THIRD DIVISION
[ G. R. NO. 151849, June 23, 2005 ]G & M () v. WILLIE BATOMALAQUE +
G & M (PHIL.), INC., PETITIONER, VS. WILLIE BATOMALAQUE, RESPONDENT.
D E C I S I O N
G & M () v. WILLIE BATOMALAQUE +
G & M (PHIL.), INC., PETITIONER, VS. WILLIE BATOMALAQUE, RESPONDENT.
D E C I S I O N
CARPIO MORALES, J.:
Culled from the records of the case are the following facts material to the appeal of petitioner.
Sometime in February 1992, Abdul Aziz Abdullah Al Muhaimid Najad Car Maintenance Association (Abdul Aziz), a Saudi Arabian entity based in Riyadh, hired respondent, Willie Batomalaque, as a car painter at a monthly salary of US$370.00[1] for a two-year period[2] through its agent, petitioner G&M (Phil.), Inc.
In accordance with the employment contract, respondent started working for Abdul Aziz on March 10, 1992[3] at a monthly salary of US$370.00[4] which according to him was equivalent to 1,200 Saudi riyals.[5]
On June 7, 1994[6] respondent was repatriated and on January 3, 1995 he filed a complaint[7] against petitioner, Abdul Aziz, and Country Empire Insurance Company with the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration[8] for non-payment and underpayment of salaries and damages.
In his Complaint-Affidavit respondent claimed that for the first four months of employment, he received a monthly salary of 900 Saudi riyals,[9] and for the fifth month (July 1992) up to the end of the 12th month (February 1993), he received a monthly salary of 700 Saudi riyals;[10] that after a one-year stint with Abdul Aziz, the workshop where he was working was sold but the new owner did not hire him;[11] that for eleven months he was jobless;[12] that Abdul Aziz hired him again and started working for it in February 1994 for which he was paid 1,200 Saudi riyals;[13] and that he resigned in May 1994 since he was not paid his salary for the months of March and April 1994,[14] which 2-month salary, was, however, used to purchase his airline ticket on his repatriation to the Philippines.
Respondent thus prayed in his Complaint-Affidavit for the award to him of damages arising from the following:
a. Non-payment of wages for 11 months from April 1993 to January 1994;
b. Non-payment of salaries for the months of March and April 1994;
c. Non-payment of salary differentials int (sic) the amount of SR500 per month for seven months deducted from his salary starting the 5th month of his work or July 1992 up to February 1993 or the totla (sic) amount of SR3,500;
d. moral and exemplary damages of P50,000.00;
e. other just and equitable remedies are prayed for.[15] (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)
Among other claims, petitioner denied respondent's claim that he was underpaid, it maintaining that he was paid his salaries in full.[16]
By Decision[17] of July 22, 1996, Labor Arbiter Fatima Jambaro-Franco credited respondent's complaint for underpayment of salaries during the first year of his contract but denied his other claims in this wise:
After due consideration, this Office finds the complaint for underpayment of salaries and wages meritorious.
Well-settled is the rule that in cases of non-payment and underpayment of salaries and wages, the employer has the burden of proof to show that the worker/employee has been paid all his salaries and wages since it has in its possession the proof of payment such as payrolls and/or vouchers (Sambalonay vs. Jose Cuevas, NLRC No. RB IV 186447, February 13, 1980) and in the absence of proof to the contrary, it is deemed that no payment has been made.
In the case at bar, except for their bare allegation that complainant's salaries was not underpaid, no evidence was adduced to show that complainant's salaries and wages were fully paid constraining the undersigned to grant the claim of the complainant as shown in the computation below, to wit:
Agreed Salary SR1,200
Salary Received SR900 for 5 months
SR700 for 8 months
Salary differential
SR1,200 SR900 = SR300 x 5 mos. = SR1,500
SR1,200 SR 700 = SR500 x 8 mos. = SR4,000
SR5,500
The claim for the non-payment of salaries for eleven (11) months (April 1993 to January 1994) is, however, untenable. The records show that complainant was repatriated on June 7, 1994, more than two (2) years from his deployment on March 9, 1992. While he claims for underpayment of salaries and wages for thirteen (13) months, he did not claim for illegal dismissal, although he claims for the payment of salaries from April 1993 to January 1994.[18] This Office is in a quandary why complainant stayed at the jobsite for eleven (11) months, without work, yet there was no complaint lodged in the Labor/Consulate Office in Saudi Arabia. The undersigned opines that if complainant really felt aggrieved, then he could have easily filed a complaint at the jobsite. However, complainant did nothing to vindicate his right, in fact, he stayed on until June 1994. Under these circumstances, this Office gives more credence to the respondents' assertion that complainant completed his 2 years (sic) contract and even extended for another 2 months before his repatriation. It is worthy to note that complainant never claimed that he was constructively dismissed rendering his claim for payment of the unexpired portion of the contract untenable.
