Dosch V NLRC Case 128

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Marianne Joe B.

Denaga, Case #128


HELMUT DOSCH, petitioner,
vs.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION and NORTHWEST AIRLINES,
INC., respondents
G.R. No. L-51182
July 5, 1983

FACTS:
Petitioner is an American citizen and the resident Manager of Northwest
Airlines, Inc. in the Philippines. He had been with the respondent company for 11
years, 9 of which was served in the Philippines as Northwest manager in Manila. On
August 18, 1975 he received an inter-office communication from R.C. Jenkins,
Northwest's Vice President for Orient Region based in Tokyo, promoting him to the
position of Director of International Sales and transferring him to Northwest's General
Office in Minneapolis, U.S.A., effective the same day. Petitioner, acknowledging receipt
of the above memo, expressed appreciation for the promotion and at the same time
regretted that for personal reasons and reasons involving his family (living in the
Philippines), he is unable to accept a transfer from the Philippines.

On September 9, 1975, the Vice-President for the Orient Region of Northwest


advised petitioner that "in view of the foregoing, your status as an employee of the
company ceased on the close of business on August 31, 1975" and "the company
therefore considers your letter of August 28, 1975, to be a resignation without notice."
On September 16, 1975, Northwest filed a Report on Resignation of Managerial
Employee i.e., Helmut Dosch before the Department of Labor, copy thereof furnished
petitioner. The Report was contested by the petitioner and the parties were conciliated
by Regional Office No. IV, Manila but failed to agree on a settlement. The case was
thus certified to the Executive Labor

Arbiter, National Labor Relations Commission, for compulsory arbitration.

ISSUE: Whether or not the petitioner is considered resigned from his employment.

HELD:
The SC agree with the Labor Arbiter that petitioner did not resign or relinquish
his position as Manager-Philippines, Indeed, the letter sent by petitioner to R.C.
Jenkins cannot be considered as a resignation as petitioner indicated therein clearly
that he preferred to remain as Manager-Philippines of Northwest. The SC treated the
Jenkins letter as directing the promotion of the petitioner from his position as
Philippine manager to Director of International Sales in Minneapolis, U.S.A. It is not
merely a transfer order alone but as the Solicitor General correctly observes, "it is
more in the nature of a promotion that a transfer, the latter being merely incidental
to such promotion." The inter-office communication of Vice President Jenkins is
captioned "Transfer" but it is basically and essentially a promotion for the nature of
an instrument is characterized not by the title given to it but by its body and contents.
The communication informed the petitioner that effective August 18, 1975, he was to
be promoted to the position of Director of International Sales, and his compensation
would be upgraded and the payroll accordingly adjusted.

Petitioner was, therefore, advanced to a higher position and rank and his salary
was increased and that is a promotion. It has been held that promotion denotes a
scalar ascent of an officer or an employee to another position, higher either in rank or
salary.

A transfer is a movement from one position to another of equivalent rank, level


or salary, without break in the service. Promotion, on the other hand, is the
advancement from one position to another with an increase in duties and
responsibilities as authorized by law, and usually accompanied by an increase in salary,
Whereas, promotion denotes a scalar ascent of a senior officer or employee to another
position, higher either in rank or salary, transfer refers to lateral movement from one
position to another, of equivalent rank, level or salary. There is no law that compels
an employee to accept a promotion, as a promotion is in the nature of a gift or a
reward, which a person has a right to refuse. When petitioner refused to accept his
promotion to Director of International Sales, he was exercising a right and he cannot
be punished for it as qui jure suo utitur neminem laedit. He who uses his own legal
right injures no one.

Assuming for the sake of argument that the communication or letter of Mr.
Jenkins was basically a transfer, under the particular and peculiar facts obtaining in
the case at bar, petitioner's inability or his refusal to be transferred was not a valid
cause for dismissal. While it may be true that the right to transfer or reassign an
employee is an employer's exclusive right and the prerogative of management, such
right is not absolute. The right of an employer to freely select or discharge his
employee is limited by the paramount police power for the relations between capital
and labor are not merely contractual but impressed with public interest. And neither
capital nor labor shall act oppressively against each other.

There can be no dispute that the constitutional guarantee of security of tenure


mandated under the Constitution applies to all employees and laborers, whether in
the government service or in the private sector. The fact that petitioner is a managerial
employee does not by itself exclude him from the protection of the constitutional
guarantee of security of tenure. Even a manager in a private concern has the right to
be secure in his position, to decline a promotion where, although the promotion carries
an increase in his salary and rank but results in his transfer to a new place of
assignment or station and away from his family. Such an order constitutes removal
without just cause and is illegal. Nor can the removal be justified on the ground of
loss of confidence as now claimed by private respondent Northwest, insisting as it
does that by petitioner's alleged contumacious refusal to obey the transfer order, said
petitioner was guilty of insubordination.

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