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BOD: Term of Office

SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION AND VERNETTE G.


UMALI v. BAGUIO COUNTRY CLUB CORPORATION

G.R. No. 165146, August 12, 2015

FACTS:

On December 17, 1998, SEC approved the amended by-laws submitted by the Baguio Country
Club Corporation (BCCC). Article 5, Section 2 thereof reads:

Election and Term. The Board of Directors shall be elected at the regular meetings or
stockholders and shall hold office for two (2) years and until their successors are elected and
qualified.

On 2001, stockholders of BCCC requested SEC’s opinion on the validity of the amendment.
SEC opined that the amendment increasing the term of office to two (2) years is contrary to law,
particularly Section 23 of the Corporation Code which limits the term of office to only one (1)
year. Hence, on 2002, Atty. Manuel Singson, acting in behalf of Ramon and Erlinda Ilusorio (the
Ilusorios) requested the SEC to compel BCCC to hold the annual election of the board of
directors for 2002.

In its answer BCCC claimed that SEC already approved its amended by- laws and that the
petitioners have no standing to question the said by-laws, not being stockholders of the BCCC.
Soon, however, SEC issued an Order ruling that the amended by-laws of BCCC violate Section
23 of the Corporation Code and should be amended to conform to the rules. The SEC also
ordered BCCC to conduct the annual election of members of the board which BCCC failed to
comply with.

Ramon Ilusorio, filed a petition to SEC praying for the latter to call and conduct, a stockholder's
meeting in the BCCC for the election of the members of the board of directors, hence, presenting
a question as to whether the latter can or cannot hold a stockholder's meeting for the said
purpose. The SEC ruled, under the Corporation Code, that it can, thus ordered the calling and
conduct of a stockholders meeting for the said purpose.

This prompts the BCCC to file a petition for certiorari with the CA, claiming that Ilusorios have
no legalstanding not being a stockholder and that the matter is within the exclusive jurisdiction
of the trial court, being an intra-corporate dispute.

The CA ruled that the respondents have legal standing since he is a registered stockholder of the
BCCC, as evidenced by his Certificate of Stock. Nonetheless, the CA agreed with BCCC that the
SEC had no jurisdiction on the matter being a intra- corporate dispute. Further, the SEC's
jurisdiction over all cases enumerated under Section 5 of Presidential Decree No. 902-A,
including intra-corporate controversies has been transferred to the appropriate Regional Trial
Courts by virtue of Republic Act (RA) No. 8799 (The Securities Regulation Code).

SEC, through OSG, filed a petition alleging that the one (1) year term rule for members of the
board of directors is mandatory, thus BCCC's amended by-laws granting its board of directors a
two (2) year term is void, notwithstanding the SEC's prior approval and that the SEC has the
authority to compel BCCC to amend its by-laws to conform the law and to impose sanction
pursuant to Section 5 of the Securities Regulation Code. Furthermore it argues that the matter at
hand is not an intra-corporate dispute. The complaint filed with the SEC was administrative in
nature since it called for an administrative remedy, even if a third party has initiated and/or
opposed it.

On June 29, 2005, the board of directors of BCCC approved the amendment to its by-laws,
modifying the term of its directors from two (2) years to one (1) year and was approved by SEC.
It added that the SEC also approved the amendments to BCCC's articles of incorporation
extending its corporate life and converting BCCC from a stock to a non-stock corporation.
BCCC reiterated that the SEC's approval of its amended by-laws has caused the petition to be
moot and academic.

ISSUE:

a. Whether or not the amendment made by BCCC on 2005 modifying the term of its
directors from two (2) years to one (1) year complied with the law, hence, rendering the
case moot and acaademic
b. Whether or not the Commission can call a stockholders' meeting for the purpose of
conducting an election of the BCCC board of directors.

RULING:

a. Yes,

The petitions have been rendered moot by the 2005 amendment of the by-laws. The validity
of the two (2) year term provision and the calling of meeting for the election of members of the
board of directors to replace those holding a two (2) year term should no longer be in issue.

A moot and academic case is one that ceases to present a justiciable controversy by virtue of
supervening events, so that a declaration thereon would be of no practical use or value. In such
instance, there is no actual substantial relief which a petitioner would be entitled to, and which
would be negated by the dismissal of the petition. Courts generally decline jurisdiction over such
case or dismiss it on the ground of mootness - save when, among others, a compelling
constitutional issue raised requires the formulation of controlling principles to guide the bench,
the bar and the public; or when the case is capable of repetition yet evading judicial review.
Simply put, the Ilusorios merely invoked the SEC to exercise what it perceived to be the
latter's power to compel BCCC to comply with the law pertaining to the term limits of the board
of directors. With the amendment restoring the term of the board to one (1) year, there is no more
illegal provision to speak of.

b. The SC ruled that such issue is not an actual controversy that warrants the exercise of
their judicial power.

An actual case or controversy exists when there is a conflict of legal rights or an assertion of
opposite legal claims, which can be resolved on the basis of existing law and jurisprudence. A
justiciable controversy admits of specific relief through a decree that is conclusive in character,
whereas an opinion only advises what the law would be upon a hypothetical state of facts.

Any discussion by the Court of the SEC's power to call for an election of the board in case of
a void term prescribed by the by-laws, as well as on the nature of the controversy, and the other
issues which are mere offshoots of the void provision of the by-laws would be merely academic,
opinions that would neither adjudicate the rights of the parties, nor grant them reliefs. As we
have previously held, courts have no authority to pass upon issues through advisory opinions or
to resolve hypothetical or feigned problems. Courts do not sit to adjudicate mere academic
questions to satisfy scholarly interest, however intellectually challenging. Even the other issues
raised by the Ilusorios in the proceedings in the CA, being mere offshoots of the main issue are
likewise mooted by the amendment.

WHEREFORE, the petitions are DENIED.

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