Case Summary (G.R. No. 105710)
Key Dates
Employment began July 1, 1995. New management review announced May 6, 2013. Notice of termination and alleged failed assessment dated August 6, 2013; termination effective September 6, 2013. Deed of Receipt, Waiver and Quitclaim executed September 11, 2013. Labor Arbiter decision: September 30, 2014. NLRC decision: June 30, 2016. Court of Appeals decision: October 20, 2017; CA resolution denying reconsideration: March 8, 2018. Supreme Court decision reversing CA: (decision reported in the prompt).
Procedural Posture
Aguilera filed a complaint for illegal dismissal and money claims. The Labor Arbiter found illegal dismissal and ordered reinstatement with monetary awards. The NLRC affirmed with modification (deleting moral and exemplary damages, granting attorney’s fees). The Court of Appeals reversed, finding a valid redundancy and that the quitclaim barred further claims. The Supreme Court granted the petition for review on certiorari, reversed the CA, and reinstated the Labor Arbiter/NLRC findings as modified by the High Court.
Factual Background
Aguilera performed tasks involving system updates, issuance and processing of work orders, coordination with third‑party service providers, inventory preparation, and performance review meetings. After a managerial change in May 2013, the company reviewed positions and assessments; on August 6, 2013 Aguilera was informed he failed the assessment and was given notice of termination for redundancy effective September 6, 2013. The company thereafter created or reclassified positions such as Cold Drink Operation Supervisor/Cold Drink Equipment Analyst, reportedly with lower salary scales. Aguilera applied for available positions but was not retained; he accepted the separation package and executed a quitclaim on September 11, 2013.
Employer’s Assertions
CCFPI maintained that it conducted an organizational restructuring to outsource non‑core activities, legitimately rendering certain positions redundant. It asserted compliance with Article 298 requirements by serving written notice to the worker and DOLE, submitting an Employment Termination Report, and paying a separation package exceeding statutory minimums (totaling P1,840,681.72). The company claimed it used fair and reasonable criteria (assessment profiles, performance ratings for three years, background, salary, location) and proffered the HR manager’s affidavit and belated psychometric test results to justify Aguilera’s non‑retention.
Employee’s Assertions
Aguilera contended the redundancy program was a subterfuge. He alleged the Cold Drink Associate position was simply split, renamed, and filled by new hires performing essentially the same functions but at lower pay, demonstrating bad faith. He highlighted his 18 years of service, recent merit increase (April 1, 2013), seniority and salary level, and his repeated expressions of willingness to continue working. He claimed he was compelled by circumstances to accept the separation package and execute the quitclaim.
Labor Arbiter and NLRC Findings
The Labor Arbiter found CCFPI acted in bad faith and failed to apply fair and reasonable criteria in declaring redundancy; the mere service of a notice and a signed quitclaim did not validate an otherwise tainted redundancy. The Labor Arbiter ordered reinstatement and monetary relief. The NLRC affirmed these findings with modification — it deleted moral and exemplary damages for lack of basis but granted attorney’s fees. The company later raised, for the first time on appeal, psychometric test results.
Court of Appeals’ Rationale
The Court of Appeals reversed, concluding that CCFPI complied with redundancy requisites: timely notices and DOLE report, separation pay greater than statutory minimum, a bona fide reorganization to maximize efficiency and reduce operating costs, and consultation with department heads resulting in fair and reasonable criteria. The CA also held that Aguilera’s executed quitclaim barred further claims.
Legal Issues Presented
Primary legal issue: whether Aguilera was validly dismissed for redundancy. Subsidiary issues: whether CCFPI acted in good faith and applied fair and reasonable criteria in selecting positions to abolish and employees to terminate; whether the subsequent creation or filling of ostensibly similar positions and the execution of a quitclaim preclude judicial relief.
