SECOND DIVISION
[G.R. No. 118475. November 29, 2000]
ELVIRA ABASOLO, ANTONIO ABAY, PURIFICACION ABAY, CATALINA
ABELLERA, DANIEL ABELLERA, ELSIE ABELLERA, LOURDES ADUSE, PACITA ALAMAN,
REYNALDO ALBAY, ROGELIO ALBAY, EMERITA ALCOY, ERLINDA ALEGRE, CORAZON ALOOT,
IMELDA ALOOT, ROWENA ALOOT, SHIRLEY JULIANA ALOOT, ADORACION ANTALAN, ESTRELLA
ANTOLIN, EPIFANIA ANTONIO, CARMELITA AQUINO, CECENIA ASPIRAS, EMILIANA ASPIRAS,
ANA BELEN ASPREC, MELENCIO ASPURIA, ILUMINADA ASTRO, CARMELITA ASUNCION,
FLORENTINA AVENA, EMILIA BACQUIL, GLORIA BAGALAN, BENJAMIN BALANAG, CLARITA
BALANAG, CONSUELO BALANAG, DOLORES BALANAG, CANDIDA BALANGA, CLARITA BALANGA,
FRANCISCA BALANGA, CORAZON BALANGUE, MILDRED BALANGUE, ERLINDA BALDERAS, MANUEL
BALLESIL, ERLINDA BAMBAO, ROSEMARIE BASIO, AMALIA BATARIO, CONCHITA BATARIO,
CORAZON BATARIO, ERLINDA BATARIO, GLORIA BATARIO, PEDRO BATARIO, JR., REBECCA
BATARIO, PERLA BAUTISTA, SHIRLEY BAUTISTA, ANGELISA BAYANI, MORGAN BEGALAN,
FRANCISCA BERBON, BERNARD VISITACION, EVELYN BIASON, VERONICA BLANDO, UFENIA
BLANZA, AMBROSIA BOADO, CARLOS BOADO, LOLITA BORJE, MARILOU BUNGAY, RODRIGO
BURGOS, AMELITA CABALBAG, ERNESTO CABALBAG, ELVIRA CABUGON, JOSEFINA
CACANINDIN, CORAZON CACAYARA, JAIME CACHERO, JULIET CALLANO, ANDRES CALUZA,
TERESITA CALUZA, ISABEL COMADRO, EDITA CARBONEL, LOLITA CARILLA, BIENVENIDA
CARINO, DELIA CARINO, LOLITA CARINO, AMARIO CARREON, ARMELINDA CARREON, ERLINDA
CARREON, FECIDAD CARREON, JOSE CARREON, MA. VICTORIA CARREON, BENJAMIN CASALLO,
DEMETRIA CASEM, ALBERTO CASIM, GLORIA CASIM, FLORIDA CATUNGAL, ESTER CAVINTA,
REMEDIOS CAVINTA, ROSALINDA CAVINTA, JULITA CAYABYAB, IRENE CELESTE CARMELITA
CHAN, ESMENIA CORDERO, LYDIA CORPUZ, JOVA CORTEZ, NORA CORTEZ, MAGDALENA CUDAL,
GENOVA DACANAY, SABINA BACLAN, CORAZON DANAO, ELISA DASALLA, AGNES BIBIANA DE
CASTRO, ANITA DE CASTRO, EDITHA DE CASTRO, NIDA DE CASTRO, CORAZON DE JESUS,
JOSE DE JESUS, MERLA DE JESUS, MILAGROS DE VERA, APOLINARIO DOLATRE, CAMILO
DOLOR, JR., LOLITA DOLOR, WILMA DOMINGO, OLYMPIA DOMONOON, BASILIO DULATRE,
BASILIO DULATRE, IMELDA DULATRE, LETICIA DULATRE, MARTINA DULATRE, RODRIGO
DULATRE, JR., ROGELIO DULATRE, TRIFONA DULATRE, CONSOLACION DULAY, CRESILDA
DULAY, DANILO DULAY, EDITHA DULAY,
ELENA G. DULAY, ERLINDA DULAY, ESTRELLA DULAY, ESTELITA DULAY, ESTRELITA P.
