This case has been cited 2 times or more.
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2009-03-24 |
AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ, J. |
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| et al.[103] 12 months 4 months 8 months 8 months Philippine Transmarine v. Carilla[104] 12 months 6 months and 22 days 5 months and | |||||
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2006-07-12 |
AUSTRIA-MARTINEZ, J. |
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| Substantial evidence is defined as that amount of relevant evidence which a reasonable mind might accept as adequate to justify a conclusion.[19] As all three tribunals found, the Report cannot be given any weight or credibility because it is uncorroborated, based purely on hearsay, and obviously merely an afterthought. While rules of evidence are not strictly observed in proceedings before administrative bodies,[20] petitioner should have offered additional proof to corroborate the statements described therein. Thus, in Ranises v. National Labor Relations Commission,[21] involving a seafarer who was repatriated to the Philippines for allegedly committing illegal acts amounting to a breach of trust, as based on a telex dispatch by the Master of the M/V Southern Laurel, the Court rejected the weight given by the NLRC on the telex, to wit:Unfortunately, the veracity of the allegations contained in the aforecited telex was never proven by respondent employer. Neither was it shown that respondent employer exerted any effort to even verify the truthfulness of Capt. Sonoda's report and establish petitioner's culpability for his alleged illegal acts. Worse, no other evidence was submitted to corroborate the charges against petitioner. | |||||