Fr. Damianus Abun, SVD, MBA, PhD
Divine Word College of Vigan, Ilocos
Sur, Philippines
Abstract
Moral standards are guides for moral
behavior, be it individual person or groups or corporation. The morality of a certain act is assessed
against those standards in order to be declared moral or immoral and
consequently for someone or group to claim responsibility. The crucial factor
in determining moral responsibility is the presence or the absence of knowledge
and free will in a certain act. Corporation, though it is a separate entity,
legal entity created by law, not a human person, is not completely out of hand and
can just do what it wants but it is also guided by moral standards and should take
moral responsibility to its immoral actions. A corporation as an entity is
still composed of rational beings that have knowledge and free will in pursuing
their objectives. Therefore, when things go wrong in the corporation, it is not
only employees as individual persons are taking the moral responsibility but
also the corporation.
Key words:
Moral responsibility, moral standards,
element of moral standards, individualism methodology, the nature of corporation,
knowledge and freewill.
Introduction
We are trying to understand moral
responsibility of a corporation. The concern of this particular subject is: who
is responsible for what is going on in a corporation when things are going
wrong? Is it individual person or the corporation to be blamed? This question
is raised based on the nature of corporation itself, that a corporation is not
the same as individual person who has the reason or knowledge and freedom
because moral responsibility is referring to human only, not to anything other
than human. Now who is then to be responsible when things go wrong in a
corporation? Is it only the man who has reason taking the responsibility? How
about the corporation? This is the main issue that we need to understand in
this topic. To help us understand this issue, we need to understand the nature
of corporation. However, before going further, one needs to know about the morality
of certain act. Are there moral standards to be followed? Are there moral standards
being violated? Are these violations intentional or not intentional? What are
the elements to be considered intentional?
It is assumed that the judgment of certain act, either to be moral or
immoral, is always based on criteria or moral standards, not on anything else. A
certain act must be evaluated against those moral standards. However, moral
standards elements may not be enough as basis for moral judgment and for
someone to take the responsibility. Responsibility involves knowledge/reason
and freewill. Therefore, reason and free will may be used as the starting point
in any moral investigation, be it to the individual person or the corporation. After
knowing the element of moral responsibility, then, we proceed to evaluate
whether an organization or corporation is subject to moral evaluation, and if
so, then what qualifies it to be treated as a human person so that it can be
held morally responsible for its actions and what disqualifies it in order not
to be held morally responsible.
The purpose of this article is to
enlighten everyone on the nature of Business Corporation and its moral responsibility.
We would like to know if a corporation, as a legal entity, not as a person, has
the moral responsibility over the crime it has committed. The area of concern
is corporate veil. Corporate veil has been used as shield to protect itself
from prosecution. The question here is: is corporation protected from moral
responsibility? In this paper, I would like to show that corporations cannot
hide behind their corporate veil and wash its hand. To support my stand, careful
readings on certain authorities related to the topic are the basis of the
arguments presented in this paper. The
paper will only limit its argument on the main element in determining moral
responsibility of a corporation. The writer realizes the difficulty in writing
this topic because it does not accommodate the idea of moral relativism. He
assumes that the readers are believer of universal morality.
Moral
Standard
The
meaning of Moral Standards and the Law
Moral standards are bases for moral behavior
and bases for determining whether a certain act is moral or immoral and for
someone to be responsible or not. These are the guides of human behavior and
decision making. These standards are not only applied to individual persons but
also to a group or corporation. Something is unethical if it does not conform
to a particular standard of morality. They may not be written but observed and
they are assumed norms of moral conduct (Articulo, 2005). These norms are point for checking if certain
action is good or bad. The concerns of moral standards are norms, not theory
which explains why certain act is good or bad. Moral standards are not the same
with social norms but they are beyond social norms. Though social norms are
code of conduct within a particular society but they are not moral standards.
Moral standards are beyond borders or may be called universal that are accepted
by all rational being everywhere. The coverage of social norms is local, while
the coverage of moral standards is universal. Therefore, the function of moral
standards is to check if the social norms are moral or immoral. Example,
certain society allows killing in the name of God or offers human as a form
sacrificial lamb to God. Moral standards will tell us that it is immoral,
though social custom declares that it is accepted.
Based
on the above understanding, it is clear that ethical standards guide
individuals to act in a good manner in dealing with other humans, society and
the environment. These standards should encourage individuals to make the right
decisions for their actions, and give them the courage to come forward should
they notice dishonest and unethical behavior. Individuals need to follow the
norms prescribed by all rational agents. Therefore, in deontological systems,
being morally good is defined as obeying certain moral rules (Harris1986).
When you follow those rules and do your duty, then you are good —
regardless of any other considerations like whether the consequences of that
obedience lead to suffering or happiness. On the other hand, if you ignore or
break any of those rules then you are not doing your duty and are morally bad —
once again, regardless of any consequences These moral duties are absolute and
unconditional duties such as telling the truth, being honest, being fair, etc. They apply whatever consequences might follow from
obeying them. Example is the order not to steal. It is our duty not to steal,
though the consequences of stealing would save the life the one who is
stealing. It does not explain why one should not steal because it is the
concern of moral philosophy.
