Labor Standards Reviewer
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PRELIMINARY TITLE
Chapter I
GENERAL PROVISIONS
Article 1: NAME OF DECREE
Article 2: DATE OF EFFECTIVITY
COMMENTS AND CASES
1.
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Act 2549 which prohibited payment of wages
in non-cash form
RA 1054 which required emergency medical
treatment for employees
11.
CA 444 or the Eight Hour Labor Law
CA 103 which created the Court of Industrial
Relations (pre-NLRC)
PD 21 which created the NLRC
RA 875 or the Industrial Peace Act/ Magna
Carta of Labor
RA 946 Blue Sunday Law
RA 1052 or the Termination Pay Law
SIGNIFICANCE OF FOREGOING DECISIONS
Where are labor statutes are based upon or
patterned after statutes in foreign
jurisdiction, the decisions of high courts in
those jurisdictions should receive the
careful attention of the SC in the application
of our own law.
RELATED LAWS
10.1.
The Civil Code
Labor relations not merely contractual, but
must yield to the common good.
Prohibition against involuntary servitude (Art.
1703)
Also contains provisions regarding wages,
househelpers and liabilities of employers.
10.2.
The Revised Penal Code
Punishes the use of violence or threats by
either employer or employee (Art. 289)
9.
10.
10.3.
Special Laws
SSS law, GSIS law, Agrarian Reform Law, 13th
month Pay Law, etc.
INTERNATIONAL ASPECT
On June 15, 1948, the Philippines became a
member of the International Labor
Organization (ILO), which is the UN
specialized agency which seeks the promotion
of social justice and internationally
recognized human and labor rights.
The ILO formulates international labor
standards in the form of Conventions and
Recommendations setting minimum standards
of basic labor rights.
An essential characteristic of ILO is
tripartism, that is, it is composed not onl of
government representatives but also of
employers and workers organizations.
11.1.
International Commitments
By being an ILO member, the country thereby
subscribes t the fundamental principles on
which the ILO is based. Also, as an ILO
member, the Philippines imbibes the
obligation of the ILO to further programs that
will achieve ILO objectives.
11.2.
ILO Core Conventions
The eight core conventions are as follows:
Forced Labor Convention (1930); Freedom of
Association and Protection of the Right to
Organize Convention (1948); Freedom to
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1.
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Chapter II
EMANCIPATION OF TENANTS1
Article
Article
Article
Article
Article
7: STATEMENT OF OBJECTIVES
8: TRANFER OF LANDS TO TENTN-WORKERS
9: DETERMINATION OF LAND VALUE
10: CONDITION OF OWNERSHIP
11: IMPMENTING AGENCY
COMMENTS AND CASES
1.
2.
LEGISLATIVE HISTORY
There is an acute imbalance in the distribution of
land among our people. Hence, the Constitution of
1987 adopted a whole article containing provisions
for the uplift of the common people, thus: The
State shall, by law, undertake an agrarian reform
program founded on the right of farmers and regular
farmworkers, who are landless, to own directly or
collectively the land they till or, in the case of other
farmworkers, to receive a just share of the fruits
thereof.
SHARE TENANCY ABOLISHED
RA 3844 abolished and outlawed share tenancy and
put in its stead the agricultural leasehold system.
RA 6389, amending RA 3844, declared share tenancy
as contrary to law and public policy.
The phasing out of share tenancy was the first step
towards the ultimate status of owner-cultivator, a
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COMMENTS
LOCAL EMPLOYMENT
The Bureau of Employment Services has been
replaced by the Bureau of Local Employment (BLE)
through EO 797 (May 1, 1982)
1.1.The PESO
Public Employment Service Office
Intended to serve as employment service
and information center in its area of
operation. It regularly obtains a list of job
vacancies from employers, publicizes them,
invites and evaluates applicants, and refers
them for probable hiring.
COMMENTS
AUTHORIZED ENTITIES
Based on the Rules Implementing the Code, the
following entities are authorized to recruit and place
workers for local or overseas employment:
a. public employment offices
b. Private recruitment entities
c. Private employment agencies
d. Shipping or manning agents or
representatives
e. POEA
f. Construction contractors if authorized
to operate by DOLE and the
Construction Industry Authority
g. Members of the diplomatic corps
although hirings done by them have
to be processed through the POEA
h. Other persons or entities as may be
authorized by the DOLE Secretary.
Article 17: OVERSEAS EMPLOYMENT DEVELOPMENT
BOARD
COMMENTS AND CASES
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1.
2.
3.
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Among the principal functions of the POEA are the
formulation, implementation, and monitoring of the
overseas employment of the Filipino workers and the
protection of their rights to fair and equitable
employment practices.
Overseas Filipino Worker (OFW) is understood as a
Filipino worker who is to be engaged, is engaged, or
has been engaged in a remunerated activity in a
country of which he/she is not a legal resident.
OFWs are classified by DOLE as either land-based or
sea-based.
4.1.POEA Rules (2002)
REGULATORY FNCTION OF POEA
POEA regulates the private sector participation in
the recruitment and overseas placement of workers
through its licensing ad registration system.
ADJUDICATORY FUNCTIONS OF POEA
Before the passage of RA 8042, POEA had original
and exclusive jurisdiction to hear and decide the ff
cases:
a. Recruitment violation and related
cases consisting of all preemployment
cases which are administrative in
character, involving or arising out of
recruitment laws, rules and
regulations, including money claims
therefrom or violations of the
conditions for issuance of license to
recruit workers.
5.
6.
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7.
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10.
i. Prostitution;
j. Vandalism;
k. Gunrunning or possession of deadly
weapons;
l. Unjust refusal to depart for a
worksite after all documents have
been prepared;
m. Violations of the law and sacred
practices of the host country and
unjustified breach of the employment
contract.
OUTSIDE POEA JURISDICTION
The POEA has no jurisdiction to hear and
decide a claim for enforcement of a foreign
judgment. Such a claim must be brought
before the regular courts. This is because the
POEA is not a court, it is only an
administrative agency.
10.1.
No Jurisdiction Over Torts
Intention must be to seek and claim
protection under the Labor Code and not the
Civil Code. In the case at bar, the items
demanded are not labor benefits such as
wages, overtime pay or separation pay, but
are items claimed as natural consequences of
his dismissal (which he denominates as
damages.) POEA has no jurisdiction.
Article 18: BAN ON DIRECT-HIRING
COMMENTS
Direct hiring of Filipino workers by a foreign
employer is not allowed except direct hiring by
members of he diplomatic corps and others
mentioned in this article. Also excepted are name
hirees or those individual workers who are able to
secure contracts for overseas employment on their
own efforts and representations without the
assistance or participation of any agency.
The Office of Emigrant Affairs has been abolished
and its pertinent functions were transferred to the
Commission on Filipinos Overseas (CFO) by Batasang
Pambansa Blg. 79.
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3.
4.
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COMMENTS
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COMMENTS
The POEA rules also disqualify persons with
derogatory records such as those convicted for
illegal recruitment or other crimes involving moral
turpitude, an official or employee of DOLE, POEA,
OWWA, DFA and other government agencies directly
involved in the implementation of RA 8042 or any of
their relatives within the fourth civil degree.
COMMENTS
The required capitalization, according to POEA rules,
is a minimum of two million pesos in case of single
proprietorship or partnership and a minimum paid-up
capital of the same amount for a corporation.
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CHARGEABLE FEES
Unless otherwise provided, the principal shall be
liable to pay for the ff:
a. visa fee;
b. airfare;
c. POEA processing fee; and
d. OWWA membership fee.
A land-based agency may charge and collect from its
hired workers a placement fee in an amount
equivalent to one month salary, exclusive of
documentation costs. These documentation costs
shall include expenses for the ff:
a. Passport;
b. NBI/ Police/ Barangay clearance;
c. Authentication;
d. Birth Certificate;
e. Medicare;
f. Trade test, if necessary;
g. Inoculation, when required;
h. Medical Examination fees.
