Labor Rev 1st
Labor Rev 1st
Labor Rev 1st
1985, November, 1985 and May, 1986, were duly submitted for
inspection.
On July 17, 1986, the Labor Standard and Welfare Officers
submitted their report confirming that there was underpayment of
wages and ECOLAs of all the employees by the petitioner, the
dispositive portion of which reads:
IN VIEW OF THE FOREGOING, deficiency on wage and
ecola as verified and confirmed per review of the
respondent payrolls and interviews with the
complainant workers and all other information
gathered
by
the
team,
it
is
respectfully
recommended to the Honorable Regional Director,
this office, that Antera Dorado, President be
ORDERED to pay the amount of SIX HUNDRED FIFTY
FOUR THOUSAND SEVEN HUNDRED FIFTY SIX &
01/100 (P654,756.01), representing underpayment of
wages and ecola to the THIRTY SIX (36) employees of
the said hospital as appearing in the attached Annex
"F" worksheets and/or whatever action equitable
under the premises. (p. 99, Rollo)
Based on this inspection report and recommendation, the Regional
Director issued an Order dated August 4, 1986, directing the
payment of P723,888.58, representing underpayment of wages and
ECOLAs to all the petitioner's employees, the dispositive portion of
which reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, respondent
Maternity and Children Hospital is hereby ordered to
pay the above-listed complainants the total amount
indicated opposite each name, thru this Office within
ten (10) days from receipt thereof. Thenceforth, the
respondent hospital is also ordered to pay its
employees/workers the prevailing statutory minimum
wage and allowance.
SO ORDERED. (p. 34, Rollo)
Petitioner appealed from this Order to the Minister of Labor and
Employment, Hon. Augusto S. Sanchez, who rendered a Decision on
September 24, 1986, modifying the said Order in that deficiency
wages and ECOLAs should be computed only from May 23, 1983 to
May 23, 1986, the dispositive portion of which reads:
WHEREFORE, the August 29, 1986 order is hereby
MODIFIED in that the deficiency wages and ECOLAs
should only be computed from May 23, 1983 to May
23, 1986. The case is remanded to the Regional
Director, Region X, for recomputation specifying the
amounts due each the complainants under each of
the applicable Presidential Decrees. (p. 40, Rollo)
On October 24, 1986, the petitioner filed a motion for
reconsideration which was denied by the Secretary of Labor in his
Order dated May 13, 1987, for lack of merit (p. 43 Rollo).
The instant petition questions the all-embracing applicability of the
award involving salary differentials and ECOLAS, in that it covers
not only the hospital employees who signed the complaints, but
also those (a) who are not signatories to the complaint, and (b)
those who were no longer in the service of the hospital at the time
the complaints were filed.
Petitioner likewise maintains that the Order of the respondent
Regional Director of Labor, as affirmed with modifications by
respondent Secretary of Labor, does not clearly and distinctly state
the facts and the law on which the award was based. In its
"Rejoinder to Comment", petitioner further questions the authority
of the Regional Director to award salary differentials and ECOLAs to
private respondents, (relying on the case of Encarnacion vs.
Baltazar, G.R. No. L-16883, March 27, 1961, 1 SCRA 860, as
authority for raising the additional issue of lack of jurisdiction at
any stage of the proceedings, p. 52, Rollo), alleging that the
original and exclusive jurisdiction over money claims is properly
lodged in the Labor Arbiter, based on Article 217, paragraph 3 of
the Labor Code.
The primary issue here is whether or not the Regional Director had
jurisdiction over the case and if so, the extent of coverage of any
award that should be forthcoming, arising from his visitorial and
enforcement powers under Article 128 of the Labor Code. The
matter of whether or not the decision states clearly and distinctly
statement of facts as well as the law upon which it is based,
becomes relevant after the issue on jurisdiction has been resolved.
SUBJECT: DISTRIBUTION
LABOR CASES
OVER
JURISDICTION
OF
a) intricate questions of
law are involved; or
b) evidentiary matters
not disclosed or verified
in the normal course of
inspection
by
labor
regulations officers are
required for their proper
disposition.
OF
CASES
TO
LABOR
Pursuant
to
the
provisions
of
Presidential Decree No. 1391 and to
insure speedy disposition of labor
cases, the following guidelines are
hereby established for the information
and guidance of all concerned.
3. Disposition of Cases.
When a case is assigned to a Labor
Arbiter, all issues raised therein shall
be resolved by him including those
which are originally cognizable by the
Regional Director to avoid multiplicity
of proceedings. In other words, the
whole case, and not merely issues
involved therein, shall be assigned to
and resolved by him.
1. Conciliable Cases.
Cases which are conciliable per se i.e.,
(a) labor standards cases where
employer-employee
relationship no
longer exists; (b) cases involving
deadlock in collective bargaining,
Standards
(Emphasis supplied)
4. PD 1691(5-1-80) original and
exclusive
jurisdiction
over unresolved issues in collective
bargaining
and
money
claims,
which includes moral
or
other
damages.
Despite the original and exclusive jurisdiction of labor
arbiters over money claims, however, the Regional
Director
nonetheless retained his
enforcement
power,
and
remained
empowered
to
adjudicate uncontested money claims.
5. BP 130 (8-21-8l) strengthened
voluntary arbitration. The decree also
returned the Labor Arbiters as part of
the NLRC, operating as Arbitration
Branch thereof.
6. BP 227(6-1- 82) original and
exclusive jurisdiction over questions
involving legality of strikes and lockouts.
The present petition questions the authority of the Regional
Director to issue the Order, dated August 4, 1986, on the basis of
his visitorial and enforcement powers under Article 128 (formerly
Article 127) of the present Labor Code. It is contended that based
on the rulings in the Ong vs. Parel (supra) and the Zambales Base
Metals, Inc. vs. The Minister of Labor (supra) cases, a Regional
Director is precluded from adjudicating money claims on the
ground that this is an exclusive function of the Labor Arbiter under
Article 217 of the present Code.
On August 4, 1986, when
128(b) 4 read as follows:
the
order
was
issued,
Article
restitutions may be
money
claims
not
Fifty
Thousand
.
E.O. No. 111 was issued on December 24, 1986 or three (3) months
after the promulgation of the Secretary of Labor's decision
upholding private respondents' salary differentials and ECOLAs on
September 24, 1986. The amendment of the visitorial and
enforcement powers of the Regional Director (Article 128-b) by said
E.O. 111 reflects the intention enunciated in Policy Instructions Nos.
6 and 37 to empower the Regional Directors to resolveuncontested
money claims in cases where an employer-employee relationship
still exists. This intention must be given weight and entitled to
great respect. As held in Progressive Workers' Union, et. al. vs. F.P.
Aguas, et. al. G.R. No. 59711-12, May 29, 1985, 150 SCRA 429:
. . The interpretation by officers of laws which are
entrusted to their administration is entitled to great
respect. We see no reason to detract from this
rudimentary rule in administrative law, particularly
when later events have proved said interpretation to
be in accord with the legislative intent. ..
The proceedings before the Regional Director must, perforce, be
upheld on the basis of Article 128(b) as amended by E.O. No. 111,
dated December 24, 1986, this executive order "to be considered in
the nature of a curative statute with retrospective application."
(Progressive Workers' Union, et al. vs. Hon. F.P. Aguas, et al.
(Supra); M. Garcia vs. Judge A. Martinez, et al., G.R. No. L- 47629,
May 28, 1979, 90 SCRA 331).
The justification for the award to this group of employees who were
not signatories to the complaint is that the visitorial and
enforcement powers given to the Secretary of Labor is relevant to,
and exercisable over establishments, not over the individual
members/employees, because what is sought to be achieved by its
exercise is the observance of, and/or compliance by, such
firm/establishment
with
the
labor
standards
regulations.
Necessarily, in case of an award resulting from a violation of labor
legislation by such establishment, the entire members/employees
should benefit therefrom. As aptly stated by then Minister of Labor
Augusto S. Sanchez:
. . It would be highly derogatory to the rights of the
workers, if after categorically finding the respondent
hospital guilty of underpayment of wages and
ECOLAs, we limit the award to only those who signed
the complaint to the exclusion of the majority of the
workers who are similarly situated. Indeed, this would
be not only render the enforcement power of the
Minister of Labor and Employment nugatory, but
would be the pinnacle of injustice considering that it
would not only discriminate but also deprive them of
legislated benefits.
. . . (pp. 38-39, Rollo).
This view is further bolstered by the provisions of Sec. 6, Rule II of
the "Rules on the Disposition of Labor Standards cases in the
Regional Offices" (supra) presently enforced, viz:
SECTION 6. Coverage of complaint inspection. A
complaint inspection shall not be limited to the
specific allegations or violations raised by the
complainants/workers but shall be a thorough inquiry
justice means the promotion of the welfare of all the people, the
adoption by the Government of measures calculated to insure
economic stability of all the competent elements of society,
through the maintenance of a proper economic and social
equilibrium in the interrelations of the members of the community,
constitutionally,
through
the
adoption
of
measures
legally
be
founded
on
the
recognition
of
the
necessity
of
SARMIENTO, J.:
The petitioner, Philippine Association of Service Exporters, Inc.
(PASEI, for short), a firm "engaged principally in the recruitment of
Filipino
workers,
male
and
female,
for
overseas
1
placement," challenges the Constitutional validity of Department
Order No. 1, Series of 1988, of the Department of Labor and
Employment, in the character of "GUIDELINES GOVERNING THE
TEMPORARY SUSPENSION OF DEPLOYMENT OF FILIPINO DOMESTIC
AND HOUSEHOLD WORKERS," in this petition for certiorari and
prohibition. Specifically, the measure is assailed for "discrimination
against males or females;" 2 that it "does not apply to all Filipino
workers but only to domestic helpers and females with similar
skills;" 3 and that it is violative of the right to travel. It is held
likewise to be an invalid exercise of the lawmaking power, police
power being legislative, and not executive, in character.
