Philippine Supreme Court Jurisprudence


Philippine Supreme Court Jurisprudence > Year 1960 > February 1960 Decisions > G.R. No. L-13115 February 29, 1960 - TRINIDAD DE LOS REYES VDA. DE SANTIAGO v. ANGELA S. REYES and WCC

107 Phil 210:




PHILIPPINE SUPREME COURT DECISIONS

EN BANC

[G.R. No. L-13115. February 29, 1960.]

TRINIDAD DE LOS REYES VDA. DE SANTIAGO, for herself and in behalf of her minor children, MAMERTO, LEONILA and ANDREA, all surnamed SANTIAGO, Petitioner, v. ANGELA S. REYES and WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION COMMISSION, Respondents.

Carlos E. Santiago, for Petitioners.

Engracio Rafanan for respondent Commission.


SYLLABUS


1. WORKMEN’S COMPENSATION; DEATH OF JEEPNEY DRIVER BEYOND REGULAR ROUTE; PRESUMPTION THAT DEATH OCCURRED BY REASON OF AND IN THE COURSE OF EMPLOYMENT. — The deceased in the case at bar was the driver of a jeepney operated by Respondent. He was last seen operating the said jeepney on a certain day, and the following day his dead body was found in the province of Quezon, obviously a victim of murder. The route of the jeepney driven by the deceased was within Manila and suburbs, and the Workmen’s Compensation Commission, in denying the claim for compensation filed by the heirs of the deceased, stated that there was nothing in the record which justified the presumption that the deceased was forcibly taken away, at the point of a gun or a knife, from his regular orbit of employment. Held: Section 69, par. (q), Rule 123 of the Rules of Court, establishes the presumption that "the ordinary course of business has been followed," There is no question that immediately before leaving Manila the deceased was engaged in his employment. The presumption is that he performed his duties legally and in accordance with the rules and regulations, because that was his regular obligation. It was incumbent upon respondent to prove that the deceased voluntarily went out of his route and drove his jeepney towards the province of Quezon. In the absence of evidence to that effect, it must be concluded that the deceased was forced by circumstances beyond his will to go outside his ordinary route. There being a presumption under the provisions of Section 43 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act that the deceased died while in the course of his employment, his death must be presumed to have arisen out of said employment. Consequently, his heirs are entitled to receive the compensation provided for by law.


D E C I S I O N


LABRADOR, J.:


This is a petition to review the decision of the majority of the members of the Workmen’s Compensation Commission, denying a claim for compensation of petitioners for the death of Victorio Santiago, driver of a jeepney operated by the Respondent. The said deceased was the driver of an autocalesa belonging to respondent and was last seen operating said autocalesa at 9:00 in the evening of September 26, 1955. In the morning of September 27, 1955, his dead body was found in Tayabas, Quezon obviously a victim of murder by persons who were at large and whose identities were not known. Apparently the driver must have been attacked with blunt instrument or instruments as an examination of his head disclosed that it was heavily fractured, fragmenting it into many pieces, crushing and lacerating the brain. (Stipulation of Facts). Other pertinent facts in the stipulation of facts submitted by the parties are as follows:ClubJuris

"That there is a specific instruction given by the respondent to the deceased to follow the route prescribed by the Public Service Commission. In the case of jeep driven by the deceased, its route is within Manila and suburbs;

That it has always been the practice of the respondent that, whenever the driver is accepted, specific instruction is given to him to follow faithfully the traffic rules and regulations, especially speeding and overloading, and he is requested also not to operate beyond the route given by the Public Service Commission. In case the driver goes beyond the route prescribed by the Public Service Commission, a fine of P50.00 is imposed which is paid by the Respondent. However, in case of the traffic violations especially speeding, it is the driver who pays." (p. 2, Annex "E").

Two of the members of the Commission made the following finding on the question as to whether or not the death of Victoriano Santiago arose out of and was occasioned in the court of his employment.

"There is nothing in the record which justified the assumption that he was forcibly taken away, at the point of a gun or a knife from his regular orbit of employment. The most that may be conceded, however remote it seems, is the possibility that, to use the referee’s own word, "he, the driver, might have been lured," by his assassins to get away from his regular route, only to be robbed of his earnings, the jeep, and, which is the most important, his life. But this only demonstrates the voluntariness of his act of going out to the ordinary way of fulfilling his assigned job. It only adds to the inevitable conclusion that he went with his attackers in disregard not only of the instructions or orders of his employer but also of the rules and regulations of the Public Service Commission, which rules undeniably should be regarded as having the force of law, having been set by authorities for the observance of those to whom they are addressed, this deceased driver not excluded. If there is any material finding that is to be made out in this case, it is that the drivers act in deviating from the route prescribed for his observance constituted a positive factor in bringing about his own demise. His departure from the route where his employment only required him to be, in fact, brought him to an area fraught with extra risks or hazards not foreseeably and ordinary attached to the employment for which he was hired.

This Commission finds that the deceased willfully violated public service rules and regulations and the instructions of his employer in undertaking a trip too far beyond the limits of the line in which his jeepney was authorized to operate. And with this as the basis, the correct determination of the second issue can be reached upon consideration of the following precedents: . . . ." (pp. 5-6, Annex "E").

Associate Commissioner Nieves Baens del Rosario dissented from the opinion of the majority. She says in part:ClubJuris

"In connection with the ‘arising out of and in the course of employment’ requirement in relation to the presumptions in favor of the employee, Larson makes this comment:clubjuris

‘The burden of proving his cases beyond speculation and conjecture is on the claimant. He is aided in some jurisdiction by presumptions that help to supply the minimum evidence necessary to support an award, and which shift the burden to the defendant when some connection of the injury with the work has been prove.’ (p. 232, W/O.S. by Larson, Vol. 2)

And in this jurisdiction where such presumptions in favor of the employee are provided in our Workmen’s Compensation Act, our Supreme Court in the aforecited Batangas Transportation case ruled:clubjuris

‘Our position is that once it is proved that the employee died in the course of the employment, the legal presumption in the contrary, is that the claim comes within the provisions of the compensation law (Sec. 44). In other words, that accident arose out of the workmen’s employment (2-A).’

Another presumption created in favor of the employee and which is more specific than the all embracing presumption that the claim comes within the provisions of ‘the Act’ is that one provided in sub-section 3 of Section 44. It reads: ‘3. That the injury was not occasioned by the willful intention of the injured employee to bring about the injury or death of himself or of another.’ This presumption arises from the natural rule, against suicides and once the presumption is established, the burden of proof shifts to the employer. He is, under the Workmen’s Compensation Act, required to present ‘substantial evidence’ to overcome such presumption.

In the case of Travellers Insurance Company v. Cardillo, 140 F-2d 10 (1943) the court stated:clubjuris

‘The evidence necessary to overcome the presumption then must do more than create doubt or set up non-compensable alternative explanations of the accident. It must be ‘evidence such as a reasonable mind must accept as adequate to support a conclusion.’

No such evidence was presented by the herein Respondent.

In explanation of this policy, the Court held in the same Batangas Transportation case:clubjuris

‘It is not unfair; the employer has the means and the facilities to know the cause; and should not be allowed to profit by concealing it. Nay, he should take active steps to ascertain the cause of the murder; not just continue its operations unmolested.’

And in the case of Travellers Insurance Co. cited above the following reason was given:clubjuris

‘The death of the employee usually deprives the dependent of his best witness — the employee himself — and, especially where the accident is unwitnessed, some latitude should be given the claimant. Hence, presumptions or inference that an unwitnessed death arose out of the employment are allowed in some jurisdictions, where the employer provides no contrary proof, and when last seen deceased was working or had properly recessed.’

Here, the respondent employer has not provided any contrary proof, and Santiago when he was last seen doing his regular work of driving . . ." (pp: 14-16, Annex "G").