The abovementioned placement and documentation
costs are the only authorized payments that may be
collected from a hired worker. No other charges in
whatever form, manner or purpose, shall be imposed
on and be paid by the worker without prior approval
by the POEA.
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2.
3.
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Minister shall order the search of the office or premises
and seizure of documents, paraphernalia, properties
and other implements used in illegal recruitment
activities and the closure of companies, establishments
and entities found to be engaged in the recruitment of
workers for overseas employment without having been
licensed or authorized to do so.
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more persons conspiring and/or confederating with one
another. It is deemed committed in large scale if
committed against three (3) or more persons
individually or as a group.
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Art. 39 - PENALTIES3
(A) The penalty of life imprisonment and a fine of One
Hundred Thousand Pesos (P100,000) shall be
imposed if illegal recruitment constitutes economic
sabotage as defined herein;
(B) Any licensee or holder of authority found violating
or causing another to violate any provision of this
Title or its implementing rules and regulations shall
upon conviction thereof, suffer the penalty of
imprisonment of not less than two years nor more
than five years or a fine not less than P10,000 nor
3 Amended by RA 8042, Section 7
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(6) YEARS AND ONE (1) DAY BUT NOT MORE THA
TWELVE (12) YEARS and A FINE OF NOT LESS THAN
TWO HUNDRED THOUSAND PESOS (P200,000.00)
NOR MORE THAN FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND PESOS
(P500,000.00)
The penalty of LIFE IMPRISONMENT and a FINE
NOT LESS THAN FIVE HUNDRED THOUSAND PESOS
(P500,000.00) NOR MORE THAN ONE MILLION
PESOS (P1,000,000.00) shall be imposed if IR
CONSTITUTES ECONOMIC SABOTAGE
Provided however, That the MAXIMUM PENALTY
shall be imposed if the PERSON ILLEGALLY
RECRUITED is LESS THAN 18 YEARS OF AGE or
committed by a non-licensee or non-holder of
authority.
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(a) After the issuance of the employment permit, the
alien shall not transfer to another job or change his
employer without prior approval from the Secretary
of DOLE
(b) Any non-resident alien who shall take up
employment in violation of provision of this Title
and its IRRs shall be punished in accordance with
Arts. 2894 and 290 of the Labor Code.
In addition, the alien worker shall be subject to
deportation after service of his sentence.
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BOOK TWO
HUMAN RESOURCES DEVELOPMENT
TITLE I:
MANPOWER DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM
CHAPTER 1
NATIONAL POLICIES AND ADMINISTRATIVE MACHINERY
FOR THEIR IMPLEMENTATION
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under this Chapter; c.) An Apprenticeable Occupation
means any trade, form of employment or occupation
which requires more than three (3) months of practical
training on the job supplemented by related theoretical
instruction; (see R.A. 7796) d.) Apprenticeship
Agreement is an employment contract wherein the
employer binds himself to train the apprentice and the
apprentice in turn accepts the terms of training.
Art. 59 Qualifications of an Apprentice
To qualify as an apprentice, a person shall:
(a) Be at least fourteen (14) years of
age; (but under the IRR, its 15 years)
(b) Possess vocational aptitude and
capacity for appropriate tests; and
(c) Possess the ability to comprehend
and follow oral and written
instructions.
Trade and industry associations may recommend to the
Secretary
of
Labor
appropriate
educational
requirements for different occupations.
Art. 60 Employment of Apprentices
Apprenticeship is the arrangement and the period
when an upcoming worker undergoes hands-on
training, more or less formal, to learn the ropes of a
skilled job. It is usually the point of entry to the
world of work.
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respondents assertion that he was hired not
as an apprentice but as a delivery boy
deserves credence.
Filamer
Christian
Institue
v.
Hon.
Intermediate Appellate Court, et a, (G.R. no.
75112) August 17, 1992
Section 14, Rule X, Book III of the IRR of the
Labor Code was promulgated by the Secretary
of Labor and Employment only for the
purpose of administering and enforcing the
provisions of the Labor Code on conditions of
employment. Particularly, Rule X of Book III
provides guidelines on the matter by which
the powers of the Labor Secretary shall be
exercised; on what records should be kept or
maintained, etc Rule X is merely a guide to
the enforcement of the substantive law on
labor. The case does not deal with a labor
dispute on conditions of employment
between an alleged employer and employee
reliance of petitioner on the IRR is misplaced.
An IRR on labor cannot be used by an
employer as a shield to avoid liability under
the substantive provisions of the Civil Code.
Chapter II LEARNERS
Art. 73 Definition
Learners are persons hired as trainees in semi-skilled
and other industrial occupations which are nonapprenticeable and which may be learned through
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practical training on the job in a relatively short period
of time which shall not exceed three (3) months.
Art. 74 When Learners may be hired
Learners may be hired when:
a.) no experienced workers are available,
b.) the employment of learners is necessary to
prevent curtailment of opportunities; and
c.) the employment does not create unfair
competition in terms of labor costs or impair
or lower working standards.
Art. 75 Learnership Agreement
Any employer desiring to employ learners shall enter
into a learnership agreement with them, which
agreement shall include:
a.) the names and addresses of the learners;
b.) the duration of the learnership period, which
shall not exceed three (3) months;
c.) the wages or salary rates of the learners
which shall begin at not less than seventy-five
(75%) percent of the applicable legal
minimum wage; and
d.) a commitment to employ the learners if they
so desire, as regular employees upon
completion of the learnership. All learners
who have been allowed or suffered to work
during the first two (2) months shall be
deemed regular employees if training is
terminated by the employer before the end of
Learnership v. Apprenticeship:
BOTH: Training periods for jobs requiring skills
that can be acquired through actual work
experience; both learner and apprentice may be
paid wages twenty-five (25%) percent lower than
the applicable legal minimum wage
Learnership
- training in semi-skilled job;
industrial occupations that require
training for less than 3 months
- job is non-apprenticeable because its
practical skills can be learned in 3 (not
6) months
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Apprenticeship
- training in highly-skilled
found in highly-technical
training period exceeds 3 mo
- minimum period is 6 months
- no commitment to
apprentice even after comp
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Chapter 1
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HOURS OF WORK
Art. 82 Coverage of Title 1
Employees in all establishments and undertakings
whether for profit or not BUT NOT TO govt
employees, managerial employees [those whose
primary duty consists of the management of the
establishment in which they are employed or of a
dept or subdivision thereof, and to other officers or
members of the managerial staff], field personnel
[refer to non-agricultural employees who regularly
perform their duties away from the principal place
of business or branch office of the employer and
whose actual hours of work in the field cannot be
determined with reasonable certainty], members of
the family who are dependent on him for support,
domestic helpers, persons in the personal service of
another, workers who are paid by results
Employer-employee must exist; existence is
determined by law, not by contract
Elements of employment relationship
(4-fold test)
1. selection and engagement of the
employee
2. payment of wages
3. power of dismissal
4. employers power to control the
employee with respect to the
means and methods by which
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5. to prevent serious obstruction ot prejudice to
the business or operations of the employer
6. to
avail
of
favorable
weather
or
environmental conditions where performance
or quality of work is dependent thereon
Art. 90 Computation of Additional Compensation
regular wage shall include cash wage only, w/o
deduction on account of facilities provided by
employer
Chapter II
WEEKLY REST PERIODS
Art. 91 Right to weekly rest day
rest period of not less than 24 hours after every 6
consecutive normal work days
Art. 92 When employer may require work on a rest
day
1. necessary to prevent loss of life or
property or in case of imminent danger to
public safety due to impending emergency
caused by accidents, fire, flood, typhoon,
earthquake, epidemic, or other disaster or
calamity
2. urgent work to be performed on the
machines, ect. In order to avoid loss or
damage to employer
10 regular holidays
1. New Year (Jan.1)
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2. Maundy Thursday
3. Good Friday
4. Araw ng Kagitingan (Apr 9)
5. Labor Day (May 1)
6. Independence Day (Jun 12)
7. National Heroes Day (Last Sunday of Aug)
8. Bonifacio Day (Nov 30)
9. Christmas Day (Dec 25)
10.Rizal Day (Dec 30)
11.Eidul Fitras - 1st day after 30-day fasting period
12.Eidul Adha regl holiday in the ARMM
Muslim Holidays
shall be observed in the provinces of
Basilan, Lanao del Norte/ Sur,
Maguindanao, North Cotabato, Sultan
Kudarat, Sulu, Tawi-tawi, Zamboanga del
Norte/Sur, cities of Cotabato, Iligan,
Marawi, Pagadian, and Zamboanga, and in
such other Muslim provinces and cities as
may be created. Upon proclamation by the
President, Muslim holidays may also be
officially observed in other provinces and
cities
PP 1198 all private corps, offices, and
agencies operating within the provinces
and cities enumerated herein shall observe
the legal holidays as proclaimed, provided,
that all Muslim employees working outside
of the Muslim provinces and cities shall be
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
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himself from work on the day immediately preceding
the 1st holiday, unless he works on the 1st holiday, in
which case, he is entitled to his holiday pay on the
2nd holiday
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the husband is cohabiting; delivery includes
childbirth, miscarriage, or abortion
shall not exceed 7 calendar days for each
delivery
entitled to full pay
non-commutation of benefits
Requisites:
1. he is an employee at the time of delivery
of his child
2. he is cohabiting with his spouse at the
time she gives birth or suffers a
miscarriage
3. he has applied for paternity leave
4. hi wife has given birth or suffered a
miscarriage
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Art. 97 - Definitions:
a. person
b. employer
c. employee
d. agriculture
e. employ
f. wage
g. fair and reasonable value
from
supplements
supplements
constitute
extra
remuneration or special privileges or
benefits given to or received by the
laborers over and above their ordinary
earnings or wages.
