328 Phil. 252; OG No. 21, 3217 (May 26, 1997)
HERMOSISIMA, JR., J.:
"In a resolution dated September 15, 1986 in G.R. No. 75749, the Court issued 'a Temporary Restraining Order' enjoining enforcement of the August 29, 1986 order of the Minister of Labor and Employment only insofar as it directs the payment of back wages, allowances, and other benefits due to the private respondents effective March 11, 1985 until their actual reinstatement. Considering, however, the financial plight of some of the private respondents, the Court further Resolved to order the petitioner to advance the equivalent of two (2) months salary to each of the private respondents entitled to reinstatement under the MOLE order, said amount to be repaid to the petitioner or charged to accumulated back wages depending on the final outcome of this case' (p. 64, Rollo). A motion for clarification of this Resolution filed by the Bank was denied.It appears that the problem of reinstating striking employees except those who had accepted separation pay was reduced a bit when 71 of 112 affected employees were additionally reinstated. Thus, only 41 among the individual respondents were not reinstated.
In view of the above-mentioned resolution, Minister Sanchez' order to reinstate back to work all striking employees except those who have accepted separation pay was ordered implemented."[6]
In our Resolution dated May 4, 1988 we observed that:We did not act favorably upon private respondents' "motion to cite in contempt the bank for violation of the court's Resolution ordering the implementation of the reinstatement order of Minister Sanchez." Instead, we dismissed said petitions of the union and the individual respondents in G.R. No. 71239, and the Bank's petition in G.R. No. 71239, and in G.R. No. 75749; and remanded them to the Department of Labor and Employment and its pertinent agencies for further proceedings as stated in our resolution, to wit:
"The individual private respondents in G.R. No. 75749 have filed motions to cite in contempt the Bank for violation of the Court's Resolution ordering the implementation of the reinstatement order of Minister Sanchez. They alleged that they were 'forced to file the Motions to expose and protest the unabating display of bad faith on the part of the Bank in effecting their reinstatement. (p. 400, Rollo in 74749)."
"A thorough review of the voluminous records of these two petitions shows that unresolved factual issues prevent a final solution to the individual respondents' and the Bank's problems.In view of this development, the respondents, including the forty-one (41) individual respondents, led by Rolando Ocampo, Rowena Rebosa and Alfredo del Pilar, were not reinstated by the bank.
First, whether or not the strikes staged by the Union and the individual respondents are legal remains unresolved. This question has been pending before the Arbitration Branch of the National Labor Relations Commission (NLRC) even before the filing of the two petitions.
In his order dated August 29, 1986, Minister Sanchez ordered reinstatement pending the final outcome of the petition initiated by the Bank to declare the strike illegal. The reinstatement is, therefore, provisional. A permanent reinstatement will depend on the legality or illegality of the strike.
Second, the Department of Labor and Employment (DOLE) or the NLRC must also look into the roles played by the individual respondents should the strike be declared illegal.
Third, in this Court's June 18, 1986 resolution, the respondent Minister was ordered to resolve (sic) the certain factual questions, to wit:
There are various factual issues which must first be resolved. Counsel for the petitioners admits that the petitioners are not authorized by the Allied Bank Employees Union nor NUBE to speak for the Union or the bargaining unit. Neither have the petitioners any authority to file a case in behalf of the Union officers and certain separated employees whom they want this Court to order reinstated. In fact, there are statements filed by individual petitioners who manifest that they did not authorize the petition to be filed in their names. Counsel for the petitioners failed to clarify at the June 18, 1986 hearing how many of the petitioners he really represents, how many workers have received separation pay, and how many of these workers have authorized the filling of a case in their behalf. Counsels for the parties have given this Court conflicting data on positions of terminated personnel allegedly being filled by new employees and various other factual matters necessitating the presentation of evidence. It is also rather odd why a petitioner union affiliated with NUBE and the Trade Union Congress of the Philippines (TUCP) or its members should be represented in this case by the legal counsel of a rival labor federation, the Kilusang Mayo Uno (KMU).
There is at present pending with the respondent a supplemental motion for partial reconsideration of the order now challenged in this petition. Counsel for the petitioner admits that they have not moved in the premises and have not asked the present Minister of the MOLE whether or not he would reconsider the questioned order issued by his predecessor. Both parties are agreed that conciliation proceedings have not terminated and both expressed a willingness to continue the proceedings. The issue of whether or not the strike which commenced on February 11, 1985 is legal remains pending determination by NLRC and calls for the presentation of the evidence. The status of the pending criminal case is likewise not clear. The Assistant Solicitor General who represented MOLE informed the Court that the respondent Minister had to suspend action on the various matter pending before him because the petitioners decided to file this petition before allowing the administrative process to make the initial determination (p. 420, Rollo in G.R. No. 71239).
