Menu Content/Inhalt

Sponsored Links

Poll for Pinoys

Your President in 2010?
 
The By-Stander Rule: The Role of the Employer in Certification Elections Print E-mail
Written by Pinoy Entrepreneur, on 30-09-2007
A certification election is the most democratic and expeditious method by which the laborers can freely determine the union that shall act as their representative in their dealings with the establishment where they are working. It is the appropriate means whereby controversies and disputes on representation may be laid to rest, by the unequivocal vote of the employees themselves.
 
The usual issue is the right of the employer-corporation in the process.

According to the Supreme Court, the employer’s role in a certification election is that of a mere by-stander, as the choice of a collective bargaining agent is the sole concern of the employees. The employer has no legal standing in a certification election as it cannot oppose the petition or appeal the orders related thereto. While employers may rightfully be notified or informed of petitions of such nature, they should not be considered parties with the concomitant right to oppose it. Otherwise stated, the employer has no “material interest to assail the certification election” and cannot be considered a party with an “inalienable right to oppose it”.

The only exception to this rule, according to the Supreme Court, is where the employer has to file the petition for certification election pursuant to Article 258 of the Labor Code because it was requested to bargain collectively.

Apparently, this is not the only exception.

In the 1997 case of Toyota Motor Philippines Corp. vs. Toyota Motor Philippines Corporation Labor Union, the employer-company actively opposed the petition for certification election. The employer-company sought the denial of the issuance of an order directing the holding of a certification election on two grounds: first, that the union had no legal personality to file petition for certification as it was still in the process of registration; and, second, that the union was composed of both rank-and-file and supervisory employees in violation of law. The Supreme Court sustained the employer-company and ruled that "the Labor Code has made it a clear statutory policy to prevent supervisory employees from joining labor organizations consisting of rank-and-file employees as the concerns which involve members of either group are normally disparate and contradictory."
 
Also in 1997, the Supreme Court promulgated its decision in Progressive Development Corp. – Pizza Hut vs. Ledesma, wherein it ordered the remand of the case that arose from a petition for certification election, with a directive to immediately resolve the accompanying petition for cancellation of registration of the union. The petitioner for cancellation is, in effect, considered a prejudicial question. This decision is a departure from the 1981 ruling in National Union of Bank Employees vs. Minister of Labor that “the pendency of the petition for cancellation of the registration certificate of herein petitioner union is not a bar to the holding of a certification election.”

The ruling in Toyota is considered by some as a fluke, not only because it goes against the consistent rulings discussed above, but also because the decision resolved the legal personality of the union through the petition for certification election. This cannot be done, as ruled by the Supreme Court in the more recent case of Tagaytay Highlands International Golf Club Incorporated vs. Tagaytay Highlands Employees Union-PGTWO, wherein the employer-petitioner cited the cases of Toyota and Progressive Development, to the effect that “a labor organization composed of both rank-and-file and supervisory employees is no labor organization at all.” The Supreme Court ruled that after a certificate of registration is issued to a union, its legal personality cannot be subject to collateral attack. It may be questioned only in an independent petition for cancellation in accordance with Section 5 of Rule V, Book IV of the Labor Code Implementing Rules. The Toyota ruling has not been expressly overturned, although it is clearly disregarded in the Tagaytay Highlands case.
Published in : Topics, HR, Labor and Office

Users' Comments (0)

No comment yet

Add your comment

 

Related posts:

Newer posts:

Older posts: