Republic of the Philippines
Supreme Court
Manila
EN BANC
BANK OF THE PHILIPPINE
ISLANDS, Petitioner, - versus - BPI EMPLOYEES UNION-DAVAO CHAPTER-FEDERATION OF
UNIONS IN BPI UNIBANK, Respondent. |
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G.R. No.
164301 Present: CORONA,
C.J., CARPIO,
VELASCO,
JR., LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, BRION,
PERALTA,
BERSAMIN,* DEL
CASTILLO,** ABAD,
VILLARAMA,
JR., PEREZ,**
MENDOZA,
SERENO,
REYES,*** and PERLAS-BERNABE,
JJ. Promulgated: October
19, 2011 |
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LEONARDO-DE
CASTRO, J.:
In the
present incident, petitioner Bank of the Philippine Islands (BPI) moves for
reconsideration[1]
of our Decision dated August 10, 2010, holding that former employees of the Far
East Bank and Trust Company (FEBTC) absorbed by BPI pursuant to the two
banks merger in 2000 were covered by the Union Shop Clause in the then
existing collective bargaining agreement (CBA)[2]
of BPI with respondent BPI Employees
Union-Davao Chapter-Federation of Unions in BPI Unibank (the Union).
To recall, the Union Shop Clause involved in this long
standing controversy provided, thus:
ARTICLE
II
x x x x
Section 2.
Union Shop - New employees falling within the bargaining unit as defined in
Article I of this Agreement, who may
hereafter be regularly employed by the Bank shall, within thirty (30) days
after they become regular employees, join the Union as a condition of their
continued employment. It is
understood that membership in good standing in the Union is a condition of
their continued employment with the Bank.[3] (Emphases supplied.)
The bone
of contention between the parties was whether or not the absorbed FEBTC
employees fell within the definition of new employees under the Union Shop
Clause, such that they may be required to join respondent union and if they fail
to do so, the Union may request BPI to terminate their employment, as the Union
in fact did in the present case. Needless to state, BPI refused to accede to
the Unions request. Although BPI won
the initial battle at the Voluntary Arbitrator level, BPIs position was
rejected by the Court of Appeals which ruled that the Voluntary Arbitrators
interpretation of the Union Shop Clause was at war with the spirit and
rationale why the Labor Code allows the existence of such provision. On review with this Court, we upheld the
appellate courts ruling and disposed of the case as follows:
WHEREFORE, the petition is hereby DENIED, and the
Decision dated September 30, 2003 of the Court of Appeals is AFFIRMED, subject
to the thirty (30) day notice requirement imposed herein. Former FEBTC
employees who opt not to become union members but who qualify for retirement
shall receive their retirement benefits in accordance with law, the applicable
retirement plan, or the CBA, as the case may be.[4]
Notwithstanding
our affirmation of the applicability of the Union Shop Clause to former FEBTC
employees, for reasons already extensively discussed in the August 10, 2010
Decision, even now BPI continues to protest the inclusion of said employees in
the Union Shop Clause.
In seeking the reversal of our August 10, 2010 Decision,
petitioner insists that the parties to the CBA clearly intended to limit the
application of the Union Shop Clause only to new employees who were hired as
non-regular employees but later attained regular status at some point after
hiring. FEBTC employees cannot be considered new employees as BPI merely
stepped into the shoes of FEBTC as an employer purely as a consequence of the
merger.[5]
Petitioner
likewise relies heavily on the dissenting opinions of our respected colleagues,
Associate Justices Antonio T. Carpio and Arturo D. Brion. From both dissenting
opinions, petitioner derives its contention that the situation of absorbed
employees can be likened to old employees of BPI, insofar as their full tenure
with FEBTC was recognized by BPI and their salaries were maintained and
safeguarded from diminution but such absorbed employees cannot and should not
be treated in exactly the same way as old BPI employees for there are
substantial differences between them.[6] Although petitioner admits that there are
similarities between absorbed and new employees, they insist there are marked
differences between them as well. Thus,
adopting Justice Brions stance, petitioner contends that the absorbed FEBTC
employees should be considered a sui
generis group of employees whose classification will not be duplicated
until BPI has another merger where it would be the surviving corporation.[7] Apparently borrowing from Justice Carpio,
petitioner propounds that the Union Shop Clause should be strictly construed
since it purportedly curtails the right of the absorbed employees to abstain
from joining labor organizations.[8]
Pursuant to our directive, the Union filed its Comment[9]
on the Motion for Reconsideration. In opposition
to petitioners arguments, the Union, in turn, adverts to our discussion in the
August 10, 2010 Decision regarding the voluntary nature of the merger between
BPI and FEBTC, the lack of an express stipulation in the Articles of Merger
regarding the transfer of employment contracts to the surviving corporation,
and the consensual nature of employment contracts as valid bases for the
conclusion that former FEBTC employees should be deemed new employees.[10] The Union argues that the creation of employment
relations between former FEBTC employees and BPI (i.e., BPIs selection and engagement of former FEBTC employees, its
payment of their wages, power of dismissal and of control over the employees
conduct) occurred after the merger, or to be more precise, after the Securities
and Exchange Commissions (SEC) approval of the merger.[11] The Union likewise points out that BPI failed
to offer any counterargument to the Courts reasoning that:
The rationale for upholding the validity of union
shop clauses in a CBA, even if they impinge upon the individual employee's
right or freedom of association, is not to protect the union for the union's
sake. Laws and jurisprudence promote unionism and afford certain protections to
the certified bargaining agent in a unionized company because a strong and
effective union presumably benefits all employees in the bargaining unit since
such a union would be in a better position to demand improved benefits and
conditions of work from the employer. x x x.