These questions have not been resolved to date.
And fourth, there are likewise factual matters that have cropped up in G.R. No. 75749 with regards (sic) to which the court has neither the means or (sic) the time to look into.
The appropriate agencies of DOLE should conduct hearings on the contention of the bank that it is now impossible to reinstate the remaining 41 respondents inspite (sic) of its alleged bona fide attempts to find equivalent positions for them and on the counter-contentions of the individual respondents that there was discrimination in the reinstatement of their companions, that the contractual employees were hired to displace them, that the bank employed harassment tactics, and that their dismissal was summary, arbitrary, and malicious in gross violation of this Court's twin resolutions on September 17 and 29, 1986.
All the unresolved factual questions call for the presentation of evidence before the appropriate administrative agency. They cannot be resolved through pleadings or oral arguments before the Court."[7]xxx xxx xxx
"(a) whether or not the subject strikes, i.e., one that took place on January 3 and 4, 1985 to March 11, 1985, were illegal; (b) whether or not anyone of the individual respondents committed illegal acts during the duration of the strikes; (c) whether or not the individual respondents were illegally dismissed and/or locked out; and (d) whether or not the respondent-employees are entitled to moral and exemplary damages."[8]The Labor Arbiter qualified that, under Article 264 (a) of the Labor Code, the individual respondents other than the union officers can be subjected to dismissal only in cases where they knowingly participated in the commission of illegal acts during the strike. Finding that all the individual respondents who were not officers of the union did not commit the illegal acts complained of, the Labor Arbiter held that they cannot validly be declared to have lost their employment status.
After weighing the arguments of both parties, the Arbiter ruled that:
"There is no dispute that under Art. 263, paragraph (g) of the Labor code, as amended, the assumption by the Secretary of Labor and Employment over a labor dispute has the automatic effect of enjoining any intended or impending strike or lockout. When then Minister Blas Ople assumed jurisdiction over the labor dispute between the bank and the union on December 19, 1984, by operation of law, the intended strike of the respondent union was automatically enjoined. The union cannot feign ignorance of this legal mandate. It is the law and compliance therewith cannot be excused on the more convenient excuse of ignorance. Besides, the order of December 19, 1984 clearly reiterated such legal injunction such that the respondent union may not now be allowed to assert that it did not violate any law or order of the lawful authorities when it staged the strike on January 3 and 4, 1985.
An assumption and/or certification order of the Secretary of Labor automatically results in a return-to-work of all striking workers, whether or not a corresponding order has been issued by the Secretary of Labor. Once an assumption/certification order is issued strikers are enjoined, or if one has already taken place, all strikers shall immediately return to work. A strike that is undertaken despite the issuance by the Secretary of Labor of an assumption or certification order becomes a prohibited activity and thus illegal. x x x
Admittedly the respondent union went on strike on January 3 and 4, 1985, barely sixteen (16) days after then Minister of Labor and Employment Blas Ople assumed jurisdiction. And while the labor dispute between the parties was still pending before Minister Blas Ople, another strike was staged on February 11, 1985 which continued up to March 11, 1985. Being in violation of the provisions of Art. 263, paragraph (g) of the Labor Code, as amended, as well as the assumption order of December 19, 1984, both strikes are, therefore, illegal and consequently, all union officers, namely, Tomas Gonzalo, Crisanto Balisi, Norberto Aguja, Benito Barrera, Hernanie Sison, Meynard Cuenca, Victor Alvares, Inocencio Salvador, Luisito Mendoza, Arturo Villanueva, and Pedro Pascual, are declared to have lost their employment status.
This Branch does not agree with the respondents' contention that the strike on January 3 and 4, 1985 was already amicably settled and/or condoned by the bank when it agreed to accept back to work the striking workers. The bank merely complied with the return-to-work order of Minister Blas Ople issued on January 6, 1985 but this did not preclude the bank from questioning the legality or illegality of the said strike.
