SECOND DIVISION
MOTOROLA
PHILIPPINES, INC. and/or SCG PHILIPPINES, INC., ROMERICO S. SERRANO, DANIEL
JAVELOSA, ALFRED GAMBOL, ANN DALUPAN and JOSEPH JACOBSON, Petitioners, - versus - IMELDA B. AMBROCIO, AMELITA ALAO, MERLE ALMASCO,
LIBRADA C. ACEBES, ELVIRA C. ANULAT, FE ARAGON, CARINA D. ARGAME, MA. TERESA R. ALMARIO,
ISIDORA S. ALMENDRAS, ARLENE C. ALINDAY, EDNA B. ASIATICO, SUSANA AGUILON,
MELINDA A. BALLON, ANNABELLA T. BRAVO, FEROLYN H. BACO, LOIDA A. BONSOL, MA. LUISA
L. BONAOBRA, TERESITA BELBES, EMILIANA C. CARRAO, MA. CRISTINA L. CARINO,
ERLINDA T. CARIGMA, DAISY E. CAPUNO, IMELDA S. CAGUIOA, AMELIA E. CASTRO,
ROSEMARIE B. CASICAS, CARMELITA B. CASTILLO, FLORA O. CABRERA, MERLINDA B.
CAJILIG, CRISELDA D. CAINGLET, ROSITA B. CERBAS, MA. VICTORIA R. CERRER,
MARILOU T. COSCOS, SILVIA S. CUNANAN, PERLITA CIELO, TERESITA B. CRUZ,
LUZVIMINDA E. CELIS, RUFINA T. CRUZ, YOLANDA D. CONSTANTINO, ANABELEN CANAPI,
JOCELYN CHALAN, MAYDELYN C. DAYAO, ERLINDA M. DAJAO, BRIGIDA R. DE CHAVEZ,
MERLE E. DE LOS SANTOS, CRISTINA C. DUPAYA, CERLY B. DISTOR, YOLANDA A. DIONISIO, GLORIA R. DAIGDIGAN,
YOLANDA DE JESUS, HAYDEE G. DE LEON, MERCEDITA M. DELGADO, ROSALINDA B. DEL
ROSARIO, CRISTINA D. ENTUCIASMO,
EUGENIA G. ENRIQUES, ELIZABETH G. FRANCIA, FLORDELINA B. FLORES,
LEDILLA DARDE, ROSALIDAR R. GARCIA, REMEDIOS B. GALMAN, CURINA F. GAMA, ELISA
G. GUSTILO, ISABELITA A. GAGARIN, SERENA G. GENTOLLANES, MA. EMELITA T.
GUARIN, ANNE C. GONZALES, ARCILLA G. GLORIA, DOROTEA T. HAMILE, RIZALINA
CARAMAT, ERLINDA DEUDA, DOMINGA ILAO, NAZARIA P. HERNANDEZ, EDITHA P.
JAUDALSO, CELEDONIA LAPUZ, JOSEPHINE T. LAGUNERO, OLIVIA O. LABRADOR, EMELITA
G. LEGASPI, WILMA G. LEMONCITO, CARLINA R. LIRAZAN, LUISA R. LOYOLA, JEAN S.
LOZANO, MA. TERESA R. LIZARDO, NENA L. MARCELO, CORAZON R. MATEO, GUADALUPE
T. MAYNIGO, LOLITA C. MALLILLIN, HELEN Q. MERCADO, TERESITA L. MEDIADO,
ERLINDA G. MECUA, EDITHA M. MERCADO, DORIS V. MADARANG, LOIDA G. MALLARI,
MARILOU C. MARTINEZ, LUCIA C. MANALO, RUBY M. MAMARIL, ANITA C. MEDALLA, LTA
M. MEJIA, MARY A. MINA, GLORIA M.
NIEVA, MELINDA F. NOFUENTE, CORAZON B. NUYDA LETICIA R. ORTEGA, ROMEO P.
