ANTONIO M. SERRANO vs. Gallant MARITIME SERVICES, INC. and MARLOW NAVIGATION CO., INC.
ANTONIO M. SERRANO vs. Gallant MARITIME SERVICES, INC. and MARLOW NAVIGATION CO., INC.
ANTONIO M. SERRANO vs. Gallant MARITIME SERVICES, INC. and MARLOW NAVIGATION CO., INC.
SUPREME COURT
Manila
EN BANC
ANTONIO M. SERRANO, Petitioner,
vs.
Gallant MARITIME SERVICES, INC. and MARLOW NAVIGATION CO., INC., Respondents.
DECISION
AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ, J.:
For decades, the toil of solitary migrants has helped lift entire families and communities out of
poverty. Their earnings have built houses, provided health care, equipped schools and planted the
seeds of businesses. They have woven together the world by transmitting ideas and knowledge from
country to country. They have provided the dynamic human link between cultures, societies and
economies. Yet, only recently have we begun to understand not only how much international
migration impacts development, but how smart public policies can magnify this effect.
For Antonio Serrano (petitioner), a Filipino seafarer, the last clause in the 5th paragraph of Section
10, Republic Act (R.A.) No. 8042, 2 to wit:
Sec. 10. Money Claims. - x x x In case of termination of overseas employment without just, valid or
authorized cause as defined by law or contract, the workers shall be entitled to the full
reimbursement of his placement fee with interest of twelve percent (12%) per annum, plus his
salaries for the unexpired portion of his employment contract or for three (3) months for every
year of the unexpired term, whichever is less.
does not magnify the contributions of overseas Filipino workers (OFWs) to national development, but
exacerbates the hardships borne by them by unduly limiting their entitlement in case of illegal
dismissal to their lump-sum salary either for the unexpired portion of their employment contract "or
for three months for every year of the unexpired term, whichever is less" (subject clause). Petitioner
claims that the last clause violates the OFWs' constitutional rights in that it impairs the terms of their
contract, deprives them of equal protection and denies them due process.
By way of Petition for Review under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, petitioner assails the December
8, 2004 Decision3 and April 1, 2005 Resolution4 of the Court of Appeals (CA), which applied the
subject clause, entreating this Court to declare the subject clause unconstitutional.
Petitioner was hired by Gallant Maritime Services, Inc. and Marlow Navigation Co., Ltd.
(respondents) under a Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA)-approved Contract
of Employment with the following terms and conditions:
On March 19, 1998, the date of his departure, petitioner was constrained to accept a downgraded
employment contract for the position of Second Officer with a monthly salary of US$1,000.00, upon
the assurance and representation of respondents that he would be made Chief Officer by the end of
April 1998.6
Respondents did not deliver on their promise to make petitioner Chief Officer. 7 Hence, petitioner
refused to stay on as Second Officer and was repatriated to the Philippines on May 26, 1998. 8
Petitioner's employment contract was for a period of 12 months or from March 19, 1998 up to March
19, 1999, but at the time of his repatriation on May 26, 1998, he had served only two (2) months and
seven (7) days of his contract, leaving an unexpired portion of nine (9) months and twenty-three (23)
days.
Petitioner filed with the Labor Arbiter (LA) a Complaint 9 against respondents for constructive
dismissal and for payment of his money claims in the total amount of US$26,442.73, broken down
as follows:
The LA rendered a Decision dated July 15, 1999, declaring the dismissal of petitioner illegal
and awarding him monetary benefits, to wit:
The respondents are likewise ordered to pay the complainant [petitioner], jointly and
severally, in Philippine Currency, based on the rate of exchange prevailing at the time of
payment, the amount of FORTY FIVE U.S. DOLLARS (US$ 45.00), 12 representing the
complainant’s claim for a salary differential. In addition, the respondents are hereby ordered
to pay the complainant, jointly and severally, in Philippine Currency, at the exchange rate
prevailing at the time of payment, the complainant’s (petitioner's) claim for attorney’s fees
equivalent to ten percent (10%) of the total amount awarded to the aforesaid employee
under this Decision.
The claims of the complainant for moral and exemplary damages are hereby DISMISSED for
lack of merit.
SO ORDERED.13 (Emphasis supplied)
Petitioner also appealed16 to the NLRC on the sole issue that the LA erred in not applying the
ruling of the Court in Triple Integrated Services, Inc. v. National Labor Relations
Commission17 that in case of illegal dismissal, OFWs are entitled to their salaries for the
unexpired portion of their contracts.18
In a Decision dated June 15, 2000, the NLRC modified the LA Decision, to wit:
WHEREFORE, the Decision dated 15 July 1999 is MODIFIED. Respondents are hereby
ordered to pay complainant, jointly and severally, in Philippine currency, at the prevailing rate
of exchange at the time of payment the following:
SO ORDERED.19
The NLRC corrected the LA's computation of the lump-sum salary awarded to petitioner by reducing
the applicable salary rate from US$2,590.00 to US$1,400.00 because R.A. No. 8042 "does not
provide for the award of overtime pay, which should be proven to have been actually performed, and
for vacation leave pay."20
Petitioner filed a Motion for Partial Reconsideration, but this time he questioned the constitutionality
of the subject clause.21 The NLRC denied the motion.22
Petitioner filed a Petition for Certiorari23 with the CA, reiterating the constitutional challenge against
the subject clause.24 After initially dismissing the petition on a technicality, the CA eventually gave
due course to it, as directed by this Court in its Resolution dated August 7, 2003 which granted the
petition for certiorari, docketed as G.R. No. 151833, filed by petitioner.
In a Decision dated December 8, 2004, the CA affirmed the NLRC ruling on the reduction of the
applicable salary rate; however, the CA skirted the constitutional issue raised by petitioner. 25
His Motion for Reconsideration26 having been denied by the CA,27 petitioner brings his cause to this
Court on the following grounds:
I
The Court of Appeals and the labor tribunals have decided the case in a way not in accord with
applicable decision of the Supreme Court involving similar issue of granting unto the migrant worker
back wages equal to the unexpired portion of his contract of employment instead of limiting it to
three (3) months
II
In the alternative that the Court of Appeals and the Labor Tribunals were merely applying their
interpretation of Section 10 of Republic Act No. 8042, it is submitted that the Court of Appeals
gravely erred in law when it failed to discharge its judicial duty to decide questions of substance not
theretofore determined by the Honorable Supreme Court, particularly, the constitutional issues
raised by the petitioner on the constitutionality of said law, which unreasonably, unfairly and
arbitrarily limits payment of the award for back wages of overseas workers to three (3) months.
III
Even without considering the constitutional limitations [of] Sec. 10 of Republic Act No. 8042, the
Court of Appeals gravely erred in law in excluding from petitioner’s award the overtime pay and
vacation pay provided in his contract since under the contract they form part of his salary. 28
On February 26, 2008, petitioner wrote the Court to withdraw his petition as he is already old and
sickly, and he intends to make use of the monetary award for his medical treatment and
medication.29 Required to comment, counsel for petitioner filed a motion, urging the court to allow
partial execution of the undisputed monetary award and, at the same time, praying that the
constitutional question be resolved.30
Considering that the parties have filed their respective memoranda, the Court now takes up the full
merit of the petition mindful of the extreme importance of the constitutional question raised therein.
The unanimous finding of the LA, NLRC and CA that the dismissal of petitioner was illegal is not
disputed. Likewise not disputed is the salary differential of US$45.00 awarded to petitioner in all
three fora. What remains disputed is only the computation of the lump-sum salary to be awarded to
petitioner by reason of his illegal dismissal.
Applying the subject clause, the NLRC and the CA computed the lump-sum salary of petitioner at
the monthly rate of US$1,400.00 covering the period of three months out of the unexpired portion of
nine months and 23 days of his employment contract or a total of US$4,200.00.