DULAY, EVANGELINE DULAY, FELICIDAD DULAY, FELISA DULAY, GINA DULAY, GINA DULAY,
GLORIA DULAY, GUILLERMO DULAY, JAIME DULAY, LETICIA DULAY, LOLITA DULAY, LUIS
DULAY, MARIA G. DULAY, MILAGROS DULAY, REMEDIOS DULAY, ROBERTO DULAY, SOTERO
DULAY, TERESITA DULAY, TERESITA G. DULAY, TERESITA M. DULAY, THERESITA DULAY,
VALENTIN DULAY, EDITHA DUMO, REMEDIOS DY, RIA MAPILI, VICTORIO MAPILI, ROBERTO
MARAMBA, SUSANA MARAMBA, ANDRES MARCOS, LANIA MARCOS, AURORA MARGASA, ARSENIA
MARIGZA, LOLITA MARQUEZ, ANA MARIA MARZAN, ANGELITA MEDINA, ADELINA MEDRIANO,
ELIZABETH MEDRIANO, HERMINIA M. MEDRIANO, ROSALINDA MEDRIANO, CLEOFE MELANA,
LOLITA MELENDEZ, LOURDES MIGUEL, EMILIA G. MILANES, JOSE MILANES, LILIA MILO,
LILIAN MILO, FELICIDA MORION, EVELYN MOSTER, ADORACION MUNAR, ELEONORA MUNAR,
IMELDRA NAVARRO, TERESITA NAVERIDA, ANITA NINOBLA, AURELIA NINOBLA, CARMELITA
NINOBLA, MARCELA NINOBLA, MYRNA NISPERO, JOSEFINA NUTO, LANY OBSRA, ELENA
OCAMPO, SYLVIA OLINARES, ROSITA OPENIANO, TRINIDAD ORDUNA, ROSALINDA ORDONEZ,
JESSIE ORIBELLO, REMEDIOS ORIBELLO, TERESITA ORIBELLO, HILARIO ORACION, AVELINA
ORTILLA, MAGDALENA ORTILLA, MARIETTA ORTILLA, LEONORA PADER, AMALIA PADILLA,
ARCELITA PADILLA, EVELYN PADILLA, FELICIDA ORTILLA, JOSELYN PADILLA, JOSEPHINE
PADILLA, VIRGINIA PADILLA, CLARITA PAIS, EDUARDO PANIS, JESUS PANIS, JOSE
PANIS, TEOFILA PANIS, VIOLETA PARADO, ROSITA PAROCHA, CARMELITA PASCUA, LUCIA
PAYUMO, MARIA PICAR, REYNALDA PILARCA, LUZVIMINDA QUERO, ALEJANDRA QUEZADA,
TEODORO QUEZADA, ARLENE QUIBAN, AIDA QUINDARA, JUANITA QUINONES, GLORIA RABOT,
EFREN RACELIS, ERLINDA RACELIS, IMELDA RACELIS, REMEDIOS RACELIS, SUSANA
RACELIS, TERESITA RACELIS, FLORITA RAQUEL, ALMA RAMIREZ, CARMEN RAMIREZ,
ROSEMARIE RAMIREZ, GEMMA RAMOS, JUANITA RAMOS, IMELITA REYES, VICTORIA A.