In its supplement to the petition, PASEI invokes Section 3, of Article
XIII, of the Constitution, providing for worker participation "in policy
and decision-making processes affecting their rights and benefits
as may be provided by law." 4 Department Order No. 1, it is
contended, was passed in the absence of prior consultations. It is
claimed, finally, to be in violation of the Charter's non-impairment
clause, in addition to the "great and irreparable injury" that PASEI
members face should the Order be further enforced.
On May 25, 1988, the Solicitor General, on behalf of the
respondents Secretary of Labor and Administrator of the Philippine
Overseas Employment Administration, filed a Comment informing
the Court that on March 8, 1988, the respondent Labor Secretary
lifted the deployment ban in the states of Iraq, Jordan, Qatar,
Canada, Hongkong, United States, Italy, Norway, Austria, and
the ban been given universal applicability, then it would have been
unreasonable and arbitrary. For obvious reasons, not all of them are
similarly circumstanced. What the Constitution prohibits is the
singling out of a select person or group of persons within an
existing class, to the prejudice of such a person or group or
resulting in an unfair advantage to another person or group of
persons. To apply the ban, say exclusively to workers deployed by
A, but not to those recruited by B, would obviously clash with the
equal protection clause of the Charter. It would be a classic case of
what Chase refers to as a law that "takes property from A and gives
it to B." 21 It would be an unlawful invasion of property rights and
freedom of contract and needless to state, an invalid
act. 22 (Fernando says: "Where the classification is based on such
distinctions that make a real difference as infancy, sex, and stage
of civilization of minority groups, the better rule, it would seem, is
to recognize its validity only if the young, the women, and the
cultural minorities are singled out for favorable treatment. There
would be an element of unreasonableness if on the contrary their
status that calls for the law ministering to their needs is made the
basis of discriminatory legislation against them. If such be the case,
it would be difficult to refute the assertion of denial of equal
protection." 23 In the case at bar, the assailed Order clearly accords
protection to certain women workers, and not the contrary.)
It is incorrect to say that Department Order No. 1 prescribes a total
ban on overseas deployment. From scattered provisions of the
Order, it is evident that such a total ban has hot been
contemplated. We quote:
5. AUTHORIZED DEPLOYMENT-The deployment of
domestic helpers and workers of similar skills defined
herein to the following [sic] are authorized under
these guidelines and are exempted from the
suspension.
5.1 Hirings by immediate members of
the family of Heads of State and
Government;
Deputy
senior
welfare and
workers. 24
protection
of
Filipino
April 4, 2001
The case was docketed as POEA Case No. (L) 85-05 0370.
Under the rules of the POEA dated May 21, 1985, complaints
involving employer-employee relations arising out of or by virtue of
any law or contract involving Filipino workers for overseas
employment, including money claims, are adjudicated by the
Workers' Assistance and Adjudication Office (hereinafter the
"WAAO") thru the POEA Hearing Officers.5 On the other hand,
complaints involving recruitment violations warranting suspension
or cancellation of the license of recruiting agencies are cognizable
by the POEA thru its Licensing and Recruitment Office (hereinafter
the "LRO"). 6 In cases where a complaint partakes of the nature of
10
Under the Rules and Regulations of the POEA, the decision of the
POEA-Adjudication Office on matters involving money claims arising
from the employer-employee relationship of overseas Filipino
workers may be appealed to the National Labor Relations
Commission (hereinafter the "NLRC)11 . Thus, as both felt aggrieved
by the said POEA Decision, petitioner and private respondents filed
separate appeals from the August 31, 1988 POEA Decision to the
NLRC.
In a decision dated July 26, 1989 12 , the NLRC modified the
appealed decision of the POEA Adjudication Office by deleting the
award of salary deductions and differentials. These awards to
private respondents were deleted by the NLRC considering that
these were not raised in the complaint filed by private respondents.
The NLRC likewise stated that there was nothing in the text of the
decision which would justify the award.
Private respondents then elevated the July 26, 1989 decision of the
NLRC to the Supreme Court in a petition for review for certiorari
where it was docketed as G.R. No. 89089. However, in a Resolution
dated October 25, 1989, the petition was dismissed outright for
"insufficiency in form and substance, having failed to comply with
the Rules of Court and Circular No. 1-88 requiring submission of a
certified true copy of the questioned resolution dated August 23,
1989." 13
Almost simultaneous with the promulgation of the August 31, 1988
decision of the POEA on private respondents' money claims, the
POEA issued a separate Order dated August 29, 1988 14 resolving
the recruitment violations aspect of private respondents' complaint.
In this Order, the POEA found petitioner guilty of illegal exaction,
contract substitution, and unlawful deduction. The dispositive
portion of this August 29, 1988 POEA Order reads:
"WHEREFORE, premises considered, this Office finds herein
respondent PHILSA International Placement and Services
Corporation liable for three (3) counts of illegal exaction, two
(2) counts of contract substitution and one count of
withholding or unlawful deduction from salaries of workers.
Accordingly, respondent is hereby ordered to refund the
placement fees in the amount of P2,500.00 to Rodrigo L.
Mikin, P4,000.00, each, to Vivencio A. de Mesa and Cedric
A.P. Leyson plus restitution of the salaries withheld in the
amount of SR1,000.00 to Vivencio A. de Mesa.
Moreover, respondent's license is hereby suspended for
eight (8) months to take effect immediately and to remain
as such until full refund and restitution of the above-stated
amounts have been effected or in lieu thereof, it is fined the
amount of SIXTY THOUSAND (P60,000.00) PESOS plus
restitution.
SO ORDERED."
In line with this August 29, 1988 Order, petitioner deposited the
check equivalent to the claims of private respondents and paid the
II
THE PUBLIC RESPONDENT HAS ACTED WITHOUT OR IN
EXCESS OF JURISDICTION OR WITH GRAVE ABUSE OF
DISCRETION IN PENALIZING PETITIONER WITH CONTRACT
SUBSTITUTION. IN THE PREMISES, THE CONTRACT
SUBSTITUTION IS VALID AS IT IMPROVED THE TERMS AND
CONDITIONS OF PRIVATE RESPONDENTS' EMPLOYMENT.
III.
20
implementing Rules,
the Labor Code on
to which group the
belongs.
SO ORDERED.
The next day, on April 23, 1976, the Department of Labor released
Policy Instructions No. 9, hereinbelow quoted:
The Rules implementing PD 850 have clarified the
policy in the implementation of the ten (10) paid
legal holidays. Before PD 850, the number of working
days a year in a firm was considered important in
determining entitlement to the benefit. Thus, where
an employee was working for at least 313 days, he
was considered definitely already paid. If he was
working for less than 313, there was no certainty
whether the ten (10) paid legal holidays were already
paid to him or not.
VITUG, J.:
Petitioner Ramon C. Lozon, a certified public accountant, was a
Senior
Vice-President-Finance of Private respondent Philippine Airlines, Inc.
("PAL"), when his services were terminated on 19 December 1990
in the aftermath of the much-publicized "two-billion-peso PALscam."
Lozon started to work for the national carrier on 23 August 1967
and, for twenty-three years, steadily climbed the corporate ladder
until he became one of its vice-presidents. 1
His termination from the service was spawned by a letter sent
some time in June 1990 by a member of PAL's board of directors,
then Solicitor General Francisco Chavez, to PAL President Dante
Santos. Chavez demanded an investigation of twenty-three
irregularities allegedly committed by twenty-two high-ranking PAL
officials. Among these officials was petitioner; he had been
administratively charged by Romeo David, Senior Vice-President for
Corporate Services and Logistics Group, for his (Lozon) purported
involvement in four cases, labeled "Goldair," "Autographics," "Big
Bang of 1983" and "Middle East." 2 Pending the investigation of
these cases by a panel 3 constituted by then President Corazon C.
Aquino, petitioner was placed under preventive suspension.
In the organizational meeting of the PAL board of directors on 19
October 1990 which occasion Feliciano R. Belmonte, Jr., was elected
chairman of the board while Dante G. Santos was designated
president and chief executive officer, 4 the board deferred action on
the election or appointment of some senior officers of the company
who, like petitioner, had been charged with various offenses.
15
On 24 July 1992, the NLRC rendered a decision (in NLRC NCR Case
No. 00-06-03684-91) 19 dismissing the case on the strength of PAL's
new argument on the issue of jurisdiction. 20 Petitioner's motion for
reconsideration was denied by the NLRC.
The instant petition for certiorari filed with this Court raises these
issues: (a) Whether or not the NLRC has jurisdiction over the illegal
dismissal case, and (b) on the assumption that the SEC has that
jurisdiction, whether or not private respondent is estopped from
raising NLRC's lack of jurisdiction over the controversy.
We sustain NLRC's dismissal of the case.
Presidential Decree No. 902-A confers on the SEC original and
exclusive jurisdiction to hear and decide controversies and cases
involving
a. Intra-corporate and partnership relations between
or among the corporation, officers and stockholders
and
partners,
including
their
elections
or
appointments;
b. State and corporate affairs in relation to the legal
existence
of
corporations,
partnerships
and
associations or to their franchises; and
c. Investors and corporate affairs, particularly in
respect of devices and schemes, such as fraudulent
practices, employed by directors, officers, business
associates, and/or other stockholders, partners, or
members of registered firms; as well as
d. Petitions for suspension of payments filed by
corporations, partnerships or associations possessing
sufficient property to cover all their debts but which
foresee the impossibility of meeting them when they
respectively fall due, or possessing insufficient assets
to cover their liabilities and said entities are upon
petition
or motu
propio,
placed
under
the
management of a Rehabilitation
Management Committee.
