Leus v. St. Scholastica Case Digest
Leus v. St. Scholastica Case Digest
Leus v. St. Scholastica Case Digest
Edna
Quiambao, OSB
28 January 2015
Reyes, J.
SHORT VERSION: Leus was employed by St. Scho (SSCW) as one of their non-teaching
staff. In 2003, she got pregnant out of wedlock and eventually married her
boyfriend/baby daddy. When SSCW found out about this (also in 2003), they asked her to
resign, citing serious misconduct. Leus refused. Eventually she was informed in a letter
that her employment was terminated on the ground of disgraceful and immoral
conduct under the 1992 Manual of Regulations for Private Schools. Leus filed a
complaint for illegal dismissal, arguing that her pregnancy out of wedlock cannot be
considered as disgraceful and immoral conduct.
SC agreed with her. Citing Estrada v. Escritor, SC said that the morality contemplated
by our laws refers to secular morality. The act is proscribed as immoral because it is
detrimental (or dangerous) to those conditions upon which depend the existence and
progress of human society and not because the conduct is proscribed by the beliefs of
one religion or the other. In this case, there is no law which penalizes an unmarried
mother under those circumstances by reason of her sexual conduct or proscribes the
consensual sexual activity between two unmarried persons. Neither does the situation
contravene any fundamental state policy as expressed in the Constitution. Though Leus
was employed in a Catholic school which denounces pre-marital sex and pregnancy out
of wedlock, such conduct is not denounced by public and secular morality and cannot be
considered immoral under the law.
FACTS:
Cheryll Santos Leus was hired by St. Scho (SSCW) as a non-teaching personnel.
Sometime in 2003, Leus and her boyfriend conceived a child out of wedlock.
When SSCW found out, Sr. Edna Quiambao, SSCWs directress, advised Leus to file
a resignation letter.
Leus said she would not resign just because she got pregnant.
May 28, 2003: Sr. Quiambao formally directed Leus to explain in writing why she
should not be dismissed for engaging in pre-marital sexual relations and getting
pregnant, which amounted to serious misconduct and conduct unbecoming of an
employee of a Catholic school.
Leus replied in a letter, stating that her pregnancy does not amount to serious
misconduct or conduct unbecoming of an employee; that she was not aware of any
school policy stating that pregnancy out of wedlock is considered serious
misconduct and thus a ground for dismissal. She also requested a copy of SSCWs
policy and guidelines to be able to respond to the charge against her.
Sr. Quiambao informed Leus that SSCW follows the 1992 Manual of Regulations for
Private Schools.
o Under Sec. 94(e) of said Manual, disgraceful or immoral conduct is a
ground for dismissal in addition to the just causes enumerated in Art. 282
Labor Code.
Leus, through counsel, insisted that pre-marital sex between two consenting adults
without legal impediment to marry each other who later on married each other
does not fall within the contemplation of disgraceful or immoral conduct and
serious misconduct of the Manual and the Labor Code.
SSCW still insisted that this was considered disgraceful and immoral conduct or
serious misconduct which are grounds for termination. The SSCW, as a Catholic
school, has the right to uphold the teaching of the Catholic Church and expect its
employees to abide by the same. Even worse, Leus was Assistant to the Director of
the Lay Apostolate and Community Outreach Directorate, a position of
responsibility that the students look up to as a role model.
Eventually, in June 11, 2003, Sr. Quiambao informed Leus in writing that the
latters employment with SSCE is terminated on the ground of serious misconduct.
Leus filed a complaint for illegal dismissal.
o She maintained that her pregnancy out of wedlock cannot be considered as
serious misconduct since the same is a purely private affair and not
connected in any way with her duties as an employee of SSCW. Further, she
and her boyfriend eventually got married even prior to her dismissal.
o SSCW continued to insist that there was just cause in the termination in that
Leus pregnancy amounted to disgraceful or immoral conduct. They argued
that SSCW would lose its credibility if it would maintain employees who do
not live up to the values it inculcates to its students. Leus should have
strived to maintain the honor, dignity and reputation of SSCW as a Catholic
school.
LA dismissed the complaint; pregnancy out of wedlock is considered disgraceful
and immoral conduct. NLRC and CA affirmed.
CA: Petitioners pregnancy prior to marriage is scandalous in itself given the work
environment and social milieu she was in. Respondent school for young ladies
precisely seeks to prevent its students from situations like this, inculcating in them
strict moral values and standards. Being part of the institution, petitioners private
and public life could not be separated. Her admitted pre-marital sexual relations
was a violation of private respondents prescribed standards of conduct that views
pre-marital sex as immoral because sex between a man and a woman must only
take place within the bounds of marriage.