Impugning the constitutionality of the subject clause, petitioner contends that, in addition to the
US$4,200.00 awarded by the NLRC and the CA, he is entitled to US$21,182.23 more or a total of
US$25,382.23, equivalent to his salaries for the entire nine months and 23 days left of his
employment contract, computed at the monthly rate of US$2,590.00. 31
Petitioner contends that the subject clause is unconstitutional because it unduly impairs the freedom
of OFWs to negotiate for and stipulate in their overseas employment contracts a determinate
employment period and a fixed salary package.32 It also impinges on the equal protection clause, for
it treats OFWs differently from local Filipino workers (local workers) by putting a cap on the amount
of lump-sum salary to which OFWs are entitled in case of illegal dismissal, while setting no limit to
the same monetary award for local workers when their dismissal is declared illegal; that the
disparate treatment is not reasonable as there is no substantial distinction between the two
groups;33and that it defeats Section 18,34 Article II of the Constitution which guarantees the protection
of the rights and welfare of all Filipino workers, whether deployed locally or overseas. 35
Moreover, petitioner argues that the decisions of the CA and the labor tribunals are not in line with
existing jurisprudence on the issue of money claims of illegally dismissed OFWs. Though there are
conflicting rulings on this, petitioner urges the Court to sort them out for the guidance of affected
OFWs.36
Petitioner further underscores that the insertion of the subject clause into R.A. No. 8042 serves no
other purpose but to benefit local placement agencies. He marks the statement made by the Solicitor
General in his Memorandum, viz.:
Often, placement agencies, their liability being solidary, shoulder the payment of money claims in the
event that jurisdiction over the foreign employer is not acquired by the court or if the foreign
employer reneges on its obligation. Hence, placement agencies that are in good faith and which
fulfill their obligations are unnecessarily penalized for the acts of the foreign employer. To protect
them and to promote their continued helpful contribution in deploying Filipino migrant workers,
liability for money claims was reduced under Section 10 of R.A. No. 8042. 37 (Emphasis supplied)
Petitioner argues that in mitigating the solidary liability of placement agencies, the subject clause
sacrifices the well-being of OFWs. Not only that, the provision makes foreign employers better off
than local employers because in cases involving the illegal dismissal of employees, foreign
employers are liable for salaries covering a maximum of only three months of the unexpired
employment contract while local employers are liable for the full lump-sum salaries of their
employees. As petitioner puts it:
In terms of practical application, the local employers are not limited to the amount of backwages they
have to give their employees they have illegally dismissed, following well-entrenched and
unequivocal jurisprudence on the matter. On the other hand, foreign employers will only be limited to
giving the illegally dismissed migrant workers the maximum of three (3) months unpaid salaries
notwithstanding the unexpired term of the contract that can be more than three (3) months. 38
Lastly, petitioner claims that the subject clause violates the due process clause, for it deprives him of
the salaries and other emoluments he is entitled to under his fixed-period employment contract. 39
In their Comment and Memorandum, respondents contend that the constitutional issue should not
be entertained, for this was belatedly interposed by petitioner in his appeal before the CA, and not at
the earliest opportunity, which was when he filed an appeal before the NLRC. 40
The Solicitor General (OSG)41 points out that as R.A. No. 8042 took effect on July 15, 1995, its
provisions could not have impaired petitioner's 1998 employment contract. Rather, R.A. No. 8042
having preceded petitioner's contract, the provisions thereof are deemed part of the minimum terms
of petitioner's employment, especially on the matter of money claims, as this was not stipulated upon
by the parties.42
Moreover, the OSG emphasizes that OFWs and local workers differ in terms of the nature of their
employment, such that their rights to monetary benefits must necessarily be treated differently. The
OSG enumerates the essential elements that distinguish OFWs from local workers: first, while local
workers perform their jobs within Philippine territory, OFWs perform their jobs for foreign employers,
over whom it is difficult for our courts to acquire jurisdiction, or against whom it is almost impossible
to enforce judgment; and second, as held in Coyoca v. National Labor Relations Commission 43 and
Millares v. National Labor Relations Commission,44 OFWs are contractual employees who can never
acquire regular employment status, unlike local workers who are or can become regular employees.
Hence, the OSG posits that there are rights and privileges exclusive to local workers, but not
available to OFWs; that these peculiarities make for a reasonable and valid basis for the
differentiated treatment under the subject clause of the money claims of OFWs who are illegally
dismissed. Thus, the provision does not violate the equal protection clause nor Section 18, Article II
of the Constitution.45
Lastly, the OSG defends the rationale behind the subject clause as a police power measure adopted
to mitigate the solidary liability of placement agencies for this "redounds to the benefit of the migrant
workers whose welfare the government seeks to promote. The survival of legitimate placement
agencies helps [assure] the government that migrant workers are properly deployed and are
employed under decent and humane conditions." 46
When the Court is called upon to exercise its power of judicial review of the acts of its co-equals,
such as the Congress, it does so only when these conditions obtain: (1) that there is an actual case
or controversy involving a conflict of rights susceptible of judicial determination; 47 (2) that the
constitutional question is raised by a proper party 48 and at the earliest opportunity;49 and (3) that the
constitutional question is the very lis mota of the case,50otherwise the Court will dismiss the case or
decide the same on some other ground. 51
Without a doubt, there exists in this case an actual controversy directly involving petitioner who is
personally aggrieved that the labor tribunals and the CA computed his monetary award based on the
salary period of three months only as provided under the subject clause.
The constitutional challenge is also timely. It should be borne in mind that the requirement that a
constitutional issue be raised at the earliest opportunity entails the interposition of the issue in the
pleadings before a competent court, such that, if the issue is not raised in the pleadings before that
competent court, it cannot be considered at the trial and, if not considered in the trial, it cannot be
considered on appeal.52 Records disclose that the issue on the constitutionality of the subject clause
was first raised, not in petitioner's appeal with the NLRC, but in his Motion for Partial
Reconsideration with said labor tribunal, 53 and reiterated in his Petition for Certiorari before the
CA.54Nonetheless, the issue is deemed seasonably raised because it is not the NLRC but the CA
which has the competence to resolve the constitutional issue. The NLRC is a labor tribunal that
merely performs a quasi-judicial function – its function in the present case is limited to determining
questions of fact to which the legislative policy of R.A. No. 8042 is to be applied and to resolving
such questions in accordance with the standards laid down by the law itself; 55 thus, its foremost
function is to administer and enforce R.A. No. 8042, and not to inquire into the validity of its
provisions. The CA, on the other hand, is vested with the power of judicial review or the power to
declare unconstitutional a law or a provision thereof, such as the subject clause. 56 Petitioner's
interposition of the constitutional issue before the CA was undoubtedly seasonable. The CA was
therefore remiss in failing to take up the issue in its decision.
The third condition that the constitutional issue be critical to the resolution of the case likewise
obtains because the monetary claim of petitioner to his lump-sum salary for the entire unexpired
portion of his 12-month employment contract, and not just for a period of three months, strikes at the
very core of the subject clause.
Thus, the stage is all set for the determination of the constitutionality of the subject clause.
Petitioner's claim that the subject clause unduly interferes with the stipulations in his contract on the
term of his employment and the fixed salary package he will receive 57 is not tenable.
The prohibition is aligned with the general principle that laws newly enacted have only a prospective
operation,58and cannot affect acts or contracts already perfected; 59 however, as to laws already in
existence, their provisions are read into contracts and deemed a part thereof. 60 Thus, the non-
impairment clause under Section 10, Article II is limited in application to laws about to be enacted
that would in any way derogate from existing acts or contracts by enlarging, abridging or in any
manner changing the intention of the parties thereto.
