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Thursday, August 31, 2023

JUST CAUSE IN EMPLOYMENT TERMINATION

FRAUD OR WILLFUL BREACH OF TRUST: JUST CAUSE IN EMPLOYMENT TERMINATION

Article 297(c) of the Labor Code provides that an employee may be dismissed for “fraud or willful breach by the employee of the trust reposed in him by his employer or duly authorized representative.” This particular provision speaks of two grounds: (a) fraud; and (b) loss of trust and confidence. The latter is discussed in a separate post. 


For fraud to be a valid ground for termination, the following must be present:

  • 1. There must be an act, omission, or concealment;
  • 2. The act, omission or concealment involves a breach of legal duty, trust or confidence justly reposed;
  • 3. It must be committed against the employer or his/her representative; and
  • 4. It must be in connection with the employee’s work.

In order to constitute a just cause for dismissal, the act complained of must be “work-related” such as would show the employee concerned to be unfit to continue working for the employer.

Employees in the Philippines enjoy security of tenure. Under the Labor Code, no employee may be terminated or dismissed, except for just or authorized causes. The employer has the burden of proving, among others, that the facts support the elements of the cause used by the company to justify the employment termination. Each ground has specific elements. It is important, therefore, for management, or at least the HR staff, to be familiar with these factors. 

 

Article 297(a) of the Labor Code covers two just causes: serious misconduct, and willful disobedience (the latter ground is discussed in a separate post). Misconduct, defined as the transgression of some established and definite rule or action, a forbidden act, a dereliction of duty, willful in character and implies wrongful intent and not mere error in judgment, is not enough to justify a termination. It has to be serious misconduct. A misconduct is considered serious when:

  • 1. There must be misconduct;
  • 2. The misconduct must be of such grave and aggravated character;
  • 3. It must relate to the performance of the employee’s duties; and
  • 4. There must be showing that the employee becomes unfit to continue working for the employer.

 

 

Just causes:
* 1. Serious misconduct
* 2. Willful disobedience or insubordination
* 3. Gross and habitual neglect of duties
* 4. Fraud or willful breach of trust
* 5. Loss of trust and confidence
* 6. Commission of a crime or offense
* 7. Analogous causes 
 Authorized causes:
* 1. Installation of labor-saving devices
* 2. Redundancy
* 3. Retrenchment or downsizing
* 4. Closure or Cessation of Operation
* 5. Disease 

* Also: Due Process in termination cases
  

Termination of Employment

 

1. What is the right to security of tenure?

The right to security of tenure means that a regular employee shall remain employed unless his or her services are terminated for just or authorized cause and after observance of procedural due process.

2. May an employer dismiss an employee? What are the grounds?

Yes. An employer may dismiss an employee on the following just causes:

a) serious misconduct;

b) willful disobedience;

c) gross and habitual neglect of duty;

d) fraud or breach of trust;

e) commission of a crime or offense against the employer, his family or representative;

f) other similar causes.

3. Are there other grounds for terminating an employment? What are they?

Yes. The other grounds are authorized causes:

a) installation of labor-saving devices;

b) redundancy;

c) retrenchment to prevent losses;

d) closure and cessation of business; and

e) disease / illness.

4. Before terminating the services of an employee, what procedure should the employer observe?

An employer shall observe procedural due process before terminating one’s employment.

5. What are the components of procedural due process?

A. In a termination for just cause, due process involves the two-notice rule:

a) A notice of intent to dismiss specifying the ground for termination, and giving said employee reasonable opportunity within which to explain his or her side;

b) A hearing or conference where the employee is given opportunity to respond to the charge, present evidence or rebut the evidence presented against him or her;

c) A notice of dismissal indicating that upon due consideration of all the circumstances, grounds have been established to justify termination.

B. In a termination for an authorized cause, due process means a written notice of dismissal to the employee specifying the grounds at least 30 days before the date of termination. A copy of the notice shall also be furnished the Regional Office of the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) where the employer is located.

6. What is the sanction if the employer failed to observe procedural due process in cases of legal and authorized termination?

In cases of termination for just causes, the employee is entitled to payment of indemnity or nominal damages in a sum of not more than 30,000 pesos (Agabon vs. NLRC, 442 SCRA 573); in case of termination for authorized causes, 50,000 pesos (Jaka Food Processing vs. Darwin Pacot, 454 SCRA 119).

7. May an employee question the legality of his or her dismissal?

Yes. The legality of a dismissal may be questioned before the Labor Arbiter of a Regional Arbitration Branch of the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC), through a complaint for illegal dismissal. In establishments with a collective bargaining agreement (CBA), the dismissal may be questioned through the grievance machinery established under the CBA. If the complaint is not resolved at this level, it may be submitted to voluntary arbitration.

8. In cases of illegal dismissal, who has the duty of proving that the dismissal is valid?

The employer.

