Professional Documents
Culture Documents
o R.A. No. 10395 [March 14, 2013], strengthening tripartism, amending for the purpose Article
290 [275] of the Labor Code, otherwise known as the “Tripartism Law.”
➢ Tripartism in labor relations is hereby declared a State policy. Towards this end, workers
and employers shall, as far as practicable, be represented in decision and policy-making
bodies of the government.
o R.A. No. 10396 [March 14, 2013], strengthening conciliation-mediation as a voluntary mode of
dispute settlement for all labor cases, amending for this purpose Article 234 [228] of the Labor
Code, otherwise known as the “Mandatory Conciliation-Mediation Law.”
o R.A. No. 10361 [January 18, 2013], instituting policies for the protection and welfare of
domestic workers, otherwise known as the “Domestic Workers Act” or “Batas Kasambahay.”
o R.A. No. 10151 [June 21, 2011], allowing the employment of night workers, thereby repealing
Articles 130 and 131 of Presidential Decree Number Four Hundred Forty-Two, as amended,
otherwise known as the Labor Code of the Philippines.
o R.A. No. 10022 [March 8, 2010], amending R.A. No. 8042, otherwise known as the Migrant
Workers and Overseas Filipinos Act of 1995, as amended, further improving the standard of
protection and promotion of the welfare of migrant workers, their families and overseas Filipinos
in distress and for other purposes.
1 Formerly, Omnibus Rules and Regulations Implementing R.A. No. 8042 jointly issued by the Secretary of Foreign Affairs and Secretary of Labor and Employment on February 29,
1996;
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2. Revised POEA Rules and Regulations Governing the Recruitment and Employment of
Land-Based Overseas Filipino Workers of 2016;1 and
3. 2016 Revised POEA Rules and Regulations Governing the Recruitment and Employment
of Seafarers issued on February 26, 2016.2
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SYLLABUS
MAJOR TOPIC 1
FUNDAMENTAL PRINCIPLES AND CONCEPTS
A.
CONSTITUTIONAL PROVISIONS
a. FIRST OF TWO PROTECTION-TO-LABOR CLAUSES: “Section 18. The State affirms labor as
a primary social economic force. It shall protect the rights of workers and promote their welfare.
b. Freedom of speech, of expression, or of the press, or the right of the people peaceably to assemble
and petition the government for redress of grievances.
NOTE: THIS FREEDOM IS RELEVANT ONLY IN PICKETING AND NOT IN STRIKE.
c. Right of public and private sector employees to form unions, associations, or societies for purposes
not contrary to law shall not be abridged.
NOTE: THIS IS KNOWN AS “FREEDOM OF ASSOCIATION.” THIS PROVISION IS THE BASIS
FOR THE EMPLOYEES’ RIGHT TO SELF-ORGANIZATION.
1 Formerly, POEA Rules and Regulations Governing the Recruitment and Employment of Land-Based Overseas Workers issued on February 4, 2002.
2 Formerly, POEA Rules and Regulations Governing the Recruitment and Employment of Seafarers issued on May 23, 2003.
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They shall be entitled to security of tenure, humane conditions of work, and a living wage. They shall
also participate in policy and decision-making processes affecting their rights and benefits as may be
provided by law.
The State shall promote the principle of shared responsibility between workers and employers and
the preferential use of voluntary modes in settling disputes, including conciliation, and shall enforce
their mutual compliance therewith to foster industrial peace.
The State shall regulate the relations between workers and employers, recognizing the right of
labor to its just share in the fruits of production and the right of enterprises to reasonable returns to
investments, and to expansion and growth.
• May cases be filed for violation of the foregoing constitutional provisions?
The labor-related provisions of the Constitution are merely statements of principles and are all NOT self-
executing provisions. They are used only as guides for judicial decisions or legislative enactments. Being
mere statement of principles and policies, no case can be filed for their violation. Only violation of the laws
passed to implement these principles and policies can be proper subject of court litigation.
• What are the kinds of procedural due process that may be asserted in labor cases?
The following are the kinds of procedural due process that may be invoked in labor cases, to wit:
(1) Procedural due process that may be invoked against the employer during the investigation of the
employee’s administrative case at the company-level that may lead to his dismissal:
a. Statutory due process per Agabon doctrine which refers to the due process provision in the Labor
Code (Article 277[b]); and
b. Contractual due process per Abbott Laboratories doctrine which refers to the due process
prescribed in the Company Rules and Regulations or Code of Conduct or Code of Discipline.
NOTE: CONSTITUTIONAL DUE PROCESS UNDER ARTICLE III, SECTION 1 OF THE
CONSTITUTION CANNOT BE INVOKED AGAINST A PRIVATE PARTY LIKE THE
EMPLOYER. IT CAN ONLY BE ASSERTED AGAINST THE STATE OR GOVERNMENT.
HENCE, THE EMPLOYEE BEING INVESTIGATED CANNOT INVOKE CONSTITUTIONAL
DUE PROCESS BUT ONLY STATUTORY AND CONTRACTUAL DUE PROCESS.
(2) Procedural due process that may be invoked once a case has already been filed in the labor court, such
as the Labor Arbiter or the NLRC, and/or brought to higher courts:
a. Constitutional due process under Section 1, Article III of the Constitution since this right cannot be
invoked against the private employer but only against the State or government as represented by
Labor Arbiters, NLRC, CA and SC.
The rule since Agabon is that compliance with the statutorily-prescribed procedural due process under
Article 292(b) [277(b)] of the Labor Code would suffice. It is not important in determining the validity of the
termination whether there is an existing company policy which also enunciates the procedural due process in
termination cases. However, under the latest doctrinal en banc ruling in the 2013 case of Abbott Laboratories,
Philippines v. Pearlie Ann F. Alcaraz, it is now required that in addition to compliance with the statutory due
process, the employer should still comply with the due process procedure prescribed in its own company rules now
called CONTRACTUAL DUE PROCESS. The employer’s failure to observe its own company-prescribed due
process, IN ADDITION TO STATUTORY DUE PROCESS, will make it liable to pay an indemnity in the form
of nominal damages, the amount of which is similar to the P30,000.00 awarded under the Agabon doctrine.
• When can an employee invoke constitutional due process and right to equal protection of the laws?
As distinguished from company-level investigation conducted by the employer where only STATUTORY
and CONTRACTUAL DUE PROCESS can be invoked, a dismissed employee can invoke constitutional due
process only when he files an illegal dismissal case in the labor court and he is deprived due process by a
government functionary like the Labor Arbiter or the Commission (NLRC), or Court of Appeals on Rule 65
certiorari petition. The reason is that, at this stage, the government is now involved through said labor tribunals.
• Is right to counsel mandatory?
No. Per the prevailing Lopez doctrine (see 2011 case of Lopez v. Alturas Group of Companies), the right to
counsel is neither indispensable nor mandatory. It becomes mandatory only in two (2) situations:
(1) When the employee himself requests for counsel; or
(2) When he manifests that he wants a formal hearing on the charges against him, in which case,
he should be assisted by counsel.
B.
NEW CIVIL CODE
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C.
THE LABOR CODE
• What are the distinctions between Labor Relations and Labor Standards?
“Labor standards law” is that part of labor law which prescribes the minimum terms and conditions of
employment which the employer is required to grant to its employees.
“Labor relations law” is that part of labor law (Book V of the Labor Code) which deals with unionism,
collective bargaining, grievance machinery, voluntary arbitration, strike, picketing and lockout.
Labor relations and labor standards laws are not mutually exclusive. They are complementary to, and
closely interlinked with, each other. For instance, the laws on collective bargaining, strikes and lockouts which are
covered by labor relations law necessarily relate to the laws on working conditions found in Book III.
• What is a SEBA?
An “exclusive bargaining representative” or “exclusive bargaining agent” or Sole and Exclusive
Bargaining Agent (SEBA), refers to a legitimate labor organization duly certified as the sole and exclusive
bargaining representative or agent of all the employees in a bargaining unit.
Note must be made of the latest innovative amendment of the Labor Code’s Implementing Rules introduced
by Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015, which has expressly repealed the entire provision on “Voluntary
Recognition” of the Implementing Rules on Book V and replaced it with the freshly-minted mode of securing the
status of a sole and exclusive bargaining agent through a “Request for SEBA Certification” or “Request.”
Voluntary recognition is therefore no longer allowed and is effectively replaced by the Request mode.
(NOTE: This is extensively discussed in Major Topic No. 7 (Labor Relations, infra)
• Can individual employee or group of employees bring grievable issues directly to their employer without the
participation of the SEBA?
Yes. The designation of a SEBA does not deprive an individual employee or group of employees to
exercise their right at any time to present grievances to their employer, with or without the intervention of the
SEBA.
• Can individual employee or group of employees bring grievable issues to voluntary arbitration without the
participation of the SEBA?
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No, as held in the 2009 case of Tabigue v. International Copra Export Corporation, where the Supreme
Court clarified that an individual employee or group of employees cannot be allowed to submit or refer unsettled
grievances for voluntary arbitration without the participation of the SEBA. The reason is that it is the SEBA
which is a party to the CBA which contains the provision on voluntary arbitration. Being a party thereto, the
SEBA cannot be disregarded when a grievable issue will be submitted for voluntary arbitration.
In order to have legal standing, the individual members should be shown to have been duly
authorized to represent the SEBA. (NOTE: Insular Hotel Employees Union-NFL v. Waterfront Insular Hotel
Davao, Sept. 22, 2010, reiterated Tabigue).
• What is the principle of co-determination?
The principle of co-determination refers to the right given to the employees to co-determine or share the
responsibility of formulating certain policies that affect their rights, benefits and welfare.
In PAL v. NLRC, it was held that the formulation of a Code of Discipline among employees is a shared
responsibility of the employer and the employees. It affirmed the decision of the NLRC which ordered that the New
Code of Discipline should be reviewed and discussed with the union, particularly the disputed provisions and that
copies thereof be furnished each employee.
• Does the grant of the right of participation mean co-management of business or intrusion into management
prerogatives?
No. This principle does not mean that workers should approve management policies or decisions.
• What is Labor-Management Council (LMC)?
The establishment of Labor-Management Council (LMC) is mandated under the said constitutional
principle of co-determination.
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SYLLABUS
MAJOR TOPIC 2
RECRUITMENT AND PLACEMENT
A.
ILLEGAL RECRUITMENT
• What are illegal recruitment acts that can be committed by No. 1 above (NON-LICENSEE or NON-HOLDER
OF AUTHORITY)?
When what is committed by such NON-LICENSEES or NON-HOLDERS OF AUTHORITY is
any of the acts of recruitment allowed only to be done by licensees or holders of authority such as the
act of canvassing, enlisting, contracting, transporting, utilizing, hiring, or procuring workers and
includes referring, contract services, promising or advertising for employment abroad, whether for
profit or not.
In other words, had they possessed of license or authority, their commission of any of the
foregoing acts could have been valid and not constitutive of illegal recruitment.
NOTE: The non-licensee or non-holder of authority is presumed to be engaged in such recruitment
if he in any manner, offers or promises for a fee employment abroad to two or more persons.
• What are acts of illegal recruitment when committed by ANY PERSON, whether a NON-LICENSEE,
NON-HOLDER OF AUTHORITY or even by a LICENSEE or HOLDER OF AUTHORITY?
(a) To charge or accept, directly or indirectly, any amount greater than that specified in the
schedule of allowable fees prescribed by the DOLE Secretary, or to make a worker pay or
acknowledge any amount greater than that actually received by him as a loan or advance;
(b) To furnish or publish any false notice or information or document in relation to recruitment or
employment;
(c) To give any false notice, testimony, information or document or commit any act of
misrepresentation for the purpose of securing a license or authority under the Labor Code, or
for the purpose of documenting hired workers with the POEA, which include the act of
reprocessing workers through a job order that pertains to non-existent work, work different from
the actual overseas work, or work with a different employer whether registered or not with the
POEA;
(d) To induce or attempt to induce a worker already employed to quit his employment in order to
offer him another unless the transfer is designed to liberate a worker from oppressive terms and
conditions of employment;
(e) To influence or attempt to influence any person or entity not to employ any worker who has not
applied for employment through his agency or who has formed, joined or supported, or has
contacted or is supported by any union or workers' organization;
(f) To engage in the recruitment or placement of workers in jobs harmful to public health or
morality or to the dignity of the Republic of the Philippines;
(g) To fail to submit reports on the status of employment, placement vacancies, remittance of
foreign exchange earnings, separation from jobs, departures and such other matters or
information as may be required by the Secretary of Labor and Employment;
(h) To substitute or alter to the prejudice of the worker, employment contracts approved and
verified by the DOLE from the time of actual signing thereof by the parties up to and including the
period of the expiration of the same without the approval of the DOLE;
(i) For an officer or agent of a recruitment or placement agency to become an officer or member of
the Board of any corporation engaged in travel agency or to be engaged directly or indirectly in
the management of travel agency;
(j) To withhold or deny travel documents from applicant workers before departure for monetary or
financial considerations, or for any other reasons, other than those authorized under the Labor
Code and its implementing rules and regulations;
(k) Failure to actually deploy a contracted worker without valid reason as determined by the
Department of Labor and Employment;
(l) Failure to reimburse expenses incurred by the worker in connection with his documentation and
processing for purposes of deployment, in cases where the deployment does not actually take
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place without the worker's fault. Illegal recruitment when committed by a syndicate or in large
scale shall be considered an offense involving economic sabotage; and
(m) To allow a non-Filipino citizen to head or manage a licensed recruitment/manning agency.”
PROHIBITED ACTIVITIES
IN RELATION TO ILLEGAL RECRUITMENT
• What are the PROHIBITED ACTIVITIES in connection with recruitment for overseas employment?
Besides illegal recruitment, the law additionally provides that it shall also be unlawful for any person or
entity to commit the following prohibited acts:
(1) Grant a LOAN to an overseas Filipino worker with interest exceeding eight percent (8%) per annum, which
will be used for payment of legal and allowable placement fees and make the migrant worker issue, either
personally or through a guarantor or accommodation party, post-dated checks in relation to the said loan;
(2) Impose a compulsory and exclusive arrangement whereby an overseas Filipino worker is required to avail of a
LOAN only from specifically designated institutions, entities or persons;
(3) Refuse to condone or renegotiate a LOAN incurred by an overseas Filipino worker after the latter's employment
contract has been prematurely terminated through no fault of his or her own;
(4) Impose a compulsory and exclusive arrangement whereby an overseas Filipino worker is required to undergo
HEALTH EXAMINATIONS only from specifically designated medical clinics, institutions, entities or
persons, except in the case of a seafarer whose medical examination cost is shouldered by the principal/
shipowner;
(5) Impose a compulsory and exclusive arrangement whereby an overseas Filipino worker is required to undergo
TRAINING, SEMINAR, INSTRUCTION OR SCHOOLING of any kind only from specifically designated
institutions, entities or persons, except for recommendatory trainings mandated by principals/shipowners
where the latter shoulder the cost of such trainings;
(6) For a SUSPENDED RECRUITMENT/MANNING AGENCY to engage in any kind of recruitment activity
including the processing of pending workers' applications; and
(7) For a recruitment/manning agency or a foreign principal/employer to pass on the overseas Filipino worker or
deduct from his or her salary the payment of the cost of INSURANCE fees, premium or other insurance
related charges, as provided under the compulsory worker's INSURANCE coverage.
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1. The number of persons victimized is determinative of the crime. A conviction for large scale illegal recruitment
must be based on a finding in each case of illegal recruitment of three (3) or more persons having been
recruited, whether individually or as a group.
2. Failure to prove at least 3 persons recruited makes the crime a case of simple illegal recruitment.
3. There is no illegal recruitment in large scale based on several informations filed by only one complainant.
4. The number of offenders is not material in illegal recruitment in large scale.
5. Recruitment in large scale or by a syndicate is malum prohibitum and not malum in se.
• What is the nature of the liability between local recruiter and its foreign principal?
The nature of their liability is “solidary” or “joint and several” for any and all claims arising out of the
employment contract of OFWs.
• Is the solidary liability of corporate officers with the recruitment agency “automatic” in character?
No. In order to hold the officers of the agency solidarily liable, it is required that there must be proof of
their culpability therefor. Thus, it was held in the 2013 case of Gagui v. Dejero,1 that while it is true that R.A. 8042
and the Corporation Code provide for solidary liability, this liability must be so stated in the decision sought to be
implemented. Absent this express statement, a corporate officer may not be impleaded and made to personally
answer for the liability of the corporation.
• What are some relevant principles on the persons liable for illegal recruitment?
1. Employees of a licensed recruitment agency may be held liable for illegal recruitment as principal by direct
participation, together with his employer, if it is shown that he actively and consciously participated in illegal
recruitment.
2. Good faith and merely following orders of superiors are not valid defenses of an employee.
3. A manager of a recruitment/manning agency is not a mere employee. As such, he receives job applications,
interviews applicants and informs them of the agency’s requirement of payment of performance or cash bond
prior to the applicant’s deployment. As the crewing manager, he was at the forefront of the company’s
recruitment activities.
THEORY OF IMPUTED KNOWLEDGE
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employment contract extension, it cannot be said to be privy thereto. As such, Sunace and its owner cannot be held
solidarily liable for any of Divina’s claims arising from the 2-year employment extension. As the New Civil Code
provides: “Contracts take effect only between the parties, their assigns, and heirs, except in case where the rights and
obligations arising from the contract are not transmissible by their nature, or by stipulation or by provision of law.”
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No. They are not entitled to such reliefs under Article 279 as reinstatement or separation pay in lieu of
reinstatement or full backwages.
• What are the reliefs to which OFWs are entitled?
They are entitled to the reliefs provided under Section 10 of R.A. No. 8042, as amended, to wit:
(1) All salaries for the unexpired portion of the contract;
(2) Full reimbursement of placement fees and deductions made with interest at 12% per annum.
All the reliefs available to an illegally dismissed OFW are always monetary in nature.
It must be noted that under the 2009 Serrano doctrine, (Serrano v. Gallant Maritime Services, Inc.,),1 an
illegally dismissed OFW is now entitled to all the salaries for the entire unexpired portion of their employment
contracts, irrespective of the stipulated term or duration thereof. The underlined phrase in Section 10 below has
been declared unconstitutional in this case:
“In case of termination of overseas employment without just, valid or authorized cause as defined
by law or contract, or any unauthorized deductions from the migrant worker's salary, the worker shall be
entitled to the full reimbursement of his placement fee and the deductions made with interest at twelve
percent (12%) per annum, plus his salaries for the unexpired portion of his employment contract or for
three (3) months for every year of the unexpired term, whichever is less.”
However, R.A. No. 10022 (March 8, 2010), which amended R.A. No. 8042 (Migrant Workers and Overseas
Filipinos Act of 1995), has replicated and re-enacted the same unconstitutional provision exactly as above quoted.
The question is: was the unconstitutionality of the above-underlined part of the provision cured by such
replication or re-enactment in the amendatory law?
The 2014 en banc case of Sameer Overseas Placement Agency, Inc. v. Joy C. Cabiles,2 answered this in
the negative. The said provision was thus declared still unconstitutional and null and void despite its replication in
R.A. No. 10022.
1. Monetary award to OFW is not in the nature of separation pay or backwages but a form of indemnity.
2. Only salaries are to be included in the computation of the amount due for the unexpired portion of the contract.
Overtime, holiday and leave pay and allowances are not included. However, this rule on exclusion of
allowance does not apply in case it is encapsulated in the basic salary clause.
3. Entitlement to overtime pay of OFWs. - As far as entitlement to overtime pay is concerned, the correct
criterion in determining whether or not sailors are entitled to overtime pay is not whether they were on board
and cannot leave ship beyond the regular eight (8) working hours a day, but whether they actually rendered
service in excess of said number of hours. An OFW is not entitled to overtime pay, even if guaranteed, if he
failed to present any evidence to prove that he rendered service in excess of the regular eight (8) working hours
a day.
4. In case of unauthorized deductions from OFW’s salary, he shall be entitled to the full reimbursement of the
deductions made with interest at 12% per annum. This is in addition to the full reimbursement of his placement
fee with the same interest of 12% per annum plus his salaries for the unexpired portion of his employment
contract if he is terminated without just, valid or authorized cause as defined by law or contract.
• Which/Who has jurisdiction over an OFW’s claims for disability and death benefits?
a) The Labor Arbiters, NOT the SSS, have jurisdiction over claims for disability, death and other benefits
of OFWs.
b) Labor Arbiters have jurisdiction even if the case is filed by the heirs of the deceased OFW.
• Is the Labor Code’s concept of permanent total disability similar to that of OFWs?
Yes. The concept of this kind of disability under Article 192 of the Labor Code is applicable to them as
reiterated lately in the 2013 case of Kestrel Shipping Co., Inc. v. Munar.
• What are the requisites for compensability of injury or illness of seafarers?
1. It should be work-related; and
2. The injury or illness existed during the term of the seafarer’s employment contract.
2 G.R. No. 170139, Aug. 05, 2014. The foreign employer alleged in this case that respondent’s dismissal was due to inefficiency in her work and negligence in her duties.
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DIRECT HIRING
▪ Does the POEA Administrator or the DOLE Secretary or DOLE Regional Director have the power to issue
closure order?
Yes. If upon preliminary examination or surveillance, the DOLE Secretary, the POEA Administrator or
DOLE Regional Director is satisfied that such danger or exploitation exists, a written order may be issued for the
closure of the establishment being used for illegal recruitment activity.
• Does the DOLE Secretary have the power to issue warrant of arrest and search and seizure orders?
No. Salazar v. Achacoso,1 declared that the exercise by the DOLE Secretary of his twin powers to issue
arrest warrant and search and seizure orders provided under Article 38[c] of the Labor Code is unconstitutional.
Only regular courts can issue such orders.
REMITTANCE OF FOREIGN EXCHANGE EARNINGS
B.
EMPLOYMENT OF NON-RESIDENT ALIENS
• What are the categories of foreign nationals EXEMPTED from securing AEP?
a) All members of the diplomatic service and foreign government officials accredited by and with reciprocity
arrangement with the Philippine government;
b) Officers and staff of international organizations of which the Philippine government is a member, and their
legitimate spouses desiring to work in the Philippines;
c) All foreign nationals granted exemption by law;
d) Owners and representatives of foreign principals whose companies are accredited by the POEA, who come to
the Philippines for a limited period and solely for the purpose of interviewing Filipino applicants for
employment abroad;
e) Foreign nationals who come to the Philippines to teach, present and/or conduct research studies in
universities and colleges as visiting, exchange or adjunct professors under formal agreements between the
universities or colleges in the Philippines and foreign universities or colleges; or between the Philippine
government and foreign government: provided that the exemption is on a reciprocal basis; and
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f) Permanent resident foreign nationals and probationary or temporary resident visa holders under Section 13 of
the Philippine Immigration Act of 1940.
• What are the categories of foreign nationals EXCLUDED from securing AEP?
a) Members of the governing board with voting rights only and do not intervene in the management of the
corporation or in the day-to-day operation of the enterprise.
b) Corporate officers as provided under the Corporation Code of the Philippines, Articles of Incorporation,
and By-laws of the Corporation such as President, Secretary and Treasurer.
c) Those providing consultancy services who do not have employers in the Philippines.
d) Intra-corporate transferee who is a manager, executive or specialist as defined below in accordance with
Trade Agreements and an employee of the foreign service supplier for at least one (1) year prior to
deployment to a branch, subsidiary, affiliate or representative office in the Philippines:
(i) an EXECUTIVE: a natural person within the organization who primarily directs the management of
the organization and exercises wide latitude in decision making and receives only general supervision
or direction from higher level executives, the board of directors or stockholders of the business; an
executive would not directly perform tasks related to the actual provision of the service or services of
the organization;
(ii) a MANAGER: a natural person within the organization who primarily directs the organization/
department/ subdivision and exercises supervisory and control functions over other supervisory,
managerial or professional staff; does not include first-line supervisors unless employees supervised
are professionals; does not include employees who primarily perform tasks necessary for the provision
of the service; or
(iii) a SPECIALIST: a natural person within the organization who possesses knowledge at an advanced
level of expertise essential to the establishment/provision of the service and/or possesses proprietary
knowledge of the organization's service, research equipment, techniques or management; may include,
but is not limited to, members of a licensed profession.
e) Contractual service supplier who is a manager, executive or specialist and an employee of a foreign service
supplier which has no commercial presence in the Philippines:
(i) who enters the Philippines temporarily to supply a service pursuant to a contract between his/her
employer and a service consumer in the Philippines;
(ii) must possess the appropriate educational and professional qualifications; and
(iii) must be employed by the foreign service supplier for at least one (1) year prior to the supply of service
in the Philippines.
1.
APPRENTICES AND LEARNERS
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2.
DISABLED WORKERS
(PERSONS WITH DISABILITY)
(R.A. No. 7277, as Amended by R.A. No. 9442)
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SYLLABUS
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MAJOR TOPIC 3
LABOR STANDARDS
A.
CONDITIONS OF EMPLOYMENT
1.
SCOPE
• Who are covered by the labor standards provisions of the Labor Code?
Employees in ALL establishments, whether operated for profit or not, are covered by the law on labor
standards.
• Who are excluded?
The following are excluded from the coverage of the law on labor standards:
a. Government employees;
b. Managerial employees;
c. Other officers or members of a managerial staff;
d. Domestic workers or kasambahay and persons in the personal service of another;
e. Workers paid by results;
f. Non-agricultural field personnel; and
g. Members of the family of the employer.
2.
HOURS OF WORK
a.
PRINCIPLES IN DETERMINING HOURS WORKED
“Fair day’s wage for a fair day’s labor,” remains the basic factor in determining the employees’
wages and backwages.
b.
NORMAL HOURS OF WORK
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ii.
POWER INTERRUPTIONS/BROWNOUTS
d.
WAITING TIME
(Article 84, Labor Code)
e.
OVERTIME
(Article 87, Labor Code)
a. For overtime work performed on an ORDINARY DAY, the overtime pay is plus 25% of the
basic hourly rate.
b. For overtime work performed on a REST DAY OR ON A SPECIAL DAY, the overtime pay
is plus 30% of the basic hourly rate which includes 30% additional compensation as provided in
Article 93 [a] of the Labor Code.
c. For overtime work performed on a REST DAY WHICH FALLS ON A SPECIAL DAY, the
overtime pay is plus 30% of the basic hourly rate which includes 50% additional compensation
as provided in Article 93 [c] of the Labor Code.
d. For overtime work performed on a REGULAR HOLIDAY, the overtime pay is plus 30% of
the basic hourly rate which includes 100% additional compensation as provided in Article 94
[b] of the Labor Code.
e. For overtime work performed on a REST DAY WHICH FALLS ON A REGULAR
HOLIDAY, the overtime pay is plus 30% of the basic hourly rate which includes 160%
additional compensation.
• May an employee validly refuse to render overtime work under any of the afore-said circumstances?
No. When an employee refuses to render emergency overtime work under any of the foregoing conditions,
he may be dismissed on the ground of insubordination or willful disobedience of the lawful order of the
employer.
f.
NIGHT SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL
(ARTICLE 86, LABOR CODE)
• How is it reckoned and computed?
Night shift differential is equivalent to 10% of employee's regular wage for each hour of work performed
between 10:00 p.m. and 6:00 a.m. of the following day.
• What is the distinction between night shift differential pay and overtime pay?
When the work of an employee falls at night time, the receipt of overtime pay shall not preclude the right to
receive night differential pay. The reason is the payment of the night differential pay is for the work done during the
night; while the payment of the overtime pay is for work in excess of the regular eight (8) working hours.
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g.
REST PERIODS
1.
WEEKLY REST DAY
Yes. The employer shall determine and schedule the weekly rest day of his employees subject to CBA and
to such rules and regulations as the DOLE Secretary may provide. However, the employer shall respect the
preference of employees as to their weekly rest day when such preference is based on religious grounds.
2.
EMERGENCY REST DAY WORK
• When can an employer require work on a rest day?
The employer may require any of its employees to work on their scheduled rest day for the duration of the
following emergency and exceptional conditions:
a. In case of actual or impending emergencies caused by serious accident, fire, flood, typhoon, earthquake,
epidemic or other disaster or calamity, to prevent loss of life and property, or in case of force majeure or
imminent danger to public safety;
b. In case of urgent work to be performed on machineries, equipment, or installations, to avoid serious
loss which the employer would otherwise suffer;
c. In the event of abnormal pressure of work due to special circumstances, where the employer cannot
ordinarily be expected to resort to other measures;
d. To prevent serious loss of perishable goods;
e. Where the nature of the work is such that the employees have to work continuously for seven (7) days
in a week or more, as in the case of the crew members of a vessel to complete a voyage and in other
similar cases; and
f. When the work is necessary to avail of favorable weather or environmental conditions where
performance or quality of work is dependent thereon.
h.
HOLIDAY PAY/PREMIUM PAY
1.
COVERAGE, EXCLUSIONS
a. Those of the government and any of the political subdivisions, including government-owned and
controlled corporations;
b. Those of retail and service establishments regularly employing less than ten (10) workers;
c. Domestic workers or Kasambahays;
d. Persons in the personal service of another;
e. Managerial employees as defined in Book III of the Labor Code;
f. Field personnel and other employees whose time and performance is unsupervised by the employer;
g. Those who are engaged on task or contract basis or purely commission basis;
h. Those who are paid a fixed amount for performing work irrespective of the time consumed in the
performance thereof;
i. Other officers and members of the managerial staff;
j. Members of the family of the employer who are dependent on him for support.
• What are REGULAR and SPECIAL HOLIDAYS?
A. Regular Holidays
New Year’s Day - 1 January (Wednesday)
Araw ng Kagitingan- 9 April (Wednesday)
Maundy Thursday - 17 April
Good Friday - 18 April
Labor Day - 1 May (Thursday)
Independence Day - 12 June (Thursday)
National Heroes Day- 25 August (Last Monday of August)
Bonifacio Day - 30 November (Sunday)
Christmas Day - 25 December (Thursday)
Rizal Day - 30 December (Tuesday)
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• If the employee worked in excess of eight hours (overtime work), he/she shall be paid an additional 30
percent of his/her hourly rate on said day. Computation: Hourly rate of the basic daily wage x 200% x
130% x number of hours worked.
• If the employee worked during a regular holiday that also falls on his/her rest day, he/she shall be paid
an additional 30 % of his/her daily rate of 200 %. Computation: (Daily rate + COLA) x 200%] + (30%
[Daily rate x 200%)].
• If the employee worked in excess of eight hours (overtime work) during a regular holiday that also
falls on his/her rest day, he/she shall be paid an additional 30 % of his/her hourly rate on said day.
Computation: (Hourly rate of the basic daily wage x 200% x 130% x 130% x number of hours
worked);
b. Special (Non-Working) Days
• If the employee did not work, the “no work, no pay” principle shall apply, unless there is a favorable
company policy, practice, or CBA granting payment on a special day.
• If the employee worked, he/she shall be paid an additional 30 % of his/her daily rate on the first eight
hours of work. Computation: [(Daily rate x 130%) + COLA).
• If the employee worked in excess of eight hours (overtime work), he/she shall be paid an additional 30
% of his/her hourly rate on said day. Computation: (Hourly rate of the basic daily wage x 130% x
130% x number of hours worked).
• If the employee worked during a special day that also falls on his/her rest day, he/she shall be paid an
additional 50% of his/her daily rate on the first eight hours of work. Computation: [(Daily rate x 150%)
+ COLA].
• If the employee worked in excess of eight hours (overtime work) during a special day that also falls on
his/her rest day, he/she shall be paid an additional 30 % of his/her hourly rate on said day.
Computation: (Hourly rate of the basic daily wage x 150% x 130% x number of hours worked).
c. Special Holiday for all schools
• For private establishments, 25 February 2014 is an ordinary workday and no premium is required to be
paid for work on said day.
• On the other hand, employees in private schools, whether academic or administrative personnel, shall
be paid in accordance with the rules for pay on special (non-working) days as stated above.
• What are the effects of absences on the computation of holiday pay?
1. Employees on leave of absence with pay - entitled to holiday pay when they are on leave of absence
with pay.
2. Employees on leave of absence without pay on the day immediately preceding the regular holiday -
may not be paid the required holiday pay if they have not worked on such regular holiday.
3. Employees on leave while on SSS or employee’s compensation benefits - Employers should grant
the same percentage of the holiday pay as the benefit granted by competent authority in the form of
employee’s compensation or social security payment, whichever is higher, if they are not reporting for
work while on such benefits.
4. When day preceding regular holiday is a non-working day or scheduled rest day - should not be
deemed to be on leave of absence on that day, in which case, employees are entitled to the regular
holiday pay if they worked on the day immediately preceding the non-working day or rest day.
2.
HOLIDAY PAY/PREMIUM PAY OF
TEACHERS, PIECE WORKERS, TAKAY,
SEASONAL WORKERS, SEAFARERS
• Are private school teachers entitled to holiday pay during semestral vacations? What about Christmas
vacation”
No, as far as regular holidays during semestral vacations are concerned.
Yes, as far as regular holidays during Christmas vacation are concerned.
• Are hourly-paid teachers entitled to holiday pay?
A school is exempted from paying hourly-paid faculty members their pay for regular holidays, whether
the same be during the regular semesters of the school year or during semestral, Christmas, or Holy Week vacations.
However, it is liable to pay the faculty members their regular hourly rate on days declared as special holidays or if,
for some reason, classes are called off or shortened for the hours they are supposed to have taught, whether
extensions of class days be ordered or not; and in case of extensions, said faculty members shall likewise be paid
their hourly rates should they teach during said extensions.
• Are piece-workers, takay and others paid by results entitled to holiday pay?
Yes. Where a covered employee is paid by results or output such as payment on piece-work, his holiday pay
should not be less than his average daily earnings for the last seven (7) actual working days preceding the regular
holiday. In no case, however, should the holiday pay be less than the applicable statutory minimum wage rate.
• What are the distinctions between “supervised” and “unsupervised” workers paid by results to determine
their entitlement to holiday pay?
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The principal test to determine entitlement to holiday pay is whether the employees’ time and performance
of the work are “supervised” or “unsupervised” by their employer. If supervised, the employee is entitled to
holiday pay. If unsupervised, he is not.
The distinctions between supervised and unsupervised workers paid by results are as follows:
(1) Those whose time and performance are supervised by the employer. Here, there is an element of
control and supervision over the manner as to how the work is to be performed. A piece-rate worker
belongs to this category especially if he performs his work in the company premises; and
(2) Those whose time and performance are unsupervised. Here, the employer’s control is over the result
of the work. Workers on pakyao and takay basis belong to this group. Both classes of workers are
paid per unit accomplished. Piece-rate payment is generally practiced in garment factories where work
is done in the company premises, while payment on pakyao and takay basis is commonly observed in
the agricultural industry, such as in sugar plantations where the work is performed in bulk or in
volumes, hence, difficult to quantify.
• Are seasonal workers entitled to holiday pay?
Yes. Seasonal workers are entitled to holiday pay while working during the season. They may not be paid
the required regular holiday pay during off-season where they are not at work.
• Are seafarers entitled to holiday pay?
Yes. Any hours of work or duty including hours of watch-keeping performed by the seafarer on designated
rest days and holidays shall be paid rest day or holiday pay accordingly.
• What are important principles on holiday pay?
• In case of two (2) regular holidays falling on the same day, the worker should be compensated as follows:
o If unworked – 200% for the two regular holidays;
o If worked – 200% for the two regular holidays plus premium of 100% for work on that day.
• “Monthly-paid” employees are not excluded from the coverage of holiday pay.
i.
13TH MONTH PAY
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13th month pay which is in the nature of additional income, is based on wage but not part of wage.
• What is the minimum amount of the 13th month pay?
The minimum 13th month pay should not be less than one-twelfth (1/12) of the total basic salary earned
by an employee within a calendar year.
• What is meant by “basic salary” or “basic wage”?
“Basic salary” or “basic wage” contemplates work within the normal eight (8) working hours in a day. This
means that the basic salary of an employee for purposes of computing the 13th month pay should include all
remunerations or earnings paid by the employer for services rendered during normal working hours.
For purposes of computing the 13th month pay, “basic salary” should be interpreted to mean not the amount actually
received by an employee, but 1/12 of their standard monthly wage multiplied by their length of service within a
given calendar year.
j.
SERVICE CHARGE
• What are the kinds of establishment covered by the law on service charge?
The rules on service charge apply only to establishments collecting service charges, such as hotels,
restaurants, lodging houses, night clubs, cocktail lounges, massage clinics, bars, casinos and gambling houses, and
similar enterprises, including those entities operating primarily as private subsidiaries of the government.
• Who are the employees covered by this law?
The same rules on service charges apply to all employees of covered employers, regardless of their
positions, designations or employment status, and irrespective of the method by which their wages are paid except
those receiving more than P2,000.00 a month.
• Who are not covered?
Specifically excluded from coverage are employees who are receiving wages of more than P2,000.00 a
month. However, it must be pointed out that the P2,000.00 ceiling is no longer realistic considering the applicable
minimum wages prevailing in the country. Hence, it must be disregarded.
•How is the service charge distributed?
a. Percentage of sharing.
All service charges collected by covered employers are required to be distributed at the following rates:
1. 85% to be distributed equally among the covered employees; and
2. 15% to management to answer for losses and breakages and distribution to employees receiving more
than P2,000.00 a month, at the discretion of the management.
b. Frequency of distribution.
The share of the employees referred to above should be distributed and paid to them not less often than
once every two (2) weeks or twice a month at intervals not exceeding sixteen (16) days.
• Can the service charge be integrated into the wages of covered employees?
Yes. In case the service charge is abolished, the share of covered employees should be considered
integrated in their wages, in accordance with Article 96 of the Labor Code. The basis of the amount to be integrated
is the average monthly share of each employee for the past twelve (12) months immediately preceding the abolition
or withdrawal of such charges.
• What are some principles on service charge?
• Tips and services charges are two different things. Tips are given by customers voluntarily to waiters and other
people who serve them out of recognition of satisfactory or excellent service. There is no compulsion to give
tips under the law. The same may not be said of service charges which are considered integral part of the cost of
the food, goods or services ordered by the customers.
• Service charges are not in the nature of profit share and, therefore, cannot be deducted from wage.
B.
WAGES
1.
WAGE VS. SALARY
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3.
FACILITIES VERSUS SUPPLEMENTS
• What are facilities?
The term “facilities” includes articles or services for the benefit of the employee or his family but does
not include tools of the trade or articles or services primarily for the benefit of the employer or necessary to the
conduct of the employer’s business. They are items of expense necessary for the laborer’s and his family’s existence
and subsistence which form part of the wage and when furnished by the employer, are deductible therefrom, since if
they are not so furnished, the laborer would spend and pay for them just the same.
•What are supplements?
The term “supplements” means extra remuneration or special privileges or benefits given to or received
by the laborers over and above their ordinary earnings or wages.
• What are the distinctions between facilities and supplements?
The benefit or privilege given to the employee which constitutes an extra remuneration over and above his
basic or ordinary earning or wage is supplement; and when said benefit or privilege is made part of the laborer’s
basic wage, it is a facility. The criterion is not so much with the kind of the benefit or item (food, lodging, bonus or
sick leave) given but its purpose. Thus, free meals supplied by the ship operator to crew members, out of necessity,
cannot be considered as facilities but supplements which could not be reduced having been given not as part of
wages but as a necessary matter in the maintenance of the health and efficiency of the crew during the voyage.
• What is the rule on deductibility of facilities and supplements?
Facilities are deductible from wage but not supplements.
4.
NON-DIMINUTION OF BENEFITS
• What is the applicability of the non-diminution rule in Article 100 of the Labor Code?
Albeit Article 100 is clear that the principle of non-elimination and non-diminution of benefits apply only
to the benefits being enjoyed “at the time of the promulgation” of the Labor Code, the Supreme Court has
consistently cited Article 100 as being applicable even to benefits granted after said promulgation. It has, in fact,
been treated as the legal anchor for the declaration of the invalidity of so many acts of employers deemed to have
eliminated or diminished the benefits of employees.
The 2014 case of Wesleyan University-Philippines v. Wesleyan University-Philippines Faculty and
Staff Association,1 succinctly pointed out that the Non-Diminution Rule found in Article 100 of the Labor Code
explicitly prohibits employers from eliminating or reducing the benefits received by their employees. This rule,
however, applies only if the benefit is based on any of the following:
(1) An express policy;
(2) A written contract; or
(3) A company practice.
There is not much controversy if the benefit involved is provided for under Nos. 1 and 2 above. Thus, if it
is expressly laid down in a written policy unilaterally promulgated by the employer, the employer is duty-bound to
adhere and comply by its own policy. It cannot be allowed to renege from its commitment as expressed in the policy.
If the benefit is granted under a written contract such as an employment contract or a collective bargaining
agreement (CBA), the employer is likewise under legal compulsion to so comply therewith.
On No. 3 above, please see discussion below.
4.1.
COMPANY PRACTICE
• What is company practice?
Company practice is a custom or habit shown by an employer’s repeated, habitual customary or succession
of acts of similar kind by reason of which, it gains the status of a company policy that can no longer be disturbed or
withdrawn.
To ripen into a company practice that is demandable as a matter of right, the giving of the benefit should
not be by reason of a strict legal or contractual obligation but by reason of an act of liberality on the part of
the employer.
• What are the criteria that may be used to determine existence of company practice?
Since there is no hard and fast rule which may be used and applied in determining whether a certain act of
the employer may be considered as having ripened into a practice, the following criteria may be used to determine
whether an act has ripened into a company practice:
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(1) The act of the employer has been done for a considerable period of time;
(2) The act should be done consistently and intentionally; and
(3) The act should not be a product of erroneous interpretation or construction of a doubtful or difficult
question of law or provision in the CBA.
(See the 2013 case of Vergara, Jr. v. Coca-Cola Bottlers Philippines, Inc.1)
1. THE ACT OF THE EMPLOYER HAS BEEN DONE FOR A CONSIDERABLE PERIOD OF
TIME.
If done only once as in the case of Philippine Appliance Corporation (Philacor) v. CA, 2 where the CBA
signing bonus was granted only once during the 1997 CBA negotiation, the same cannot be considered as having
ripened into a company practice.
In the following cases, the act of the employer was declared company practice because of the considerable
period of time it has been practiced:
(a) Davao Fruits Corporation v. Associated Labor Unions.3 - The act of the company of freely and
continuously including in the computation of the 13th month pay, items that were expressly excluded
by law has lasted for six (6) years, hence, was considered indicative of company practice.
(b) Sevilla Trading Company v. A. V. A. Semana.4 - The act of including non-basic benefits such as paid
leaves for unused sick leave and vacation leave in the computation of the employees’ 13th month pay
for at least two (2) years was considered a company practice.
(c) The 2010 case of Central Azucarera de Tarlac v. Central Azucarera de Tarlac Labor Union-
NLU, 5 also ruled as company practice the act of petitioner of granting for thirty (30) years, its workers
the mandatory 13th month pay computed in accordance with the following formula: Total Basic
Annual Salary divided by twelve (12) and Including in the computation of the Total Basic Annual
Salary the following: basic monthly salary; first eight (8) hours overtime pay on Sunday and legal/
special holiday; night premium pay; and vacation and sick leaves for each year.
1
G.R. No. 176985, April 1, 2013; See also Supreme Steel Corporation v. Nagkakaisang Manggagawa ng Supreme Independent Union (NMS-IND-APL), G.R. No. 185556,
March 28, 2011, 646 SCRA 501, 527; TSPIC Corporation v. TSPIC Employees Union (FFW), G.R. No. 163419, Feb. 13, 2008, 545 SCRA 215, 226.
6 G.R. No. L-57636, May 16, 1983, 122 SCRA 267; 207 Phil. 2235.
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absence of clear administrative guidelines is not considered a voluntary act which cannot be
unilaterally discontinued.
(b) TSPIC Corp. v. TSPIC Employees Union [FFW],1 where the Supreme Court reiterated the rule
enunciated in Globe-Mackay, that an erroneously granted benefit may be withdrawn without violating
the prohibition against non-diminution of benefits. No vested right accrued to individual respondents
when TSPIC corrected its error by crediting the salary increase for the year 2001 against the salary
increase granted under Wage Order No. 8, all in accordance with the CBA. Hence, any amount given
to the employees in excess of what they were entitled to, as computed above, may be legally deducted
by TSPIC from the employees’ salaries.