As aptly observed by the OSG, the enactment of R.A. No. 8042 in 1995 preceded the execution of
the employment contract between petitioner and respondents in 1998. Hence, it cannot be argued
that R.A. No. 8042, particularly the subject clause, impaired the employment contract of the parties.
Rather, when the parties executed their 1998 employment contract, they were deemed to have
incorporated into it all the provisions of R.A. No. 8042.
But even if the Court were to disregard the timeline, the subject clause may not be declared
unconstitutional on the ground that it impinges on the impairment clause, for the law was enacted in
the exercise of the police power of the State to regulate a business, profession or calling, particularly
the recruitment and deployment of OFWs, with the noble end in view of ensuring respect for the
dignity and well-being of OFWs wherever they may be employed. 61Police power legislations adopted
by the State to promote the health, morals, peace, education, good order, safety, and general
welfare of the people are generally applicable not only to future contracts but even to those already
in existence, for all private contracts must yield to the superior and legitimate measures taken by the
State to promote public welfare.62
Section 18,63 Article II and Section 3,64 Article XIII accord all members of the labor sector, without
distinction as to place of deployment, full protection of their rights and welfare.
To Filipino workers, the rights guaranteed under the foregoing constitutional provisions translate to
economic security and parity: all monetary benefits should be equally enjoyed by workers of similar
category, while all monetary obligations should be borne by them in equal degree; none should be
denied the protection of the laws which is enjoyed by, or spared the burden imposed on, others in
like circumstances.65
Such rights are not absolute but subject to the inherent power of Congress to incorporate, when it
sees fit, a system of classification into its legislation; however, to be valid, the classification must
comply with these requirements: 1) it is based on substantial distinctions; 2) it is germane to the
purposes of the law; 3) it is not limited to existing conditions only; and 4) it applies equally to all
members of the class.66
There are three levels of scrutiny at which the Court reviews the constitutionality of a classification
embodied in a law: a) the deferential or rational basis scrutiny in which the challenged classification
needs only be shown to be rationally related to serving a legitimate state interest; 67 b) the middle-tier
or intermediate scrutiny in which the government must show that the challenged classification serves
an important state interest and that the classification is at least substantially related to serving that
interest;68 and c) strict judicial scrutiny69 in which a legislative classification which impermissibly
interferes with the exercise of a fundamental right 70 or operates to the peculiar disadvantage of a
suspect class71 is presumed unconstitutional, and the burden is upon the government to prove that
the classification is necessary to achieve a compelling state interest and that it is the least
restrictive means to protect such interest.72
Under American jurisprudence, strict judicial scrutiny is triggered by suspect classifications 73 based
on race74 or gender75 but not when the classification is drawn along income categories. 76
It is different in the Philippine setting. In Central Bank (now Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas) Employee
Association, Inc. v. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas,77 the constitutionality of a provision in the charter of
the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas(BSP), a government financial institution (GFI), was challenged for
maintaining its rank-and-file employees under the Salary Standardization Law (SSL), even when the
rank-and-file employees of other GFIs had been exempted from the SSL by their respective
charters. Finding that the disputed provision contained a suspect classification based on salary
grade, the Court deliberately employed the standard of strict judicial scrutiny in its review of the
constitutionality of said provision. More significantly, it was in this case that the Court revealed the
broad outlines of its judicial philosophy, to wit:
Congress retains its wide discretion in providing for a valid classification, and its policies should be
accorded recognition and respect by the courts of justice except when they run afoul of the
Constitution. The deference stops where the classification violates a fundamental right,
or prejudices persons accorded special protection by the Constitution. When these violations
arise, this Court must discharge its primary role as the vanguard of constitutional guaranties, and
require a stricter and more exacting adherence to constitutional limitations. Rational basis should not
suffice.
Admittedly, the view that prejudice to persons accorded special protection by the Constitution
requires a stricter judicial scrutiny finds no support in American or English jurisprudence.
Nevertheless, these foreign decisions and authorities are not per se controlling in this jurisdiction. At
best, they are persuasive and have been used to support many of our decisions. We should not
place undue and fawning reliance upon them and regard them as indispensable mental crutches
without which we cannot come to our own decisions through the employment of our own
endowments. We live in a different ambience and must decide our own problems in the light of our
own interests and needs, and of our qualities and even idiosyncrasies as a people, and always with
our own concept of law and justice. Our laws must be construed in accordance with the intention of
our own lawmakers and such intent may be deduced from the language of each law and the context
of other local legislation related thereto. More importantly, they must be construed to serve our own
public interest which is the be-all and the end-all of all our laws. And it need not be stressed that our
public interest is distinct and different from others.
xxxx
Further, the quest for a better and more "equal" world calls for the use of equal protection as a tool
of effective judicial intervention.
Equality is one ideal which cries out for bold attention and action in the Constitution. The Preamble
proclaims "equality" as an ideal precisely in protest against crushing inequities in Philippine society.
The command to promote social justice in Article II, Section 10, in "all phases of national
development," further explicitated in Article XIII, are clear commands to the State to take affirmative
action in the direction of greater equality. x x x [T]here is thus in the Philippine Constitution no lack of
doctrinal support for a more vigorous state effort towards achieving a reasonable measure of
equality.
Our present Constitution has gone further in guaranteeing vital social and economic rights to
marginalized groups of society, including labor. Under the policy of social justice, the law bends over
backward to accommodate the interests of the working class on the humane justification that those
with less privilege in life should have more in law. And the obligation to afford protection to labor is
incumbent not only on the legislative and executive branches but also on the judiciary to translate
this pledge into a living reality. Social justice calls for the humanization of laws and the equalization
of social and economic forces by the State so that justice in its rational and objectively secular
conception may at least be approximated.
xxxx
Under most circumstances, the Court will exercise judicial restraint in deciding questions of
constitutionality, recognizing the broad discretion given to Congress in exercising its legislative
power. Judicial scrutiny would be based on the "rational basis" test, and the legislative discretion
would be given deferential treatment.
But if the challenge to the statute is premised on the denial of a fundamental right, or the
perpetuation of prejudice against persons favored by the Constitution with special
protection, judicial scrutiny ought to be more strict. A weak and watered down view would call
for the abdication of this Court’s solemn duty to strike down any law repugnant to the Constitution
and the rights it enshrines. This is true whether the actor committing the unconstitutional act is a
private person or the government itself or one of its instrumentalities. Oppressive acts will be struck
down regardless of the character or nature of the actor.
xxxx
In the case at bar, the challenged proviso operates on the basis of the salary grade or officer-
employee status. It is akin to a distinction based on economic class and status, with the higher
grades as recipients of a benefit specifically withheld from the lower grades. Officers of the BSP now
receive higher compensation packages that are competitive with the industry, while the poorer, low-
salaried employees are limited to the rates prescribed by the SSL. The implications are quite
disturbing: BSP rank-and-file employees are paid the strictly regimented rates of the SSL while
employees higher in rank - possessing higher and better education and opportunities for career
advancement - are given higher compensation packages to entice them to stay. Considering that
majority, if not all, the rank-and-file employees consist of people whose status and rank in life are
less and limited, especially in terms of job marketability, it is they - and not the officers - who have
the real economic and financial need for the adjustment. This is in accord with the policy of the
Constitution "to free the people from poverty, provide adequate social services, extend to them a
decent standard of living, and improve the quality of life for all." Any act of Congress that runs
counter to this constitutional desideratum deserves strict scrutiny by this Court before it can pass
muster. (Emphasis supplied)
Imbued with the same sense of "obligation to afford protection to labor," the Court in the present
case also employs the standard of strict judicial scrutiny, for it perceives in the subject clause a
suspect classification prejudicial to OFWs.
