FIRST DIVISION
[ G.R. No. 122653, December 12, 1997 ]PURE FOODS CORPORATON v. NLRC +
PURE FOODS CORPORATON, PETITIONER, VS. NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION, RODOLFO CORDOVA, VIOLETA CRUSIS, ET AL.,* RESPONDENTS.
D E C I S I O N
PURE FOODS CORPORATON v. NLRC +
PURE FOODS CORPORATON, PETITIONER, VS. NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION, RODOLFO CORDOVA, VIOLETA CRUSIS, ET AL.,* RESPONDENTS.
D E C I S I O N
DAVIDE, JR., J.:
The crux of this petition for certiorari is the issue of whether employees hired for a definite period and whose services are necessary and desirable in the usual business or trade of the employer are regular employees.
The private respondents (numbering 906) were hired by petitioner Pure Foods Corporation to work for a fixed period of five months at its tuna cannery plant in Tambler, General Santos City. After the expiration of their respective contracts of employment in June and July 1991, their services were terminated. They forthwith executed a "Release and Quitclaim" stating that they had no claim whatsoever against the petitioner.
On 29 July 1991, the private respondents filed before the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) Sub-Regional Arbitration Branch No. XI, General Santos City, a complaint for illegal dismissal against the petitioner and its plant manager, Marciano Aganon. [1] This case was docketed as RAB-11-08-50284-91.
On 23 December 1992, Labor Arbiter Arturo P. Aponesto handed down a decision [2] dismissing the complaint on the ground that the private respondents were mere contractual workers, and not regular employees; hence, they could not avail of the law on security of tenure. The termination of their services by reason of the expiration of their contracts of employment was, therefore, justified. He pointed out that earlier he had dismissed a case entitled "Lakas ng Anak-Pawis- NOWM v. Pure Foods Corp." (Case No. RAB-11-02-00088-88) because the complainants therein were not regular employees of Pure Foods, as their contracts of employment were for a fixed period of five months. Moreover, in another case involving the same contractual workers of Pure Foods (Case No. R-196-ROXI- MED- UR-55-89), then Secretary of Labor Ruben Torres held, in a Resolution dated 30 April 1990, that the said contractual workers were not regular employees.
The Labor Arbiter also observed that an order for private respondents' reinstatement would result in the reemployment of more than 10,000 former contractual employees of the petitioner. Besides, by executing a "Release and Quitclaim," the private respondents had waived and relinquished whatever right they might have against the petitioner.
The private respondents appealed from the decision to the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC), Fifth Division, in Cagayan de Oro City, which docketed the case as NLRC CA No. M-001323-93.
On 28 October 1994, the NLRC affirmed the Labor Arbiter's decision. [3] However, on private respondents' motion for reconsideration, the NLRC rendered another decision on 30 January 1995 [4] vacating and setting aside its decision of 28 October 1994 and holding that the private respondents and their co-complainants were regular employees. It declared that the contract of employment for five months was a "clandestine scheme employed by [the petitioner] to stifle [private respondents'] right to security of tenure" and should therefore be struck down and disregarded for being contrary to law, public policy, and morals. Hence, their dismissal on account of the expiration of their respective contracts was illegal.
Accordingly, the NLRC ordered the petitioner to reinstate the private respondents to their former position without loss of seniority rights and other privileges, with full back wages; and in case their reinstatement would no longer be feasible, the petitioner should pay them separation pay equivalent to one-month pay or one-half-month pay for every year of service, whichever is higher, with back wages and 10% of the monetary award as attorney's fees.
Its motion for reconsideration having been denied,[5] the petitioner came to this Court contending that respondent NLRC committed grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction in reversing the decision of the Labor Arbiter.
The petitioner submits that the private respondents are now estopped from questioning their separation from petitioner's employ in view of their express conformity with the five-month duration of their employment contracts. Besides, they fell within the exception provided in Article 280 of the Labor Code which reads: "[E]xcept where the employment has been fixed for a specific project or undertaking the completion or termination of which has been determined at the time of the engagement of the employee."
Moreover, the first paragraph of the said article must be read and interpreted in conjunction with the proviso in the second paragraph, which reads: "Provided that any employee who has rendered at least one year of service, whether such service is continuous or broken, shall be considered a regular employee with respect to the activity in which he is employed...." In the instant case, the private respondents were employed for a period of five months only. In any event, private respondents' prayer for reinstatement is well within the purview of the "Release and Quitclaim" they had executed wherein they unconditionally released the petitioner from any and all other claims which might have arisen from their past employment with the petitioner.