Facilities items of expense
necessary for the laborers and his familys
existence and subsistence so that by
express provision of law, they form part of
the wage and when furnished by the
employer are deductible therefrom
HOWEVER, re: meals and snacks
deduction cannot be more than 70% of the
value of the meals and snacks, provided
that such deduction must be authorized in
writing by the employee; remaining 30%
has to be subsidized by the employer
Lodging facility value is determined to be
the cost of operation and maintenance,
including adequate depreciation plus
reasonable allowance
Requirements for deducting value of
facilities (Mabeza v NLRC)
1. proof must be shown that such
facilities are customarily furnished
by the trade
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SALARY denotes a
higher degree of employment, or a superior grade
of services, and implies a position or office
- suggestive of a larger and more permanent
or fixed compensation for more important
office
- excludes allowances
commissions and
computation of
GRATUITY something
given freely, or without recompense; a gift;
something voluntarily given in return for a favor
or services; a bounty; a tip
- that which is paid to the beneficiary for
past services rendered purely out of the
generosity of the giver or grantor
- not intended to pay a worker for actual
services rendered
days labor
Agricultural work
work on the soil and its harvests
if highly mechanized and carries on processing
activities not merely incidental to purely farming
operations, deemed industrial employees
nature of work classifies a worker
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trading and services, whose total assets
including those arising from loans but
exclusive of the land on which the particular
business entitys office, plant and equipment
are situated, shall not be more than P3M.
7. wage orders issued by the wage boards under
A 99 and 122
Chapter 2 Minimum Wage Rates
Art. 99 - Regional Minimum Wages
Agri and non-agri prescribed by the Regional
Tripartite Wages and Productivity Boards
MINIMUM WAGE
lowest wage rate fixed by law that
an employer can pay his worker
adopted to reduce the evils of the
sweating system
raises standard of competition
among employers
employers ability to pay is
immaterial; cant exempt himself to pay
minimum wages
acceptance by an employee of the
wages paid him without objection does not
give rise to estoppel precluding him from
suing for the difference between the
amount received and the amount he
elimination
or
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ex: rank-and-file to supervisory lose overtime
pay and other benefits under A 82-96 but A 100 is
not violated (Natl Sugar Refineries Corp v NLRC)
5. contingent or conditional benefits/bonus
bonus is an amount granted and paid to an
employee for his industry and loyalty which
contributed to the success of the employers
business and made possible the realization of
profits; bonus is not a demandable and
enforceable obligation BUT it is when made part
of the wage or salary or compensation
equity or long practice as basis of bonus even
if bonus is not demandable; long and regular
concession; fixed hope
services rendered as basis of bonus right is
not defeated by a release and quitclaim upon
termination (Marcos v NLRC redundancy
benefits))
reduction of bonus not diminution of benefits;
no profit, no bonus. Granting of bonus is basically
a management prerogative (Traders Royal Bank v
NLRC)
bonus as productivity incentives; employees
share is in the nature of salary bonus
proportionate to increases in current productivity
over the average for the preceding 3 consecutive
years; bonus is not gratuity but the computed
result of joint planning and effort; claimable only
on the basis of predefined output level
PD 851 13TH MONTH PAY
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include
all
remunerations or earnings paid by
an employer to an employee for
services rendered but may not
include cost-of-living allowances,
profit-sharing payments and all
allowances and monetary benefits
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an
employee
who
has
resigned or whose services
were terminated at any time
before the time for payment
of the 13th month pay is
entitled to this monetary
benefit in proportion to the
length of time he worked
during the year, reckoned
from the time he started
working during the calendar
year up to the time of his
resignation or termination
from service (Intl School of
Speech v NLRC)
distressed employer may be
exempt from paying the 13th
month pay only upon prior
authorization from Labor Sec
(Dentech Manufacturing Corp
v NLRC)
difference of opinion on how
to compute the 13th month
pay does not justify a strike
nonpayment of 13th month
pay is not an issue of unfair
labor practice but one of
money claim
PD 851 only applies to private
employers
and
their
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employees; no intention to
cover persons working in the
govt service (Alliance of Govt
Workers v Minister of Labor
and Employment)
Art. 101 Payment by Results
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1. holiday pay
2. 13th month pay (if he has rendered at least
1 month work or service during the
calendar year)
Variant Jurisprudence on
Piece-rate workers entitlement to statutory
benefits
a. Makati Haberdashery v NLRC
Held:
- workers are regular employees
although paid on piece-rate basis
- entitled to minimum wage
- as regular employees, they can
claim cost-living allowances, 13th
month pay
- not entitled to service incentive
leave pay and holiday pay because
they fall under one of the
exceptions stated in Section 1(d),
rule 5, Implementing Regulations,
Book 3, Labor Code for being paid
at a fixed amount for performing
work
irrespective
of
time
consumed in the performance
thereof
b. Labor Congress v NLRC
Held:
- piece-rate employees are entitled
to night shift differential, holiday
pay, service incentive leave,
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exempted from paying the 13th
month pay
- Entitled to overtime pay because
respondent company did not
allege adherence to the standards
set forth in Sec 8, Rule 7, Book 3
Summation
of
benefits
payable to Piece-rate workers
1. minimum wage
2. service incentive leave of 5 days with pay
3. night differential pay
4. holiday pay
5. meal and rest periods
6. overtime pay (conditional)
7. premium pay (conditional)
8. 13th month pay
9. other benefits granted by law, by individual or
collective agreement or company policy or
practice
IF output rates conform with the standards
prescribed by the Labor Code, employer is not
required to grant the piece-rate workers the
benefits under the Rule on Hours of Work nor
to pay the wage differentials if their daily
earnings do not amount to the applicable
statutory minimum daily wage.
Chapter III Payment of Wages
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1. Contracting and Subcontracting in general
Co. A engaged in resto business concludes contract
with const co. B which in turn hires the services of
another contractor C to handle certain aspect of
construction project. B & C hires people.
GR Employer-employee relationship (see Art 82)
Bet B and his workers
Bet C and his workers
A is not an employer to B or C
to their respective groups
of workers
E employment arrangement unlawful
A is indirect employer
D.O. 18-02
Contracting or subcontracting as an arrangement
whereby a principal agrees to put out or farm out
with a contractor or subcon the eprformance or
completion of a specific job, work or service within
a definite or predetermined period, regardless of
whether such job, work or service is to be performed
or completed within or outside the premises of the
principal.