The claim for refund of transportation expenses is likewise, not allowable in the absence of proof that the repatriation cost was actually shouldered by him. (Underscoring supplied)
The labor arbiter thus disposed as follows:
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, respondents G & M (Phils.), Inc., Abdul Aziz Abdullah Al Muhaimid Najad Car Maintenance Association and Country Empire Insurance Company are hereby ordered to pay jointly and severally complainant Willie Batomalaque the amount of FIVE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED SAUDI RIYALS (SR5,500) or in Philippine currency at the prevailing rate of exchange as certified to by the Central Bank at the time of payment, representing his underpayment of salaries and wages.
All other claims are dismissed for lack of merit.
SO ORDERED.[19] (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)
Petitioner appealed[20] the labor arbiter's decision to the National Labor Relation Commission (NLRC) which, by Resolution[21] of February 11, 1999, affirmed the same.
Aggrieved, petitioner, via a petition for certiorari[22] under Rule 65, brought the case to the Court of Appeals which docketed it as CA-G.R. No. 52920. By the assailed decision[23] of April 27, 2001, the Court of Appeals dismissed petitioner's petition, it holding that the NLRC committed no error much less any grave abuse of discretion.
Petitioner's motion for reconsideration[24] having been denied by the Court of Appeals, by Resolution[25] of January 8, 2002, it lodged the present petition.[26]
Petitioner maintains that respondent had been paid his salaries in full and it was incumbent upon him to prove otherwise.
Petitioner's claim fails.
It is settled that as a general rule, a party who alleges payment as a defense has the burden of proving it.[27]
Specifically with respect to labor cases, the burden of proving payment of monetary claims rests on the employer, the rationale being
that the pertinent personnel files, payrolls, records, remittances and other similar documents which will show that overtime, differentials, service incentive leave and other claims of workers have been paid are not in the possession of the worker but in the custody and absolute control of the employer.[28]
Aside, however, from its bare allegation that its principal Abdul Aziz had fully paid respondent's salaries, petitioner did not present any evidence, e.g., payroll or payslips, to support its defense of payment. Petitioner thus failed to discharge the onus probandi.
Petitioner, as the recruiter and agent of Abdul Aziz, is thus solidarily liable with the latter for the unpaid wages of respondent. This Court, through Justice Irene Cortes, in Royal Crown Internationale v. NLRC[29] explains the basis thereof:
…Petitioner conveniently overlooks the fact that it had voluntarily assumed solidary liability under the various contractual undertakings it submitted to the Bureau of Employment Services. In applying for its license to operate a private employment agency for overseas recruitment and placement, petitioner was required to submit, among others, a document or verified undertaking whereby it assumed all responsibilities for the proper use of its license and the implementation of the contracts of employment with the workers it recruited and deployed for overseas employment [Section 2(e), Rule V, Book I, Rules to Implement the Labor Code (1976)]. It was also required to file with the Bureau a formal appointment or agency contract executed by the foreign-based employer in its favor to recruit and hire personnel for the former, which contained a provision empowering it to sue and be sued jointly and solidarily with the foreign principal for any of the violations of the recruitment agreement and the contracts of employment [Section 10 (a) (2), Rule V, Book I of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code (1976)]. Petitioner was required as well to post such cash and surety bonds as determined by the Secretary of Labor to guarantee compliance with prescribed recruitment procedures, rules and regulations, and terms and conditions of employment as appropriate [Section 1 of Pres. Dec. 1412 (1978) amending Article 31 of the Labor Code].
