santos from inspecting the
corporate books.
WHEREFORE, the Petition for Review of Belo Medical Group, Inc. is PARTIALLY GRANTED. The
December 8, 2008 Joint Resolution of Branch 149, Regional Trial Court, Makati City in Civil Case
No. 08-397 is REVERSED regarding its dismissal of the intra-corporate case. Let this case
be REMANDED to the commercial court of origin for further proceedings.
SO ORDERED.