9. Suppose the employer denies dismissing the employee, who has the duty to prove that the dismissal is without valid cause?

The employee must elaborate, support or substantiate his or her complaint that he or she was dismissed without valid cause (Ledesma, Jr. vs. NLRC, 537 SCRA 358, October 19, 2007).

10. On what grounds may an employee question his or her dismissal?

An employee may question his or her dismissal based on substantive or procedural grounds.

The substantive aspect pertains to the absence of a just or authorized cause supporting the dismissal.

The procedural aspect refers to the failure of the employer to give the employee the opportunity to explain his or her side.

11. What are the rights afforded to an unjustly dismissed employee?

An employee who is dismissed without just cause is entitled to any or all of the following:

a) reinstatement without loss of seniority rights;

b) in lieu of reinstatement, an employee may be given separation pay of one month pay for every year of service (Golden Ace Builders, et. al vs. Jose Talde, May 5, 2010, GR No. 187200);

c) full backwages, inclusive of allowances and other benefits or their monetary equivalent from the time compensation was withheld up to the time of reinstatement;

d) damages if the dismissal was done in bad faith (Aurora Land Project Corp. vs NLRC, 266 SCRA 48).

12. What is reinstatement?

Reinstatement means restoration of the employee to the position from which he or she has been unjustly removed.

Reinstatement without loss of seniority rights means that the employee, upon reinstatement, should be treated in matter involving seniority and continuity of employment as though he or she had not been dismissed from work.

When a Labor Arbiter rules for an illegal dismissal, reinstatement is immediately executory even pending appeal by the employer (Article 223 of the Labor Code, as amended).

13. In what forms may reinstatement pending appeal be effected?

Reinstatement pending appeal may be actual or by payroll, at the option of the employer.

14. What is meant by full backwages?

Full backwages refer to all compensations, including allowances and other benefits with monetary equivalent that should have been earned by the employee but was not collected by him or her because of unjust dismissal. It includes all the amounts he or she could have earned starting from the date of dismissal up to the time of reinstatement.

15. What is separation pay?

In termination for authorized causes, separation pay is the amount given to an employee terminated due to installation of labor-saving devices, redundancy, retrenchment, closure or cessation of business or incurable disease.

Separation pay may also be granted to an illegally dismissed employee in lieu of reinstatement.

16. How much is the separation pay?

In cases of installation of labor-saving devices or redundancy, the employee is entitled to receive the equivalent of one month pay or one month for every year of service, whichever is higher.

In cases of retrenchment, closure or cessation of business or incurable disease, the employee is entitled to receive the equivalent of one month pay or one-half month pay for every year of service, whichever is higher.

In case of separation pay in lieu of reinstatement, the employee is entitled to receive the equivalent of one month pay for every year of service.

17. Is proof of financial losses necessary to justify retrenchment?

Yes. Proof of actual or imminent financial losses that are substantive in character must be proven by the employer to justify retrenchment (Lopez Sugar Central vs. NLRC, 189 SCRA 179).

18. Are there other conditions before an employee may be dismissed on the ground of redundancy?

Yes. It must be shown that there is:

a) Good faith in abolishing redundant position; and

b) Fair and reasonable criteria in selecting employees to be dismissed, such as but not limited to less preferred status (e.g. temporary employee), efficiency and seniority (Asian Alcohol Corp. vs. NLRC, 305 SCRA 416);

c) A one-month prior notice is given to the employee and DOLE Regional Office as prescribed by law.

19. May the services of an employee be terminated due to disease?

Yes. The employer may terminate employment on ground of disease only upon the issuance of a certification by a competent public health authority that the disease is of such nature or at such stage that it cannot be cured within a period of six months even with proper medical treatment.

20. What is constructive dismissal?

Constructive dismissal refers to an involuntary resignation resorted to when continued employment becomes impossible, unreasonable or unlikely; when there is a demotion in rank or a diminution in pay; or when a clear discrimination, insensibility or disdain by an employer becomes unbearable to an employee or an unwarranted transfer or demotion of a employee, or other unjustified action prejudicial to the employee. The employer has to prove that such managerial actions do not constitute constructive dismissal (Blue Dairy Corp. vs. NLRC, 314 SCRA 401)

21. May an employee be placed on floating status?

Yes, provided it is permitted under circumstances for a period of not more than six (6) months. Beyond this period, floating status becomes constructive dismissal which entitles the employee to separation pay (Phil. Industrial Security Agency Corp. vs. Virgilio Dapiton and NLRC, 320 SCRA 124)

22. When an employee resigned voluntarily, is he or she entitled to separation pay?

No. An employee is not entitled to separation pay when he or she resigns voluntarily, unless it is a company practice or provided in the CBA (Hanford Philippines Inc. vs. Shirley Joseph, 454 SCRA 786, March 31, 2005).

