Petitioners Respondents: Second Division
Petitioners Respondents: Second Division
Petitioners Respondents: Second Division
DECISION
QUISUMBING, J : p
For review are the Decision 1 dated February 27, 2001 of the Court of
Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 60337, and its Resolution 2 dated May 28 2001,
denying the motion for reconsideration. The Court of Appeals dismissed the
petition for certiorari filed by petitioners and affirmed the Resolution 3 of the
National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC), Third Division, which affirmed the
Decision 4 of Labor Arbiter Jose G. De Vera in NLRC-NCR Case No. 00-03-02279-
98, which found petitioners liable for illegal dismissal and ordered petitioners to
pay private respondent Jose Mascarinas separation pay, backwages, legal
holiday pay, service incentive leave pay and 13th month pay in the aggregate
sum of P85,871.00.
SO ORDERED. 5
The Labor Arbiter ruled that (1) private respondent Jose F. Mascarinas'
dismissal was unjustified because of petitioners' failure to serve upon the
private respondent and the DOLE the required written notice of termination
least one month prior to the effectivity thereof and to submit proof showing
that petitioners suffered a business slowdown in operations and sales effective
January 1998; (2) private respondent may recover backwages from March 1,
1998 up to March 1, 1999 or P66,924.00 6 and separation pay, in lieu of
reinstatement, at the rate of one (1) month pay for every year of service, or
P10,296.00; 7 (3) the payrolls submitted by JAT showed that effective May 1,
1997, private respondent's wages did not conform to the prevailing minimum
wage, hence, private respondent is entitled to salary differentials from May 1,
1997 to January 6, 1998, in the amount of P1,066.00; 8 (4) that private
respondent be awarded legal holiday pay in the amount of P1,850.00 9 service
incentive leave pay in the amount of P925.00 10 and 13th month pay for 1997
in the amount of P4,810.00. 11
On appeal the NLRC affirmed the decision of the labor arbiter. 12 The NLRC
found that the financial statements submitted on appeal were questionable,
unreliable and inconsistent with petitioners' allegations in the pleadings,
particularly as to the date of the alleged closure of operation; hence, they
cannot be used to support private respondent's dismissal. The NLRC also
affirmed the monetary awards because petitioners failed to prove the payment
of benefits claimed by private respondent. CDHacE
SO ORDERED. 13
The relevant issues for our resolution are: (a) whether or not private
respondent was illegally dismissed from employment due to closure of
petitioners' business, and (b) whether or not private respondent is entitled to
separation pay, backwages and other monetary awards.
On the first issue, the petitioners claim that the Court of Appeals
erroneously concluded that they are liable for illegal dismissal because of non-
compliance of the procedural and substantive requirements of terminating
employment, due to retrenchment and cessation of business. They argued that
there was no closure but only suspension of operation in good faith in March
1998 when private respondent claimed to have been illegally dismissed, due to
the decline in sales and heavy losses incurred in its business arising from the
1997 Asian financial crisis. Petitioners assert that under Article 286 of the Labor
Code, a bona fidesuspension of the operation of a business for a period not
exceeding six (6) months shall not terminate employment and no notice to an
employee is required. However, petitioners relate that JAT was compelled to
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permanently close its operation eight (8) months later or on November 1998,
when the hope of recovery became nil but only after sending notices to all its
workers and DOLE. Thus, petitioners argue that it cannot be held liable for
illegal dismissal in March 1998 since there was no termination of employment
during suspension of operations and a notice to employee is not required,
unlike in the case of permanent closure of business operation.
In the present case, we find the issues and contentions more centered on
closure of business operation rather than retrenchment. Closure or cessation of
operation of the establishment is an authorized cause for terminating an
employee under Article 283 of the Labor Code, to wit:
ART. 283. Closure of establishment and reduction of personnel. —
The employer may also terminate the employment of any employee
due to the installation of labor-saving devices, redundancy,
retrenchment to prevent losses or the closing or cessation of operation
of the establishment or undertaking unless the closing is for the
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purpose of circumventing the provisions of this Title, by serving a
written notice on the workers and the Department of Labor and
Employment at least one (1) month before the intended date thereof. .
. . In case of retrenchment to prevent losses and in cases of closures or
cessation of operations of establishment or undertaking not duet to
serious business losses or financial reverses, the separation pay shall
be equivalent to one (1) month pay or to at least one-half (1/2) month
pay for every year of service, whichever is higher. A fraction of at least
six (6) months shall be considered one (1) whole year.
However the burden of proving that such closure is bona fide falls upon
the employer. 17 In the present case, JAT justifies its closure of business due to
heavy losses caused by declining sales. It belatedly submitted its 1997 Income
Statement 18 and Comparative Statement of Income and Capital for 1997 and
1998 19 to the NLRC to prove that JAT suffered losses starting 1997. However,
as noted earlier, these were not given much evidentiary weight by the NLRC as
well as the Court of Appeals, to wit:
The financial statements submitted by the respondents on
appeal are questionable for the following reasons: (1) the figures in
Annexes "D-2" and "E" of the appeal memorandum (which both refer to
1997) do not tally; (2) they (the respondents) allegedly closed on
March 1, 1998. Yet, their 1998 financial statement (Annex "E")
indicates operations up to and ending December 31, 1998. In view of
the foregoing, the above-mentioned financial statements do not justify
the complainant's dismissal. . . . 20
ADCETI
A careful examination of Article 283 of the Labor Code shows that closure
or cessation of business operation as a valid and authorized ground of
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terminating employment is not limited to those resulting from business losses
or reverses. Said provision in fact provides for the payment of separation pay to
employees terminated because of closure of business not due to losses, thus
implying that termination of employees other than closure of business due to
losses may be valid.
Hence, in one case, 22 we emphasized that:
. . . Art. 283 governs the grant of separation benefits "in case of
closures or cessation of operation" of business establishments "NOT
due to serious business losses or financial reverses . . .." Where,
however, the closure was due to business losses — as in the instant
case, in which the aggregate losses amounted to over P20 billion — the
Labor Code does not impose any obligation upon the employer to pay
separation benefits, for obvious reasons. There is no need to belabor
this point. Even the public respondents, in their Comment filed by the
Solicitor General, impliedly concede this point.
Footnotes
1. Penned by Associate Justice Jose L. Sabio, Jr., with Associate Justices Hilarion L.
Aquino, and Mercedes Gozo-Dadole concurring.
2. Rollo , pp. 32-33.
3. Id. at 43-47.
4. Id. at 38-41
5. Id. at 41.
6. P198.00/day x 26 days x 13 mos. = P66,924.00, Rollo , p. 40.
7. From January 1997 up to March 31, 1999, or two (2) years x P5,148.00 =
P10,296.00, ibid.
8. From May 1, 1997 up to January 6, 1998 at P185.00/day less amount paid at
P180.00/day = P5.00 x 26 days x 8.2 mos. = P1,066.00, id . at 41.
9. P185.00 x 10 legal holidays = P1,850.00, ibid.
10. P185.00 x 5 days = P925.00, ibid.
11. P185.00 x 26 days = P4,810.00, ibid.
16. See SCRA Annotation, "Reversal of Fortune as Ground for Dismissal" by Rogelio
E. Subong, 282 SCRA 617, 621-622.
17. Industrial Timber Corporation v. National Labor Relations Commission , 339 Phil.
395, 405 (1997).
18. Rollo , p. 34.