FIRST DIVISION
[G.R. No. 112661. May 30, 2001]
SIMEON DE LEON, EFREN ABAD, JAIME ABAD, JESSIE ABAY-ABAY, ROLANDO ABIOLA, ALICIO ABISO, CELEDONIO ABSALON, JEREMIAS ADO, VICENTE ADO, VICENTE AGGABAO, EFRAIN AGUIRRE, ALEXANDER ALATA, ERNESTO ALCALDE, LORENZO ALCOY, ALMARIO ALICIO, CESAR AMADOR, JOSE AMANTE, ESTELITO AMBROSIO, VICENTE ANAPI, ARNEL ANCHETA, ROGELIO ANCHETA, WILFREDO ANONUEVO, DOMINGO ANTIGRO, MARGARITO ANTIGRO, ROGELIO ANZANO, ANTONIO APOSTOL, ORLANDO AQUINO, JUAN ARCALAS, BONIFACIO ARIOLA, EDGAR ARIOLA, BONIFACIO ARMASA, FERNANDO BACCAY, MARIO BACUD, RUPERTO BACUDAN, NILO BALAG, ARGEL BALTAZAR, DEMETRIO BARAYOGA, FELIX BARNEDO, FLORENTINO BARTE, SARRI BASIRUL, MARCELO BATANES, RECTO BAYONA, VICTORIO BERMUNDO, ISMAEL BERNAL, LERIO BERSABE, FIDEL BOSE, MARIANO BOTACION, DANILO BRAZIL, REYNALDO BRUNIO, MARIO BUENAVENTURA, ARSENIO BULATAO, FRANCISCO BULATAO, CARLOS CAJARA, ROSENDO CAMACHO, RUBEN CAMACHO, NESTOR CAPILOS, DOMINGO CASTRO, MAXIMIANO DE CASTO, EDINO CASTUERA, ZALDY CERDON, ANTONIO DERUJANO, VICTOR CIPRIANO, JUANITO CORPUZ, ALFREDO CRUZ, FERNANDO DELA CRUZ, MARIO CUSTOPAY, ROSAURO CUSTODIO, FRANKLIN CUSTODIO, ALFREDO DAPROZA, RENATO DAVAG, NOEL DEMINGOY, GENE DIESTRO, ESTEBAN DIONSON, RAMON DIZA, JEREMIAS DOROMAL, MANUEL EDATO, FERNANDO EDORA, CONRADO ENRIQUEZ, NICOMEDEZ ENRIQUEZ, ROLITO ESPIEL, LAURO ESPANOL, NONITO ESPLANA, ELPIDIO ESPANOL, DIOLITO ESTOPEREZ, ODILON EUSTE, HENRY FACTOR, VIRGILIO FAVORITO, ARISTOTLE FERNANDEZ, RODOFLO FORMALEJO, JUNE FULAY, RUIS FUTOL, JESUS GABA, RODRIGO GABAT, ROSALIA GABAT, CLEMENTE GASPAR, RODRIGO GAVIOLA, ELLEN GODELOSON, SALVADOR GUELA, EDUARDO GUZMAN, BALTAZAR DE GUZMAN, ZOSIMO DE GUZMAN, REYANLDO HAGUIRING, CARLOS GINDAP, BERNARDINO GIPIT, WILFREDO HERNANDEZ, IMMANUEL IBRING, PEPITO IMPERIO, MAGTANGGOL INSORIO, RODELYN JACUNTO, MARIO JARAPAN, MAXIMO JIMENEZ, ALEJANDRO JUDLOMAN, JUAN LAOAGAN, DANTE LARIOSA, ELINO LASAGA, JOSEPH LEGASPINA, ZOSIMO LEPALAM, BENJAMIN LIBAN, EFREN LIGUE, CLETO LINGA, ROMEO LLAGAS, LUCIO LLARENA, ALFREDO LOPEZ, FELIX LOPEZ, SANTOS LOPEZ, RUBEN LORENZO, NILO LUGANA, CANCIO MAATUBANG, ANTONIO MACASIO, ROBERTO MACATUNGGAL, VIRGILIO