G.R. No. L-104776 December 5, 1994
BIENVENIDO M. CADALIN, ROLANDO M. AMUL, DONATO B. EVANGELISTA, and the rest of 1,767 NAMED-COMPLAINANTS, thru and by their Attorney-in-fact, Atty. GERARDO A. DEL MUNDO, petitioners,
vs.
PHILIPPINE OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT ADMINISTRATION'S ADMINISTRATOR, NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION, BROWN & ROOT INTERNATIONAL, INC. AND/OR ASIA INTERNATIONAL BUILDERS CORPORATION, respondents.
G.R. Nos. 104911-14 December 5, 1994
BIENVENIDO M. CADALIN, ET AL., petitioners,
vs.
HON. NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION, BROWN & ROOT INTERNATIONAL, INC. and/or ASIA INTERNATIONAL BUILDERS CORPORATION, respondents.
G.R. Nos. 105029-32 December 5, 1994
ASIA INTERNATIONAL BUILDER CORPORATION and BROWN & ROOT INTERNATIONAL, INC., petitioners,
vs.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION, BIENVENIDO M. CADALIN, ROLANDO M. AMUL, DONATO B. EVANGELISTA, ROMEO PATAG, RIZALINO REYES, IGNACIO DE VERA, SOLOMON B. REYES, JOSE M. ABAN, EMIGDIO N. ABARQUEZ, ANTONIO ACUPAN, ROMEO ACUPAN, BENJAMIN ALEJANDRE, WILFREDO D. ALIGADO, MARTIN AMISTAD, JR., ROLANDO B. AMUL, AMORSOLO ANADING, ANTONIO T. ANGLO, VICENTE ARLITA, HERBERT AYO, SILVERIO BALATAZO, ALFREDO BALOBO, FALCONERO BANAAG, RAMON BARBOSA, FELIX BARCENA, FERNANDO BAS, MARIO BATACLAN, ROBERTO S. BATICA, ENRICO BELEN, ARISTEO BICOL, LARRY C. BICOL, PETRONILLO BISCOCHO, FELIX M. BOBIER, DIONISIO BOBONGO, BAYANI S. BRACAMANTE, PABLITO BUSTILLO, GUILLERMO CABEZAS, BIENVENIDO CADALIN, RODOLFO CAGATAN, AMANTE CAILAO, IRENEO CANDOR, JOSE CASTILLO, MANUEL CASTILLO, REMAR CASTROJERES, REYNALDO CAYAS, ROMEO CECILIO, TEODULO CREUS, BAYANI DAYRIT, RICARDO DAYRIT, ERNESTO T. DELA CRUZ, FRANCISCO DE GUZMAN, ONOFRE DE RAMA, IGNACIO DE VERA, MODESTO DIZON, REYNALDO DIZON, ANTONIO S. DOMINGUEZ, GILBERT EBRADA, RICARDO EBRADA, ANTONIO EJERCITO, JR., EDUARTE ERIDAO, ELADIO ESCOTOTO, JOHN ESGUERRA, EDUARDO ESPIRITU, ERNESTO ESPIRITU, RODOLFO ESPIRITU, NESTOR M. ESTEVA, BENJAMIN ESTRADA, VALERIO EVANGELISTA, OLIGARIO FRANCISCO, JESUS GABAWAN, ROLANDO GARCIA, ANGEL GUDA, PACITO HERNANDEZ, ANTONIO HILARIO, HENRY L. JACOB, HONESTO JARDINIANO, ANTONIO JOCSON, GERARDO LACSAMANA, EFREN U. LIRIO LORETO LONTOC, ISRAEL LORENZO, ALEJANDRO LORINO, JOSE MABALAY, HERMIE MARANAN, LEOVIGILDO MARCIAL, NOEL MARTINEZ, DANTE MATREO, LUCIANO MELENDEZ, RENATO MELO, FRANCIS MEDIODIA, JOSE C. MILANES, RAYMUNDO C. MILAY, CRESENCIANO MIRANDA, ILDEFONSO C. MOLINA, ARMANDO B. MONDEJAR RESURRECCION D. NAZARENO, JUAN OLINDO, FRANCISCO R. OLIVARES, PEDRO ORBISTA, JR., RICARDO ORDONEZ, ERNIE PANCHO, JOSE PANCHO, GORGONIO P. PARALA, MODESTO PINPIN, JUANITO PAREA, ROMEO I. PATAG, FRANCISCO PINPIN, LEONARDO POBLETE, JAIME POLLOS, DOMINGO PONDALIS, EUGENIO RAMIREZ, LUCIEN M. RESPALL, GAUDENCIO RETANAN, JR., TOMAS B. RETENER, ALVIN C. REYES, RIZALINO REYES, SOLOMON B. REYES, VIRGILIO G. RICAZA, RODELIO RIETA, JR., BENITO RIVERA, JR., BERNARDO J. ROBILLOS, PABLO A. ROBLES, JOSE ROBLEZA, QUIRINO RONQUILLO, AVELINO M. ROQUE, MENANDRO L. SABINO, PEDRO SALGATAR, EDGARDO SALONGA, NUMERIANO SAN MATEO, FELIZARDO DE LOS SANTOS, JR., GABRIEL SANTOS, JUANITO SANTOS, PAQUITO SOLANTE, CONRADO A. SOLIS, JR., RODOLFO SULTAN, ISAIAS TALACTAC, WILLIAM TARUC, MENANDRO TEMPROSA, BIENVENIDO S. TOLENTINO, BENEDICTO TORRES, MAXIMIANO TORRES, FRANCISCO G. TRIAS, SERGIO A. URSOLINO, ROGELIO VALDEZ, LEGORIO E. VERGARA, DELFIN VICTORIA, GILBERT VICTORIA, HERNANE VICTORIANO, FRANCISCO VILLAFLORES, DOMINGO VILLAHERMOSA, ROLANDO VILLALOBOS, ANTONIO VILLAUZ, DANILO VILLANUEVA, ROGELIO VILLANUEVA, ANGEL VILLARBA, JUANITO VILLARINO, FRANCISCO ZARA, ROGELIO AALAGOS, NICANOR B. ABAD, ANDRES ABANES, REYNALDO ABANES, EDUARDO ABANTE, JOSE ABARRO, JOSEFINO ABARRO, CELSO S. ABELANIO, HERMINIO ABELLA, MIGUEL ABESTANO, RODRIGO G. ABUBO, JOSE B. ABUSTAN, DANTE ACERES, REYNALDO S. ACOJIDO, LEOWILIN ACTA, EUGENIO C. ACUEZA, EDUARDO ACUPAN, REYNALDO ACUPAN, SOLANO ACUPAN, MANUEL P. ADANA, FLORENTINO R. AGNE, QUITERIO R. AGUDO, MANUEL P. AGUINALDO, DANTE AGUIRRE, HERMINIO AGUIRRE, GONZALO ALBERTO, JR., CONRADO ALCANTARA, LAMBERTO Q. ALCANTARA, MARIANITO J. ALCANTARA, BENCIO ALDOVER, EULALIO V. ALEJANDRO, BENJAMIN ALEJANDRO, EDUARDO L. ALEJANDRO, MAXIMINO ALEJANDRO, ALBERTO ALMENAR, ARNALDO ALONZO, AMADO ALORIA, CAMILO ALVAREZ, MANUEL C. ALVAREZ, BENJAMIN R. AMBROCIO, CARLOS AMORES, BERNARD P. ANCHETA, TIMOTEO O. ANCHETA, JEOFREY ANI, ELINO P. ANTILLON, ARMANDRO B. ANTIPONO, LARRY T. ANTONIO, ANTONIO APILADO, ARTURO P. APILADO, FRANCISCO APOLINARIO, BARTOLOME M. AQUINO, ISIDRO AQUINO, PASTOR AQUINO, ROSENDO M. AQUINO, ROBERTO ARANGORIN, BENJAMIN O. ARATEA, ARTURO V. ARAULLO, PRUDENCIO ARAULLO, ALEXANDER ARCAIRA, FRANCISCO ARCIAGA, JOSE AREVALO, JUANTO AREVALO, RAMON AREVALO, RODOLFO AREVALO, EULALIO ARGUELLES, WILFREDO P. ARICA, JOSE M. ADESILLO, ANTONIO ASUNCION, ARTEMIO M. ASUNCION, EDGARDO ASUNCION, REXY M. ASUNCION, VICENTE AURELIO, ANGEL AUSTRIA, RICARDO P. AVERILLA, JR., VIRGILIO AVILA, BARTOLOME AXALAN, ALFREDO BABILONIA, FELIMON BACAL, JOSE L. BACANI, ROMULO R. BALBIERAN, VICENTE BALBIERAN, RODOLFO BALITBIT, TEODORO Y. BALOBO, DANILO O. BARBA, BERNARDO BARRO, JUAN A. BASILAN, CEFERINO BATITIS, VIVENCIO C. BAUAN, GAUDENCIO S. BAUTISTA, LEONARDO BAUTISTA, JOSE D. BAUTISTA, ROSTICO BAUTISTA, RUPERTO B. BAUTISTA, TEODORO S. BAUTISTA, VIRGILIO BAUTISTA, JESUS R. BAYA, WINIEFREDO BAYACAL, WINIEFREDO BEBIT, BEN G. BELIR, ERIC B. BELTRAN, EMELIANO BENALES, JR., RAUL BENITEZ, PERFECTO BENSAN, IRENEO BERGONIO, ISABELO BERMUDEZ, ROLANDO I. BERMUDEZ, DANILO BERON, BENJAMIN BERSAMIN, ANGELITO BICOL, ANSELMO BICOL, CELESTINO BICOL, JR., FRANCISCO BICOL, ROGELIO BICOL, ROMULO L. BICOL, ROGELIO BILLIONES, TEOFILO N. BITO, FERNANDO BLANCO, AUGUSTO BONDOC, DOMINGO BONDOC, PEPE S. BOOC, JAMES R. BORJA, WILFREDO BRACEROS, ANGELES C. BRECINO, EURECLYDON G. BRIONES, AMADO BRUGE, PABLITO BUDILLO, ARCHIMEDES BUENAVENTURA, BASILIO BUENAVENTURA, GUILLERMO BUENCONSEJO, ALEXANDER BUSTAMANTE, VIRGILIO BUTIONG, JR., HONESTO P. CABALLA, DELFIN CABALLERO, BENEDICTO CABANIGAN, MOISES CABATAY, HERMANELI CABRERA, PEDRO CAGATAN, JOVEN C. CAGAYAT, ROGELIO L. CALAGOS, REYNALDO V. CALDEJON, OSCAR C. CALDERON, NESTOR D. CALLEJA, RENATO R. CALMA, NELSON T. CAMACHO, SANTOS T. CAMACHO, ROBERTO CAMANA, FLORANTE C. CAMANAG EDGARDO M. CANDA, SEVERINO CANTOS, EPIFANIO A. CAPONPON, ELIAS D. CARILLO, JR., ARMANDO CARREON, MENANDRO M. CASTAÑEDA, BENIGNO A. CASTILLO, CORNELIO L. CASTILLO, JOSEPH B. CASTILLO, ANSELMO CASTILLO, JOAQUIN CASTILLO, PABLO L. CASTILLO, ROMEO P. CASTILLO, SESINANDO CATIBOG, DANILO CASTRO, PRUDENCIO A. CASTRO, RAMO CASTRO, JR., ROMEO A. DE CASTRO, JAIME B. CATLI, DURANA D. CEFERINO, RODOLFO B. CELIS, HERMINIGILDO CEREZO, VICTORIANO CELESTINO, BENJAMIN CHAN, ANTONIO C. CHUA, VIVENCIO B. CIABAL, RODRIGO CLARETE, AUGUSTO COLOMA, TURIANO CONCEPCION, TERESITO CONSTANTINO, ARMANDO CORALES, RENATO C. CORCUERA, APOLINAR CORONADO, ABELARDO CORONEL, FELIX CORONEL, JR., LEONARDO CORPUZ, JESUS M. CORRALES, CESAR CORTEMPRATO, FRANCISCO O. CORVERA, FRANCISCO COSTALES, SR., CELEDONIO CREDITO, ALBERTO A. CREUS, ANACLETO V. CRUZ, DOMINGO DELA CRUZ, AMELIANO DELA CRUZ, JR., PANCHITO CRUZ, REYNALDO B. DELA CRUZ, ROBERTO P. CRUZ, TEODORO S. CRUZ, ZOSIMO DELA CRUZ, DIONISIO A. CUARESMA, FELIMON CUIZON, FERMIN DAGONDON, RICHARD DAGUINSIN, CRISANTO A. DATAY, NICASIO DANTINGUINOO, JOSE DATOON, EDUARDO DAVID, ENRICO T. DAVID, FAVIO DAVID, VICTORIANO S. DAVID, EDGARDO N. DAYACAP, JOSELITO T. DELOSO, CELERINO DE GUZMAN, ROMULO DE GUZMAN, LIBERATO DE GUZMAN, JOSE DE LEON, JOSELITO L. DE LUMBAN, NAPOLEON S. DE LUNA, RICARDO DE RAMA, GENEROSO DEL ROSARIO, ALBERTO DELA CRUZ, JOSE DELA CRUZ, LEONARDO DELOS REYES, ERNESTO F. DIATA, EDUARDO A. DIAZ, FELIX DIAZ, MELCHOR DIAZ, NICANOR S. DIAZ, GERARDO C. DIGA, CLEMENTE DIMATULAC, ROLANDO DIONISIO, PHILIPP G. DISMAYA, BENJAMIN DOCTOLERO, ALBERTO STO. DOMINGO, BENJAMIN E. DOZA, BENJAMIN DUPA, DANILO C. DURAN, GREGORIO D. DURAN, RENATO A. EDUARTE, GODOFREDO E. EISMA, ARDON B. ELLO, UBED B. ELLO, JOSEFINO ENANO, REYNALDO ENCARNACION, EDGARDO ENGUANCIO, ELIAS