RIVERA, VIRGINIA RIVERA, LYDIA ROBLES, EMILIA RONQUILLO, ROSALLA ROSETE,
FORTUNATO RUIZ, GLORIA RUIZ, RICARDO RUIZ, ROSALINDA RUIZ, ROLIE RUIZ, DANILO
RULLA, EDITHA RULLA, MARITES RULLA, ANTONIO RULLAMOS, BERNADETEE RULLAMAS,
JULITA R. RULLAMAS, SOLEDAD RULLAMAS, CELILIA RULLAN, NAPOLEON RULLAN, NORA
RULLAN, WARLITO RULLAN, AURORA RULLODA, GLORIA RULLODA, REMEDIOS RULLODA,
LETICIA RUMATAY, FELY RUNAS, RIZALITO RUNAS, DOMINGA SABADO, JOSE SACDAL,
CLARITA SALAZAR, GLORIA SALTING, PURITA SAMSON, ESTRELLITA SERRANO, GEMMA
SIABABA, SUSANA SIABANA, PERLITA SOBREMONTE, CARMEN SOBREVILLA, RUBIE SOLOMON,
MONICA SORIANO, ERLINDA SUGUITAN, JULITA SUCNET, FEDEL TACIO, LETICIA TAGARA,
JOSEFINA TALENG, MARILY TAMONDON, NIEVEZ TAMONDON, GLORI TANGALIN, LEONARDO
TANGALIN, MYRNA TANGALIN, NOEMA TANGALIN, NORMA TANGALIN, CRISTETA TEANAN,
RUFINA TRANCIA, ALMA TRINIDAD, GLORIA TUGADE, TERESITA TUMBAGA, ALICIA UBONGEN,
ZENAIDA UCOL, ADELA UGAY, AMAILIA UGAY, ESTELLA UGAY, HONORATO UGAY, JULIETA
UGAY, LOURDES UGAY, PURIFICACION UGAY, ROSEMARIE UGAY, RUFINA UGAY, ANGELITO
UMEL, JOSEFINA VALDEZ, ALFREDO VERCELES, JOSIE VERCELES, HELEN VILLANUEVA,
SALVACION VILLAROSA, DOMINGO YARANON, FELIMON YARANON, FELIX YARANON, MONICA
YARES, CONSOLACION YARIZ, DEMETRIA YARIZ, IMELDA YARIZ, MARGARITA ZARATE,
ESMERALDA ABAD, LOURDES ABELLERA, MILAGROS ADUBE, JOSEPHINE ARIAS, ERLINDA
ASPERIN, EMELDA ASUNCION, LILIA ASUNCION, VIOLETA ASUNCION, ROSA BALAGOT,
ADORACION BALANAG, ALICA J. BALANAG, GLECERIA BALANGA, CORAZON BAMBICO, RICARDO
BAIARIO, ADELA BAUTISTA, CORAZON BRAVO, DINAH BULATAO, MARILOU BUNGAY, LORETO
BURGOS, EVELYN CABUNIAS, CARLITO CACAYURAN, ISABEL CAMACHO, LUCRECIA CARREON,
ALFREDO CASEM, HERA CASEM, MELY CASEM, NATIVIDAD CASIPIT, MARILYN CASTILLO,
NENITA CASTANEDA, CARMELITA CAVINTA, LEONIDA CAVINTA, LEONILA CAVINTA, MELANIE
CHAVEZ, LORETO CORTEZ, HERMANA DACANAY, MARIETTA DACANAY, MARITES G. DACANAY,
MARIO DALAZA, AIDA DANAO, EVA DANAO, MARGIE DE GUZMAN, NATIVIDAD DE CASTRO,
NATIVIDAD DELA CRUZ, LORETA DIFUNTORUM, LOLITA DISTOR, ADELINA DOMONDON, HELEN
DULATRE, IMELDA M. DULATRE, JOSE N. DULATRE, LYDIA A. DULATRE, MERLY DULATRE,
CONCEPCION DULAY, DOMINGA DULAY, ELENA C. DULAY, ERLINDA DULAY, ORPILINA R.