Receiver
or
corporation,
its
directors,
trustees,
officers,
shareholders, the issue of consequential damages
may just as well be resolved and adjudicated by the
SEC. (Emphasis supplied.)
We here reiterate the above holdings for, indeed, controversies
within the purview of Section 5 of P.D. No. 902-A must not be so
constricted as to deny to the SEC the sound exercise of its
expertise and competence in resolving all closely related aspects of
such corporate disputes.
Petitioner maintains that PAL is estopped, nevertheless, from
questioning the jurisdiction of the NLRC considering that PAL did
not hold the dispute to be intra-corporate until after the case had
already been brought on appeal to the NLRC.
In the first place, there would not be much basis to indicate that
PAL was "effectively barred by estoppel." 30 As early as the initial
stages of the controversy PAL had already raised the issue of
jurisdiction albeit mistakenly at first on the ground that petitioner's
recourse was an appeal to the Office of the President. The error
could not alter the fact that PAL did question even then the
jurisdiction of both the labor arbiter and the NLRC.
It has long been the established rule, moreover, that jurisdiction
over a subject matter is conferred by law, 31 and the question of
lack of jurisdiction may be raised at anytime even on appeal. 32 In
the recent case of La Naval Drug Corporation vs. Court of Appeals,
G.R. No. 103200, 31 August 1994, this Court said:
Lack of jurisdiction over the subject matter of the suit
is yet another matter. Whenever it appears that the
court has no jurisdiction over the subject matter, the
action shall be dismissed (Section 2, Rule 9, Rules of
Court). This defense may be interpose at any time,
during appeal (Roxas vs. Rafferty, 37 Phil. 957) or
even after final judgment (Cruzcosa vs. Judge
Concepcion, et al., 101 Phil. 146). Such is
understandable, as this kind of jurisdiction is
conferred by law and not within the courts, let alone
CRUZ, J.:
In ancient mythology, Antaeus was a terrible giant who blocked and
challenged Hercules for his life on his way to Mycenae after
performing his eleventh labor. The two wrestled mightily and
Hercules flung his adversary to the ground thinking him dead, but
Antaeus rose even stronger to resume their struggle. This
happened several times to Hercules' increasing amazement.
Finally, as they continued grappling, it dawned on Hercules that
Antaeus was the son of Gaea and could never die as long as any
part of his body was touching his Mother Earth. Thus forewarned,
Hercules then held Antaeus up in the air, beyond the reach of the
sustaining soil, and crushed him to death.
Mother Earth. The sustaining soil. The giver of life, without whose
invigorating touch even the powerful Antaeus weakened and died.
The cases before us are not as fanciful as the foregoing tale. But
they also tell of the elemental forces of life and death, of men and
women who, like Antaeus need the sustaining strength of the
precious earth to stay alive.
"Land for the Landless" is a slogan that underscores the acute
imbalance in the distribution of this precious resource among our
people. But it is more than a slogan. Through the brooding
centuries, it has become a battle-cry dramatizing the increasingly
urgent demand of the dispossessed among us for a plot of earth as
their place in the sun.
Recognizing this need, the Constitution in 1935 mandated the
policy of social justice to "insure the well-being and economic
security of all the people," 1 especially the less privileged. In 1973,
the new Constitution affirmed this goal adding specifically that "the
State shall regulate the acquisition, ownership, use, enjoyment and
disposition of private property and equitably diffuse property
ownership and profits." 2 Significantly, there was also the specific
injunction to "formulate and implement an agrarian reform program
aimed at emancipating the tenant from the bondage of the soil." 3
The Constitution of 1987 was not to be outdone. Besides echoing
these sentiments, it also adopted one whole and separate Article
XIII on Social Justice and Human Rights, containing grandiose but
undoubtedly sincere provisions for the uplift of the common people.
These include a call in the following words for the adoption by the
State of an agrarian reform program:
SEC. 4. The State shall, by law, undertake an agrarian reform
program founded on the right of farmers and regular farmworkers,
who are landless, to own directly or collectively the lands they till
or, in the case of other farmworkers, to receive a just share of the
fruits thereof. To this end, the State shall encourage and undertake
the just distribution of all agricultural lands, subject to such
agricultural land was deemed the owner of the land he was tilling.
The leasehold rentals paid after that date should therefore be
considered amortization payments.
The petitioner contends that the issuance of E.0. Nos. 228 and 229
shortly before Congress convened is anomalous and arbitrary,
besides violating the doctrine of separation of powers. The
legislative power granted to the President under the Transitory
Provisions refers only to emergency measures that may be
promulgated in the proper exercise of the police power.
The petitioner also invokes his rights not to be deprived of his
property without due process of law and to the retention of his
small parcels of riceholding as guaranteed under Article XIII,
Section 4 of the Constitution. He likewise argues that, besides
denying him just compensation for his land, the provisions of E.O.
No. 228 declaring that:
Lease rentals paid to the landowner by the farmer-beneficiary after
October 21, 1972 shall be considered as advance payment for the
land.
is an unconstitutional taking of a vested property right. It is also his
contention that the inclusion of even small landowners in the
program along with other landowners with lands consisting of
seven hectares or more is undemocratic.
In his Comment, the Solicitor General submits that the petition is
premature because the motion for reconsideration filed with the
Minister of Agrarian Reform is still unresolved. As for the validity of
the issuance of E.O. Nos. 228 and 229, he argues that they were
enacted pursuant to Section 6, Article XVIII of the Transitory
Provisions of the 1987 Constitution which reads:
The incumbent president shall continue to exercise legislative
powers until the first Congress is convened.
On the issue of just compensation, his position is that when P.D. No.
27 was promulgated on October 21. 1972, the tenant-farmer of
which
was
promulgated
in
provide for the creation of said fund, for that is not its principal
purpose. An appropriation law is one the primary and specific
purpose of which is to authorize the release of public funds from
the treasury.19 The creation of the fund is only incidental to the
main objective of the proclamation, which is agrarian reform.
It should follow that the specific constitutional provisions invoked,
to wit, Section 24 and Section 25(4) of Article VI, are not applicable.
With particular reference to Section 24, this obviously could not
have been complied with for the simple reason that the House of
Representatives, which now has the exclusive power to initiate
appropriation measures, had not yet been convened when the
proclamation was issued. The legislative power was then solely
vested in the President of the Philippines, who embodied, as it
were, both houses of Congress.
The argument of some of the petitioners that Proc. No. 131 and E.O.
No. 229 should be invalidated because they do not provide for
retention limits as required by Article XIII, Section 4 of the
Constitution is no longer tenable. R.A. No. 6657 does provide for
such limits now in Section 6 of the law, which in fact is one of its
most controversial provisions. This section declares:
Retention Limits. Except as otherwise provided in this Act, no
person may own or retain, directly or indirectly, any public or
private agricultural land, the size of which shall vary according to
factors governing a viable family-sized farm, such as commodity
produced, terrain, infrastructure, and soil fertility as determined by
the Presidential Agrarian Reform Council (PARC) created hereunder,
but in no case shall retention by the landowner exceed five (5)
hectares. Three (3) hectares may be awarded to each child of the
landowner, subject to the following qualifications: (1) that he is at
least fifteen (15) years of age; and (2) that he is actually tilling the
land or directly managing the farm; Provided, That landowners
whose lands have been covered by Presidential Decree No. 27 shall
be allowed to keep the area originally retained by them thereunder,
further, That original homestead grantees or direct compulsory
heirs who still own the original homestead at the time of the
approval of this Act shall retain the same areas as long as they
continue to cultivate said homestead.
which would have been exhausted by the 59-story building that the
city refused to countenance atop the Terminal. Prevailing bulk
restrictions on neighboring sites were proportionately relaxed,
theoretically enabling Penn Central to recoup its losses at the
Terminal site by constructing or selling to others the right to
construct larger, hence more profitable buildings on the transferee
sites. 30
28
But for all its primacy and urgency, the power of expropriation is by
no means absolute (as indeed no power is absolute). The limitation
is found in the constitutional injunction that "private property shall
not be taken for public use without just compensation" and in the
abundant jurisprudence that has evolved from the interpretation of
this principle. Basically, the requirements for a proper exercise of
the power are: (1) public use and (2) just compensation.
Let us dispose first of the argument raised by the petitioners in G.R.
No. 79310 that the State should first distribute public agricultural
lands in the pursuit of agrarian reform instead of immediately
disturbing property rights by forcibly acquiring private agricultural
lands. Parenthetically, it is not correct to say that only public
agricultural lands may be covered by the CARP as the Constitution
calls for "the just distribution of all agricultural lands." In any event,
the decision to redistribute private agricultural lands in the manner
prescribed by the CARP was made by the legislative and executive
departments in the exercise of their discretion. We are not justified
in reviewing that discretion in the absence of a clear showing that it
has been abused.
A becoming courtesy admonishes us to respect the decisions of the
political departments when they decide what is known as the
political question. As explained by Chief Justice Concepcion in the
case of Taada v. Cuenco: 36
The term "political question" connotes what it means in ordinary
parlance, namely, a question of policy. It refers to "those questions
which, under the Constitution, are to be decided by the people in
their sovereign capacity; or in regard to which full discretionary
authority has been delegated to the legislative or executive branch
of the government." It is concerned with issues dependent upon the
wisdom, not legality, of a particular measure.
It is true that the concept of the political question has been
constricted with the enlargement of judicial power, which now
includes the authority of the courts "to determine whether or not
there has been a grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or
excess of jurisdiction on the part of any branch or instrumentality of
the Government." 37 Even so, this should not be construed as a
proceeding was not had before the actual taking. However, the
strict application of the decrees during the proceedings would be
nothing short of a mere formality or charade as the court has only
to choose between the valuation of the owner and that of the
assessor, and its choice is always limited to the lower of the two.