These contractual undertakings constitute the legal basis for holding petitioner, and other private employment or recruitment agencies, liable jointly and severally with its principal, the foreign-based employer, for all claims filed by recruited workers which may arise in connection with the implementation of the service agreements or employment contracts [See Ambraque International Placement and Services v. NLRC, G.R. No. 77970, January 28, 1988, 157 SCRA 431; Catan v. NLRC, G.R. No. 77279, April 15, 1988, 160 SCRA 691; Alga Moher International Placement Services v. Atienza, G.R. No. 74610, September 30, 1988][30] (Emphasis and underscoring supplied; italics in the original)
Petitioner argues, however, that the foregoing rule has no application in the case at bar because it applies only to one which raises the issue of non-payment but not one which raises issues of underpayment,[31] hence, the burden was on respondent to show that he was indeed underpaid.[32]
Petitioner does not persuade.
On repeated occasions, this Court ruled that the debtor has the burden of showing with legal certainty that the obligation has been discharged by payment.[33] To discharge means to extinguish an obligation,[34] and in contract law discharge occurs either when the parties have performed their obligations in the contract, or when an event the conduct of the parties, or the operation of law releases the parties from performing.[35] Thus, a party who alleges that an obligation has been extinguished must prove facts or acts giving rise to the extinction.
The fact of underpayment does not shift the burden of evidence to the plaintiff-herein respondent because partial payment does not extinguish the obligation.[36] Only when the debtor introduces evidence that the obligation has been extinguished does the burden of evidence shift to the creditor who is then under a duty of producing evidence to show why payment does not extinguish the obligation.
The lack of merit of petitioner's petition notwithstanding, this Court finds that the appellate court's affirmance of the award to respondent of salaries for a 13-month period, as reflected in the computation of salary differential in the decision of the labor arbiter, calls for modification. Respondent himself alleged in his Complaint-Affidavit having been underpaid for 12 months[37] albeit, oddly enough, in the above-quoted prayer of his said Complaint-Affidavit, he prayed for salary differential in the amount of "SR500 per month for seven [7] months… starting the 5th month of his work or July 1992 up to February 1993 or [a total] amount of SR3,500."
Respondent being entitled to a monthly salary of US$370.00,[38] its equivalent of 1,200 Saudi riyals of which has not been disputed, and his allegation that he received a monthly salary of 900 Saudi riyals for the first 4 months and 700 Saudi riyals for the 5th month until the end of the 12th month not having been successfully refuted, he is entitled to SR5,200,[39] not SR5,500, representing the total deficient payment of his salaries for a 12-month period.
WHEREFORE, the Decision of the Court of Appeals in C.A. G.R. SP. No. 52920 is AFFIRMED with the MODIFICATION that respondent, Willie Batomalaque, is only entitled to 5,200 Saudi riyals, instead of 5,500 Saudi riyals. Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
ARTEMIO V. PANGANIBAN
Associate Justice
Chairman
ANGELINA SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ
Associate Justice
RENATO C. CORONA
Associate Justice
CANCIO C. GARCIA
Associate Justice
ATTESTATION
I attest that the conclusions in the above Decision were reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court's Division.
ARTEMIO V. PANGANIBAN
Associate Justice
Chairman
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Article VIII, Section 13 of the Constitution, and the Division Chairman's Attestation, it is hereby certified that the conclusions in the above Decision were reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court.
HILARIO G. DAVIDE, JR.
Chief Justice
[1] Records at 28.
[2] Id. at 29. Note however that respondent's POEA Overseas Employment Certificate is only for 12 months (Records at 5).
[3] Id. at 24.
[4] Id. at 28.
[5] Id. at 24.
[6] Ibid.
[7] Id. at 1.
[8] With the passage of Republic Act No. 8042 otherwise known as "The Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipino Act of 1995," it is now the NLRC and not the POEA which has original and exclusive jurisdiction to hear and decide claims arising out of an employer-employee relationship or by virtue of any law or contract involving Filipino workers for overseas deployment including claims for actual, moral, exemplary and other forms of damages.
[9] Records at 24.
[10] Ibid.
[11] Ibid.
[12] Ibid.
[13] Ibid.
[14] Ibid.
[15] Id. at 25.
[16] Id. at 36-37.
[17] Id. at 112-117.
[18] This is the period during which he claims he was jobless.
[19] Id. at 114-117.
[20] Id. at 123-131.
[21] Id. at 187-194.
[22] Court of Appeals (CA) Rollo at 2-51.
[23] Id. at 107-114.
[24] Id. at 121-124.
[25] Id. at 148.
[26] Rollo at 3-41.
