The Law On Unions (Labor Code) The Right To Self-Organization
The Law On Unions (Labor Code) The Right To Self-Organization
The Law On Unions (Labor Code) The Right To Self-Organization
REPRESENTATION
ISSUES
ORGANIZED
UNORGANIZED ESTABLISHMEN
T
ESTABLISHMEN
ART 256
T
ART 257 EMPLOYER AS In organized establishments, when a verified
PETITIONER petition questioning the majority status of the
In any establishment where there is no certified incumbent bargaining agent is filed before the
bargaining agent, a certification election shall Department of Labor and Employment within
automatically be conducted by the Med-Arbiter the sixty-day period before the expiration of the
upon the filing of a petition by a legitimate labor collective bargaining agreement, the Med-
organization. (As amended by Section 24, When requested to
Arbiter shall automatically order an election by
Republic Act No. 6715, March 21, 1989)Marchbargain collectively, an secret ballot when the verified petition is
21, 1989) employer may petition
supported by the written consent of at least
the Bureau for an
twenty-five percent (25%) of all the employees
election. If there is no
in the bargaining unit to ascertain the will of the
existing certified
employees in the appropriate bargaining unit.
collective bargaining
To have a valid election, at least a majority of
agreement in the unit,
all eligible voters in the unit must have cast their
the Bureau shall, after
votes. The labor union receiving the majority of
hearing, order a
the valid votes cast shall be certified as the
certification election.
exclusive bargaining agent of all the workers in
All certification cases the unit. When an election which provides for
shall be decided within three or more choices results in no choice
twenty (20) working receiving a majority of the valid votes cast, a
days. run-off election shall be conducted between the
labor unions receiving the two highest number
The Bureau shall of votes: Provided, that the total number of
conduct a certification votes for all contending unions is at least fifty
election within twenty percent (50%) of the number of votes cast. At
(20) days in accordance the expiration of the freedom period, the
with the rules and employer shall continue to recognize the
regulations prescribed majority status of the incumbent bargaining
by the Secretary of agent where no petition for certification election
Labor. is filed. (As amended by Section 23, Republic
Act No. 6715, March 21, 1989)
THE LAW ON UNION, CBA, ULP, AND STRIKES
Determination of Appropriate
Bargaining Unit
The Bargaining
The Principle of Self-
History Rule
Determination
(The Rothenberg
(The Globe Doctrine)
Principle)
The Mutuality of Interest Rule
The Globe Doctrine refers to the Rothenberg has this to say:
method of determining the will or desire (UP V. Calleja, G.R. No 96189,
of the employee which is an important 14 July 1992)
factor in determining the appropriate ... it can be established that the true and
bargaining unit. The best way to
The Court further explained that "(t)he basic inspiration for the employer's act
determine such preference is through
test of the grouping is community or is derived from the employee's union
referendum or plebiscite.
mutuality of interests. And this is so affiliations or activities, the assignment
because 'the basic test of an asserted by the employer or another reason,
bargaining unit's acceptability is whether whatever its semblance of validity, is
or not it is fundamentally the unavailing. Thus, it has been held that
combination which will best assure to all the facts disclosed that the employer's
employees the exercise of their collective acts in discharging employees were
bargaining rights' (Rothenberg on Labor actually prompted by the employers's
Relations, 490)." Hence, in that case, the improper interest in the affected
Court upheld the trial court's conclusion employee's improper interest in the
that two separate bargaining units should affected employee's union affiliations
be formed, one consisting of regular and and activities, even though the employer
permanent employees and another urged that his acts were predicated on
consisting of casual laborers or economic necessity, desire to give
stevedores. employment to more needy persons,
lack of work, cessation of operations,
refusal to work overtime, refusal of
non-union employees to work with
union employees, seasonal lay-off,
libelous remarks against management,
violation of company rules.
(Rothenberg on Labor Relations, pp.
400-401; emphasis supplied.)
THE LAW ON CERTIFICATION ELECTION
BARS TO C.E.