But if the error does not proceed from the interpretation or construction of a law or a provision in the CBA,
the same may ripen into a company practice.
Example:
(a) Hinatuan Mining Corporation and/or the Manager v. NLRC, 2 where the act of the employer in
granting separation pay to resigning employees, despite the fact that the Labor Code does not grant it,
was considered an established employer practice.
5.
PROHIBITIONS REGARDING WAGES
(See Articles 112 to 119 of the Labor Code)
(1) NON-INTERFERENCE BY EMPLOYER IN THE DISPOSAL BY EMPLOYEES OF THEIR WAGES.
Article 112 of the Labor Code - No employer is allowed to limit or otherwise interfere with the freedom of
any employee to dispose of his wages and no employer shall in any manner oblige any of his employees to patronize
any store or avail of the services offered by any person.
(2) WAGES NOT SUBJECT TO EXECUTION OR ATTACHMENT; EXCEPTION.
The general rule is that laborer’s wages are not subject to execution or attachment. The exception is when
such execution or attachment is made for debts incurred for food, shelter, clothing and medical attendance.
(3) PROHIBITION ON DEDUCTIONS FROM WAGES.
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If the employer is engaged in a trade, occupation or business where there is such practice of making
deductions or requiring deposits to answer for the reimbursement of loss of or damage to tools, materials or
equipment supplied by the employer to the employee.
(5) PROHIBITION ON WITHHOLDING OF WAGES.
Article 116 of the Labor Code prohibits any person, whether employer or not, directly or indirectly, to
withhold any amount from the wages of a worker.
Under Article 1706 of the Civil Code, withholding of the wages, except for a debt due, is not allowed to be
made by the employer.
Moreover, under Article 1709 of the same Code, the employer is not allowed to seize or retain any tool or
other articles belonging to the laborer.
(6) KICKBACKS.
Article 116 of the Labor Code also prohibits “kickback” which consists in the act of any person, whether
employer or not, directly or indirectly, to induce a worker to give up any part of his wages by force, stealth,
intimidation, threat or by any other means whatsoever, without the worker’s consent.
(7) PROHIBITION AGAINST DEDUCTION TO ENSURE EMPLOYMENT.
Article 117 of the Labor Code prohibits any person, whether the employer himself or his representative or
an intermediary, to require that a deduction be made or to actually make any deduction from the wages of any
employee or worker, for the benefit of such employer or his representative or an intermediary, as consideration of a
promise of employment or, when already employed, for the continuation of such employment or retention therein.
(8) RETALIATORY ACTIONS BY EMPLOYER.
Article 118 of the Labor Code prohibits the employer:
(a) to refuse to pay the wages and benefits of an employee; or
(b) to reduce his wages and benefits; or
(c) to discharge him from employment; or
(d) to discriminate against him in any manner;
on account and by reason of said employee’s:
(1) act of filing any complaint or institution of any proceeding under Title II [Wages], Book III of the Labor
Code; or
(2) act of testifying in said proceedings or when he is about to testify therein.
(9) FALSE STATEMENT, REPORT OR RECORD.
Article 119 of the Labor Code prohibits any person, whether employer or not, to make any false statement,
report or record required to be filed or kept in accordance with and pursuant to the provisions of the Labor Code,
knowing such statement, report or record to be false in any material respect.
Examples: Payrolls, time records, employment records and production records, among others.
6.
WAGE ORDER
• What is a Wage Order?
The term “Wage Order” refers to the order promulgated by the Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity
Board (Regional Board) pursuant to its wage fixing authority.
• When is it proper to issue a Wage Order?
Whenever conditions in the region so warrant, the Regional Board shall investigate and study all pertinent
facts and based on the prescribed standards and criteria, shall proceed to determine whether a Wage Order should be
issued. Any such Wage Order shall take effect after fifteen (15) days from its complete publication in at least one
(1) newspaper of general circulation in the region.
• What are the standards/criteria for minimum wage fixing?
In the determination of regional minimum wages, the Regional Board shall, among other relevant factors,
consider the following:
(1) Needs of workers and their families
1) Demand for living wages;
2) Wage adjustment vis-à-vis the consumer price index;
3) Cost of living and changes therein;
4) Needs of workers and their families;
5) Improvements in standards of living.
(2) Capacity to pay
1) Fair return on capital invested and capacity to pay of employers;
2) Productivity.
(3) Comparable wages and incomes
1) Prevailing wage levels.
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2. Severe contraction of intentional quantitative differences in wage or salary rates between and among
employee groups in an establishment as to effectively obliterate the distinctions embodied in such wage
structure based on the following criteria:
a. Skills;
b. Length of service; or
c. Other logical bases of differentiation.
Wage distortion presupposes a classification of positions and ranking of these positions at various levels.
One visualizes a hierarchy of positions with corresponding ranks basically in terms of wages and other emoluments.
Where a significant change occurs at the lowest level of positions in terms of basic wage without a corresponding
change in the other level in the hierarchy of positions, negating as a result thereof the distinction between one level
of position from the next higher level, and resulting in a parity between the lowest level and the next higher level or
rank, between new entrants and old hires, there exists a wage distortion. xxx. The concept of wage distortion
assumes an existing grouping or classification of employees which establishes distinctions among such employees
on some relevant or legitimate basis. This classification is reflected in a differing wage rate for each of the existing
classes of employees.
• What are the elements of wage distortion?
The four (4) elements of wage distortion are as follows:
(1) An existing hierarchy of positions with corresponding salary rates;
(2) A significant change in the salary rate of a lower pay class without a concomitant increase in the
salary rate of a higher one;
(3) The elimination of the distinction between the two levels; and
(4) The existence of the distortion in the same region of the country.
Normally, a company has a wage structure or method of determining the wages of its employees. In a
problem dealing with “wage distortion,” the basic assumption is that there exists a grouping or classification of
employees that establishes distinctions among them on some relevant or legitimate bases.
Involved in the classification of employees are various factors such as the degrees of responsibility, the
skills and knowledge required, the complexity of the job, or other logical basis of differentiation. The differing
wage rate for each of the existing classes of employees reflects this classification.
•What is the formula for rectifying or resolving wage distortion?
Following is the formula for the correction of wage distortion in the pay scale structures:
Minimum Wage = % x Prescribed Increase = Distortion Adjustment
Actual Salary
The above formula was held to be just and equitable.
C.
LEAVES
1.
SERVICE INCENTIVE LEAVE
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k. Members of the family of the employer who are dependent on him for support.
• Are unavailed service incentive leaves commutable to cash?
Yes. The service incentive leave is commutable to its money equivalent if not used or exhausted at the end
of the year.
2.
MATERNITY LEAVE
The term "solo parent" refers to any individual who falls under any of the following categories:
(1) A woman who gives birth as a result of rape and other crimes against chastity even without a final
conviction of the offender: Provided, That the mother keeps and raises the child;
(2) Parent left solo or alone with the responsibility of parenthood due to death of spouse;
(3) Parent left solo or alone with the responsibility of parenthood while the spouse is detained or is serving
sentence for a criminal conviction for at least one (1) year;
(4) Parent left solo or alone with the responsibility of parenthood due to physical and/or mental incapacity
of spouse as certified by a public medical practitioner;
(5) Parent left solo or alone with the responsibility of parenthood due to legal separation or de facto
separation from spouse for at least one (1) year, as long as he/she is entrusted with the custody of the
children;
(6) Parent left solo or alone with the responsibility of parenthood due to declaration of nullity or
annulment of marriage as decreed by a court or by a church as long as he/she is entrusted with the
custody of the children;
(7) Parent left solo or alone with the responsibility of parenthood due to abandonment of spouse for at
least one (1) year;
(8) Unmarried mother/father who has preferred to keep and rear her/his child/children instead of having
others care for them or give them up to a welfare institution;
(9) Any other person who solely provides parental care and support to a child or children;
(10) Any family member who assumes the responsibility of head of family as a result of the death,
abandonment, disappearance or prolonged absence of the parents or solo parent.
• What is the effect of change of status of the solo parent?
A change in the status or circumstance of the parent claiming benefits under this Act, such that he/she is no
longer left alone with the responsibility of parenthood, shall terminate his/her eligibility for these benefits.
• Who are considered children under this law?
"Children" refer to those living with and dependent upon the solo parent for support who are unmarried,
unemployed and not more than eighteen (18) years of age, or even over eighteen (18) years but are incapable of self-
support because of mental and/or physical defect/disability.
• Is an unavailed parental leave convertible to cash?
No. In the event that the parental leave is not availed of, said leave shall not be convertible to cash unless
specifically agreed upon previously.
5.
SPECIAL LEAVES FOR WOMEN WORKERS
(MAGNA CARTA OF WOMEN)
6.
LEAVE FOR VICTIMS OF VIOLENCE
AGAINST WOMEN AND CHILDREN
(R.A. No. 9262)
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D.
SPECIAL GROUPS OF EMPLOYEES
1.
WOMEN
a.
DISCRIMINATION
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1. Philippine Telegraph and Telephone Company (PT&T) v. NLRC.1 - It was declared here that the
company policy of not accepting or considering as disqualified from work any woman worker who
contracts marriage runs afoul of the test of, and the right against, discrimination afforded all women
workers by our labor laws and by no less than the Constitution.
2. Star Paper Corp. v. Simbol.2 - The following policies were struck down as invalid for violating the
standard of reasonableness which is being followed in our jurisdiction, otherwise called the
“Reasonable Business Necessity Rule”:
“1. New applicants will not be allowed to be hired if in case he/she has [a] relative, up to [the] 3rd degree
of relationship, already employed by the company.
“2. In case of two of our employees (both singles [sic], one male and another female) developed a
friendly relationship during the course of their employment and then decided to get married, one of them
should resign to preserve the policy stated above.”
3. Duncan Association of Detailman-PTGWO v. Glaxo Welcome Philippines, Inc.3 In this case, the
prohibition against marriage embodied in the following stipulation in the employment contract was held
as valid:
“10. You agree to disclose to management any existing or future relationship you may have, either by
consanguinity or affinity with co-employees or employees of competing drug companies. Should it pose
a possible conflict of interest in management discretion, you agree to resign voluntarily from the
Company as a matter of Company policy.”
The Supreme Court ruled that the dismissal based on this stipulation in the employment contract is a valid
exercise of management prerogative. The prohibition against personal or marital relationships with employees of
competitor companies upon its employees was held reasonable under the circumstances because relationships of that
nature might compromise the interests of the company. In laying down the assailed company policy, the employer
only aims to protect its interests against the possibility that a competitor company will gain access to its secrets and
procedures.
c.
PROHIBITED ACTS
• What are the prohibited acts against women under the Labor Code?
Article 137 of the Labor Code and its implementing rule consider unlawful the followings acts of the
employer:
1. To discharge any woman employed by him for the purpose of preventing such woman from enjoying
maternity leave, facilities and other benefits provided under the Labor Code;
2. To discharge such woman on account of her pregnancy, or while on leave or in confinement due to her
pregnancy;
3. To discharge or refuse the admission of such woman upon returning to her work for fear that she may
again be pregnant;
4. To discharge any woman or any other employee for having filed a complaint or having testified or
being about to testify under the Labor Code; or
5. To require as a condition for or continuation of employment that a woman employee shall not get
married or to stipulate expressly or tacitly that upon getting married, a woman employee shall be
deemed resigned or separated, or to actually dismiss, discharge, discriminate or otherwise
prejudice a woman employee merely by reason of marriage.
d.
SEXUAL HARASSMENT
(ANTI-SEXUAL HARASSMENT ACT)
(R.A. No. 7877)
1 G.R. No. 118978, May 23, 1997, 272 SCRA 596, 605.
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• Who are the persons who may be held liable for sexual harassment?
Work, education or training-related sexual harassment is committed by any employer, employee, manager,
supervisor, agent of the employer, teacher, instructor, professor, coach, trainor, or any other person who, having
authority, influence or moral ascendancy over another in a work or training or education environment, demands,
requests or otherwise requires any sexual favor from another, regardless of whether the demand, request or
requirement for submission is accepted by the object of said act.
Further, any person who directs or induces another to commit any act of sexual harassment as defined in the
law, or who cooperates in the commission thereof by another without which it would not have been committed, shall
also be held liable under the law.
•How is sexual harassment committed in a work-related or employment environment?
In a work-related or employment environment, sexual harassment is committed when:
1. The sexual favor is made a condition in the hiring or in the employment, re-employment or continued
employment of said individual or in granting said individual favorable compensation, terms, conditions,
promotions, or privileges; or the refusal to grant the sexual favor results in limiting, segregating or
classifying the employee which in any way would discriminate, deprive or diminish employment
opportunities or otherwise adversely affect said employee;
2. The above acts would impair the employee’s rights or privileges under existing labor laws; or
3. The above acts would result in an intimidating, hostile, or offensive environment for the employee.
• What are duties of the employer in regard to sexual harassment complaints?
It is the duty of the employer to prevent or deter the commission of acts of sexual harassment and to
provide the procedures for the resolution or prosecution of acts of sexual harassment.
The employer or head of office is required to:
1. promulgate appropriate rules and regulations, in consultation with and jointly approved by the
employees or students or trainees, through their duly designated representatives, prescribing the
procedure for the investigation of sexual harassment cases and the administrative sanctions therefor.
The said rules and regulations issued shall include, among others, guidelines on proper decorum in the
workplace and educational or training institutions.
2. create a committee on decorum and investigation of cases on sexual harassment. The committee shall
conduct meetings, as the case may be, with officers and employees, teachers, instructors, professors,
coaches, trainors and students or trainees to increase understanding and prevent incidents of sexual
harassment. It shall also conduct the investigation of alleged cases constituting sexual harassment.
2.
MINORS
(Labor Code and R.A. No. 7678, R.A. No. 9231)
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allowed to work between ten (10) o’clock in the evening and six (6) o’clock in the morning of the
following day.
• What is the prohibition of employing minors in certain undertakings and advertisements?
No child below 18 years of age is allowed to be employed as a model in any advertisement directly or
indirectly promoting alcoholic beverages, intoxicating drinks, tobacco and its by-products, gambling or any form of
violence or pornography.
3.
KASAMBAHAY
(FORMERLY CALLED “HOUSEHELPERS”)
(R.A. No. 10361, otherwise known as “Domestic Workers Act” or “Batas Kasambahay”
Approved on January 18, 2013).
Under the Kasambahay Law, the following are the minimum wages of kasambahays:
(a) P2,500.00 a month for those employed in the National Capital Region (NCR);
(b) P2,000.00 a month for those employed in chartered cities and first class municipalities; and
(c) P1,500.00 a month for those employed in other municipalities.
• Are the minimum wages subject to review by the RTWPBs or Regional Boards?
Yes. After one (1) year from the effectivity of the Kasambahay Law, and periodically thereafter, the
Regional Tripartite and Productivity Wage Boards (RTPWBs) shall review, and if proper, determine and adjust
the minimum wage rates of domestic workers.”
• What are some important principles on wage of kasambahay?
• Frequency of payment of wages. - The wages of the Kasambahay shall be paid at least once a
month. This is so because the minimum wage rates are on a monthly basis.
• The equivalent minimum daily wage rate of the Kasambahay shall be determined by dividing the
applicable minimum monthly rate by thirty (30) days.
• The amount of the minimum wage depends on the geographical area where the Kasambahay works.
• Payment of wages:
1. To whom paid. - It should be made on time directly to the Kasambahay to whom they are due in cash at
least once a month.
2. Deductions, prohibition; when allowed. - The employer, unless allowed by the Kasambahay through a
written consent, shall make no deductions from the wages other than that which is mandated by law such as
for SSS, PhilHealth or Pag-IBIG contributions.
3. Mode of payment. - It should be paid in cash and not by means of promissory notes, vouchers, coupons,
tokens, tickets, chits, or any object other than the cash wage as provided for under this Act.
4. Pay slip. – The employer shall at all times provide the Kasambahay with a copy of the pay slip containing
the amount paid in cash every pay day, and indicating all deductions made, if any. The copies of the pay
slip shall be kept by the employer for a period of three (3) years.
5. Prohibition on Interference in the disposal of wages. – It shall be unlawful for the employer to interfere
with the freedom of the Kasambahay in the disposition of his/her wages, such as:
(a) Forcing, compelling, or obliging the Kasambahay to purchase merchandise, commodities or
other properties from the employer or from any other person; or
(b) Making use of any store or services of such employer or any other person.
6. Prohibition against withholding of wages. – It shall be unlawful for an employer, directly or indirectly, to
withhold the wages of the Kasambahay. If the Kasambahay leaves without any justifiable reason, any
unpaid salary for a period not exceeding fifteen (15) days shall be forfeited. Likewise, the employer shall
not induce the Kasambahay to give up any part of the wages by force, stealth, intimidation, threat or by any
other means whatsoever.
• What are important terms and conditions of employment of kasambahay?
The following is a rundown of the basic terms and conditions that should be observed in the employment of
a Kasambahay:
a. Employable age. - Children whose age is below 15 years are absolutely prohibited to work as
Kasambahay.
b. Normal daily hours of work. – Because R.A. No. 10361 does not contain any provision on the number
of normal hours of work that a Kasambahay should render in a day but merely prescribes said daily rest
period of eight (8) hours per day, it may be concluded that the Kasambahay should work for at least a
total of sixteen (16) hours per day as normal hours of work. However, it must be noted that the Labor
Code does not contain any provision on the normal hours of work of househelpers. Article 1695 of the
Civil Code, however, specifically provides that househelpers shall not be required to work for more
than ten (10) hours a day. Since R.A. No. 10361, a special law, is the most recent piece of legislation,
it should prevail over the general provision of the Civil Code.
c. Normal daily hours of work for working child-kasambahay is eight (8) hours per day.
d. 13th month pay. - The Kasambahay who has rendered at least one (1) month of service is entitled to a
13th month pay which shall not be less than one-twelfth (1/12) of his/her total basic salary earned in a
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calendar year. The 13th month pay shall be paid not later than December 24 of every year or upon
separation from employment.
e. Daily rest period. – The Kasambahay shall be entitled to an aggregate daily rest period of eight (8)
hours.
f. Weekly rest period. - The Kasambahay shall be entitled to at least twenty-four (24) consecutive hours
of rest in a week. The employer and the Kasambahay shall agree in writing on the schedule of the weekly
rest day but the preference of the Kasambahay, when based on religious grounds, shall be respected.
g. Service incentive leave. - A Kasambahay who has rendered at least one (1) year of service shall be
entitled to an annual service incentive leave of at least five (5) days with pay. Any unused portion of
said annual leave shall not be cumulative or carried over to the succeeding years. Unused leaves shall
not be convertible to cash.
h. Social security benefits. - A Kasambahay who has rendered at least one (1) month of service shall be
covered by the Social Security System (SSS), Employees Compensation Commission (ECC), Philippine
Health Insurance Corporation (PhilHealth), and Home Development Mutual Fund or Pag-IBIG, and
shall be entitled to all the benefits in accordance with their respective policies, laws, rules and
regulations.
i. Obligation of employer to register and enroll with SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG. - As employer
of the Kasambahay, he/she shall register himself/herself with, and enroll the latter as his/her employee
to the SSS, PhilHealth, and Pag-IBIG.
j. Deposits for loss or damage. - It shall be unlawful for the employer or any other person to require a
Kasambahay to make deposits from which deductions shall be made for the reimbursement of loss or
damage to tools, materials, furniture and equipment in the household.
k. Standard of treatment. - The Kasambahay shall be treated with respect by the employer or any
member of the household. He/she shall not be subjected to any kind of abuse, including repeated verbal
or psychological, nor be inflicted with any form of physical violence or harassment or any act tending to
degrade his/her dignity, as defined under the Revised Penal Code, Violence Against Women and their
Children Law (R.A. No. 9262), Special Protection of Children Against Child Abuse, Exploitation and
Discrimination Act (R.A. No. 7610) as amended by R.A. No. 9231, Anti-Trafficking in Persons Act of
2003 (R.A. No. 9208), and other applicable laws.
l. Board, lodging and medical attendance. - The employer shall provide for the basic necessities of the
Kasambahay, to include the following:
(1) At least three (3) adequate meals a day, taking into consideration the Kasambahay's religious
beliefs and cultural practices;
(2) Humane sleeping condition that respects the person's privacy for live-in arrangement; and
(3) Appropriate rest and medical assistance in the form of first-aid medicines, in case of illnesses and
injuries sustained during service without loss of benefits.
m. Opportunities for education and training. - The Kasambahay shall be afforded the opportunity to
finish basic education, which shall consist of elementary and secondary education. He/she may be allowed access to
alternative learning systems and, as far as practicable, higher education or technical vocational education and
training.
n. Membership in labor organization. - The Kasambahay shall have the right to join a labor organization
of his/her own choosing for purposes of mutual aid and collective negotiation.
r. Health and safety. - The employer shall safeguard the safety and health of the Kasambahay in
accordance with the standards which the DOLE shall develop through the Bureau of Working Conditions (BWC)
and the Occupational Safety and Health Center (OSHC) within six (6) months from the promulgation of this IRR.
The said standards shall take into account the peculiar nature of domestic work.
s. Prohibition on debt bondage. - It shall be unlawful for the employer or any person acting on his/her
behalf to place the Kasambahay under debt bondage. “Debt bondage” refers to the rendering of service by the
Kasambahay as security or payment for a debt where the length and nature of service is not clearly defined or when
the value of the service is not reasonably applied in the payment of the debt.
t. Assignment to non-household work. - The employer shall not assign the Kasambahay to work, whether
in full or part-time, in a commercial, industrial or agricultural enterprise at a wage rate lower than that provided for
agricultural or non-agricultural workers.
If so assigned, the Kasambahay will no longer be treated as such but as a regular employee of the
establishment.
• What are the rules on termination of Kasambahay?
a. Pre-termination of employment. – The following rules shall be observed:
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(1) In case the duration of employment is specified in the contract, the Kasambahay and the employer may
mutually agree upon notice to terminate the contract of employment before the expiration of its term.
(2) In case the duration is not determined by stipulation or by nature of service, the employer or the
Kasambahay may give notice to end the employment relationship five (5) days before the intended
termination of employment.
b. Termination of employment initiated by the Kasambahay. - The Kasambahay may terminate the
employment relationship at any time before the expiration of the contract for any of the following causes:
(1) Verbal or emotional abuse of the Kasambahay by the employer or any member of the household;
(2) Inhuman treatment including physical abuse of the Kasambahay by the employer or any member of the
household;
(3) Commission of a crime or offense against the Kasambahay by the employer or any member of the
household;
(4) Violation by the employer of the terms and conditions of the employment contract and other standards
set forth in the law;
(5) Any disease prejudicial to the health of the Kasambahay, the employer, or members of the household;
and
(6) Other causes analogous to the foregoing.
If the Kasambahay leaves without cause, any unpaid salary due, not exceeding the equivalent of 15 days’
work, shall be forfeited. In addition, the employer may recover from the Kasambahay deployment expenses, if any,
if the services have been terminated within six (6) months from employment.
c. Termination of employment initiated by the employer. - An employer may terminate the employment
of the Kasambahay at any time before the expiration of the contract for any of the following causes:
(1) Misconduct or willful disobedience by the Kasambahay of the lawful order of the employer in
connection with the former's work;
(2) Gross or habitual neglect or inefficiency by the Kasambahay in the performance of duties;
(3) Fraud or willful breach of the trust reposed by the employer on the Kasambahay;
(4) Commission of a crime or offense by the Kasambahay against the person of the employer or any
immediate member of the employer's family;
(5) Violation by the Kasambahay of the terms and conditions of the employment contract and other
standards set forth under the law;
(6) Any disease prejudicial to the health of the Kasambahay, the employer, or members of the household;
and
(7) Other causes analogous to the foregoing.
If the employer dismissed the Kasambahay for reasons other than the above, he/she shall pay the
Kasambahay the earned compensation plus indemnity in the amount equivalent to fifteen (15) days’ work.
d. Invalid ground for termination. - Pregnancy and marriage of the Kasambahay are not valid grounds for
termination of employment.
e. Employment Certification. - Upon the termination of employment, the employer shall issue the
Kasambahay, within five (5) days from request, a certificate of employment indicating the nature, duration of the
service and work description.
4.
HOMEWORKERS
2. sells any goods, articles or materials for the purpose of having such goods or articles processed in or
about a home and then repurchases them himself or through another after such processing.
f. “Contractor” or “subcontractor.” - It refers to any person who, for the account or benefit of an
employer, delivers or causes to be delivered to a homeworker, goods or articles to be processed in or about his home
and thereafter to be returned, disposed of or distributed in accordance with the direction of the employer.
g. “Processing.” - It refers to manufacturing, fabricating, finishing, repairing, altering, packing, wrapping
or handling in any way connected with the production or preparation of an article or material.
•How is homework paid?
Immediately upon receipt of the finished goods or articles, the employer is required to pay the homeworker
or the contractor or subcontractor, as the case may be, for the work performed less the corresponding homeworker’s
share of SSS, PhilHealth and ECC premium contributions which should be remitted by the contractor or
subcontractor or employer to the SSS with the employer’s share. However, where payment is made to a contractor
or subcontractor, the homeworker should likewise be paid immediately after the goods or articles have been
collected from the workers.
•What are prohibited homeworks?
No homework shall be performed on the following:
1. Explosives, fireworks and articles of like character;
2. Drugs and poisons; and
3. Other articles, the processing of which requires exposure to toxic substances.
5
NIGHT WORKERS
(R.A. NO. 10151)
• What is the new law on night work?
R.A. No. 10151 [JUNE 21, 2011].
a. Significance of the law.
R.A. No. 10151 has repealed Article 130 [Nightwork Prohibition] and Article 131 [Exceptions] of the
Labor Code and accordingly renumbered the same articles. Additionally, it has inserted a new Chapter V of Title III
of Book III of the Labor Code entitled “Employment of Night Workers” which addresses the issue on nightwork of
all employees, including women workers. Chapter V covers newly renumbered Articles 154 up to 161 of the Labor
Code.
b. Coverage of the law.
The law on nightwork applies not only to women but to all persons, who shall be employed or permitted
or suffered to work at night, except those employed in agriculture, stock raising, fishing, maritime transport and
inland navigation, during a period of not less than seven (7) consecutive hours, including the interval from
midnight to five o'clock in the morning, to be determined by the DOLE Secretary, after consulting the workers’
representatives/labor organizations and employers.
c. Night worker, meaning.
"Night worker" means any employed person whose work covers the period from 10 o'clock in the
evening to 6 o'clock the following morning provided that the worker performs no less than seven (7) consecutive
hours of work.
d. Mandatory facilities.
(1) Suitable first-aid and emergency facilities as provided for under Rule 1960 (Occupational Health
Services) of the Occupational Safety and Health Standards (OSHS);
(2) Lactation station in required companies pursuant to R.A. No. 10028 (The Expanded Breastfeeding
Promotion Act of 2009);
(3) Separate toilet facilities for men and women;
(4) Facility for eating with potable drinking water; and
(5) Facilities for transportation and/or properly ventilated temporary sleeping or resting quarters, separate
for male and female workers, shall be provided except where any of the following circumstances is
present:
i. Where there is an existing company guideline, practice or policy, CBA or any similar agreement
between management and workers providing for an equivalent or superior benefit; or
ii. Where the start or end of the night work does not fall within 12 midnight to 5 o'clock in the
morning; or
iii. Where the workplace is located in an area that is accessible 24 hours to public transportation;
iv. Where the number of employees does not exceed a specified number as may be provided for by
the DOLE Secretary in subsequent issuances.
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------------oOo------------
SYLLABUS
MAJOR TOPIC 4
POST EMPLOYMENT
A.
EMPLOYER-EMPLOYEE RELATIONSHIP
1.
TESTS TO DETERMINE EMPLOYER-EMPLOYEE RELATIONSHIP
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Four-Fold Test
Employment relationship under the control test is determined under the same concept as discussed above, that is,
by asking whether “the person for whom the services are performed reserves the right to control not only the end to be
achieved but also the manner and means to be used in reaching such end.”3
Under the economic reality test, the proper standard of economic dependence is whether the worker is dependent
on the alleged employer for his continued employment in that line of business.4
These 2-tiered test applies to cases where there are several parties alleged to be employers of one individual. The
determinant factor is economic dependency of such individual. In other words, under the economic reality test, the
question to ask is - among the parties alleged to be the employer, to whom is the individual economically dependent?
Following the broader economic reality test, the Supreme Court found petitioner in Orozco v. The Fifth
Division of the Hon. CA,5 who is a columnist in the Philippine Daily Inquirer (PDI), not an employee of PDI but an
independent contractor. Thus:
“Petitioner’s main occupation is not as a columnist for respondent but as a women’s rights advocate
working in various women’s organizations. Likewise, she herself admits that she also contributes articles to other
publications. Thus, it cannot be said that petitioner was dependent on respondent PDI for her continued employment
in respondent’s line of business.
“The inevitable conclusion is that petitioner was not respondent PDI’s employee but an independent
contractor, engaged to do independent work.”
• Is it necessary to have a written contract of employment in order to establish employer-employee
relationship?
No. It may be an oral or written contract. A written contract is not necessary for the creation and validity of
the relationship.
The only exception is in the case of Kasambahay where, under the Kasambahay Law, it is required
that the contract of employment should be in writing.
2.
KINDS OF EMPLOYMENT
2 Id.
3 Id.
4 Id.
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• Is the period of 6 months in the law on probationary employment (Article 296 [281], LC) the minimum or
maximum period?
The answer is it is neither the minimum nor the maximum period of probationary employment. The 6-month
period is mentioned in the law for purposes of setting the standard period. Proof that it is not the maximum is
the case of Buiser v. Leogardo where the probationary period of 18 months was considered reasonable. In other
words, probationary period may be for a day, a week, a month or several months, depending on the reasonable
discretion of management.
If there is no written contract, the employee is considered a regular employee from day one of his
employment. And even if there is one, he is deemed regular if there is no stipulation on probationary period.
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of the performance evaluation conducted on the employee which forms as the basis for deciding to terminate the
probationary employment.
• When should termination of probationary employment be made?
Termination to be valid must be done prior to lapse of probationary period. Termination a few days after
lapse of probationary period cannot be done without due process as he has already become a regular employee by
that time.
b.
REGULAR EMPLOYMENT
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3.
JOB CONTRACTING
▪ What is the latest Implementing Rules on contractualization issued by the DOLE Secretary?
Department Order No. 174, Series of 2017 (issued on March 16, 2017) – Rules Implementing
Articles 106 to 109 of the Labor Code, as Amended.
Shortly after its issuance, Department Circular No. 01, Series of 2017 (Issued on June 09, 2017)
was issued by the DOLE Secretary to clarify the inapplicability of Department Order No. 174, Series
of 2017 to BPO, KPO, LPO, IT Infrastructure Outsourcing, Application Development, Hardware and/
or Software Support, Medical Transcription, Animation Services, Back Office Operations/Support,
and CONSTRUCTION INDUSTRY.
d.
TRILATERAL RELATIONSHIP IN JOB CONTRACTING
Here are the elements based on law, Department Order No. 174 and jurisprudence:
(a) The contractor is engaged in a distinct and independent business and undertakes to perform the job
or work on its own responsibility, according to its own manner and method;
(b) The contractor has substantial capital to carry out the job farmed out by the principal on his own
account, manner and method, investment in the form of tools, equipment, machinery and
supervision;
(c) In performing the work farmed out, the contractor is free from the control and/or direction of the
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CHAN ROBLES ONLINE BAR REVIEW
www.chanroblesbar.com
principal in all matters connected with the performance of the work EXCEPT as to the result
thereto; and
(d) The Service Agreement ensures compliance with all the rights and benefits for all the employees of
the contractor under labor laws.
Example:
Scenario 1: If it is ABC University that controls the manner and method of performing the job or
work of XYZ Security Agency’s security guards (such as when it is ABC University, that (1) sets the
schedule of the Security Guards; (2) makes the assignments to their respective posts; (3) monitors their
attendance/absences; (3) supervises their every action and performance of their duties, and the like),
then, ABC University is the direct employer of the guards and the XYZ Security Agency is but a labor-
only contractor.
Scenario 2: If it is ABC Security Agency which controls such manner and method of performing the
job or work of the Security Guards it assigned to ABC University, and ABC University is interested
only on the result of the arrangement (such as the safety of the students, teachers and employees,
safeguard of school property and premises, peace and tranquility inside its campus, etc.), then, there is
here legitimate job contracting arrangement where ABC University is the principal, XYZ Security
Agency is the contractor, and the Security Guards, the contractor’s employees.
• What is the amount of SUBSTANTIAL CAPITAL required under the new Rules?
According to Department Order No. 174, Series of 2017 (issued on March 16, 2017), the following
consists of substantial capital:
1. In the case of corporations, partnerships or cooperatives – paid-up capital stocks/shares of at least
P5 Million; or
2. In the case of single proprietorship - a net worth of at least P5 Million.
• “Substantial capital” and “investment in tools, etc.” are two separate requirements.
“Substantial capital” and “investment in tools, equipment, implements, machineries and work premises”
should be treated as two (2) distinct and separate requirements in determining whether there is legitimate
job contracting arrangement. It is enough that only one of these two requisites is complied with to make
the job contracting arrangement legitimate.
• May individuals engage in legitimate job contracting?
Yes. Legitimate job contracting may not only be engaged by corporation, partnership or single proprietorship.
Individuals may become legitimate job contractors themselves for as long as they have SPECIAL SKILLS or
TALENTS.
• Are individuals engaged as legitimate job contractors required to fulfill the requisites of legitimate job
contracting as afore-described?
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NO. They need not be registered as independent contractors with DOLE; they need not have substantial capital
(such as the P5 Million stated above). All that they are required is to have their tools consisting of SPECIAL
SKILL, TALENT or EXPERTISE.
1. Sonza v. ABS-CBN Broadcasting Corporation1 - TV and radio talents and others with special talents and
skills are not employees but legitimate independent contractors.
2. Orozco v. The Fifth Division of the Honorable Court of Appeals2 - A newspaper columnist is not an
employee but an independent contractor of the newspaper publishing the column.
3. Jose Mel Bernarte v. Philippine Basketball Association3 - Basketball or soccer referee or umpire, an
independent contractor.
4. Semblante and Pilar v. CA, Gallera de Mandaue, et al. 4 - Cockpit masiador and sentenciador are
independent contractors.
LABOR-ONLY CONTRACTING.
Based on law, Department Order No. 174 and jurisprudence, the following are the elements:
(a) The contractor does not have either (i) SUBSTANTIAL CAPITAL or (ii) INVESTMENTS
in the form of tools, equipment, machineries, supervision, work premises, among others, AND the
contractor's employees recruited and placed are performing activities which are directly
related to the main business operation of the principal;
or
(b) The contractor does not exercise the right to control over the performance of the work of the
employee.
NOTE: - There is labor-only contracting even if only one of the two (2) elements above is present.
- An unregistered contractor is presumed to be a labor-only contractor. Registration should be
made with the DOLE.
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CHAN ROBLES ONLINE BAR REVIEW
www.chanroblesbar.com
The chief distinctions between legitimate job contracting, on the one hand, and the prohibited labor-only
contracting, on the other, may be summed up as follows:
1. In the former, no employer-employee relationship exists between the contractual employees of the job
contractor and the principal; while in the latter, an employer-employee relationship is created by law
between the principal and the employees supplied by the labor-only contractor.
2. In the former, the principal is considered only an “indirect employer”; while in the latter, the principal
is considered the “direct employer” of the employees supplied by the labor-only contractor.
3. In the former, the solidary obligation of the principal and the legitimate job contractor is only for a
limited purpose, that is, to pay the wages of the contractor’s employees supplied to the principal..
Other than this obligation of paying the wages, the principal is not responsible for any claim made by
the contractor’s employees; while in the latter, the principal becomes solidarily liable with the labor-
only contractor to the latter’s employees in the same manner and extent that the principal is liable to
employees directly hired by him/her.
• What are OTHER ILLICIT FORMS OF EMPLOYMENT IN D.O. 174, Series of 2017, (IN ADDITION TO
LABOR-ONLY CONTRACTING)?
The following are considered as such (formerly called “PROHIBITIONS” under previous Department
Orders):
a) When the principal farms out work to a “Cabo” which term refers to a person or group of persons or to
a labor group which, under the guise of a labor organization, cooperative or any entity, supplies workers
to an employer, with or without any monetary or other consideration, whether in the capacity of an
agent of the employer or as an ostensible independent contractor.
b) Contracting out of job or work through an “In-house Agency” which term refers to a contractor which
is owned, managed, or controlled, directly or indirectly, by the principal or one where the principal
owns/represents any share of stock, and which operates solely or mainly for the principal.
c) Contracting out of job or work through an “In-house Cooperative” which merely supplies workers to
the principal. An “In-house Cooperative” refers to a cooperative which is managed, or controlled
directly or indirectly by the principal or one where the principal or any of its officers owns/represents
any equity or interest, and which operates solely or mainly for the principal.
d) Contracting out of a job or work by reason of a strike or lockout, whether actual or imminent.
e) Contracting out of a job or work being performed by union members and such will interfere with,
restrain or coerce employees in the exercise of their rights to self-organization as provided in
Article 259 [248] of the Labor Code, as amended.
f) Requiring the contractor's/subcontractor's employees to perform functions which are currently being
performed by the regular employees of the principal.
g) Requiring the contractor's/subcontractor's employees to sign, as a precondition to employment or
continued employment, an antedated resignation letter; a blank payroll; a waiver of labor
standards including minimum wages and social or welfare benefits; or a quitclaim releasing the
principal or contractor from liability as to payment of future claims; or require the employee to
become member of a cooperative.
h) Repeated hiring by the contractor/subcontractor of employees under an employment contract of short
duration.
i) Requiring employees under a contracting/subcontracting arrangement to sign a contract fixing the
period of employment to a term shorter than the term of the Service Agreement, unless the contract
is divisible into phases for which substantially different skills are required and this is made known to the
employee at the time of engagement.
j) Such other practices, schemes or employment arrangements designed to circumvent the right of
workers to security of tenure.
B.
TERMINATION OF EMPLOYMENT
1.
TERMINATION BY EMPLOYEE
(RESIGNATION)
a.
RESIGNATION VERSUS CONSTRUCTIVE DISMISSAL
i.
RESIGNATION
• What are the two (2) kinds of resignation under the Labor Code (Article 300 [285])?
(a) Voluntary resignation - without just cause; or
(b) Involuntary resignation - with just cause.
• What are the distinctions between the two?
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ii.
CONSTRUCTIVE DISMISSAL
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In illegal dismissal, the employer openly shows his intention to dismiss the employee. In fact, the employer,
in compliance with due process, asks the employee to explain why he should not be dismissed for committing a
wrongful act and he is given due process prior to terminating him.
In contrast, in constructive dismissal, the employer will never indicate that he is terminating the employee.
He will even allow the employee to report to his work every day. But he will do any of the three (3) acts mentioned
above that indicates his intention to get rid of the services of the employee. This is the reason why it is called
“dismissal in disguise.”
2.
TERMINATION BY EMPLOYER
1. REQUISITES.
For misconduct or improper behavior to be a just cause for dismissal, the following requisites must concur:
II.
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INSUBORDINATION
OR WILLFUL DISOBEDIENCE OF LAWFUL ORDERS
1. REQUISITES.
One of the fundamental duties of an employee is to obey all reasonable rules, orders and instructions of the
employer. In order to validly invoke this ground, the following requisites must be complied with, to wit:
1. The employee’s assailed conduct must have been willful or intentional, the willfulness being
characterized by a wrongful and perverse attitude; and
2. The order violated must be based on a reasonable and lawful company rule, regulation or policy and
made known to the employee and must pertain to the duties for which he has been engaged to discharge.
III.
GROSS AND HABITUAL NEGLECT OF DUTIES
1. REQUISITES.
The following are the requisites:
(1) There must be negligence which is gross and/or habitual in character; and
(2) It must be work-related as would make him unfit to work for his employer.
2. SOME PRINCIPLES ON GROSS AND HABITUAL NEGLECT OF DUTIES.
• Simple negligence is not sufficient to terminate employment.
• The negligence must be gross in character which means absence of that diligence that an ordinarily prudent man
would use in his own affairs.
• As a general rule, negligence must be both gross and habitual to be a valid ground to dismiss.
• Habituality may be disregarded if negligence is gross or the damage or loss is substantial. “Habitual
negligence” implies repeated failure to perform one’s duties for a period of time, depending upon the
circumstances.
• Actual damage, loss or injury is not an essential requisite.
• Gross negligence may result to loss of trust and confidence.
• Absences, if authorized, cannot be cited as a ground to terminate employment.
• Tardiness or absenteeism, if not habitual, cannot be cited as a ground to terminate employment.
• Tardiness or absenteeism, if habitual, may be cited as a ground to terminate employment.
• Tardiness or absenteeism, if habitual, may be tantamount to serious misconduct.
• Absences or tardiness due to emergency, ailment or fortuitous event are justified and may not be cited as just
cause to terminate employment.
• Unsatisfactory or poor performance, inefficiency and incompetence are considered just causes for dismissal
only if they amount to gross and habitual neglect of duties.
IV.
ABANDONMENT OF WORK
1. CONCEPT.
Abandonment is not provided for in the Labor Code but it is jurisprudentially considered a form of neglect
of duty; hence, a just cause for termination of employment under Article 297(b) [282(b)] of the Labor Code.
2. REQUISITES.
To constitute abandonment, two (2) elements must concur, namely:
1) The employee must have failed to report for work or must have been absent without valid or justifiable
reason; and
2) There must have been a clear intention on the part of the employee to sever the employer-employee
relationship manifested by some overt act.
3. SOME PRINCIPLES ON ABANDONMENT.
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CHAN ROBLES ONLINE BAR REVIEW
www.chanroblesbar.com
V.
FRAUD
1. REQUISITES.
The following are the requisites of this ground:
1. There must be an act, omission, or concealment;
2. The act, omission or concealment involves a breach of legal duty, trust, or confidence justly reposed;
3. It must be committed against the employer or his/her representative; and
4. It must be in connection with the employees' work.1
2. SOME PRINCIPLES ON FRAUD.
• Failure to deposit collection constitutes fraud.
• Lack of damage or losses is not necessary in fraud cases. The fact that the employer did not suffer losses from
the dishonesty of the dismissed employee because of its timely discovery does not excuse the latter from any
culpability.
• Lack of misappropriation or shortage is immaterial in case of unauthorized encashment of personal checks by
teller and cashier.
• Restitution does not have absolutory effect.
VI.
WILLFUL BREACH OF TRUST AND CONFIDENCE
1 Per latest DOLE Department Order No. 147-15, series of 2015, September 07, 2015.
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1. REQUISITES.
For the doctrine of loss of trust and confidence to apply, the following requisites must be satisfied:
(1) The employee holds a position of trust and confidence;
(2) There exists an act justifying the loss of trust and confidence, which means that the act that betrays the
employer’s trust must be real, i.e., founded on clearly established facts;
(3) The employee’s breach of the trust must be willful, i.e., it was done intentionally, knowingly and
purposely, without justifiable excuse; and
(4) The act must be in relation to his work which would render him unfit to perform it.
2. GUIDELINES.
As a safeguard against employers who indiscriminately use “loss of trust and confidence” to justify
arbitrary dismissal of employees, the Supreme Court, in addition to the above elements, came up with the following
guidelines for the application of the doctrine:
(1) The loss of confidence must not be simulated;
(2) It should not be used as a subterfuge for causes which are illegal, improper or unjustified;
(3) It may not be arbitrarily asserted in the face of overwhelming evidence to the contrary; and
(4) It must be genuine, not a mere afterthought, to justify earlier action taken in bad faith.
The foregoing guidelines have been prescribed by the Supreme Court due to the subjective nature of this
ground which makes termination based on loss of trust and confidence prone to abuse.
3. SOME PRINCIPLES ON THE DOCTRINE OF LOSS OF TRUST AND CONFIDENCE.
• Employee’s position must be reposed with trust and confidence.
• “Position of trust and confidence” is one where a person is entrusted with confidence on delicate matters, or
with the custody, handling, or care and protection of the employer’s property.