[27] Far East Bank and Trust Company v. Querimit, 373 SCRA 665, 671 (2002); Sevillana v. I.T. (International) Corp., 356 SCRA 451, 470 (2001); Villar v. National Labor Relations Commission, 331 SCRA 686, 695 (2000); Audion Electric Co, Inc. v. NLRC, 308 SCRA 340, 352 (1999); Ropali Trading Corporation v. NLRC, 296 SCRA 309, 315 (1998); National Semiconductor (HK) Distribution, Ltd. v. National Labor Relations Commission (4th Division), 291 SCRA 348, 352 (1998); Pacific Maritime Services, Inc. v. Ranay, 275 SCRA 717, 725-726 (1997); Jimenez v. National Labor Relations Commission, 256 SCRA 84, 89 (1996); Philippine National Bank v. Court of Appeals, 256 SCRA 44, 49 (1996); Good Earth Emporium, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 194 SCRA 544, 552 (1991); Villaflor v. Court of Appeals, 192 SCRA 680, 690 (1990); Biala v. Court of Appeals, 191 SCRA 50, 59 (1990); Servicewide Specialists, Inc. v. Intermediate Appellate Court, 174 SCRA 80, 90 (1989).
[28] Villar v. National Labor Relations Commission, 331 SCRA 686, 695 (2000).
[29] 178 SCRA 569 (1989).
[30] Id. at 575-576. Note that now under Section 10 of the Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipino Act of 1995, the solidary liability of the employer and recruitment agency is expressly provided for by law.
[31] Rollo at 8.
[32] Id. at 7.
[33] Far East Bank and Trust Company v. Querimit, supra; Sevillana v. I.T. (International) Corp Villar v. National Labor Relations Commission, supra; Audion Electric Co, Inc. v. NLRC, supra at 352-353; National Semiconductor (HK) Distribution, Ltd. v. National Labor Relations Commission (4th Division), supra; Pacific Maritime Services, Inc. v. Ranay, supra at 726; Jimenez v. National Labor Relations Commission, supra.
[34] Black's Law Dictionary 463 (1991), 6th ed.
[35] Ibid.
[36] Vide: Godwin v. Hinnant, 108 S.E.2d 658, 662 (1959); Machtinger v. Grenzebach, 282 S.W.2d 200, 202 (1955).
[37] Records at 24.
[38] Id. at 28.
[39] This figure was arrived at by multiplying SR300 by 4 months and SR500 by 8 months.
Sometime in February 1992, Abdul Aziz Abdullah Al Muhaimid Najad Car Maintenance Association (Abdul Aziz), a Saudi Arabian entity based in Riyadh, hired respondent, Willie Batomalaque, as a car painter at a monthly salary of US$370.00[1] for a two-year period[2] through its agent, petitioner G&M (Phil.), Inc.
In accordance with the employment contract, respondent started working for Abdul Aziz on March 10, 1992[3] at a monthly salary of US$370.00[4] which according to him was equivalent to 1,200 Saudi riyals.[5]
On June 7, 1994[6] respondent was repatriated and on January 3, 1995 he filed a complaint[7] against petitioner, Abdul Aziz, and Country Empire Insurance Company with the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration[8] for non-payment and underpayment of salaries and damages.
In his Complaint-Affidavit respondent claimed that for the first four months of employment, he received a monthly salary of 900 Saudi riyals,[9] and for the fifth month (July 1992) up to the end of the 12th month (February 1993), he received a monthly salary of 700 Saudi riyals;[10] that after a one-year stint with Abdul Aziz, the workshop where he was working was sold but the new owner did not hire him;[11] that for eleven months he was jobless;[12] that Abdul Aziz hired him again and started working for it in February 1994 for which he was paid 1,200 Saudi riyals;[13] and that he resigned in May 1994 since he was not paid his salary for the months of March and April 1994,[14] which 2-month salary, was, however, used to purchase his airline ticket on his repatriation to the Philippines.
Respondent thus prayed in his Complaint-Affidavit for the award to him of damages arising from the following:
a. Non-payment of wages for 11 months from April 1993 to January 1994;
b. Non-payment of salaries for the months of March and April 1994;
c. Non-payment of salary differentials int (sic) the amount of SR500 per month for seven months deducted from his salary starting the 5th month of his work or July 1992 up to February 1993 or the totla (sic) amount of SR3,500;
d. moral and exemplary damages of P50,000.00;
e. other just and equitable remedies are prayed for.[15] (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)
Among other claims, petitioner denied respondent's claim that he was underpaid, it maintaining that he was paid his salaries in full.[16]
By Decision[17] of July 22, 1996, Labor Arbiter Fatima Jambaro-Franco credited respondent's complaint for underpayment of salaries during the first year of his contract but denied his other claims in this wise:
After due consideration, this Office finds the complaint for underpayment of salaries and wages meritorious.
