Republic of the Philippines
SUPREME COURT
Manila
THIRD DIVISION
G.R. No. 182836 October 13, 2009
CONTINENTAL STEEL MANUFACTURING CORPORATION, Petitioner,
vs.
HON. ACCREDITED VOLUNTARY ARBITRATOR ALLAN S. MONTAÑO and
NAGKAKAISANG MANGGAGAWA NG CENTRO STEEL CORPORATION-SOLIDARITY OF UNIONS
IN THE PHILIPPINES FOR EMPOWERMENT AND REFORMS (NMCSC-SUPER), Respondents.
D E C I S I O N
CHICO-NAZARIO, J.:
Before Us is a Petition for Review on Certiorari, under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, assailing the Decision
1 dated 27 February 2008 and the Resolution
2 dated 9 May 2008 of the Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 101697, affirming the Resolution
3
dated 20 November 2007 of respondent Accredited Voluntary Arbitrator
Atty. Allan S. Montaño (Montaño) granting bereavement leave and other
death benefits to Rolando P. Hortillano (Hortillano), grounded on the
death of his unborn child.
The antecedent facts of the case are as follows:
Hortillano, an employee of petitioner Continental
Steel Manufacturing Corporation (Continental Steel) and a member of
respondent Nagkakaisang Manggagawa ng Centro Steel
Corporation-Solidarity of Trade Unions in the Philippines for
Empowerment and Reforms (Union) filed on 9 January 2006, a claim for
Paternity Leave, Bereavement Leave and Death and Accident Insurance for
dependent, pursuant to the Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA)
concluded between Continental and the Union, which reads:
ARTICLE X: LEAVE OF ABSENCE
x x x x
Section 2. BEREAVEMENT LEAVE—The Company agrees to
grant a bereavement leave with pay to any employee in case of death of
the employee’s legitimate dependent (parents, spouse, children, brothers
and sisters) based on the following:
2.1 Within Metro Manila up to Marilao, Bulacan - 7 days
2.2 Provincial/Outside Metro Manila - 11 days
x x x x
ARTICLE XVIII: OTHER BENEFITS
x x x x
Section 4. DEATH AND ACCIDENT INSURANCE—The Company
shall grant death and accidental insurance to the employee or his family
in the following manner:
x x x x
4.3 DEPENDENTS—Eleven Thousand Five Hundred Fifty
Pesos (Php11,550.00) in case of death of the employees legitimate
dependents (parents, spouse, and children). In case the employee is
single, this benefit covers the legitimate parents, brothers and sisters
only with proper legal document to be presented (e.g. death
certificate).
4
The claim was based on the death of Hortillano’s
unborn child. Hortillano’s wife, Marife V. Hortillano, had a premature
delivery on 5 January 2006 while she was in the 38th week of pregnancy.
5
According to the Certificate of Fetal Death dated 7 January 2006, the
female fetus died during labor due to fetal Anoxia secondary to
uteroplacental insufficiency.
6
Continental Steel immediately granted Hortillano’s
claim for paternity leave but denied his claims for bereavement leave
and other death benefits, consisting of the death and accident
insurance.
7
Seeking the reversal of the denial by Continental
Steel of Hortillano’s claims for bereavement and other death benefits,
the Union resorted to the grievance machinery provided in the CBA.
Despite the series of conferences held, the parties still failed to
settle their dispute,
8
prompting the Union to file a Notice to Arbitrate before the National
Conciliation and Mediation Board (NCMB) of the Department of Labor and
Employment (DOLE), National Capital Region (NCR).
9
In a Submission Agreement dated 9 October 2006, the Union and
Continental Steel submitted for voluntary arbitration the sole issue of
whether Hortillano was entitled to bereavement leave and other death
benefits pursuant to Article X, Section 2
and Article XVIII, Section 4.3 of the CBA.