DULAY, PABLO A. DULAY, RENATO DULAY, NORMA EISMA, EDNA ESTOQUE, TEOFILO
FAJARDO, ADELINA FONTANILLA, TERESITA FORONDA, MARGARITA FREDELUCES, RUFINA
GALESTE, MARISSA GALI, LUZVIMINDA GAMBOA, CLEOFE GARCIA, ERLINDA GAPASIN,
JULITA GATCHALIAN, MARISSA GATCHALIAN, ALFONSO HALOG, TERESITA IBASAN, RICARDO
JUGO, ELMA JULOYA, ELENITA LACUATA, EPIFANIA LACUATA, SEBASTIAN LACUATA,
JOSEFINA LARON, PEDRO LEGASPI, DOLORES LUCENA, FLORDELIZA MABANTA, PERLITA
MACAGBA, CESAR MAGLAYA, ERNA MAGNO, GLORIA MAGNO, BONA P. MAMARIL, CONCEPCION
MAMARIL, MARCELINA MAMARIL, TERESITA MAMARIL, ESTINILIE MANGADANG, HERMOGENES
MANGADANG, LETICIA MANGADANG, LYDIA MANGADANG, SHIRLEY MANGADANG, SONIA MANGADANG, TRINIDAD MANGADANG, VICTORIANO
MANGADANG, CRESTITA D. MANZANO, ERLINDA MAPALO, FABIAN F. MAPANAO, LYDIA
MAPILE, RUMO MASON, SUSANA MEDRIANO, DOLORES MILAN, ANTONIO G. MUNAR, MARINA
NINIALBA, CORAZON B. NINOBLE, SUSAN ORIBELLO, JOVENCIO ORLINO, CHARITO ORPILLA,
FERDINAND PADILLA, LETECIA PAGADUAN, BERLINA PALMONES, ARISTON PANIS, PATRICIO
PANIS, PRIMO PANIS, REMEDIOS B. PANIS, EMELITO PERALTA, GLORIA RAMIREZ, DOMINGA
RAMOS, GERTRUDES RAMOS, DOROTEO REFUERZO, JR., JUANITA REFUERZO, FLORENCIO
REGACHO, MAGDALENA REBACHO, ADELINA REYES, DELIA REYES, EUFENIA RIVERA, LEONORA
RIVERA, ROSEMARIE ROSIMO, VICTORIA RUALO, DANILO RULLAN, AURORA RULLODA,
SERAFICA RULLODA, ZENAIDO P. RULLODA, IMELDA RUNAS, REMEDIOS SANTOS, DOMINADOR TABABA, ROSENDA TABAO,
JOSEFINA TALENS, REVELINA TORCEDO, RUFINA TUMBANGA, JULITA F. UGAY, BRENDA
VILLANUEVA, GLORIA VILORIA, FLORIDA YARIS, MARGARITA ZARATE, FERNANDO SACDAL,
ANICETA MANONGDO and BEATRIZ UGAY, petitioners, vs. NATIONAL LABOR
RELATIONS COMMISSION, LABOR ARBITER RICARDO N. OLAIREZ, LA UNION TOBACCO
REDRYING CORPORATION and SEE LIN CHAN, respondents.
D E C I S I O N
DE
LEON, JR., J.:
Before us is a petition
for certiorari seeking to annul two Resolutions of the National Labor Relations
Commission (NLRC), Third Division, dated July 6, 1994[1] and September 23, 1994[2], in its affirmance of the Decision[3] of Labor Arbiter Ricardo N. Olairez dated
December 29, 1993 dismissing petitioners’ consolidated complaint for separation
pay for lack of merit.
The facts are as follows:
Private respondent La
Union Tobacco Redrying Corporation (LUTORCO), which is owned by private
respondent See Lin Chan, is engaged in the business of buying, selling,
redrying and processing of tobacco leaves and its by-products. Tobacco season
starts sometime in October of every year when tobacco farmers germinate their
seeds in plots until they are ready for replanting in November. The harvest season starts in mid-February. Then, the farmers sell the harvested tobacco
leaves to redrying plants or do the redrying themselves. The redrying plant of LUTORCO receives
tobacco for redrying at the end of February and starts redrying in March until
August or September.
Petitioners have been
under the employ of LUTORCO for several years until their employment with
LUTORCO was abruptly interrupted sometime in March 1993 when Compania General
de Tabaccos de Filipinas (also known as TABACALERA) took over LUTORCO’s tobacco
operations. New signboards were posted
indicating a change of ownership and petitioners were then asked by LUTORCO to
file their respective applications for employment with TABACALERA. Petitioners were caught unaware of the
sudden change of ownership and its effect on the status of their employment,
though it was alleged that TABACALERA would assume and respect the seniority
rights of the petitioners.
On March 17, 1993, the
disgruntled employees instituted before the NLRC Regional Arbitration Branch
No. 1, San Fernando, La Union a complaint[4] for separation pay against private
respondent LUTORCO on the ground that there was a termination of their employment due to the closure of LUTORCO as
a result of the sale and turnover to TABACALERA. Other equally affected employees filed two additional complaints[5], also for separation pay, which were
consolidated with the first complaint.
