Labor Law 2 Digest
Labor Law 2 Digest
Labor Law 2 Digest
July 3, 1992
FACTS:
In 1988, Med-Arbiter Basa issued an Order granting the petition for
Certification election filed by the Trade Union of the Philippines and Allied
Services (TUPAS). Said order directed the holding of a certification election
among the regular and seasonal workers of the Philippine Fruits and
Vegetables, Inc. After a series of pre-election conferences, all issues relative
to the conduct of the certification election were threshed out except that
which pertains to the voting qualifications of the hundred ninety four (194)
workers enumerated in the lists of qualified voters submitted by TUPAS.
Election transpired and only 168 of the questioned workers actually voted.
This was opposed by the company and objected the proceeding. However, it
was subsequently agreed upon that workers whose names were inadvertently
omitted in the list of qualified voters were allowed to vote, subject to
challenge. Only 38 of them voted in the election. Subsequently, since the
majority votes of the employees were not reached, a need to open the 168
challenged vote was necessary, this was again objected by the company.
Eventually, the petitioner-company filed a protest but was then denied. After
the denial of its motion for reconsideration by the Secretary of Labor, the
company filed for a petition for certiorari in the Court alleging that the
Secretary of Labor committed manifest error in upholding the certification of
TUPAS as the sole bargaining agent mainly on an erroneous ruling that the
protest against the canvassing of the votes cast by 168 dismissed workers
was filed beyond the reglementary period.
HELD:
Yes. The Court ruled that that the formal protest of petitioner PFVII
was filed beyond the reglementary period. Under Section 4, Rule VI, Book V
of the Implementing Rules of the Labor Code:
Sec. 4. Protest to be decided in twenty (20) working days. Where the
protest is formalized before the med-arbiter with five (5) days after the close
of the election proceedings, the med-arbiter shall decide the same within
twenty (20) working days from the date of formalizationxxx
The Court stated the two requirements in order that a protest filed
thereunder would prosper: (1) The protest must be filed with the
representation officer and made of record in the minutes of the proceedings
before the close of election proceedings, and (2) The protest must be
formalized before the Med-Arbiter within five (5) days after the close of the
election proceedings.
The records of the case clearly disclosed that petitioner, after filing a
manifestation of protest on December 16, 1988, election day, only formalized
the same on February 20, 1989, or more than two months after the close of
election proceedings . As explained correctly by the Solicitor General, the
phrase "close of election proceedings" as used in Sections 3 and 4 of the
pertinent Implementing Rules refers to that period from the closing of the
polls to the counting and tabulation of the votes as it could not have been the
intention of the Implementing Rules to include in the term "close of the
election proceedings" the period for the final determination of the challenged
votes and the canvass thereof, as in the case at bar which may take a very
long period. 6 Thus, if a protest can be formalized within five days
FACTS:
ISSUE: Whether or not the NLRC modified the contract-bar rule as asserted
by the petitioners
HELD:
No. The Court recognizes the NLRC in accordance with Rules and
Regulations Re Its Organization and Definition of Functions, which among
other things provide to rule on issues regarding petitions for certification
election of labor org. Further, the Court stated Labor Relations Implementing
Instruction No. 2 establishing rules and regulations concerning certification
elections for use and enforcement of the NLRC.Petitioners, however, contend
that respondent NLRC had no authority to promulgate Section 3 of
Implementing Instructions No. 2 because it violates not only General Order
No. 3 but also the existing jurisprudence on the matter. However,it was
shown that the NLRCs authority to promulgate rules emanates from the
Presidential Decree No. 21.
RATIO: Yes, the Monthly Paid office and technical rank and file employee of
the petitioner enjoy constitutional rights to self organization and collective
bargaining. A "bargaining unit" has been defined as a group of employees of
a given employer, comprised of all or less than all of the entire body of
employees, which the collective interest of all the employees, consistent with
equity to the employer, indicate to be the best suited to serve the reciprocal
rights and duties of the parties under the collective bargaining provisions of
the law. The community or mutuality of interest is therefore the essential
criterion in the grouping. "And this is so because 'the basic test of an
asserted bargaining unit's acceptability is whether or not it is fundamentally
the combination which will best assure to all employees the exercise of their
collective bargaining right. In the case at bench, the evidence established
that the monthly paid rank-and-file employees of petitioner primarily perform
administrative or clerical work. In contradistinction, the petitioner's daily paid
rank-and-file employees mainly work in the cultivation of bananas in the
fields. It is crystal clear the monthly paid rank-and-file employees of
petitioner have very little in common with its daily paid rank-and-file
employees in terms of duties and obligations, working conditions, salary
rates, and skills. This dissimilarity of interests warrants the formation of a
separate and distinct bargaining unit for the monthly paid rank-and-file
employees of the petitioner. To rule otherwise would deny this distinct class
of employees the right to self-organization for purposes of collective
bargaining.