10 The parties mutually chose Atty. Montaño, an Accredited Voluntary Arbitrator, to resolve said issue.
11
When the preliminary conferences again proved futile
in amicably settling the dispute, the parties proceeded to submit their
respective Position Papers,
12 Replies,
13 and Rejoinders
14 to Atty. Montaño.
The Union argued that Hortillano was entitled to
bereavement leave and other death benefits pursuant to the CBA. The
Union maintained that Article X, Section 2 and Article XVIII, Section
4.3 of the CBA did not specifically state that the dependent should have
first been born alive or must have acquired juridical personality so
that his/her subsequent death could be covered by the CBA death
benefits. The Union cited cases wherein employees of MKK Steel
Corporation (MKK Steel) and Mayer Steel Pipe Corporation (Mayer Steel),
sister companies of Continental Steel, in similar situations as
Hortillano were able to receive death benefits under similar provisions
of their CBAs.
The Union mentioned in particular the case of Steve
L. Dugan (Dugan), an employee of Mayer Steel, whose wife also
prematurely delivered a fetus, which had already died prior to the
delivery. Dugan was able to receive paternity leave, bereavement leave,
and voluntary contribution under the CBA between his union and Mayer
Steel.
15
Dugan’s child was only 24 weeks in the womb and died before labor, as
opposed to Hortillano’s child who was already 37-38 weeks in the womb
and only died during labor.
The Union called attention to the fact that MKK Steel
and Mayer Steel are located in the same compound as Continental Steel;
and the representatives of MKK Steel and Mayer Steel who signed the CBA
with their respective employees’ unions were the same as the
representatives of Continental Steel who signed the existing CBA with
the Union.
Finally, the Union invoked Article 1702 of the Civil
Code, which provides that all doubts in labor legislations and labor
contracts shall be construed in favor of the safety of and decent living
for the laborer.
On the other hand, Continental Steel posited that the
express provision of the CBA did not contemplate the death of an unborn
child, a fetus, without legal personality. It claimed that there are
two elements for the entitlement to the benefits, namely: (1) death and
(2) status as legitimate dependent, none of which existed in
Hortillano’s case. Continental Steel, relying on Articles 40, 41 and 42
16
of the Civil Code, contended that only one with civil personality could
die. Hence, the unborn child never died because it never acquired
juridical personality. Proceeding from the same line of thought,
Continental Steel reasoned that a fetus that was dead from the moment of
delivery was not a person at all. Hence, the term dependent could not
be applied to a fetus that never acquired juridical personality. A fetus
that was delivered dead could not be considered a dependent, since it
never needed any support, nor did it ever acquire the right to be
supported.
Continental Steel maintained that the wording of the
CBA was clear and unambiguous. Since neither of the parties qualified
the terms used in the CBA, the legally accepted definitions thereof were
deemed automatically accepted by both parties. The failure of the Union
to have unborn child included in the definition of dependent, as used
in the CBA – the death of whom would have qualified the parent-employee
for bereavement leave and other death benefits – bound the Union to the
legally accepted definition of the latter term.
Continental Steel, lastly, averred that similar cases
involving the employees of its sister companies, MKK Steel and Mayer
Steel, referred to by the Union, were irrelevant and incompetent
evidence, given the separate and distinct personalities of the
companies. Neither could the Union sustain its claim that the grant of
bereavement leave and other death benefits to the parent-employee for
the loss of an unborn child constituted "company practice."
On 20 November 2007, Atty. Montaño, the appointed Accredited Voluntary Arbitrator, issued a Resolution
17 ruling that Hortillano was entitled to bereavement leave with pay and death benefits.
Atty. Montaño identified the elements for entitlement to said benefits, thus:
This Office declares that for the entitlement of the
benefit of bereavement leave with pay by the covered employees as
provided under Article X, Section 2 of the parties’ CBA, three (3)
indispensable elements must be present: (1) there is "death"; (2) such
death must be of employee’s "dependent"; and (3) such dependent must be
"legitimate".
