1987 Constitution
1987 Constitution
1987 Constitution
How do local laws direct the implementation of the said employment relationship in the
Philippines?
The 1987 Constitution mandates that the State shall protect labor and promote
its welfare, and provide basic rights, including just and humane terms and conditions of
employment and the right to self-organization, for Filipino workers. This is the
fundamental rule in labor and social legislations. This is likewise the building block of
the Labor Code of the Philippines. The Code provides for the rights and privileges of
Filipino workers in all kind of employment relationship including those under the trilateral
employment relationship.
Article 106 states that when the subcontractor enters a contract to the principal
for the performance of the subcontractor, the employees of the contractor and
subcontractor shall be paid in accordance with the provision of the Labor Code. This
means that the main mandate of our laws is that the core labor standards must be
complied with by the contractor. Having said that, it is readily apparent that our laws
recognize the contractor as the employer unless otherwise is proven.
Equally important is the provision in the said article providing that whenever the
contractor or the subcontractor fails to pay the wages of the employee, the employer is
2 Supra at page 1
jointly and severally liable to pay the employees which are directly employed to them.
This provision is another safeguard for the workers
It is worth noting also that not all labor dealings of the contractor is legally
permissible. Prohibited under the immediately referred provision is labor-only
contracting. Said scheme is evident when a person who supplies workers to an
employer does not have substantial capital or investment in the form of tools,
equipment, machineries and the like and if the workers recruited and placed by such
person are performing activities which are directly related to the principal business of
such employer. In such event, the workers are considered as employees of the
principal.
On the other hand, the Code likewise provides for the manner on how should the
principal must comply with the standards of trilateral employment relationship, hence:
The above mentioned article provides that there is "job contracting" where (1) the
contractor carries on an independent business and undertakes the contract work on his
own account under his own responsibility according to his own manner and method,
free from the control and direction of his employer or principal in all matters connected
with the performance of the work except as to the results thereof; and (2) the contractor
has substantial capital or investment in the form of tools, equipment, machineries, work
premises, and other materials which are necessary in the conduct of his business. 4
The distinction between Articles 106 and 107 is that in the former it speaks of labor only
wherein the contractor is considered as an agent of the employer but the latter pertains
to job contracting wherein the contractor is the direct employer of the employees and
the employer may be considered as indirect employer. These two provisions must be
3 Supra at page 3
4
read together in order to understand how the trilateral system is being regulated by our
laws.
Another important article of our Labor Code is Article 109 which reads:
It is important to note nevertheless that under the existing laws of the country,
there is no employer-employee relationship between the principal and the contractors
employee because the contractor, being the businessman himself, is the employer. The
5 Ibid.
recruitment
and
placement
agency
(PRPA),
by
prohibiting