Maricalum Mining Corp. vs. Florentino, G.R No.221813, July 23, 2018 G.R. No. 221813
Maricalum Mining Corp. vs. Florentino, G.R No.221813, July 23, 2018 G.R. No. 221813
Maricalum Mining Corp. vs. Florentino, G.R No.221813, July 23, 2018 G.R. No. 221813
221813
Constitution Statutes Executive Issuances Judicial Issuances Other Issuances Jurisprudence International Legal Resources AUSL Exclusive
THIRD DIVISION
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ELY FLORENTINO, GLENN BUENVIAJE, RUDY J. GOMEZ, represented by his heir THELMA GOMEZ,
FERNANDO SIGUAN, DENNIS ABELIDA, NOEL S. ACCOLADOR,WILFREDO TAGANILE, SR., MARTIR S.
AGSOY, SR., MELCHOR APUCA Y, DOMINGO LA VIDA, JESUS MOSQUEDA, RUELITO A. VILLARMIA,
SOFRONIO M. A YON, EFREN T. GENISE, ALQUIN A. FRANCO, PABLO L. ALEMAN, PEPITO G. HEPRIANA,
ELIAS S. TRESPECES, EDGAR SOBRINO, ALEJANDRO H. SITCHON, NENET ARITA, WELILMO T. NERI,
ERLINDA FERNANDEZ, and EDGARDO PENAFLORIDA, Petitioners
vs.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION – 7th DIVISION, CEBU CITY, "G" HOLDINGS, INC., and
TEODORO G. BERNARDINO, ROLANDO DEGOJAS, MARICALUM MINING CORPORATION. Respondents
DECISION
GESMUNDO, J.:
A subsidiary company's separate corporate personality may be disregarded only when the evidence shows that
such separate personality was being used by its parent or holding corporation to perpetrate a fraud or evade an
existing obligation. Concomitantly, employees of a corporation have no cause of action for labor-related claims
against another unaffiliated corporation, which does not exercise control over them.
The subjects of the instant consolidated cases are two (2) petitions for appeal by certiorari filed by the following
petitioners:
2) Ely Florentino, Glenn Buenviaje, Rudy J. Gomez, 1 Fernando Siguan, Dennis Abelida, Noel S.
Acollador, Wilfredo C. Taganile, Sr., Martir S. Agsoy, Sr., Melchor B. Apucay, Domingo Lavida, Jesus
Mosqueda, Ruelito A. Villarmia, Sofronio M. Ayon, Efren T. Genise, Alquin A. Franco, Pabio L. Aleman,
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Pepito G. Hepriana, Elias S. Trespeces, Edgar M. Sobrino, Alejandro H. Sitchon, Nenet Arita, Dr.
Welilmo T. Neri, Erlinda L. Fernandez, and Edgardo S. Pefiaflorida (complainants) in G.R. No. 222723.
Both of these petitions are assailing the propriety of the October 29, 2014 Decision2 of the Court of Appeals (CA) in
CA-G.R. SP No. 06835. The CA upheld the November 29, 2011 Decision3 and January 31, 2012 Resolution4 of the
National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) in NLRC Case No. VAC-05-000412-11. In the present petitions,
complainants seek to reinstate the April 20, 2011 Decision 5 of the Labor Arbiter (LA) in consolidated cases NLRC
RAB VI CASE No. 09-10755-10, NLRC RAB VI CASE No. 12-10915-10, NLRC RAB VI CASE No. 12-10916-10 and
NLRC RAB VI CASE No. 12-10917-10, which granted their joint complaints for monetary claims against G Holdings,
Inc. (G Holdings); while Maricalum Mining seeks to have the case remanded to the LA for proper computation of its
total monetary liability to the complainants.
The Antecedents
The dispute traces its roots back to when the Philippine National Bank (PNB, a former government-owned-and-
controlled corporation) and the Development Bank of the Philippines (DBP) transferred its ownership of Maricalum
Mining to the National Government for disposition or privatization because it had become a non-performing asset.6
On October 2, 1992, the National Government thru the Asset Privatization Trust (APT) executed a Purchase and
Sale Agreement (PSA) with G Holdings, a domestic corporation primarily engaged in the business of owning and
holding shares of stock of different companies. G Holding bought 90% of Maricalum Mining's shares and financial
claims in the form of company notes. In exchange, the PSA obliged G Holdings to pay APT the amount of
₱673,161,280.00, with a down payment of ₱98,704,000.00 and with the balance divided into four tranches payable
in installment over a period of ten years.7 Concomitantly, G Holdings also assumed Maricalum Mining's liabilities in
the form of company notes. The said financial liabilities were converted into three (3) Promissory Notes (PNs)
totaling ₱550,000,000.00 (₱114,715,360.00, ₱186,550,560.00 and ₱248,734,080.00), which were secured by
mortgages over some of Maricalum Mining's properties.8 These PNs obliged Maricalum Mining to pay G Holdings
the stipulated amount of ₱550,000,000.00.
Upon the signing of the PSA and paying the stipulated down payment, G Holdings immediately took physical
possession of Maricalum Mining's Sipalay Mining Complex, as well as its facilities, and took full control of the latter's
management and operations.9
On January 26, 1999, the Sipalay General Hospital, Inc. (Sipalay Hospital) was duly incorporated to provide medical
services and facilities to the general public. 10
Afterwards, some of Maricalum Mining's employees retired and formed several manpower cooperatives, 11 as follow:
In 2000, each of the said cooperatives executed identical sets of Memorandum of Agreement 12 with Maricalum
Mining wherein they undertook, among others, to provide the latter with a steady supply of workers, machinery and
equipment for a monthly fee.
On June 1, 2001, Maricalum Mining's Vice President and Resident Manager Jesus H. Bermejo wrote a
Memorandum 13 to the cooperatives informing them that Maricalum Mining has decided to stop its mining and milling
operations effective July 1, 2001 in order to avert continuing losses brought about by the low metal prices and high
cost of production.
In July 2001, the properties of Maricalum Mining, which had been mortgaged to secure the PNs, were extrajudicially
foreclosed and eventually sold to G Holdings as the highest bidder on December 3, 2001. 14
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On September 23, 2010, some of Maricalum Mining's workers, including complainants, and some of Sipalay
General Hospital's employees jointly filed a Complaint15 with the LA against G Holdings, its president, and officer-in-
charge, and the cooperatives and its officers for illegal dismissal, underpayment and nonpayment of salaries,
underpayment of overtime pay, underpayment of premium pay for holiday, nonpayment of separation pay,
underpayment of holiday pay, nonpayment of service incentive leave pay, nonpayment of vacation and sick leave,
nonpayment of 13th month pay, moral and exemplary damages, and attorneys fees.
On December 2, 2010, complainants and CeMPC Chairman Alejandro H. Sitchon surprisingly filed his complaint for
illegal dismissal and corresponding monetary claims with the LA against G Holdings, its officer-in-charge and
CeMPC. 16
During the hearings, complainants presented the affidavits of Alejandro H. Sitchon and Dennis Abelida which
attested that, prior to the formation of the manpower cooperatives, their services were terminated by Maricalum
Mining as part of its retrenchment program. 17 They claimed that, in 1999, they were called by the top executives of
Maricalum Mining and G Holdings and informed that they will have to form a cooperative for the purpose of
providing manpower services in view of the retrenchment program. Thus, they were "rehired" only after their
respective manpower cooperative services were formed. Moreover, they also submitted the following documents: (a)
Cash Vouchers 18 representing payments to the manpower cooperatives; (b) a Payment Schedule19 representing G
Holdings' payment of social security contributions in favor of some Sipalay Hospital employees (c) Termination
Letters 20 written by representatives of G Holdings, which were addressed to complainants including those employed
by Sipalay Hospital; and (d) Caretaker Schedules21 prepared by G Holdings to prove the existence of employment
relations.
