A M Oreta Vs NLRC Digest
A M Oreta Vs NLRC Digest
A M Oreta Vs NLRC Digest
NLRC
G.R. No. 74004
August 10, 1989
FACTS:
Private respondent Grulla was engaged by Engineering
Construction and Industrial Development Company (ENDECO)
through A.M. Oreta and Co., Inc., as a carpenter in its projects in
Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. The contract of employment, which was
entered into June 11, 1980 was for a period of twelve (12) months.
On October 9, 1980, he received a notice of termination of
his employment.
He filed a complaint for illegal dismissal.
Petitioner contends that the respondent Grulla was validly
dismissed because the latter was still a probationary employee;
and that his dismissal was justified on the basis of his
unsatisfactory performance of his job during the probationary
period.
ISSUES:
Whether respondent Grulla was illegaly terminated by the
petitioner?
HELD:
Yes. A perusal of the employment contract reveals that
although the period of employment of respondent Grulla is twelve
(12) months, the contract is renewable subject to future
agreements of the parties. It is clear from the employment contract
that the respondent Grulla was hired by the company as a regular
employee and not just mere probationary employee. Also, nowhere
in the employment contract executed between petitioner company
and respondent Grulla is there a stipulation that the latter shall
undergo a probationary period for three months before he can
qualify as a regular employee.
Respondent Grulla was not, in any manner, notified of the
charges against him before he was outrightly dismissed. Neither
was any hearing or investigation conducted by the company to give
the respondent a chance to be heard concerning the alleged
unsatisfactory performance of his work.
CHUA V CA
440 SCRA 121
October 6, 2004
FACTS
- On 20 August 1985, private respondents Andres Paguio, Pablo
Canale, Ruel Pangan, Aurelio Paguio, Rolando Trinidad, Romeo
Tapang and Carlos Maliwat (hereinafter referred to as respondents)
filed a Petition with the SSC for SSS coverage and contributions
against petitioner Reynaldo Chua, owner of Prime Mover
Construction Development, claiming that they were all regular
employees of the petitioner in his construction business. Private
respondents alleged that petitioner dismissed all of them without
justifiable grounds and without notice to them and to the then
Ministry of Labor and Employment. They further alleged that
petitioner did not report them to the SSS for compulsory coverage
in flagrant violation of the Social Security Act.
- On the other hand, the petitioner claimed that private
respondents were project employees, whose periods of
employment were terminated upon completion of the project. Thus,
he claimed, no employer-employee relation existed between the
parties. There being no employer-employee relationship, private
respondents are not entitled to coverage under the Social Security
Act. Moreover, petitioner invokes the defense of good faith, or his
honest belief that project employees are not regular employees
under Article 280 of the Labor Code. The SSC and CA ruled in favor
of the respondents.
ISSUE
WON private respondents were regular employees of the petitioner
HELD
YES. Elements of the control test: (a) selection and engagement of
the employee; (b) payment of wages; (c) the power of dismissal;
and (d) the power of control with regard to the means and methods
by which the work is to be accomplished, with the power of control
Philippines (P.D. 442) had not yet been promulgated. At that time,
the validity of term employment was impliedly recognized by the
Termination Pay Law, R.A. 1052, as amended by R.A. 1787. Prior,
thereto, it was the Code of Commerce (Article 302) which governed
employment without a fixed period, and also implicitly
acknowledged the propriety of employment with a fixed period. The
Civil Code of the Philippines, which was approved on June 18, 1949
and became effective on August 30,1950, itself deals with
obligations with a period. No prohibition against term-or fixedperiod employment is contained in any of its articles or is otherwise
deducible therefrom.
It is plain then that when the employment contract was signed
between Brent School and Alegre, it was perfectly legitimate for
them to include in it a stipulation fixing the duration thereof
Stipulations for a term were explicitly recognized as valid by this
Court.
The status of legitimacy continued to be enjoyed by fixed-period
employment contracts under the Labor Code (PD 442), which went
into effect on November 1, 1974. The Code contained explicit
references to fixed period employment, or employment with a fixed
or definite period. Nevertheless, obscuration of the principle of
licitness of term employment began to take place at about this
time.
