John Kaven Disability Complaint Vs Lydia Mar Rejoinder
John Kaven Disability Complaint Vs Lydia Mar Rejoinder
John Kaven Disability Complaint Vs Lydia Mar Rejoinder
COMPLAINANT’S REJOINDER
1
With indicated address at Suite E, 11th Floor, GE Antonio Bldg., TM Kalaw St., Ermita, Manila.
2
25 Possidonous Avenue, GR 18344 Moschato, Greece
3
Jointly impleaded as a necessary Party, Ms. Brenda being no other that the responsible Corporate Officer for
Lydia Mar (Philippines), Inc.
COMES NOW, Complainant-Seafarer, JOHN KAVEN C. GONZALES,
by and through the undersigned counsel, by way of REJOINDER, most
respectfully asseverates:
5. 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.
6. Even if the claimant failed to seek a third opinion, the court may not
uphold the first medical opinion simply as the gospel truth. Where it is
attended by apparent bias, where the conclusions are unsupported, or
when the findings are sham and merely intended to co-opt the wishes of
the employer, there is no rule forbidding the court or tribunal from
junking the first medical opinion, and, on the basis of the inherent
merits, upheld the opinion of the private specialist.
7. It is well to point out that in 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."4
4
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].
5
677 Phil. 262 (2011) [Per J. Mendoza, Third Division].
9. Thusly:
6
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].
7
759 Phil. 514 (2015).
8
Same Case citation at page 526 thereof.
11. We hasten to add that settled is the rule that for illness or injury
to be compensable, it is not necessary that the nature of the employment
be the sole and only reason for the injury and disability suffered by the
seafarer. Thus, in David v. OSG Ship Management Manila, Inc., the high
court did not mince words holding as follows:
9
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.
In fine and without an iota of
doubt, the permanent total disability of
seafarer John Kaven C. Gonzales is
clear, apparent, unmistakable and, nay,
incontrovertible.
14. Disability claims are determined by law, the contracts and the
medical findings. To take a leaf from the Court’s myriad decisions, the
entitlement or, conversely, the non-entitlement, of a seafarer to
disability claims is not only governed by the medical findings, but by law
(the Labor Code) and the terms of the contract executed between and
among them: the POEA-SEC by incorporation 10 to the actual contract, the
Contract of Employment, Employment Agreements, and, last but not the
least, the Collective Bargaining Agreement, if there is any in effect and
governing the parties in the course of the employment.
15. For this reason, Courts and labor tribunals are not bound by the
medical findings of the company physician such that the repetitive
arguments of manning agencies that the company-designated physician
is more controlling than any other medical findings has become passé.
The more correct rule is that the courts and labor tribunals are not
bound by the medical findings because they are ordained to look and
10
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:
16. The rules require that the medical assessment must be final,
complete and definitive and, as currently stands, adhere to the 120/240
window evolved in Kestrel and Vergara and the twin requirements in
Dario Carcedo vs Maine Marine. Failure and shortcomings from any of
the foregoing requirements, perforce, the law is deemed to effectively
step in to fill the void, characterizing whatever disability that the
seafarer has, into one that is Permanent 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.
17. The seafarer has the statutory and substantial right to contest the
findings and he may seek a second opinion from a specialist of his own
choosing. In such classic impasse, where the first clash with the second,
the seafarer is obliged to contest anew the first medical report by
initiating the third doctor process in the hope that the third opinion will
confirm the second medical opinion.
18. 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. However, even if the claimant failed to seek a third
opinion, the court may not uphold the first medical opinion simply as
the gospel truth. Where it is attended by apparent bias, where the
conclusions are unsupported, or when the findings are sham and merely
intended to co-opt the wishes of the employer, there is no rule
forbidding the court or tribunal from junking the first medical opinion,
and, on the basis of the inherent merits, upheld the opinion of the
private specialist.
21. The High Court has unwaveringly applied the Labor Code concept
of permanent total disability to the case of seafarers. 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.
24.To our mind, the said disability assessment was an interim one because
JOHN KAVEN, in fact continued to require medical treatments and
management that extended even after his treatment with the CDP and
that he was still being prescribed heart medications by Dr. Antonio
Pascual way beyond six months after repatriation.
25. 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.
11
Libang v. Indochina Ship Management, Inc., G.R. No. 189863, 17 September 2014.
The POEA-SEC provisions should not be
construed that it is only the company-
designated physician who could assess the
condition and declare the disability of
seamen. The provision does not serve as a
limitation but rather a guarantee of
protection to overseas workers.
30.In fact, it allows a third opinion in case the seafarer’s doctor disagrees
with the assessment of the company-designated physician. Therefore,
the provision should not be construed that it is only the company-
designated physician who could assess the condition and declare the
disability of seamen. THE PROVISION DOES NOT SERVE AS A LIMITATION
BUT RATHER A GUARANTEE OF PROTECTION TO OVERSEAS WORKERS.
31. Verily, the law has already stepped in and whatever disability
Chief Cook John Kaven Gonzales had, by legal fiction, has now been
transmogrified to a permanent and total one. Without doubt, this is
irrefutable from the records
PRAYER
FOR AFFIRMATIVE RELIEFS
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:
Due to distance and for lack of office personnel to effect personal
service, a copy of the foregoing COMPLAINANT’s REJOINDER was served by
registered mail to the respondents’ counsel.
.
ARNOLD M. BURIGSAY