Tax2 Reviewer Notes
Tax2 Reviewer Notes
TRANSFER TAXATION
Transfer Taxes
b)
c)
d)
2.
3.
Benefit-Received Theory
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Law applicable
Estate taxation is governed by the statute in
force at the time of the death of the decedent.
Reciprocity
There is reciprocity if the foreign country of
which the decedent was a citizen or resident at the time
of his death:
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2)
-
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
f)
g)
Note:
The THREE (3) YEAR PRESUMPTION provides that
any transfer of a material part of his property in the
nature of a final disposition or distribution thereof made
by the decedent within three years prior to his death
without such adequate and full consideration shall,
unless shown to the contrary, be deemed to be have been
made in contemplation of death.
This provision, however, has been already deleted in Sec.
100 (b) now sec. 85 (B) of the Tax Code by PD No. 1705.
Under BIR Ruling No. 261 September 2, 1987, the law
does not specify the number of years prior to a
decedents death within which a transfer can be
considered in contemplation of death.
Note: In relation to transfers with retention of rights
which are made in contemplation of death if the right
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B)
Note:
If the power of appointment is general, it makes
the appointed property a part of the donees
property.
Under a general power of appointment, title to
the property is legally transferred to the donee.
Therefore the property shall form part of the gross
estate of the donee.
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5)
-
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Requisites:
a) The expenses must be due to the interment, wake
and burial; hence, expenses on the death
anniversary are not included
b) The expenses must have been shouldered by the
estate and not by other people
2)
Note:
This includes all expenses necessary to settle or
preserve the estate hence, extrajudicial expenses are
included.
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Accommodated Loan
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a.
b.
7) Unpaid Taxes
Unpaid income tax on income due or received
before death of the decedent, and real property
taxes, which have accrued prior to the death of the
decedent (real property taxes accrued at the
beginning of the year but may be paid before or at
the end of each quarter) are deductible.
-
- Rationale:
The deduction operates to ease the harshness of
successive taxation of the same property within a
relatively short period of time.
Requisites for deductibility:
1. The present decedent must have acquired the
property by inheritance or by donation.
2. The property must have been acquired within five
(5) years prior to the death of the present decedent
3. The property must have formed part of the gross
estate of the prior decedent if acquired by inheritance, or
the taxable gift of the donor if acquired by donation.
4. The estate tax or the donors tax, as the case may be,
must have been paid on the previous transfer.
5. The property must be identified as the one received
from the prior decedent or from the donor, as the case
may be.
6. The estate of the prior decedent must not have
previously availed of the vanishing deduction on the
subject property.
Procedure in computing vanishing deductions:
1. Value taken of property previously taxed
Less:Mortgage paid by the present decedent on
property previously mortgaged by prior decedent /
donor, if any (Ist deduction)
= Initial basis
2. Initial basis divided by the value of the gross estate of
present decedent X Expenses, and transfer for public
purpose
=2nddeduction
3. Initial Basis
Less: 2nd deduction
Final Basis
Multiplied by rate deduction (sec.86 (A.2), NIRC)
Vanishing Deduction
C. Transfers For Public Use
- Requisites:
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- Requisites to be deductible:
a. The family home must be the actual residential home
of the decedent and his family at the time of his
death. (Decedent is married and has dependents or is
a head of family with dependents.)
b. Such fact must be certified by the Barangay Captain
of the locality where the family is situated.
c. The total value of the family home must be included
in the gross estate of the decedent.
d. The allowable deduction must be in an amount
equivalent to the current fair market value of the
family home as declared or included in the gross
estate not exceeding
P1, 000,000.
Conjugal
20 M lot
_______
20 M
F. Medical Expenses
- Requisites:
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Deductions
By whom?
An estate tax return under oath is required by
law to be filed by the executor, administrator, or
any of the legal heirs:
a)
b)
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When to file?
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ESTATE TAX
Donation / Gift
- an act of liberality whereby a person disposes
gratuitously of a thing or right in favor of another who
accepts it.
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Parties To A Donation:
1. Donor - the Person who disposes of his property or
right.