Article 320 originally stated that the "termination of employment of
probationary employees and those employed WITH A FIXED PERIOD
shall be subject to such regulations as the Secretary of Labor may
prescribe." Article 321 prescribed the just causes for which an
employer could terminate "an employment without a definite
period." And Article 319 undertook to define "employment without
a fixed period" in the following manner: where the employee has
been engaged to perform activities which are usually necessary or
desirable in the usual business or trade of the employer, except
where the employment has been fixed for a specific project or
undertaking the completion or termination of which has been
determined at the time of the engagement of the employee or
where the work or service to be performed is seasonal in nature
and the employment is for the duration of the season.
Subsequently, the foregoing articles regarding employment with "a
definite period" and "regular" employment were amended by
Presidential Decree No. 850, effective December 16, 1975.
PEOPLE V SAGAYAGA
423 SCRA 468
Facts: The appellant was charged with large scale illegal
recruitment. Sometime in October 1997, Elmer Janer went to the
office of Alvis Placement Service Corporation to apply for overseas
employment as factory worker in Taiwan. Appellant Leticia
Sagayaga, after personally receiving Elmers application, required
him to submit the necessary documents. Appellant further asked
Elmer to pay seventy-five thousand pesos (P75,000.00) as
placement fee. Elmer paid the said fee to appellant in three (3)
installments. All the payments were made inside Alvis Placement
Agency.Elmer also had his medical examination at the Angeles
Medical Clinic, the result of which confirmed that he was fit to
work. Thereafter, he was told to wait for the arrival of the
employer. After seven (7) months, no employer arrived. Tired of
waiting, Elmer demanded that he be refunded of his money (Id.).
Despite appellants promises to pay, Elmer was not refunded of his
money.
Elmer asked appellant for a promissory note, which
appellant executed, promising to pay Elmer seventy-five thousand
(P75,000.00) on May 6, 1998 (pp. 10 and 11, TSN, September 7,
1999). In said promissory note, appellant designated herself as
the assistant general manager of the placement agency.
When appellant failed to refund the amount to Elmer on the date
stated in the promissory note, the latter went to the Philippine
Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) and filed a sworn
complaint against appellant. Elmer Ramos and Eric Farol filed their
complaint based on basically similar facts.
The appellant avers that she is not criminally liable for the
crime charged because the prosecution failed to prove that she had
a direct or actual control, management or direction of the business
cause and due process. The Labor Arbiter ruled that Solon was a
regular employee and could only be removed for cause. NLRC
affirmed with only a modification as to the computation of 13 th
month pay. CA also affirmed.
ISSUE
Whether the respondent is a regular employee or not.
Facts:
HELD
YES. The test to determine whether employment is regular or not is
the reasonable connection between the particular activity
performed by the employee in relation to the usual business or
trade of the employer. Also, if the employee has been performing
the job for at least one year, even if the performance is not
continuous or merely intermittent, the law deems the repeated and
continuing need for its performance as sufficient evidence of the
necessity, if not indispensability of that activity to the business. (De
Leon v NLRC)
While length of time may not be the controlling test for
project employment, it is vital in determining if the employee was
hired for a specific undertaking or tasked to perform functions vital,
necessary and indispensable to the usual business or trade of the
employer. Here, private respondent had been a project employee
several times over. His employment ceased to be coterminous with
specific projects when he was repeatedly re-hired due to the
demands of petitioners business.
Disposition
assailed Decision dated October 30, 2001 and
the Resolution dated February 28, 2002 of CA are AFFIRMED with
MODIFICATION. The petitioner id hereby ORDERED to (1)reinstate
the respondent with no loss of seniority rights and other privileges;
and (2) pay respondent his back wages, 13 th month pay for the year
1998 and Service Incentive Leave Pay computed from the date of
his illegal dismissal up to the date of his actual reinstatement.
of
Sugarcane
Issue:
Whether the hacienda workers are regular or seasonal workers
worthy of the benefits granted by law to regular employees?
Philippine Tobacco v. NLRC, 300 SCRA 37
G.R. No. 118475.
DE LEON, JR., J.:
Ruling:
The petition is denied. The hacienda workers are regular employees
regardless of the off-milling period. The Mercado doctrine does not
apply in this case.
