ROOS Industrial Const. Vs NLRC PDF
ROOS Industrial Const. Vs NLRC PDF
ROOS Industrial Const. Vs NLRC PDF
QUISUMBING, J.,
Chairperson,
CARPIO,
- versus - CARPIO MORALES,
TINGA, and
VELASCO, JR., JJ.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS
COMMISSION and JOSE MARTILLOS,
Respondents. Promulgated:
February 4, 2008
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DECISION
TINGA, J.:
In this Petition for Review on Certiorari[1] under Rule 45 of the 1997 Rules of Civil
Procedure, petitioners Roos Industrial Construction, Inc. and Oscar Tocmo assail
the Court of Appeals[2] Decision dated 12 January 2006 in C.A. G.R. SP No. 87572
and its Resolution[3] dated 10 April 2006 denying their Motion for
Reconsideration.[4]
The Labor Arbiter ruled that respondent had been illegally dismissed after finding
that he had acquired the status of a regular employee as he was hired as a driver
with little interruption from one project to another, a task which is necessary to the
usual trade of his employer.[7] The Labor Arbiter pertinently stated as follows:
x x x If it were true that complainant was hired as project employee, then there
should have been project employment contracts specifying the project for which
complainants services were hired, as well as the duration of the project as required
in Art. 280 of the Labor Code. As there were four (4) projects where complainant
was allegedly assigned, there should have been the equal number of project
employment contracts executed by the complainant. Further, for every project
termination, there should have been the equal number of termination report
submitted to the Department of Labor and Employment. However, the record
shows that there is only one termination [report] submitted to DOLE pertaining to
the last project assignment of complainant in Carmona, Cavite.
In the case of Maraguinot, Jr. v. NLRC, 284 SCRA 539, 556 [1998], citing capital
Industrial Construction Group v. NLRC, 221 SCRA 469, 473-474 [1993], it was
ruled therein that a project employee may acquire the status of a regular employee
when the following concurs: (1) there is a continuous rehiring of project
employees even after the cessation of a project; and (2) the tasks performed by the
alleged project employee are vital, necessary and indispensable to the usual
business or trade of the employer. Both factors are present in the instant case.
Thus, even granting that complainant was hired as a project employee, he
eventually became a regular employee as there was a continuous rehiring of this
services.
xxx
In the instant case, apart from the fact that complainant was not made to sign any
project employment contract x x x he was successively transferred from one
project after another, and he was made to perform the same kind of work as
driver.[8]
The Labor Arbiter ordered petitioners to pay respondent the aggregate sum
of P224,647.17 representing backwages, separation pay, salary differential, holiday
pay, service incentive leave pay and 13th month pay.[9]
Petitioners elevated the dismissal of their appeal to the Court of Appeals by way of
a special civil action of certiorari. They argued that the filing of the appeal bond
evinced their willingness to comply and was in fact substantial compliance with
the Rules. They likewise maintained that the NLRC gravely abused its discretion in
failing to consider the meritorious grounds for their motion for extension of time to
file the appeal bond. Lastly, petitioners contended that the NLRC gravely erred in
issuing an entry of judgment as the assailed resolution is still open for
review.[18] On 12 January 2006, the Court of Appeals affirmed the challenged
resolution of the NLRC. Hence, the instant petition.
Before this Court, petitioners reiterate their previous assertions. They insist on the
application of Star Angel Handicraft v. National Labor Relations Commission, et
al.[19] where it was held that a motion for reduction of bond may be filed in lieu of
the bond during the period for appeal. They aver that Borja Estate v.
Ballad,[20] which underscored the importance of the filing of a cash or surety bond
in the perfection of appeals in labor cases, had not been promulgated yet in 2003
when they filed their appeal. As such, the doctrine in Borja could not be given
retroactive effect for to do so would prejudice and impair petitioners right to
appeal. Moreover, they point out that judicial decisions have no retroactive
effect.[21]
The Court denies the petition.
The Court reiterates the settled rule that an appeal from the decision of the Labor
Arbiter involving a monetary award is only deemed perfected upon the posting of a
cash or surety bond within ten (10) days from such decision.[22] Article 223 of the
Labor Code states:
xxx
Contrary to petitioners assertion, the appeal bond is not merely procedural but
jurisdictional. Without said bond, the NLRC does not acquire jurisdiction over the
appeal.[23]Indeed, non-compliance with such legal requirements is fatal and has the
effect of rendering the judgment final and executory.[24] It must be stressed that
there is no inherent right to an appeal in a labor case, as it arises solely from the
grant of statute.[25]
Evidently, the NLRC did not acquire jurisdiction over petitioners appeal within the
ten (10)-day reglementary period to perfect the appeal as the appeal bond was filed
eight (8) days after the last day thereof. Thus, the Court cannot ascribe grave abuse
of discretion to the NLRC or error to the Court of Appeals in refusing to take
cognizance of petitioners belated appeal.