ORTEGA, RAUL R. ORAA, FE P. PASCUA, GLICERIA B. PLACIDO, FELICITAS R. PATO,
SYLVIA PERALTA, LENIDA R. PONES, ROSALINDA PAREDES, YOLANDA PANGANIBAN,
MARITEL PILASPILAS, CONSOLACION M. QUINOY, FLORANDO C. QUITAIN, ERLINDA I.
REYES, ROSENDA S. RAMOS, IRENE G. REGACHO, EMILITA R. REYES, LEONORA A.
RIVERA, REMEDIOS M. ROBOSA, MELINDA G. RODULFO, LEPOLDO A. RODRIGUEZ,
VERONICA S. RIVERA, NANCY J. ROMERO, TERESITA F. RONQUILLO, EVA B. RUANTO,
MARIA LUISA LUY RABIN, ROSITA SABINO, ROSEMARIE J. SALANATIN, MARILIE S.
SANCHEZ, OLIVIA C. SANTIOQUE, LUISA R. SAN MIGUEL, JOSEFINA F. SAN MIGUEL,
ANGELES C. SAMAR, OLIVIA P. SALLE, NELIA E. SARABILLO, NENITA R. SAFLOR,
GLORIA B. SANTIAGO, ANGELINA H. SANTOS, MARINA B. SOLIDUM, MARITESS G. SUNGA,
SALVADOR M. SALES, SUSANA C. TAGAM, ARCEL S. TAYAG, JOSEPHINE B. TADIOAN,
SILVIA L. TAN, LIGAYA C. TANCINGCO, MARIVIC R. TELEBRICO, ROSELYN B. TERUEL,
MARILYN G. TOLENTINO, MARILYN B. TAGUINES, AMALIA UNIPA, MANUEL UNIPA,
EMERENCIANA VILLAGONZALO, NINA VILLANUEVA, JOSEPHINE VILLANUEVA, HELEN J.
VILLARIN, NELIA VILLANUEVA, ANALYN B. VIDA, CLAUDIA YASAY, GLORIA C. ZAFRA,
SYLVIA R. ZAFRA, FLOR G. FUNA, BELEN BANDALAN, ELENA H. SARZUELA, CRISTINA C.
BALICOCO, GLORIA C. BALICOCO, GLORIA N. BANOG, REMEGIA DE LOS SANTOS, BEVERLY
N. PAYAS, JULIET BUERA, EMERCIANA E. MARCELO, LEONIDA N. QUINTO, AURORA Q.
BACUD, ZENAIDA R. MANAHAN, VIVIAN G. PERALTA, CRISANTA ROTONE, LEONILA R.
VIRTUS, TERESA ALEGADA, ROSALINA R. AQUINO, JAIME A. AROGO, ELISA C. BARLAS,
JULIETA V. BUENAVENTURA, HELEN F. CAMAROA, EDNA C. ESTILLORE, HELINDA H.
HAGOOT, LIBERTY B. ISIP, EMERLITA B. LAYNO, ANGELITA C. MACALINDONG, SEVERINA
E. MALAGA, VIOLETA C. NACIANCENO, MARITA C. NATIVIDAD, CRISTINA NAVARRO,
RODRIGO L. RIVERA, TERESITA C. ROLLON, REMEDIOS C. SANTOS, MILAGROS B. SUNGA,
VIDISTA B. TALAVERA, CARMELITA J. TAMPE, VIOLETA P. GUEVARA, AMELITA ILAO,
MYRNA A. COMBALECER, CONCHITA V. CONSIBIDO, LIZA MOYA, SUSAN PATARATA, MILA
SAMORTIN, BEATRIZ UMALI, EVA BANCOLETA, RIZALINO BANCOLETA, MARIA RIZA BERNI,
ELIZABETH SUNGA, IMELDA DE VILLA and MINDA SAN PEDRO, Respondents. |
G.R. No. 173279 Present: QUISUMBING,
J., Chairperson, CARPIO
MORALES, TINGA, VELASCO, JR., and PERALTA,*
JJ. Promulgated: March 30, 2009 |
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D E C I S I O N
CARPIO MORALES, J.:
On petition
for review on certiorari is the Court of Appeals March 1, 2006 Resolution[1]
and June 27, 2006 Resolution[2]
reinstating the appeal of respondent Imelda B. Ambrocio and 235[3]
other respondents from the December 13, 2004 Resolution[4]
and September 30, 2005 Resolution[5]
of the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) in NLRC RAB IV Case Nos.