One
should remember that moral standards are not the same with legal
standards. Following laws does not make
one ethical. Abortion in a certain
country is legal but it does not mean that abortion is moral because it
involves killing a human being. While
this practice is certainly legal, the unethical nature of it is quite clear. Another
example is euthanasia. Some countries are legalizing euthanasia in which one
can terminates one’s life on the basis of mercy or other reasons. Though it is
legal but such action is immoral because it is considered killing. Thus Legal
is following the law and may include exploiting holes in the legal system but
it may contradict morality. Ethics is doing the morally right thing. Some laws
may not even have any ethical connotations whatsoever. Some moral acts may be
legal but it may be also illegal. The legality of an action does not guarantee
that the action is morally right. Many issues in life that cannot be resolved
by appeal to law alone. Thus Shaw,
Williams (1999) argued that law codifies a society’s customs, ideals, norms and
moral values and changes in laws undoubtedly reflect changes in what society
considers right, wrong, good and bad. However, he further emphasized that it is
a mistake to see law as a sufficient to establish moral standards that should
guide an individual, a profession, an organization or society. Law cannot cover
all individual and group conduct. Thus conformity to law does not necessarily
mean that the act is immoral or non-conformity to the law does not mean that
the act is immoral.
Sources of Moral Standards
Related
to moral standards issue, one may ask question, “Where are the sources of these
standards or where do we get those standards?
If our ethics
are not based on feelings, religion, law, accepted social practice, or science,
and then what are their sources? Many philosophers and ethicists have helped us
answer this critical question. They have suggested at least five different
sources of ethical standards we should use.
Common Good
Common good principle would argue
that certain act may be considered good if it promotes the interest of the
majority over individual interest. This principle is originated from the
utilitarianism theory. Utilitarianism emphasizes that the ethical action is the
one that produces most good for the greatest majority interest and does the
least harm for all who are affected (Velasquez, 2014). One should not act if it
does not bring good to the majority of the society, though it might violate to
one’s individual interest. If we apply it in the business setting, an ethical
corporate action is the one that produces the greatest good for the
stockholders, stakeholders and the environment. All actions are analyzed from
its consequences, if the consequences are good for the majority, then such act
can be pursued.
The Rights Doctrine
Immanuel Kant classified rights as natural and positive
rights. Natural
right is inborn right while positive or statutory right is what proceeds from
the will of a legislator. From the two classifications of rights, thus we have innate
rights and acquired rights. Innate right is that right which belongs to
everyone by nature, independent of all juridical acts of experience. Acquired
right is that right which is founded upon such juridical acts. Innate right may
also be called the “internal mine and thine” (meum vel tuum internum),
for external right must always be acquired (Kant, 1790). Kant argued that there
is only one innate right such as birth right of freedom, while other rights are
originated from right to freedom such as right to property and other rights.
For Kant, freedom is independence of the compulsory will of another; and in so
far as it can coexist with the freedom of all according to a universal law, it
is the one sole original, inborn right belonging to every man in virtue of his
humanity. This is a right to be independent and of being coerced by external
force. The limit of this freedom is the freedom of others, in the sense that
the exercise of freedom is limited by the freedom of others. Emanated from
freedom is the right to property. It is believed that each one is free to own a
property. He/she has the right to property if he/she is connected to it and
that if any other person should make use of it with the owner’s consent and if
they do it without the consent of the owner, then they do an injury to the
person or the owner. The subjective condition of the use of anything is
possession of it as Immanuel Kant puts it, “Anything is “Mine” by right, or is
rightfully mine, when I am so connected with it, that if any other person should make use of it without my consent, he would do me a lesion or
injury”. Thus anyone who would assert the right to a thing as his must be in
possession of it as an object. According
to Robert Nozick (1974) as cited by Shaw (1999) argued that property rights is
considered sacrosanct. It grows out of one’s basic moral right. Such right is
either reflecting ones’ initial creation or appropriation of the product, some
sort of exchange or transfer between consenting individuals or a combination of
the two. However, Nozick, as quoted by Shaw argued that property rights exist
prior to any social arrangement and are morally antecedent to any legislative
decision that a state could make.
Reading the
argument of Kant and Nozick, it can be said that there are two kinds of rights
and they are moral natural rights and legal rights. Moral
natural rights are possessed by man by virtue of their human nature; they are
born with those rights, not conferred by the state. While legal rights are
those conferred and recognized by the law. That’s why we have constitutional
rights which are conferred and protected by law. They cannot be altered by the
state. While statutory rights are derived from legislation which are drawn by
the people’s representative such as right to minimum wage and right to just
compensation to additional work (Articulo, 2005).
Thus the ethicists agree that the ethical action is the one
that best protects and respects the moral rights of those affected. This
approach starts from the belief that humans have a dignity based on their human
nature per se or on their ability to choose freely what they do with their
lives. On the basis of such dignity, they have a right to be treated as ends
and not merely as means to other ends (Kant, cited by Stanford Encyclopedia of
Philosophy, 2004). The exercise of any moral rights is limited to the moral
rights of others, the sense that while the bearer of the right has the right to
exercise his/her freedom but at the same time the same time the bearer should
not violate the rights of others. Others have the duty to protect our rights
and we have the duty to protect the right of others.
The Justice Doctrine
Plato
as cited by Velasquez (1996) argued that in a society that lacks norms of
justice, he suggests, people inflict injustices on each other. People quickly
conclude that they will be better off if everyone adheres to norms of justice.
People consequently agree to cooperate in mutual adherence to norms of justice.