• Two (2) classes of positions of trust. The first class consists of managerial employees or those who, by the
nature of their position, are entrusted with confidential and delicate matters and from whom greater fidelity to
duty is correspondingly expected. They refer to those vested with the powers or prerogatives to lay down and
execute management policies and/or to hire, transfer suspend, lay-off, recall, discharge, assign or discipline
employees or to effectively recommend such managerial actions. Their primary duty consists of the
management of the establishment in which they are employed or of a department or a subdivision thereof.
The second class consists of fiduciary rank-and-file employees who, though rank-and-file, are routinely
charged with the custody, handling or care and protection of the employer's money or property, or entrusted with
confidence on delicate matters, and are thus classified as occupying positions of trust and confidence. Included
under this class are “cashiers, auditors, property custodians, or those who, in the normal and routine exercise of
their functions, regularly handle significant amounts of [the employer’s] money or property.”
• Rules on termination of managerial and supervisory employees different from those applicable to rank-
and-file employees. Thus, with respect to rank-and-file personnel, loss of trust and confidence as a ground for
valid dismissal requires proof of involvement in the alleged events in question and that mere uncorroborated
assertions and accusations by the employer will not be sufficient. But as regards a managerial employee, the
mere existence of a basis for believing that he has breached the trust of his employer would suffice for his
dismissal.
• There must be “some basis” for the loss of trust and confidence which means that there is reasonable ground to
believe, if not to entertain the moral conviction, that the concerned employee is responsible for the misconduct
and that the nature of his participation therein rendered him absolutely unworthy of trust and confidence
demanded by his position.
• Dismissal due to feng shui mismatch is not a valid ground to lose trust and confidence.
• Command responsibility of managerial employees is a ground to dismiss.
• Confidential employee may be dismissed for loss of trust and confidence.
• Grant of promotions and bonuses negates loss of trust and confidence.
• Long years of service, absence of derogatory record and small amount involved are deemed inconsequential
insofar as loss of trust and confidence is concerned.
• Dropping of criminal charges or acquittal in a criminal case arising from the same act does not affect the
validity of dismissal based on loss of trust and confidence.
• Full restitution does not absolve employee of offense which resulted in the loss of trust and confidence.
VII.
COMMISSION OF CRIME OR OFFENSE
1. REQUISITES.
The following are the requisites for the valid invocation of this ground:
1. A crime or offense was committed by the employee;
2. It was committed against any of the following persons:
(a) His employer;
(b) Any immediate member of his employer’s family; or
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VIII.
OTHER ANALOGOUS CAUSES
1. ANALOGOUS CAUSES UNDER ESTABLISHED JURISPRUDENCE.
The following may be cited as analogous causes:
1) Violation of company rules and regulations.
2) Theft of property owned by a co-employee, as distinguished from theft of property owned by the
employer.
3) Incompetence, inefficiency or ineptitude.
4) Failure to attain work quota.
5) Failure to comply with weight standards of employer.
6) “Attitude problem” is analogous to loss of trust and confidence.
IX.
TERMINATION DUE TO ENFORCEMENT OF
UNION SECURITY CLAUSE
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• Can the employer adopt the due process afforded by the SEBA to the employee in expelling him from his
membership in the SEBA?
No. The employer cannot adopt the due process afforded by the SEBA as its own due process for the simple
reason that such due process concerns the termination of membership of the employee from the SEBA. The due
process in above-cited Alabang Country Club, Inc. v. NLRC,1 is required for a different purpose - to terminate his
employment.
OTHER PRINCIPLES `ON TERMINATION
PER DEPARTMENT ORDER NO. 147-15, SERIES OF 2015
(07 SEPTEMBER 2015):
2
➢ An employee found positive for use of dangerous drugs shall be dealt with administratively which shall be a
ground for suspension or termination.3
➢ An employee shall not be terminated from work based on actual, perceived or suspected HIV status.4
➢ An employee shall not be terminated on basis of actual, perceived or suspected Hepatitis B status.5
➢ An employee who has or had tuberculosis shall not be discriminated against. He/she shall be entitled to work for
as long as they are certified by the company's accredited health provider as medically fit and shall be restored to
work as soon as his/her illness is controlled.6
➢ An employee may also be terminated based on the grounds provided for under the CBA.
b.
AUTHORIZED CAUSES
3 DOLE Department Order No. 53, Series of 2003 in relation to the IRR of R.A. 9165.
5 DOLE Department Advisory No.5, Series of 2010 Part III C1. par. c.
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5. Fair and reasonable criteria in ascertaining what positions are to be affected by the termination, such
as, but not limited to: nature of work; status of employment (whether casual, temporary or regular);
experience; efficiency; seniority; dependability; adaptability; flexibility; trainability; job performance;
discipline; and attitude towards work. Failure to follow fair and reasonable criteria in selecting who to
terminate would render the termination invalid.
NOTE: SENIORITY is not the principal criterion. The other criteria mentioned above which are lifted
from jurisprudence, is of equal importance.
I.
INSTALLATION OF LABOR-SAVING DEVICE
1 Per latest DOLE Department Order No. 147-15, series of 2015, September 07, 2015.
2 Id.
3 Id.
4 Balasabas v. NLRC, G.R. No. 85286, August 24,1992; Central Azucarerra dela Carlota v. NLRC, G.R. No. 100092, December 29, 1995.
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IV.
CLOSURE OR CESSATION OF BUSINESS OPERATIONS
• Can an employer close its business even if it is not suffering from business losses?
Yes. In fact, closure involves two (2) situations:
(a) When NOT due to serious business losses or financial reverses; or
(b) When due to serious business losses or financial reverses
It is only in the first that payment of separation pay is required. No such requirement is imposed in the
second.
▪ Principle of closure under Article 283 applies in cases of both total and partial closure or cessation of business
operations. Management may choose to close only a branch, a department, a plant, or a shop.
▪ Closure of department or section and hiring of workers supplied by independent contractor as replacements is
valid.
▪ Relocation of business may amount to cessation of operations.
▪ Closure of business to merge or consolidate with another or to sell or dispose all of its assets, held valid.
▪ Audited financial statements necessary only in closure due to losses.
V.
DISEASE
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2. THE FUJI RULE – THE EMPLOYEE SHOULD BE GIVEN THE CHANCE TO PRESENT
COUNTERVAILING MEDICAL CERTIFICATES.
Subsequent to Deoferio, another 2014 case, Fuji Television Network, Inc. v. Arlene S. Espiritu,1 has
further expounded on the due process requirement in termination due to disease, this time by categorically
specifying the right of the ailing employee to present countervailing evidence in the form of medical certificates to
prove that his dismissal due to disease is not proper and therefore illegal.
Respondent Arlene was petitioner’s news correspondent/producer “tasked to report Philippine news to Fuji
through its Manila Bureau field office.” She was successively given yearly fixed-term employment contracts until
she was diagnosed with lung cancer sometime in January 2009 when the Chief of News Agency of Fuji informed her
“that the company will have a problem renewing her contract” since it would be difficult for her to perform her job.
She, however, “insisted that she was still fit to work as certified by her attending physician.” Subsequently, Arlene
and Fuji signed a non-renewal contract where it was stipulated that her contract would no longer be renewed after its
expiration on May 31, 2009 and that the parties release each other from liabilities and responsibilities under the
employment contract. Arlene received her unpaid salaries and bonuses but she affixed her signature on the non-
renewal contract with the initials “U.P.” for “under protest.” The day after Arlene signed the non-renewal contract,
she filed a complaint for illegal dismissal and attorney’s fees with the Labor Arbiter, alleging that she was forced to
sign the non-renewal contract when Fuji came to know of her illness and that Fuji withheld her salaries and other
benefits for March and April 2009 when she refused to sign. Arlene claimed that she was left with no other recourse
but to sign the non-renewal contract, and it was only upon signing that she was given her salaries and bonuses, in
addition to separation pay equivalent to 4 years.
The Supreme Court declared respondent Arlene as having been constructively dismissed. It was likewise
held here that respondent was not afforded due process, thus:
“There is no evidence showing that Arlene was accorded due process. After informing her
employer of her lung cancer, she was not given the chance to present medical certificates. Fuji
immediately concluded that Arlene could no longer perform her duties because of chemotherapy. It
did not ask her how her condition would affect her work. Neither did it suggest for her to take a
leave, even though she was entitled to sick leaves. Worse, it did not present any certificate from a
competent public health authority. What Fuji did was to inform her that her contract would no
longer be renewed, and when she did not agree, her salary was withheld. Thus, the Court of
Appeals correctly upheld the finding of the National Labor Relations Commission that for failure of
Fuji to comply with due process, Arlene was illegally dismissed.”
▪ What are some salient points to consider under this ground of disease?
▪ If the disease or ailment can be cured within the period of six (6) months with proper medical treatment, the
employer should not terminate the employee but merely ask him to take a leave of absence. The employer
should reinstate him to his former position immediately upon the restoration of his normal health.
▪ In case the employee unreasonably refuses to submit to medical examination or treatment upon being
requested to do so, the employer may terminate his services on the ground of insubordination or willful
disobedience of lawful order.
▪ A medical certificate issued by a company’s own physician is not an acceptable certificate for purposes of
terminating an employment based on Article 284, it having been issued not by a “competent public health
authority,” the person referred to in the law.
▪ A “competent public health authority” refers to a government doctor whose medical specialization
pertains to the disease being suffered by the employee. For instance, if the employee suffers from
tuberculosis, the medical certificate should be issued by a government-employed pulmonologist who is
competent to make an opinion thereon. If the employee has cardiac symptoms, the competent physician in
this case would be a cardiologist.
▪ The medical certificate should be procured by the employer and not by the employee.
3.
DUE PROCESS
(a) Twin-Notice Requirement
(b) Hearing; Ample Opportunity to be Heard
1 Fuji Television Network, Inc. v. Arlene S. Espiritu, G.R. Nos. 204944-45, Dec. 03, 2014.
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(2) Due process required to be observed by the labor authorities/tribunals/courts (Labor Arbiter/NLRC/CA) in
hearing and deciding labor cases brought before them for adjudication and decision (COURT-LEVEL DUE
PROCESS).
No. 1 above requires compliance with both the statutory and contractual due process as discussed below;
while No. 2 above requires observance of the constitutional due process.
It is No. 1 above that is prescribed in the Syllabus, hence, discussion herein will focus thereon.
▪ What is the King of Kings Transport doctrine on just cause procedural due process?
Based on this doctrine which was enunciated in the 2007 case of King of Kings Transport, Inc. v.
Mamac,2 the following requirements should be complied with in just cause termination:
(1) First written notice.
The first written notice to be served on the employee should:
a) Contain the specific causes or grounds for termination against him;
b) Contain a directive that the employee is given the opportunity to submit his written explanation
within the reasonable period of FIVE (5) CALENDAR DAYS from receipt of the notice:
1) to enable him to prepare adequately for his defense;
2) to study the accusation against him;
3) to consult a union official or lawyer;
4) to gather data and evidence; and
5) to decide on the defenses he will raise against the complaint.
c) Contain a detailed narration of the facts and circumstances that will serve as basis for the charge
against the employee. This is required in order to enable him to intelligently prepare his explanation
and defenses. A general description of the charge will not suffice.
d) Specifically mention which company rules, if any, are violated and/or which among the grounds
under Article 282 is being charged against the employee.
(2) Hearing required,
After serving the first notice, the employer should schedule and conduct a hearing or conference wherein
the employee will be given the opportunity to:
1) explain and clarify his defenses to the charge/s against him;
2) present evidence in support of his defenses; and
3) rebut the evidence presented against him by the management.
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During the hearing or conference, the employee is given the chance to defend himself personally, with the
assistance of a representative or counsel of his choice. Moreover, this conference or hearing could be used by the
parties as an opportunity to come to an amicable settlement.
NOTE: As earlier discussed, per the 2011 Lopez doctrine, which is the prevailing rule,
the right to counsel is neither indispensable nor mandatory. It becomes mandatory only in
two (2) situations:
(1) When the employee himself requests for counsel; or
(2) When he manifests that he wants a formal hearing on the charges against him, in
which case, he should be assisted by counsel. (See Lopez v. Alturas Group of Companies).
(3) Second written notice.
After determining that termination of employment is justified, the employer shall serve the employees a
written notice of termination indicating that:
1) all circumstances involving the charge/s against the employee have been considered; and
2) grounds have been established to justify the severance of his employment.
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(5) Award of financial assistance in cases where the employee’s dismissal is declared legal but because of
long years of service, and other considerations, financial assistance is awarded.
(6) Imposition of legal interest on separation pay, backwages and other monetary awards.
1.
REINSTATEMENT
a.
REINSTATEMENT PENDING APPEAL
(Article 229 [223], Labor Code)
• Is reinstatement pending appeal solely applicable to reinstatement ordered by the Labor Arbiter?
Yes. Reinstatement is self-executory or immediately executory only if it is ordered by the Labor Arbiter.
This means that the employee ordered reinstated need not file any motion for the issuance of writ of execution to
enforce reinstatement. The employer, in fact, is required to manifest within 10 days from his receipt of the order of
reinstatement which of the two (2) options he is taking:
(1) To reinstate the employee to his former position or to a substantially equivalent position; or
(2) To reinstate him in the payroll, which means the employee need not report for work but only for the
purpose of getting his wage.
There is no way the employer can disregard the reinstatement order. Posting of a bond does not stay the
execution of immediate reinstatement.
In contrast, if ordered by the NLRC, on appeal, or the Court of Appeals, under a Rule 65 certiorari
petition, or even by the Supreme Court, reinstatement is not immediately executory. This means that the
employee reinstated should still file a motion for issuance of writ of execution to enforce the reinstatement.
• Are there instances where writ of execution of Labor Arbiter’s reinstatement order is still required?
Yes, under the following two (2) instances, viz.:
(1) When the employer disobeys the Rules-prescribed directive to submit a report of compliance within ten
(10) calendar days from receipt of the decision; or
(2) When the employer refuses to reinstate the dismissed employee.
The Labor Arbiter shall motu proprio issue a corresponding writ to satisfy the reinstatement wages as they
accrue until actual reinstatement or reversal of the order of reinstatement.
The employee need not file a motion for the issuance of the writ of execution since the Labor Arbiter shall
thereafter motu proprio issue the writ. Employer may be cited for contempt for his refusal to comply with the order
of reinstatement.
Employer is liable to pay the salaries for the period that the employee was ordered reinstated pending
appeal even if his dismissal is later finally found to be legal on appeal.
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(2) When reinstatement proves impossible, impracticable, not feasible or unwarranted for varied reasons
and thus hardly in the best interest of the parties such as:
(a) Where the employee has already been replaced permanently as when his position has already been
taken over by a regular employee and there is no substantially equivalent position to which he may
be reinstated.
(b) Where the dismissed employee’s position is no longer available at the time of reinstatement for
reasons not attributable to the fault of the employer.
(c) When there has been long lapse or passage of time that the employee was out of employer’s employ
from the date of the dismissal to the final resolution of the case or because of the realities of the
situation.
(d) By reason of the injury suffered by the employee.
(e) The employee has already reached retirement age under a Retirement Plan.
(f) When the illegally dismissed employees are over-age or beyond the compulsory retirement age and
their reinstatement would unjustly prejudice their employer.
(3) Where the employee decides not to be reinstated as when he does not pray for reinstatement in his
complaint or position paper but asked for separation pay instead.
(4) When reinstatement is rendered moot and academic due to supervening events, such as:
(a) Death of the illegally dismissed employee.
(b) Declaration of insolvency of the employer by the court.
(c) Fire which gutted the employer’s establishment and resulted in its total destruction.
(d) In case the establishment where the employee is to be reinstated has closed or ceased operations.
(5) To prevent further delay in the execution of the decision to the prejudice of private respondent.
(6) Other circumstances such as (a) when reinstatement is inimical to the employer’s interest; (b)
reinstatement does not serve the best interests of the parties involved; (c) the employer is prejudiced by
the workers’ continued employment; or (d) that it will not serve any prudent purpose as when
supervening facts transpired which made execution unjust or inequitable.
• What is the amount of separation pay in lieu of reinstatement?
Per prevailing jurisprudence, the following are the components of separation pay in lieu of reinstatement>
(1) The amount equivalent to at least one (1) month salary or to one (1) month salary for every year of
service, whichever is higher, a fraction of at least six (6) months being considered as one (1) whole year.
(2) Allowances that the employee has been receiving on a regular basis.
• What is the period covered?
From start of employment up to the date of finality of decision except when the employer has ceased its
operation earlier, in which case, the same should be computed up to the date of closure.
• What is the salary rate to be used in computing it?
The salary rate prevailing at the end of the period of putative service should be the basis for computation
which refers to the period of imputed service for which the employee is entitled to backwages.
• What are some important principles on separation pay in lieu of reinstatement?
1. Award of separation pay and backwages are not inconsistent with each other. Hence, both may be
awarded to an illegally dismissed employee. The payment of separation pay is in addition to
payment of backwages.
2. Reinstatement cannot be granted when what is prayed for by employee is separation pay in lieu
thereof.
BACKWAGES
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▪ Salary increases during period of unemployment are not included as component in the computation of
backwages.
▪ Dismissed employee’s ability to earn is irrelevant in the award of backwages.
▪ In case reinstatement is ordered, full backwages should be reckoned from the time the compensation was
withheld (which, as a rule, is from the time of illegal dismissal) up to the time of reinstatement, whether
actual or in the payroll.
▪ If separation pay is ordered in lieu of reinstatement, full backwages should be computed from the time of
illegal dismissal until the finality of the decision. The justification is that along with the finality of the
Supreme Court’s decision, the issue on the illegality of the dismissal is finally laid to rest.
▪ If the illegally dismissed employee has reached the optional retirement age of 60 years, his backwages
should only cover the time when he was illegally dismissed up to the time when he reached 60 years. Under
Article 287, 60 years is the optional retirement age.
▪ If the employee has reached 65 years of age or beyond, his full backwages should be computed only up to
said age. The contention of the employer that backwages should be reckoned only up to age 60 cannot be
sustained.
▪ If employer has already ceased operations, full backwages should be computed only up to the date of the
closure. To allow the computation of the backwages to be based on a period beyond that would be an
injustice to the employer.
▪ Any amount received during payroll reinstatement is deductible from backwages.
LIMITED BACKWAGES
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➢ Extension of period must be justified. During the 30-day period of preventive suspension, the employer is
expected to conduct and finish the investigation of the employee’s administrative case. The period of thirty
(30) days may only be extended if the employer failed to complete the hearing or investigation within said
period due to justifiable grounds. No extension thereof can be made based on whimsical, capricious or
unreasonable grounds.
➢ Preventive suspension lasting longer than 30 days, without the benefit of valid extension, amounts to
constructive dismissal.
➢ Indefinite preventive suspension amounts to constructive dismissal.
C.
RETIREMENT
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Cainta Catholic School v. Cainta Catholic School Employees Union [CCSEU], where the Supreme
Court upheld the exercise by the school of its option to retire employees pursuant to the existing CBA where it is
provided that the school has the option to retire an employee upon reaching the age limit of sixty (60) or after
having rendered at least twenty (20) years of service to the school, the last three (3) years of which must be
continuous. Hence, the termination of employment of the employees, arising as it did from an exercise of a
management prerogative granted by the mutually-negotiated CBA between the school and the union is valid.
• What is the minimum years of service required for entitlement under the law?
Five (5) years is the minimum years of service that must be rendered by the employee before he can avail
of the retirement benefits upon reaching optional or compulsory retirement age under Article 287.
• What is the retirement age of underground mine workers?
The rule is different. The optional retirement age of underground mine workers is 50 years of age; while
the compulsory retirement age is 60 years old.
• What is the minimum number of years of service required of underground mine workers?
Minimum years of service is also 5 years.
• Are the retirement benefits of underground mine workers similar to ordinary retirees?
Yes. In fact, other than the retirement age, all other requirements as well as benefits provided in the law are
applicable to underground mine workers.
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But in the 2010 case of Serrano v. Severino Santos Transit,1 which involves a bus conductor (petitioner)
who worked for 14 years for respondent bus company which did not adopt any retirement scheme. It was held
herein that even if petitioner as bus conductor was paid on commission basis, he falls within the coverage of R.A.
7641 (Retirement Pay Law, now Article 287 of Labor Code). This means that his retirement pay should include the
cash equivalent of the 5-day SIL and 1/12 of the 13th month pay for a total of 22.5 days. The affirmance by the Court
of Appeals of the reliance by the NLRC on R & E Transport case was held erroneous. For purposes of applying the
law on SIL as well as on retirement, there is a difference between drivers paid under the “boundary system” and
conductors paid on commission basis. This is so because in practice, taxi drivers do not receive fixed wages. They
retain only those sums in excess of the “boundary” or fee they pay to the owners or operators of the vehicles.
Conductors, on the other hand, are paid a certain percentage of the bus’ earnings for the day. It bears emphasis that
under P.D. No. 851 and the SIL Law, the exclusion from its coverage of workers who are paid on a purely
commission basis is only with respect to field personnel.
RETIREMENT BENEFITS OF
WORKERS PAID BY RESULTS
• What are the retirement benefits of workers paid by results?
For covered workers who are paid by results and do not have a fixed monthly rate, the basis for the
determination of the salary for fifteen (15) days shall be their average daily salary (ADS). The ADS is the average
salary for the last twelve (12) months reckoned from the date of their retirement, divided by the number of actual
working days in that particular period.
ENTITLEMENT OF EMPLOYEES
DISMISSED FOR JUST CAUSE TO RETIREMENT BENEFITS
General rule – Entitled because employee has acquired vested right over the retirement benefits.
Exception - Where just cause termination is cited in the retirement plan as reason to validly deny claim
for retirement benefits.
Here, the company’s retirement plan prohibits the award of retirement benefits to an employee
dismissed for just cause, a proscription that binds the parties to it.
In this case, the Supreme Court ordered the payment to the retrenched employees of both the
separation pay for retrenchment embodied in the CBA as well as the retirement pay
provided under a separate Retirement Plan. The reason is that these two are not mutually
exclusive. There is nothing in the CBA nor in the Retirement Plan that states that an employee
who had received separation pay would no longer be entitled to retirement benefits or that
collection of retirement benefits was prohibited if the employee had already received separation
pay
It is provided in the retirement plan that the retirement, death and disability benefits paid in the
plan are considered integrated with and in lieu of termination benefits under the Labor Code,
thus, the retirement fund may be validly used to pay such termination or separation pay because
of closure of business.
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The retirement plan provides that the employee shall be entitled to either the retirement benefit
provided therein or the separation pay provided by law, whichever is higher, the employee cannot
be entitled to both benefits.
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SYLLABUS
MAJOR TOPIC 5
MANAGEMENT PREROGATIVES
• What are management prerogatives?
Management prerogatives are granted to the employer to regulate every aspect of their business, generally
without restraint in accordance with their own discretion and judgment. This privilege is inherent in the right of
employers to control and manage their enterprise effectively. Such aspects of employment include hiring, work
assignments, working methods, time, place and manner of work, tools to be used, processes to be followed,
supervision of workers, working regulations, transfer of employees, lay-off of workers and the discipline, dismissal
and recall of workers.
• What are the limitations to the exercise of these prerogatives?
1. Limitations imposed by:
a) law;
b) CBA;
c) employment contract;
d) employer policy;
e) employer practice; and
f) general principles of fair play and justice.
2. It is subject to police power.
3. Its exercise should be without abuse of discretion.
4. It should be done in good faith and with due regard to the rights of labor.
For example, an employer cannot prescribe more than 8 hours as normal working hours in a day because
there is a law which limits it to 8 hours. In the same vein, the employer cannot insist that an employee should
observe 8 hours as the daily normal working hours if there is a stipulation in the CBA, employment contract, or
there is an employer policy or practice that the normal working hours is only 7 hours per day.
A.
DISCIPLINE
B.
TRANSFER OF EMPLOYEES
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▪ The exercise of the prerogative to transfer or assign employees from one office or area of operation to
another is valid provided there is no demotion in rank or diminution of salary, benefits and other
privileges. The transfer should not be motivated by discrimination or made in bad faith or effected as a form
of punishment or demotion without sufficient cause.
▪ Commitment made by the employee like a salesman in the employment contract to be re-assigned
anywhere in the Philippines is binding on him.
▪ Even if the employee is performing well in his present assignment, management may reassign him to a
new post.
▪ The transfer of an employee may constitute constructive dismissal when:
1) When the transfer is unreasonable, inconvenient or prejudicial to the employee;
2) When the transfer involves a demotion in rank or diminution of salaries, benefits and other privileges;
and
3) When the employer performs a clear act of discrimination, insensibility, or disdain towards the employee,
which forecloses any choice by the latter except to forego his continued employment.
▪ The refusal of an employee to be transferred may be held justified if there is a showing that the transfer was
directed by the employer under questionable circumstances. For instance, the transfer of employees during
the height of their union’s concerted activities in the company where they were active participants is
illegal.
▪ An employee who refuses to be transferred, when such transfer is valid, is guilty of insubordination or
willful disobedience of a lawful order of an employer under Article 282 of the Labor Code.
▪ Refusal to transfer due to parental obligations, additional expenses, inconvenience, hardship and
anguish is not valid. An employee could not validly refuse lawful orders to transfer based on these
grounds.
▪ Refusal to transfer to overseas assignment is valid.
▪ Refusal to transfer consequent to promotion is valid.
▪ Transfer to avoid conflict of interest is valid.
▪ A transfer from one position to another occasioned by the abolition of the position is valid.
C.
PRODUCTIVITY STANDARD
Illustrative cases:
In International School Manila v. International School Alliance of Educators (ISAE),1 the teacher was
held guilty of gross inefficiency meriting her dismissal on the basis of the Court’s finding that she failed to measure
up to the standards set by the school in teaching Filipino classes.
In Reyes-Rayel v. Philippine Luen Thai Holdings Corp.,2 the validity of the dismissal of petitioner who
was the Corporate Human Resources (CHR) Director for Manufacturing of respondent company, on the ground of
inefficiency and ineptitude, was affirmed on the basis of the Court’s finding that petitioner, on two occasions, gave
wrong information regarding issues on leave and holiday pay which generated confusion among employees in the
computation of salaries and wages.
In Realda v. New Age Graphics, Inc.,3 petitioner, a machine operator of respondent company, was
dismissed on the ground, among others, of inefficiency. In affirming the validity of his dismissal, the Supreme Court
reasoned:
“xxx (T)he petitioner’s failure to observe Graphics, Inc.’s work standards constitutes inefficiency
that is a valid cause for dismissal. Failure to observe prescribed standards of work, or to fulfill reasonable
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work assignments due to inefficiency may constitute just cause for dismissal. Such inefficiency is understood
to mean failure to attain work goals or work quotas, either by failing to complete the same within the allotted
reasonable period, or by producing unsatisfactory results.”
D.
BONUS
E.
CHANGE OF WORKING HOURS
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1. Philippine Telegraph and Telephone Company (PT&T) v. NLRC.1 - It was declared here that the
company policy of not accepting or considering as disqualified from work any woman worker who
contracts marriage runs afoul of the test of, and the right against, discrimination afforded all women
workers by our labor laws and by no less than the Constitution.
2. Star Paper Corp. v. Simbol.2 - The following policies were struck down as invalid for violating the
standard of reasonableness which is being followed in our jurisdiction, otherwise called the
“Reasonable Business Necessity Rule”:
“1. New applicants will not be allowed to be hired if in case he/she has [a] relative, up to [the] 3rd degree
of relationship, already employed by the company.
“2. In case of two of our employees (both singles [sic], one male and another female) developed a
friendly relationship during the course of their employment and then decided to get married, one of them
should resign to preserve the policy stated above.”
It was in this case of Star Paper that the Supreme Court pronounced that in Duncan, the policy against
marriage has passed and complied with the “Reasonable Business Necessity Rule” because of the conflict of
interest sought to be avoided. But in PT&T, there was no showing that there ever was a reasonable business
necessity sought to be protected by the policy against marriage. So also as in this case of Star Paper where there is
no showing of such reasonable business necessity.
NOTE: Besides the foregoing, Article 136 of the Labor Code considers as an unlawful act of the employer
to require as a condition for or continuation of employment that a woman employee shall not get married or to
stipulate expressly or tacitly that upon getting married, a woman employee shall be deemed resigned or separated. It
is likewise an unlawful act of the employer, to actually dismiss, discharge, discriminate or otherwise prejudice a
woman employee merely by reason of her marriage.
G.
POST-EMPLOYMENT BAN
“8. NON-INVOLVEMENT PROVISION – The EMPLOYEE further undertakes that during his/her
engagement with EMPLOYER and in case of separation from the Company, whether voluntary or for cause, he/
she shall not, for the next TWO (2) years thereafter, engage in or be involved with any corporation, association or
entity, whether directly or indirectly, engaged in the same business or belonging to the same pre-need industry as
the EMPLOYER. Any breach of the foregoing provision shall render the EMPLOYEE liable to the EMPLOYER
in the amount of One Hundred Thousand Pesos (P100,000.00) for and as liquidated damages.”
Starting on January 1, 1993, petitioner worked for respondent as Senior Assistant Vice-President and
Territorial Operations Head in charge of its Hongkong and Asean operations under a 5-year contract of employment
containing the afore-quoted clause. On September 16, 1995, petitioner stopped reporting for work. In November
1995, she became the Vice-President for Sales of Professional Pension Plans, Inc., a corporation engaged also in the
pre-need industry. Consequently, respondent sued petitioner for damages before the RTC of Pasig City. Respondent
alleged, among others, that petitioner’s employment with Professional Pension Plans, Inc. violated the above-quoted
non-involvement clause in her contract of employment. Respondent thus prayed for P100,000 as compensatory
damages; P200,000 as moral damages; P100,000 as exemplary damages; and 25% of the total amount due plus
P1,000 per counsel’s court appearance, as attorney’s fees.
Petitioner countered that the non-involvement clause was unenforceable for being against public order or
public policy: First, the restraint imposed was much greater than what was necessary to afford respondent a fair and
reasonable protection. Petitioner contended that the transfer to a rival company was an accepted practice in the pre-
1 G.R. No. 118978, May 23, 1997, 272 SCRA 596, 605.
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need industry. Since the products sold by the companies were more or less the same, there was nothing peculiar or
unique to protect. Second, respondent did not invest in petitioner’s training or improvement. At the time petitioner
was recruited, she already possessed the knowledge and expertise required in the pre-need industry and respondent
benefited tremendously from it. Third, a strict application of the non-involvement clause would amount to a
deprivation of petitioner’s right to engage in the only work she knew.
In affirming the validity of the Non-Involvement Clause, the Supreme Court ratiocinated as follows:
“xxx a non-involvement clause is not necessarily void for being in restraint of trade as long as there are
reasonable limitations as to time, trade, and place.
“In this case, the non-involvement clause has a time limit: two years from the time petitioner’s
employment with respondent ends. It is also limited as to trade, since it only prohibits petitioner from
engaging in any pre-need business akin to respondent’s. It is limited as to place since the prohibition covers only
Hongkong and Asean operations.
“More significantly, since petitioner was the Senior Assistant Vice-President and Territorial Operations Head in
charge of respondent’s Hongkong and Asean operations, she had been privy to confidential and highly sensitive
marketing strategies of respondent’s business. To allow her to engage in a rival business soon after she leaves would
make respondent’s trade secrets vulnerable especially in a highly competitive marketing environment. In sum, we
find the non-involvement clause not contrary to public welfare and not greater than is necessary to afford a
fair and reasonable protection to respondent.
“Thus, as held by the trial court and the Court of Appeals, petitioner is bound to pay respondent P100,000 as
liquidated damages. While we have equitably reduced liquidated damages in certain cases, we cannot do so in this
case, since it appears that even from the start, petitioner had not shown the least intention to fulfill the non-
involvement clause in good faith.”
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SYLLABUS
MAJOR TOPIC 6
A.
SSS LAW
(R.A. No. 8282)
• Who are covered employers?
a. An employer or any person who uses the services of another person in business, trade, industry or any
undertaking.
b. A social, civic, professional, charitable and other non-profit organizations which hire the services of
employees are considered “employers.”
c. A foreign government, international organization or its wholly-owned instrumentality such as an
embassy in the Philippines, may enter into an administrative agreement with the SSS for the coverage of
its Filipino employees.
• Who are compulsorily covered employees?
a. A private employee, whether permanent, temporary or provisional, who is not over 60 years old.
b. A domestic worker or kasambahay who has rendered at least one (1) month of service.
c. A Filipino seafarer upon the signing of the standard contract of employment between the seafarer and
the manning agency which, together with the foreign ship owner, act as employers.
d. An employee of a foreign government, international organization or their wholly-owned instrumentality
based in the Philippines, which entered into an administrative agreement with the SSS for the coverage
of its Filipino workers.
e. The parent, spouse or child below 21 years old of the owner of a single proprietorship business.
• Are self-employed persons covered?
Yes. A self-employed person, regardless of trade, business or occupation, with an income of at least P1,000
a month and not over 60 years old, should register with the SSS. Included, but not limited to, are the following self-
employed persons:
a. Self-employed professionals;
b. Business partners, single proprietors and board directors;
c. Actors, actresses, directors, scriptwriters and news reporters who are not under an employer-employee
relationship;
d. Professional athletes, coaches, trainers and jockeys;
e. Farmers and fisherfolks; and
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f. Workers in the informal sector such as cigarette vendors, watch-your-car boys, hospitality girls, among
others.
Unless otherwise specified, all provisions of the law, R.A. No. 8282, applicable to covered employees shall
also be applicable to the covered self-employed persons.
A self-employed person shall be both employee and employer at the same time.
• Who may be covered voluntarily?
1. Separated Members
A member who is separated from employment or ceased to be self-employed/OFW/non-working spouse
and would like to continue contributing.
2. Overseas Filipino Workers (OFWs)
A Filipino recruited in the Philippines by a foreign-based employer for employment abroad or one who
legitimately entered a foreign country (i.e., tourist, student) and is eventually employed.
3. Non-working spouses of SSS members
A person legally married to a currently employed and actively paying SSS member who devotes full
time in the management of household and family affairs may be covered on a voluntary basis, provided
there is the approval of the working spouse. The person should never have been a member of the SSS.
The contributions will be based on 50 percent (50%) of the working spouse’s last posted monthly salary
credit but in no case shall it be lower than P1,000.
• What is the effective date of coverage?
For compulsory coverage:
1. For employer - Compulsory coverage of the employer shall take effect on the first day of his operation
or on the first day he hires employee/s. The employer is given only 30 days from the date of
employment of employee to report the person for coverage to the SSS.
2. For employee - Compulsory coverage of the employee shall take effect on the first day of his
employment.
3. For self-employed - The compulsory coverage of the self-employed person shall take effect upon his
registration with the SSS or upon payment of the first valid contribution, in case of initial coverage.
For voluntary coverage:
1. For an OFW – upon first payment of contribution, in case of initial coverage.
2. For a non-working spouse – upon first payment of contribution.
3. For a separated member – on the month he/she resumed payment of contribution.
• Who are excluded employers?
Government and any of its political subdivisions, branches or instrumentalities, including corporations
owned or controlled by the Government with original charters.
• Who are excluded employees?
Workers whose employment or service falls under any of the following circumstances are not covered:
(1) Employment purely casual and not for the purpose of occupation or business of the employer;
(2) Service performed on or in connection with an alien vessel by an employee if he is employed when
such vessel is outside the Philippines;
(3) Service performed in the employ of the Philippine Government or instrumentality or agency thereof;
(4) Service performed in the employ of a foreign government or international organization, or their wholly-
owned instrumentality: Provided, however, That this exemption notwithstanding, any foreign
government, international organization or their wholly-owned instrumentality employing workers in the
Philippines or employing Filipinos outside of the Philippines, may enter into an agreement with the
Philippine Government for the inclusion of such employees in the SSS except those already covered by
their respective civil service retirement systems: Provided, further, That the terms of such agreement
shall conform with the provisions of R.A. No. 8282 on coverage and amount of payment of
contributions and benefits: Provided, finally, That the provisions of this Act shall be supplementary to
any such agreement; and
(5) Such other services performed by temporary and other employees which may be excluded by regulation
of the Social Security Commission. Employees of bona-fide independent contractors shall not be
deemed employees of the employer engaging the service of said contractors.
• What are the classifications of benefits?
The SSS benefits may be classified into two (2) as follows:
(a) Social security benefits:
1) Sickness
2) Maternity
3) Retirement
4) Disability
5) Death and funeral.
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6. Such other benefits common to both Systems that may be availed of through totalization.
• When does totalization apply?
a. if a worker is not qualified for any benefits from both Systems; or
b. if a worker in the public sector is not qualified for any benefits from the GSIS; or
c. if a worker in the private sector is not qualified for any benefits from the SSS.
For purposes of computation of benefits, totalization applies in all cases so that the contributions made by
the worker-member in both Systems shall provide maximum benefits which otherwise will not be available. In no
case shall the contribution be lost or forfeited.
•
What is the effect if worker is not qualified after totalization?
If after totalization, the worker-member still does not qualify for any benefit as listed in the law, the
member will then get whatever benefits correspond to his/her contributions in either or both Systems.
• What is the effect if worker qualifies for benefits in both Systems?
If a worker qualifies for benefits in both Systems, totalization shall not apply.
D.
EMPLOYEE’S COMPENSATION
COVERAGE AND WHEN COMPENSABLE
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------------oOo------------
SYLLABUS
MAJOR TOPIC 7
LABOR RELATIONS
A.
RIGHT TO SELF-ORGANIZATION
1.
WHO MAY EXERCISE THE RIGHT
• Who are eligible to join, form or assist a labor organization for purposes of collective bargaining?
• Are front-line managers or supervisors eligible to join, form or assist a labor organization?
Yes, but only among themselves. They cannot join a rank-and-file union.
• Do alien employees have the right to join a labor organization?
No, except if the following requisites are complied with:
(1) He should have a valid working permit issued by the DOLE; and
(2) He is a national of a country which grants the same or similar rights to Filipino workers OR which has
ratified either ILO Convention No. 87 or ILO Convention No. 98 (ON THE RIGHT TO SELF-
ORGANIZATION OF WORKERS) as certified by the Philippine Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA).
• Do members of cooperatives have the right to join, form or assist a labor organization?
No, because they are co-owners of the cooperative.
• What about employees of a cooperative?
Yes, because they have employer-employee relationship with the cooperative.
• What about members who are at the same time employees of the cooperative?
No, because the prohibition covers employees of the cooperative who are at the same time members
thereof. But employee-members of a cooperative may withdraw as members of the cooperative for purposes of
joining a labor union.
• Can employees of job contractors join, form or assist a labor organization?
Yes, but not for the purpose of collective bargaining with the principal but with their direct employer – the
job contractor.
• Are self-employed persons allowed to join, form or assist a labor organization?
Yes, for their mutual aid and protection but not for collective bargaining purposes since they have no
employers but themselves. BUT AS AND BY WAY OF DISTINCTION, THEIR LABOR ORGANIZATION IS
CALLED “WORKERS’ ASSOCIATION.”
This rule applies as well to ambulant, intermittent and other workers, rural workers and those without any
definite employers. The reason for this rule is that these persons have no employers with whom they can collectively
bargain.
2.
COMMINGLING or MIXED MEMBERSHIP
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4.
DOCTRINE OF NECESSARY IMPLICATION
5.
RIGHTS AND CONDITIONS OF MEMBERSHIP
a.
NATURE OF RELATIONSHIP
It is in the nature of principal-agent relationship, the members being the principal and the union,
the agent.
It is also in the nature of principal-agent relationship, the labor union being the principal and the
federation, the agent.
a.1.
AFFILIATION AND DISAFFILIATION OF THE
LOCAL UNION FROM THE MOTHER UNION
1. AFFILIATION.
a. Mother union.
In relation to an affiliate, the federation or national union is commonly known as the “mother union.”
This term is not found in law but oftentimes, the Supreme Court uses this term to describe a federation or a national
union.
b. Affiliate.
An “affiliate” refers to:
(1) An independent union affiliated with a federation or a national union; or
(2) A local chapter which has been subsequently granted independent registration but did not disaffiliate
from the federation or national union which created it.
c. A chartered local/local chapter, not an affiliate.
Based on the above definition and description, technically, a local chapter created through the mode of
chartering by a mother union under Article 234-A of the Labor Code, cannot be properly called an “affiliate” if it
has not acquired any independent registration of its own.
The contract that binds a mother union and an affiliate is called “Contract of Affiliation”; while that of a
mother union and the chartered local/local chapter is called “Charter Certificate.”
d. Purpose of affiliation.
The purpose is to further strengthen the collective bargaining leverage of the affiliate. No doubt, the
purpose of affiliation by a local union with a mother union (federation or national union) is to increase by collective
action its bargaining power in respect of the terms and conditions of labor.
e. Principal-agent relationship.
To iterate, the mother union, acting for and in behalf of its affiliate, has the status of an agent while the
local union remains the principal – the basic unit of the association free to serve the common interest of all its
members subject only to the restraints imposed by the constitution and by-laws of the association.
f. Some principles on affiliation.
• Independent legal personality of an affiliate union is not affected by affiliation.
• Affiliate union becomes subject of the rules of the federation or national union.
• The appendage of the acronym of the federation or national union after the name of the affiliate union in
the registration with the DOLE does not change the principal-agent relationship between them. Such
inclusion of the acronym is merely to indicate that the local union is affiliated with the federation or
national union at the time of the registration. It does not mean that the affiliate union cannot
independently stand on its own.
• The fact that it was the federation which negotiated the CBA does not make it the principal and the
affiliate or local union which it represents, the agent.
• In case of illegal strike, the local union, not the mother union, is liable for damages.
2. DISAFFILIATION.
a. Right to disaffiliate.
The right of the affiliate union to disaffiliate from its mother federation or national union is a
constitutionally-guaranteed right which may be invoked by the former at any time. It is axiomatic that an affiliate
union is a separate and voluntary association free to serve the interest of all its members - consistent with the
freedom of association guaranteed in the Constitution.
b. Disaffiliation of independently-registered union and local chapter, distinguished.
The disaffiliation of an independently-registered union does not affect its legitimate status as a labor
organization. However, the same thing may not be said of a local chapter which has no independent registration
since its creation was effected pursuant to the charter certificate issued to it by the federation or national union. Once
a local chapter disaffiliates from the federation or national union which created it, it ceases to be entitled to the rights
and privileges granted to a legitimate labor organization. Hence, it cannot, by itself, file a petition for certification
election.
c. Some principles on disaffiliation.
▪ Disaffiliation does not divest an affiliate union of its legal personality.
▪ Disaffiliation of an affiliate union is not an act of disloyalty.
▪ Disaffiliation for purposes of forming a new union does not terminate the status of the members
thereof as employees of the company. By said act of disaffiliation, the employees who are members of
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the local union did not form a new union but merely exercised their right to register their local union.
The local union is free to disaffiliate from its mother union.
▪ Disaffiliation should be approved by the majority of the union members.
▪ Disaffiliation terminates the right to check-off federation dues. The obligation to check-off federation
dues is terminated with the valid disaffiliation of the affiliate union from the federation with which it
was previously affiliated.
▪ Disaffiliation does not affect the CBA. It does not operate to amend it or change the administration of
the contract.
▪ Disaffiliating from the federation and entering into a CBA with the employer does not constitute an
unfair labor practice.
▪ Disaffiliation is not a violation of the union security clause.
a.2.
SUBSTITUTIONARY DOCTRINE
1. CHANGE OF BARGAINING REPRESENTATIVE DURING THE LIFE OF A CBA.
It simply refers to the substitution of the existing SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE BARGAINING AGENT
(“SEBA” or simply “bargaining agent”) by a newly certified SEBA which defeated it in the certification election.
As new SEBA, it is duty-bound to respect the existing CBA but it can renegotiate for new terms and conditions
thereof.
2. EFFECT OF SUBSTITUTIONARY DOCTRINE ON THE DEPOSED UNION’S PERSONAL
UNDERTAKINGS.
In case of change of bargaining agent under the substitutionary doctrine, the new bargaining agent is not
bound by the personal undertakings of the deposed union like the “no strike, no lockout” clause in a CBA which
is the personal undertaking of the bargaining agent which negotiated it.
3. SOME PRINCIPLES ON SUBSTITUTIONARY DOCTRINE.
• The substitutionary doctrine cannot be invoked to subvert an existing CBA, in derogation of the principle of
freedom of contract. The substitution of a bargaining agent cannot be allowed if the purpose is to subvert an
existing CBA freely entered into by the parties. Such act cannot be sanctioned in law or in equity as it is in
derogation of the principle underlying the freedom of contract and good faith in contractual relations.