Well-settled is the rule that in cases of non-payment and underpayment of salaries and wages, the employer has the burden of proof to show that the worker/employee has been paid all his salaries and wages since it has in its possession the proof of payment such as payrolls and/or vouchers (Sambalonay vs. Jose Cuevas, NLRC No. RB IV 186447, February 13, 1980) and in the absence of proof to the contrary, it is deemed that no payment has been made.
In the case at bar, except for their bare allegation that complainant's salaries was not underpaid, no evidence was adduced to show that complainant's salaries and wages were fully paid constraining the undersigned to grant the claim of the complainant as shown in the computation below, to wit:
Agreed Salary SR1,200
Salary Received SR900 for 5 months
SR700 for 8 months
Salary differential
SR1,200 SR900 = SR300 x 5 mos. = SR1,500
SR1,200 SR 700 = SR500 x 8 mos. = SR4,000
SR5,500
The claim for the non-payment of salaries for eleven (11) months (April 1993 to January 1994) is, however, untenable. The records show that complainant was repatriated on June 7, 1994, more than two (2) years from his deployment on March 9, 1992. While he claims for underpayment of salaries and wages for thirteen (13) months, he did not claim for illegal dismissal, although he claims for the payment of salaries from April 1993 to January 1994.[18] This Office is in a quandary why complainant stayed at the jobsite for eleven (11) months, without work, yet there was no complaint lodged in the Labor/Consulate Office in Saudi Arabia. The undersigned opines that if complainant really felt aggrieved, then he could have easily filed a complaint at the jobsite. However, complainant did nothing to vindicate his right, in fact, he stayed on until June 1994. Under these circumstances, this Office gives more credence to the respondents' assertion that complainant completed his 2 years (sic) contract and even extended for another 2 months before his repatriation. It is worthy to note that complainant never claimed that he was constructively dismissed rendering his claim for payment of the unexpired portion of the contract untenable.
The claim for refund of transportation expenses is likewise, not allowable in the absence of proof that the repatriation cost was actually shouldered by him. (Underscoring supplied)
The labor arbiter thus disposed as follows:
WHEREFORE, in view of the foregoing, respondents G & M (Phils.), Inc., Abdul Aziz Abdullah Al Muhaimid Najad Car Maintenance Association and Country Empire Insurance Company are hereby ordered to pay jointly and severally complainant Willie Batomalaque the amount of FIVE THOUSAND FIVE HUNDRED SAUDI RIYALS (SR5,500) or in Philippine currency at the prevailing rate of exchange as certified to by the Central Bank at the time of payment, representing his underpayment of salaries and wages.
All other claims are dismissed for lack of merit.
SO ORDERED.[19] (Emphasis and underscoring supplied)
Petitioner appealed[20] the labor arbiter's decision to the National Labor Relation Commission (NLRC) which, by Resolution[21] of February 11, 1999, affirmed the same.
Aggrieved, petitioner, via a petition for certiorari[22] under Rule 65, brought the case to the Court of Appeals which docketed it as CA-G.R. No. 52920. By the assailed decision[23] of April 27, 2001, the Court of Appeals dismissed petitioner's petition, it holding that the NLRC committed no error much less any grave abuse of discretion.
Petitioner's motion for reconsideration[24] having been denied by the Court of Appeals, by Resolution[25] of January 8, 2002, it lodged the present petition.[26]
Petitioner maintains that respondent had been paid his salaries in full and it was incumbent upon him to prove otherwise.
Petitioner's claim fails.
It is settled that as a general rule, a party who alleges payment as a defense has the burden of proving it.[27]
Specifically with respect to labor cases, the burden of proving payment of monetary claims rests on the employer, the rationale being
that the pertinent personnel files, payrolls, records, remittances and other similar documents which will show that overtime, differentials, service incentive leave and other claims of workers have been paid are not in the possession of the worker but in the custody and absolute control of the employer.[28]
Aside, however, from its bare allegation that its principal Abdul Aziz had fully paid respondent's salaries, petitioner did not present any evidence, e.g., payroll or payslips, to support its defense of payment. Petitioner thus failed to discharge the onus probandi.