4-13771-01-C, and 4-13772-01-C.
Culled from the five-volume records of
the case are the following undisputed facts:
Sometime in 1997, Motorola
Philippines, Inc. (MPI), a subsidiary of Motorola U.S., decided to close its
Parañaque plant in order to consolidate its operations at its Carmona, Cavite
plant. It thus offered to its affected
employees a redundancy/separation package consisting of the following benefits
and emoluments:
1)
separation pay equivalent to two
months salary per year of service;
2)
two-year health insurance policy;
3)
one-year life insurance policy;
4)
cost of stock liquidation
transactions on the employees’ stock options;
5)
orientation program on fund
management; and
6)
orientation program and training on
livelihood options.
Out of
about 900 employees who availed of the package and were consequently separated
from employment on July 24, 1998 when MPI’s Parañaque plant finally closed shop,
236 employees including respondents herein, filed on July 24, 2001 two
separate complaints against MPI, for payment of retirement pay equivalent to one month salary per year of service,
alleging that they were entitled thereto under Sec. III-B of MPI’s Retirement
Plan.[6]
For its
part, MPI alleged that the applicable retirement plan was not Sec. III-B, but
Policy 1215, specifically Sec. III par. 6 thereof which reads:
In case of voluntary separation from the company due to Labor
Saving devices or redundancy, retrenchment program initiated by the Company as
a result of a merger or to prevent losses or other similar causes, the company
shall provide a separation pay equivalent to one (1) month’s pay per year of
service, inclusive of any service benefit eligibility under the Retirement
Plan.[7] (Italics and underscoring supplied)
MPI thus
insisted that respondents had already received such one-month pay, the same having
been included in the cash component of the separation/redundancy package,
which consisted of two-months pay per year of service, paid to them.
Labor Arbiter Waldo Emerson Gan, by Decision[8]
of December 16, 2002, found MPI and its officers liable to respondents for the
payment of “retirement pay service
benefits” under Sec. III-B of the Retirement Plan, as well as for interest thereon
at 15% per annum, moral and exemplary damages equivalent to 25% of the total
monetary award in each case, and attorney’s fees equivalent to 15% of the total
monetary award in each case.
In arriving
at the decision, the Arbiter noted that retirement pay is separate and distinct
from separation pay, hence, respondents
were entitled to their claim of another separate one-month pay per year of
service; that Policy 1215 was unfair; and that the quitclaims and waivers
signed by respondents were void for they were forced and defrauded into signing
them.
MPI appealed to the NLRC, which move
was opposed by respondents, they alleging that the appeal was not perfected
since the surety bond was filed not by MPI but by Motorola Communications
Philippines, Inc. (MCPI) “for and in behalf of Motorola Philippines, Inc.
and/or SCG Corporation,” and that the initial amount of the bond posted was insufficient,
being way below the amount of the total monetary award.
Respondents’
opposition notwithstanding, the NLRC gave due course to MPI’s appeal by
Resolution of December 13, 2004, it holding that there is nothing in the law which requires that only the
employer can post the appeal bond in
order to perfect it, hence, MCPI was not precluded from filing the same on
behalf of MPI and/or SCG Corporation.
The NLRC
further held that the “rationale behind the requirement for the posting of an
appeal bond to perfect an appeal is to guarantee the payment of the employee’s
valid and legal claims against any occurrence, during the pendency of the
appeal, that would defeat or diminish recovery under the appealed judgment if
it is subsequently affirmed,” and this was complied with by MCPI’s filing of
the appeal bond in favor of MPI.
Moreover,
the NLRC gave credence to MPI’s explanation that prior to MPI’s transfer of
ownership to SCG Corporation, it was a sister company of MCPI, and the posting
of the appeal bond by MCPI in favor of MPI/SCG Corporation was in fact in compliance
with the indemnity agreement Motorola,
Inc., MCPI’s parent company, entered into with SCG – that SCG would be free
from any and all liability arising from or related to the claims of MPI’s
former employees who were separated when SCG acquired its business.
