AHS Vs NLRC
AHS Vs NLRC
AHS Vs NLRC
FERNAN, J.:
Assailed in this petition for certiorari with prayer for a writ of preliminary
injunction is the decision dated December 27, 1985 of the National Labor
Relations Commission [NLRC] in NCR-9-3217-84 entitled,
"AHS/Philippines, Inc., Complainant-Appellee, versus AHS/Philippines
Employees Union [FFW], B.A. Aganon, D.T. Guilles, E.G. Sulit and E.C.
Rodriguez, Respondents-Appellants," which affirmed the labor arbiter's
decision declaring the strike held by petitioners as illegal, but with the
modification that individual petitioners be reinstated to their former
positions, or paid separation pay or the economic package offered by the
company, if reinstatement is impossible.[1]
On July 26, 1984, petitioner union filed a notice of strike with the Bureau of
Labor Relations, listing as ground therefor unfair labor practice consisting
in: 1] diminution of benefits, 2] union busting, 3] illegal termination and 4]
harassment.[2] A second notice of strike was thereafter filed on August 3,
1984 on substantially the same grounds and the additional charges of
refusal to bargain, violation of the CBA and dismissal of union officers and
members.[3]
On August 15, 1984, petitioner union struck. A picket was staged at private
respondent company's premises at Pasong Tamo in Makati.
On March 26, 1985, Labor Arbiter Son rendered a decision declaring the
strike staged by petitioner union illegal and ordering the lifting of the picket
established in the premises of private respondent company. All the officers
of the union who joined and were responsible for the declaration of said
strike were deemed to have lost their employment status, while the other
non-officer employees who sympathized and joined the strike were ordered
reinstated to their former or equivalent positions without strike duration
pay, or paid separation pay or the economic package offered by the
company, whichever is higher, in case reinstatement was not possible. [5]
On July 30, 1986, after public and private respondents had submitted their
respective comments to the petition, the Court resolved to dismiss the
petition for lack of merit.[6] A motion for reconsideration filed by union
president Lorenzo Leones and vice-president Ernesto Ilagan[7] was denied
on September 8, 1986.[8] Upon receipt of the notice of said denial,
petitioners forthwith filed a motion with leave of Court to allow petitioners
to file last or final motion for reconsideration, on the ground, among
others, that the first motion for reconsideration was filed by the aforesaid
union officers without the assistance of counsel.[9] The motion was opposed
by private respondent company.[10]
Pending action on this motion, the Kilusang Mayo Uno [KMU] staged a
picket in front of the P. Faura gate of this Court on October 27, 1986 in
protest of the dismissal by the Court of the petition at bar. Reacting to the
circular signed by Nick Elman of the KMU distributed to the public during
the picket, respondent company filed a motion to cite petitioners, the KMU
and Nick Elman in contempt of court. The alleged contemptors, upon
being required, submitted their joint comment on the contempt charge,
[11]
to which respondent company filed a reply.[12]
Meanwhile, the case was heard on November 10, 1986,[13] after which the
Court resolved to require the parties to file their respective memoranda
within 20 days.[14] The parties complied with this order.
In concluding that the strike declared by petitioners was illegal for being
based on trivial grounds, public respondent NLRC ruled on the issues
alleged in the notice of strike in this wise:
2] With respect to the increase in the area sales quota of the union
president and vice-president, the NLRC found the increase justified by the
change in the sales organization in January 1984, whereby each field
representative, instead of carrying both Berna and Pharmaton products,
would concentrate only on either one. It further observed that it was only
after six [6] months after the plan had been in operation and when the
union president failed to meet his quota that said union president filed his
grievance; that the grievance was being threshed out in accordance with the
grievance procedure outlined in the CBA and that any delay in the
resolution thereof was not entirely attributable to the company. Moreover,
respondent NLRC found the setting of the area sales quota not to be ill-
motivated nor related to the president's union activities. Hence, it
concluded that the union president's grievance was not a valid ground for a
strike.[18]
4] Likewise not considered by the NLRC as a valid ground for strike was the
failure of respondent company to provide space for a union office as
stipulated under Art. XV, Section 1 of the CBA. The NLRC attributed such
failure to the complacency exhibited by petitioner union in not taking up
the matter again with respondent company after petitioner union rejected
the set of rules drawn up by respondent company with respect to the use of
the office in accordance with the CBA provision that the use of such office
would be subject to any rules and regulations to be agreed upon by both
union and company.[20]
5] Anent the recall by respondent company of the cars assigned to the field
representatives, the NLRC found no violation of the CBA nor any unfair
labor practice to have been committed by respondent company by reason
thereof. Referring to Art. XIV, Sec. 2 of the CBA which granted to the
assignee of a car to be disposed of the first priority to purchase the car at
fifty [50] percent of the appraised market value, the NLRC found no
indication that the cars were to be disposed of and therefore the CBA
provision invoked by petitioner union had not come into operation. This
being the case, such recall could not be a ground for a strike.[21]
Under the New Labor Code, however, even if the dismissal is based on a
just cause under Art. 284, the one-month written notice to both the affected
employee and the Minister of Labor is required, on top of the separation
pay. Hence, unlike in the old termination pay laws, payment of a month's
salary cannot be considered substantial compliance with the provisions of
Art. 284 of the Labor Code. Since the dismissal of the 31 employees of the
Pharmaceutical Division of respondent company was effected in violation
of the above-cited provision, the same is illegal.
