Case Summary (G.R. No. 234186)
Key Dates and Procedural Posture
Employment period: July 16, 2012 to May 31, 2013 (probationary). Pregnancy discovered and disclosed: November 23, 2012. Absence and suspensions: December 3, 2012. Grievance hearing(s): scheduled December 14, 2012, held December 17, 2012. Filing of illegal dismissal complaint by Dagdag: December 17, 2012. Labor Arbiter Decision: June 7, 2013 (found constructive/illegal dismissal). NLRC Decision: September 13, 2013 (vacated LA and dismissed complaint; awarded limited unpaid salary and 13th month pay). Court of Appeals Decision: November 10, 2016 (annulled NLRC and found illegal dismissal; awarded separation pay, full backwages, attorney’s fees). Supreme Court Decision under review: November 21, 2018 (denied petition; affirmed CA decision).
Facts: Pregnancy Disclosure, Disciplinary Proceedings, and Alleged Coercion
Dagdag informed school head Mandapat that she was pregnant (single; stated father was marrying another woman). Prior absences resulted in suspensions for abandonment and unauthorized absence. The Grievance Committee convened to consider alleged gross immorality. At the hearing Dagdag was apprised of the handbook, Professional Code of Ethics, and potential consequences including dismissal; she was told resignation was a preferable alternative in view of possible adverse consequences in future employment. Minutes indicate she was told she could resign or face dismissal; she reportedly consulted relatives and indicated acceptance of dismissal but would await the school’s decision. She subsequently filed an illegal dismissal complaint. After failing to submit a requested written explanation following a December 19 memorandum, the grievance committee recommended termination.
Labor Arbiter and NLRC Decisions
Labor Arbiter: Found constructive dismissal, concluding Dagdag was coerced into resignation because of persecution, discrimination, and insensitivity; awarded backwages, moral and exemplary damages, and attorney’s fees.
NLRC: Reversed the Labor Arbiter, holding insufficient evidence of persecution or contempt and that Dagdag failed to prove constructive dismissal; awarded only salary for December 1–17, 2012 and 13th month pay.
Court of Appeals Ruling
The Court of Appeals annulled the NLRC decision and found that Dagdag was illegally dismissed. The CA emphasized that the minutes showed Dagdag was presented only with two options—resign or be dismissed—which, together with threats (including possible revocation of teaching license), rendered continued employment unreasonable and effectively imposed constructive dismissal. The CA applied Article 135 (prohibition of discrimination) and ordered separation pay in lieu of reinstatement, full backwages, and attorney’s fees, remanding computation to the Labor Arbiter.
Supreme Court Ruling: Disposition and Standard Adopted
The Supreme Court denied the petition and affirmed the Court of Appeals in toto. The Court applied the 1987 Constitution framework and established constructive dismissal standards: constructive dismissal occurs when continued employment is rendered impossible, unreasonable, or unlikely; when there is demotion/diminution; or when employer conduct demonstrates clear discrimination, insensibility, or disdain that becomes unbearable. The controlling test is whether a reasonable person in the employee’s position would have felt compelled to give up employment under the circumstances.
Supreme Court Reasoning on Constructive Dismissal
The Court found Mandapat’s suggestion that Dagdag resign—coupled with the presentation of only two options (resign or dismissal) and threats such as possible revocation of her teaching license—effectively left Dagdag no realistic choice but to discontinue employment. The Court concluded the grievance process’ outcome was predetermined, and the coercive context satisfied the constructive dismissal standard because it rendered continued employment unreasonable.
Analysis of “Gross Immorality” and Applicable Standard
The Court reiterated that determinations of whether conduct is disgraceful or immoral require consideration of the totality of circumstances and comparison against prevailing public and secular norms (not sectarian standards). Precedent (Leus; Capin‑Cadiz) requires substantial evidence that premarital sexual relations and pregnancy out of wedlock are considered disgraceful or immoral by secular, public standards before they can justify termination. On the facts, the Court found no legal impediment to marriage at the time of conception and no sufficient showing that the pregnancy warranted dismissal under secular morality standards; thus pregnancy out of wedlock did not constitute just cause for termination.
Constitutional and Statutory Considerations Applied by the Court
The Court applied Article 135 of the Labor Code (prohibiting discrimination against women employees on account of sex) and constitutional protections under the 1987 Constitution (due process and equal protection). It relied on jurisprudence establishing privacy and liberty dimensions related to personal choices and recognized that employment sanctions premised solely on pregnancy out of wedlock can constitute unlawful discrimination and an unconstitutional burden on liberty when not justified by compelling secular reasons.