The court cannot exercise its discretion or independence in
determining what is just or fair. Even a grade school pupil could
substitute for the judge insofar as the determination of
constitutional just compensation is concerned.
xxx
In the present petition, we are once again confronted with the same
question of whether the courts under P.D. No. 1533, which contains
the same provision on just compensation as its predecessor
decrees, still have the power and authority to determine just
compensation, independent of what is stated by the decree and to
this effect, to appoint commissioners for such purpose.
This time, we answer in the affirmative.
xxx
It is violative of due process to deny the owner the opportunity to
prove that the valuation in the tax documents is unfair or wrong.
And it is repulsive to the basic concepts of justice and fairness to
allow the haphazard work of a minor bureaucrat or clerk to
absolutely prevail over the judgment of a court promulgated only
after expert commissioners have actually viewed the property,
after evidence and arguments pro and con have been presented,
and after all factors and considerations essential to a fair and just
determination have been judiciously evaluated.
A reading of the aforecited Section 16(d) will readily show that it
does not suffer from the arbitrariness that rendered the challenged
decrees constitutionally objectionable. Although the proceedings
are described as summary, the landowner and other interested
parties are nevertheless allowed an opportunity to submit evidence
on the real value of the property. But more importantly, the
determination of the just compensation by the DAR is not by any
means final and conclusive upon the landowner or any other
interested party, for Section 16(f) clearly provides:
Any party who disagrees with the decision may bring the matter to
the court of proper jurisdiction for final determination of just
compensation.
The determination made by the DAR is only preliminary unless
accepted by all parties concerned. Otherwise, the courts of justice
will still have the right to review with finality the said determination
in the exercise of what is admittedly a judicial function.
The second and more serious objection to the provisions on just
compensation is not as easily resolved.
This refers to Section 18 of the CARP Law providing in full as
follows:
SEC. 18. Valuation and Mode of Compensation. The LBP shall
compensate the landowner in such amount as may be agreed upon
by the landowner and the DAR and the LBP, in accordance with the
criteria provided for in Sections 16 and 17, and other pertinent
provisions hereof, or as may be finally determined by the court, as
the just compensation for the land.
The compensation shall be paid in one of the following modes, at
the option of the landowner:
(1) Cash payment, under the following terms and conditions:
(a) For lands above fifty (50) hectares, insofar as the excess
hectarage is concerned Twenty-five percent (25%) cash, the
balance to be paid in government financial instruments negotiable
at any time.
(b) For lands above twenty-four (24) hectares and up to fifty (50)
hectares Thirty percent (30%) cash, the balance to be paid in
government financial instruments negotiable at any time.
(c) For lands twenty-four (24) hectares and below Thirty-five
percent (35%) cash, the balance to be paid in government financial
instruments negotiable at any time.
(2) Shares of stock in government-owned or controlled
corporations, LBP preferred shares, physical assets or other
(vi) Payment for tuition fees of the immediate family of the original
bondholder in government universities, colleges, trade schools, and
other institutions;
(vii) Payment for fees of the immediate family of the original
bondholder in government hospitals; and
(viii) Such other uses as the PARC may from time to time allow.
The contention of the petitioners in G.R. No. 79777 is that the
above provision is unconstitutional insofar as it requires the owners
of the expropriated properties to accept just compensation therefor
in less than money, which is the only medium of payment allowed.
In support of this contention, they cite jurisprudence holding that:
The fundamental rule in expropriation matters is that the owner of
the property expropriated is entitled to a just compensation, which
should be neither more nor less, whenever it is possible to make
the assessment, than the money equivalent of said property. Just
compensation has always been understood to be the just and
complete equivalent of the loss which the owner of the thing
expropriated
has
to
suffer
by
reason
of
the
expropriation . 45 (Emphasis supplied.)
In J.M. Tuazon Co. v. Land Tenure Administration,
46
(3)
(4)
(5)
(6)
a.)
unserved portion of
complainants duration
of employment ..............................
NT$ 348,480.00;
a.)
Remittance of illegal
placement fee . P 99,110.00.
SO ORDERED.[6]
(subject to proper future
conversion to Philippine Peso)
b.)
d.)
individual liabilities.
NT$95,040, subject to
proper conversion to
Philippine currency by
Labor Arbiter Cresencio
Iniego.
the adoption of better terms and conditions over and above the
minimum standards,[14] the NLRC could not be accused of grave
abuse of discretion in not accepting anything less.
However petitioners contend that the entry should be
considered prima facie evidence that respondent himself requested
his repatriation conformably with the rulings in Haverton Shipping
Ltd. v. NLRC[15] andAbacast Shipping and Management Agency, Inc.
v. NLRC.[16] Indeed, Haverton says that a vessels log book is prima
facie evidence of the facts stated therein as they are official entries
made by a person in the performance of a duty required by
law. However, this jurisprudential principle does not apply to win
the case for petitioners. In Wallem Maritime Services, Inc. v.
NLRC[17] the Haverton ruling was not given unqualified application
because the log book presented therein was a mere typewritten
collation of excerpts from what could be the log book. [18] The Court
reasoned that since the log book was the only piece of evidence
presented to prove just cause for the termination of respondent
therein, the log book had to be duly identified and authenticated
lest an injustice would result from a blind adoption of its contents
which were but prima facie evidence of the incidents stated
therein.
In the instant case, the disputed entry in the Deck Log was
neither
authenticated
nor
supported
by
credible
evidence. Although petitioners claim that Cajeras signed his
Seamans Service Record Book to signify his conformity to the
repatriation, the NLRC found the allegation to be actually untrue
since no signature of private respondent appeared in the Record
Book.
Neither could the Medical Report prepared by Dr. Hoed be
considered corroborative and conclusive evidence that private
respondent was suffering from paranoia and other mental
problems, supposedly just causes for his repatriation. Firstly,
absolutely no evidence, not even an allegation, was offered to
enlighten the NLRC or this Court as to Dr. Hoed's qualifications to
diagnose mental illnesses. It is a matter of judicial notice that there
are various specializations in medical science and that a general
practitioner is not competent to diagnose any and all kinds of
illnesses and diseases. Hence, the findings of doctors who are not
proven experts are not binding on this Court. [19] Secondly, the
Medical Report prepared by Dr. Hoed contained only a general
statement that private respondent was suffering from paranoia
and other mental problems without providing the details on how
the diagnosis was arrived at or in what stage the illness was. If Dr.
Hoed indeed competently examined private respondent then he
would have been able to discuss at length the circumstances and
precedents of his diagnosis. Petitioners cannot rely on the
presumption of regularity in the performance of official duties to
make the Medical Report acceptable because the presumption
applies only to public officers from the highest to the lowest in the
service of the Government, departments, bureaus, offices, and/or
its political subdivisions,[20] which Dr. Wden Hoed was not shown to
be. Furthermore, neither did petitioners prove that private
respondent was incompetent or continuously incapacitated for the
duties for which he was employed by reason of his alleged mental
state. On the contrary his ability as Chief Cook Steward, up to the
very moment of his repatriation, was rated Very Good in his
Seamans Service Record Book as correctly observed by public
respondent.
Considering all the foregoing we cannot ascribe grave abuse of
discretion on the part of the NLRC in ruling that petitioners failed to
prove just cause for the termination of private respondent's
overseas employment. Grave abuse of discretion is committed only
when the judgment is rendered in a capricious, whimsical, arbitrary
or despotic manner, which is not true in the present case. [21]
With respect to attorneys fees, suffice it to say that in actions
for recovery of wages or where an employee was forced to litigate
and thus incurred expenses to protect his rights and interests, a
maximum award of ten percent (10%) of the monetary award by
way of attorneys fees is legally and morally justifiable under Art.
111 of the Labor Code, [22] Sec. 8, Rule VIII, Book III of its
Implementing Rules,[23] and par. 7, Art. 2208[24] of the Civil Code.
[25]
The case of Albenson Enterprises Corporation v. Court of
Appeals[26] cited by petitioners in arguing against the award of
attorneys fees is clearly not applicable, being a civil action for
damages which deals with only one of the eleven (11) instances
x x x
AGRARIAN AND NATURAL RESOURCES REFORM
Section 4. The State shall, by law, undertake an agrarian
reform program founded on the right of farmers and regular
farmworkers, who are landless, to own directly or
collectively the lands they till or, in the case of other
farmworkers, to receive a just share of the fruits thereof. To
this end, the State shall encourage and undertake the just
distribution of all agricultural lands, subject to such priorities
and reasonable retention limits as the Congress may
prescribe, taking into account ecological, developmental, or
equity considerations, and subject to the payment of just
compensation. In determining retention limits, the State
shall respect the rights of small landowners. The State shall
further provide incentives for voluntary land-sharing.
x x x"
Luz Farms contended that it does not seek the nullification
of R.A. 6657 in its entirety. In fact, it acknowledges the
correctness of the decision of this Court in the case of the
Association of Small Landowners in the Philippines, Inc.
vs. Secretary of Agrarian Reform (G.R. 78742, 14 July 1989)
affirming the constitutionality of the Comprehensive
Agrarian Reform Law. It, however, argued that Congress in
enacting the said law has transcended the mandate of the
Constitution, in including land devoted to the raising of
livestock, poultry and swine in its coverage (Rollo, p. 131).
Livestock or poultry raising is not similar to crop or tree
farming. Land is not the primary resource in this
undertaking and represents no more than five percent (5%)
of the total investment of commercial livestock and poultry
raisers. Indeed, there are many owners of residential lands
all over the country who use available space in their
residence for commercial livestock and raising purposes,
under
"contract-growing
arrangements,"
whereby
processing corporations and other commercial livestock and
poultry raisers (Rollo, p. 10). Lands support the buildings
and other amenities attendant to the raising of animals and
birds. The use of land is incidental to but not the principal
factor or consideration in productivity in this industry.