Contrary to the Mercado case that provides that farm workers in
haciendas are work in a definite period of time therefore the
relationship with the owner is terminated, the herein case presents
a different factual condition as the enormity of the size of the sugar
hacienda of petitioner, with an area of two hundred thirty-six (236)
hectares, simply do not allow for private respondents to render
work only for a definite period.
The petitioners did not present any evidence that the respondents
were required to perform certain phases of agricultural work for a
definite period of time. Although the petitioners assert that the
respondents
made
their
services
available
to
the
neighboring haciendas, the records do not, however, support such
assertion. The primary standard for determining regular
employment is the reasonable connection between the particular
activity performed by the employee in relation to the usual trade or
business of the employer. There is no doubt that the respondents
were performing work necessary and desirable in the usual trade or
business of an employer. Hence, they can properly be classified as
regular employees.
Facts:
Private respondent La Union Tobacco Redrying Corporation
(LUTORCO), which is owned by private respondent See Lin Chan, is
engaged in the business of buying, selling, redrying and processing
of tobacco leaves and its by-products. Tobacco season starts
sometime in October of every year. Farmers germinate their seeds
in plots until they are ready for replanting in November. The
harvest season starts in mid-February. Then, the farmers sell the
harvested tobacco leaves to redrying plants or do the redrying
themselves. The redrying plant of LUTORCO receives tobacco for
redrying at the end of February and starts redrying in March until
August or September.
Petitioners have been under the employ of LUTORCO for several
years until their employment with LUTORCO was abruptly
interrupted sometime in March 1993 when Compania General de
Tabaccos de Filipinas (also known as TABACALERA) took over
LUTORCOs tobacco operations. New signboards were posted
indicating a change of ownership and petitioners were then asked
by LUTORCO to file their respective applications for employment
with TABACALERA. Petitioners were caught unaware of the sudden
change of ownership and its effect on the status of their
employment, though it was alleged that TABACALERA would
assume and respect the seniority rights of the petitioners.
Because of this, the disgruntled employees instituted before the
NLRC Regional Arbitration a complaint for separation pay against
private respondent LUTORCO on the ground that there was a
termination of their employment due to the closure of LUTORCO as
a result of the sale and turnover to TABACALERA. Other equally
affected employees filed two additional complaints, also for
separation pay, which were consolidated with the first complaint.
off-season are not separated from service in said period, but are
merely considered on leave until re-employed.
Private respondents reliance on the case of Mercardo v. NLRC is
misplaced considering that since in said case of Mercado, although
the respondent company therein consistently availed of the
services of the petitioners therein from year to year, it was clear
that petitioners therein were not in respondent companys regular
employ. Petitioners therein performed different phases of
agricultural work in a given year. However, during that period, they
were free to contract their services to work for other farm owners,
as in fact they did. Thus, the Court ruled in that case that their
employment would naturally end upon the completion of each
project or phase of farm work for which they have been contracted.
People v. Baytic
398 SCRA 18
BELLOSILLO, J.:
Facts:
On 24 September 1998 Kennedy Hapones accompanied by accused
Alex Baytic went to the house of his aunt Ofelia in Quezon City.
There they found Ofelia et al. together with Millie Passi, Yolanda
Barrios and Elvira Nacario. Accused Alex Baytic told the girls that
he was looking for workers willing to work in Italy as utility
personnel. He explained that interested applicants should give him
money for processing of their medical certificate, certificate of
employment and other travel documents. Since the offer appeared
to be a good opportunity to work abroad, Ofelia Bongbonga on the
same day gave the accused P3,500.00, followed by Millie Passi
with P4,000.00 the next day, and Nolie Bongbonga with P4,000.00
on 5 October as their placement fees. All these transactions were
evidenced by receipts issued by accused Alex Baytic.
According to private complainant, accused Baytic promised her and
her two (2) co-applicants an interview by his cousin, a doctor from
Italy, on 7 October 1998 at the Corinthian Gardens. However, on
the appointed date of their interview, the accused failed to appear.
