SECOND DIVISION
[G.R. No. 138938. October 24, 2000]
CELESTINO VIVIERO, petitioner, vs. COURT OF APPEALS, HAMMONIA MARINE SERVICES, and HANSEATIC SHIPPING CO., LTD. respondents.
D E C I S I O N
BELLOSILLO,
J.:
CELESTINO VIVERO, in this
petition for review, seeks the reversal of the Decision of the Court of Appeals
of 26 May 1999 setting aside the Decision of the National Labor Relations
Commission of 28 May 1998 as well as its Resolution of 23 July 1998 denying his
motion for its reconsideration, and reinstating the decision of the Labor
Arbiter of 21 January 1997.
Petitioner Vivero, a
licensed seaman, is a member of the Associated Marine Officers and Seamen's
Union of the Philippines (AMOSUP). The
Collective Bargaining Agreement entered into by AMOSUP and private respondents
provides, among others -
ARTICLE XII
GRIEVANCE PROCEDURE
x x
x x
Sec. 3. A dispute or grievance arising in connection with the terms and provisions of this Agreement shall be adjusted in accordance with the following procedure:
1. Any seaman who feels that he has been unjustly treated or even subjected to an unfair consideration shall endeavor to have said grievance adjusted by the designated representative of the unlicensed department abroad the vessel in the following manner:
A. Presentation of the complaint to his immediate superior.
B. Appeal to the head of the department in which the seaman involved shall be employed.
C. Appeal directly to the Master.
Sec. 4. If the grievance cannnot be resolved under the provision of Section 3, the decision of the Master shall govern at sea x x x x in foreign ports and until the vessel arrives at a port where the Master shall refer such dispute to either the COMPANY or the UNION in order to resolve such dispute. It is understood, however, if the dispute could not be resolved then both parties shall avail of the grievance procedure.
Sec. 5. In furtherance of the foregoing principle, there is hereby created a GRIEVANCE COMMITTEE to be composed of two COMPANY REPRESENTATIVES to be designated by the COMPANY and two LABOR REPRESENTATIVES to be designated by the UNION.
Sec. 6. Any grievance, dispute or misunderstanding concerning any ruling, practice, wages or working conditions in the COMPANY, or any breach of the Employment Contract, or any dispute arising from the meaning or the application of the provision of this Agreement or a claim of violation thereof or any complaint that any such crewmembers may have against the COMPANY, as well as complaint which the COMPANY may have against such crewmembers shall be brought to the attention of the GRIEVANCE COMMITTEE before either party takes any action, legal or otherwise.
Sec. 7. The COMMITTEE shall resolve any dispute within seven (7) days from and after the same is submitted to it for resolution and if the same cannot be settled by the COMMITTEE or if the COMMITTEE fails to act on the dispute within the 7-day period herein provided, the same shall be referred to a VOLUNTARY ARBITRATION COMMITTEE.
An "impartial arbitrator" will be appointed by mutual
choice and consent of the UNION and the COMPANY who shall hear and decide the
dispute or issue presented to him and his decision shall be final and
unappealable x x x x[1]
As found by the Labor
Arbiter -
Complainant was hired by respondent as Chief Officer of the vessel "M.V. Sunny Prince" on 10 June 1994 under the terms and conditions, to wit:
Duration of Contract - - - - 10 months
Basic Monthly Salary - - - - US $1,100.00
Hours of Work - - - - 44 hrs./week
Overtime - - - - 495 lump O.T.
Vacation leave with pay - - - - US $220.00/mo.
On grounds of very poor performance and conduct, refusal to perform his job, refusal to report to the Captain or the vessel’s Engineers or cooperate with other ship officers about the problem in cleaning the cargo holds or of the shipping pump and his dismal relations with the Captain of the vessel, complainant was repatriated on 15 July 1994.
On 01 August 1994, complainant filed a complaint for illegal dismissal
at Associated Marine Officers’ and Seaman’s Union of the Philippines (AMOSUP)
of which complainant was a member.