EQUIPANO, FELIZARDO ESCARMOSA, MIGUEL ESCARMOSA, ARMANDO ESCOBAR, ROMEO T. ESCUYOS, ANGELITO ESPIRITU, EDUARDO S. ESPIRITU, REYNALDO ESPIRITU, ROLANDO ESPIRITU, JULIAN ESPREGANTE, IGMIDIO ESTANISLAO, ERNESTO M. ESTEBAN, MELANIO R. ESTRO, ERNESTO M. ESTEVA, CONRADO ESTUAR, CLYDE ESTUYE, ELISEO FAJARDO, PORFIRIO FALQUEZA, WILFREDO P. FAUSTINO, EMILIO E. FERNANDEZ, ARTEMIO FERRER, MISAEL M. FIGURACION, ARMANDO F. FLORES, BENJAMIN FLORES, EDGARDO C. FLORES, BUENAVENTURA FRANCISCO, MANUEL S. FRANCISCO, ROLANDO FRANCISCO, VALERIANO FRANCISCO, RODOLFO GABAWAN, ESMERALDO GAHUTAN, CESAR C. GALANG, SANTIAGO N. GALOSO, GABRIEL GAMBOA, BERNARDO GANDAMON, JUAN GANZON, ANDRES GARCIA, JR., ARMANDO M. GARCIA, EUGENIO GARCIA, MARCELO L. GARCIA, PATRICIO L. GARCIA, JR., PONCIANO G. GARCIA, PONCIANO G. GARCIA, JR., RAFAEL P. GARCIA, ROBERTO S. GARCIA, OSIAS G. GAROFIL, RAYMUNDO C. GARON, ROLANDO G. GATELA, AVELINO GAYETA, RAYMUNDO GERON, PLACIDO GONZALES, RUPERTO H. GONZALES, ROGELIO D. GUANIO, MARTIN V. GUERRERO, JR., ALEXIS GUNO, RICARDO L. GUNO, FRANCISCO GUPIT, DENNIS J. GUTIERREZ, IGNACIO B. GUTIERREZ, ANGELITO DE GUZMAN, JR., CESAR H. HABANA, RAUL G. HERNANDEZ, REYNALDO HERNANDEZ, JOVENIANO D. HILADO, JUSTO HILAPO, ROSTITO HINAHON, FELICISIMO HINGADA, EDUARDO HIPOLITO, RAUL L. IGNACIO, MANUEL L. ILAGAN, RENATO L. ILAGAN, CONRADO A. INSIONG, GRACIANO G. ISLA, ARNEL L. JACOB, OSCAR J. JAPITENGA, CIRILO HICBAN, MAXIMIANO HONRADES, GENEROSO IGNACIO, FELIPE ILAGAN, EXPEDITO N. JACOB, MARIO JASMIN, BIENVENIDO JAVIER, ROMEO M. JAVIER, PRIMO DE JESUS, REYNALDO DE JESUS, CARLOS A. JIMENEZ, DANILO E. JIMENEZ, PEDRO C. JOAQUIN, FELIPE W. JOCSON, FELINO M. JOCSON, PEDRO N. JOCSON, VALENTINO S. JOCSON, PEDRO B. JOLOYA, ESTEBAN P. JOSE, JR., RAUL JOSE, RICARDO SAN JOSE, GERTRUDO KABIGTING, EDUARDO S. KOLIMLIM, SR., LAURO J. LABAY, EMMANUEL C. LABELLA, EDGARDO B. LACERONA, JOSE B. LACSON, MARIO J. LADINES, RUFINO LAGAC, RODRIGO LAGANAPAN, EFREN M. LAMADRID, GUADENCIO LATANAN, VIRGILIO LATAYAN, EMILIANO LATOJA, WENCESLAO LAUREL, ALFREDO LAXAMANA, DANIEL R. LAZARO, ANTONIO C. LEANO, ARTURO S. LEGASPI, BENITO DE LEMOS, JR., PEDRO G. DE LEON, MANOLITO C. LILOC, GERARDO LIMUACO, ERNESTO S. LISING, RENATO LISING, WILFREDO S. LISING, CRISPULO LONTOC, PEDRO M. LOPERA, ROGELIO LOPERA, CARLITO M. LOPEZ, CLODY LOPEZ, GARLITO LOPEZ, GEORGE F. LOPEZ, VIRGILIO M. LOPEZ, BERNARDITO G. LOREJA, DOMINGO B. LORICO, DOMINGO LOYOLA, DANTE LUAGE, ANTONIO M. LUALHATI, EMMANUEL LUALHATI, JR., LEONIDEZ C. LUALHATI, SEBASTIAN LUALHATI, FRANCISCO LUBAT, ARMANDO LUCERO, JOSELITO L. DE LUMBAN, THOMAS VICENTE O. LUNA, NOLI MACALADLAD, ALFREDO MACALINO, RICARDO MACALINO, ARTURO V. MACARAIG, ERNESTO V. MACARAIG, RODOLFO V. MACARAIG, BENJAMIN MACATANGAY, HERMOGENES MACATANGAY, RODEL MACATANGAY, ROMULO MACATANGAY, OSIAS Q. MADLANGBAYAN, NICOLAS P. MADRID, EDELBERTO G. MAGAT, EFREN C. MAGBANUA, BENJAMIN MAGBUHAT, ALFREDO C. MAGCALENG, ANTONIO MAGNAYE, ALFONSO MAGPANTAY, RICARDO C. MAGPANTAY, SIMEON M. MAGPANTAY, ARMANDO M. MAGSINO, MACARIO S. MAGSINO, ANTONIO MAGTIBAY, VICTOR V. MAGTIBAY, GERONIMO MAHILUM, MANUEL MALONZO, RICARDO MAMADIS, RODOLFO MANA, BERNARDO A. MANALILI, MANUEL MANALILI, ANGELO MANALO, AGUILES L. MANALO, LEOPOLDO MANGAHAS, BAYANI MANIGBAS, ROLANDO C. MANIMTIM, DANIEL MANONSON, ERNESTO F. MANUEL, EDUARDO MANZANO, RICARDO N. MAPA, RAMON MAPILE, ROBERTO C. MARANA, NEMESIO MARASIGAN, WENCESLAO MARASIGAN, LEONARDO MARCELO, HENRY F. MARIANO, JOEL MARIDABLE, SANTOS E. MARINO, NARCISO A. MARQUEZ, RICARDO MARTINEZ, DIEGO MASICAMPO, AURELIO MATABERDE, RENATO MATILLA, VICTORIANO MATILLA, VIRGILIO MEDEL, LOLITO M. MELECIO, BENIGNO MELENDEZ, RENER J. MEMIJE, REYNALDO F. MEMIJE, RODEL MEMIJE, AVELINO MENDOZA, JR., CLARO MENDOZA, TIMOTEO MENDOZA, GREGORIO MERCADO, ERNANI DELA MERCED, RICARDO MERCENA, NEMESIO METRELLO, RODEL MEMIJE, GASPAR MINIMO, BENJAMIN MIRANDA, FELIXBERTO D. MISA, CLAUDIO A. MODESTO, JR., OSCAR MONDEDO, GENEROSO MONTON, RENATO MORADA, RICARDO MORADA, RODOLFO MORADA, ROLANDO M. MORALES, FEDERICO M. MORENO, VICTORINO A. MORTEL, JR., ESPIRITU A. MUNOZ, IGNACIO MUNOZ, ILDEFONSO MUNOZ, ROGELIO MUNOZ, ERNESTO NAPALAN, MARCELO A. NARCIZO, REYNALDO NATALIA, FERNANDO C. NAVARETTE, PACIFICO D. NAVARRO, FLORANTE NAZARENO, RIZAL B. NAZARIO, JOSUE NEGRITE, ALFREDO NEPUMUCENO, HERBERT G. NG, FLORENCIO NICOLAS, ERNESTO C. NINON, AVELINO NUQUI, NEMESIO D. OBA, DANILO OCAMPO, EDGARDO OCAMPO, RODRIGO E. OCAMPO, ANTONIO B. OCCIANO, REYNALDO P. OCSON, BENJAMIN ODESA, ANGEL OLASO, FRANCISCO OLIGARIO, ZOSIMO OLIMBO, BENJAMIN V. ORALLO, ROMEO S. ORIGINES, DANILO R. ORTANEZ, WILFREDO OSIAS, VIRGILIO PA-A, DAVID PAALAN, JESUS N. PACHECO, ALFONSO L. PADILLA, DANILO PAGSANJAN, NUMERIANO PAGSISIHAN, RICARDO T. PAGUIO, EMILIO PAKINGAN, LEANDRO PALABRICA, QUINCIANO PALO, JOSE PAMATIAN, GONZALO PAN, PORFIRIO PAN, BIENVENIDO PANGAN, ERNESTO PANGAN, FRANCISCO V. PASIA, EDILBERTO PASIMIO, JR., JOSE V. PASION, ANGELITO M. PENA, DIONISIO PENDRAS, HERMINIO PERALTA, REYNALDO M. PERALTA, ANTONIO PEREZ, ANTOLIANO E. PEREZ, JUAN PEREZ, LEON PEREZ, ROMEO E. PEREZ, ROMULO PEREZ, WILLIAM PEREZ, FERNANDO G. PERINO, FLORENTINO DEL PILAR, DELMAR F. PINEDA, SALVADOR PINEDA, ELIZALDE PINPIN, WILFREDO PINPIN, ARTURO POBLETE, DOMINADOR R. PRIELA, BUENAVENTURA PRUDENTE, CARMELITO PRUDENTE, DANTE PUEYO, REYNALDO Q. PUEYO, RODOLFO O. PULIDO, ALEJANDRO PUNIO, FEDERICO QUIMAN, ALFREDO L. QUINTO, ROMEO QUINTOS, EDUARDO W. RACABO, RICARDO C. DE RAMA, RICARDO L. DE RAMA, ROLANDO DE RAMA, FERNANDO A. RAMIREZ, LITO S. RAMIREZ, RICARDO G. RAMIREZ, RODOLFO V. RAMIREZ, ALBERTO RAMOS, ANSELMO C. RAMOS, TOBIAS RAMOS, WILLARFREDO RAYMUNDO, REYNALDO RAQUEDAN, MANUEL F. RAVELAS, WILFREDO D. RAYMUNDO, ERNESTO E. RECOLASO, ALBERTO REDAZA, ARTHUR REJUSO, TORIBIO M. RELLAMA, JAIME RELLOSA, EUGENIO A. REMOQUILLO, GERARDO RENTOZA, REDENTOR C. REY, ALFREDO S. REYES, AMABLE S. REYES, BENEDICTO R. REYES, GREGORIO B. REYES, JOSE A. REYES, JOSE C. REYES, ROMULO M. REYES, SERGIO REYES, ERNESTO F. RICO, FERNANDO M. RICO, EMMANUEL RIETA, RICARDO RIETA, LEO B. ROBLES, RUBEN ROBLES, RODOLFO ROBLEZA, RODRIGO ROBLEZA, EDUARDO ROCABO, ANTONIO R. RODRIGUEZ, BERNARDO RODRIGUEZ, ELIGIO RODRIGUEZ, ALMONTE ROMEO, ELIAS RONQUILLO, ELISE RONQUILLO, LUIS VAL B. RONQUILLO, REYNOSO P. RONQUILLO, RODOLFO RONQUILLO, ANGEL ROSALES, RAMON ROSALES, ALBERTO DEL ROSARIO, GENEROSO DEL ROSARIO, TEODORICO DEL ROSARIO, VIRGILIO L. ROSARIO, CARLITO SALVADOR, JOSE SAMPARADA, ERNESTO SAN PEDRO, ADRIANO V. SANCHA, GERONIMO M. SANCHA, ARTEMIO B. SANCHEZ, NICASIO SANCHEZ, APOLONIO P. SANTIAGO, JOSELITO S. SANTIAGO, SERGIO SANTIAGO, EDILBERTO C. SANTOS, EFREN S. SANTOS, RENATO D. SANTOS, MIGUEL SAPUYOT, ALEX S. SERQUINA, DOMINADOR P. SERRA, ROMEO SIDRO, AMADO M. SILANG, FAUSTINO D. SILANG, RODOLFO B. DE SILOS, ANICETO G. SILVA, EDGARDO M. SILVA, ROLANDO C. SILVERTO, ARTHUR B. SIMBAHON, DOMINGO SOLANO, JOSELITO C. SOLANTE, CARLITO SOLIS, CONRADO SOLIS, III, EDGARDO SOLIS, ERNESTO SOLIS, ISAGANI M. SOLIS, EDUARDO L. SOTTO, ERNESTO G. STA. MARIA, VICENTE G. STELLA, FELIMON SUPANG, PETER TANGUINOO, MAXIMINO TALIBSAO, FELICISMO P. TALUSIK, FERMIN TARUC, JR., LEVY S. TEMPLO, RODOLFO S. TIAMSON, LEONILO TIPOSO, ARNEL TOLENTINO, MARIO M. TOLENTINO, FELIPE TORRALBA, JOVITO V. TORRES, LEONARDO DE TORRES, GAVINO U. TUAZON, AUGUSTO B. TUNGUIA, FRANCISCO UMALI, SIMPLICIO UNIDA, WILFREDO V. UNTALAN, ANTONIO VALDERAMA, RAMON VALDERAMA, NILO VALENCIANO, EDGARDO C. VASQUEZ, ELPIDIO VELASQUEZ, NESTOR DE VERA, WILFREDO D. VERA, BIENVENIDO VERGARA, ALFREDO VERGARA, RAMON R. VERZOSA, FELICITO P. VICMUNDO, ALFREDO VICTORIANO, TEOFILO P. VIDALLO, SABINO N. VIERNEZ, JESUS J. VILLA, JOVEN VILLABLANCO, EDGARDO G. VILLAFLORES, CEFERINO VILLAGERA, ALEX VILLAHERMOZA, DANILO A. VILLANUEVA, ELITO VILLANUEVA, LEONARDO M. VILLANUEVA, MANUEL R. VILLANUEVA, NEPTHALI VILLAR, JOSE V. VILLAREAL, FELICISIMO VILLARINO, RAFAEL VILLAROMAN, CARLOS VILLENA, FERDINAND VIVO, ROBERTO YABUT, VICENTE YNGENTE, AND ORO C. ZUNIGA, respondents.
Gerardo A. Del Mundo and Associates for petitioners.
Romulo, Mabanta, Sayoc, Buenaventura, De los Angeles Law Offices for BRII/AIBC.
Florante M. De Castro for private respondents in 105029-32.
