Republic of
the Philippines
Supreme
Court
Manila
SECOND DIVISION
EFREN
M. HERRERA and ESTHER C. GALVEZ, for
and on their
behalf and on behalf of
OTHER SEPARATED, UNREHIRED
and RETIRED EMPLOYEES
OF THE NATIONAL POWER
CORPORATION, Petitioners, - versus - NATIONAL
POWER CORPORATION, THE
DEPARTMENT OF BUDGET AND
MANAGEMENT and THE OFFICE
OF THE SOLICITOR GENERAL, Respondents. |
|
G.R.
No. 166570 Present: CARPIO,* J., Chairperson, LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO,** BRION, DEL
CASTILLO, and ABAD,
JJ. Promulgated December
18, 2009 |
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D E C I S
I O N
DEL CASTILLO, J.:
The question at the heart of this
case is whether petitioners, former employees of the National Power Corporation
(NPC) who were separated from service due to the government’s initiative of
restructuring the electric power industry, are entitled to their retirement
benefits in addition to the separation pay granted by law.
Absent explicit statutory
authority, we cannot provide our imprimatur to the grant of separation
pay and retirement benefits from one single act of involuntary separation from
the service, lest there be duplication of purpose and depletion of government
resources. Within the context of government reorganization, separation pay and
retirement benefits arising from the same cause, are in consideration of the
same services and granted for the same purpose. Whether denominated as separation pay or
retirement benefits, these financial benefits reward government service and
provide monetary assistance to employees involuntarily separated due to bona
fide reorganization.
This is a Petition for Review on Certiorari
under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court on a pure question of law against the
Decision[1]
dated December 23, 2004 rendered by the Regional Trial Court (RTC), Branch 101,
Quezon City in SCA No. Q-03-50681 (for Declaratory Relief) entitled National Power Corporation v. Napocor
Employees and Workers Union (NEWU), NAPOCOR Employees Consolidated Union
(NECU), NPC Executive Officers Association, Inc. (NPC-EXA), Esther Galvez and
Efren Herrera, for and on their behalf and in behalf of other separated,
unrehired, and retired employees of the National Power Corporation, the
Department of Budget and Management (DBM), the Office of the Solicitor General
(OSG), the Civil Service Commission (CSC) and the Commission on Audit (COA). Said Decision ruled that the petitioners are
not entitled to receive retirement benefits under Commonwealth Act No. 186 (CA
No. 186),[2] as
amended, over and above the separation benefits they received under Republic
Act (RA) No. 9136,[3] otherwise known as the Electric Power Industry
Reform Act of 2001 (EPIRA).
Legal and
factual background
RA
No. 9136 was enacted on June 8, 2001 to provide a framework for the
restructuring of the electric power industry, including the privatization of
NPC’s assets and liabilities.[4] One necessary consequence of the
reorganization was the displacement of employees from the Department of Energy,
the Energy Regulatory Board, the National Electrification Administration and
the NPC. To soften the blow from the
severance of employment, Congress provided in Section 63 of the EPIRA, for a
separation package superior than those provided under existing laws, as
follows:
SEC.
63. Separation Benefits of Officials and Employees of Affected Agencies.
– National government employees displaced or separated from the service as a
result of the restructuring of the [electric power] industry and privatization
of NPC assets pursuant to this Act, shall be entitled to either a
separation pay and other benefits in accordance with existing laws, rules or
regulations or be entitled to avail of the privileges provided under a
separation plan which shall be one and one-half month salary for every year of
service in the government: Provided, however, That those who avail of
such privilege shall start their government service anew if absorbed by any
government-owned successor company. In no case shall there be any diminution of
benefits under the separation plan until the full implementation of the
restructuring and privatization. x x x
(Emphasis supplied)
The implementing rules
of the EPIRA, approved by the Joint Congressional
Power Commission on February 27, 2002,[5]
further expounded on the separation benefits, viz:
RULE 33. Separation
Benefits
Section 1.