Pursuant to Article XII of the Collective Bargaining Agreement,
grievance proceedings were conducted; however, parties failed to reach and
settle the dispute amicably, thus, on
28 November 1994, complainant filed [a] complaint with the Philippine Overseas
Employment Administration (POEA).[2]
The
law in force at the time petitioner filed his Complaint with the POEA
was EO No. 247.[3]
While the case was
pending before the POEA, private respondents filed a Motion to Dismiss
on the ground that the POEA had no jurisdiction over the case considering
petitioner Vivero's failure to refer it to a Voluntary Arbitration Committee in
accordance with the CBA between the parties.
Upon the enactment of RA 8042, the Migrant Workers and Overseas
Filipinos Act of 1995, the case was transferred to the Adjudication Branch
of the National Labor Relations Commission.
On 21 January 1997 Labor
Arbiter Jovencio Ll. Mayor Jr., on the basis of the pleadings and documents
available on record, rendered a decision dismissing the Complaint for
want of jurisdiction.[4] According to the Labor Arbiter, since the
CBA of the parties provided for the referral to a Voluntary Arbitration
Committee should the Grievance Committee fail to settle the dispute, and
considering the mandate of Art. 261 of the Labor Code on the original and
exclusive jurisdiction of Voluntary Arbitrators, the Labor Arbiter clearly had
no jurisdiction over the case.[5]
Petitioner (complainant
before the Labor Arbiter) appealed the dismissal of his petition to the
NLRC. On 28 May 1998 the NLRC set aside
the decision of the Labor Arbiter on the ground that the record was clear that
petitioner had exhausted his remedy by submitting his case to the Grievance
Committee of AMOSUP. Considering
however that he could not obtain any settlement he had to ventilate his case
before the proper forum, i.e., the Philippine Overseas Employment
Administration.[6] The NLRC further held that the contested
portion in the CBA providing for the intercession of a Voluntary Arbitrator was
not binding upon petitioner since both petitioner and private respondents had to agree voluntarily to submit the
case before a Voluntary Arbitrator or Panel of Voluntary Arbitrators. This would entail expenses as the Voluntary
Arbitrator chosen by the parties had to be paid. Inasmuch however as petitioner chose to file his Complaint
originally with POEA, then the Labor Arbiter to whom the case was transferred
would have to take cognizance of the case.[7]
The NLRC then remanded
the case to the Labor Arbiter for further proceedings. On 3 July 1998 respondents filed a Motion
for Reconsideration which was denied by the NLRC on 23 July 1998.
Thus, private respondents
raised the case to the Court of Appeals contending that the provision in the
CBA requiring a dispute which remained unresolved by the Grievance Committee to
be referred to a Voluntary Arbitration Committee, was mandatory in character in
view of the CBA between the parties.
They stressed that "since it is a policy of the state to promote voluntary
arbitration as a mode of settling labor disputes, it is clear that the public
respondent gravely abused its discretion in taking cognizance of a case which
was still within the mantle of the Voluntary Arbitration Commitee’s
jurisdiction."[8]
On the other hand,
petitioner argued -
(A)s strongly suggested by its very title, referral of cases of
this nature to the Voluntary Arbitration Committee is voluntary in nature. Otherwise, the committee would not have been
called Voluntary Arbitration Committee but rather, a Compulsory Arbitration
Committee. Moreover, if the referral of
cases of similar nature to the Voluntary Arbitration Committee would be deemed
mandatory by virtue of the provisions in the CBA, the [NLRC] would then be
effectively deprived of its jurisdiction to try, hear and decide termination
disputes, as provided for under Article 217 of the Labor Code. Lastly, [respondents] ought to be deemed to have waived their right to
question the procedure followed by [petitioner], considering that they have
already filed their Position Paper
before belatedly filing a
Motion to Dismiss x x x x [9]
But the Court of Appeals
ruled in favor of private respondents.
