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[CEBU PORTLAND CEMENT COMPANY v. MAXIMO J. SAVELLANO](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c3018?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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105 Phil. 856

[ G.R. No. L-10781, May 29, 1959 ]

CEBU PORTLAND CEMENT COMPANY, PETITIONER, VS. MAXIMO J. SAVELLANO (SR.) AND COURT OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS, RESPONDENTS.

D E C I S I O N

REYES, A., J.:

This is a petition to  review on certiorari a decision of the Court of  Industrial Relations.

The record-shows that the herein respondent Maximo J. Savellano Sr.  was an  employee of the Cebu  Portland Cement  Co. who, together with some  81  others,  were dismissed from the service of the company on November 16, 1950.  Claiming that their layoff was illegal, Savellano and the  81 others  filed a petition with  the Court of Industrial  Relations on March  24,  1952, asking that  they be reinstated with  backpay, the petition being signed by Savellano "In  his own  behalf and as Attorney for  Petitioners."  The company opposed the petition but the court, after  trial, ordered the reinstatement of  Savellano and five of the others, with backpay from the day they  were dismissed, minus such amounts  as  they  may have  earned elsewhere during the period  of their unjustified  lay-off.

After  the   order had become  final,  Savellano's  son Maximo Savellano Jr., as counsel for his father and the five other awardees, filed a  motion for the immediate payment  of the authorized  backpays  "after deducting therefrom", so says  the motion,  "the  twenty per  cent (20%)  attorney's fees  to be paid to Maximo Savellano Jr., with the exception of the back salaries due Savellano Sr., which may be given to him without deduction."  The company opposed the motion  in so much as it asked for the payment of Savellano Sr/s backpay without deduction, contending that Savellano Sr/s fee for acting as attorney for the other  awardees should,  in accordance with the order, be deducted from his backpay.  But  after hearing, the court granted the motion, having found that Savellano Sr.  was not to  receive  any fee from his co-petitioners and that, on the other hand,  it  was his son  Savellano Jr. who appeared to have  actively prosecuted the case for all of them and with whom they had a contract concerning:  attorney's fees. Reconsideration  of  this  ruling having been denied, the company elevated the  case here for review  on certiorari.

The basic question for determination is whether  deduction should be made for the attorney's fees  which petitioner company believes  Savellano  Sr. was  entitled  to receive as counsel for the  five other petitioners  who were ordered reinstated. There is no proof that Savellano  Sr. has actually  received any attorney's  fees  from his  copetitioners while, on the other hand, the lower court found that no fee was due him, that it was his son Who actually prosecuted the case for all the petitioners and that  it was also with his son that they had a contract for the payment of fees.  The company contends that there is  no proof to  support  this finding.   But the  record discloses that such a contract was actually entered  into and was even filed  in court  as  a  supporting document  when Savellano Jr. registered his  attorney's lien  in  the case. It does not appear that the company has objected  to  the registration of said lien  on the ground that Savellano  Jr. was not entitled to any fee.  And  while it is  true that Savellano Sr. has intervened in the case as attorney  for himself and his five co-awardees, it does not necessarily follow that he has received any fee for such intervention, for, as the lower court found, he was at that  time secretary-treasurer  (a high-salaried position) of the  Manila Hotel, a government corporation,  and could not, for that reason, engage in private legal  practice. Savellano Jr., it is true, was not admitted to the Bar until 1954; but there seems to be no question that it was he who had actively prosecuted the case both before and after that  year, and that was why the awardees agreed to pay  the fees  to him.

The point is also made that the lower court, without hearing the company's counsel in oral  argument as requested, denied reconsideration of the order not to deduct,   from Savellano Sr/s backpay, the  fee which the company believed was due him from his co-awardees.  But, as the lower  court rightly says, the motion for reconsideration was denied after the company had failed to file written argument in support thereof within the ten days required  by  the court's rules.  Moreover, considering the view we  have taken of the case on the  merits, we are persuaded that no real prejudice was  caused by  the  fact that no 5 oral argument was allowed.

The petition being clearly without merit, the order complained of is affirmed, with costs against the petitioner.

Paras,  C.J.,  Bengzon,  Montemayor,  Bautista Angelo, Labrador, Concepcion, and Endencia, JJ., concur.

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