Upon cursory reading, the subject clause appears facially neutral, for it applies to all OFWs.
However, a closer examination reveals that the subject clause has a discriminatory intent against,
and an invidious impact on, OFWs at two levels:
First, OFWs with employment contracts of less than one year vis-à-vis OFWs with
employment contracts of one year or more;
Second, among OFWs with employment contracts of more than one year; and
OFWs with employment contracts of less than one year vis-à-vis OFWs with employment
contracts of one year or more
As pointed out by petitioner,78 it was in Marsaman Manning Agency, Inc. v. National Labor Relations
Commission79(Second Division, 1999) that the Court laid down the following rules on the application
of the periods prescribed under Section 10(5) of R.A. No. 804, to wit:
A plain reading of Sec. 10 clearly reveals that the choice of which amount to award an
illegally dismissed overseas contract worker, i.e., whether his salaries for the unexpired
portion of his employment contract or three (3) months’ salary for every year of the
unexpired term, whichever is less, comes into play only when the employment contract
concerned has a term of at least one (1) year or more. This is evident from the words "for
every year of the unexpired term" which follows the words "salaries x x x for three
months." To follow petitioners’ thinking that private respondent is entitled to three (3) months salary
only simply because it is the lesser amount is to completely disregard and overlook some words
used in the statute while giving effect to some. This is contrary to the well-established rule in legal
hermeneutics that in interpreting a statute, care should be taken that every part or word thereof be
given effect since the law-making body is presumed to know the meaning of the words employed in
the statue and to have used them advisedly. Ut res magis valeat quam pereat. 80 (Emphasis supplied)
In Marsaman, the OFW involved was illegally dismissed two months into his 10-month contract, but
was awarded his salaries for the remaining 8 months and 6 days of his contract.
Prior to Marsaman, however, there were two cases in which the Court made conflicting rulings on
Section 10(5). One was Asian Center for Career and Employment System and Services v. National
Labor Relations Commission (Second Division, October 1998), 81 which involved an OFW who was
awarded a two-year employment contract, but was dismissed after working for one year and two
months. The LA declared his dismissal illegal and awarded him SR13,600.00 as lump-sum salary
covering eight months, the unexpired portion of his contract. On appeal, the Court reduced the
award to SR3,600.00 equivalent to his three months’ salary, this being the lesser value, to wit:
Under Section 10 of R.A. No. 8042, a worker dismissed from overseas employment without just,
valid or authorized cause is entitled to his salary for the unexpired portion of his employment
contract or for three (3) months for every year of the unexpired term, whichever is less.
In the case at bar, the unexpired portion of private respondent’s employment contract is eight (8)
months. Private respondent should therefore be paid his basic salary corresponding to three (3)
months or a total of SR3,600.82
The Marsaman interpretation of Section 10(5) has since been adopted in the following cases:
As the foregoing matrix readily shows, the subject clause classifies OFWs into two categories. The
first category includes OFWs with fixed-period employment contracts of less than one year; in case
of illegal dismissal, they are entitled to their salaries for the entire unexpired portion of their contract.
The second category consists of OFWs with fixed-period employment contracts of one year or more;
in case of illegal dismissal, they are entitled to monetary award equivalent to only 3 months of the
unexpired portion of their contracts.
The disparity in the treatment of these two groups cannot be discounted. In Skippers, the respondent
OFW worked for only 2 months out of his 6-month contract, but was awarded his salaries for the
remaining 4 months. In contrast, the respondent OFWs in Oriental and PCL who had also worked for
about 2 months out of their 12-month contracts were awarded their salaries for only 3 months of the
unexpired portion of their contracts. Even the OFWs involved in Talidano and Univan who
had worked for a longer period of 3 months out of their 12-month contracts before being illegally
dismissed were awarded their salaries for only 3 months.
To illustrate the disparity even more vividly, the Court assumes a hypothetical OFW-A with an
employment contract of 10 months at a monthly salary rate of US$1,000.00 and a hypothetical
OFW-B with an employment contract of 15 months with the same monthly salary rate of
US$1,000.00. Both commenced work on the same day and under the same employer, and were
illegally dismissed after one month of work. Under the subject clause, OFW-A will be entitled to
US$9,000.00, equivalent to his salaries for the remaining 9 months of his contract, whereas OFW-B
will be entitled to only US$3,000.00, equivalent to his salaries for 3 months of the unexpired portion
of his contract, instead of US$14,000.00 for the unexpired portion of 14 months of his contract, as
the US$3,000.00 is the lesser amount.
The disparity becomes more aggravating when the Court takes into account jurisprudence
that, prior to the effectivity of R.A. No. 8042 on July 14, 1995,97 illegally dismissed OFWs, no
matter how long the period of their employment contracts, were entitled to their salaries for the entire
unexpired portions of their contracts. The matrix below speaks for itself:
Case Title Contract Period of Unexpired Period Applied in the
Period Service Period Computation of the
Monetary Award
It is plain that prior to R.A. No. 8042, all OFWs, regardless of contract periods or the unexpired
portions thereof, were treated alike in terms of the computation of their monetary benefits in case of
illegal dismissal. Their claims were subjected to a uniform rule of computation: their basic salaries
multiplied by the entire unexpired portion of their employment contracts.
The enactment of the subject clause in R.A. No. 8042 introduced a differentiated rule of computation
of the money claims of illegally dismissed OFWs based on their employment periods, in the
process singling out one category whose contracts have an unexpired portion of one year or more
and subjecting them to the peculiar disadvantage of having their monetary awards limited to their
salaries for 3 months or for the unexpired portion thereof, whichever is less, but all the while sparing
the other category from such prejudice, simply because the latter's unexpired contracts fall short of
one year.
Upon closer examination of the terminology employed in the subject clause, the Court now has
misgivings on the accuracy of the Marsaman interpretation.
The Court notes that the subject clause "or for three (3) months for every year of the unexpired
term, whichever is less" contains the qualifying phrases "every year" and "unexpired term." By its
ordinary meaning, the word "term" means a limited or definite extent of time. 105 Corollarily, that "every
year" is but part of an "unexpired term" is significant in many ways: first, the unexpired term must be
at least one year, for if it were any shorter, there would be no occasion for such unexpired term to be
measured by every year; and second, the original term must be more than one year, for otherwise,
whatever would be the unexpired term thereof will not reach even a year. Consequently, the more
decisive factor in the determination of when the subject clause "for three (3) months for every year of
the unexpired term, whichever is less" shall apply is not the length of the original contract period as
held in Marsaman,106 but the length of the unexpired portion of the contract period -- the subject
clause applies in cases when the unexpired portion of the contract period is at least one year, which
arithmetically requires that the original contract period be more than one year.
Viewed in that light, the subject clause creates a sub-layer of discrimination among OFWs whose
contract periods are for more than one year: those who are illegally dismissed with less than one
year left in their contracts shall be entitled to their salaries for the entire unexpired portion thereof,
while those who are illegally dismissed with one year or more remaining in their contracts shall be
covered by the subject clause, and their monetary benefits limited to their salaries for three months
only.
To concretely illustrate the application of the foregoing interpretation of the subject clause, the Court
assumes hypothetical OFW-C and OFW-D, who each have a 24-month contract at a salary rate of
US$1,000.00 per month. OFW-C is illegally dismissed on the 12th month, and OFW-D, on the 13th
month. Considering that there is at least 12 months remaining in the contract period of OFW-C, the
subject clause applies to the computation of the latter's monetary benefits. Thus, OFW-C will be
entitled, not to US$12,000,00 or the latter's total salaries for the 12 months unexpired portion of the
contract, but to the lesser amount of US$3,000.00 or the latter's salaries for 3 months out of the 12-
month unexpired term of the contract. On the other hand, OFW-D is spared from the effects of the
subject clause, for there are only 11 months left in the latter's contract period. Thus, OFW-D will be
entitled to US$11,000.00, which is equivalent to his/her total salaries for the entire 11-month
unexpired portion.