MACALINAO, RAMON MACOY, JOSE MAGALONA, ALEJO MANAGUELOD, DOMINGO MANALO, EMILIANO MANALO, SULPICIO MANTALABA, EDITO MANUEL, ROMULO MANUEL, FELINO MARANA, CARLITO MARGAJA, ROMARES MARIANO, CERMELO MARTINEZ, MODESTO MASULIT, ALMA MATUSALEM, FLAVIANO MEDEL, DOLCIANO MEDINA, DOLOROSA MEDINA, NORLINDO MEJARITO, PEDRITO MENDOZA, GUARDITO MERANO, ALBERTO DE MESA, CHARLIE MINANO, JOSE MONTEROSO, ROSENDO MORALES, CESAR NARDA, DOMINADOR NAGAL, EDEMIO NARISMA, DINISIO NAVASCA, REGINO NEPICON, JR., JESSIE CRIS NILO, JERWYN ORARIO, EUGENIO ORBEGOZO, IRENEO ORGANISTA, CATALINO OJENDRAS, WILLIAM OLIVARES, JUANITO ORIO, WILLIAM ORTIZO, ROQUE PAL-PALLATOC, ROGELIO PAEL, LORENZO PAMINTUAN, VIRGILIO PANTALEON, ANTONIO PAPA, EMMANUEL PASCUAL, FRANCISCO PECUNDO, RUFINO PELICER, LEONARDO PEPITO, PABLITO PERALTA, EDILBERTO PEREZ, LOLITO PEREZ, PELAGIO PEREZ, JR., FERNANDO PINEDA, CARMEN PIO, ALEJANDRO QUIAMCO, VIRGILIO QUILALANG, JEREMEAS QUINES, ZENAIDA RAQUINE, DOMINGO RANOLA, SABINO RANULO, EDDIE RAZONABE, ALBERTO REBAULA, BENIGNO REGIS, PERFECTO REBOYO, VITALIANO REYES, ZOSIMO REYES, EDWIN ROBERTS, ROBERT ROJO, GODOFREDO ROLIO, ANATALIA ROSANTO, DOMINADOR ROSANTO, RAMON ROSANTO, SR., RODRIGO ROSANTO, JULIO RUBIO, DANTE RUZOL, VENUS RUZOL, ROMULO SABINO, CIPRIANO SACUILLES, SR., PRIMO SALAZAR, GASPAR SAMUYA, ANTONIO SANCHEZ, CLAUDIO SANCHEZ, YOLANDA SAN LUIS, ROBERTO SANTOS, BENITO SEGUDIENTE, EDGAR SIBAL, GREGORIO SIBAL, VALENTINO SIBAL, SONNY SINGH, ROMEO SOMERA, EDGAR TABAQUE, BENITO TACATA, MATILDE TACATA, ANDRESITO TALAM, ANTOLIN TALISIC, PABLO TAMAYO, JULIE TAMIEZA, ROGELIO TAYO, CELSO TE, ENRIQUE TRIPULCA, ARMANDO TUIBEO, NICANOR TUMAMAO, EDUARDO TUMBALE, RAMON TURIRIT, LONGENIO UMACAM, TOLENTINO UNDAUNDO, DIOLITO VALENCIA, ERNESTO VARGAS, BILLY VASQUEZ, TOMAS VELINA, MARCOS DE VERA, IRENEO VILELA, NICANDRO VILLAFRANCA, DANNY VILLANUEVA, LOLITA VITALICO, ALIPIO YGOT, AGOSTO YROMA, FELIX ZAMBALES, and GUILLERMO ZIPANGAN, petioners, vs. NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION (NLRC), and FORTUNE TOBACCO CORPORATION and/or MAGNUM INTEGRATED SERVICES, INC. (formerly FORTUNE INTEGRATED SERVICES, INC.), respondents.