QUIASON, J.:
The
petition in G.R. No. 104776, entitled "Bienvenido M. Cadalin, et. al.
v. Philippine Overseas Employment Administration's Administrator, et.
al.," was filed under Rule 65 of the Revised Rules of Court:
(1) to modify the Resolution dated September 2, 1991 of the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) in POEA Cases Nos.
L-84-06-555, L-85-10-777, L-85-10-779 and L-86-05-460; (2) to render a new decision: (i) declaring private respondents as in default; (ii) declaring the said labor cases as a class suit; (iii) ordering Asia International Builders Corporation (AIBC) and Brown and Root International Inc. (BRII) to pay the claims of the 1,767 claimants in said labor cases; (iv) declaring Atty. Florante M. de Castro guilty of forum-shopping; and (v) dismissing POEA Case No. L-86-05-460; and
L-84-06-555, L-85-10-777, L-85-10-779 and L-86-05-460; (2) to render a new decision: (i) declaring private respondents as in default; (ii) declaring the said labor cases as a class suit; (iii) ordering Asia International Builders Corporation (AIBC) and Brown and Root International Inc. (BRII) to pay the claims of the 1,767 claimants in said labor cases; (iv) declaring Atty. Florante M. de Castro guilty of forum-shopping; and (v) dismissing POEA Case No. L-86-05-460; and
(3) to reverse the Resolution dated March 24, 1992 of
NLRC, denying the motion for reconsideration of its Resolution dated
September 2, 1991 (Rollo, pp. 8-288).
The petition in
G.R. Nos. 104911-14, entitled "Bienvenido M. Cadalin, et. al., v. Hon.
National Labor Relations Commission, et. al.," was filed under Rule 65
of the Revised Rules of Court:
(1) to reverse the Resolution dated September 2, 1991 of NLRC in POEA Cases Nos. L-84-06-555, L-85-10-777, L-85-10-799 and
L-86-05-460 insofar as it: (i) applied the three-year prescriptive period under the Labor Code of the Philippines instead of the ten-year prescriptive period under the Civil Code of the Philippines; and (ii) denied the
"three-hour daily average" formula in the computation of petitioners' overtime pay; and
L-86-05-460 insofar as it: (i) applied the three-year prescriptive period under the Labor Code of the Philippines instead of the ten-year prescriptive period under the Civil Code of the Philippines; and (ii) denied the
"three-hour daily average" formula in the computation of petitioners' overtime pay; and
(2) to reverse the Resolution dated March 24, 1992 of
NLRC, denying the motion for reconsideration of its Resolution dated
September 2, 1991 (Rollo, pp. 8-25; 26-220).
The petition in
G.R. Nos. 105029-32, entitled "Asia International Builders Corporation,
et. al., v. National Labor Relations Commission, et. al." was filed
under Rule 65 of the Revised Rules of Court:
(1) to reverse the Resolution dated September 2, 1991 of NLRC in POEA Cases Nos. L-84-06-555, L-85-10-777, L-85-10-779 and
L-86-05-460, insofar as it granted the claims of 149 claimants; and
L-86-05-460, insofar as it granted the claims of 149 claimants; and
(2) to reverse the Resolution dated March 21, 1992 of
NLRC insofar as it denied the motions for reconsideration of AIBC and
BRII (Rollo, pp. 2-59; 61-230).
The Resolution
dated September 2, 1991 of NLRC, which modified the decision of POEA in
four labor cases: (1) awarded monetary benefits only to 149 claimants
and (2) directed Labor Arbiter Fatima J. Franco to conduct hearings and
to receive evidence on the claims dismissed by the POEA for lack of
substantial evidence or proof of employment.
Consolidation of Cases
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. 104911-14, 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.
BRII is a foreign corporation with headquarters in
Houston, Texas, and is engaged in construction; while AIBC is a domestic
corporation licensed as a service contractor to recruit, mobilize and
deploy Filipino workers for overseas employment on behalf of its foreign
principals.
The amended complaint principally sought the payment
of the unexpired portion of the employment contracts, which was
terminated prematurely, and secondarily, the payment of the interest of
the earnings of the Travel and Reserved Fund, interest on all the unpaid
benefits; area wage and salary differential pay; fringe benefits;
refund of SSS and premium not remitted to the SSS; refund of withholding
tax not remitted to the BIR; penalties for committing prohibited
practices; as well as the suspension of the license of AIBC and the
accreditation of BRII (G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 13-14).
At the hearing on June 25, 1984, AIBC was furnished a
copy of the complaint and was given, together with BRII, up to July 5,
1984 to file its answer.
On July 3, 1984, POEA Administrator, upon motion of
AIBC and BRII, ordered the claimants to file a bill of particulars
within ten days from receipt of the order and the movants to file their
answers within ten days from receipt of the bill of particulars. The
POEA Administrator also scheduled a pre-trial conference on July 25,
1984.
On July 13, 1984, the claimants submitted their
"Compliance and Manifestation." On July 23, 1984, AIBC filed a "Motion
to Strike Out of the Records", the "Complaint" and the "Compliance and
Manifestation." On July 25, 1984, the claimants filed their "Rejoinder
and Comments," averring, among other matters, the failure of AIBC and
BRII to file their answers and to attend the pre-trial conference on
July 25, 1984. The claimants alleged that AIBC and BRII had waived their
right to present evidence and had defaulted by failing to file their
answers and to attend the pre-trial conference.
On October 2, 1984, the POEA Administrator denied the
"Motion to Strike Out of the Records" filed by AIBC but required the
claimants to correct the deficiencies in the complaint pointed out in
the order.
On October 10, 1984, claimants asked for time within
which to comply with the Order of October 2, 1984 and filed an "Urgent
Manifestation," praying that the POEA Administrator direct the parties
to submit simultaneously their position papers, after which the case
should be deemed submitted for decision. On the same day, Atty. Florante
de Castro filed another complaint for the same money claims and
benefits in behalf of several claimants, some of whom were also
claimants in POEA Case No. L-84-06-555 (POEA Case No. 85-10-779).
On October 19, 1984, claimants filed their
"Compliance" with the Order dated October 2, 1984 and an "Urgent
Manifestation," praying that the POEA direct the parties to submit
simultaneously their position papers after which the case would be
deemed submitted for decision. On the same day, AIBC asked for time to
file its comment on the "Compliance" and "Urgent Manifestation" of
claimants. On November 6, 1984, it filed a second motion for extension
of time to file the comment.
On November 8, 1984, the POEA Administrator informed AIBC that its motion for extension of time was granted.
On November 14, 1984, claimants filed an opposition
to the motions for extension of time and asked that AIBC and BRII be
declared in default for failure to file their answers.
On November 20, 1984, AIBC and BRII filed a "Comment"
praying, among other reliefs, that claimants should be ordered to amend
their complaint.
On December 27, 1984, the POEA Administrator issued
an order directing AIBC and BRII to file their answers within ten days
from receipt of the order.
On February 27, 1985, AIBC and BRII appealed to NLRC
seeking the reversal of the said order of the POEA Administrator.
Claimants 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. L-84-06-555.
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
POEA Case No. L-84-06-555. In the same month, Solomon Reyes also filed
his own complaint (POEA Case No. L-85-10-779) against AIBC and BRII.
On October 17, 1985, the law firm of Florante M. de
Castro & Associates asked for the substitution of the original
counsel of record and the cancellation of the special powers of attorney
given the original counsel.
On December 12, 1985, Atty. Del Mundo filed in NLRC a notice of the claim to enforce attorney's lien.
