SME Bank VS. de Guzman
SME Bank VS. de Guzman
SME Bank VS. de Guzman
College of Law
Angela – 3C
RELEVANT FACTS
- Respondent employees Elicerio Gaspar, Ricardo Gaspar, Jr. , Eufemia Rosete, Fidel Espiritu, Simeon Espiritu,
Jr. , and Liberato Mangoba were employees of Small and Medium Enterprise Bank, Incorporated (SME Bank).
Originally, the principal shareholders and corporate directors of the bank were Eduardo M. Agustin, Jr. and
Peregrin de Guzman, Jr. SME Bank experienced financial difficulties.
- To remedy the situation, the bank officials proposed its sale to Abelardo Samson. Negotiations ensued, and a
formal offer was made to Samson. Through his attorney-in-fact, Tomas S. Gomez IV, Samson then sent formal
letters (Letter Agreements) to Agustin and De Guzman, demanding the following as preconditions for the sale of
SME Bank’s shares of stock:
1. You shall guarantee the peaceful turn over of all assets as well as the peaceful transition of management of the
bank and shall terminate/retire the employees we mutually agree upon, upon transfer of shares in favor of our
group’s nominees;
2. All retirement benefits, if any of the above officers/stockholders/board of directors are hereby waived upon
consummation of the above sale. The retirement benefits of the rank and file employees including the managers
shall be honored by the new management in accordance with B.R. No. 10, S. 1997
- Agustin and De Guzman accepted the terms and conditions proposed by Samson and signed the conforme
portion of the Letter Agreements. Simeon Espiritu, then the general manager of SME Bank, held a meeting with
all the employees of the head office and of the Talavera and Muno branches of SME Bank and persuaded them to
tender their resignations, 11 with the promise that they would be rehired upon reapplication. His directive was
allegedly done at the behest of petitioner Olga Samson. Relying on their representation All of them tendered their
resignation, Eufemia first tendered resignation then after tendered retirement. Agustin and De Guzman signified
their conformity to the Letter Agreements and sold 86.365% of the shares of stock of SME Bank to spouses
Abelardo and Olga Samson. Spouses Samson then became the principal shareholders of SME Bank, while
Aurelio Villaflor, Jr. was appointed bank president.
- As it turned out, respondent employees, except for Simeon, Jr., 26 were not rehired. After a month in service,
Simeon, Jr. again resigned Respondent-employees demanded the payment of their respective separation pays,
but their requests were denied. Aggrieved by the loss of their jobs, respondent employees filed a Complaint
before the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC)– Regional Arbitration Branch No. III and sued SME
Bank, spouses Abelardo and Olga Samson and Aurelio
Villaflor (the Samson Group) for unfair labor practice; illegal dismissal; illegal deductions; underpayment; and
nonpayment of allowances, separation pay and 13th month pay. Subsequently, they amended their Complaint to
include Agustin and De Guzman as respondents to the case. the labor arbiter ruled that the buyer of an enterprise
is not bound to absorb its employees, unless there is an express stipulation to the contrary.
- However, he also found that respondent employees were illegally dismissed, because they had involuntarily
executed their resignation letters after relying on representations that they would be given their separation
benefits and rehired by the new management. Accordingly, the labor arbiter decided the case against Agustin and
De Guzman, but dismissed the Complaint against the Samson Group.
- Thus ordering Agustin and De Guzman to pay separation pay to the employees. respondent employees, Agustin
and De Guzman brought separate appeals to the NLRC. Respondent emplo ees questioned the labor arbiter’s
failure to award backwages, while Agustin and De Guzman contended that they should not be held liable for the
pa ment of the emplo ees’ claims. The NLRC found that there was only a mere transfer of shares – and therefore,
a mere change of management – from Agustin and De Guzman to the Samson Group.
USA College of Law
Angela – 3C
- As the change of management was not a valid ground to terminate respondent bank employees, the NLRC ruled
that they had indeed been illegally dismissed. It further ruled that Agustin, De Guzman and the Samson Group
should be held jointly and severally liable for the employees’ separation pay and back wages, CA affirming NLRC
decision. Hence this appeal.
ISSUE: WON respondent employees were illegally dismissed and, if so, which of the parties are liable for the
claims of the employees and the extent of the reliefs that may be awarded to these employees.?
RULING: Petition was partially granted. Petitioner bank also argues that, there being a transfer of the business
establishment, the innocent transferees no longer have any obligation to continue employing respondent
employees,56 and that the most that they can do is to give preference to the qualified separated employees;
hence, the employees were validly dismissed. The argument is misleading and unmeritorious. Contrary to
petitioner bank’s argument, there was no transfer of the business establishment to speak of, but merely a change
in the new majority shareholders of the corporation. There are two types of corporate acquisitions: asset sales
and stock sales. In asset sales, the corporate entity sells all or substantially all of its assets to another entity. In
stock sales, the individual or corporate shareholders sell a controlling block of stock to new or existing
shareholders. In asset sales, the rule is that the seller in good faith is authorized to dismiss the affected
employees, but is liable for the payment of separation pay under the law. The buyer in good faith, on the other
hand, is not obliged to absorb the employees affected by the sale, nor is it liable for the payment of their claims.
The most that it may do, for reasons of public policy and social justice, is to give preference to the qualified
separated personnel of the selling firm.
In contrast with asset sales, in which the assets of the selling corporation are transferred to another entity, the
transaction in stock sales takes place at the shareholder level. Because the corporation possesses a personality
separate and distinct from that of its shareholders, a shift in the composition of its shareholders will not affect its
existence and continuity. Thus, notwithstanding the stock sale, the corporation continues to be the employer of its
people and continues to be liable for the payment of their just claims. Furthermore, the corporation or its new
majority shareholders are not entitled to lawfully dismiss corporate employees absent a just or authorized cause.
In the case at bar, the Letter Agreements show that their main object is the acquisition by the Samson Group of
86.365% of the shares of stock of SME Bank.66 Hence, this case involves a stock sale, whereby the transferee
acquires the controlling shares of stock of the corporation. Thus, following the rule in stock sales, respondent
employees may not be dismissed except for just or authorized causes under the Labor Code. The rule should be
different in Manlimos, as this case involves a stock sale. It is error to even discuss transfer of ownership of the
business, as the business did not actually change hands. The transfer only involved a change in the equity
composition of the corporation. To reiterate, the employees are not transferred to a new employer, but remain
with the original corporate employer, notwithstanding an equity shift in its majority shareholders. This being so,
the employment status of the employees should not have been affected by the stock sale. A change in the equity
composition of the corporate shareholders should not result in the automatic termination of the employment of the
corporation’s employees. Neither should it give the new majority shareholders the right to legally dismiss the
corporation’s employees, absent a just or authorized cause. The right to security of tenure guarantees the right of
employees to continue in their employment absent a just or authorized cause for termination. This guarantee
proscribes a situation in which the corporation procures the severance of the employment of its employees – who
patently still desire to work for the corporation – only because new majority stockholders and a new management
have come into the picture. This situation is a clear circumvention of the emplo ees’ constitutionall guaranteed
right to security of tenure, an act that cannot be countenanced by this Court. We therefore see it fit to expressly
reverse our ruling in Manlimos insofar as it upheld that, in a stock sale, the buyer in good faith has no obligation to
retain the employees of the selling corporation; and that the dismissal of the affected employees is lawful, even
absent a just or authorized cause.