Buena Obra v. SSS
Buena Obra v. SSS
Buena Obra v. SSS
212
SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Buena Obra vs. Social Security System
1. A claim was filed for Medicare, retirement with disability,
burial, death claims, or life (disability) insurance, with the GSIS
within three (3) years from the occurrence of the contingency.
2.In the case of the private sector employees, a claim for
Medicare, sickness, burial, disability or death was filed within
three (3) years from the occurrence of the contingency.
3. In any of the foregoing cases, the employees compensation
claim shall be filed with the GSIS or the SSS within a reasonable
time as provided by law. [Emphasis supplied.]
We agree with the petitioner that her claim for death benefits
under the SSS law should be considered as the Employees
Compensation claim itself. This is but logical and reasonable
because the claim for death benefits which petitioner filed with
the SSS is of the same nature as her claim before the ECC.
Furthermore, the SSS is the same agency with which Employees
Compensation claims are filed. As correctly contended by the
petitioner, when she filed her claim for death benefits with the
SSS under the SSS law, she had already notified the SSS of her
employees compensation claim, because the SSS is the very
same
agency
where
claims
for
payment
of
sickness/disability/death benefits under P.D. No. 626 are filed.
Section 4(b)(2), Rule 3 of the ECC Rules of Procedure for the
Filing and Disposition of the Employees Compensation Claims,
quoted above, also provides for the conditions when EC claims
filed beyond the three-year prescriptive period may still be
given due course. Section 4(b)(2) states the condition for
private sector employees, requiring that a claim for Medicare,
sickness, burial, disability or death should be filed within three
(3) years from the occurrence of the contingency. In the instant
case, the petitioner was able to file her claim for death benefits
under the SSS law within the three-year prescriptive period. In
fact, she has been receiving her pension under the SSS law
since November 1988.
It is true that under the proviso, the employees compensation
claim shall be filed with the GSIS/SSS within a reasonable time
as provided by law. It should be noted that neither statute nor
jurisprudence has defined the limits of reasonable time. Thus,
what is reasonable time depends upon the peculiar facts and
circumstances of each case.12 In the case at bar, we also find
petitioners claim to have been filed within a reasonable time
considering the situation and condition of the petitioner. We
have ruled that when the petitioner filed her claim for death
benefits under the SSS law, her claim for the same benefits
under the Employees Compensation Law should be considered
as filed. The evidence shows that the System failed to process
her compensation claim. Under the circumstances, the
petitioner cannot be made to suffer for the lapse committed by
the System. It is the avowed policy of the State to construe
social legislations liberally in favor of the beneficiaries.13 This
court has time and again upheld the policy of liberality of the
law in favor of labor. Presidential Decree No. 626 itself, in its Art.
166 reads:
ART. 166. Policy.The State shall promote and develop a taxexempt employees compensation program whereby employees
and their dependents, in the event of work-connected disability
20, 1977 which states that the strain of work that brought about
the acute attack must be of sufficient severity and must be
followed within 24 hours by the clinical signs of a cardiac insult
to constitute causal relationship. Petitioners husband was
driving a dump truck within the company premises where they
were stacking gravel and sand when he suffered the heart
attack. He had to be taken down from the truck and brought to
the workers quarters where he expired at 10:30 a.m., just a few
minutes after the heart attack, which is much less than the 24
hours required by ECC Resolution No. 432. This is a clear
indication that severe strain of work brought about the acute
attack that caused his death.
SO ORDERED.
Panganiban, Sandoval-Gutierrez, Corona and Carpio-Morales, JJ., concur.
Petition granted, assailed judgment and resolution set aside.
Note.The Employees Compensation Commission may not be
considered as having jurisdiction over money claims, albeit
death compensation benefits, of overseas contract workers.
(Heirs of the Late R/O Reynaldo Aniban vs. NLRC, 282 SCRA 377
[1997])
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