Ofelia, Millie and Nolie frantically searched for him but he was
nowhere to be found. Ofelia further testified that sometime in
January 1999 they heard over the radio that accused Baytic was
arrested in Pasig City for illegal recruitment activities. Upon inquiry
from the radio station, she learned that the accused was already
detained at the Pasig Provincial Jail, so she followed him there.
Accused Alex Baytic, testifying in his defense, not only denied the
accusations against him but also insisted that it was actually
Kennedy Hapones, a new acquaintance, who was the illegal
recruiter. He recounted that sometime in November 1999, he went
to the house of Hapones who was trying to recruit him for
deployment abroad. According to the accused, Hapones told him to
prepare P250,000.00 although the former eventually accepted an
initial advance payment of P4,500.00. He again met Hapones the
following month when the latter told him and a group of other
applicants, including Ofelia Bongbonga, that their requirements
were ready. That was the last time he saw Hapones who, he later
learned, had already left for abroad. He was suspected of being in
cahoots with Hapones because whenever the latter and the
applicants talked, Hapones would always point at him, although he
never had the opportunity to know what Hapones had actually said
to them.
The trial court opined that all the essential requisites of the crime
of illegal recruitment in large scale as defined in Art. 13, par. (b), of
the Labor Code2 were present. Accused-appellant now prays that
the Court to take a second hard look at his conviction in view of the
alleged failure of the prosecution to prove his guilt beyond
reasonable doubt. He takes exception to the finding of the trial
court that all the elements of the crime of illegal recruitment in
large scale are present.
Respondent argues that the first element, i.e., the accused engages
in the recruitment and placement of workers, defined under Art. 13,
or in any prohibited activities under Art. 34, of the Labor Code, is
not present because he did not solicit any money from the
complainants nor did he promise them employment in Italy. The
truth of the matter, according to him, is that he himself was
victimized by Kennedy Hapones, the real illegal recruiter. He
explained that when Hapones could not be contacted, the
complainants vented their anger towards him, being Hapones
constant companion.
Issue:
Whether the elements of illegal recruitment were absent since the
accused did not solicit money from the complainants nor did he
promise them employment in Italy?
Ruling:
No, all the elements of illegal recruitment were present. Illegal
recruitment is committed when two (2) elements concur. First, the
offender has no valid license or authority required by law to enable
one to engage lawfully in recruitment and placement of workers.
Second, he or she undertakes either any activity within the
meaning of "recruitment and placement" defined under Art. 13, par.
(b), or any prohibited practices enumerated under Art. 34 of the
Labor Code. In case of illegal recruitment in large scale, a third
element is added: that the accused commits the acts against three
or more persons, individually or as a group.
The first element is present. POEA representative Flordeliza
Cabusao presented in evidence a certification from one
Hermogenes Mateo, Director III, Licensing Branch, showing that
accused-appellant was neither licensed nor authorized to recruit
workers for overseas employment.5
The second element is likewise present. Accused-appellant is
deemed engaged in recruitment and placement under Art. 13, par.
(b), of the Labor Code when he made representations to each of
the complainants that he could send them to Italy for employment
as utility personnel. His promises and misrepresentations gave the
complainants the distinct impression that he had the authority to
engage in recruitment, thus enabling him to collect from them
various amounts for recruitment and placement fees without
license or authority to do so.
ISSUE
WON petitioner was legally dismissed, as he was a probationary employee
HELD
YES
- Petitioner was hired by Shemberg on May 27, 1996 and was terminated on Sept. 14, 1996. A281 LC provides:
Probationary employment shall not exceed six (6) months from the date the employee started working , unless it is
covered in apprenticeship[ agreement stipulating a longer period. The services of an employee who has been
engaged on a probationary basis may be terminated for a just cause or when he fails to qualify as a regular
employee in accordance with reasonable standards, made known by the employer to the employee at the time of
his engagement. An employee who is allowed to work after a probationary period shall be considered a regular
employee.
- The evidence on record clearly shows that petitioner was well informed of the standards to be met before he could
qualify as a regular employee. Attached to his appointment papers was a job description of sales manager.
