Title
Linsangan vs. Philippine Deposit Insurance Corp.
Case
G.R. No. 228807
Decision Date
Feb 11, 2019
PDIC denied petitioner's deposit insurance claim due to lack of proof of beneficial ownership or qualified relative status, upheld by courts.
A

Case Summary (G.R. No. 228807)

Key Dates

Monetary Board closure and PDIC takeover: Resolution dated May 23, 2013.
PDIC denial of petitioner’s claim: July 12, 2013; denial of reconsideration: August 6, 2014.
Court of Appeals (CA) decision: March 31, 2016; CA resolution denying reconsideration: December 19, 2016.
Supreme Court final disposition: reported decision (citation in prompt indicates 2020).

Applicable Law and Regulatory Authority

Constitutional framework: 1987 Philippine Constitution (applicable given decision date after 1990).
Statutory authority: Republic Act No. 3591 (PDIC charter), specifically Sec. 3(g) defining “insured deposit” and PDIC’s duty to determine insured amounts.
Regulatory standard: PDIC Regulatory Issuance No. 2009-03 — sets rules on determination of beneficial ownership of legitimate deposits and definition and consequences of “deposit splitting.”

Factual Background and PDIC Investigation

CRBBI’s records showed a source account in the names of Cornelio or Ligaya Linsangan with an opening balance of P1,531,993.42. On December 13, 2012 the source account was closed and its balance (P1,544,081.48) was distributed among four accounts, one of which later appeared as petitioner’s SISA with P400,000.00. PDIC traced the accounts and conducted a “tracing of relationship” to determine beneficial ownership; it concluded petitioner was not a “qualified relative” of the transferors and that the four resulting accounts should be consolidated as belonging beneficially to Cornelio and Ligaya for purposes of computing insured deposits.

PDIC’s Denial and Stated Rationale

PDIC denied petitioner’s claim on the ground that under PDIC Regulatory Issuance No. 2009-03 the transferee is recognized as beneficial owner only if (a) the transfer was for valid consideration evidenced by transfer documents contained in the bank’s records at takeover, or (b) the transferee is a qualified relative of the transferor. CRBBI’s records contained no documents proving a valid transfer or donation to petitioner at the time PDIC took over. PDIC therefore treated Cornelio and Ligaya as the real owners and limited insurance payout to the statutory maximum per owner.

Proceedings Before the Court of Appeals

Petitioner filed a petition for certiorari before the CA. The CA affirmed PDIC’s action, finding no grave abuse of discretion. The CA emphasized (1) the absence in the bank records of details or documents explaining the splitting and transfers; (2) indicators that the source account had been divided in a manner suggestive of deposit-splitting to maximize insurance coverage; and (3) that PDIC’s denial did not invalidate any alleged donation, nor did it preclude claims against CRBBI’s assets. The CA thus denied petitioner’s petition.

Petitioner’s Principal Contentions on Review

Petitioner argued: (a) the transfer to his account occurred more than 120 days before bank closure and therefore was not “deposit splitting” under PDIC Regulatory Issuance No. 2009-03; (b) he was not advised that transfer documents must be in the bank’s records at takeover, so he had no opportunity to ensure this; and (c) requiring such documents in bank custody before takeover violates due process and imposes an extra requisite to validate donations.

PDIC’s and CA’s Rebuttal to Petitioner’s Arguments

PDIC and the CA responded that PDIC Regulatory Issuance No. 2009-03 differentiates two situations: (1) transfers made within 120 days before closure are presumed deposit splitting and treated as non-genuine for purposes of insurance coverage (and may have criminal consequences); and (2) transfers made before the 120-day period are not automatically immune from scrutiny — the transferee must nonetheless prove the transfer was for valid consideration by producing transfer documents that were in the bank’s records at takeover. In the absence of such records, PDIC may properly treat the transferor as the beneficial owner.

Governing Regulatory Provisions Applied

PDIC Regulatory Issuance No. 2009-03 (as quoted):

  • Determination of beneficial ownership: the registered holder is recognized as depositor entitled to insurance except where records show accounts are maintained for another’s benefit; when an account exceeding the maximum insurance is broken up and transferred, PDIC recognizes the transferor as beneficial owner unless transferee proves (a) break-up and transfer was for valid consideration, with (i) details of transfer contained in bank deposit account records, and (ii) copies of documents supporting transfer were in the bank’s custody at takeover; or (b) transferee is a “qualified relative” (within second degree of consanguinity or affinity).
  • Deposit splitting: defined by elements including transfer within 120 days immediately preceding or during a bank-declared holiday or immediately preceding closure; presence of all elements invokes a presumption against transferees’ beneficial ownership and carries prohibitions and possible liabilities for bank personnel who facilitate such activity.

Court’s Factual Application and Legal Reasoning

The Court found (consistent with PDIC and CA):

  • No document evidencing a valid transfer or donation to petitioner was in CRBBI’s custody at the time of PDIC takeover. Therefore the transferee could not meet the Regulatory Issuance’s evidentiary condition for recognition as beneficial owner.
  • Petitioner did not qualify as a “qualified relative” (he is the son of Cornelio’s cousin, i.e., a fifth-degree relative), so the familial exception did not apply.
  • The absence of transfer documents in bank records raised a presumption that the source account remained with the transferor; PDIC was entitled to rely on bank records in determining beneficial ownership.
  • Publication of PDIC Regulatory Issuance No. 2009-03 in a newspaper of general circulation constituted constructive notice; individual, personal notice by the bank to each depositor was not required (ignorantia legis non excusat).

Addressing Due Process and Notice Objections

The Court r

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