Relief Ordered
The Supreme Court affirmed the CA’s awards: separation pay in lieu of reinstatement (one month’s pay per year of service with fractions treated as whole where applicable), full backwages from dismissal until finality, and attorney’s fees (10% of the monetary award), with legal interest applied as ordered by the CA. The case was remanded to the Labor Arbiter for computation where necessary.
Concurring Opinion (Jardeleza, J.): Liberty, Privacy, and Equal Protection Emphasis
Justice Jardeleza’s concurring opinion emphasized that an unmarried woman has a liberty interest under the Due Process Clause to engage in consensual sexual relations with an unmarried man and to bear a child as a consequence, and that this liberty interest warrants recognition as a fundamental right requiring strict scrutiny for any state or state‑sanctioned intrusion. He traced doctrinal support to recognized privacy jurisprude
Case Syllabus (G.R. No. 234186)
Case Caption, Court and Procedural Posture
- Full caption as extracted from the source: Union School International represented by Pastor Abraham Cho (School Superintendent), Jaime Nabua (Board President), and Jennifer Mandapat (School Head), petitioners, v. Charley Jane Dagdag, respondent.
- Supreme Court First Division decision citation: 843 Phil. 858; G.R. No. 234186; date of Supreme Court decision: November 21, 2018.
- Petition before the Supreme Court: Petition for review on certiorari under Rule 45 of the Rules of Court, assailing:
- Court of Appeals (CA) Decision dated November 10, 2016 in CA-G.R. SP No. 133482, which found illegal dismissal; and
- CA Resolution dated May 17, 2017 denying motion for reconsideration.
- Prior proceedings:
- Labor Arbiter (LA) Decision dated June 7, 2013 (rendered by Executive Labor Arbiter Vito C. Bose) finding constructive/illegal dismissal and awarding backwages and damages.
- National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) Decision dated September 13, 2013 (Penned by Commissioner Teresita D. Castillon-Lora, concurred in by Presiding Commissioner Raul T. Aquino and Commissioner Erlinda T. Agus), which vacated the LA decision and dismissed the complaint for lack of merit but ordered limited salary payments for December 1–17, 2012 and 13th month pay amounting to P10,370.00.
- CA Decision dated November 10, 2016 annulling the NLRC decision and declaring illegal dismissal; CA remanded to LA for computation of monetary awards.
- CA Resolution dated May 17, 2017 denying petitioners’ motion for reconsideration; petitioners elevated the matter to the Supreme Court.
Material and Operative Facts
- Employment status and period:
- Respondent Charley Jane Dagdag was employed as an Elementary School Teacher on probationary status by Union School from July 16, 2012 to May 31, 2013.
- Pregnancy disclosure and context:
- On November 23, 2012, Dagdag discovered she was eight weeks and five days pregnant.
- Dagdag informed School Head Jennifer Mandapat of her pregnancy and that the father of the child was marrying another woman; Dagdag was single.
- Disciplinary incidents and pre-termination steps:
- On December 3, 2012, Dagdag did not report for work without prior notice; she was suspended for four days for abandonment of work and additionally suspended one day for a second offense of absence without official leave.
- On December 12, 2012, Dagdag received a notice addressed to the Grievance Committee members to attend a Teacher’s Disciplinary Committee hearing scheduled for December 14, 2012 concerning gross immorality; she was advised to nominate a representative from the current full-time staff.
- Hearing was rescheduled to December 17, 2012 due to her failure to attend the December 14 schedule.
- Grievance meeting and alleged coercion to resign:
- At the December 17, 2012 hearing, Dagdag acknowledged the contents of the school’s Faculty and Staff Handbook, including the offense of gross immorality and the Professional Code of Ethics for Teachers.
- Petitioners apprised her of possible consequences, including dismissal affecting future employment; petitioners suggested resigning as a “better option.”
- Minutes of the hearing indicated Dagdag consulted family, accepted dismissal as a possible disciplinary action, but would await the school’s decision. The minutes also reflected that she agreed to resign.
- Parallel and post-hearing actions:
- On December 17, 2012, Dagdag filed a complaint for illegal dismissal, non-payment of salaries and benefits, moral and exemplary damages, and attorney’s fees.
