163622-2009-People S Broadcasting Bombo Radyo Phils.20160918-3445-1nvp7gl
163622-2009-People S Broadcasting Bombo Radyo Phils.20160918-3445-1nvp7gl
163622-2009-People S Broadcasting Bombo Radyo Phils.20160918-3445-1nvp7gl
DECISION
TINGA , J : p
I.
The instant petition for certiorari under Rule 65 assails the decision and the
resolution of the Court of Appeals dated 26 October 2006 and 26 June 2007,
respectively, in C.A. G.R. CEB-SP No. 00855. 1
The petition traces its origins to a complaint led by Jandeleon Juezan
(respondent) against People's Broadcasting Service, Inc. (Bombo Radyo Phils., Inc.)
(petitioner) for illegal deduction, non-payment of service incentive leave, 13th month
pay, premium pay for holiday and rest day and illegal diminution of bene ts, delayed
payment of wages and non-coverage of SSS, PAG-IBIG and Philhealth before the
Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) Regional Of ce No. VII, Cebu City. 2 On
the basis of the complaint, the DOLE conducted a plant level inspection on 23
September 2003. In the Inspection Report Form, 3 the Labor Inspector wrote under the
heading "Findings/Recommendations" "non-diminution of bene ts" and "Note:
Respondent deny employer-employee relationship with the complainant see Notice
of Inspection results". In the Notice of Inspection Results 4 also bearing the date 23
September 2003, the Labor Inspector made the following notations:
Management representative informed that complainant is a drama talent hired on
a per drama "participation basis" hence no employer-employeeship [sic] existed
between them. As proof of this, management presented photocopies of cash
vouchers, billing statement, employments of speci c undertaking (a contract
between the talent director & the complainant), summary of billing of drama
production etc. They (mgt.) has [sic] not control of the talent if he ventures into
another contract w/ other broadcasting industries. DTEIaC
Petitioner was required to rectify/restitute the violations within ve (5) days from
receipt. No recti cation was effected by petitioner; thus, summary investigations were
conducted, with the parties eventually ordered to submit their respective position
papers. 6
In his Order dated 27 February 2004, 7 DOLE Regional Director Atty. Rodolfo M.
Sabulao (Regional Director) ruled that respondent is an employee of petitioner, and that
the former is entitled to his money claims amounting to P203,726.30. Petitioner sought
reconsideration of the Order, claiming that the Regional Director gave credence to the
documents offered by respondent without examining the originals, but at the same
time he missed or failed to consider petitioner's evidence. Petitioner's motion for
reconsideration was denied. 8 On appeal to the DOLE Secretary, petitioner denied once
more the existence of employer-employee relationship. In its Order dated 27 January
2005, the Acting DOLE Secretary dismissed the appeal on the ground that petitioner did
not post a cash or surety bond and instead submitted a Deed of Assignment of Bank
Deposit. 9 EAHDac
Petitioner elevated the case to the Court of Appeals, claiming that it was denied
due process when the DOLE Secretary disregarded the evidence it presented and failed
to give it the opportunity to refute the claims of respondent. Petitioner maintained that
there is no employer-employee relationship had ever existed between it and respondent
because it was the drama directors and producers who paid, supervised and
disciplined respondent. It also added that the case was beyond the jurisdiction of the
DOLE and should have been considered by the labor arbiter because respondent's
claim exceeded P5,000.00.
The Court of Appeals held that petitioner was not deprived of due process as the
essence thereof is only an opportunity to be heard, which petitioner had when it led a
motion for reconsideration with the DOLE Secretary. It further ruled that the latter had
the power to order and enforce compliance with labor standard laws irrespective of the
amount of individual claims because the limitation imposed by Article 29 of the Labor
Code had been repealed by Republic Act No. 7730. 1 0 Petitioner sought reconsideration
of the decision but its motion was denied. 1 1
Before this Court, petitioner argues that the National Labor Relations
Commission (NLRC), and not the DOLE Secretary, has jurisdiction over respondent's
claim, in view of Articles 217 and 128 of the Labor Code. 1 2 It adds that the Court of
Appeals committed grave abuse of discretion when it dismissed petitioner's appeal
without delving on the issues raised therein, particularly the claim that no employer-
employee relationship had ever existed between petitioner and respondent. Finally,
petitioner avers that there is no appeal, or any plain, speedy and adequate remedy in the
ordinary course of law available to it. TIDaCE
On the other hand, respondent posits that the Court of Appeals did not abuse its
discretion. He invokes Republic Act No. 7730, which "removes the jurisdiction of the
Secretary of Labor and Employment or his duly authorized representatives, from the
effects of the restrictive provisions of Article 129 and 217 of the Labor Code, regarding
the con nement of jurisdiction based on the amount of claims". 1 3 Respondent also
claims that petitioner was not denied due process since even when the case was with
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the Regional Director, a hearing was conducted and pieces of evidence were presented.
Respondent stands by the propriety of the Court of Appeals' ruling that there exists an
employer-employee relationship between him and petitioner. Finally, respondent argues
that the instant petition for certiorari is a wrong mode of appeal considering that
petitioner had earlier led a Petition for Certiorari, Mandamus and Prohibition with the
Court of Appeals; petitioner, instead, should have filed a Petition for Review. 1 4 TSHIDa
II.
The signi cance of this case may be reduced to one simple question does the
Secretary of Labor have the power to determine the existence of an employer-employee
relationship?
To resolve this pivotal issue, one must look into the extent of the visitorial and
enforcement power of the DOLE found in Article 128 (b) of the Labor Code, as
amended by Republic Act 7730. It reads:
Article 128 (b) Notwithstanding the provisions of Articles 129 and 217 of this
Code to the contrary, and in cases where the relationship of employer-
employee still exists , the Secretary of Labor and Employment or his duly
authorized representatives shall have the power to issue compliance orders to
give effect to the labor standards provisions of this Code and other
labor legislation based on the ndings of labor employment and enforcement
of cers or industrial safety engineers made in the course of inspection. The
Secretary or his duly authorized representative shall issue writs of execution to
the appropriate authority for the enforcement of their orders, except in cases
where the employer contests the ndings of the labor employment and
enforcement of cer and raises issues supported by documentary proofs which
were not considered in the course of inspection. (emphasis supplied) DHTECc
The provision is quite explicit that the visitorial and enforcement power of the
DOLE comes into play only "in cases when the relationship of employer-employee still
exists". It also underscores the avowed objective underlying the grant of power to the
DOLE which is "to give effect to the labor standard provision of this Code and other
labor legislation". Of course, a person's entitlement to labor standard bene ts under the
labor laws presupposes the existence of employer-employee relationship in the rst
place.
