Urbanes V Sec of Labor
Urbanes V Sec of Labor
Urbanes V Sec of Labor
SUPREME COURT
Manila
THIRD DIVISION
G.R. No. 122791
PLACIDO O. URBANES, JR., doing business under the name & style of
CATALINA SECURITY AGENCY, petitioner,
vs.
THE HONORABLE SECRETARY OF LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT and
SOCIAL SECURITY SYSTEM, respondents.
DECISION
CARPIO-MORALES, J.:
Before this Court is a Petition for Certiorari under Rule 65 of the Revised
Rules of Court assailing the June 22, 1995 Order of the Department of Labor
and Employment (DOLE) Secretary which set aside the September 16, 1994
Order of the Regional Director, National Capital Region (NCR).
The antecedent facts of the case are as follows:
Petitioner Placido O. Urbanes, Jr., doing business under the name and style
of Catalina Security Agency, entered into an agreement1 to provide security
services to respondent Social Security System (SSS).
During the effectivity of the agreement, petitioner, by letter of May 16,
1994,2 requested the SSS for the upward adjustment of their contract rate in
view of Wage Order No. NCR-03 which was issued by the Regional Tripartite
Wages and Productivity Board-NCR pursuant to Republic Act 6727 otherwise
known as the Wage Rationalization Act, the pertinent provision of which wage
order reads:
Section 9. In the case of contracts for construction projects and for
security, janitorial and similar services, the prescribed amount set forth
herein for covered workers shall be borne by the principals or the
clients of the construction/service contractors and the contract shall be
deemed amended accordingly. In the event, however, that the principal
or client failed to pay the prescribed increase, the construction/service
SSS.17
Petitioner asserts that the Secretary of Labor does not have jurisdiction to
review appeals from decisions of the Regional Directors in complaints filed
under Article 129 of the Labor Code18 which provides:
ART. 129. RECOVERY OF WAGES, SIMPLE MONEY CLAIMS AND OTHER
BENEFITS. Upon complaint of any interested party, the regional director of
the Department of Labor and Employment or any duly authorized hearing
officers of the Department is empowered, through summary proceeding and
after due notice, to hear and decide any matter involving the recovery of
wages and other monetary claims and benefits, including legal interest,
owing to an employee or person employed in domestic or household service
or househelper under this Code, arising from employer-employee relations:
Provided, That such complaint does not include a claim for reinstatement;
Provided, further, That the aggregate money claim of each employee or
househelper does not exceed Five Thousand pesos (P5,000.00). The
regional director or hearing officer shall decide or resolve the complaint within
thirty (30) calendar days from the date of the filing of the same. Any sum thus
recovered on behalf of any employee or househelper pursuant to this Article
shall be held in a special deposit account by, and shall be paid on order of,
the Secretary of Labor and Employment or the regional director directly to the
employee or househelper concerned. Any such sum not paid to the employee
or househelper, because he cannot be located after diligent and reasonable
effort to locate him within a period of three (3) years, shall be held as a
special fund of the Department of Labor and Employment to be used
exclusively for the amelioration and benefit of workers.
Any decision or resolution of the regional director or officer pursuant to this
provision may be appealed on the same grounds provided in Article 223 of
this Code, within five (5) calendar days from receipt of a copy of said decision
or resolution, to the National Labor Relations Commission which shall resolve
the appeal within ten (10) calendar days from submission of the last pleading
required or allowed under its rules.
x x x (Emphasis supplied).
Petitioner thus contends that as the appeal of SSS was filed with the wrong
forum, it should have been dismissed.19
The SSS, on the other hand, contends that Article 128, not Article 129, is
applicable to the case. Article 128 provides:
ART. 128. VISITORIAL AND ENFORCEMENT POWERS
xxx
(b) Notwithstanding the provisions of Article 129 and 217 of this Code to the
contrary, and in cases where the relationship of employer-employee still
1awphi1.nt
The records do not show that petitioner has paid the mandated increases to
the security guards. The security guards in fact have filed a complaint 26 with
the NLRC against petitioner relative to, among other things, underpayment of
wages.
WHEREFORE, the present petition is hereby DISMISSED, and petitioners
complaint before the Regional Director is dismissed for lack of jurisdiction
and cause of action.
SO ORDERED.
Puno, (Chairman), Panganiban, Sandoval-Gutierrez and Corona, JJ., concur.
Footnotes
1
Rollo at 127-133.
Id. at 101-103.
Id. at 105.
Id. at 107.
Id. at 109-116.
Id. at 172-180.
Id. at 118-126.
10
Rollo at 234-241.
11
Id. at 243-246.
12
Id. at 299-301.
13
Id. at 303-314.
14
Id. at 308-309.
15
Id. at 366-371.
16
Id. at 373-375.
17
Id. at 14.
18
Id. at 510.
19
Id. at 17.
21
Ibid.
22
Rollo at 114.
23
Supra.
24
Supra.
25
Id. at 50.
26
Records at 389-397.