After the hearings were concluded, complainants presented their Position Paper22 claiming that: they have not
received any increase in wages since they were allegedly rehired; except for Sipalay Hospital's employees, they
worked as an augmentation force to the security guards charged with securing Maricalum Mining's assets which
were acquired by G Holdings; Maricalum Mining's assets have been exposed to pilferage by some of its rank-and-
file employees whose claims for collective bargaining benefits were undergoing litigation; the Sipalay Hospital is
purportedly "among the assets" of Maricalum Mining acquired by G Holdings; the payrolls for their wages were
supposedly prepared by G Holdings' accounting department; since the second half of April 2007, they have not been
paid their salary; and some of their services were dismissed without any due process.
Based on these factual claims, complainants posited that: the manpower cooperatives were mere alter egos of G
Holdings organized to subvert the "tenurial rights" of the complainants; G Holdings implemented a retrenchment
scheme to dismiss the caretakers it hired before the foreclosure of Maricalum Mining's assets; and G Holdings was
their employer because it allegedly had the power to hire, pay wages, control working methods and dismiss them.
Correspondingly, G Holdings filed its Position Paper23 maintaining that: it was Maricalum Mining who entered into an
agreement with the manpower corporations for the employment of complainants' services for auxiliary or seasonal
mining activities; the manpower cooperatives were the ones who paid the wages, deducted social security
contributions, withheld taxes, provided medical benefits and had control over the working means and methods of
complainants; despite Maricalum Mining's decision to stop its mining and milling operations, complainants still
continued to render their services for the orderly winding down of the mines' operations; Maricalum Mining should
have been impleaded because it is supposed to be the indispensable party in the present suit; (e) Marical um
Mining, as well as the manpower cooperatives, each have distinct legal personalities and that their individual
corporate liabilities cannot be imposed upon each other; and there was no employer-employee relationship between
G Holdings and complainants.
Likewise, the manpower cooperatives jointly filed their Position Paper24 arguing that: complainants had exhibited a
favorable response when they were properly briefed of the nature and benefits of working under a cooperative
setup; complainants received their fair share of benefits; complainants were entitled to cast their respective votes in
deciding the affairs of their respective cooperatives; complainants, as member of the cooperatives, are also co-
owners of the said cooperative and they cannot bargain for higher labor benefits with other co-owners; and the LA
has no jurisdiction over the case because there is no employer-employee relationship between a cooperative and its
members.
The LA Ruling
In its decision dated April 28, 2011, the LA ruled in favor of complainants. It held that G Holdings is guilty of labor-
1awp++i1
only contracting with the manpower cooperatives thereby making all of them solidarily and directly liable to
complainants. The LA reasoned that: G Holdings connived with Marcalum Mining in orchestrating the formation of
manpower cooperatives to circumvent complainants' labor standards rights; it is highly unlikely that complainants
(except Sipalay Hospital's employees) would spontaneously form manpower cooperatives on their own and in
unison without the guidance of G Holdings and Maricalum Mining; and complainants effectively became the
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employees of G Holdings because their work had changed from assisting in the mining operations to safeguarding
the properties in the Sipalay Mining Complex, which had already been acquired by G Holding. On the other hand,
the LA denied the claims of complainants Nenet Arita and Domingo Lavida for lack of factual basis. The fallo of the
LA decision reads:
and the amount of ₱485,803.23 as attorney's fees, or the total amount of FIVE MILLION THREE
HUNDRED FORTY-THREE THOUSAND EIGHT HUNDRED THIRTY-FIVE and 50/100 PESOS
(₱5,343,835.50).
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COOPERATIVE, CANSIBIT MULTI-PURPOSE COOPERATIVE, and CENTENNIAL MULTI-PURPOSE
COOPERATIVE, being mere agents of respondent "G" HOLDINGS, INC., are hereby DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.25
On July 18, 2011, Marical um Mining filed its Appeal-in-Intervention 26 seeking to: (a) reverse and set aside the
Labor Arbiter's Decision; (b) declare Mari cal um Mining as the true and proper party-in-interest; (c) remand the case
back to the Labor Arbiter for proper computation of the money claims of the complainants; and (d) give Maricalum
Mining the opportunity to settle with the complainants.
In its decision dated November 29, 2011, the NLRC modified the LA ruling. It held that Dr. Welilmo T. Neri, Erlinda L.
Fernandez and Edgar M. Sobrino are not entitled to the monetary awards because they were not able to establish
the fact of their employment relationship with G Holdings or Maricalum Mining because Sipalay Hospital has a
separate and distinct corporate personality. As to the remaining complainants, it found that no evidence was
adduced to prove that the salaries/wages and the 13th month pay had been paid.
However, the NLRC imposed the liability of paying the monetary awards imposed by the LA against Maricalum
Mining, instead of G Holdings, based on the following observations that: it was Maricalum Mining-not G Holdings-
who entered into service contracts by way of a Memorandum of Agreement with each of the manpower
cooperatives; complainants continued rendering their services at the insistence of Maricalum Mining through their
cooperatives; Maricalum Mining never relinquished possession over the Sipalay Mining Complex; Maricalum Mining
continuously availed of the services of complainants through their respective manpower cooperatives; in G
Holdings, Inc. v. National Mines and Allied Workers Union Local 103 (NAMAWU), et al. 27 (NAMA WU Case), the
Court already held that G Holdings and Maricalum Mining have separate and distinct corporate personalities. The
dispositive portion of the NLRC ruling states:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Decision rendered by the Labor Arbiter on 20 April 2011 is
hereby MODIFIED, to wit:
1) the monetary award adjudged to complainants Jessie Magallanes, Rogelio E. Fulo, Salvador
J. Arceo, Freddie Masicampo, Welilmo Neri, Erlinda Fernandez and Edgar Sobrino are
CANCELLED;
2) the award of ten percent (10%) attorney's fees is ADJUSTED commensurate to the award of
unpaid salaries/wages and 13th month pay of the remaining complainants;
3) the directive for respondent "G" Holdings, Inc. to pay complainants the monetary awards
adjudged by the Labor Arbiter is CANCELLED;
4) it is intervenor that is, accordingly, directed to pay the remaining complainants their respective
monetary awards. 1âwphi1
SO ORDERED.28
Complainants and Maricalum Mining filed their respective motions for reconsideration before the NLRC. On January
31, 2012, it issued a resolution modifying its previous decision. The dispositive portion of the NLRC resolution state:
SO ORDERED.29
Undaunted, the parties filed their respective petitions for certiorari before the CA.
The CA Ruling
In its decision dated October 29, 2014, the CA denied the petitions and affirmed the decision of the NLRC. It
ratiocinated that factual issues are not fit subjects for review via the extraordinary remedy of certiorari. The CA
emphasized that the NLRC's factual findings are conclusive and binding on the appellate courts when they are
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supported by substantial evidence. Thus, it maintained that it cannot review and re-evaluate the evidence all over
again because there was no showing that the NLRC's findings of facts were reached arbitrarily. The decretal portion
of the CA decision states:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the instant petition for certiorari is DENIED, and the assailed
Decision dated 29 December 2011 and two Resolutions both dated 31 January 2012 of the National
Labor Relations Commission are hereby AFFIRMED in all respects.
SO ORDERED.30
WHETHER THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN REFUSING TO RE-EVALUATE THE FACTS AND
IN FINDING NO GRAVE ABUSE OF DISCRETION ON THE PART OF THE NLRC;
II
III
WHETHER THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN DISREGARDING THAT THE NLRC ALLOWED
MARICALUM MINING TO INTERVENE IN THE CASE ONLY ON APPEAL;
IV
WHETHER THE COURT OF APPEALS ERRED IN AFFIRMING THE NLRC'S RULING WHICH
ALLOWED THE PIERCING OF THE CORPORA TE VEIL AGAINST MARICALUM MINING BUT NOT
AGAINST SIPALAY HOSPITAL.