• The substitutionary doctrine is applicable also to a situation where the local union, which was created through
the process of chartering by the mother union, disaffiliates from the latter after it secured an independent
registration. The local union will thus be substituted to that of the federation which negotiated the CBA as in
Elisco-Elirol Labor Union [NAFLU] v. Noriel, where petitioner union was created through the mode of
chartering by the National Federation of Labor Unions (NAFLU) and later, it secured its independent
registration with the BLR and disaffiliated with NAFLU by virtue of a resolution by its general membership.
B.
BARGAINING UNIT
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they perform. It is characterized by similarity of employment status, same duties and responsibilities and
substantially similar compensation and working conditions.
St. James School of Quezon City v. Samahang Manggagawa sa St. James School of Quezon City.1 -
Respondent union sought to represent the rank-and-file employees (consisting of the motor pool, construction and
transportation employees) of petitioner-school’s Tandang Sora campus. Petitioner-school opposed it by contending
that the bargaining unit should not only be composed of said employees but must include administrative, teaching
and office personnel in its five (5) campuses. The Supreme Court disagreed with said contention. The motor pool,
construction and transportation employees of the Tandang Sora campus had 149 qualified voters at the time of the
certification election, hence, it was ruled that the 149 qualified voters should be used to determine the existence of a
quorum during the election. Since a majority or 84 out of the 149 qualified voters cast their votes, a quorum existed
during the certification election. The computation of the quorum should be based on the rank-and-file motor pool,
construction and transportation employees of the Tandang Sora campus and not on all the employees in petitioner’s
five (5) campuses. Moreover, the administrative, teaching and office personnel are not members of the union. They
do not belong to the bargaining unit that the union seeks to represent.
Other cases:
(1) San Miguel Corporation v. Laguesma,2 involving a petition of the union which seeks to represent the
sales personnel in the various Magnolia sales offices in Northern Luzon. Petitioner company, however, opposed it by
taking the position that each sales office should constitute one bargaining unit. In disagreeing with this proposition
of petitioner, the High Court said: “What greatly militates against this position (of the company) is the meager
number of sales personnel in each of the Magnolia sales office in Northern Luzon. Even the bargaining unit sought
to be represented by respondent union in the entire Northern Luzon sales area consists only of approximately fifty-
five (55) employees. Surely, it would not be for the best interest of these employees if they would further be
fractionalized. The adage ‘there is strength in number’ is the very rationale underlying the formation of a labor
union.”
(2) San Miguel Corporation Supervisors and Exempt Employees Union v. Laguesma,3 involving the
issue of validity of constituting as one CBU of employees working in San Miguel’s three (3) plants located in three
(3) different places, namely: (1) in Cabuyao, Laguna, (2) in Otis, Pandacan, Metro Manila, and (3) in San Fernando,
Pampanga. It was declared that geographical location is immaterial and therefore can be completely disregarded if
the communal or mutual interest of the employees are not sacrificed. The distance among the 3 plants is not
productive of insurmountable difficulties in the administration of union affairs. Neither are there regional differences
that are likely to impede the operations of a single bargaining representative.
(3) Similar to this case is University of the Philippines v. Ferrer-Calleja, 4 where all non-academic rank-
and-file employees of the University of the Philippines in its various campuses, to wit: (1) Diliman, Quezon City;
(2) Padre Faura, Manila; (3) Los Baños, Laguna; and (4) the Visayas, were allowed to participate in a certification
election as one bargaining unit.
2. GLOBE DOCTRINE.
This principle is based on the will of the employees. It is called Globe doctrine because this principle was
first enunciated in the United States case of Globe Machine and Stamping Co., 5 where it was ruled, in defining the
appropriate bargaining unit, that in a case where the company’s production workers can be considered either as a
single bargaining unit appropriate for purposes of collective bargaining or as three (3) separate and distinct
bargaining units, the determining factor is the desire of the workers themselves. Consequently, a certification
election should be held separately to choose which representative union will be chosen by the workers.
International School Alliance of Educators [ISAE] v. Quisumbing.6 - The Supreme Court ruled here
that foreign-hired teachers do not belong to the bargaining unit of the local-hires because the former have not
indicated their intention to be grouped with the latter for purposes of collective bargaining. Moreover, the collective
bargaining history of the school also shows that these groups were always treated separately.
3. COLLECTIVE BARGAINING HISTORY DOCTRINE.
This principle puts premium to the prior collective bargaining history and affinity of the employees in
determining the appropriate bargaining unit. However, the existence of a prior collective bargaining history has been
held as neither decisive nor conclusive in the determination of what constitutes an appropriate bargaining unit.
National Association of Free Trade Unions v. Mainit Lumber Development Company Workers
Union. 7 - It was ruled here that there is mutuality of interest among the workers in the sawmill division and logging
3 G.R. No. 110399, Aug. 15, 1997, 277 SCRA 370, 380-381.
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division as to justify their formation of a single bargaining unit. This holds true despite the history of said two
divisions being treated as separate units and notwithstanding their geographical distance from each other.
4. EMPLOYMENT STATUS DOCTRINE.
The determination of the appropriate bargaining unit based on the employment status of the employees is
considered an acceptable mode. For instance, casual employees and those employed on a day-to-day basis,
according to the Supreme Court in Philippine Land-Air-Sea Labor Union v. CIR, 1 do not have the mutuality or
community of interest with regular and permanent employees. Hence, their inclusion in the bargaining unit
composed of the latter is not justified. Confidential employees, by the very nature of their functions, assist and act in
a confidential capacity to, or have access to confidential matters of, persons who exercise managerial functions in
the field of labor relations. As such, the rationale behind the ineligibility of managerial employees to form, assist or
join a labor union equally applies to them. Hence, they cannot be allowed to be included in the rank-and-file
employees’ bargaining unit. The rationale for this inhibition is that if these managerial employees would belong to
or be affiliated with a union, the latter might not be assured of their loyalty to the union in view of evident conflict
of interest. The union can also become company-dominated with the presence of managerial employees in its
membership.
C.
BARGAINING REPRESENTATIVE
A.K.A. SEBA OR BARGAINING AGENT
(a)
REQUEST FOR SEBA CERTIFICATION
(FORMERLY “VOLUNTARY RECOGNITION”)
• What should the employer do if a request for recognition or a demand for CBA negotiation is made by a
union which has not been certified as the SEBA?
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The employer so requested cannot now extend voluntary recognition but may still validly file a petition for
certification election (PCE) under Article 270 [258] of the Labor Code, in order to determine if the requesting union
has the majority support of the employees in the bargaining unit which it seeks to represent or where it intends to
operate.
• What are the situations involved in this new mode of “REQUEST FOR SEBA CERTIFICATION”?
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(b)
CERTIFICATION ELECTION
a. General rule.
The general rule is that in the absence of a CBA duly registered in accordance with Article 231 of the Labor
Code, a petition for certification election may be filed at any time.
b. Bar rules.
No certification election may be held under the following rules:
1. Statutory bar rule;
2. Certification year bar rule;
3. Negotiations bar rule;
4. Bargaining deadlock bar rule; or
5. Contract bar rule.
1. STATUTORY BAR RULE.
The Labor Code does not contain any provision on this rule but the Rules to Implement the Labor Code
embody a rule that bars the filing of a PCE within a period of one (1) year from the date of a valid conduct of a
certification, consent, run-off or re-run election where no appeal on the results thereof was made. If there was such
an appeal from the order of the Med-Arbiter, the running of the one-year period is deemed suspended until the
decision on the appeal has become final and executory.
This is called the statutory bar rule which finds its roots from a similar rule in the United States. Thus, an
election cannot be held in any bargaining unit in which a final and valid election was concluded within the preceding
12-month period.
2. CERTIFICATION YEAR BAR RULE.
Under this rule, a petition for certification election (PCE) may not be filed within one (1) year:
1. From the date a union is certified as SEBA by virtue of a REQUEST FOR SEBA CERTIFICATION;
or
2. From the date a valid certification, consent, run-off or re-run election has been conducted within the
bargaining unit.
If after this one year period, the SEBA did not commence collective bargaining with the employer, a PCE
may be filed by a rival union to challenge the majority status of the certified SEBA.
3. NEGOTIATIONS BAR RULE.
Under this rule, no PCE should be entertained while the sole and exclusive bargaining agent (SEBA) and
the employer have commenced and sustained negotiations in good faith within the period of one (1) year from the
date of a valid certification, consent, run-off or re-run election or from the date of voluntary recognition.
Once the CBA negotiations have commenced and while the parties are in the process of negotiating the
terms and conditions of the CBA, no challenging union is allowed to file a PCE that would disturb the process and
unduly forestall the early conclusion of the agreement.
4. BARGAINING DEADLOCK BAR RULE.
Under this rule, a PCE may not be entertained when a bargaining deadlock to which an incumbent or
certified bargaining agent is a party has been submitted to conciliation or arbitration or has become the subject of a
valid notice of strike or lockout.
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• What are the two (2) kinds of majorities (DOUBLE MAJORITY RULE)?
The process of certification election requires two (2) kinds of majority votes, viz.:
1. Number of votes required for the validity of the process of certification election itself. In order to
have a valid certification election, at least a majority of all eligible voters in the appropriate bargaining
unit must have cast their votes.
2. Number of votes required to be certified as the collective bargaining agent. To be certified as the
sole and exclusive bargaining agent, the union should obtain a majority of the valid votes cast.
• What are some pertinent principles on certification election?
• The pendency of a petition to cancel the certificate of registration of a union participating in a certification
election does not stay the conduct thereof.
• The pendency of an unfair labor practice case filed against a labor organization participating in the certification
election does not stay the holding thereof.
• Direct certification as a method of selecting the exclusive bargaining agent of the employees is not allowed.
This is because the conduct of a certification election is still necessary in order to arrive in a manner definitive
and certain concerning the choice of the labor organization to represent the workers in a collective bargaining
unit.
• The “No Union” vote is always one of the choices in a certification election. Where majority of the valid votes
cast results in “No Union” obtaining the majority, the Med-Arbiter shall declare such fact in the order.
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• Only persons who have direct employment relationship with the employer may vote in the certification
election, regardless of their period of employment.
b.1.
CERTIFICATION ELECTION
IN AN UNORGANIZED ESTABLISHMENT
• What are the requisites for the conduct of a certification election in an organized establishment?
The Med-Arbiter is required to automatically order the conduct of a certification election by secret ballot in
an organized establishment as soon as the following requisites are fully met:
1. That a petition questioning the majority status of the incumbent bargaining agent is filed before the
DOLE within the 60-day freedom period;
2. That such petition is verified; and
3. That the petition is supported by the written consent of at least twenty-five percent (25%) of all the
employees in the bargaining unit.
.
c.
RUN-OFF ELECTION
• What is a run-off election?
A “run-off election” refers to an election between the labor unions receiving the two (2) highest
number of votes in a certification election or consent election with three (3) or more unions in contention,
where such certification election or consent election results in none of the contending unions receiving the
majority of the valid votes cast; provided, that the total number of votes for all contending unions, if
added, is at least fifty percent (50%) of the number of valid votes cast.
• When is it conducted?
If the above conditions that justify the conduct of a run-off election are present and there are no
objections or challenges which, if sustained, can materially alter the election results, the Election Officer
should motu proprio conduct a run-off election within ten (10) days from the close of the election
proceeding between the labor unions receiving the two highest number of votes.
ILLUSTRATION.
To illustrate, in a certification election involving four (4) unions, namely: Union A, Union B,
Union C, and Union D, where there are 100 eligible voters who validly cast their votes, and the votes
they each garnered are as follows: Union A – 35; Union B – 25; Union C – 10; Union D - 15; and No
Union - 15, a run-off election may be conducted between Union A and Union B because:
(1) Not one of the unions mustered the majority vote of 51 votes but Union A and Union B got
the first two highest number of votes;
(2) If all the votes for the contending unions are added up, it will result in at least 50% of the
valid votes cast (Union A – 35; Union B – 25; Union C – 10; Union D - 15 for a total of 85
or 85%); and
(3) There are no objections or challenges which, if sustained, can materially alter the results of
the election.
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d.
RE-RUN ELECTION
1. RULE ON RE-RUN ELECTION, NOT FOUND IN LABOR CODE BUT LATELY PROVIDED
IN A DOLE DEPARTMENT ORDER.
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CONSENT ELECTION
D.
RIGHTS OF LABOR ORGANIZATION
1.
CHECK-OFF, ASSESSMENT, AGENCY FEES
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AGENCY FEES
REQUISITES FOR ASSESSMENT
10. MINORITY UNION CANNOT DEMAND FROM THE EMPLOYER TO GRANT IT THE RIGHT TO
CHECK-OFF OF UNION DUES AND ASSESSMENTS FROM THEIR MEMBERS.
The obligation on the part of the employer to undertake the duty to check-off union dues and special
assessments holds and applies only to the bargaining agent and not to any other union/s (called “Minority Union/s”).
2.
COLLECTIVE BARGAINING
a.
DUTY TO BARGAIN COLLECTIVELY
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This doctrine is based on the ruling In Kiok Loy v. NLRC, 1 where the petitioner, Sweden Ice Cream Plant,
refused to submit any counter-proposal to the CBA proposed by its employees’ certified bargaining agent. The High
Court ruled that the employer had thereby lost its right to bargain the terms and conditions of the CBA. Thus, the
CBA proposed by the union was imposed lock, stock and barrel on the erring company.
The Kiok Loy case epitomizes the classic case of negotiating a CBA in bad faith consisting of the
employer’s refusal to bargain with the collective bargaining agent by ignoring all notices for negotiations and
requests for counter-proposals. Such refusal to send a counter-proposal to the union and to bargain on the economic
terms of the CBA constitutes an unfair labor practice under Article 248(g) of the Labor Code.
OTHER CASES AFTER KIOK LOY.
❖ Divine Word University of Tacloban v. Secretary of Labor and Employment, Sept. 11, 1992.
❖ General Milling Corporation v. CA, Feb. 11, 2004.
b.
COLLECTIVE BARGAINING AGREEMENT (CBA)
1. CBA.
A “Collective Bargaining Agreement” or “CBA” for short, refers to the negotiated contract between a duly
recognized or certified exclusive bargaining agent of workers and their employer, concerning wages, hours of work
and all other terms and conditions of employment in the appropriate bargaining unit, including mandatory provisions
for grievances and arbitration machineries. It is executed not only upon the request of the exclusive bargaining
representative but also by the employer.
2. ESSENTIAL REQUISITES OF COLLECTIVE BARGAINING.
Prior to any collective bargaining negotiations between the employer and the bargaining union, the
following requisites must first be satisfied:
1. Employer-employee relationship must exist between the employer and the members of the bargaining
unit being represented by the bargaining agent;
2. The bargaining agent must have the majority support of the members of the bargaining unit
established through the modes sanctioned by law; and
3. A lawful demand to bargain is made in accordance with law.
3. SOME PRINCIPLES ON CBA.
• CBA is the law between the parties during its lifetime and thus must be complied with in good faith.
• Being the law between the parties, any violation thereof can be subject of redress in court.
• Non-impairment of obligations of contract. A contract is the law between the parties and courts have no choice
but to enforce such contract so long as it is not contrary to law, morals, good customs or public policy.
Otherwise, courts would be interfering with the freedom of contract of the parties.
• CBA is not an ordinary contract as it is impressed with public interest.
• Automatic Incorporation Clause – law is presumed part of the CBA.
• The benefits derived from the CBA and the law are separate and distinct from each other.
• Workers are allowed to negotiate wage increases separately and distinctly from legislated wage increases.
The parties may validly agree in the CBA to reduce wages and benefits of employees provided such
reduction does not go below the minimum standards.
• Ratification of the CBA by majority of all the workers in the bargaining unit makes the same binding on all
employees therein.
• Employees entitled to CBA benefits. The following are entitled to the benefits of the CBA:
(1) Members of the bargaining union;
(2) Non-members of the bargaining union but are members of the bargaining unit;
(3) Members of the minority union/s who paid agency fees to the bargaining union; and
(4) Employees hired after the expiration of the CBA.
• Pendency of a petition for cancellation of union registration is not a prejudicial question before CBA
negotiation may proceed.
• CBA should be construed liberally. If the terms of a CBA are clear and there is no doubt as to the intention of
the contracting parties, the literal meaning of its stipulation shall prevail.
1.
MANDATORY PROVISIONS OF CBA
1. MANDATORY STIPULATIONS OF THE CBA.
The Syllabus mentions 4 provisions that are mandatorily required to be stated in the CBA, to wit:
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1. Grievance Procedure;
2. Voluntary Arbitration;
3. No Strike-No Lockout Clause; and
4. Labor-Management Council (LMC).
If these provisions are not reflected in the CBA, its registration will be denied by the BLR.
(i)
GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE
1. “GRIEVANCE” OR “GRIEVABLE ISSUE”.
A “grievance” or “grievable issue” is any question raised by either the employer or the union regarding
any of the following issues or controversies:
1. The interpretation or implementation of the CBA;
2. The interpretation or enforcement of company personnel policies; or
3. Any claim by either party that the other party is violating any provisions of the CBA or company
personnel policies.
In order to be grievable, the violations of the CBA should be ordinary and not gross in character;
otherwise, they shall be considered as unfair labor practice (ULP).
Gross violation of the CBA is defined as flagrant and/or malicious refusal by a party thereto to comply
with the economic provisions thereof. If what is violated, therefore, is a non-economic or a political provision of
the CBA, the same shall not be considered as unfair labor practice and may thus be processed as a grievable issue in
accordance with and following the grievance machinery laid down in the CBA.
2. GRIEVANCE MACHINERY.
“Grievance machinery” refers to the mechanism for the adjustment and resolution of grievances arising
from the interpretation or implementation of a CBA and those arising from the interpretation or enforcement of
company personnel policies.
3. GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE.
“Grievance procedure” refers to the internal rules of procedure established by the parties in their CBA
with voluntary arbitration as the terminal step, which are intended to resolve all issues arising from the
implementation and interpretation of their collective agreement. It is that part of the CBA which provides for a
peaceful way of settling differences and misunderstanding between the parties.
The terms “grievance procedure” and “grievance machinery” may be used interchangeably.
(ii)
VOLUNTARY ARBITRATION
1. VOLUNTARY ARBITRATION.
“Voluntary arbitration” refers to the mode of settling labor-management disputes in which the parties
select a competent, trained and impartial third person who is tasked to decide on the merits of the case and whose
decision is final and executory.
2. VOLUNTARY ARBITRATOR.
A “Voluntary Arbitrator” refers to any person who has been mutually named or designated by the parties
to the CBA – the employer and the bargaining agent - to hear and decide the issues between them.
A Voluntary Arbitrator is not an employee, functionary or part of the government or of the Department of
Labor and Employment, but he is authorized to render arbitration services provided under labor laws.
(iii)
“NO STRIKE, NO LOCKOUT” CLAUSE
1. SIGNIFICANCE OF THE CLAUSE.
A “No Strike, No Lockout” clause in the CBA is an expression of the firm commitment of the parties
thereto that, on the part of the union, it will not mount a strike during the effectivity of the CBA, and on the part of
the employer, that it will not stage a lockout during the lifetime thereof.
This clause may be invoked by an employer only when the strike is economic in nature or one which is
conducted to force wage or other concessions from the employer that are not mandated to be granted by the law
itself. It does not bar strikes grounded on unfair labor practices. This is so because it is presumed that all
economic issues between the employer and the bargaining agent are deemed resolved with the signing of the CBA.
The same rule also applies in case of lockout. The said clause may only be invoked by the union in case the
ground for the lockout is economic in nature but it may not be so cited if the ground is unfair labor practice
committed by the union.
2. EFFECT OF VIOLATION OF THE CLAUSE.
A strike conducted in violation of this clause is illegal.
(iv)
LABOR-MANAGEMENT COUNCIL
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7. Composition. - The representatives of the workers to the LMC may or may not be nominated by the
recognized or certified bargaining agent, depending on whether the establishment is organized or unorganized. Thus,
in organized establishments, the workers’ representatives to the LMC should be nominated by the exclusive
bargaining agent. In establishments where no legitimate labor organization exists, the workers’ representatives
should be elected directly by the employees of the establishment at large; while those in the GM are nominated
solely by the bargaining agent.
E.
UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICE
(ULP)
1.
NATURE, ASPECTS
1. WHEN AN ACT CONSTITUTES ULP.
At the outset, it must be clarified that not all unfair acts constitute ULPs. While an act or decision of an
employer or a union may be unfair, certainly not every unfair act or decision thereof may constitute ULP as defined
and enumerated under the law.
The act complained of as ULP must have a proximate and causal connection with any of the following 3
rights:
1. Exercise of the right to self-organization;
2. Exercise of the right to collective bargaining; or
3. Compliance with CBA.
Sans this connection, the unfair acts do not fall within the technical signification of the term “unfair labor
practice.”
2. THE ONLY ULP WHICH MAY OR MAY NOT BE RELATED TO THE EXERCISE OF THE RIGHT TO
SELF-ORGANIZATION AND COLLECTIVE BARGAINING.
The only ULP which is the exception as it may or may not relate to the exercise of the right to self-
organization and collective bargaining is the act described under Article 248 [f], i.e., to dismiss, discharge or
otherwise prejudice or discriminate against an employee for having given or being about to give testimony
under the Labor Code.
3. LABOR CODE PROVISIONS ON ULP.
Under the Labor Code, there are only five (5) provisions related to ULP, to wit:
1. Article 258 [247] which describes the concept of ULPs and prescribes the procedure for their
prosecution;
2. Article 259 [248] which enumerates the ULPs that may be committed by employers;
3. Article 260 [249] which enumerates the ULPs that may be committed by labor organizations;
4. Article 274 [261] which considers violations of the CBA as no longer ULPs unless the same are gross
in character which means flagrant and/or malicious refusal to comply with the economic provisions
thereof.
5. Article 278(c) [263(c)] which refers to union-busting, a form of ULP, involving the dismissal from
employment of union officers duly elected in accordance with the union constitution and by-laws,
where the existence of the union is threatened thereby.
4. PARTIES WHO/WHICH MAY COMMIT ULP.
A ULP may be committed by an employer or by a labor organization. Article 259 [248] describes the ULPs
that may be committed by an employer; while Article 260 [249] enumerates those which may be committed by a
labor organization.
On the part of the employer, only the officers and agents of corporations, associations or partnerships who
have actually participated in or authorized or ratified ULPs are criminally liable.
On the part of the union, only the officers, members of governing boards, representatives or agents or
members of labor associations or organizations who have actually participated in or authorized or ratified the ULPs
are criminally liable.
5. ELEMENTS OF ULP.
1. There should exist an employer-employee relationship between the offended party and the offender;
and
2. The act complained of must be expressly mentioned and defined in the Labor Code as an unfair
labor practice.
Absent one of the elements aforementioned will not make the act an unfair labor practice.
6. ASPECTS OF ULP.
Under Article 258 [247], a ULP has two (2) aspects, namely:
1. Civil aspect; and
2. Criminal aspect.
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The civil aspect of an unfair labor practice includes claims for actual, moral and exemplary damages,
attorney’s fees and other affirmative reliefs. Generally, these civil claims should be asserted in the labor case before
the Labor Arbiters who have original and exclusive jurisdiction over unfair labor practices. The criminal aspect,
on the other hand, can only be asserted before the regular court.
2.
ULP BY EMPLOYERS
I.
INTERFERENCE WITH, RESTRAINT OR COERCION OF EMPLOYEES
IN THE EXERCISE OF THEIR RIGHT TO SELF-ORGANIZATION
1. TEST OF INTERFERENCE, RESTRAINT OR COERCION.
The terms “interfere,” “restrain” and “coerce” are very broad that any act of management that may
reasonably tend to have an influence or effect on the exercise by the employees of their right to self-organize may
fall within their meaning and coverage. According to the Supreme Court in Insular Life Assurance Co., Ltd.,
Employees Association-NATU v. Insular Life Assurance Co., Ltd.,1 the test of whether an employer has
interfered with or restrained or coerced employees within the meaning of the law is whether the employer has
engaged in conduct which may reasonably tend to interfere with the free exercise of the employees’ rights. It is not
necessary that there be direct evidence that any employee was in fact intimidated or coerced by the statements or
threats of the employer if there is a reasonable inference that the anti-union conduct of the employer does have an
adverse effect on the exercise of the right to self-organization and collective bargaining.
2. TOTALITY OF CONDUCT DOCTRINE.
In ascertaining whether the act of the employer constitutes interference with, restraint or coercion of the
employees’ exercise of their right to self-organization and collective bargaining, the “totality of conduct doctrine”
may be applied.
The totality of conduct doctrine means that expressions of opinion by an employer, though innocent in
themselves, may be held to constitute an unfair labor practice because of the circumstances under which they were
uttered, the history of the particular employer’s labor relations or anti-union bias or because of their connection with
an established collateral plan of coercion or interference. An expression which may be permissibly uttered by one
employer, might, in the mouth of a more hostile employer, be deemed improper and consequently actionable as an
unfair labor practice. The past conduct of the employer and like considerations, coupled with an intimate connection
between the employer’s action and the union affiliation or activities of the particular employee or employees taken
as a whole, may raise a suspicion as to the motivation for the employer’s conduct. The failure of the employer to
ascribe a valid reason therefor may justify an inference that his unexplained conduct in respect of the particular
employee or employees was inspired by the latter’s union membership and activities.
In General Milling,2 the Supreme Court considered the act of the employer in presenting the letters from
February to June 1993, by 13 union members signifying their resignation from the union clearly indicative of the
employer’s pressure on its employees. The records show that the employer presented these letters to prove that the
union no longer enjoyed the support of the workers. The fact that the resignations of the union members occurred
during the pendency of the case before the Labor Arbiter shows the employer’s desperate attempt to cast doubt on
the legitimate status of the union. The ill-timed letters of resignation from the union members indicate that the
employer had interfered with the right of its employees to self-organization. Because of such act, the employer was
declared guilty of ULP.
3. INTERFERENCE IN THE EMPLOYEE’S RIGHT TO SELF-ORGANIZATION.
a. Interference is always ULP.
The judicial dictum is that any act of interference by the employer in the exercise by employees of their
right to self-organization constitutes an unfair labor practice. This is the very core of ULP.
In Hacienda Fatima v. National Federation of Sugarcane Workers – Food and General Trade,3 the
Supreme Court upheld the factual findings of the NLRC and the Court of Appeals that from the employer’s refusal
to bargain to its acts of economic inducements resulting in the promotion of those who withdrew from the union, the
use of armed guards to prevent the organizers to come in, and the dismissal of union officials and members, one
cannot but conclude that the employer did not want a union in its hacienda - a clear interference in the right of the
workers to self-organization. Hence, the employer was held guilty of unfair labor practice.
It was likewise held in Insular Life 4 that it is an act of interference for the employer to send individual
letters to all employees notifying them to return to work at a time specified therein, otherwise new employees would
be engaged to perform their jobs. Individual solicitation of the employees or visiting their homes, with the employer
or his representative urging the employees to cease their union activities or cease striking, constitutes ULP. All the
2 General Milling Corporation v. CA, G.R. No. 146728, Feb. 11, 2004.
4 Insular Life Assurance Co., Ltd., Employees Association-NATU v. Insular Life Assurance Co., Ltd., G.R. No. L-25291, Jan. 30, 1971, 37 SCRA 244.
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above-detailed activities are ULPs because they tend to undermine the concerted activity of the employees, an
activity to which they are entitled free from the employer's molestation.
b. Formation of a union is never a valid ground to dismiss.
c. It is ULP to dismiss a union officer or an employee for his union activities.
II.
YELLOW DOG CONTRACT
1. WHAT IS A YELLOW DOG CONTRACT?
It is one which exacts from workers as a condition of employment that they shall not join or belong to a
labor organization, or attempt to organize one during their period of employment or that they shall withdraw
therefrom in case they are already members of a labor organization.
2. COMMON STIPULATIONS IN A YELLOW DOG CONTRACT.
A typical yellow dog contract embodies the following stipulations:
(1) A representation by the employee that he is not a member of a labor organization;
(2) A promise by the employee that he will not join a union; and
(3) A promise by the employee that upon joining a labor organization, he will quit his employment.
The act of the employer in imposing such a condition constitutes unfair labor practice under Article 248(b)
of the Labor Code. Such stipulation in the contract is null and void.
III.
CONTRACTING OUT OF SERVICES AND FUNCTIONS
1. GENERAL RULE.
As a general rule, the act of an employer in having work or certain services or functions being performed
by union members contracted out is not per se an unfair labor practice. This is so because contracting-out of a job,
work or service is clearly an exercise by the employer of its business judgment and its inherent management rights
and prerogatives. Hiring of workers is within the employer’s inherent freedom to regulate its business and is a valid
exercise of its management prerogative subject only to special laws and agreements on the matter and the fair
standards of justice. The employer cannot be denied the faculty of promoting efficiency and attaining economy by a
study of what units are essential for its operation. It has the ultimate right to determine whether services should be
performed by its personnel or contracted to outside agencies.
2. WHEN CONTRACTING-OUT BECOMES ULP.
It is only when the contracting out of a job, work or service being performed by union members will
interfere with, restrain or coerce employees in the exercise of their right to self-organization that it shall constitute an
unfair labor practice. Thus, it is not unfair labor practice to contract out work for reasons of business decline,
inadequacy of facilities and equipment, reduction of cost and similar reasonable grounds.
IV.
COMPANY UNION
1. COMPANY INITIATED, DOMINATED OR ASSISTED UNION.
Paragraph [d] of Article 259 [248] considers it an unfair labor practice to initiate, dominate, assist or
otherwise interfere with the formation or administration of any labor organization, including the giving of financial
or other support to it or its organizers or supporters. Such union is called “company union” as its formation, function
or administration has been assisted by any act defined as unfair labor practice under the Labor Code.
V.
DISCRIMINATION
1. COVERAGE OF PROHIBITION.
What is prohibited as unfair labor practice under the law is to discriminate in regard to wages, hours of
work, and other terms and conditions of employment in order to encourage or discourage membership in any labor
organization.
4. MATERIALITY OF PURPOSE OF ALLEGED DISCRIMINATORY ACT.
1 Joel I. Seidman, The Yellow Dog Contract, The Johns Hopkins Press, 1932, Ch. 1, pp.11-38.
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In Manila Pencil Co., Inc. v. CIR,1 it was ruled that even assuming that business conditions justify the
dismissal of employees, it is a ULP of employer to dismiss permanently only union members and not non-
unionists.
In Manila Railroad Co. v. Kapisanan ng mga Manggagawa sa Manila Railroad Co., 2 the non-
regularization of long-time employees because of their affiliation with the union while new employees were
immediately regularized was declared an act of discrimination.
VI.
FILING OF CHARGES OR GIVING OF TESTIMONY
1. CONCEPT.
Under paragraph [f] of Article 259 [248] of the Labor Code, it is an unfair labor practice for an employer to
dismiss, discharge or otherwise prejudice or discriminate against an employee for having given or being about to
give testimony under the Labor Code.
2. THE ONLY ULP NOT REQUIRED TO BE RELATED TO EMPLOYEE’S EXERCISE OF THE RIGHT
TO SELF-ORGANIZATION AND COLLECTIVE BARGAINING.
It must be underscored that Article 259(f) [248 (f)] is the only unfair labor practice that need not be related
to the exercise by the employees of their right to self-organization and collective bargaining.
In Itogon-Suyoc Mines, Inc. v. Baldo, 3 it was declared that an unfair labor practice was committed by the
employer when it dismissed the worker who had testified in the hearing of a certification election case despite its
prior request for the employee not to testify in the said proceeding accompanied with a promise of being reinstated if
he followed said request.
VII.
CBA-RELATED ULPs
1. THREE (3) CBA-RELATED ULPs.
Article 259 [248] enunciates three (3) CBA-related unfair labor practices, to wit:
1. To violate the duty to bargain collectively as prescribed in the Labor Code.
2. To pay negotiation or attorney’s fees to the union or its officers or agents as part of the settlement
of any issue in collective bargaining or any other dispute.
3. To violate a collective bargaining agreement.
VII-A.
PAYMENT OF NEGOTIATION AND ATTORNEY’S FEES
1. WHEN PAYMENT CONSIDERED ULP.
Article 259 (h) [248(h)] of the Labor Code considers as an unfair labor practice the act of the employer in
paying negotiation fees or attorney’s fees to the union or its officers or agents as part of the settlement of any issue
in collective bargaining or any other dispute.
VII-B.
VIOLATION OF THE CBA
1. CORRELATION.
Article 259 (i) [248(i)] of the Labor Code should be read in relation to Article 261 thereof. Under Article
261, as amended, violations of a CBA, except those which are gross in character, shall no longer be treated as an
unfair labor practice and shall be resolved as grievances under the CBA. Gross violations of CBA shall mean
flagrant and/or malicious refusal to comply with the economic provisions of such agreement.
2. CASE LAW.
The act of the employer in refusing to implement the negotiated wage increase stipulated in the CBA,
which increase is intended to be distinct and separate from any other benefits or privileges that may be forthcoming
to the employees, is an unfair labor practice.
Refusal for a considerable number of years to give salary adjustments according to the improved salary
scales in the CBA is an unfair labor practice.
3.
ULP OF LABOR ORGANIZATIONS
I.
RESTRAINT AND COERCION OF EMPLOYEES
IN THE EXERCISE OF THEIR RIGHT TO SELF-ORGANIZATION
1. UNION MAY INTERFERE WITH BUT NOT RESTRAIN OR COERCE EMPLOYEES IN THE EXERCISE
OF THEIR RIGHT TO SELF-ORGANIZE.
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Under Article 260(a) [249 (a)], it is ULP for a labor organization, its officers, agents or representatives to
restrain or coerce employees in the exercise of their right to self-organization. Compared to similar provision of
Article 248(a) of the Labor Code, notably lacking is the use of the word “interfere” in the exercise of the employees’
right to self-organize. The significance in the omission of this term lies in the grant of unrestricted license to the
labor organization, its officers, agents or representatives to interfere with the exercise by the employees of their right
to self-organization. Such interference is not unlawful since without it, no labor organization can be formed as the
act of recruiting and convincing the employees is definitely an act of interference.
II.
DISCRIMINATION
Under Article 260(b) [249 (b)], it is ULP for a labor organization, its officers, agents or representatives:
(1) To cause or attempt to cause an employer to discriminate against an employee, including discrimination
against an employee with respect to whom membership in such organization has been denied.
(2) To terminate an employee’s union membership on any ground other than the usual terms and conditions
under which membership or continuation of membership is made available to other members.
III.
DUTY OF UNION TO BARGAIN COLLECTIVELY
1. CONCEPT.
Under Article 260(c) [249 (c)], it is ULP for a duly certified sole and exclusive bargaining union, its
officers, agents or representatives to refuse or violate the duty to bargain collectively with the employer. This is the
counterpart provision of Article 259(g) [248 (g)] respecting the violation by the employer of its duty to bargain
collectively.
2. PURPOSE.
The obvious purpose of the law is to ensure that the union will negotiate with management in good faith
and for the purpose of concluding a mutually beneficial agreement regarding the terms and conditions of their
employment relationship.
IV.
FEATHERBEDDING DOCTRINE
1. CONCEPT.
Article 260(d) [249 (d)] is the “featherbedding”1 provision in the Labor Code. Patterned after a similar
provision in the Taft-Hartley Act, 2 “featherbedding” or “make-work” refers to the practice, caused and induced by a
union, of hiring more workers than are needed to perform a given work, job or task or to adopt work procedures
which is evidently senseless, wasteful, inefficient and without legitimate justifications since it is meant purely for
the purpose of employing additional workers than are necessary. This is resorted to by the union as a response to the
laying-off of workers occasioned by their obsolescence because of the introduction of machines, robots3 or new and
innovative technological changes and improvements in the workplace or as required by minimum health and safety
standards, among other reasons. Its purpose is to unduly secure the jobs of the workers. Because of these lay-offs,
the unions are constrained to resort to some featherbedding practices. Accordingly, they usually request that the
technological changes be introduced gradually, or not at all, or that a minimum number of personnel be retained
despite such changes. They resort to some ways and methods of retaining workers even though there may be little
work left for them to do and perform. It therefore unnecessarily maintains or increases the number of employees
used or the amount of time consumed to work on a specific job, work or undertaking. By so increasing the demand
for workers, featherbedding obviously keeps wages higher.4
2. REQUISITES.
The requisites for featherbedding are as follows:
1 Etymologically, the term "featherbedding" originally referred to any person who is pampered, coddled, or excessively rewarded. The term originated in the use of feathers to fill
mattresses in beds, providing for more comfort. The modern use of the term in the labor relations setting began in the United States railroad industry, which used feathered
mattresses in sleeping cars. Railway labor unions, confronted with changing technology which led to widespread unemployment, sought to preserve jobs by negotiating contracts
which required employers to compensate workers to do little or no work or which required complex and time-consuming work rules so as to generate a full day's work for an employee
who otherwise would not remain employed. (Merriam-Webster's Dictionary of Law, 1st ed., Merriam-Webster, Inc., 1996. ISBN 0-87779-604-1; Visit also the Knowledge Encyclopedia
at http://www.referenceforbusiness.com/knowledge/ Featherbedding.html; Last visited: Jan. 30, 2017).
2 It is the Labor Management Relations Act of 1947, better known as the “Taft–Hartley Act,” which was enacted on June 23, 1947. It amended the National Labor Relations Act, 29 U.S.
Code § 158 - Unfair labor practices, Sec. 8[b] [6] thereof, which states: “to cause or attempt to cause an employer to pay or deliver or agree to pay or deliver any money or other thing
of value, in the nature of an exaction, for services which are not performed or not to be performed[.]”
3 “Featherbedding” is the insistence by unions on employment of unnecessary workers, i.e., demanding payment for work no longer performed by workers because of machines or
robots. Featherbedding dramatically increases labor costs and decreases productivity. (See Labor Law Glossary, Matt Austin Labor Law, https://mattaustinlaborlaw.com/labor-law-
dictionary/; Last accessed: October 09, 2016).
4 It must be noted that Section 8(b)(6) of the Taft-Hartley Act has outlawed featherbedding arrangements which is a ULP of the union making the demand for payment of wages for
services which are not performed or not to be performed. However, the prohibitions against featherbedding under this section are made applicable only to payments for workers not to
work. Consequently, the agreement prescribing minimum number of workers to be hired and maintained and other “make-work” arrangements are considered valid and legal,
notwithstanding the provision of this section.
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(1) The labor organization, its officers, agents or representatives have caused or attempted to cause an
employer either:
(a) to pay or agree to pay any money, including the demand for fee for union negotiations; or
(b) to deliver or agree to deliver any things of value;
(2) Such demand for payment of money or delivery of things of value is in the nature of an exaction; and
(3) The services contemplated in exchange for the exaction are not actually performed or will not be
performed.
On No. 1 above, it is important that the effort at securing payment of sums of money or delivery of goods
or things of value, emanates from and initiated by the union.
On No. 2 above, the act of the employer in paying the money or delivering the things of value demanded by
the union, is against its will and is therefore, as the law states, “in the nature of exaction” by the union.
“Exaction”, as a legal term, means an excessive or harsh demand of a reward or fee for an official service
performed in the normal course of duty. It is taking more fee or pay for the services than what the law allows, under
color of one’s official authority.1 While it is a form of extortion,2 it should, however, be differentiated from
“extortion” in that, in “extortion,” the union extorts more than its due, when something is due; in “exaction,” the
union exacts what is not due, when there is nothing due to it.3
On No. 3 above, although the employer agrees to pay money or deliver things of value, the employees to
whom such payment and delivery are made will not actually do or perform the contemplated services. Being an
exaction, no services would be rendered in exchange for the money paid or things of value delivered.
3. DEMAND FOR PAYMENT OF STANDBY SERVICES.
A union commits ULP under this provision by causing or attempting to cause an employer to pay or agree
to pay for standby services. Payments for “standing-by,” or for the substantial equivalent of “standing-by,” are not
payments for “services performed” within the meaning of the law. When an employer receives a bona-fide offer of
competent performance of relevant services, it remains for the employer, through free and fair negotiation, to
determine whether such offer should be accepted and what compensation should be paid for the work done.4
It is an exaction constitutive of ULP within the meaning of this law for a union to demand of the employer
for a contract calling for payment of compensation for the presence of one of its members at a jobsite when no
unionist’s work is being done therein, and when the employer indicated that it had no need for such labor, the union
staged a strike to make the employer respond to such demand. The demand herein is considered not a bona-fide offer
of competent performance of relevant services.5
A union’s demand that a theater corporation employ maintenance men at its theater is also an arguable
violation of the anti-featherbedding provision of the law where maintenance men employed at other theaters under
union compulsion did little or no actual work but were merely present on the premises during working hours. 6
4. DEMAND FOR PAYMENT OF MADE WORK.
Where work is actually done by an employee with the employer’s consent, the union’s demand that the
employee be compensated for time spent in doing the work does not violate the law.7 The law leaves to collective
bargaining the determination of what work, if any, including bona-fide “made work,” shall be included as
compensable services and what rate of compensation shall be paid for it.8
A musicians’ union has been held not to have violated the anti-featherbedding provision by refusing to
permit a union band to perform at the opening game of the baseball season, refusing to permit a union organist to
play at the home games, and picketing the baseball stadium, in order to force the owner of the baseball team to hire a
union band to play at all weekend home games; or by refusing to give its consent to appearances of travelling bands
in a theater unless the theater manager also employs a local orchestra in connection with certain programs where the
local orchestra is to perform actual and not token services, even though the theater manager does not need or want to
1 Meaning of “exaction” per USLegal.com found at http://definitions.uslegal.com/e/exaction/. Last visited: June 30, 2016. Note that “[t]he act of exacting money or the sum exacted is
also called exaction.” See also TheLawDictionary.Com at http://thelawdictionary.org/exaction/, Last accessed: June 30, 2016.
3 See USLegal.com at http://definitions.uslegal.com/e/exaction/. Last visited: June 30, 2016. The FreeDictionary.com at http://legal-dictionary.thefreedictionary.com/exaction,
distinguished these two terms, thus: “EXACTION, torts. A willful wrong done by an officer, or by one who, under color of his office, takes more fee or pay for his services than what the
law allows. Between extortion and exaction there is this difference; that in the former case the officer extorts more than his due, when something is due to him; in the latter, he exacts
what is not his due, when there is nothing due to him. Wishard; Co. Litt. 368.” Last accessed: June 30, 2016.
5 International Brotherhood of Teamsters, etc., 212 NLRB 968, 1974 CCH NLRB 26867, 87 BNA LRRM 1101.
6 Consolidated Theaters, Inc. v. Theatrical Stage Employees Union, 69 Cal 2d 713, 73 Cal Rptr 213, 447 P2d 325.
7 NLRB v. Gamble Enterprises, Inc., 345 US 117, 97 l Ed 864, 73 S Ct 560; American Newspaper Publishers Association v. NLRB, 345 US 100, 97 L Ed 852, 73 S Ct 552, 31 ALR2d
497.
8 American Newspaper Publishers Association v. NLRB, 345 US 100, 97 L Ed 852, 73 S Ct 552, 31 ALR2d 497.
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employ the local orchestra.1 Similarly, a printers’ union does not violate the anti-featherbedding provision by
securing payment of wages to printers from newspapers for setting “bogus” - duplicate forms for local
advertisements although the newspaper already has cardboard matrices to be used as molds for metal casting from
which to print the same advertisements – even though the “bogus” is ordinarily not used but is melted down
immediately.2
5. DEMAND FOR PAYMENT OF WORK ALREADY COMPENSATED.
The anti-featherbedding provision has been held not to bar a union from demanding payment for work for
which the employer has already paid another person. Hence, a union has been held not guilty of ULP in demanding
payment to it of an amount equal to the wages paid by the employer to a non-union employee for work to which the
union’s members were entitled. If the work is actually done by employees, there can be no conflict with the anti-
featherbedding provision, regardless of whether or not the persons receiving payment are the ones who performed
the work.3
V.
DEMAND OR ACCEPTANCE
OF NEGOTIATION FEES OR ATTORNEY’S FEES
1. CONCEPT.
Under Article 260(e) [249 (e)], it is ULP for a labor organization, its officers, agents or representatives to
ask for or accept negotiation fees or attorney’s fees from employers as part of the settlement of any issue in
collective bargaining or any other dispute.