General Statement on Coverage.
This
Rule shall apply to all employees in the National Government service as of June
26, 2001 regardless of position, designation or status, who are displaced or
separated from the service as a result of the restructuring of the electric [power]
industry and privatization of NPC assets: Provided, however, That the coverage
for casual or contractual employees shall be limited to those whose
appointments were approved or attested [to] by the Civil Service Commission
(CSC).
Section 2.
Scope of Application.
This
Rule shall apply to affected personnel of DOE, ERB, NEA and NPC.
Section 3.
Separation and Other Benefits.
(a) The
separation benefit shall consist of either a separation pay and other benefits granted in accordance with
existing laws, rules and regulations or a separation plan equivalent to one and
one half (1-1⁄2) months’ salary for every year of service in the
government, whichever is higher; Provided, That the separated or
displaced employee has rendered at least one (1) year of service at the time of
effectivity of the Act.
x x x x
(e) For this purpose, “Salary”, as a rule, refers to
the basic pay including the thirteenth (13th) month pay received by an employee
pursuant to his appointment, excluding per diems, bonuses, overtime pay,
honoraria, allowances and any other emoluments received in addition to the
basic pay under existing laws.
(f) Likewise, “Separation”
or “Displacement” refers to the severance of employment of any official or
employee, who is neither qualified under existing laws, rules and regulations
nor has opted to retire under existing laws, as a result of the
Restructuring of the electric power industry or Privatization of NPC assets
pursuant to the Act. (Emphasis supplied)
On February 28, 2003, all NPC
employees, including the petitioners, were separated from the service. As a result, all the employees who held
permanent positions at the NPC as of June 26, 2001 opted for and were paid the
corresponding separation pay equivalent to one and a half months’ salary per
year of service. Nonetheless, in addition to the separation package mandated by the EPIRA,
a number of NPC employees also claimed retirement benefits under CA No. 186,[6]
as amended by RA No. 660[7]
and RA No. 1616.[8] Under these laws, government employees who
have rendered at least 20 years of service are entitled to a gratuity
equivalent to one month’s salary for every year of service for the first 20
years, one and a half months’ salary for every year of service over 20 but
below 30 years, and two months’ salary for every year of service in excess of
30 years.[9]
The NPC,
on the other hand, took the position that the grant of retirement benefits to
displaced employees in addition to separation pay was inconsistent with the
constitutional proscription on the grant of a double gratuity. Unable to amicably resolve this matter with
its former employees, the NPC filed on September 18, 2003, a Petition for
Declaratory Relief[10]
against several parties,[11]
including the petitioners, before the RTC of Quezon City, to obtain confirmation
that RA No. 9136 did not specifically authorize NPC to grant retirement
benefits in addition to separation pay.[12] The case was docketed as SCA No. Q-03-50681
and raffled to Branch 101 of said court.
After
submission of the respondents’ respective Answers and Comments,[13]
the parties agreed that the court a quo would resolve the case based on
the arguments raised in their memoranda[14]
since only a question of law was involved.[15] In due course, the court a quo rendered
the assailed Decision, finding that employees who received the separation
benefit under RA No. 9136 are no longer entitled to retirement benefits:
The
aforementioned law speaks of two (2) options for the employee to choose from,
that is: (1) to receive separation pay and other benefits in accordance with
existing laws, rules, and regulations or (2) to avail of the privileges
provided under a separation plan (under R.A. 9136), which shall be one and one
half months’ salary for every year of service in the government.
Under
Section 3(f) of Rule 33 of the Implementing Rules and Regulations of R.A. 9136,
“separation or displacement refers to the severance of employment of any
official or employee, who is neither qualified under existing laws, rules, and
regulations nor has opted to retire under existing laws as a result of
the Restructuring of the electric power industry or Privatization of NPC assets
pursuant to the act”. Thus, it is clear that the receipt of benefits under the
EPIRA law, by employees who opted to retire under such law bars the receipt of
retirement benefits under R.A. 1616.