DEADLOCK BAR
BAR
CONTRACT
DWU v. Secretary of
Article 232 Labor
The Bureau shall not entertain any 12 MO. POST C.E. Article 253 of the Labor Code reads: “It
petition for certification election or any BAR shall be the duty of both parties to keep the
other action which may disturb the status quo and to continue in full force and
RARILC
administration of duly registered effect the terms and conditions in full force
existing collective bargaining and effect the terms and conditions of the
agreements affecting the parties except existing agreement until a new agreement
under Articles 253, 253-A and 256 of is reached by the parties.”
this Code. (As amended by Section 15,
Be that as it may, the Court is not inclined
Republic Act No. 6715, March 21,
to rule that there has been a deadlock or an
1989)
impasse in the collective bargaining
process. As the Court earlier observed,
there has not been a "reasonable effort at
good faith bargaining" on the part of the
University. While DWUEU-ALU was
opening all possible avenues for the
conclusion of an agreement, the record is
replete with evidence on the University’s
reluctance and thinly disguised refusal to
bargain with the duly certified bargaining
agent, such that the inescapable conclusion
is that the University evidently had no
intention of bargaining with it. Thus, while
the Court recognizes that technically, the
University has the right to file the petition
for certification election as there was no
bargaining deadlock to speak of, to grant
its prayer that the herein assailed Orders be
annulled would put an unjustified premium
on bad faith bargaining.
THE LAW ON UNION, CBA, ULP, AND STRIKES
COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
Meaning
According to P v. Fernandez
C.M. Aquino v. NLRC, G.R.
“A method of resolving NO. 87653, 11 Feb 1992
disputes over collective
“A process where the parties
interests of labor vis-a-vis
discuss their demand and
those of capital arrived at
counter- demands and, after
through negotiation”
haggling, agree on a
compromise, reflecting
concessions mutually given,
resulting on a contract”
PROCEDURES IN COLLECTIVE
BARGAINING (Article 250)
2
Should differences arise on the basis of such
notice and reply, either party may request for a
conference which shall begin not later than ten
(10) calendar days from the date of request.
4
to participate fully and promptly in the conciliation meetings the
Board may call;
5
settlement of the disputes; and
Any Collective Bargaining Agreement that the parties may Any agreement on such other provisions of the Collective
enter into shall, insofar as the representation aspect is Bargaining Agreement entered into within six (6) months
concerned, be for a term of five (5) years. No petition from the date of expiry of the term of such other provisions as
questioning the majority status of the incumbent bargaining fixed in such Collective Bargaining Agreement, shall retroact
agent shall be entertained and no certification election shall to the day immediately following such date. If any such
be conducted by the Department of Labor and Employment agreement is entered into beyond six months, the parties shall
outside of the sixty-day period immediately before the date of agree on the duration of retroactivity thereof. In case of a
expiry of such five-year term of the Collective Bargaining deadlock in the renegotiation of the Collective Bargaining
Agreement. All other provisions of the Collective Bargaining Agreement, the parties may exercise their rights under this
Agreement shall be renegotiated not later than three (3) years Code.
after its execution.
Require as a condition of employment that a person or an employee shall not join a labor organization or
Those officers and agents of corporations,
associations and partnerships who
2. Authorized it
3. Ratified it
On the part of the Labor Unions/ Labor Organizations (Art 249)
Violate the duty or refuse to bargain collectively with the employer, provided it is the representative of
the employees
Cause or attempt to cause an employer to pay or deliver or agree to pay or deliver any money or other
things of value
ULP Penalties
Strike - any temporary stoppage of work by the concerted action of employees as a result of an
industrial or labor dispute. The requisites of a strike are temporary and the result of a labor
dispute.