4 features of legit contracting
i. Parties principal enters into a contract with
subcon.
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contribution to, the amounts which the bank will
have to pay to Orpiada.
Consequence of LoC Agency hired employee
becomes entitled to benefits under CBA of
client company
Tabas v. California Manufacturing Co (1989)
The existence of an employer-empoyee relation is a
question of law and being such, cannot be made the
subject of agreement.
Employee is reinstated with the full status and rights
of regular employees; all benefits as may be
provided by existing CBA or other relations or by law.
3. Summary of prohibited labor contracting
4. 2nd set of prohibitions Arrangements that violate
public policy (DO 18-02)
Not LoC but are likewise prohibited because they
contravene public policy:
Prohibitions:
a) Contracting not done in good faith and not
justified by the exigencies of the business and
the same results in the termination of regular
employees and reduction of work hours or
reduction or splitting of the bargaining unit
b) Contracting with cabo
c) Contracting with in house agency
d) Contracting bec of strike or lockout
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Liability is immediately and directly imposed upon
the principal, as if directly hired by the employer.
(Broadway Motors v. NLRC)
Rosewood Processing
If the liability is in the nature of a penalty, such as
backwages and separation pay because of a wrongful
dismissal, the liabilithy should be solely that of the
contractor if there is no proof that the principal
conspired with the contractor in committing the
wrongful dismissal of the contractors worker.
7. Legitimate Contracting Independent
Contractor/Job Contracting
Legitimate when the ff circumstances concur:
i)
Contractor carries on a distinct and
independent business & undertakes to
perform job, work or service on its own
account and under its own resp, accdg to its
own manner and method and free from the
control and direction of the principal in all
matter connected with the perf of work
except as to the results thereof
ii)
Contractor has substantial capital or
investment
iii)
Contractual agreement assures contractual
employees entitlement to all labor,
occupational safety and health standards,
right to self organization, security of tenure,
social and welfare benefits.
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Dealership
Mafinco Trading Corp v. Ople
Where the peddler shall have the right to employ his
own workers, shall post a bond to protect the
manufacturer against losses, shall be responsible for
damages caused to 3rd persons, shall obtain
necessary licenses and permits and bear the
expenses incurred in the sale of soft drinks is not a
contract of employment. independent
contractors.
Commission Agent
Insular Life v. NLRC
Under the contract, Basiao is not an employee of
Insular life but a commission agent, an independent
contractor whose claim for unpaid commissions
should have been litigated in an ordinary civil
action.
Messengerial/Janitorial Service
Rhone-Poulenc Phils v. NLRC
The respondents themselves admitted that they
were selected and hired by CSI and were assigned to
Union Carbide. [Union Carbide was bought by
Rhoune Poulenc.]
The janitors drew their salaries from CSI which
exercised control over them. Moreover, CSI had the
power to assign its janitors to various clients and to
pull out.
Independent Operator
Ushio v. NLRC
Severino is one of those independent, free lance
operators who offer services to customers of auto
parts shops along Banawe.
The power to control the employees conduct is
absent, with respect to the means and methods by
which his work was to be accomplished.
Private respodent was free to offer his services to
other stores along Banawe.
Judicial Notice of Job Contracting
Neri v. NLRC
Judicial notice of general practice adopted in govt &
privateinstitutions of hiring independent
contractings to perform special services janitorial,
security or even technical or other specific services.
8. A manpower company may be a LoC in one case
but an independent contractor in another
Coca Cola Bottlers v. Hingpit
In 1st case, it failied to prove that Lipercon has
substantial capital, investment, tools, etc. In
present case, Lipercon established its character as
an independent contractor.
Escario v. NLRC
In earlier case of Tabas v. CMC, Livi was determined
to be an LoC. But reliance of Tabas case is
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misplaced because Livi was a mere placement
agency that had simply supplied CMC with manpower
necessaru tp carry oiut the companys merchandizing
activity.
But in this case, applying the 4-fold test in
determining employer-employee relationship, the
status of Admark as the true employer of the
petitioners is further established.
9. Extent of Principals liability in legit contracting
Contractor considered to be the employer of the
contractual employee for purposes of enforcing the
provisions of the Labor cCode and other Social
legislation. (DO 18-02)
The principal shall be solidarily liable with the
contractor in the event of any violation of the
provisions of the Labor Code, including failure to pay
wages. (DO 18-02).
9.1 As to payment of wages/money claims
When a contractor fails to pay the wages of his
employees in accordance with the Labor Code, the
employer who contracted out the job becomes
jointly and severally liable with the contractor to
the extent of the work performed under the
contract. as if such employer were the employer
of the contractors employee. (PBCOM v. NLRC)
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c) Social security and welfare benefits
d) Self organizations, CBA, peaceful concerted
action
e) Security of Tenure
10.1 Security of Tenure
In case of pre-termination of contract bet principal
& contractor governed by applicable laws
Expiration of contract bet principal & contractor
not entitled to separation pay
11.Registration of Contractors
Registration of contractor with DOLE regional office.
An unregistered contractor is presumed to be a
labor-only contractor.
Art. 110 Worker Preference in case of bankruptcy
Worker preference in case of bankruptcy
Prereq- declaration of bankruptcy or judicial liquidation
of employers business
Unpaid wages earned prior to declaration/liquidation
shall be given 1st preference for payment, even ahead of
claims of govt.
Preference even to claims of govt for taxes (DBP v.
NLRC)
Coverage of Preference
Termination pay, separation pay, all other monetary
claims.
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c. Art 1707 CC: Labors wages shall be a lien
on goods manufactured or work done.
d. Art 1708 CC: wages not subject to
execution or attachment, except for debts
incurred for food, shelter, clothing and
medical attenda.ce
e. Art 1709 CC: Employer shall neither seize
nor retain any tool or other articles
belonging to the laborer.
Art. 113. Wage Deduction
Wage deduction
Authorized deductions by law:
a. Value of means and other facilities
b. Premium paid by employer where insured with
employees consent
c. Union to check off recognized by employer/
authorized in writing by indiv employee
d. Employee is indebted to employer, due &
demandable
e. Subject to exection for debts incurred for
food, shelter clothing and medical attendance
f. Withholding tax
g. Salary deductions cooperative
h. SSS, Medicare, Pag-ibig
Payment to 3rd person
Authorized in writing by employee
Employer agrees to make deduction
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Art. 118 Retaliatory Measures
Are retaliatory measures (Art 118) striakeable?
Acts under Art 118 are broad, and can lead to a ULP
case if employer retaliated against testifying
employee. If ULP, striekable.
Reprisal for Silent Testimony
Art 118 equally applies to implicit or unspoken
testimony by an employee.
Art. 119. False Reporting
Chapter V. Wage studies, wage agreements and
wage determination
Art. 120 Creation of National Wages and Productivity
Commission
National Wages and Productivity Commission created by
RA 6727.
Art. 121. Powers and Functions of the Commission
Art. 122. Creation of the RTWPB
Regional Tripartite Wages and Producticity Boards
Composed of:
DOLE Regional Director
NEDA Regional Director
DTI Regional Director
2 workers
2 employers
While the RTWPB has the power to issue wage orders
under Art 122 (b) of the Labor Code, such orders are
subject to the guidelines prescribed by the National
Wages and Productivity Commission (NWPC), who has
the power to prescribe the rules and guidelines for the
determination of appropriate wages in the country.
Art. 123 Wage Order
Wage Order
Takes effect after complete publication in at least 1
newspaper of gen circulation in region.
Not be disturbed for a period of 12 months from
effectivity.