x x x Nonetheless, settled jurisprudence has
already swung the balance in favor of unionism, in recognition that ultimately
the individual employee will be benefited by that policy. In the hierarchy of
constitutional values, this Court has repeatedly held that the right to abstain
from joining a labor organization is subordinate to the policy of encouraging
unionism as an instrument of social justice.[12]
While most of the arguments offered by BPI have already
been thoroughly addressed in the August 10, 2010 Decision, we find that a
qualification of our ruling is in order only with respect to the interpretation
of the provisions of the Articles of Merger and its implications on the former
FEBTC employees security of tenure.
Taking a second look on this point, we have come to agree
with Justice Brions view that it is more in keeping with the dictates of
social justice and the State policy of according full protection to labor to
deem employment contracts as automatically assumed by the surviving corporation
in a merger, even in the absence of an express stipulation in the articles of
merger or the merger plan. In his dissenting opinion, Justice Brion reasoned
that:
To my mind, due consideration of Section 80 of the Corporation
Code, the constitutionally declared policies on work, labor and employment, and
the specific FEBTC-BPI situation i.e.,
a merger with complete "body and soul" transfer of all that FEBTC
embodied and possessed and where both participating banks were willing (albeit
by deed, not by their written agreement) to provide for the affected human
resources by recognizing continuity of employment should point this Court to
a declaration that in a complete merger situation where there is total takeover
by one corporation over another and there is silence in the merger agreement on
what the fate of the human resource complement shall be, the latter should not
be left in legal limbo and should be properly provided for, by compelling the
surviving entity to absorb these employees. This is what Section 80 of the
Corporation Code commands, as the surviving corporation has the legal
obligation to assume all the obligations and liabilities of the merged
constituent corporation.
Not to be forgotten is that the affected employees
managed, operated and worked on the transferred assets and properties as their
means of livelihood; they constituted a basic component of their corporation
during its existence. In a merger and consolidation situation, they cannot be treated
without consideration of the applicable constitutional declarations and
directives, or, worse, be simply disregarded. If they are so treated, it is up
to this Court to read and interpret the law so that they are treated in
accordance with the legal requirements of mergers and consolidation, read in
light of the social justice, economic and social provisions of our
Constitution. Hence, there is a need for the surviving corporation to take
responsibility for the affected employees and to absorb them into its workforce
where no appropriate provision for the merged corporation's human resources
component is made in the Merger Plan.[13]
By upholding the automatic assumption of the non-surviving
corporations existing employment contracts by the surviving corporation in a
merger, the Court strengthens judicial protection of the right to security of
tenure of employees affected by a merger and avoids confusion regarding the
status of their various benefits which were among the chief objections of our
dissenting colleagues. However, nothing
in this Resolution shall impair the right of an employer to terminate the
employment of the absorbed employees for a lawful or authorized cause or the
right of such an employee to resign, retire or otherwise sever his employment,
whether before or after the merger, subject
to existing contractual obligations.
In this manner, Justice Brions theory of automatic assumption may be
reconciled with the majoritys concerns with the successor employers
prerogative to choose its employees and the prohibition against involuntary
servitude.
Notwithstanding this concession, we find no reason to
reverse our previous pronouncement that the absorbed FEBTC employees are
covered by the Union Shop Clause.