VI.
VIOLATION OF THE CBA
1. CONCEPT.
Under Article 260(f) [249 (f)], it is ULP for a labor organization, its officers, agents or representatives to
violate a CBA.
2. COUNTERPART PROVISION.
This is the counterpart provision of Article 259(i) [248 (i)] regarding the employer’s act of violating a CBA.
But it must be noted that under Article 261 of the Labor Code, violation of the CBA is generally considered merely a
grievable issue. It becomes an unfair labor practice only if the violation is gross in character which means that there
is flagrant and/or malicious refusal to comply with the economic (as distinguished from non-economic) stipulations
in the CBA. This principle applies not only to the employer but to the labor organization as well.
VII.
CRIMINAL LIABILITY FOR ULPs OF LABOR ORGANIZATION
1. PERSONS LIABLE.
Article 260 [249] is explicit in its provision on who should be held liable for ULPs committed by labor
organizations. It states that only the officers, members of governing boards, representatives or agents or members of
labor associations or organizations who have actually participated in, authorized or ratified unfair labor practices
shall be held criminally liable.
F.
PEACEFUL CONCERTED ACTIVITIES
A.
FORMS OF CONCERTED ACTIVITIES
1. FORMS OF CONCERTED ACTIVITIES.
There are three (3) forms of concerted activities, namely:
1. Strike;
2. Picketing; and
3. Lockout.
1.
BY LABOR ORGANIZATION
1. Strike; and
2. Picketing.
1. STRIKE.
1 Musicians Union v. Superior Court of Alameda County, 69 Cal 2d 695, 73 Cal Rptr 201, 447 P2d 313; NLRB v. Gamble Enterprises, Inc., 345 US 117, 97 L Ed 864, 73 S Ct 560.
2 American Newspaper Publishers Association v. NLRB, 345 US 100, 97 L Ed 852, 73 S Ct 552, 31 ALR2d 497; International Hod Carriers Bldg. & Common Laborers Union, 135
NLRB 1153 1962 CCH NLRB 10938, 49 BNA LRRM 1638.
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“Strike” means any temporary stoppage of work by the concerted action of the employees as a result of
an industrial or labor dispute.
2. PICKETING.
“Picketing” is the act of workers in peacefully marching to and fro before an establishment involved in a
labor dispute generally accompanied by the carrying and display of signs, placards and banners intended to inform
the public about the dispute.
2.
BY EMPLOYER
1. LOCKOUT.
“Lockout” means the temporary refusal by an employer to furnish work as a result of an industrial or
labor dispute.
It consists of the following:
1. Shutdowns;
2. Mass retrenchment and dismissals initiated by the employer.
3. The employer’s act of excluding employees who are union members.
a.
REQUISITES FOR A VALID STRIKE
1. PROCEDURAL BUT MANDATORY REQUISITES FOR A VALID STRIKE.
A strike, in order to be valid and legal, must conform to the following procedural requisites:
1st requisite - It must be based on a valid and factual ground;
2nd requisite - A notice of strike must be filed with the NCMB-DOLE;
3rd requisite - A notice must be served to the NCMB-DOLE at least twenty-four (24) hours prior to the
taking of the strike vote by secret balloting, informing said office of the decision to conduct
a strike vote, and the date, place, and time thereof;
4th requisite - A strike vote must be taken where a majority of the members of the union obtained by
secret ballot in a meeting called for the purpose, must approve it;
5th requisite - A strike vote report should be submitted to the NCMB-DOLE at least seven (7) days before
the intended date of the strike;
th
6 requisite - Except in cases of union-busting, the cooling-off period of 15 days, in case of unfair labor
practices of the employer, or 30 days, in case of collective bargaining deadlock, should be
fully observed; and
th
7 requisite - The 7-day waiting period/strike ban reckoned after the submission of the strike vote report
to the NCMB-DOLE should also be fully observed in all cases.
All the foregoing requisites, although procedural in nature, are mandatory and failure of the union to
comply with any of them would render the strike illegal.
I.
FIRST REQUISITE:
EXISTENCE OF VALID AND FACTUAL GROUND/S
1. VALID GROUNDS.
The law recognizes only 2 grounds in support of a valid strike, viz.:
1. Collective bargaining deadlock (Economic Strike); and/or
2. Unfair labor practice (Political Strike).
A strike not based on any of these two grounds is illegal.
2. SOME PRINCIPLES ON THE FIRST REQUISITE.
▪ Violation of CBA, except when gross, is not an unfair labor practice, hence, may not be cited as
ground for a valid strike. Ordinary violation of a CBA is no longer treated as an unfair labor practice
but as a mere grievance which should be processed through the grievance machinery and voluntary
arbitration.
▪ Inter-union or intra-union dispute is not a valid ground.
▪ Violation of labor standards is not a valid ground.
▪ Wage distortion is not a valid ground.
II.
SECOND REQUISITE:
FILING OF A NOTICE OF STRIKE
1. NOTICE OF STRIKE.
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No labor organization shall declare a strike without first having filed a notice of strike.
III.
THIRD REQUISITE:
SERVICE OF A 24-HOUR PRIOR NOTICE
In Capitol Medical Center, Inc. v. NLRC, it was imposed as additional requisite that a 24-hour notice
must be served to the NCMB-DOLE prior to the taking of the strike vote by secret balloting, informing it of the
union’s decision to conduct a strike vote as well as the date, place, and time thereof.
IV.
FOURTH REQUISITE:
CONDUCT OF A STRIKE VOTE
1. MAJORITY APPROVAL OF THE STRIKE.
No labor organization shall declare a strike without the necessary strike vote first having been obtained and
reported to the NCMB-DOLE. A decision to declare a strike must be approved by a majority of the total union
membership in the bargaining unit concerned, obtained by secret ballot in meetings or referenda called for that
purpose. This process is called “strike vote balloting.”
A STRIKE WITHOUT THE MAJORITY SUPPORT OF THE UNION MEMBERS IS CALLED A
“WILDCAT STRIKE.”
2. PURPOSE.
The purpose of a strike vote is to ensure that the decision to strike broadly rests with the majority of the
union members in general and not with a mere minority.
3. DURATION OF THE VALIDITY OF THE MAJORITY APPROVAL OF A STRIKE.
The majority decision to stage a strike is valid for the duration of the dispute based on substantially the
same grounds considered when the strike vote was taken.
V.
FIFTH REQUISITE:
SUBMISSION OF THE STRIKE VOTE TO NCMB-DOLE
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The purpose of the cooling-off periods is to provide an opportunity for mediation and conciliation of the
dispute by the NCMB-DOLE with the end in view of amicably settling it.
VII.
SEVENTH REQUISITE:
7-DAY WAITING PERIOD OR STRIKE BAN
1. PURPOSE OF THE 7-DAY WAITING PERIOD OR STRIKE BAN.
The seven (7) day waiting period is intended to give the NCMB-DOLE an opportunity to verify whether
the projected strike really carries the approval of the majority of the union members.
2. WAITING PERIOD/STRIKE BAN VS. COOLING-OFF PERIOD.
The 7-day waiting period or strike ban is a distinct and separate requirement from the cooling-off period
prescribed by law. The latter cannot be substituted for the former and vice-versa.
The cooling-off period is counted from the time of the filing of the notice of strike. The 7-day waiting
period/strike ban, on the other hand, is reckoned from the time the strike vote report is submitted to the NCMB-
DOLE.
Consequently, a strike is illegal for failure to comply with the prescribed mandatory cooling-off period and
the 7-day waiting period/strike ban after the submission of the report on the strike vote.
3. BOTH MUST BE COMPLIED WITH SEPARATELY AND DISTINCTLY FROM EACH OTHER.
The requirements of cooling-off period and 7-day waiting period/strike ban must both be complied with.
The labor union may take the strike vote and report the same to the NCMB-DOLE within the statutory cooling-off
period. In this case, the 7-day waiting period/strike ban should be counted from the day following the expiration of
the cooling-off period. A contrary view would certainly defeat and render nugatory the salutary purposes behind the
distinct requirements of cooling-off period and the waiting period/strike ban.
The NCMB Primer on Strike, Picketing and Lockout,1 issued by the NCMB, the agency of government
directly tasked with the implementation and enforcement of this particular legal provision and requirement, is very
clear on this point, thus:
“In the event the result of the strike/lockout vote ballot is filed within the cooling-off
period, the 7-day requirement shall be counted from the day following the expiration of the
cooling-off period.”2
In other words, the seven (7) days should be added to the cooling-off period of fifteen (15) days, in case of
unfair labor practice, or thirty (30) days, in case of collective bargaining deadlock and it is only after the lapse of the
total number of days after adding the two (2) periods that the strike/lockout may be lawfully and validly staged.
While there was no categorical declaration on this point, the Supreme Court, in holding in the 2010 case of
Phimco Industries, Inc. v. Phimco Industries Labor Association (PILA),3 that respondents fully satisfied the
legal procedural requirements, noted that the strike notice grounded on collective bargaining deadlock was filed on
March 9, 1995. Consequently, the 30-day cooling-off period would have lapsed on April 9, 1995. The strike vote
was reached on March 16, 1995 and the notification thereof was filed with the DOLE on March 17, 1995 or well
within the cooling-off period. Based on the said rule in the NCMB Primer, the strike could only be validly staged
starting from April 17, 1995 and onwards, i.e., after the lapse of 7 days from April 9, 1995. Hence, since the actual
strike was launched only on April 25, 1995, there was clearly full compliance with the requisites.
Example: In a case where the notice of strike grounded on ULP is filed on October 1, 2015, and the strike
vote is taken within the cooling-off period, say, on October 5, 2015 and the strike vote report showing majority
support for the intended strike is submitted to the NCMB-DOLE the following day, October 6, 2015, the question is
when can the union legally stage the strike?
Following the above principle, the answer obviously is on October 24, 2015 or any day thereafter. This is
so because the 15-day cooling-off period for ULP expires on October 16 and adding the 7-day strike ban which
“should be counted from the day following the expiration of the cooling-off period,” the 7th day would be on
October 23, 2015. Obviously, the strike cannot be conducted on the 7th day but rather after the lapse thereof; hence,
it is only on October 24, 2015 and onwards that the union may lawfully conduct the strike.
4. SOME PRINCIPLES ON COOLING-OFF PERIOD AND 7-DAY WAITING PERIOD.
▪ Deficiency of even one (1) day of the cooling-off period and 7-day strike ban is fatal.
▪ One-day strike without complying with the 7-day strike ban is illegal.
b.
REQUISITES FOR A VALID LOCKOUT
1. SUBSTANTIALLY SIMILAR REQUISITES AS IN STRIKE.
2 No. 6 thereof.
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With a slight, insignificant variation, the procedural but mandatory requisites for a valid strike discussed
above are substantially similar to those applicable for valid lockout. For purposes of ease and clarity, the same are
presented as follows:
• 1st requisite - It must be based on a valid and factual ground;
• 2nd requisite - A notice of lockout must be filed with the NCMB-DOLE;
• 3rd requisite - A notice must be served to the NCMB-DOLE at least twenty-four (24) hours prior to the
taking of the lockout vote by secret balloting, informing said office of the decision to conduct a lockout
vote, and the date, place, and time thereof;
• 4th requisite - A lockout vote must be taken where a majority of the members of the Board of Directors
of the corporation or association or of the partners in a partnership obtained by secret ballot in a meeting
called for the purpose, must approve it;
• 5th requisite - A lockout vote report should be submitted to the NCMB-DOLE at least seven (7) days
before the intended date of the lockout;
• 6th requisite - The cooling-off period of 15 days, in case of unfair labor practices of the labor
organization, or 30 days, in case of collective bargaining deadlock, should be fully observed; and
• 7th requisite - The 7-day waiting period/lockout ban reckoned after the submission of the lockout vote
report to the NCMB-DOLE should also be fully observed in all cases.
c.
REQUISITES FOR LAWFUL PICKETING
1. THE REQUISITES FOR A VALID STRIKE ARE NOT APPLICABLE TO PICKETING.
The seven (7) requisites for a valid strike discussed above do not apply to picketing.
2. REQUISITES FOR LAWFUL PICKETING.
The most singular requirement to make picketing valid and legal is that it should be peacefully conducted.
Based on the foregoing provision, the requisites may be summed up as follows:
1. The picket should be peacefully carried out;
2. There should be no act of violence, coercion or intimidation attendant thereto;
3. The ingress to (entrance) or egress from (exit) the company premises should not be obstructed; and
4. Public thoroughfares should not be impeded.
3. RIGHT TO PICKET IS PROTECTED BY THE CONSTITUTION AND THE LAW.
Unlike a strike which is guaranteed under the Constitutional provision on the right of workers to conduct
peaceful concerted activities under Section 3, Article XIII thereof, the right to picket is guaranteed under the
freedom of speech and of expression and to peaceably assemble to air grievances under Section 4, Article III
(Bill of Rights) thereof.
4. EFFECT OF THE USE OF FOUL LANGUAGE DURING THE CONDUCT OF THE PICKET.
In the event the picketers employ discourteous and impolite language in their picket, such may not result in,
or give rise to, libel or action for damages.
5. PICKETING VS. STRIKE.
(a) To strike is to withhold or to stop work by the concerted action of employees as a result of an industrial
or labor dispute. The work stoppage may be accompanied by picketing by the striking employees outside of the
company compound.
(b) While a strike focuses on stoppage of work, picketing focuses on publicizing the labor dispute and its
incidents to inform the public of what is happening in the company being picketed.
(c) A picket simply means to march to and fro in front of the employer’s premises, usually accompanied by
the display of placards and other signs making known the facts involved in a labor dispute. It is but one strike
activity separate and different from the actual stoppage of work.
Phimco Industries, Inc. v. Phimco Industries Labor Association (PILA).1 - While the right of
employees to publicize their dispute falls within the protection of freedom of expression and the right to peaceably
assemble to air grievances, these rights are by no means absolute. Protected picketing does not extend to
blocking ingress to and egress from the company premises. That the picket was moving, was peaceful and
was not attended by actual violence may not free it from taints of illegality if the picket effectively blocked
entry to and exit from the company premises.
6. WHEN PICKET CONSIDERED A STRIKE.
In distinguishing between a picket and a strike, the totality of the circumstances obtaining in a case should
be taken into account.
Santa Rosa Coca-Cola Plant Employees Union v. Coca-Cola Bottlers Phils., Inc.2 - Petitioners contend
that what they conducted was a mere picketing and not a strike. In disagreeing to this contention, the High Court
emphasized that it is not an issue in this case that there was a labor dispute between the parties as petitioners had
notified the respondent of their intention to stage a strike, and not merely to picket. Petitioners’ insistence to stage a
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strike is evident in the fact that an amended notice of strike was filed even as respondent moved to dismiss the first
notice. The basic elements of a strike are present in this case: 106 members of petitioner Union, whose respective
applications for leave of absence on September 21, 1999 were disapproved, opted not to report for work on said
date, and gathered in front of the company premises to hold a mass protest action. Petitioners deliberately absented
themselves and instead wore red ribbons and carried placards with slogans such as: “YES KAMI SA STRIKE,”
“PROTESTA KAMI,” “SAHOD, KARAPATAN NG MANGGAGAWA IPAGLABAN,” “CBA-’WAG BABOYIN,”
“STOP UNION BUSTING.” They marched to and fro in front of the company’s premises during working hours.
Thus, petitioners engaged in a concerted activity which already affected the company’s operations. The mass
concerted activity obviously constitutes a strike. Moreover, the bare fact that petitioners were given a Mayor’s
permit is not conclusive evidence that their action/activity did not amount to a strike. The Mayor’s description of
what activities petitioners were allowed to conduct is inconsequential. To repeat, what is definitive of whether the
action staged by petitioners is a strike and not merely a picket is the totality of the circumstances surrounding the
situation.
Petitioner union in the 2011 case of Leyte Geothermal Power Progressive Employees Union-ALU-
TUCP v. Philippine National Oil Company – Energy Development Corporation,1 contends that there was no
stoppage of work; hence, they did not strike. Euphemistically, petitioner union avers that it “only engaged in
picketing,” and maintains that “without any work stoppage, [its officers and members] only engaged in xxx protest
activity.” The Supreme Court, however, ruled that it was a strike and not picketing or protest activity that petitioner
union staged. It found the following circumstances in support of such finding:
(1) Petitioner union filed a Notice of Strike on December 28, 1998 with the DOLE grounded on
respondent’s purported unfair labor practices, i.e., “refusal to bargain collectively, union busting and mass
termination.” On even date, petitioner Union declared and staged a strike.
(2) The DOLE Secretary intervened and issued a Return-to-Work Order dated January 4, 1999, certifying
the labor dispute to the NLRC for compulsory arbitration. The Order indicated the following facts: (1) filing of the
notice of strike; (2) staging of the strike and taking control over respondent’s facilities of its Leyte Geothermal
Project on the same day petitioner union filed the notice of strike; (3) attempts by the NCMB to forge a mutually
acceptable solution proved futile; (4) in the meantime, the strike continued with no settlement in sight placing in
jeopardy the supply of much needed power supply in the Luzon and Visayas grids.
(3) Petitioner union itself, in its pleadings, used the word “strike.”
(4) Petitioner union’s asseverations are belied by the factual findings of the NLRC, as affirmed by the CA
thus: “The failure to comply with the mandatory requisites for the conduct of strike is both admitted and clearly
shown on record. Hence, it is undisputed that no strike vote was conducted; likewise, the cooling-off period was not
observed and that the 7-day strike ban after the submission of the strike vote was not complied with since there was
no strike vote taken.”
In fine, petitioner union’s bare contention that it did not hold a strike cannot trump the factual findings of
the NLRC that petitioner union indeed struck against respondent. In fact, and more importantly, petitioner union
failed to comply with the requirements set by law prior to holding a strike.
d.
WHEN IS A STRIKE CONSIDERED ILLEGAL?
A strike is illegal if it is declared and staged:
1) Without complying with the procedural but mandatory requisites (See 7 requisites above).
2) For unlawful purpose such as to compel the dismissal of an employee or to force recognition of the
union or for trivial and puerile purpose or to circumvent contracts and judicial orders.
3) Based on non-strikeable or invalid grounds such as:
a) Inter-union or intra-union disputes.
b) Simple violation of CBA in contrast to gross violation thereof which is deemed ULP.
c) Violation of labor standards.
d) Legislated wage orders (wage distortion).
4) Without first having bargained collectively.
5) In violation of the “no strike, no lockout” clause in the CBA.
6) Without submitting the issues to the grievance machinery or voluntary arbitration or failing to exhaust
the steps provided therein.
7) While conciliation and mediation proceeding is on-going at the NCMB.
8) Based on issues already brought to voluntary or compulsory arbitration.
9) During the pendency of a case involving the same ground/s cited in the notice of strike.
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3.
ASSUMPTION OF JURISDICTION
(BY THE DOLE SECRETARY OR ALTERNATIVELY, AT HIS DISCRETION,
CERTIFICATION OF THE LABOR DISPUTE TO THE NLRC FOR COMPULSORY
ARBITRATION)
1. WHEN DOLE SECRETARY MAY ASSUME OR CERTIFY A LABOR DISPUTE.
Article 278(g) [263(g)] of the Labor Code provides that when in the opinion of the DOLE Secretary, the
labor dispute causes or will likely to cause a strike or lockout in an industry indispensable to the national
interest, he is empowered to do either of 2 things:
1. He may assume jurisdiction over the labor dispute and decide it himself; or
2. He may certify it to the NLRC for compulsory arbitration, in which case, it will be the NLRC which
shall hear and decide it.
This power may be exercised by the DOLE Secretary even before the actual staging of a strike or
lockout since Article 278(g) [263(g)] does not require the existence of a strike or lockout but only of a labor dispute
involving national interest.
2. WHAT CONSTITUTES A NATIONAL INTEREST CASE?
The Labor Code vests in the DOLE Secretary the discretion to determine what industries are indispensable
to the national interest. Accordingly, upon the determination by the DOLE Secretary that such industry is
indispensable to the national interest, he has authority to assume jurisdiction over the labor dispute in the said
industry or certify it to the NLRC for compulsory arbitration.
Past issuances of the DOLE Secretary have not made nor attempted to mention specifically what the
industries indispensable to the national interest are. It was only in Department Order No. 40-H-13, Series of 2013,
that certain industries were specifically named, thus:
“Section 16. Industries Indispensable to the National Interest. – For the guidance of the
workers and employers in the filing of petition for assumption of jurisdiction, the following industries/
services are hereby recognized as deemed indispensable to the national interest:
a. Hospital sector;
b. Electric power industry;
c. Water supply services, to exclude small water supply services such as bottling and
refilling stations;
d. Air traffic control; and
e. Such other industries as may be recommended by the National Tripartite Industrial Peace
Council (TIPC).”
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Obviously, the above enumerated industries are not exclusive as other industries may be considered
indispensable to the national interest based on the appreciation and discretion of the DOLE Secretary or as may be
recommended by TIPC.
3. DIFFERENT RULE ON STRIKES AND LOCKOUTS IN HOSPITALS, CLINICS AND MEDICAL
INSTITUTIONS.
As a general rule, strikes and lockouts in hospitals, clinics and similar medical institutions should be
avoided.
In case a strike or lockout is staged, it shall be the duty of the striking union or locking-out employer to
provide and maintain an effective skeletal workforce of medical and other health personnel whose movement and
services shall be unhampered and unrestricted as are necessary to insure the proper and adequate protection of the
life and health of its patients, most especially emergency cases, for the duration of the strike or lockout.
The DOLE Secretary may immediately assume, within twenty four (24) hours from knowledge of the
occurrence of such a strike or lockout, jurisdiction over the same or certify it to the NLRC for compulsory
arbitration.
4. SOME PRINCIPLES ON ASSUMPTION/CERTIFICATION POWER OF THE DOLE SECRETARY.
▪ Prior notice and hearing are not required in the issuance of the assumption or certification order.
▪ The DOLE Secretary may seek the assistance of law enforcement agencies like the Philippine National Police
to ensure compliance with the provision thereof as well as with such orders as he may issue to enforce the same.
5. RETURN-TO-WORK ORDER.
a. It is a STATUTORY PART AND PARCEL of assumption/certification order even if not expressly
stated therein.
The moment the DOLE Secretary assumes jurisdiction over a labor dispute involving national interest or
certifies it to the NLRC for compulsory arbitration, such assumption or certification has the effect of automatically
enjoining the intended or impending strike or, if one has already been commenced, of automatically prohibiting its
continuation. The mere issuance of an assumption or certification order automatically carries with it a return-to-work
order, even if the directive to return to work is not expressly stated therein. It is thus not necessary for the DOLE
Secretary to issue another order directing the strikers to return to work.
It is error therefore for striking workers to continue with their strike alleging absence of a return-to-work
order since Article 263(g) is clear that once an assumption/certification order is issued, strikes are enjoined or, if one
has already taken place, all strikers should immediately return to work.
b. Nature of return-to-work order.
Return-to-work order is compulsory and immediately executory in character. It should be strictly
complied with by the parties even during the pendency of any petition questioning its validity in order to maintain
the status quo while the determination is being made. Filing of a motion for reconsideration does not affect the
enforcement of a return-to-work order which is immediately executory.
c. Some principles on return-to-work order.
▪ The issue of legality of strike is immaterial in enforcing the return-to-work order.
▪ Upon assumption or certification, the parties should revert to the status quo ante litem which refers to
the state of things as it was before the labor dispute or the state of affairs existing at the time of the filing
of the case. It is the last actual, peaceful and uncontested status that preceded the actual controversy.
▪ To implement the return-to-work order, the norm is actual reinstatement. However, payroll
reinstatement in lieu of actual reinstatement may properly be resorted to when special circumstances
exist that render actual reinstatement impracticable or otherwise not conducive to attaining the purposes
of the law.
Example:
University of Sto. Tomas v. NLRC, where the teachers ordered to return to work could not be given
back their academic assignments since the return-to-work order of the DOLE Secretary was issued in the
middle of the first semester of the academic year. The Supreme Court affirmed the validity of the payroll
reinstatement order of the NLRC and ruled that the NLRC did not commit grave abuse of discretion in
providing for the alternative remedy of payroll reinstatement. It observed that the NLRC was only trying
its best to work out a satisfactory ad hoc solution to a festering and serious problem.
3.1.
NATURE OF ASSUMPTION ORDER
OR CERTIFICATION ORDER
1. A POLICE POWER MEASURE.
The power to issue assumption or certification orders is an extraordinary authority granted to the
President and to his alter ego, the DOLE Secretary, the exercise of which should be strictly limited to national
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interest cases. It is in the nature of a police power measure. This is done for the promotion of the common good
considering that a prolonged strike or lockout can be inimical to the national economy.
3.2.
EFFECT OF DEFIANCE OF
ASSUMPTION OR CERTIFICATION ORDERS
ON EMPLOYMENT OF DEFIANT WORKERS
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The mere declaration of illegality of the strike will result in the termination of all union officers who
knowingly participated in the illegal strike. Unlike ordinary members, it is not required, for purposes of
termination, that the officers should commit an illegal act during the strike.
However, absent any showing that the employees are union officers, they cannot be dismissed based
solely on the illegality of the strike.
To illustrate how the “knowing participation” of union officers may be ascertained and established, the
following factors were taken into account in another 2011 case, Abaria v. NLRC,1 which led to the declaration that
they knowingly participated in the illegal strike:
(1) Their persistence in holding picketing activities despite the declaration by the NCMB that their union
was not duly registered as a legitimate labor organization and notwithstanding the letter from the federation’s legal
counsel informing them that their acts constituted disloyalty to the national federation; and
(2) Their filing of the notice of strike and conducting a strike vote despite the fact that their union has no
legal personality to negotiate with their employer for collective bargaining purposes.
2. Ordinary union members.
The mere finding or declaration of illegality of a strike will not result in termination of ordinary union
members. For an ordinary union member to suffer termination, it must be shown by clear evidence that he has
committed illegal acts during the strike.
b. Reason for the distinction.
The reason for this distinction is that the union officers have the duty to guide their members to respect the
law. If instead of doing so, the officers urged the members to violate the law and defy the duly constituted
authorities, their dismissal from the service is a just penalty or sanction for their unlawful act. Their responsibility as
main players in an illegal strike is greater than that of the ordinary union members and, therefore, limiting the
penalty of dismissal only to the former for their participation in an illegal strike is in order.
c. Some principles on illegality of a strike.
▪ The fact that the employees are signatories to the CBA does not in itself sufficiently establish their
status as union officers during the illegal strike. Neither were their active roles during the bargaining
negotiations be considered as evidence of their being union officers.
▪ Only the union officers during the period of illegal strike are liable. If the employees acted as
union officers after the strike, they may not be held liable and, therefore, could not be terminated in
their capacity as such.
▪ Shop stewards are union officers. Hence, they should be terminated upon the declaration of the
illegality of the strike.
▪ Union officers may be dismissed despite the fact that the illegal strike was staged only for 1 day
or even for less than 10 hours. This holds true in cases of defiance of the assumption/ certification
order issued in national interest cases.
▪ If the dispositive portion of the decision failed to mention the names of union officers, resort
should be made to the text of the decision.
▪ No wholesale dismissal of strikers allowed. The employer cannot just unceremoniously dismiss a
hundred of its employees in the absence of clear and convincing proof that these people were indeed
guilty of the acts charged and then, afterwards, go to court to seek validation of the dismissal it
whimsically executed. That certainly cannot be allowed.
1 G.R. Nos. 154113, 187778, 187861 & 196156, Dec. 7, 2011, 661 SCRA 686.
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Liability for illegal acts should be determined on an individual basis. For this purpose, the individual
identity of the union members who participated in the commission of illegal acts may be proved thru affidavits and
photographs. Simply referring to them as “strikers,” or “complainants in this case” is not enough to justify
their dismissal.
d. Some principles on commission of illegal acts in the course of the strike.
▪ Only members who are identified as having participated in the commission of illegal acts are
liable. Those who did not participate should not be blamed therefor.
• To effectively hold ordinary union members liable, those who participated in the commission of illegal
acts must not only be identified but the specific illegal acts they each committed should be
described with particularity.
▪ If violence was committed by both employer and employees, the same cannot be cited as a ground to
declare the strike illegal.
------------oOo------------
SYLLABUS
MAJOR TOPIC 8
PRELIMINARY CONSIDERATIONS
ON PROCEDURE AND JURISDICTION
1. EXISTENCE OF EMPLOYER-EMPLOYEE RELATIONSHIP.
The existence of employer-employee relationship between the parties-litigants, or a reasonable causal
connection to such relationship is a jurisdictional pre-requisite for the exercise of jurisdiction over a labor dispute by
the Labor Arbiters or any other labor tribunals.
2. THE CAUSE OF ACTION MUST ARISE FROM THE EMPLOYER-EMPLOYEE RELATIONSHIP.
Even if there is employer-employee relationship, if the cause of action did not arise out of or was not
incurred in connection with the employer-employee relationship, Labor Arbiters and other labor tribunals have no
jurisdiction thereover.
Actions between employers and employees where the employer-employee relationship is merely incidental
are within the exclusive original jurisdiction of the regular courts.
3. REASONABLE CAUSAL CONNECTION RULE – THE RULE IN CASE OF CONFLICT OF
JURISDICTION BETWEEN LABOR COURT AND REGULAR COURT.
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Under this rule, if there is a reasonable causal connection between the claim asserted and the employer-
employee relations, then the case is within the jurisdiction of labor courts.
In the absence of such nexus, it is the regular courts that have jurisdiction.
4. THE POWER TO DETERMINE EXISTENCE OF EMPLOYMENT RELATIONSHIP.
Under labor laws, it is not only the Labor Arbiters and the NLRC who/which are vested with the power to
determine the existence of employer-employee relationship.
The following have also the power to make similar determination:
(1) The DOLE Secretary and the DOLE Regional Directors, to the exclusion of the Labor Arbiter and
the NLRC;
(2) The Med-Arbiter;
(3) The Social Security Commission (SSC).
5. IN CASES FILED BY OFWs, LABOR ARBITERS MAY EXERCISE JURISDICTION EVEN ABSENT
THE EMPLOYMENT RELATIONSHIP.
In Santiago v. CF Sharp Crew Management, Inc.,1 it was held that a seafarer who has already signed a
POEA-approved employment contract but was not deployed overseas and, therefore, there is no employer-employee
relationship, may file his monetary claims case with the Labor Arbiter. This is because the jurisdiction of Labor
Arbiters is not limited to claims arising from employer-employee relationships. Under Section 10 of R. A. No. 8042
(Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipinos Act of 1995), as amended, the Labor Arbiter may exercise jurisdiction
over the claims of OFWs arising out of an employer-employee relationship or by virtue of any law or contract
involving Filipino workers for overseas deployment, including claims for actual, moral, exemplary and other
forms of damage. (See also the 2012 case of Bright Maritime Corporation v. Fantonial2).
6. LABOR ARBITERS HAVE JURISDICTION EVEN IF THE CASE IS FILED BY THE HEIRS OF THE
OFW.
This was the ruling in Medline Management, Inc. v. Roslinda.3 As heirs, the wife and son of Juliano
Roslinda, the deceased OFW, have the personality to file the claim for death compensation, reimbursement of
medical expenses, damages and attorney's fees before the Labor Arbiter of the NLRC.
7. LABOR DISPUTES, NOT SUBJECT TO BARANGAY CONCILIATION.
Labor cases are not subject to the conciliation proceedings prescribed under P.D. No. 1508 requiring the
submission of disputes before the Barangay Lupong Tagapayapa prior to their filing with the court or other
government offices. Instead of simplifying labor proceedings designed at expeditious settlement or referral to the
proper courts or offices to decide them finally, the conciliation of the issues before the Barangay Lupong
Tagapayapa would only duplicate the conciliation proceedings and unduly delay the disposition of labor cases.
A.
LABOR ARBITER
1. THE LABOR ARBITER.
The Labor Arbiter is an official in the Arbitration Branch of the National Labor Relations Commission
(NLRC) who hears and decides cases falling under his original and exclusive jurisdiction as provided by law.
2. LABOR ARBITERS HAVE NO INJUNCTIVE POWER; ONLY THE COMMISSION (NLRC) HAS THIS
POWER.
Previously, Labor Arbiters are possessed of injunctive power. This grant of injunctive power, however, was
deleted in recent NLRC Rules. The Labor Arbiter thus has no more injunctive power. Only the Commission (NLRC)
has that power.
1.
JURISDICTION
1. NATURE OF JURISDICTION OF LABOR ARBITERS - ORIGINAL AND EXCLUSIVE.
The jurisdiction conferred by Article 217 upon the Labor Arbiters is both original and exclusive, meaning,
no other officers or tribunals can take cognizance of, or hear and decide, any of the cases therein enumerated.
2. EXCEPTIONS TO THE ORIGINAL AND EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION OF LABOR ARBITERS.
The following cases are the exceptions when the Labor Arbiters may not exercise their original and
exclusive jurisdiction:
1. In assumed cases. When the DOLE Secretary or the President exercises his power under Article 278(g)
[263(g)] of the Labor Code to assume jurisdiction over national interest cases and decide them himself.
2. In certified cases. When the NLRC exercises its power of compulsory arbitration over similar national
interest cases that are certified to it by the DOLE Secretary pursuant to the exercise by the latter of his
certification power under the same Article 278(g) [263(g)].
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3. In cases arising from CBA. - When cases arise from the interpretation or implementation of collective
bargaining agreements and from the interpretation or enforcement of company personnel policies which
shall be disposed of by the Labor Arbiter by referring the same to the grievance machinery and
voluntary arbitration, as may be provided in said agreements.
4. In cases submitted for voluntary arbitration. - When the parties agree to submit the case to voluntary
arbitration before a Voluntary Arbitrator or panel of Voluntary Arbitrators who, under Articles 274 [261]
and 275 [262] of the Labor Code, are also possessed of original and exclusive jurisdiction to hear and
decide cases mutually submitted to them by the parties for arbitration and adjudication.
3. RUNDOWN OF ALL CASES FALLING UNDER THE JURISDICTION OF THE LABOR ARBITERS.
More particularly, Labor Arbiters shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction to hear and decide the
following cases involving all workers, whether agricultural or non-agricultural:
1. Under Article 224 [217] of the Labor Code:
(a) Unfair labor practice cases;
(b) Termination disputes (Illegal dismissal cases);
(c) Money claims exceeding P5,000.00.
(d) Claims for actual, moral, exemplary and other forms of damages arising from employer-employee
relations; and
(e) Cases involving the legality of strikes and lockouts.
NOTE: Claims for employees’ compensation, SSS, PhilHealth (Medicare) and maternity benefits do not
fall under the jurisdiction of the Labor Arbiter because these fall under the jurisdiction of other government
agencies.
2. Under Article 124 of the Labor Code, as amended by R.A. No. 6727:
Disputes involving legislated wage increases and wage distortion in unorganized establishments not
voluntarily settled by the parties pursuant to R.A. No. 6727.
3. Under Article 128(b) of the Labor Code, as amended by R.A. No. 7730:
• Contested cases under the exception clause in Article 128(b) of the Labor Code.
4. Under Article 233 [227] of the Labor Code:
• Enforcement of compromise agreements when there is non-compliance by any of the parties thereto,
pursuant to Article 227 of the Labor Code.
5. Under Article 276 [262-A] of the Labor Code:
• Issuance of writ of execution to enforce decisions of Voluntary Arbitrators or panel of Voluntary
Arbitrators, in case of their absence or incapacity, for any reason.
6. Under Section 10 of R.A. No. 8042, as amended by R.A. No. 10022:
• Money claims of OFWs arising out of employer-employee relationship or by virtue of any law or
contract, including claims death and disability benefits and for actual, moral, exemplary and other
forms of damages.
7. Other cases as may be provided by law.
I.
JURISDICTION OVER UNFAIR LABOR PRACTICE CASES
1. SOME PRINCIPLES ON JURISDICTION OVER ULPs.
• The Labor Arbiter has jurisdiction over all ULPs whether committed by the employers or the labor
organizations.
• The Labor Arbiter has jurisdiction only over the civil aspect of ULP, the criminal aspect being lodged with the
regular courts.
II.
JURISDICTION OVER ILLEGAL DISMISSAL CASES
1. SOME PRINCIPLES ON JURISDICTION OVER TERMINATION CASES.
• The validity of the exercise of jurisdiction by Labor Arbiters over illegal dismissal cases is not
dependent on the kind or nature of the ground cited in support of the dismissal; hence, whether the
dismissal is for just cause or authorized cause, it is of no consequence.
• In case of conflict of jurisdiction between Labor Arbiter and the Voluntary Arbitrator over
termination cases, the former’s jurisdiction shall prevail for the following reasons:
(1) Termination of employment is not a grievable issue that must be submitted to the grievance
machinery or voluntary arbitration for adjudication. The jurisdiction thereover remains within the
original and exclusive ambit of the Labor Arbiter and not of the Voluntary Arbitrator.
(2) Even if the CBA provides that termination disputes are grievable, the same is merely discretionary
on the part of the parties thereto.
(3) Once there is actual termination, jurisdiction is conferred upon Labor Arbiters by operation of law.
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(4) Interpretation of CBA and enforcement of company personnel policies are merely corollary to an
illegal dismissal case.
(5) Article 217 is deemed written into the CBA being an intrinsic part thereof.
• In other words, the Voluntary Arbitrator will only have jurisdiction over illegal dismissal cases when
there is express agreement of the parties to the CBA, i.e., the employer and the bargaining agent, to
submit the termination case to voluntary arbitration. Absent the mutual express agreement of the parties,
Voluntary Arbitrator cannot acquire jurisdiction over termination cases.
• The express agreement must be stated in the CBA or there must be enough evidence on record
unmistakably showing that the parties have agreed to resort to voluntary arbitration.
III.
JURISDICTION OVER MONEY CLAIMS CASES
1. CLASSIFICATION OF MONEY CLAIMS.
Money claims falling within the original and exclusive jurisdiction of the Labor Arbiters may be classified
as follows:
1. Any money claim, regardless of amount, when asserted in an illegal dismissal case (where the
remedy of reinstatement is proper). Here, the money claim is but an accompanying remedy
subordinated to the principal cause of action, i.e., illegal dismissal; or
If the amount does not exceed P5,000.00, it is, under Article 129, the DOLE Regional Director who has
jurisdiction to take cognizance thereof. Therefore, the amount of P5,000.00 becomes important only when the
principal cause of action is MONETARY CLAIM.
3. SOME PRINCIPLES ON JURISDICTION OVER MONEY CLAIMS.
• Award of statutory benefits even if not prayed for is valid.
• Claim for notarial fees by a lawyer employed by a company is within the jurisdiction of the Labor Arbiter.
(a)
VERSUS REGIONAL DIRECTOR
1. LABOR ARBITERS HAVE NO JURISDICTION OVER SMALL MONEY CLAIMS LODGED UNDER
ARTICLE 129.
As earlier emphasized, under Article 129 of the Labor Code, DOLE Regional Directors have jurisdiction
over claims amounting to P5,000 or below, provided the following requisites concur:
1. The claim must arise from employer-employee relationship;
2. The claimant does not seek reinstatement; and
3. The aggregate money claim of each employee does not exceed P5,000.00.
2. IN INSPECTION OF ESTABLISHMENT CASES UNDER ARTICLE 128 (VISITORIAL AND
ENFORCEMENT POWER), THE DOLE REGIONAL DIRECTORS HAVE JURISDICTION
REGARDLESS OF WHETHER OR NOT THE TOTAL AMOUNT OF CLAIMS PER EMPLOYEE
EXCEEDS P5,000.00.
a. Requisites.
For the valid exercise by the DOLE Secretary or any of his duly authorized representatives (DOLE
Regional Directors) of the visitorial and enforcement powers provided under Article 128(b), the following requisites
should concur:
(1) The employer-employee relationship should still exist;
(2) The findings in question were made in the course of inspection by labor inspectors; and
(3) The employees have not yet initiated any claim or complaint with the DOLE Regional Director under
Article 129, or the Labor Arbiter under Article 217.
3. HOWEVER, JURISDICTION OVER CONTESTED CASES UNDER THE EXCEPTION CLAUSE IN
ARTICLE 128(b) OF THE LABOR CODE INVOLVING INSPECTION OF ESTABLISHMENTS
BELONGS TO THE LABOR ARBITERS AND NOT TO DOLE REGIONAL DIRECTORS.
a. Relation of paragraph (b) of Article 128 to the jurisdiction of Labor Arbiters.
The Labor Arbiters have jurisdiction over contested cases under the exception clause in Article 128(b),
which states: “xxx. The Secretary or his duly authorized representatives shall issue writs of execution to the
appropriate authority for the enforcement of their orders, except in cases where the employer contests the findings
of the labor employment and enforcement officer and raises issues supported by documentary proofs which were not
considered in the course of inspection.”
In interpreting the afore-quoted provision of the exception clause, three (3) elements must concur to divest
the Regional Directors or their representatives of jurisdiction thereunder, to wit:
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(a) That the employer contests the findings of the labor regulations officer and raises issues thereon;
(b) That in order to resolve such issues, there is a need to examine evidentiary matters; and
(c) That such matters are not verifiable in the normal course of inspection.
The 2009 case of Meteoro v. Creative Creatures, Inc., 1 best illustrates the application of the exception
clause. Here, it was held that the Court of Appeals aptly applied the “exception clause” because at the earliest
opportunity, respondent company registered its objection to the findings of the labor inspector on the ground that
there was no employer-employee relationship between petitioners and respondent company. The labor inspector, in
fact, noted in his report that “respondent alleged that petitioners were contractual workers and/or independent and
talent workers without control or supervision and also supplied with tools and apparatus pertaining to their job.” In
its position paper, respondent again insisted that petitioners were not its employees. It then questioned the Regional
Director’s jurisdiction to entertain the matter before it, primarily because of the absence of an employer-employee
relationship. Finally, it raised the same arguments before the Secretary of Labor and the appellate court. It is,
therefore, clear that respondent contested and continues to contest the findings and conclusions of the labor
inspector. To resolve the issue raised by respondent, that is, the existence of an employer-employee relationship,
there is a need to examine evidentiary matters.
IV.
JURISDICTION OVER CLAIMS FOR DAMAGES
1. LABOR ARBITERS HAVE JURISDICTION OVER CLAIMS FOR DAMAGES.
It is now a well-settled rule that claims for damages as well as attorney’s fees in labor cases are cognizable
by the Labor Arbiters, to the exclusion of all other courts. Rulings to the contrary are deemed abandoned or modified
accordingly.
2. CLAIMS FOR DAMAGES OF OVERSEAS FILIPINO WORKERS (OFWs).
Claims for actual, moral, exemplary and other forms of damages that may be lodged by overseas Filipino
workers are cognizable by the Labor Arbiters.
V.
JURISDICTION OVER LEGALITY OF STRIKES AND LOCKOUTS
2 G.R. No. 183335, Dec. 23, 2009; See also Hotel Employees Union-NFL v. Waterfront Insular Hotel Davao, G.R. Nos. 174040-41, Sept. 22, 2010.
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In case at the time of the said assumption or certification, there is a pending case before the Labor Arbiter
or Voluntary Arbitrator on the issue of illegality of the strike or lockout, the same shall be deemed subsumed in the
assumed or certified case. Resultantly, it is no longer the Labor Arbiter or the Voluntary Arbitrator who should
decide the said case but the DOLE Secretary, in the case of assumed cases, or the NLRC, in the case of certified
cases.
6. Assumption of jurisdiction over a national interest case by the President. - The President of the
Philippines is not precluded from intervening in a national interest case by exercising himself the powers of his alter
ego, the DOLE Secretary, granted under Article 278(g) [263(g)] by assuming jurisdiction over the same for purposes
of settling or terminating it.
7. Submission of a national interest case to voluntary arbitration. - Despite the pendency of the
assumed or certified national interest case, the parties are allowed to submit any issues raised therein to voluntary
arbitration at any stage of the proceeding, by virtue of Article 278(h) [263(h)] which provides that “(b)efore or at
any stage of the compulsory arbitration process, the parties may opt to submit their dispute to voluntary
arbitration.”