Including backyard raisers, about 80% of those in
commercial livestock and poultry production occupy five
hectares or less. The remaining 20% are mostly corporate
farms (Rollo, p. 11).
On the other hand, the public respondent argued that livestock and
poultry raising is embraced in the term "agriculture" and the
inclusion of such enterprise under Section 3(b) of R.A. 6657 is
proper. He cited that Webster's International Dictionary, Second
Edition (1954), defines the following words:
"Agriculture the art or science of cultivating the ground
and raising and harvesting crops, often, including also,
feeding, breeding and management of livestock, tillage,
husbandry, farming.
It includes farming, horticulture, forestry, dairying, sugarmaking . . .
Livestock domestic animals used or raised on a farm, especially
for profit.
Farm a plot or tract of land devoted to the raising of domestic or
other animals." (Rollo, pp. 82-83).
The petition is impressed with merit.
The question raised is one of constitutional construction. The
primary task in constitutional construction is to ascertain and
thereafter assure the realization of the purpose of the framers in
the adoption of the Constitution (J.M. Tuazon & Co. vs. Land Tenure
Administration, 31 SCRA 413 [1970]).: rd
Ascertainment of the meaning of the provision of Constitution
begins with the language of the document itself. The words used in
the Constitution are to be given their ordinary meaning except
where technical terms are employed in which case the significance
thus attached to them prevails (J.M. Tuazon & Co. vs. Land Tenure
Administration, 31 SCRA 413 [1970]).
It is generally held that, in construing constitutional provisions
which are ambiguous or of doubtful meaning, the courts may
consider the debates in the constitutional convention as throwing
light on the intent of the framers of the Constitution. It is true that
the intent of the convention is not controlling by itself, but as its
proceeding was preliminary to the adoption by the people of the
Constitution the understanding of the convention as to what was
meant by the terms of the constitutional provision which was the
subject of the deliberation, goes a long way toward explaining the
understanding of the people when they ratified it (Aquino, Jr. v.
Enrile, 59 SCRA 183 [1974]).
The transcripts of the deliberations of the Constitutional
Commission of 1986 on the meaning of the word "agricultural,"
clearly show that it was never the intention of the framers of the
Constitution to include livestock and poultry industry in the
power of the Congress and Executive, the Court will not hesitate "to
make the hammer fall heavily," where the acts of these
departments, or of any official, betray the people's will as
expressed in the Constitution (Association of Small Landowners of
the Philippines, Inc. v. Secretary of Agrarian Reform, G.R. 78742;
Acuna v. Arroyo, G.R. 79310; Pabico v. Juico, G.R. 79744; Manaay v.
Juico, G.R. 79777, 14 July 1989).
Thus, where the legislature or the executive acts beyond the scope
of its constitutional powers, it becomes the duty of the judiciary to
declare what the other branches of the government had assumed
to do, as void. This is the essence of judicial power conferred by the
Constitution "(I)n one Supreme Court and in such lower courts as
may be established by law" (Art. VIII, Section 1 of the 1935
Constitution; Article X, Section I of the 1973 Constitution and which
was adopted as part of the Freedom Constitution, and Article VIII,
Section 1 of the 1987 Constitution) and which power this Court has
exercised in many instances (Demetria v. Alba, 148 SCRA 208
[1987]).
Are the local crewing or manning agent and its foreign principal
(the shipowner) liable for the death of a Filipino seaman-employee
who, after having been discharged, was killed in transit while being
repatriated home?
The instant petition[1] seeks the reversal and/or modification of
the Resolution[2] dated March 30, 1994 of public respondent
National Labor Relations Commission[3]dismissing the appeals of
petitioners and affirming the decision dated November 16,
1992[4] of Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA)
Administrator Felicisimo C. Joson, which ordered that: [5]
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing consideration, respondents
are hereby jointly and severally held liable to pay the complainant
the following amounts:
1. P130,000.00 as death compensation benefits.
2. P18,000.00 as burial expenses.
The Facts
The proceedings below originated as a claim for death
compensation benefits filed by Constancia Pineda as heir of her
deceased son, seaman Jeremias Pineda, against Interorient
Maritime Enterprises, Inc. and its foreign principal, Fircroft Shipping
Corporation and the Times Surety and Insurance Co., Inc. The
following facts were found by the POEA Administrator:[6]
G.R. No. 115497. September 16, 1996
INTERORIENT MARITIME ENTERPRISES, INC., FIRCROFT
SHIPPING CORPORATION and TIMES SURETY &
INSURANCE CO., INC., petitioners, vs. NATIONAL
LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION and CONSTANCIA
PINEDA, respondents.
DECISION
PANGANIBAN, J.:
xxx
xxx
death,
petition
is
this petition
III
THIRDLY, THE NLRC COMMITTED GRAVE ABUSE OF
DISCRETION IN REVERSING THE POEA DECISION ON THE
BASIS OF DOCUMENTS WHICH AT BEST ARE NOT
CONCLUSIVE AS TO THE CAUSE OF DEATH OF SUBJECT
SEAMEN. 4
Petitioners claim respondent Commission gravely abused its
discretion in admitting private respondent's additional evidence on
appeal. Petitioners allege that the additional evidence were
"surreptitiously" submitted in violation of petitioner's right to due
process.
The submission of additional evidence before the respondent
Commission is not prohibited by the New Rules of Procedure of the
NLRC. After all, rules of evidence prevailing in courts of law or
equity are not controlling in labor cases. 5 The NLRC and labor
arbiters are directed to use every and all reasonable means to
ascertain the facts in each case speedily and objectively, without
regard to technicalities of law and procedure all in the interest of
substantial justice. 6 In keeping with this directive, it has been held
that the NLRC may consider evidence, such as documents and
affidavits, submitted by the parties for the first time on
appeal. 7 The submission of additional evidence on appeal does not
prejudice the other party for the latter could submit counterevidence. 8
In the case at bar, the additional evidence was submitted by
private respondents before the respondent Commission in their
Memorandum on Appeal dated November 8, 1993. The decision of
respondent Commission was rendered on April 25, 1994, i.e., six (6)
months after the additional documents were submitted. Petitioners
had ample opportunity to object and refute the documents. They
had the chance to submit counter-evidence during this period but
they did not do so. It was only when they moved for reconsideration
of the decision of respondent Commission that they questioned the
admission of these evidence.
had to drop anchor at the nearest port which was Galle, Sri
Lanka. 19 Envidiado was brought ashore and admitted to hospital.
He died a few days later.
On July 3, 1991, Arturo Fajardo started exhibiting the same
symptoms as the two other seamen. On inquiry, the master of the
vessel learned that Misada, Envidiado and Fajardo implanted pieces
of reindeer horn in their sex organs. Fajardo's condition worsened
and the master was compelled to drop anchor at Penang, Malaysia
where Fajardo was admitted to hospital on July 5, 1991. He was
diagnosed to be suffering from tetanus and given medication for
said illness. Fajardo recovered two weeks later. 20
As a result of this chain of events, the master of the vessel
conducted a formal inquiry to verify the cause of the seamen's
deaths and illness. Written testimonies as to the events leading to
their deaths were taken from the master, the Chief Officer, Second
Engineer and Second Cook.
The testimonies of the officers are insufficient to prove the fact that
Misada's and Envidiado's deaths were caused by self-inflicted
injuries. The testimonies were given by people who merely
observed and narrated the circumstances surrounding the deaths
of the two seamen and the illness of Fajardo. Fajardo himself did
not submit any testimony regarding the implantation. The
testimonies of the officers are, at best, hearsay. Moreover, the
officers did not have the competence to make a medical finding as
to the actual cause of the deaths. No autopsy report was presented
to corroborate their testimonies. On the contrary, Eduardo Misada
was medically diagnosed to have died of "acute laryngo-trachea
bronchitis with pneumonia probably due to viral cause." 21 This was
declared in his "Cause of Death Form" after his dead body was
examined on June 29, 1991 by Dr. Sydney Prematirat, a Judicial
Medical Officer at Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Enrico Envidiado was not issued a "Cause of Death Form." While
still alive, he was examined in Galle, Sri Lanka by Consultant
Physician Chandima de Mel who found a wound in his penis and
diagnosed his illness as "severe tetanus." 22 His "Certificate for
Removal of A Dead Body" dated July 8, 1991 issued by Dr. T.L.
DE CASTRO, J.:
of
the
National
Labor
Relations
that is not sufficient reason why the NSB or the ILRC should not
stand by the former instead of listening to unsubstantiated fears
that they would be killing the hen which lays the golden eggs.
Prescinding from the above, we now hold that neither the National
Seamen Board nor the National Labor Relations Commission should,
as a matter of official policy, legitimize and enforce cubious
arrangements where shipowners and seamen enter into fictitious
contracts similar to the addendum agreements or side contracts in
this case whose purpose is to deceive. The Republic of the
Philippines and its ministries and agencies should present a more
honorable and proper posture in official acts to the whole world,
notwithstanding our desire to have as many job openings both here
and abroad for our workers. At the very least, such as sensitive
matter involving no less than our dignity as a people and the
welfare of our workingmen must proceed from the Batasang
Pambansa in the form of policy legislation, not from administrative
rule making or adjudication
Another issue raised by the movants is whether or not the seamen
violated their contracts of employment.
The form contracts approved by the National Seamen Board are
designed to protect Filipino seamen not foreign shipowners who can
take care of themselves. The standard forms embody' the basic
minimums which must be incorporated as parts of the employment
contract. (Section 15, Rule V, Rules and Regulations Implementing
the Labor Code.) They are not collective bargaining agreements or
immutable contracts which the parties cannot improve upon or
modify in the course of the agreed period of time. To state,
therefore, that the affected seamen cannot petition their employer
for higher salaries during the 12 months duration of the contract
runs counter to established principles of labor legislation. The
National Labor Relations Commission, as the appellate tribunal from
decisions of the National Seamen Board, correctly ruled that the
seamen did not violate their contracts to warrant their dismissal.
