Source: http://lawlibrary.chanrobles.com/index.php?option=com_content&amp;view=article&amp;id=28748:g-r-no-l-33493-august-18,-1988-kapisanan-ng-manggagawa-sa-manila-railroad-v-gregorio-fajardo&amp;catid=1240&amp;Itemid=566
Timestamp: 2019-04-19 09:02:45+00:00

Document:
KAPISANAN NG MANGGAGAWA SA MANILA RAILROAD CO., Petitioner, v. ATTY. GREGORIO FAJARDO & THE COURT OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS, Respondents.
J.C. Espinas & Associates for Petitioner.
Gregorio E. Fajardo for and in his own behalf and for respondent Rafael Hernandez.
1.	LABOR LAW; COURT OF INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS; ATTORNEY’S FEES; SHOULD BE AWARDED BY EMPLOYEES WHO BENEFITTED FROM COUNSEL’S SERVICES. — There is no gainsaying Attorney Fajardo’s right to be paid reasonable fees by all the members of the union who benefitted from his services. The rule was enunciated in Union de Empleados de Trenes v. Kapisanan Ng Mga Manggagawa sa MRRCO, L-14762, Dec. 20, 1961 that lawyers who represent members of the Union to secure benefits for all the employees, should be paid corresponding fees by all those favored or benefitted by the award secured by them.
2.	ID.; ID.; ID.; LIMITED TO 10% OF AMOUNT AWARDED. — We hold that the 25% fee fixed by the Court of Industrial Relations was excessive. Section 11, Rule VIII, Book III of the Omnibus Rules Implementing the Labor Code fixes the attorney’s fees in judicial and administrative proceedings at 10% of the amount awarded (Galvadores v. Trajano, 144 SCRA 138; Halili v. CIR, 136 SCRA 112; Pacific Banking Corporation v. Clave, 128 SCRA 110). This is the same percentage allowed by law to lawyers prosecuting workmen’s compensation cases that reach the appellate court.
"As to the claim of Attorney Gregorio E. Fajardo for his attorney’s fee or lien of P83,905.65 representing twenty-five per centum (25%) of the total refundable amount of P335,622.61, respondent Kapisanan Ng Mga Manggagawa sa Manila Railroad Company claims that said fee or lien is based only upon the amount that may be due to the four hundred (400) complainants and not upon the amount that may be due to the entire membership of respondent Kapisanan which is not represented by Atty. Gregorio E. Fajardo in the instant case. We find no merit in this pretense.
"It cannot be disputed and/or denied that all members of respondent Kapisanan who were collected and/or assessed in the amount of five pesos (P5.00) monthly for gratuities of retired and deceased members from July, 1960 through 1962 without their consent and in violation of their constitution and by-laws were benefited by the decision or award requiring said respondent Kapisanan to refund to its members the additional fees it had been collecting from them since the increased dues were made effective until stoppage. Hence, Atty. Gregorio E. Fajardo who represented the struggling members of respondent Kapisanan to secure the refund of said additional collection of five pesos (P5.00) monthly should be paid the corresponding fee by all members who were favored and /or benefited by the decision or award secured by said four hundred (400) complainants in the instant case (see Rufino Martinez, Et. Al. v. Union de Maquinistas, Fogoneros y Motormen, Et Al., G.R. Nos. L-19455-56, January 30, 1967). And considering the efforts exerted by Attorney Gregorio E. Fajardo in the success of this litigation in securing the abovementioned decision or award not only in this Court but also in the Supreme Court, an attorney’s fee or lien of twenty-five per centum (25%) of the total refundable amount to the members of respondent Kapisanan is, to our mind, fair and reasonable.
Respondent Kapisanan Ng Manggagawa filed a Motion for Partial Reconsideration of the order dated January 4, 1971 on the ground that Attorney Fajardo is entitled to claim attorney’s fees from the 400 complainants only who signed the complaint but not from the other union members who did not sign the complaint, because there was no lawyer-client relationship between them and Attorney Fajardo.
Attorney Fajardo opposed the motion for reconsideration. He argued that all members of the respondent union who will benefit from the decision in G.R. No. 19791, regardless of whether they signed the complaint or not, should pay his attorney’s fees. No distinction should be made between those who signed the petition and those who did not because under Section 17 of Republic Act 875, a complaint against the union by its members has to be signed by only 10% of the membership.
There is no gainsaying Attorney Fajardo’s right to be paid reasonable fees by all the members of the union who benefitted from his services. The rule was enunciated in Union de Empleados de Trenes v. Kapisanan Ng Mga Manggagawa sa MRRCO, L-14762, Dec. 20, 1961 that lawyers who represent members of the Union to secure benefits for all the employees, should be paid corresponding fees by all those favored or benefitted by the award secured by them.
Narvasa, Cruz and Medialdea, JJ., concur.

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