Moreover,
Section 8 of Article IX-B of the 1987 Constitution prohibits the grant of both
separation pay and retirement benefits. x x x
x
x x x
In
said constitutional provision, it is x x x clear that additional or indirect
compensation is barred by law and only [allowed] when so specifically
authorized by law. Furthermore, on the Private Respondents' contention that the
second paragraph should be applied in their [case], the same will not hold
water. This is so because “retirement benefits” [are] not synonymous to pension
or gratuities as contemplated by law.
R.A.
9136 did not clearly and unequivocally authorize the payment of additional
benefits to Private Respondents as the benefits referred to in such law should
not be interpreted to include retirement benefits in addition to their
separation pay. Separation from service due to [the] restructuring of
the [electric] power industry should not be interpreted to mean “retirement”
as both are different in every respect. The law specifically defines the
meaning of “separation” by virtue of the restructuring. x x x
x
x x x
Thus,
the Respondent-Employees are not entitled to receive retirement benefits under
Republic Act No. 1616 over and above the separation benefits they received
under Republic Act No. 9136.[16]
Petitioners
sought recourse from the assailed Decision directly before this court on a pure
question of law. The Department of
Budget and Management (DBM) submitted its Comment on June 30, 2005,[17] while
the NPC, through the Office of the Solicitor General, filed its Comment on
August 23, 2005.[18] Petitioners then filed their Consolidated
Reply by registered mail on November 18, 2005.[19] After the
parties filed their respective
memoranda,[20] the case was
submitted for decision.
Petitioners’
arguments
Before
us, petitioners argue that:
1) The EPIRA does not bar the application of
CA No. 186, as amended. Petitioners are therefore entitled to their retirement
pay in addition to separation pay.
2) Petitioners have vested rights over their
retirement benefits.
3) The payment of both retirement pay and
separation pay does not constitute double compensation, as the Constitution
provides that “pensions or gratuities shall not be considered as additional,
double or indirect compensation”.
Respondents’ arguments
Respondents
NPC and the DBM, on the other hand, maintain that:
1) Section 63 of RA No. 9136 and Section 3,
Rule 33 of its Implementing Rules and Regulations do not authorize the grant of
retirement benefits in addition to the separation pay already received. Rather, Section 63 requires separated
employees to choose between a separation plan under existing laws or the
separation package under the EPIRA.
2) The grant of both separation pay and
retirement benefit amounts to double gratuity in direct contravention of the
Constitution.
3) No law authorizes the payment of both
separation pay and retirement benefits to petitioners.
Issue
The sole issue in this case is whether or not NPC employees who were
separated from the service because of the reorganization of the electric power
industry and who received their separation pay under RA No. 9136 are still
entitled to receive retirement benefits under CA No. 186, as amended.
Our Ruling
We deny
the petition and affirm the court a quo’s Decision dated December 23,
2004 in SCA No. Q-03-50681.
Absent clear and unequivocal statutory authority, the grant of both
separation pay and retirement benefits violates the constitutional proscription
on additional compensation.
Section 8 of Article IX(B) of the
Constitution provides that “[n]o
elective or appointive public officer or employee shall receive additional,
double, or indirect compensation, unless specifically authorized by law”. In prior decisions, we have
ruled that there must be a clear and unequivocal statutory provision to justify
the grant of both separation pay and retirement benefits to an employee.[21] Here, absent an express provision of law, the
grant of both separation and retirement benefits would amount to double
compensation from one single act of separation from employment.