OFWs vis-à-vis Local Workers
With Fixed-Period Employment
As discussed earlier, prior to R.A. No. 8042, a uniform system of computation of the monetary
awards of illegally dismissed OFWs was in place. This uniform system was applicable even to local
workers with fixed-term employment.107
The earliest rule prescribing a uniform system of computation was actually Article 299 of the Code of
Commerce (1888),108 to wit:
Article 299. If the contracts between the merchants and their shop clerks and employees should
have been made of a fixed period, none of the contracting parties, without the consent of the other,
may withdraw from the fulfillment of said contract until the termination of the period agreed upon.
Persons violating this clause shall be subject to indemnify the loss and damage suffered, with the
exception of the provisions contained in the following articles.
In Reyes v. The Compañia Maritima, 109 the Court applied the foregoing provision to determine the
liability of a shipping company for the illegal discharge of its managers prior to the expiration of their
fixed-term employment. The Court therein held the shipping company liable for the salaries of its
managers for the remainder of their fixed-term employment.
There is a more specific rule as far as seafarers are concerned: Article 605 of the Code of
Commerce which provides:
Article 605. If the contracts of the captain and members of the crew with the agent should be for a
definite period or voyage, they cannot be discharged until the fulfillment of their contracts, except for
reasons of insubordination in serious matters, robbery, theft, habitual drunkenness, and damage
caused to the vessel or to its cargo by malice or manifest or proven negligence.
Article 605 was applied to Madrigal Shipping Company, Inc. v. Ogilvie, 110 in
which the Court held the shipping company liable for the salaries and subsistence allowance of its
illegally dismissed employees for the entire unexpired portion of their employment contracts.
While Article 605 has remained good law up to the present, 111 Article 299 of the Code of Commerce
was replaced by Art. 1586 of the Civil Code of 1889, to wit:
Article 1586. Field hands, mechanics, artisans, and other laborers hired for a certain time and for a
certain work cannot leave or be dismissed without sufficient cause, before the fulfillment of the
contract. (Emphasis supplied.)
Citing Manresa, the Court in Lemoine v. Alkan112 read the disjunctive "or" in Article 1586 as a
conjunctive "and" so as to apply the provision to local workers who are employed for a time certain
although for no particular skill. This interpretation of Article 1586 was reiterated in Garcia Palomar v.
Hotel de France Company.113 And in both Lemoine and Palomar, the Court adopted the general
principle that in actions for wrongful discharge founded on Article 1586, local workers are entitled to
recover damages to the extent of the amount stipulated to be paid to them by the terms of their
contract. On the computation of the amount of such damages, the Court in Aldaz v. Gay 114 held:
The doctrine is well-established in American jurisprudence, and nothing has been brought to our
attention to the contrary under Spanish jurisprudence, that when an employee is wrongfully
discharged it is his duty to seek other employment of the same kind in the same community, for the
purpose of reducing the damages resulting from such wrongful discharge. However, while this is the
general rule, the burden of showing that he failed to make an effort to secure other employment of a
like nature, and that other employment of a like nature was obtainable, is upon the defendant. When
an employee is wrongfully discharged under a contract of employment his prima facie damage is the
amount which he would be entitled to had he continued in such employment until the termination of
the period. (Howard vs. Daly, 61 N. Y., 362; Allen vs. Whitlark, 99 Mich., 492; Farrell vs. School
District No. 2, 98 Mich., 43.)115(Emphasis supplied)
On August 30, 1950, the New Civil Code took effect with new provisions on fixed-term employment:
Section 2 (Obligations with a Period), Chapter 3, Title I, and Sections 2 (Contract of Labor) and 3
(Contract for a Piece of Work), Chapter 3, Title VIII, Book IV.116 Much like Article 1586 of the Civil
Code of 1889, the new provisions of the Civil Code do not expressly provide for the remedies
available to a fixed-term worker who is illegally discharged. However, it is noted that in Mackay
Radio & Telegraph Co., Inc. v. Rich,117 the Court carried over the principles on the payment of
damages underlying Article 1586 of the Civil Code of 1889 and applied the same to a case involving
the illegal discharge of a local worker whose fixed-period employment contract was entered into in
1952, when the new Civil Code was already in effect. 118
More significantly, the same principles were applied to cases involving overseas Filipino workers
whose fixed-term employment contracts were illegally terminated, such as in First Asian Trans &
Shipping Agency, Inc. v. Ople,119involving seafarers who were illegally discharged. In Teknika Skills
and Trade Services, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Commission, 120 an OFW who was illegally
dismissed prior to the expiration of her fixed-period employment contract as a baby sitter, was
awarded salaries corresponding to the unexpired portion of her contract. The Court arrived at the
same ruling in Anderson v. National Labor Relations Commission, 121 which involved a foreman hired
in 1988 in Saudi Arabia for a fixed term of two years, but who was illegally dismissed after only nine
months on the job -- the Court awarded him salaries corresponding to 15 months, the unexpired
portion of his contract. In Asia World Recruitment, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Commission, 122 a
Filipino working as a security officer in 1989 in Angola was awarded his salaries for the remaining
period of his 12-month contract after he was wrongfully discharged. Finally, in Vinta Maritime Co.,
Inc. v. National Labor Relations Commission, 123 an OFW whose 12-month contract was illegally cut
short in the second month was declared entitled to his salaries for the remaining 10 months of his
contract.
In sum, prior to R.A. No. 8042, OFWs and local workers with fixed-term employment who were
illegally discharged were treated alike in terms of the computation of their money claims: they were
uniformly entitled to their salaries for the entire unexpired portions of their contracts. But with the
enactment of R.A. No. 8042, specifically the adoption of the subject clause, illegally dismissed
OFWs with an unexpired portion of one year or more in their employment contract have since been
differently treated in that their money claims are subject to a 3-month cap, whereas no such
limitation is imposed on local workers with fixed-term employment.
The Court concludes that the subject clause contains a suspect classification in that, in the
computation of the monetary benefits of fixed-term employees who are illegally discharged, it
imposes a 3-month cap on the claim of OFWs with an unexpired portion of one year or more
in their contracts, but none on the claims of other OFWs or local workers with fixed-term
employment. The subject clause singles out one classification of OFWs and burdens it with a
peculiar disadvantage.
There being a suspect classification involving a vulnerable sector protected by the Constitution, the
Court now subjects the classification to a strict judicial scrutiny, and determines whether it serves a
compelling state interest through the least restrictive means.
What constitutes compelling state interest is measured by the scale of rights and powers arrayed in
the Constitution and calibrated by history.124 It is akin to the paramount interest of the state125 for
which some individual liberties must give way, such as the public interest in safeguarding health or
maintaining medical standards,126 or in maintaining access to information on matters of public
concern.127
In the present case, the Court dug deep into the records but found no compelling state interest that
the subject clause may possibly serve.
The OSG defends the subject clause as a police power measure "designed to protect the
employment of Filipino seafarers overseas x x x. By limiting the liability to three months [sic], Filipino
seafarers have better chance of getting hired by foreign employers." The limitation also protects the
interest of local placement agencies, which otherwise may be made to shoulder millions of pesos in
"termination pay."128
Often, placement agencies, their liability being solidary, shoulder the payment of money claims in the
event that jurisdiction over the foreign employer is not acquired by the court or if the foreign
employer reneges on its obligation. Hence, placement agencies that are in good faith and which fulfil
their obligations are unnecessarily penalized for the acts of the foreign employer. To protect them
and to promote their continued helpful contribution in deploying Filipino migrant workers, liability for
money are reduced under Section 10 of RA 8042.
