Unicorn Safety Glass v. Basarte
Unicorn Safety Glass v. Basarte
Unicorn Safety Glass v. Basarte
154689
FIRST DIVISION
[ G.R. No. 154689, November 25, 2004 ]
UNICORN SAFETY GLASS, INC., LILY YULO AND HILARIO YULO, PETITIONERS, VS.
RODRIGO BASARTE, JAIMELITO FLORES, TEODOLFO LOR, RONNIE DECIO, ELMER
SULTORA AND JOSELITO DECIO, RESPONDENTS.
DECISION
YNARES-SATIAGO, J.:
This is a Petition for Review on Certiorari seeking to set aside the Decision
[1]
of the Court of
Appeals dated October 18, 2001 and its subsequent Resolution dated August 7, 2002, which
reversed the decisions of the Labor Arbiter and the National Labor Relations Commission
(NLRC).
Respondents were regular employees of petitioner Unicorn Safety Glass Incorporated, a
company engaged in the business of glass manufacturing. Respondents normally worked
six (6) times a week, from Monday to Saturday, and were paid on a weekly basis. They
were likewise officers of the organized union in petitioner company, owned and managed by
the Spouses Lily and Hilario Yulo.
On March 2, 1998, Hilario Yulo, as general manager of Unicorn, issued a
Memorandum
[2]
informing respondents that effective April 13, 1998, their workdays shall be
reduced due to economic considerations. Yulo cited several factors such as decrease in
sales, increase in the cost of production, devaluation of the peso and increase in minimum
wage, which contributed to the current economic state of the company. In a letter dated
March 12, 1998, respondents registered their protest to the proposed reduction of working
days and expressed doubts on the reasons offered by the company.
[3]
Respondents also
surmised that the management was merely getting back at them for forming a union
especially since only the union officers were affected by the work reduction.
On April 6, 1998, Hilario Yulo issued another Memorandum
[4]
announcing the
implementation of a work rotation schedule to take effect from April 13, 1998 to April 30,
1998, which will effectively reduce respondents workdays to merely three days a week. A
copy of the planned rotation scheme was sent to the Department of Labor and
Employment. Respondents wrote another letter of protest dated April 7, 1998
[5]
expressing
their frustrations at the apparent lack of willingness on the part of petitioner companys
management to address their concerns and objections. On the same day, respondents met
with the Spouses Yulo and inquired as to the reasons for the imposition of the reduced
workweek. They were told that it was managements prerogative to do so.
[6]
On April 13, 1998, instead of reporting for work, respondents filed a complaint against
petitioner company with the National Labor Relations Commission, docketed as NLRC Case
No. NCR-00-04-03277-98, for constructive dismissal and unfair labor practice, i.e., union
busting, non-payment of five days service incentive leave pay and payment of moral and
exemplary damages as well as attorneys fees. Respondents prayed for reinstatement and
payment of full backwages.
Meanwhile, since respondents failed to report for work, petitioners sent each of them a
telegram directing them to do so. On April 18, 1998, respondents sent Yulo a letter
informing him that, in view of the managements apparent indifference to their plight and
blatant violation of their rights, a complaint was lodged against petitioner company for
constructive dismissal. Moreover, given the working environment they were subjected to,
they decided not to report for work at all.
[7]
Petitioner company replied by asking them to
explain why they have not been reporting for work. However, respondents neither reported
for work nor replied to petitioner companys telegrams.
On January 26, 1999, Labor Arbiter Felipe Pati rendered judgment finding that respondents
were not constructively terminated by petitioner company. Thus:
Complainants claim that they were constructively terminated. However, evidence extant do
not support this contention. What we see on records are the telegrams, letters and
memoranda sent by respondents to complainants ordering the latter to report for
work. Despite due receipt by the complainants of these communications, they simply
ignored respondents plea. Complainants deliberate refusal to report for work is very much
evident from the number of letters they received from respondents which were all ignored.