Even in our August 10, 2010 Decision, we already observed
that the legal fiction in the law on mergers (that the surviving corporation
continues the corporate existence of the non-surviving corporation) is mainly a
tool to adjudicate the rights and obligations between and among the merged
corporations and the persons that deal with them.[14] Such a legal fiction cannot be unduly
extended to an interpretation of a Union Shop Clause so as to defeat its
purpose under labor law. Hence, we
stated in the Decision that:
In any event, it is of no moment that the former
FEBTC employees retained the regular status that they possessed while working
for their former employer upon their absorption by petitioner. This fact would
not remove them from the scope of the phrase "new employees" as
contemplated in the Union Shop Clause of the CBA, contrary to petitioner's
insistence that the term "new employees" only refers to those who are
initially hired as non-regular employees for possible regular employment.
The Union Shop Clause in the CBA simply states that
"new employees" who during the effectivity of the CBA "may be
regularly employed" by the Bank must join the union within thirty (30)
days from their regularization. There is nothing in the said clause that limits
its application to only new employees who possess non-regular status, meaning
probationary status, at the start of their employment. Petitioner likewise
failed to point to any provision in the CBA expressly excluding from the Union
Shop Clause new employees who are "absorbed" as regular employees
from the beginning of their employment. What is indubitable from the Union Shop
Clause is that upon the effectivity of the CBA, petitioner's new regular
employees (regardless of the manner by which they became employees of BPI) are
required to join the Union as a condition of their continued employment.[15]
Although by virtue
of the merger BPI steps into the shoes of FEBTC as a successor employer as if
the former had been the employer of the latters employees from the beginning
it must be emphasized that, in reality, the legal consequences of the merger
only occur at a specific date, i.e., upon its effectivity which is the date
of approval of the merger by the SEC. Thus, we observed in the Decision that
BPI and FEBTC stipulated in the Articles of Merger that they will both continue
their respective business operations until the SEC issues the certificate of
merger and in the event no such certificate is issued, they shall hold each
other blameless for the non-consummation of the merger.[16]
We likewise previously noted that BPI made its assignments of the former FEBTC
employees effective on April 10, 2000, or after the SEC approved the merger.[17] In other words, the obligation of BPI to pay
the salaries and benefits of the former FEBTC employees and its right of
discipline and control over them only arose with the effectivity of the
merger. Concomitantly, the obligation of
former FEBTC employees to render service to BPI and their right to receive
benefits from the latter also arose upon the effectivity of the merger. What is material is that all of these legal
consequences of the merger took place during the life of an existing and valid
CBA between BPI and the Union wherein they have mutually consented to include a
Union Shop Clause.
From the
plain, ordinary meaning of the terms of the Union Shop Clause, it covers
employees who (a) enter the employ of BPI during the term of the CBA; (b) are
part of the bargaining unit (defined in the CBA as comprised of BPIs rank and
file employees); and (c) become regular employees without distinguishing as to
the manner they acquire their regular status.
Consequently, the number of such employees may adversely affect the
majority status of the Union and even its existence itself, as already amply
explained in the Decision.
Indeed, there are differences between (a) new employees who
are hired as probationary or temporary but later regularized, and (b) new
employees who, by virtue of a merger, are absorbed from another company as
regular and permanent from the beginning of their employment with the surviving
corporation. It bears reiterating here
that these differences are too insubstantial to warrant the exclusion of the
absorbed employees from the application of the Union Shop Clause. In the Decision, we noted that:
Verily, we agree with the Court of Appeals that
there are no substantial differences between a newly hired non-regular employee
who was regularized weeks or months after his hiring and a new employee who was
absorbed from another bank as a regular employee pursuant to a merger, for
purposes of applying the Union Shop Clause. Both employees were hired/employed
only after the CBA was signed. At the time they are being required to join the
Union, they are both already regular rank and file employees of BPI. They
belong to the same bargaining unit being represented by the Union. They both
enjoy benefits that the Union was able to secure for them under the CBA. When
they both entered the employ of BPI, the CBA and the Union Shop Clause therein
were already in effect and neither of them had the opportunity to express their
preference for unionism or not. We see no cogent reason why the Union Shop
Clause should not be applied equally to these two types of new employees, for
they are undeniably similarly situated.[18]
Again, it
is worthwhile to highlight that a contrary interpretation of the Union Shop
Clause would dilute its efficacy and put the certified union that is supposedly
being protected thereby at the mercy of management. For if the former FEBTC employees had no say
in the merger of its former employer with another bank, as petitioner BPI
repeatedly decries on their behalf, the Union likewise could not prevent BPI
from proceeding with the merger which undisputedly affected the number of
employees in the bargaining unit that the Union represents and may negatively
impact on the Unions majority status.