This measure redounds to the benefit of the migrant workers whose welfare the government seeks
to promote. The survival of legitimate placement agencies helps [assure] the government that
migrant workers are properly deployed and are employed under decent and humane
conditions.129 (Emphasis supplied)
However, nowhere in the Comment or Memorandum does the OSG cite the source of its perception
of the state interest sought to be served by the subject clause.
The OSG locates the purpose of R.A. No. 8042 in the speech of Rep. Bonifacio Gallego in
sponsorship of House Bill No. 14314 (HB 14314), from which the law originated; 130 but the speech
makes no reference to the underlying reason for the adoption of the subject clause. That is only
natural for none of the 29 provisions in HB 14314 resembles the subject clause.
On the other hand, Senate Bill No. 2077 (SB 2077) contains a provision on money claims, to wit:
Sec. 10. Money Claims. - Notwithstanding any provision of law to the contrary, the Labor Arbiters of
the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) shall have the original and exclusive jurisdiction to
hear and decide, within ninety (90) calendar days after the filing of the complaint, the claims arising
out of an employer-employee relationship or by virtue of the complaint, the claim arising out of an
employer-employee relationship or by virtue of any law or contract involving Filipino workers for
overseas employment including claims for actual, moral, exemplary and other forms of damages.
The liability of the principal and the recruitment/placement agency or any and all claims under this
Section shall be joint and several.
Non-compliance with the mandatory period for resolutions of cases provided under this Section shall
subject the responsible officials to any or all of the following penalties:
(1) The salary of any such official who fails to render his decision or resolution within the
prescribed period shall be, or caused to be, withheld until the said official complies therewith;
(3) Dismissal from the service with disqualification to hold any appointive public office for five
(5) years.
Provided, however, That the penalties herein provided shall be without prejudice to any liability
which any such official may have incurred under other existing laws or rules and regulations as a
consequence of violating the provisions of this paragraph.
But significantly, Section 10 of SB 2077 does not provide for any rule on the computation of money
claims.
A rule on the computation of money claims containing the subject clause was inserted and
eventually adopted as the 5th paragraph of Section 10 of R.A. No. 8042. The Court examined the
rationale of the subject clause in the transcripts of the "Bicameral Conference Committee
(Conference Committee) Meetings on the Magna Carta on OCWs (Disagreeing Provisions of Senate
Bill No. 2077 and House Bill No. 14314)." However, the Court finds no discernible state interest, let
alone a compelling one, that is sought to be protected or advanced by the adoption of the subject
clause.
In fine, the Government has failed to discharge its burden of proving the existence of a compelling
state interest that would justify the perpetuation of the discrimination against OFWs under the
subject clause.
Assuming that, as advanced by the OSG, the purpose of the subject clause is to protect the
employment of OFWs by mitigating the solidary liability of placement agencies, such callous and
cavalier rationale will have to be rejected. There can never be a justification for any form of
government action that alleviates the burden of one sector, but imposes the same burden on another
sector, especially when the favored sector is composed of private businesses such as placement
agencies, while the disadvantaged sector is composed of OFWs whose protection no less than the
Constitution commands. The idea that private business interest can be elevated to the level of a
compelling state interest is odious.
Moreover, even if the purpose of the subject clause is to lessen the solidary liability of placement
agencies vis-a-vistheir foreign principals, there are mechanisms already in place that can be
employed to achieve that purpose without infringing on the constitutional rights of OFWs.
The POEA Rules and Regulations Governing the Recruitment and Employment of Land-Based
Overseas Workers, dated February 4, 2002, imposes administrative disciplinary measures on erring
foreign employers who default on their contractual obligations to migrant workers and/or their
Philippine agents. These disciplinary measures range from temporary disqualification to preventive
suspension. The POEA Rules and Regulations Governing the Recruitment and Employment of
Seafarers, dated May 23, 2003, contains similar administrative disciplinary measures against erring
foreign employers.
Resort to these administrative measures is undoubtedly the less restrictive means of aiding local
placement agencies in enforcing the solidary liability of their foreign principals.
Thus, the subject clause in the 5th paragraph of Section 10 of R.A. No. 8042 is violative of the right
of petitioner and other OFWs to equal protection. 1avvphi1
Further, there would be certain misgivings if one is to approach the declaration of the
unconstitutionality of the subject clause from the lone perspective that the clause directly violates
state policy on labor under Section 3,131Article XIII of the Constitution.
While all the provisions of the 1987 Constitution are presumed self-executing, 132 there are some
which this Court has declared not judicially enforceable, Article XIII being one,133 particularly
Section 3 thereof, the nature of which, this Court, in Agabon v. National Labor Relations
Commission,134 has described to be not self-actuating:
Thus, the constitutional mandates of protection to labor and security of tenure may be deemed as
self-executing in the sense that these are automatically acknowledged and observed without need
for any enabling legislation. However, to declare that the constitutional provisions are enough to
guarantee the full exercise of the rights embodied therein, and the realization of ideals therein
expressed, would be impractical, if not unrealistic. The espousal of such view presents the
dangerous tendency of being overbroad and exaggerated. The guarantees of "full protection to
labor" and "security of tenure", when examined in isolation, are facially unqualified, and the broadest
interpretation possible suggests a blanket shield in favor of labor against any form of removal
regardless of circumstance. This interpretation implies an unimpeachable right to continued
employment-a utopian notion, doubtless-but still hardly within the contemplation of the framers.
Subsequent legislation is still needed to define the parameters of these guaranteed rights to ensure
the protection and promotion, not only the rights of the labor sector, but of the employers' as well.
Without specific and pertinent legislation, judicial bodies will be at a loss, formulating their own
conclusion to approximate at least the aims of the Constitution.
Ultimately, therefore, Section 3 of Article XIII cannot, on its own, be a source of a positive
enforceable right to stave off the dismissal of an employee for just cause owing to the failure to
serve proper notice or hearing. As manifested by several framers of the 1987 Constitution, the
provisions on social justice require legislative enactments for their enforceability.135 (Emphasis
added)
Thus, Section 3, Article XIII cannot be treated as a principal source of direct enforceable rights, for
the violation of which the questioned clause may be declared unconstitutional. It may unwittingly risk
opening the floodgates of litigation to every worker or union over every conceivable violation of so
broad a concept as social justice for labor.
It must be stressed that Section 3, Article XIII does not directly bestow on the working class any
actual enforceable right, but merely clothes it with the status of a sector for whom the Constitution
urges protection through executive or legislative action and judicial recognition. Its utility is best
limited to being an impetus not just for the executive and legislative departments, but for the judiciary
as well, to protect the welfare of the working class. And it was in fact consistent with that
constitutional agenda that the Court in Central Bank (now Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas) Employee
Association, Inc. v. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, penned by then Associate Justice now Chief Justice
Reynato S. Puno, formulated the judicial precept that when the challenge to a statute is premised on
the perpetuation of prejudice against persons favored by the Constitution with special protection --
such as the working class or a section thereof -- the Court may recognize the existence of a suspect
classification and subject the same to strict judicial scrutiny.
The view that the concepts of suspect classification and strict judicial scrutiny formulated in Central
Bank Employee Association exaggerate the significance of Section 3, Article XIII is a groundless
apprehension. Central Bank applied Article XIII in conjunction with the equal protection clause.
Article XIII, by itself, without the application of the equal protection clause, has no life or force of its
own as elucidated in Agabon.