It is true that complainants have sent to respondent a joint letter-reply dated April 18, 1998
(Annexes 35, Respondents Position Paper). However, said joint letter reinforces the fact
that complainants were not terminated by respondents. In fact complainants admitted in
this joint letter-reply that they have decided not to report for work because they did not
agree with the report rotation adopted by respondents. From this admission and statement
of complainant, we feel that the charge of illegal dismissal they filed against respondents is
misplaced. If complainants strongly opposed the rotation adopted by respondents, they
could have initiated an illegal rotation and not illegal dismissal case against respondents. As
good soldiers complainants could initiate this case while they are reporting for work based
on the adopted work rotation and let the Court decides whether or not this rotation is valid
and legal. Certainly refusal to report for work is not a proper remedy.
[8]
The Labor Arbiter likewise dismissed the charge of unfair labor practice for lack of legal and
factual basis. Nonetheless, the Labor Arbiter ordered petitioner company to pay the
respondents claim for unpaid service incentive leave pay. The Labor Arbiter disposed of the
case, thus:
WHEREFORE, the instant case is hereby dismissed for lack of merit. Respondents however,
are ordered to pay complainants the total amount of P5,110.00 for unpaid service incentive
leave pay as alluded in the above computation.
On the grounds of amicable settlement and subsequent withdrawals of their complaints, the
cases of PAQUITO MANONGSONG and ELMER SULTORA are hereby dismissed with
prejudice.
SO ORDERED.
[9]
The case was appealed to the NLRC. During the pendency of the appeal, however,
petitioner company filed a Motion to Dismiss alleging that respondents Basarte, Flores,
Decio and Lor entered into amicable settlements and executed a Waiver, Release &
Quitclaim.
[10]
Respondents representative filed an Opposition thereto alleging that the
Waiver, Release & Quitclaim executed by respondents were entered into without his
knowledge and not in the presence of the Labor Arbiter; and that the amounts received by
respondents were unconscionably inadequate.
In a decision dated October 31, 2000, the NLRC sustained the findings of the Labor
Arbiter. On the issue of the amicable settlements, the NLRC stated:
We are not convinced that the amicable settlement entered into by complainants were
involuntary and that the consideration thereof are unconscionable.
It is to be stressed that the complainants were the ones who went to the office of
respondent for settlement. They acknowledged having signed the Waiver, Release and
Quitclaim and brought the same before a Notary Public. Given these factual
circumstances, it is hard to believe that there was involuntariness on the part of the
complainant when they settled their claims with respondent. In fact, almost a year have
already lapsed since then. It is only now that complainants are claiming that their
settlement was involuntary.
Anent complainants claim that the consideration of settlement is unconscionable suffice it to
state that the amount granted by way of settlement to complainants Rodrigo Basarte,
Jaimelito Flores, Joselito Decio including that of complainant Teodolfo Lor (Records, p. 179)
are more than the judgment award.
[11]
The dispositive portion of the NLRCs decision states:
PREMISES CONSIDERED, the appeal from the Decision dated January 26, 1999 is hereby
DISMISSED for lack of merit and the Decision is AFFIRMED.
Further, the motions to dismiss filed by respondents with respect to complainants Rodrigo
Basarte, Jaimelito Flores, Joselito Decio and Teodolfo Lor are hereby GRANTED. Thus,
insofar as said complainants are concerned their cases are dismissed with prejudice, as
prayed for by respondents.
SO ORDERED.
[12]
Unrelenting, the respondents filed a petition for certiorari with the Court of Appeals, which
found respondents case partly meritorious.