On the otherhand, for the entitlement to benefit for
death and accident insurance as provided under Article XVIII, Section 4,
paragraph (4.3) of the parties’ CBA, four (4) indispensable elements
must be present: (a) there is "death"; (b) such death must be of
employee’s "dependent"; (c) such dependent must be "legitimate"; and (d)
proper legal document to be presented.
18
Atty. Montaño found that there was no dispute that
the death of an employee’s legitimate dependent occurred. The fetus had
the right to be supported by the parents from the very moment he/she was
conceived. The fetus had to rely on another for support; he/she could
not have existed or sustained himself/herself without the power or aid
of someone else, specifically, his/her mother. Therefore, the fetus was
already a dependent, although he/she died during the labor or delivery.
There was also no question that Hortillano and his wife were lawfully
married, making their dependent, unborn child, legitimate.
In the end, Atty. Montaño decreed:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, a resolution is
hereby rendered ORDERING [herein petitioner Continental Steel] to pay
Rolando P. Hortillano the amount of Four Thousand Nine Hundred
Thirty-Nine Pesos (P4,939.00), representing his bereavement leave pay and the amount of Eleven Thousand Five Hundred Fifty Pesos (P11,550.00) representing death benefits, or a total amount of P16,489.00
The complaint against Manuel Sy, however, is ORDERED DISMISSED for lack of merit.
All other claims are DISMISSED for lack of merit.
Further, parties are hereby ORDERED to faithfully abide with the herein dispositions.
Aggrieved, Continental Steel filed with the Court of Appeals a Petition for Review on Certiorari,
19 under Section 1, Rule 43 of the Rules of Court, docketed as CA-G.R. SP No. 101697.
Continental Steel claimed that Atty. Montaño erred in
granting Hortillano’s claims for bereavement leave with pay and other
death benefits because no death of an employee’s dependent had occurred.
The death of a fetus, at whatever stage of pregnancy, was excluded from
the coverage of the CBA since what was contemplated by the CBA was the
death of a legal person, and not that of a fetus, which did not acquire
any juridical personality. Continental Steel pointed out that its
contention was bolstered by the fact that the term death was qualified
by the phrase legitimate dependent. It asserted that the status of a
child could only be determined upon said child’s birth, otherwise, no
such appellation can be had. Hence, the conditions sine qua non for
Hortillano’s entitlement to bereavement leave and other death benefits
under the CBA were lacking.
The Court of Appeals, in its Decision dated 27
February 2008, affirmed Atty. Montaño’s Resolution dated 20 November
2007. The appellate court interpreted death to mean as follows:
[Herein petitioner Continental Steel’s] exposition on
the legal sense in which the term "death" is used in the CBA fails to
impress the Court, and the same is irrelevant for ascertaining the
purpose, which the grant of bereavement leave and death benefits
thereunder, is intended to serve. While there is no arguing with
[Continental Steel] that the acquisition of civil personality of a child
or fetus is conditioned on being born alive upon delivery, it does not
follow that such event of premature delivery of a fetus could never be
contemplated as a "death" as to be covered by the CBA provision,
undoubtedly an event causing loss and grief to the affected employee,
with whom the dead fetus stands in a legitimate relation. [Continental
Steel] has proposed a narrow and technical significance to the term
"death of a legitimate dependent" as condition for granting bereavement
leave and death benefits under the CBA. Following [Continental Steel’s]
theory, there can be no experience of "death" to speak of. The Court,
however, does not share this view. A dead fetus simply cannot be equated
with anything less than "loss of human life", especially for the
expectant parents. In this light, bereavement leave and death benefits
are meant to assuage the employee and the latter’s immediate family,
extend to them solace and support, rather than an act conferring legal
status or personality upon the unborn child. [Continental Steel’s]
insistence that the certificate of fetal death is for statistical
purposes only sadly misses this crucial point.
20
Accordingly, the fallo of the 27 February 2008 Decision of the Court of Appeals reads:
WHEREFORE, premises considered, the present petition
is hereby DENIED for lack of merit. The assailed Resolution dated
November 20, 2007 of Accredited Voluntary Arbitrator Atty. Allan S.
