Position Paper Josefino Jimenez
Position Paper Josefino Jimenez
Position Paper Josefino Jimenez
Complainant, 403-07-09-2023
PHILIPPINE TRANSMARINE
CARRIERS, INC., NSC SHIPPING
GMBH & CIE KG (DOC HOLDER),
and MR. GERARDO A. BORROMEO,
Respondents.
X…………………………………X
COMPLAINANT’S
POSITION PAPER
PREFATORY
1
Loss of earning capacity is the controlling consideration in
determining disability compensation and not the medical
significance of the injury or illness as enunciated by the Supreme
Court in a litany of cases:
xxx
Xxxx
2
disability compensation, it is not the injury
which is compensated, but rather it is the
incapacity to work resulting in the impairment of
one’s earning capacity.” (FIL-PRIDE SHIPPING
COMPANY INC., et al., vs. EDGAR A BALASTA
G.R. NO. 193047 March 3, 2014)
3
Verily, under this factual milieu, Josefino, under the law, is
undoubtedly entitled to permanent and total disability
compensation.
Thusly:
1
Please see the Supreme Court Decisions in Remigio v. National Labor Relations Commission, 521 Phil. 330, 347
(2006) [Per J. Puno, Second Division) citing Philippine Transmarine Carriers v. NLRC, 405 Phil. 487 (2001) [Per J.
Quisumbing, Second Division].
2
677 Phil. 262 (2011) [Per J. Mendoza, Third Division].
3
Kindly see Sunit v. OSM Maritime Services, Inc., G.R. No. 223035, February 27, 2017 <
http://sc.judiciary.gov.ph/pdf/web/viewer.html?file=/jurisprudence/2017/february2017/223035.pdf > [Per J.
Velasco, Third Division). See also Fair Shipping Corp. v. Medel, 693 Phil. 516 (2012) [Per J. Leonardo-De Castro, First
Division].
4
Conversely, it might not be amiss to state that, too,
in Belchem Philippines, Inc. v. Zafra, Jr.,4 the Supreme Court
held that:
4
759 Phil. 514 (2015).
5
Same Case citation at page 526 thereof.
6
David v. OSG Ship Management Manila, Inc., G.R. NO. 197205, September 26, 2012, citing Nisda v. Sea Serve
Maritime Agency, G.R. NO. 179177, July 23, 2009, 593 SCRA 668, 699; NYK-Fil Ship Management v. Talavera, G.R.
NO. 175894, November 14, 2008, 571 SCRA 183, 198.
5
Here, Complainant suffers permanent total disability. The
Company doctors and the private specialists of choice having
unanimity that Josefino has hernia, gastritis and gallbladder
stones.
6
Respondent Corporation President/Manager MR. GERARDO
A. BORROMEO, is of legal age, a Filipino Citizen and with the same
office address as that of Respondent PHILIPPINE TRANSMARINE
CARRIERS.
THE FACTS
7
Notice To Arbitrate.
8
POEA-validated on March 24, 2022.
7
EMPLOYMENT (attached hereto as ANNEX A and made an
integral part of this Position Paper) embodying the Standard
Terms and Conditions Governing the Employment of Filipino
Seafarers On Board Ocean-Going Vessels and stating in
particular the terms of Complainant’s employment.
8
10. Cut to the chase, Complainant’s job demands a lot of
physical energy as he is subjected to the daily tasks of
carrying, lifting and pulling heavy equipment as well as heavy
provisions, carrying and transferring cargo provisions, as well
as activities requiring prolonged standing, walking, repetitive
bending and similar strenuous actions. He is, without doubt,
therefore constantly subjected to prolonged bone and muscle
strains as well as mental stress.
9
15. Initially, he tried to ignore the pain and was given mere
pain relievers but it became progressively worse as days passed
until he can no longer work with ease. The pain he felt started to
radiate even from his right leg severely limiting his movements.
9
Marine medical Services, Manila Doctors Hospital at Manila City.
10
21. On August 16, 2022, a Certificate of Final Assessment
(ANNEX D) by the senior medical coordinator and
gastroenterologist, DR. JAMES MONTESA, at SHIPHEALTH was
issued certifying Josefino as FIT-TO-WORK and certifying that his
esophagitis, umbilical hernia, gallstones and gastritis have all been
resolved with the following cryptic observation:
11
26. For this reason, Complainant respectfully asked
Respondents for Permanent Total Disability Benefits under the
applicable CBA, IBF-IMEC CBA.