D E C I S I O N
PUNO,
J.:
This case stemmed from a
complaint for illegal dismissal, unfair labor practice and refund of cash bond
filed by petitioners against respondents before the Arbitration Branch of the
National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC).
The petition at bar seeks the annulment of the resolution of the NLRC
dated July 5, 1993 reversing the decision of the Labor Arbiter finding
respondents liable for the charges, and its resolution dated August 10, 1993
denying petitioners' motion for reconsideration.
The undisputed facts are
as follows:
On August 23, 1980,
Fortune Tobacco Corporation (FTC) and Fortune Integrated Services, Inc. (FISI)
entered into a contract for security services where the latter undertook to
provide security guards for the protection and security of the former. The petitioners were among those engaged as
security guards pursuant to the contract.
On February 1, 1991, the
incorporators and stockholders of FISI sold out lock, stock and barrel to a
group of new stockholders by executing for the purpose a "Deed of Sale of
Shares of Stock". On the same
date, the Articles of Incorporation of FISI was amended changing its corporate
name to Magnum Integrated Services, Inc. (MISI). A new by-laws was likewise adopted and approved by the Securities
and Exchange Commission on June 4, 1993.
On October 15, 1991, FTC
terminated the contract for security services which resulted in the
displacement of some five hundred eighty two (582) security guards assigned by
FISI/MISI to FTC, including the petitioners in this case. FTC engaged the services of two (2) other
security agencies, Asian Security Agency and Ligalig Security Services, whose
security guards were posted on October 15, 1991 to replace FISI's security
guards.
Sometime in October 1991,
the Fortune Tobacco Labor Union, an affiliate of the National Federation of
Labor Unions (NAFLU), and claiming to be the bargaining agent of the security
guards, sent a Notice of Strike to FISI/MISI.
On November 14, 1991, the members of the union which include petitioners
picketed the premises of FTC. The
Regional Trial Court of Pasig, however, issued a writ of injunction to enjoin
the picket.
On November 29, 1991,
Simeon de Leon, together with sixteen (16) other complainants instituted the
instant case before the Arbitration Branch of the NLRC. The complaint was later amended to allow the
inclusion of other complainants.
The parties submitted the
following issues for resolution:
(1) Whether petitioners were illegally dismissed;
(2) Whether respondents are guilty of unfair labor practice; and
(3) Whether petitioners are entitled to the refund of their cash bond deposited with respondent FISI.
Petitioners alleged that
they were regular employees of FTC which was also using the corporate names
Fortune Integrated Services, Inc. and Magnum Integrated Services, Inc. They were assigned to work as security
guards at the company's main factory plant, its tobacco redrying plant and
warehouse. They averred that they
performed their duties under the control and supervision of FTC's security
supervisors. Their services, however,
were severed in October 1991 without valid cause and without due process. Petitioners claimed that their dismissal was
part of respondents' design to bust their newly-organized union which sought to
enforce their rights under the Labor Standards law.[1]
Respondent FTC, on the
other hand, maintained that there was no employer-employee relationship between
FTC and petitioners. It said that at
the time of the termination of their services, petitioners were the employees
of MISI which was a separate and distinct corporation from FTC. Hence, petitioners had no cause of action
against FTC.[2]
Respondent FISI,
meanwhile, denied the charge of illegal dismissal and unfair labor
practice. It argued that petitioners
were not dismissed from service but were merely placed on floating status
pending re-assignment to other posts.
It alleged that the temporary displacement of petitioners was not due to
its fault but was the result of the pretermination by FTC of the contract for
security services.[3]
The Labor Arbiter found
respondents liable for the charges.
Rejecting FTC's argument that there was no employer-employee
relationship between FTC and petitioners, he ruled that FISI and FTC should be
considered as a single employer. He
observed that the two corporations have common stockholders and they share the
same business address. In addition,
FISI had no client other than FTC and other corporations belonging to the group
of companies owned by Lucio Tan. The
Labor Arbiter thus found respondents guilty of union busting and illegal
dismissal. He observed that not long
after the stockholders of FISI sold all their stocks to a new set of
stockholders, FTC terminated the contract of security services and engaged the
services of two other security agencies.