In its Comment, the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) advances the argument that the private respondents were regular employees, since they performed activities necessary and desirable in the business or trade of the petitioner. The period of employment stipulated in the contracts of employment was null and void for being contrary to law and public policy, as its purpose was to circumvent the law on security of tenure. The expiration of the contract did not, therefore, justify the termination of their employment.
The OSG further maintains that the ruling of the then Secretary of Labor and Employment in LAP-NOWM v. Pure Foods Corporation is not binding on this Court; neither is that ruling controlling, as the said case involved certification election and not the issue of the nature of private respondents' employment. It also considers private respondents' quitclaim as ineffective to bar the enforcement for the full measure of their legal rights.
The private respondents, on the other hand, argue that contracts with a specific period of employment may be given legal effect provided, however, that they are not intended to circumvent the constitutional guarantee on security of tenure. They submit that the practice of the petitioner in hiring workers to work for a fixed duration of five months only to replace them with other workers of the same employment duration was apparently to prevent the regularization of these so-called "casuals," which is a clear circumvention of the law on security of tenure.
We find the petition devoid of merit.
Article 280 of the Labor Code defines regular and casual employment as follows:
In the instant case, the private respondents' activities consisted in the receiving, skinning, loining, packing, and casing-up of tuna fish which were then exported by the petitioner. Indisputably, they were performing activities which were necessary and desirable in petitioner's business or trade.
Contrary to petitioner's submission, the private respondents could not be regarded as having been hired for a specific project or undertaking. The term "specific project or undertaking" under Article 280 of the Labor Code contemplates an activity which is not commonly or habitually performed or such type of work which is not done on a daily basis but only for a specific duration of time or until completion; the services employed are then necessary and desirable in the employer's usual business only for the period of time it takes to complete the project.[7]
The fact that the petitioner repeatedly and continuously hired workers to do the same kind of work as that performed by those whose contracts had expired negates petitioner's contention that those workers were hired for a specific project or undertaking only.
Now on the validity of private respondents' five-month contracts of employment. In the leading case of Brent School, Inc. v. Zamora, [8] which was reaffirmed in numerous subsequent cases, [9] this Court has upheld the legality of fixed-term employment. It ruled that the decisive determinant in term employment should not be the activities that the employee is called upon to perform but the day certain agreed upon by the parties for the commencement and termination of their employment relationship. But, this Court went on to say that where from the circumstances it is apparent that the periods have been imposed to preclude acquisition of tenurial security by the employee, they should be struck down or disregarded as contrary to public policy and morals.
Brent also laid down the criteria under which term employment cannot be said to be in circumvention of the law on security of tenure:
As a matter of fact, the petitioner even stated in its position paper submitted to the Labor Arbiter that, according to its records, the previous employees of the company hired on a five-month basis numbered about 10,000 as of July 1990. This confirms private respondents' allegation that it was really the practice of the company to hire workers on a uniformly fixed contract basis and replace them upon the expiration of their contracts with other workers on the same employment duration.
This scheme of the petitioner was apparently designed to prevent the private respondents and the other "casual" employees from attaining the status of a regular employee. It was a clear circumvention of the employees' right to security of tenure and to other benefits like minimum wage, cost-of-living allowance, sick leave, holiday pay, and 13th month pay. [11] Indeed, the petitioner succeeded in evading the application of labor laws. Also, it saved itself from the trouble or burden of establishing a just cause for terminating employees by the simple expedient of refusing to renew the employment contracts.
The five-month period specified in private respondents' employment contracts having been imposed precisely to circumvent the constitutional guarantee on security of tenure should, therefore, be struck down or disregarded as contrary to public policy or morals. [12] To uphold the contractual arrangement between the petitioner and the private respondents would, in effect, permit the former to avoid hiring permanent or regular employees by simply hiring them on a temporary or casual basis, thereby violating the employees' security of tenure in their jobs.[13]
The execution by the private respondents of a "Release and Quitclaim" did not preclude them from questioning the termination of their services. Generally, quitclaims by laborers are frowned upon as contrary to public policy and are held to be ineffective to bar recovery for the full measure of the workers' rights. [14] The reason for the rule is that the employer and the employee do not stand on the same footing.[15]
Notably, the private respondents lost no time in filing a complaint for illegal dismissal. This act is hardly expected from employees who voluntarily and freely consented to their dismissal.[16]
The NLRC was, thus, correct in finding that the private respondents were regular employees and that they were illegally dismissed from their jobs. Under Article 279 of the Labor Code and the recent jurisprudence, [17] the legal consequence of illegal dismissal is reinstatement without loss of seniority rights and other privileges, with full back wages computed from the time of dismissal up to the time of actual reinstatement, without deducting the earnings derived elsewhere pending the resolution of the case.