On May 29, 1986, Atty. De Castro filed a complaint
for money claims (POEA Case No. 86-05-460) in behalf of 11 claimants
including Bienvenido Cadalin, a claimant in POEA Case No. 84-06-555.
On December 12, 1986, the NLRC dismissed the two appeals filed on February 27, 1985 and September 18, 1985 by AIBC and BRII.
In narrating the proceedings of the labor cases
before the POEA Administrator, it is not amiss to mention that two cases
were filed in the Supreme Court by the claimants, namely — G.R. No.
72132 on September 26, 1985 and Administrative Case No. 2858 on March
18, 1986. On May 13, 1987, the Supreme Court issued a resolution in
Administrative Case No. 2858 directing the POEA Administrator to resolve
the issues raised in the motions and oppositions filed in POEA Cases
Nos. L-84-06-555 and L-86-05-460 and to decide the labor cases with
deliberate dispatch.
AIBC also filed a petition in the Supreme Court (G.R.
No. 78489), questioning the Order dated September 4, 1985 of the POEA
Administrator. Said order required BRII and AIBC to answer the amended
complaint in POEA Case No. L-84-06-555. In a resolution dated November
9, 1987, we dismissed the petition by informing AIBC that all its
technical objections may properly be resolved in the hearings before the
POEA.
Complaints were also filed before the Ombudsman. The
first was filed on September 22, 1988 by claimant Hermie Arguelles and
18 co-claimants against the POEA Administrator and several NLRC
Commissioners. The Ombudsman merely referred the complaint to the
Secretary of Labor and Employment with a request for the early
disposition of POEA Case No. L-84-06-555. The second was filed on April
28, 1989 by claimants Emigdio P. Bautista and Rolando R. Lobeta charging
AIBC and BRII for violation of labor and social legislations. The third
was filed by Jose R. Santos, Maximino N. Talibsao and Amado B. Bruce
denouncing AIBC and BRII of violations of labor laws.
On January 13, 1987, AIBC filed a motion for reconsideration of the NLRC Resolution dated December 12, 1986.
On January 14, 1987, AIBC reiterated before the POEA
Administrator its motion for suspension of the period for filing an
answer or motion for extension of time to file the same until the
resolution of its motion for reconsideration of the order of the NLRC
dismissing the two appeals. On April 28, 1987, NLRC en banc denied the motion for reconsideration.
At the hearing on June 19, 1987, AIBC submitted its
answer to the complaint. At the same hearing, the parties were given a
period of 15 days from said date within which to submit their respective
position papers. On June 24, 1987 claimants filed their "Urgent Motion
to Strike Out Answer," alleging that the answer was filed out of time.
On June 29, 1987, claimants filed their "Supplement to Urgent
Manifestational Motion" to comply with the POEA Order of June 19, 1987.
On February 24, 1988, AIBC and BRII submitted their position paper. On
March 4, 1988, claimants filed their "Ex-Parte Motion to Expunge from the Records" the position paper of AIBC and BRII, claiming that it was filed out of time.
On September 1, 1988, the claimants represented by
Atty. De Castro filed their memorandum in POEA Case No. L-86-05-460. On
September 6, 1988, AIBC and BRII submitted their Supplemental
Memorandum. On September 12, 1988, BRII filed its "Reply to
Complainant's Memorandum." On October 26, 1988, claimants submitted
their "Ex-Parte Manifestational Motion and Counter-Supplemental
Motion," together with 446 individual contracts of employments and
service records. On October 27, 1988, AIBC and BRII filed a
"Consolidated Reply."
On January 30, 1989, the POEA Administrator rendered
his decision in POEA Case No. L-84-06-555 and the other consolidated
cases, which awarded the amount of $824,652.44 in favor of only 324
complainants.
On February 10, 1989, claimants submitted their
"Appeal Memorandum For Partial Appeal" from the decision of the POEA. On
the same day, AIBC also filed its motion for reconsideration and/or
appeal in addition to the "Notice of Appeal" filed earlier on February
6, 1989 by another counsel for AIBC.
On February 17, 1989, claimants filed their "Answer to Appeal," praying for the dismissal of the appeal of AIBC and BRII.
On March 15, 1989, claimants filed their "Supplement
to Complainants' Appeal Memorandum," together with their "newly
discovered evidence" consisting of payroll records.
On April 5, 1989, AIBC and BRII submitted to NLRC
their "Manifestation," stating among other matters that there were only
728 named claimants. On April 20, 1989, the claimants filed their
"Counter-Manifestation," alleging that there were 1,767 of them.
On July 27, 1989, claimants filed their "Urgent
Motion for Execution" of the Decision dated January 30, 1989 on the
grounds that BRII had failed to appeal on time and AIBC had not posted
the supersedeas bond in the amount of $824,652.44.
On December 23, 1989, claimants filed another motion to resolve the labor cases.
On August 21, 1990, claimants filed their
"Manifestational Motion," praying that all the 1,767 claimants be
awarded their monetary claims for failure of private respondents to file
their answers within the reglamentary period required by law.
On September 2, 1991, NLRC promulgated its Resolution, disposing as follows:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the Decision of the
POEA in these consolidated cases is modified to the extent and in
accordance with the following dispositions:
1. The claims of the 94 complainants identified and listed in Annex "A" hereof are dismissed for having prescribed;
2. Respondents AIBC and Brown & Root are hereby
ordered, jointly and severally, to pay the 149 complainants, identified
and listed in Annex "B" hereof, the peso equivalent, at the time of
payment, of the total amount in US dollars indicated opposite their
respective names;
3. The awards given by the POEA to the 19
complainants classified and listed in Annex "C" hereof, who appear to
have worked elsewhere than in Bahrain are hereby set aside.
4. All claims other than those indicated in Annex
"B", including those for overtime work and favorably granted by the
POEA, are hereby dismissed for lack of substantial evidence in support
thereof or are beyond the competence of this Commission to pass upon.
In addition, this Commission, in the exercise of its
powers and authority under Article 218(c) of the Labor Code, as amended
by R.A. 6715, hereby directs Labor Arbiter Fatima J. Franco of this
Commission to summon parties, conduct hearings and receive evidence, as
expeditiously as possible, and thereafter submit a written report to
this Commission (First Division) of the proceedings taken, regarding the
claims of the following:
(a) complainants identified and listed in Annex "D"
attached and made an integral part of this Resolution, whose claims were
dismissed by the POEA for lack of proof of employment in Bahrain (these
complainants numbering 683, are listed in pages 13 to 23 of the
decision of POEA, subject of the appeals) and,
(b) complainants identified and listed in Annex "E"
attached and made an integral part of this Resolution, whose awards
decreed by the POEA, to Our mind, are not supported by substantial
evidence" (G.R. No. 104776; Rollo, pp. 113-115; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, pp. 85-87; G.R. Nos. 105029-31, pp. 120-122).
On November 27, 1991, claimant Amado S. Tolentino and 12
co-claimants, who were former clients of Atty. Del Mundo, filed a petition for certiorari with the Supreme Court (G.R. Nos. 120741-44). The petition was dismissed in a resolution dated January 27, 1992.
co-claimants, who were former clients of Atty. Del Mundo, filed a petition for certiorari with the Supreme Court (G.R. Nos. 120741-44). The petition was dismissed in a resolution dated January 27, 1992.
Three motions for reconsideration of the September 2,
1991 Resolution of the NLRC were filed. The first, by the claimants
represented by Atty. Del Mundo; the second, by the claimants represented
by Atty. De Castro; and the third, by AIBC and BRII.
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).
Thus the following manifestations that the parties
had arrived at a compromise agreement and the corresponding motions for
the approval of the agreements were filed by the parties and approved by
the Court:
1) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving claimant
Emigdio Abarquez and 47 co-claimants dated September 2, 1992 (G.R. Nos.
104911-14, Rollo, pp. 263-406; G.R. Nos. 105029-32, Rollo, pp.
470-615);
470-615);
2) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving
petitioner Bienvenido Cadalin and 82 co-petitioners dated September 3,
1992 (G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 364-507);
3) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving claimant Jose
M. Aban and 36 co-claimants dated September 17, 1992 (G.R. Nos. 105029-32, Rollo, pp. 613-722; G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 518-626; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 407-516);
M. Aban and 36 co-claimants dated September 17, 1992 (G.R. Nos. 105029-32, Rollo, pp. 613-722; G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 518-626; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 407-516);
4) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving claimant Antonio T. Anglo and 17 co-claimants dated October 14, 1992 (G.R. Nos.
105029-32, Rollo, pp. 778-843; G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 650-713; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 530-590);
105029-32, Rollo, pp. 778-843; G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 650-713; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 530-590);
5) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving claimant
Dionisio Bobongo and 6 co-claimants dated January 15, 1993 (G.R. No.
104776, Rollo, pp. 813-836; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 629-652);
6) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving claimant
Valerio A. Evangelista and 4 co-claimants dated March 10, 1993 (G.R.
Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 731-746; G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 1815-1829);
7) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving claimants
Palconeri Banaag and 5 co-claimants dated March 17, 1993 (G.R. No.
104776, Rollo, pp. 1657-1703; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 655-675);
8) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving claimant
Benjamin Ambrosio and 15 other co-claimants dated May 4, 1993 (G.R. Nos.
105029-32, Rollo, pp. 906-956; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 679-729; G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 1773-1814);
9) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving Valerio Evangelista and 3 co-claimants dated May 10, 1993 (G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 1815-1829);
10) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving
petitioner Quiterio R. Agudo and 36 co-claimants dated June 14, 1993
(G.R. Nos. 105029-32, Rollo, pp. 974-1190; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 748-864; G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 1066-1183);
11) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving claimant
Arnaldo J. Alonzo and 19 co-claimants dated July 22, 1993 (G.R. No.
104776, Rollo, pp. 1173-1235; G.R. Nos. 105029-32, Rollo, pp. 1193-1256; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 896-959);
12) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving claimant Ricardo C. Dayrit and 2 co-claimants dated September 7, 1993 (G.R. Nos.
105029-32, Rollo, pp. 1266-1278; G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 1243-1254; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 972-984);
105029-32, Rollo, pp. 1266-1278; G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 1243-1254; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 972-984);
13) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving claimant
Dante C. Aceres and 37 co-claimants dated September 8, 1993 (G.R. No.
104776, Rollo, pp. 1257-1375; G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 987-1105; G.R. Nos. 105029-32, Rollo, pp. 1280-1397);
14) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving Vivencio V. Abella and 27 co-claimants dated January 10, 1994 (G.R. Nos. 105029-32, Rollo, Vol. II);
15) Joint Manifestation and Motion involving Domingo
B. Solano and six co-claimants dated August 25, 1994 (G.R. Nos.
105029-32; G.R. No. 104776; G.R. Nos. 104911-14).
III
The facts as found by the NLRC are as follows:
We have taken painstaking efforts to sift over the
more than fifty volumes now comprising the records of these cases. From
the records, it appears that the complainants-appellants allege that
they were recruited by respondent-appellant AIBC for its accredited
foreign principal, Brown & Root, on various dates from 1975 to 1983.
They were all deployed at various projects undertaken by Brown &
Root in several countries in the Middle East, such as Saudi Arabia,
Libya, United Arab Emirates and Bahrain, as well as in Southeast Asia,
in Indonesia and Malaysia.
Having been officially processed as overseas contract
workers by the Philippine Government, all the individual complainants
signed standard overseas employment contracts (Records, Vols. 25-32.
Hereafter, reference to the records would be sparingly made, considering
their chaotic arrangement) with AIBC before their departure from the
Philippines. These overseas employment contracts invariably contained
the following relevant terms and conditions.
PART B —(1) Employment Position Classification :—————————
(Code) :—————————
(2) Company Employment Status :—————————
(3) Date of Employment to Commence on :—————————
(4) Basic Working Hours Per Week :—————————
(5) Basic Working Hours Per Month :—————————
(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
xxx xxx xxx
3. HOURS OF WORK AND COMPENSATION
a) The Employee is employed at the hourly rate and overtime rate as set out in Part B of this Document.
b) The hours of work shall be those set forth by the
Employer, and Employer may, at his sole option, change or adjust such
hours as maybe deemed necessary from time to time.
