Erectors Vs NLRC
Erectors Vs NLRC
Erectors Vs NLRC
SECOND DIVISION
PUNO, J.:p
It asserts that E.O. No. 797 divested the Labor Arbiter of his
authority to try and resolve cases arising from overseas
employment contract. Invoking this Court's ruling in Briad Agro
Development Corp. vs. Dela Cerna,8 petitioner argues that E.O.
No. 797 applies retroactively to affect pending cases, including
the complaint filed by private respondent.
E.O. No. 797 did not divest the Labor Arbiter's authority to hear
and decide the case filed by private respondent prior to its
effectivity. Laws should only be applied prospectively unless
the legislative intent to give them retroactive effect is expressly
declared or is necessarily implied from the language
used.13 We fail to perceive in the language of E.O. No. 797 an
intention to give it retroactive effect.
E.O. No. 111, amended Article 217 of the Labor Code to widen
the workers' access to the government for redress of
grievances by giving the Regional Directors and Labor Arbiters
concurrent jurisdiction over cases involving money claims. This
amendment, however, created a situation where the jurisdiction
of the Regional Directors and the Labor Arbiters overlapped.
As a remedy, R.A. 6715 further amended Article 217 by
delineating their respective jurisdictions. Under R.A. 6715, the
Regional Director has exclusive original jurisdiction over cases
involving money claims provided: (1) the claim is presented by
an employer or person employed in domestic or household
service, or househelper under the Code; (2) the claimant, no
longer being employed, does not seek reinstatement; and (3)
the aggregate money claim of the employee or househelper
does not exceed P5,000.00. All other cases are within the
Page 5 of 7
The law at bar, E.O. No. 797, is not a curative statute. It was
not intended to remedy any defect in the law. It created the
POEA to assume the functions of the Overseas Employment
Development Board, the National Seamen Board and the
overseas employment functions of the Bureau of Employment
Services. Accordingly, it gave the POEA "original and exclusive
jurisdiction over all cases, including money claims, involving
employer-employee relations arising out of or by virtue of any
law or contract involving Filipino workers for overseas
employment, including seamen." 17 The rule on prospectivity of
laws should therefore apply to E.O. No. 797. It should not affect
jurisdiction over cases filed prior to its effectivity.
(a) . . .
SO ORDERED.