It is a long this line of reason, we take justice as one sources of moral
standards, a standard of moral behavior. All know that just action is considered to be ethical. Therefore, the
principles of justice are some portion of the total principles that make up
ethics. There
are a lot of different ideas about justice. Aristotle
and other Greek philosophers have contributed to the idea that all equals
should be treated equally. Today we use this idea to say that ethical actions
treat all human beings equally-or if unequally. This kind of definition refers
to fair treatment. But the question here is: who does the treatment and who are
to be treated? The answer to this question leads us to think of individual
justice and social justice or group justice. Justice is not only fair treatment
from other people toward the person but how the person treats other people
justly. Therefore justice becomes individual virtue and social virtue. A just
person always treats other people justly and a just society is always treating
its community members justly. As a just individual, I pay people more based on
their work, based on the amount they have contributed to the organization and
so the greater the amount that they contribute to an organization, the greater
they receive. Just society, just government, just organization would treat
individual justly as how the individual treat each other. In this case justice means
giving what is due to a person fairly deserves. An act is ethical if it gives a
person his proper due, otherwise the act is unethical. Giving what is due
indicates that all persons must always be treated equally.
Velasquez (2014) argues that there are two kinds of justice
and they are distributive and retributive justice. Distributive justice is
dealing with the way how the wealth is distributed to members of the society.
Thus distributive justice refers to fair distribution of society’s benefits and
burdens. The benefits should be distributed according to the contribution or
the burden. Someone should not expect more if he/she has not contributed
anything to the production of the output.
Thus, pursuing society’s benefits but avoiding burdens is unethical
because it is unfair for anyone to benefit from society’s economic pool without
working hard for it. Such idea of justice falls within what Aristotle called
formal justice. Formal justice is the requirement that we should treat similar
people similarly. If two persons have the same qualifications, the same amount
of contribution to the organization, they should be treated equally or
similarly. This kind justice would contradict with what Karl Marx meant by
justice. For him justice is to share benefits according to the needs but the
burden is shared according to the capability. While retributive justice refers
to the punishment given to a person who committed a crime and punishment must
be equal to the crime she/he committed. Not accepting the punishment is
considered unethical because such act would mean that the person avoids what is
due him. In relation to this idea, it is the same when someone destroys the
property of other people, then it is his due to pay or replace it. When he violated
the law, then it is his due to be jailed.
There are other views of justice when we talk about society
as a whole (Velasquez, 2014). When a person thinks that talents, education
qualification, ability, experience are the basis for job distribution and
salary structure, would understand justice in terms of merit. This what we have
mentioned above that justice means giving what is due to the person who
deserve. Such idea is originated in the idea of Plato. Plato believes that
people are classified not based on their family background but based on their
talents and abilities and with such talents and abilities, those persons can
play their social role. Further, when a person considers that the government
should provide free education to all, would think that justice is about
equality. This is rooted in the believe that all men are created equally or the
same. Therefore treatment should not be based on religion, gender, race, and
nationality and all should be given the same opportunity. Therefore, since all human
are the same, they should be given equal shares of benefits and burdens. Next,
if a person believes that business is importance to the common welfare of
society and they should be given tax break, then they view justice as utility.
For this group justice means what promote the common good or common welfare of
the citizens. In this case, a business is just when it promotes the welfare of
majority of people.
Moral
Standards Based on Religion
Each religion teaches people to live according to the teaching
of their religion. Muslims must follow the teaching Mohammad which is reflected
in the Qur’an. The Christian must follow the teaching of Jesus as reflected in
the Bible. As many people say that a true Christian walks in the footsteps
of Jesus. Jesus has taught people or His followers about the good life that is
written in the bible. Therefore, moral standards would be that of Christ. Example
when a young man came to Jesus and asked Jesus what he should do in order to
attain eternal life, Jesus asked him to live the Ten Commandments. But the
young man said that he had fulfilled all those commandments. Jesus pointed
further again that it is not yet enough and Jesus asked the young man to share
his wealth to the poor and then follow Him. For Christians, it is not enough
just to follow the Ten Commandments but one must share his/her wealth to the
unfortunate. This is summarized under one commandment “love your God and your
neighbor as yourself”.
Following the
idea above, thus the morality of certain act would be referred to the teaching
of Jesus Christ. It evaluates moral acts whether they conform to God’s will or
not which is reflected in the Bible. The decision has been made and we just
simply follow these rules and apply them to resolve ethical problems in our
daily life. However, not all understand God’s will and may not be all read the
bible. In such situation, how do people know about God’s will? People may know
God’s will through the interpretation which is done by the religious
authorities. Therefore, moral standards based on religion requires that all
must accept that the Bible is a source of God’s will and the interpretation by
their priest or religious leader is accepted as the words of God. These duties apply regardless of the
consequences or motive of carrying them out because they are absolute duties.
Natural
Law and Virtue Doctrine
Humans are born good, they are given the natural knowledge,
capability of knowing what is good and bad which is already built in the
reason. Such concept would emphasize the point that human are rational being
and moral being. This is true to all human beings. Peter Singer as cited by
Arneson (1998) argued that human have special moral privilege based on the
superior cognitive abilities. Though his argument has been criticized by some
for it leads to conclusion that there are different capacities among human and
so there must be different level of moralities among human. Beside the point of
different argument but the common point in the argument is that all human are
moral being. All actions are commanded by reason which makes a different from
the animal and therefore actions motivated by reason are necessarily good or
moral. It makes a different from animal. Such concept leads us to categorize acts
as have human act and act of man. The human act is calculated by reason, while
act of man is calculated by instinct which is the same with animal. Therefore,
an act is good if it reflects the nature of man as a rational being and a moral
being and these are first basis for moral evaluation of human acts.