Private respondent
corporation raised as its defense that it is exempt from paying separation pay
and denied that it terminated the services of the petitioners; and that it stopped
its operations due to the absence of capital and operating funds caused by losses incurred from 1990 to 1992 and
absence of operating funds for 1993, coupled with adverse financial conditions
and downfall of prices.[6] It alleged further that LUTORCO entered into
an agreement with TABACALERA to take over LUTORCO’s tobacco operations for the
year 1993 in the hope of recovering from
its serious business losses in the succeeding tobacco seasons and to
create a continuing source of income for the petitioners.[7] Lastly, it manifested that LUTORCO, in good
faith and with sincerity, is willing to grant reasonable and adjusted amounts
to the petitioners, as financial assistance, if and when LUTORCO could recover
from its financial crisis.[8]
On December 29, 1993,
Labor Arbiter Ricardo N. Olairez rendered his decision dismissing the complaint
for lack of merit. In upholding private
respondent LUTORCO’s position, the Labor Arbiter declared that the petitioners
are not entitled to the benefits under Article 283[9] of the Labor Code since LUTORCO ceased to
operate due to serious business losses and, furthermore, TABACALERA, the new
employer of the petitioner has assumed the seniority rights of the petitioners
and other employment liabilities of the LUTORCO.[10]
Petitioners appealed[11] then the decision of the Labor Arbiter to
the public respondent NLRC where it was assigned to the Third Division.
In its Opposition to
Appeal[12] dated February 5, 1994 private respondent
LUTORCO presented new allegations and a different stand for denying separation
pay. It alleged that LUTORCO never
ceased to operate but continues to operate even after TABACALERA took over the
operations of its redrying plaint in Aringay, La Union. Petitioners were not terminated from
employment but petitioners instead refused to work with TABACALERA, despite the
notice to petitioners to return to work in view of LUTORCO’s need for workers
at its Agoo plant which had approximately 300,000 kilos of Virginia tobacco for
processing and redrying. Furthermore, petitioners are not entitled to
separation pay because petitioners are seasonal workers.
Adopting these arguments
of private respondent, the NLRC, in a Resolution[13] dated
July 6, 1994, affirmed the dismissal of the consolidated complaints for
separation pay. Public respondent held that petitioners are not entitled to the
protection of Article 283 of the Labor Code providing for separation pay since
there was no closure of establishment or termination of services to speak
of. It declared that there was no
dismissal but a “non-hiring due mainly to [petitioners] own volition.”[14] Moreover, the benefits of Article 283 of the
Labor Code apply only to regular employees, not seasonal workers like
petitioners.[15] Inasmuch as public respondent in its
Resolution[16] dated September 23, 1994 denied petitioners’
motion for reconsideration, petitioners now assail the correctness of the
NLRC’s resolution via the instant petition.
Petitioners anchor their
petition on the following grounds, to wit:
I. PUBLIC RESPONDENT
NLRC COMMITTED GRAVE ABUSE OF DISCRETION AMOUNTING TO EXCESS OR LACK OF
JURISDICTION IN RULING THAT THERE WAS NO DISMISSAL OR TERMINATION OF SERVICES.
II. PUBLIC RESPONDENT NLRC
COMMITTED GRAVE ABUSE OF DISCRETION AMOUNTING TO EXCESS OR LACK OF JURISDICTION
IN RULING THAT PETITIONERS WERE NOT REGULAR EMPLOYEES.
III. PUBLIC RESPONDENT NLRC COMMITTED GRAVE ABUSE OF DISCRETION
AMOUNTING TO EXCESS OR LACK OF JURISDICTION IN NOT AWARDING SEPARATION PAY TO
THE PETITIONERS.
Petitioners vigorously
maintain that they are regular workers of respondent LUTORCO since they worked
continuously for many years with LUTORCO, some of them even for over 20 years,
and that they performed functions necessary and desirable in the usual business
of LUTORCO.[17] According to them, the fact that some of
them work only during the tobacco season does not affect their status as
regular workers since they have been repeatedly called back to work for every
season, year after year.[18] Thus, petitioners take exception to the
factual findings and conclusions of the NLRC, stressing that the conclusions of
the NLRC were based solely on the new theory advanced by private respondent
LUTORCO only on appeal, that is, that it was only LUTORCO’s tobacco re-drying
operation that was sold, and hence, diametrically opposed to its theory before
the Labor Arbiter, i.e., that it is the entire company (LUTORCO) itself that
was sold.