4. TERMINATION
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 pro-rata basis.
b) Sick leave of 15-days shall be granted to the
employee for every year of service for non-work connected injuries or
illness. If the employee failed to avail of such leave benefits, the
same shall be forfeited at the end of the year in which said sick leave
is granted.
11. BONUS
A bonus of 20% (for offshore work) of gross income
will be accrued and payable only upon satisfactory completion of this
contract.
12. OFFDAY PAY
The seventh day of the week shall be observed as a
day of rest with 8 hours regular pay. If work is performed on this day,
all hours work shall be paid at the premium rate. However, this offday
pay provision is applicable only when the laws of the Host Country
require payments for rest day.
In the State of Bahrain, where some of the individual
complainants were deployed, His Majesty Isa Bin Salman Al Kaifa, Amir
of Bahrain, issued his Amiri Decree No. 23 on June 16, 1976, otherwise
known as the Labour Law for the Private Sector (Records, Vol. 18). This
decree took effect on August 16, 1976. Some of the provisions of Amiri
Decree No. 23 that are relevant to the claims of the
complainants-appellants are as follows (italics supplied only for
emphasis):
Art. 79: . . . A worker shall receive payment for each extra hour equivalent to his wage entitlement increased by a minimum of twenty-five per centum thereof for hours worked during the day; and by a minimum of fifty per centum thereof 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. . . .
Art. 80: Friday shall be deemed to be a weekly day of rest on full pay.
. . . an employer may require a worker, with his consent, to work on his weekly day of rest if circumstances so require and in respect of which an additional sum equivalent to 150% of his normal wage shall be paid to him. . . .
Art. 81: . . . When conditions of work require the
worker to work on any official holiday, he shall be paid an additional
sum equivalent to 150% of his normal wage.
Art. 84: Every worker who has completed one year's
continuous service with his employer shall be entitled to leave on full
pay for a period of not less than 21 days for each year increased to a
period not less than 28 days after five continuous years of service.
A worker shall be entitled to such leave upon a quantum meruit in respect of the proportion of his service in that year.
Art. 107: A contract of employment made for a period
of indefinite duration may be terminated by either party thereto after
giving the other party thirty days' prior notice before such
termination, in writing, in respect of monthly paid workers and fifteen days' notice in respect of other workers.
The party terminating a contract without giving the required notice
shall pay to the other party compensation equivalent to the amount of
wages payable to the worker for the period of such notice or the
unexpired portion thereof.
Art. 111: . . . the employer concerned shall pay to such worker, upon termination of employment, a
leaving indemnity for the period of his employment calculated on the
basis of fifteen days' wages for each year of the first three years of
service and of one month's wages for each year of service thereafter. Such worker shall be entitled to payment of leaving indemnity upon a quantum meruit in proportion to the period of his service completed within a year.
All the individual complainants-appellants 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;
(a) Whether or not the complainants who have worked in Bahrain are entitled to the above-mentioned benefits.
(b) Whether or not Art. 44 of the same Decree
(allegedly prescribing a more favorable treatment of alien employees)
bars complainants from enjoying its benefits.
Second: — Assuming that Amiri Decree No. 23 of
Bahrain is applicable in these cases, whether or not complainants'
claim for the benefits provided therein have prescribed.
Third: — Whether or not the instant cases qualify as a class suit.
Fourth: — Whether or not the proceedings
conducted by the POEA, as well as the decision that is the subject of
these appeals, conformed with the requirements of due process;
(a) Whether or not the respondent-appellant was denied its right to due process;
(b) Whether or not the admission of evidence by the POEA after these cases were submitted for decision was valid;
(c) Whether or not the POEA acquired jurisdiction over Brown & Root International, Inc.;
(d) Whether or not the judgment awards are supported by substantial evidence;
(e) Whether or not the awards based on the averages
and formula presented by the complainants-appellants are supported by
substantial evidence;
(f) Whether or not the POEA awarded sums beyond what
the complainants-appellants prayed for; and, if so, whether or not these
awards are valid.
Fifth: — Whether or not the POEA erred in
holding respondents AIBC and Brown & Root jointly are severally
liable for the judgment awards despite the alleged finding that the
former was the employer of the complainants;
(a) Whether or not the POEA has acquired jurisdiction over Brown & Root;
(b) Whether or not the undisputed fact that AIBC was a
licensed construction contractor precludes a finding that Brown &
Root is liable for complainants claims.
Sixth: — Whether or not the POEA Administrator's failure to hold respondents in default constitutes a reversible error.
Seventh: — Whether or not the POEA Administrator erred in dismissing the following claims:
a. Unexpired portion of contract;
b. Interest earnings of Travel and Reserve Fund;
c. Retirement and Savings Plan benefits;
d. War Zone bonus or premium pay of at least 100% of basic pay;
e. Area Differential Pay;
f. Accrued interests on all the unpaid benefits;
g. Salary differential pay;
h. Wage differential pay;
i. Refund of SSS premiums not remitted to SSS;
j. Refund of withholding tax not remitted to BIR;
k. Fringe benefits under B & R's "A Summary of Employee Benefits" (Annex "Q" of Amended Complaint);
l. Moral and exemplary damages;
m. Attorney's fees of at least ten percent of the judgment award;
n. Other reliefs, like suspending and/or cancelling
the license to recruit of AIBC and the accreditation of B & R issued
by POEA;
o. Penalty for violations of Article 34 (prohibited practices), not excluding reportorial requirements thereof.
Eighth: — Whether or not the POEA
Administrator erred in not dismissing POEA Case No. (L) 86-65-460 on the
ground of multiplicity of suits (G.R. Nos. 104911-14, Rollo, pp. 25-29, 51-55).
Anent the first
issue, NLRC set aside Section 1, Rule 129 of the 1989 Revised Rules on
Evidence governing the pleading and proof of a foreign law and admitted
in evidence a simple copy of the Bahrain's Amiri Decree No. 23 of 1976
(Labour Law for the Private Sector). NLRC invoked Article 221 of the
Labor Code of the Philippines, vesting on the Commission ample
discretion to use every and all reasonable means to ascertain the facts
in each case without regard to the technicalities of law or procedure.
NLRC agreed with the POEA Administrator that the Amiri Decree No. 23,
being more favorable and beneficial to the workers, should form part of
the overseas employment contract of the complainants.
NLRC, however, held that the Amiri Decree No. 23
applied only to the claimants, who worked in Bahrain, and set aside
awards of the POEA Administrator in favor of the claimants, who worked
elsewhere.
On the second issue, NLRC ruled that the prescriptive
period for the filing of the claims of the complainants was three
years, as provided in Article 291 of the Labor Code of the Philippines,
and not ten years as provided in Article 1144 of the Civil Code of the
Philippines nor one year as provided in the Amiri Decree No. 23 of 1976.
On the third issue, NLRC agreed with the POEA
Administrator that the labor cases cannot be treated as a class suit for
the simple reason that not all the complainants worked in Bahrain and
therefore, the subject matter of the action, the claims arising from the
Bahrain law, is not of common or general interest to all the
complainants.
On the fourth issue, NLRC found at least three
infractions of the cardinal rules of administrative due process: namely,
(1) the failure of the POEA Administrator to consider the evidence
presented by AIBC and BRII; (2) some findings of fact were not supported
by substantial evidence; and (3) some of the evidence upon which the
decision was based were not disclosed to AIBC and BRII during the
hearing.
On the fifth issue, NLRC sustained the ruling of the
POEA Administrator that BRII and AIBC are solidarily liable for the
claims of the complainants and held that BRII was the actual employer of
the complainants, or at the very least, the indirect employer, with
AIBC as the labor contractor.
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;
(5) that the allegation that complainants were
prematurely repatriated prior to the expiration of their overseas
contract was not established; and
(6) that the POEA Administrator has no jurisdiction
over the complaint for the suspension or cancellation of the AIBC's
recruitment license and the cancellation of the accreditation of BRII.
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;
(3) the NLRC and POEA Administrator erred in not
holding that the labor cases filed by AIBC and BRII cannot be considered
a class suit;
(4) that the prescriptive period for the filing of the claims is ten years; and
(5) that NLRC and the POEA Administrator should have
dismissed POEA Case No. L-86-05-460, the case filed by Atty. Florante de
Castro (Rollo, pp. 31-40).
AIBC and BRII, commenting on the petition in G.R. No. 104776, argued:
(1) that they were not responsible for the delay in
the disposition of the labor cases, considering the great difficulty of
getting all the records of the more than 1,500 claimants, the piece-meal
filing of the complaints and the addition of hundreds of new claimants
by petitioners;
(2) that considering the number of complaints and
claimants, it was impossible to prepare the answers within the ten-day
period provided in the NLRC Rules, that when the motion to declare AIBC
in default was filed on July 19, 1987, said party had already filed its
answer, and that considering the staggering amount of the claims (more
than US$50,000,000.00) and the complicated issues raised by the parties,
the ten-day rule to answer was not fair and reasonable;
(3) that the claimants failed to refute NLRC's finding that
there was no common or general interest in the subject matter of the controversy — which was the applicability of the Amiri Decree No. 23. Likewise, the nature of the claims varied, some being based on salaries pertaining to the unexpired portion of the contracts while others being for pure money claims. Each claimant demanded separate claims peculiar only to himself and depending upon the particular circumstances obtaining in his case;
there was no common or general interest in the subject matter of the controversy — which was the applicability of the Amiri Decree No. 23. Likewise, the nature of the claims varied, some being based on salaries pertaining to the unexpired portion of the contracts while others being for pure money claims. Each claimant demanded separate claims peculiar only to himself and depending upon the particular circumstances obtaining in his case;
(4) that the prescriptive period for filing the
claims is that prescribed by Article 291 of the Labor Code of the
Philippines (three years) and not the one prescribed by Article 1144 of
the Civil Code of the Philippines (ten years); and
(5) that they are not concerned with the issue of
whether POEA Case No. L-86-05-460 should be dismissed, this being a
private quarrel between the two labor lawyers (Rollo, pp. 292-305).
Attorney's Lien
On
November 12, 1992, Atty. Gerardo A. del Mundo moved to strike out the
joint manifestations and motions of AIBC and BRII dated September 2 and
11, 1992, claiming that all the claimants who entered into the
compromise agreements subject of said manifestations and motions were
his clients and that Atty. Florante M. de Castro had no right to
represent them in said agreements. He also claimed that the claimants
were paid less than the award given them by NLRC; that Atty. De Castro
collected additional attorney's fees on top of the 25% which he was
entitled to receive; and that the consent of the claimants to the
compromise agreements and quitclaims were procured by fraud (G.R. No.
104776, Rollo, pp. 838-810). In the Resolution dated November 23,
1992, the Court denied the motion to strike out the Joint
Manifestations and Motions dated September 2 and 11, 1992 (G.R. Nos.
104911-14, Rollo, pp. 608-609).
On December 14, 1992, Atty. Del Mundo filed a "Notice
and Claim to Enforce Attorney's Lien," alleging that the claimants who
entered into compromise agreements with AIBC and BRII with the
assistance of Atty. De Castro, had all signed a retainer agreement with
his law firm (G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 623-624; 838-1535).
Contempt of Court
On February 18, 1993, an omnibus motion was filed
by Atty. Del Mundo to cite Atty. De Castro and Atty. Katz Tierra for
contempt of court and for violation of Canons 1, 15 and 16 of the Code
of Professional Responsibility. The said lawyers allegedly misled this
Court, by making it appear that the claimants who entered into the
compromise agreements were represented by Atty. De Castro, when in fact
they were represented by Atty. Del Mundo (G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 1560-1614).
On September 23, 1994, Atty. Del Mundo reiterated his
charges against Atty. De Castro for unethical practices and moved for
the voiding of the quitclaims submitted by some of the claimants.