Public Hearing reqd
Wage increase cannot be retroactive to effectivity of
wage order (Cagayan Sugar Milling v. Secretrary of
Labor)
Art. 124. Standards/Criteria for Min Wage Fixing
Standards/Criteria for Min wage fixing
a. Living Wage
b. Consumer price index
c. Cost of living
d. Needs of workers and their families
e. Induce industries to invest in
countryside
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f.
g.
h.
i.
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upon effectivity of wage order, exclusive of other wafe
related benefits.
Labor Standards Cases
DOLE Regional Director exercises both visitorial and
enforcement power over labor standard cases
emplowered to adjudicate money claims, provided
employer-employee relationship exists and finding are
not contested by employer (Maternity Childrens
Hospital v. sec of labor)
Art. 129. Recovery of wages, simple money claims
and other benefits
Money claims arising from complaint/routine inspection
Regional director refers case to Labor Standards and
Welfare Officer for field inspection. LSWO to submit
report to Regional Director through the Chief of the
Labor Standards Enforcement Division (LSED) with 24 hrs
after investigation or within a reasonable period as
determined by Regional Director.
Restitution
Plant Level restitution may be effected for money
claims not exceeding P50T. Report submitted to
Regional Director for verification and confirmation.
Compromise agreement
In writing, signed by parties in the presence of Regional
Director or his duly authorized rep.
Hearing
Where no proof of compliance submitted by employer
after 7 days from receipt of inspection, Regional
director to summon employer & complainants to a
summary investigation.
Enforcement under Art 128 are beyond injunctive power
of an inferior court.
Appeal
Appealable to DOLE sec. Then to CA through certiorari.
DO 57-04 New system for enforcement of labor laws
3 approaches
(1) self-assessment voluntary compliance applicable
for shops >= 200 workers or those with CBA
(2) Inespection 10 to 199 workers; hazardous,
construction projects; labor standards complaints
(3) advisory - < 10 workers; micro business enterprises;
not punitive; assistance to increase productivity;
relaxed
DOLE may delegate to Lgu the inspection of safety (ex
boiler).
Title III Working Conditions for Special Groups of
employees
Chapter I Employment of Women
Nightwork prohibition (Art 130)
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Exceptions (Art 131)
Most call centers are exempt DOLE Secretary
exemption (under Art 131 (g))
Art. 132 Facilities for Women
Art. 133. Maternity Leave (obsolete)
Maternity leave benefits (now under SSS law)
Pre-req: at least 3 monthly contributions in 12 month
period immediately preceding semester of childbirth or
miscarriage:
60 days salary credit
78 days in case of caesarian delivery
Paternity Leave (RA 8187) legit married, living with
spouse
Maternity leave benefits apply to married or unmarried
women.
Art. 134. Family Planning Services; Incentives for
Family Planning
Art. 135. Discrimination Prohibited
Discrimination prohibited
solely on account of her sex
RA 7192 provides that the state recognizes the role of
women in nation-bldg and shall ensure the fundamental
equality before the law of women and men. The State
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Any woman working in any night club, cocktail lounce,
massage clinic, bar or similar establishment, under the
effective control of the employer for a substantial
period of time condiered employee of such
establishment
Zialcita v. PAL (1977) OP decision
We cannot agree to the respondent PALs proposition
that termination from employment of flight attendants
on account of marriage is a fair and reasonable standard
designed for their own health, safety, protection and
welfare, as no basis has been laid therefore. Actually,
respondent claims that its concern is not so much
against the continued employment of the flight
attendant merely by reason of marriage but rather on
the consequence of marriage pregnancy. Xxx The
sweeping intendment of the law, be it on special or
ordinary occupations is reflected in the whole text and
supported by Art 135 that speaks of nondiscrimination
on the employment of women.
PT&T v. NLRC
Similar to the Zialcita case except that the employer
did not admit that the employee was dismissed because
she was married. The cause of the dismissal, the
employer insisted, was her dishonesty in stating in the
job application that she was single though in fact she
was not.
PT&Ts policy that married women are not qualified for
employment in PT&T is not only in derogation of the
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Chapter I
MEDICAL AND DENTAL SERVICES
Article 156:
Article 157:
SERVICES
Article 158:
REQUIRED
Article 159:
Article 160:
Article 161:
FIRST-AID TREATMENT
EMERGENCY MEDICAL AND DENTAL
WHEN EMERGENCY HOSPITAL NOT
HEALTH PROGRAM
QUALIFICATIONS OF HEALTH PERSONNEL
ASSISTANCE OF EMPLOYER
COMMENTS
ADEQUATE,
IMMEDIATE, and NECESSARY, medical and
dental attention or remedy given in case
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Number of Employees
Part-time
Full-time Dentist
Part-time
Dental Clinic and
have
Infirmary
OR Shall
Exceeds 300
Emergency Hospital responsibilities
with
One
bed provided in prev
capacity for every
100 workers
The Physician and the
Dentist shall stay in the
premises of the workplace
for at least 8 hours a day*
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*Where the establishment has more than one workshift a day, the required
two-hour stay shall be devoted to the workshift which has he biggest
number of workers and they shall, in addition to the requirements Personnel
of this
Rule, be subject to call at anytime during the other workshifts to attend to
emergency cases.
First-aider
** In all workplaces where there are more than one workshift in a day, the
employer shall, in addition to the requirements of this rule, provide for the
services of a full-time first-aider for each workshift.
Nurse
Physician
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Requirements
Must be able to read and write
Completed a course in firstcertified by the National Red Cro
other organization accredited
same
Passed the examinations given
Board of Examiners
Duly licensed to practice nursi
Philippines and preferably with
50 hours of training in occ
nursing conducted by
o DOH
o Institute of Public Health
o Any organization accredit
former
Passed the examination given by
Board of Examiners
Licensed to practice medicine in
Philippines
Preferably a graduate of a traini
course in occupational medicine
conducted by the
o Bureau of Labor Standards
o Institute of Public Health
o Or any organization accre
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the former
Coverage:
Passed the examinations given
by the The Rule shall apply to ALL
establishments,
workplaces
and
other
Board of Examiners
undertakings except:
Licensed to practice in the Philippines
o Those engaged in land, sea and air
Preferably has completed a training
transportation
course
in
occupational
dentistry
Dentist
Provided: that their dry docks,
conducted
garages, hangars, maintenance and
o Bureau of Dental Services of DOH
repair shops and offices, shall be
o OR
any
organization
duly
covered by this Rule
accredited by the former
o Residential places exclusively devoted to
dwelling purposes
Opportunity for Training:
*GR: Department of Labor has jurisdiction to
Hazardous Workplaces
inspect all establishments, workplaces and
Health Program
undertakings.
Medical and Dental Records
Exception: Chartered cities may be
allowed to assume responsibility for technical
Chapter II
safety inspection upon compliance with such
OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH AND SAFETY
standards and guidelines as the Secretary of
Labor may promulgate
Article 162: SAFETY AND HEALTH STANDARDS
Article 163: RESEARCH
*Technical Safety Inspection includes inspection
Article 164: TRAINING PROGRAMS
for purposes of safety determination of boilers,
Article 165: ADMINISTRATION OF SAFETY AND
pressure, wheels, internal combustion engines,
HEALTH LAW
elevators (passenger and freight), dumbwaiters,
escalators, and electrical installations in all
COMMENTS
workplaces.