Private respondent
LUTORCO, on the other hand, insists that petitioners’ employment was not
terminated; that it never ceased to operate, and that it was petitioners
themselves who severed their employer-employee relationship when they chose
employment with TABACALERA because petitioners found more stability working
with TABACALERA than with LUTORCO.[19] It likewise insists that petitioners are
seasonal workers since almost all of petitioners never continuously worked in
LUTORCO for any given year[20] and they were required to reapply every year
to determine who among them shall be given work for the season. To support
its argument that petitioners are seasonal workers, private respondent
LUTORCO cites the case of Mercado, Sr. v. NLRC[21] wherein this Court held that “the employment of [seasonal workers]
legally ends upon the completion of the xxx season.”
Clearly, the crux of the
dispute boils down to two issues, namely, (a) whether petitioners’ employment
with LUTORCO was terminated, and (b) whether petitioners are regular or
seasonal workers, as defined by law.
Both issues are clearly factual in nature as they involved appreciation
of evidence presented before the NLRC whose finding of facts and conclusions
thereon are entitled to respect and finality in the absence of proof that they
were arrived at arbitrarily or capriciously.[22] In the instant case, however, cogent reasons
exist to apply the exception, to wit:
First, upon a thorough
review, the records speak of a sale to TABACALERA in 1993 under conditions
evidently so concealed that petitioners were not formally notified of the
impending sale of LUTORCO’s tobacco re-drying operations to TABACALERA and its
attendant consequences with respect to their continued employment status under
TABACALERA. They came to know of the
fact of that sale only when TABACALERA took over the said tobacco re-drying
operations. Thus, under those
circumstances, the employment of petitioners with respondent LUTORCO was
technically terminated when TABACALERA took over LUTORCO’s tobacco re-drying
operations in 1993.[23]
Moreover, private
respondent LUTORCO’s allegation that TABACALERA assured the seniority rights of
petitioners deserves scant consideration inasmuch as the same is not supported
by documentary evidence nor was it confirmed by TABACALERA. Besides, there is no law requiring that the
purchaser of an entire company should absorb the employees of the selling
company. The most that the purchasing
company can do, for reasons of public policy and social justice, is to give
preference to the qualified separated employees of the selling company, who in
its judgment are necessary in the continued operation of the business
establishment. In the instant case, the
petitioner employees were clearly required to file new applications for
employment. In reality then, they were
hired as new employees of TABACALERA.
Second, private
respondent LUTORCO’s contention that petitioners themselves severed the
employer-employee relationship by choosing to work with TABACALERA is bereft of
merit considering that its offer to return to work was made more as an
afterthought when private respondent LUTORCO later realized it still had
tobacco leaves for processing and redrying.
The fact that petitioners ultimately chose to work with TABACALERA is
not adverse to petitioners’ cause. To
equate the more stable work with TABACALERA and the temporary work with LUTORCO
is illogical. Petitioners’ untimely
separation in LUTORCO was not of their own making and therefore, not
construable as resignation therefrom inasmuch as resignation must be voluntary
and made with the intention of relinquishing the office, accompanied with an
act of relinquishment.[24]
Third, the test of
whether or not an employee is a regular employee has been laid down in De
Leon v. NLRC,[25] in which this Court held:
The primary standard, therefore, of determining regular employment is the reasonable connection between the particular activity performed by the employee in relation to the usual trade or business of the employer. The test is whether the former is usually necessary or desirable in the usual business or trade of the employer. The connection can be determined by considering the nature of the work performed and its relation to the scheme of the particular business or trade in its entirety. Also if the employee has been performing the job for at least a year, even if the performance is not continuous and merely intermittent, the law deems repeated and continuing need for its performance as sufficient evidence of the necessity if not indispensability of that activity to the business. Hence, the employment is considered regular, but only with respect to such activity, and while such activity exists.