Montaño is hereby AFFIRMED and UPHELD.
With costs against [herein petitioner Continental Steel].
21
In a Resolution
22 dated 9 May 2008, the Court of Appeals denied the Motion for Reconsideration
23 of Continental Steel.
Hence, this Petition, in which Continental Steel
persistently argues that the CBA is clear and unambiguous, so that the
literal and legal meaning of death should be applied. Only one with
juridical personality can die and a dead fetus never acquired a
juridical personality.
We are not persuaded.
As Atty. Montaño identified, the elements for
bereavement leave under Article X, Section 2 of the CBA are: (1) death;
(2) the death must be of a dependent, i.e., parent, spouse, child,
brother, or sister, of an employee; and (3) legitimate relations of the
dependent to the employee. The requisites for death and accident
insurance under Article XVIII, Section 4(3) of the CBA are: (1) death;
(2) the death must be of a dependent, who could be a parent, spouse, or
child of a married employee; or a parent, brother, or sister of a single
employee; and (4) presentation of the proper legal document to prove
such death, e.g., death certificate.
It is worthy to note that despite the repeated
assertion of Continental Steel that the provisions of the CBA are clear
and unambiguous, its fundamental argument for denying Hortillano’s claim
for bereavement leave and other death benefits rests on the purportedly
proper interpretation of the terms "death" and "dependent" as used in
the CBA. If the provisions of the CBA are indeed clear and unambiguous,
then there is no need to resort to the interpretation or construction of
the same. Moreover, Continental Steel itself admitted that neither
management nor the Union sought to define the pertinent terms for
bereavement leave and other death benefits during the negotiation of the
CBA.
The reliance of Continental Steel on Articles 40, 41
and 42 of the Civil Code for the legal definition of death is misplaced.
Article 40 provides that a conceived child acquires personality only
when it is born, and Article 41 defines when a child is considered born.
Article 42 plainly states that civil personality is extinguished by
death.
First, the issue of civil personality is not relevant
herein. Articles 40, 41 and 42 of the Civil Code on natural persons,
must be applied in relation to Article 37 of the same Code, the very
first of the general provisions on civil personality, which reads:
Art. 37. Juridical capacity, which is the fitness to
be the subject of legal relations, is inherent in every natural person
and is lost only through death. Capacity to act, which is the power to
do acts with legal effect, is acquired and may be lost.
We need not establish civil personality of the unborn
child herein since his/her juridical capacity and capacity to act as a
person are not in issue. It is not a question before us whether the
unborn child acquired any rights or incurred any obligations prior to
his/her death that were passed on to or assumed by the child’s parents.
The rights to bereavement leave and other death benefits in the instant
case pertain directly to the parents of the unborn child upon the
latter’s death.
Second, Sections 40, 41 and 42 of the Civil Code do
not provide at all a definition of death. Moreover, while the Civil Code
expressly provides that civil personality may be extinguished by death,
it does not explicitly state that only those who have acquired
juridical personality could die.
And third, death has been defined as the cessation of life.
24
Life is not synonymous with civil personality. One need not acquire
civil personality first before he/she could die. Even a child inside the
womb already has life. No less than the Constitution recognizes the
life of the unborn from conception,
25
that the State must protect equally with the life of the mother. If the
unborn already has life, then the cessation thereof even prior to the
child being delivered, qualifies as death.
Likewise, the unborn child can be considered a
dependent under the CBA. As Continental Steel itself defines, a
dependent is "one who relies on another for support; one not able to
exist or sustain oneself without the power or aid of someone else."
Under said general definition,
26
even an unborn child is a dependent of its parents. Hortillano’s child
could not have reached 38-39 weeks of its gestational life without
depending upon its mother, Hortillano’s wife, for sustenance.
Additionally, it is explicit in the CBA provisions in question that the
dependent may be the parent, spouse, or
child of a married employee; or the parent, brother, or sister of a single employee. The CBA did not provide a qualification for the
child dependent,
such that the child must have been born or must have acquired civil
personality, as Continental Steel avers. Without such qualification,
then
child shall be understood in its more general sense, which includes the unborn fetus in the mother’s womb.