However, it declined to make a contrary finding on the charge of unfair labor practice for
lack of clear-cut and convincing evidence. The dispositive portion of the Court of Appeals
decision is as follows:
UPON THE VIEW WE TAKE OF THIS CASE, THUS, the petition is substantially
GRANTED. Private respondents are hereby ordered to reinstate to their former positions
Rodrigo Basarte, Jaimelito Flores and Ronnie Decio, without loss of seniority rights and
privileges, and to pay these three their full backwages from April 13, 1998 until their
reinstatement. Or, to award them separation pay, in case reinstatement is no longer
feasible or possible. Private respondents are further sentenced to pay the aforenamed
petitioners ten per cent (10%) of the total awards by way of attorneys fees. Costs shall
also be taxed against private respondents.
SO ORDERED.
[13]
Its Motion for Reconsideration having been denied, petitioners are before us on Petition for
Review on Certiorari, raising the following assignment of errors:
I.
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN REVERSING THE RULING OF THE LABOR
ARBITER A QUO WHICH WAS AFFIRMED BY THE NLRC HOLDING THAT PRIVATE
RESPONDENTS WERE NOT ILLEGALLY DISMISSED FROM THEIR EMPLOYMENT.
II.
THE HONORABLE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN RULING THAT THE RELEASE, WAIVER AND
QUITCLAIMS EXECUTED BY PRIVATE RESPONDENTS RODRIGO BASARTE AND JAIMELITO
FLORES NULL AND VOID.
[14]
The petition lacks merit.
Constructive dismissal or a constructive discharge has been defined as quitting because
continued employment is rendered impossible, unreasonable or unlikely, as an offer
involving a demotion in rank and a diminution in pay.
[15]
Constructive dismissal, however,
does not always take the form of a diminution. In several cases, we have ruled that an act
of clear discrimination, insensibility, or disdain by an employer may become so unbearable
on the part of the employee so as to foreclose any choice on his part except to resign from
such employment. This constitutes constructive dismissal.
[16]
In the case at bar, we agree with the Court of Appeals that petitioners bare assertions on
the alleged reason for the rotation plan as well as its failure to refute respondents
contention that they were targeted due to their union activities, merit the reversal of the
Labor Arbiters decision. It was incumbent upon petitioners to prove that the rotation
scheme was a genuine business necessity and not meant to subdue the organized
union. The reasons enumerated by petitioners in their Memoranda dated March 2, 1998
were factors too general to actually substantiate the need for the scheme. Petitioners cite
the reduction in their electric consumption as proof of an economic slump. This may be true
to an extent. But it does not, by itself, prove that the rotation scheme was the most
reasonable alternative to remedy the companys problems.
The petitioners unbending stance on the implementation of the rotation scheme was an
indication that the rotation plan was being implemented for reasons other than business
necessity. It appears that respondents attempted on more than one occasion to have a
dialogue with petitioner Hilario Yulo to discuss the work reduction. Good faith should have
prompted Yulo to hear the side of the respondents, to come up with a scheme amenable to
both parties or attempt to convince the employees concerned that there was no other viable
option. However, petitioners ignored the letters sent by respondents, which compelled the
latter to seek redress with the Labor Arbiter.
We are mindful that every business strives to keep afloat during these times when
prevailing economic situations turns such endeavor into a near struggle. With as much
latitude as our laws would allow, the Court has always respected a companys exercise of its
prerogative to devise means to improve its operations. Thus, we have held that
management is free to regulate, according to its own discretion and judgment, all aspects of
employment, including hiring, work assignments, working methods, time, place and manner
of work, processes to be followed, supervision of workers, working regulations, transfer of
employees, work supervision, lay off of workers and discipline, dismissal and recall of
workers.
[17]
Further, management retains the prerogative, whenever exigencies of the
service so require, to change the working hours of its employees.
[18]
However, the exercise of management prerogative is not absolute. By its very nature,
encompassing as it could be, management prerogative must be exercised in good faith and
with due regard to the rights of laborverily, with the principles of fair play at heart and
justice in mind. While we concede that management would best know its operational needs,
the exercise of management prerogative cannot be utilized as an implement to circumvent
our laws and oppress employees. The prerogative accorded management cannot defeat the
very purpose for which our labor laws exist: to balance the conflicting interests of labor and
management, not to tilt the scale in favor of one over the other, but to guaranty that labor
and management stand on equal footing when bargaining in good faith with each other.