Complainants argue that the CA committed several reversible errors because: (a) it refused to re-evaluate the facts
of the case even if the factual findings of the NLRC and the LA were conflicting; (b) it failed to consider that G
Holdings had already acquired all of Maricalum Mining's assets and that Teodoro G. Bernardino (Bernardino) was
now the president and controlling stockholder of both corporations; (c) it failed to take into account that Maricalum
Mining was allowed to intervene only on appeal even though it was not a real party-in-interest; (d) it failed to
appreciate the LA' s findings that Maricalum Mining could not have hired complainants because G Holdings had
already acquired in an auction sale all the assets in the Sipalay Mining Complex; (e) it failed to consider that all
resident managers of the Sipalay Mining Complex were employed by G Holdings; (f) the foreclosure of the assets in
the Sipalay Mining Complex was intended to bring the said properties outside the reach of complainants; (g) the
Sipalay Hospital had been existing as a hospital for Maricalum Mining's employees long before G Holdings arrived;
(h) Dr. Welilmo T. Neri, Erlinda L. Fernandez, Edgar M. Sobrino and Wilfredo C. Taganile, Sr. were all hired by
Maricalum Mining but were dismissed by G Holdings; (i) Sipalay Hospital existed without a board of directors and its
employees were receiving orders from Maricalum Mining and, later on, replaced by G Holdings' officer-in-charge;
and (j) Maricalum Mining and G Holdings controlled the affairs of Sipalay Hospital.
Maricalum Mining contends that the CA committed grave abuse of discretion because the monetary awards were
improperly computed. It claims that complainants had stopped rendering their services since September 23, 2010,
hence, their monetary claims covering the second half of April 2007 up to July 2007 have already prescribed as
provided pursuant to Article 291 of the Labor Code. Moreover, it also stressed that the NLRC should have remanded
the case to the LA for the determination of the manpower cooperatives' net surpluses and how these amounts were
distributed to their members to aid the proper determination of the total amount of the monetary award. Finally,
Maricalum Mining avers that the awards in favor of some of the complainants are "improbable" and completely
unfounded.
On the other hand, G Holdings argues that piercing the corporate veil of Maricalum Mining is not proper because:
(a) it did not acquire all of Maricalum Mining's assets; (b) it is primarily engaged in the business of owning and
holding shares of stocks of different companies-not participating in the operations of its subsidiaries; (c) Maricalum
Mining, the actual employers of complainants, had already manifested its willingness to settle the correct money
claims; (d) Bernardino is not a controlling stockholder of Maricalum Mining because the latter's corporate records
show that almost all of its shares of stock are owned by the APT; ( e) Joost Pekelharing-not Bernardino-is G
Holdings' president; (f) in the NAMA WU Case, it was already held that control over Maricalum Mining was exercised
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by the APT and not G Holdings; (g) the NLRC did not commit any grave abuse of discretion when it allowed
Maricalum Mining to intervene after the LA's decision was promulgated; (h) the cash vouchers, payment schedule,
termination letters and caretaker schedules presented by complainants do not prove the employment relationship
with G Holdings because the signatories thereto were either from Maricalum Mining or the manpower cooperatives;
(i) this Court's pronouncements in the NAMA WU Case and in Republic v. G Holdings, Inc. 31 prove that Maricalum
Mining never relinquished possession of the Sipalay Mining Complex in favor of G Holdings; and (j) Dr. Welilmo T.
Neri, Erlinda L. Fernandez, Edgar M. Sobrino and Wilfredo C. Taganile, Sr. were employees of the Sipalay Hospital,
which is a separate business entity, and were not members in any of the manpower cooperatives, which entered
into a labor-only arrangement with Maricalum Mining.
It is basic that only pure questions of law should be raised in petitions for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the
Rules of Court.32 It will not entertain questions of fact as the factual findings of appellate courts are final, binding or
conclusive on the parties and upon this court when supported by substantial evidence.33 In labor cases, however,
the Court has to examine the CA' s Decision from the prism of whether the latter had correctly determined the
presence or absence of grave abuse of discretion in the NLRC's Decision.34
In this case, the principle that this Court is not a trier of facts applies with greater force in labor cases. 35 Grave
abuse must have attended the evaluation of the facts and evidence presented by the parties.36 This Court is keenly
aware that the CA undertook a Rule 65 review-not a review on appeal-of the NLRC decision challenged before it. 37
It follows that this Court will not re-examine conflicting evidence, reevaluate the credibility of witnesses, or substitute
the findings of fact of the NLRC, an administrative body that has expertise in its specialized field. 38 It may only
examine the facts only for the purpose of resolving allegations and determining the existence of grave abuse of
discretion. 39 Accordingly, with these procedural guidelines, the Court will now proceed to determine whether or not
the CA had committed any reversible error in affirming the NLRC's Decision.
Ordinarily, when there is sufficient evidence before the Court to enable it to resolve fundamental issues, it will
dispense with the regular procedure of remanding the case to the lower court or appropriate tribunal in order to
avoid a further delay in the resolution of the case.40 A remand is only necessary when the proceedings below are
grossly inadequate to settle factual issues.41 This is in line with the Court's power to issue a process in order to
enforce its own decrees and thus avoid circuitous actions and vexatious litigation.42
In the case at bench, Maricalum Mining is seeking to have the case remanded because the LA allegedly
miscomputed the amount of the monetary awards. However, it failed to offer any reasonable argument or
explanation why the proceedings conducted before the NLRC or LA were "grossly inadequate to settle
factual issues," especially as regards the computation of monetary awards. Its bare allegations - that the monetary
awards were improperly computed because prescribed claims have been granted, that the net surpluses of the
manpower cooperative were not properly distributed, and that the awards in favor of some of the complainants were
improbable - do not warrant the invocation of this Court's power to have the case remanded back to the LA. Bare
and unsubstantiated allegations do not constitute substantial evidence and have no probative value.43
Besides, it is not imperative for the Court to remand the case to the LA for the determination of the amounts of net
surpluses that each of the manpower cooperatives had received from Maricalum Mining. The records show that
Maricalum Mining was guilty of entering into a labor-only contracting arrangement with the manpower cooperatives,
thus, all of them are solidarily liable to the complainants by virtue of Article 10644 of the Labor Code. In DOLE
Philippines, Inc. v. Esteva, et al. 45 it was ruled that a cooperative, despite having a personality separate from its
members, 46 is engaged in a labor-only contracting arrangement based on the following indicators:
1) The cooperative had a measly paid-up capital of ₱6,600.00 and had only managed to increase the
same by continually engaging in labor-only contracting with its client;
2) The cooperative did not carry out an independent business from its client and its own office and
equipment were mainly used for administrative purposes;
3) The cooperative's members had to undergo instructions and pass the training provided by the
client's personnel before they could start working alongside regular employees;
4) The cooperative was not engaged to perform a specific and special job or service; and
5) The cooperative's members performed activities directly related and vital to the principal business of
its client.
Here, the virtually identical sets of memorandum of agreement with the manpower cooperatives state among others
that: (a) the services covered shall consist of operating loading, drilling and various auxiliary equipments; and (b) the
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cooperative members shall abide by the norms and standards of the Maricalum Mining. These services and
guidelines are essential to the operations of Maricalum Mining. Thus, since the cooperative members perform the
work vital to the operation of the Sipalay Mining Complex, the they were being contracted in a labor-only
arrangement. Moreover, the burden of proving the supposed status of the contractor rests on the principal47 and
Maricalum Mining, being the principal, also failed to present any evidence before the NLRC that each of the
manpower cooperatives had an independent viable business.