Nor can this Branch accede to the respondents' assertion that they are merely acting in self-defense when they resumed their concerted activity on February 11, 1985 allegedly on account of unfair labor practices committed by the bank's representatives and agents. Regardless of their motives, or the validity of their claims, the striking workers must cease and/or desist from any and all acts that tend to or undermine the authority of Secretary of Labor and Employment once an assumption order is issued. They cannot, for instance, ignore return-to-work orders, citing unfair labor practices on the part of the company, to justify their actions x x x"[9]
"x x x Implicit in the petitioner's argument is that the individual respondents by their failure to comply with the published return-to-work order are liable for abandonment of work. Abandonment as a ground for dismissal must be shown to be deliberate and that the employee involved has shown no more inclination to resume work. This is not true in the instant case. At the time they were terminated by the bank, the individual respondents were then on strike, and until the legality or illegality of the strike is resolved, the petitioner did not have any basis for terminating the individual respondents' services. Precisely, the primary reason why the respondents struck was rooted on their conviction that their economic demands that led to bargaining deadlock were justified. If the respondents through the strike have shown their eagerness in improving their employment situation, how could they now be held liable for abandonment. The grounds relied upon by the bank in terminating the individual respondents being non-existent, perforce such subject termination must be held to be without just and valid grounds, and consequently, the individual respondents are entitled to reinstatement with back wages from the time of their termination until their actual reinstatement."[10]On September 29, 1992, the forty-one (41) respondents who were ordered reinstated filed a "Motion to Issue Partial Writ of Execution." This was granted by the Labor Arbiter.
Hence, the Labor Arbiter's disposition of the case, viz:
"WHEREFORE, all the foregoing premises being considered, judgment is hereby rendered as follows:
a) Declaring the strikes complained of as illegal and consequently, all union officers, namely, Tomas Gonzalo, Crisanto Balisi, Norberto Aguja, Benito Barrera, Hernanie Sison, Meynard Cuenca, Victor Alvarez, Inocencio Salvador, Luisito Mendoza, Arturo Villanueva, and Pedro Pascual, lost their employment status;
b) Dismissing the petition to declare the strike illegal as against the other individual respondents;
c) Declaring the dismissal of the abovenamed 163 counter-complainants as illegal and ordering the petitioner Allied Banking Corporation to pay their aggregate back wages and other computed benefits in the total sum of P5,049,692.73;
d) Ordering the petitioner Allied Banking Corporation to reinstate the forty-one (41) counter-complainants led by Rolando Ocampo, Rowena Rebosa and Alfredo del Pilar, to their former or substantially equivalent position with all the rights, privileges and benefits appertaining thereto including seniority, and to pay them their backwages and other computed benefits in the aggregate sum of P3,548,213.80 plus moral and exemplary damages in the aggregate amount of P615,000.00; and
e) Ordering the petitioner Allied Banking Corporation to pay attorney's fees in the amount of P921,290.65.[11]
"This alleged ground cited that other than three (3) individual respondents, namely, Rolando Ocampo, Alfredo del Pilar and Rowena Rebosa, the thirty-eight (38) others were not identified, the petitioner-bank cannot feign its lack of awareness as to who are the thirty-eight (38) other individual respondents considering that the petitioner itself notified the Supreme Court in its Manifestation/Motion filed on March 7, 1988 that-On November 19, 1992, petitioner filed with the NLRC a consolidated petition for injunction docketed as NLRC NCR IC NO. 000316-92.
'2. Since October 7, 1986 to date, petitioner has found equivalent positions only for 71 among 112 of those ordered reinstated by this Honorable Court, although petitioner Bank paid their salaries and other monetary benefits continuously from October 1986 to the present without rendering work, to the damage and prejudice of petitioner;
'3. Petitioner has exhausted all possible means to look for adequate equivalent positions for the remaining 41 employees but to no avail. x x x'
"The petitioner attached to the said Manifestation/Motion a list of the forty-one (41) employees together with the corresponding separation pay and other benefits they are supposed to receive. And these forty-one (41) employees are, as follows: Daisy Adriano, Luisito Arellano, Teodoro Banaticla, Ruben Beltran, Jose Bufi, Walfrido Calcabin, Roy Casido, Edna Cioco, Rosauro Clerigo, Mary Ann Co, Delia Conde, Judith dela Cruz, Roberta dela Cruz, Carmen delos Santos, Rogelio Edora, Raul Gonzales, Balagtas Hernandez, Gerardo Ilano, Alan de Jesus, Hector Juliano, Teresita Licarte, Tony Manaois, Jaime Manipis, Edgar Marcelo, Rufino Marquez, Edgardo Nicasio, Rolando Ocampo, Irene Ocos, Herson Ozarraga, Alfredo del Pilar, Elpidio Pineda, Alfredo Raymundo, Rowena Rebosa, Dexter Sanchez, Romeo Simon, Noel Solis, Evangeline Saulog, Fe Uy, Reuel Velarde, Veronica Villarica, and Mario Marquez."[12]
"WHEREFORE, the appealed September 4, 1992 Decision insofar as concerns disposition (b) to (e) thereof, is hereby set aside.The opposing parties moved for a reconsideration of the said decision, which motions were denied in a Resolution of the NLRC, dated July 8, 1994.