The Implementing Rules in Book IV, Rule II, provide
details additional to those in the above codal provisions:
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supervisors
or
technical men shall be
20 to 200 each shift
trained who shall work
as part-time safety
man. He shall be the
secretary of the safety
committee
At least two of its
supervisors
or
technical
personnel
shall be trained and
Over
200
workers
each
one of them shall be
Training
appointed
full-time
Hazardous
Non-Hazardousshift
safety
man
and
At least one of the
secretary of safety
supervisors or technical
committee therein.
personnel
shall
be
employment of a full-time safety man may not be required w
trained *inThe
occupational
employer
health and safetyenters
and into a written contract with a qualified consulting org
which shall
develop and carry out his safety and health activities.
shall be assigned
as partthat
the
consultant
shall conduct plant visits at least four hours a we
time safety man. Such
subject
safety man
shalltobecall
theany time to conduct accident investigations and is
during
scheduled
secretary of the safety inspections or surveys by the Secretary of Lab
authorized representatives.
committee
At least two of its
* The shall
provisions
supervisors
be of this Section shall be made mandatory upon orde
Secretary
of
Labor
as soon as he is satisfied that the adequate fac
trained and a full time
trainingshall
in occupational
safety and health are available in the Depar
safety man
be
Labor
and
other
public
or
private entities duly accredited by the Sec
provided
Labor
At least one of its
Number of Employees
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Primary Purpose is to provide compensation for
disability or death resulting from occupational injuries
or diseases, or accidental injury to, or death of,
employees. It is for the benefit of the EMPLOYEES and
not the employer
It is not Charity but a recognition of a moral duty and
erection of it into a legal obligation of the PUBLIC not
only of that of the employer.
Based on the Idea that liability arising out of employers
negligence is inapplicable to modern conditions of
employment because of highly organized and hazardous
industries of modern times. The causes of injuries are
often so obscure and complex that it is usually
impossible to ascertain the fact to from an accurate
judgment. Further litigation causes expense and delays
that defeats justice and antagonisms between employer
and employee. Basically, the theory of negligence is
discarded as the basis of liability, and in general a right
to compensation is given for all injuries incident to the
employment, the amount is limited to a given schedule.
Purpose
Improve the economic status of the worker
Obviate uncertainties, delay, expense, and
hardship attendant upon the enforcement of
court remedies
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required to remit to a common fund a monthly
contribution equivalent to one percent of the monthly
salary credit of every covered employee. The employee
pays NO contribution into the fund; agreement to the
contrary is VOID and PROHIBITED.
Compensation is in the form of medical supplies and
services and/or cash income if employee is unable to
earn because of injury of disease. Death benefits and
funeral benefits are also given.
Process:
1. Injury befalls the employee
2. Within 5 days must notify employer, if
notification is required, who in turn ,must enter
notice in the logbook
3. Within 5 days after entry report the sickness,
injury or death deemed work connected to:
a. SSS in private sector or;
b. GSIS in public sector
Note: The employer INITIALLY decided whether the
injury, sickness or death is work related or not.
4. The claim is decided by the SSS or GSIS. Decisions
of the two administering agencies are appealable
to the Employees Compensation Commission,
which is the policy making body, within 30 days.
a. If the result of the appeal is favorable to
the
employee
becomes
final
and
executory, appealable to the SC in limited
cases
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opposes his claim. There is no notice of injury nor
requirement of controversion. The sick worker simply
files a claim with a new neutral ECC which then
determines on the basis of employees supporting
papers and medical evidence whether or not
compensation may be paid. The payment of benefits is
more prompt. The cost of administration is low. The
amount of death benefits has also been doubled.
3.1.Trust Fund
It is now the trust fund and not the employer that
suffers if benefits are paid to the claimants who are not
entitled under the law. The employer joins the
employee in trying to have their claims approved. The
employer is spared the problem of proving a negative
proposition that the disease was not caused by
employment.
3.2.Social Insurance
Employees compensation is based on social security
principles. All covered employers throughout the
country are required to contribute fixed and regular
premiums or contributions to a trust fund for their
employees. Benefits are paid from this trust fund. At
the time the amount of the contributions was being
fixed, actuarial studies were undertaken. The
actuarially determined number of workers who would
probably file claims within any given year is important
Employees Compensatio
Abolished
Abolished
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Under the present law for an employee to be entitled to
sickness, injury or death benefits, it must be result form
or must have resulted:
1. Any illness definitely accepted as an occupational
disease listed by the Commission
2. Any illness caused by employment subject to
proof that the risk of contracting the same is
increased by working conditions
The list of occupational diseases is in Annex A of the
ECC Rules in the Appendix.
4.1.Presumptive Compensability for AFP Members
and Policemen
In a limited sense, Presumption of Compensability has
been restored through Resolution No 3906, adopted on
July 5, 1988 by the ECC which states:
This board resolves, as it hereby resolves, to approve
the adoption of a policy that the moment an AFP
member suffers a contingency, the presumption is that
it is because of the nature of his work; provided that
the evidentiary details of his injury, or death, are
clearly established through duly issued medical
certifications on his injury or injuries, or death, by the
attending physician or duly authorized representatives
of the hospital where he is brought for medical
treatment.
5. LIBERAL INTERPRETATION
The ECC should adopt a liberal attitude in favor of the
employee in deciding claims for compensability,
especially where there is some basis in the facts for
inferring a work-connection to the accident. This kind
of interpretation gives meaning and substance to the
compassionate spirit of the law as embodied in Article 4
of the New Labor Code.
However, it is not the intention of the legislature the
insurer against all accidental injuries which might
happen to an employee while in the course of the
employment, but only for such injuries arising from, or
growing out of, the risks peculiar to the nature of the
work in the scope of the workmens employment or
incidental to such employment, and accidents in which
it is possible to trace the injury to some risk or hazard
to which the employee is exposed in a special degree by
reason of such employment.
Article 167: DEFINITION OF TERMS
COMMENTS AND CASES
1. COMPENSABLE WORK-RELATED INJURY DEFINED
What is compensated is not the injury or the disease
itself but the attendant loss or impairment of earning
capacity.
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No Precise Formula for Sphere of Employment:
Generally, time and place of and the circumstances
surrounding its occurrence. Sphere of Employment
varies, dependent upon the nature of the work and
terms and conditions in the hiring contract.
Not necessary it should have occurred during hours of
active labor or in premises or within control of
employer, employment includes not only the actual
doing of work, but also reasonable margin of time and
space necessary to be used in passing to and form the
place where the work is to be done, where the latter is
expressly included in the terms of employment
3. PROXIMATE CAUSE
It is the sufficient cause, which may be the most remote
of an operation chain. It must be that which sets the
others in motion and is to be distinguished from a mere
preexisting condition upon which the effective cause
operates, and must have been adequate to produce the
resultant damage without the intervention of an
independent cause.
Where the primary injury is shown to have arisen in the
course of employment, every natural consequence that
flows from the injury likewise arises out of the
employment, unless it is the result of an independent
intervening cause attributable to claimants own
negligence or misconduct. Simply stated, all medical
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soldier on active duty status in the AFP, and hence
compensable. The concept of workplace cannot
always be literally applied to a soldier on active duty
status. A soldier must go where his company is
stationed. Sgt. Hinoguin and his companions had
permission to proceed to Aritao. This is a place where
soldiers have secured lawful permission to be and
cannot be very different from a place where they are
required to go by their commanding officer. Hinoguin
and his companions were not on vacation leave. They
are authorized to carry their firearms with which they
were to defend themselves if NPA elements happen to
attack them.
A soldier should be presumed to be on official duty
unless he is shown to have clearly and unequivocally put
aside that status or condition temporarily by, e.g. going
on approved vacation leave. Even vacation leave may be
preterminated by superior officers.
3.3.The 24-Hour Duty Doctrine and Its Qualifications;
Moonlighting Policemen
Soldiers and policemen and even firemen by the nature
of their work may be considered on duty round-theclock. But this doctrine, while it relaxes the workplace
factor does not dispense with the work-connection
requisite.
GSIS vs. CA and F. Alegre From the cases (Hinoguin vs.
ECC, Nitura vs. ECC and ECC vs. CA), it can be gleaned
that the Court did not justify its grant of death benefits
merely on account of the rule that soldiers or
policemen, as the case may be, are virtually working
round-the-clock. Note that the court likewise attempted
in each case to find reasonable nexus between the
absence of the deceased from his assigned place of
work and the incident that led to his death.
Obviously, the matter SPO2 Alegre was attending to at
the time he met his death that of ferrying passengers
for a fee, was intrinsically private and unofficial in
nature proceedings as it did from no particular directive
or permission from his superior officer. In the absence
of such as in the case of Hinoguin and Nitura, or
peacekeeping nature of the act attended to by the
policeman at the time he died even without the explicit
permission or directive of a superior officer, as in
Alavaran, there is no justification for holding that SPO2
Alegre met the requisites set forth in the ECC
guidelines.