Since human are moral being, then definitely human must
possess moral character or virtues. Therefore human are necessarily virtues
human being.
Aristotle argued that that a
virtuous person is someone who has ideal character traits. These traits derive
from natural internal tendencies, but need to be nurtured; however, once
established, they will become stable. Virtue ethics emphasize the role
of character and virtue in moral philosophy rather than either doing
one’s duty or acting in order to bring about good consequences. A virtue
ethicist is likely to give us this kind of moral advice: “Act as a virtuous
person would act in your situation.”
Or virtue ethicists would advise us, “act always as honest person”. Honesty
here is not refereeing to certain dealings or transactions but the honesty is a
character of the person. Human transactions must always be honest because
honesty is a reflection of human as a moral being, a virtuous human being. If
transactions are not honest, then it is immoral because it does not reflect a
character of human being as virtuous human being. A virtuous person
is someone who is kind across many situations over a lifetime because that is
her character and not because she wants to maximize utility or gain favors or
simply do her duty (Athanassoulis, 2013).
Moral
Responsibility
After knowing that someone has done
something wrong based on either one or all of those moral standards, then that
person should take the responsibility. Responsibility means something for which one is responsible to one’s act or the
state or fact of being responsible, answerable, or accountable for something
within one's power, control, or management. Related to the topic of ethics,
responsibility would mean being accountable for what we are doing knowingly and
freely. It is the extent to which the person or group deserves blame or
punishment for what he/she has done or the group has done. In other words,
she/he should not wash his/her hands and throw his/her moral responsibility to
other people after he/she committed certain action. Be responsible and take the
blame. Why? The person who performs an act knows why he acts and freely commits
it, even though he knows his act is wrong but he/she does it and therefore she/he
must take the full responsibility for his/her actions. Consequently the person deserves
blame or punishment. Thus moral
responsibility involves the notion of guilt or innocence (Articulo, 2005). Take
an example, the employer was found to be violating the right of employees to
privacy. The investigation committee recommend to the management that certain
employer has to take the responsibility. As a result, the employer was punished
and the employer was ordered to pay for moral damages.
The example mentioned above is a case of individual
act, in a sense that the act was done by an individual person, not authorized
by the management. Now our concern is, how if such act was done out of duty or
she/he was authorized by the management as prescribed in his job description?
Should the individual employee or the corporation take the responsibility?
Should both wash their hands? The contention here is related to the extent of
moral responsibility. Moral responsibility refers to both, individual and
collective moral responsibility (Risser, 2014) because immoral act may be done
either by individual person authorized by corporation or a group as a corporation.
There can be a situation in which as a group knowingly and freely plans certain
activity which brings disaster to a community. Moral responsibility becomes
complicated here because it involves corporation which is not considered a
human person or rational being. Corporation is only a legal entity created by
law which is not an individual person that has no reason, knowledge and freedom
or free will. How can it be imposed with moral responsibility? Therefore, we
have the reason to argue that the person or a group who has committed certain
immoral act is not always responsible for their wrongful act. It might have
been the idea behind why some individual prefer to form a corporation than single
proprietorship because it has a veil to protect from moral responsibility. It
is a veil given by law. It has a limited liability. Now, what happen if certain
corporation committed a crime? Who is the one taking the blame? Let us be clear
that morality and law are two different things, in a sense that what is legal
may not be always moral and what is moral may not be always legal. The issue on
hand is moral issue and as a moral issue, there are simple requirements to be
met if certain act is moral or immoral. In this regard, there must be criteria
or requirements to be fulfilled for one or a group to be morally responsible,
and thus we need to know when the person is morally responsible and when they
are not. In order to determine moral responsibility, we need to know what makes
an act right or wrong morally. This is important criteria to determine on which
we can base our judgment and moral theories will help us in determining the
extent of moral responsibility.
Element of Moral Responsibility:
Knowledge and freedom
Moral standards are the guide of our moral
behavior. Everyone including corporations should be guided by those moral
standards. However, in determining moral responsibility of certain act, moral
standards may not be a good starting point. Therefore, evaluating certain act and
their moral responsibility merely based on the moral standards would not be
enough or sufficient. The issue of moral responsibility is framed within the
nature of persons. Persons are classified as unique because of the reason,
minds (McKenna & Widerker, 2006). Thus the starting point to be
investigated is knowledge and freedom. Thus, we need to see if the violation of
those moral standards were intentional or not intentional. In other words,
evaluation may continue if the element of knowledge and free will are found. Thus,
the primary step to be taken before a judgement can be done is to find out if
there was the presence or absence of knowledge and freedom or free will (Sandel,
2014, cited from Immanuel Kant). If there was a sign that knowledge and freedom
were present in the act, then the question remains: to what extent is the
presence of knowledge and free will? This is relevant to the issue because it
will determine the level of moral responsibility. But we will not go deeper
into it because our main purpose here is to find out if corporation can be
morally responsible for its action. A judgement on certain act can be made if
it is found that there is presence of mind or reason and free will, if the act
was done knowingly and freely. In other words, the person can be blamed if the
person is acting out of his knowledge and free will. The person acts knowingly
and willingly despite the fact that he knows that such act will destroy common
good, the right of people, justice, the doctrine of his religion, and dignity
of other people. Despite of that knowledge in mind, however he still commits
it.