Respecting the merits of the appeal,
the NLRC held that MPI was not liable for payment of the so-called “retirement
service benefits” under Sec. III-B of the Retirement Plan, consistent with its
earlier findings in “Fe de Vera, et al.
v. Motorola Philippines, Inc., et al., and Yolanda Rombaon, et al. v. Motorola
Philippines, Inc. – cases filed by former employees of MPI which it decided
on appeal.
In granting
MPI’s appeal and dismissing the complaint of respondents, the NLRC held that the
benefits received by respondents for involuntary separation under MPI’s
retirement plan included the service pay benefits under either Sec.
III-B of the Retirement Plan or Policy 1215 which both grant exactly the same
benefit in case of involuntary separation – one month’s pay for every year of
service.
The NLRC
added that retirement pay is due only if an employee retires, and since none of
respondents retired but were actually involuntarily separated due to
redundancy, then they cannot avail of such pay.
The NLRC thus
concluded that since respondents availed of the separation package consisting
of two months pay for every year of service (as well as other emoluments) under
MPI’s retirement plan and Article 283 of the Labor Code, as amended, they no
longer have any cause of action.
Contrary to the arbiter’s observation,
the NLRC held that Policy 1215 was fair, for it did not revoke nor reduce any
of the benefits granted under Sec. III-B of the Retirement Plan.
On the
quitclaims and waivers executed by respondents, the NLRC found the same to be
valid, it noting that respondents were given every opportunity to ask questions
and review them in connection with the redundancy program through the meetings
and seminars held, and pamphlets and other materials were in fact distributed
and explained to them by MPI’s officers.
The NLRC deleted the arbiter’s award
of damages and attorney’s fees, finding no basis therefor. And with respect to the complaint of the four
respondents namely Conchita V. Consibido, Violeta P. Guevarra, Liza Moya and
Mila Samortin, the NLRC held that their cause of action had prescribed, their
complaints having been filed three (3) years and one day from the time they
were separated.
Finally, the
NLRC rebuked the arbiter for granting monetary claims to persons, who were not
listed as complainants in the two complaints, also named as respondents herein,
viz: Rizalino Bancoleta, Elizabeth
Sunga, Eva Bancoleta, Imelda de Villa, Maria Riza Berni, and Minda San Pablo.
Their motion for reconsideration
having been denied by Resolution dated September 30, 2005, respondents appealed
to the Court of Appeals.
Initially, the appellate court
dismissed the petition by Resolution[9]
promulgated on January 10, 2006 on the following technicalities: the signatory to
the certification against non-forum shopping had no apparent authorization; the
copies of the assailed NLRC resolutions appended to the petition were not
certified true copies; and the copy of MPI’s reply to the opposition as
mentioned in the petition was not attached as required under Section 3 of Rule
46.
However, by the first challenged Resolution
of March 1, 2006, the appellate court reinstated the petition on respondents’ motion
for reconsideration.
MPI filed a
motion for reconsideration of the said Resolution of March 1, 2006, questioning
the reinstatement of the petition, noting[10]
that respondents’ motion for reconsideration was filed out of time on February
8, 2006 or 11 days after the January 10, 2006 Resolution was received by respondents
on January 13, 2006. MPI concluded that
since respondents’ motion for reconsideration was filed out of time, then the
January 10, 2006 Resolution dismissing the petition had attained finality.
MPI, in any
event, pointed out that the petition remained defective for the following
reasons: the certification against forum shopping was signed by one Fe de Vera
who is not a party to the case nor was authorized to sign it, ostensibly to “simplify
the tedious individual signing of several legal documents,” and the belated
submission of the special power of attorneys (SPAs) in favor of de Vera did not
cure the defect; the SPAs are dubious;
and there was no explanation as to the belated filing of the Motion for Reconsideration
as required under the Rules.