Legal Standards and Burden of Proof
Redundancy under Article 298 exists when workforce service capability exceeds what is reasonably needed. For a valid redundancy, the requisites are: (a) written notice to employees and DOLE at least one month prior; (b) payment of separation pay (at least one month pay or at least one month per year of service, whichever higher, insofar as Article 298 prescribes); (c) good faith in abolishing positions; and (d) fair and reasonable criteria in selecting positions and employees to be terminated (considering preferred status, efficiency, seniority, etc.). The employer bears the burden to prove by substantial evidence the factual and legal bases for redundancy. Courts have repeatedly held that management prerogative is recognized but must not be arbitrary, malicious, or violative of law; bare, self‑serving statements are insufficient.
Supreme Court’s Analysis and Application
The Supreme Court acknowledged that the first two requisites (notice and separation pay) were undisputed. The Court found serious conflict in factual findings between the labor tribunals and the CA, permitting resolution of factual issues on certiorari. Applying precedents (Feati University; Yulo; Abbott Laboratories), the Court concluded CCFPI failed to prove good faith and absence of arbitrariness. The HR manager’s affidavit was self‑serving; the psychometric test was submitted belatedly and lacked interpretation or comparative data to justify Aguilera’s exclusion; no objective criteria or comparative analyses of retained versus dismissed employees were produced. The Court compared the articulated duties of the abolished Cold Drink Associate with the responsibilities of the purportedly new Cold Drink Equipment Analyst and found substantial identity in core functions (system accuracy, updating equipment movements, releasing work orders, processing third‑party finished work orders), indicating mere renaming/reclassification rather than genuine redundancy. The Court cited Abbott for the rule that subsequent creation of similar positions or the hiring of replacements contradicts a redundancy claim and demonstrates intent to circumvent security of tenure.
Quitclaim and Waiver Considerations
The Court reiterated that quitclaims and waivers are not per se binding against public policy or an employee’s right to security of tenure; three recognized exceptions permit invalidation of waivers: fraud or deceit in obtaining them; the consideration paid is incredible or unreasonable; or terms are contrary to law/public policy. Here Aguilera demonstrated susceptibility to compulsion (economic pressure and desire to continue working), his hes
Case Syllabus (G.R. No. 105710)
Case Overview
- Petition for Review on Certiorari under Rule 45 seeking reversal and setting aside: (a) Court of Appeals Decision dated October 20, 2017 reversing labor tribunals' finding that petitioner was illegally dismissed; and (b) Court of Appeals Resolution dated March 8, 2018 denying motion for reconsideration.
- Decision penned by Justice Lazaro‑Javier; filed September 29, 2021 (G.R. No. 238941).
- Central legal question presented: Was petitioner Bernilo M. Aguilera validly dismissed on the ground of redundancy?
Antecedent Facts (Employment History and Termination)
- Petitioner Bernilo M. Aguilera was hired on July 1, 1995 by Coca‑Cola (formerly Coca‑Cola Bottlers Philippines, Inc.), initially as Refrigeration Technician assigned to South Luzon Cold Drink Equipment Group.
- Petitioner later promoted to Trade Asset Controller and Maintenance Coordinator, and later to Cold Drink Associate; principal duties included supervising maintenance work of third‑party service providers on company electric coolers installed at customer stores.
- New management took over in May 2013 and the company changed name to Coca‑Cola FEMSA Philippines, Inc. (CCFPI).
- On May 6, 2013, petitioner was notified the new management would review positions and performances of all plant employees.
- On August 6, 2013, HR Manager Marge Del Rosario informed petitioner that he “failed the assessment” (results not disclosed) and handed him notice of termination for redundancy, effective September 6, 2013.
- Petitioner had 18 years of service, was one of the senior employees in his team, and was receiving P39,367.00 monthly; he had received citations for excellent work and a 2% merit increase effective April 1, 2013.
- Petitioner applied for newly available Cold Drink Equipment Analyst positions in August 2013 but failed to obtain them; he later discovered the company hired new employees for tasks he used to perform.