Intervention is a remedy by which a third party, who is not originally imp leaded in a proceeding, becomes a litigant
for purposes of protecting his or her right or interest that may be affected by the proceedings.48 The factors that
should be reckoned in determining whether or not to allow intervention are whether intervention will unduly delay or
prejudice the adjudication of the rights of the original parties and whether the intervenors rights may be fully
protected in a separate proceeding. 49 A motion to intervene may be entertained or allowed even if filed after
judgment was rendered by the trial court, especially in cases where the intervenors are indispensable parties.50
Parties may be added by order of the court on motion of the party or on its own initiative at any stage of the action
and/or at such times as are just.51
In this case, it was never contested by complainants that it was Maricalum Mining-not G Holdings-who executed
several sets of memorandum of agreement with the manpower cooperatives. The contractual connection between
Maricalum Mining and the manpower cooperatives is crucial to the determination of labor-related liabilities especially
when it involves a labor-only contracting arrangement. Accordingly, Maricalum Mining will eventually be held
solidarily liable with the manpower cooperatives. In other words, it stands to be injured by the incontrovertible fact
that it entered into a labor-only arrangement with the manpower cooperatives. Thus, Maricalum Mining is an
indispensable party and worthy of being allowed to intervene in this case.52
In order to properly analyze G Holdings's role in the instant dispute, the Court must discuss its peculiar relationship
(or lack thereof) with Maricalum Mining and Sipalay Hospital.
The doctrine of piercing the corporate veil applies only in three (3) basic areas, namely: (a) defeat of public
convenience as when the corporate fiction is used as a vehicle for the evasion of an existing obligation; (b) fraud
cases or when the corporate entity is used to justify a wrong, protect fraud, or defend a crime; or (c) alter ego cases,
where a corporation is merely a farce since it is a mere alter ego or business conduit of a person, or where the
corporation is so organized and controlled and its affairs are so conducted as to make it merely an instrumentality,
agency, conduit or adjunct of another corporation. 53 This principle is basically applied only to determine established
liability. 54 However, piercing of the veil of corporate fiction is frowned upon and must be done with caution. 55 This is
because a corporation is invested by law with a personality separate and distinct from those of the persons
composing it as well as from that of any other legal entity to which it may be related. 56
A parent57 or holding company58 is a corporation which owns or is organized to own a substantial portion of another
company's voting59 shares of stock enough to control60 or influence the latter's management, policies or affairs thru
election of the latter's board of directors or otherwise. However, the term "holding company" is customarily used
interchangeably with the term "investment company" which, in turn, is defined by Section 4 (a) of Republic Act (R.A.)
No. 262961 as "any issuer (corporation) which is or holds itself out as being engaged primarily, or proposes to
engage primarily, in the business of investing, reinvesting, or trading in securities."
In other words, a "holding company" is organized and is basically conducting its business by investing substantially
in the equity securities62 of another company for the purposes of controlling their policies (as opposed to directly
engaging in operating activities) and "holding" them in a conglomerate or umbrella structure along with other
subsidiaries. Significantly, the holding company itself-being a separate entity-does not own the assets of and does
not answer for the liabilities of the subsidiary63 or affiliate. 64 The management of the subsidiary or affiliate still rests
in the hands of its own board of directors and corporate officers. It is in keeping with the basic rule a corporation is a
juridical entity which is vested with a legal personality separate and distinct from those acting for and in its behalf
and, in general, from the people comprising it.65 The corporate form was created to allow shareholders to invest
without incurring personal liability for the acts of the corporation. 66
While the veil of corporate fiction may be pierced under certain instances, mere ownership of a subsidiary does not
justify the imposition of liability on the parent company. 67 It must further appear that to recognize a parent and a
subsidiary as separate entities would aid in the consummation of a wrong.68 Thus, a holding corporation
has a separate corporate existence and is to be treated as a separate entity; unless the facts show that such
separate corporate existence is a mere sham, or has been used as an instrument for concealing the truth.69
In the case at bench, complainants mainly harp their cause on the alter ego theory. Under this theory, piercing the
veil of corporate fiction may be allowed only if the following elements concur:
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1) Control-not mere stock control, but complete domination-not only of finances, but of policy and
business practice in respect to the transaction attacked, must have been such that the corporate entity
as to this transaction had at the time no separate mind, will or existence of its own;
2) Such control must have been used by the defendant to commit a fraud or a wrong, to perpetuate the
violation of a statutory or other positive legal duty, or a dishonest and an unjust act in contravention of
plaintiffs legal right; and
3) The said control and breach of duty must have proximately caused the injury or unjust loss
complained of.70
The elements of the alter ego theory were discussed in Philippine National Bank v. Hydro Resources Contractors
Corporation, 71 to wit:
The first prong is the "instrumentality" or "control" test. This test requires that the subsidiary be
completely under the control and domination of the parent. It examines the parent corporation's
relationship with the subsidiary. It inquires whether a subsidiary corporation is so organized and
controlled and its affairs are so conducted as to make it a mere instrumentality or agent of the parent
corporation such that its separate existence as a distinct corporate entity will be ignored. It seeks to
establish whether the subsidiary corporation has no autonomy and the parent corporation, though
acting through the subsidiary in form and appearance, "is operating the business directly for itself."
The second prong is the "fraud" test. This test requires that the parent corporation's conduct in using
the subsidiary corporation be unjust, fraudulent or wrongful. It examines the relationship of the plaintiff
to the corporation. It recognizes that piercing is appropriate only if the parent corporation uses the
subsidiary in a way that harms the plaintiff creditor. As such, it requires a showing of "an element of
injustice or fundamental unfairness."
The third prong is the "harm" test. This test requires the plaintiff to show that the defendant's control,
exerted in a fraudulent, illegal or otherwise unfair manner toward it, caused the harm suffered. A causal
connection between the fraudulent conduct committed through the instrumentality of the subsidiary and
the injury suffered or the damage incurred by the plaintiff should be established. The plaintiff must
prove that, unless the corporate veil is pierced, it will have been treated unjustly by the defendant's
exercise of control and improper use of the corporate form and, thereby, suffer damages.
To summarize, piercing the corporate veil based on the alter ego theory requires the concurrence of
three elements: control of the corporation by the stockholder or parent corporation, fraud or
fundamental unfairness imposed on the plaintiff, and harm or damage caused to the plaintiff by the
fraudulent or unfair act of the corporation. The absence of any of these elements prevents piercing
the corporate veil. (emphases and underscoring supplied)
Again, all these three elements must concur before the corporate veil may be pierced under the alter ego theory.
Keeping in mind the parameters, guidelines and indicators for proper piercing of the corporate veil, the Court now
proceeds to determine whether Maricalum Mining's corporate veil may be pierced in order to allow complainants to
enforce their monetary awards against G Holdings.
In Concept Builders, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Commission, et al., 72 the Court first laid down the first set of
probative factors of identity that will justify the application of the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil, viz:
Later, in Philippine National Bank v. Ritratto Group Inc., et al.,73 the Court expanded the aforementioned probative
factors and enumerated a combination of any of the following common circumstances that may also render a
subsidiary an instrumentality, to wit:
1) The parent corporation owns all or most of the capital stock of the subsidiary;
6) The parent corporation pays the salaries and other expenses or losses of the subsidiary;
7) The subsidiary has substantially no business except with the parent corporation or no assets except
those conveyed to or by the parent corporation;
8) In the papers of the parent corporation or in the statements of its officers, the subsidiary is described
as a department or division of the parent corporation, or its business or financial responsibility is
referred to as the parent corporation's own;
9) The parent corporation uses the property of the subsidiary as its own;
10) The directors or executives of the subsidiary do not act independently in the interest of the
subsidiary but take their orders from the parent corporation; and
11) The formal legal requirements of the subsidiary are not observed.
