Tunay Na Pagkakaisa NG Manggagawa Sa Asia Brewery vs. Asia Brewery Inc

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Tunay na Pagkakaisa ng Manggagawa sa Asia Brewery vs. Asia Brewery Inc.

GR No. 162025, Aug. 3, 2010

Facts: Asia Brewery, Inc. (ABI) is engaged in the manufacture, sale and distribution of beer, shandy,
bottled water and glass products. ABI entered into a Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA) with Bisig at
Lakas ng mga Manggagawa sa Asia-Independent (BLMA-INDEPENDENT), the exclusive bargaining
representative of ABI’s rank-and-file employees.

Article I of the CBA defined the scope of the bargaining unit, as follows:

Section 1.Recognition. The COMPANY recognizes the UNION as the sole and exclusive bargaining
representative of all the regular rank-and-file daily paid employees within the scope of the appropriate
bargaining unit with respect to rates of pay, hours of work and other terms and conditions of
employment. The UNION shall not represent or accept for membership employees outside the scope of
the bargaining unit herein defined.

Section 2.Bargaining Unit. The bargaining unit shall be comprised of all regular rank-and-file daily-paid
employees of the COMPANY. However, the following jobs/positions as herein defined shall be excluded
from the bargaining unit, to wit:

1. Managers
2. Assistant Managers
3. Section Heads
4. Supervisors
5. Superintendents
6. Confidential and Executive Secretaries
7. Personnel, Accounting and Marketing Staff
8. Communications Personnel
9. Probationary Employees
10. Security and Fire Brigade Personnel
11. Monthly Employees
12. Purchasing and Quality Control Staff

Subsequently, a dispute arose when ABI’s management stopped deducting union dues from eighty-one
(81) employees, believing that their membership in BLMA-INDEPENDENT violated the CBA. Eighteen (18)
of these affected employees are QA Sampling Inspectors/Inspectresses and Machine Gauge Technician
who formed part of the Quality Control Staff. Twenty (20) checkers are assigned at the Materials
Department of the Administration Division, Full Goods Department of the Brewery Division and
Packaging Division. The rest are secretaries/clerks directly under their respective division managers.

BLMA-INDEPENDENT claimed that ABI’s actions restrained the employees’ right to self-organization and
brought the matter to the grievance machinery. As the parties failed to amicably settle the controversy,
BLMA-INDEPENDENT lodged a complaint before the National Conciliation and Mediation Board (NCMB).
The parties eventually agreed to submit the case for arbitration to resolve the issue of "[w]hether or not
there is restraint to employees in the exercise of their right to self-organization."
Voluntary Arbitrator sustained the BLMA-INDEPENDENT after finding that the positions of the subject
employees qualify under the rank-and-file category because their functions are merely routinary and
clerical. On appeal, the CA reversed the Voluntary Arbitrator.
BLMA-INDEPENDENT filed a motion for reconsideration. In the meantime, a certification election was
held on August 10, 2002 wherein petitioner Tunay na Pagkakaisa ng Manggagawa sa Asia (TPMA) won.
As the incumbent bargaining representative of ABI’s rank-and-file employees claiming interest in the
outcome of the case, petitioner filed with the CA an omnibus motion for reconsideration of the decision
and intervention, with attached petition signed by the union officers.11 Both motions were denied by
the CA.12

Issues:
1. Whether or not the 81 employees are excluded from and are not eligible for inclusion in the
bargaining unit as defined in the CBA;
2. Whether or not the ABI committed an act in restraining the employees in the exercise of their right to
self-organization;

Ruling:
1. Although Article 245 of the Labor Code limits the ineligibility to join, form and assist any labor
organization to managerial employees, jurisprudence has extended this prohibition to confidential
employees or those who by reason of their positions or nature of work are required to assist or act in a
fiduciary manner to managerial employees and hence, are likewise privy to sensitive and highly
confidential records. Confidential employees are thus excluded from the rank-and-file bargaining unit.
The rationale for their separate category and disqualification to join any labor organization is similar to
the inhibition for managerial employees because if allowed to be affiliated with a Union, the latter might
not be assured of their loyalty in view of evident conflict of interests and the Union can also become
company-denominated with the presence of managerial employees in the Union membership. Having
access to confidential information, confidential employees may also become the source of undue
advantage. Said employees may act as a spy or spies of either party to a collective bargaining
agreement.