At any rate the 24-hour duty doctrine serves more as an
after-the-fact validation of their acts to place them
within the scope of the guidelines rather than a blanket
license to benefit them in all situations that may give
rise to their deaths. In other words, the doctrine should
not be sweepingly applied to all acts and circumstances
causing the death of the police officer but only to those
which, although not on official line of duty, are
nonetheless, basically police service in character.
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Bountiful Brick Company vs. Giles Employment
includes not only the actual doing of work, but
reasonable margin of time and space necessary to be
used in passing to and from the place where the work is
to be done. If the employee be injured while passing,
with the express or implied consent of the employer, to
or from his work by a way over the employers premises,
or over those of another in such proximity and relation
as to be in practical effect a part of the employers
premises, the injury is one arising out and in the course
of the employment as much as though it had happened
while the employee was engaged in his work at the
place of its performance.
5. GOING TO OR COMING FROM WORK RULE
Resolution No. 3914-A, July 5, 1988 extending the
compensable coverage of off-premises injury from near
the premises up to the residence of the employee. The
resolution provides that an injury or death of a covered
member in an accident while he is going to, or coming
from, the workplaces, shall henceforth be duly
considered compensable provided the following
conditions are established definitely:
1) The act of the employee of going to, or coming
from, the workplace, must have been a
CONTINUING ACT, that is, he had not been
diverted therefrom by any other activity, and he
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of the work, but a reasonable margin of time and space
necessary to be used in the passing, with the express or
implied consent of the employer, to or from his work by
a way over the employers premises, or over those of
another in such proximity and relation as to be in
practical effect a part of the employers premises, the
injury is one arising out of and in the course of the
employment as much as though it had happened while
the employee was engaged in his work at the place of
its performance.
6. INJURY AT PLACE OF EMPLOYMENT NOT NECESSARY
ELEMENT OF COMPENSABILITY
For an injury to be compensable, it is not necessary that
the cause therefore shall take place within the place
employment. If a workman is acting within the scope of
his employment, his protection in the course of
employment usually continues regardless of the place of
injury
The use of streets by the workman merely to get to or
from his work stands on a different footing altogether,
but as soon as it is established that the work itself
involves exposure to the perils of the streets, the
workman can recover for any injury so occasioned. The
fact that street perils are common to all mankind is
immaterial
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14.1.
Where Employee Uses Own Vehicle Which
He Also Uses in Performance of Duties
In some cases in which it appeared that an employee
was using his own vehicle at the time he was injured in
an accident while going to or from work, and that he
used such vehicle in the performance of his duties to his
employer, it was held that his it was held that such
injuries arose out of and in the course of employment.
14.2.
Effect of Deviation from Route, Schedule,
or Mode of Travel
Non Compensability of Deviation depends upon the
Extent, Purpose and Effect Thereof - An unauthorized
deviation may preclude recovery of compensation for an
injury caused by an added peril to which the employee
is thereby exposed during the period of the deviation,
but the compensability of an injury occurring after the
deviation has ended and the employee is again in the
course of his employment is not ordinarily affected
thereby.
14.3.
Effect of Mingling of Purposes of Employer
and Employee; Dual Purpose
Dual Purpose Doctrine considers as compensable an
injury that an employee sustains while on a trip
undertaken for the benefit of the employer even if in
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arising out of and in the course of employment
where the recreation indulged was fostered and
encourages by the employer to the end of
efficiency of the service.
Recreational Activities fall under the so-called special
engagement rule which is one of the exceptions to the
direct premises rule. This exception covers field trips,
intramurals, outings, and picnics when initiated or
sanctioned by the employer. Accidents befalling
employees on those occasions are compensable.
*Considered as an incident of employment
16.ACTS OF GOD OR FORCE MAJEUR
General Rule: The employer is not responsible for
accidents arising from force majeur or an act of God,
when the employee has not been exposed to a greater
danger than usual.
Exception: Positional and Local Risks, when one in the
course of his employment is reasonably required to be
at a particular place at a particular time and there
meets an accident, although one which any other
person then and there present would have met
irrespective of his employemtn, that accident is one
arising out of the employment of the person so
injured. Employer is held liable for compensation
because were it not for the order the employee would
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employee, or by a third person, no question of the
injured employees own culpability being involved, is
compensable where, from the evidence presented, a
rational mind is able to trace the injury to a cause set
in motion by the nature of the employment, or some
condition, obligation or incident therein, and not by
some other agency.
When a quarrel had its origin at work, injury from
assault committed outside the work premises is deemed
compensable. The SC reasoning that it was merely a
continuation or extension of the quarrel that begun
within; that continuity of the case had been so
combined with continuity in time and space that the
quarrel from origin to ending must be taken as one
17.1.
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another member of the Philippine Constabulary because
evidence revealed the indeed the incident was brought
about by personal conflicts.
19.EFFECTS OF VIOLATION OF RULES
Acts within the sphere of employment but carried out in
violation of some employer-promulgated rules are
compensable.
1. Where the violation of the rule itself did not
bring about the cause of the accident
2. Where there is serious doubt that the prohibition
was known to the employees injured.
3. Where the violation was not intentional but due
to carelessness or negligence.
Hawaiian-Philippine CO. vs. WCC: If the injury or death
was the result of horseplay or larking among employees,
the courts have declared the same as a compensable
accident. There can be no question that horseplay or
larking is unfortunately too common in factory life.
20.WHEN NOT COMPENSABLE
Although violation of company rules does not necessarily
defeat compensability it will be a different matter,
however, if the injury results from intoxication whether
or not the company rule is violated. It will be seen
under Art. 172 that the disability or death is not
Occupational Disease
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To be an occupational disease it must be one due wholly
to causes and conditions which are normal and
constantly present and characteristic of the particular
occupation; that is, those things which science and
industry have not yet learned how to eliminate. Every
worker in every plant of the same industry alike
constantly exposed to the danger of contracting a
particular occupational disease.
21.2.
Duties of Employer Regarding Occupational
Disease
Under Rule III, Sec. 2 of the Amended ECC Rules, the
employer is bound to require preemployment
examination of employees exposed to occupational
diseases.
22.THEORY OF INCREASED RISK
Increased Risk Theory to establish compensability, the
claimant must show proof of reasonable workconnection, not necessarily direct causal relation. The
degree of proof required is merely substantial evidence
which means such relevant evidence as will support a
decision, or clear and convincing evidence. Although
strict rules of evidence are not applicable, yet the basic
rules that mere allegations is not evidence cannot be
disregarded.
22.1.
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Asbestosis
Guidelines:
1. the employee must have been exposed to
asbestos dust in the workplace, as duly certified
to by the employer, or by a medical institution,
or competent medical practitioner acceptable to,
or accredited by the System
2. The chest x-ray report of the employee must
show findings of asbestos, or asbestos-related
disease, (e.g. plural plaques, pleural thickening,
effusion, neoplasm and interstitial fibrosis;
3. in case the ailment is discovered after the
employees retirement/separation from the
service, the claim therefore must be filed with
the System within (3) years from discovery
23.3.
Bangungot
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link between the ailment and the working conditions
should be liberalized.
23.4.
Bells Palsy, Anxiety Neurosis, Peripheral
Neuritis
Not among those listed, thus, the claimant must prove
that he contracted the disease in the course of
employment.
23.5.
Cardiovascular Failure
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was caused or aggravated by the employment or work
applies only to an illness where the cause can be
determined or proved.
Where the causes of an ailment are unknown to and/ or
undetermined even by medical science, the
requirement of proof of any causal link between the
ailment and the working conditions should be liberalized
so that hose who have less in life will have more in law.