Section 43 of the Workmen’s Compensation Act, as amended by Section 24 of Republic Act 772, establishes the following presumptions:ClubJuris

"In any proceeding for the enforcement of the claim for compensation under this Act, it shall be presumed in the absence of substantial evidence to the contrary —

1. That the claim comes within the provisions of this Act;

2. That sufficient notice thereof was given;

3. That the injury was not occasioned by the willful intention of the injured employee to bring about the injury or death of himself or of another;

4. That the injury did not result solely from the intoxication of the injured employee while on duty; and

5. That the contents of verified medical and surgical reports introduced in evidence by claimants for compensation are correct." clubjuris

The decision of the majority of the members of the Commission reasons out that the deceased had received specific instructions not to operate beyond the route given by the Public Service Commission (only within the city of Manila), and his act in getting outside of the city was his free and voluntary act, because he disregarded the orders of his employer as well as the rules and regulations of the Public Service Commission. The majority concludes that the deceased willfully violated Public Service Commission rules and regulations and, therefore, death did not arise out of or by reason of his employment.

The flaw in the above reasoning of the majority is that it violates the presumption expressly laid down by the following provision of Section 69, par. (q), rule 123, Rules of Court:ClubJuris

"The following presumptions are satisfactory if uncontradicted, but may be contradicted and overcome by other evidence:clubjuris

x       x       x


(q) That the ordinary course of business has been followed;

x       x       x


There is no question that immediately before leaving Manila the deceased was engaged in his employment. The presumption is that he performed his duties legally and in accordance with the rules and regulations, because that was his regular obligation.

Inasmuch as the law established the presumption that the deceased followed the law and regulations, it was incumbent upon respondent to prove that he did otherwise, or that he failed to comply with the regulations. In other words it was incumbent upon the respondent herein to prove that the deceased voluntarily went out of his route and drove his jeepney towards the province of Quezon, not that the deceased voluntarily went to that province thereby going beyond the route provided for the vehicle that he was driving.

Petitioners claim that the deceased voluntarily went out of his ordinary route. Petitioners also have the obligation to prove this fact, this being an affirmative allegation. They failed to do so.

There being no such evidence submitted by the respondent, i.e., that the going of the deceased to Quezon province was made voluntarily by him, we must conclude, pursuant to the presumption that every person performs his duty or obligation, that he was forced by circumstances beyond his will to go outside his ordinary route; in other words that while driving in the city he must have been forced to go out and drive to the province of Quezon on the threats of the malefactors guilty of assaulting and killing him against his (deceased) will.

In the case of Batangas Transportation Co. v. Josefina de Rivera, Et Al., G. R. No. L-7658, prom. May 8, 1956, decided by this Court, in which a driver of a bus, while so driving was suddenly attacked by his assailant who boarded the bus and thereafter stabbed him, the majority of this Court held that the driver died in the course of his employment even if there were indications (not sufficient to prove) that there was personal animosity between the assailant and the victim, which may have caused the assault. In said case the reason for the decision of this Court was that circumstances or indications show that the deceased died while driving the bus, thus that his death must have been due to his employment.

The present case is stronger than the above-cited case of Batangas Transportation Co. v. de Rivera, for while in said previous case there were indications which showed personal animosities which may have been the root cause of the assault, in the case at bar, there are no such indications. On the other hand, there is a presumption that the deceased died while in the course of his employment, and therefore his death must be presumed to have arisen out of said employment.

We, therefore, find that the decision of the majority which has been appealed from is not in consonance with the law and the express provision of Section 43 of the Workmen’s Compensation Law; and that by reason of such express provision of the law, we must hold that Victoriano Santiago died by reason of and in the course of his employment and consequently his heirs are entitled to receive the compensation provided for by law in such cases.

Decision rendered by the court below is hereby set aside, and respondent is hereby ordered to pay the compensation due the heirs under the law. Without costs. So ordered.

Paras, C.J. Bengzon, Bautista Angelo, Reyes, J. B. L., Endencia, Barrera and Gutiérrez David, JJ., concur.




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