In the instant case, there is no doubt that G Holdings-being the majority and controlling stockholder-had been
exercising significant control over Maricalum Mining. This is because this Court had already upheld the validity and
enforceability of the PSA between the APT and G Holdings. It was stipulated in the PSA that APT shall transfer 90%
of Mari cal um Mining's equity securities to G Holdings and it establishes the presence of absolute control of a
subsidiary's corporate affairs. Moreover, the Court evinces its observation that Maricalum Mining's corporate name
appearing on the heading of the cash vouchers issued in payment of the services rendered by the manpower
cooperatives is being superimposed with G Holding's corporate name. Due to this observation, it can be reasonably
inferred that G Holdings is paying for Mari cal um Mining's salary expenses. Hence, the presence of both
circumstances of dominant equity ownership and provision for salary expenses may adequately establish that
Maricalum Mining is an instrumentality of G Holdings.
However, mere presence of control and full ownership of a parent over a subsidiary is not enough to pierce the veil
of corporate fiction. It has been reiterated by this Court time and again that mere ownership by a single
stockholder or by another corporation of all or nearly all of the capital stock of a corporation is not of itself
sufficient ground for disregarding the separate corporate personality.74
The corporate veil may be lifted only if it has been used to shield fraud, defend crime, justify a wrong, defeat public
convenience, insulate bad faith or perpetuate injustice.75 To aid in the determination of the presence or absence of
fraud, the following factors in the "Totality of Circumstances Test"76 may be considered, viz:
1) Commingling of funds and other assets of the corporation with those of the individual
shareholders;
2) Diversion of the corporation's funds or assets to non-corporate uses (to the personal uses of the
corporation's shareholders);
3) Failure to maintain the corporate formalities necessary for the issuance of or subscription to the
corporation's stock, such as formal approval of the stock issue by the board of directors;
7) Identity of the directors and officers of two entities who are responsible for supervision and
management (a partnership or sole proprietorship and a corporation owned and managed by the same
parties);
8) Failure to adequately capitalize a corporation for the reasonable risks of the corporate undertaking;
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10) Use of a corporation as a mere shell or conduit to operate a single venture or some particular
aspect of the business of an individual or another corporation;
11) Sole ownership of all the stock by one individual or members of a single family;
12) Use of the same office or business location by the corporation and its individual
shareholder(s);
13) Employment of the same employees or attorney by the corporation and its shareholder(s);
15) Disregard of legal formalities and failure to maintain proper arm's length relationships among
related entities;
16) Use of a corporate entity as a conduit to procure labor, services or merchandise for another person
or entity;
17) Diversion of corporate assets from the corporation by or to a stockholder or other person or
entity to the detriment of creditors, or the manipulation of assets and liabilities between entities
to concentrate the assets in one and the liabilities in another;
18) Contracting by the corporation with another person with the intent to avoid the risk of
nonperformance by use of the corporate entity; or the use of a corporation as a subterfuge for
illegal transactions; and
19) The formation and use of the corporation to assume the existing liabilities of another person or
entity.
Aside from the aforementioned circumstances, it must be determined whether the transfer of assets from Maricalum
Mining to G Holdings is enough to invoke the equitable remedy of piercing the corporate veil. The same issue was
resolved in Y-1 Leisure Phils., Inc., et al. v. Yu77 where this Court applied the "Nell Doctrine"78 regarding the transfer
of all the assets of one corporation to another. It was discussed in that case that as a general rule that where
one corporation sells or otherwise transfers all of its assets to another corporation, the latter is not liable for the
debts and liabilities of the transferor, except:
3) Where the purchasing corporation is merely a continuation of the selling corporation; and
4) Where the transaction is entered into fraudulently in order to escape liability for such debts.
If any of the above-cited exceptions are present, then the transferee corporation shall assume the liabilities of the
transferor. 79
In this case, G Holdings cannot be held liable for the satisfaction of labor-related claims against Maricalum Mining
under the fraud test for the following reasons:
First, the transfer of some Maricalum Mining's assets in favor G Holdings was by virtue of the PSA as part of an
official measure to dispose of the government's non-performing assets-not to evade its monetary obligations to the
complainants. Even before complainants' monetary claims supposedly existed in 2007, some of Maricalum Mining's
assets had already been validly extrajudicially foreclosed and eventually sold to G Holdings in 2001. Thus, G
Holdings could not have devised a scheme to avoid a non-existent obligation. No fraud could be attributed to G
Holdings because the transfer of assets was pursuant to a previously perfected valid contract.
Settled is the rule that where one corporation sells or otherwise transfers all its assets to another corporation for
value, the latter is not, by that fact alone, liable for the debts and liabilities of the transferor. 80 In other words, control
or ownership of substantially all of a subsidiary's assets is not by itself an indication of a holding company's
fraudulent intent to alienate these assets in evading labor-related claims or liabilities. As discussed earlier, the PSA
was not designed to evade the monetary claims of the complainants. Although there was proof that G Holdings has
an office in Maricalum Mining's premises and that that some of their assets have been commingled due to the PSA's
unavoidable consequences, there was no fraudulent diversion of corporate assets to another corporation for the
sole purpose of evading complainants' claim.
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Besides, it is evident that the alleged continuing depletion of Maricalum Mining's assets is due to its disgruntled
employees' own acts of pilferage, which was beyond the control of G Holdings. More so, complainants also failed to
present any clear and convincing evidence that G Holdings was grossly negligent and failed to exercise the required
degree of diligence in ensuring that Maricalum Mining's assets would be protected from pilferage. 81 Hence, no fraud
can be imputed against G Holdings considering that there is no evidence in the records that establishes it
systematically tried to alienate Maricalum Mining's assets to escape the liabilities to complainants.
Second, it was not proven that all of Maricalum Mining's assets were transferred to G Holdings or were totally
depleted. Complainants never offered any evidence to establish that Maricalum Mining had absolutely no substantial
assets to cover for their monetary claims. Their allegation that their claims will be reduced to a mere "paper victory"
has not confirmed with concrete proof. At the very least, substantial evidence should be adduced that the subsidiary
company's "net realizable value"82 of "current assets" 83 and "fair value" 84 of "non-current assets" 85 are collectively
insufficient to cover the whole amount of its liability subject in the instant litigation.
Third, G Holdings purchased Mari cal um Mining's shares from the APT not for the purpose of continuing the latter's
existence and operations but for the purpose of investing in the mining industry without having to directly engage in
the management and operation of mining. As discussed earlier, a holding company's primary business is merely to
invest in the equity of another corporation for the purpose of earning from the latter's endeavors. It generally does
not undertake to engage in the daily operating activities of its subsidiaries that, in turn, have their own separate sets
of directors and officers. Thus, there should be proof that a holding company had indeed fraudulently used the
separate corporate personality of its subsidiary to evade an obligation before it can be held liable. Since G Holdings
is a holding company, the corporate veil of its subsidiaries may only be pierced based on fraud or gross negligence
amounting to bad faith.
Lastly, no clear and convincing evidence was presented by the complainants to conclusively prove the presence of
fraud on the part of G Holdings. Although the quantum of evidence needed to establish a claim for illegal dismissal
in labor cases is substantial evidence,86 the quantum need to establish the presence of fraud is clear and convincing
evidence.87 Thus, to disregard the separate juridical personality of a corporation, the wrongdoing must be
established clearly and convincingly-it cannot be presumed.88
Here, the complainants did not satisfy the requisite quantum of evidence to prove fraud on the part of G Holdings.