The respondent Commission ruled: t.hqw
private
respondents.
supplied).
(Emphasis
the Vir-Jen Shipping case (supra) that the Ministry now the
Department of Labor and Employment and all its agencies exist
primarily for the workingman's interest and the nation's as a whole.
Implicit in these petitions and the only reason for the NSB to take
the side of foreign shipowners against Filipino seamen is the "killing
the goose which lays the golden eggs" argument. We reiterate the
ruling of the Court in Vir-Jen Shipping (supra)
There are various arguments raised by the
petitioners but the common thread running through
all of them is the contention, if not the dismal
prophecy, that if the respondent seamen are
sustained by this Court, we would in effect "kill the
hen that lays the golden egg." In other words, Filipino
seamen, admittedly among the best in the world,
should remain satisfied with relatively lower if not the
lowest, international rates of compensation, should
not agitate for higher wages while their contracts of
employment are subsisting, should accept as sacred,
iron clad, and immutable the side contracts which
require: them to falsely pretend to be members of
international labor federations, pretend to receive
higher salaries at certain foreign ports only to return
the increased pay once the ship leaves that port,
should stifle not only their right to ask for improved
terms of employment but their freedom of speech
and expression, and should suffer instant termination
of employment at the slightest sign of dissatisfaction
with no protection from their Government and their
courts. Otherwise, the petitioners contend that
Filipinos would no longer be accepted as seamen,
those employed would lose their jobs, and the still
unemployed would be left hopeless.
This is not the first time and it will not be the last where the threat
of unemployment and loss of jobs would be used to argue against
the interests of labor; where efforts by workingmen to better their
terms of employment would be characterized as prejudicing the
interests of labor as a whole.
The stipulation is in line with the provisions of Rule II, Book V and
Section 2(f), Rule I, Book VI of the 1991 Rules and Regulations
Governing Overseas Employment, thus:
Book V, Rule II
Sec. 2.
license.
Grounds
for
suspension/cancellation
of
In the case at bench, petitioner filed her claim well within the threeyear prescriptive period for the filing of money claims set forth in
Article 291 of the Labor Code. 12 For this reason, we hold the
doctrine of laches inapplicable to petitioner. As we ruled in Imperial
Victory Shipping Agency v. NLRC, 200 SCRA 178 (1991):
. . . Laches is a doctrine in equity while prescription is
based on law. Our courts are basically courts of law
not courts of equity. Thus, laches cannot be invoked
to resist the enforcement of an existing legal right.
We have ruled in Arsenal v. Intermediate Appellate
Court . . . that it is a long standing principle that
equity follows the law. Courts exercising equity
jurisdiction are bound by rules of law and have no
arbitrary discretion to disregard them. In Zabat,
Jr. v. Court of Appeals . . ., this Court was more
emphatic upholding the rules of procedure. We said
therein:
As for equity,
described as
legality," this
absence of,
statutory law
SO ORDERED.
G.R. Nos. 104776 and 105029-32 were originally raffled to the Third
Division while G.R. Nos. 104911-14 were raffled to the Second
Division. In the Resolution dated July 26, 1993, the Second Division
referred G.R. Nos. 104911-14 to the Third Division (G.R. Nos.
104911-14, Rollo, p. 895).
In the Resolution dated September 29, 1993, the Third Division
granted the motion filed in G.R. Nos. 104911-14 for the
consolidation of said cases with G.R. Nos. 104776 and 105029-32,
which were assigned to the First Division (G.R. Nos. 10491114, Rollo, pp. 986-1,107; G.R. Nos. 105029-30, Rollo, pp. 369-377,
426-432). In the Resolution dated October 27, 1993, the First
Division granted the motion to consolidate G.R. Nos. 104911-14
with G.R. No. 104776 (G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, p. 1109; G.R.
Nos. 105029-32, Rollo, p. 1562).
I
On June 6, 1984, Bienvenido M.. Cadalin, Rolando M. Amul and
Donato B. Evangelista, in their own behalf and on behalf of 728
other overseas contract workers (OCWs) instituted a class suit by
filing an "Amended Complaint" with the Philippine Overseas
Employment Administration (POEA) for money claims arising from
their recruitment by AIBC and employment by BRII (POEA Case No.
L-84-06-555). The claimants were represented by Atty. Gerardo del
Mundo.
opposed the appeal, claiming that it was dilatory and praying that
AIBC and BRII be declared in default.
On April 2, 1985, the original claimants filed an "Amended
Complaint and/or Position Paper" dated March 24, 1985, adding
new demands: namely, the payment of overtime pay, extra night
work pay, annual leave differential pay, leave indemnity pay,
retirement and savings benefits and their share of forfeitures (G.R.
No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 14-16). On April 15, 1985, the POEA
Administrator directed AIBC to file its answer to the amended
complaint (G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, p. 20).
On May 28, 1985, claimants filed an "Urgent Motion for Summary
Judgment." On the same day, the POEA issued an order directing
AIBC and BRII to file their answers to the "Amended Complaint,"
otherwise, they would be deemed to have waived their right to
present evidence and the case would be resolved on the basis of
complainant's evidence.
On June 5, 1985, AIBC countered with a "Motion to Dismiss as
Improper Class Suit and Motion for Bill of Particulars Re: Amended
Complaint dated March 24, 1985." Claimants opposed the motions.
On September 4, 1985, the POEA Administrator reiterated his
directive to AIBC and BRII to file their answers in POEA Case No. L84-06-555.
On September 18, 1985, AIBC filed its second appeal to the NLRC,
together with a petition for the issuance of a writ of injunction. On
September 19, 1985, NLRC enjoined the POEA Administrator from
hearing the labor cases and suspended the period for the filing of
the answers of AIBC and BRII.
On September 19, 1985, claimants asked the POEA Administrator
to include additional claimants in the case and to investigate
alleged wrongdoings of BRII, AIBC and their respective lawyers.
On October 10, 1985, Romeo Patag and two co-claimants filed a
complaint (POEA Case No. L-85-10-777) against AIBC and BRII with
the POEA, demanding monetary claims similar to those subject of
In its Resolution dated March 24, 1992, NLRC denied all the motions
for reconsideration.
Hence, these petitions filed by the claimants represented by Atty.
Del Mundo (G.R. No. 104776), the claimants represented by Atty.
De Castro (G.R. Nos. 104911-14) and by AIBC and BRII (G.R. Nos.
105029-32).
II
Compromise Agreements
Before this Court, the claimants represented by Atty. De Castro and
AIBC and BRII have submitted, from time to time, compromise
agreements for our approval and jointly moved for the dismissal of
their respective petitions insofar as the claimants-parties to the
compromise agreements were concerned (See Annex A for list of
claimants who signed quitclaims).
(Code) :
Classification
(6)
Basic
Hourly
Rate
:
(7) Overtime Rate Per Hour :
(8)
Projected
Period
of
Service
(Subject to C(1) of this [sic]) :
Months
and/or
Job Completion
4. TERMINATION
12. OFFDAY PAY
a) Notwithstanding any other terms and conditions of
this agreement, the Employer may, at his sole
discretion, terminate employee's service with cause,
under this agreement at any time. If the Employer
terminates the services of the Employee under this
Agreement because of the completion or termination,
or suspension of the work on which the Employee's
services were being utilized, or because of a
reduction in force due to a decrease in scope of such
work, or by change in the type of construction of
such work. The Employer will be responsible for his
return transportation to his country of origin.
Normally on the most expeditious air route, economy
class accommodation.
xxx xxx xxx
10. VACATION/SICK LEAVE BENEFITS
a) After one (1) year of continuous service and/or
satisfactory completion of contract, employee shall
be entitled to 12-days vacation leave with pay. This
shall be computed at the basic wage rate. Fractions
of a year's service will be computed on a prorata basis.
for
hours
worked
during
the
night which shall be deemed to being
from seven o'clock in the evening until
seven o'clock in the morning. . . .
All
the
individual
complainantsappellants
have
already
been
repatriated to the Philippines at the
time of the filing of these cases (R.R.
No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 59-65).
IV
The issues raised before and resolved by the NLRC were:
First: Whether or not complainants are entitled to
the benefits provided by Amiri Decree No. 23 of
Bahrain;
same
more
alien
from
c. Retirement
benefits;
and
Savings
Plan
premiums
j. Refund of withholding
remitted to BIR;
tax
not
not
substantial evidence; and (3) some of the evidence upon which the
decision was based were not disclosed to AIBC and BRII during the
hearing.
NLRC also held that jurisdiction over BRII was acquired by the POEA
Administrator through the summons served on AIBC, its local agent.
On the sixth issue, NLRC held that the POEA Administrator was
correct in denying the Motion to Declare AIBC in default.
On the seventh issue, which involved other money claims not
based on the Amiri Decree No. 23, NLRC ruled:
(1) that the POEA Administrator has no jurisdiction
over the claims for refund of the SSS premiums and
refund of withholding taxes and the claimants should
file their claims for said refund with the appropriate
government agencies;
(2) the claimants failed to establish that they are
entitled to the claims which are not based on the
overseas employment contracts nor the Amiri Decree
No. 23 of 1976;
(3) that the POEA Administrator has no jurisdiction
over claims for moral and exemplary damages and
nonetheless, the basis for granting said damages
was not established;
(4) that the claims for salaries corresponding to the
unexpired portion of their contract may be allowed if
filed within the three-year prescriptive period;
NLRC passed sub silencio the last issue, the claim that POEA Case
No. (L) 86-65-460 should have been dismissed on the ground that
the claimants in said case were also claimants in POEA Case No. (L)
84-06-555. Instead of dismissing POEA Case No. (L) 86-65-460, the
POEA just resolved the corresponding claims in POEA Case No. (L)
84-06-555. In other words, the POEA did not pass upon the same
claims twice.
