Ludo & Luym Corporation Vs Saordino G.R. No. 140960 January 20, 2003
Ludo & Luym Corporation Vs Saordino G.R. No. 140960 January 20, 2003
Ludo & Luym Corporation Vs Saordino G.R. No. 140960 January 20, 2003
SUPREME COURT
Manila
SECOND DIVISION
G.R. No. 140960
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, this Voluntary Arbitrator finds the claims of
the complainants meritorious and so hold that:
a. the 214 complainants, as listed in the Annex A, shall be considered regular
employees of the respondents six (6) months from the first day of service at
CLAS;
b. the said complainants, being entitled to the CBA benefits during the regular
employment, are awarded a) sick leave, b) vacation leave & c) annual wage
and salary increases during such period in the amount of FIVE MILLION
SEVEN HUNDRED SEVEN THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED SIXTY ONE
PESOS AND SIXTY ONE CENTAVOS (P5,707,261.61) as computed in
"Annex A";
c. the respondents shall pay attorneys fees of ten (10) percent of the total
award;
d. an interest of twelve (12) percent per annum or one (1) percent per month
shall be imposed to the award from the date of promulgation until fully paid if
only to speed up the payment of these long over due CBA benefits deprived
of the complaining workers.
Accordingly, all separation and/or retirement benefits shall be construed from the
date of regularization aforementioned subject only to the appropriate government
laws and other social legislation.
SO ORDERED.3
In due time, LUDO filed a motion for reconsideration, which was denied. On appeal, the Court of
Appeals affirmed in toto the decision of the Voluntary Arbitrator, thus:
WHEREFORE, finding no reversible error committed by respondent voluntary
arbitrator, the instant petition is hereby DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.4
Hence this petition. Before us, petitioner raises the following issues:
I
WHETHER OR NOT BENEFITS CONSISTING OF SALARY INCREASES,
VACATION LEAVE AND SICK LEAVE BENEFITS FOR THE YEARS 1977 TO 1987
ARE ALREADY BARRED BY PRESCRIPTION WHEN PRIVATE RESPONDENTS
FILED THEIR CASE IN JANUARY 1995;
II
WHETHER OR NOT A VOLUNTARY ARBITRATOR CAN AWARD BENEFITS NOT
CLAIMED IN THE SUBMISSION AGREEMENT.5
Petitioner contends that the appellate court gravely erred when it upheld the award of benefits which
were beyond the terms of submission agreement. Petitioner asserts that the arbitrator must confine
its adjudication to those issues submitted by the parties for arbitration, which in this case is the sole
issue of the date of regularization of the workers. Hence, the award of benefits by the arbitrator was
done in excess of jurisdiction.6
Respondents, for their part, aver that the three-year prescriptive period is reckoned only from the
time the obligor declares his refusal to comply with his obligation in clear and unequivocal terms. In
this case, respondents maintain that LUDO merely promised to review the company records in
response to respondents demand for adjustment in the date of their regularization without making a
categorical statement of refusal.7 On the matter of the benefits, respondents argue that the arbitrator
is empowered to award the assailed benefits because notwithstanding the sole issue of the date of
regularization, standard companion issues on reliefs and remedies are deemed incorporated.