Reason allows us to act with a purpose and guide us
to pursue the objective. With such reason, one can identify or differentiate
right from wrong or good from bad and one can avoid it. Thus the absence of
reason, depending on the situation or circumstance, can reduce or mitigate the
moral burden of the person who committed the act. It is the reality that many
times a person acts out of fear or anger or external force. In other words, the
person is not in full control of his acts. In such situation the person may or
may not be morally responsible. When the person acts without being aware of the
consequences or the wrongness of his act, cannot take full responsibility of
his act.
Knowledge and free will are the first bases for
moral judgement of certain act because we believe that only knowledge and
freedom belong to human as a rational being. Consequently all acts performed by
human must be based on his reason or knowledge and free will. This is what we
call human act; the acts are specifically belonged to human, a rational being
who has a freedom. Knowledge and freedom are the only things belong to human
and the acts that are belonged to human act are the only the acts we can judge.
Human should act based on the knowledge and his free will (Widereker and Mckenna,
2006). This is to emphasize that there are other acts which we call act of man.
The act of man does not necessarily belong to human but also belong to animal
which is not necessarily motivated by reason but by instinct like animal.
Example, eating, drinking, sleeping, is acts that are also belonged to animal.
These acts are neutral to moral judgment. Therefore, we emphasize that it is
only human act that we can judge morally. Before we judge certain whether it is
immoral or immoral based on the motive, the means, the ends and consequence, we
need to determine first if the act was done knowingly and freely (Widerker
&Mckenna, 2006).
Taking Full Responsibility, Not Full Responsibility and Exempted.
Based on the discussion on the determining factors
of moral responsibilities, then we have the idea that not all wrong act are
done knowingly and freely. There are certain situations or circumstance that a
certain person committed a certain act either with full knowledge and freedom
or incomplete knowledge. It is here we need to examine when someone can be full
responsible of his /her action or not fully responsible for his /her actions
(Widerker and Mckenna, 2006).
Someone is judged to be morally wrong and fully
responsible for his/her actions when she/he does it with full knowledge and
freedom. In other words, he/she does it knowingly and freely. The person has a
complete knowledge of the wrongness of that act but he/she chooses to commit
that act at his own choice and free will. In other words, the person committed
such act intentionally, voluntarily and is a product of contemplation and
deliberation. After establishing facts and determining that such act is done
knowingly and freely, then the person has full responsibility and that person
should be punished according to the crime he/she has committed. Example a
manager knows that bribery is immoral, however, despite of such knowledge,
he/she committed it.
However, there are circumstances in which a person
commits certain act not because he/she has full knowledge. Despite of her lack
of knowledge, she/he committed it because she /he might be pushed or forced by
a certain circumstance that he/she has no choice but to do it. This is the case
that we cannot throw all the responsibility and blame over that person. Given
that situation, in the case of lack of knowledge of the correctness or
rightness of the act, however, the person cannot also be removed from all moral
responsibilities. The responsibility and blame are still with the person,
however, to a lesser extent, not totally exempted because lack of knowledge is
not sufficient enough to exempt the person from moral responsibility because
he/she could still find ways to get information but he/she did not.
A person can be exempted totally if the person acts
out of complete ignorance of the moral wrongness of the act, unintended result
of a rightful act, result of an accident, coercion to the extent that the person’s
reason cannot work and when such person has no capability to know if such act
is right or wrong, good or bad. The first and the last is the case of a child
or a crazy person who burn the house of their neighbor because of excitement to
the see the beautiful fire. The case of unintended result is the case of double
effect of certain act. This is the case in which a person performs certain act
that lead to, either good or bad outcome. Example a doctor examines a pregnant
mother who has cancer. The only way to deliver the baby is through caesarean;
however, the result was the mother’s death.
Corporate Moral Responsibility
The Nature of
Business Corporation
In order to determine moral responsibility of
corporation, first, we need to know the nature of corporation. Proper
understanding is needed for us to determine if a corporation is morally
responsible for their actions. This is due to the fact that corporation is not
human, it is a legal entity created by law but what qualifies it to be like
human and therefore be responsible morally. It is commonly known that a business entity
is an entity that is a group of people organized for some profitable or
charitable purpose. Business entities include organizations such as corporations,
partnerships, charities, trusts, and other forms of organization. Generally
speaking, entrepreneurs incorporate their business in the state where they
conduct their business (Perez, 2015). After incorporation, then the business
is considered legal and it is now recognized as a legal business entity.
It has a
legal personality and now can legally pursue its business objectives as
prescribed in their constitution and bylaws as approved by the Security of
Exchange Commission. Thus
the
treatment to a corporation is now the same treatment to a person. Business entities, just like individual persons, are
subject to taxation and must file a tax return. Some business entities are
exempt from federal income tax. These include non-profit charities, non- profit
corporations. Business entities may be subjected to state income tax, depending
on the laws of the state or states where they conduct business.
There are different types of businesses and knowing
different types of businesses could help us understand the nature of business. The
classification of business is depending on the objective that it pursues.