The foregoing interplay explains why Article 278(i) [263(i)] makes specific reference to the President of
the Philippines, the Secretary of Labor and Employment, the Commission (NLRC) or the Voluntary Arbitrator in
connection with the law on strike, lockout and picketing embodied in Article 278 [263]. The only labor official not
so mentioned therein but who has a significant role to play in the interaction of labor officials and tribunals in strike
or lockout cases, is the Labor Arbiter. This is understandable in the light of the separate express grant of jurisdiction
to the Labor Arbiters under Article 224(a)(5) [217(a)(5)] as above discussed.
VI.
JURISDICTION OVER CASES INVOLVING
LEGISLATED WAGE INCREASES AND WAGE DISTORTION
VII.
JURISDICTION OVER ENFORCEMENT OR ANNULMENT
OF COMPROMISE AGREEMENTS
1. LEGAL BASIS.
Article 233 [227] clearly embodies the following provisions on compromise agreements:
“Article 233 [227]. Compromise Agreements. - Any compromise settlement, including those
involving labor standard laws, voluntarily agreed upon by the parties with the assistance of the Bureau or the
regional office of the Department of Labor, shall be final and binding upon the parties. The National Labor
Relations Commission or any court shall not assume jurisdiction over issues involved therein except in
case of non-compliance thereof or if there is prima facie evidence that the settlement was obtained
through fraud, misrepresentation, or coercion.”
Clear from the foregoing provision that, although the compromise agreement may have been entered into by
the parties before the Bureau of Labor Relations (BLR) or the DOLE Regional Office, it is the Labor Arbiter who
has jurisdiction to take cognizance of the following issues related thereto, to the exclusion of the BLR and the
DOLE Regional Directors:
(1) To enforce the compromise agreement in case of non-compliance therewith by any of the parties thereto;
or
(2) To nullify it if there is prima facie evidence that the settlement was obtained through fraud,
misrepresentation, or coercion.
VIII.
JURISDICTION OVER EXECUTION AND ENFORCEMENT
OF DECISIONS OF VOLUNTARY ARBITRATORS
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In situations, however, where the Voluntary Arbitrator or the panel of Voluntary Arbitrators who rendered
the decision is absent or incapacitated for any reason, Article 276 [262-A] grants jurisdiction to any Labor Arbiter in
the region where the winning party resides, to take cognizance of a motion for the issuance of the writ of execution
filed by such party and accordingly issue such writ addressed to and requiring the public officers mentioned above
to execute the final decision, order or award of the Voluntary Arbitrator or panel of Voluntary Arbitrators.
IX.
JURISDICTION OVER CASES OF OFWs
X.
OTHER ISSUES OVER WHICH
LABOR ARBITERS HAVE JURISDICTION
1. JURISDICTION OVER CERTAIN ISSUES AS PROVIDED IN JURISPRUDENCE.
In accordance with well-entrenched jurisprudence, the issues, claims or cases of the following fall under the
jurisdiction of the Labor Arbiters:
(a) Employees in government-owned and/or controlled corporations without original charters;
(b) Domestic workers or kasambahay;
(c) Employees of cooperatives;
(d) Counter-claims of employers against employees.
X-1.
JURISDICTION OVER CASES OF
DOMESTIC WORKERS OR KASAMBAHAY
X-2.
JURISDICTION OVER CASES OF
EMPLOYEES OF COOPERATIVES
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Simply stated, insofar as member-employees are concerned, there is a need to determine their cause of
action. If what they are asserting arose from their employment relationship with the cooperative, such as monetary
claims or illegal dismissal cases, then, the Labor Arbiter has jurisdiction thereover. But if the action involves their
membership with the cooperative, then, it is considered an intra-cooperative dispute which falls under the
jurisdiction of the Cooperative Development Authority (CDA).
Members of cooperatives or member-employees thereof are not allowed to organize a labor organization to
collectively bargain with the cooperative because they are the owners of the cooperative. They cannot negotiate with
themselves. Only employees of cooperative can organize such labor organization, for obvious reason.
X-3.
JURISDICTION OVER COUNTER-CLAIMS OF EMPLOYERS
XI-A.
CLAIMS FOR DAMAGES ARISING FROM BREACH OF NON-COMPETE CLAUSE AND
OTHER POST-EMPLOYMENT PROHIBITIONS
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a. Cash loans/advances are in the nature of simple collection of a sum of money brought by the employer,
as creditor, against the employee, as debtor. The fact that they were employer and employee at the time
of the transaction does not negate the civil jurisdiction of the trial court. The case does not involve
adjudication of a labor dispute but recovery of a sum of money based on our civil laws on obligation
and contract.
b. Car loans such as those granted to sales or medical representatives by reason of the nature of their
work. The employer’s demand for payment of the employees’ amortizations on their car loans, or, in the
alternative, the return of the cars to the company, is not a labor, but a civil, dispute. It involves debtor-
creditor relations, rather than employee-employer relations.
c. Appliance loans concern the enforcement of a loan agreement involving debtor-creditor relations
founded on contract and do not in any way concern employee relations. As such it should be
enforced through a separate civil action in the regular courts and not before the Labor Arbiter.
d. Loans from retirement fund also involve the same principle as above; hence, collection therefor may
only be made through the regular courts and not through the Labor Arbiter or any labor tribunal.
XI-C.
DISMISSAL OF DIRECTORS AND CORPORATE OFFICERS
1. LABOR ARBITERS HAVE NO JURISDICTION.
The dismissal of a director or corporate officer is an intra-corporate dispute cognizable by the Regional
Trial Court and not by the Labor Arbiter.
2. MATLING DOCTRINE.
Under this doctrine, 1 the following rules should be observed:
(1) The dismissal of regular employees falls under the jurisdiction of Labor Arbiters; while that of
corporate officers falls within the jurisdiction of the regular courts.
(2) The term “corporate officers” refers only to those expressly mentioned in the Corporation Code and
By-Laws; all other officers not so mentioned therein are deemed employees.
(3) Corporate officers are elected or appointed by the directors or stockholders, and those who are given
that character either by the Corporation Code or by the corporation’s by-laws.
(4) The Corporation Code specifically mentions only the following corporate officers, to wit: president,
secretary and treasurer and such other officers as may be provided for in the by-laws.
(5) The Board of Directors can no longer create corporate offices because the power of the Board of
Directors to create a corporate office cannot be delegated. Therefore, the term “corporate officers”
should only refer to the above and to no other. A different interpretation can easily leave the way open
for the Board of Directors to circumvent the constitutionally guaranteed security of tenure of the
employee by the expedient inclusion in the By-Laws of an enabling clause on the creation of just any
corporate officer position.
(6) Distinction between a corporate officer and an employee. - An “office” is created by the charter of
the corporation and the “corporate officer” is elected by the directors or stockholders. On the other
hand, an “employee” occupies no office and generally is employed not by the action of the directors or
stockholders but by the managing officer of the corporation who also determines the compensation to
be paid to such employee.
(7) Because of the Matling doctrine, the rulings in Tabang and Nacpil, are no longer controlling because
they are “too sweeping and do not accord with reason, justice, and fair play.”
(8) The status of an employee as director and stockholder does not automatically convert his
dismissal into an intra-corporate dispute.
(9) TWO (2) ELEMENTS TO DETERMINE WHETHER A DISPUTE IS INTRA-CORPORATE
OR NOT.
(a) The status or relationship of the parties (Relationship test); and
(b) The nature of the question that is the subject of their controversy. (Nature of controversy test).
In the absence of any one of these factors, the RTC will not have jurisdiction.
(10) The criteria do not depend on the services performed but on the manner of creation of the office.
In Matling, respondent Corros was supposedly at once an employee, a stockholder, and a Director of
Matling. The circumstances surrounding his appointment to office must be fully considered to
determine whether the dismissal constituted an intra-corporate controversy or a labor termination
dispute. It must also be considered whether his status as Director and stockholder had any relation at
all to his appointment and subsequent dismissal as Vice President for Finance and Administration.
1 Enunciated in the 2010 case of Matling Industrial and Commercial Corp. v. Ricardo R. Coros, G.R. No. 157802, Oct. 13, 2010. This case is an appeal via petition for
review on certiorari. The petitioners challenge the decision of the CA which sustained the ruling of the NLRC to the effect that the Labor Arbiter had jurisdiction because
the respondent, its Vice President for Finance and Administration, was not a corporate officer of petitioner Matling.
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Obviously enough, the respondent was not appointed as Vice President for Finance and Administration
because of his being a stockholder or Director of Matling. He had started working for Matling on
September 8, 1966, and had been employed continuously for 33 years until his termination on April 17,
2000. His first work as a bookkeeper and his climb in 1987 to his last position as Vice President for
Finance and Administration had been gradual but steady. Even though he might have become a
stockholder of Matling in 1992, his promotion to the position of Vice President for Finance and
Administration in 1987 was by virtue of the length of quality service he had rendered as an employee
of Matling. His subsequent acquisition of the status of Director/stockholder had no relation to his
promotion. Besides, his status of Director/stockholder was unaffected by his dismissal from
employment as Vice President for Finance and Administration.
3. SIGNIFICANT CASES DECIDED BASED ON THE MATLING DOCTRINE.
a. Cosare v. Broadcom Asia, Inc., (2014)
In this 2014 case, the Supreme Court ruled that the Labor Arbiter, not the regular courts, has original
jurisdiction over the illegal dismissal case filed by petitioner Cosare who was an incorporator of respondent
Broadcom and was holding the position of Assistant Vice President for Sales (AVP for Sales) and Head of the
Technical Coordination at the time of his termination. The following justifications were cited in support of this
ruling:
(1) The mere fact that a person was a stockholder and an officer of the company at the time the subject
controversy developed does not necessarily make the case an intra-corporate dispute.
(2) A person, although an officer of the company, is not necessarily a corporate officer thereof.
(3) General Information Sheet (GIS) submitted to SEC neither governs nor establishes the nature of office.
(4) The Nature of the Controversy Test: The mere fact that a person was a stockholder at the time of the
filing of the illegal dismissal case does not make the action an intra-corporate dispute.
b. Other cases:
(1) Barba v. Liceo de Cagayan University (2012);
(2) Marc II Marketing, Inc. and Lucila V. Joson v. Alfredo M. Joson (2011);
(3) Real v. Sangu Philippines, Inc. (2011).
XI-D.
LABOR CASES INVOLVING ENTITIES IMMUNE FROM SUIT
1. IMMUNE ENTITIES CANNOT BE SUED FOR LABOR LAW VIOLATIONS.
In this jurisdiction, the generally accepted principles of international law are recognized and adopted as part
of the law of the land. Immunity of a State and international organizations from suit is one of these universally
recognized principles. It is on this basis that Labor Arbiters or other labor tribunals have no jurisdiction over
immune entities.
2. ILLUSTRATIVE CASE.
In Department of Foreign Affairs v. NLRC,1 involving an illegal dismissal case filed against the Asian
Development Bank (ADB), it was ruled that said entity enjoys immunity from legal process of every form and
therefore the suit against it cannot prosper. And this immunity extends to its officers who also enjoy immunity in
respect of all acts performed by them in their official capacity. The Charter and the Headquarters Agreement
granting these immunities and privileges to the ADB are treaty covenants and commitments voluntarily assumed by
the Philippine government which must be respected.
3. EXCEPTION TO THE RULE.
There is an exception to the immunity rule as exemplified by the case of United States v. Hon. Rodrigo, 2
where it was held that when the function of the foreign entity otherwise immune from suit partakes of the nature of a
proprietary activity, such as the restaurant services offered at John Hay Air Station undertaken by the United States
Government as a commercial activity for profit and not in its governmental capacity, the case for illegal dismissal
filed by a Filipino cook working therein is well within the jurisdiction of Philippine courts. The reason is that by
entering into the employment contract with the cook in the discharge of its proprietary functions, it impliedly
divested itself of its sovereign immunity from suit.
4. ESTOPPEL DOES NOT CONFER JURISDICTION OVER AN IMMUNE ENTITY.
An entity immune from suit cannot be estopped from claiming such diplomatic immunity since estoppel
does not operate to confer jurisdiction to a tribunal that has none over a cause of action.
XI-E.
DOCTRINE OF FORUM NON CONVENIENS
1 G.R. No. 113191, Sept. 18, 1996, 262 SCRA 39, 43-44.
2 G.R. No. 79470, Feb. 26, 1990, 182 SCRA 644, 660.
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1. REQUISITES.
This doctrine is an international law principle which has been applied to labor cases. The following are the
requisites for its applicability:
(1) That the Philippine court is one to which the parties may conveniently resort;
(2) That the Philippine court is in a position to make an intelligent decision as to the law and the facts; and
(3) That the Philippine court has or is likely to have power to enforce its decision.
2. APPLICATION TO LABOR CASES.
a. Case where doctrine was rejected.
Petitioners’ invocation of this principle was rejected in Pacific Consultants International Asia, Inc. v.
Schonfeld.1 Petitioners’ insistence was based on the fact that respondent is a Canadian citizen and was a repatriate.
In so rejecting petitioners’ contention, the Supreme Court cited the following reasons that do not warrant the
application of the said principle: (1) the Labor Code does not include forum non conveniens as a ground for the
dismissal of the complaint; and (2) the propriety of dismissing a case based on this principle requires a factual
determination; hence, it is properly considered as a defense.
b. Case where doctrine was applied.
This doctrine was applied in the case of The Manila Hotel Corp. and Manila Hotel International
Limited v. NLRC, 2 where private respondent Marcelo Santos was an overseas worker employed as a printer in a
printing press in the Sultanate of Oman when he was directly hired by the Palace Hotel, Beijing, People’s Republic
of China to work in its print shop. This hotel was being managed by the Manila Hotel International Ltd., a foreign
entity registered under the laws of Hong Kong. Later, he was terminated due to retrenchment occasioned by business
reverses brought about by the political upheaval in China (referring to the Tiananmen Square incident) which
severely affected the hotel’s operations.
In holding that the NLRC was a seriously inconvenient forum, the Supreme Court noted that the main
aspects of the case transpired in two foreign jurisdictions and the case involves purely foreign elements. The only
link that the Philippines has with the case is that the private respondent employee (Marcelo Santos) is a Filipino
citizen. The Palace Hotel and MHICL are foreign corporations. Consequently, not all cases involving Filipino
citizens can be tried here. Respondent employee was hired directly by the Beijing Palace Hotel, a foreign employer,
through correspondence sent to him while he was working at the Sultanate of Oman. He was hired without the
intervention of the POEA or any authorized recruitment agency of the government. Hence, the NLRC is an
inconvenient forum given that all the incidents of the case - from the time of recruitment, to employment to
dismissal - occurred outside the Philippines. The inconvenience is compounded by the fact that the proper
defendants, the Palace Hotel and MHICL, are not nationals of the Philippines. Neither are they “doing business in
the Philippines.” Likewise, the main witnesses, Mr. Shmidt (General Manager of the Palace Hotel) and Mr. Henk
(Palace Hotel’s Manager) are non-residents of the Philippines.
Neither can an intelligent decision be made as to the law governing the employment contract as such was
perfected in foreign soil. This calls to fore the application of the principle of lex loci contractus (the law of the place
where the contract was made). It must be noted that the employment contract was not perfected in the Philippines.
Private respondent employee signified his acceptance thereof by writing a letter while he was in the Sultanate of
Oman. This letter was sent to the Palace Hotel in the People’s Republic of China. Neither can the NLRC determine
the facts surrounding the alleged illegal dismissal as all acts complained of took place in Beijing, People’s Republic
of China. The NLRC was not in a position to determine whether the Tiananmen Square incident truly adversely
affected the operations of the Palace Hotel as to justify respondent employee’s retrenchment.
Even assuming that a proper decision could be reached by the NLRC, such would not have any binding
effect against the employer, the Palace Hotel, which is a corporation incorporated under the laws of China and was
not even served with summons. Jurisdiction over its person was not acquired. This is not to say that Philippine
courts and agencies have no power to solve controversies involving foreign employers. Neither could it be said that
the Supreme Court does not have power over an employment contract executed in a foreign country. If the
respondent employee were an “overseas contract worker”, a Philippine forum, specifically the POEA, not the
NLRC, would protect him. He is not an “overseas contract worker”, a fact which he admits with conviction.
XI-F.
CONSTITUTIONALITY OF LABOR CONTRACT STIPULATIONS
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Claiming that said CBA provision is discriminatory against them, petitioners filed against respondent a
Special Civil Action for Declaratory Relief with Prayer for the Issuance of Temporary Restraining Order and Writ of
Preliminary Injunction with the Regional Trial Court (RTC) of Makati City.
In ruling that the RTC has jurisdiction, the Supreme Court cited the following reasons:
(1) The case is an ordinary civil action, hence, beyond the jurisdiction of labor tribunals.
(2) The said issue cannot be resolved solely by applying the Labor Code. Rather, it requires the
application of the Constitution, labor statutes, law on contracts and the Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). The power to apply and interpret the
constitution and CEDAW is within the jurisdiction of trial courts, a court of general jurisdiction.
(3) Not every controversy or money claim by an employee against the employer or vice-versa is within
the exclusive jurisdiction of the Labor Arbiter. Actions between employees and employer where the
employer-employee relationship is merely incidental and the cause of action proceeds from a different
source of obligation are within the exclusive jurisdiction of the regular courts. Here, the employer-
employee relationship between the parties is merely incidental and the cause of action ultimately arose
from different sources of obligation, i.e., the Constitution and CEDAW.
2.
REQUIREMENTS TO PERFECT APPEAL TO NLRC
I.
APPEAL IN GENERAL
1. APPEAL, MEANING AND NATURE.
The term “appeal” refers to the elevation by an aggrieved party to an agency vested with appellate
authority of any decision, resolution or order disposing the principal issues of a case rendered by an agency vested
with original jurisdiction, undertaken by filing a memorandum of appeal.
2. SOME PRINCIPLES ON APPEAL.
• Appeals under Article 223 apply only to appeals from the Labor Arbiter’s decisions, awards or orders to the
Commission (NLRC).
• There is no appeal from the decisions, orders or awards of the NLRC. Clearly, therefore, Article 223 of the
Labor Code is not the proper basis for elevating the case to the Court of Appeals or to the Supreme Court. The
proper remedy from the decisions, awards or orders of the NLRC to the Court of Appeals is a Rule 65 petition
for certiorari and from the Court of Appeals to the Supreme Court, a Rule 45 petition for review on certiorari.
• Appeal from the NLRC to the DOLE Secretary and to the President had long been abolished.
• Appeal is not a constitutional right but a mere statutory privilege. Hence, parties who seek to avail of it must
comply with the statutes or rules allowing it.
• A motion for reconsideration is unavailing as a remedy against a decision of the Labor Arbiter. The Labor
Arbiter should treat the said motion as an appeal to the NLRC.
• A “Petition for Relief” should be treated as appeal.
• Affirmative relief is not available to a party who failed to appeal. A party who does not appeal from a
decision of a court cannot obtain affirmative relief other than the ones granted in the appealed decision.
3. GROUNDS FOR APPEAL TO THE COMMISSION (NLRC).
The appeal to the NLRC may be entertained only on any of the following grounds:
a. If there is a prima facie evidence of abuse of discretion on the part of the Labor Arbiter;
b. If the decision, order or award was secured through fraud or coercion, including graft and corruption;
c. If made purely on questions of law; and/or
d. If serious errors in the findings of fact are raised which, if not corrected, would cause grave or
irreparable damage or injury to the appellant.
• NLRC has certiorari power.
The first ground above regarding prima facie evidence of abuse of discretion on the part of the Labor
Arbiter is actually an exercise of certiorari power by the NLRC. The case of Triad Security & Allied Services, Inc.
v. Ortega,1 expressly recognized this certiorari power of the NLRC. Clearly, according to the 2012 case of Auza, Jr.
v. MOL Philippines, Inc.,2 the NLRC is possessed of the power to rectify any abuse of discretion committed by the
Labor Arbiter.
II.
PERFECTION OF APPEAL
1. EFFECT OF PERFECTION OF APPEAL ON EXECUTION.
To reiterate, the perfection of an appeal shall stay the execution of the decision of the Labor Arbiter except
execution for reinstatement pending appeal.
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IV.
APPEAL FEE AND LEGAL RESEARCH FEE
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1. PAYMENT OF APPEAL FEE AND LEGAL RESEARCH FEE, MANDATORY AND JURISDICTIONAL.
The payment by the appellant of the prevailing appeal fee and legal research fee is both mandatory and
jurisdictional. An appeal is perfected only when there is proof of payment of the appeal fee. It is by no means a
mere technicality. If not paid, the running of the reglementary period for perfecting an appeal will not be tolled.
V.
MEMORANDUM OF APPEAL
1. REQUISITES.
The requisites for a valid Memorandum of Appeal are as follows:
1. The Memorandum of Appeal should be verified by the appellant himself in accordance with the Rules of
Court, as amended;
2. It should be presented in three (3) legibly typewritten or printed copies;
3. It shall state the grounds relied upon and the arguments in support thereof, including the relief prayed
for;
4. It shall contain a statement of the date the appellant received the appealed decision, award or order; and
5. It shall be accompanied by:
(i) proof of payment of the required appeal fee and legal research fee;
(ii) posting of a cash or surety bond (in case of monetary awards); and
(iii) proof of service upon the other party.
2. REQUIREMENTS NOT JURISDICTIONAL.
The aforesaid requirements that should be complied with in a Memorandum of Appeal are merely a
rundown of the contents of the required appeal memorandum to be submitted by the appellant. They are not
jurisdictional requirements.
3. SOME PRINCIPLES ON MEMORANDUM OF APPEAL.
• Mere notice of appeal without complying with the other requisites aforestated shall not stop the running
of the period for perfecting an appeal.
• Memorandum of appeal is not similar to motion for reconsideration.
• Lack of verification in a memorandum of appeal is not a fatal defect. It may easily be corrected by
requiring an oath.
• An appeal will be dismissed if signed only by an unauthorized representative.
• Only complainants who signed the memorandum of appeal are deemed to have appealed the Labor
Arbiter’s decision. The prevailing doctrine in labor cases is that a party who has not appealed cannot obtain
from the appellate court any affirmative relief other than those granted, if any, in the decision of the lower
tribunal.
VI.
PROOF OF SERVICE TO ADVERSE PARTY
1. FAILURE TO SERVE COPY TO ADVERSE PARTY, NOT FATAL.
While it is required that in all cases, the appellant shall furnish a copy of the Memorandum of Appeal to the
other party (appellee), non-compliance therewith, however, will not be an obstacle to the perfection of the appeal;
nor will it amount to a jurisdictional defect on the NLRC’s taking cognizance thereof.
VII.
POSTING OF BOND
1. WHEN POSTING OF BOND REQUIRED.
Only in case the decision of the Labor Arbiter or the DOLE Regional Director (under Article 129 of the
Labor Code) involves a monetary award, that an appeal by the employer may be perfected only upon the posting of
a bond, which shall either be in the form of (1) cash deposit, (2) surety bond or (3) property bond, equivalent in
amount to the monetary award, but excluding the amount of damages (moral and exemplary) and attorney’s fees.
In other words, only monetary awards (such as unpaid wages, backwages, separation pay, 13th month pay,
etc.) are required to be covered by the bond. Moral and exemplary damages and attorney’s fees are excluded.
2. SOME PRINCIPLES ON POSTING OF BOND.
• Posting of bond is mandatory and jurisdictional.
• The cash or surety bond required for the perfection of appeal should be posted within the reglementary
period. If a party failed to perfect his appeal by the non-payment of the appeal bond within the 10-calendar day
period provided by law, the decision of the Labor Arbiter becomes final and executory upon the expiration of
the said period.
• In case the employer failed to post a bond to perfect its appeal, the remedy of the employee is to file a
motion to dismiss the appeal and not a petition for mandamus for the issuance of a writ of execution.
• Surety bond must be issued by a reputable bonding company duly accredited by the Commission (NLRC) or the
Supreme Court.
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• The bond shall be valid and effective from the date of deposit or posting, until the case is finally decided,
resolved or terminated, or the award satisfied.
• Posting of a bank guarantee or bank certification is not sufficient compliance with the bond requirement.
It is not equivalent to nor can be considered compliance with the cash, surety or property bond.
• Cooperatives are not exempted from posting bond.
• Government is exempt from posting of bond; government-owned and/or controlled corporations, however,
are not exempt therefrom.
• Bond is not required for the NLRC to entertain a motion for reconsideration. An appeal bond is required
only for the perfection of an appeal of a Labor Arbiter’s decision involving a monetary award.
• Bond is not required to file a Rule 65 petition for certiorari.
VII-A.
RULE ON REDUCTION OF APPEAL BOND
1. REQUISITES WHEN THE AMOUNT OF APPEAL BOND MAY BE REDUCED.
(1) The motion should be filed within the reglementary period;
(2) The motion to reduce bond should be based on meritorious grounds; and
(3) The motion should be accompanied by a partial bond, the amount of which should be reasonable in
relation to the monetary awards.
2. THE MCBURNIE DOCTRINE: NEW GUIDELINES FOR FILING AND ACCEPTANCE OF MOTIONS
TO REDUCE BOND.
The 2013 en banc decision rendered in the case of Andrew James Mcburnie v. Eulalio Ganzon, 1 has
enunciated the following guidelines that must be observed in the matter of the filing and acceptance of motions to
reduce appeal bond, as provided in Section 6, Rule VI of the 2011 NLRC Rules of Procedure:
(a) The filing of a motion to reduce appeal bond shall be entertained by the NLRC subject to the following
conditions: (1) there is meritorious ground; and (2) a bond in a reasonable amount is posted;
(b) For purposes of compliance with condition no. (2) above, a motion shall be accompanied by the
posting of a provisional cash or surety bond equivalent to ten percent (10%) of the monetary award
subject of the appeal, exclusive of damages and attorney's fees;
(c) Compliance with the foregoing conditions shall suffice to suspend the running of the 10-day
reglementary period to perfect an appeal from the Labor Arbiter’s decision to the NLRC;
(d) The NLRC retains its authority and duty to resolve the motion to reduce bond and determine the final
amount of bond that shall be posted by the appellant, still in accordance with the standards of
meritorious grounds and reasonable amount; and
(e) In the event that the NLRC denies the motion to reduce bond, or requires a bond that exceeds the
amount of the provisional bond, the appellant shall be given a fresh period of ten (10) days from notice
of the NLRC order within which to perfect the appeal by posting the required appeal bond.
This Mcburnie ruling has completely overhauled the rules on motion to reduce bond. Before its advent, the
issue of what amount to post by way of partial or provisional bond has continued to hound the party litigants and the
courts. Now, the fixing of “ten percent (10%) of the monetary award subject of the appeal, exclusive of damages
and attorney's fees” as the “reasonable amount” that should be posted has completely eradicated any and all
controversies thereon. In other words, no more motion for reduction of bond accompanied by said 10% requirement
would be denied outright on the ground of insufficiency or inadequacy of the partial or provisional bond.
What is left for the determination by the NLRC, using its sound judgment and discretion, are only the
issues of (1) the reasonable final amount of the bond; and (2) what constitute “meritorious grounds.” This
determination is important since “in all cases, the reduction of the appeal bond shall be justified by meritorious
grounds and accompanied by the posting of the required appeal bond in a reasonable amount.”2
1 G.R. Nos. 178034, 178117, 186984 and 186985, Oct. 17, 2013.
2 Andrew James Mcburnie v. Eulalio Ganzon, G.R. Nos. 178034, 178117, 186984 and 186985, Oct. 17, 2013.
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The rule set in McBurnie was clarified1 by the Court in the consolidated cases of Sara Lee Philippines v.
Ermilinda Macatlang.2 Thus, while McBurnie has effectively addressed the preliminary amount of the bond to be
posted in order to toll the running of the period to appeal, there is no hard and fast rule in determining whether the
additional bond to be posted is reasonable in relation to the judgment award. In this case of Sara Lee, petitioner
companies3 were held liable by the Labor Arbiter for the illegal dismissal of 5,984 employees with accompanying
award of separation pay and other monetary benefits amounting to P3,453,664,710.86. Petitioner companies filed
their Notice of Appeal with Motion to Reduce Appeal Bond and To Admit Reduced Amount with the NLRC. They
asked the NLRC to reduce the appeal bond to P1 Million each on the grounds that it is impossible for any insurance
company to cover such huge amount and that, in requiring them to post in full the appeal bond, it would be
tantamount to denying them their right to appeal.
In light of the impossibility for any surety company to cover the appeal bond and the huge economic losses
which the companies and their employees might suffer if the P3.45 Billion bond is sustained, the NLRC granted the
reduction of the appeal bond. The NLRC issued an Order dated 31 March 2006 directing petitioner corporations to
post an additional P4.5 Million bond, bringing the total posted bond to P9 Million. The Court of Appeals, however,
reversed and set aside the said 31 March 2006 NLRC Resolution and deemed it reasonable under the circumstances
of the case to order the posting of an additional appeal bond of P1 Billion.
Considering the peculiar circumstances in Sara Lee, the Court has to determine what is the reasonable
amount of appeal bond. The fact was underscored that the amount of 10% of the award is not a permissible bond
but is only such amount that shall be deemed reasonable in the meantime that the appellant’s motion is pending
resolution by the NLRC. The actual reasonable amount yet to be determined is necessarily a bigger amount. In an
effort to strike a balance between the constitutional obligation of the state to afford protection to labor, on the one
hand, and the opportunity afforded to the employer to appeal, on the other, it considered the appeal bond in the
amount of P725M which is equivalent to 25% of the monetary award sufficient to perfect the appeal, viz.:
“We sustain the Court of Appeals in so far as it increases the amount of the required appeal bond.
But we deem it reasonable to reduce the amount of the appeal bond to P725 Million. This directive
already considers that the award if not illegal, is extraordinarily huge and that no insurance
company would be willing to issue a bond for such big money. The amount of P725 Million is
approximately 25% of the basis above calculated. It is a balancing of the constitutional obligation
of the state to afford protection to labor which, specific to this case, is assurance that in case of
affirmance of the award, recovery is not negated; and on the other end of the spectrum, the
opportunity of the employer to appeal.
“By reducing the amount of the appeal bond in this case, the employees would still be assured of
at least substantial compensation, in case a judgment award is affirmed. On the other hand,
management will not be effectively denied of its statutory privilege of appeal.”
In line with Sara Lee and the objective that the appeal on the merits to be threshed out soonest by the
NLRC, the Court, in the 2015 case of Balite v. SS Ventures International, Inc.,4 held that the appeal bond of
P100,000.00 posted by the respondent company for the total monetary award of P490,308.00, which is equivalent to
around 20% thereof, is sufficient to perfect the appeal. With the employer's demonstrated good faith in filing the
motion to reduce the bond on demonstrable grounds coupled with the posting of the appeal bond in the requested
amount, as well as the filing of the memorandum of appeal, the right of the employer to appeal must be upheld. This
is in recognition of the importance of the remedy of appeal, which is an essential part of our judicial system and the
need to ensure that every party litigant is given the amplest opportunity for the proper and just disposition of his
cause freed from the constraints of technicalities.
3.
REINSTATEMENT PENDING APPEAL
1. PIONEER TEXTURIZING DOCTRINE: REINSTATEMENT ASPECT OF LABOR ARBITER’S
DECISION, IMMEDIATELY EXECUTORY EVEN PENDING APPEAL; NO WRIT OF EXECUTION
REQUIRED.
According to the Pioneer Texturizing doctrine, an order of reinstatement issued by the Labor Arbiter under
Article 229 [223] of the Labor Code is self-executory or immediately executory even pending appeal. This means
that the perfection of an appeal shall stay the execution of the decision of the Labor Arbiter except execution of the
reinstatement pending appeal.
2. REINSTATEMENT PENDING APPEAL, APPLICABLE ONLY TO THE REINSTATEMENT ORDER
ISSUED BY THE LABOR ARBITER; WRIT OF EXECUTION REQUIRED WHEN REINSTATEMENT
IS ORDERED BY NLRC ON APPEAL, OR SUBSEQUENTLY BY THE COURT OF APPEALS OR
SUPREME COURT, AS THE CASE MAY BE.
By way of distinction, the rule on reinstatement pending appeal applies only to the order of reinstatement
issued by the Labor Arbiter and to no other. This means that if the reinstatement order is issued by the NLRC on
1 The fact of clarification was pronounced in Balite v. SS Ventures International, Inc., G.R. No. 195109, Feb. 4, 2015.
3 This case is a consolidation of 6 cases involving several corporations, namely: Sara Lee Philippines, Inc. (SLPI), Aris Philippines, Inc. (Aris), Sara Lee Corporation (SLC)
and Fashion Accessories Philippines, Inc. (FAPI).
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appeal, or by the Court of Appeals or by the Supreme Court, there is a need to secure a writ of execution from the
Labor Arbiter of origin to enforce the reinstatement of the employee whose dismissal is declared illegal.
3. TWO (2) OPTIONS OF EMPLOYER.
To implement the reinstatement aspect of a Labor Arbiter’s decision, there are only two (2) options
available to the employer, to wit:
1. Actual reinstatement. - The employee should be reinstated to his position which he occupies prior to his
illegal dismissal under the same terms and conditions prevailing prior to his dismissal or separation or, if
no longer available, to a substantially-equivalent position; or
2. Payroll reinstatement. – The employee should be reinstated in the payroll of the company without
requiring him to report back to his work.
4. DUTY OF EMPLOYER TO NOTIFY EMPLOYEE ORDERED REINSTATED.
It is required that in case the decision of the Labor Arbiter includes an order of reinstatement, it should
contain:
(a) A statement that the reinstatement aspect is immediately executory; and
(b) A directive for the employer to submit a report of compliance within ten (10) calendar days from
receipt of the said decision.
Disobedience of this directive clearly denotes a refusal to reinstate. The employee need not file a motion
for the issuance of the writ of execution since the Labor Arbiter is mandated thereafter to motu proprio issue the
writ. With the new rules in place, there is hardly any difficulty in determining the employer’s intransigence in
immediately complying with the order.
5. INSTANCES WHEN WRIT OF EXECUTION OF LABOR ARBITER’S REINSTATEMENT ORDER
STILL REQUIRED.
Under the 2011 NLRC Rules of Procedure, there are two (2) instances when a writ of execution should still
be issued immediately by the Labor Arbiter to implement his order of reinstatement, even pending appeal, viz.:
(1) When the employer disobeys the prescribed directive to submit a report of compliance within ten (10)
calendar days from receipt of the decision; or
(2) When the employer refuses to reinstate the dismissed employee.
The Labor Arbiter shall motu proprio issue a corresponding writ to satisfy the reinstatement wages as they
accrue until actual reinstatement or reversal of the order of reinstatement.
6. SOME PRINCIPLES ON REINSTATEMENT PENDING APPEAL.
• Employer has no way of staying execution of immediate reinstatement. He cannot post bond to prevent its
execution.
• Reinstatement pending appeal applies to all kinds of illegal dismissal cases, regardless of the grounds
thereof.
• Reinstatement pending appeal does not apply when the dismissal is legal but reinstatement is ordered for
some reasons like equity and compassionate justice.
• The failure of employee ordered reinstated pending appeal to report back to work as directed by the employer
does not give the employer the right to remove him, especially when there is a reasonable explanation for his
failure.
• When former position is already filled up, the employee ordered reinstated pending appeal should be reinstated
to a substantially equivalent position.
• Reinstatement to a position lower in rank is not proper.
• In case of two successive dismissals, the order of reinstatement pending appeal under Article 223 issued
in the first case shall apply only to the first case and should not affect the second dismissal. According to
Sevilla v. NLRC, the Labor Arbiter was correct in denying the third motion for reinstatement filed by the
petitioner because what she should have filed was a new complaint based on the second dismissal. The
second dismissal gave rise to a new cause of action. Inasmuch as no new complaint was filed, the Labor
Arbiter could not have ruled on the legality of the second dismissal.
• Reinstatement pending appeal is not affected by the reinstated employee’s employment elsewhere.
• Effect of grant of achievement award during reinstatement pending appeal.
In the 2014 case of Garza v. Coca-Cola Bottlers Philippines, Inc., 1 it was pronounced that the act of
respondent CCBPI in giving an award of a Certificate of Achievement to petitioner for his exemplary sales
performance during his reinstatement ordered by the Labor Arbiter, while respondent’s appeal with the NLRC
was still pending, constitutes recognition of petitioner’s abilities and accomplishments. It indicates that he is a
responsible, trustworthy and hardworking employee of CCBPI. It constitutes adequate proof weighing in his
favor.
B.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION (NLRC)
1. NATURE.
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The NLRC is an administrative quasi-judicial body. It is an agency attached to the DOLE solely for
program and policy coordination only. It is in charge of deciding labor cases through compulsory arbitration.
2. COMPOSITION OF THE NLRC.
The NLRC is composed of a Chairman and twenty-three (23) members called “Commissioners.”
The NLRC has tripartite composition. Eight (8) members thereof should be chosen only from among the
nominees of the workers sector and another eight (8) from the employers sector. The Chairman and the seven (7)
remaining members shall come from the public sector, with the latter to be chosen preferably from among the
incumbent Labor Arbiters.
3. COMMISSION EN BANC.
The Commission sits en banc only for the following purposes:
(1) To promulgate rules and regulations governing the hearing and disposition of cases before any of its
divisions and regional branches; and
(2) To formulate policies affecting its administration and operations.
The NLRC does not sit en banc to hear and decide cases. The banc has no adjudicatory power. The
Commission exercises its adjudicatory and all other powers, functions, and duties through its eight (8)
Divisions.
4. NLRC’S EIGHT (8) DIVISIONS.
The NLRC is divided into eight (8) divisions, each one is comprised of three (3) members. Each Division
shall consist of one (1) member from the public sector who shall act as its Presiding Commissioner and one (1)
member each from the workers and employers sectors, respectively.
The various Divisions of the Commission have exclusive appellate jurisdiction over cases within their
respective territorial jurisdictions.
1.
JURISDICTION
1. TWO (2) KINDS OF JURISDICTION.
The NLRC exercises two (2) kinds of jurisdiction:
1. Exclusive original jurisdiction; and
2. Exclusive appellate jurisdiction.
2. EXCLUSIVE ORIGINAL JURISDICTION.
The NLRC exercises exclusive and original jurisdiction over the following cases:
a. Petition for injunction in ordinary labor disputes to enjoin or restrain any actual or threatened
commission of any or all prohibited or unlawful acts or to require the performance of a particular act in
any labor dispute which, if not restrained or performed forthwith, may cause grave or irreparable
damage to any party.
b. Petition for injunction in strikes or lockouts under Article 264 of the Labor Code.
c. Certified cases which refer to labor disputes causing or likely to cause a strike or lockout in an industry
indispensable to the national interest, certified to it by the Secretary of Labor and Employment for
compulsory arbitration by virtue of Article 263(g) of the Labor Code.
d. Petition to annul or modify the order or resolution (including those issued during execution
proceedings) of the Labor Arbiter.
3. EXCLUSIVE APPELLATE JURISDICTION.
The NLRC exercises exclusive appellate jurisdiction over the following:
a. All cases decided by the Labor Arbiters.
b. Cases decided by the DOLE Regional Directors or hearing officers involving small money claims under
Article 129 of the Labor Code.
c. Contempt cases decided by the Labor Arbiters.
2.
EFFECT OF NLRC REVERSAL OF
LABOR ARBITER’S ORDER OF REINSTATEMENT
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• After reversal of Labor Arbiter’s decision, the employer’s duty to reinstate the dismissed employee in the
actual service or in the payroll is effectively terminated. The employee, in turn, is not required to return
the wages that he had received prior to the reversal of the LA’s decision.
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rehabilitation proceedings, was resolved in the negative by the Supreme Court. The following ratiocinations were
cited:
(1) Re: modification of the Genuino doctrine. - The “refund doctrine” in Genuino should no longer be
observed because it easily demonstrates how a favorable decision by the Labor Arbiter could harm, more than help,
a dismissed employee. The employee, to make both ends meet, would necessarily have to use up the salaries
received during the pendency of the appeal, only to end up having to refund the sum in case of a final unfavorable
decision. It is mirage of a stop-gap leading the employee to a risky cliff of insolvency. Further, the Genuino ruling
not only disregards the social justice principles behind the rule, but also institutes a scheme unduly favorable to
management. Under such scheme, the salaries dispensed pendente lite merely serve as a bond posted in installment
by the employer. For in the event of a reversal of the Labor Arbiter’s decision ordering reinstatement, the employer
gets back the same amount without having to spend ordinarily for bond premiums. This circumvents, if not directly
contradicts, the proscription that the “posting of a bond [even a cash bond] by the employer shall not stay the
execution for reinstatement.”
(2) Re: modification of the Roquero doctrine. – The Roquero doctrine was reaffirmed but with the
modification that “[a]fter the Labor Arbiter’s decision is reversed by a higher tribunal, the employee may be barred
from collecting the accrued wages, if it is shown that the delay in enforcing the reinstatement pending appeal was
without fault on the part of the employer.”
b. Two-fold test under the Garcia doctrine.
Under Garcia, the test to determine the liability of the employer (who did not reinstate the employee
pending appeal) to pay the wages of the dismissed employee covering the period from the time he was ordered
reinstated by the Labor Arbiter to the reversal of the Labor Arbiter’s decision either by the NLRC, the Court of
Appeals or the High Court, is two-fold, to wit:
(1) There must be actual delay or the fact that the order of reinstatement pending appeal was not executed
prior to its reversal; and
(2) The delay must not be due to the employer’s unjustified act or omission. If the delay is due to the
employer’s unjustified refusal, the employer may still be required to pay the salaries notwithstanding
the reversal of the Labor Arbiter’s decision.
In Garcia, there was actual delay in reinstating petitioners but respondent PAL was justified in not
complying with the reinstatement order of the Labor Arbiter because during the pendency of the illegal dismissal
case, the SEC placed respondent PAL under an Interim Rehabilitation Receiver who, after the Labor Arbiter
rendered his decision, was replaced with a Permanent Rehabilitation Receiver. It is settled that upon appointment
by the SEC of a rehabilitation receiver, all actions for claims before any court, tribunal or board against the
corporation shall ipso jure be suspended. Resultantly, respondent PAL’s “failure to exercise the alternative options
of actual reinstatement and payroll reinstatement was thus justified. Such being the case, respondent’s obligation to
pay the salaries pending appeal, as the normal effect of the non-exercise of the options, did not attach.”
c. Cases decided after the promulgation of the Garcia doctrine.
Subsequent to Garcia, some of the cases decided in accordance with this doctrine are as follows:
(1) College of the Immaculate Conception v. NLRC (2010);
(2) Islriz Trading v. Capada (2011);
(3) Pfizer, Inc. v. Velasco (2011); and
(4) C. Alcantara & Sons, Inc. v. CA (2012).
2. RECKONING OF THE PERIOD COVERED BY ACCRUED REINSTATEMENT WAGES.
To clarify, employees ordered reinstated by the Labor Arbiter are entitled to accrued reinstatement wages
only from the time the employer received a copy of the Labor Arbiter’s decision declaring the employees’
termination illegal and ordering their reinstatement up to the date of the decision of the appellate tribunal
overturning that of the Labor Arbiter. It is not accurate therefore to state that such entitlement commences “from
the moment the reinstatement order was issued up to the date when the same was reversed by a higher court without
fear of refunding what he had received.”
4. SOME PRINCIPLES ON REINSTATEMENT WAGES.
• Employer is not liable to pay any reinstatement backwages if reinstatement is ordered not by the Labor Arbiter
but by the NLRC on appeal and it was not executed by writ and its finding of illegal dismissal is later reversed
by the Court of Appeals and/or Supreme Court.
• Payroll-reinstated employee is entitled not only to reinstatement wages but also to other benefits during the
period of payroll reinstatement until the illegal dismissal case is reversed by a higher tribunal.
• Award of additional backwages and other benefits from the time the Labor Arbiter ordered reinstatement until
actual or payroll reinstatement is proper and valid.
C.
COURT OF APPEALS
1.
RULE 65, RULES OF COURT
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1. RULE 65 PETITION FOR CERTIORARI, THE ONLY MODE OF ELEVATING A LABOR CASE TO
THE COURT OF APPEALS.
The only mode by which a labor case decided by any of the following labor authorities/tribunals may reach
the Court of Appeals is through a Rule 65 petition for certiorari.
(a) the DOLE Secretary;
(b) the Commission (NLRC); and
(c) the Director of the Bureau of Labor Relations (BLR) in cases decided by him in his appellate
jurisdiction (as distinguished from those he decides in his original jurisdiction which are appealable to
the DOLE Secretary).