G.R. Nos. 104911-14
The claimants in G.R. Nos. 104911-14 based their petition for certiorari on
the grounds that NLRC gravely abused its discretion when it: (1)
applied the three-year prescriptive period under the Labor Code of the
Philippines; and (2) it denied the claimant's formula based on an
average overtime pay of three hours a day (Rollo, pp. 18-22).
The claimants argue that said method was proposed by
BRII itself during the negotiation for an amicable settlement of their
money claims in Bahrain as shown in the Memorandum dated April 16, 1983
of the Ministry of Labor of Bahrain (Rollo, pp. 21-22).
BRII and AIBC, in their Comment, reiterated their
contention in G.R. No. 104776 that the prescriptive period in the Labor
Code of the Philippines, a special law, prevails over that provided in
the Civil Code of the Philippines, a general law.
As to the memorandum of the Ministry of Labor of
Bahrain on the method of computing the overtime pay, BRII and AIBC
claimed that they were not bound by what appeared therein, because such
memorandum was proposed by a subordinate Bahrain official and there was
no showing that it was approved by the Bahrain Minister of Labor.
Likewise, they claimed that the averaging method was discussed in the
course of the negotiation for the amicable settlement of the dispute and
any offer made by a party therein could not be used as an admission by
him (Rollo, pp. 228-236).
G.R. Nos. 105029-32
In G.R. Nos. 105029-32, BRII and AIBC claim that
NLRC gravely abused its discretion when it: (1) enforced the provisions
of the Amiri Decree No. 23 of 1976 and not the terms of the employment
contracts; (2) granted claims for holiday, overtime and leave indemnity
pay and other benefits, on evidence admitted in contravention of
petitioner's constitutional right to due process; and (3) ordered the
POEA Administrator to hold new hearings for the 683 claimants whose
claims had been dismissed for lack of proof by the POEA Administrator or
NLRC itself. Lastly, they allege that assuming that the Amiri Decree
No. 23 of 1976 was applicable, NLRC erred when it did not apply the
one-year prescription provided in said law (Rollo, pp. 29-30).
VI
G.R. No. 104776; G.R. Nos. 104911-14; G.R. Nos. 105029-32
All the petitions raise the common issue of
prescription although they disagreed as to the time that should be
embraced within the prescriptive period.
To the POEA Administrator, the prescriptive period
was ten years, applying Article 1144 of the Civil Code of the
Philippines. NLRC believed otherwise, fixing the prescriptive period at
three years as provided in Article 291 of the Labor Code of the
Philippines.
The claimants in G.R. No. 104776 and G.R. Nos.
104911-14, invoking different grounds, insisted that NLRC erred in
ruling that the prescriptive period applicable to the claims was three
years, instead of ten years, as found by the POEA Administrator.
The Solicitor General expressed his personal view
that the prescriptive period was one year as prescribed by the Amiri
Decree No. 23 of 1976 but he deferred to the ruling of NLRC that Article
291 of the Labor Code of the Philippines was the operative law.
These money claims (under Article 291 of the Labor
Code) refer to those arising from the employer's violation of the
employee's right as provided by the Labor Code.
In the instant case, what the respondents violated
are not the rights of the workers as provided by the Labor Code, but the
provisions of the Amiri Decree No. 23 issued in Bahrain, which ipso facto amended
the worker's contracts of employment. Respondents consciously failed to
conform to these provisions which specifically provide for the increase
of the worker's rate. It was only after June 30, 1983, four months
after the brown builders brought a suit against B & R in Bahrain for
this same claim, when respondent AIBC's contracts have undergone
amendments in Bahrain for the new hires/renewals (Respondent's Exhibit
7).
Hence, premises considered, the applicable law of
prescription to this instant case is Article 1144 of the Civil Code of
the Philippines, which provides:
Art. 1144. The following actions may be brought within ten years from the time the cause of action accrues:
(1) Upon a written contract;
(2) Upon an obligation created by law;
Thus, herein money claims of the complainants against
the respondents shall prescribe in ten years from August 16, 1976.
Inasmuch as all claims were filed within the ten-year prescriptive
period, no claim suffered the infirmity of being prescribed (G.R. No.
104776, Rollo, 89-90).
In overruling the
POEA Administrator, and holding that the prescriptive period is three
years as provided in Article 291 of the Labor Code of the Philippines,
the NLRC argued as follows:
The Labor Code provides that "all money claims
arising from employer-employee relations . . . shall be filed within
three years from the time the cause of action accrued; otherwise they
shall be forever barred" (Art. 291, Labor Code, as amended). This
three-year prescriptive period shall be the one applied here and which
should be reckoned from the date of repatriation of each individual
complainant, considering the fact that the case is having (sic) filed in
this country. We do not agree with the POEA Administrator that this
three-year prescriptive period applies only to money claims specifically
recoverable under the Philippine Labor Code. Article 291 gives no such
indication. Likewise, We can not consider complainants' cause/s of
action to have accrued from a violation of their employment contracts.
There was no violation; the claims arise from the benefits of the law of
the country where they worked. (G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp.
90-91).
90-91).
Anent the
applicability of the one-year prescriptive period as provided by the
Amiri Decree No. 23 of 1976, NLRC opined that the applicability of said
law was one of characterization, i.e., whether to characterize the
foreign law on prescription or statute of limitation as "substantive" or
"procedural." NLRC cited the decision in Bournias v. Atlantic Maritime Company (220
F. 2d. 152, 2d Cir. [1955], where the issue was the applicability of
the Panama Labor Code in a case filed in the State of New York for
claims arising from 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 nothing in the
record to indicate that the Panamanian legislature gave special
consideration to the impact of Article 623 upon the particular rights
sought to be enforced here, as distinguished from the other rights to
which that Article is also applicable. Were we confronted with the
question of whether the limitation period of Article 621 (which carves
out particular rights to be governed by a shorter limitation period) is
to be regarded as "substantive" or "procedural" under the rule of
"specifity" we might have a different case; but here on the surface of
things we appear to be dealing with a "broad," and not a "specific,"
statute of limitations (G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp.
92-94).
92-94).
Claimants in G.R.
Nos. 104911-14 are of the view that Article 291 of the Labor Code of the
Philippines, which was applied by NLRC, refers only to claims "arising
from the employer's violation of the employee's right as provided by the
Labor Code." They assert that their claims are based on the violation
of their employment contracts, as amended by the Amiri Decree No. 23 of
1976 and therefore the claims may be brought within ten years as
provided by Article 1144 of the Civil Code of the Philippines (Rollo, G.R. Nos. 104911-14, pp.
18-21). To bolster their contention, they cite PALEA v. Philippine Airlines, Inc., 70 SCRA 244 (1976).
18-21). To bolster their contention, they cite PALEA v. Philippine Airlines, Inc., 70 SCRA 244 (1976).
AIBC and BRII, insisting that the actions on the
claims have prescribed under the Amiri Decree No. 23 of 1976, argue that
there is in force in the Philippines a "borrowing law," which is
Section 48 of the Code of Civil Procedure and that where such kind of
law exists, it takes precedence over the common-law conflicts rule (G.R.
No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 45-46).
First to be determined is whether it is the Bahrain
law on prescription of action based on the Amiri Decree No. 23 of 1976
or a Philippine law on prescription that shall be the governing law.
Article 156 of the Amiri Decree No. 23 of 1976 provides:
A claim arising out of a contract of employment shall
not be actionable after the lapse of one year from the date of the
expiry of the contract. (G.R. Nos. 105029-31, Rollo, p. 226).
As a general rule,
a foreign procedural law will not be applied in the forum. Procedural
matters, such as service of process, joinder of actions, period and
requisites for appeal, and so forth, are governed by the laws of the
forum. This is true even if the action is based upon a foreign
substantive law (Restatement of the Conflict of Laws, Sec. 685; Salonga,
Private International Law, 131 [1979]).
A law on prescription of actions is sui generis in
Conflict of Laws in the sense that it may be viewed either as
procedural or substantive, depending on the characterization given such a
law.
Thus in Bournias v. Atlantic Maritime Company, supra, the
American court applied the statute of limitations of New York, instead
of the Panamanian law, after finding that there was no showing that the
Panamanian law on prescription was intended to be substantive. Being
considered merely a procedural law even in Panama, it has to give way to
the law of the forum on prescription of actions.
However, the characterization of a statute into a
procedural or substantive law becomes irrelevant when the country of the
forum has a "borrowing statute." Said statute has the practical effect
of treating the foreign statute of limitation as one of substance
(Goodrich, Conflict of Laws 152-153 [1938]). A "borrowing statute"
directs the state of the forum to apply the foreign statute of
limitations to the pending claims based on a foreign law (Siegel,
Conflicts, 183 [1975]). While there are several kinds of "borrowing
statutes," one form provides that an action barred by the laws of the
place where it accrued, will not be enforced in the forum even though
the local statute has not run against it (Goodrich and Scoles, Conflict
of Laws, 152-153 [1938]). Section 48 of our Code of Civil Procedure is
of this kind. Said Section provides:
If by the laws of the state or country where the
cause of action arose, the action is barred, it is also barred in the
Philippines Islands.
Section 48 has not
been repealed or amended by the Civil Code of the Philippines. Article
2270 of said Code repealed only those provisions of the Code of Civil
Procedures as to which were inconsistent with it. There is no provision
in the Civil Code of the Philippines, which is inconsistent with or
contradictory to Section 48 of the Code of Civil Procedure (Paras,
Philippine Conflict of Laws 104 [7th ed.]).
In the light of the 1987 Constitution, however, Section 48 cannot be enforced ex proprio vigore insofar as it ordains the application in this jurisdiction of Section 156 of the Amiri Decree No. 23 of 1976.
The courts of the forum will not enforce any foreign
claim obnoxious to the forum's public policy (Canadian Northern Railway
Co. v. Eggen, 252 U.S. 553, 40 S. Ct. 402, 64 L. ed. 713 [1920]). To
enforce the one-year prescriptive period of the Amiri Decree No. 23 of
1976 as regards the claims in question would contravene the public
policy on the protection to labor.
In the Declaration of Principles and State Policies, the 1987 Constitution emphasized that:
The state shall promote social justice in all phases of national development. (Sec. 10).
The state affirms labor as a primary social economic
force. It shall protect the rights of workers and promote their welfare
(Sec. 18).
In article XIII on Social Justice and Human Rights, the 1987 Constitution provides:
Sec. 3. The State shall afford full protection to
labor, local and overseas, organized and unorganized, and promote full
employment and equality of employment opportunities for all.
Having determined
that the applicable law on prescription is the Philippine law, the next
question is whether the prescriptive period governing the filing of the
claims is three years, as provided by the Labor Code or ten years, as
provided by the Civil Code of the Philippines.
The claimants are of the view that the applicable
provision is Article 1144 of the Civil Code of the Philippines, which
provides:
The following actions must be brought within ten years from the time the right of action accrues:
(1) Upon a written contract;
(2) Upon an obligation created by law;
(3) Upon a judgment.
NLRC, on the other
hand, believes that the applicable provision is Article 291 of the
Labor Code of the Philippines, which in pertinent part provides:
Money claims-all money claims arising from
employer-employee relations accruing during the effectivity of this Code
shall be filed within three (3) years from the time the cause of action
accrued, otherwise they shall be forever barred.
xxx xxx xxx
The case of Philippine Air Lines Employees Association v. Philippine Air Lines, Inc., 70 SCRA 244 (1976) invoked by the claimants in G.R. Nos. 104911-14 is inapplicable to the cases at bench (Rollo,
p. 21). The said case involved the correct computation of overtime pay
as provided in the collective bargaining agreements and not the
Eight-Hour Labor Law.
As noted by the Court: "That is precisely why
petitioners did not make any reference as to the computation for
overtime work under the Eight-Hour Labor Law (Secs. 3 and 4, CA No. 494)
and instead insisted that work computation provided in the collective
bargaining agreements between the parties be observed. Since the claim
for pay differentials is primarily anchored on the written contracts
between the litigants, the ten-year prescriptive period provided by Art.