Therefore, first, we have sole proprietor. Sole proprietor is unincorporated
businesses and it is usually owned by a single individual. There are no
forms we need to fill out to start this type of business. The only thing you
need to do is report your business income and expense. This is the easiest form
of business to set up, and the easiest to dissolve. A Sole Proprietorship in the Philippines is also known as a
"single proprietorship, A sole proprietorship is the most simple form of
business and the easiest to register in the Philippines, through the Bureau of
Trade Regulation and Consumer Protection (BTRCP) of the Department of Trade and
Industry (DTI). It is owned by an individual who has full control or authority over
all the assets, as well as personally answers all liabilities or losses. The
fact that it is run by the individual means that it is highly flexible in which
the owner retains absolute control. In
relation to liability, the sole proprietorship has an unlimited liability
as compared to corporation. This is in case if the owner put up his/her
business not by her/his own capital but from loans either from individual person
or from the banks. When the business bankrupt, then the owner has to pay all
the money that he/she has loaned from other people or creditors. The creditors
can also file case against the owner and run after the owner and can proceed
not only against the assets and property of the business but also the
properties of the owner. Therefore the laws do not differentiate between the
owner and the business, both are the same.
Second is corporation. A corporation is an entity which is separate from
its owners. Therefore, unlike sole
proprietorship, corporation has limited liability protection. The
Corporation is formed under the laws of the state in which it is operating,
with Articles of Incorporation. It has
shareholders, and the shares may be privately or closely held, or they
may be offered for sale to the public. Corporations are taxed separately from
their owners at the corporate tax rate.
Since corporations are
separate entities, the debts and liabilities of the corporations are also
separate from those of the owners. This separation is sometimes called a “corporate
shield” or “corporate veil”. Corporate veil is a term used to describe the separation of the corporations from its
owners. As a separate entity, the corporation is set up to shield its owners
from personal liability for the debts and negligence of the business. Since it is a separate entity, when the
corporation is sued, the individual shareholders and officers cannot be
brought into the lawsuit. But there are cases in which the corporation's
officers and shareholders could be sued for negligence or for debts; the action
of bringing in these shareholders to be sued is called "piercing the corporate veil" or
"lifting the corporate veil. “There are two instances when a corporation
can be sued: first, in the case of fraud, in which the
corporation was found to be a sham that was set up for the purpose of carrying
on fraudulent deals or for fraudulent purposes. In this case they knowingly and
freely pursue immoral objectives. Second, in the case of egregious and willful
activity by corporate shareholders or officers who put corporate gain over
public good (Murray, 2015). Again they knowingly and freely pursue immoral
intention even though they know that the common good will be violated.
Third is partnership. It
is a legal
relationship formed by the agreement between two or more individuals to carry
on a business as co-owners. Unlike
Corporation, partnership is not a separate entity from its owner. Since it is not
a separate entity from its owners, then the owners must take the responsibility
in case of business going bankrupt. Partnership
must have at least one general partner who assumes unlimited liability for the
business, for actions of the partnership. It may also include limited partners who
are merely investors and who do not share in the day-to-day operations of the
business and who do not share in liability.
Partnership must have at least two partners. Partnerships are usually
registered with the state in which they do business, but the requirement to
register varies from state to state. Partnerships use a partnership agreement
to clarify the relationship between the partners, roles and responsibilities of
the partners, and their respective shares in the profits or losses of the partnership
(Murray, 2015)
Fourth is Trust. Trust
is usually formed upon the death of an individual and is designed to
provide continuity of the investments and business activities of the deceased
individual (Perez, 2015). Fifth is called non-stock nonprofit corporation.
Their purpose is not for profit but it is for service or for charity. Such kind
of business is exempted from tax but it needs to report its activities and
income and assets to ensure that it complies with the government laws with
charitable institution or corporations. We use the term nonprofit because these
organizations are not set up for the sole purpose of making a profit. Rather, they pursue public
benefit purpose that is recognized by the constitution. What makes an
organization a nonprofit is that: first its mission. Its mission is to
undertake activities whose goal is not primarily for profit. Second, no person
owns shares of the corporation or interests in its property. Third, the
property and income of the nonprofit corporation are never distributed to any
owners, but are recycled back into the nonprofit corporation's public benefit
mission and activities. In terms of ownership, it is owned by the public, it
belongs to no private person and no one person controls the corporation. All
its assets are dedicated to service or charity. The cash, equipment, and other
property of a nonprofit cannot be given to anyone or used for anyone's private
benefit without fair market compensation to the nonprofit organization (Fritz,
2015). In terms of control, it is
controlled and governed by Board of Trustees and their function is to see to it
that the organization serves the purpose and the founder does not own or
control the nonprofit. Board of Trustees does not act as individual persons but
act as a group. Nonprofit is only accountable to the public and it is
therefore, it must file annual information return to the appropriate office of
the government (Fritz, 2015).
After understanding the nature of business, now we
have idea how business are working. Some are taking full responsibility and
others are avoiding responsibility which is allowed by law by creating a
corporation. However, setting aside the discussion on the different kinds of
business organization, from the definition, it gives us a clear view of what
business organization is all about. Depending on the kind of business, each
business has different set up and has different level of liability. Some have
unlimited liabilities, while others have limited liabilities. In the case of
unlimited liabilities, then such business cannot cover itself from legal
charges and assume the damage. However, our concern in this particular topic is
corporate moral responsibility. A corporation has a limited liability because
it is a separate entity from its owners. The concern is: who is taking the
moral responsibility or who is going to take the blame?