The appellate court, by Resolution
dated June 27, 2006, denied MPI’s motion for reconsideration, justifying its
reinstatement of the petition with the fact that the petition was filed by more
than a hundred complainants, hence, impressed it with a strong public interest
warranting a suspension of the Rules in line with Amorganda v. CA.[11]
Hence, the
instant petition for review on certiorari wherein MPI faults the appellate
court to have committed grave abuse of discretion in reinstating respondents’
petition, and in, among other things, applying the Amorganda ruling given that respondents did not give any
explanation at all for their belated filing of their Motion for Reconsideration.
And MPI
maintains that the attachments to the Motion for Reconsideration did not cure
the fatal defects in the petition.
The petition is impressed with merit.
Procedural rules are not to be belittled or dismissed simply because their non-observance may have resulted in prejudicing a party’s substantive rights. The bare invocation of “substantial justice” is not a magic wand that will compel the court to suspend the rules of procedure. Rather, the appellate court needs to assess if the appeal is absolutely meritorious on its face. Only after such finding, can it ease the often stringent rules of procedure.[12] (Emphasis supplied)
In the present case, aside from the
appellate court’s declaration that the fact that the “case has been filed by
more than a hundred petitioners is sufficient to impress it with a strong
public interest,” no compelling reason was proffered to justify the acceptance
of respondents’ motion for reconsideration which was admittedly filed out of
time or 11 days beyond the reglementary period.
It is a hornbook doctrine that the 15-day reglementary period for filing a motion for reconsideration
is non-extendible. Provisions of the
Rules of Court prescribing the time within which certain acts must be done or
certain proceedings taken are considered absolutely indispensable to the
prevention of needless delays and to the orderly and speedy discharge of
judicial businesses and strict compliance with such rules is mandatory and
imperative.[13]
The citation by the appellate court of the ruling in Amorganda is misplaced. In Amorganda,
the Court stated that the therein petitioners’ motion for reconsideration which
was filed two calendar days late should have been given due course by the
appellate court, as the counsel’s mistaken belief that the last day for filing
the motion, a Saturday, was a legal holiday, is pardonable.[14] The Court went on to note that “anyway, the
delay of two (2) calendar days – one of which was a Sunday- in the filing of
the motion for reconsideration did not prejudice the cause of private
respondents, or that said private respondents suffered material injury by
reason of the delay,” and that “private respondents who appear to be guilty of
coercion, stand to unjustly profit from their fraudulent and deceitful act at
the expense of petitioners.”[15]
In the case
at bar, not only was there a considerable delay of 11 days beyond the 15-day
reglementary period; no explanation therefor
was proffered by respondents. That
respondents numbered more than a hundred does not, per se, justify the
relaxation of procedural rules.
The unexplained delay in the filing
of respondents’ motion for reconsideration
before the appellate court is not just a technical lapse which can be excused. More importantly, it is a jurisdictional
defect to thus render the January 10, 2006 Resolution final and executory. As such, the appellate court erred in taking
cognizance of the motion for reconsideration.
Technicality aside, on the merits,
respondents have no cause of action as against petitioners with respect to
their claim for additional retirement benefits. Article 283 of the Labor Code, as amended,
provides:
ART.
283. Closure of establishment and reduction of personnel. – The employer
may also terminate the employment of any employee due to the installation of
labor saving devices, redundancy, retrenchment to prevent losses or the closing
or cessation of operation of the establishment or undertaking unless the
closing is for the purpose of circumventing the provisions of this Title, by
serving a written notice on the workers and the [Department] of Labor and
Employment at least one (1) month before the intended date thereof. In case of termination due to the
installation of labor-saving devices or redundancy, the worker affected thereby
shall be entitled to a separation pay equivalent to at least his one (1) month
pay or to at least one (1) month pay for every year of service, whichever is
higher. In case of retrenchment to prevent losses and in cases of closures
or cessation of operations of establishment or undertaking not due to serious
business losses or financial reverses, the separation pay shall be equivalent
to one (1) month pay or at least one-half (1/2) month pay for every year of
service, whichever is higher. A fraction of at least six (6) months shall be
considered one (1) whole year." (Emphasis supplied)
Separation pay
has been defined as the amount that an employee receives at the time of his
severance and is designed to provide the employee with the wherewithal during
the period he is looking for another employment,[16]
and is recoverable only in the instances enumerated under Articles 283 and 284
of the Labor Code, as amended, or in illegal dismissal cases when reinstatement
is no longer possible.