While indeed the Court has relaxed the application of this requirement in cases
where the failure to comply with the requirement was justified or where there was
substantial compliance with the rules,[26] the overpowering legislative intent of
Article 223 remains to be for a strict application of the appeal bond requirement as
a requisite for the perfection of an appeal and as a burden imposed on the
employer.[27] As the Court held in the case of Borja Estate v. Ballad:[28]
The intention of the lawmakers to make the bond an indispensable requisite for
the perfection of an appeal by the employer is underscored by the provision that
an appeal may be perfected only upon the posting of a cash or surety bond. The
word only makes it perfectly clear that the LAWMAKERS intended the posting
of a cash or surety bond by the employer to be
In addition, petitioners cannot take refuge behind the Courts ruling in Star
Angel. Pertinently, the Court stated in Computer Innovations Center v. National
Labor Relations Commission:[31]
Moreover, the reference in Star Angel to the distinction between the period to file
the appeal and to perfect the appeal has been pointedly made only once by this
Court in Gensoli v. NLRC thus, it has not acquired the sheen of venerability
reserved for repeatedly-cited cases. The distinction, if any, is not particularly
evident or material in the Labor Code; hence, the reluctance of the Court to adopt
such doctrine. Moreover, the present provision in the NLRC Rules of Procedure,
that the filing of a motion to reduce bond shall not stop the running of the period
to perfect appeal flatly contradicts the notion expressed in Star Angel that there is
a distinction between filing an appeal and perfecting an appeal.
Ultimately, the disposition of Star Angel was premised on the ruling that a motion
for reduction of the appeal bond necessarily stays the period for perfecting the
appeal, and that the employer cannot be expected to perfect the appeal by posting
the proper bond until such time the said motion for reduction is resolved. The
unduly stretched-out distinction between the period to file an appeal and to perfect
an appeal was not material to the resolution of Star Angel, and thus could properly
be considered as obiter dictum.[32]
Lastly, the Court does not agree that the Borja doctrine should only be applied
prospectively. In the first place, Borja is not a ground-breaking precedent as it is a
reiteration, emphatic though, of long standing jurisprudence.[33] It is well to recall
too our pronouncement in Senarillos v. Hermosisima, et al.[34] that the judicial
interpretation of a statute constitutes part of the law as of the date it was originally
passed, since the Courts construction merely establishes the contemporaneous
legislative intent that the interpreted law carried into effect. Such judicial doctrine
does not amount to the passage of a new law but consists merely of a construction
or interpretation of a pre-existing one, as is the situation in this case.[35]
At all events, the decision of the Labor Arbiter appears to be well-founded and
petitioners ill-starred appeal untenable.
SO ORDERED.
DANTE O. TINGA
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
LEONARDO A. QUISUMBING
Associate Justice
Chairperson
ANTONIO T. CARPIO CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES
Associate Justice Associate Justice
ATTESTATION
I attest that the conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in
consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the
Courts Division.
LEONARDO A. QUISUMBING
Associate Justice
Chairperson, Second Division
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, and the Division
Chairpersons Attestation, it is hereby certified that the conclusions in the
above Decision had been reached in consultation before the case was
assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Courts Division.
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
[1]
Rollo, pp. 12-49; dated 8 June 2006.
[2]
Id. at 51-62; penned by Associate Justice Hakim S. Abdulwahid with the concurrence of Associate Justices
Remedios A. Salazar-Fernando and Estela M. Perlas-Bernabe.
[3]
Id. at 64.
[4]
Id. at 66-77.
[5]
Id. at 158.
[6]
Id. at 130-134.
[7]
Id. at 53; NLRC Decision dated 30 October 2003.
[8]
Id. at 169-170.
[9]
Id. at 170-172.
[10]
Id. at 173-188; dated 22 December 2003.
[11]
Id. at 190-192.
[12]
Id. at 53-54.
[13]
Id. at 116-120.
[14]
Id. at 118-119.
[15]
Id. at 214-220; dated 13 August 2004.
[16]
Id. at 121; Dated 31 August 2004.
[17]
Id. at 56.
[18]
Id. at 56-57.
[19]
G.R. No. 108914, 20 September 1994, 236 SCRA 580.
[20]
G.R. No. 152550, 8 June 2005, 459 SCRA 657.
[21]
Rollo, pp. 35-37.
[22]
Borja Estate v. Ballad, supra note 20 at 667.
[23]
Sameer Overseas Placement Agency, Inc. v. Levantino, G.R. No. 153942, 29 June 2005, 462 SCRA 231, 235.
[24]
Computer Innovations Center v. National Labor Relations Commission, G.R. No. 152410, 29 June 2005, 462
SCRA 193.
[25]
Id.
[26]
See Borja Estate v. Ballad, supra note 20 at 669-670.
[27]
Sameer Overseas Placement Agency, Inc. v. Levantino, supra note 23 at 236.
[28]
Supra note 19.
[29]
Borja Estate v. Ballad, supra note 20 at 667-669.
[30]
Sameer Overseas Placement Agency, Inc. v. Levantino, supra note 23 at 240.
[31]
G.R. No. 152410, 29 June 2005, 462 SCRA 183.
[32]
Id. at 192-193.
[33]
Borja Estate v. Ballad, supra note 19 at 667, citing Catubay v. National Labor Relations Commission,
386 Phil. 648, 657; 330 SCRA 440, 447 (2000); Taberrah v. National Labor Relations Commission, 342 Phil. 394,
404; 276 SCRA 431, 440 (1997); Italian Village Restaurant v. National Labor Relations Commission, G.R. No.
95594, 11 March 1992, 207 SCRA 204, 208 (1992); Cabalan Pastulan Negrito Labor Association v. National Labor
Relations Commission, 311 Phil. 744; 241 SCRA 643 (1995); Rosewood Processing, Inc. v. National Labor
Relations Commission, 352 Phil. 1013, 1028; 290 SCRA 408, 420 (1998).
[34]
100 Phil. 501, 504 (1956).
[35]
Columbia Pictures, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 329 Phil. 875, 907-908.