The clause "in cases where the relationship of employer-employee still exists"
signi es that the employer-employee relationship must have existed even before the
emergence of the controversy. Necessarily, the DOLE's power does not apply in
two instances, namely: (a) where the employer-employee relationship has
ceased; and (b) where no such relationship has ever existed.
The rst situation is categorically covered by Sec. 3, Rule 11 of the Rules on the
Disposition of Labor Standards Cases 1 5 issued by the DOLE Secretary. It reads:
Rule II MONEY CLAIMS ARISING FROM
COMPLAINT/ROUTINE INSPECTION
Sec. 3. Complaints where no employer-employee relationship actually exists.
Where employer-employee relationship no longer exists by reason of the fact
that it has already been severed, claims for payment of monetary bene ts fall
within the exclusive and original jurisdiction of the labor arbiters. Accordingly, if
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on the face of the complaint, it can be ascertained that employer-employee
relationship no longer exists, the case, whether accompanied by an allegation of
illegal dismissal, shall immediately be endorsed by the Regional Director to the
appropriate branch of the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC).
In the recent case of Bay Haven, Inc. v. Abuan, 1 6 this Court recognized the rst
situation and accordingly ruled that a complainant's allegation of his illegal dismissal
had deprived the DOLE of jurisdiction as per Article 217 of the Labor Code. 1 7
In the rst situation, the claim has to be referred to the NLRC because it is the
NLRC which has jurisdiction in view of the termination of the employer-employee
relationship. The same procedure has to be followed in the second situation since it is
the NLRC that has jurisdiction in view of the absence of employer-employee
relationship between the evidentiary parties from the start.
Clearly the law accords a prerogative to the NLRC over the claim when the
employer-employee relationship has terminated or such relationship has not arisen at
all. The reason is obvious. In the second situation especially, the existence of an
employer-employee relationship is a matter which is not easily determinable from an
ordinary inspection, necessarily so, because the elements of such a relationship are not
veri able from a mere ocular examination. The intricacies and implications of an
employer-employee relationship demand that the level of scrutiny should be far above
the cursory and the mechanical. While documents, particularly documents found in the
employer's office are the primary source materials, what may prove decisive are factors
related to the history of the employer's business operations, its current state as well as
accepted contemporary practices in the industry. More often than not, the question of
employer-employee relationship becomes a battle of evidence, the determination of
which should be comprehensive and intensive and therefore best left to the specialized
quasi-judicial body that is the NLRC. HCTAEc
It can be assumed that the DOLE in the exercise of its visitorial and
enforcement power somehow has to make a determination of the existence
of an employer-employee relationship. Such prerogatival determination,
however, cannot be coextensive with the visitorial and enforcement power
itself. Indeed, such determination is merely preliminary, incidental and
collateral to the DOLE's primary function of enforcing labor standards
provisions. The determination of the existence of employer-employee
relationship is still primarily lodged with the NLRC. This is the meaning of the
clause "in cases where the relationship of employer-employee still exists" in
Art. 128 (b).
Thus, before the DOLE may exercise its powers under Article 128, two important
questions must be resolved: (1) Does the employer-employee relationship still exist, or
alternatively, was there ever an employer-employee relationship to speak of; and (2) Are
there violations of the Labor Code or of any labor law?
The existence of an employer-employee relationship is a statutory
prerequisite to and a limitation on the power of the Secretary of Labor, one
which the legislative branch is entitled to impose. The rationale underlying this
limitation is to eliminate the prospect of competing conclusions of the Secretary of
Labor and the NLRC, on a matter fraught with questions of fact and law, which is best
resolved by the quasi-judicial body, which is the NLRC, rather than an administrative
of cial of the executive branch of the government. If the Secretary of Labor proceeds
to exercise his visitorial and enforcement powers absent the rst requisite, as the
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dissent proposes, his of ce confers jurisdiction on itself which it cannot otherwise
acquire.
The approach suggested by the dissent is frowned upon by common law. To wit:
[I]t is a general rule, that no court of limited jurisdiction can give itself
jurisdiction by a wrong decision on a point collateral to the merits of
the case upon which the limit to its jurisdiction depends ; and however its
decision may be nal on all particulars, making up together that subject matter
which, if true, is within its jurisdiction, and however necessary in many cases it
may be for it to make a preliminary inquiry, whether some collateral matter be or
be not within the limits, yet, upon this preliminary question, its decision must
always be open to inquiry in the superior court. 1 8
cHDaEI
III.
Aside from lack of jurisdiction, there is another cogent reason to set aside the
Regional Director's 27 February 2004 Order. A careful study of the case reveals that the
said Order, which found respondent as an employee of petitioner and directed the
payment of respondent's money claims, is not supported by substantial evidence, and
was even made in disregard of the evidence on record.
It is not enough that the evidence be simply considered. The standard is
substantial evidence as in all other quasi-judicial agencies. The standard employed in
the last sentence of Article 128 (b) of the Labor Code that the documentary proofs be
"considered in the course of inspection" does not apply. It applies only to issues other
than the fundamental issue of existence of employer-employee relationship. A contrary
rule would lead to controversies on the part of labor of cials in resolving the issue of
employer-employee relationship. The onset of arbitrariness is the advent of denial of
substantive due process.
As a general rule, the Supreme Court is not a trier of facts. This applies with
greater force in cases before quasi-judicial agencies whose ndings of fact are
accorded great respect and even nality. To be sure, the same ndings should be
supported by substantial evidence from which the said tribunals can make its own
independent evaluation of the facts. Likewise, it must not be rendered with grave abuse
of discretion; otherwise, this Court will not uphold the tribunals' conclusion. 2 0 In the
same manner, this Court will not hesitate to set aside the labor tribunal's ndings of
fact when it is clearly shown that they were arrived at arbitrarily or in disregard of the
evidence on record or when there is showing of fraud or error of law. 2 1
At the onset, it is the Court's considered view that the existence of employer-
employee relationship could have been easily resolved, or at least prima facie
determined by the labor inspector, during the inspection by looking at the records of
petitioner which can be found in the work premises. Nevertheless, even if the labor
inspector had noted petitioner's manifestation and documents in the Notice of
Inspection Results, it is clear that he did not give much credence to said evidence, as he
did not nd the need to investigate the matter further. Considering that the documents
shown by petitioner, namely: cash vouchers, checks and statements of account,
summary billings evidencing payment to the alleged real employer of respondent,
letter-contracts denominated as "Employment for a Speci c Undertaking", prima facie
negate the existence of employer-employee relationship, the labor inspector could have
exerted a bit more effort and looked into petitioner's payroll, for example, or its roll of
employees, or interviewed other employees in the premises. After all, the labor
inspector, as a labor regulation of cer is given "access to employer's records and
premises at any time of day or night whenever work is being undertaken therein, and the
right to copy therefrom, to question any employee and investigate any fact, condition or
matter which may be necessary to determine violations or which may aid in the
enforcement of this Code and of any labor law, wage order or rules and regulations
pursuant thereto." 2 2 Despite these far-reaching powers of labor regulation of cers,
records reveal that no additional efforts were exerted in the course of the inspection.