V
G.R. No. 104776
Claimants in G.R. No. 104776 based their petition for certiorari on
the following grounds:
(1) that they were deprived by NLRC and the POEA of
their right to a speedy disposition of their cases as
guaranteed by Section 16, Article III of the 1987
Constitution. The POEA Administrator allowed private
respondents to file their answers in two years (on
June 19, 1987) after the filing of the original
complaint (on April 2, 1985) and NLRC, in total
disregard of its own rules, affirmed the action of the
POEA Administrator;
(2) that NLRC and the POEA Administrator should
have declared AIBC and BRII in default and should
have rendered summary judgment on the basis of
the pleadings and evidence submitted by claimants;
said Code. In said case, the claims would have prescribed under the
Panamanian Law but not under the Statute of Limitations of New
York. The U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals held that the Panamanian
Law was procedural as it was not "specifically intended to be
substantive," hence, the prescriptive period provided in the law of
the forum should apply. The Court observed:
. . . And where, as here, we are dealing with a statute
of limitations of a foreign country, and it is not clear
on the face of the statute that its purpose was to
limit the enforceability, outside as well as within the
foreign country concerned, of the substantive rights
to which the statute pertains, we think that as a
yardstick for determining whether that was the
purpose this test is the most satisfactory one. It does
not lead American courts into the necessity of
examining into the unfamiliar peculiarities and
refinements of different foreign legal systems. . .
The court further noted:
xxx xxx xxx
Applying that test here it appears to us that the
libelant is entitled to succeed, for the respondents
have failed to satisfy us that the Panamanian period
of limitation in question was specifically aimed
against the particular rights which the libelant seeks
to enforce. The Panama Labor Code is a statute
having broad objectives, viz: "The present Code
regulates the relations between capital and labor,
placing them on a basis of social justice, so that,
without injuring any of the parties, there may be
guaranteed for labor the necessary conditions for a
normal life and to capital an equitable return to its
investment." In pursuance of these objectives the
Code gives laborers various rights against their
employers. Article 623 establishes the period of
limitation for all such rights, except certain ones
which are enumerated in Article 621. And there is
The claimants are of the view that the applicable provision is Article
1144 of the Civil Code of the Philippines, which provides:
Section 7-a of the Eight-Hour Labor Law (CA No. 444 as amended
by R.A. No. 19933) provides:
VII
A. As to the first two grounds for the petition in G.R. No. 104776,
claimants aver: (1) that while their complaints were filed on June 6,
1984 with POEA, the case was decided only on January 30, 1989, a
clear denial of their right to a speedy disposition of the case; and
(2) that NLRC and the POEA Administrator should have declared
AIBC
and
BRII
in
default
(Rollo,
pp.
31-35).
Since July 25, 1984 or a month after AIBC and BRII were served with
a copy of the amended complaint, claimants had been asking that
AIBC and BRII be declared in default for failure to file their answers
within the ten-day period provided in Section 1, Rule III of Book VI
of the Rules and Regulations of the POEA. At that time, there was a
pending motion of AIBC and BRII to strike out of the records the
amended complaint and the "Compliance" of claimants to the order
of the POEA, requiring them to submit a bill of particulars.
The cases at bench are not of the run-of-the-mill variety, such that
their final disposition in the administrative level after seven years
from their inception, cannot be said to be attended by
104776, Rollo, p. 57). All the three new cases were consolidated
with POEA Case No. L-84-06-555.
NLRC blamed the parties and their lawyers for the delay in
terminating the proceedings, thus:
These cases could have been spared the long and
arduous route towards resolution had the parties and
their counsel been more interested in pursuing the
truth and the merits of the claims rather than
exhibiting a fanatical reliance on technicalities.
Parties and counsel have made these cases a
litigation of emotion. The intransigence of parties and
counsel is remarkable. As late as last month, this
Commission made a last and final attempt to bring
the counsel of all the parties (this Commission issued
a special order directing respondent Brown & Root's
resident agent/s to appear) to come to a more
conciliatory stance. Even this failed (Rollo,
p. 58).
The squabble between the lawyers of claimants added to the delay
in the disposition of the cases, to the lament of NLRC, which
complained:
It is very evident from the records that the
protagonists in these consolidated cases appear to
be not only the individual complainants, on the one
hand, and AIBC and Brown & Root, on the other
hand. The two lawyers for the complainants, Atty.
Gerardo Del Mundo and Atty. Florante De Castro,
have yet to settle the right of representation, each
one persistently claiming to appear in behalf of most
of the complainants. As a result, there are two
appeals by the complainants. Attempts by this
Commission to resolve counsels' conflicting claims of
their respective authority to represent the
complainants prove futile. The bickerings by these
two counsels are reflected in their pleadings. In the
charges and countercharges of falsification of
NLRC and the POEA Administrator are correct in their stance that
inasmuch as the first requirement of a class suit is not present
(common or general interest based on the Amiri Decree of the
State of Bahrain), it is only logical that only those who worked in
Bahrain shall be entitled to file their claims in a class suit.
While there are common defendants (AIBC and BRII) and the nature
of the claims is the same (for employee's benefits), there is no
common question of law or fact. While some claims are based on
the Amiri Law of Bahrain, many of the claimants never worked in
that country, but were deployed elsewhere. Thus, each claimant is
interested only in his own demand and not in the claims of the
other employees of defendants. The named claimants have a
special or particular interest in specific benefits completely
different from the benefits in which the other named claimants and
those included as members of a "class" are claiming (Berses v.
Villanueva, 25 Phil. 473 [1913]). It appears that each claimant is
only interested in collecting his own claims. A claimants has no
concern in protecting the interests of the other claimants as shown
by the fact, that hundreds of them have abandoned their coclaimants and have entered into separate compromise settlements
of their respective claims. A principle basic to the concept of "class
suit" is that plaintiffs brought on the record must fairly represent
and protect the interests of the others (Dimayuga v. Court of
Industrial Relations, 101 Phil. 590 [1957]). For this matter, the
claimants who worked in Bahrain can not be allowed to sue in a
class suit in a judicial proceeding. The most that can be accorded to
them under the Rules of Court is to be allowed to join as plaintiffs in
one complaint (Revised Rules of Court, Rule 3, Sec. 6).
The Court is extra-cautious in allowing class suits because they are
the exceptions to the condition sine qua non, requiring the joinder
of all indispensable parties.
In an improperly instituted class suit, there would be no problem if
the decision secured is favorable to the plaintiffs. The problem
arises when the decision is adverse to them, in which case the
others who were impleaded by their self-appointed representatives,
would surely claim denial of due process.
C. The claimants in G.R. No. 104776 also urged that the POEA
Administrator and NLRC should have declared Atty. Florante De
Castro guilty of "forum shopping, ambulance chasing activities,
falsification, duplicity and other unprofessional activities" and his
appearances as counsel for some of the claimants as illegal (Rollo,
pp. 38-40).
The Anti-Forum Shopping Rule (Revised Circular No. 28-91) is
intended to put a stop to the practice of some parties of filing
multiple petitions and complaints involving the same issues, with
the result that the courts or agencies have to resolve the same
issues. Said Rule, however, applies only to petitions filed with the
Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals. It is entitled "Additional
Requirements For Petitions Filed with the Supreme Court and the
Court of Appeals To Prevent Forum Shopping or Multiple Filing of
Petitioners and Complainants." The first sentence of the circular
expressly states that said circular applies to an governs the filing of
petitions in the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeals.
While Administrative Circular No. 04-94 extended the application of
the anti-forum shopping rule to the lower courts and administrative
agencies, said circular took effect only on April 1, 1994.
POEA and NLRC could not have entertained the complaint for
unethical conduct against Atty. De Castro because NLRC and POEA
have no jurisdiction to investigate charges of unethical conduct of
lawyers.
Attorney's Lien
The "Notice and Claim to Enforce Attorney's Lien" dated December
14, 1992 was filed by Atty. Gerardo A. Del Mundo to protect his
claim for attorney's fees for legal services rendered in favor of the
claimants (G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 841-844).
A statement of a claim for a charging lien shall be filed with the
court or administrative agency which renders and executes the
money judgment secured by the lawyer for his clients. The lawyer
shall cause written notice thereof to be delivered to his clients and
to the adverse party (Revised Rules of Court, Rule 138, Sec. 37).
The statement of the claim for the charging lien of Atty. Del Mundo
should have been filed with the administrative agency that
rendered and executed the judgment.
Contempt of Court
The complaint of Atty. Gerardo A. Del Mundo to cite Atty. Florante
De Castro and Atty. Katz Tierra for violation of the Code of
Professional Responsibility should be filed in a separate and
appropriate proceeding.
computation
reached
the
AIBC and BRII claim that NLRC acted capriciously and whimsically
when it refused to enforce the overseas-employment contracts,
which became the law of the parties. They contend that the
principle that a law is deemed to be a part of a contract applies
only to provisions of Philippine law in relation to contracts executed
in the Philippines.
The overseas-employment contracts, which were prepared by AIBC
and BRII themselves, provided that the laws of the host country
became applicable to said contracts if they offer terms and
conditions more favorable that those stipulated therein. It was
stipulated in said contracts that:
The Employee agrees that while in the employ of the
Employer, he will not engage in any other business
or occupation, nor seek employment with anyone
other than the Employer; that he shall devote his
entire time and attention and his best energies, and
abilities to the performance of such duties as may be
assigned to him by the Employer; that he shall at all
times be subject to the direction and control of the
Employer; and that the benefits provided to
Employee hereunder are substituted for and in lieu of
all other benefits provided by any applicable
law, provided of course, that total remuneration and
benefits do not fall below that of the host country
regulation or custom, it being understood that should
applicable laws establish that fringe benefits, or
other such benefits additional to the compensation
herein agreed cannot be waived, Employee agrees
that such compensation will be adjusted downward
so that the total compensation hereunder, plus the
non-waivable benefits shall be equivalent to the
compensation herein agreed (Rollo, pp. 352-353).