They merely offered allegations and suppositions that, since Maricalum Mining's assets appear to be continuously
depleting and that the same corporation is a subsidiary, G Holdings could have been guilty of fraud. As emphasized
earlier, bare allegations do not prove anything. There must be proof that fraud-not the inevitable effects of a
previously executed and valid contract such as the PSA-was the cause of the latter's total asset depletion. To be
clear, the presence of control per se is not enough to justify the piercing of the corporate veil.
In WPM International Trading, Inc., et al. v. Labayen,89 the Court laid down the criteria for the harm or casual
connection test, to wit:
In this connection, we stress that the control necessary to invoke the instrumentality or alter ego rule is
not majority or even complete stock control but such domination of finances, policies and practices that
the controlled corporation has, so to speak, no separate mind, will or existence of its own, and is but a
conduit for its principal. The control must be shown to have been exercised at the time the acts
complained of took place. Moreover, the control and breach of duty must proximately cause the
injury or unjust loss for which the complaint is made. (emphases and underscoring supplied)
Proximate cause is defined as that cause, which, in natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any efficient
intervening cause, produces the injury, and without which the result would not have occurred.90 More
comprehensively, the proximate legal cause is that "acting first and producing the injury, either immediately or by
setting other events in motion, all constituting a natural and continuous chain of events, each having a close causal
connection with its immediate predecessor, the final event in the chain immediately effecting the injury as a natural
and probable result of the cause which first acted, under such circumstances that the person responsible for the first
event should, as an ordinary prudent and intelligent person, have reasonable ground to expect at the moment of his
act or default that an injury to some person might probably result therefrom."91 Hence, for an act or event to be
considered as proximate legal cause, it should be shown that such act or event had indeed caused injury to another.
In the case at bench, complainants have not yet even suffered any monetary injury. They have yet to enforce
their claims against Maricalum Mining. It is apparent that complainants are merely anxious that their monetary
awards will not be satisfied because the assets of Maricalum Mining were allegedly transferred surreptitiously to G
Holdings. However, as discussed earlier, since complainants failed to show that G Holdings's mere exercise of
control had a clear hand in the depletion of Maricalum Mining's assets, no proximate cause was successfully
established. The transfer of assets was pursuant to a valid and legal PSA between G Holdings and APT.
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Accordingly, complainants failed to satisfy the second and third tests to justify the application of the alter ego theory.
This inevitably shows that the CA committed no reversible error in upholding the NLRC's Decision declaring
Maricalum Mining as the proper party liable to pay the monetary awards in favor of complainants.
Sipalay Hospital was incorporated by Romulo G. Zafra, Eleanore B. Gutierrez, Helen Grace B. Fernandez, Evelyn
B. Badajos and Helen Grace L. Arbolario. 92 However, there is absence of indication that G Holdings subsequently
acquired the controlling interests of Sipalay Hospital. There is also no evidence that G Holdings entered into a
contract with Sipalay Hospital to provide medical services for its officers and employees. This lack of stockholding or
contractual connection signifies that Sipalay Hospital is not affiliated93 with G Holdings. Thus, due to this absence of
affiliation, the Court must apply the tests used to determine the existence of an employee-employer relationship;
rather than piercing the corporate veil.
Under the four-fold test, the employer-employee relationship is determined if the following are present: a) the
selection and engagement of the employee; b) the payment of wages; c) the power of dismissal; and d) the power to
control the employee's conduct, or the so-called "control test."94 Here, the "control test" is the most important and
crucial among the four tests. 95 However, in cases where there is no written agreement to base the relationship on
and where the various tasks performed by the worker bring complexity to the relationship with the employer, the
better approach would therefore be to adopt a two-tiered test involving: a) the putative employer's power to control
the employee with respect to the means and methods by which the work is to be accomplished; and b) the
underlying economic realities of the activity or relationship.96
In applying the second tier, the determination of the relationship between employer and employee depends upon the
circumstances of the whole economic activity (economic reality or multi-factor test), such as: a) the extent to
which the services performed are an integral part of the employer's business; b) the extent of the worker's
investment in equipment and facilities; c) the nature and degree of control exercised by the employer; d) the
worker's opportunity for profit and loss; e) the amount of initiative, skill, judgment or foresight required for the
success of the claimed independent enterprise; f) the permanency and duration of the relationship between the
worker and the employer; and g) the degree of dependency of the worker upon the employer for his continued
employment in that line of business. 97 Under all of these tests, the burden to prove by substantial evidence all of the
elements or factors is incumbent on the employee for he or she is the one claiming the existence of an employment
relationship.98
In light of the present circumstances, the Court must apply the four-fold test for lack of relevant data in the case
records relating to the underlying economic realities of the activity or relationship of Sipalay Hospital's employees.
To prove the existence of their employment relationship with G Holdings, complainants Dr. Welilmo T. Neri, Erlinda
L. Fernandez, Edgar M. Sobrino and Wilfredo C. Taganile, Sr. presented the following documents:
1) Affidavit99 of Dr. Welilmo T. Neri attesting among others that he was the Medical Director of Sipalay
Hospital which is allegedly owned and operated by G Holdings/Maricalum Mining;
2) Several cash vouchers 100 issued by G Holdings!Maricalum Mining representing Dr. Welilmo T. Neri's
payment for services rendered to "various" personnel;
3) Schedules of social security premium payments101 in favor of Dr. Welilmo T. Neri, Edgar M. Sobrino
and Wilfredo C. Taganile, Sr. stamped paid by G Holdings;
4) Notice of termination102 dated July 3, 2010 issued by Rolando G. Degojas (OIC of G-Holdings Inc.)
issued to Dr. Welilmo T. Neri and some of his companions who are not complainants in this case;
5) Notice of termination103 addressed to Dr. Welilmo T. Neri, Erlinda L. Fernandez, Edgar M. Sobrino
and some of their co-employees who are not complainants in this case with a collatilla stating that the
services of Dr. Welilmo T. Neri and nurse Erlinda L. Fernandez will be engaged on per call basis; and
6) A "Statement of Unpaid Salaries of Employees of G Holdings, Inc. Assigned to the Sipalay General
Hospital" 104 prepared by Dr. Welilmo T. Neri which included his own along with complainants Erlinda L.
Fernandez, Wilfredo C. Taganile, [Sr.] and Edgar M. [Sobrino].
A perusal of the aforementioned documents fails to show that the services of complainants Dr. Welilmo T. Neri,
Erlinda L. Fernandez, Edgar M. Sobrino and Wilfredo C. Taganile, Sr. were indeed selected and engaged by either
Maricalum Mining or G Holdings. This gap in evidence clearly shows that the first factor of the four-fold test,
or the selection and engagement of the employee, was not satisfied and not supported by substantial
evidence.
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However, the same cannot be said as to the second and third factors of the four-fold test (the payment of wages and
the power of dismissal). Since substantial evidence is defined as that amount of relevant evidence which a
reasonable mind might accept as adequate to justify a conclusion, 105 the cash vouchers, social security payments
and notices of termination are reasonable enough to draw an inference that G Holdings and Maricalum Mining may
have had a hand in the complainants' payment of salaries and dismissal.