- A probationary employee is one who, for a given period of time, is under observation or evaluation to determine
whether or not he is qualified for permanent employment. During the probationary period, the employer is given the
opportunity to observe the skill, competence and attitude of the employee while the latter seeks to prove to the
employer that he has the qualifications to meet the reasonable standards for permanent employment. The length of
time is immaterial in determining the correlative rights of both the employer and the employee in dealing with each
other during this period.
- There is no dispute that petitioner, as a probationary employee enjoyed only a temporary employment status. This
meant that he was terminable anytime, permanent employment not having been attained in the mean time. The
employer could well decide he no longer needed the probationary employees service or hi performance fell short of
expectation. As long as the termination was made before the expiration of the 6-month probationary period, the
employer was well within his rights to sever the employer-employee relationship. A contrary interpretation would
defect the clear meaning of the term probationary. In this case, Shemberg had good reason to terminate petitioners
employment. Petitioner was holding a managerial position in which he was tasked to perform key functions in
accordance with an exacting work ethic. His position required the full trust and confidence of his employer. While
petitioner could exercise some discretion, this obviously did not cover acts for his own personal benefit. He committed
a transgression which betrayed the trust and confidence of his employer reimbursing his familys personal travel
expenses out of company funds.
Disposition Petition is DISMISSED. The decision of the CA is affirmed.
- In October 1996, the respondents filed separate complaints for illegal dismissal, reinstatement, backwages,
damages and attorneys fees against the petitioners. The complaints were later consolidated. On March 30, 1999,
after due proceedings, the Labor Arbiter rendered a decision in favor of the respondents, which NLRC and the CA
affirmed.
- On appeal, the petitioners submit that the respondents are not regular employees. They aver that it is of no moment
that the respondents have rendered service for more than a year since they were covered by the five-month individual
contracts to which they duly acquiesced. The petitioners contend that they were free to terminate the services of the
respondents at the expiration of their individual contracts. The petitioners maintain that, in doing so, they merely
implemented the terms of the contracts.
- The petitioners assert that the respondents contracts of employment were not intended to circumvent security of
tenure. They point out that the respondents knowingly and voluntarily agreed to sign the contracts without the
petitioners having exercised any undue advantage over them. Moreover, there is no evidence showing that the
petitioners exerted moral dominance on the respondents.[\
ISSUE
WON the respondent employees of the corporation are regular employees and therefore their termination for causes
outside of the Labor Code is patently illegal
HELD
YES
Ratio An employee shall be deemed to be of regular status when he has been performing a job for at least one year
even if the performance is not continuous and merely intermittent.
Reasoning
- In any case, we find that the CA, the NLRC and the Labor Arbiter correctly categorized the respondents as regular
employees of the petitioner company. In Abasolo v. National Labor Relations Commission, the Court reiterated the
test in determining whether one is a regular employee:
- The primary standard, therefore, of determining regular employment is the reasonable connection between
the particular activity performed by the employee in relation to the usual trade or business of the employer.
The test is whether the former is usually necessary or desirable in the usual business or trade of the
employer. The connection can be determined by considering the nature of work performed and its relation to
the scheme of the particular business or trade in its entirety. Also, if the employee has been performing the
job for at least a year, even if the performance is not continuous and merely intermittent, the law deems
repeated and continuing need for its performance as sufficient evidence of the necessity if not
indispensability of that activity to the business. Hence, the employment is considered regular, but only with
respect to such activity and while such activity exists.
- It is obvious that the said five-month contract of employment was used by petitioners as a convenient subterfuge to
prevent private respondents from becoming regular employees. Such contractual arrangement should be struck down
or disregarded as contrary to public policy or morals. To uphold the same would, in effect, permit petitioners to avoid
hiring permanent or regular employees by simply hiring them on a temporary or casual basis, thereby violating the
employees security of tenure in their jobs. Petitioners act of repeatedly and continuously hiring private respondents
in a span of 3 to 5 years to do the same kind of work negates their contention that private respondents were hired
for a specific project or undertaking only.
- Further, factual findings of labor officials who are deemed to have acquired expertise in matters within their
respective jurisdiction are generally accorded not only respect but even finality, and bind us when supported by
substantial evidence.
Disposition petition is DENIED DUE COURSE. The Decision of the Court of Appeals is AFFIRMED.