23. Are quitclaims valid?

Yes, provided that these are voluntarily signed and the consideration is reasonable and is not against the law or public policy. (More Maritime Agencies vs. NLRC, 307 SCRA 189)

Quitclaims entered into by union officers and some members do not bind those who did not sign it (Liana’s Supermarket vs. NLRC, 257 SCRA 186).

 

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Ref:  https://blr.dole.gov.ph/2014/12/11/termination-of-employment/

 

Monday, August 21, 2023

Calabarzon workers get second tranche of wage hike Published on: January 03, 2023 By Christopher Hedreyda

 JAN 3 , 2023 SALARY MINIMUM WAGE BINAN SANTA ROSA

CALAMBA CITY, Laguna (PIA) — Minimum wage earners in Calabarzon will get an increase of P23 to P48 in their daily take-home pay following the implementation of the second tranche of a wage order.

The Regional Tripartite Wages and Productivity Board (RTWPB) IV-A announced on Tuesday, January 3 that Wage Order IVA-19 previously signed in May 2022 took effect last December 30.

Minimum wage earners in the region have already received an additional P3 to P49 daily increase during the first tranche of the wage order last year.

The new minimum wage rate in the non-agricultural sector is set to P470 in the extended metropolitan area which includes the cities of Bacoor, Imus, and Dasmarinas in Cavite; Binan and San Pedro in Laguna; Antipolo City, Cainta, and Taytay in Rizal.

Component cities and first class municipalities will receive a P28 wage increase or P429 daily rate. 

Wage rate in the second and third class municipalities workers was set to P390 while the rate in the fourth to 6th class municipalities was set to P350.

Meanwhile, agricultural workers in the extended metropolitan area and component cities will now receive P429 daily; workers in first class municipalities will get P390 daily; those in second to sixth class municipalities will receive P350 daily.

Those in the retail and service establishments with not more than 10 workers will receive an across-the-board increase of P23 giving them a P350 daily wage rate.

The minimum wage rate is given to employees who work for not exceeding eight hours a day.

According to the RTWPB IV-A, the wage hike is the government’s response to the lower purchasing power of the peso, two-tiered wage system, poverty threshold, impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, comparability of wages vis-a-vis benchmark regions, and the dispersal of industries across the region. (CH/PIA-Laguna; with reports from RTWPB IV-A)

 

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REF- https://pia.gov.ph/news/2023/01/03/calabarzon-workers-get-second-tranche-of-wage-hike#:~:text=The%20new%20minimum%20wage%20rate,Cainta%2C%20and%20Taytay%20in%20Rizal.

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notes:

1.  as of JAN 3 , 2023 SALARY MINIMUM WAGE BINAN,LAGUNA= Php470 per day or Php58.75 per hour

2. as of JAN 3 , 2023 SALARY MINIMUM WAGE Santa Rosa,LAGUNA= Php429 per day or Php53.625 per hour

Tuesday, July 25, 2023

Laguna factory to export electric 'big bikes' to EU

 Laguna factory to export electric 'big bikes' to EU

ABS-CBN News

Posted at Jul 25 2023 08:28 PM | Updated as of Jul 25 2023 08:35 PM

MANILA -- The high-powered electric motorcycles being built by an Ayala-led firm in Laguna will be primarily exported to the European Union, an official of the American EV brand said on Tuesday. 

“In the first few years, the majority of the motorcycles that IMI will be producing for us will be for export into the EU market,” said Zero Motorcycles CEO Sam Paschel.

The EU remains Zero’s largest market for its electric motorcycles, Paschel said in an interview with ANC's "Business Roadshow." 

Zero recently partnered with the Ayala Group's electronics manufacturing unit IMI to launch the first electric “big bike” assembly line in the Philippines.

According to its website, Zero sells a range of electric bikes which have a range of up to 301 kilometers, and are capable of producing 110 horsepower, and hitting top speeds of up to 200 kilometers per hour.

This is one of the smartest and most complex vehicles on the planet," Paschel said.

He added that while they see these motorcycles being sold in the Philippines, the company is “not solely reliant” on sales in the country, as these EVs need investments in public charging infrastructure. 

IMI CEO Arthur Tan meanwhile said they see the factory contributing to the growth of the e-bike market, both locally and globally

 “So this is something that we’re looking not just to serve the Philippine market, which is quite nascent, but also the global market, especially out in Europe and rest of Asia," he said.

He also said the Philippines could be the leader in the e-bike industry in the region.

"So being able to make that transition into the electric motorcycle not only cuts costs on the operating cost and the fuel cost that necessary to drive our economy, but also in general, allow us now to become the leader in this segment within the region," he said.

Tan also said the e-bike industry should be seen as a way for the Philippines to "leapfrog its neighbors."

IMI will be assembling batteries, motors, building all the electronics that sit at the core of the operating system of Zero’s electric motorcycle, Paschel said. 

--ANC, 25 July 2023

 

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