Petitioners claim that Section 9
of RA No. 6656[22] amounts
to sufficient statutory basis for the grant of both retirement benefits and
separation pay. Section 9 provides:
x x x Unless also
separated for cause, all officers and employees, who have been separated
pursuant to reorganization shall, if entitled thereto, be paid the appropriate
separation pay and retirement and other benefits under existing laws
within ninety (90) days from the date of the effectivity of their separation or
from the date of the receipt of the resolution of their appeals as the case may
be. Provided, That application for clearance has been filed and no action
thereon has been made by the corresponding department or agency. Those who are
not entitled to said benefits shall be paid a separation gratuity in the amount
equivalent to one (1) month salary for every year of service. Such separation
pay and retirement benefits shall have priority of payment out of the savings
of the department or agency concerned.
(Emphasis supplied)
Unfortunately for the petitioners, their interpretation has little legal
precedent. The CSC has previously
ruled that employees similarly situated to petitioners herein were not entitled
to both separation pay and retirement benefits; instead, the concerned employee
must either avail of the separation benefit or opt to retire if qualified under
existing laws. In CSC Resolution No.
021112,[23]
the CSC interpreted the phrase “separation pay and retirement” in
RA No. 6656 as follows:
x x x While the aforequoted provision of law used the
conjunctive "and"
between the words "separation pay" and
"retirement", this does not mean that both benefits shall be
given to an affected employee. This interpretation is supported by the phrase "if
entitled thereto" found before the phrase "be
paid the appropriate separation pay and retirement and other benefits under
existing laws". Thus, payment of both
separation and retirement benefits is not absolute.
Also, in CSC Resolution
No. 00-1957,[24] the CSC declared:
The aforequoted
provision of law says: ‘separation pay and retirement and other benefits under
existing laws’. Be it noted that the conjunctive ‘and’ is used between
‘separation pay and retirement’, which in its elementary sense would mean that
they are to be taken jointly. (Ruperto G. Martin, Statutory Construction, sixth
edition, p. 88) Obviously, therefore, ‘separation pay and retirement’ refer to
only one benefit, of which an employee affected by the reorganization, if
entitled thereto, must be paid plus other benefits under existing laws, i.e.
terminal leave pay, etc.
Further, in Cajiuat v. Mathay,[25] we found that in the absence of express
provisions to the contrary, gratuity laws should be construed against the grant
of double compensation. Cajiuat involved
employees of the Rice and Corn Administration who exercised their option to
retire under CA No. 186 and received the appropriate retirement benefits. Subsequently, the Rice and Corn Administration
was abolished by Presidential Decree No. 4.[26] Said Decree also provided for the payment of a
gratuity in Section 26, paragraph 3:
Permanent officials and employees
of the Rice and Corn Administration who cannot be absorbed by the
Administration, or who
cannot transfer or to
be transferred to other agencies, or who prefer
to retire, if qualified for
retirement, or to be laid off, shall be given gratuity equivalent to one month salary for every year of service
but in no case more than twenty-four months salary, in addition to all
other benefits to which they are entitled under existing laws and
regulations. x x x
On the basis of this provision, the retired employees of the Rice and
Corn Administration claimed that they were entitled to the separation gratuity,
over and above the retirement benefits already received. We disagreed and held
that:
x x x [t]here must be a provision, clear and
unequivocal, to justify a double pension. The general language employed in
paragraph 3, Section 26 of Presidential Decree No. 4 fails to meet that test.
All that it states is that permanent employees of the Rice and Corn
Administration who are retirable are entitled to gratuity equivalent to one
month salary for every year of service but in no case more than twenty four
months salary in addition to other benefits to which they are entitled under
existing laws and regulations. To grant double gratuity is unwarranted. No
reliance can be placed [on] the use of the term “other benefits” found in the
paragraph relied upon. As clearly stated in the memorandum of the Solicitor
General, they refer to “those receivable by a retiree under the general
retirement laws, like the refund of contributions to the retirement fund and
the money value of the accumulated vacation and sick leaves of said official
employee. The clause “in addition to all other benefits to which they are
entitled under existing laws and regulations” was inserted to insure the
payment to the retiree of the refund of the contributions to the retirement fund
and the money value of the accumulated vacation and sick leaves of said
official or employee.[27]
Nothing
in the EPIRA justifies the grant of both the separation package and retirement
benefits.