The remedy of ordinary appeal to the Court of Appeals is not available from their decisions, orders or
awards. The reason for this rule is that their decisions, orders or awards are final and executory and therefore
inappealable.
2. THE ONLY EXCEPTION.
The only exception to the foregoing rule is in the case of decisions, orders or awards issued by the
Voluntary Arbitrator or panel of Voluntary Arbitrators which may be elevated to the Court of Appeals by way
of an ordinary appeal under a Rule 43 petition for review.
3. FILING OF MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION OF THE DECISION OF THE DOLE SECRETARY,
THE COMMISSION (NLRC) OR THE BLR DIRECTOR, A PRE-REQUISITE TO FILING OF RULE 65
PETITION FOR CERTIORARI.
The rule on the filing of a Motion for Reconsideration of the decision of the DOLE Secretary, the NLRC
and the BLR Director is mandatory and jurisdictional. Failure to comply therewith would result in the dismissal of
the Rule 65 certiorari petition. Jurisprudence abounds enunciating the rule that a motion for reconsideration is a pre-
requisite for the filing of a special civil action for certiorari.
The reason for this rule is that in labor cases, a motion for reconsideration is the plain and adequate
remedy from an adverse decision of the DOLE Secretary, the NLRC and the BLR Director.
• THE PHILTRANCO DOCTRINE: a motion for reconsideration should be filed even though it is not
required or even prohibited by the concerned government office. This was the rule enunciated in the
2014 case of Philtranco Service Enterprises, Inc. v. Philtranco Workers Union-Association of Genuine
Labor Organizations (PWU-AGLO).1 Thus, while a government office may prohibit altogether the filing
of a motion for reconsideration with respect to its decisions or orders, the fact remains that certiorari
inherently requires the filing of a motion for reconsideration which is the tangible representation of the
opportunity given to the office to correct itself. Unless it is filed, there could be no occasion to rectify.
Worse, the remedy of certiorari would be unavailing. Simply put, regardless of the proscription against the
filing of a motion for reconsideration, the same may be filed on the assumption that rectification of the
decision or order must be obtained and before a petition for certiorari may be instituted.
4. CERTIORARI PETITION MAY BE FILED EVEN IF THE DECISION OF THE DOLE SECRETARY,
THE COMMISSION (NLRC), OR THE BLR DIRECTOR HAS ALREADY BECOME FINAL AND
EXECUTORY.
This rule applies to the decisions rendered by the DOLE Secretary, the NLRC or the BLR Director (in cases
which he decided in his appellate jurisdiction).
If the CA grants the petition and nullifies their decisions on the ground of grave abuse of discretion
amounting to excess or lack of jurisdiction, such decisions are, in contemplation of law, null and void ab initio;
hence, they never became final and executory.
2.
JUDICIAL REVIEW OF DECISIONS
OF VOLUNTARY ARBITRATORS
1 G.R. No. 180962, Feb. 26, 2014. Although this case involves a decision of the DOLE Secretary, the principle enunciated herein equally applies to the NLRC.
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Hence, in a petition for certiorari from the awards or decisions of the Voluntary Arbitrator, the Court of Appeals has
concurrent jurisdiction with the Supreme Court.
In Alcantara, Jr. v. CA, 1 it was held that Luzon Development Bank is still a good law.
3. PERIOD OF APPEAL – 15 DAYS.
Rule 43 of the Rules of Court requires that the petition for review to be taken to the Court of Appeals
should be filed within fifteen (15) days from notice of the award, judgment or final order or resolution of the
Voluntary Arbitrator.
D.
SUPREME COURT
1.
RULE 45, RULES OF COURT
1. RULE 45 PETITION FOR REVIEW ON CERTIORARI, THE ONLY MODE BY WHICH A LABOR
CASE MAY REACH THE SUPREME COURT.
Since the Court of Appeals has jurisdiction over the petition for certiorari under Rule 65 that may be filed
before it from the decisions of the NLRC or the DOLE Secretary or the BLR Director (in cases decided by him in
his appellate jurisdiction), any alleged errors committed by it in the exercise of its jurisdiction would be errors of
judgment which are reviewable by means of a timely appeal to the Supreme Court and not by a special civil action
of certiorari.
If the aggrieved party fails to do so within the reglementary period and the decision accordingly becomes
final and executory, he cannot avail himself of the writ of certiorari, his predicament being the effect of his
deliberate inaction. A petition for certiorari under Rule 65 cannot be a substitute for a lost appeal under Rule
45; hence, it should be dismissed.
2. THE NEYPES DOCTRINE (FRESH PERIOD RULE) - FRESH PERIOD FROM DENIAL OF MOTION
FOR RECONSIDERATION.
In the 2013 case of Elizabeth Gagui v. Dejero,2 petitioner successively filed two Motions for
Reconsideration of the CA’s decision but both were denied. Petitioner elevated the case to the Supreme Court under
Rule 45. In their comment, respondents alleged that the instant petition had been filed 15 days after the prescriptive
period of appeal under Section 2, Rule 45 of the Rules of Court. In her reply, petitioner countered that she has a
fresh period of 15 days from the date she received the Resolution of the CA to file the instant Rule 45 petition. In
affirming the contention of petitioner, the Supreme Court cited the en banc ruling in the case of Neypes v. CA 3
which standardized the appeal periods, thus:
“To standardize the appeal periods provided in the Rules and to afford litigants fair opportunity to appeal
their cases, the Court deems it practical to allow a fresh period of 15 days within which to file the notice of appeal
in the Regional Trial Court, counted from receipt of the order dismissing a motion for a new trial or motion for
reconsideration.
“Henceforth, this ‘fresh period rule’ shall also apply to Rule 40 governing appeals from the Municipal Trial
Courts to the Regional Trial Courts; Rule 42 on petitions for review from the Regional Trial Courts to the Court of
Appeals; Rule 43 on appeals from quasi-judicial agencies to the Court of Appeals and Rule 45 governing
appeals by certiorari to the Supreme Court. The new rule aims to regiment or make the appeal period uniform,
to be counted from receipt of the order denying the motion for new trial, motion for reconsideration (whether full
or partial) or any final order or resolution.”
Consequently, since petitioner in Gagui received the CA Resolution denying her two Motions for
Reconsideration only on 16 March 2011, she had another 15 days within which to file her Petition, or until 31 March
2011. This Petition, filed on 30 March 2011, fell within the prescribed 15-day period.
E.
BUREAU OF LABOR RELATIONS (BLR)
1.
JURISDICTION
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2. MED-ARBITER.
The term “Med-Arbiter” refers to an officer in the DOLE Regional Office or in the BLR authorized to hear and
decide representation cases, inter-union or intra-union disputes and other related labor relations disputes.1
While the Labor Code refers to this official as “Med-Arbiter,”2 it should, however, be construed to mean
“Mediator-Arbiter.”3 Most recent DOLE issuances 4 have specifically changed such reference to “Mediator-Arbiter” in
their provisions. This is but proper since the word “Med”5 obviously is an abbreviation of the word “Mediator.”
3. DOLE REGIONAL DIRECTOR.
The Regional Directors are the duly authorized representatives of the DOLE Secretary in the DOLE regional
offices. They are in charge of the administration and enforcement of labor standards within their respective territorial
jurisdictions.6 Although, like the Med-Arbiters, they are not also specifically mentioned in said article, it is a known
procedural rule, however, that in addition to their jurisdiction over cases falling under Articles 1287 and 1298 of the Labor
Code, they also have jurisdiction over certain specified cases contemplated under Article 232 [226] of the same Code such
as disputes concerning union registration and cancellation of union registration as well as CBA registration or
deregistration cases.
4. BLR DIRECTOR.
The BLR is headed by a Director who hears and decides certain specified cases over which he has either original
or appellate jurisdiction. In many cases, his name, instead of the BLR, is usually the one impleaded as public respondent in
certiorari petitions to the CA or subsequent appeals to the Supreme Court. Thus, one would encounter countless cases filed
against such luminaries like Pura-Ferrer Calleja, Cresenciano B. Trajano, Benedicto Ernesto R. Bitonio Jr., and Hans Leo
J. Cacdac, among others, who are sued in their capacity as BLR Directors.
III.
CASES COGNIZABLE
The following are the general classifications of the cases falling under the jurisdiction of the said officials, to wit:
(a) Inter-union disputes;
(b) Intra-union disputes;9 and
(c) Other related labor relations disputes.10
III-A.
INTER-UNION AND INTRA-UNION DISPUTES
1. INTER-UNION OR REPRESENTATION DISPUTE.
An “inter-union dispute” or “representation dispute” is one occurring or carried on between or among unions.11 It
refers to a case involving a petition for certification election filed by a duly registered labor organization which is seeking
to be recognized as the sole and exclusive bargaining agent (SEBA) of the rank-and-file employees or supervisory
1 Section 1 [ii], Rule I, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003]. Excepted from the Med-Arbiter’s
jurisdiction are cases over which the Regional Director exercises original and exclusive jurisdiction such as application for union registration, petitions for cancellation of union
registration and complaints for examination of unions books of accounts.” This is per Section 3, Rule II [Med-Arbitration], Rules of Procedure on Mediation-Arbitration, which provides:
“SEC. 3. Jurisdiction of the Regional Director.- The Regional Director shall exercise original and exclusive jurisdiction over application for union registration, petitions for cancellation of
union registration and complaints for examination of unions books of accounts.” See also Barles v. Bitonio, G.R. No. 120220, June 16, 1999.
2 The term “Med-Arbiter” is used and cited in the following articles of the Labor Code: Articles 230 [224] (Execution of decisions, orders or awards), 268 [256] (Representation issue in
organized establishments), 269 [257] (Petitions in unorganized establishments), 272 [259] (Appeal from certification election orders), and 292 [277] (Miscellaneous provisions),
paragraph (i) thereof. Surprisingly, Med-Arbiter is not referred to at all in Article 232 [226].
3 Nowhere, however, in the Labor Code is the term “Mediator-Arbiter” used or cited.
4 Such as Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008, issued on October 30, 2008. This Department Order was issued by the DOLE Secretary to implement the changes in the
Labor Code brought about by the amendments introduced thereto by R.A. No. 9481 [Effective June 14, 2007]. Another issuance is Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015
[September 07, 2015], entitled “Further Amending Department Order No. 40, Series of 2003, Amending the Implementing Rules and Regulations of Book V of the Labor Code of the
Philippines, as Amended.”
7 Visitorial and enforcement powers of the DOLE Secretary and his duly authorized representatives, the DOLE Regional Directors.
8 See Article 129, Labor Code, involving monetary claims of ₱5,000 or less.
9 Diokno v. Hon. Cacdac, G.R. No. 168475, July 4, 2007; Bautista v. CA, G.R. 123375, Feb. 28, 2005, 452 SCRA 406, 420.
10 Section 1[B] (formerly Section 2), Rule XI, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [Oct. 30, 2008]; Article 232
[226], Labor Code; Policy Instructions No. 6; Villaor v. Trajano, G.R. No. 69188, Sept. 23, 1986; M. Y. San Biscuits, Inc. v. Laguesma, G.R. No. 95011, April 22, 1991.
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employees, as the case may be, in the appropriate bargaining unit of a company, firm or establishment.1 If there are two or
more legitimate unions involved, it also refers to any conflict between and among them concerning the issue of which of
them should be certified as the SEBA for purposes of collective bargaining with the employer. Broadly, it covers any other
conflict or dispute between legitimate labor unions.2
Note must be made of the latest innovative amendment of the Labor Code’s Implementing Rules introduced by
Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015,3 which has expressly repealed the entire provision4 on “Voluntary
Recognition” of the Implementing Rules on Book V and replaced it with the freshly-minted mode of securing the status of
a sole and exclusive bargaining agent through a “Request for SEBA Certification” or “Request.” Voluntary recognition is
therefore no longer allowed and is effectively replaced by the Request mode.
The Request basically is in the nature of an inter-union or representation dispute. While it may not involve the
actual conduct of a certification election when it is made in an unorganized establishment with only one (1) legitimate
union, since it would merely require a simple validation process by the DOLE Regional Director of confirming the
majority support of the members of the bargaining unit for the requesting union and once validated, the requesting union is
immediately certified as the SEBA without conducting a certification election, however, certification election will have to
be conducted under any of the following situations:
(1) When the Request is made in an unorganized establishment with only one (1) legitimate union, and the
requesting union or local fails to complete the requirements for SEBA certification during the validation conference before
the DOLE Regional Director, such Request should be referred to the Election Officer for the conduct of certification
election,5 in which case, such certification election should now be under the jurisdiction of the Mediator-Arbiter.
(2) When the Request is made in an unorganized establishment with more than one (1) legitimate labor
organization, in which case, the DOLE Regional Director, before whom Requests are required to be filed, should refer the
Request directly to the Election Officer for the conduct of a certification election6 in accordance with the Rules;7 and
(3) When the Request is made in an organized establishment, in which case, the Regional Director should refer
the same to the Mediator-Arbiter for the determination of the propriety of conducting a certification election.8
It is clear from the foregoing discussion that there is a jurisdictional interplay between the DOLE Regional
Director and the Med-Arbiter, a subject which will be discussed further in the sections below dwelling on the jurisdiction
of these labor authorities.
2. INTRA-UNION OR INTERNAL UNION DISPUTE.
An “intra-union dispute” or “internal union dispute” refers to a conflict within or inside a labor union.9 It may
refer to any conflict between and among officers and/or members of one particular union, including grievances arising
from any violation of the rights and conditions of membership, violation of or disagreement over any provision of the
union’s constitution and by-laws,10 issues over control, supervision and management of its internal affairs,11 or disputes
arising from chartering or affiliation of a union.12
3. RUNDOWN OF INTER-UNION AND INTRA-UNION CASES.
1 Section 1 [9], Rule III, NCMB Manual of Procedures for Conciliation and Preventive Mediation Cases; Appendix 2 [Definition of Terms], NCMB Primer on Strike, Picketing and
Lockout, 2nd Edition, December 1995; Diokno v. Hon. Cacdac, Ibid.; Bautista v. CA, Ibid.
2 Section 1 [x], Rule I, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003].
4 Particularly its Rule VII [Voluntary Recognition], Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003]. This
provision has been repealed and replaced by a new provision entitled, "REQUEST FOR SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE BARGAINING AGENT (SEBA) CERTIFICATION", pursuant to the
amendment introduced by Section 3, Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015], entitled “Further Amending Department Order No. 40, Series of 2003,
Amending the Implementing Rules and Regulations of Book V of the Labor Code of the Philippines, as Amended.”
5 Section 4, Rule VII of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015]. The election should be
conducted in accordance with Rule IX thereof.
7 Referring to Rule IX of the Labor Code’s Implementing Rules, as amended by Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015].
8 Section 6, Rule VII, Ibid. in accordance with Rules VIII and IX, Ibid.
10 Section 1 [bb], Rule I, Book V, Ibid.; Diokno v. Hon. Cacdac, supra; Bautista v. CA, supra.
11 Section 1 [8], Rule III, NCMB Manual of Procedures for Conciliation and Preventive Mediation Cases; Appendix 2 [Definition of Terms], NCMB Primer on Strike, Picketing and
Lockout, 2nd Edition, December 1995.
12 Section 1 [bb], Rule I, Book V, Ibid.; Diokno v. Hon. Cacdac, supra; Bautista v. CA, supra.
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In accordance with the Labor Code’s Implementing Rules, as amended in 2015,1 the following is a rundown of all
possible inter-union/intra-union disputes:
a) Cancellation of registration of a labor organization filed by its members or by another labor organization;
b) Conduct of election of union and workers’ association officers or nullification of election of union and
workers' association officers;
c) Audit/accounts examination of union or workers' association funds;
d) Deregistration of collective bargaining agreements;
e) Validity/invalidity of union affiliation or disaffiliation;
f) Validity/invalidity of acceptance/non-acceptance for union membership;
g) Validity/invalidity of impeachment/expulsion of union and workers' association officers and members;
h) Validity/invalidity of Request for SEBA Certification2 (Replacing “Voluntary Recognition” as a mode of securing
sole and exclusive bargaining agent status);
i) Opposition to application for union and CBA registration;
j) Violations of or disagreements over any provision in a union or workers' association constitution and by-laws;
k) Disagreements over chartering or registration of labor organizations and collective bargaining agreements;
I) Violations of the rights and conditions of union or workers' association membership;
m) Violations of the rights of legitimate labor organizations, except interpretation of collective bargaining
agreements;3 and
n) Such other disputes or conflicts involving the rights to self-organization, union membership and collective
bargaining -
1) Between and among legitimate labor organizations; or
2) Between and among members of a union or workers’ association.
III-B.
OTHER RELATED LABOR RELATIONS DISPUTES
1. MEANING OF “OTHER RELATED LABOR RELATIONS DISPUTES.”
“Other related labor relations dispute” refers to any conflict between a labor union and the employer or any
individual, entity or group that is not a labor union or workers’ association.4
More specifically, it may refer to any of the following:
(a) Any conflict between:
(1) a labor union and an employer, or
(2) a labor union and a group that is not a labor organization; or
(3) a labor union and an individual who is not a member of such union;
(b) Cancellation of registration of unions and workers’ associations filed by individuals other than its members,
or group that is not a labor organization; and
(c) A petition for interpleader involving labor relations.5
IV.
ORIGINAL AND EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION
OF MED-ARBITERS, DOLE DIRECTORS AND BLR DIRECTOR
Having known the various cases afore-described, a discussion of the respective jurisdictions of the Med-Arbiters,
DOLE Directors and BLR Director over these cases may now be made with greater clarity.
1. ORIGINAL AND EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION OF THE MED-ARBITERS.
The cases falling under the original and exclusive jurisdiction of the Med-Arbiters are as follows:
(1) Inter-union disputes (representation or certification election conflicts), such as:
1 See Section 1, Rule XI, Book V of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as previously amended by Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [October 30, 2008] which
designated this section as “Section 1(A)”, and as further amended by Section 18, Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015], entitled “Further Amending
Department Order No. 40, Series of 2003, Amending the Implementing Rules and Regulations of Book V of the Labor Code of the Philippines, as Amended.”
2 This is in the nature of an inter-union dispute which may be occasioned by the introduction of a new mode of securing the status of sole and exclusive bargaining agent (SEBA). The
Labor Code’s Implementing Rules, particularly its RULE VII on “Voluntary Recognition” was actually repealed and replaced by a completely new provision entitled “REQUEST FOR
SOLE AND EXCLUSIVE BARGAINING AGENT (SEBA) CERTIFICATION” This was introduced by the amendatory provision of Section 3, Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of
2015 [September 07, 2015], Ibid.
3 Disputes over the interpretation or implementation of the CBA are considered as grievable issues cognizable by and should be processed through the grievance machinery and
voluntary arbitration provided in the CBA itself. (See Articles 273 [260] and 274 [261], Labor Code).
4 Section 1 [rr], Rule I, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003].
5 Section 1[B] (formerly Section 2), Rule XI, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [Oct. 30, 2008].
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(a) Request for SEBA certification when made in an unorganized establishment with only one1 or
more than one (1) legitimate union2 or in an organized establishment;3 or
(b) Petition for certification election, consent election, run-off election or re-run election;
(2) Intra-union disputes;
(3) Other related labor relations disputes;4
(4) Injunction cases;5 and
(5) Contempt cases.6
On No. 1[a] above, the Mediator-Arbiter will have jurisdiction over a Request for SEBA Certification if it is
made in an organized establishment as well as in instances where it is made in an unorganized establishment with
more than one (1) legitimate organization. Under this situation, the DOLE Regional Director, before whom the said
Request is filed, is required to refer it to the Mediator-Arbiter for the determination of the propriety of conducting a
certification election; consequently, the Mediator-Arbiter would now have the jurisdiction to take cognizance of the
certification election.7
2. ORIGINAL AND EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION OF THE DOLE REGIONAL DIRECTORS.
The DOLE Regional Directors have original and exclusive jurisdiction over numerous cases.8 But not all of them
are relevant to or connected with the three (3) classes of cases9 expressly mentioned in Article 232 [226]. Only the
following cases cognizable by them are related thereto or connected therewith by virtue of laws and rules:
(1) Visitorial cases under Article 289 [274],10 involving examination of books of accounts of independent
unions, local chapters/chartered locals and workers’ associations;
(2) Union registration-related cases, such as:
a) Applications for union registration of independent unions, local chapters and workers’ associations;11
1 In case the Request is made in an unorganized establishment with only one (1) legitimate union, and the requesting union or local fails to complete the requirements for SEBA
certification during the validation conference before the DOLE Regional Director, in which event, such Request should be referred to the Election Officer for the conduct of certification
election (Section 4, Rule VII of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015]. The election should be
conducted in accordance with Rule IX thereof.), which necessarily would mean that such certification election should now be conducted under the jurisdiction of the Mediator-Arbiter
to whom the Election Officer is duty-bound to report the outcome of the election proceeding. Certainly, the ensuing certification election cannot be conducted under the directive of the
DOLE Regional Director without the participation of the Mediator-Arbiter who, under the law, is the one possessed of the original and exclusive jurisdiction over certification election
cases, including the proclamation of the winning SEBA. (See Section 21, Rule IX, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as ordered renumbered by Section 17, Department
Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015]. This section was originally numbered Section 20, per Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003], but it
was subsequently re-numbered to Section 19, per Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [Oct. 30, 2008]).
2 Section 5, Rule VII, in relation to Rules VIII and IX, Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015].
4 Section 1 [ii], Rule I, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003]; Section 4, Rule XI, Book V of the
Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [October 30, 2008]. See also Article 226, Labor Code; Policy Instructions No. 6;
Villaor v. Trajano, G.R. No. 69188, Sept. 23, 1986.
5 Med-Arbiters have the authority to issue temporary restraining orders (TROs) and writs of injunction in appropriate cases. Section 5, Rule XVI, Book V of the Omnibus Rules
Implementing the Labor Code states: “Sec 5. Injunctions. -- No temporary injunctions or restraining order in any case involving or growing out of a labor dispute shall be issued by any
court or other entity. On the other hand, the Office of the President, the Secretary of Labor, the Commission, the Labor Arbiter or Med-Arbiter may enjoin any or all acts involving or
arising from any case pending before any of said offices or officials which if not restrained forthwith may cause grave or irreparable damage to any of the parties to the case or
seriously affect social or economic stability.”
7 Section 6, Rule VII, in relation to Rules VIII and IX, Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015].
8 All the cases cognizable by the DOLE Regional Directors are as follows: (a) Visitorial (inspection) cases under Article 37; (b) Visitorial (inspection) and enforcement cases under
Article 128; (c) Visitorial cases under Article 289 [274], involving examination of books of accounts of independent unions, local chapters/chartered locals and workers’ associations;
(d) Occupational safety and health violations; (e) Small money claims cases arising from labor standards violations in an amount not exceeding ₱5,000.00 and not accompanied with
a claim for reinstatement under Article 129; (f) Cases related to private recruitment and placement agencies (PRPAs) for local employment, such as: (1) Applications for license or
denial thereof; (2) Complaints for suspension or cancellation of license by reason of administrative offenses; (3) Complaints for illegal recruitment; and (4) Petition for closure of
agency; (g) Cases submitted for voluntary arbitration in their capacity as Ex-Officio Voluntary Arbitrators (EVAs) under Department Order No. 83-07, Series of 2007; (h) Union
registration-related cases, such as: 1) Applications for union registration of independent unions, local chapters and workers’ associations; 2) Petition for denial of application for
registration of said unions; 3) Petitions for revocation or cancellation of registration of said unions; (i) Notice of merger, consolidation, affiliation and change of name of said unions
and or petition for denial thereof; (j) CBA-related cases, such as: 1) Application for registration of single-enterprise CBAs or petition for deregistration thereof; 2) Petition for denial
of registration of single-enterprise CBAs or denial of deregistration thereof; and (k) Request for SEBA certification when made in an unorganized establishment with only one (1)
legitimate union.
9 These are (1) inter-union disputes; (2) intra-union disputes; and (3) Other related labor relations disputes.
10 “Article 289 [274]. Visitorial power. The Secretary of Labor and Employment or his duly authorized representative is hereby empowered to inquire into the financial activities of
legitimate labor organizations upon the filing of a complaint under oath and duly supported by the written consent of at least twenty percent (20%) of the total membership of the labor
organization concerned and to examine their books of accounts and other records to determine compliance or non-compliance with the law and to prosecute any violations of the law
and the union constitution and by-laws: Provided, That such inquiry or examination shall not be conducted during the sixty (60)-day freedom period nor within the thirty (30) days
immediately preceding the date of election of union officials.” (As amended by Section 31, Republic Act No. 6715, March 21, 1989).
11 Section 3, Rule II of the Med-Arbitration Rules states: “SEC. 3. Jurisdiction of the Regional Director.- The Regional Director shall exercise original and exclusive jurisdiction over
application for union registration, petitions for cancellation of union registration and complaints for examination of unions books of accounts.” See also Section 1, Rule II,
Rules of Procedure on Mediation-Arbitration.
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On No. 1 above, it is imperative to point out that although by nature, this is an intra-union dispute, the rules,
however, treat this separately from those generally applicable to intra-union disputes8 and accordingly vest jurisdiction
thereover in the DOLE Regional Directors and not in the Med-Arbiters.
Barles v. Bitonio9 is clear on this point. It was held here10 that while intra-union conflicts, such as examinations
of accounts are under the jurisdiction of the BLR, however, the Rules of Procedure on Mediation-Arbitration purposely
and expressly separated or distinguished examinations of union accounts from the genus of intra-union conflicts and
provided a different procedure for their resolution. Consequently, original jurisdiction over complaints for examinations of
union accounts is vested not in the Med-Arbiter but in the DOLE Regional Director. This is apparent from Section 311
thereof.
But there is a need to point out though that the foregoing rule applies only when the request for examination of
books of accounts concerns only those of independent unions, local chapters/chartered locals and workers’
associations. If what is involved are those of federations, national unions, industry unions or trade union centers, and
their local chapters/chartered locals, affiliates and member organizations, the jurisdiction thereover is vested with the
BLR Director and not with the DOLE Regional Director.
On No. 2[a] above, as far as workers’ associations are concerned, if they operate in more than one region, the
application for registration should be filed with the BLR or the Regional Offices, but either way, it should be processed by
the BLR.12 This is so in order to have a unified resolution of the merits of the application by one, single agency.
On No. 4 above, when the Request for SEBA Certification is made in an unorganized establishment with
only one (1) legitimate union, it should be filed with the DOLE Regional Director who will make an immediate
determination on whether there is majority support by the members of the bargaining unit to the requesting union. Once
the majority support is confirmed and the requesting union does not fail to complete the requirements for SEBA
certification during the validation conference, the requesting union is immediately certified by the DOLE Regional
Director as the SEBA without conducting a certification election.
As a consequence of this latest change in the Rules, it may be said that the DOLE Regional Director, in a way, is
now empowered to rule on a “representation” issue which, technically speaking, falls under and is covered by the general
class of “inter-union disputes” that falls within the jurisdiction of the Mediator-Arbiter. In fact, the very Request itself
speaks of “SEBA Certification,” a relief that is not the consequence of “Voluntary Recognition” - the original remedy
intended to be replaced by this Request mode.
1 See Article 243 [236] of the Labor Code which provides: “Art. 243 [236]. Denial of registration; appeal. The decision of the Labor Relations Division in the regional office denying
registration may be appealed by the applicant union to the Bureau within ten (10) days from receipt of notice thereof.”
2 Referring to independent unions, local chapters and workers’ associations, as distinguished from federations, national unions, industry unions, trade union centers and their local
chapters/chartered locals, affiliates and member organizations whose application for registration as well as denial or cancellation or revocation of registration is cognizable by the BLR
Director in his original and exclusive jurisdiction [infra].
3 Specifically cited as exception to Med-Arbiter’s jurisdiction is cancellation of union registration, per Section 1 [ii], Rule I, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by
Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003].
4 Section 3, Rule II of the Med-Arbitration Rules, supra; See also Section 4, Rule XI, Book V of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-F-03,
Series of 2008 [October 30, 2008].
5 As distinguished from cases involving multi-empoyer CBAs which fall under the original jurisdiction of the BLR Director.
6 Section 4 [formerly Section 5], Rule XI, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003], and as re-
numbered by Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [Oct. 30, 2008].
7 Section 4, Rue VII, Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015]. Under this situation, the DOLE Regional Director, before whom the Request for SEBA
Certification is filed, should refer the Request for SEBA Certification to the Mediator-Arbiter for the determination of the propriety of conducting a certification election, in which case,
the Mediator-Arbiter now has the jurisdiction to decide the certification election issue. (Section 6, Rule VII, in relation to Rules VIII and IX, Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of
2015 [September 07, 2015]). Note must be made that when the Request for SEBA Certification is made in an unorganized establishment with more than one (1) legitimate labor
organization, the Med-Arbiter takes over from the DOLE Regional Director in the matter of hearing and resolving the issue of certification election.
8 See Section 3, Rule XIII, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003], thus, a request for examination
of books of accounts pursuant to Article 289 [274], in the absence of allegations pertaining to a violation of Article 250 [241], should not be treated as an intra-union dispute.
10 Citing La Tondena Workers Union v. Secretary of Labor, G.R. No. 96821, Dec. 9, 1994, 239 SCRA 117.
11 Section 3, Rule II of the Med-Arbitration Rules states: “SEC. 3. Jurisdiction of the Regional Director.- The Regional Director shall exercise original and exclusive jurisdiction over
application for union registration, petitions for cancellation of union registration and complaints for examination of unions books of accounts.”
12 See 2nd paragraph, Section 1, Rule III, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003]; See also Section 1, Rule II,
Rules of Procedure on Mediation-Arbitration.
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For it is clear that under the previous repealed rule on voluntary recognition, the DOLE Regional Director never
issues a “SEBA Certification”; what is done is the mere recording1 of the “Notice of Voluntary Recognition” jointly
submitted by the employer and the union to the DOLE Regional Office which issued the recognized labor union’s
certificate of registration or, in the case of local chapter, where the charter certificate and the other documents required
under Article 241 [234-A] were submitted and filed.2 Since it is crystal clear under existing laws, rules and jurisprudence
that it is the Mediator-Arbiter who has the original and exclusive jurisdiction to issue a “SEBA Certification” under any
of the modes3 of selecting a SEBA, it is not surprising if the issue of the validity of the exercise of similar power to issue
the SEBA Certification by the DOLE Regional Director would be raised in an appropriate proceeding.
But the rule is quite clear that the Mediator-Arbiter would acquire original jurisdiction over the Request for
SEBA Certification under the following situations:
(1) In case the Request is made in an unorganized establishment with only one (1) legitimate union, and the
requesting union or local fails to complete the requirements for SEBA certification during the validation conference before
the DOLE Regional Director, in which event, such Request should be referred to the Election Officer 4 for the conduct of
certification election5 which necessarily would mean that such certification election should now be conducted under the
jurisdiction of the Mediator-Arbiter to whom the Election Officer is duty-bound to report the outcome of the election
proceeding.6 Certainly, the ensuing certification election cannot be conducted under the directive of the DOLE Regional
Director without the participation of the Mediator-Arbiter who, under the law,7 is the one possessed of the original and
exclusive jurisdiction over certification election cases, including the proclamation of the winning SEBA.8
(2) In case the Request is made in an unorganized establishment with more than one (1) legitimate union, in
which event, the DOLE Regional Director is required to refer the Request directly to the Election Officer for the conduct
of a certification election9 which should be in accordance with the Rules10 that state, in its Section 2, Rule VIII, that the
“(Request) shall be heard and resolved by the Mediator-Arbiter.” Resultantly, it is still the Mediator-Arbiter who should
take cognizance of the Request which, in this case, is the equivalent of the Petition for Certification Election over which he
exercises original jurisdiction.
(3) In case the Request is made in an organized establishment, in which case, the Regional Director should refer
the same to the Mediator-Arbiter for the determination of the propriety of conducting a certification election.11
3. ORIGINAL AND EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION OF THE BLR DIRECTOR.
At the outset, it must be stressed that reference in the law and pertinent rules to “BLR”, as far as the issue of
jurisdiction is concerned, should appropriately mean “BLR Director.” This is as it should be because “BLR” is a generic
1 Under the previous repealed provision, it is stated that where the notice of voluntary recognition is sufficient in form, number and substance and where there is no other registered
labor union operating within the bargaining unit concerned, the DOLE Regional Office, through the Labor Relations Division shall, within ten (10) days from receipt of the notice, record
the fact of voluntary recognition in its roster of legitimate labor unions and notify the labor union concerned. (See the repealed provision of Section 3, Rule VII, Book V, Rules to
Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003]).
Where the notice of voluntary recognition is insufficient in form, number and substance, the DOLE Regional Office shall, within the same period, notify the labor union of its findings
and advise it to comply with the necessary requirements. Where neither the employer nor the labor union failed to complete the requirements for voluntary recognition within thirty (30)
days from receipt of the advisory, the DOLE Regional Office shall return the notice of voluntary recognition together with all its accompanying documents without prejudice to its re-
submission. (Section 3, Rule VII, Book V, Ibid.).
2 Section 1, Rule VII, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003].
3 Besides this mode, the other modes of selecting or designating a SEBA are certification election, consent election, run-off election, and lately, re-run election.
4 “Election Officer” refers to an officer of the Bureau of Labor Relations or the Labor Relations Division in the Regional Office authorized to conduct certification elections, election of
union officers and other forms of elections and referenda. (Section 1 [o], Rule I, and Sections 2-5, Rule XII, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department
Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003]). It is the Election Officer who shall have control of the pre-election conference and election proceedings. (Section 1, Rule IX, Book
V, Ibid.).
5 Section 4, Rule VII of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015]. The election should be
conducted in accordance with Rule IX thereof.
6 Under the Rules, within 24 hours from the final canvass of votes, there being a valid election, the Election Officer shall transmit the records of the case to the Med-Arbiter who shall,
within the same period from receipt of the minutes and results of election, issue an order proclaiming the results of the election and certifying the union which obtained the majority of
the valid votes cast as the sole and exclusive bargaining agent in the subject bargaining unit, xxx. (The provision entitled “Proclamation and certification of the result of the election”
should now be denominated as Section 21, Rule IX, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, by virtue of the re-numbering ordered by Section 17, Department Order No. 40-I-15,
Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015]. This section was originally numbered Section 20, per Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003], but it was subsequently re-
numbered to Section 19, per Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [Oct. 30, 2008]. This latest 2015 re-numbering was effected through said Section 17 which states:
“Sections subsequent to inserted new provisions and/or renumbered sections are renumbered accordingly.”).
8 See Section 21, Rule IX, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as ordered renumbered by Section 17, Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015].
This section was originally numbered Section 20, per Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003], but it was subsequently re-numbered to Section 19, per
Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [Oct. 30, 2008].
9 Section 5, Rule VII, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015].
10 Referring to Rule IX of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015]. Note must be made that when
the Request for SEBA Certification is made in organized establishment, in which case, the Regional Director should refer the same to the Mediator-Arbiter for the determination of the
propriety of conducting a certification election. (Section 6, Rule VII, Ibid. in accordance with Rules VIII and IX, Ibid.).
11 Section 6, Rule VII, in relation to Rules VIII and IX, Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015].
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term that includes not only the Med-Arbiters and DOLE Regional Directors but the BLR Director himself. More
significantly, there is jurisprudential variance in the cases cognizable by the BLR Director, in relation to Med-Arbiters and
DOLE Regional Directors, hence, referring to the cases properly falling under the jurisdiction of the “BLR Director” as
such would be more appropriate and less confusing than simply referring to them as falling under the jurisdiction of the
“BLR.”
The BLR Director exercises two (2) kinds of jurisdiction, namely: original and appellate.1 The following cases
fall under the first:
(1) Complaints and petitions involving the application for registration, revocation or cancellation of registration
of federations, national unions, industry unions, trade union centers and their local chapters/chartered
locals, affiliates and member organizations;2
(2) Request for examination of books of accounts of said labor organizations3 under Article 289 [274] of the
Labor Code;
(3) Intra-union disputes involving said labor organizations;4
(4) Notice of merger, consolidation, affiliation and change of name of said unions and or petition for denial
thereof;5
(5) Registration of multi-employer6 CBAs or petitions for deregistration thereof;7
(6) Contempt cases.
As far as No. 3 above is concerned, the 2010 case of Atty. Montaño v. Atty. Verceles,8 is relevant. Petitioner9 here
claimed that under the Implementing Rules,10 it is the DOLE Regional Director and not the BLR (Director) who has
jurisdiction over intra-union disputes involving federations which, in this case, pertains to the election protests in
connection with the election of officers of the federation (Federation of Free Workers [FFW]). In finding no merit in
petitioner’s contention, the High Court pointed out that Article 226 of the Labor Code clearly provides that the BLR
(Director) and the Regional Directors of DOLE have concurrent jurisdiction over inter-union and intra-union
disputes. Such disputes include the conduct or nullification of election of union and workers’ association officers. There is,
thus, no doubt as to the BLR (Director)’s jurisdiction over the instant dispute involving member-unions of a federation
arising from disagreement over the provisions of the federation’s constitution and by-laws. It agreed with the following
observation of the BLR (Director):
“Rule XVI lays down the decentralized intra-union dispute settlement mechanism. Section 1 states that any
complaint in this regard ‘shall be filed in the Regional Office where the union is domiciled.’ The concept of domicile in
labor relations regulation is equivalent to the place where the union seeks to operate or has established a geographical
presence for purposes of collective bargaining or for dealing with employers concerning terms and conditions of
employment.
“The matter of venue becomes problematic when the intra-union dispute involves a federation, because the
geographical presence of a federation may encompass more than one administrative region. Pursuant to its
authority under Article 232 [226], this Bureau exercises original jurisdiction over intra-union disputes involving
federations. It is well-settled that FFW, having local unions all over the country, operates in more than one
administrative region. Therefore, this Bureau maintains original and exclusive jurisdiction over disputes arising
from any violation of or disagreement over any provision of its constitution and by-laws.”11
V.
APPELLATE JURISDICTION OF THE BLR DIRECTOR
AS DISTINGUISHED FROM THAT OF THE DOLE SECRETARY
1. NECESSITY FOR JURISDICTIONAL DISTINCTIONS.
1 The appellate jurisdiction of the BLR Director is discussed in another section below.
2 As distinguished from petitions for cancellation of registration of independent unions, local chapters and workers’ associations, as provided in Section 3, Rule II of the Med-Arbitration
Rules which states: “SEC. 3. Jurisdiction of the Regional Director.- The Regional Director shall exercise original and exclusive jurisdiction over application for union registration,
petitions for cancellation of union registration and complaints for examination of unions books of accounts.” See also Section 4, Rule XI, Book V of the Rules to Implement
the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [October 30, 2008] and Section 1, Rule II, Rules of Procedure on Mediation-Arbitration.
3 Referring to federations, national unions, industry unions and trade union centers, as distinguished from independent unions, local chapters and workers’ associations.
4 Id.
5 Section 5, Rule IV, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003] and as further amended by
Department Order No. 40-D-05, Series of 2005, Sept. 13, 2005.
6 As distinguished from cases involving single-enterprise CBAs which fall under the jurisdiction of the DOLE Regional Director.
7 Section 4, Rule XI, Book V of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [October 30, 2008].
9 Petitioner was elected the National Vice President of FFW in the National Convention held at Subic International Hotel, Olongapo City over the strong opposition and protest of
respondent Atty. Ernesto C. Verceles, a delegate to the convention and president of University of the East Employees Association (UEEA-FFW) which is an affiliate union of FFW.
10 See Section 6 of Rule XV, in relation to Section 1 of Rule XIV of Book V of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code.
11 Emphasis supplied.
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The distinctions pointed out above between the respective jurisdictions of the Med-Arbiters, DOLE Regional
Directors and the BLR Director acquire significance in determining which of the cases over which they exercise
jurisdiction may be appealed to the BLR Director and those that may be appealed to the DOLE Secretary, both of whom,
based on law and jurisprudence, are possessed of exclusive appellate jurisdiction over certain cases decided by the Med-
Arbiters, DOLE Regional Directors and BLR Director.
The Supreme Court had occasion to distinguish the appellate jurisdiction of the BLR Director from that of the
DOLE Secretary in the case of Abbott Laboratories Philippines, Inc. v. Abbott Laboratories Employees Union.1
Accordingly, the appellate jurisdiction of the DOLE Secretary is limited only to the review of decisions rendered by the
BLR Director in the exercise of his exclusive and original jurisdiction. The DOLE Secretary has no jurisdiction over
decisions of the BLR Director rendered in the exercise of his appellate jurisdiction over decisions made by Med-Arbiters
and DOLE Regional Directors in the exercise of their respective original and exclusive jurisdictions, the reason being that
such decisions are final and inappealable.
2. APPEALS FROM DECISIONS OF MED-ARBITERS.
Decisions in the cases falling under the original and exclusive jurisdiction of the Med-Arbiters are appealable as
follows:
(1) Inter-union disputes (representation or certification election conflicts) – to DOLE Secretary2
(a) Request for SEBA certification when made in an unorganized establishment with only one3 or more than
one (1) legitimate union4 or in an organized establishment – to DOLE Secretary
(b) Petition for certification election, consent election, run-off election or re-run election - to DOLE
Secretary
(2) Intra-union disputes5 – to BLR Director
(3) Other related labor relations disputes - to BLR Director
(4) Injunction cases - to BLR Director
(5) Contempt cases - to BLR Director
2.1. DIFFERENT RULE RE APPELLATE JURISDICTION OVER MED-ARBITER’S DECISIONS IN INTER-
UNION DISPUTES.
a. Legal basis.
While generally, the decisions of the Med-Arbiters are appealable to the BLR Director, excepted therefrom are
their decisions in inter-union disputes6 which are appealable directly to the DOLE Secretary by virtue of Article 272 [259]7
of the Labor Code.
b. Variance in the rule on appeal in unorganized and organized establishments.
The rule on appeal in certification election cases in unorganized establishments is different from that of
organized establishments, to wit:
(1) Appeal in unorganized establishments. - The order granting the conduct of a certification election in an
unorganized establishment is not subject to appeal. Any issue arising from its conduct or from its results is proper subject
of a protest. Appeal may only be made to the DOLE Secretary in case of denial of the petition within ten (10) calendar
days from receipt of the decision of denial.8
2 This is by virtue of Article 272 [259] of the Labor Code. This article is entitled “Appeal from Certification Election Orders” and it provides as follows: “Article 259. Appeal from
Certification Election Orders. – Any party to an election may appeal the order or results of the election as determined by the Med-Arbiter directly to the Secretary of Labor and
Employment on the ground that the rules and regulations or parts thereof established by the Secretary of Labor and Employment for the conduct of the election have been violated.
Such appeal shall be decided within fifteen (15) calendar days.” Prior to the amendment of Article 272 [259] by R.A. No. 6715, the decisions of the Med-Arbiter in certification election
cases are appealable to the BLR. Now, they are appealable to the DOLE Secretary. (A’ Prime Security Services, Inc. v. Hon. Secretary of Labor, G.R. No. 91987, July 17, 1995). It
must be emphasized that as far as intra-union disputes are concerned, the decisions of the Med-Arbiters thereon remain appealable to the BLR. (See Section 1 [1], Rule III, NCMB
Manual of Procedures for Conciliation and Preventive Mediation Cases).
3 In case the Request is made in an unorganized establishment with only one (1) legitimate union, and the requesting union or local fails to complete the requirements for SEBA
certification during the validation conference before the DOLE Regional Director, in which event, such Request should be referred to the Election Officer for the conduct of certification
election (Section 4, Rule VII of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015]. The election should be
conducted in accordance with Rule IX thereof.), which necessarily would mean that such certification election should now be conducted under the jurisdiction of the Mediator-Arbiter
to whom the Election Officer is duty-bound to report the outcome of the election proceeding. Certainly, the ensuing certification election cannot be conducted under the directive of the
DOLE Regional Director without the participation of the Mediator-Arbiter who, under the law, is the one possessed of the original and exclusive jurisdiction over certification election
cases, including the proclamation of the winning SEBA. (See Section 21, Rule IX, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as ordered renumbered by Section 17, Department
Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015]. This section was originally numbered Section 20, per Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003], but it
was subsequently re-numbered to Section 19, per Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [Oct. 30, 2008]).
4 Section 5, Rule VII, in relation to Rules VIII and IX, Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015].
5 Section 1 [1], Rule III, NCMB Manual of Procedures for Conciliation and Preventive Mediation Cases.
7 Supra.
8 Section 18 [formerly Section 17], Rule VIII, Book V, of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [October 30, 2008].