Chapter II
COVERAGE AND LIABILITY
Article
Article
Article
Article
168:
169:
170:
171:
COMPULSORY COVERAGE
FOREIGN EMPLOYMENT
EFFECTIVE DATE OF COVERAGE
REGISTRATION
COMMENTS
1. COVERAGE
Employees
Covered from first day of employment
All employees, public or private, including
casual, emergency, temporary or substitute
employees
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Employer
Covered compulsorily from first day of operation
2. FOREIGN EMPLOYMENT
Filipinos working abroad for employers doing business in
the Philippines are covered by the employees
compensation law. They are entitled to the same
benefits as for those working in the Philippines.
Considering their situation, the application for the rule
on accreditation of hospitals and physicians and the rule
requiring notice to employer is relaxed.
Article 172: LIMITATIONS OF LIABILITY
COMMENTS AND CASES
1. EXCLUSIONS
Self-Inflicted or Self-Courted contingencies
1.1.Intoxication or Drunkenness
To the extent that one is not entirely himself or so that
his judgment is impaired and his act, word, or conduct
is visibly impaired.
1.2.Self-Inflicted Injuries
The injury must be intentionally self-inflicted, which
contemplates a deliberate intent on the part of the
employee, not a failure on his part to realize the
probable consequences to himself of his foolish act.
1.2.a. Suicide or Provoked Death Not
Compensable
1.2.b. Death Not the Result of Workers Willful
Act
1.2.c. Suicide, When Compensable
According to American authorities, suicide is
compensable in the following cases:
1. when it results from insanity resulting from
compensable work injury or disease
2. when it occurs during a delirium resulting from
compensable disease
NAESS Shipping Phil. Vs. NLRC: No law or rule would
make it illegal for an employer to assume the obligation
to pay death benefits in favor of his employee in their
contract of employment. Since, NAESS freely bound
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THE
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of any part of the income benefits, and medical or
related services granted under this title.
Existing
medical services being provided by the employer shall
be maintained and continued to be enjoyed by their
employees.
Exception: When otherwise provided under this Title.
CHAPTER III
ADMINISTRATION
ART. 176
ART. 177
ART. 178
ART. 179
ART. 180
ART. 181
ART. 182
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2. Compensative Thrust
- is the heart of the Employees Compensation
Program
- through the SSS and GSIS, the ECC pays benefits
to government and private
Sector workers who suffer work-oriented
contingencies.
- in case of death, the benefits are given to the
beneficiaries.
3. Curative Thrust
- The ECC is also responsible for the treatment of
sickness or injury that a worker
may suffer in line of duty as well as
rehabilitation of those who are disabled.
Note: For medical services, the ECC conduct
accreditation of qualified physicians, clinics and
hospitals where EC patients may be referred to for
admission and treatment.
REHABILITATION SERVICES consist of
a. medical treatment;
b. surgical treatment; or
c. hospital treatment, including appliance.
2. TWO SEPARATE FUNDS
The ECC may not augment the SIF in the GSIS with
funds from the SIF in the SSS because these are two
separate funds.
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CHAPTER IV
CONTRIBUTIONS
ART. 183 EMPLOYERS CONTRIBUTIONS
ART. 184 GOVERNMENT GUARANTEE
The penalties to the employer who is delinquent in
paying ECC contributions include imprisonment and/or
fine and a 3% penalty per month from the date the
contribution falls due until paid.
CHAPTER V
MEDICAL BENEFITS
ART. 185 MEDICAL SERVICES
ART.186 LIABILITY
ART. 187 ATTENDING PHYSICIAN
ART. 188 REFUSAL OF EXAMINATION OR TREATMENT
ART. 189 FEES AND OTHER CHARGES
ART. 190 REHABILITATION SERVICES
1. E.C. BENEFITS SUMMARIZED
THREE KINDS OF COMPENSATION EXTENDED TO THE
EMPLOYEE:
a. Services
- medical services, appliances and supplies;
- rehabilitation services
b. Cash Income Benefit or Pension due to:
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-
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Temporary Disability
Permanent Disability
Kind of Disability
1. TEMPORARY TOTAL
Compensation
To compensate the laborer or employee
for what he might have earned during
the period of the treatment of his
injury
To compensate the injured laborer or
employee for the actual and permanent
loss of a member of the body, or the
use thereof
Descriptions
- employee is unable to perform any gainful
occupation for a continuous period not exceeding
120 days, except as otherwise provided in Rule X
of these Rules.
- income benefit equivalent to 90 percent of his
average daily salary credit, subject to the
following conditions:
1. the daily income benefit shall not be less than
PERMANENT
P10 or more than P90 nor paid 2.
longer
than 120TOTAL
days for the same disability, unless the in jury or
sickness requires more extensive treatment that
lasts beyond 120 days, but not to exceed 240
days from onset of disability, in which case he
shall be paid benefit for temporary total
disability during the extended period.
2.
the monthly income benefit shall be
suspended if the employee fails to submit a
monthly medical report certified by its attending
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physician.
- Maximum Daily Income Benefit : P200.
- Paid beginning on the 1st day of disabil
The system may declare the t
permanent status at any time after 12
continuous temporary disability as
warranted by the degree of actual
impairment of physical or mental fun
determined by the system.
Note:
-After an employee has fully recovered
illness, the period covered by any re
suffers, or recurrence of his illness
considered independent of, and separa
the period covered by the original
Such a period shall not be added to th
covered by his original disability
computation of his income benefit for t
total disability.
-employee is unable to perform for a c
period exceeding 120 days except as
provided for in Rule X of the ECC Rules.
- incapacity to perform gainful work
expected to be permanent.
- does not require a condition of
helplessness
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Note:
-Each dependent child, but not exce
counted from the youngest and
substitution, shall be entitled to 10% p
the monthly income benefit of the emplo
-Except the benefit to dependent childr
Sec.4 of this Rule, the aggregate month
payable, in the case of the GSIS, shall i
exceed the monthly wage or salary
received by the employee as of the da
permanent total disability.
-employee suffers a permanent partial l
use of any part of his body
- see art. 193 (body parts/period)
-monthly income benefit for the nu
months indicated in art. 193
- If the indicated number of months ex
the income benefits shall be paid in
pension; otherwise, the System may pa
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Finals Reviewer
NOTE:
-The compensation paid in 1936 on account of the
amputation of an employees foot, below the knee,
should NOT be deducted from the compensation due for
the dsability resulting from the amputation of the left
leg, above the knee in 1857.
CHAPTER VII
DEATH BENEFITS
ART. 194 DEATH
Jojo Baetiong, Gel Baniqued, Elvira Castro, Denise Dy, Sheryl Harina, Giselle Remulla
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DEPENDENCY
- does not mean absolute dependency for the
necessities of life, but rather, that the
plaintiff looked up to and relied on the
contribution of the decedent in whole or in
part, as a means of supporting and
maintaining herself in accordance with her
station in life.
- A person may be dependent, according to this
view, although able to maintain himself
without any assistance from the decedent.
TEST OF DEPENDENCY
- dependency
may
exist
although
the
dependent could have subsisted without the
assistance he received, if such contributions
were relied on by claimant for his means of
living as determined by his position in life.
- one need not be a part of the deceaseds
household in oreder to be a dependent.
SPOUSE AS DEPENDENT
- arises from fact that marriage exists
- showing of marital status is essential
TWO WIVES AS CLAIMANTS
- the Commission must resolve the dispute
- determine who the legal wife is
PARENTS AS DEPENDENT
a.
b.
Secondary
Illegitimate
childre
legitimate descendant
Parents,
gran
grandchildren.
Notes:
- Amount of income benefits shall be equivalent t the
monthly income benefits under PTD and PPD benefits.
- Under the ECC Rules, the death benefit shall accrue
to the Employees Compensation Fund if the deceased
employee has no beneficiaries at the time of his death.
Jojo Baetiong, Gel Baniqued, Elvira Castro, Denise Dy, Sheryl Harina, Giselle Remulla
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TITLE IV
ADULT EDUCATION
Jojo Baetiong, Gel Baniqued, Elvira Castro, Denise Dy, Sheryl Harina, Giselle Remulla
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