In this instance, we should be guided by the principle that courts must place
a practical and realistic construction upon a CBA, giving due consideration to
the context in which it is negotiated and purpose which it is intended to
serve.[19]
We now
come to the question: Does our
affirmance of our ruling that former FEBTC employees absorbed by BPI are
covered by the Union Shop Clause violate their right to security of tenure
which we expressly upheld in this Resolution?
We answer in the negative.
In Rance v. National Labor Relations Commission,[20]
we held that:
It is the policy of the state to assure the right of
workers to "security of tenure" (Article XIII, Sec. 3 of the New
Constitution, Section 9, Article II of the 1973 Constitution). The guarantee is
an act of social justice. When a person has no property, his job may possibly
be his only possession or means of livelihood. Therefore, he should be
protected against any arbitrary deprivation of his job. Article 280 of the
Labor Code has construed security of tenure as meaning that "the
employer shall not terminate the services of an employee except for a just cause
or when authorized by" the Code.
x x x (Emphasis supplied.)
We have
also previously held that the fundamental guarantee of security of tenure and
due process dictates that no worker shall be dismissed except for a just and
authorized cause provided by law and after due process is observed.[21] Even as we now recognize the right to
continuous, unbroken employment of workers who are absorbed into a new company
pursuant to a merger, it is but logical that their employment may be terminated
for any causes provided for under the law or in jurisprudence without violating
their right to security of tenure. As
Justice Carpio discussed in his dissenting opinion, it is well-settled that
termination of employment by virtue of a union security clause embodied in a CBA
is recognized in our jurisdiction.[22] In Del
Monte Philippines, Inc. v. Saldivar,[23]
we explained the rationale for this policy in this wise:
Article 279 of the Labor Code ordains that "in
cases of regular employment, the employer shall not terminate the services of
an employee except for a just cause or when authorized by [Title I, Book Six of
the Labor Code]." Admittedly, the enforcement of a closed-shop or union
security provision in the CBA as a ground for termination finds no extension
within any of the provisions under Title I, Book Six of the Labor Code. Yet
jurisprudence has consistently recognized, thus: "It is State
policy to promote unionism to enable workers to negotiate with management
on an even playing field and with more persuasiveness than if they were to
individually and separately bargain with the employer. For this reason, the law
has allowed stipulations for 'union shop' and 'closed shop' as means of
encouraging workers to join and support the union of their choice in the
protection of their rights and interests vis-a-vis
the employer."[24]
(Emphasis supplied.)
Although it is accepted that
non-compliance with a union security clause is a valid ground for an employees
dismissal, jurisprudence dictates that such a dismissal must still be done in
accordance with due process. This much
we decreed in General Milling Corporation
v. Casio,[25] to wit:
The Court
reiterated in Malayang Samahan ng mga
Manggagawa sa M. Greenfield v. Ramos that:
While respondent
company may validly dismiss the employees expelled by the union for disloyalty
under the union security clause of the collective bargaining agreement upon the
recommendation by the union, this dismissal should not be done hastily and
summarily thereby eroding the employees' right to due process,
self-organization and security of tenure. The enforcement of union security
clauses is authorized by law provided
such enforcement is not characterized by arbitrariness, and always with due
process. Even on the assumption that the federation had valid grounds to
expel the union officers, due process requires that these union officers be accorded a separate hearing by
respondent company.
The twin requirements
of notice and hearing constitute the essential elements of procedural due
process. The law requires the employer to furnish the employee sought to be
dismissed with two written notices before termination of employment can be
legally effected: (1) a written notice apprising the employee of the particular
acts or omissions for which his dismissal is sought in order to afford him an
opportunity to be heard and to defend himself with the assistance of counsel,
if he desires, and (2) a subsequent notice informing the employee of the
employer's decision to dismiss him. This procedure is mandatory and its absence
taints the dismissal with illegality.
Irrefragably,
GMC cannot dispense with the
requirements of notice and hearing before dismissing Casio, et al. even when
said dismissal is pursuant to the closed shop provision in the CBA. The
rights of an employee to be informed of the charges against him and to
reasonable opportunity to present his side in a controversy with either the
company or his own union are not wiped away by a union security clause or a
union shop clause in a collective bargaining agreement. x x x[26]
(Emphases supplied.)
In light of the foregoing, we find
it appropriate to state that, apart from the fresh thirty (30)-day period from
notice of finality of the Decision given to the affected FEBTC employees to
join the Union before the latter can request petitioner to terminate the
formers employment, petitioner must still accord said employees the twin
requirements of notice and hearing on the possibility that they may have other
justifications for not joining the Union.