1. PEACEFUL
a. If there is NO
- Illegal acts
- Coercion force
- Intimidation
- Threat
b. If there is NO obstruction of
- Ingress
- Egress
- Public thoroughfare
2. DONE IN ACCORDANCE WITH LAW
a. Based on Legal Grounds
- ULP
- Deadlock
- Union-busting
b. Staged by Legitimate Labor
- ULP – any legitimate Labor Org
- Union-Busting – any legitimate Labor Organization
- Deadlock – The Exclusive Bargaining Agent
c. Following the Legal Procedure
- Notice of Strike
o Deadlock – before 30 days
o ULP - 15 days
o Union-Busting – 0 days
- Strike Vote
o Simple Majority
- Strike Vote results
o Submission to DOLE at least 7 days prior to actual strike
- Cooling off
3. CONSISTENT WITH NATIONAL INTEREST
a. If there is no defiance of:
- Assumption order
- Injunction
- Certification order
- Restraining order
- Return to work order
b. If there is no pending case involving the same issue in:
- Compulsory arbitration
- Voluntary Arbitration
- Other Pending
Sanction for Illegal Strike
An Illegal strike does not automatically warrant the wholesale dismissal of strikers. Only the following
strikers can be penalized with loss of employment status:
The law is permissive upon granting to the employer the option of declaring a union
officer who participated in an illegal strike and any striker who committed illegal acts during
the strike as having lost their employment status.
If the strike is illegal, the employer cannot be restrained or enjoined from imposing the
appropriate sanctions against the union officers who knowingly participated in the illegal
strike and against any striking employee who committed illegal acts during the strike.
a. Serious misconduct or willful disobedience by the employee of the lawful orders of his employer
or representative in connection with his work;
o NATHANIEL DONGON VS. RAPID MOVERS AND FORWARDERS CO.INC.,
AND NICANOR JAO; GR. NO. 163431, AUGUST 28, 2013
- The prerogative of the employer to dismiss an employee on the ground of willful
disobedience to company policies must be exercised in good faith and with due
regard to the rights of labor.
Petitioner maintains that willful disobedience could not be a ground for his
dismissal because he had acted in good faith and with the sole intention of
facilitating deliveries for Rapid Movers when he allowed Villaruz to use his
company ID.
Willful disobedience to the lawful orders of an employer is one of the valid
grounds to terminate an employee under Article 296 (formerly Article 282) of the
Labor Code. For willful disobedience to be a ground, it is required that : (a) the
conduct of the employee must be willful or intentional; and (b) the order the
employee violated must have been reasonable, lawful, made known to the
employee, and must pertain to the duties that he had been engaged to discharge.
Under the foregoing standards, the disobedience attributed to petitioner could not
be justly characterized as willful within the contemplation of Article 296 of the
Labor Code. He neither benefitted from it, nor thereby prejudiced the business
interest of Rapid Movers. His explanation that his deed had been intended to
benefit Rapid Movers was credible. There could be no wrong or perversity on his
part that warranted the termination of his employment based on willful
disobedience.
b. Gross and habitual neglect by the employee of his duties;
o CENTURY IRON WORKS, INC., AND BENITO CHUA VS. ELETO BANAS;
GR.NO. 184116, JUNE 19, 2013
- Article 282 of the Labor Code provides that one of the just causes for terminating
an employment is the employees’ gross and habitual neglect of his duties.
To our mind, such numerous infractions are sufficient to hold him grossly and
habitually negligent. His repeated negligence is not tolerable. The totality of
infractions or the number of violations he committed during his employment
merits his dismissal.
Besides, the determination of who to keep in employment and who to dismiss for
cause is one of Century Iron's prerogatives. Time and again, we have recognized
that the employer has the right to regulate, according to its discretion and best
judgment, ell aspects of employment. It would be the height of injustice if we
force an employer to retain the services of an employee who does not value his
work.
c. Fraud or willful breach by the employee of the trust reposed in him by his employer or duly
authorized representative;
o ROLANDO TORRES VS. RURAL BANK OF SAN JUAN, INC., ANDRES CANO
CHUA, ETAL; GR.NO.184520, MARCH 13, 2013
- Further, the law mandates that before validity can be accorded to a dismissal
premised on loss of trust and confidence, two requisites must concur, viz: (1) the
employee concerned must be holding a position of trust; and (2) the loss of trust
must be based on willful... breach of trust founded on clearly established facts.
Anent the second requisite, the Court finds that the respondents failed to meet
their burden of proving that the petitioner's dismissal was for a just cause.
