Equitable Vs NRLC
Equitable Vs NRLC
Equitable Vs NRLC
VITUG, J.:
FACTS:
Private respondent Atty. Sadac was appointed as Vice-President for the Legal Department and General Counsel
of petitioner bank by its President, with a monthly salary of P8,000.00, plus allowances and bonuses.
The turning point in the relationship among the parties surfaced, when, nine lawyers of the bank's Legal
Department, who were all under private respondent, addressed a letter-petition accusing private respondent of abusive
conduct, inefficiency, mismanagement, ineffectiveness and indecisiveness.
Convinced that reconciliation was out of the question, the bank issued a memorandum to the private respondent
stating among others, that it has chosen the more compassionate option of waiting for your voluntary resignation from
your employ with the Bank.
Private respondent again made requests for a full hearing with the board but was unheeded. This prompt the
private respondent to filed with the Manila arbitration branch of the NLRC, a complaint, against herein petitioners for illegal
dismissal and damages.
LA RULING: The Labor Arbiter was convinced that the relationship between petitioner bank and private respondent was
one of lawyer-client based on the functions of the latter which "only a lawyer with highly trained legal mind, can effectively
discharge.
NLRC RULING: It ruled that private respondent was denied the right to due process with the bank's failure to observe the
twin requirements of notice and hearing.
ISSUE: W/N there is an ER-EE relationship between Equitable bank and respondent Sadac.
HELD: YES.
In determining the existence of an employer-employee relationship, the following elements are considered: (1) the
selection and engagement of the employee; (2) the payment of wages; (3) the power of dismissal, and (4) the power to
control the employee's conduct, with the control test generally assuming primacy in the overall consideration. The power
of control refers to the existence of the power and not necessarily to the actual exercise thereof. It is not essential, in other
words, for the employer to actually supervise the performance of duties of the employee; it is enough that the former has
the right to wield the power.
The NLRC, in the instant case, based its finding that there existed an employer-employee relationship between
petitioner bank and private respondent on these factual settings:
He was not hired as lawyer on a retainership basis but as an officer of the bank.
In addition to his duties as Vice President of the bank, the complainant's duties and responsibilities were so
defined as to prove that he was a bank officer working under the supervision of the President and the Board of
Directors of the respondent bank.
The complainant was given the usual payslips to evidence his monthly gross compensation. The respondent bank, as
employer, withheld taxes due to the Bureau of Internal Revenue from the complainant's salary as employee.
In sum, the treatment with Atty. Sadac is not different from the banks employees and officers.
As held in Hydro Resources case:
A lawyer, like any other professional, may very well be an employee of a private corporation or even of the
government. It is not unusual for a big corporation to hire a staff of lawyers as its in-house counsel, pay them regular
salaries, rank them in its table of organization, and otherwise treat them like its other officers and employees.
As NLRC ruled, private respondent was denied the right to due process with the bank's failure to observe the twin
requirements of notice and hearing. The memorandum could not have been a substitute for notice because it did not
manifest petitioners' intention to dismiss him from employment, and neither the meeting between private respondent and
the complaining lawyers nor those held between private respondent and petitioner Banico could be considered the
"investigations" which private respondent had consistently sought.
Decision of NLRC is AFFIRMED with the following MODIFICATIONS: That private respondent shall be entitled to
backwages from termination of employment until turning sixty (60) years of age.