Bisudeco v. Pensumil

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ABUNDIO BARAYOGA and BISUDECO - PHILSUCOR CORFARM WORKERS UNION 13.

13. NLRC - affirmed APTs liability for UNIONs money claims.


(PACIWU CHAP-TPC) V. ASSET PRIVATIZATION TRUST 1. While no EE-ER relationship, at the time of employees illegal dismissal, at the time
NOTE: Privatization Management Office Succeeded APT of the employees illegal dismissal, the assets of BISUDECO had been transferred
to the national government through APT.
FACTS: 2. APT should have treated petitioners claim as a lien on the assets of BISUDECO.
1. Bisudeco - Philsucor Corfarm Workers Union (UNION) is composed of workers of 3. Awarded to petitioners their money claims for underpayment, labor-standard
Bicolandia Sugar Development Corporation (BISUDECO), a sugar plantation mill in benefits, ECOLA, and their backwages. NLRC also ordered that petitioners are not
Himaao, Pili, Camarines Sur. entitled to separation pay because of BISUDECOs bankruptcy.
2. APT is a public trust created under Proclamation No. 50, as amended. It is mandated to 14. On Petition for Certiorari with the CA, it held that APT should not be held liable for
take title to and possession of, conserve, provisionally manage and dispose of non- petitioners claims for unfair labor practice, illegal dismissal, illegal deduction and
performing assets of the Philippine government identified for privatization or disposition. underpayment of wages, as well as other labor-standard benefits plus damages.
3. Pursuant to Section 23 of Proc. No. 50, former President Corazon Aquino issued AO No. 1. APT was not the employer of petitioners, but was impleaded only for possessing
14 identifying certain assets of government institutions that were to be transferred to the BISUDECOs mortgaged properties as trustee and, later, as the highest bidder in the
National Government foreclosure sale of those assets.
4. The financial claim of the Phil. National Bank (PNB) against BISUDECO in the form of a ISSUE/S:
secured loan was transferred. Consequently, by virtue of the trust agreement executed WON Respondent APT is liable for petitioners monetary claims.
between the government and APT, the latter was constituted as trustee over BISUDECOs
account with the PNB. HELD:
5. On Aug. 28, 1988, BISUDECO contracted the services of Philippine Sugar Corporation to
take over the management of the sugar plantation and milling operations unti Aug. 31, WON APT is liable for the claims of petitioners against their former employer (BISUDECO). NO.
1992. Pursuant to AO No. 14, PNBs assets, loans and receivables from its borrowers were
6. Meanwhile, because of BISUDECOs failure to pay its outstanding loan with PNB, its transferred to APT as trustee of the national government.
mortgaged properties were foreclosed and subsequently sold in a public auction to APT Among the liabilities transferred to APT was PNBs financial claim against BISUDECO,
as the sole bidder. not the latters assets and chattel.
7. On July 23, 1991, UNION filed a complaint for unfair labor practice, illegal dismissal, illegal Contrary to petitioners assertions, BISUDECO remained the owner of the mortgaged
deduction and underpayment of wages and other labor standard benefits plus damages properties in August 1988, when the PHILSUCOR undertook the operation and management
against BISUDECO. of the sugar plantation until August 31, 1992, under a so-called Contract of Lease between
8. In the meantime, APTs Board of trustees issued a resolution accepting the offer of Bicol- the two corporations.
Agro-Industrial Cooperative (BAPCI) to buy the sugar plantation and mill. Subsequently, At the time, APT was merely a secured creditor of BISUDECO.
a resolution was passed authorizing the payment of separation benefits to BISUDECOs It was only in April 1991 that APT foreclosed the assets of BISUDECO because of the latters
employees in the event of the companys privatization. continued failure to pay outstanding loan PNB/APT. The properties were sold at public
1. BAPCI purchased the foreclosed assets of BISUDECO from APT and took over its auction to APT as the highest bidder and it was only in Sept. 1992, after the expiration of the
operation under the trade name Peafrancia Sugar Milling (PENSUMIL) lease agreement with PHILSUCOR, when APT took over BISUDECOs assets.
9. UNION filed another complaint which was consolidated to the previous one. It was later In the present case, petitioner-unions members who were not recalled to work by Philsucor
amended, impleading as additional party APT and PENSUMIL. in May 1991 seek to hold APT liable for their monetary claims and allegedly illegal dismissal
10. UNION alleged that when Philsucor initially took over the operations of the company, it and prior to the actual sale of BISUDECO assets to BAPCI, the APT board of trustees had
retained BISUDECOs existing personnel under the same terms and conditions of approved a Resolutio which authorized the payment of separation benefits to the employees
employment. Nonetheless, Philsucor started recalling workers back to work, to the of the corporation in the event of its privatization.
exception of the union members. Management told them that they will be re-hired only if APT CANNOT BE HELD LIABLE TO PAY PETITIONERS MONETARY CLAIMS
they resign from the union. Thereafter, the company started to employ the services of INCLUDING BACKWAGES.
outsiders under the pakyaw system. The duties and liabilities of BISUDECO, including its monetary liabilities to its
11. BISUDECO, PENSUMIL, and APT all interposed the defense of lack of employer- employees, were not all automatically assumed by APT as purchaser of the
employee relationship. foreclosed properties at the auction sale. Any assumption of liability must be
12. Labor Arbiter - APT was ordered to pay UNION the mandated employment benefits. Both specifically and categorically agreed upon.
union and APT elevated the case to the NLRC.
Sundowner Development Corp. v. Drilon - unless expressly assumed, labor contracts An innocent transferee of a business establishment has no liability to the employees
