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SECOND DIVISION
G.R. No. L-60950 November 19, 1982
J.D. MAGPAYO CUSTOMS BROKERAGE CORPORATION, Petitioner, vs.
NATIONAL LABOR RELATIONS COMMISSION AND FRANCISCO GRANATAN, Respondents.
Severo C. Cebanda, Jr. counsel for petitioner.chanrobles virtual law library
Pacianito Cabaron counsel for respondent.
ABAD SANTOS, J.:
In this appeal by certiorari, the petitioner prays that We order the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) to give due course to its appeal which was dismissed for noncompliance with the rules of the NLRC.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
The antecedent facts are: chanrobles virtual law library
A complaint for illegal dismissal and non-payment of wages was filed on August 19, 1979, by Francisco Granatan, the private respondent herein, against his employer J.D. Magpayo Customs Brokerage Corporation. in a decision dated March 10, 1981, the employer was ordered by the Labor Arbiter to reinstate Granatan without loss of seniority and pay his back wages.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
The employer appealed the decision to the NLRC within the reglementary period but the latter dismissed the appeal because "there is no showing whatsoever that a copy of the appeal was served by the appellant on the appellee." (Annex A, Petition, p. 12, Rollo.) chanrobles virtual law library
The only question presented to Us for resolution is whether or not the NLRC committed a grave abuse of discretion in dismissing the appeal on the ground aforestated. This decision does not, and indeed We are not asked to resolve the merit of the appealed decision.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
The petition is impressed with merit and should be granted.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
The failure to give a copy of the appeal to the adverse party was a mere formal lapse, an excusable neglect. Time and again We have acted on petitions to review decisions of the Court of Appeals even in the absence of proof of service of a copy thereof to the Court of Appeals as required by Section 1 of Rule 45, Rules of Court. We act on the petitions and simply require the petitioners to comply with the rule.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
Jurisprudential support is not absent to sustain Our action. In Estrada vs. National Labor Relations Commission G.R. 57735, March 19, 1982, 112 SCRA 688, this Court set aside the order of the NLRC which dismissed an appeal on the sole ground that the appellant had not furnished the appellee a memorandum of appeal contrary to the requirements of Article 223 of the New Labor Code and Section 9, Rule XIII of its implementing Rules and Regulations. The same decision likewise quotes the distinguished Chief Justice of the Philippines, Enrique M. Fernando, who said in Meracap v& International Ceramics Mfg. Co., Inc., G.R. No. L-48235-36, July 30, 1979, 92 SCRA 412, 417, thus: chanrobles virtual law library
For the strictly juridical standpoint, it cannot be too strongly s to follow Davis in his masterly work, Discretionary Justice, that where a decision my be made to rest on informed judgment rather than rigid rules, all the equities of the case must be accorded their due weight. Finally, labor law determinations, to quote from Bultmann should be not only secundum rationem but also secundum caritatem.
WHEREFORE, the petition is granted; the National Labor Relations Commission is hereby ordered to give due course to the petitioner's appeal. No special pronouncement as to costs.chanroblesvirtualawlibrary chanrobles virtual law library
SO ORDERED.
Makasiar (Chairman), Aquino, Concepcion, Jr., Guerrero, De Castro and Escolin., JJ., concur.