28. Moreover, the Complainant was not even told the status
of his illness. He was only told to wait for the call of the
Respondents which call never came.
29. Left with no choice but to tend to his medical needs and
notwithstanding the declaration of the company doctor he
sought the opinion of DR. FELIX TERENCIO.
THE ISSUE
14
On this score, Complainant can only answer in the affirmative.
ARGUMENTS,
DISQUISITION AND CONFABULATION
Josefino’s unresolved
esophagitis, umbilical hernia,
gallstones and gastritis is a
compensable work-related
illness.
15
We respectfully beg to disagree.
The Supreme Court has held that under Section 32-A of the
POEA Standard Employment Contract, abdominal ailments and
hernia are considered a work-related diseases. The Court explained
that the seaman is entitled to disability benefits if the seaman
16
proves that the conditions inside the vessel increased or aggravated
the risk of the seaman of his ailments.
10
628 Phil. 81 (2010).
17
metastasis has occurred in colorectal cancer,
a complete cure of the cancer is unlikely.
19
compensable work-related diseases and granted full disability
benefits to the seaman.
20
employment has contributed to some degree to
the development of his disease.
21
Notably, in Dohle-Pilman Manning Agency, Inc., it has been
ruled that illnesses which are either: (1) acquired by the seaman on
board the vessel; or (2) resulting from a pre-existing condition of the
seaman which is aggravated by the conditions on board the vessel
are compensable work-related diseases.
12
739 Phil. 774 (2014).
22
of the POEA Standard Employment Contract through the required
quantum of proof of substantial evidence.
The seaman, thus, must prove that the conditions aboard the
vessel increased, aggravated, or elevated the seaman's risk of colon
cancer for the occupational disease to be compensable.
13
That all provisions of the POEA-SEC are standard and deemed integral part of any contract of employment
binding the parties to at least comply with barest minimum terms and conditions deemed acceptable by law, and
case law and as updated by timely revisions made by the regulatory body, the POEA-SEC. This is to ensure that the
minimum terms and standards for all contract of employment, minimum labor standards and terms of
employment, are adhered to by the parties to the contract and, obviously, on the consideration and concern that
the worker is not put into disadvantage. The Court has aptly stated:
23
Agreement, if there is any in effect and governing the parties in the
course of the employment.
24
and Total. The requirements are deemed built-in safeguards to
dissuade a situation where the company doctor can simply defeat
the claims if the time to issue when is entirely dependent on him. In
which case, the doctor may just simply sit back idly and issue no
medical report at all, all the while putting the seafarer to an
interminable waiting game.
Where the third medical opinion did not come about due to the
failure of the claimant to initiate one, the courts are bound to
uphold the first medical opinion.
25
Entitlement to Disability Benefits
26
Section 20(B)(3) of the POEA-SEC provides a similar
mechanism for determining the disability assessment.
14
521 Phil. 330 (2006).
27
In Philippine Transmarine Carriers v. NLRC, seaman
Carlos Nietes was found to be suffering from congestive heart
failure and cardiomyopathy and was declared as unfit to work by
the company-accredited physician.
xxxx
15
521 Phil. 330 (2006).
28
(c) The following disabilities shall be deemed
total and permanent:
SECTION 2. Disability. x x x
29
These provisions, in conjunction with Section 20(B)(3) of the
POEA-SEC, were interpreted in the case of Vergara v. Hammonia
Maritime Services, Inc.16 thus:
The Court could have not been way clearer on this point
in Kestrel Shipping Co., Inc. v. Munar18 which held that the
declaration by the company-designated physician is an obligation,
the abdication of which transforms the temporary total disability to
permanent total disability, regardless of the disability grade, viz:
16
588 Phil. 895 (2008).
17
588 Phil. 895 (2008).
18
G.R. No. 198501, 30 January 2013, 689 SCRA 795.
30
Indeed, under Section 32 of the POEA-SEC, only
those injuries or disabilities that are classified as
Grade 1 may be considered as total and
permanent. However, if those injuries or
disabilities with a disability grading from 2 to 14,
hence, partial and permanent, would incapacitate
a seafarer from performing his usual sea duties
for a period of more than 120 or 240 days,
depending on the need for further medical
treatment, then he is, under legal contemplation,
totally and permanently disabled. In other words,
an impediment should be characterized as partial
and permanent not only under the Schedule of
Disabilities found in Section 32 of the POEA-SEC
but should be so under the relevant provisions of
the Labor Code and the Amended Rules on
Employee Compensation (AREC) implementing
Title II, Book IV of the Labor Code. That while
the seafarer is partially injured or disabled, he is
not precluded from earning doing the same work
he had before his injury or disability or that he is
accustomed or trained to do. Otherwise, if his
illness or injury prevents him from engaging in
gainful employment for more than 120 or 240
days, as the case may be, he shall be deemed
totally and permanently disabled.