- Because he was already unemployed as of September 6, 2013, petitioner accepted the separation package and executed a Deed of Receipt, Waiver and Quitclaim on September 11, 2013.
Employer’s Position and Actions (CCFPI)
- CCFPI asserted compliance with Labor Code redundancy requirements and contended the reorganization was a bona fide exercise of management prerogative to improve business efficiency and profitability and to outsource non‑core activities.
- Company claimed petitioner scored below satisfactory in assessments and was not qualified for available positions.
- CCFPI maintained it applied fair and reasonable criteria: assessment profiles, backgrounds/experiences, performance ratings for the last three years, current salary bases, and locations.
- CCFPI served written notice of termination and submitted an Employment Termination Report to the DOLE at least one month before effectivity in compliance with Article 298.
- CCFPI paid petitioner a separation package totaling P1,840,681.72, including: 200% separation pay per year of service; commutation of earned/unused sick and vacation leaves; proportionate 13th month pay; and five years HMO coverage (Sept 6, 2013–Sept 5, 2018) or until age 65.
- CCFPI relied on HR Manager Del Rosario’s affidavit describing meetings, assessments, and the recommendation that petitioner’s position be “redundated.”
- On appeal, CCFPI belatedly submitted petitioner’s psychometric examination result (IQ score) purportedly demonstrating petitioner did not meet prescribed qualifications for newly created positions.
Evidence Presented by Petitioner
- Petitioner asserted the redundancy program was tainted with bad faith and merely split his Cold Drink Associate position into Cold Drink Operation Supervisor (or Equipment Supervisor) and Cold Drink Equipment Analyst positions with lower salary scales but essentially the same duties.
- Petitioner emphasized his recent merit increase, prior good performance citations, repeated expressions of willingness to be reassigned, and that he was forced by economic necessity to accept the separation package and execute the quitclaim.
- Petitioner challenged the company’s failure to disclose assessment results, the belated submission of psychometric data, the absence of comparative data showing retained employees were objectively more qualified, and the subsequent hiring into positions performing the same tasks.
Duties and Functions Compared (Cold Drink Associate v. Cold Drink Equipment Analyst)
- Cold Drink Equipment Analyst responsibilities (as represented in company documents):
- Responsible for accuracy of system vs. trade reports.
- Responsible for updating Cold Drinks Equipment movements and physical conditions in system (Equipment Master).
- Release work orders for Cold Drinks Equipment (placement, repair, maintenance, retirement).
- Process finished work orders by third party as approved by Cold Drink Equipment Supervisor.
- Petitioner’s Cold Drink Associate tasks (as listed in company records):
- Shipment receiving and checking; storage coordination.
- Enrollment encoding of invoices to SAP.
- Warehousing: loading/unloading and releasing to third‑party service providers.
- Placement: prepare and release work orders; update in SAP.
- Removal: prepare and release work orders; update in SAP.
- Service calls: prepare work orders; update in SAP and portal.
- Preventive maintenance: prepare work orders; dispatch; update in SAP.
- Refurbishment: evaluate, prepare work orders, award, release and receive; update in SAP.
- Billings: prepare billings/work orders; review and PO creation; GR; update in SAP.
- Backchecking in trade visits; route riding; technician in‑field coaching.
- Inventory scraping, evaluation, document preparation; update in SAP.
- Review meetings with third‑party service providers and technicians’ performance review.
- Comparison: The Court found the functions of the abolished Cold Drink Associate position were basically the same, if not identical, to those of the newly created Cold Drink Equipment Analyst, indicating mere change of title and reduced compensation.
Labor Arbiter Ruling (Labor Arbiter Melchisedek A. Guan)
- Decision dated September 30, 2014: declared petitioner illegally dismissed.
- Ordered reinstatement to former or equivalent position within ten days; payment to petitioner of P817,697.65 (partial backwages, moral and exemplary damages, and attorney’s fees); directed parties to arrange scheme to offset monetary awards against