It held that the CBA "is the law between the parties and compliance
therewith is mandated by the express policy of the law."[10] Hence, petitioner should have followed the
provision in the CBA requiring the submission of the dispute to the Voluntary
Arbitration Committee once the Grievance Committee failed to settle the controversy.[11] According to the Court of Appeals, the
parties did not have the choice to "volunteer" to refer the dispute
to the Voluntary Arbitrator or a Panel of Arbitrators when there was already an
agreement requiring them to do so. "Voluntary Arbitration" means that
it is binding because of a prior agreement or contract, while "Compulsory
Arbitration" is when the law
declares the dispute subject to arbitration, regardless of the consent or
desire of the parties.[12]
The Court of Appeals
further held that the Labor Code itself enumerates the original and exclusive
jurisdiction of the Voluntary Arbitrator or Panel of Voluntary Arbitrators, and
prohibits the NLRC and the Regional Directors of the Department of Labor and
Employment (DOLE) from entertaining cases falling under the same.[13] Thus, the fact that private respondents
filed their Position Paper first before filing their Motion to Dismiss
was immaterial and did not operate to confer jurisdiction
upon the Labor Arbiter, following the well-settled rule that jurisdiction is
determined by law and not by consent or agreement of the parties or by
estoppel.[14]
Finally, the appellate
court ruled that a case falling under the jurisdiction of the Labor Arbiter as
provided under Art. 217 of the Labor Code may be lodged instead with a
Voluntary Arbitrator because the law prefers, or gives primacy, to voluntary
arbitration instead of compulsory
arbitration.[15] Consequently, the contention that the NLRC
would be deprived of its jurisdiction to try, hear and decide termination
disputes under Art. 217 of the Labor Code, should the instant dispute be
referred to the Voluntary Arbitration Committee, is clearly bereft of merit.[16] Besides, the Voluntary Arbitrator, whether
acting solely or in a panel, enjoys in law the status of a quasi-judicial
agency independent of, and apart from, the NLRC since his decisions are not
appealable to the latter.[17]
Celestino Vivero, in his
petition for review assailing the Decision of the Court of Appeals, alleges
that the appellate court committed grave abuse of discretion in holding that a
Voluntary Arbitrator or Panel of Voluntary Arbitrators, and not the
Adjudication Branch of the NLRC, has jurisdiction over his complaint for
illegal dismissal. He claims that his complaint for illegal dismissal was undeniably a
termination dispute and did not, in any way, involve an "interpretation or
implementation of collective bargaining agreement" or
"interpretation" or "enforcement" of company personnel
policies. Thus, it should fall within
the original and exclusive jurisdiction of the NLRC and its Labor Arbiter, and
not with a Voluntary Arbitrator, in accordance with Art. 217 of the Labor Code.
Private respondents, on
the other hand, allege that the case is clearly one "involving the proper interpretation
and implementation of the Grievance Procedure found in the Collective
Bargaining Agreement (CBA) between the parties"[18] because of petitioner’s allegation in his
claim/assistance request form submitted to the Union, to wit:
NATURE OF COMPLAINT
3. Illegal Dismissal - Reason: (1) That in this case it was the master of M.V. SUNNY PRINCE Capt. Andersen who created the trouble with physical injury and stating false allegation; (2) That there was no proper procedure of grievance; (3) No proper notice of dismissal.
Is there a Notice of dismissal? _x_ Yes or ____ No
What date? 11 July 1994
Is there a Grievance Procedure observed? ____ Yes or _x_ No[19]
Private respondents
further allege that the fact that petitioner sought the assistance of his Union
evidently shows that he himself was convinced that his Complaint was
within the ambit of the jurisdiction of the grievance machinery and
subsequently by a Panel of Voluntary Arbitrators as provided for in their CBA,
and as explicitly mandated by Art. 261 of the Labor Code.[20]
Thus, the issue is
whether the NLRC is deprived of jurisdiction over illegal dismissal cases
whenever a CBA provides for grievance machinery and voluntary arbitration
proceedings. Or, phrased in another
way, does the dismissal of an employee constitute a "grievance between the
parties," as defined under the provisions of the CBA, and consequently,
within the exclusive original jurisdiction of the Voluntary Arbitrators,
thereby rendering the NLRC without jurisdiction to decide the case?