Our Order of April 7, 1994 is hereby reconsidered and likewise set aside. Instead, the question of whether or not the forty-one (41) Individual Respondents (led by Rolando Ocampo, Rowena Rebosa and Alfredo del Pilar) are entitled to back wages corresponding to the period that they should have been reinstated since 1986 is hereby remanded to the Arbiter of origin pursuant to the earlier quoted guideline of the Supreme Court in its May 4, 1988 resolution."[13]
1) Article 263 (g) of the Labor CodeIn the case of Union of Filipro Employees v. Nestle Philippines., Inc.,[15] we ruled that a strike undertaken despite the issuance by the Secretary of Labor of an assumption or certification order becomes a prohibited activity and thus, illegal, pursuant to Article 264 (a) of the Labor Code. Moreover, the union officers and members who have participated in the said illegal activity, are, as a result, deemed to have lost their employment status. Thus, we held that:xxx xxx xxx
"When, in his opinion, there exists a labor dispute causing or likely to cause a strike or lockout in an industry indispensable to the national interest, the Secretary of Labor and Employment may assume jurisdiction over the dispute and decide it or certify the same to the Commission for compulsory arbitration. Such assumption or certification shall have the effect of automatically enjoining the intended or impending strike or lockout as specified in the assumption or certification order. If one has already taken place at the time of assumption or certification, all striking or locked out employees shall immediately return to work and the employer shall immediately resume operations and readmit all workers under the same terms and conditions prevailing before the strike or lockout. The Secretary of Labor and Employment or the Commission may seek the assistance of law enforcement agencies to ensure compliance with this provision as well as with such orders as he may issue to enforce the same xx x " (as amended by Sec. 27, R.A. 6715; Italics supplied.)
2) Article 264 (a)
"No strike or lockout shall be declared after assumption of jurisdiction by the President or the Minister or after certification or submission of the dispute to compulsory or voluntary arbitration or during the pendency of cases involving the same grounds for the strike or lockout.
Any worker whose employment has been terminated as a consequent of an unlawful lockout shall be entitled to reinstatement with full back wages. Any union officer who knowingly participates in an illegal strike and any worker or union officer who knowingly participates in the commission of illegal acts during a strike may be declared to have lost his employment status: Provided, That mere participation of a worker in a lawful strike shall not constitute sufficient ground for termination of his employment, even if a replacement had been hired by the employer during such lawful strike."
"UFE completely misses the underlying principle embodied in Art. 263 (g) on the settlement of labor disputes and this is, that assumption and certification orders are executory in character and are to be strictly complied with by the parties even during the pendency of any petition questioning their validity. This extraordinary authority given to the Secretary of Labor is aimed at arriving at a peaceful and speedy solution to labor disputes, without jeopardizing national interests.In the cases of Sarmiento v. Tuico,[16] and Asian Transmission Corporation v. National Labor Relations Commission,[17] we explained the rationale for this rule:
Regardless therefore of their motives, or the validity of their claims, the striking workers must cease and/or desist from any and all acts that tend to, or undermine this authority of the Secretary of Labor, once an assumption and/or certification order is issued. They cannot, for instance, ignore return-to-work orders, citing unfair labor practices on the part of the company, to justify their actions x x x"
‘xxx
One other point that must be underscored is that the return-to-work order is issued pending the determination of the legality or illegality of the strike. It is not correct to say that it may be enforced only if the strike is legal and may be disregarded if the strike is illegal, for the purpose precisely is to maintain the status quo while the determination is being made. Otherwise, the workers who contend that their strike is legal can refuse to return to their work and cause a standstill on the company operations while retaining the positions they refuse to discharge or allow the management to fill. Worse, they will also claim payment for work not done, on the ground that they are still legally employed although actually engaged in the activities inimical to their employer's interest.
