Seafarers
are considered contractual employees. Their employment is governed by the Standard
Employment Contract (SEC) they sign and duly approved by
the Philippine Overseas Employment Administration (POEA) every time they are rehired and their employment is
terminated when the contract expires.
Their
employment is contractually fixed for a certain period of time. For
the seafarers mental and physical health, they need a break after “long periods
away from home, limited communication and consistently high work loads.”
As a
general rule, the period of employment shall be for a period mutually agreed
upon by the seafarer and the employer but not to exceed 12 months. The Maritime
Labor Convention 0f 2006 (MLC2006) prescribes
that the seafarer has the right to be repatriated within a contract period of
less than 12 months.
The commencement of the contract is from the
time when the contracted seafarer actually departs from Philippine, either
airport or seaport, for employment. It shall
cease when the seafarer completes his period of contractual service aboard the
ship, signs-off from the ship and arrives at the point of hire.
The POEA
contract requires the seafarer to arrive at the point of hire as it signifies
the completion of the employment contract, and not merely its expiration.
Similarly, a
seafarer’s employment contract is terminated even before the contract expires
as soon as he arrives at the point of hire and signs off for medical reasons,
due to shipwreck, voluntary resignation or for other just causes.
There
are instances that the employment is not terminated as set in the contract but becomes a subject of
extension.
Usually extension of contract period are not
encouraged due to factors such as fatigue, complacency and other health reasons
and same may not be accepted if relief is already lined up. Extension request must always be documented duly signed.
Any
extension of the contract can be voluntary or compulsory
1.
Voluntary if the extension is with the mutual consent of both
parties.
2.
Compulsory until the ship’s
arrival at a convenient port and/ or after arrival of the
replacement crew provided that, in any case, the continuance of such service
shall not exceed three months.
In
the absence of a new document or POEA contract, as long as the seafarer has not
yet arrived at the point of hire, it is legally presumed that the
original contract is still subsisting. If a seafarer keeps working for the same
employer for a period longer than the agreed period, any subsequent working period that exceeds
this period of time is to be considered extension of the contract.
The seafarer is entitled to be
paid his wages and other benefits after
the expiration of his contract and during the
extended period until the vessel's arrival at a convenient port. The obligations and liabilities of the local
agency and its foreign principal do not end upon the expiration of the
contracted period as they were duty bound to repatriate the seaman to the point
of hire to effectively terminate the contract of employment. (Interorient
Maritime Enterprises, Inc. v. NLRC,330 Phil. 493)
If he suffers from an illness
or accident or he dies during the extended period, the same benefits from his
original contract will be applicable.
However, there was no implied renewal of contract if the
seafarer was allowed to stay after the termination of his contract. The
extension was due to the fact that the ship was still at sea and the late disembarkation was not without valid
reason. The company could not have disembarked the seafarer on the date of the
termination of his employment contract, because the vessel was still in the
middle of the sea (Unica vs. Anscor Swire Ship Management Corporation ;
G.R. No. 184318; February 12, 2014)
(Atty. Gorecho heads the seafarers’ division of the Sapalo Velez Bundang Bulilan law offices. For comments, email info@sapalovelez.com, or call 09175025808 or 09088665786)
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