On the original and
exclusive jurisdiction of Labor Arbiters, Art. 217 of the Labor Code provides -
Art. 217. Jurisdiction
of Labor Arbiters and the Commission. -
(a) Except as otherwise provided
under this Code, the Labor Arbiters shall have original and exclusive
jurisdiction to hear and decide within thirty (30) calendar days after the
submission of the case by the parties for decision without extension, even in
the absence of stenographic notes, the following cases involving all workers,
whether agricultural or non-agricultural:
(1) Unfair labor practice cases; (2) Termination disputes; (3) If
accompanied with a claim for reinstatement, those cases that workers may file
involving wages, rates of pay, hours of work and other terms and conditions of
employment; (4) Claims for actual, moral, exemplary and other forms of
damages arising from the employer-employee relations; (5) Cases arising
from any violation of Article 264 of this Code, including questions involving
the legality of strikes and lockouts; and, (6) Except claims for Employees
Compensation, Social Security, Medicare and maternity benefits, all other
claims arising from employer-employee relations, including those of persons in
domestic or household service, involving an amount exceeding five thousand
pesos (P5,000.00) regardless of whether accompanied with a claim for
reinstatement.
(b) The Commission shall have exclusive appellate jurisdiction over all cases decided by Labor Arbiters.
(c) Cases arising from the interpretation of collective bargaining agreements and those arising from the interpretation or enforcement of company personnel policies shall be disposed of by the Labor Arbiter by referring the same to the grievance machinery and voluntary arbitration as may be provided in said agreements (emphasis supplied).
However, any or all of
these cases may, by agreement of the parties, be submitted to a Voluntary
Arbitrator or Panel of Voluntary Arbitrators for adjudication. Articles 261 and 262 of the Labor Code
provide -
Art. 261. Jurisdiction of Voluntary Arbitrators or Panel of Voluntary Arbitrators. - The Voluntary Arbitrator or panel of Voluntary Arbitrators shall have original and exclusive jurisdiction to hear and decide all unresolved grievances arising from the interpretation or implementation of the Collective Bargaining Agreement and those arising from the interpretation or enforcement of company personnel policies referred to in the immediately preceding article. Accordingly, violations of a Collective Bargaining Agreement, except those which are gross in character, shall no longer be treated as unfair labor practice and shall be resolved as grievances under the Collective Bargaining Agreement. For purposes of this article, gross violations of Collective Bargaining Agreement shall mean flagrant and/or malicious refusal to comply with the economic provisions of such agreement.
The Commission, its Regional Offices and the Regional Directors of the Department of Labor and Employment shall not entertain disputes, grievances or matters under the exclusive and original jurisdiction of the Voluntary Arbitrator or panel of Vountary Arbitrators and shall immediately dispose and refer the same to the Grievance Machinery or Voluntary Arbitration provided in the Collective Bargaining Agreement.
Art. 262. Jurisdiction Over Other Labor Disputes. - The Voluntary Arbitrator or panel of Voluntary Arbitrators, upon agreement of the parties, shall also hear and decide all other labor disputes including unfair labor practices and bargaining deadlocks (emphasis supplied).
Private respondents
attempt to justify the conferment of jurisdiction over the case on the
Voluntary Arbitrator on the ground that the issue involves the proper
interpretation and implementation of the Grievance Procedure found in the
CBA. They point out that when
petitioner sought the assistance of his Union to avail of the grievance
machinery, he in effect submitted himself to the procedure set forth in the CBA
regarding submission of unresolved grievances to a Voluntary Arbitrator.