The term
legitimate merely addresses the dependent child’s status in relation to his/her parents. In
Angeles v. Maglaya,
27 we have expounded on who is a legitimate child,
viz:
A legitimate child is a product of, and, therefore,
implies a valid and lawful marriage. Remove the element of lawful union
and there is strictly no legitimate filiation between parents and child.
Article 164 of the Family Code cannot be more emphatic on the matter:
"Children conceived or born during the marriage of the parents are legitimate." (Emphasis ours.)
Conversely, in
Briones v. Miguel,
28 we identified an illegitimate child to be as follows:
The fine distinctions among the various types of
illegitimate children have been eliminated in the Family Code. Now,
there are only two classes of children -- legitimate (and those who,
like the legally adopted, have the rights of legitimate children) and
illegitimate. All children conceived and born outside a valid marriage are illegitimate, unless the law itself gives them legitimate status. (Emphasis ours.)
It is apparent that according to the Family Code and
the afore-cited jurisprudence, the legitimacy or illegitimacy of a child
attaches upon his/her conception. In the present case, it was not
disputed that Hortillano and his wife were validly married and that
their child was conceived during said marriage, hence, making said child
legitimate upon her conception.1avvphi1
Also incontestable is the fact that Hortillano was
able to comply with the fourth element entitling him to death and
accident insurance under the CBA, i.e., presentation of the death certificate of his unborn child.
Given the existence of all the requisites for
bereavement leave and other death benefits under the CBA, Hortillano’s
claims for the same should have been granted by Continental Steel.
We emphasize that bereavement leave and other death
benefits are granted to an employee to give aid to, and if possible,
lessen the grief of, the said employee and his family who suffered the
loss of a loved one. It cannot be said that the parents’ grief and sense
of loss arising from the death of their unborn child, who, in this
case, had a gestational life of 38-39 weeks but died during delivery, is
any less than that of parents whose child was born alive but died
subsequently.
Being for the benefit of the employee, CBA provisions
on bereavement leave and other death benefits should be interpreted
liberally to give life to the intentions thereof. Time and again, the
Labor Code is specific in enunciating that in case of doubt in the
interpretation of any law or provision affecting labor, such should be
interpreted in favor of labor.
29 In the same way, the CBA and CBA provisions should be interpreted in favor of labor. In
Marcopper Mining v. National Labor Relations Commission,
30 we pronounced:
Finally, petitioner misinterprets the declaration of
the Labor Arbiter in the assailed decision that "when the pendulum of
judgment swings to and fro and the forces are equal on both sides, the
same must be stilled in favor of labor." While petitioner acknowledges
that all doubts in the interpretation of the Labor Code shall be
resolved in favor of labor, it insists that what is involved-here is the
amended CBA which is essentially a contract between private persons.
What petitioner has lost sight of is the avowed policy of the State,
enshrined in our Constitution, to accord utmost protection and justice
to labor, a policy, we are, likewise, sworn to uphold.
In Philippine Telegraph & Telephone Corporation v. NLRC [183 SCRA 451 (1990)], we categorically stated that:
When conflicting interests of labor and capital are
to be weighed on the scales of social justice, the heavier influence of
the latter should be counter-balanced by sympathy and compassion the law
must accord the underprivileged worker.
Likewise, in Terminal Facilities and Services Corporation v. NLRC [199 SCRA 265 (1991)], we declared:
Any doubt concerning the rights of labor should be resolved in its favor pursuant to the social justice policy.
IN VIEW WHEREOF, the Petition is DENIED. The
Decision dated 27 February 2008 and Resolution dated 9 May 2008 of the
Court of Appeals in CA-G.R. SP No. 101697, affirming the Resolution
dated 20 November 2007 of Accredited Voluntary Arbitrator Atty. Allan S.