19
G.R. No. 198501, 30 January 2013, 689 SCRA 795.
31
As explained by the Court in Pelagio v. Philippine
Transmarine Carriers, Inc:20
32
employment for more than 120 or 240 days, as the
case may be, he shall be deemed totally and
permanently disabled.
22
Id. at 251.
33
Verily, he was certainly still under total disability at that time
and, even at present, he has not been able to resume seafaring
work of any kind.
34
By operation of law, therefore, Josefino’s total and temporary
disability lapsed into a total and permanent disability. 23
35
Based on this Court’s pronouncements in Vergara, it
is easily discernible that the 120-day or 240-day
period and the obligations the law imposed on the
employer are determinative of when a seafarer’s
cause of action for total and permanent disability
may be considered to have arisen. Thus, a seafarer
may pursue an action for total and permanent
disability benefits if: (a) the company-designated
physician failed to issue a declaration as to his
fitness to engage in sea duty or disability even after
the lapse of the 120-day period and there is no
indication that further medical treatment would
address his temporary total disability, hence, justify
an extension of the period to 240 days; (b) 240 days
had lapsed without any certification being issued by
the company-designated physician; (c) the company-
designated physician declared that he is fit for sea
duty within the 120-day or 240-day period, as the
case may be, but his physician of choice and the
doctor chosen under Section 20-B(3) of the POEA-
SEC are of a contrary opinion; (d) the company-
designated physician acknowledged that he is
partially permanently disabled but other doctors
who he consulted, on his own and jointly with his
employer, believed that his disability is not only
permanent but total as well; (e) the company-
designated physician recognized that he is totally
and permanently disabled but there is a dispute on
the disability grading; (f) the company-designated
physician determined that his medical condition is
not compensable or work-related under the POEA-
SEC but his doctor-of-choice and the third doctor
selected under Section 20-B(3) of the POEA-SEC
found otherwise and declared him unfit to work; (g)
the company-designated physician declared him
totally and permanently disabled but the employer
refuses to pay him the corresponding benefits;
and (h) the company-designated physician
declared him partially and permanently disabled
within the 120-day or 240-day period but he
remains incapacitated to perform his usual sea
duties after the lapse of the said
periods. (Emphasis supplied)
45
36
In fine, no sane and enterprising shipping company would ever
hire Complainant, by reason of his very disabling and debilitating
conditions.
37
Of vital significance, although the employer is not the insurer
of the health of his employees, he takes them as he finds them
and assumes the risk of liability.25
Section 20 (B)
COMPENSATION
AND BENEFITS
FOR INJURY
OR
ILLNESS
25
Fil-Star Maritime Corporation v. Rosete, G.R. No. 192686, November 23, 2011, 661 SCRA 247, 255, citing Seagull
Shipmanagement and Transport, Inc. v. NLRC, 388 Phil. 906, 914 (2000), citing More Maritime Agencies, Inc. v.
NLRC, 366 Phil. 646, 654-655 (1999).
26
David v. OSG Ship Management Manila, Inc., supra
38
The liabilities of the employer when the seafarer
suffers work-related injury or illness during the term
of his contract are as follows:
x x x x
39
This is precisely a remedy that Josefino pursued when he
engaged the services of a private specialist and contested the
assessment of the company doctor which was never embodied in a
complete and definitive report. Let alone such report adequately
explained to him.
40
Moral and Exemplary Damages
and Attorney’s Fees
41
permanent total disability benefits rightly due to JOSEFINO
JIMENEZ, erstwhile OILER of MV ATACAMA, and in line with the
overriding and more beneficent provisions of the afore-stated
applicable and governing CBA.
PRAYER
FOR AFFIRMATIVE RELIEFS
42
OTHER RELIEFS, just and equitable under the premises, are
likewise prayed for.
By:
ARNOLD M. BURIGSAY
IBP No. 260805 January 5, 2023
PTR NO. 0862689
January 4, 2023; Manila
Roll No. 43265
MCLE No. VII- 0028015
April 14, 2023; Pasig City
Tel No. 564-49-00/6646124
amburigsaylaw@gmail.com
Copy Furnished:
EXPLANATION:
43
ARNOLD M. BURIGSAY
44