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(2) Appeal in organized establishments. - The order granting the conduct of a certification election in an
organized establishment and the decision dismissing or denying the petition for certification election may be appealed to
the DOLE Secretary within ten (10) calendar days from receipt thereof.1
3. APPEALS FROM DECISIONS OF DOLE REGIONAL DIRECTORS.
a. Decisions appealable to the BLR Director.
Not all decisions, awards or orders rendered by the DOLE Regional Directors are appealable to the BLR
Director. Only decisions in the following cases relevant and related to labor relations, are appealable to the BLR Director:
(1) Visitorial cases under Article 289 [274], involving examination of books of accounts of independent unions,
local chapters/chartered locals and workers’ associations;2
(2) Union registration-related cases, such as:
a) Denial of applications3 for union registration of independent unions, local chapters and workers’
associations;
b) Revocation or cancellation4 of registration of said unions;
(3) Notice of merger, consolidation, affiliation and change of name of said unions and or petition for denial
thereof;5
(4) CBA-related cases, such as:
a) Application for registration of single-enterprise6 CBAs or petition for deregistration thereof;7
b) Petition for denial of registration of single-enterprise CBAs or denial of petition deregistration thereof.
As far as No. 1 above is concerned, appellate authority over decisions of the DOLE Regional Directors involving
examinations of union accounts is expressly conferred on the BLR Director under the Rules of Procedure on Mediation-
Arbitration,8 to wit:
“RULE II
MED-ARBITRATION
“SEC. 3. Jurisdiction of the Regional Director. - The Regional Director shall exercise original and exclusive
jurisdiction over application for union registration, petitions for cancellation of union registration and complaints for
examination of union books of accounts.
SEC. 4. Jurisdiction of the Bureau.-
xxx
“(b) The Bureau shall exercise appellate jurisdiction over all cases originating from the Regional Director
involving union registration or cancellation of certificates of union registration and complaints for examination of
union books of accounts.”9
The language of the law is categorical. Any additional explanation on the matter is superfluous. It is thus clear
then that the DOLE Secretary has no appellate jurisdiction over decisions of DOLE Regional Directors involving petitions
for examinations of union accounts.10
b. Cases not appealable to the BLR Director but to some other labor officials.
For greater clarity in presentation and to avoid any confusion, it is worthy to mention that the decisions of the
DOLE Regional Directors in the following cases which are not related to labor relations are appealable to the DOLE
Secretary and not to the BLR Director:
1 Id.
2 The BLR Director, not the DOLE Secretary, has the appellate authority over decisions of the DOLE Regional Directors involving examinations of union accounts as provided under
Rule II of the Rules of Procedure on Mediation-Arbitration, issued on April 10, 1992, to wit: “SEC. 3. Jurisdiction of the Regional Director. - The Regional Director shall exercise
original and exclusive jurisdiction over application for union registration, petitions for cancellation of union registration and complaints for examination of unions books of accounts.
SEC. 4. Jurisdiction of the Bureau.- xxx “(b) The Bureau shall exercise appellate jurisdiction over all cases originating from the Regional Director involving union registration or
cancellation of certificates of union registration and complaints for examination of union books of accounts.”
3 See Article 243 [236] of the Labor Code which provides: “Art. 243 [236]. Denial of registration; appeal. The decision of the Labor Relations Division in the regional office denying
registration may be appealed by the applicant union to the Bureau within ten (10) days from receipt of notice thereof.”
4 See Article 245 [238] of the Labor Code which provides: “Art. 245 [238]. Cancellation of registration; appeal. The certificate of registration of any legitimate labor organization, whether
national or local, shall be cancelled by the Bureau if it has reason to believe, after due hearing, that the said labor organization no longer meets one or more of the requirements
herein prescribed.”
5 Section 5, Rule IV, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003] and as further amended by
Department Order No. 40-D-05, Series of 2005, Sept. 13, 2005.
6 As distinguished from cases involving multi-employer CBAs which fall under the original jurisdiction of the BLR Director.
7 Section 4 [formerly Section 5], Rule XI, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003], and as re-
numbered by Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [Oct. 30, 2008].
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1 “Article 37. Visitorial Power. - The Secretary of Labor or his duly authorized representatives may, at any time, inspect the premises, books of accounts and records of any person or
entity covered by this Title, require it to submit reports regularly on prescribed forms, and act on violation of any provisions of this Title.” (Referring to Tile I [Recruitment and Placement
of Workers], Book I, Labor Code).
2 Visitorial cases involve inspection of establishments to determine compliance with labor standards; while enforcement cases involve issuance of compliance orders and writs of
execution.
3 Based on the 2nd paragraph of Article 128(b), Labor Code, which states: “An order issued by the duly authorized representative of the Secretary of Labor and Employment under this
Article may be appealed to the latter. xxx” (As amended by Republic Act No. 7730, June 2, 1994). Additionally, it is provided in Section 1, Rule IV, of the Rules on the Disposition of
Labor Standards Cases in the Regional Offices, thus: “Section 1. Appeal. – The order of the Regional Director shall be final and executory unless appealed to the Secretary of Labor
and Employment within ten (10) calendar daysfrom receipt thereof.” The grounds for the appeal are provided in Section 2 thereof, thus: “Grounds for appeal. – The aggrieved party
may appeal to the Secretary the Order of the Regional Director on any of the following grounds: (a) there is a prima facie evidence of abuse of discretion on the part of the Regional
Director; (b) the Order was secured through fraud, coercion or graft and corruption; (c) the appeal is made purely on questions of law; and (d) serious errors in the findings of facts
were committed which, if not corrected, would cause grave irreparable damageor injury to the appellant.” (See also Section 2, in relation to Section 3(a), Rule X, Book III of the Rules
to Implement the Labor Code}.
4 Section 6(a) of Rule VI [Health and Safety Cases] of the Rules on the Disposition of Labor Standards Cases in the Regional Offices which provides: Section 6. Review by the
Secretary. - (a) The Secretary at his own initiative or upon the request of the employer and/or employee, may review the order of the Regional Director which shall be immediately
final and executory unless stayed by the Secretary upon posting by the employer of a reasonable cash or performance bond as fixed by the Regional Director.” See also the 2nd
paragraph of Article 128(b), Labor Code.
5 Section 62, Department Order No. 141-14, Series of 2014, Nov. 20, 2014.
6 Section 23, Rule XI, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003]; National Federation of Labor [NFL] v.
Laguesma, G.R. No. 123426, March 10, 1999.
7 Abbott Laboratories Philippines, Inc. v. Abbott Laboratories Employees Union, G.R. No. 131374, Jan, 26, 2000.
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It must be noted that it is the registration of the labor organization with the BLR and not with the Securities and
Exchange Commission (SEC) which makes it a legitimate labor organization with rights and privileges granted under the
Labor Code.1
F.
NATIONAL CONCILIATION AND MEDIATION BOARD
(NCMB)
1.
NATURE OF PROCEEDINGS
1. NCMB IS NOT A QUASI-JUDICIAL AGENCY.
NCMB is not a quasi-judicial agency, according to the 2009 case of Tabigue v. International
Copra Export Corporation. 2
“Quasi-judicial function” is a term which applies to the action, discretion, etc. of public administrative
officers or bodies, who are required to investigate facts or ascertain the existence of facts, hold hearings, and draw
conclusions from them as a basis for their official action and to exercise discretion of a judicial nature.
2. NOT BEING A QUASI-JUDICIAL AGENCY, NCMB’S RULINGS CANNOT BE ELEVATED TO, AND
COGNIZABLE BY, THE COURT OF APPEALS.
Rule 43 of the Rules of Court applies only to awards, judgments, final orders or resolutions of or authorized
by any quasi-judicial agency in the exercise of its quasi-judicial functions. Hence, NCMB’s decision, not having
been rendered by a quasi-judicial body, cannot be elevated to the Court of Appeals under said rule.
2.
CONCILIATION VS. MEDIATION
1. CONCILIATION AND MEDIATION, MEANING.
Both the terms “conciliation” and “mediation” refer to a process whereby a third person usually called
Conciliator (in case of conciliation) or Mediator (in case of mediation), intervenes in a dispute involving two or
more conflicting parties for the purpose of reconciling their differences or persuading them into adjusting or settling
their dispute. The Conciliator or Mediator normally does not make or render any decision, his role being confined to
the functions afore-described.
3. DISTINCTION BETWEEN CONCILIATION AND MEDIATION.
Generally, there are no marked distinctions between conciliation and mediation. The reason is that in both
cases, a neutral third party (called Conciliator or Mediator) is tasked to assist two or more opposing parties in
finding appropriate resolution to a dispute.
In the NCMB, the hearing officer is called Conciliator-Mediator. There is no separate classification
between conciliators and mediators. When the Conciliator-Mediator performs his task, he does not make any
distinction when he is acting as Conciliator or as Mediator.
In other jurisdictions, the principal distinction between conciliation and mediation lies on the extent
of the power and authority granted to the neutral third party.
In mediation, the Mediator normally facilitates a deliberation or discussion of the issues between the
parties. He may or may not offer any opinions on the strength and weaknesses of each party's positions and
arguments. Thus, mediation may be classified into two, namely:
1. Facilitative Mediation where the Mediator does not make or offer any opinion; or
2. Evaluative Mediation where the Mediator offers an opinion which is not binding on the parties.
It bears stressing, however, that regardless of which of the 2 methods above is chosen, the Mediator is not
empowered to impose his will on the parties.
In conciliation, the Conciliator is given more power and authority in that he may not only offer an opinion
on the issues at hand but may actually make a binding opinion thereon provided the parties stipulate in advance to
this effect. His opinion is based on the facts and the law involved in the controversy before him.
It may thus be observed that conciliation is more formal than mediation in the sense that the Conciliator’s
opinion, unlike the Mediator’s, may be binding on the parties, although it may be merely temporary in character.
3.
PREVENTIVE MEDIATION
1. PREVENTIVE MEDIATION AS A REMEDY.
1 Cebu Seamen’s Association, Inc. v. Hon. Pura Ferrer-Calleja, G.R. No. 83190. Aug. 4, 1992; See also Philippine Land-Sea-Air Labor Union [PLASLU] v. CIR, G.R. Nos. L-5664 &
L-5698, Sept. 17, 1953, 93 Phil. 747.
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“Preventive mediation,” as a remedy, is not found in the Labor Code. But under the law which created the
NCMB, it is expressly stated that one of its functions is to provide preventive mediation to disputing parties.
The term “preventive mediation case” refers to the potential or brewing labor dispute which is the subject
of a formal or informal request for conciliation and mediation assistance sought by either or both parties in order to
remedy, contain or prevent its degeneration into a full blown dispute through amicable settlement.
2. HOW TO INITIATE PREVENTIVE MEDIATION.
Preventive mediation proceeding may be initiated in two (2) ways:
(1) By filing a notice or request of preventive mediation, as distinguished from a notice of strike/
lockout; or
(2) By conversion of the notice of strike/lockout into a preventive mediation case.
G.
DOLE REGIONAL DIRECTORS
1.
JURISDICTION
1. ROLE OF THE DOLE REGIONAL DIRECTORS.
The DOLE has a total of 16 Regional Offices nationwide each one of them is headed by a Regional Director. The
DOLE Regional Directors are the duly “authorized representatives” of the DOLE Secretary referred to in Article 128 of
the Labor Code which grants to them both visitorial and enforcement powers. They are in charge of the administration
and enforcement of labor standards within their respective territorial jurisdictions.3
2. JURISDICTION OF THE DOLE REGIONAL DIRECTORS.
The DOLE Regional Directors have original and exclusive jurisdiction over the following cases:
(a) Visitorial (inspection) cases under Article 37;4
3 See Section 3, Rule I, Rules on the Disposition of Labor Standards Cases in the Regional Offices [Sept. 16, 1987]; Atilano v. De la Cruz, G.R. No. 82488, Feb. 28, 1990, 182 SCRA
886; San Miguel Corporation v. The Hon. CA, G.R. No. 146775, Jan. 30, 2002.
4 “Article 37. Visitorial Power. - The Secretary of Labor or his duly authorized representatives may, at any time, inspect the premises, books of accounts and records of any person or
entity covered by this Title, require it to submit reports regularly on prescribed forms, and act on violation of any provisions of this Title.” (Referring to Tile I [Recruitment and Placement
of Workers], Book I, Labor Code).
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(b) Visitorial (inspection) and enforcement cases1 under Article 128,2 (either routine or initiated through a
complaint);
(c) Visitorial cases under Article 289 [274],3 involving examination of books of accounts of independent
unions, local chapters/chartered locals and workers’ associations;
(d) Occupational safety and health violations;4
(e) Small money claims cases arising from labor standards violations in an amount not exceeding ₱5,000.00
and not accompanied with a claim for reinstatement under Article 129;
(f) Cases related to private recruitment and placement agencies (PRPAs) for local5 employment, such as:
1) Applications for license or denial thereof;6
2) Complaints for suspension or cancellation of license by reason of administrative offenses;7
3) Complaints for illegal recruitment;8 and
4) Petition for closure of agency;9
(g) Cases submitted for voluntary arbitration in their capacity as Ex-Officio Voluntary Arbitrators (EVAs) under
Department Order No. 83-07, Series of 2007.10
(h) Union registration-related cases, such as:
1) Applications for union registration of independent unions, local chapters and workers’ associations;11
2) Petitions for denial of application for registration12 of said unions;13
3) Petitions for revocation or cancellation of registration14 of said unions;15
(i) Notice of merger, consolidation, affiliation and change of name of said unions and or petition for denial
thereof;16
(j) CBA-related cases, such as:
1) Application for registration of single-enterprise17 CBAs or petition for deregistration thereof;18
2) Petition for denial of registration of single-enterprise CBAs or denial of petition for deregistration
thereof; and
1 Visitorial cases involve inspection of establishments to determine compliance with labor standards; while enforcement cases involve issuance of compliance orders and writs of
execution.
4 Section 6 of Rule VI [Health and Safety Cases] of the Rules on the Disposition of Labor Standards Cases in the Regional Offices.
5 As distinguished from recruitment and placement of workers for overseas employment which falls under the jurisdiction of the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration
(POEA).
6 Section 8, Department Order No. 141-14, Series of 2014 (Revised Rules and Regulations Governing Recruitment and Placement for Local Employment), Nov. 20, 2014; See
previous provision on this matter in Section 36, Rule VII, Rules And Regulations Governing Private Recruitment and Placement Agency for Local Employment, June 5, 1997. See
also National Federation of Labor v. Laguesma, G.R. No. 123426, March 10, 1999.
7 Section 54, in relation to Section 51, Department Order No. 141-14, Series of 2014, Ibid.
10 Issued by former DOLE Secretary, now Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, Arturo D. Brion on June 8, 2007.
11 Section 3, Rule II of the Med-Arbitration Rules states: “SEC. 3. Jurisdiction of the Regional Director.- The Regional Director shall exercise original and exclusive jurisdiction over
application for union registration, petitions for cancellation of union registration and complaints for examination of unions books of accounts.” See also Section 1, Rule II,
Rules of Procedure on Mediation-Arbitration.
12 See Article 243 [236] of the Labor Code which provides: “Art. 243 [236]. Denial of registration; appeal. The decision of the Labor Relations Division in the regional office denying
registration may be appealed by the applicant union to the Bureau within ten (10) days from receipt of notice thereof.”
13 Referring to independent unions, local chapters and workers’ associations, as distinguished from federations, national unions, industry unions, trade union centers and their local
chapters/chartered locals, affiliates and member organizations whose application for registration as well as denial or cancellation or revocation of registration is cognizable by the BLR
Director in his original and exclusive jurisdiction [infra].
14 See Article 245 [238] of the Labor Code which provides: “Art. 245 [238]. Cancellation of registration; appeal. The certificate of registration of any legitimate labor organization, whether
national or local, shall be cancelled by the Bureau if it has reason to believe, after due hearing, that the said labor organization no longer meets one or more of the requirements
herein prescribed.”
15 Section 3, Rule II of the Med-Arbitration Rules, supra; See also Section 4, Rule XI, Book V of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-
F-03, Series of 2008 [October 30, 2008].
16 Section 5, Rule IV, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003] and as further amended by
Department Order No. 40-D-05, Series of 2005, Sept. 13, 2005.
17 As distinguished from cases involving multi-empoyer CBAs which fall under the original jurisdiction of the BLR Director.
18 Section 4 [formerly Section 5], Rule XI, Book V, Rules to Implement the Labor Code, as amended by Department Order No. 40-03, Series of 2003, [Feb. 17, 2003], and as re-
numbered by Department Order No. 40-F-03, Series of 2008 [Oct. 30, 2008].
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(k) Request for SEBA certification when made in an unorganized establishment with only one (1)
legitimate union.1
I.
LABOR STANDARDS ENFORCEMENT CASES
1. SUBJECT OF THE VISITORIAL AND ENFORCEMENT POWERS - THE ESTABLISHMENT AND
NOT THE EMPLOYEES THEREIN.
The subject of the visitorial and enforcement powers granted to the DOLE Secretary or his duly authorized
representatives under Article 128 is the establishment which is under inspection and not the employees thereof.
Consequently, any awards granted are not confined to employees who signed the complaint inspection but
are equally applicable to all those who were employed by the establishment concerned at the time the
complaint was filed, even if they were not signatories thereto. The reason is that the visitorial and
enforcement powers are relevant to, and may be exercised over, establishments, not over individual employees
thereof, to determine compliance by such establishments with labor standards laws. Necessarily, in case of an
award from such violation by the establishment, all its existing employees should be benefited thereby. It must
be stressed, however, that such award should not apply to those who resigned, retired or ceased to be employees at
the time the complaint was filed.
2. ORIGINAL JURISDICTION.
The DOLE Regional Directors exercise original jurisdiction over the following:
(a) Cases involving inspection of establishments to determine compliance with labor standards (Visitorial
Power); and
(b) Cases involving issuance of compliance orders and writs of execution (Enforcement Power).
II.
SMALL MONEY CLAIMS CASES
1. JURISDICTION OVER CLAIMS NOT EXCEEDING P5,000.
1 Under this situation, the DOLE Regional Director, before whom the Request for SEBA Certification is filed, should refer the Request for SEBA Certification to the Mediator-Arbiter for
the determination of the propriety of conducting a certification election, in which case, the Mediator-Arbiter now has the jurisdiction to decide the certification election issue. (Section 6,
Rule VII, in relation to Rules VIII and IX, Department Order No. 40-I-15, Series of 2015 [September 07, 2015]). Note must be made that when the Request for SEBA Certification is
made in an unorganized establishment with more than one (1) legitimate labor organization, the Med-Arbiter takes over from the DOLE Regional Director in the matter of hearing and
resolving the issue of certification election.
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The DOLE Regional Director has original jurisdiction over small money claims cases arising from labor
standards violations in the amount not exceeding P5,000.00 and not accompanied with a claim for reinstatement
under Article 129 of the Labor Code.
Article 129 contemplates the recovery of wages and other monetary claims and benefits, including legal
interest, owing to an employee or domestic worker or kasambahay, arising from employer-employee relations
provided the claim does not exceed P5,000.00.
2. REQUISITES FOR THE VALID EXERCISE OF JURISDICTION BY DOLE REGIONAL DIRECTORS
UNDER ARTICLE 129.
The following requisites must all concur, to wit:
(1) The claim is presented by an employee or domestic worker or kasambahay;
(2) The claimant, no longer being employed, does not seek reinstatement; and
(3) The aggregate money claim of the employee or domestic worker or kasambahay does not exceed
P5,000.00.
In the absence of any of the aforesaid three (3) requisites, the Labor Arbiters have original and exclusive
jurisdiction over all claims arising from employer-employee relations, other than claims for employees’
compensation, social security, PhilHealth and maternity benefits.
III.
CASES SUBMITTED TO REGIONAL DIRECTORS AND ASSISTANT REGIONAL
DIRECTORS FOR VOLUNTARY ARBITRATION IN THEIR CAPACITY AS EX-OFFICIO
VOLUNTARY ARBITRATORS (EVAs)
1. JURISDICTION.
As EVAs, the DOLE Regional Directors and their Assistants have jurisdiction over the following cases:
(a) All grievances arising from the interpretation or implementation of the CBA;
(b) All grievances arising from the interpretation or enforcement of company personnel policies which
remain unresolved after exhaustion of the grievance procedure;
(c) Cases referred to them by the DOLE Secretary under the DOLE’s Administrative Intervention for
Dispute Avoidance (AIDA) initiative (provided under DOLE Circular No. 1, Series of 2006); and
(d) Upon agreement of the parties, any other labor dispute may be submitted to the EVAs for voluntary
arbitration.
H.
DOLE SECRETARY
1. POWERS OF THE DOLE SECRETARY.
The DOLE Secretary, being the head of the Department of Labor and Employment, is possessed of a
number of powers, some of which are mentioned in the syllabus, to wit:
1. Visitorial and enforcement powers;
2. Power to suspend the effects of termination;
3. Assumption of jurisdiction;
4. Appellate jurisdiction; and
5. Voluntary arbitration powers.
2. CASES FALLING UNDER THE DOLE SECRETARY’S ORIGINAL JURISDICTION.
The DOLE Secretary has original jurisdiction over the following cases:
(1) Petition to assume jurisdiction over labor disputes affecting industries indispensable to the national interest
(national interest cases);1
(2) Petition to certify national interest cases to the NLRC for compulsory arbitration;2
(3) Petition to suspend effects of termination;3
(4) Administrative Intervention for Dispute Avoidance (AIDA) cases;4
(5) Voluntary arbitration cases;5 and
(6) Contempt cases.6
1.
2 Id.
4 This is a new form of dispute settlement introduced by the DOLE Secretary under DOLE Circular No. 1, Series of 2006, issued on August 11, 2006 by former DOLE Secretary Arturo
D. Brion, later a distinguished member of the Highest Court. This was issuedin line with the objectives of R.A. No. 9285, otherwise known as the “Alternative Dispute Resolution Act of
2004” [approved on April 2, 2004], Executive Order No. 523 dated April 07, 2006 and the mandate of the DOLE to promote industrial peace.
6 As provided under Article 231 [225] which states: Article 231 [225]. Contempt powers of the Secretary of Labor. In the exercise of his powers under this Code, the Secretary of Labor
may hold any person in direct or indirect contempt and impose the appropriate penalties therefor.
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The appellate power in No. 3 above may only be exercised by the DOLE Secretary in respect to any
decision, order or award issued by the DOLE Regional Directors.
3. NATURE OF THE VISITORIAL AND ENFORCEMENT POWERS.
The visitorial and enforcement powers granted to the DOLE Secretary and the DOLE Regional Directors
who are his duly authorized representatives, are quasi-judicial in nature.
4. IT IS THE REGIONAL DIRECTORS WHO HAVE ORIGINAL JURISDICTION TO EXERCISE THE
VISITORIAL AND ENFORCEMENT POWERS UNDER ARTICLES 37, 128 AND 274.
In the instances contemplated under Articles 37, 128 and 274, it is the DOLE Regional Directors, the
DOLE Secretary’s duly authorized representatives commonly referred to in these three (3) articles, who have the
original jurisdiction to exercise the visitorial power granted therein.
5. THE ROLE OF THE DOLE SECRETARY IN THE EXERCISE OF VISITORIAL AND ENFORCEMENT
POWERS IS APPELLATE IN NATURE.
It is clear from the above disquisition that the original jurisdiction over the exercise of the visitorial and
enforcement powers belongs to the DOLE Regional Directors, as the duly authorized representatives of the DOLE
Secretary.
The role of the DOLE Secretary is confined to the exercise of his appellate jurisdiction over the decisions,
orders and awards of the DOLE Regional Directors in cases brought before them for adjudication under Articles 128
and 274.
2.
POWER TO SUSPEND EFFECTS OF TERMINATION
1. GROUNDS.
The DOLE Secretary may suspend the effects of termination pending resolution of the dispute in the event
of a prima facie finding by the appropriate official of the DOLE before whom the dispute is pending that:
1. the termination may cause a serious labor dispute; and/or
2. the termination is in implementation of a mass lay-off.
2. RATIONALE FOR SUSPENDING THE EFFECTS OF TERMINATION.
The obvious purpose behind this rule is to bring the parties back to the status quo ante litem, that is, their
state of relationship prior to the termination. In this way, the workers will be litigating the issue of the validity or
legality of their termination on more or less equal footing with the employer since they will be immediately
reinstated and accordingly not be deprived of their wages while the litigation is on-going.
3. REINSTATEMENT PENDING RESOLUTION OF THE TERMINATION DISPUTE.
Suspension of the effects of termination will necessarily result in the immediate reinstatement of the
terminated employees. An order of reinstatement pending resolution of the case may thus be issued by the DOLE
Secretary pursuant to this power.
4. DISTINGUISHED FROM DOLE SECRETARY’S POWER OF ASSUMPTION OR CERTIFICATION IN
NATIONAL INTEREST CASES.
a. Different power of the DOLE Secretary.
This power of the DOLE Secretary granted under Article 277(b) should be distinguished from his power to
assume or certify labor disputes involving industries indispensable to the national interest under Article 263(g). The
following distinctions may be cited:
First, the exercise of the power to suspend the effects of termination involves only the issue of termination
of employment which may cause a serious labor dispute or is in implementation of a mass lay-off; while the power
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to assume or certify labor disputes is applicable to all labor disputes, irrespective of the grounds therefor, provided
such labor disputes will cause or likely to cause strikes or lockouts in industries indispensable to the national
interest.
Second, the former requires the conduct of preliminary determination of the existence of prima facie
evidence that the termination may cause a serious labor dispute or is in implementation of a mass lay-off to be
conducted by the appropriate official of the DOLE before whom the termination dispute is pending; while the latter
does not require such preliminary prima facie determination. In fact, prior notice and hearing are not required before
the DOLE Secretary may issue an assumption or certification order.
Third, the “serious labor dispute” contemplated under the former may or may not involve a strike or
lockout; while the labor dispute referred to in the latter will cause or likely to cause a strike or lockout.
Fourth, the former may be exercised in cases of termination of employment for as long as any of the two
(2) grounds mentioned in Article 277(b) exists, irrespective of the nature of the business of the employer; while the
latter may only be exercised in industries indispensable to the national interest.
Fifth, the remedy under the former is immediate reinstatement pending resolution of the termination case;
while in the latter, the remedy is the automatic return to work of the strikers or locked-out employees, if the strike or
lock-out is on-going at the time of the issuance of the assumption/certification order or the enjoining of the strike or
lockout, if one has not taken place, pending the resolution of the issues raised in the notice of strike or lockout.
3.
ASSUMPTION OF JURISDICTION
The DOLE Secretary is granted under Article 263(g) of the Labor Code, the extraordinary police power of
assuming jurisdiction over a labor dispute which, in his opinion, will cause or likely to cause a strike or lockout in an
industry indispensable to the national interest, or the so-called “national interest” cases. Alternatively, he may
certify the labor dispute to the NLRC for compulsory arbitration.
4.
APPELLATE JURISDICTION
I.
VARIOUS APPEALS TO THE DOLE SECRETARY
UNDER THE LABOR CODE AND APPLICABLE RULES
1. OFFICES FROM WHICH APPEALS MAY ORIGINATE.
Appeals to the DOLE Secretary may originate from any of the following offices:
(1) DOLE Regional Directors;
(2) Med-Arbiters;
(3) Director of the Bureau of Labor Relations (BLR); and
(4) Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA).
2. CASES NOT APPEALABLE TO THE DOLE SECRETARY.
The following decisions, awards or orders are not appealable to the Office of the DOLE Secretary:
(1) Those rendered by Labor Arbiters that are appealable to the Commission (NLRC) which has exclusive
appellate jurisdiction thereover;
(2) Those rendered by the Commission (NLRC) since they can be elevated directly to the CA by way of a
Rule 65 certiorari petition;
(3) Those rendered by the BLR Director in the exercise of his appellate jurisdiction since they can be
brought directly to the CA under Rule 65 certiorari petition;
(4) Those rendered by DOLE Regional Directors under Article 129 of the Labor Code since they are
appealable to the NLRC;
(5) Those issued by DOLE Regional Directors in their capacity as Ex-Officio Voluntary Arbitrators (EVAs)
since they can be brought directly to the CA under Rule 43 of the Rules of Court; and
(6) Those rendered by Voluntary Arbitrators which are appealable directly to the CA under Rule 43 of the
Rules of Court.
II.
APPEALS FROM DOLE REGIONAL DIRECTORS
1. CASES APPEALABLE TO DOLE SECRETARY.
Not all decisions, awards or orders rendered by the DOLE Regional Directors are appealable to the DOLE
Secretary. Only those issued in the following cases are so appealable:
(a) Labor standards enforcement cases under Article 128;
(b) Occupational safety and health violations; and
(c) Complaints against private recruitment and placement agencies (PRPAs) for local employment.
2. CASES NOT APPEALABLE TO THE DOLE SECRETARY.
As earlier pointed out, the following cases decided by the DOLE Regional Directors are not appealable to
the DOLE Secretary but to some other agencies/tribunals indicated below:
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(a) Decisions in small money claims cases arising from labor standards violations in the amount not
exceeding P5,000.00 and not accompanied with a claim for reinstatement under Article 129 are
appealable to the NLRC;
(b) Decisions in cases submitted to DOLE Regional Directors for voluntary arbitration in their capacity as
Ex-Officio Voluntary Arbitrators (EVAs) under Department Order No. 83-07, Series of 2007 may be
elevated directly to the Court of Appeals by way of a Rule 43 petition. This is so because the DOLE
Regional Directors, in so deciding, are acting as Voluntary Arbitrators; hence, what should apply are
the rules on appeal applicable to voluntary arbitration.
III.
APPEALS FROM DECISIONS OF
MEDIATORS-ARBITERS (MED-ARBITERS) AND BLR DIRECTOR
(NOTE: See discussion above in connection with
the jurisdiction of the Bureau of Labor Relations [BLR])
V.
APPEALS FROM DECISIONS OF POEA
1. CASES APPEALABLE TO THE DOLE SECRETARY.
The decisions in the following cases rendered by the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration
(POEA) in its original jurisdiction are appealable to the DOLE Secretary:
(a) Recruitment violations and other related cases. - All cases which are administrative in character,
involving or arising out of violation of rules and regulations relating to licensing and registration of
recruitment and employment agencies or entities, including refund of fees collected from workers and
violation of the conditions for the issuance of license to recruit workers.
(b) Disciplinary action cases and other special cases which are administrative in character, involving
employers, principals, contracting partners and Filipino migrant workers.
It must be noted that the POEA ceased to have any jurisdiction over money claims of OFWs, or those
arising out of an employer-employee relationship or by virtue of any law or contract involving Filipino workers for
overseas deployment including claims for actual, moral, exemplary and other forms of damages. The jurisdiction
over these claims was transferred to the Labor Arbiters of the NLRC by virtue of Section 10 of R.A. No. 8042, as
amended. Hence, appeals therefrom may be instituted to the Commission (NLRC).
5.
DOLE SECRETARY’S VOLUNTARY ARBITRATION POWERS
1. AIDA.
a. New rule on voluntary settlement of cases by the DOLE Secretary.
A new form of dispute settlement by the DOLE Secretary was introduced by DOLE Circular No. 1, Series
of 2006. Called Administrative Intervention for Dispute Avoidance (AIDA), this is a new administrative
procedure for the voluntary settlement of labor disputes in line with the objectives of R.A. No. 9285, Executive
Order No. 523 and the mandate of the DOLE to promote industrial peace.
b. Nature of administrative intervention by DOLE Secretary.
This recourse is separate from the established dispute resolution modes of mediation, conciliation and
arbitration under the Labor Code, and is an alternative to other voluntary modes of dispute resolution such as the
voluntary submission of a dispute to the Regional Director for mediation, to the NCMB for preventive mediation, or
to the intervention of a regional or local tripartite peace council for the same purpose.
c. Parties who may request for DOLE Secretary’s intervention.
Either or both the employer and the certified collective bargaining agent (or the representative of the
employees where there is no certified bargaining agent) may voluntarily bring to the Office of the DOLE Secretary,
through a Request for Intervention, any potential or ongoing dispute defined below.
d. Potential or on-going dispute.
A potential or on-going dispute refers to:
(a) a live and active dispute;
(b) that may lead to a strike or lockout or to massive labor unrest; and
(c) is not the subject of any complaint or notice of strike or lockout at the time a Request for Intervention
is made.
2. VOLUNTARY ARBITRATION BY DOLE SECRETARY.
If the intervention through AIDA fails, either or both parties may avail themselves of the remedies provided
under the Labor Code. Alternatively, the parties may submit their dispute to the Office of the DOLE Secretary for
voluntary arbitration. Such voluntary arbitration should be limited to the issues defined in the parties' submission to
voluntary arbitration agreement and should be decided on the basis of the parties' position papers and submitted
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evidence. The Office of the DOLE Secretary is mandated to resolve the dispute within sixty (60) days from the
parties' submission of the dispute for resolution.
3. DOES THE DOLE SECRETARY ASSUME THE ROLE OF VOLUNTARY ARBITRATOR ONCE HE
ASSUMES JURISDICTION OVER A LABOR DISPUTE?
In the 2014 case of Philtranco Service Enterprises, Inc. v. Philtranco Workers Union-Association of
Genuine Labor Organizations (PWU-AGLO),1 this poser was answered in the negative. A notice of strike was
filed by respondent union which, after failure of conciliation and mediation by the NCMB, was referred by the
Conciliator-Mediator to the Office of the DOLE Secretary who thereby assumed jurisdiction over the labor dispute.
The case was resolved by the Acting DOLE Secretary in favor of respondent union. A motion for reconsideration
was filed by petitioner company. The DOLE Secretary, however, declined to rule on the motion citing a DOLE
regulation, applicable to voluntary arbitration, which provided that the Voluntary Arbitrators’ decisions, orders,
resolutions or awards shall not be the subject of motions for reconsideration. The DOLE Secretary took the position
that when he assumed jurisdiction over the labor dispute, he was acting as a Voluntary Arbitrator. Petitioner
subsequently filed a Rule 65 certiorari petition with the CA. The CA, however, dismissed petitioner company’s Rule
65 certiorari petition on the ground, among others, that the decision of the DOLE Secretary, having been rendered
by him in his capacity as Voluntary Arbitrator, is not subject to a Rule 65 certiorari petition but to a Rule 43 petition
for review which properly covers decisions of Voluntary Arbitrators.
Before the Supreme Court, petitioner asserted that, contrary to the CA’s ruling, the case is not a simple
voluntary arbitration case. The character of the case, which involves an impending strike by petitioner’s employees;
the nature of petitioner’s business as a public transportation company, which is imbued with public interest; the
merits of its case; and the assumption of jurisdiction by the DOLE Secretary – all these circumstances removed the
case from the coverage of Article 262, and instead placed it under Article 263, of the Labor Code. For its part,
respondent union argued that the DOLE Secretary decided the assumed case in his capacity as Voluntary Arbitrator;
thus, his decision, being that of a Voluntary Arbitrator, is only assailable via a petition for review under Rule 43.
The Supreme Court, however, pronounced that:
“It cannot be said that in taking cognizance of NCMB-NCR CASE No. NS-02-028-07, the Secretary of Labor
did so in a limited capacity, i.e., as a voluntary arbitrator. The fact is undeniable that by referring the case to the
Secretary of Labor, Conciliator-Mediator Aglibut conceded that the case fell within the coverage of Article 263 of
the Labor Code; the impending strike in Philtranco, a public transportation company whose business is imbued
with public interest, required that the Secretary of Labor assume jurisdiction over the case, which he in fact did.
By assuming jurisdiction over the case, the provisions of Article 263 became applicable, any representation to the
contrary or that he is deciding the case in his capacity as a voluntary arbitrator notwithstanding.”
Consequently, the Supreme Court reversed and set aside the CA ruling and reinstated the case and directed
the CA “to resolve the same with deliberate dispatch.”
I.
GRIEVANCE MACHINERY
AND VOLUNTARY ARBITRATION
(NOTE must be made that the 2017 Syllabus merely requires a discussion of the jurisdiction of the
Voluntary Arbitrator and the remedies available before him. However, in the view of the author,
there can be no meaningful discussion of these subject matters without touching the subject of
“Grievance Machinery” since the main bulk of cases cognizable by Voluntary Arbitrators emanate
from and consist of unresolved grievances that were initially processed and adjudicated through the
Grievance Machinery. Hence, a discussion of Grievance Machinery is of extreme necessity).
1.
SUBJECT MATTER OF GRIEVANCE
1. GRIEVANCE OR GRIEVABLE ISSUE.
A “grievance” or “grievable issue” is any question raised by either the employer or the union regarding
any of the following issues or controversies:
1. The interpretation or application of the CBA;
2. The interpretation or enforcement of company personnel policies; or
3. Violation of any provisions of the CBA or company personnel policies.
2. VALIDITY AND BINDING EFFECT OF DECISIONS OF GRIEVANCE COMMITTEE.
A member of the bargaining union who brought his grievable issue for resolution by the Grievance
Committee is bound by whatever disposition the latter may render thereon.
1 G.R. No. 180962, Feb. 26, 2014. Although this case involves a decision of the DOLE Secretary, the principle enunciated herein equally applies to the NLRC.
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The various internal procedural steps or stages of resolving grievances under the grievance machinery in a
CBA should be fully exhausted before resort to voluntary arbitration may be made. The 7-calendar day period is
usually reckoned from the date of their submission for resolution to the last step of the internal grievance machinery.
Simply stated, only after exhausting all the internal procedures and only after the lapse of this period that unsettled
or unadjusted grievances should automatically be referred to voluntary arbitration enunciated in the CBA.
2. A PARTY IS NOT ALLOWED TO GO DIRECTLY TO COURT IN DISREGARD OF VOLUNTARY
ARBITRATION AFTER DECISION IS RENDERED BY GRIEVANCE COMMITTEE.
Before a party is allowed to seek the intervention of the court, it is a precondition that he should have
availed of all the means of administrative processes afforded him. Hence, if a remedy within the administrative
machinery can still be resorted to by giving the administrative officer concerned every opportunity to decide on a
matter that comes within his jurisdiction, then such remedy should be exhausted first before the court’s judicial
power can be sought. The premature invocation of the court’s judicial intervention is fatal to one’s cause of action.”
Indeed, the underlying principle of the rule on exhaustion of administrative remedies rests on the presumption
that when the administrative body, or grievance machinery, is afforded a chance to pass upon the matter, it will
decide the same correctly.
2.
VOLUNTARY ARBITRATOR
1. VOLUNTARY ARBITRATION.
“Voluntary arbitration” refers to the mode of settling labor-management disputes in which the parties select
a competent, trained and impartial third person who is tasked to decide on the merits of the case and whose decision
is final and executory. It is a third-party settlement of a labor dispute involving the mutual consent by the
representatives of the employer and the labor union involved in a labor dispute to submit their case for arbitration.
2. VOLUNTARY ARBITRATOR.
a. Who is a Voluntary Arbitrator?
A “Voluntary Arbitrator” refers to:
(1) any person who has been accredited by the National Conciliation and Mediation Board (“NCMB” or
“Board”) as such; or
(2) any person named or designated in the CBA by the parties as their Voluntary Arbitrator; or
(3) one chosen by the parties with or without the assistance of the NCMB, pursuant to a selection procedure
agreed upon in the CBA; or
(4) one appointed by the NCMB in case either of the parties to the CBA refuses to submit to voluntary
arbitration.
This term includes a panel of Voluntary Arbitrators.
3. VOLUNTARY ARBITRATOR ACTS IN QUASI-JUDICIAL CAPACITY.
Although not a part of a government unit or a personnel of the Department of Labor and Employment, a
Voluntary Arbitrator, by the nature of his functions, acts in a quasi-judicial capacity. He is a means by which
government acts, or by which a certain government act or function is performed. He performs a state function
pursuant to a governmental power delegated to him under the Labor Code. The landmark case of Luzon
Development Bank v. Association of Luzon Development Bank Employees,1 clearly declared that a Voluntary
Arbitrator, whether acting solely or in a panel, enjoys in law the status of a quasi-judicial agency.
2.1.
JURISDICTION
1. ORIGINAL AND EXCLUSIVE JURISDICTION.
a. In general.
The Voluntary Arbitrator or panel of Voluntary Arbitrators shall have exclusive and original jurisdiction
over the following cases:
(1) Unresolved grievances arising from the interpretation or implementation of the collective bargaining
agreement (CBA).
(2) Unresolved grievances arising from the interpretation or enforcement of company personnel policies.
(3) Violations of the CBA which are not gross in character.
(4) Other labor disputes, including unfair labor practices and bargaining deadlocks, upon agreement of the
parties.
(5) National interest cases.
(6) Wage distortion issues arising from the application of any wage orders in organized establishments.
(7) Unresolved grievances arising from the interpretation and implementation of the Productivity Incentive
Programs under R.A. No. 6971.
2.1.1.
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2.1.2.
JURISDICTION OVER NATIONAL INTEREST CASES
Article 263(g) of the Labor Code which involves the DOLE Secretary’s power of assumption of jurisdiction
or certification to the NLRC of labor disputes affecting industries indispensable to the national interest, also
provides that “[b]efore or at any stage of the compulsory arbitration process, the parties may opt to submit
their dispute to voluntary arbitration.”
This means that even if the case has already been assumed by the DOLE Secretary or certified to the NLRC
for compulsory arbitration, or even during its pendency therewith, the parties thereto may still withdraw the case
from the DOLE Secretary or NLRC, as the case may be, and submit it to a Voluntary Arbitrator for voluntary
arbitration purposes.
2.1.3.
JURISDICTION OVER WAGE DISTORTION CASES
▪ Jurisdiction over wage distortion cases depends on whether the establishment is organized or
unorganized.
In organized establishments, the employer and the union are required to negotiate to correct the wage
distortion. Any dispute arising from such wage distortion should be resolved through the grievance procedure under
the CBA and if it remains unresolved, through voluntary arbitration.
In unorganized establishments, where there are no CBAs or recognized or certified collective bargaining
unions, the jurisdiction is with the Labor Arbiter.
SOME PRINCIPLES.
1) Cases cognizable by Voluntary Arbitrators in their original jurisdiction but ERRONEOUSLY filed
with Labor Arbiters, DOLE Regional Offices or NCMB should be disposed of by referring them to
the Voluntary Arbitrators or panel of Voluntary Arbitrators mutually chosen by the parties.
2) Cases cognizable by Voluntary Arbitrators but filed with regular courts should be dismissed.
3) THE WELL-ENTRENCHED RULE IS THAT WHEN A CASE DOES NOT INVOLVE THE
PARTIES TO A CBA – THE EMPLOYER AND THE BARGAINING UNION - IT IS NOT
SUBJECT TO VOLUNTARY ARBITRATION. While individual or group of employees, without the
participation of the union, are granted the right to bring grievance directly to the employer, they
cannot submit the same grievance, if unresolved by the employer, for voluntary arbitration without
the union’s approval and participation. The reason is that it is the union which is the party to the
CBA, and not the individual or group of employees. - This rule was lately affirmed in the 2009 case of
Tabigue v. International Copra Export Corporation. Pursuant to Article 260 of the Labor Code, the
parties to a CBA shall name or designate their respective representatives to the grievance machinery and if
the grievance is unsettled in that level, it shall automatically be referred to the voluntary arbitrators
designated in advance by parties to a CBA. Consequently only disputes involving the union and the
company shall be referred to the grievance machinery or voluntary arbitrators.”
3.
REMEDIES
1. RELIEFS AND REMEDIES THAT MAY BE GRANTED BY VOLUNTARY ARBITRATORS.
Besides the procedural remedies discussed above, the Voluntary Arbitrator or panel of Voluntary Arbitrators
may grant the same reliefs and remedies granted by Labor Arbiters under Article 279 of the Labor Code, such as:
(1) In illegal dismissal cases:
(a) Actual reinstatement;
(b) Separation pay in lieu of reinstatement, in case reinstatement becomes impossible, non-feasible or
impractical;
(c) Full backwages;
(d) Moral and exemplary damages; and
(e) Attorney’s fees.
(2) Monetary awards in monetary claims cases in which case, the decision should specify the amount
granted and the formula used in the computation thereof.
J.
PRESCRIPTION OF ACTIONS
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