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Digest - Geraldo vs. The Bill Sender Corporation

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G.R. No.

222219, October 03, 2018

REYNALDO S. GERALDO, Petitioner, v. THE BILL SENDER CORPORATION/MS. LOURDES NER


CANDO, Respondents.

DECISION

PERALTA, J.:

On June 20, 1997, respondent The Bill Sender Corporation, engaged in the business of
delivering bills and other mail matters for and in behalf of their customers, employed petitioner
Reynaldo S. Geraldo as a delivery/messenger man to deliver the bills of its client, the Philippine
Long Distance Telephone Company (PLDT). He was paid on a "per-piece basis," the amount of
his salary depending on the number of bills he delivered.

On February 6, 2012, Geraldo filed a complaint for illegal dismissal alleging that on August 7,
2011, the company's operations manager, Mr. Nicolas Constantino, suddenly informed him that
his employment was being terminated because he failed to deliver certain bills. He explained
that he was not the messenger assigned to deliver the said bills but the manager refused to
reconsider and proceeded with his termination. Thus, he claims that his dismissal was illegal for
being done without the required due process under the law and that the company and its
president, respondent Lourdes Ner Cando, be held liable for his monetary claims. 3

For its part, the company countered that Geraldo was not a full time employee but only a piece-
rate worker as he reported to work only as he pleased and that it was a usual practice for
messengers to transfer from one company to another to similarly deliver bills and mail matters.
As such, he would only be given bills to deliver if he reports to work, otherwise, the bills would
be assigned to other messengers. Moreover, contrary to Geraldo's claims, the company asserts
that he was not illegally dismissed for he was the one who abandoned his job when he no
longer reported for work. Thus, the burden was on him to substantiate his claims for illegal
dismissal.4

Issue:
Whether or not petitioner being a piece-rate employee is not an employee of respondent and
not entitled to security of tenure on the basis of the allegations that petitioner was paid on a
per piece basis.

Held:
The test to determine whether employment is regular or not is the reasonable connection
between the particular activity performed by the employee in relation to the usual business or
trade of the employer. If the employee has been performing the job for at least one year, even
if the performance is not continuous or merely intermittent, the law deems the repeated and
continuing need for its performance as sufficient evidence of the necessity, if not
indispensability, of that activity to the business.

it is undisputed that the company was engaged in the business of delivering bills and other mail
matters for and in behalf of their customers, and that Geraldo was engaged as a
delivery/messenger man tasked to deliver bills of the company's clients. Clearly, the company
cannot deny the fact that Geraldo was performing activities necessary or desirable in its usual
business or trade for without his services, its fundamental purpose of delivering bills cannot be
accomplished. On this basis alone, the law deems Geraldo as a regular employee of the
company.
But even considering that he is not a full time employee, the law still deems his employment as
regular due to the fact that he had been performing the activities for more than one year. In
fact, he has been delivering mail matters for the company for more than fourteen (14) years.
Without question, this amount of time that is well beyond a decade sufficiently discharges the
requirement of the law. While length of time may not be the controlling test to determine if an
employee is indeed a regular employee, it is vital in establishing if he was hired to perform tasks
which are necessary and indispensable to the usual business or trade of the employer.11

The Court, moreover, cannot subscribe to the company's contention that Geraldo is not a
regular employee but merely a piece-rate worker since his salary depends on the number of
bills he is able to deliver. The payment on a piece-rate basis does not negate regular
employment.

The term "wage" is broadly defined in Article 97 of the Labor Code as remuneration or earnings,
capable of being expressed in terms of money whether fixed or ascertained on a time, task,
piece or commission basis. Payment by the piece is just a method of compensation and does
not define the essence of the relations.

Thus, the fact that Geraldo is paid on the basis of his productivity does not render his
employment as contractual.

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