This is like eating one's cake and having it too, and at the expense of the management. Such an unfair situation surely was not contemplated by our labor laws and cannot be justified under the social justice policy, which is a policy of fairness to both labor and management. Neither can this unseemly arrangement be sustained under the due process clause as the order, if thus interpreted, would be plainly oppressive and arbitrary.'"
"It is also important to emphasize that the return-to-work order not so much confers a right as it imposes a duty; and while as a right it may be waived, it must be discharged as a duty even against the worker's will. Returning to work in this situation is not a matter of option or voluntariness but of obligation. The worker must return to his job together with his co-workers so the operations of the company can be resumed and it can continue serving the public and promoting its interest. That is the real reason such return can be compelled. So imperative is the order in fact that it is not even considered violative of the right against involuntary servitude, as this Court held in Kaisahan Ng Mga Manggagawa sa Kahoy v. Gotamco Sawmills. The worker can of course give up his work, thus severing his ties with the company, if he does not want to obey the order; but the order must be obeyed if he wants to retain his work even if his inclination is to strike."This principle was reiterated in the case of St. Scholastica's College v. Torres,[18] wherein we cited the case of Federation of Free Workers v. Inciong,[19] and held that:
"A strike undertaken despite the issuance by the Secretary of Labor of an assumption or certification order becomes a prohibited activity and thus illegal, pursuant to the second paragraph of Art. 264 of the Labor Code as amended. x x x The Union officers and members, as a result, are deemed to have lost their employment status for having knowingly participated in an illegal act.Hence, respondents' failure to immediately comply with the return-to-work order dated, December 16, 1984 and January 6, 1985 cannot be condoned.
"On their part, the individual respondents in their answer dated September 26, 1985 denied that the strike on January 3 and 4, 1985 was illegal contending that there was already an amicable settlement pursuant to which the bank agreed to accept back to work all striking employees. Further, the said respondents alleged that the bank in an Order dated January 6, 1985 was directed to accept back all striking employees under the same terms and conditions previous to work stoppage and this order allegedly became final and executory. Regarding the strike on February 11, 1985, the respondents argued that the same is legal for the following alleged reasons, namely: (a) they resorted to such concerted action upon the representation of the union officers that it was legal; (b) said concerted action was resumption of their picketing activities considering that the Order of January 31, 1985 was nothing but a mere reiteration of the position taken by the bank on the deadlocked issues and the Minister unjustly ignored the position of the respondents; (c) the said action was justified in view of alleged acts of the bank amounting to unfair labor practices; and (d) the order of January 31, 1985 of the Minister has not yet become final considering that there was filed by this union a motion for reconsideration on February 11, 1985. The respondents charged as unfair labor practice the act of the petitioner in publishing in metropolitan newspapers the notices requiring the striking employees to return to work under threat of disciplinary action contending that it was a coercive act which was tantamount to interference and restraint when the publication adverted to the concerted action on February 11, 1985 as illegal. Furthermore, the respondents argued that even if the strike staged by them was illegal, they did not incur any liability for the following stated reasons, to wit: a) the individual respondents participated in the strike on the strength of representations/assurances made by union officers that the strike was legal; b) they have acted in good faith and merely exercised their constitutional right to strike and engage in concerted action; c) they acted in defense of their political and economic rights which were allegedly ignored by the Minister of Labor; d) they have acted in peaceful and orderly manner during the picketing and they did not commit any illegal or violent act; e) they have faithfully complied with the orders of the Minister of Labor and f) they merely acted in self-defense to repel the continuing acts of unfair labor practices committed by the petitioner's representatives and agents."[21]Furthermore, private respondents contend that a strike is not synonymous with abandonment of work as the employer-employee relationship is not terminated during the duration of the strike but merely suspended. They also cited the cases of Insular Life Assurance Co. Ltd., Employees Association - NATU v. The Insular Life Assurance Co. Ltd.,[22] and the case of RCPI v. Philippine Communications Electronics & Electricity Worker's Federation,[23] wherein we held that mere failure to report for work after notice to return, does not constitute abandonment nor bar reinstatement.
Moreover, as aptly stated by the NLRC in its decision:Furthermore, as non-compliance with an assumption or certification order is considered as an illegal act committed in the course of a strike, the Ministry of Labor and Employment (now DOLE) is authorize to impose such sanctions as may be provided for by law which may include the hiring of replacements for workers defying the order. In the case of Jackbilt Concrete Block Company, Inc. v. Norton and Harrison Company,[25] it appeared that in an earlier decision the Supreme Court ordered the reinstatement without back wages of the strikers who staged a strike on the good-faith belief that the Company had committed an unfair labor practice. Some of the strikers reported for work and were reinstated. The rest of the strikers listed in the order either ignored or disobeyed said order. Of the strikers who reported for work, some have either not submitted themselves to medical examination as required and did not report back anymore or after having gone through medical examination, did not report back for work, or after reporting back for work did not continue working anymore and the others were found suffering from disease and unfit for work.