In Philips Industrial Development, Inc. v. NLRC, this Court held that petitioner’s "division secretaries, all
Staff of General Management, Personnel and Industrial Relations Department, Secretaries of Audit, EDP
and Financial Systems" are confidential employees not included within the rank-and-file bargaining unit.
Earlier, in Pier 8 Arrastre & Stevedoring Services, Inc. v. Roldan-Confesor, the court declared that legal
secretaries who are tasked with, among others, the typing of legal documents, memoranda and
correspondence, the keeping of records and files, the giving of and receiving notices, and such other
duties as required by the legal personnel of the corporation, fall under the category of confidential
employees and hence excluded from the bargaining unit composed of rank-and-file employees.

Also considered having access to "vital labor information" are the executive secretaries of the General
Manager and the executive secretaries of the Quality Assurance Manager, Product Development
Manager, Finance Director, Management System Manager, Human Resources Manager, Marketing
Director, Engineering Manager, Materials Manager and Production Manager.

In the present case, the CBA expressly excluded "Confidential and Executive Secretaries" from the rank-
and-file bargaining unit, for which reason ABI seeks their disaffiliation from the union. Petitioner,
however, maintains that except for Daisy Laloon, Evelyn Mabilangan and Lennie Saguan who had been
promoted to monthly paid positions, several secretaries/clerks are deemed included among the rank-
and-file employees of ABI. It is rather curious that there would be several secretaries/clerks for just one
(1) department/division performing tasks which are mostly routine and clerical. ABI insisted they fall
under the "Confidential and Executive Secretaries" expressly excluded by the CBA from the rank-and-file
bargaining unit.

However, perusal of the job descriptions of these secretaries/clerks reveals that their assigned duties
and responsibilities involve routine activities of recording and monitoring, and other paper works for
their respective departments while secretarial tasks such as receiving telephone calls and filing of office
correspondence appear to have been commonly imposed as additional duties.

ABI failed to indicate who among these numerous secretaries/clerks have access to confidential data
relating to management policies that could give rise to potential conflict of interest with their Union
membership. Clearly, the rationale under our previous rulings for the exclusion of executive secretaries
or division secretaries would have little or no significance considering the lack of or very limited access
to confidential information of these secretaries/clerks.

We thus hold that the secretaries/clerks, numbering about forty (40), are rank-and-file employees and
not confidential employees.

With respect to the Sampling Inspectors/Inspectresses and the Gauge Machine Technician, there seems
no dispute that they form part of the Quality Control Staff who, under the express terms of the CBA, fall
under a distinct category. But we disagree with ABI’s contention that the twenty (20) checkers are
similarly confidential employees being "quality control staff" entrusted with the handling and custody of
company properties and sensitive information.

Again, the job descriptions of these checkers assigned in the storeroom section of the Materials
Department, finishing section of the Packaging Department, and the decorating and glass sections of the
Production Department plainly showed that they perform routine and mechanical tasks preparatory to
the delivery of the finished products. Consequently, we hold that the twenty (20) checkers may not be
considered confidential employees under the category of Quality Control Staff who were expressly
excluded from the CBA of the rank-and-file bargaining unit.

Confidential employees are defined as those who (1) assist or act in a confidential capacity, (2) to
persons who formulate, determine, and effectuate management policies in the field of labor relations.
The two (2) criteria are cumulative, and both must be met if an employee is to be considered a
confidential employee – that is, the confidential relationship must exist between the employee and his
supervisor, and the supervisor must handle the prescribed responsibilities relating to labor relations.
The exclusion from bargaining units of employees who, in the normal course of their duties, become
aware of management policies relating to labor relations is a principal objective sought to be
accomplished by the "confidential employee rule.

There is no showing in this case that the secretaries/clerks and checkers assisted or acted in a
confidential capacity to managerial employees and obtained confidential information relating to labor
relations policies. Not being confidential employees, the secretaries/clerks and checkers are not
disqualified from membership in the Union of respondent’s rank-and-file employees.

2. Unfair labor practice refers to "acts that violate the workers’ right to organize." The prohibited acts
are related to the workers’ right to self organization and to the observance of a CBA. For a charge of
unfair labor practice to prosper, it must be shown that ABI was motivated by ill will, "bad faith, or fraud,
or was oppressive to labor, or done in a manner contrary to morals, good customs, or public policy, and,
of course, that social humiliation, wounded feelings or grave anxiety resulted from ABI’s act in
discontinuing the union dues deduction from those employees it believed were excluded by the CBA.
Considering that the herein dispute arose from a simple disagreement in the interpretation of the CBA
provision on excluded employees from the bargaining unit, respondent cannot be said to have
committed unfair labor practice that restrained its employees in the exercise of their right to self-
organization, nor have thereby demonstrated an anti-union stance.

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