The
EPIRA, a legislative enactment dealing specifically with the privatization of
the electric power industry, provides:
SEC.
63. Separation Benefits of Officials and Employees of Affected Agencies.
– National government employees displaced or separated from the service as a
result of the restructuring of the [electric power] industry and privatization
of NPC assets pursuant to this Act, shall be entitled to either a
separation pay and other benefits in accordance with existing laws, rules or
regulations or be entitled to avail of the privileges provided under a separation
plan which shall be one and one-half month[s’] salary for every year of service
in the government: Provided, however, That those who avail of such
privilege shall start their government service anew if absorbed by any
government-owned successor company. In no case shall there be any diminution of
benefits under the separation plan until the full implementation of the
restructuring and privatization. x x x
(Emphasis supplied)
A
careful reading of Section 63 of the EPIRA affirms that said law did not
authorize the grant of both separation pay and retirement benefits. Indeed, the
option granted was either to “a separation pay and other benefits in accordance
with existing laws, rules and regulations” or to “a separation plan which shall
be one and one-half months’ salary for every year of service in the government”.
The options were alternative, not
cumulative. Having chosen the separation
plan, they cannot now claim additional retirement benefits under CA No. 186.
This
position finds further support in Section 3(f), Rule 33 of RA No. 9136’s
Implementing Rules and Regulations, which provides:
(f)
likewise, “separation” or “displacement”
refers to the severance of employment of any official or employee, who is
neither qualified under existing laws, rules and regulations nor has opted to
retire under existing laws, as a result of the restructuring of the electric
power industry or privatization of NPC assets pursuant to the act.
As worded, Rule 33, Section 3(f) of the Implementing
Rules and Regulations of RA No. 9136 precludes the receipt of both separation
and retirement benefits. A separated or
displaced employee, as defined by the implementing rules, does not include one
who is qualified or has opted to retire under existing laws. Consequently, a separated employee must
choose between retirement under applicable laws or separation pay under the
EPIRA.
Within
the context of reorganization, petitioners cannot claim a vested right over
their retirement benefits.
Petitioners
claim that having religiously paid their premiums, they have vested rights to
their retirement gratuities which may not be revoked or impaired. However,
petitioners fail to consider that under the
retirement laws that they themselves invoke, separation from the service, whether
voluntary or involuntary, is a distinct compensable event from retirement.[28] Nothing in said laws permits an employee to
claim both separation pay and retirement benefits in the event of separation
from the service due to reorganization.
Thus, absent an express provision of law to the contrary, separation due to
reorganization gives rise to two possible scenarios: first, when the separated
employee is not yet entitled to retirement benefits, second, when the employee
is qualified to retire. In the first
case, the employee’s separation pay shall be computed based on the period of
service rendered in the government prior to the reorganization. In the second case, where an employee is
qualified to retire, he or she may opt to claim separation or retirement
benefits.
Contradistinction with
Laraño v. Commission on Audit
We are,
of course, aware that in Laraño v.
Commission on Audit[29] we held that employees, who were
separated from the service because of the
reorganization of the Metropolitan Waterworks and Sewerage System (MWSS) and
Local Waterworks and Utilities Administration (LWUA) pursuant to RA No. 8041,
were entitled to both a separation package and retirement benefits.[30]
In Laraño, however, the Early Retirement Incentive Plan submitted to
and approved by then President Fidel V. Ramos explicitly provided for a
separation package that would be given over
and above the existing retirement benefits. Therein lies the fundamental difference.
Hence, unlike in this case, there was specific authority for the grant of both
separation pay and retirement benefits.
