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Hilario Soriano Case

The petitioner, Hilario P. Soriano, who was the president of Rural Bank of San Miguel, Inc. (RBSM), was charged with violation of the DOSRI law and estafa through falsification of commercial documents for his role in obtaining an unauthorized P8 million loan from RBSM under the name of depositor Enrico Carlos. The Supreme Court ruled that the allegations in the two criminal informations established the elements of both offenses. While petitioner claimed he legally acquired the loan proceeds, the Court found he remained a fiduciary of the bank and was therefore capable of misappropriating the funds for estafa. Both charges were allowed to proceed as the DOSRI prohibition broadly covers direct and indirect borrowing by

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Darlene Ganub
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
709 views2 pages

Hilario Soriano Case

The petitioner, Hilario P. Soriano, who was the president of Rural Bank of San Miguel, Inc. (RBSM), was charged with violation of the DOSRI law and estafa through falsification of commercial documents for his role in obtaining an unauthorized P8 million loan from RBSM under the name of depositor Enrico Carlos. The Supreme Court ruled that the allegations in the two criminal informations established the elements of both offenses. While petitioner claimed he legally acquired the loan proceeds, the Court found he remained a fiduciary of the bank and was therefore capable of misappropriating the funds for estafa. Both charges were allowed to proceed as the DOSRI prohibition broadly covers direct and indirect borrowing by

Uploaded by

Darlene Ganub
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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HILARIO P. SORIANO VS. PEOPLE OF THE PHILIPPINES, G.R. NO.

162336, 1 FEBRUARY
2010 [611 SCRA 191]
FACTS:
The Office of Special Investigation (OSI) of the BSP transmitted a letter to the DOJ, which was
attached with five affidavits, which would allegedly serve as bases for filing criminal charges
for Estafa thru Falsification of Commercial Documents, in relation to PD No. 1689, and for Violation
of Section 83 of RA 337, as amended by PD 1795, against, inter alia, petitioner Hilario P. Soriano.
These five affidavits, along with other documents, stated that spouses Enrico and Amalia Carlos
appeared to have an outstanding loan of P8 million with the Rural Bank of San Miguel, Inc. (RBSM),
but had never applied for nor received such loan; that it was petitioner, who was then president of
RBSM who had ordered, facilitated, and received the proceeds of the loan; and that the P8 million loan
had never been authorized by RBSM’s Board of Directors and no report thereof had ever been
submitted to the Department of Rural Banks, Supervision and Examination Sector of the BSP.
Two separate informations against petitioner.
Petitioner moved to quash these information.
Essentially, the petitioner theorized that the characterization of possession is different in the two
offenses. If petitioner acquired the loan as DOSRI, he owned the loaned money and therefore, cannot
misappropriate or convert it as contemplated in the offense of estafa. Conversely, if petitioner
committed estafa, then he merely held the money in trust for someone else and therefore, did not
acquire a loan in violation of DOSRI rules.
The trial court denied petitioner’s Motion to Quash for lack of merit. The MR was denied as well.
Aggrieved, petitioner filed a Petition for Certiorari before the CA which was also denied. Hence, this
petition.
ISSUE:
Whether a loan transaction within the ambit of the DOSRI law (violation of Section 83 of RA 337, as
amended) could also be the subject of Estafa under Article 315 (1) (b) of the Revised Penal Code.

RULING:
We have examined the two informations against petitioner and we find that they contain allegations
which, if hypothetically admitted, would establish the essential elements of the crime of DOSRI
violation and estafa thru falsification of commercial documents.
In Criminal Case No. 238-M-2001 for violation of DOSRI rules, the information alleged that petitioner
Soriano was the president of RBSM; that he was able to indirectly obtain a loan from RBSM by putting
the loan in the name of depositor Enrico Carlos; and that he did this without complying with the
requisite board approval, reportorial, and ceiling requirements.
In Criminal Case No. 237-M-2001 for estafa thru falsification of commercial documents, the
information alleged that petitioner, by taking advantage of his position as president of RBSM, falsified
various loan documents to make it appear that an Enrico Carlos secured a loan of P8 million from
RBSM; that petitioner succeeded in obtaining the loan proceeds; that he later converted the loan
proceeds to his own personal gain and benefit; and that his action caused damage and prejudice to
RBSM, its creditors, the BSP, and the PDIC.
Petitioners theory is based on the false premises that the loan was extended to him by the bank in his
own name, and that he became the owner of the loan proceeds.
Under the circumstances, it cannot be said that petitioner became the legal owner of the P8 million.
Thus, petitioner remained the banks fiduciary with respect to that money, which makes it capable of
misappropriation or conversion in his hands.
The prohibition in Section 83 is broad enough to cover various modes of borrowing. It covers loans by
a bank director or officer (like herein petitioner) which are made either: (1) directly, (2) indirectly, (3)
for himself, (4) or as the representative or agent of others.
It applies even if the director or officer is a mere guarantor, indorser or surety for someone else’s loan
or is in any manner an obligor for money borrowed from the bank or loaned by it. The covered
transactions are prohibited unless the approval, reportorial and ceiling requirements under Section 83
are complied with.
The prohibition is intended to protect the public, especially the depositors, from the overborrowing of
bank funds by bank officers, directors, stockholders and related interests, as such overborrowing may
lead to bank failures.
It has been said that banking institutions are not created for the benefit of the directors [or officers].
While directors have great powers as directors, they have no special privileges as individuals. They
cannot use the assets of the bank for their own benefit except as permitted by law. Stringent restrictions
are placed about them so that when acting both for the bank and for one of themselves at the same time,
they must keep within certain prescribed lines regarded by the legislature as essential to safety in the
banking business.
A direct borrowing is obviously one that is made in the name of the DOSRI himself or where the
DOSRI is a named party, while an indirect borrowing includes one that is made by a third party, but the
DOSRI has a stake in the transaction. The latter type indirect borrowing applies here.

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