At any rate, the absence of the clearance upon which the contradicting claims of
the parties could ideally be resolved, should work against the respondents. With
only sworn pleadings as proof of their opposite claims on the true contents of the
clearance, the Court is bound to... apply the principle that the scales of justice
should be tilted in favor of labor in case of doubt in the evidence presented.
More importantly, the complained act of the petitioner did not evince intentional
breach of the respondents' trust and confidence. Neither was the petitioner
grossly negligent or unjustified in pursuing the course of action he took.
d. Commission of a crime or offense by the employee against the person of his employer or any
immediate member of his family or his duly authorized representatives; and
o SAMPAGUITA GARMENTS CORPORATION VS. NLRC AND EMILIA
SANTOS; GR. NO. 102406, JUNE 17, 1994
- There is no dispute in the case at bar that the decision of the respondent NLRC or
dering the private respondent’s reinstatement with back wages had indeed becom
e final and executory. Even so, we find, in light of the subsequent developments,
that the NLRC was not correct in sustaining the implementation of that decision.
In Heirs of Francisco Guballa, Sr. vs. Court of Appeals, this Court held that “the
power of the NLRC to issue a writ of execution carries with it the right to look in
to the correctness of the execution of the decision and to consider supervening ev
ents that may affect such execution.”
The affirmance by the Regional Trial Court and the Court of Appeals of the priva
te respondent’s conviction for theft is justification enough for the NLRC to exerc
ise this authority and suspend the execution of its decision. Such conviction, whic
h was also upheld by the Supreme Court, is a supervening cause that rendered unj
ust and inequitable the decision mandating the private respondent’s reinstatement
, and with back wages to boot.
e. Other causes analogous to the foregoing.
o SAMPAGUITA AUTO TRANSPORT CORPORATION VS. NLRC AND EFREN
SAGAD; GR NO. 197384, JANUARY 30, 2013
- Independently of the discussions of the LA, NLRC, and CA about the alleged for
egery of Sagad’s signature in the contract and even if the Court were to consider t
hat Sagad went through a probationary period, the records indicate that he was re
tained even beyond the expiration of his supposed probationary employment on
October 14, 2006. As the NLRC noted, Sagad claimed that he was dismissed by t
he company on November 5, 2006, after he was accused of conniving with condu
ctor Vitola in issuing tickets outside their assigned route. The company never ref
uted this particular assertion of Sagad and its silence can only mean that Sagad re
mained in employment until November 4, 2006, thereby attaining regular status a
s of that date. Under the law, “an employee who is allowed to work after a probat
ionary period shall be considered a regular employee.”.
Voluntary Arbitrator
o Luzon Dev. Bank v. NLRC, G.R. No. 120319, En Banc Oct 6, 1995
- The jurisdiction conferred by law on a voluntary arbitrator or a panel of such
arbitrators is quite limited compared to the original jurisdiction of the labor
arbiter and the appellate jurisdiction of the NLRC for that matter. The
“(d)ecision, awards, or orders of the Labor Arbiter are final and executory unless
appealed to the Commission …” Hence, while there is an express mode of appeal
from the decision of a labor arbiter, Republic Act No. 6715 is silent with respect
to an appeal from the decision of a voluntary arbitrator.
Yet, past practice shows that a decision or award of a voluntary arbitrator is,
more often than not, elevated to the SC itself on a petition for certiorari, in effect
equating the voluntary arbitrator with the NLRC or the CA. In the view of the
Court, this is illogical and imposes an unnecessary burden upon it.
The voluntary arbitrator no less performs a state function pursuant to a
governmental power delegated to him under the provisions therefor in the Labor
Code and he falls, therefore, within the contemplation of the term
“instrumentality” in the aforequoted Sec. 9 of B.P. 129. The fact that his
functions and powers are provided for in the Labor Code does not place him
within the exceptions to said Sec. 9 since he is a quasi-judicial instrumentality as
contemplated therein.
In effect, this equates the award or decision of the voluntary arbitrator with that
of the RTC. Consequently, in a petition for certiorari from that award or
decision, the CA must be deemed to have concurrent jurisdiction with the SC. As
a matter of policy, this Court shall henceforth remand to the Court of Appeals
petitions of this nature for proper disposition.