Corporate Moral
Responsibility and Individual Responsibility
The starting point of discussion is: is a
corporation not morally or morally responsible for its actions? This question
is raised because of the fact that corporation has a limited liability. Such
nature of corporation has brought controversies between theorists whether a
corporation is morally responsible or only the individual person, not the
corporation. Answering the above question would be simple if we follow the
previous argument on the determining factor of moral responsibility, then we
can give immediate answer to this question. As long as the act was done
knowingly and willingly by the corporation, the organization is morally
responsible. However, problem becomes complicated because it is not a matter of
applying such principle but the theory of corporation makes it complicated. The
idea of corporate veil makes things harder. Pursuing this idea, we encounter a
problem and the problem is a corporation has no reason and free will because it
is a legal entity created by law that can carry out a business for a certain
objectives. It is not an individual person who acts knowingly and freely. Corporation
is a separate entity from its owners and thus it has a limited liability, in
the sense that it cannot take all the blame for its actions. Why? Two opposing
groups present their views. Those who use the individualism methodology
would argue that "corporations
don't commit offences; people do (Bodenheimer, 1980). The strategy of
Individualism, as revived by numerous commentators in recent years, is to
abolish corporate criminal liability and to rely instead on individual criminal
liability (Lederman, 1985). He continued that theoretical basis for imposing
criminal liability on the corporation remains unclear. And such situation has
encouraged the trend toward a slight restriction in the scope of corporate
criminal liability.
How can we apply moral responsibility and blame to
a corporation? Friedman (1967) as cited by Lederman (1985) argued that many
debates have come out to discuss issues related to moral responsibility of the
corporations. Indeed,
the very substance of the corporate body is controversial and various views
concerning it have emerged. There are those who treat the corporate body as a
mere legal fiction devoid of the ability to function independently and
requiring permanent representation by human beings. Others treat corporations as real entities
claiming that the law merely recognizes the existence of corporate bodies
rather than creates the corporate entities. A third group of jurists rejects
both these approaches and offers additional explanations. For the upholders of the theory of
individual responsibility rooted in methodological individualism and its
related metaphysics, argue that one cannot ascribe moral responsibility to a
corporation but only to a “a flesh and blood” individuals who are moral person
but Soarez (2003) argued that corporations have sufficient structural
complexity to be agents whom it makes sense to call to account for their
actions and the consequences of those actions. It may not be possible for
corporations to be responsible in the way that the individual can be but they
can be responsible appropriate to corporations. J. Braithwite and B. Fisse,
(1998) in an article, “The Allocation of Responsibility for Corporate Crime:
Individualism, Collectivism and Accountability” as cited by Soarez (2003) argue
that methodological individualism amounts to a dualistic ontology. On the one
side are individuals and on the other are corporations. Individuals are
observable and therefore, real, while corporations are abstractions without the
possibility of direct observations. If it is so, it is not possible to ascribe
to moral responsibility to a corporation and ideas such as agency, autonomy and
rationality do not apply to a corporation. Therefore we cannot expect formal
organization or their representative to take the moral blame. It is along such
line of argument, Soarez (2003) lamented that moral responsibility is a word
without meaning. Amidst those conflicting discussions, however, debate along
such idea never ends because of the desire to settle the score on who is
holding the moral responsibility. The question of who is holding the
responsibility remains alive because different interpretation of the nature of
corporation. Trying to settle the interpretation, Lederman (19850 suggested
that that distinctions must be made between human beings and corporate
bodies. Those
distinctions are not to clear one and punish one but to clear the
responsibility in terms of the extent to which both are responsible morally.
Some argue that even assuming that the individual desires of a group of people
working in concert can form a "collective will" as a result of the
interdependence and mutual influence within the group, and even assuming that
this synthesis of desires is distinct from the separate wills forming it
(Braithwite &b Fisse, 1998), the problem of personifying the corporate body
is not thereby brought to a clear-cut solution. The corporate entity is an
enterprise devoid of the physical ability characteristics of the human race.
Man possesses consciousness and physical aptitude, as well as the power to
exercise them. Corporate bodies, in contrast, are bereft of those capacities
and depend totally on a human source in order to function.
To clear such issue, Soarez (2003) presented two
arguments from two contestants: Nominalists and realists. For the
Nominalists, corporations are collections of individuals or aggregations of
human beings. While the Realists argue that a corporations has its own
existence and a meaning as well as moral/legal personality of its own. He
further emphasized that both of these views have implications for moral and
legal responsibility. In the Nominalists view, corporations do not exist apart
from its members; any blame worthiness or responsibility can only be obtained
from the culpability of an individual employee. Therefore, in line with this
Nominalists view, corporations are moral persons in the sense that they are
entities and they are intentional actors. Corporations are entities with dominant
role to play in our society. Corporations are more than mere collection of
individuals which means that they are capable of moral decisions and therefore
susceptible to moral blame. However, this would leave one with the problem of
deciding whether the corporations should be responsible for the behavior of its
employees or only for some of them. Definitely if employees or employee acts on
behalf of the corporation because they are or he/she is carrying out their duty
or her/his duty authorized by corporation, then in this case the corporation
has to take the blame. On the realists view, corporations represent something
beyond individuals which means that following this point of view, it may be
possible to find a new candidate for attributing responsibility. In the
realists view, the corporation is not morally responsible. However, Lederman
(1985) settles this issue by using the conspirator theory. He said that the theory of
conspiracy holds any conspirator liable for crimes committed by fellow conspirators
in the furtherance of the conspiracy, even if the conspirator was not capable
of committing the offense himself.