EHcaDT
On the other hand, petitioner maintained in its position paper that respondent
had never been its employee. Attached as annexes to its position paper are
photocopies of cash vouchers it issued to drama producers, as well as letters of
employment captioned "Employment for a Speci c Undertaking", wherein respondent
was appointed by different drama directors as spinner/narrator for speci c radio
programs. 2 5
In his Order, the Regional Director merely made a passing remark on petitioner's
claim of lack of employer-employee relationship a token paragraph and proceeded
to a detailed recitation of respondent's allegations. The documents introduced by
petitioner in its position paper and even those presented during the inspection were not
given an iota of credibility. Instead, full recognition and acceptance was accorded to
the claims of respondent from the hours of work to his monthly salary, to his alleged
actual duties, as well as to his alleged "evidence". In fact, the ndings are anchored
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almost verbatim on the self-serving allegations of respondent.
Furthermore, respondent's pieces of evidence the identi cation card and the
certi cation issued by petitioner's Greman Solante are not even determinative of an
employer-employee relationship. The certi cation, issued upon the request of
respondent, speci cally stated that "MR. JANDELEON JUEZAN is a program employee
of PEOPLE'S BROADCASTING SERVICES, INC. (DYMF-Bombo Radyo Cebu)", it is not
therefore "crystal clear that complainant is a station employee rather than a program
employee hence entitled to all the bene ts appurtenant thereto", 2 6 as found by the
DOLE Regional Director. Respondent should be bound by his own evidence. Moreover,
the classi cation as to whether one is a "station employee" and "program employee", as
lifted from Policy Instruction No. 40, 2 7 dividing the workers in the broadcast industry
into only two groups is not binding on this Court, especially when the classi cation has
no basis either in law or in fact. 2 8
Even the identi cation card purportedly issued by petitioner is not proof of
employer-employee relationship since it only identi ed respondent as an "Authorized
Representative of Bombo Radyo . . . ", and not as an employee. The phrase gains
significance when compared vis a vis the following notation in the sample identi cation
cards presented by petitioner in its motion for reconsideration:
1. This is to certify that the person whose picture and signature appear
hereon is an employee of Bombo Radio Philippines.
2. This ID must be worn at all times within Bombo Radyo Philippines
premises for proper identi cation and security. Furthermore, this is the
property of Bombo Radyo Philippines and must be surrendered upon
separation from the company. cCAIES
Respondent tried to address the discrepancy between his identi cation card and
the standard identi cation cards issued by petitioner to its employees by arguing that
what he annexed to his position paper was the old identi cation card issued to him by
petitioner. He then presented a photocopy of another "old" identi cation card, this time
purportedly issued to one of the employees who was issued the new identi cation card
presented by petitioner. 2 9 Respondent's argument does not convince. If it were true
that he is an employee of petitioner, he would have been issued a new identi cation
card similar to the ones presented by petitioner, and he should have presented a copy
of such new identi cation card. His failure to show a new identi cation card merely
demonstrates that what he has is only his "Media" ID, which does not constitute proof
of his employment with petitioner. caHIAS
While the requirements for perfecting an appeal must be strictly followed as they
are considered indispensable interdictions against needless delays and for orderly
discharge of judicial business, the law does admit exceptions when warranted by the
circumstances. Technicality should not be allowed to stand in the way of equitably and
completely resolving the rights and obligations of the parties. 3 7 Thus, in some cases,
the bond requirement on appeals involving monetary awards had been relaxed, such as
when (i) there was substantial compliance with the Rules; (ii) the surrounding facts and
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circumstances constitute meritorious ground to reduce the bond; (iii) a liberal
interpretation of the requirement of an appeal bond would serve the desired objective
of resolving controversies on the merits; or (iv) the appellants, at the very least
exhibited their willingness and/or good faith by posting a partial bond during the
reglementary period. 3 8
By:
(Signed) GREMAN B. SOLANTE
Station Manager
Casting aside the technical imprecision and inaptness of words that mark the
three documents, a liberal reading reveals the documents petitioner did assign, as cash
bond for the monetary award in favor of respondent in LSED Case No. RO700-2003-CI-
09, the amount of P203,726.30 covered by petitioner's PSD Account No. 010-8-00038-
4 with the Queen City Development Bank at Sanciangko St. Cebu City, with the
depositary bank authorized to remit the amount to, and upon withdrawal by respondent
and or the Department of Labor and Employment Regional Of ce VII, on the basis of
the proper writ of execution. The Court nds that the Deed of Assignment constitutes
substantial compliance with the bond requirement.
The purpose of an appeal bond is to ensure, during the period of appeal, against
any occurrence that would defeat or diminish recovery by the aggrieved employees
under the judgment if subsequently af rmed. 4 0 The Deed of Assignment in the instant
case, like a cash or surety bond, serves the same purpose. First, the Deed of
Assignment constitutes not just a partial amount, but rather the entire award in the
appealed Order. Second, it is clear from the Deed of Assignment that the entire amount
is under the full control of the bank, and not of petitioner, and is in fact payable to the
DOLE Regional Of ce, to be withdrawn by the same of ce after it had issued a writ of
execution. For all intents and purposes, the Deed of Assignment in tandem with the
Letter Agreement and Cash Voucher is as good as cash. Third, the Court nds that the
execution of the Deed of Assignment, the Letter Agreement and the Cash Voucher were
made in good faith, and constituted clear manifestation of petitioner's willingness to
pay the judgment amount.
The Deed of Assignment must be distinguished from the type of bank
certi cation submitted by appellants in Cordova v. Keysa's Boutique, 4 1 wherein this
Court found that such bank certi cation did not come close to the cash or surety bond
required by law. The bank certi cation in Cordova merely stated that the employer
maintains a depository account with a balance of P23,008.19, and that the certi cation
was issued upon the depositor's request for whatever legal purposes it may serve.
There was no indication that the said deposit was made speci cally for the pending
appeal, as in the instant case. Thus, the Court ruled that the bank certi cation had not in
any way ensured that the award would be paid should the appeal fail. Neither was the
appellee in the case prevented from making withdrawals from the savings account.
Finally, the amount deposited was measly compared to the total monetary award in the
judgment. 4 2 aEHADT
V.
Another question of technicality was posed against the instant petition in the
hope that it would not be given due course. Respondent asserts that petitioner pursued
the wrong mode of appeal and thus the instant petition must be dismissed. Once more,
the Court is not convinced.