FTC did not give any reason for the termination of the contract. The Labor Arbiter gave credence to
petitioners' theory that respondents' precipitate termination of their
employment was intended to bust their union.
Consequently, the Labor Arbiter ordered respondents to pay petitioners
their backwages and separation pay, to refund their cash bond deposit, and to
pay attorney's fees.[4]
On appeal, the NLRC
reversed and set aside the decision of the Labor Arbiter. First, it held that the Labor Arbiter erred
in applying the "single employer" principle and concluding that there
was an employer-employee relationship between FTC and FISI on one hand, and
petitioners on the other hand. It found
that at the time of the termination of the contract of security services on
October 15, 1991, FISI which, at that time, had been renamed Magnum Integrated
Services, Inc. had a different set of stockholders and officers from that of
FTC. They also had separate offices. The NLRC held that the principle of "single
employer" and the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil could not apply
under the circumstances. It further
ruled that the proximate cause for the displacement of petitioners was the
termination of the contract for security services by FTC on October 15,
1991. FISI could not be faulted for the
severance of petitioners' assignment at the premises of FTC. Consequently, the NLRC held that the charge
of illegal dismissal had no basis. As
regards the charge of unfair labor practice, the NLRC found that petitioners
who had the burden of proof failed to adduce any evidence to support their
charge of unfair labor practice against respondents. Hence, it ordered the dismissal of petitioners' complaint.[5]
The petitioners filed a
motion for reconsideration of the resolution of the NLRC but the same was
denied.[6] Hence, this petition.
We gave due course to the
petition on May 15, 1995. Thus, the
ruling in St. Martin Funeral Home vs. NLRC[7] remanding all petitions for certiorari from
the decision of the NLRC to the Court of Appeals does not apply to the case at
bar.
The petition is impressed
with merit.
An examination of the
facts of this case reveals that there is sufficient ground to conclude that
respondents were guilty of interfering with the right of petitioners to
self-organization which constitutes unfair labor practice under Article 248 of
the Labor Code.[8] Petitioners have been employed with FISI since the
1980s and have since been posted at the premises of FTC -- its main factory
plant, its tobacco redrying plant and warehouse. It appears from the records that FISI, while having its own
corporate identity, was a mere instrumentality of FTC, tasked to provide
protection and security in the company premises. The records show that the two corporations had identical
stockholders and the same business address.
FISI also had no other clients except FTC and other companies belonging
to the Lucio Tan group of companies.
Moreover, the early payslips of petitioners show that their salaries
were initially paid by FTC.[9] To enforce their
rightful benefits under the laws on Labor Standards, petitioners formed a union
which was later certified as bargaining agent of all the security guards. On February 1, 1991, the stockholders of
FISI sold all their participations in the corporation to a new set of
stockholders which renamed the corporation Magnum Integrated Services,
Inc. On October 15, 1991, FTC, without
any reason, preterminated its contract of security services with MISI
and contracted two other agencies to provide security services for its
premises. This resulted in the
displacement of petitioners. As MISI
had no other clients, it failed to give new assignments to petitioners. Petitioners have remained unemployed since
then. All these facts indicate a
concerted effort on the part of respondents to remove petitioners from the
company and thus abate the growth of the union and block its actions to enforce
their demands in accordance with the Labor Standards laws. The Court held in Insular Life Assurance
Co., Ltd., Employees Association-NATU vs. Insular Life Assurance Co., Ltd.:[10]
“The test of whether an employer has interfered with and coerced
employees within the meaning of section (a) (1) is whether the employer has
engaged in conduct which it may reasonably be said tends to interfere with the