Thus, the nature of one’s
employment does not depend solely on the will or word of the employer. Nor on the procedure for hiring and the
manner of designating the employee, but on the nature of the activities to be
performed by the employee, considering the employer’s nature of business and
the duration and scope of work to be done.[26]
In the case at bar, while
it may appear that the work of petitioners is seasonal, inasmuch as petitioners
have served the company for many years, some for over 20 years, performing
services necessary and indispensable to LUTORCO’s business, serve as badges of
regular employment.[27] Moreover, the fact that petitioners do not
work continuously for one whole year but only for the duration of the tobacco
season does not detract from considering them in regular employment since in a
litany of cases[28] this Court has already settled that seasonal
workers who are called to work from time to time and are temporarily laid off
during off-season are not separated from service in said period, but are merely
considered on leave until re-employed.
Private respondent’s
reliance on the case of Mercardo v. NLRC is misplaced considering that
since in said case of Mercado, although the respondent company therein
consistently availed of the services of the petitioners therein from year to
year, it was clear that petitioners therein were not in respondent company’s
regular employ. Petitioners therein
performed different phases of agricultural work in a given year. However, during that period, they were free
to contract their services to work for other farm owners, as in fact they
did. Thus, the Court ruled in that case
that their employment would naturally end upon the completion of each project
or phase of farm work for which they have been contracted.
All the foregoing
considered, the public respondent NLRC in the case at bar erred in its total
affirmance of the dismissal of the consolidated complaint, for separation pay,
against private respondents LUTORCO and See Lin Chan considering that petitioners
are regular seasonal employees entitled to the benefits of Article 283 of the
Labor Code which applies to closures or cessation of an establishment or
undertaking, whether it be a complete or partial cessation or closure of
business operation.[29]
In the case of Philippine
Tobacco Flue-Curing & Redrying Corporation v. NLRC[30] this Court, when faced with the question of
whether the separation pay of a seasonal worker, who works for only a fraction
of a year, should be equated with the separation pay of a regular worker,
resolved that question in this wise:
The amount of separation pay is based on two factors: the amount of monthly salary and the number
of years of service. Although the Labor
Code provides different definitions as to what constitutes “one year of
service,” Book Six[31]
does not specifically define “one year
of service” for purposes of computing separation pay. However, Articles 283 and 284 both state in connection with
separation pay that a fraction of at least six months shall be considered one
whole year. Applying this case at bar,
we hold that the amount of separation pay which respondent members xxx should
receive is one-half (1/2) their respective average monthly pay during the last
season they worked multiplied by the number of years they actually rendered
service, provided that they worked for at least six months during a given year.
Thus,
in the said case, the employees were awarded separation pay equivalent to one
(1) month, or to one-half (1/2) month pay for every year they rendered service,
whichever is higher, provided they rendered service for at least six (6) months
in a given year. As explained in the
text of the decision in the said case, “month pay” shall be understood as
“average monthly pay during the last season they worked.”[32] An award of ten percent (10%) of the total
amount due petitioners as attorney’s fees is legally and morally justifiable
under Art. 111 of the Labor Code,[33] Sec. 8, Rule VIII, Book III of its
Implementing Rules,[34] and par. 7, Art. 2208[35] of the Civil Code.[36]
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby GRANTED, and the
assailed Resolutions dated July 6, 1994 and September 23, 1994 of public
respondent NLRC are REVERSED and SET ASIDE.
Private respondent La Union Tobacco Redrying Corporation is ORDERED: (a)
to pay petitioners separation pay equivalent to one (1) month, or one-half
(1/2) month pay for each year that they rendered service, whichever is higher,
provided that they rendered service for at least six (6) months in a given year,
and; (b) to pay ten percent (10%) of the total amount due to petitioners, as
and for attorney’s fees. Consequently, public respondent NLRC is ORDERED to
COMPUTE the total amount of separation pay which each petitioner who has
rendered service to private respondent LUTORCO for at least six (6) months in a
given year is entitled to receive in accordance with this decision, and to
submit its compliance thereon within forty-five (45) days from notice of this
decision.
SO ORDERED.
Bellosillo, (Chairman),
Mendoza, Quisumbing, and Buena, JJ., concur.
[1] Penned
by Commissioner Ireneo B. Bernardo and concurred in by Presiding Commissioner
Lourdes C. Javier and Commissioner Joaquin A. Tanodra in NLRC CN.