WHEREFORE, the petition
is DENIED. The
Decision dated December 23, 2004 of the Regional Trial Court of Quezon City,
Branch 101 in SCA No. Q-03-50681 holding that petitioners are not entitled to
receive retirement benefits under Commonwealth Act No. 186, as amended is AFFIRMED
with MODIFICATION that petitioners are
entitled to a refund of their contributions to the retirement fund, and the
monetary value of any accumulated vacation and sick leaves.
SO
ORDERED.
MARIANO C. DEL CASTILLO
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice
TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO Associate Justice |
ARTURO D. BRION Associate Justice |
ROBERTO A. ABAD
Associate Justice
ATTESTATION
I
attest that the conclusions in the above Decision had been reached in
consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the
Court’s Division.
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice
Chairperson, Second Division
C E R T I F I C A T I O N
Pursuant
to Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, and the Division Chairperson’s
attestation, it is hereby certified that the conclusions in the above Decision
had been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of
the opinion of the Court’s Division.
REYNATO S. PUNO
Chief Justice
* Per
Special Order No. 775 dated November 3, 2009.
** Additional
member per Special Order No. 776 dated November 3, 2009.
[1] Records, pp. 249-253; penned by Judge
Normandie B. Pizarro, now Associate Justice of the Court of Appeals.
[2] An Act to
Create and Establish a “Government Service Insurance System”, To Provide for
its Administration and To Appropriate the Necessary Funds Therefor.
[3] An Act Ordaining Reforms In The Electric Power
Industry, Amending For The Purpose Certain Laws And For Other Purposes (2001).
[4] EPIRA, Secs. 2(i) & 3.
[5] Under Sec. 62 of the EPIRA, the Joint
Congressional Power Commission was authorized to “set the guidelines and
overall framework to monitor and ensure the proper implementation” of the
EPIRA.
[6] Supra note 2.
[7] An Act To Amend
Commonwealth Act Numbered One Hundred And Eighty-Six Entitled "An Act To
Create And Establish A Government Service Insurance System, To Provide For Its
Administration, And To Appropriate The Necessary Funds Therefor", And To
Provide Retirement Insurance And For Other Purposes (1951).
[8] An Act Further
Amending Section Twelve Of Commonwealth Act Numbered One Hundred Eighty-Six, As
Amended, By Prescribing Two Other Modes Of Retirement And For Other Purposes
(1957).
[9] Sec. 12(c) of CA No.
186, as amended by RA No. 1616, provides:
(c) Retirement is likewise allowed to any
official or employee, appointive or elective, regardless of age and employment
status, who has rendered a total of at least twenty years of service, the last
three years of which are continuous. The benefit shall, in addition to the
return of his personal contributions with interest compounded monthly and the
payment of the corresponding employer's premiums described in subsection (a) of
Section five hereof, without interest, be only a gratuity equivalent to
one month's salary for every year of the first twenty years of service, plus
one and one-half months’ salary for every year of service over twenty but below
thirty years and two months’ salary for every year of service over thirty years
in case of employees based on the highest rate received and in case of elected
officials on the rates of pay as provided by law. This gratuity is
payable on the rates of pay as provided by law. This gratuity is payable
by the employer or officer concerned which is hereby authorized to provide the
necessary appropriation or pay the same from any unexpended items of
appropriations or savings in its appropriations. Officials and
employees retired under this Act shall be entitled to the commutation of the
unused vacation and sick leave, based on the highest rate received, which they
may have to their credit at the time of retirement. x x
x (Emphasis supplied)
[10] Records, pp. 1-17.
[11] Namely,
the Napocor Employees and Workers Union (NEWU), NAPOCOR Employees Consolidated
Union (NECU), NPC Executive Officers Association, Inc. (NPC-EXA), Esther Galvez
and Efren Herrera, for and on their behalf and on behalf of other separated,
unrehired, and retired employees of the National Power Corporation, the
Department of Budget and Management (DBM), The Office of the Solicitor General
(OSG), the Civil Service Commission (CSC), and the Commission on Audit (COA).
[12] Records, pp.
1-33.
