Case Digests
Case Digests
Case Digests
Santos
A.B. Pol. Sci.
their consent. However, their gripes and grievances were not heeded by the
respondents.
The petitioner union filed a notice of strike with the Bureau of Labor Relations in
connection with the dismissal of some of its members who were allegedly
castigated for their union membership. Despite conciliation conferences, San
Miguel refused to bargain with the petitioner union alleging that the workers are
not their employees.
On February 20, 1969, all the petitioners were dismissed from their jobs and,
thereafter, denied entrance to respondent company's glass factory despite their
regularly reporting for work. A complaint for illegal dismissal and unfair labor
practice was filed by the petitioners.
Respondents moved for the dismissal of the complaint on the grounds that the
complainants are not and have never been employees of respondent company but
employees of the independent contractor; that respondent company has never had
control over the means and methods followed by the independent contractor who
enjoyed full authority to hire and control said employees; and that the individual
complainants are barred by estoppel from asserting that they are employees of
respondent company.
The petitioners strongly argue that there exists an employer-employee relationship
between them and the respondent company and that they were dismissed for
unionism, an act constituting unfair labor practice.
Issue: Whether or not an employer-employee relationship exists between
petitioners-members of the "Brotherhood Labor Unit Movement of the
Philippines" and respondent San Miguel Corporation.
Held: Yes. In determining the existence of an employer-employee relationship, the
elements that are generally considered are the following: (a) the selection and
engagement of the employee; (b) the payment of wages; (c) the power of dismissal;
and (d) the employer's power to control the employee with respect to the means
and methods by which the work is to be accomplished. It is the so-called "control
test" that is the most important element (Investment Planning Corp. of the Phils. v.
The Social Security System, 21 SCRA 924; Mafinco Trading Corp. v. Ople, supra,
and Rosario Brothers, Inc. v. Ople, 131 SCRA 72).
Applying the above criteria, the evidence strongly indicates the existence of an
employer-employee relationship between petitioner workers and respondent San
Miguel Corporation.
Uncontroverted is the fact that for an average of seven (7) years, each of the
petitioners had worked continuously and exclusively for the respondent company's
shipping and warehousing department. Considering the length of time that the
petitioners have worked with the respondent company, there is justification to
conclude that they were engaged to perform activities necessary or desirable in the
usual business or trade of the respondent, and the petitioners are, therefore regular
employees. In fact, despite past shutdowns of the glass plant for repairs, the
petitioners, thereafter, promptly returned to their jobs, never having been replaced,
or assigned elsewhere until the present controversy arose. The term of the
petitioners employment appears indefinite. The continuity and habituality of
petitioners' work bolsters their claim of employee status vis-a-vis respondent
company.
Firmly establishing respondent SMC's role as employer is the control exercised by
it over the petitioners - that is, control in the means and methods/manner by which
petitioners are to go about their work, as well as in disciplinary measures imposed
by it.
Because of the nature of the petitioners' work as cargadores or pahinantes,
supervision as to the means and manner of performing the same is practically nil.
More evident and pronounced is respondent company's right to control in the
discipline of petitioners. Documentary evidence presented by the petitioners
establish respondent SMC's right to impose disciplinary measures for violations or
infractions of its rules and regulations as well as its right to recommend transfers
and dismissals of the piece workers. The inter-office memoranda submitted in
evidence prove the company's control over the petitioners. That respondent SMC
has the power to recommend penalties or dismissal of the piece workers, even as to
recover upon the causes of action asserted is a matter to be resolved only after and
as a result of a hearing. Thus, the respondents plea of lack of employer-employee
relationship may be pleaded only as a matter of defense. It behooves upon it the
duty to prove that there really is no employer-employee relationship between it and
the complainant.
The Labor Arbiter then considered the case submitted for resolution. The
parties submitted their position papers on 24 February 1997.
On 11 March 1997, SONZA filed a Reply to Respondents Position Paper with
Motion to Expunge Respondents Annex 4 and Annex 5 from the Records. Annexes
4 and 5 are affidavits of ABS-CBNs witnesses Soccoro Vidanes and Rolando V.
Cruz. These witnesses stated in their affidavits that the prevailing practice in the
television and broadcast industry is to treat talents like SONZA as independent
contractors.