like collective bargaining agreements are not enforceable against the transferee of an of the transferor to continue employing them. Nor is the transferee liable for past
enterprise. Labor contracts are in personam and thus binding only between the parties. unfair labor practices of the previous owner, except, when the liability therefor is
No succession of employment rights and obligations can be said to have taken assumed by the new employer under the contract of sale, or when liability arises
place between the two. Between the employees of BISUDECO and APT, there is no because of the new owners participation in thwarting or defeating the rights of the
privity of contract that would make the latter a substitute employer that should be burdened employees.
with the obligations of the corporation. RULE: The liabilities of the previous owner to its employees are not enforceable against the
To rule otherwise would result in unduly imposing upon APT an unwarranted buyer or transferee, unless
assumption of accounts not contemplated in Proclamation No. 50 or in the Deed of the latter unequivocally assumes them; or
Transfer between the national government and PNB. the sale or transfer was made in bad faith.
Moreover, under the principle of absorption, a bona fide buyer or transferee of all, or APT cannot be held responsible for the monetary claims of petitioners who had been
substantially all, the properties of the seller or transferor is not obliged to absorb the latters dismissed even before it actually took over BISUDECOs assets.
employees. Moreover, it should be remembered that APT merely became a transferee of BISUDECOs
The most that the purchasing company may do, for reasons of public policy and assets for purposes of conservation because of its lien on those assets -- a lien it assumed
social justice, is to give preference of reemployment to the selling companys as assignee of the loan secured by the corporation from PNB. Subsequently, APT, as the
qualified separated employees, who in its judgment are necessary to the continued highest bidder in the auction sale, acquired ownership of the foreclosed properties.
operation of the business establishment.
The national government (in whose trust APT previously held the mortgage credits of RELEVANT TO TRANSFER OF ASSETS - ART. 1101 of the LABOR CODE
BISUDECO) is not the employer of petitioner-unions members, who had been dismissed,
and under existing law and jurisprudence, there is no reason to expect any kind of bailout Under Articles 2241 and 2242 of the Civil Code, a mortgage credit is a special preferred
by the national government. credit that enjoys preference with respect to a specific/determinate property of the debtor.
Even the NLRC found that no employer-employee relationship existed between APT and On the other hand, the workers preference under Article 110 of the Labor Code is an ordinary
petitioners. preferred credit. While this provision raises the workers money claim to first priority in the
- order of preference established under Article 2244 of the Civil Code, the claim has no
Petitioners cited in their contention, Central Azucarera del Danao v. Court of Appeals preference over special preferred credits.
wherein SC supposedly ruled that the "sale of a business of a going concern does not ipso Thus, the right of employees to be paid benefits due them from the properties of their
facto terminate the employer-employee relations insofar as the successor-employer is employer cannot have any preference over the latters mortgage credit.
concerned, and that change of ownership or management of an establishment or company In other words, being a mortgage credit, APTs lien on BISUDECOs mortgaged assets
is not one of the just causes provided by law for termination of employment. is a special preferred lien that must be satisfied first before the claims of the workers.
The decision in the case showed that it does not contain the words quoted by counsel
for petitioners. DBP v. NLRC - A preference applies only to claims which do not attach to specific
Counsel was admonished for his bounden duty as an officer of the Court was to properties. A lien creates a charge on a particular property. The right of first preference
refrain from misquoting or misrepresenting the text of its decisions. as regards unpaid wages recognized by Article 110 does not constitute a lien on the
On the Contrary, SC ruled in the said case that as an exercise of management property of the insolvent debtor in favor of workers. It is but a preference of credit in their
prerogatice, the employer may merge or considlidate his business with another, or favor, a preference in application. It is a method adopted to determine and specify the
sell or dispose all or substantially all of its assets and properties which may bring order in which credits should be paid in the final distribution of the proceeds of the
about dismissal or termination of its employees in the process. Such dismissal or insolvents assets. It is a right to a first preference in the discharge of the funds of the
termination should not however be interpreted in such a manner as to permit the judgment debtor.
employer to escape payment of termination pay.
In a number of cases, the rule has been laid down that the sale or disposition must be Furthermore, workers claims for unpaid wages and monetary benefits cannot be paid outside
motivated by good faith as an element of exemption from liability. of a bankruptcy or judicial liquidation proceedings against the employer

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"Article 110. Workers preference in case of bankruptcy. In the event of bankruptcy or liquidation of the
employers business, his workers shall enjoy first preference as regards their unpaid wages and other
monetary claims shall be paid in full before the claims of the Government and other creditors may be paid."
Application of Article 110 of the Labor Code is contingent upon the institution of those
proceedings, during which all creditors are convened, their claims ascertained and inventoried,
and their preferences determined.

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