"Abandonment of work as a ground to dismiss under Article 282 (b) of the Labor Code should not be confused with abandonment of work under the law on strike, particularly those as provided in Article 263 (g) and Article 264 (a) of the Labor Code. To rule that [t]o constitute abandonment of position, there must be concurrence of the intention to abandon and some overt act from which it may be inferred that the employee concerned has no more interest in working x x x while available as a defense against dismissals under Article 282 of the Labor Code, cannot, however, be validly invoked in dismissals resulting from a striker's defiance of a DOLE Secretary's assumption order so clearly spelled out in Article 263 (g) of the Labor Code, much less as a defense against the ban on strikes after assumption of jurisdiction by x x the Minister of Labor and Employment (Article 264 (a), Labor Code)."[24]
"We are also of the opinion and so hold that the strikers who failed, without proper justification, to report for work assignment despite the issuance of the orders reinstating them to their jobs are deemed to have forfeited their right to reinstatement. Their unexplained failure to request for another period or an extended period within which to comply with the reinstatement orders and report back for work militates against them.In the case at bar, we fully agree with the ruling of the NLRC in declaring that respondents were validly dismissed considering their defiance of the return-to-work order issued by the Secretary of Labor. As a consequence of such defiance, they are considered severed from their employment.
In East Asiatic Company Ltd., et al. vs. CIR, et. al., G.R. No. L-29068, August 31, 1971, 40 SCRA 521, this Court had occasion to rule that the failure to report for work when one had the opportunity to do so waived thereby his right to reinstatement. Because of the apparent lack of interest of the strikers concerned as shown by their failure to report for work without justifiable reason with the petitioner herein, We are constrained to declare them to have forfeited their right to reinstatement."
"Considering the foregoing, the Court RESOLVED to DISMISS the instant petitions and to REMAND them to the Department of Labor and Employment and its pertinent agencies for further proceedings as outlined in this resolution. This action is without prejudice to either or both parties filing an appropriate and concise petition with this Court, if they are so minded after the final administrative determination of the issues has been made."[26]Furthermore, a perusal of our Resolution reveals that the issue of whether or not the forty one (41) respondents should be paid back wages from September, 1986 up to the date of the promulgation of the decision, was not raised therein. Only the determination of factual matters, i.e., whether or not the strike was illegal; the roles played by respondents should the strike be declared illegal; issue of representation and the impossibility of reinstating the 41 respondents by bank, were remanded by this Court to the DOLE.
"In his order dated August 29, 1986, Minister Sanchez ordered reinstatement pending the final outcome of the petition initiated by the Bank to declare the strike illegal. The reinstatement is, therefore, provisional. A permanent reinstatement will depend on the legality or illegality of the strike."As a consequence of the declaration of the illegality of the strike and the upholding of the dismissal of respondents in the NLRC Decision, the factual matters mentioned in our Resolution dated May 4, 1988 have already become moot and academic.
"The sympathy of the Court which, as a rule, is on the side of the laboring classes (Reliance Surety and Insurance Co., Inc. v. NLRC), cannot be extended to the striking union officers and members in the instant petition. There was willful disobedience not only to one but two return-to-work orders. Considering that the UNION consisted mainly of teachers, who are supposed to be well-lettered and well-informed, the court cannot overlook the plain arrogance and pride displayed by the UNION in this labor dispute. Despite containing threats of disciplinary action against some union officers and members who actively participated in the strike, the letter dated 9 November 1990 sent by the COLLEGE enjoining the union officers and members to return to work under the same terms and conditions prior to the strike. Yet, the UNION decided to ignore the same. The COLLEGE, correspondingly, had every right to terminate the services of those who chose to disregard the return-to-work orders issued by respondent SECRETARY in order to protect the interests of its students who form part of the youth of the land."WHEREFORE, the NLRC Decision of May 20, 1994 is AFFIRMED with respect to the finding that private respondents were validly dismissed. However, as to its disposition that the issue of reinstatement and computation of back wages be remanded to the Labor Arbiter, the same, being inconsistent with the finding of valid dismissal, is ANNULLED and SET ASIDE.