Otherwise, the whole arbitration process would be rendered purely academic and the law creating it
inutile.8
The jurisdiction of Voluntary Arbitrator or Panel of Voluntary Arbitrators and Labor Arbiters is clearly
defined and specifically delineated in the Labor Code. The pertinent provisions of the Labor Code,
read:
Art. 217. Jurisdiction of Labor Arbiters and the Commission. --- (a) Except as
otherwise provided under this Code the Labor Arbiters shall have original and
exclusive jurisdiction to hear and decide, within thirty (30) calendar days after the
submission of the case by the parties for decision without extension, even in the
absence of stenographic notes, the following cases involving all workers, whether
agricultural or non-agricultural:
1. Unfair labor practice cases:
2. Termination disputes;
3. If accompanied with a claim for reinstatement, those cases that workers
may file involving wage, rates of pay, hours of work and other terms and
conditions of employment;
4. Claims for actual, moral, exemplary and other forms of damages arising
from the employer-employee relations;
xxx
Art. 261. Jurisdiction of Voluntary Arbitrators or panel of Voluntary Arbitrators. The
Voluntary Arbitrator or panel of Voluntary Arbitrators shall have original and exclusive
jurisdiction to hear and decide all unresolved grievances arising from the
interpretation or implementation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement and those
arising from the interpretation or enforcement of company personnel policies referred
to in the immediately preceding article. Accordingly, violations of a Collective
Bargaining Agreement, except those which are gross in character, shall no longer be
treated as unfair labor practice and shall be resolved as grievances under the
Collective Bargaining Agreement. For purposes of this article, gross violations of
Collective Bargaining Agreement shall mean flagrant and/or malicious refusal to
comply with the economic provisions of such agreement.
The Commission, its Regional Offices and the Regional Directors of the Department
of Labor and Employment shall not entertain disputes, grievances or matters under
the exclusive and original jurisdiction of the Voluntary Arbitrator or panel of Voluntary
Arbitrators and shall immediately dispose and refer the same to the Grievance
Machinery or Voluntary Arbitration provided in the Collective Bargaining Agreement.
Art. 262. Jurisdiction over other labor disputes. The Voluntary Arbitrator or panel of
Voluntary Arbitrators, upon agreement of the parties, shall also hear and decide all
other labor disputes including unfair labor practices and bargaining deadlocks."
In construing the above provisions, we held in San Jose vs. NLRC, 9 that the jurisdiction of the Labor
Arbiter and the Voluntary Arbitrator or Panel of Voluntary Arbitrators over the cases enumerated in
the Labor Code, Articles 217, 261 and 262, can possibly include money claims in one form or
another.10 Comparatively, in Reformist Union of R.B. Liner, Inc. vs. NLRC,11 compulsory arbitration
has been defined both as "the process of settlement of labor disputes by a government agency
which has the authority to investigate and to make an award which is binding on all the parties, and
as a mode of arbitration where the parties are compelled to accept the resolution of their dispute
through arbitration by a third party (emphasis supplied)."12 While a voluntary arbitrator is not part of
the governmental unit or labor departments personnel, said arbitrator renders arbitration services
provided for under labor laws.
Generally, the arbitrator is expected to decide only those questions expressly delineated by the
submission agreement. Nevertheless, the arbitrator can assume that he has the necessary power to
make a final settlement since arbitration is the final resort for the adjudication of disputes. 13 The
succinct reasoning enunciated by the CA in support of its holding, that the Voluntary Arbitrator in a
labor controversy has jurisdiction to render the questioned arbitral awards, deserves our
concurrence, thus:
In general, the arbitrator is expected to decide those questions expressly stated and
limited in the submission agreement. However, since arbitration is the final resort for
the adjudication of disputes, the arbitrator can assume that he has the power to
make a final settlement. Thus, assuming that the submission empowers the arbitrator
to decide whether an employee was discharged for just cause, the arbitrator in this
instance can reasonable assume that his powers extended beyond giving a yes-orno answer and included the power to reinstate him with or without back pay.
In one case, the Supreme Court stressed that "xxx the Voluntary Arbitrator had
plenary jurisdiction and authority to interpret the agreement to arbitrate and to
determine the scope of his own authority subject only, in a proper case, to the
certiorari jurisdiction of this Court. The Arbitrator, as already indicated, viewed his
authority as embracing not merely the determination of the abstract question of
whether or not a performance bonus was to be granted but also, in the affirmative
case, the amount thereof.
By the same token, the issue of regularization should be viewed as two-tiered issue.