Montaño, which granted to Rolando P. Hortillano bereavement leave pay
and other death benefits in the amounts of Four Thousand Nine Hundred
Thirty-Nine Pesos (P4,939.00) and Eleven Thousand Five Hundred Fifty Pesos (P11,550.00), respectively, grounded on the death of his unborn child, are AFFIRMED. Costs against Continental Steel Manufacturing Corporation.
SO ORDERED.
MINITA V. CHICO-NAZARIO
Associate Justice
WE CONCUR:
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice
Chairperson
PRESBITERO J. VELASCO, JR.
Associate Justice |
ANTONIO EDUARDO B. NACHURA
Associate Justice |
DIOSDADO M. PERALTA
Associate Justice
A T T E S T A T I O N
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.
ANTONIO T. CARPIO
Associate Justice
Chairperson, Third Division
C E R T I F I C A T I O N
Pursuant to Section 13, Article VIII of the
Constitution, and the Division Chairperson’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’s Division.
LEONARDO A. QUISUMBING
Acting Chief Justice
Footnotes
1
Penned by Associate Justice Martin S. Villarama, Jr. with Associate
Justices Noel G. Tijam and Sesinando E. Villon concurring; rollo, pp.
32-40.
2 Id. at 42.
3 Penned by Atty. Allan S. Montaño, Accredited Voluntary Arbitrator; records, pp. 381-392.
4 CA rollo, p. 26.
5 Rollo, pp. 84-92.
6 Id. at 93.
7 Id. at 86.
8 Id. at 33.
9 CA rollo, p. 60.
10 Id. at 67.
11 Id. at 46.
12 Id. at 25.
13 Id. at 62-65.
14 Id at 66-72.
15 Records, pp. 46-53.
16
Article 40. Birth determines personality; but the conceived child shall
be considered born for all purposes that are favorable to it, provided
it be born later with the conditions specified in the following article.
Article 41. For civil purposes, the foetus is
considered born if it is alive at the time it is completely delivered
from the mother’s womb. However, if the foetus had an intra-uterine life
of less than seven months, it is not deemed born if it dies within
twenty-four hours after its complete delivery from the maternal womb.
Article 42. Civil personality is extinguished by
death. The effect of death upon the rights and obligations of the
deceased is determined by law, by contract and by will.
17 CA rollo, pp. 24-34.
18 Id. at 32.
19 Id. at 2-18.
Art. 262-A of the Labor Code as amended in relation
to Section 7, Rule XIX of Department Order No. 40-03 series of 2003
provides that the decision, order, resolution or award of the Voluntary
Arbitrator shall be final and executory after ten (10) calendar days
from receipt of the copy of the award or decision by the parties and
that it shall not be subject of a motion for reconsideration.
20 Rollo, pp. 38-39.
21 Id. at 39.
22 Id. at 153.
23 Id. at 136-143.
24 Black’s Law Dictionary
25 Article II, Section 12 of the Constitution reads in full:
Sec. 12. The State recognizes the sanctity of family
life and shall protect and strengthen the family as a basic autonomous
social institution. It shall equally protect the life of the mother and
the life of the unborn from conception. The natural and primary right
and duty of parents in the rearing of the youth for civic efficiency and
the development of moral character shall receive the support of the
Government.
26
As opposed to the more limited or precise definition of a dependent
child for income tax purposes, which means "a legitimate, illegitimate
or legally adopted child chiefly dependent upon and living with the
taxpayer if such dependent is not more than twenty-one (21) years of
age, unmarried and not gainfully employed or if such dependent,
regardless of age, is incapable of self-support because of mental or
physical defect."
27 G.R. No. 153798, 2 September 2005, 469 SCRA 363, 369.
28 483 Phil. 483, 491 (2004).
29
Faculty Association of Mapua Institute of Technology (FAMIT) v. Court
of Appeals, G.R. No. 164060, 15 June 2007, 524 SCRA 709, 716.
30 325 Phil. 618, 634-635 (1996).
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