Law Principle:
Anything favorable to the labor-only contractor redounds to
the benefit of the employer under the principle of solidary liability
Facts:
The petitioners work for the
Philippine College of Criminology Inc. (PCCr) as janitors, janitress and
supervisor in its maintenance department. The petitioners were made to
understand by the respondent PCCr that they are under the Metropolitan Building
Services, Inc. (MBMSI) which is a corporation engaged in providing janitorial
services. PCCr terminated the services of MBMSI on 2009 which resulted in the
dismissal of the petitioners. An illegal dismissal complaint was then filed
against PCCr by the petitioners contending that it is their real employer and
not MBMSI. Subsequently, the PCCr submitted to the Labor Arbiter waivers,
releases and quitclaims that were executed by the petitioners in favor to
MBMSI.
The Labor Arbiter and NLRC ruled
in favor of the petitioner, however upon filing the petition for review on
certiorari before the Court of Appeals, the CA ruled that the quitclaims, releases
and waivers executed by the petitioners in favor to MBMSI redounds to the
benefit of PCCr by virtue of solidary liability under Article 1217 of the NewCivil Code. The petitioners contend that under Article 106 of the Labor Code a
labor-only contractor's liability is not solidary as it is the employer who
should be directly responsible to the supplied worker.
Issue
Whether or not the quitclaims, releases
and waivers executed by the petitioners in favor to MBMSI redounds to the
benefit of PCCr?
Held
Yes.
The Supreme Court held that the
basis of the solidary liability of the principal with those engaged in
labor-only contracting is the last paragraph of Article 106 of the Labor Code
that provides, "In such cases of labor-only contracting, the person or
intermediary shall be considered merely as an agent of the employer who shall
be responsible to the workers in the same manner and extent as if the latter
were directly employed by him."
It also pointed out D.O. No.
18-A, s. 2011 section 27 providing for the effects of labor-only contracting
"where upon the finding by competent authority of labor-only contracting
shall render the principal jointly and severally liable with the contractor to
the latter's employees, in the same manner and extent that the principal is
liable to employees directly hired by him/her, as provided in Article 106 of
the Labor Code."
Hence, the PCCr's solidary
liability was already expunged by virtue of the releases, waivers and
quitclaims executed by the petitioners in favor of MBMSI by virtue of Article
1217 of the Civil Code providing that "payment
made by one of the solidary debtors extinguishes the obligation."
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