RAB-I-03-1055-93, RAB-I-03-1056-93 and RAB-I-03-1100-93 CA No. L-001300, Rollo,
pp. 37-55.
[2] Rollo,
pp. 27-36.
[3] Rollo,
pp. 56-64.
[4] Docketed
as NLRC Case No. RAB-I-03-1055-93, Rollo, pp. 69-75.
[5] Filed
on March 25, 1993 and June 15, 1993, docketed as NLRC Case Nos.
RAB-I-03-1056-93 and RAB-I-03-1100-93, respectively, Rollo, pp. 65-68.
[6] Rollo,
pp. 85-86.
[7] Ibid.
[8] Rollo,
p. 87.
[9] Article 283. Closure of establishment and reduction of
personnel.
x x x in cases of closure and cessation of
operations of establishment or undertaking not due to serious business
losses or financial reverses, the separation pay shall be equivalent to one
(1) month pay or at least one-half (1/2) month pay for every year of service,
whichever is higher. A fraction of at
least six (6) months shall be considered as one (1) whole year.
[10] Rollo,
pp. 61-64.
[11] Rollo,
pp. 90-102.
[12] Rollo,
pp. 103-109.
[13] See
Note No. 1, supra.
[14] Rollo,
p. 50.
[15] Rollo,
pp. 51-52.
[16] See
Note No. 2, supra.
[17]
Rollo, p. 304.
[18] Rollo,
p. 305.
[19] Rollo,
pp. 239-240.
[20] Rollo,
p. 236.
[21] 201
SCRA 332, 343 [1991].
[22] PASVIL/Pascual
Liner, Inc., Workers Union-NAFLU v. NLRC, 311 SCRA 444, 457 [1999].
[23] See
San Felipe Neri School of Mandaluyong, Inc. v. NLRC, 201 SCRA 478 [1991]
citing Central Azucarera del Danao v. Court of Appeals, 137 SCRA 295
[1985].
[24] Pascua
v. NLRC (Third Division), 287 SCRA 554, 567 [1998]; see Tacloban
Sagkahan Rice and Corn Mills Co. v. NLRC, 183 SCRA 425 [1990].
[25] De
Leon v. NLRC, 176 SCRA 615, 621 [1989].
[26] Bernardo
v. NLRC, 310 SCRA 186, 201 [1999].
[27] Maraguinot,
Jr. v. NLRC (Second Division), 284 SCRA 539, 556 [1998].
[28] Bacolod-Murcia
Milling Co., Inc. v. NLRC, 204 SCRA 155, 158 [1991]; Visayan Stevedore
Transportation Company v. CIR, 19 SCRA 426 [1967]; Industrial-Commercial
Agricultural Workers’ Organization (ICAWO) v. CIR, 16 SCRA 562, 565-566
[1966]; Manila Hotel Company v. Court of Industrial Relations, 9 SCRA
184, 186 [1963].
[29] Coca-Cola
Bottlers (Phils.), Inc. v. NLRC
194 SCRA 592, 599 [1991].
[30] 300
SCRA 37, 63 –65 [1998].
[31] Book
Six of the Labor Code contains the provisions pertaining to termination of
employment and computation of separation pay.
[32] See
Note No. 30.
[33] (a) In cases of unlawful withholding of wages the
culpable party may be assessed attorney’s fees equivalent to ten percent of the
amount of wages recovered.
(b) It shall be unlawful for any person to demand or accept,
in any judicial or administrative proceedings for the recovery of the wages,
attorney’s fees, which exceed ten percent of the amount of wages recovered.
[34] Attorney’s
fees in any judicial or administrative proceedings for the recovery of wages shall
not exceed 10% of the amount awarded.
The fees may be deducted from the total amount due the winning party.
[35] In absence of stipulation, attorney’s fees and
expenses of litigation, other than judicial consist, cannot be recovered,
except:
xxx (7) In actions
for the recovery of wages of household
helpers, laborers and skilled workers xxx.
[36] Marsaman
Manning Agency, Inc. v. NLRC, 313 SCRA 88, 99-100 [1999] citing
Philippine National Construction Corporation v. NLRC, 277 SCRA 91, 105
[1997]; Sebuguero v. NLRC, 248 SCRA 532, 548 [1995].