Orlando Farm Vs NLRC
Orlando Farm Vs NLRC
Orlando Farm Vs NLRC
DECISION
ROMERO, J.:
The case of Loran Paquit and Lovilla Dorlones [1] is dropped for having been
amicably settled.
In case of appeal, backwages and other benefits shall accrue but in no case
exceeding 3 years, without any qualification or deduction.
SO ORDERED."[2]
Petitioner alleged that the NLRC erred in finding that respondents were its
employees and not of the individual landownners which fact can easily be
deduced from the payments made by the latter of respondent's Social
Security System (SSS) contributions. Moreover, it could have never
exercised the power of control over them with regard to the manner and
method by which the work was to be accomplished, which authority remain
vested with the landowners despite becoming members thereof.
In the instant case, the following circumstances which support the existence
of employer-employee relations cannot be denied. During the subsistence of
the association, several circulars and memoranda were issued concerning,
among other things, absences without formal request, loitering in the work
area and disciplinary measures with which every worker is enjoined to
comply. Furthermore, the employees were issued identification cards which
the Court, in the case of Domasig v. NLRC,[4] construed, not only as a
security measure but mainly to identify the holder as a bonafide employee of
the firm. However, what makes the relationship explicit is the power of the
petitioner to enter into compromise agreements involving money claims filed
by three employees, namely: Lorna Paquit, Lovella Dorlones and Jasmine
Espanola. If petitioner's disclaimer were to believed, what benefit would
accrue to it in settling an employer-employee dispute to which it allegedly
lay no claim?
Prescinding from the foregoing, we now address the issue of whether or not
petitioner had a valid ground to dismiss respondents from their respective
employment.
For having been dismissed without a valid cause and for non-observance of
the due process requirement, respondents, consistent with recent
jurisprudence laid down in the case of Bustamante v. NLRC,[11] are entitled
to receive full backwages from the date of their dismissal up to the time of
their reinstatement. The order, therefore, of the labor arbiter limiting
backwages to a period of three (3) years in the event of an appeal, is
erroneous.
SO ORDERED.
[1]
Should read as Lorna Paquit and Lovella Dorlones.
[2]
Rollo, p. 17.
[3]
G.R. No. 118892, March 11, 1998.
[4]
261 SCRA 779 (1996).
[5]
Belaunzaran v. NLRC, 265 SCRA 800 (1996).
[6]
PLDT v. NLRC, 276 SCRA 462 (1997).
[7]
Philippine-Singapore Transport Services, Inc. v. NLRC, 277 SCRA 506
(1997).
[8]
280 SCRA 828 (1997).
[9]
ART. 282. Termination by employer. - An employer may terminate an
employment for any of the following causes:
(a) Serious misconduct or willful disobedience by the employee of the lawful
orders of his employer or representative in connection with his work;
(b) Gross and habitual neglect by the employee of his duties;
(c) Fraud or willful breach by the employee of the trust reposed in him by his
employer or duly authorized representative;
(d) Commission of a crime or offense by the employee against the person of
his employer or any immediate member of his family or his duly authorized
representative; and
(e) Other causes analogous to the foregoing.
[10]
Padilla v. NLRC, 273 SCRA 457 (1997).
[11]
265 SCRA 61 (1996).