
Dear Atty. Vlad,
I am an assistant cook in a restaurant in Balanga, Bataan. My employer made me sign a templated one-page contract which states that my employment in the restaurant will last for three months. I work from Mondays to Saturdays and I was also not allowed to work for other restaurants or establishments. My contract was renewed five times for the same period. Thereafter, the restaurant manager told me that my contract will not be renewed anymore. I was told that the restaurant plans to hire a regular full-time assistant cook and I am a mere casual employee. Is this legal and what can I do to protect my rights?
Leo
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Dear Leo,
From the facts that you shared to me, you should already be considered a regular employee of the restaurant. The restaurant’s resort to continuous renewal of your employment contract is just a ploy to prevent you from attaining regular status.
In the case of Ariel Espina, et al. vs. Highlands Camp, et al., G.R. No. 220935 and G.R. NO. 219868, 28 July 2020, the Supreme Court citing the case of Claret School of Quezon City vs. Sinday (G.R. No. 226358, 9 October 2019), stated:
“Thus, in Claret, the Court held that the repeated hiring of employees under a contract less than the six-month probationary period to circumvent regular employment is contrary to law, viz.:
xxx where from the circumstances it is apparent that the period has been imposed to preclude the acquisition of tenurial security by the employee, then it should be struck down as being contrary to law, morals, good customs, public order and public policy. The pernicious practice of having employees, workers and laborers, engaged xxx short of the normal six-month probationary period of employment and, thereafter, to be hired on a day-to-day basis, mocks the law. (Emphasis supplied, citation omitted)
Indeed, Highlands’ cyclical scheme of hiring and rehiring petitioners year after year manifests its intent to prevent them from attaining regular employment. Highlands failed to prove that petitioners freely entered into agreements with it to perform services for a specified period or season. In fact, there is nothing on record to show there was any agreement at all between Highlands and each of herein petitioners. Respondents never presented petitioners’ supposed contracts of employment. In the absence of proof showing that petitioners knowingly agreed on a fixed or seasonal term of employment, we uphold the findings of the labor tribunals that petitioners are regular employees.
You can go to the National Labor Relations Commission in San Fernando, Pampanga and file a complaint for regularization and illegal dismissal against your employer.
I hope I was able to help you based on the facts you stated.
Atty. Vlad del Rosario