Assumption of liability not a defense

By: ATTY. DENNIS GORECHO June 04,2018 - 09:33 PM

Gorecho

The original manning agency cannot claim that it will be exempted from liability because it is no longer the manning agency responsible to the dismissed seafarers since the new manning agencies had executed Affidavits of Assumption of Responsibility.

In Section 1 of Rule II of the POEA Rules and Regulations, it states that:

Section 1. Requirements for Issuance of License. Every applicant for license to operate a private employment agency or manning agency shall submit a written application together with the following requirements:

f. A verified undertaking stating that the applicant: (3) Shall assume joint and solidary liability with the employer for all claims and liabilities which may arise in connection with the implementation of the contract; including but not limited to payment of wages, death and disability compensation and repatriation.

Accordingly, despite the execution of said Affidavits by other manning agencies, the original manning agency cannot exempt itself from all the claims and liabilities arising from the implementation of the contract executed between the said original manning agency and the seafarers.

It is very clear from the above-cited POEA rules that the manning agency shall assume joint and solidary liability with the employer.

Joint and solidary liability is meant to assure aggrieved workers of immediate and sufficient payment of what is due them.

The reason for this ruling was given by this Court in the 1988 case of Catan v. NLRC ( 160 SCRA 691, 695) : “This must be so, because the obligations covenanted in the manning agreement entered into by and between the local agent and its foreign principal are not coterminus with the term of such agreement so that if either or both of the parties decide to end the agreement, the responsibilities of such parties towards the contracted employees under the agreement do not at all end, but the same extends up to and until the expiration of the employment contracts of the employees recruited and employed pursuant to the said recruitment agreement. Otherwise, this will render nugatory the very purpose for which the law governing the employment of workers for foreign jobs abroad was enacted.”

The Migrant Workers Act ( R.A. No. 8042) also states that the agency which deployed the employees whose employment contract were adjudged illegally terminated, shall be jointly and solidarily liable with the principal for the money claims awarded to the aforesaid employees.

The said Affidavits, though valid as between the original manning agency and the other manning agencies, are not enforceable as against the respondents because the latter were not parties to those agreements.

The POEA Rules are clear enough that the manning agreement extends up to and until the expiration of the employment contracts of the employees recruited and employed pursuant to the said recruitment agreement.

Hence, despite the execution of said affidavits, the original manning agency cannot exempt itself from the liabilities and responsibilities towards the seafarers.

( SKIPPERS vs. MAGUAD, G.R. No. 166363, August 15, 2006)

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