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26 Ateneo L.J. 1 (1981-1982)

handle is hein.journals/ateno26 and id is 1 raw text is: 



                A  COMPARISON OF THE CORPORATION
                  LAW   AND THE CORPORATION CODE

                    By  Atty. ROLANDO F. DEL CASTILLO*

       The Corporation Code  was approved by the President considerably more than
 thirty days after it had been passed by the National Assembly. Accordingly, prior
 to its approval, a controversy arose as to whether or not the Code was in effect.
 For Article X  of the Constitution provides that if the Prime Minister (President)
 fails to act on any bill passed by the National Assembly within thirty days after
 the date of receipt thereof, it shall become a law as if he had signed it.

      One  issue of Business Day carried two headlines on the Code. One quoted the
 then Chairman  of the Securities and Exchange Commission   as saying that he was
 not sure if the Code was  in effect. The other quoted a partner of the country's
 largest law firm as stating the Code was in effect on the basis of Article X of the
 Constitution. Only action by  the President put the controversy to rest and left
 to future students of the Code the more  difficult task of ascertaining the exact
 date that it took effect.

      Recently, another question arose as to the extent the Code is in effect.1 Asso-
 ciate Commissioner Rosario  Lopez of the SEC, citing the Code's transitory provi-
 sions, states that the Code is fully applicable in respect of corporations organized
 after its  approval   by   the  President.2  In  respect   of  corporations  in
 existence at that time, the articles of incorporation or by-laws of which are in
 conflict with the Code, she states that these corporations have a period of two years
 within which to comply with its provisions.

      The Corporation  Code, which  was almost ten years in the making3, contains
many  provisions not found in the old Corporation Law. Many  of these new provi-
sions, however, do not embody   principles radically different from those that were
applied under the Coyoiadon   Law.  They  merely formalized rules and regulations
that had long .been implemented by  the SEC. That this is so, is not surprising. For
the version of the new law on corporations that was finally approved, was mainly
the handiwork  of the SEC.


              A.B., L.L.B. Ateneo de Manila University, L.L.M. Harvard.
      1Commissioner Lopez had been misquoted in the August 30, 1981 issue of the Bulletin
Today as having stated that the Code was not yet in effect, allegedly because under the Code's
transitory provisions, the Code would take effect in 1982.
     2The  transitory provision referred to is Section 148, which provides that any corpora-
tion lawfully existing in the Philippines on the date of effectivity of the Code, which is affect-
ed by the new requirements of the Code, shall be given two years from effectivity of the Code
within which to comply with the same.

      3The first draft of the Code which was prepared under the auspices of the UP. Law
Center, was presented to the President for signature in 1973. It died a natural death.


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