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[ESPIRITU SANTO PARISH v. JOSE HABITAN](https://www.lawyerly.ph/juris/view/c3452?user=fbGU2WFpmaitMVEVGZ2lBVW5xZ2RVdz09)
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[ GR No. L-12753, Nov 28, 1959 ]

ESPIRITU SANTO PARISH v. JOSE HABITAN +

DECISION

106 Phil. 614

[ G.R. No. L-12753, November 28, 1959 ]

ESPIRITU SANTO PARISH (ESPIRITU SANTO PAROCHIAL SCHOOL), PETITIONER, VS. JOSE HABITAN AND WORKMEN'S COMPENSATION, RESPONDENTS.

D E C I S I O N

GUTIERREZ DAVID, J.:

This is  a  petition to review on certiorari a decision of the  Workmen's Compensation Commission awarding compensation to respondent Jose Habitan for disability alleged to have resulted from an accident arising  out of and in the  course of employment.  

Respondent Jose Habitan was from February to April 27,  1955 employed as carpenter  in the construction of the Espiritu  Santo  Parochial School  building located at the corner of Rizal Avenue and  Tayuman streets, Manila.  On March 9, 1955, while he was working in said construction, the  scaffold  on which he and another worker were standing  suddenly broke.   Fortunately, Habitan  got hold  of a lower scaffolding, and his co-worker was able to grab and cling to his  right thigh thereby preventing their fall to the  ground  below. They   remained in that precarious position until one of  their  co-workers went to their aid.

Thereafter, respondent Habitan, apparently none the worse for the experience,  proceeded  with  his work.   He  continued working in the construction of the  school building until April 27, 1955  when he  was laid off and paid all his wages.

On November 7, 1955, respondent Habitan, alleging that during the construction of the school building, or on March 9,  1955, he suffered  an "accident injury" referring to the incident above narrated when the  scaffolding on which he was standing  broke which resulted in his  disability to  work,  filed a claim for compensation with, the Workmen's Compensation  Commission  against  the   Espiritu Santo Parochial  School.

On  April 27,  1956, herein petitioner  Espiritu  Santo Parish (Espiritu  Santo Parochial School)  filed  a motion to  dismiss the claim on the grounds that it is  not subject to  the jurisdiction of the Workmen's  Compensation Commission because it is  not engaged  in a trade or occupation for the purpose  of gain but is  a charitable  institution, and that the claim was barred under Sec. 24 of the Workmen's  Compensation  Act, the notice of injury and claim for compensation having been filed  only  on November 4, 1955, or eight months after the accident.  The referee assigned to hear the case, however, denied the motion, and, after  conducting  several  hearings, rendered  a  decision awarding to the claimant the total sum of P1,060.08 as compensation for  temporary total and permanent partial disability.   That  decision,  on appeal,  was affirmed  by Associate  Commissioner  Jose  Sanchez  in his  decision dated April 26, 1957.   And reconsideration of that latter decision having been  denied by the Commission in bane, with the Chairman abstaining, petitioner filed the present petition for review on certiorari, alleging as it did in its motion to  dismiss that the Commission lacked jurisdiction to hear and determine the case as the Espiritu Santo Parochial  School  is  a church property  organized  for religious, educational and charitable purposes, and that the claim is already barred under section 24 of the Workmen's Compensation Act, the notice of injury and claim for compensation not  having been  given  within  the prescribed statutory  period of two  months.

The  Workmen's Compensation Act provides for compensation  or indemnity  for  certain accidents or  illness suffered by workers or  employees engaged in "industrial employment" which,  as  defined in section  39 (d)  of  the Act, "includes all employment or work at a  trade, occupation  or  profession exercised by  an  employer for  the purpose of  gain,  except domestic  service."   Charitable institutions or organizations  not organized for gain  not coming under the general definition are, of course, excepted from the operation of the Act.  (See Quezon Institute, et al. vs. Velasco, 51 Off. Gaz., 6175.)