A petition for certiorari is the proper remedy when any tribunal, board or of cer
exercising judicial or quasi-judicial functions has acted without or in excess of its
jurisdiction, or with grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of
jurisdiction and there is no appeal, nor any plain speedy, and adequate remedy at law.
There is "grave abuse of discretion" when respondent acts in a capricious or whimsical
manner in the exercise of its judgment as to be equivalent to lack of jurisdiction. 4 3
CScTED
WHEREFORE, the petition is GRANTED. The Decision dated 26 October 2006 and
the Resolution dated 26 June 2007 of the Court of Appeals in C.A. G.R. CEB-SP No.
00855 are REVERSED and SET ASIDE. The Order of the then Acting Secretary of the
Department of Labor and Employment dated 27 January 2005 denying petitioner's
appeal, and the Orders of the Director, DOLE Regional Of ce No. VII, dated 24 May
2004 and 27 February 2004, respectively, are ANNULLED. The complaint against
petitioner is DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.
Velasco, Jr., J., concurs.
Carpio Morales * , J., joins the dissent of J. Brion. Please see my Separate Dissenting.
Leonardo-de Castro ** , J., concurs in the result.
Brion, J., dissents.
Separate Opinions
CARPIO MORALES , J., dissenting :
I join the dissent of Justice Arturo Brion in pointing out the obvious: the petition
is wrecked beyond salvage.
The course taken by the ponencia leads labor cases to the iceberg of protracted
proceedings and unsecured execution. Unless the ponencia can justify the
consequential ripples resulting from the decision that could place the whole vessel of
labor rights in distress, I am constrained to drop an anchor to keep it at bay. I could not
thus join the majority in charting such troubled sea.
I Join Justice Brion in his observation that the ponencia bends over beyond the
law's breaking point in order to accommodate the recti cation of a perceived error.
Methinks the ponencia was too willing to give up the stability of settled doctrines like
the proper mode of appeal, due process in administrative proceedings, requirement of
an appeal bond, all for a porridge of "genuine doubt" in one factual nding which in this
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case was resolved by all public respondents 1 in favor of labor. There is, therefore, utter
lack of justi cation for this Court to excuse petitioner from hurdling the basic
preliminary requirements of the remedies.
Let me add a few points for the further illumination of the principal issue on the
exercise of the visitorial and enforcement power of the Labor Secretary under Article
128 (b) of the Labor Code, as amended by Republic Act No. 7730 which legislated the
expanded power of the Labor Secretary.
In complaints such as that led by private respondent for illegal deduction, non-
payment of service incentive leave, 13th month pay, premium pay for holiday and rest
day, illegal diminution of bene ts, delayed payment of wages, and non-coverage of SSS,
Pag-ibig and Philhealth, it becomes commonly convenient for the employer to
immediately raise the defense of the absence of an employer-employee relationship. ECcTaH
The CA duly considered the points raised, but ultimately dismissed the petition
for lack of merit. Petitioner now comes to the Court, again under Rule 65 of the
Rules of Court alleging the following grounds:
1. The Honorable Court of Appeals committed grave abuse of discretion
amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction when it rules that the Secretary
of Labor and Employment has jurisdiction over the claim of the private
respondent even as under R.A. 6715 jurisdiction over it lies with the NLRC,
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hence, clearly, the Honorable Court Appeals committed errors of law.
2. The Honorable Court of Appeals committed grave abuse of discretion
amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction when it upheld the Order of the
Secretary of Labor and Employment despite the patent lack of due
process.
3. The Honorable Court of Appeals committed grave abuse of discretion
amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction when it dismissed the appeal
without delving on the issues raised by the petitioner. Its decision dated
October 26, 2006 did not even rule on the issue raised by the petition that
there is no employer-employee relationship between it and respondent
Juezan.
4. There is no appeal or any plain and adequate remedy in the ordinary
course of law available to the petition.
III. Discussion
These discussions address the above grounds for dissent, not necessarily in the
order posed above in light of the inter-relationships of these grounds with one another.
ITESAc
The clause "in cases where the relationship of employer-employee still exists"
signi es that the employer-employee relationship must have existed even before
the emergence of the controversy. Necessarily, the DOLE's power does not
apply in two instances, namely: (a) where the employer-employee
relationship has ceased; and (b) where no such relationship has ever
existed.
The rst situation is categorically covered by Sec. 3, Rule 11 of the Rules on the
Disposition of Labor Standards Cases issued by the DOLE Secretary. It reads:
Sec. 3. Complaints where no employer-employee relationship actually
exists. Where employer-employee relationship no longer exists by reason of
the fact that it has already been severed, claims for payment of monetary
bene ts fall within the exclusive and original jurisdiction of the labor
arbiters. Accordingly, if on the face of the complaint, it can be ascertained
that employer-employee relationship no longer exists, the case, whether
accompanied by an allegation of illegal dismissal, shall immediately be
endorsed by the Regional Director to the appropriate branch of the National
Labor Relations Commission (NLRC).
xxx xxx xxx
In the rst situation, the claim has to be referred to the NLRC because it is the
NLRC which has jurisdiction in view of the termination of the employer-employee
relationship. The same procedure has to be followed in the second situation since
it is the NLRC that has jurisdiction in view of the absence of employer-employee
relationship between the evidentiary parties from the start.
Clearly the law accords a prerogative to the NLRC over the claim when the
employer-employee relationship has terminated or such relationship has not
arisen at all. The reason is obvious. In the second situation especially, the
existence of an employer-employee relationship is a matter which is not easily
determinable from an ordinary inspection, necessarily so, because the elements
of such a relationship are not veri able from a mere ocular examination. The
intricacies and implications of an employer-employee relationship demand that
the level of scrutiny should be far above the cursory and the mechanical. While
documents, particularly documents found in the employer's of ce are the primary
source materials, what may prove decisive are factors related to the history of the
employer's business operations, its current state as well as accepted
contemporary practices in the industry. More often than not, the question of
employer-employee relationship becomes a battle of evidence, the determination
of which should be comprehensive and intensive and therefore best left to the
specialized quasi-judicial body that is the NLRC.
It can be assumed that the DOLE in the exercise of its visitorial and
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enforcement power somehow has to make a determination of the
existence of an employer-employee relationship. Such prerogatival
determination, however, cannot be coextensive with the visitorial and
enforcement power itself. Indeed, such determination of the existence
of employer-employee relationship is still primarily lodged with the
NLRC. This is the meaning of the clause "in cases where the
relationship of employer-employee still exists" in Art. 128 (b).
The difference can be explained by the new and unique formulation of the whole
Article 128 (b). In the original provision, the visitorial and enforcement power of the
Minister of Labor and Employment generally prevailed over the jurisdiction over
arbitration cases granted to Labor Arbiters and the Commission under Article 217.