Needless to say, in the absence of a showing that the illegal dismissal was
dictated by anti-union motives, the same does not constitute an unfair labor
practice as would be a valid ground for a strike. The remedy is an action for
reinstatement with backwages and damages. Nevertheless, We take this
actuation of respondent company as evidence of the abusive and oppressive
manner by which the retrenchment was effected. And while the lack of
proper notice could not be a ground for a strike, this does not mean that the
strike staged by petitioner union was illegal because it was likewise
grounded on a violation by respondent company of the CBA, enumerated as
an unfair labor practice under Art. 249 [i] of the Labor Code.
a] the COMPANY agrees that whenever it will lay-off or terminate any
covered employee for economic or other reasons, the UNION shall be
consulted prior to such lay off/termination."[30]
Verily, union president Lorenzo Leones was told by respondent company's
president and managing director, Constancio V. Halili, Jr. on July 25, 1984
about the impending closure, but contrary to the NLRC's assessment, said
notice cannot be taken as a substantial compliance with the above-cited
CBA provision. The July 25, 1984 meeting was called by Halili for the
purpose of discussing Leones' grievance over the latter's increase in area
sales quota. The information about the closure was a mere "by the way" or
an "incidentally", a lip service, which does not constitute compliance in
good faith of the CBA provision on consultation.
In the same manner that We found the dismissal of the 31 employees of the
Pharmaceutical Division in itself not to be constitutive of an unfair labor
practice, so must the dismissal of the 14 rank-and-file employees be
characterized. In the first instance it is not disputed that these employees
were hired by respondent company thru a placement agency. In the
absence of any evidence that the placement agency did not have substantial
capital or investment in the form of tools, equipment machineries, work
premises, among others, We cannot conclude that the arrangement
between respondent company and said placement agency was "Labor-only"
contracting as to make respondent company the direct employer of these 14
employees.[33] In the second place, even if such conclusion is reached and
the 14 employees be deemed regular employees of respondent company,
their dismissal, not having been shown in the least manner to be connected
with union affiliation or activities cannot be considered an unfair labor
practice, and therefore, not a valid ground for a strike.
Although the picket was staged when the motion for leave to file a final and
last motion for reconsideration was still pending action by the Court, the
KMU and Nick Elman, not being parties to the case, were unaware of such
fact. They believed the case to have been finally disposed of in view of the
final denial of the first motion for reconsideration. On the other hand,
there is no sufficient proof that petitioner union had participated in the
picket nor in the preparation of the circular under consideration.
The contempt charge against petitioner union, KMU and Nick Elman is
dismissed.
SO ORDERED.
Gutierrez, Jr., Paras, Padilla, Bidin, and Cortes, JJ., concur.
[1]
Annex "A", Petition, pp. 50-51, Rollo
[2]
Annex "D", Supplemental Memorandum of the Petitioners, p. 285, Rollo
[3]
Annex "D-2", Supplemental Memo, p. 287, Rollo
[4]
Annex "H", Supplemental Memo, p. 292, Rollo.
[5]
p. 24, Rollo
[6]
p. 104, Rollo
[7]
p. 105, Rollo
[8]
p. 131, Rollo
[9]
p. 133, Rollo
[10]
p. 157, Rollo
[11]
p. 193, Rollo
[12]
p. 313, Rollo
[13]
p. 144, Rollo
[14]
p. 165, Rollo
[15]
p. 191, Rollo
[16]
p. 309, Rollo
[17]
pp. 36-37, Rollo
[18]
pp. 37-40, rollo
[19]
pp. 40-41, Rollo
[20]
pp. 41-42, Rollo
[21]
pp. 42-44, Rollo
[22]
Art. 284, Labor Code of the Philippines
[23]
Special Events & Central Shipping Office Workers Union vs. San
Miguel Corporation, 122 SCRA 557
[24]
Art. 19, Civil Code of the Philippines
[25]
135 SCRA 167
[26]
R.A. 1052 and R.A. 1787
[27]
Pepito v. Secretary of Labor, 122 SCRA 834
[28]
Phil. Refining Co., Inc. v. Garcia, et al., 18 SCRA 107
[29]
t.s.n. of 12-12-84 Hearing Page 17
[30]
Exh. "C", p. 19, NLRC Records
[31]
Annex B, Reply to Position Paper, NLRC Records
[32]
T.s.n., 12-12-84 Hearing, p. 54
[33]
Art. 106, Labor Code
[34]
pp. 116-117, Rollo
[35]
Rothenberg on Labor Relations, pp. 401-402
[36]
p. 155, Rollo