Along the same line of reasoning, the Court further holds that the subject clause violates petitioner's
right to substantive due process, for it deprives him of property, consisting of monetary benefits,
without any existing valid governmental purpose. 136
The argument of the Solicitor General, that the actual purpose of the subject clause of limiting the
entitlement of OFWs to their three-month salary in case of illegal dismissal, is to give them a better
chance of getting hired by foreign employers. This is plain speculation. As earlier discussed, there is
nothing in the text of the law or the records of the deliberations leading to its enactment or the
pleadings of respondent that would indicate that there is an existing governmental purpose for the
subject clause, or even just a pretext of one.
The subject clause does not state or imply any definitive governmental purpose; and it is for that
precise reason that the clause violates not just petitioner's right to equal protection, but also her right
to substantive due process under Section 1,137 Article III of the Constitution.
The subject clause being unconstitutional, petitioner is entitled to his salaries for the entire unexpired
period of nine months and 23 days of his employment contract, pursuant to law and jurisprudence
prior to the enactment of R.A. No. 8042.
Petitioner is mistaken.
The word salaries in Section 10(5) does not include overtime and leave pay. For seafarers like
petitioner, DOLE Department Order No. 33, series 1996, provides a Standard Employment Contract
of Seafarers, in which salary is understood as the basic wage, exclusive of overtime, leave pay and
other bonuses; whereas overtime pay is compensation for all work "performed" in excess of the
regular eight hours, and holiday pay is compensation for any work "performed" on designated rest
days and holidays.
By the foregoing definition alone, there is no basis for the automatic inclusion of overtime and
holiday pay in the computation of petitioner's monetary award, unless there is evidence that he
performed work during those periods. As the Court held in Centennial Transmarine, Inc. v. Dela
Cruz,138
However, the payment of overtime pay and leave pay should be disallowed in light of our ruling in
Cagampan v. National Labor Relations Commission, to wit:
The rendition of overtime work and the submission of sufficient proof that said was actually
performed are conditions to be satisfied before a seaman could be entitled to overtime pay which
should be computed on the basis of 30% of the basic monthly salary. In short, the contract provision
guarantees the right to overtime pay but the entitlement to such benefit must first be established.
In the same vein, the claim for the day's leave pay for the unexpired portion of the contract is
unwarranted since the same is given during the actual service of the seamen.
WHEREFORE, the Court GRANTS the Petition. The subject clause "or for three months for every
year of the unexpired term, whichever is less" in the 5th paragraph of Section 10 of Republic Act No.
8042 is DECLARED UNCONSTITUTIONAL; and the December 8, 2004 Decision and April 1, 2005
Resolution of the Court of Appeals are MODIFIED to the effect that petitioner is AWARDED his
salaries for the entire unexpired portion of his employment contract consisting of nine months and 23
days computed at the rate of US$1,400.00 per month.
No costs.
SO ORDERED.
WE CONCUR:
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
(On leave)
PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR.
MINITA V. CHICO-NAZARIO
Associate Justice
Associate Justice
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, it is hereby certified that the conclusions in
the above Decision were reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the
opinion of the Court.
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
Footnotes
1
http://www.un.org/News/Press/docs/2007/sgsm11084.doc.htm.
2
Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipinos Act of 1995, effective July 15, 1995.
3
Penned by Associate Justice Andres B. Reyes, Jr. and concurred in by Associate Justices
Lucas P. Bersamin and Celia C. Librea-Leagogo; rollo, p. 231.
4
Id. at 248.
5
Rollo, p. 57.
6
Id. at 58.
7
Id. at 59.
8
Id. at 48.
9
Id. at 55.
According to petitioner, this amount represents the pro-rated difference between the salary
10
of US$2,590.00 per month which he was supposed to receive as Chief Officer from March
19, 1998 to April 30, 1998 and the salary of US$1,850.00 per month which he was actually
paid as Second Officer for the same period. See LA Decision, rollo, pp. 107 and 112.
11
Position Paper, id. at 53-54.
The LA awarded petitioner US$45.00 out of the US$1,480.00 salary differential to which
12
13
Id. at 114.
14
Rollo, pp. 111-112.
15
Id. at 124.
16
Id. at 115.
17
G.R. No. 129584, December 3, 1998, 299 SCRA 608.
18
Appeal Memorandum, rollo, p. 121.
19
Id. at 134.
20
NLRC Decision, rollo, p. 140.
21
Id. at 146-150.
22
Id. at 153.
23
Id. at 155.
24
Id. at 166-177.
25
CA Decision, id. at 239-241.
26
Id. at 242.
27
Id. at 248.
28
Petition, rollo, p. 28.
29
Id. at 787.
30
Id. at 799.
31
Rollo, p. 282
32
Memorandum for Petitioner, id. at 741-742.
33
Id. at 746-753.
34
Section 18. The State affirms labor as a primary social economic force. It shall protect the
rights of workers and promote their welfare.
35
Rollo, pp. 763-766.
36
Petition, id. at 735.
37
Memorandum of the Solicitor General, rollo, p. 680.
38
Memorandum for Petitioner, id. at 755.
39
Id. at 761-763.
40
Rollo, pp. 645-646 and 512-513.
Alfredo L. Benipayo was Solicitor General at the time the Comment was filed. Antonio
41
Eduardo B. Nachura (now an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court) was Solicitor General
when the Memorandum was filed.
42
Memorandum of the Solicitor General, id. at 662-665.
43
G.R. No. 113658, March 31, 1995, 243 SCRA 190.
44
G.R. No. 110524, July 29, 2002, 385 SCRA 306.
45
Memorandum of the Solicitor General, rollo, pp. 668-678.
46
Id. at 682.
The Province of North Cotabato v. The Government of the Republic of the Philippines
47
Peace Panel on Ancestral Domain, G.R. No. 183591 October 14, 2008.
Automotive Industry Workers Alliance v. Romulo, G.R. No. 157509, January 18, 2005, 449
48
SCRA 1.
49
David v. Macapagal-Arroyo, G.R. No. 171396, May 3, 2006, 489 SCRA 160.
50
Arceta v. Mangrobang, G.R. No. 152895, June 15, 2004, 432 SCRA 136.
Moldex Realty, Inc. v. Housing and Land Use Regulatory Board, G.R. No. 149719, June
51
21, 2007, 525 SCRA 198; Marasigan v. Marasigan, G.R. No. 156078, March 14, 2008, 548
SCRA 409.
52
Matibag v. Benipayo, G.R. No. 149036, April 2, 2002, 380 SCRA 49.
53
Rollo, p. 145.
54
Id. at 166.
Smart Communications, Inc. v. National Telecommunications Commission, G.R. No.
55
57
Memorandum for Petitioner, rollo, pp. 741-742.
Ortigas & Co., Ltd. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 126102, December 4, 2000, 346
58
SCRA 748.
Picop Resources, Inc. v. Base Metals Mineral Resources Corporation, G.R. No. 163509,
59
Walker v. Whitehead, 83 U.S. 314 (1873); Wood v. Lovett, 313 U.S. 362, 370
60
Executive Secretary v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 131719, May 25, 2004, 429 SCRA 81,
61
citing JMM Promotion and Management, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 120095, August
5, 1996, 260 SCRA 319.
62
Ortigas & Co., Ltd. v. Court of Appeals, supra note 58.
63
Section 18. The State affirms labor as a primary social economic force. It shall protect the
rights of workers and promote their welfare.
Section 3, The State shall afford full protection to labor, local and overseas, organized and
64
unorganized, and promote full employment and equality of employment opportunities for all.
See City of Manila v. Laguio, G.R. No. 118127, April 12, 2005, 455 SCRA 308; Pimentel III
65
v. Commission on Elections, G.R. No. 178413, March 13, 2008, 548 SCRA 169.
November 18, 2008; Beltran v. Secretary of Health, G.R. No. 139147,November 25, 2005,
476 SCRA 168.
Los Angeles v. Almeda Books, Inc., 535 U.S. 425 (2002); Craig v. Boren, 429 US 190
68
(1976).