[13] Esther
Galvez and Efren Herrera (petitioners herein) filed their Answer on January 22,
2004, id. at 60-71. This
Answer was adopted by Abner P. Eleria, for and on his own behalf and on behalf
of other separated and [un]rehired NPC employees in a Manifestation dated
February 2, 2004, id. at 74-76. The Department of Budget and Management filed
its Comment on March 17, 2004, id. at 80-99.
[14] The NPC submitted its Memorandum dated
July 12, 2004, id. at 155-159. Abner Eleria and all other separated and [un]rehired
employees filed their Memorandum dated July 23, 2004, id. at 170-184. Herrera
and Galvez submitted their Memorandum dated July 31, 2004, id. at 187-205. DBM submitted its Position paper dated
September 24, 2004, id at. 222-248.
[15] Order dated June 16, 2004; id. at
196-197.
[16] Records, pp. 252-253.
[17] Rollo, pp. 61-95.
[18] Id. at 113-136.
[19] Id. at 145-154.
[20] The Memorandum for Petitioners was filed
on July 10, 2006, see rollo, pp
177-200. The Memorandum for the DBM was filed on September 12, 2006, id. at
218-260; finally, the Memorandum for NPC was filed on November 20, 2006, id. at
277-306.
[21] Nunal
v. Commission on Audit, G.R. No.
78648, January 24, 1989, 169 SCRA 356, 361-362; Cajiuat
v. Mathay, Sr., 209 Phil. 579, 583 (1983).
[22] An Act To Protect The
Security Of Tenure Of Civil Service Officers And Employees In The
Implementation Of Government Reorganization.
[23] Re Aurora Enerio Cerilles, Query on Retirement
Benefits dated August 22, 2002.
[24] Re
Teofilo Naungayan dated August 30, 2000. See also CSC Resolution No. 021204 dated September 23, 2002
(Re Carlito H. Millan, Motion for Reconsideration of CSC Resolution No. 01-1534
dated September 14, 2001).
[25] Supra
note 21.
[26] As amended
by Presidential Decree Nos. 699 and 1485, Proclaiming The Creation Of The
National Grains Authority and Providing Funds Therefor (1972).
[27] Supra note 21 at 583-584.
[28] Section 9 of CA No. 186 provides for the
following benefits in case of involuntary separation from the service, which
are distinct from retirement benefits:
In other
cases of separation before maturity of a policy, the Government contributions
shall cease, and the insured member shall have the following options: (a) to
collect the cash surrender value of the policy; or (b) to continue the policy
by paying the full premiums thereof; or (c) to obtain a paid up or extended
term insurance in such amount or period, respectively, as the paid premiums may
warrant, in accordance with the conditions contained in said policy; or (d) to
avail himself of such other options as may be provided in the policy.
On the other
hand, under RA No. 8291, the involuntary separation benefits are as follows:
SEC. 12. Unemployment or Involuntary Separation Benefits. - Unemployment benefits in the
form of monthly cash payments equivalent to fifty percent (50%) of the average
monthly compensation shall be paid to a permanent employee who is involuntarily
separated from the service due to the abolition of his office or position
usually resulting from reorganization: Provided, That he has been paying integrated contributions
for at least one (1) year prior to separation. Unemployment benefits shall be
paid in accordance with the following schedules:
[29] G.R.
No. 164542, December 18, 2007, 540 SCRA 553.
[30] In said
case, to cushion adverse financial effects on the said employees, an Early
Retirement Incentive Package (ERIP) was offered to those who had rendered at
least one year of service. Thus,
employees affected by the reorganization were paid the corresponding benefits
under the ERIP. In Laraño, as here, those employees who had rendered more than 20
years of service filed their claims for payment of retirement benefits under RA
No. 1616. When brought before this Court, we ruled that affected officials and employees
of the MWSS who were qualified to retire could claim retirement benefits,
notwithstanding their receipt of benefits under the ERIP. Id. at 570-572.