Notwithstanding the absence of the first factor and the presence of the second and third factors of the four-fold test,
the Court still deems it best to examine the fourth factor-the presence of control-in order to determine the
employment connection of complainants Dr. Welilmo T. Neri, Erlinda L. Fernandez, Edgar M. Sobrino and Wilfredo
C. Taganile, Sr. with G Holdings.
Under the control test, an employer-employee relationship exists where the person for whom the services are
performed reserves the right to control not only the end achieved, but also the manner and means to be used in
reaching that end. 106 As applied in the healthcare industry, an employment relationship exists between a physician
and a hospital if the hospital controls both the means and the details of the process by which the physician is to
accomplish his task. 107 But where a person who works for another performs his job more or less at his own
pleasure, in the manner he sees fit, not subject to definite hours or conditions of work, and is compensated
according to the result of his efforts and not the amount thereof, no employer-employee relationship exists. 108
A corporation may only exercise its powers within the definitions provided by law and its articles of incorporation. 109
Accordingly, in order to determine the presence or absence of an employment relationship between G Holdings and
the employees of Sipalay Hospital by using the control test, the Court deems it essential to examine the salient
portion of Sipalay Hospital's Articles of Incorporation imparting its 'primary purpose,' 110 to wit:
To own, manage, lease or operate hospitals or clinics offering and providing medical services and
facilities to the general public, provided that purely professional, medical or surgical services shall be
performed by duly qualified physicians or surgeons who may or may not be connected with the
corporation and who shall be freely and individually contracted by patients. (emphasis supplied)
It is immediately apparent that Sipalay Hospital, even if its facilities are located inside the Sipalay Mining Complex,
does not limit its medical services only to the employees and officers of Maricalum Mining and/or G Holdings. Its act
of holding out services to the public reinforces the fact of its independence from either Maricalum Mining or G
Holdings because it is free to deal with any client without any legal or contractual restriction. Moreover, G Holdings
is a holding company primarily engaged in investing substantially in the stocks of another company-not in directing
and managing the latter's daily business operations. Because of this corporate attribute, the Court can reasonably
draw an inference that G Holdings does not have a considerable ability to control means and methods of
work of Sipalay Hospital employees. Markedly, the records are simply bereft of any evidence that G Holdings
had, in fact, used its ownership to control the daily operations of Sipalay Hospital as well as the working methods of
the latter's employees. There is no evidence showing any subsequent transfer of shares from the original
incorporators of Sipalay Hospital to G Holdings. Worse, it appears that complainants Dr. Welilmo T. Neri, Erlinda L.
Fernandez, Wilfredo C. Taganile, Sr. and Edgar M. Sobrino are trying to derive their employment connection with G
Holdings merely on an assumed premise that the latter owns the controlling stocks of Maricalum Mining.
On this score, the CA committed no reversible error in allowing the NLRC to delete the monetary awards of Dr.
Welilmo T. Neri, Erlinda L. Fernandez, Wilfredo C. Taganile, Sr. and Edgar M. Sobrino imposed by the Labor Arbiter
against G Holdings.
Conclusion
A holding company may be held liable for the acts of its subsidiary only when it is adequately proven that: a) there
was control over the subsidiary; (b) such control was used to protect a fraud (or gross negligence amounting to bad
faith) or evade an obligation; and c) fraud was the proximate cause of another's existing injury. Further, an employee
is duly-burdened to prove the crucial test or factor of control thru substantial evidence in order to establish the
existence of an employment relationship-especially as against an unaffiliated corporation alleged to be exercising
control.
In this case, complainants have not successfully proven that G Holdings fraudulently exercised its control over
Maricalum Mining to fraudulently evade any obligation. They also fell short of proving that G Holdings had exercised
operational control over the employees of Sipalay Hospital. Due to these findings, the Court sees no reversible error
on the part of the CA, which found no grave abuse of discretion and affirmed in toto the factual findings and legal
conclusions of the NLRC.
WHEREFORE, the Court AFFIRMS in toto the October 29, 2014 Decision of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP
No. 06835.
No pronouncement as to costs.
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SO ORDERED.
ALEXANDER G. GESMUNDO
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
SAMUEL R. MARTIRES
Associate Justice
ATTESTATION
I attest that the conclusions in the above Decisionhad been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to
the writer of the opinion of the Court’s Division.
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to the Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution and the Division Chairperson’s Attestation, I certify 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 Court’s Division.
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Senior Associate Justice
(Per Section 12, R.A. 296, The Judiciary Act of 1948, as amended)
Footnotes
1
Rollo (G.R. No. 222723) p. 12, represented by his heir Thelma G. Gomez, et al.
2
Id. (G.R. No. 221813, Vol. 1) at 67-80; penned by Associate Justice Marie Christine Azcarraga-Jacob and
concurred by Associate Justices Ramon Paul L. Hernando and Ma. Luisa C. Quijano-Padilla.
3
Id. at 381; penned by Presiding Commissioner Violeta Ortiz-Bantug and concurred by Commissioner Julie
C. Rendoque.
4
Id. at 440.
5
Id. at 250; penned by Labor Arbiter Romulo P. Sumalinog.
6
See "G" Holdings, Inc. v. National Mines and Allied Workers Union Local 103 (NAMA WU), et al., 619 Phil.
69, 78 (2009).
7
See Republic of the Philippines v. "G" Holdings, Inc., 512 Phil. 253, 258 (2005).
8
Supra note 5.
9
Id.
10
Rollo (G.R. No. 222723), pp. 437, 447.
11
Id. (G .R. No. 221813, Vol. II), pp. 553, 557.
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12
Id. at 527-552.
13
Id. (G.R. No. 222723) at 112.
14
Supra note 5.
15
Rollo (G.R. No. 221813, Vol. I), pp. 500-504.
16
Id. at 508-509; rollo (G.R. No. 221813, Vol. II), pp. 510-511.
17
Id. (G.R. No. 222723) at 171-175.
18
Id. at 154-166; 233-245, 251-297, 308-314.
19
Id. at 167.
20
Id. at 168-169.
21
Id. at 207-232.
22
Id. at 175-190.
23
Id. (G.R. No. 221813, Vol. 1) at 143-159.
24
Id. at 162-173.
25
Id. at 277-278.
26
Rollo (G.R. No. 221813, Vol. I), pp. 284-325.
27
619 Phil. 69, 78 (2009).
28
Rollo (G.R. No. 221813, Vol. I), pp. 405-406.
29
Id. at 451.
30
Id. at 27.
31
Supra, note 7.
32
Far Eastern Surety and Insurance Co., Inc. v. People, 721 Phil. 760, 770(2013), citations omitted.
33
Villarama v. Atty. De Jesus, G.R. No. 217004, April 17, 2017, citations omitted.
34
Quebral, et al. v. Angbus Construction, Inc., et al., G.R. No. 221897, November 7, 2016, citations omitted. 35
Noblado, et al. v. Alfonso, 773 Phil. 271, 279 (2015), citations omitted.
36
Pascual v. Burgos, et al., 776 Phil. 167, 186(2016), citations omitted.
37
Philippine National Bank v. Gregorio, G.R. No. 194944, September 18, 2017, citations omitted.
38
Protective Maximum Security Agency, Inc. v. Fuentes, 753 Phil. 482, 504 (2015), citations omitted.
39
United Coconut Planters Bank v. Looyuko, et al., 560 Phil. 581, 590 (2007), citations omitted.
40
Simon, et al. v. Canlas, 521 Phil. 558, 575 (2006), citations omitted.
41
Tacloban II Neighborhood Association, Inc. v. Office of the President, et al., 588 Phil. 177, 195 (2008),
citations omitted.
42
Cf. De Ortega v. Natividad, etc., et al., 71 Phil. 340, 342 (1941), citations omitted.
43
LNS International Manpower Services v. Padua, Jr., 628 Phil. 223, 224 (2010).
44
Article 106. Contractor or subcontractor. Whenever an employer enters into a contract with another person
for the performance of the former's work, the employees of the contractor and of the latter's subcontractor, if
any, shall be paid in accordance with the provisions of this Code.
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In the event that the contractor or subcontractor fails to pay the wages of his employees in accordance
with this Code, the employer shall be jointly and severally liable with his contractor or subcontractor to
such employees to the extent of the work performed under the contract, in the same manner and extent
that he is liable to employees directly employed by him.
xxxx
There is "labor-only" contracting where the person supplying workers to an employer does not have
substantial capital or investment in the form of tools, equipment, machineries, work premises, among
others, and the workers recruited and placed by such person are performing activities which are
directly related to the principal business of such employer. In such cases, the person or intermediary
shall be considered merely as an agent of the employer who shall be responsible to the workers in the
same manner and extent as if the latter were directly employed by him. (emphasis supplied)
45
538 Phil. 817, 867-869 (2006).
46
See Republic v. Asiapro Cooperative, 563 Phil. 979, 1002 (2007).