[19]
In the case at bar, the manner by which petitioners exercised their management
prerogative appears to be an underhanded circumvention of the law. Petitioners were keen
on summarily implementing the rotation plan, obviously singling out respondents who were
all union officers. The managements apparent lack of interest to hear what the
respondents had to say, created an uncertain situation where reporting for work was
tantamount to an acquiescence in an unjust situation.
Petitioners argued that they exerted diligent and massive efforts to make respondents
return to work, highlighting the telegrams and memoranda sent to respondents.
[20]
It is well
established that to constitute abandonment, two elements must concur: (1) the failure to
report for work or absence without valid or justifiable reason, and (2) a clear intention to
sever the employer-employee relationship, with the second element as the more
determinative factor and being manifested by some overt acts. Abandoning ones job
means the deliberate, unjustified refusal of the employee to resume his employment and
the burden of proof is on the employer to show a clear and deliberate intent on the part of
the employee to discontinue employment.
[21]
However, petitioners charge of abandonment of work by respondents does not hold water
when taken in light of the complaint for constructive dismissal. We have held that a charge
of abandonment is totally inconsistent with the filing of a complaint for constructive
dismissal and with reason.
[22]
Respondents cannot be said to have abandoned their jobs
when precisely, the root cause of their protest is their demand to maintain their regular
work hours. What is more, respondents even prayed for reinstatement and
backwages. Clearly, these are incompatible with the proposition that respondents sought to
abandon their work.
Anent the issue of the validity of the waivers and quitclaims executed by some of the
respondents, petitioners argue that while admittedly, the amounts indicated therein were
not substantial, it does not necessarily follow that these were executed under
duress. Moreover, the waivers and quitclaims were executed when the complaint for illegal
dismissal was already dismissed by the Labor Arbiter. Thus, the waivers and quitclaims
were executed under valid circumstances.
We do not agree. To be sure, the law looks with disfavor upon quitclaims and releases by
employees who are inveigled or pressured into signing them by unscrupulous employers
seeking to evade their legal responsibilities. We have clarified the standards for
determining the validity of quitclaim or waiver in the case of Periquet v. National Labor
Relations Commission,
[23]
to wit:
If the agreement was voluntarily entered into and represents a reasonable settlement, it is
binding on the parties and may not later be disowned simply because of a change of mind.
It is only where there is clear proof that the waiver was wangled from an unsuspecting or
gullible person, or the terms of settlement are unconscionable on its face, that the law will
step in to annul the questionable transaction. But where it is shown that the person making
the waiver did so voluntarily, with full understanding of what he was doing, and the
consideration for the quitclaim is credible and reasonable, the transaction must be
recognized as a valid and binding undertaking.
In the instant case, while it is true that the complaint for illegal dismissal filed by
respondents with the Labor Arbiter has been dismissed, their appeal before the NLRC was
still pending. In fact, petitioners even filed a Motion to Dismiss with the NLRC on the very
ground that the respondents, or at least most of them, have executed said Waivers,
Releases and Quitclaims. Petitioners cannot therefore deny that it was in their interest to
have respondents execute the quitclaims.
Furthermore, the considerations received by respondents Basarte and Flores were grossly
inadequate considering the length of time that they were employed in petitioner
company. As correctly pointed out by the Court of Appeals, Basarte worked for petitioner
company for 21 years, that is, from 1976 to 1998, while Flores worked from 1991 to
1998. Basarte and Flores only received P10,000.00 and P3,000.00, respectively. In
contrast, Manongsong and Soltura, two workers who opted to settle their respective cases
earlier on, both started in 1993 only, but were able to take home P16,434.00 each after
executing their waivers.