While the submission agreement mentioned only the determination of the date or
regularization, law and jurisprudence give the voluntary arbitrator enough leeway of
authority as well as adequate prerogative to accomplish the reason for which the law
on voluntary arbitration was created speedy labor justice. It bears stressing that the
underlying reason why this case arose is to settle, once and for all, the ultimate
question of whether respondent employees are entitled to higher benefits. To require
them to file another action for payment of such benefits would certainly undermine
labor proceedings and contravene the constitutional mandate providing full protection
to labor.14
As regards petitioners contention that the money claim in this case is barred by prescription, we
hold that this contention is without merit. So is petitioners stance that the benefits claimed by the
respondents, i.e., sick leave, vacation leave and 13th-month pay, had already prescribed,
considering the three-year period for the institution of monetary claims. 15 Such determination is a
question of fact which must be ascertained based on the evidence, both oral and documentary,
presented by the parties before the Voluntary Arbitrator. In this case, the Voluntary Arbitrator found
that prescription has not as yet set in to bar the respondents claims for the monetary benefits
awarded to them. Basic is the rule that findings of fact of administrative and quasi-judicial bodies,
which have acquired expertise because their jurisdiction is confined to specific matters, are generally
accorded not only great respect but even finality.16 Here, the Voluntary Arbitrator received the
evidence of the parties first-hand. No compelling reason has been shown for us to diverge from the
findings of the Voluntary Arbitrator, especially since the appellate court affirmed his findings, that it
took some time for respondent employees to ventilate their claims because of the repeated
assurances made by the petitioner that it would review the company records and determine
therefrom the validity of the claims, without expressing a categorical denial of their claims. As
elucidated by the Voluntary Arbitrator:
The respondents had raised prescription as defense. The controlling law, as ruled by
the High Court, is:
"The cause of action accrues until the party obligated refuses xxx to comply with his
duty. Being warded off by promises, the workers not having decided to assert [their]
right[s], [their] causes of action had not accrued" (Citation omitted.)
Since the parties had continued their negotiations even after the matter was raised
before the Grievance Procedure and the voluntary arbitration, the respondents had
not refused to comply with their duty. They just wanted the complainants to present
some proofs. The complainants cause of action had not therefore accrued yet.
Besides, in the earlier voluntary arbitration case aforementioned involving exactly the
same issue and employees similarly situated as the complainants, the same defense
was raised and dismissed by Honorable Thelma Jordan, Voluntary Arbitrator.
In fact, the respondents promised to correct their length of service and grant them
the back CBA benefits if the complainants can prove they are entitled rendered the
former in estoppel, barring them from raising the defense of laches or prescription. To
hold otherwise amounts to rewarding the respondents for their duplicitous
representation and abet them in a dishonest scheme against their workers. 17
Indeed, as the Court of Appeals concluded, under the equitable principle of estoppel, it will be the
height of injustice if we will brush aside the employees claims on a mere technicality, especially
when it is petitioners own action that prevented them from interposing the claims within the
prescribed period.
WHEREFORE, the petition is denied. The appealed decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP
No. 44341 and the resolution denying petitioners motion for reconsideration, are AFFIRMED. Costs
against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
Footnotes
Rollo, pp. 29-34. Penned by Associate Justice Angelina Sandoval Gutierrez, former
Associate Justice of the CA.
1
Id. at 60-61.
Id. at 63.
Id. at 33.
Id. at 10-11.
Id. at 16.
Id. at 97-98.
Id. at 99-101.
10
11
12
Rollo, pp. 31-32 citing C.A. Azucena, The Labor Code, With Comments and Cases,
1993 Ed., p. 283 and Sime Darby Pilipinas, Inc. vs. Magsalin, G.R. No. 90426, 180
SCRA 177, 183 (1989).
13
14
Ibid.
Labor Code, ART. 291. Money claims. All money claims arising from employeremployee relation accruing during the effectivity of this Code shall be filed within
three (3) years from the time that cause of action accrues; otherwise they shall be
forever barred.
15
xxx
16
17
Conti vs. NLRC, G.R. No. 119253, 271 SCRA 114, 122 (1997).