Biodata Format Final
Biodata Format Final
Biodata Format Final
FIRST DIVISION
DECISION
CRUZ, J.:
We have to go back seven years to trace the train of events that began
and chugged its way through the circuitous and sluggish route that
has finally brought it to the decision we are now making. There are
three cases here intertwined which we have consolidated because they
all involve the same employee-employer relations of the Bank of the
Philippine Islands and its personnel. chanroblespublishingcompany
First Issue
The Reyes group then came to this Court in a petition for certiorari,
with a prayer for a temporary restraining order, which we issued on
July 11, 1983, to prevent the BLR and the BPI from enforcing the
above-cited Decision[5] We eventually dismissed the petition for lack
of merit and lifted the temporary restraining order on February 16,
1985, later denying the motion for reconsideration on March 27,
1985.[6]chanroblespublishingcompany
Earlier, on April 28, 1983, the Valdez group (with ALU) had filed with
the NLRC a motion for a writ of execution commanding the BPI to
negotiate the new collective bargaining agreement with it.[7] In
deference to our temporary restraining order in the Reyes case, the
NLRC held in abeyance its action on the motion.[8] The reaction of the
Valdez group was to seek relief from the Court on February 1, 1985, in
a petition for certiorari and injunction, now docketed as G.R. No.
69746. In this petition, it is contended that, for not enforcing the said
decision of March 22, 1983, which has long become final and
executory, the NLRC has acted with grave abuse of discretion and so
should be reversed. chanroblespublishingcompany
The Court has studied the arguments of the parties and is unable to
accept the petitioner’s contention. Our finding is that although the
temporary restraining order was strictly speaking addressed only to
BPI and ALU, it was entirely proper for the NLRC itself to abide by it,
and not only out of respect for this Court. The decision sought to be
enforced called for the conclusion of a collective bargaining
agreement between BPI and the members of BPIEU-ALU. The
question precisely before the Court then was which as between the
Reyes and Valdez groups should be recognized as the legitimate
representative of the employees in general to negotiate with BPI.
NLRC had no jurisdiction to resolve that question. Obviously, its own
decision of March 23, 1983, could not be enforced until that question
was first cleared. chanroblespublishingcompany
More importantly, the issue has become moot and academic. In its
decision dated June 13, 1985, the Bureau of Labor Relations did hold
that the disaffiliation of the Reyes group from ALU was invalid
because it was done beyond the freedom period, that is within sixty
days before the expiration of the collective bargaining agreement on
March 31, 1982. But that is all past and done now. That CBA was
replaced by another collective bargaining agreement concluded with
BPI by the BPIEU-Metro Manila after its disaffiliation — valid this
time because it was done within the freedom period.[9] That
agreement expired on March 31, 1985. In fact, even the agreement
concluded afterwards was itself to have expired on March 31, 1988, or
almost a year ago.[10]
Second Issue
Napales and Gito agreed to move to General Santos City, but the two
lady employees, to wit Ongkiko and Aniñon, remained adamant. chanroblespublishingcompany
This matter need not detain us too long for the issue is hardly
debatable. Indeed, the right of the employer to transfer the employees
in the interest of the efficient and economic operation of its business
cannot be seriously challenged. That is its prerogative. The only
limitation on the discretion of management in this regard is its mala
fides. The only time the employer cannot exercise this right is where it
is vitiated by improper motive and is merely a disguised attempt to
remove or punish the employee sought to be transferred. chanroblespublishingcompany
Such improper motive has not been shown in the case at bar. On the
contrary, it has been established that the transfer was necessitated by
the fact that the COMBANK branch in Davao City had to be closed
because it was just across the street from the BPI branch. There was
certainly no justification to maintain the two branches as they both
belonged now to the BPI. Moreover, it is not disputed that the lateral
transfer of the employees involved no demotion in their rank or salary
or other benefits.
x x x
Following the dismissal of its petition against the BLR, the Reyes
group, on April 26, 1985, filed a motion with the NLRC for the release
to it of the union dues consigned by BPI.[16] This motion was opposed
by the Valdez group, which subsequently filed its own petition for the
payment to it of the said dues, on the ground that it was the legitimate
BPIEU recognized by the BIR.[17] In its decision dated September 26,
1986, the NLRC declared as follows: chanroblespublishingcompany
In holding that the disputed dues were payable to “none other than
BPIEU-ALU (Valdez),” the NLRC could not have intended to exclude
the Reyes group which continued to be part of the BPIEU-Metro
Manila because of the disapproval of its disaffiliation from ALU. In
referring to it as “BPIEU-ALU (Valdez),” the NLRC simply recognized
Valdez as the lawful head of the entire BPIEU-Metro Manila,
including Reyes and his followers, and was holding that Valdez, not
Reyes, was the person authorized to receive the union’s share of the
dues. chanroblespublishingcompany
In any event, this issue of dues-sharing has also become moot and
academic now because the Reyes group has finally succeeded in
disaffiliating from ALU and is now a separate and independent union.
As such, it does not have to share with ALU whatever union dues it
may now collect from its members. But at the time this petition was
filed, the issue was very much alive and had to be resolved to
determine who were entitled to the union dues and in what
proportion. The NLRC therefore did not commit any grave abuse of
discretion in rendering the challenged decision as we have here
interpreted it. chanroblespublishingcompany
The basis of this motion was a resolution dated August 26, 1982,
providing as follows:
RESOLUTION
Upon learning about this, the petitioners challenged the said order,
on the ground that it was not authorized under the Labor Code. On
April 15, 1983, the NLRC issued a resolution setting aside the order
and requiring BPI to safekeep the amounts sought to be deducted
“until the rights thereto of the interested parties shall have been
determined in appropriate proceedings.”[19] Subsequently, the NLRC
issued an en banc resolution dated September 27, 1983, ordering the
release to Lacsina of the amounts deducted “except with respect to
any portion thereof as to which no individual signed authorization
has been given by the members concerned or where such
authorization has been withdrawn.”[20] chanroblespublishingcompany
They also cite the case of Pacific Banking Corporation vs. Clave,[21]
where the lawyer’s fee was taken not from the total economic benefits
received by the workers but from the funds of their labor union. chanroblespublishingcompany
That only those who signed the resolution could be subjected to the
authorized deductions was recognized and made clear by the order
itself of the NLRC. It was there categorically declared that the check-
off could not be made where “no individual signed authorization has
been given by the members concerned or where such authorization
has been withdrawn.” chanroblespublishingcompany
chanroblespublishingcompany