There is also the "heightened scrutiny" standard of review which is less demanding than
69
"strict scrutiny" but more demanding than the standard rational relation test. Heightened
scrutiny has generally been applied to cases that involve discriminatory classifications based
on sex or illegitimacy, such as in Plyler v. Doe, 457 U.S. 202, where a heightened scrutiny
standard was used to invalidate a State's denial to the children of illegal aliens of the free
public education that it made available to other residents.
America v. Dale, 530 U.S. 640 (2000); Parents Involved in Community Schools v. Seattle
70
71
Adarand Constructors, Inc. v. Peña, 515 US 230 (1995).
72
Grutter v. Bollinger, 539 US 306 (2003); Bernal v. Fainter, 467 US 216 (1984).
The concept of suspect classification first emerged in the famous footnote in the opinion of
73
Justice Harlan Stone in U.S. v. Carolene Products Co., 304 U.S. 144 (1938), the full text of
which footnote is reproduced below:
Nor need we enquire whether similar considerations enter into the review of statutes
directed at particular religious, Pierce v. Society of Sisters, 268 U.S. 510, or national,
Meyer v. Nebraska, 262 U.S. 390; Bartels v. Iowa, 262 U.S. 404; Farrington v.
Tokushige, 273 U.S. 284, or racial minorities, Nixon v. Herndon, supra; Nixon v.
Condon, supra: whether prejudice against discrete and insular minorities may be a
special condition, which tends seriously to curtail the operation of those political
processes ordinarily to be relied upon to protect minorities, and which may call for a
correspondingly more searching judicial inquiry. Compare McCulloch v. Maryland, 4
Wheat. 316, 428; South Carolina v. Barnwell Bros., 303 U.S. 177, 184, n 2, and
cases cited.
Korematsu v. United States, 323 U.S. 214 (1944); Regents of the University of California v.
74
75
Frontiero v. Richardson, 411 U.S. 677 (1973); U.S. v. Virginia, 518 U.S. 515 (1996).
76
San Antonio Independent School District v. Rodriguez, 411 U.S. 1 (1973).
77
G.R. No. 148208, December 15, 2004, 446 SCRA 299.
78
Rollo, pp. 727 and 735.
79
371 Phil. 827 (1999).
80
Id. at 840-841.
81
G.R. No. 131656, October 20, 1998, 297 SCRA 727.
82
Id.
83
Supra note 17.
84
G.R. No. 166363, August 15, 2006, 498 SCRA 639.
85
G.R. No. 162195, April 8, 2008, 550 SCRA 600.
86
G.R. No. 180719, August 22, 2008.
87
G.R. No. 172031, July 14, 2008, 558 SCRA 279.
88
G.R. No. 157534, June 18, 2003 (Resolution).
89
G.R. No. 153750, January 25, 2006, 480 SCRA 100.
90
G.R. No. 148418, July 28, 2005, 464 SCRA 314.
91
G.R. No. 148407, November 12, 2003, 415 SCRA 720.
92
G.R. No. 156381, October 14, 2005, 473 SCRA 120.
93
G.R. No. 157373, July 27, 2004, 435 SCRA 342.
94
G.R. No. 144786, April 15, 2004, 427 SCRA 732.
95
G.R. No. 177948, March 14, 2008, 548 SCRA 712.
96
G.R. No. 151303, April 15, 2005, 456 SCRA 313.
97
Asian Center v. National Labor Relations Commission, supra note 81.
98
G.R. No. 143949, August 9, 2001, 362 SCRA 571.
99
G.R. No. 123354, November 19, 1996, 264 SCRA 418.
100
G.R. No. 109390, March 7, 1996, 254 SCRA 457.
101
G.R. No. 112096, January 30, 1996, 252 SCRA 588.
102
G.R. No. 145587, October 26, 2007, 537 SCRA 409.
103
G.R. No. 123901, September 22, 1999, 315 SCRA 23.
104
G.R. No. 157975, June 26, 2007, 525 SCRA 586.
105
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary visited on November 22, 2008 at 3:09.
106
See also Flourish, supra note 95; and Athena, supra note 96.
It is noted that both petitioner and the OSG drew comparisons between OFWs in general
107
and local workers in general. However, the Court finds that the more relevant comparison is
between OFWs whose employment is necessarily subject to a fixed term and local workers
whose employment is also subject to a fixed term.
Promulgated on August 6, 1888 by Queen Maria Cristina of Spain and extended to the
108
109
No. 1133, March 29, 1904, 3 SCRA 519.
110
No. L-8431, October 30, 1958, 104 SCRA 748.
February 20, 1981, 102 scra 835, where Madrigal Shipping Company, Inc. v. Ogilvie is cited.
112
No. L-10422, January 11, 1916, 33 SCRA 162.
113
No. L-15878, January 11, 1922, 42 SCRA 660.
114
7 Phil. 268 (1907).
115
See also Knust v. Morse, 41 Phil 184 (1920).
116
Brent School, Inc. v. Zamora, No. L-48494, February 5, 1990, 181 SCRA 702.
117
No. L-22608, June 30, 1969, 28 SCRA 699.
118
The Labor Code itself does not contain a specific provision for local workers with fixed-
term employment contracts. As the Court observed in Brent School, Inc., the concept of
fixed-term employment has slowly faded away from our labor laws, such that reference to
our labor laws is of limited use in determining the monetary benefits to be awarded to fixed-
term workers who are illegally dismissed.
119
No. L-65545, July 9, 1986., 142 SCRA 542.
120
G.R. No. 100399, August 4, 1992, 212 SCRA 132.
121
G.R. No. 111212, January 22, 1996, 252 SCRA 116.
122
G.R. No. 113363, August 24, 1999, 313 SCRA 1.
123
G.R. No. 113911, January 23, 1998, 284 SCRA 656.
124
See Estrada v. Escritor, A.M. No. P-02-1651, August 4, 2003, 408 SCRA 1.
125
Id.
Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1971); see also Carey v. Population Service International,
126
127
Sabio v. Gordon, G.R. Nos. 174340, 174318, 174177, October 16, 2006, 504 SCRA 704.
128
Comment, rollo, p. 555.
129
Memorandum of the Solicitor General, id. at 682-683
130
Id. at p. 693.
Section 3. The State shall afford full protection to labor, local and overseas, organized and
131
unorganized, and promote full employment and equality of employment opportunities for all.
It shall guarantee the rights of all workers to self-organization, collective bargaining and
negotiations, and peaceful concerted activities, including the right to strike in accordance
with law. They shall be entitled to security of tenure, humane conditions of work, and a living
wage. They shall also participate in policy and decision-making processes affecting their
rights and benefits as may be provided by law.
The State shall promote the principle of shared responsibility between workers and
employers and the preferential use of voluntary modes in settling disputes, including
conciliation, and shall enforce their mutual compliance therewith to foster industrial peace.
The State shall regulate the relations between workers and employers, recognizing the right
of labor to its just share in the fruits of production and the right of enterprises to reasonable
returns to investments, and to expansion and growth.
Manila Prince Hotel v. Government Service Insurance System, G.R. No. 122156, February
132
Basco v. Philippine Amusement and Gaming Corporation, G.R. No. 91649, May 14, 1991,
133
134
G.R. No. 158693, November 17, 2004, 442 SCRA 573.
135
Agabon v. National Labor Relations Commission, supra note 134, at 686.
Section 1. No person shall be deprived of life, liberty, or property without due process of
137
law, nor shall any person be denied the equal protection of the laws.
G.R. No. 180719, August 22, 2008. See also PCL Shipping Philippines, Inc. v. National
138
Labor Relations Commission. G.R. No. 153031, December 14, 2006, 511 SCRA 44.