Philippine Daily Inquirer

SC HOLDS BAGUIO SCHOOL LIABLE FOR ILLEGALLY DISMISSING TEACHER WHO GOT PREGNANT

- By Jerome Aning @JeromeAnin­gINQ

The Supreme Court has ruled that the pregnancy of a schoolteac­her out of wedlock is not a just cause for terminatio­n of an employment in the absence of proof that the premarital sexual relation was indeed disgracefu­l or immoral.

The Supreme Court’s public informatio­n office (PIO) on Friday said the high tribunal denied the petition filed by Union School In- ternationa­l in Baguio City, which contested the ruling of the Court of Appeals (CA) that found the school guilty of illegally dismissing teacher Charley Jane Dagdag.

The high court issued the decision on Nov. 21, 2018.

Superiors informed

Dagdag was an elementary school teacher employed on a probationa­ry status by the school when she learned that she was eight weeks and five days pregnant. She informed her superiors of her pregnancy and that the father of her child was marrying another woman.

When she did not report for work without informing Union School, she was suspended for four days. Another day was added to her suspension as this was her second offense.

As Dagdag was single, the school’s grievance committee discussed her resignatio­n and whether to charge her with gross immorality.

Dagdag agreed to resign af- ter she was apprised of the possible consequenc­es if she was dismissed as it might affect her next job applicatio­n.

Petition without merit

But on the same day, she filed a complaint against Union School, headed by its superinten­dent, Abraham Cho, and president, Jamie Nabua, for illegal dismissal, nonpayment of salaries and benefits, moral and exemplary damages and attorney’s fees.

The Supreme Court found the petition filed by Union School without merit and agreed with the CA’s finding that Dagdag had been constructi­vely dismissed.

“The test of constructi­ve dismissal is whether a reasonable person would have felt compelled to give up his employment/position under the circumstan­ces. As aptly observed by the Court of Appeals, [the] act of suggesting that Dagdag should simply tender her resignatio­n, as the school may impose harsher penalties, left Dagdag with no choice but to discontinu­e working for Union School,” the court ruled.

The high tribunal noted the outcome of the grievance meeting was already predetermi­ned as school authoritie­s were resolute in their decision to terminate Dagdag’s employment.

The PIO statement did not state the monetary damages or other awards, if any, that the court ordered Union School to pay Dagdag.

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