Excepted from this rule is what the original and unamended excepting clause, quoted
above, provides i.e., when inspection would not suf ce because of evidentiary
matters that have to be threshed out at an arbitration hearing.
The new and amended Article 128 (b) did not retain the formulation of the
original as it broke up the original version into two sentences. In the first
sentence, it recognized the primacy of the visitorial and enforcement powers of the
Secretary of Labor over the terms of Articles 129 and 217. In other words, the
Secretary or his delegate can inspect without being fettered by the limitations under
these provisions. The second sentence is devoted wholly to the issuance of writs of
execution to enforce the issued orders. It exists as an independent statement from
what the rst sentence states and is limited only by the exception when the employer
cites a documentary proof that was not considered during the inspection.
Thus, under the amended Article 128 (b), as written, the power of the Secretary of
Labor or his representative to enforce the labor standards provisions of the Labor Code
and other labor legislations has been vastly expanded, being unlimited by Articles 129
and 217 of the Labor Code, provided only that employer-employee relationship still
exists. The existence of the relationship, however, is still a matter for the Secretary or
the appropriate regional of ce to determine, unfettered by Articles 129 and 217 of the
Labor Code. The mere allegation whether prima facie or not that employer-
employee relationship exists, does not, by itself, divests the Regional Director of
jurisdiction to rule on the case; 1 6 the Director can at least fully determine whether or
not employer-employee relationship exists.
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The present "excepting clause" (which refers only to the issuance of a writ
of execution ) suggests that after the labor employment of cer has issued its
inspection ruling, the Secretary may issue a writ to execute the ruling, unless the
employer "contests the ndings of the labor employment of cer and raises issues
supported by documentary evidence which were not considered in the course of
inspection." Stated otherwise, there is now a window in the law for immediate execution
pending appeal when the employer's objection does not relate to documentary
evidence that has not been raised in the course of inspection.
What happens to the inspection ruling itself is governed by the next paragraph
of Article 128 (b) which expressly provides for an appeal to the Secretary of Labor, with
the requirement for the ling of a cash or surety bond to perfect the appeal. This
requirement, stated without distinctions or quali cations, should apply to all issues,
whether on the employer-employee issue or on the inspection findings.
A necessary question that arises is the status of the current rule implementing
Article 128 (b) as amended, which is an exact copy of the law except for the addition of
a new sentence ". . . In such cases the Regional Director shall endorse the dispute to
the appropriate regional branch of the National Labor Relations Commission for proper
action." This rule antedates the R.A. 7730 amendment but is not necessarily negated by
the Secretary's expanded powers because of the limitation that the Secretary or his
representation has jurisdiction only where an employment relationship exists. Properly
understood, it should now be read as a con rmation of the Secretary's expanded power
that includes the full authority to rule on whether employer-employee relationship
exists. It is only upon a ruling that no such relationship exists that the Secretary and the
Director are divested of jurisdiction to rule on the monetary claim. The Secretary or the
Director must then endorse the monetary claim to the NLRC instead of dismissing it for
lack of jurisdiction. However, whatever action the Director takes is a matter that can be
appealed to the Secretary of Labor pursuant to the second paragraph of Article 128 (b).
In the present case, the petitioner did appeal as allowed by Article 128 (b), but
unfortunately blew its chance to secure a review on appeal before the Secretary of
Labor as it failed to post the cash or surety bond that the present law expressly
requires.
This reading of the law totally invalidates the ponencia's position in the present
case that the Regional Director and the Secretary of Labor have no jurisdiction to issue
an enforcement order and the case should have been turned over to the NLRC for
compulsory arbitration after the petitioner claimed or has shown prima facie that no
employer-employee relationship existed.
The ponencia makes a nal desperate effort to circumvent the plain import of
Section 128 (b) and its history by appealing to and urging the use of the common
law in reading the DOLE Secretary's visitorial and enforcement powers under
the cited Section. The ponencia suggests a "functional or pragmatic analysis" to
ascertain the jurisdictional boundaries of administrative agencies. Why the common
law approach is to be used in the Philippines' statutory regime is puzzling. Why there is
a need for such an analysis to understand the terms of Section 128 (b) and the Labor
Code, is more so. The suggested common law approach is simply irrelevant and
deserves no further discussion.
Petitioner Failed to Validly
Appeal to the Secretary
The parties do not dispute that the remedy from the Regional Director's ruling is
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an appeal to the Secretary, as the petitioner did indeed appeal to the Of ce of the
Secretary of Labor. The ponencia, however, rules that the DOLE erred in declaring that
the appeal was not perfected; the ponencia holds that the Deed of Assignment of Bank
Deposits that the petitioner submitted in lieu of a cash or surety bond substantially
satis ed the requirements of Section 128 (b) of the Labor Code. This provision states:
cDTaSH
No cash bond was however submitted, showing that the petitioner was less than
candid when it made its claim. It was under these circumstances i.e., the petitioner's
knowledge that a cash or surety bond is required; the absence of a cash bond; and
misrepresentation that a cash bond was attached when there was none that the
DOLE Secretary dismissed the appeal. The CA correctly supported the Secretary's
action and ruled that the Secretary did not act with grave abuse of discretion in
dismissing the appeal.
Separately from these factual incidents are reasons proceeding from established
jurisprudence as the indispensability of a bond to perfect an appeal is not a new issue
for the Court. In Borja Estate, et al. v. Spouses R. Ballad and R. Ballad, 2 2 we ruled that
The intention of the lawmakers to make the bond an indispensable requisite for
the perfection of an appeal by the employer is underscored by the provision that
an appeal may be perfected "only upon the posting of a cash bond". The word
"only" makes it perfectly clear that the LAWMAKERS intended the posting of a
cash or surety bond by the employer to be the exclusive means by which an
employer's appeal may be considered complete.
xxx xxx xxx
Evidently, the posting of a cash or surety bond is mandatory. And the perfection
of an appeal in the manner and within the period prescribed by law is not only
mandatory but jurisdictional. [emphasis supplied].