Petitioner, as the recruiter and agent of Abdul Aziz, is thus solidarily liable with the latter for the unpaid wages of respondent. This Court, through Justice Irene Cortes, in Royal Crown Internationale v. NLRC[29] explains the basis thereof:
…Petitioner conveniently overlooks the fact that it had voluntarily assumed solidary liability under the various contractual undertakings it submitted to the Bureau of Employment Services. In applying for its license to operate a private employment agency for overseas recruitment and placement, petitioner was required to submit, among others, a document or verified undertaking whereby it assumed all responsibilities for the proper use of its license and the implementation of the contracts of employment with the workers it recruited and deployed for overseas employment [Section 2(e), Rule V, Book I, Rules to Implement the Labor Code (1976)]. It was also required to file with the Bureau a formal appointment or agency contract executed by the foreign-based employer in its favor to recruit and hire personnel for the former, which contained a provision empowering it to sue and be sued jointly and solidarily with the foreign principal for any of the violations of the recruitment agreement and the contracts of employment [Section 10 (a) (2), Rule V, Book I of the Rules to Implement the Labor Code (1976)]. Petitioner was required as well to post such cash and surety bonds as determined by the Secretary of Labor to guarantee compliance with prescribed recruitment procedures, rules and regulations, and terms and conditions of employment as appropriate [Section 1 of Pres. Dec. 1412 (1978) amending Article 31 of the Labor Code].
These contractual undertakings constitute the legal basis for holding petitioner, and other private employment or recruitment agencies, liable jointly and severally with its principal, the foreign-based employer, for all claims filed by recruited workers which may arise in connection with the implementation of the service agreements or employment contracts [See Ambraque International Placement and Services v. NLRC, G.R. No. 77970, January 28, 1988, 157 SCRA 431; Catan v. NLRC, G.R. No. 77279, April 15, 1988, 160 SCRA 691; Alga Moher International Placement Services v. Atienza, G.R. No. 74610, September 30, 1988][30] (Emphasis and underscoring supplied; italics in the original)
Petitioner argues, however, that the foregoing rule has no application in the case at bar because it applies only to one which raises the issue of non-payment but not one which raises issues of underpayment,[31] hence, the burden was on respondent to show that he was indeed underpaid.[32]
Petitioner does not persuade.
On repeated occasions, this Court ruled that the debtor has the burden of showing with legal certainty that the obligation has been discharged by payment.[33] To discharge means to extinguish an obligation,[34] and in contract law discharge occurs either when the parties have performed their obligations in the contract, or when an event the conduct of the parties, or the operation of law releases the parties from performing.[35] Thus, a party who alleges that an obligation has been extinguished must prove facts or acts giving rise to the extinction.
The fact of underpayment does not shift the burden of evidence to the plaintiff-herein respondent because partial payment does not extinguish the obligation.[36] Only when the debtor introduces evidence that the obligation has been extinguished does the burden of evidence shift to the creditor who is then under a duty of producing evidence to show why payment does not extinguish the obligation.
The lack of merit of petitioner's petition notwithstanding, this Court finds that the appellate court's affirmance of the award to respondent of salaries for a 13-month period, as reflected in the computation of salary differential in the decision of the labor arbiter, calls for modification. Respondent himself alleged in his Complaint-Affidavit having been underpaid for 12 months[37] albeit, oddly enough, in the above-quoted prayer of his said Complaint-Affidavit, he prayed for salary differential in the amount of "SR500 per month for seven [7] months… starting the 5th month of his work or July 1992 up to February 1993 or [a total] amount of SR3,500."
Respondent being entitled to a monthly salary of US$370.00,[38] its equivalent of 1,200 Saudi riyals of which has not been disputed, and his allegation that he received a monthly salary of 900 Saudi riyals for the first 4 months and 700 Saudi riyals for the 5th month until the end of the 12th month not having been successfully refuted, he is entitled to SR5,200,[39] not SR5,500, representing the total deficient payment of his salaries for a 12-month period.
WHEREFORE, the Decision of the Court of Appeals in C.A. G.R. SP. No. 52920 is AFFIRMED with the MODIFICATION that respondent, Willie Batomalaque, is only entitled to 5,200 Saudi riyals, instead of 5,500 Saudi riyals. Costs against petitioner.
SO ORDERED.
CONCHITA CARPIO MORALES
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
ARTEMIO V. PANGANIBAN
Associate Justice
Chairman
ANGELINA SANDOVAL-GUTIERREZ
Associate Justice
RENATO C. CORONA
Associate Justice
CANCIO C. GARCIA
Associate Justice
ATTESTATION
I attest that the conclusions in the above Decision were reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court's Division.
ARTEMIO V. PANGANIBAN
Associate Justice
Chairman
CERTIFICATION
Pursuant to Article VIII, Section 13 of the Constitution, and the Division Chairman's Attestation, it is hereby certified that the conclusions in the above Decision were reached in consultation before the case was assigned to the writer of the opinion of the Court.
HILARIO G. DAVIDE, JR.
Chief Justice
[1] Records at 28.
[2] Id. at 29. Note however that respondent's POEA Overseas Employment Certificate is only for 12 months (Records at 5).
[3] Id. at 24.
[4] Id. at 28.
[5] Id. at 24.
[6] Ibid.
[7] Id. at 1.
[8] With the passage of Republic Act No. 8042 otherwise known as "The Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipino Act of 1995," it is now the NLRC and not the POEA which has original and exclusive jurisdiction to hear and decide claims arising out of an employer-employee relationship or by virtue of any law or contract involving Filipino workers for overseas deployment including claims for actual, moral, exemplary and other forms of damages.
[9] Records at 24.
[10] Ibid.
[11] Ibid.
[12] Ibid.
[13] Ibid.
[14] Ibid.
[15] Id. at 25.
[16] Id. at 36-37.
[17] Id. at 112-117.
[18] This is the period during which he claims he was jobless.
[19] Id. at 114-117.
[20] Id. at 123-131.
[21] Id. at 187-194.
[22] Court of Appeals (CA) Rollo at 2-51.
[23] Id. at 107-114.
[24] Id. at 121-124.
[25] Id. at 148.
[26] Rollo at 3-41.
[27] Far East Bank and Trust Company v. Querimit, 373 SCRA 665, 671 (2002); Sevillana v. I.T. (International) Corp., 356 SCRA 451, 470 (2001); Villar v. National Labor Relations Commission, 331 SCRA 686, 695 (2000); Audion Electric Co, Inc. v. NLRC, 308 SCRA 340, 352 (1999); Ropali Trading Corporation v. NLRC, 296 SCRA 309, 315 (1998); National Semiconductor (HK) Distribution, Ltd. v. National Labor Relations Commission (4th Division), 291 SCRA 348, 352 (1998); Pacific Maritime Services, Inc. v. Ranay, 275 SCRA 717, 725-726 (1997); Jimenez v. National Labor Relations Commission, 256 SCRA 84, 89 (1996); Philippine National Bank v. Court of Appeals, 256 SCRA 44, 49 (1996); Good Earth Emporium, Inc. v. Court of Appeals, 194 SCRA 544, 552 (1991); Villaflor v. Court of Appeals, 192 SCRA 680, 690 (1990); Biala v. Court of Appeals, 191 SCRA 50, 59 (1990); Servicewide Specialists, Inc. v. Intermediate Appellate Court, 174 SCRA 80, 90 (1989).
[28] Villar v. National Labor Relations Commission, 331 SCRA 686, 695 (2000).
[29] 178 SCRA 569 (1989).
[30] Id. at 575-576. Note that now under Section 10 of the Migrant Workers and Overseas Filipino Act of 1995, the solidary liability of the employer and recruitment agency is expressly provided for by law.
[31] Rollo at 8.
[32] Id. at 7.
[33] Far East Bank and Trust Company v. Querimit, supra; Sevillana v. I.T. (International) Corp Villar v. National Labor Relations Commission, supra; Audion Electric Co, Inc. v. NLRC, supra at 352-353; National Semiconductor (HK) Distribution, Ltd. v. National Labor Relations Commission (4th Division), supra; Pacific Maritime Services, Inc. v. Ranay, supra at 726; Jimenez v. National Labor Relations Commission, supra.
[34] Black's Law Dictionary 463 (1991), 6th ed.
[35] Ibid.
[36] Vide: Godwin v. Hinnant, 108 S.E.2d 658, 662 (1959); Machtinger v. Grenzebach, 282 S.W.2d 200, 202 (1955).
[37] Records at 24.
[38] Id. at 28.
[39] This figure was arrived at by multiplying SR300 by 4 months and SR500 by 8 months.