Retirement pay, on the other hand, presupposes that the
employee entitled to it has reached the compulsory retirement age or has
rendered the required number of years as provided for in the collective
bargaining agreement (CBA), the employment contract or company policy, or in
the absence thereof, in Republic Act No. 7641 or the Retirement Law.
It is admitted that respondents
were terminated pursuant to a redundancy, and not due to retirement program,
hence, they were entitled to a separation pay of one month salary per year of
service.
As correctly ruled by the
NLRC, by whatever version of MPI’s Retirement Plan would be made applicable,
respondents are entitled to a separation pay of one month salary per year of
service. Under Sec. III-B of the Plan on
which respondents rely, “[i]n case of involuntary separation with the company
due to retrenchment/redundancy, the employee shall be given a service benefit
equivalent to one month per year of service.”
On the other hand, based on Policy 1215 on which MPI relies, under the
same circumstances, the company shall
provide its employee a separation pay equivalent to one (1) month’s pay per
year of service, inclusive of any service benefit eligibility under the
Retirement Plan.
Thus, when respondents
were paid a separation pay of two months salary for every year of
service under the Redundancy Package, they already received what was due them
under the law and in accordance with MPI’s plan.
WHEREFORE, the petition of Motorola is hereby GRANTED. The Resolution of the Court of Appeals dated March 1, 2006 and its Resolution dated June
27, 2006 are SET ASIDE. Respondents’ petition for certiorari is
DISMISSED.
SO ORDERED.
CONCHITA CARPIO
MORALES
Associate
Justice
WE CONCUR:
LEONARDO A.
QUISUMBING
Associate Justice
Chairperson
DANTE O. TINGA Associate Justice |
PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR. Associate Justice |
DIOSDADO M. PERALTA
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.
LEONARDO
A. QUISUMBING
Associate
Justice
Chairperson
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to
Section 13, Article VIII of the Constitution, and the Division Chairperson’s
Attestation, I certify 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
* Additional member per Special Order No. 587 dated March 16, 2009 in lieu of the leave of absence due to sickness of Justice Arturo D. Brion.
[1] CA rollo, pp. 823-824. Penned by Associate Justice Mario L. Guariña III and concurred in by Associate Justices Roberto A. Barrios and Santiago Javier Ranada.
[2] Rollo, p.15-16. Penned by Associate Justice Mario L. Guariña III and concurred in by Associate Justices Roberto A. Barrios and Santiago Javier Ranada.
[3] A physical count of the herein named petitioners shows that there are only 188 of them.
[4] Records I, pp. 680-703. Per curiam, Presiding Commissioner Lourdes C. Javier and Commissioners Tito F. Genilo and Ernesto C. Verceles.
[5] Records II pp. 833-837. Per curiam, Presiding Commissioner Lourdes C. Javier and Commissioners Tito F. Genilo and Romeo C. Lagman.
[6] B. INVOLUNTARY SEPARATION
In case of involuntary separation with the company due to retrenchment/redundancy, the employee shall be given a service benefit equivalent to one month per year of service.
[7] Policy 1215, Records I, pp. 204-213 at 210.
[8] CA
rollo, pp. 701-732.
[9] CA rollo, pp. 452-453. Penned by Associate Justice Mario L. Guariña III and concurred in by Associate Justices Roberto A. Barrios and Santiago Javier Ranada.
[10] See Motion for Time Ad Cautelam to file Comment Ad Cautelam to Joint Petition for Certiorari, CA rollo, pp. 825-828.
[11] No. L-80040,
[12] Securities
and Exchange Commission v. PICOP Resources, Inc., G.R. No. 164314,
[13] Ponciano v. Laguna Lake Development Authority, G.R. No. 174536, October 29, 2008.
[14] Amorganda, supra, at 210.
[15] Id.
[16] Gabuay
v. Oversea Paper Supply, G.R. No. 148837,