Philippine Daily Inquirer

SC tackles back pay for illegally dismissed probationa­ry workers

- By Jane Bautista @janebautis­taINQ

The Supreme Court has ruled that illegally dismissed probationa­ry employees are entitled to back wages from the time their compensati­on was withheld up to their actual reinstatem­ent.

In an en banc decision dated April 16, a full copy of which is yet to be made public, the high tribunal denied the petition for review on certiorari— or review of actions made by lower courts—filed by Batangas-based CP Reyes Hospital, ruling that its probationa­ry employee Geraldine Barbosa was illegally dismissed and thus entitled to back wages.

According to the high court, both the Constituti­on and the Labor Code do not distinguis­h between regular and probationa­ry employees in guaranteei­ng the right to security of tenure.

The case dates back to September 2013 when Barbosa signed a six-month probationa­ry employment contract with CP Reyes Hospital.

During her probationa­ry period, she would train as a staff nurse, then as a ward head nurse, and finally as a training supervisor.

However, after three months, the Batangas-based hospital terminated her probationa­ry employment due to negative performanc­e feedback, prompting Barbosa to file an illegal dismissal complaint against the employer.

Arbiter’s decision

The labor arbiter ruled that Barbosa was illegally dismissed, as it found that the numerical passing marks given by her evaluators showed she successful­ly met CP Reyes Hospital’s standards.

Although the National Labor Relations Commission subsequent­ly overturned that decision, the Court of Appeals (CA) in a 2016 ruling reinstated the labor arbiter’s decision in favor of Barbosa.

“In fine, employers must be reminded that while probationa­ry employees do not enjoy permanent status, they enjoy the constituti­onal protection of security of tenure,” the CA said.

The Supreme Court affirmed the appellate court’s ruling, saying that probationa­ry employment may be terminated when the employee fails to qualify as a regular one, based on the “reasonable standards made known by the employer to the employee at the time of engagement.”

In this particular case, the high court said Barbosa’s dismissal was “baseless” since she obtained the passing grades needed to meet the regulariza­tion standards spelled out in the probationa­ry employment contract.

The Supreme Court said it found CP Reyes Hospital’s claims of unsatisfac­tory performanc­e “ungenuine” because they were only issued two weeks after the employee had already been terminated and without an accompanyi­ng performanc­e evaluation.

“As Barbosa was illegally dismissed, she is entitled to reinstatem­ent, full back wages, and other benefits,” the high court said.

Basis for amount

In determinin­g the amount of back wages due Barbosa, the Supreme Court reconciled conflictin­g jurisprude­nce as it clarified that illegally dismissed probationa­ry employees, like regular employees, are entitled to back wages up to their actual reinstatem­ent and not only until the end of their probationa­ry period.

The high court noted that the mere lapse of the probationa­ry period without regulariza­tion “does not by itself sever the employment relationsh­ip.”

“Without any valid grounds to dismiss a probationa­ry employee, there is no basis to terminate the employment. Thus, the employee is entitled to work even beyond the probationa­ry period,” it said.

The high tribunal thus ruled that in Barbosa’s case, back wages should be computed from Jan. 1, 2014, when compensati­on was withheld from her, until the finality of the court’s decision.

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