The
analogy to the theory of corporate criminal liability suggests that each breach
of law the corporate body has been accused of is in furtherance of an offense
previously plotted between the corporation and the perpetrator. Hence, the
corporation is criminally liable for the acts of the perpetrator in execution
of the plan of the conspiracy.
Based on those arguments presented in the
discussion, we can settle our case on the question of “who is taking the blame?” Following the argument, the traditionalist
and the nominalists definitely would answer that the one who is taking the
blame is an individual person or employees because they are the ones who have
reasons and freedom. They have the knowledge of what is right and what is wrong
and the knowledge of what is good and what is bad. Therefore using their
freedom, individual employee or employees could refuse to carry out a job which
is not moral, even though they or she/he is authorized to do so. Further they
argue that individuals had to carry out the particular actions that brought
about the corporate act. Contrary to the traditionalists and nominalists’ view,
French (1979) as cited by Velasquez (1998) claimed that when an organized group
such as corporation acts together, their corporate acts may be described as the
act of a group and consequently the corporate group and not the individuals who
make up the group must be held responsible for the act. Take an example, the
defective product of a beauty product cannot be attributed to the individual
person but it is attributed to the corporation or the company where the product
is made, so long the cause of defective product was not caused by individual
employee but a consequence of following the order of the company. Velasquez
pointed out that more often than not, employees of large corporation cannot be
accused of “knowingly and freely” join their actions together to pursue corporate
objectives. Often time they may not be aware of the intention and the
ends/objective of the corporation’s act because they are not involved in the
discussion during the planning process and they have no way of finding it out
and are not capable of stopping it. In this case, the excusing factor is
ignorance and inability.
However there are situations wherein employees know
that the corporation’s plan is immoral, however, they just ignore about it
because they have no power and no choice to do otherwise except to follow the
order. They have the capability to question and to withdraw their cooperation
but they choose to go along because of the fear and pressure that they might be
fired. However, such situation could not be used as an excuse by the employees
or employee from their moral responsibility. Velasques (1998) claimed that
following orders out of fear of his/her boss cannot absolve the
employees/employee from moral responsibility. Unwillingly cooperate with the
corporation to do a certain crime cannot excused him/her from moral
accountability because such reason is not serious enough to cause his/her mind
goes blank but she/he is still in full control of her knowledge about the
wrongness of her/his action. Example, an employee was authorized by his/her
employer to put a bump near the gate of their business competitors. The
employee cannot claim that he/she is just following orders because the employee
knows that it is wrong but still doing it. Doing a certain crime because of
fear, threat, and uncertainties may lessen or mitigate the moral responsibility
of the employees. The employees/ employee can only be exempted from moral
responsibility if the employees/employee is found to be in complete ignorance
about the wrongness of their act and if he/she was coerced by his/her boss to
commit a certain crime, however, such reason can only be accepted if the
coercion was very serious up to the point that her reason cannot function
well. Moral responsibility requires merely
that one acts knowingly and freely and it is irrelevant to use the reason of
“following orders only”. Following orders because of pressures may only
mitigate the employee’s moral responsibility over the crime.
Conclusion
Moral standards are applied to all who are called
rational being, be it an individual person or a corporation. Consequently all
must take the responsibility if they are found to violate moral standards. We
conclude that employees and corporations are morally responsible to the crime
they have committed. However moral responsibility depends on the circumstance
in which how the crime is committed. The determining factors of moral
responsibility of corporation are knowledge and freedom or freewill. Though a
corporation is separate legal entity from the owner, and not considered as an
individual person, however, a corporation is composed of rational human beings
who have knowledge and freedom. There are situations in which, as a group, it
knowingly and freely pursues objectives that are in violations of moral
standards. When they violated the
ethical standards, they are acting as a group with full knowledge and free
will. Employees are acting on behalf of the corporation. They are authorized by
the corporation to carry out their job as prescribed by the organization or in
other words, they are just doing their job. However, employees cannot just wash
their hands and throw the blame to the corporation because the element of
reason and free will are retained with them. Thus as individual employees,
he/she has still the freedom to choose to follow or not to follow if the order
is not moral.
It is based on such argument, we conclude that
both: employees and corporation are morally responsible to the crime committed
by the corporation. This position may be opposed by those who are using the
argument of individualism methodology; however our determining factor is
knowledge and free will. As long as these two factors are present in certain
act, then corporation is morally responsible. In this regard we have group
and individual moral responsibility. Individual responsibility maintains that
only individual human agents can be held morally responsible, and group responsibility
maintains that groups, such as corporation, can be held morally responsible as
group, independently of their members. These opposing positions rest on a
deeper conflict between methodological individualists, for whom all social
phenomena, such as group activities, can be explained by reference only to
facts about individual humans, and methodological holists who defend the
ontological position that there are social groups capable of actions that
cannot be reduced to the actions and interests of their individual members. Though they are using different approach
but the two approach lead to the same conclusion that both individual employees
and corporation are morally responsible because both are still considered
rational being who have knowledge and freewill.
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