However, since reinstatement is no longer possible because the petitioner's tuna cannery plant had, admittedly, been closed in November 1994,[18] the proper award is separation pay equivalent to one month pay or one-half month pay for every year of service, whichever is higher, to be computed from the commencement of their employment up to the closure of the tuna cannery plant. The amount of back wages must be computed from the time the private respondents were dismissed until the time petitioner's cannery plant ceased operation.[19]
WHEREFORE, for lack of merit, the instant petition is DISMISSED and the challenged decision of 30 January 1995 of the National Labor Relations Commission in NLRC CA No. M-001323-93 is hereby AFFIRMED subject to the above modification on the computation of the separation pay and back wages.
SO ORDERED.
Bellosillo, Vitug, and Kapunan, JJ., concur.
* Those included in et al. are not enumerated in the caption and in the body of the petition. Logically, these respondents are the complainants in Case No. RAB-11-08-50284-91 whose caption only specifically mentioned five employees and the rest as "901 other employees."
[1] Annex "J" of Private Respondents' Memorandum, Rollo, 134.
[2] Annex "A" of Petition, Id., 31.
[3] Rollo, 47.
[4] Id., 51.
[5] Id., 59.
[6] See Philippine Geothermal, Inc. v. NLRC, 189 SCRA 211, 215 [1990]; Mercado v. NLRC, 201 SCRA 332, 341-342 [1991]; Aurora Land Project Corp. v. NLRC, G.R. No. 114733, 2 January 1997.
[7] Tucor Industries, Inc. v. NLRC, 197 SCRA 296, 301 [1991].
[8] 181 SCRA 702 [1990].
[9] Blancaflor v. NLRC, 218 SCRA 366 [1993]; Caramol v. NLRC, 225 SCRA 582 [1993]; Pines City Educational Center v. NLRC, 227 SCRA 655 [1993]; Philippine Village Hotel v. NLRC, 230 SCRA 423 [1994]; Pantranco North Express, Inc. v. NLRC, 239 SCRA 272 [1994].
[10] Memorandum for the Private Respondents, 13; Rollo, 131-132.
[11] Cielo v. NLRC, 193 SCRA 410, 415-416 [1991].
[12] Samson v. NLRC, 253 SCRA 112, 124 [1996].
[13] Contri v. NLRC, G.R. No. 119253, 10 April 1997.
[14] American Home Assurance Co. v. NLRC, 259 SCRA 280, 293-294 [1996]; Republic Planters Bank now known as PNB-Republic Bank v. NLRC, G.R. No. 117460, 6 January 1997.
[15] Marcos v. NLRC, 248 SCRA 146, 152 [1995].
[16] Agoy v. NLRC, 252 SCRA 588, 597 [1996].
[17] Bustamante v. NLRC, G.R. No. 111651, 28 November 1996; Reformist Union of R.B. Liner, Inc. v. NLRC, G.R. No. 120482, 27 January 1997; Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company v. NLRC, G. R. No. 99030, 31 July 1997.
[18] Petition, 1; Rollo, 13.
[19] See Reformist Union of R.B. Liner, Inc. v. NLRC, supra note 18.
The private respondents (numbering 906) were hired by petitioner Pure Foods Corporation to work for a fixed period of five months at its tuna cannery plant in Tambler, General Santos City. After the expiration of their respective contracts of employment in June and July 1991, their services were terminated. They forthwith executed a "Release and Quitclaim" stating that they had no claim whatsoever against the petitioner.
On 29 July 1991, the private respondents filed before the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) Sub-Regional Arbitration Branch No. XI, General Santos City, a complaint for illegal dismissal against the petitioner and its plant manager, Marciano Aganon. [1] This case was docketed as RAB-11-08-50284-91.