Interestingly, the same adverb "only" that this Court construed in Borja, is the
very same adverb that Article 128 (b) of the Labor Code contains. Thus, this Article
states in part an appeal by the employer may be perfected only upon the posting of a
cash or surety bond issued by a reputable bonding company duly accredited by the
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Secretary of Labor and Employment. All these safeguards would be for naught if the
ponencia's understanding of the requirements for the perfection of an appeal will
prevail. To reiterate, the bond must be in cash or a surety issued by a reputable bonding
company, not by any bonding company. The reputation alone of the bonding company
will not suf ce to satisfy the law; the bonding company must be accredited by the
Secretary. "Cash", on the other hand, whether in lay or its legal signi cation, means a
sum of money; cash bail (the sense in which a cash bond is used) is a sum of money
posted by a criminal defendant to ensure his presence in court, used in place of a surety
bond and real estate. 2 3
How the aforequoted Deed of Assignment can satisfy the above legal
requirements requires an act of bending that goes beyond the intent of the law. What
the Deed extends is a guarantee using a sum of money placed with a bank, not with the
DOLE. The guarantee is made by a certain Greman B. Solante, described in the Deed as
Station Manager signing for and in behalf of the petitioner, a corporation. There is no
indication anywhere, however, that Mr. Solante was authorized by the Board
of the corporation to commit the corporate funds as a guarantee. 2 4 This lack
of clear authority is replete with legal implications that render the Deed of
Assignment less than the cash bond that it purports to be; among others,
these implications impose on the DOLE added burdens that a cash bond is
designed to avoid. Under Article 1878 of the Civil Code, a special power of attorney
is required to bind a principal as guarantor or surety. Under Section 23 and 35 of the
Corporation Code of the Philippines, authority over corporate funds is exercised by the
Board of Directors who, in the absence of an appropriate delegation of authority, are
the only ones who can act for and in behalf of the corporation. Under Article 1403 of the
Civil Code, a contract entered into without any legal authority or legal representation is
unenforceable. To state the obvious, all these are stumbling blocks for the DOLE when
enforcement against the Deed of Assignment comes.
It is noteworthy, too, that the guarantee is under the condition that "said sum
cannot be withdrawn by the Plaintiff-Appellee/Department of Labor and Employment
Regional Of ce VII until such time that a Writ of Execution shall be ordered by the
Appellate Of ce". What this limitation means is not at all certain. But on its face, it
means that the bond is in favor of the DOLE Regional Of ce, not to the Of ce to the
DOLE Secretary where the appeal has been led. Thus, the DOLE Secretary herself has
no authority to call on the guarantee. Even Regional Of ce VII cannot, until a writ of
execution is ordered by the Appellate Of ce. What this Appellate Of ce is, is again not
certain and can mean the highest appellate levels all the way up to this Court. Another
uncertainty is the bank's commitment to the guarantee as the Deed only contains a
"CONFORME" signed by the Of cer-in-Charge of the Queen City Development Bank, not
the exact terms of the bank's own commitment to the DOLE in whose favor any bond
should be made. What is certain about the Deed is provided in its penultimate
paragraph" "any interest to be earned from said Deposit will be for the account holder".
The Platinum Savings Deposit mentioned in the Deed is itself very interesting as
it carries the heading "Deposit Insured by PDIC Maximum Amount of Php100,000.00.
Yet, the amount of deposit is stated to be Php203,726.30, with interest rate of 4.25%,
and maturity date of July 19, 2004 (31 days). Thus, if anything happened to the
depositary bank, in the way that banks under the Legacy group of banks currently has
problems, the DOLE Regional Of ce VII would be holding an empty guarantee and
would still have to file a claim with the PDIC for the maximum amount covered. aEHADT
To be sure, these are not the terms the framers of the law intended when they
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required that perfection of appeal requires the ling "only" of a cash or surety bond.
Effectively, what the Deed of Assignment and its allied documents have
committed to support the perfection of the petitioner's appeal, with the
intent to pass it off as a cash bond, is an amount whose control is not clearly
with the DOLE and which may require a lot of clari cations and prior actions
before it can be used to pay the monetary claim secured by the bond. This is
what the ponencia wishes to recognize as a substitute for the cash bond requirement
of the law. To say the least, a ruling from this Court of this tenor would severely and
adversely affect the effectiveness and ef ciency of the DOLE's handling of appeals
before it; it would be a precedent that effectively negates the certainties the law wishes
to foster, and would be a welcome development to those who would wish to submit
guarantees other than the cash or surety bonds the law demands.
I submit that the determination of what satis es the bonding requirement in
labor appeals is a matter for the Secretary of Labor and Employment to determine in
the rst instance, and should be free from judicial interference, provided that the
Secretary does not substantially depart from the letter and intent of the law. Once the
Secretary the entity with primary jurisdiction over labor appeals has ruled that a
guarantee other than the strict cash and surety bonds that the law requires is not
suf cient, then this Court should be bound by the determination in the absence of any
attendant grave abuse of discretion on the part of the Secretary. Otherwise stated, this
Court cannot and should not second guess or in hindsight control an administrative
tribunal in the exercise of its powers, even "in the interest of justice", where there is no
attendant grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of jurisdiction. Only in
this manner can this Court accord due respect to the constitutional separation of
powers that it is duty-bound to enforce.
Failure of the CA to review the evidence
In light of the above discussions, the CA could not have been wrong in concluding
that no grave abuse of discretion attended the CA's conclusion that the petitioner
indeed failed to perfect its appeal before the Secretary. Over and above this objection,
however, the ponencia, faults the CA for not examining the evidence to determine
whether the conclusions of the DOLE in the assailed orders were supported by the
evidence presented. It nds that the CA focused instead on a general discussion of due
process and the jurisdiction of the Regional Director.
Let it be clari ed that the Secretary did not need to go into a full discussion of
the merits of the appeal because no appeal was ever perfected. The CA understandably
focused on this aspect of the case as it renders moot all other issues. To the CA's
credit it made sure that there was no denial of due process that tainted the DOLE
decisions and it found that there was none. In this light, the CA complied with what the
Constitution requires as a decision maker is only duty-bound to state the facts and the
law on which its decision is based. 2 5
In this respect, it should be considered that the petitioner was given every
opportunity to be heard at the DOLE Regional Of ce. The plant inspection was
conducted at the petitioner's own establishment where its of cials were present. No
complaint exists regarding this aspect of the case. A notice of inspection results was
duly sent to the petitioner, which it contested. Thus, the Regional Director directed the
parties to le their position papers on the inspection results. The parties duly complied,
with parties both focusing on the employer-employee relationship issue. In the Order
dated February 27, 2004, the Director fully considered the parties' positions in light of
the inspection results and ruled that there was employer-employee relationship. The
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petitioner reacted by ling a motion for reconsideration and a supplemental motion for
reconsideration, to which additional supporting exhibits were attached. These
submissions were taken into account but still failed to convince the Director.
Unfortunately, the petitioner equated the Regional Director's failure to rule in its favor to be
denial of due process for the alleged failure to consider the evidence it submitted. The CA,
of course, noting the above-described developments in the case saw the fallacy of the
petitioner's submission and dismissed the petition, thus affirming the DOLE level
decisions.
