Fil Oil vs. Fil Oil Supervisor
Fil Oil vs. Fil Oil Supervisor
Fil Oil vs. Fil Oil Supervisor
FILOIL
SUPERVISORY & CONFIDENTIAL EMPLOYEES
ASSOCIATION AND COURT OF INDUSTRIAL
RELATIONS, Respondents., G.R. No. L-26736, 46 SCRA 512,
August 18, 1972
Respondent court in its order of May 26, 1965 denied the dismissal motion. However, no appeal having been taken from
the resolution, the petition was accordingly set for hearing and the parties submitted their stipulation of facts, stipulating
inter alia that respondent association has forty-seven (47) members among the supervisory, technical men and confidential
employees of the company. Evidence was received by respondent court and it was satisfied that executive personnel
handling personnel matters for the employer were duly excluded from respondent association
FACTS OF THE CASE
Respondent court in its order of July 23, 1966 consequently cast aside petitioner’s sedulous objections against the
inclusion of the confidential employees in the supervisors’ respondent association. Since the confidential employees are
very few and are, by practice and tradition, identified with management, the NLRB, because of such ‘identity of interest’
(Wilson & Co., 68 NLRB 84), has allowed their inclusion in the bargaining unit of supervisors who are likewise identified
with management. This Court, a counterpart of the NLRB, for the same reason, should also allow the inclusion of the
confidential employees in the bargaining unit of supervisors
Respondent court per its resolution en banc dismissed petitioner’s motion for reconsideration, holding that "as to the
question of the right of supervisors and confidential employees to compel their employer to bargain collectively, this
has already been passed upon by the Trial Court in its Order which Order was affirmed by the Court en banc. The
Company did not appeal this resolution to the Supreme Court. Hence, this matter, as far as we are concerned, has
already been resolved. We find it, therefore, unnecessary to pass upon the same again," and that it found no
sufficient justification to alter or modify the trial court’s order upholding the appropriateness of the bargaining unit
ISSUE(S)
Whether or not the Court of Industrial Relations has a wide discretion in adopting
procedure to determine appropriate bargaining unit.
ISSUE:
Whether or not the Court of Industrial Relations has a wide
discretion in adopting procedure to determine appropriate
RULING bargaining unit. YES