1144(1) of the New Civil Code should govern."
Section 7-a of the Eight-Hour Labor Law (CA No. 444 as amended by R.A. No. 19933) provides:
Any action to enforce any cause of action under this
Act shall be commenced within three years after the cause of action
accrued otherwise such action shall be forever barred, . . . .
The court further explained:
The three-year prescriptive period fixed in the
Eight-Hour Labor Law (CA No. 444 as amended) will apply, if the claim
for differentials for overtime work is solely based on said law, and not
on a collective bargaining agreement or any other contract. In the
instant case, the claim for overtime compensation is not so much because
of Commonwealth Act No. 444, as amended but because the claim is
demandable right of the employees, by reason of the above-mentioned
collective bargaining agreement.
Section 7-a of the
Eight-Hour Labor Law provides the prescriptive period for filing
"actions to enforce any cause of action under said law." On the other
hand, Article 291 of the Labor Code of the Philippines provides the
prescriptive period for filing "money claims arising from
employer-employee relations." The claims in the cases at bench all arose
from the employer-employee relations, which is broader in scope than
claims arising from a specific law or from the collective bargaining
agreement.
The contention of the POEA Administrator, that the
three-year prescriptive period under Article 291 of the Labor Code of
the Philippines applies only to money claims specifically recoverable
under said Code, does not find support in the plain language of the
provision. Neither is the contention of the claimants in G.R. Nos.
104911-14 that said Article refers only to claims "arising from the
employer's violation of the employee's right," as provided by the Labor
Code supported by the facial reading of the provision.
VII
G.R. No. 104776
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).
31-35).
Claimants invoke a new provision incorporated in the 1987 Constitution, which provides:
Sec. 16. All persons shall have the right to a speedy
disposition of their cases before all judicial, quasi-judicial, or
administrative bodies.
It is true that
the constitutional right to "a speedy disposition of cases" is not
limited to the accused in criminal proceedings but extends to all
parties in all cases, including civil and administrative cases, and in
all proceedings, including judicial and quasi-judicial hearings. Hence,
under the Constitution, any party to a case may demand expeditious
action on all officials who are tasked with the administration of
justice.
However, as held in Caballero v. Alfonso, Jr.,
153 SCRA 153 (1987), "speedy disposition of cases" is a relative term.
Just like the constitutional guarantee of "speedy trial" accorded to the
accused in all criminal proceedings, "speedy disposition of cases" is a
flexible concept. It is consistent with delays and depends upon the
circumstances of each case. What the Constitution prohibits are
unreasonable, arbitrary and oppressive delays which render rights
nugatory.
Caballero laid down the factors that may be
taken into consideration in determining whether or not the right to a
"speedy disposition of cases" has been violated, thus:
In the determination of whether or not the right to a
"speedy trial" has been violated, certain factors may be considered and
balanced against each other. These are length of delay, reason for the
delay, assertion of the right or failure to assert it, and prejudice
caused by the delay. The same factors may also be considered in
answering judicial inquiry whether or not a person officially charged
with the administration of justice has violated the speedy disposition
of cases.
Likewise, in Gonzales v. Sandiganbayan, 199 SCRA 298, (1991), we held:
It must be here emphasized that the right to a speedy
disposition of a case, like the right to speedy trial, is deemed
violated only when the proceeding is attended by vexatious, capricious,
and oppressive delays; or when unjustified postponements of the trial
are asked for and secured, or when without cause or justified motive a
long period of time is allowed to elapse without the party having his
case tried.
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
unreasonable, arbitrary and oppressive delays as to violate the
constitutional rights to a speedy disposition of the cases of
complainants.
The amended complaint filed on June 6, 1984 involved a
total of 1,767 claimants. Said complaint had undergone several
amendments, the first being on April 3, 1985.
The claimants were hired on various dates from 1975
to 1983. They were deployed in different areas, one group in and the
other groups outside of, Bahrain. The monetary claims totalling more
than US$65 million according to Atty. Del Mundo, included:
1. Unexpired portion of contract;
2. Interest earnings of Travel and Fund;
3. Retirement and Savings Plan benefit;
4. War Zone bonus or premium pay of at least 100% of basic pay;
5. Area Differential pay;
6. Accrued Interest of all the unpaid benefits;
7. Salary differential pay;
8. Wage Differential pay;
9. Refund of SSS premiums not remitted to Social Security System;
10. Refund of Withholding Tax not remitted to Bureau of Internal Revenue (B.I.R.);
11. Fringe Benefits under Brown & Root's "A
Summary of Employees Benefits consisting of 43 pages (Annex "Q" of
Amended Complaint);
12. Moral and Exemplary Damages;
13. Attorney's fees of at least ten percent of amounts;
14. Other reliefs, like suspending and/or cancelling the license to recruit of AIBC and issued by the POEA; and
15. Penalty for violation of Article 34 (Prohibited
practices) not excluding reportorial requirements thereof (NLRC
Resolution, September 2, 1991, pp. 18-19; G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, pp. 73-74).
Inasmuch as the
complaint did not allege with sufficient definiteness and clarity of
some facts, the claimants were ordered to comply with the motion of AIBC
for a bill of particulars. When claimants filed their "Compliance and
Manifestation," AIBC moved to strike out the complaint from the records
for failure of claimants to submit a proper bill of particulars. While
the POEA Administrator denied the motion to strike out the complaint, he
ordered the claimants "to correct the deficiencies" pointed out by
AIBC.
Before an intelligent answer could be filed in
response to the complaint, the records of employment of the more than
1,700 claimants had to be retrieved from various countries in the Middle
East. Some of the records dated as far back as 1975.
The hearings on the merits of the claims before the
POEA Administrator were interrupted several times by the various
appeals, first to NLRC and then to the Supreme Court.
Aside from the inclusion of additional claimants, two
new cases were filed against AIBC and BRII on October 10, 1985 (POEA
Cases Nos.
L-85-10-777 and L-85-10-779). Another complaint was filed on May 29, 1986 (POEA Case No. L-86-05-460). NLRC, in exasperation, noted that the exact number of claimants had never been completely established (Resolution, Sept. 2, 1991, G.R. No. 104776, Rollo, p. 57). All the three new cases were consolidated with POEA Case No. L-84-06-555.
L-85-10-777 and L-85-10-779). Another complaint was filed on May 29, 1986 (POEA Case No. L-86-05-460). NLRC, in exasperation, noted that the exact number of claimants had never been completely established (Resolution, Sept. 2, 1991, G.R. No. 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).
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 documents and signatures, and in the disbarment
proceedings by one against the other. All these have, to a large extent,
abetted in confounding the issues raised in these cases, jumble the
presentation of evidence, and even derailed the prospects of an amicable
settlement. It would not be far-fetched to imagine that both counsel,
unwittingly, perhaps, painted a rainbow for the complainants, with the
proverbial pot of gold at its end containing more than US$100 million,
the aggregate of the claims in these cases. It is, likewise, not
improbable that their misplaced zeal and exuberance caused them to throw
all caution to the wind in the matter of elementary rules of procedure
and evidence (Rollo, pp. 58-59).
Adding to the
confusion in the proceedings before NLRC, is the listing of some of the
complainants in both petitions filed by the two lawyers. As noted by
NLRC, "the problem created by this situation is that if one of the two
petitions is dismissed, then the parties and the public respondents
would not know which claim of which petitioner was dismissed and which
was not."
B. Claimants insist that all their claims could
properly be consolidated in a "class suit" because "all the named
complainants have similar money claims and similar rights sought
irrespective of whether they worked in Bahrain, United Arab Emirates or
in Abu Dhabi, Libya or in any part of the Middle East" (Rollo, pp. 35-38).
A class suit is proper where the subject matter of
the controversy is one of common or general interest to many and the
parties are so numerous that it is impracticable to bring them all
before the court (Revised Rules of Court, Rule 3, Sec. 12).
While all the claims are for benefits granted under
the Bahrain Law, many of the claimants worked outside Bahrain. Some of
the claimants were deployed in Indonesia and Malaysia under different
terms and conditions of employment.
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 co-claimants 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.
G.R. No. 104911-14
Claimants charge NLRC with grave abuse of
discretion in not accepting their formula of "Three Hours Average Daily
Overtime" in computing the overtime payments. They claim that it was
BRII itself which proposed the formula during the negotiations for the
settlement of their claims in Bahrain and therefore it is in estoppel to
disclaim said offer (Rollo, pp. 21-22).
Claimants presented a Memorandum of the Ministry of Labor of Bahrain dated April 16, 1983, which in pertinent part states:
After the perusal of the memorandum of the Vice President and the Area Manager, Middle East, of Brown & Root Co.
and the Summary of the compensation offered by the Company to the
employees in respect of the difference of pay of the wages of the
overtime and the difference of vacation leave and the perusal of the
documents attached thereto i.e., minutes of the meetings between the
Representative of the employees and the management of the Company, the
complaint filed by the employees on 14/2/83 where they have claimed as
hereinabove stated, sample of the Service Contract executed between one
of the employees and the company through its agent in (sic) Philippines, Asia International Builders Corporation where it has been provided for 48 hours of work per week and an annual leave of 12 days and an overtime wage of 1 & 1/4 of the normal hourly wage.
xxx xxx xxx
The Company in its computation reached the following averages:
A. 1. The average duration of the actual service of the employee is 35 months for the Philippino (sic) employees . . . .
2. The average wage per hour for the Philippino (sic) employee is US$2.69 . . . .
3. The average hours for the overtime is 3 hours plus in all public holidays and weekends.
4. Payment of US$8.72 per months (sic) of service as compensation for the difference of the wages of the overtime done for each Philippino (sic) employee . . . (Rollo, p.22).
BRII and AIBC
countered: (1) that the Memorandum was not prepared by them but by a
subordinate official in the Bahrain Department of Labor; (2) that there
was no showing that the Bahrain Minister of Labor had approved said
memorandum; and (3) that the offer was made in the course of the
negotiation for an amicable settlement of the claims and therefore it
was not admissible in evidence to prove that anything is due to the
claimants.
While said document was presented to the POEA without
observing the rule on presenting official documents of a foreign
government as provided in Section 24, Rule 132 of the 1989 Revised Rules
on Evidence, it can be admitted in evidence in proceedings before an
administrative body. The opposing parties have a copy of the said
memorandum, and they could easily verify its authenticity and accuracy.
The admissibility of the offer of compromise made by
BRII as contained in the memorandum is another matter. Under Section 27,
Rule 130 of the 1989 Revised Rules on Evidence, an offer to settle a
claim is not an admission that anything is due.
Said Rule provides:
Offer of compromise not admissible. — In civil cases,
an offer of compromise is not an admission of any liability, and is not
admissible in evidence against the offeror.
This Rule is not
only a rule of procedure to avoid the cluttering of the record with
unwanted evidence but a statement of public policy. There is great
public interest in having the protagonists settle their differences
amicable before these ripen into litigation. Every effort must be taken
to encourage them to arrive at a settlement. The submission of offers
and counter-offers in the negotiation table is a step in the right
direction. But to bind a party to his offers, as what claimants would
make this Court do, would defeat the salutary purpose of the Rule.
G.R. Nos. 105029-32
A. NLRC applied the Amiri Decree No. 23 of 1976,
which provides for greater benefits than those stipulated in the
overseas-employment contracts of the claimants. It was of the belief
that "where the laws of the host country are more favorable and
beneficial to the workers, then the laws of the host country shall form
part of the overseas employment contract." It quoted with approval the
observation of the POEA Administrator that ". . . in labor proceedings,
all doubts in the implementation of the provisions of the Labor Code and
its implementing regulations shall be resolved in favor of labor" (Rollo, pp. 90-94).
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 the same provision categorically states
"that total remuneration and benefits do not fall below that of the host
country regulation and custom."
Any ambiguity in the overseas-employment contracts
should be interpreted against AIBC and BRII, the parties that drafted it
(Eastern Shipping Lines, Inc. v. Margarine-Verkaufs-Union, 93 SCRA 257
[1979]).