free exercise of employees' rights under section 3 of the Act, and it is not
necessary that there be direct evidence that any employee was in fact
intimidated or coerced by statements of threats of the employer if there is a
reasonable inference that anti-union conduct of the employer does have an
adverse effect on self-organization and collective bargaining.”[11]
We are not persuaded by
the argument of respondent FTC denying the presence of an employer-employee
relationship. We find that the Labor
Arbiter correctly applied the doctrine of piercing the corporate veil to hold
all respondents liable for unfair labor practice and illegal termination of
petitioners' employment. It is a
fundamental principle in corporation law that a corporation is an entity
separate and distinct from its stockholders and from other corporations to
which it is connected. However, when the
concept of separate legal entity is used to defeat public convenience, justify
wrong, protect fraud or defend crime, the law will regard the corporation as an
association of persons, or in case of two corporations, merge them into one. The separate juridical personality of a
corporation may also be disregarded when such corporation is a mere alter ego
or business conduit of another person.[12] In the case at bar, it was shown that FISI was a
mere adjunct of FTC. FISI, by virtue of
a contract for security services, provided FTC with security guards to
safeguard its premises. However,
records show that FISI and FTC have the same owners and business address, and
FISI provided security services only to FTC and other companies belonging to
the Lucio Tan group of companies. The
purported sale of the shares of the former stockholders to a new set of
stockholders who changed the name of the corporation to Magnum Integrated
Services, Inc. appears to be part of a scheme to terminate the services of
FISI's security guards posted at the premises of FTC and bust their
newly-organized union which was then beginning to become active in demanding
the company's compliance with Labor Standards laws. Under these circumstances, the Court cannot allow FTC to use its
separate corporate personality to shield itself from liability for illegal acts
committed against its employees.
Thus, we find that the
termination of petitioners' services was without basis and therefore illegal. Under Article 279 of the Labor Code, an
employee who is unjustly dismissed from work is entitled to reinstatement
without loss of seniority rights and other privileges, and to his full
backwages, inclusive of allowances, and to his other benefits or their monetary
equivalent computed from the time his compensation was witheld from him up to
the time of his actual reinstatement.
However, if reinstatement is no longer possible, the employer has the
alternative of paying the employee his separation pay in lieu of reinstatement.[13]
IN VIEW WHEREOF, the petition is GRANTED. The assailed resolutions of the NLRC are SET
ASIDE. Respondents are hereby ordered
to pay petitioners their full backwages, and to reinstate them to their former
position without loss of seniority rights and privileges, or to award them
separation pay in case reinstatement is no longer feasible.
SO ORDERED.
Davide, Jr., C.J. (Chairman), Pardo and Ynares-Santiago,
JJ., concur.
Kapunan J., on leave.
[1] Position
Paper of Complainants, Original Record, pp. 66-73.
[2] Position
Paper of Respondent Fortune Tobacco Corporation, Original Record, pp. 140-150.
[3] Position
Paper of Respondent Fortune Integrated Services, Inc., Original Record, pp.
121-125.
[4] Rollo,
pp. 47-64.
[5] Rollo,
pp. 26-45.
[6] Rollo,
p. 46.
[7] 295
SCRA 494 (1998).
[8] Art. 248.
Unfair labor practices of employers.-- It shall be unlawful for an employer to commit any of the following
unfair labor practice:
(a) To interfere with, restrain or coerce employees in the exercise of their right to self-organization;
xxx
[9] Annex
"B"-"B-19", Position Paper of Complainants, Original
Record, pp. 81-100.
[10] 37
SCRA 244 (1971).
[11] citing
Francisco, Labor Laws, 1956, Vol. II, p. 323.
[12] Yutivo
Sons and Hardware Co. vs. Court of Tax Appeals, 1 SCRA 160 (1961); See
also La Campana Coffee Factory, Inc. vs. Kaisahan ng mga Manggagawa
sa La Campana (KKM), 93 Phil 160 (1953); Tan Boon Bee & Co., Inc. vs.
Jarencio, 163 SCRA 205 (1988); Tomas
Lao Construction vs. NLRC, 278 SCRA 716 (1997).
[13] Dela
Cruz vs. NLRC, 268 SCRA 458 (1997).