47
Petron Corporation v. Caberte, et al., 759 Phil. 353, 367 (2015), citations omitted.
48
Neptune Metal Scrap Recycling, Inc. v. Manila Electric Company, et al., 789 Phil. 30, 3 7 (2016), citations
omitted.
49
Salandanan v. Spouses Mendez, 600 Phil. 229, 241.
50
Galicia, et al. v. Manliquez vda. de Mindo, et al., 549 Phil. 595, 605 (2007), citations omitted.
51
Plasabas, et al. v. Court of Appeals, et al., 60 I Phil. 669, 675-676 (2009).
52
Cf. In the Matter of the Heirship (Intestate Estates) of the late Hermogenes Rodriguez, et al. v. Roh/es, 653
Phil. 396, 404-405 (2010), citations omitted.
53
GeneralCreditCorporationv.AlsonsDevelopmentandInvestmentCorporation,etal.,542Phil.219,232(2007),
citations omitted.
54
KukanInternationalCorporationv.Reyes,etal.,646Phil.210,234(2010),citationsomitted.
55
Reynoso, IVv. Court of Appeals, et al., 399 Phil. 38, 50 (2000).
56
Ever Electrical Manufacturing, Inc., et al. v. Samahang Manggagawa ng Ever Electrical, et al., 687 Phil.
529, 538 (2012).
57
See Section 3 (x) of Republic Act No. 9856 (The Real Estate Investment Trust Act of 2009).
58
See Section 3 (g) of Republic Act No. 2629 (Investment Company Act).
59
See Section 3 (ff) of Republic Act No. 2629 (Investment Company Act).
60
See Section 3 (h) of Republic Act No. 2629 (Investment Company Act); supra note 58.
61
The Investment Company Act (June 18, 1960).
62
Equity securities represent ownership in a company (Stice, et al., Intermediate Accounting, 17th Ed. [2010],
p. 839).
63
Section 3 (kk) of Republic Act No. 9856 (The Real Estate Investment Trust Act of 2009).
64
See Section 3 (b) of Republic Act No. 9856 (The Real Estate Investment Trust Act of 2009); cf. Section 3
(c) of Republic Act No. 2629 (Investment Company Act).
65
Aratea, et al. v. Suico, et al., 547 Phil. 407, 415 (2007), citations omitted.
66
Pearson, et al. v. Component Technology Corporation, et al., 247 F.3d 471 (2001), citations omitted.
67
Parkinson, et al. v. Guidant Corporation, et al., 315 F.Supp.2d 741 (2004), citations omitted.
68
Cf. Pacific Rehouse Corporation v. Court of Appeals, et al., 730 Phil. 325, 351 (2014), citations omitted.
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69
18 C.J.S. Corporations § 5 (1939).
70
Philippine National Bank, et al. v. Andrada Electric & Engineering Company, 430 Phil. 882, 895 (2002),
citations omitted.
71
706 Phil. 297, 310-312 (2013), citations omitted.
72
326 Phil. 955, 965 (1996), citations omitted.
73
414 Phil. 494, 504-505 (2001).
74
Zambrano, et al. v. Philippine Carpet Manufacturing Corporation, et al., G.R. No. 224099, June 21, 2017,
citations omitted; Francisco, et al. v. Mejia, et al., 415 Phil. 153, 170 (2001).
75
See San Juan Structural and Steel Fabricators, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, et al., 357 Phil. 631, 648-649
(1998).
76
Laya v. Erin Homes, Inc., et al., 352 S.E.2d 93 (1986), cited in: Kinney Shoe Corporation v. Polan, 939 F.2d
209 (1991).
77
769 Phil. 279, 293 (2015).
78
The Edward J. Nell Company v. Pacific Farms, Inc., 122 Phil. 825, 827 (1965), citations omitted.
79
Supra note 77 at 293.
80
Pantranco Employees Association, et al. v. National labor Relations Commission, et al., 600 Phil. 645, 660
(2009).
81
See Heirs of Fe Tan Uy v. International Exchange Bank, 703 Phil. 477, 486 (2013).
82
Net realizable value is the estimated selling price in the ordinary course of business less the estimated
costs of completion and the estimated costs necessary to make the sale (International Financial Reporting
Standards No. 2.6).
83
Current assets are assets that a company expects to convert to cash or use up within one year or its
operating cycle, whichever is longer (Weygandt, et al., Accounting Principles, 10th Ed. [2012], p. 172).
84
Fair value is the price that would be received to sell an asset or paid to transfer a liability in an orderly
transaction in the principal (or most advantageous) market at the measurement date under current market
conditions (ie an exit price) regardless of whether that price is directly observable or estimated using another
valuation technique (International Financial Reporting Standards No. 19.24).
85
Non-current assets are those which are not likely to be converted into unrestricted cash within a year of the
balance sheet date (see: https://www.accountingcoach.com/blog/what-is-a-noncurrent-asset [last visited: May
28, 2018]).
86
Functional, Inc. v. Granjil, 676 Phil. 279, 2S7 (2011).
87
Republic v. Guerrero, 520 Phil. 296, 311 (2006).
88
Mcleod v. National labor Relations Commission, et al., 541 Phil. 214, 239 (2007).
89
743 Phil. 192, 201-202 (2014).
90
Mendoza, et al. v. Spouses Gomez, 736 Phil. 460, 475 (2014).
91
Ramos v. C.O.L. Realty Corporation, 614 Phil. 169, 177 (2009).
92
Rollo (G.R. No. 222723), p. 441.
93
See Section 3 (c) of Republic Act No. 2629 (Investment Company Act).
(c)"Affiliated person" of another person means (1) any person directly or indirectly owning, controlling or
holding with power to vote, ten per centum or more of the outstanding voting securities of such other
person; (2) any 'person ten per centum or more of whose outstanding voting securities are directly or
indirectly owned, controlled, or held with power to vote, by such other person; (3) any person directly or
indirectly controlling, controlled by, or under common control with, such other person; (4) any officer,
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director, partner, copartner, or employee of such other person; and (5) if such other person is an
investment company, any investment adviser thereof or any member of an advisory board thereof.
(emphasis supplied)
94
South East International Rattan, Inc., et al. v. Coming, 729 Phil. 298, 306 (2014).
95
Alba v. Espinosa, et al., G.R. No. 227734, August 9, 2017, citations omitted.
96
Valeroso, et al. v. Skycable Corporation, 790 Phil. 93, 103 (2016).
97
Francisco v. National labor Relations Commission, et al., 532 Phil. 399, 408-409 (2006).
98
See Valencia v. Classique Vinyl Products Corporation, et al., G.R. No. 206390, January 30, 2017, 816
SCRA 144, 156, citations omitted.
99
Rollo (G.R. No. 222723), p. 153.
100
Id. at 154-165.
101
Id. at 166-167.
102
Id. at 168.
103
Id. at 169.
104
Id. at 170.
105
Skippers United Pacific, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Commission, et al., 527 Phil. 248, 257 (2006).
106
Atok Big Wedge Company, Inc. v. Gison, 670 Phil. 615, 627 (2011).
107
Calamba Medical Center, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Commission, et al., 592 Phil. 318, 326 (2008).
108
Orozco v. Court of Appeals, et al., 584 Phil. 35, 52 (2008).
109
See University of Mindanao, Inc. v. Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas, et al., 776 Phil. 401, 428 (2016).
110
Rollo (G.R. No. 222723), p. 438.
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