Article 1377 of the Civil Code of the Philippines provides:
The interpretation of obscure words or stipulations in a contract shall not favor the party who caused the obscurity.
Said rule of
interpretation is applicable to contracts of adhesion where there is
already a prepared form containing the stipulations of the employment
contract and the employees merely "take it or leave it." The presumption
is that there was an imposition by one party against the other and that
the employees signed the contracts out of necessity that reduced their
bargaining power (Fieldmen's Insurance Co., Inc. v. Songco, 25 SCRA 70
[1968]).
Applying the said legal precepts, we read the
overseas-employment contracts in question as adopting the provisions of
the Amiri Decree No. 23 of 1976 as part and parcel thereof.
The parties to a contract may select the law by which
it is to be governed (Cheshire, Private International Law, 187 [7th
ed.]). In such a case, the foreign law is adopted as a "system" to
regulate the relations of the parties, including questions of their
capacity to enter into the contract, the formalities to be observed by
them, matters of performance, and so forth (16 Am Jur 2d,
150-161).
150-161).
Instead of adopting the entire mass of the foreign
law, the parties may just agree that specific provisions of a foreign
statute shall be deemed incorporated into their contract "as a set of
terms." By such reference to the provisions of the foreign law, the
contract does not become a foreign contract to be governed by the
foreign 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
stipulation in the employment contract that the foreign law would be
applicable if it afforded greater compensation.
B. AIBC and BRII claim that they were denied by NLRC
of their right to due process when said administrative agency granted
Friday-pay differential, holiday-pay differential, annual-leave
differential and leave indemnity pay to the claimants listed in Annex B
of the Resolution. At first, NLRC reversed the resolution of the POEA
Administrator granting these benefits on a finding that the POEA
Administrator failed to consider the evidence presented by AIBC and
BRII, that some findings of fact of the POEA Administrator were not
supported by the evidence, and that some of the evidence were not
disclosed to AIBC and BRII (Rollo, pp. 35-36; 106-107). But
instead of remanding the case to the POEA Administrator for a new
hearing, which means further delay in the termination of the case, NLRC
decided to pass upon the validity of the claims itself. It is this
procedure that AIBC and BRII complain of as being irregular and a
"reversible error."
They pointed out that NLRC took into consideration
evidence submitted on appeal, the same evidence which NLRC found to have
been "unilaterally submitted by the claimants and not disclosed to the
adverse parties" (Rollo, pp. 37-39).
NLRC noted that so many pieces of evidentiary matters
were submitted to the POEA administrator by the claimants after the
cases were deemed submitted for resolution and which were taken
cognizance of by the POEA Administrator in resolving the cases. While
AIBC and BRII had no opportunity to refute said evidence of the
claimants before the POEA Administrator, they had all the opportunity to
rebut said evidence and to present their
counter-evidence before NLRC. As a matter of fact, AIBC and BRII themselves were able to present before NLRC additional evidence which they failed to present before the POEA Administrator.
counter-evidence before NLRC. As a matter of fact, AIBC and BRII themselves were able to present before NLRC additional evidence which they failed to present before the POEA Administrator.
Under Article 221 of the Labor Code of the
Philippines, NLRC is enjoined to "use every and all reasonable means to
ascertain the facts in each case speedily and objectively and without
regard to technicalities of law or procedure, all in the interest of due
process."
In deciding to resolve the validity of certain claims
on the basis of the evidence of both parties submitted before the POEA
Administrator and NLRC, the latter considered that it was not expedient
to remand the cases to the POEA Administrator for that would only
prolong the already protracted legal controversies.
Even the Supreme Court has decided appealed cases on
the merits instead of remanding them to the trial court for the
reception of evidence, where the same can be readily determined from the
uncontroverted facts on record (Development Bank of the Philippines v.
Intermediate Appellate Court, 190 SCRA 653 [1990]; Pagdonsalan v.
National Labor Relations Commission, 127 SCRA 463 [1984]).
C. AIBC and BRII charge NLRC with grave abuse of
discretion when it ordered the POEA Administrator to hold new hearings
for 683 claimants listed in Annex D of the Resolution dated September 2,
1991 whose claims had been denied by the POEA Administrator "for lack
of proof" and for 69 claimants listed in Annex E of the same Resolution,
whose claims had been found by NLRC itself as not "supported by
evidence" (Rollo, pp. 41-45).
NLRC based its ruling on Article 218(c) of the Labor
Code of the Philippines, which empowers it "[to] conduct investigation
for the determination of a question, matter or controversy, within its
jurisdiction, . . . ."
It is the posture of AIBC and BRII that NLRC has no
authority under Article 218(c) to remand a case involving claims which
had already been dismissed because such provision contemplates only
situations where there is still a question or controversy to be resolved
(Rollo, pp. 41-42).
A principle well embedded in Administrative Law is
that the technical rules of procedure and evidence do not apply to the
proceedings conducted by administrative agencies (First Asian Transport
& Shipping Agency, Inc. v. Ople, 142 SCRA 542 [1986]; Asiaworld
Publishing House, Inc. v. Ople, 152 SCRA 219 [1987]). This principle is
enshrined in Article 221 of the Labor Code of the Philippines and is now
the bedrock of proceedings before NLRC.
Notwithstanding the non-applicability of technical
rules of procedure and evidence in administrative proceedings, there are
cardinal rules which must be observed by the hearing officers in order
to comply with the due process requirements of the Constitution. These
cardinal rules are collated in Ang Tibay v. Court of Industrial Relations, 69 Phil. 635 (1940).
VIII
The three petitions were filed under Rule 65 of the
Revised Rules of Court on the grounds that NLRC had committed grave
abuse of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction in issuing the
questioned orders. We find no such abuse of discretion.
WHEREFORE, all the three petitions are DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.
Padilla, Davide, Jr., Bellosillo and Kapunan, JJ., concur.
ANNEX A
LIST OF CLAIMANTS WHO SIGNED QUITCLAIMS
Bienvenido Cadalin Ardon ElloAntonio Acupan Josefino R. Enano
Benjamin Alejandre Rolando E. Espiritu
Wilfredo Aligada Patricio L. Garcia Jr.
Robert Batica Felino M. Jocson
Enrico Belen Eduardo S. Kolimlim
Guillermo Cabeza Emmanuel C. Labella
Rodolfo Cagatan Ernesto S. Lising
Francisco De Guzman Edilberto G. Magat
Ignacio De Vera Victoriano L. Matilla
Ernesto De la Cruz Renato V. Morada
Reynaldo Dizon Ildefonso C. Muñoz
Ricardo Ebrada Herbert G. Ng
Antonio Ejercito Reynado Oczon
Eduardo Espiritu Romeo Orial
Ernesto Espiritu Ricardo Paguio
Rodolfo Espiritu Emilio Pakingan
Oligario Francisco Ernesto S. Pangan
Antonio Jocson Albert L. Quinto
Alejandro Olorino Romulo M. Reyes
Efren Lirio Leonilo Tiposo
Noel Martinez Manual P. Villanueva
Francis Mediodia Arnaldo J. Alonzo
Luciano Melendez Pastor M. Aquino
Reymundo Milay Ramon Castro
Jose Pancho Graciano Isla
Modesto Pin Pin Renato Matilla
Gaudencio Retana Ricardo B. Morada
Rodelio Rieta, Jr. Pacifico D. Navarro
Jose Robleza Eugenio A. Remonquillo
Nemeriano San Mateo Felix Barcena
Juanito Santos Eliseo Fajardo
Paquito Solanto Sergio S. Santiago
Conrado Solis, Jr. Antonio R. Rodriquez
Menandro Temprosa Luis Val B. Ronquillo
Maximiano Torres Teodorico C. Del Rosario
Francisco Trias Joselito C. Solante
Delfin Victoria Ricardo C. Dayrit
Gilbert Victoria Antonio P. Hilario
Domingo Villahermosa Edgardo O. Salonga
Rogelio Villanueva Dante C. Aceres
Jose M. Aban Reynaldo S. Acojido
Amorsolo S. Anading Esidro M. Aquino
Alfredo S. Balogo Rosendo M. Aquino
Ramon T. Barboza Rodolfo D. Arevalo
Felix M. Bobier Rexy De Leon Ascuncion
Jose H. Castillo Basilio Buenaventura
Emmanuel H. Castillo Alexander Bustamante
Remar R. Castrojerez Virgilio V. Butiong, Jr.
Romeo O. Cecilio Delfin Caballero
Bayani M. Dayrit Danilo M. Castro
Felizardo S. Delos Santos Franscisco O. Corvera
Nestor N. Estava Edgardo N. Dayacap
Rolando M. Garcia Napoleon S. De Luna
Angel D. Guda Benjamin E. Doza
Henry L. Jacob Renato A. Eduarte
Dante A. Matreo Clyde C. Estuye
Renato S. Melo Buenaventura M. Francisco
Resurrecion D. Nazareno Rogelio D. Guanio
Jaime C. Pollos Arnel L. Jacob
Domingo Pondales Renato S. Lising
Eugenio Ramirez Wilfredo S. Lising
Lucien M. Respall Rogelio S. Lopena
Alvin C. Reyes Bernardito G. Loreja
Rizalina R. Reyes Ignacio E. Muñoz
Quirino Ronquillo Romeo C. Quintos
Avelino M. Roque Willafredo Dayrit Raymundo
Pedro L. Salgatar Virgilio L. Rosario
Rodolfo T. Sultan Joselito Santiago
Benedicto E. Torres Ernesto G. Sta. Maria
Sergio A. Ursolino Gavino U. Tuazon
Rogelio R. Valdez Elito S. Villanueva
Dionisio Bobongo Lamberto Q. Alcantara
Crisenciano Miranda Arturo P. Apilado
Ildefonso C. Molina Turiano V. Concepcion
Gorgonio C. Parala Domingo V. Dela Cruz
Virgilio Ricaza Eduardo R. Enguancho
Palconeri D. Banaag Melanio R. Esteron
Bayani S. Bracamante Santiago N. Galoso
Onofre De Rama Joveniano Hilado
Jose C. Melanes Eduardo Hipolito
Romeo I. Patag Romero M. Javier
Valerio A. Evangelista Valentino S. Jocson
Gilbert E. Ebrada Jose B. Lacson
Juanito P. Villarino Armando M. Magsino
Aristeo M. Bicol Avelino O. Nuqui
Quiterio R. Agudo Delmar F. Pineda
Marianito J. Alcantara Federico T. Quiman
Jose Arevalo Alberto M. Redaza
Ramon A. Arevalo Renosa Ronquillo
Jesus Baya Rodolfo Ronquillo
Guillermo Buenconsejo Antonio T. Valderama
Teresito A. Constantino Ramon Valderama
Eduardo A. Diaz Benigno N. Melendez
Emigdio Abarquez Claudio A. Modesto
Herbert Ayo Solomon Reyes
Mario Bataclan Isaias Talactac
Ricardo Ordonez William G. Taruc
Bernardino Robillos Oscar C. Calderon
Francisco Villaflores Pacifico P. Campano
Angel Villarba Eulalio G. Arguelles
Honesto Jardiniano Ben G. Belir
Juan Y. Olindo Cornelio L. Castillo
Hernani T. Victoriano Valeriano B. Francisco
Ubed B. Ello, Sr. Jaime L. Relosa
Ernesto V. Macaraig Alex Q. Villahermosa
Espiritu A. Munoz, Sr. Vivencio V. Abello, Jr.
Rodrigo E. Ocampo Renato C. Corcuera
Rodolfo V. Ramirez Emiliano B. Dela Cruz, Jr.
Ceferino Batitis Esteban B. Jose, Jr.
Augusto R. Bondoc Ricardo B. Martinez
Jaime C. Catli Bienvenido Vergara
Gerardo B. Limuaco, Jr. Pedro G. Cagatan
Macario S. Magsino Francisco Apolinario
Domingo B. Solano Miguel Abestano
Ricardo De Rama Prudencio Araullo
Arturo V. Araullo
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