On 23 December 1992, Labor Arbiter Arturo P. Aponesto handed down a decision [2] dismissing the complaint on the ground that the private respondents were mere contractual workers, and not regular employees; hence, they could not avail of the law on security of tenure. The termination of their services by reason of the expiration of their contracts of employment was, therefore, justified. He pointed out that earlier he had dismissed a case entitled "Lakas ng Anak-Pawis- NOWM v. Pure Foods Corp." (Case No. RAB-11-02-00088-88) because the complainants therein were not regular employees of Pure Foods, as their contracts of employment were for a fixed period of five months. Moreover, in another case involving the same contractual workers of Pure Foods (Case No. R-196-ROXI- MED- UR-55-89), then Secretary of Labor Ruben Torres held, in a Resolution dated 30 April 1990, that the said contractual workers were not regular employees.
The Labor Arbiter also observed that an order for private respondents' reinstatement would result in the reemployment of more than 10,000 former contractual employees of the petitioner. Besides, by executing a "Release and Quitclaim," the private respondents had waived and relinquished whatever right they might have against the petitioner.
The private respondents appealed from the decision to the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC), Fifth Division, in Cagayan de Oro City, which docketed the case as NLRC CA No. M-001323-93.
On 28 October 1994, the NLRC affirmed the Labor Arbiter's decision. [3] However, on private respondents' motion for reconsideration, the NLRC rendered another decision on 30 January 1995 [4] vacating and setting aside its decision of 28 October 1994 and holding that the private respondents and their co-complainants were regular employees. It declared that the contract of employment for five months was a "clandestine scheme employed by [the petitioner] to stifle [private respondents'] right to security of tenure" and should therefore be struck down and disregarded for being contrary to law, public policy, and morals. Hence, their dismissal on account of the expiration of their respective contracts was illegal.
Accordingly, the NLRC ordered the petitioner to reinstate the private respondents to their former position without loss of seniority rights and other privileges, with full back wages; and in case their reinstatement would no longer be feasible, the petitioner should pay them separation pay equivalent to one-month pay or one-half-month pay for every year of service, whichever is higher, with back wages and 10% of the monetary award as attorney's fees.
Its motion for reconsideration having been denied,[5] the petitioner came to this Court contending that respondent NLRC committed grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack of jurisdiction in reversing the decision of the Labor Arbiter.
The petitioner submits that the private respondents are now estopped from questioning their separation from petitioner's employ in view of their express conformity with the five-month duration of their employment contracts. Besides, they fell within the exception provided in Article 280 of the Labor Code which reads: "[E]xcept where the employment has been fixed for a specific project or undertaking the completion or termination of which has been determined at the time of the engagement of the employee."
Moreover, the first paragraph of the said article must be read and interpreted in conjunction with the proviso in the second paragraph, which reads: "Provided that any employee who has rendered at least one year of service, whether such service is continuous or broken, shall be considered a regular employee with respect to the activity in which he is employed...." In the instant case, the private respondents were employed for a period of five months only. In any event, private respondents' prayer for reinstatement is well within the purview of the "Release and Quitclaim" they had executed wherein they unconditionally released the petitioner from any and all other claims which might have arisen from their past employment with the petitioner.
In its Comment, the Office of the Solicitor General (OSG) advances the argument that the private respondents were regular employees, since they performed activities necessary and desirable in the business or trade of the petitioner. The period of employment stipulated in the contracts of employment was null and void for being contrary to law and public policy, as its purpose was to circumvent the law on security of tenure. The expiration of the contract did not, therefore, justify the termination of their employment.
The OSG further maintains that the ruling of the then Secretary of Labor and Employment in LAP-NOWM v. Pure Foods Corporation is not binding on this Court; neither is that ruling controlling, as the said case involved certification election and not the issue of the nature of private respondents' employment. It also considers private respondents' quitclaim as ineffective to bar the enforcement for the full measure of their legal rights.
The private respondents, on the other hand, argue that contracts with a specific period of employment may be given legal effect provided, however, that they are not intended to circumvent the constitutional guarantee on security of tenure. They submit that the practice of the petitioner in hiring workers to work for a fixed duration of five months only to replace them with other workers of the same employment duration was apparently to prevent the regularization of these so-called "casuals," which is a clear circumvention of the law on security of tenure.
We find the petition devoid of merit.
