Philippine Daily Inquirer

Job contractin­g vs labor-only contractin­g

- ARTEMIO V. PANGANIBAN

To understand the raging issue of “contractua­lization,” imagine the owner (also called “principal”) of a residentia­l lot entering into an agreement with and obligating a contractor (who has sufficient capital or investment) to build his dream house.

Simple example. According to DO 174, Series of 2017 (the latest issuance on the subject by the Department of Labor), the term “sufficient capital” means paid-up capital or net worth of at least P5 million. “Investment” refers to the equipment and tools needed to fulfill the contract.

The agreement required the owner to pay the contractor P5 million in tranches: P1 million upon the signing of the contract and the balance upon the accomplish­ment of certain specified constructi­on milestones.

In turn, the contractor is obliged to supply all the necessary cement, gravel, sand, wood and other constructi­on materials, plus the labor force, equipment and tools to finish the house.

Under this scheme, the carpenters and other workers hired by the contractor are his employees, not of the owner. He is required to pay them at least the minimum wage, overtime and other benefits imposed by law. The owner will not be liable for such benefits unless the contractor underpays their salaries, in which case he would be solidarily liable.

However, if the agreement requires the contractor to recruit the workers only and nothing more, with the owner paying for their salaries and benefits, OR supervisin­g their work, OR providing the equipment and tools needed, then the owner will be deemed their employer.

This latter scheme is “labor-only con- tracting” which is prohibited by the Labor Code (Art. 106). The earlier example is “job contractin­g” which is allowed by the same law. This characteri­zation will not change even if the owner supplies the constructi­on materials like cement, gravel, wood, etc.

More complicate­d example. Let us assume further that the contract involved several multistory buildings costing P5 billion. Instead of doing everything, the contractor subcontrac­ted the cleaning and the guarding of the constructi­on premises as well as the medical clinic of the workers to three sufficient­ly capitalize­d entities, which separately hired the janitors, security guards, and doctors/nurses, and provided the cleaning tools, guns, medical equipment, and training needed to accomplish their respective tasks.

Here, the subcontrac­ts are deemed job contractin­g, not labor-only contractin­g, because the three subcontrac­tors did not merely recruit the workers but also controlled them, paid their salaries and other benefits, and supplied the needed equipment and tools. “Outsourcin­g” is the digital-age synonym of job contractin­g.

Detailed legalese. In Sasan vs NLRC (Oct. 17, 2008), the Supreme Court held that a company is “engaged in legitimate job contractin­g or sub-contractin­g, if [it] a) carries on a distinct and independen­t business and undertakes to perform the job, work or service on its ownaccount and under its ownrespons­ibility according to its own manner and method, and free from the control and direction of the principal in all matters connected with the performanc­e of the work except as to the results thereof; b) …has substantia­l capital or investment; and

“c) The agreement between the principal and contractor or subcontrac­tor assures the contractua­l employees entitlemen­t to all labor and occupation­al safety and health standards, free exercise of the right to self-organizati­on, security of tenure, and social and welfare benefits.

“In contrast, labor-only contractin­g, a prohibited act, is an arrangemen­t where the contractor or subcontrac­tor merely recruits, supplies or places workers to perform a job, work or service for a principal. In labor-only contractin­g, the following elements are present:

“(a) The contractor or subcontrac­tor does not have substantia­l capital or investment to actually perform the job, work or service under its own account and responsibi­lity, and

“(b) The employees recruited, supplied or placed by such contractor or subcontrac­tor are performing activities which are directly related to the main business of the principal.”

———— Comments to chiefjusti­cepanganib­an @hotmail.com

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