Case Digest Saint Martin
Case Digest Saint Martin
Case Digest Saint Martin
FACTS:
Private respondent alleges that he started working as Operations Manager of petitioner
St. Martin Funeral Home on February 6, 1995. However, there was no contract of
employment executed between him and petitioner nor was his name included in the
semi-monthly payroll. On January 22, 1996, he was dismissed from his employment for
allegedly misappropriating P38,000.00. Petitioner on the other hand claims that private
respondent was not its employee but only the uncle of Amelita Malabed, the owner of
petitioner St.Martin’s Funeral Home and in January 1996, the mother of Amelita passed
away, so the latter took over the management of the business.
Amelita made some changes in the business operation and private respondent and his
wife were no longer allowed to participate in the management thereof. As a
consequence, the latter filed a complaint charging that petitioner had illegally terminated
his employment. The labor arbiter rendered a decision in favor of petitioner declaring
that no employer-employee relationship existed between the parties and therefore his
office had no jurisdiction over the case.
ISSUE: WON the decision of the NLRC are appealable to the Court of Appeals.
RULING:
The Court is of the considered opinion that ever since appeals from the NLRC to the SC
were eliminated, the legislative intendment was that the special civil action for certiorari
was and still is the proper vehicle for judicial review of decisions of the NLRC. The use
of the word appeal in relation thereto and in the instances we have noted could have
been a lapsus plumae because appeals by certiorari and the original action for certiorari
are both modes of judicial review addressed to the appellate courts. The important
distinction between them, however, and with which the Court is particularly concerned
here is that the special civil action for certiorari is within the concurrent original
jurisdiction of this Court and the Court of Appeals; whereas to indulge in the assumption
that appeals by certiorari to the SC are allowed would not subserve, but would subvert,
the intention of the Congress as expressed in the sponsorship speech on Senate Bill
No. 1495.
In this regard the Court finds it necessary to discuss the processes of appeal as well as
the jurisdiction of each appellate court before it reaches the SC.
Turning now to the matter of judicial review of NLRC decisions, B.P. No. 129 originally
provided as follows:
The Intermediate Appellate Court shall have the power to try cases and conduct
hearings, receive evidence and perform any and all acts necessary to resolve factual
issues raised in cases falling within its original and appellate jurisdiction, including the
power to grant and conduct new trials or further proceedings.
These provisions shall not apply to decisions and interlocutory orders issued under the
Labor Code of the Philippines and by the Central Board of Assessment Appeals. 15
Subsequently, and as it presently reads, this provision was amended by R.A. No. 7902
effective March 18, 1995, to wit:
The Court of Appeals shall have the power to try cases and conduct hearings, receive
evidence and perform any and all acts necessary to resolve factual issues raised in
cases falling within its original and appellate jurisdiction, including the power to grant
and conduct new trials or further proceedings.
Therefore, all references in the amended Section 9 of B.P No. 129 to supposed appeals
from the NLRC to the Supreme Court are interpreted and hereby declared to mean and
refer to petitions for certiorari under Rule 65. Consequently, all such petitions should
henceforth be initially filed in the Court of Appeals in strict observance of the doctrine on
the hierarchy of courts as the appropriate forum for the relief desired.
WHEREFORE, under the foregoing premises, the instant petition for certiorari is hereby
REMANDED, and all pertinent records thereof ordered to be FORWARDED, to the
Court of Appeals for appropriate action and disposition consistent with the views and
ruling herein set forth, without pronouncement as to costs.