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BLTB Vs NLRC

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Topic: Basis of Right to Engage in Concerted Activities; Statutory

G.R. No. 101858 August 21, 1992


Batangas Laguna Tayabas Bus Company (BLTBCo) vs NLRC

Cruz J.:

FACTS: Tinig at Lakas ng Manggagawa sa BLTBCo NAFLU filed a Notice of Strike against the BLTBCo on the
grounds of unfair labor practice and violation of the CBA. Efforts at amicable settlement having failed, Acting
Labor Secretary Castro certified the dispute to the NLRC. A copy of the certification order was served upon the
union on August 30, 1988.

On August 31, 1988, the officers and members of the union went on strike and maintained picket lines blocking
the premises of BLTBCo's terminals.

On September 6, 1988, the NLRC issued an en banc resolution ordering the striking employees to lift their
picket and to remove all obstructions and barricades. All striking employees on payroll as of May 23, 1988
were required to return to work. BLTBCo, on the other hand, was directed to accept them back to work within 5
days under the same terms and conditions prevailing before the strike. Of the some 1,730 BLTBCo employees
who went on strike, only 1,116 reported back for work. Seventeen others were later re-admitted. Subsequently,
about 614 employees, including those who were allegedly dismissed for causes other than the strike, filed
individual complaints for illegal dismissal. Their common ground was that they were refused admission when
they reported back for work.

On July 19, 1991, the NLRC issued a resolution declaring the strike illegal but directing the reinstatement of all
striking employees who have not committed illegal acts. On September 16, 1991, the NLRC issued the other
challenged resolution denying the Motion for Reconsideration of BLTBCo and Complainant Pepito Abratique
for lack of merit. BLTBCo was likewise directed to reinstate the union members specifically named in the
questioned resolution and all those striking employees who have not committed illegal acts. BLTB then filed
this special civil action for certiorari, claiming that the respondent NLRC committed grave abuse of discretion.

ISSUE: WON the union members who participated in the illegal strike should not have been reinstated on the
ground that they defied the return-to-work order of the NLRC and thus abandoned their position

HELD: No. As correctly declared in the questioned resolution, only the officers of the union deserved to be
penalized with the loss of their employment status, under the principle of vicarious liability. The leaders of the
union are the moving force in the declaration of the strike and the rank-and-file employees merely followed.
While the general membership of the union may have joined the strike at its inception, the Court was
convinced that they returned to work on September 19, 1988 or, immediately thereafter.

The mere fact that the majority of the strikers were able to return to work does not necessarily mean that the
rest deliberately defied the return-to-work order or that they had been sufficiently notified thereof.

A worker who joins a strike does so precisely to assert or improve the terms and conditions of his employment.
If his purpose is to abandon his work, he would not go to the trouble of joining a strike.

The loss of employment status of striking union members is limited to those "who knowingly
participates in the commission of illegal acts." (Article 264, Labor Code) Evidence must be
presented to substantiate the commission thereof and not merely an unsubstantiated allegation.
He who asserts the commission of illegal acts, must prove the same, and it is on the basis of
substantiated evidence that this Commission declares the loss of employment status of specific
union members who have committed illegal acts.

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Additionally, the court held that the right to strike is one of the rights recognized and guaranteed by the
Constitution as an instrument of labor for its protection against exploitation by management. By virtue of this
right, the workers are able to press their demands for better terms of employment with more energy and
persuasiveness, poising the threat to strike as their reaction to the employer's intransigence.

RULING: The petition is DISMISSED. The resolutions dated July 19, 1991, and September 16, 1991, are
AFFIRMED. The temporary restraining order dated November 6, 1991, is LIFTED. Costs against the petitioner.

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