- On December 19, 2012, Dagdag received a Memorandum requiring her written explanation why she should not be dismissed; for her failure to submit said explanation, the grievance committee recommended termination.
- Union School’s stance:
- Union School denied that it suspended, transferred, demoted, or prevented Dagdag from performing her work as a result of her pregnancy out of wedlock.
Labor Arbiter Decision (June 7, 2013)
- Finding:
- Labor Arbiter found Dagdag constructively dismissed and that Union School committed acts of persecution, discrimination, insensitivity and disdain, coercing Dagdag into resignation after she admitted pregnancy out of wedlock and stated the father had married another woman.
- Relief awarded (fallo as reported):
- Joint and several liability of Union School and Mandapat to pay Dagdag:
- Backwages inclusive of all benefits and allowances: P59,627.50;
- Moral damages: P50,000.00;
- Exemplary damages: P30,000.00;
- Attorney’s fees: P5,962.75.
- All other claims dismissed for lack of basis.
- Joint and several liability of Union School and Mandapat to pay Dagdag:
NLRC Decision (September 13, 2013)
- Holding:
- NLRC vacated the LA decision and dismissed Dagdag’s complaint for illegal dismissal and money claims for lack of merit.
- NLRC found no substantial evidence of persecution or contempt after Dagdag reported her pregnancy; hence, no proof of constructive dismissal.
- Relief ordered:
- Union School was ordered to pay salary corresponding to the period December 1–17, 2012 and 13th month pay amounting to P10,370.00.
- NLRC decision reversed the LA and provided limited monetary relief only for the early December period.
Court of Appeals Decision (November 10, 2016) and Remand (May 17, 2017)
- CA holding:
- CA annulled and set aside the NLRC decision and declared Dagdag illegally dismissed.
- CA reasoned that the minutes of the grievance meeting showed Dagdag was presented only two options—resign or be dismissed—after the school’s finding of pregnancy out of wedlock, which constituted unlawful discrimination under Article 135 of the Labor Code prohibiting discharge of a woman employee on account of her pregnancy.
- Relief ordered by CA (as reported):
- Separation pay in lieu of reinstatement equivalent to one (1) month pay for every year of service, with fraction of at least six months treated as one whole year, from date of dismissal December 17, 2012 up to finality;
- Full backwages from time of illegal dismissal up to finality;
- Attorney’s fees equivalent to ten percent (10%) of the total monetary award;
- Monetary awards to earn legal interest at six percent (6%) per annum from date of finality until paid;
- Case remanded to the Labor Arbiter for computation of monetary awards.
- Petitioners’ Motion for Reconsideration was filed and later denied in CA Resolution dated May 17, 2017.
Supreme Court Ruling — Majority Opinion (Tijam, J.)
- Disposition:
- Petition dismissed; Supreme Court affirmed the CA Decision dated November 10, 2016 and the CA Resolution dated May 17, 2017 in toto.
- Key legal determinations and reasoning:
- Constructive dismissal defined and standard applied:
- Constructive dismissal is “a cessation of work because continued employment is rendered impossible, unreasonable or unlikely; when there is a demotion in rank or diminution in pay or both; or when a clear discrimination, insensibility, or disdain by an employer becomes unbearable to the employee.” (Citation: Mcmer Corporation, Inc., et al. v. NLRC, et al., 735 Phil. 204, 213 (2014).)
- Test articulated: whether a reasonable person in the employee’s position would have felt compelled to give up employment under the circumstances. (Citing Doble, Jr. v. ABB, Inc., G.R. No. 215627, June 5, 2017.)
- Application to facts:
- Mandapat’s suggestion that Dagdag should resign because the school may impose harsher penalties left Dagdag with no real choice and effectively compelled her to discontinue working for Union School.
- The grievance meeting’s outcome was effectively predetermined; Dagdag was left with “resign or dismissal” as the only choices, and she was threatened with possible revocation of her teaching license, which would affect her livelihood.
- The grievance committee’s minutes showed the committee concluded she committed gross immorality in violation of school rules and the Code of Ethics for Professional Teachers; but the totality of evidence did not justify dismissal because there was no showing that premarital sexual relations and pregnancy out of wedlock were considered disgraceful or immoral under public and secular standards.
- Law on morality and pregnancy out of wedlock:
- Citing Leus v. St. Scholastica’s College Westgrove and Capin-Cadiz v. Brent Hospital and Colle
- Constructive dismissal defined and standard applied: