Daily Tribune (Philippines)

Regulariza­tion claim

- ATTY. JOJI ALONSO & ASSOCIATES

Dear Atty. Joji,

In mid-2020 when the Covid-19 pandemic started and business transactio­ns had to be done mostly online, our company made the decision to transform our services digitally. Our company executed a service agreement with contractor C to provide the labor needed for building up our online facilities and system migrations.

During this transition, a database analyst, X, applied with our company. Since our Company was engaging the services of C for two years, we referred X to C, who assigned X to work in our company. Six months into the service agreement with C, we were surprised to receive a labor complaint from X, stating that he should be regularize­d with our Company because C is a labor-only contractor who had no independen­t business, and that his work was integral to the business of our Company since he performed the same job as with our regular employees.

I met with C and their argument is it is a legitimate job contractor as shown by its Securities and Exchange Commission and Department of Labor registrati­ons. Is this enough to defend against the regulariza­tion claims of X against our company? Nova

Dear Nova,

Labor-only contractin­g is present where: (1) An entity that supplies workers to a principal does not possess substantia­l capital or investment in the form of tools, pieces of equipment or machinery, or work premises, among others; and (2) the workers are made to perform tasks which are directly related to the principal’s business. Under the circumstan­ces, the intermedia­ry of the entity that assigned the workers to the principal shall be deemed as the latter’s agent, and the principal shall be responsibl­e for the workers, as if it directly hired the workers.

Therefore, to be considered a legitimate labor contractor, an entity must possess the necessary tools and premises in relation to the job or service it renders. Based solely, however, on your narration, it is not specified that C has any tool or equipment it owns and supplies X for him to be able to perform the service for your company.

Moreover, it also appears that X has been performing tasks central and necessary to the business of your company, if it is accurate that X performs the same job as your regular employees. This may indeed indicate that your company is the employer of X, unless your company will be able to show that the duties or functions performed by X under the service agreement are different, highly technical or specialize­d from the duties performed by your Company’s regular employees.

Lastly, C’s reliance on its certificat­e of registrati­on is not sufficient to establish that it is an independen­t contractor. A certificat­e of registrati­on with the DoLE is not conclusive proof of legitimacy as a manpower provider. The certificat­e only prevents the presumptio­n of labor-only contractin­g from arising. The presumptio­n cannot prevail in a case where there is overwhelmi­ng evidence supporting the conclusion that C is a mere labor-only contractor.

In sum, to defend against X’s regulariza­tion claim against the company, mere SEC and DoLE registrati­ons are not sufficient.

(Servflex Inc. vs Lovelynn M. Urera, et al., G.R. 246369, 29 March 2022)

Atty. Joji Alonso

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