Article 279 of the Labor Code provides that an employee who is unjustly dismissed from
work is entitled to reinstatement without loss of seniority rights and other privileges, and to
his full backwages, inclusive of allowances, and to the other benefits or their monetary
equivalent computed from the time of his actual reinstatement. However, if reinstatement
is no longer possible, the employer has the alternative of paying the employee his
separation pay in lieu of reinstatement.
WHEREFORE, the instant petition is DENIED, and the decision of the Court of Appeals of
October 18, 2001 in CA-G.R. SP No. 63577 is AFFIRMED in toto. Costs against
petitioners.
SO ORDERED.
Quisumbing, Carpio, and Azcuna, JJ., concur.
Davide, Jr., C.J., on official leave.
[1]
Penned by Associate Justice Renato C. Dacudao of the Thirteenth Division with the
concurrence of then Associate Justice of the Court of Appeals, now Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court, Romeo J. Callejo, Sr. and Associate Justice Mariano C. Del Castillo.
[2]
Court of Appeals Decision, Rollo, p. 35.
[3]
Annex D, Court of Appeals Rollo, p. 132.
[4]
Annex F, Court of Appeals Rollo, p. 43.
[5]
Annex A, Court of Appeals Rollo, p. 59.
[6]
Court of Appeals Rollo, p. 47.
[7]
Annex B, Court of Appeals Rollo, p. 61.
[8]
Court of Appeals Rollo, pp. 30-31.
[9]
Id., pp. 32-33.
[10]
NLRC Decision, Court of Appeals Rollo, p. 20.
[11]
Id., p. 22.
[12]
Id., p. 23.
[13]
Rollo, p. 43.
[14]
Id., pp. 19-20.
[15]
Philippine Industrial Security Agency Corporation v. Virgilio Dapiton, G.R. No. 127421, 8
December 1999, 320 SCRA 124; see also Delfin Garcia v. National Labor Relations
Commission, G.R. No. 116568, 3 September 1999, 313 SCRA 597; Mark Roche
International v. National Labor Relations Commission, G.R. No. 123825, 31 August 1999,
313 SCRA 356.
[16]
Soliman Security Services, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 143215, 11 July 2002, 384
SCRA 514; see also Ala Mode Garments, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Commission, G.R.
No. 122165, 17 February 1997, 268 SCRA 497; Philippine Advertising Counselors, Inc. v.
National Labor Relations Commission, G.R. No. 120008, 18 October 1996, 263 SCRA 395;
Philippine Japan Active Carbon Corporation v. National Labor Relations Commission, G.R.
No. 83239, 8 March 1989, 171 SCRA 164.
[17]
Philippine-Singapore Transport Services, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Commission,
G.R. No. 95449, 18 August 1997, 277 SCRA 506; San Miguel Brewery Sales v. Ople, G.R.
No. 53615, 8 February 1989, 170 SCRA 25; Caltex Refinery Employees Association v. NLRC,
et al., G.R. No. 102993, 14 July 1995, 246 SCRA 271; Businessday Information Systems
and Services, Inc. v. NLRC, et al., G.R. No. 103575, 5 April 1993, 221 SCRA 9.
[18]
Sime Darby Pilipinas, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Commission, G.R. No. 119205, 15
April 1998, 289 SCRA 86.
[19]
Philippine Airlines, Inc. v. Joselito Pascua, G.R. No. 143258, 15 August 2003, 409 SCRA
195.
[20]
Rollo, p. 23.
[21]
Premiere Development Bank v. National Labor Relations Commission, G.R. No. 114695,
23 July 1998, 293 SCRA 49.
[22]
Globe Telecom, Inc. v. Florendo-Flores, G.R. No. 150092, 27 September 2002, 390
SCRA 201; see also Philippine Industrial Security Agency Corporation v. Virgilio
Dapiton,supra; Delfin Garcia v. National Labor Relations Commission, supra.
[23]
G.R. No. 91298, 22 June 1990, 186 SCRA 724, 730-731.
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