Issue:
THE COURT OF APPEALS GRAVELY ERRED IN AFFIRMING THE NLRCS
DECISION AND REFUSING TO FIND THAT AN EMPLOYER-EMPLOYEE
RELATIONSHIP EXISTED BETWEEN SONZA AND ABS-CBN, DESPITE
THE WEIGHT OF CONTROLLING LAW, JURISPRUDENCE AND EVIDENCE
TO SUPPORT SUCH A FINDING
Held:
Shoe Shiner
1.contributes anything
capital of the employer
4.respondent
control
doesnt
to
the
exercise
Thus, shoe shiners are not employees of the company, but are partners,
because there is no control by the owner and shoe shiners have their own
customers whom they charge a fee and divide the proceeds equally with the owner.
he is again found out. This kind of misplaced compassion is not going to do labor
in general any good as it will encourage the infiltration of its ranks by those who
do not deserve the protection and concern of the Constitution.
Those who invoke social justice may do so only if their hands are clean and their
motives blameless and not simply because they happen to be poor.
We hold that the grant of separation pay in the case at bar is unjustified.
The private respondent has been dismissed for dishonesty, as found by the labor
arbiter and affirmed by the NLRC and as she herself has impliedly admitted. The
fact that she has worked with the PLDT for more than a decade, if it is to be
considered at all, should be taken against her as it reflects a regrettable lack of
loyalty that she should have strengthened instead of betraying during all of her 10
years of service with the company. If regarded as a justification for moderating the
penalty of dismissal, it will actually become a prize for disloyalty, perverting the
meaning of social justice and undermining the efforts of labor to cleanse its ranks
of all undesirables.
Philippine Blooming Mills Employees Organization vs. PBM, 51 SCRA 189
Facts: Philippine Blooming Employees Organization (PBMEO) decided to stage a
mass demonstration in front of Malacaang to express their grievances against the
alleged abuses of the Pasig Police.
After learning about the planned mass demonstration, Philippine Blooming Mills
Inc., called for a meeting with the leaders of the PBMEO. During the meeting, the
planned demonstration was confirmed by the union. But it was stressed out that the
demonstration was not a strike against the company but was in fact an exercise of
the laborers inalienable constitutional right to freedom of expression, freedom of
speech and freedom for petition for redress of grievances.
The company asked them to cancel the demonstration for it would interrupt the
normal course of their business which may result in the loss of revenue. This was
backed up with the threat of the possibility that the workers would lose their jobs if
they pushed through with the rally.
A second meeting took place where the company reiterated their appeal that while
the workers may be allowed to participate, those from the 1st and regular shifts
should not absent themselves to participate, otherwise, they would be dismissed.
Since it was too late to cancel the plan, the rally took place and the officers of the
PBMEO were eventually dismissed for a violation of the No Strike and No
Lockout clause of their Collective Bargaining Agreement.
The lower court decided in favor of the company and the officers of the PBMEO
were found guilty of bargaining in bad faith. Their motion for reconsideration was
subsequently denied by the Court of Industrial Relations for being filed two days
late.
Issue: Whether or not the workers who joined the strike violated the CBA.
Held: No. While the Bill of Rights also protects property rights, the primacy of
human rights over property rights is recognized. Because these freedoms are
"delicate and vulnerable, as well as supremely precious in our society" and the
"threat of sanctions may deter their exercise almost as potently as the actual
application of sanctions," they "need breathing space to survive," permitting
government regulation only "with narrow specificity." Property and property rights
can be lost thru prescription; but human rights are imprescriptible. In the hierarchy
of civil liberties, the rights of free expression and of assembly occupy a preferred
position as they are essential to the preservation and vitality of our civil and
political institutions; and such priority "gives these liberties the sanctity and the
sanction not permitting dubious intrusions."
The freedoms of speech and of the press as well as of peaceful assembly and of
petition for redress of grievances are absolute when directed against public
officials or "when exercised in relation to our right to choose the men and women
by whom we shall be governed.
PAL vs. NLRC 225 SCRA 301
FACTS:
requirements of which are satisfied where the parties are afforded fair and
reasonable opportunity to explain their side of the controversy.
Since private respondent's dismissal was for just and valid cause, the order of
public respondent for the reinstatement of private respondent with award of back
wages has no factual and legal basis.
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby GRANTED. The challenged decision and
resolution of the National Labor Relations Commission are SET ASIDE. In lieu
thereof, the decision of the Labor Arbiter dated October 28, 1992, is AFFIRMED.