The Director's ruling that the ponencia now sees as objectionable states in its material
portion:
Under the said Policy Instructions, there are two (2) types of employees in the
broadcast industry, namely: 1) "Station employees are those whose services
are engaged to discharge functions which are usually necessary and desirable to
the operation of the station and whose usefulness is not affected by changes of
programs, ratings or formats and who observe normal working hours. These shall
include employees whose talents, skills or services are engaged as such by the
station without particular reference to any speci c program or undertaking, and
are not allowed by the station to be engaged or hired by other stations or persons
even if such employees do not observe normal working hours. 2) Program
employees are those whose skills, talents or services are engaged by the
station for a particular or speci c program or undertaking and who are not
required to observe normal working hours such that on some days they work for
less than eight (8) hours and on other days beyond the normal work hours
observed by the station employees and are allowed to enter into employment
contracts with other persons, stations, advertising agencies or sponsoring
companies. The engagement of program employees, including those hired by
advertising agencies or sponsoring companies, shall be under a written contract
specifying, among other things, the nature of the work to be performed, rates to
pay, and the programs in which they will work. The contract shall be duly
registered by the station with the Broadcast Media Council within three (3) days
from its consummation."
A careful perusal of the records of this case showed that complainant Jandeleon
Juezan was hired by the respondent as a radio talent/spinner and work six (6)
days a week from 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M., Monday thru Saturday. It was the
respondent who paid complainant's salary every quincena and was required by
the former to sign payrolls. Notwithstanding the employment contract stipulating
herein complainant as a program employee, his actual duty pertains to that of a
station employee. Moreover, respondent failed to register said employment
contract with the Broadcast Media Counsel as required. He is required to observe
normal working hours that deductions are made for tardiness. Therefore, it is
crystal clear that complainant is a station employee rather than a program
employee hence entitled to all benefits appurtenant thereto.
cACTaI
In the motion for reconsideration that followed, the Director ruled as follows:
For resolution is the Motion for Reconsideration led by the respondent on March
15, 2004 to the Order of this Of ce dated February 27, 2004 on the ground that
due process is not observed.
The motion was set for clari catory hearing on April 2, 2004 wherein the parties
through their respective counsel appeared. Counsel for complaint asked for 15
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days from April 2, 2004 to le its comment to the Motion for Reconsideration
after which the case is submitted for resolution.
Respondent in its Motion for Reconsideration alleged to have been denied due
process because it was not given the opportunity to examine the identi cation
card which was not presented for scrutiny and verification.
The contention sought by the respondent is without merit.
The identi cation card presented by complainant that he was an authorized
Media Representative is not material to this case nor fatal to respondent's case.
Presentation of employment records is the burden of employer and not of
complaint worker.
Respondent's passing the buck of employer-employee relationship to its drama
Directors and Producers is of no moment. Granting without admitting that herein
complainant is indeed under the employ of respondents' drama directors. Such
partakes of a sub-contracting relationship which will not absolve herein
respondent from its solidary liability to complainant's claims pursuant to Art. 106
to Art. 109 of the Labor Code.
Correctly understood, these rulings do not indicate in any way that the
petitioner's evidence were not considered. To be sure, the parties' various pieces of
evidence the parties submitted were not all mentioned in these rulings. What it does
mention are its ndings from the parties' con icting factual assertions. Interestingly, it
implies that, at least nominally, the respondent was a program employee. This is the
ruling's concession to the petitioner's evidence. However, it also asserts that despite
this seeming status, the respondent was in fact a station employee for the reasons the
ruling outlined, namely: (1) the respondent initially hired the respondent as a radio
talent/spinner; (2) his work was six [6] days a week from 8:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.,
Monday thru Saturday; (3) he is required to observe normal working hours and
deductions are made for tardiness; (4) the respondent paid the complainant's salary
every quincena; (5) the petitioner required the respondent to sign payrolls; (6)
notwithstanding the employment contract stipulating herein complainant as a program
employee, his actual duty pertains to that of a station employee; and (7) the petitioner
failed to register the respondent's employment contract with the Broadcast Media
Counsel as required.
Thus viewed, the ponencia's conclusion that the Director did not consider the
petitioner's evidence is misplaced. In fact, the factors the Director pointed out
decisively show that an employer-employee relationship existed between the petitioner
and the respondent.
Confusion between the DOLE and
the NLRC in resolving employment
relationship issues.
As last point that is hard to leave alone is the ponencia's interpretation that the
standard laid down in the last sentence of Article 128 (b) of the Labor Code that the
documentary proofs be "considered in the course of inspection" applies only to issues
other than the fundamental issue of the existence of employer-employee relationship. A
contrary rule according to the ponencia would lead to controversies on the part of labor
officials in resolving the issue of employer-employee relationship.
What the ponencia apparently refers to is that portion of Article 128 (b) that was
amended by R.A. 7730, heretofore discussed. To reiterate what has been stated above,
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the "documentary proofs which were not considered in the course of inspection" refers
to the objection that a party may raise in relation with the issuance of a writ of
execution, and does not relate to the extent of the visitorial and enforcement power of
the Secretary de ned in the rst sentence of the Article. Thus, no writ may immediately
issue if such objection exists. Rather, a full hearing shall ensue as in this case where the
Director allowed the petitioner to submit evidence as late as the motion for
reconsideration stage. After the Director shall have ruled on all the submitted issues,
then a writ of execution shall issue if no appeal is taken; otherwise, an appeal may be
taken to the Secretary. Under the Rules, the perfection of an appeal holds in abeyance
the issuance of a writ of execution or suspends one already issued. 2 6 R.A. 7730
effectively changes this rule by giving the authority to issue a writ of execution unless
the "excepting clause" mentioned above applies.
That the employment relationship issue is for the Secretary or his representative
to rule upon is clear from the wording of the 1st paragraph of Article 128 (b) when it
de nes the extent of the Secretary's power. In this de nition of authority, the issue
cannot be anywhere else but with the Secretary who has been granted visitorial and
enforcement power when an employment relationship exists. This grant must be read
with the 2nd paragraph of the same Article that identi es an appeal as the remedy to
take from an inspection decision made under the 1st paragraph.
For the ponencia to imply that the NLRC is more tted to rule on the employment
relationship issue misunderstands the power that Article 128 grants the Secretary. It is
a full fact- nding power that includes whatever is necessary for the enforcement of the
grant, including the authority to determine when the limits of the power apply and to call
the parties and hear and decide their submissions. For this reason, Sections 5 (a) and 6
of Department Order No. 7-A, Series of 1995 states:
Sec 5. Field investigation and hearing. (a) In case of complaint inspection
where no proof of compliance is submitted by the employer after seven (7)
calendar days from receipt of the inspection results, the Regional Director shall
summon the employer and the employees/complainants to a summary hearing at
the regional office.