Article 280 of the Labor Code defines regular and casual employment as follows:
ART. 280. Regular and Casual Employment.-- The provisions of written agreement to the contrary notwithstanding and regardless of the oral argument of the parties, an employment shall be deemed to be regular where the employee has been engaged to perform activities which are usually necessary or desirable in the usual business or trade of the employer, except where the employment has been fixed for a specific project or undertaking the completion or termination of which has been determined at the time of the engagement of the employee or where the work or services to be performed is seasonal in nature and the employment is for the duration of the season.Thus, the two kinds of regular employees are (1) those who are engaged to perform activities which are necessary or desirable in the usual business or trade of the employer; and (2) those casual employees who have rendered at least one year of service, whether continuous or broken, with respect to the activity in which they are employed.[6]
An employment shall be deemed to be casual if it is not covered by the preceding paragraph; Provided, That, any employee who has rendered at least one year of service, whether such service is continuous or broken, shall be considered a regular employee with respect to the activity in which he is employed and his employment shall continue while such activity exists.
In the instant case, the private respondents' activities consisted in the receiving, skinning, loining, packing, and casing-up of tuna fish which were then exported by the petitioner. Indisputably, they were performing activities which were necessary and desirable in petitioner's business or trade.
Contrary to petitioner's submission, the private respondents could not be regarded as having been hired for a specific project or undertaking. The term "specific project or undertaking" under Article 280 of the Labor Code contemplates an activity which is not commonly or habitually performed or such type of work which is not done on a daily basis but only for a specific duration of time or until completion; the services employed are then necessary and desirable in the employer's usual business only for the period of time it takes to complete the project.[7]
The fact that the petitioner repeatedly and continuously hired workers to do the same kind of work as that performed by those whose contracts had expired negates petitioner's contention that those workers were hired for a specific project or undertaking only.
Now on the validity of private respondents' five-month contracts of employment. In the leading case of Brent School, Inc. v. Zamora, [8] which was reaffirmed in numerous subsequent cases, [9] this Court has upheld the legality of fixed-term employment. It ruled that the decisive determinant in term employment should not be the activities that the employee is called upon to perform but the day certain agreed upon by the parties for the commencement and termination of their employment relationship. But, this Court went on to say that where from the circumstances it is apparent that the periods have been imposed to preclude acquisition of tenurial security by the employee, they should be struck down or disregarded as contrary to public policy and morals.
Brent also laid down the criteria under which term employment cannot be said to be in circumvention of the law on security of tenure:
1) The fixed period of employment was knowingly and voluntarily agreed upon by the parties without any force, duress, or improper pressure being brought to bear upon the employee and absent any other circumstances vitiating his consent; orNone of these criteria had been met in the present case. As pointed out by the private respondents:
2) It satisfactorily appears that the employer and the employee dealt with each other on more or less equal terms with no moral dominance exercised by the former or the latter.
[I]t could not be supposed that private respondents and all other so-called "casual" workers of [the petitioner] KNOWINGLY and VOLUNTARILY agreed to the 5-month employment contract. Cannery workers are never on equal terms with their employers. Almost always, they agree to any terms of an employment contract just to get employed considering that it is difficult to find work given their ordinary qualifications. Their freedom to contract is empty and hollow because theirs is the freedom to starve if they refuse to work as casual or contractual workers. Indeed, to the unemployed, security of tenure has no value. It could not then be said that petitioner and private respondents "dealt with each other on more or less equal terms with no moral dominance whatever being exercised by the former over the latter. [10]The petitioner does not deny or rebut private respondents' averments (1) that the main bulk of its workforce consisted of its so-called "casual" employees; (2) that as of July 1991, "casual" workers numbered 1,835; and regular employees, 263; (3) that the company hired "casual" every month for the duration of five months, after which their services were terminated and they were replaced by other "casual" employees on the same five-month duration; and (4) that these "casual" employees were actually doing work that were necessary and desirable in petitioner's usual business.
As a matter of fact, the petitioner even stated in its position paper submitted to the Labor Arbiter that, according to its records, the previous employees of the company hired on a five-month basis numbered about 10,000 as of July 1990. This confirms private respondents' allegation that it was really the practice of the company to hire workers on a uniformly fixed contract basis and replace them upon the expiration of their contracts with other workers on the same employment duration.
This scheme of the petitioner was apparently designed to prevent the private respondents and the other "casual" employees from attaining the status of a regular employee. It was a clear circumvention of the employees' right to security of tenure and to other benefits like minimum wage, cost-of-living allowance, sick leave, holiday pay, and 13th month pay. [11] Indeed, the petitioner succeeded in evading the application of labor laws. Also, it saved itself from the trouble or burden of establishing a just cause for terminating employees by the simple expedient of refusing to renew the employment contracts.