The overseas-employment contracts could have been drafted more
felicitously. While a part thereof provides that the compensation to
the employee may be "adjusted downward so that the total
computation (thereunder) plus the non-waivable benefits shall be
equivalent to the compensation" therein agreed, another part of
law. The said law does not operate as a statute but as a set of
contractual terms deemed written in the contract (Anton, Private
International Law, 197 [1967]; Dicey and Morris, The Conflict of
Laws, 702-703, [8th ed.]).
A basic policy of contract is to protect the expectation of the parties
(Reese, Choice of Law in Torts and Contracts, 16 Columbia Journal
of Transnational Law 1, 21 [1977]). Such party expectation is
protected by giving effect to the parties' own choice of the
applicable law (Fricke v. Isbrandtsen Co., Inc., 151 F. Supp. 465, 467
[1957]). The choice of law must, however, bear some relationship
to the parties or their transaction (Scoles and Hayes, Conflict of
Law 644-647 [1982]). There is no question that the contracts
sought to be enforced by claimants have a direct connection with
the Bahrain law because the services were rendered in that
country.
In Norse Management Co. (PTE) v. National Seamen Board, 117
SCRA 486 (1982), the "Employment Agreement," between Norse
Management Co. and the late husband of the private respondent,
expressly provided that in the event of illness or injury to the
employee arising out of and in the course of his employment and
not due to his own misconduct, "compensation shall be paid to
employee in accordance with and subject to the limitation of the
Workmen's Compensation Act of the Republic of the Philippines or
the Worker's Insurance Act of registry of the vessel, whichever is
greater." Since the laws of Singapore, the place of registry of the
vessel in which the late husband of private respondent served at
the time of his death, granted a better compensation package, we
applied said foreign law in preference to the terms of the contract.
The case of Bagong Filipinas Overseas Corporation v. National
Labor Relations Commission, 135 SCRA 278 (1985), relied upon by
AIBC and BRII is inapposite to the facts of the cases at bench. The
issue in that case was whether the amount of the death
compensation of a Filipino seaman should be determined under the
shipboard employment contract executed in the Philippines or the
Hongkong law. Holding that the shipboard employment contract
was controlling, the court differentiated said case from Norse
Management Co. in that in the latter case there was an express
CORTES, J.:
Petitioner, in this special civil action for certiorari, alleges grave
abuse of discretion on the part of the National Labor Relations
Commission in an effort to nullify the latters resolution and thus
free petitioner from liability for the disability suffered by a Filipino
worker it recruited to work in Saudi Arabia. This Court, however, is
not persuaded that such an abuse of discretion was committed.
This petition must fail.
The facts of the case are quite simple.
Petitioner, a duly licensed recruitment agency, as agent of Ali and
Fahd Shabokshi Group, a Saudi Arabian firm, recruited private
respondent to work in Saudi Arabia as a steelman.
The term of the contract was for one year, from May 15,1981 to
May 14, 1982. However, the contract provided for its automatic
renewal:
FIFTH: The validity of this Contract is for ONE YEAR
commencing from the date the SECOND PARTY
assumes hill port. This Contract is renewable
automatically if neither of the PARTIES notifies the
other PARTY of his wishes to terminate the Contract
by at least ONE MONTH prior to the expiration of the
contractual period. [Petition, pp. 6-7; Rollo, pp. 7-8].
This assertion is without merit. The NLRC upheld the POEA finding
that petitioner's evidence was insufficient to prove termination
from employment for just and valid cause. And a careful study of
the evidence thus far presented by petitioner reveals to this Court
that there is legal basis for public respondent's conclusion.
It must be borne in mind that the basic principle in termination
cases is that the burden of proof rests upon the employer to show
that the dismissal is for just and valid cause, and failure to do so
would necessarily mean that the dismissal was not justified and,
therefore, was illegal [Polymedic General Hospital v. NLRC, G.R. No.
64190, January 31, 1985,134 SCRA 420; and also Article 277 of the
Labor Code]. And where the termination cases involve a Filipino
worker recruited and deployed for overseas employment, the
burden naturally devolves upon both the foreign-based employer
and the employment agency or recruitment entity which recruited
the worker, for the latter is not only the agent of the former, but is
also solidarily liable with its foreign principal for any claims or
liabilities arising from the dismissal of the worker.
In the case at bar, petitioner had indeed failed to discharge the
burden of proving that private respondent was terminated from
employment for just and valid cause. Petitioner's evidence
consisted only of the following documents:
(1) A letter dated May l5, 1984 allegedly written by
an official of ZAMEL, stating that a periodic
evaluation of the entire staff was conducted; that the
personnel concerned were given a chance to
improve; that complainant's performance was found
below par; and that on February 13,1984, at about
8:30 AM, complainant was caught on the way out of
the office to look for another job during office hours
without the permission of his supervisor;
(2) A telex message allegedly sent by employees of
ZAMEL, stating that they have not experienced
maltreatment, and that the working conditions (in
ZAMEL) are good;
SARMIENTO, J.:
This concerns the validity of the power of the Secretary of Labor to
issue warrants of arrest and seizure under Article 38 of the Labor
Code, prohibiting illegal recruitment.
The facts are as follows:
xxx xxx xxx
1. On October 21, 1987, Rosalie Tesoro of 177 Tupaz
Street, Leveriza, Pasay City, in a sworn statement
filed with the Philippine Overseas Employment
Administration (POEA for brevity) charged petitioner
Hortencia Salazar, viz:
04. T: Ano ba ang
dahilan at ikaw ngayon
ay
narito
at
nagbibigay ng salaysay.
S: Upang ireklamo sa dahilan ang
aking
PECC
Card
ay
ayaw ibigay sa akin ng dati kong
manager.
Horty
Salazar
615
R.O.
Santos,
Mandaluyong, Mla.
06. T: Paano
naganap
pangyayari?
naman
ang
S. Pagkagaling ko sa
Japan ipinatawag niya
ako.
Kinuha
ang PECC Card ko at
sinabing hahanapan ako
ng
booking sa Japan. Mag 9
month's na ako sa Phils.
ay
hindi pa niya ako napaalis. So lumipat ako ng
ibang
company
pero
ayaw
niyang ibigay and PECC
Card
ko.
2. On November 3, 1987, public respondent Atty.
Ferdinand Marquez to whom said complaint was
assigned, sent to the petitioner the following
telegram:
YOU ARE HEREBY DIRECTED TO
APPEAR BEFORE FERDIE MARQUEZ
POEA ANTI ILLEGAL RECRUITMENT
UNIT 6TH FLR. POEA BLDG. EDSA COR.
ORTIGAS AVE. MANDALUYONG MM ON
Santos
SALAZAR
St.
June 6, 2002
Landrito did not know the private complainants. She stated that
Jamila did not have job orders accredited by the POEA for
Malaysia.10 She knew of a Steven Mah who represented Manifield
Enterprise but the agreement with that company did not push
through and POEA did not accredit Manifield.11
CELYNIA CUYA testified that she was a clerk at the Jamila office,
responsible for processing documents for submission to the POEA.
She also assisted in interviewing job applicants. She narrated that
Amado Pancha, one of the witnesses for the defense who claimed
that he applied for a job abroad through Jamila, never applied at
Jamila based on their records. She presented in court a certification
to this effect, signed by Evelyn Landrito.12
In her defense, appellant NIMFA REMULLO denied having recruited
private complainants and receiving any money from them.
According to her testimony, she met private complainants
sometime in March 1993 at the Jamila office where she was a
marketing consultant. They asked for her help in obtaining jobs
abroad, so she had them fill up bio-data forms and told them to
wait for job openings.13 She alleged that Jamila had an agreement
with Wearness Electronics, based in Malaysia, concerning the
recruitment of workers for Wearness.14 Private complainants were
supposed to have been recruited for Wearness.15
Appellant explained that Steven Mah was the owner of
Manifield16 Enterprise,17 a recruitment agency. Appellant said that
Mah "went to Malaysia to look for job opening and he was able to
find this company, Wearness Electronics."18
Appellant insisted that private complainants did not hand their
placement fees to her but to Steven Mah and to a certain Lani
Platon.19 She presented in evidence photocopies of receipts
allegedly signed by Platon.20 She said private complainants sought
her assistance after they were unable to leave for abroad. She
I
IN NOT FINDING THAT EXHIBITS "3", "4" AND "16" ARE
CREDIBLE
AND
COMPETENT
PROOFS
THAT
THE
COMPLAINANTS TRANSACTED WITH AND GAVE THEIR
MONEY TO LANI PLATON AND STEVEN MAH IN CONNECTION
WITH THEIR APPLICATIONS FOR OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT.
II
IN NOT FINDING THAT THE
COMPLAINANTS ARE NOT CREDIBLE.
VERSIONS
OF
THE
III
issue being factual, and the Court having been cited to no grave
error invalidating the respondent Secretary's conclusion that
summons had indeed been duly served.
Finally, EASCO's half-hearted argument that its liability should be
limited to the maximum amount set in its surety bond, i.e.,
P150,000.00, is palpably without merit, since the aggregate liability
imposed on it, P140,817.75, supra, does not in fact exceed that
limit.
WHEREFORE, the petition is DISMISSED for lack of merit, and this
decision is declared to be immediately executory. Costs against
petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
CORPORATION
and
EARL
TIMOTHY
Petition