In the  present case, the record  shows and it is  not disputed that the Espiritu Santo Parochial School is an educational institution which belongs to and  is administered by the  Archdiocese of the Archbishop of Manila through the parish  priest  of the Espiritu  Santo  Church.  The maintenance of the school is  dependent more  on religious and charitable sources than on school fees. As a matter of fact, of  the 2,000 students registered in  said school, about 40 to 50 per cent are not paying their fees because they come from  poor families and  cannot  afford to pay. The respondent Commission,  however, in addition to the above  undisputed facts,  found that the construction of the parochial school building  was financed  by loans from banking institutions  in the  amount of P200,000.00, of which the sum of P130,000.00 was to bear interest; that the loan is to be paid with a monthly amortization of P1,066.00; that the school  operates just like other private schools, charging tuition  fees, library  fees, athletic fees, medical fees, etc., and  that  it paid an income tax of P400.00 for the previous year (1956) to the Government. The Commission also found  that as admitted by herein petitioner there were eighty workers, including the claimant, employed in the construction of the parochial school building and  that  the petitioner's  liability as  employer was insured  with  the Philippine  Guaranty  Company; From  its findings  as  above set forth,  the Commission concluded that the Espiritu Santo Parochial School  is "an educational project operating for gain" and therefore an  employer within the purview of the Workmen's Compensation Act.

Considering the facts on record,  we do not think that the  findings of the  Commission are sufficient to support its  conclusion that  the Espiritu Santo Parochial School- , admittedly an educational institution. is a "project operating  for  gain."  There is  evidence that  the  loan  of P200,000.00 is being paid  more from the church funds of  the Espiritu Santo Parish and donations from the parishioners than  from any  other  source.  The tax of 1%  is  a  requirement upon all private  schools,  and petitioner,  in paying such tax, is just performing its  legal duty.  As to the fact that its liability as an employer was insured, we fail to see how  this could  make petitioner an  institution  organized  for profit subject  to the jurisdiction of the Workmen's Compensation Commission.  If at all, the insurance policy  may be considered as a protection against its possible  liability as an  employer during the  construction of  the  school  building  under the  new Civil Code  or other  laws,  but not  under the Workmen's Compensation Act.   

We believe that as an educational institution, the operation and maintenance of which is largely dependent upon charity, the Espiritu Santo Parochial  School could not have been  created for profit and  is therefore  not an industrial  or  business  organization.  Its   situation  is, similar to that of  San Beda College, University  of  San Agustin,  Cebu Chinese High School and University of Santo  Tomas.  These institutions of learning have already been held by this Court to be not  industrial  or business organizations established for gain.[1] It has also  been held that  the Santo Tomas  University Hospital, the  Quezon Institute, the Philippine National Red Cross and the Boy Scouts of  the Philippines  are  not  industries  organized for profit.[2]  With  greater reason, the Espiritu Santo Parochial School, which-appears to be a church  property, should be  declared  as an institution not established  for gain within the meaning of the Workmen's Compensation Act and consequently not covered by  that  Act.

In  view  of  the  foregoing,  the  decision  of  the Workmen's Compensation Commission complained of is revoked and respondent Jose  Habitan's claim for compensation dismissed.  Without costs.

Bengzon, Padilla, Montemayor, Bautista Angelo, Labrador, and Endencia, JJ., concur,



[1] See University of Sari Agustin vs. CIR, 103 Phil, 926; San Beda College vs. CIR et  al., 97  Phil, 787,  51, Off. Gaz., 5636; Cehu Chinese High  School et al. vs.  Philippine Land-Air-Sea  Labor Union  (PLASLU)  et  al., G.  R.  No. L-12015,  April -22,  1959; University of Santo Tomas vs. Villanueva, etc., et al., Supra, p. 439.

[2] See UST Hospital Association.  Sto. Tomas University Hospital, 95 Phil., 40; Quezon, Institute, et.al. vs. Velasco, 97 Phil.,  905, 51. Off.  Gaz., 6175  Marcelo vs. Philippine National Red Cross, 101 Phil., 544; Boy Scouts of the Philippines vs.  Araos, 102 Phil., 1080.

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