The argument is
untenable. The case is primarily a
termination dispute. It is clear from
the claim/assistance request form submitted by petitioner to AMOSUP that he was
challenging the legality of his dismissal for lack of cause and lack of due
process. The issue of whether there was
proper interpretation and implementation of the CBA provisions comes into play
only because the grievance procedure provided for in the CBA was not observed
after he sought his Union’s assistance in contesting his termination. Thus, the question to be resolved
necessarily springs from the primary issue of whether there was a valid
termination; without this, then there would be no reason to invoke the need to
interpret and implement the CBA provisions properly.
In San Miguel Corp. v.
National Labor Relations Commission[21] this Court held that the phrase "all other labor disputes"
may include termination disputes provided that the agreement between the Union
and the Company states "in unequivocal language that [the parties] conform
to the submission of termination disputes and unfair labor practices to
voluntary arbitration."[22] Ergo, it is not sufficient to merely say
that parties to the CBA agree on the principle that "all disputes"
should first be submitted to a Voluntary Arbitrator. There is a need for an express stipulation in the CBA that
illegal termination disputes should be resolved by a Voluntary Arbitrator or
Panel of Voluntary Arbitrators, since the same fall within a special class of
disputes that are generally within the exclusive original jurisdiction of Labor
Arbiters by express provision of law.
Absent such express stipulation, the
phrase "all disputes"
should be construed as limited to the areas of conflict traditionally within
the jurisdiction of Voluntary Arbitrators, i.e., disputes relating
to contract-interpretation, contract-implementation, or interpretation or
enforcement of company personnel policies.
Illegal termination disputes - not falling within any of these
categories - should then be considered as a special area of interest governed
by a specific provision of law.
In this case, however,
while the parties did agree to make termination disputes the proper subject of
voluntary arbitration, such submission remains discretionary upon the
parties. A perusal of the CBA
provisions shows that Sec. 6, Art. XII (Grievance Procedure) of the CBA is the
general agreement of the parties to refer grievances, disputes or
misunderstandings to a grievance committee, and henceforth, to a voluntary
arbitration committee. The requirement
of specificity is fulfilled by Art. XVII (Job Security) where the parties
agreed -
Sec. 1. Promotion, demotion, suspension, dismissal or disciplinary
action of the seaman shall be left to the discretion of the Master, upon
consultation with the Company and notification to the Union. This notwithstanding, any and all
disciplinary action taken on board the vessel shall be provided for in Appendix
“B” of this Agreement x x x x [23]
Sec. 4. x x x x Transfer,
lay-off or discipline of seamen for incompetence, inefficiency, neglect of
work, bad behavior, perpetration of crime, drunkenness, insubordination,
desertion, violation of x x x regulations of any port touched by the Company’s
vessel/s and other just and proper causes shall be at Master’s discretion x x x
in the high seas or foreign ports. The
Master shall refer the case/dispute upon reaching port and if not
satisfactorily settled, the case/dispute may be referred to the grievance
machinery or procedure hereinafter provided (emphasis supplied).[24]
The use of the word
"may" shows the intention of the parties to reserve the right
to submit the illegal termination dispute to the jurisdiction of the Labor
Arbiter, rather than to a Voluntary Arbitrator. Petitioner validly exercised his option to submit his case to a
Labor Arbiter when he filed his Complaint before the proper government
agency.
Private respondents
invoke Navarro III v. Damasco[25] wherein the Court held that "it is the policy of the state to
promote voluntary arbitration as a mode of settling disputes."[26] It should be noted, however, that in Navarro
III all the parties voluntarily submitted to the jurisdiction of the
Voluntary Arbitrator when they filed their respective position papers and
submitted documentary evidence before him.
Furthermore, they manifested during the initial conference that they
were not questioning the authority of the Voluntary Arbitrator.[27] In the case at bar, the dispute was never
brought to a Voluntary Arbitrator for resolution; in fact, petitioner precisely
requested the Court to recognize the jurisdiction of the Labor Arbiter over the
case. The Court had held in San
Miguel Corp. v. NLRC[28] that neither officials nor tribunals can assume jurisdiction in the
absence of an express legal conferment.