No costs.
Calalang vs. Williams, 70 Phil 726
Facts: Pursuant to the power delegated to it by the Legislature, the Director of
Public Works promulgated rules and regulations pertaining to the closure of
Rosario Street and Rizal Avenue to traffic of animal-drawn vehicles for a year in
prohibition against respondent-public officers. Among others, the petitioners aver
that the rules and regulations complained of infringe upon constitutional precept on
the promotion of social justice to insure the well being and economic security of all
people.
Issue: Whether or not the rules and regulation promote social justice.
Held: Yes. The promotion of Social Justice is to be adhered not through a mistaken
sympathy towards any given group.
Social justice is "neither communism, nor despotism, nor atomism, nor anarchy,"
but the humanization of laws and the equalization of social and economic force by
the State so that justice in its rational and objectively secular conception may at
least be approximated. Social justice means the promotion of the welfare of all the
people, the adoption by the Government of measures calculated to insure economic
stability of all the competent elements of society, through the maintenance of a
proper economic and social equilibrium in the interrelations of the members of the
community, constitutionally, through the adoption of measures legally justifiable,
association. Therefore the right to join a union includes the right to abstain from
joining any union. The exceptions provided by the assailed Republic Act is that
members of said religious sects cannot be compelled or coerced to join labor
unions even when said unions have closed shop agreements with the employers;
that in spite of any closed shop agreement, members of said religious sects cannot
be refused employment or dismissed from their jobs on the sole ground that they
are not members of the collective bargaining union. Thus this exception does not
infringe upon the constitutional provision on freedom of association but instead
reinforces it.
EASTERN SHIPPING LINES, INC., vs. PHILIPPINE OVERSEAS
EMPLOYMENTADMINISTRATION (POEA) 166 SCRA 533, G.R. No.
76633, October 18, 1988Petitioner:
Facts:
Vitaliano Saco was Chief Officer of the M/V Eastern Polaris when he was killed in an accident
in Tokyo, Japan on March 15, 1985.His widow sued for damages under Executive Order No.
797 and Memorandum Circular No. 2of the POEA. The petitioner, as owner of the vessel,
argued that the complaint was cognizable not by the POEA but by the Social Security System
and should have been filed against the State Fund Insurance. The POEA nevertheless assumed
jurisdiction and after considering the position papers of the parties ruled in favour of the
complainant. The petition is DISMISSED, with costs against the petitioner. The temporary
restraining order dated December 10, 1986 is hereby LIFTED. It is so ordered.
Issue:
1. Whether or not the POEA had jurisdiction over the case as the husband was not an overseas
worker.
2. Whether or not the validity of Memorandum Circular No. 2 itself as violative of the principle
of non-delegation of legislative power
Held:
1. Yes. The Philippine Overseas Employment Administration was created under Executive
Order No. 797, promulgated on May 1, 1982, to promote and monitor the overseas
employment of Filipinos and to protect their rights. It replaced the National Seamen Board
created earlier under Article 20 of the Labor Code in 1974. Under Section 4(a) of the said
executive order, the POEA is vested with "original and exclusive jurisdiction over all cases,
including money claims, involving employee-employer relations arising out of or by virtue of
any law or contract involving Filipino contract workers, including seamen." These cases,
according to the 1985Rules and Regulations on Over
seas Employment issued by the POEA, include, claims for death, disability and
other benefits arising out of such employment.
The award of P180,000.00 for death benefits and P12,000.00 for burial expenses was made by
the POEA pursuant to its Memorandum Circular No. 2, which became effective on February
1,1984. This circular prescribed a standard contract to be adopted by both foreign and domestic
shipping companies in the hiring of Filipino seamen for overseas employment.2. No.