The five-month period specified in private respondents' employment contracts having been imposed precisely to circumvent the constitutional guarantee on security of tenure should, therefore, be struck down or disregarded as contrary to public policy or morals. [12] To uphold the contractual arrangement between the petitioner and the private respondents would, in effect, permit the former to avoid hiring permanent or regular employees by simply hiring them on a temporary or casual basis, thereby violating the employees' security of tenure in their jobs.[13]
The execution by the private respondents of a "Release and Quitclaim" did not preclude them from questioning the termination of their services. Generally, quitclaims by laborers are frowned upon as contrary to public policy and are held to be ineffective to bar recovery for the full measure of the workers' rights. [14] The reason for the rule is that the employer and the employee do not stand on the same footing.[15]
Notably, the private respondents lost no time in filing a complaint for illegal dismissal. This act is hardly expected from employees who voluntarily and freely consented to their dismissal.[16]
The NLRC was, thus, correct in finding that the private respondents were regular employees and that they were illegally dismissed from their jobs. Under Article 279 of the Labor Code and the recent jurisprudence, [17] the legal consequence of illegal dismissal is reinstatement without loss of seniority rights and other privileges, with full back wages computed from the time of dismissal up to the time of actual reinstatement, without deducting the earnings derived elsewhere pending the resolution of the case.
However, since reinstatement is no longer possible because the petitioner's tuna cannery plant had, admittedly, been closed in November 1994,[18] the proper award is separation pay equivalent to one month pay or one-half month pay for every year of service, whichever is higher, to be computed from the commencement of their employment up to the closure of the tuna cannery plant. The amount of back wages must be computed from the time the private respondents were dismissed until the time petitioner's cannery plant ceased operation.[19]
WHEREFORE, for lack of merit, the instant petition is DISMISSED and the challenged decision of 30 January 1995 of the National Labor Relations Commission in NLRC CA No. M-001323-93 is hereby AFFIRMED subject to the above modification on the computation of the separation pay and back wages.
SO ORDERED.
Bellosillo, Vitug, and Kapunan, JJ., concur.
* Those included in et al. are not enumerated in the caption and in the body of the petition. Logically, these respondents are the complainants in Case No. RAB-11-08-50284-91 whose caption only specifically mentioned five employees and the rest as "901 other employees."
[1] Annex "J" of Private Respondents' Memorandum, Rollo, 134.
[2] Annex "A" of Petition, Id., 31.
[3] Rollo, 47.
[4] Id., 51.
[5] Id., 59.
[6] See Philippine Geothermal, Inc. v. NLRC, 189 SCRA 211, 215 [1990]; Mercado v. NLRC, 201 SCRA 332, 341-342 [1991]; Aurora Land Project Corp. v. NLRC, G.R. No. 114733, 2 January 1997.
[7] Tucor Industries, Inc. v. NLRC, 197 SCRA 296, 301 [1991].
[8] 181 SCRA 702 [1990].
[9] Blancaflor v. NLRC, 218 SCRA 366 [1993]; Caramol v. NLRC, 225 SCRA 582 [1993]; Pines City Educational Center v. NLRC, 227 SCRA 655 [1993]; Philippine Village Hotel v. NLRC, 230 SCRA 423 [1994]; Pantranco North Express, Inc. v. NLRC, 239 SCRA 272 [1994].
[10] Memorandum for the Private Respondents, 13; Rollo, 131-132.
[11] Cielo v. NLRC, 193 SCRA 410, 415-416 [1991].
[12] Samson v. NLRC, 253 SCRA 112, 124 [1996].
[13] Contri v. NLRC, G.R. No. 119253, 10 April 1997.
[14] American Home Assurance Co. v. NLRC, 259 SCRA 280, 293-294 [1996]; Republic Planters Bank now known as PNB-Republic Bank v. NLRC, G.R. No. 117460, 6 January 1997.
[15] Marcos v. NLRC, 248 SCRA 146, 152 [1995].
[16] Agoy v. NLRC, 252 SCRA 588, 597 [1996].
[17] Bustamante v. NLRC, G.R. No. 111651, 28 November 1996; Reformist Union of R.B. Liner, Inc. v. NLRC, G.R. No. 120482, 27 January 1997; Philippine Long Distance Telephone Company v. NLRC, G. R. No. 99030, 31 July 1997.
[18] Petition, 1; Rollo, 13.
[19] See Reformist Union of R.B. Liner, Inc. v. NLRC, supra note 18.