In the same manner, petitioner cannot arrogate into the powers of
Voluntary Arbitrators the original and exclusive jurisdiction of Labor Arbiters
over unfair labor practices, termination disputes, and claims for damages, in
the absence of an express agreement between the parties in order for Art.
262 of
the Labor Code to apply in the
case at bar. In other words, the Court
of Appeals is correct in holding that Voluntary Arbitration is mandatory in
character if there is a specific agreement between the parties to that effect. It must be stressed however that, in the
case at bar, the use of the word "may" shows the intention of the parties to
reserve the right of recourse to Labor Arbiters.
The CBA clarifies the
proper procedure to be followed in situations where the parties expressly
stipulate to submit termination disputes to the jurisdiction of a Voluntary
Arbitrator or Panel of Voluntary Arbitrators.
For when the parties have validly agreed on a procedure for resolving
grievances and to submit a dispute to voluntary arbitration then that procedure
should be strictly observed. Non-compliance
therewith cannot be excused, as petitioner suggests, by the fact that he is not
well-versed with the "fine prints"
of the CBA. It was his
responsibility to find out, through his Union, what the provisions of the CBA
were and how they could affect his rights.
As provided in Art. 241, par. (p), of the Labor Code -
(p) It shall be the duty of any labor organization and its officers to inform its members on the provisions of its constitution and by-laws, collective bargaining agreement, the prevailing labor relations system and all their rights and obligations under existing labor laws.
In fact, any violation of
the rights and conditions of union membership is a "ground for
cancellation of union registration or expulsion of officer from office, whichever
is appropriate. At least thirty percent (30%) of all the members of a union
or any member or members especially concerned may report such violation to the
Bureau [of Labor Relations] x x x x"[29]
It may be observed that
under Policy Instruction No. 56 of the Secretary of Labor, dated 6 April
1993, "Clarifying the Jurisdiction Between Voluntary Arbitrators and
Labor Arbiters Over Termination Cases and Providing Guidelines for the Referral
of Said Cases Originally Filed with the NLRC to the NCMB," termination
cases arising in or resulting from the interpretation and implementation of
collective bargaining agreements and interpretation and enforcement of company
personnel policies which were initially processed at the various steps of the
plant-level Grievance Procedures under the parties' collective bargaining
agreements fall within the original and exclusive jurisdiction of the voluntary
arbitrator pursuant to Art. 217 (c) and Art. 261 of the Labor Code; and, if
filed before the Labor Arbiter, these cases shall be dismissed by the Labor
Arbiter for lack of jurisdiction and referred to the concerned NCMB Regional
Branch for appropriate action towards an expeditious selection by the parties
of a Voluntary Arbitrator or Panel of Arbitrators based on the procedures
agreed upon in the CBA.
As earlier stated, the
instant case is a termination dispute falling under the original and exclusive
jurisdiction of the Labor Arbiter, and does not specifically involve the
application, implementation or enforcement of company personnel policies
contemplated in Policy Instruction No. 56. Consequently, Policy Instruction No. 56 does not apply in
the case at bar. In any case, private
respondents never invoked the application of Policy Instruction No. 56
in their Position Papers, neither did they raise the question in their Motion
to Dismiss which they filed nine (9) months after the filing of their Position
Papers. At this late stage of the
proceedings, it would not serve the ends of justice if this case is referred
back to a Voluntary Arbitrator considering that both the AMOSUP and private
respondents have submitted to the jurisdiction of the Labor Arbiter by filing
their respective Position Papers and ignoring the grievance procedure
set forth in their CBA.
After the grievance
proceedings have failed to bring about a resolution, AMOSUP, as agent of
petitioner, should have informed him of his option to settle the case through
voluntary arbitration. Private respondents, on their part, should have timely
invoked the provision of their CBA
requiring the referral of their unresolved disputes to a Voluntary Arbitrator
once it became apparent that the grievance machinery failed to resolve it prior
to the filing of the case before the proper tribunal. The private respondents should not have waited for nine (9)
months from the filing of their Position Paper with the POEA before it
moved to dismiss the case purportedly for lack
of jurisdiction. As it is, private respondents are deemed to
have waived their right to question the procedure followed by petitioner,
assuming that they have the right to do so.