Similar to our August 10, 2010 Decision, we reiterate that our ruling
presupposes there has been no material change in the situation of the parties
in the interim.
WHEREFORE,
the
Motion for Reconsideration is DENIED. The Decision dated August
10, 2010 is AFFIRMED, subject to the
qualifications that:
(a)
Petitioner is deemed to have assumed the employment contracts of the Far
East Bank and Trust Company (FEBTC) employees upon effectivity of the merger without
break in the continuity of their
employment, even without express stipulation in the Articles of Merger;
and
(b)
Aside from the thirty (30) days, counted from notice of finality of the
August 10, 2010 Decision, given to former FEBTC employees to join the
respondent, said employees shall be accorded full procedural due process before
their employment may be terminated.
SO ORDERED.
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TERESITA J. LEONARDO-DE CASTRO
Associate
Justice |
WE CONCUR:
I
reiterate my Dissenting Opinion ANTONIO
T. CARPIO Associate
Justice |
PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR.Associate
Justice |
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In light of modification, I Concur ARTURO D. BRION Associate Justice |
DIOSDADO M. PERALTA Associate
Justice |
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On official leave
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On leave
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LUCAS P. BERSAMIN Associate Justice
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MARIANO C. DEL CASTILLO Associate Justice
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ROBERTO A. ABAD
Associate Justice
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MARTIN S. VILLARAMA, JR. Associate
Justice |
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On leave |
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JOSE PORTUGAL
PEREZ Associate
Justice |
JOSE CATRAL
MENDOZA Associate
Justice |
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No
part |
I join J.
Carpio MARIA LOURDES
P. A. SERENO Associate Justice |
BIENVENIDO L.
REYES Associate
Justice |
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ESTELA
M. PERLAS-BERNABE
Pursuant to Article VIII, Section 13
of the Constitution, I certify that the conclusions in the above Resolution had
been reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the
opinion of the Court.
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RENATO C. CORONAChief Justice
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* On official leave.
** On leave.
*** No part.
[1] Rollo, pp. 249-258.
[2] The term of the CBA in question covered the period April 1, 1996 to March 31, 2001.
[3] Bank of the Philippine Islands v. BPI Employees Union-Davao
Chapter-Federation of Unions in BPI Unibank, G.R. No. 164301, August 10,
2010, 627 SCRA 590, 613.
[4] Id. at 649.
[5] Rollo, pp. 251-252; Motion for Reconsideration, pp. 3-4.
[6] Id. at 253; id. at 5.
[7] Justice Brions Dissenting Opinion, Bank of the Philippine Islands v. BPI Employees Union-Davao Chapter-Federation of Unions in BPI Unibank, supra note 3 at 693; quoted in Motion for Reconsideration, id.
[8] Rollo, pp. 254-256.
[9] Id. at 262-278.
[10] Id. at 264-271.
[11] Id. at 275.
[12] Bank of the Philippine Islands v. BPI Employees Union-Davao Chapter-Federation of Unions in BPI Unibank, supra note 3 at 647-648.
[13] Id. at 683-684.
[14] Id. at 630-631.
[15] Id. at 632.
[16] Id. at 634.
[17] Id.
[18] Id. at 635-636.
[19] Marcopper Mining Corporation v. National Labor Relations Commission, 325 Phil. 618, 632 (1996).
[20] 246 Phil. 287, 292-293 (1988), cited in Gatus v. Quality House Inc., G.R. No. 156766, April 16, 2009, 585 SCRA 177, 199 and Perez v. Philippine Telegraph and Telephone Company, G.R. No. 152048, April 7, 2009, 584 SCRA 110, 150.
[21] Cosep
v. National Labor Relations Commission, 353 Phil. 148, 157 (1998); Archbuild Masters and Construction, Inc.
v. National Labor Relations Commission, 321 Phil. 869, 877 (1995).
[22] Justice Carpios Dissenting Opinion, Bank of the Philippine Islands v. BPI Employees Union-Davao Chapter-Federation of Unions in BPI Unibank, supra note 3 at 667, citing Alabang Country Club, Inc. v. National Labor Relations Commission, G.R. No. 170287, February 14, 2008, 545 SCRA 351, 361.
[23] G.R. No. 158620, October 11, 2006, 504 SCRA 192.
[24] Id. at 203-204.
[25] G.R. No. 149552, March 10, 2010, 615 SCRA 13.
[26] Id. at 34-35.