Association of Trade Unions V. Abella GR No.100518, January 24, 2000 Quisumbing, J

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ASSOCIATION OF TRADE UNIONS v.

ABELLA
GR No.100518, January 24, 2000
Quisumbing, J.

Facts: Respondent company is a domestic corporation engaged in road construction


projects of the government. They engaged the services of Monteclaro and Juesan in
various projects on different dates. Their contracts indicate the particular project
they are assigned, the duration of their employment and their daily wage. They
joined petitioner union as members. Accordingly, petitioner union filed a petition for
certification election with the regional office of the labor department. Respondent
company opposed the petition on the ground that the workers were project
employees and therefore not qualified to form part of the rank and file collective
bargaining unit. The Med-Arbiter dismissed the petition for certification election. On
appeal, the Secretary of Labor and Employment reversed the Med-Arbiter's decision.
Meanwhile, the national president of petitioner union sent a demand letter to
respondent company seeking the payment of wage differentials to some affected
union members. As said demand was unheeded, petitioner union and the concerned
workers filed a complaint for payment of wage differentials and other benefits
before the Regional Office of DOLE.
Respondent company terminated the employment of aforementioned workers owing
to the completion of its projects or the expiration of workers' contracts. However,
the affected workers claim that they were dismissed because of their union
activities. Due to that, the workers staged a strike. Upon complaint of respondent
company, LA declared said strike illegal. On appeal, the NLRC affirmed said decision.
The aggrieved workers filed with the Regional Arbitration Branch of the NLRC their
individual complaints against private respondent company. LA refrained from
resolving the issue of underpayment of monetary benefits but found that workers
were illegally dismissed. On appeal, NLRC awarded monetary benefits to qualified
workers. Private respondents filed their motion for reconsideration, which was
denied.
Issue: Whether Respondent Commission committed errors in their decision.
Ruling: In petitions for certiorari under Rule 65 of the Rules of Court, it may be noted
that "want of jurisdiction" and "grave abuse of discretion," and not merely reversible
error, are the proper grounds for review. The respondent acts without jurisdiction if
he does not have the legal authority to decide a case. There is excess of jurisdiction
if the respondent, having the power to determine the case, oversteps his lawful
authority. And there is grave abuse of discretion where the respondent acts in a
capricious, whimsical, arbitrary or despotic manner, in effect equivalent to lack of
jurisdiction. Here, petitioners neither assail the jurisdiction of public respondent nor
attribute any grave abuse of discretion on the part of the labor tribunal. Necessarily,
this petition must fail, for lack of substantial requisites under Rule 65.
As properly stated by the Solicitor General, the point of inquiry here is whether
petitioners are regular or project employees of respondent company. Regular
employees are those who have been engaged to perform activities which are
usually necessary or desirable in the usual business or trade of the employer even if

the parties enter into an agreement stating otherwise. In contrast, project


employees are those whose 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. In the case at bar, the contracts of employment of the petitioners attest to
the fact that they had been hired for specific projects, and their employment was
coterminous with the completion of the project for which they had been hired.
Considering that petitioners were project employees, whose nature of employment
they were fully informed about, at the time of their engagement, related to a
specific project, work or undertaking, their employment legally ended upon
completion of said project. The termination of their employment could not be
regarded as illegal dismissal

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