Under their CBA, both Union and respondent companies are responsible for
selecting an impartial arbitrator or for convening an arbitration committee;[30] yet,
it is apparent that neither made a move towards this end. Consequently, petitioner should not be
deprived of his legitimate recourse because of the refusal of both Union and
respondent companies to follow the grievance procedure.
WHEREFORE, the Decision of the Court of Appeals
is SET ASIDE and the case is remanded to the Labor Arbiter to dispose of the
case with dispatch until terminated considering the undue delay already
incurred.
SO ORDERED.
Mendoza, Quisumbing,
Buena, and De Leon, Jr., JJ., concur.
[1] Rollo,
pp. 34-35.
[2] Id.,
pp. 49-50.
[3] Sec. 3, par. (d), of EO No. 247, the
"Reorganization Act of the Philippine Overseas Employment
Administration" (24 July
1987) provides -
Sec. 3. Powers and Functions. - x
x x x (d) Exercise original and exclusive jurisdiction to hear and decide
all claims arising out of an employee-employer relationship or by virtue of any
law or contract involving Filipino workers for overseas employment including
the disciplinary cases; and all pre-employment cases which are administrative
in character involving or arising out of violation of requirement laws, rules
and regulations including money claims arising therefrom, or violation of the
conditions for issuance of license or authority to recruit workers
x x x x
[4] Id.,
p. 53.
[5] Rollo,
p. 66
[6] Id.,
p. 60.
[7] Id.,
p. 61.
[8] Rollo,
p. 66.
[9] Rollo,
p. 67.
[10] E.
Razon, Inc. v. Secretary of Labor and Employment, G.R. No. 85867, 13 May
1993. 222 SCRA 1, 8.
[11] Rollo,
p. 69.
[12] Id.,
p. 70, citing II Azucena, THE LABOR CODE WITH COMMENTS AND CASES 277 (1993).
[13] Id.,
p. 70.
[14] Tolentino
v. Court of Appeals, G.R. No. 123445, 6 October 1997, 280 SCRA 226, 234.
[15] Labor
Code, Art. 211, par. (a) provides that:
“It is the policy of the State to promote and emphasize the primacy of
free collective bargaining and negotiations, including voluntary arbitration,
mediation and conciliation, as modes of settling labor or industrial disputes.”
[16] Rollo,
p. 70.
[17] Id.,
p. 70; see Luzon Development Bank v. Association of Luzon Development
Bank Employees, G.R. No. 120319, 6 October 1995, 249 SCRA 162, 168-69,
citing Labor Code, Art. 262-A, in
relation to Labor Code, Art. 217 (b) and (c), as amended by RA 6715, Sec. 9.
[18] Id.,
p. 74.
[19] Id.,
p. 23.
[20] Id.,
p. 74.
[21] G.R.
No. 108001, 15 March 1996, 255 SCRA 133.
[22] Id.,
p. 137.
[23] The
aforesaid Appendix B provides for a Table of Offenses and Maximum Penalties,
where the offense of insubordination, which includes “any acts of disobedience
to lawful orders of a superior officer” is punished with the maximum penalty of
dismissal; Rollo, p. 46.
[24] Rollo,
pp. 36-37.
[25] G.R.
No. 101875, 14 July 1995, 246 SCRA 260.
[26] Id.,
p. 264, citing Manguiat, MECHANISMS OF VOLUNTARY ARBITRATION IN LABOR DISPUTES, pp. 2-6 (1978)
[27] See
Note 25, p. 264.
[28] See
Note 20, pp. 143-44.
[29] Labor
Code, Art. 241 (p).
[30] Rollo,
p. 35.