Memorandum Circular No. 2 is an administrative regulation. The model contract prescribed
thereby has been applied in a significant number of the cases without challenge by the
employer. The power of the POEA (and before it the National Seamen Board) in requiring the
model contract is not unlimited as there is a sufficient standard guiding the delegate in the
exercise of the said authority. That standard is discoverable in the executive order itself which,
in creating the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration, mandated it to protect the
rights of overseas Filipino workers to "fair and equitable employment practices. "GENERAL
RULE: Non-delegation of powers; exception. It is true that legislative discretion as to the
substantive contents of the law cannot be delegated. What can be delegated is the discretion to
determine how the law may be enforced, not what the law shall be. The ascertainment of the
latter subject is a prerogative of the legislature. This prerogative cannot be abdicated or
surrendered by the legislature to the delegate. Two Tests of Valid Delegation of Legislative
Power. There are two accepted tests to determine whether or not there is a valid delegation of
legislative power,
viz
, the completeness test and the sufficient standard test. Under the first test, the law must be
complete in all its terms and conditions when it leaves the legislature such that when it reaches
the delegate the only thing he will have to do is to enforce it. Under the sufficient standard test,
there must be adequate guidelines or stations in the law to map out the boundaries
of the delegates authority and prevent the delegation from running riot.
Both tests are intended to prevent a total transference of legislative authority to the delegate,
who is not allowed to step into the shoes of the legislature and exercise a power essentially
legislative. The delegation of legislative power has become the rule and its non-delegation the
exception.
the Labor Code defines "labor-only" contracting thus Art. 106. Contractor
or subcontractor
. . . . There is "labor-only" contracting where the person supplying workers to an
employer does not have substantial capital or investment in the form of tools,
equipment, machineries, work premises, among others, and the workers recruited
by such persons are performing activities which are directly related to the principal
business of such employer . . . . (emphasis supplied).Based on the foregoing, BCC
cannot be considered a "labor-only" contractor because it has substantial capital.
While there may be no evidence that it has investment in the form of tools,
equipment, machineries, work premises, among others, it is enough that it has
substantial capital, as was established before the Labor Arbiter as well as the
NLRC. In other words, the law does not require both substantial capital and
investment in the form of tools, equipment, machineries, etc. This is clear from the
use of the conjunction "or". If the intention was to require the contractor to prove
that he has both capital and the requisite investment, then the conjunction "and"
should have been used. But, having established that it has substantial capital, it was
no longer necessary for BCC to further adduce evidence to prove that it does not
fall within the purview of "labor-only" contracting. There is even no need for it to
refute petitioners' contention that the activities they perform are directly related to
the principal business of respondent bank. Even assuming that petitioners were
performing activities directly related to the principal business of the bank, under
the" right of control" test they must still be considered employees of BCC. In the
case of petitioner Neri, it is admitted that FEBTC issued a job description which
detailed her functions as a radio/telex operator. However, a cursory reading of the
job description shows that what was sought to be controlled by FEBTC was
actually the end-result of the task,
that the daily incoming and outgoing telegraphic transfer of funds received and
relayed by her, respectively, tallies with that of the register. The guidelines were
laid down merely to ensure that the desired end-result was achieved. It did not,
however, tell Neri how the radio/telex machine should be operated. More
importantly, under the terms and conditions of the contract, it was BCC alone
which had the power to reassign petitioners. Their deployment to FEBTC was not
subject to the bank's acceptance. Cabelin was promoted to messenger because the
FEBTC branch manager promised BCC that two (2) additional janitors would be
hired from the company if the promotion was to be effected. Furthermore, BCC
ISSUE: Where is the proper venue of the case, the RTC or the NLRC?
HELD: The RTC. There was no employer-employee relationship in this case, since
Commando simply sought to collect a sum of money and damages for breach of
contract. The service contract had long since expired. Hence, reference must be
made to the Civil, not Labor Code.
People vs. Panis,142 SCRA 664G.R. Nos. L-58674-77 July 11, 1990
FACTS: Serapio Abug was charged with illegal recruitment. His defense was that
the information filed against him did not constitute an offense because in each of
the four information filed against him, each denote that he was only recruiting one
person whereas the statute requires two or more persons.
ISSUE: Determination of the proper interpretation of Art 13(b) of PD 442/ Labor
Code:
b) Recruitment and placement' refers to any act of canvassing, enlisting,
contracting, transporting, hiring, or procuring workers, and includes referrals,
contract services, promising or advertising for employment, locally or abroad,
whether for profit or not: Provided, That any person or entity which, in any
manner, offers or promises for a fee employment to two or more persons shall be
deemed engaged in recruitment and placement.
HELD: The specification of two or more persons is not to create a condition prior
to filing but rather it states a presumption that the individual is engaged in
recruitment in consideration of a fee, however the number of persons is not an
essential ingredient to the act of recruitment or placement, and it will still qualify
even if only one person has been involved.