Signi cantly, the nature of the proceedings before the Regional Director is not
different from the proceedings before the Labor Arbiter. Section 2, Rule V of the
Revised Rules of Procedure of the National Labor Relations Commission (2005)
provides that: cDTSHE
Thus, the view that one tribunal has primacy over another because of the nature
of their proceedings, the quantum of evidence required, or their level of expertise, is
misplaced. Properly understood, the structure that Article 128 (b) provides in relation
with monetary claims within and employment relationship, as well as the delineation of
powers between the Secretary of Labor and Employment and the NLRC are not at all
complicated nor confusing, and need not lead to controversies on the part of labor
of cials in resolving the issue of employer-employee relationship, as the ponencia
fears.
Footnotes
* Acting Chairperson.
** Per Special Order No. 619, Justice Teresita J. Leonardo-de Castro is hereby designated
as additional member of the Second Division in lieu of Justice Leonardo A. Quisumbing,
who is on official leave.
1. People's Broadcasting Service (Bombo Radyo Phils., Inc.) v. The Secretary of the
Department of Labor and Employment, the Regional Director, DOLE Region VII and
Jandeleon Juezan, rollo, pp. 38-43 and 56, respectively. Penned by Associate Justice
Pampio A. Abarintos, with Associate Justices Agustin S. Dizon and Priscilla Baltazar-
Padilla, concurring.
12. Petitioner maintains that the instant case is beyond the jurisdiction of the Regional
Director because respondent's claim exceeds P5,000. The argument must be struck
down at once, as it is well settled, following the amendment of the Labor Code by R.A.
7730 on 2 June 1994, that the visitorial and enforcement powers of the Regional Director
can be exercised even if the individual claim exceeds P5,000. See Allied Investigation
Bureaus, Inc. v. Secretary of Labor, G.R. No. 122006, 24 November 1999, 319 SCRA 175,
Cirineo Bowling Plaza, Inc. v. Sensing, G.R. No. 146572, 14 January 2005, 448 SCRA
175. Ex-Bataan Veterans Security Agency, Inc. v. Laguesma, G.R. No. 152396, 20
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November 2007, 537 SCRA 2007.
13. Rollo, p. 131.
14. Comment, id. at 125-140.
15. Dated 16 September 1987 issued by then DOLE Secretary Franklin M. Drilon. The same
Rules are used up to the present.
16. G.R. No. 160859, 30 July 2008, 560 SCRA 457.
17. Id. at 469. The Court made the ruling only as regards respondent Abuan who had made
a claim of illegal dismissal but qualified that "the same (the ruling) does not hold for the
rest of respondents, who do not claim to have illegally dismissed. HSDCTA
18. Bunbury v. Fuller 9 Ex. 111, 140 (1853), cited in CASES, MATERIALS AND
COMMENTARY ON ADMINISTRATIVE LAW by S.H. Bailey, B.L. Jones, A.R. Mowbray, p.
423. This view is more popularly called the "preliminary or collateral question".
19. Re Ontario Nurses Association v. Pay Equity Hearings Tribunal and Glengarry Memorial
Hospital, 10 April 1995, Decision of the Ontario Court of Appeals.
20. Ropali Trading Corporation v. NLRC, G.R. No. 122409, 25 September 1998.
21. Felix v. Enertech Systems Industries, Inc., G.R. No. 142007, 28 March 2001, 355 SCRA
680.
29. The argument was made in respondent's Comments on Respondent's Motion for
Reconsideration, DOLE Records, pp. 135-138, photocopy of the identification card is on
p. 134.
40. Cordova v. Keysa's Boutique, G.R. No. 156379, 16 September 2005, 470 SCRA 144, 154,
citing Your Bus Lines v. NLRC, G.R. No. 93381, 28 September 1990, 190 SCRA 160. ETIDaH
41. Id.
42. Id. In this case, the bank certification merely stated that the spouses/employer
have/has a depository account containing a certain amount, and that the certification
was issued upon the clients' request for whatever legal purposes it may serve them.
There was no indication that the said deposit was made specifically for the pending
appeal, as in the instant case.
43. Condo Suite Club Travel, Inc. v. NLRC, G.R. No. 125671, January 28, 2000, 323 SCRA
679.
44. Provident International Resources Corp. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 119328, 26 July
1996, 259 SCRA 510.
45. Conti v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 134441, 19 May 1999, 307 SCRA 486 citing
Detective & Protective Bureau v. Cloribel, L-23428, 29 November 1968, 26 SCRA 255 and
Matute v. Court of Appeals, L-26085, 31 January 1969, 26 SCRA 768.
46. Zarate v. Olegario, G.R. No. 90655, 7 October 1996, 263 SCRA 1.
47. Destileria Limtuaco & Co., Inc. v. IAC, L-74369, 29 January 1988, 157 SCRA 706, 715.
48. Gutib v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 131209, 13 August 1999, 312 SCRA 365.
49. Santo Tomas University Hospital v. Surla, G.R. No. 129718, 17 August 1998, 294 SCRA
382.
50. Filoteo v. Sandiganbayan, G.R. No. 79543, 16 October 1996, 263 SCRA 222.
51. Osmea III, et al. v. Sandiganbayan, G.R. No. 116941, 31 May 2001.
52. Chua, et al. v. Santos, G.R. No. 132467, 440 SCRA 365, 374-375, citing MMDA v.
JANCON Environmental Corp., G.R. No. 147465, 30 January 2002, 375 SCRA 320.
53. Destileria Limtuaco & Co., Inc. v. IAC, L-74369, 29 January 1988, 157 SCRA 706, 716,
citing Republic v. Court of Appeals, L-54886, 10 September 1981, 107 SCRA 504 and
Republic v. Court of Appeals, L-31303-04, 31 May 1978, 83 SCRA 459.
54. Supra note 46.
CARPIO MORALES, J., dissenting:
4. Chan v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 159922, April 28, 2005, 457 SCRA 502.
5. People v. Maguikay, G.R. Nos. 103226-28, October 14, 1994, 237 SCRA 587.
6. Approved on June 2, 1994; published on June 20, 1994.
7. Prangan v. NLRC, G.R. No. 126529, April 15, 1998, 289 SCRA 142; see Nicario v. NLRC,
Mancao Supermarket, et al., G.R. No. 125340, September 17, 1998.
8. Incorporated in the Implementing Rules under Department Order No. 7-A, Series of 1995.
9. Rule 3, Section 1 (a) and (b).
10. See: ponencia, pp. 6-7.
11. Its 1st ground is a generic allegation of grave abuse of discretion for denial of due
course to the petition; the 2nd ground, using the "grave abuse" magic formula, at the
same time states that the Secretary committed an error of law; the 3rd ground alleges
grave abuse for not "delving on the issues raised by the petitioner"; the 4th in the list is
not a cited ground at all but a statement that there is no adequate remedy in the course
of law other than a petition for certiorari.