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Home Opinion

Pinoy Marino Rights – 2022 Bar exam question on seafarer’s disability benefits claims

Dennis Gorecho by Dennis Gorecho
November 29, 2022
in Opinion
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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CAN a seafarer be entitled to compensation for disability benefits if he has finished his employment contract?

This is one of the questions included in the 2022 Bar Examinations for Labor  Law and Social Legislations.

Marino, a seafarer, was engaged as an oiler on board Searena Corp.’s oil tanker vessel. After ten consecutive contracts, with each contract having a duration of eight months and the last one ending in December 2021, Marino decided it was time to enjoy his hard-earned money, and disembarked from the vessel upon the expiration of his employment contract.

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In April 2022, he felt excruciating pain in his groin. He went to a doctor and was diagnosed with an acute hernia. The doctor also determined that the hernia was caused by repeated heavy lifting because of his work as an oiler.

Marino then filed a case against Searena Corp. before the Labor Arbiter, claiming total and permanent disability under the POEA  contract.

Searena Corp. raised in its position paper that Marino is barred from filing the case as he did not raise any complaints during the term of his employment, and within three days from his arrival in the country after his last employment.

Entitlement of seafarers to disability benefits is a matter governed, not only by medical findings, but by law and by contract.

The claim for disability benefits is coterminous with the existence of the contract seafarers sign every time they are rehired and is terminated when the contract expires.

The contract commences from the time when the seafarer actually departs from the Philippines, either airport or seaport, for employment. It shall cease when he completes his period of contractual service aboard the ship, signs off from the ship and arrives at the point of hire.

As a general rule, the seafarer’s  condition or symptoms must be documented while he is on board the vessel since one of the requirements for an illness to be compensable is that the seafarer suffered said illness during the effectivity of the POEA contract.

Otherwise, his claim for benefits might be denied due to failure to prove that said illness occurred while his contract was still in force.

However, the Supreme Court ruled in Ventis Maritime Corp. v. Salenga (GR. No. 238578, June 8, 2020) that the seafarer may still claim disability benefits even if his illnesses manifested or were discovered after the term of the contract.

The Court noted that In instances where the illness manifests itself or is discovered after the term of the seafarer’s contract, the illness may either be (I) an occupational illness listed under Section 32-A of the POEA contract, in which case, it is categorized as a work-related illness if it complies with the conditions stated in Section 32-A, or (2) an illness not listed as an occupational illness under Section 32-A but is reasonably linked to the work of the seafarer.

A seafarer who was repatriated for end of contract and had no medical condition during his employment but later suffers from an illness which manifested only after the end of his employment can still be entitled to disability benefits, provided he can prove that the illness suffered is reasonably linked to the work performed on board.

On the other hand, failure to  comply with the mandatory three working-day reporting requirement will cause the denial of claims with some exceptions i.e., when the seafarer  is physically incapacitated from complying with the requirement  (Wallem, Inc. vs Inductivo, 376 Phil. 738) or due to inadvertence / deliberate refusal of the employer to refer the seafarer to a company-designated physician (Interorient Maritime Enterprises, Inc. vs Leonora S. Remo, 622 SCRA 237).

This requirement, whether to undergo a post-employment medical examination or report the seafarer’s physical incapacity, must be strictly observed so that the company-designated physician can identify whether the illness or injury was contracted during the term of the seafarer’s employment or that his working conditions increased the risk of contracting the ailment. ( Dela Cruz vs PTC, 758 Phil. 382,394-395).

Just like the 2020-2021 Bar Exams which is not dependent on penmanship, this year’s exams were done digitally where  9,183 out of the 10,006 total examinees were able to complete the  examinations held on two Wednesdays ( November 9 and 16) and two Sundays (November 13 and 20).

Headed by Associate Justice Alfredo Benjamin Caguioa, the simultaneous digital and regionalized bar exams were administered at fourteen (14) local testing centers nationwide with  eight in Luzon, three in Visayas and three in Mindanao.

A total of 8,241 examinees out of the 11,402 takers passed the 2020/2021 bar exams with a  passing rate of 72.28% with my UPLaw professor SC Associate Justice Marvic Leonen as chairman. 

 

( Atty. Dennis R. Gorecho heads the seafarers’ division of the Sapalo Velez Bundang Bulilan law offices. For comments, e-mail info@sapalovelez.com, or call 0917-5025808 or 0908-8665786.)

 

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Dennis Gorecho

Dennis Gorecho

ATTY. DENNIS R. GORECHO had two of Eraserheads band members as his roommates while studying at the University of the Philippines Diliman. He was a staff photographer of the UP Collegian and wrote for the Manila-based newspaper Today. He was admitted to the bar in 1999 after which he joined the Sapalo Velez Bundang Bulilan (SVBB) Law Office where he is now a junior partner and heads the seafarers’ division.

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