2. Donee - the Person who receives the property or right.
Stranger
1.) one who is not a :
(a) brother/sister (whole or half blood), spouse,
ancestor and lineal descendant
(b) relative by consanguinity in the collateral line
within the fourth degree of relationship
2.) donations made between individuals and business
organizations are considered donations to
strangers
3.) donations made between business organizations
are considered donations made to strangers
(RR 2-2003)
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Requisites:
1. The donation must be given on account of
marriage.
2. The parent must give it to his child.
3. The child must be either the legitimate,
recognized natural or legally adopted child of
the donor, and;
4. It must be given before or one year after the
celebration of the marriage.
b.) Gifts made to or for the use of the National
Government or any of its agencies which is not
conducted for profit, or to any political subdivision of
the said government.
c.) Gifts in favor of educational, charitable, religious,
cultural or social welfare corporation, institutions,
foundations, trust or philanthropic organization,
research institution or organization, or accredited nongovernment organization. Provided, that no more than
30% of said gifts shall be used by such donee for
administration purposes.
Note:
paying no dividends.
Note:
Only donations made to non-stock, non-profit
educational institutions are exempt from gift taxes as
although Article 14 of the Constitution states that
proprietary educational institutions may be given the
same privileges subject to a guideline; as a guideline, the
NIRC does not provide for such exemption to them.
2. Gifts made by a Non-Resident Alien
a) Gifts made to or for the use of the National
Government or any entity created by of its
agencies which is not conducted for profit, or to
any political subdivision of the said government.
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Formula:
1. Donors Tax Paid to 1 Foreign Country
D. TAX TREATMENT OF PROPERTIES
TRANSFERRED FOR LESS THAN FULL /
ADEQUATE CONSIDERATION
General Rule: The amount by which the FMV of the
property exceeded the value of the consideration shall
be deemed a gift
Exception: real properties classified as capital assets (not
used in business) as there were already subjected to
Capital Gains Tax
E. TAX TREATMENT OF POLITICAL
CONTRIBUTIONS
- any contribution in cash or in kind to any candidate,
political party or coalition of parties for campaign
purposes shall be governed by the Election Code; hence,
this is not subject to gift tax (report to COMELEC?)
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I. LAW APPLICABLE
J. ADMINISTRATIVE PROVISIONS
H. VALUATION
- the gift tax is based on the fair market value of the gift
at the time it was given
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250,000
_______
250,000
* 30%
75,000
Note: Do not deduct the first 100,000 in case of doneerelatives as this is incorporated already in the table
under Section 99.
General Rule: H and W are considered separate and
distinct taxpayers for purposes of donors tax.
Exception: What was donated is a conjugal property and
only H signed. There is only one donor, without
prejudice to the right of W to question the validity of
the donation without her consent.
PROBLEMS
1. Donations made by X
January 300,000 to his brother
April 400,000 to his sister
August 500,000 to his mother
Compute donors tax:
a) For January donation
= 300,000 * (percentage in the 2 to 15% table) = tax
B.
o n l y t h a t t h e e c o n o m i c b u rd e n i s
shouldered by the buyer.
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Barter
Exchange
Lease
regular course
of business
c.
F.
Tax Credits
Transitional Input Tax Credits (Sec. 111(A),
NIRC, as amended by RA 9337)
b. Presumptive Input Tax Credits (Sec. 111(B),
NIRC, as amended by RA 9337)
a.
B.
C.
Destination Principle
- Goods are destined to be consumed in the
Philippines
2.
Cross-border principle
- Goods going out of the Philippines shall not
be subjected to tax since these goods are not
destined to be consumed in the Phils.
E.
b.
a. Composition Functions
- The Bureau of Internal Revenue shall
have a chief to be known as
Commissioner of Internal Revenue,
hereinafter referred to as the
Commissioner and four (4) assistant
chiefs to be known as Deputy
Commissioners. (Sec. 3, NIRC)
b. Powers and Duties
i. In general
-
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ii. Specific
1. Interpret tax laws and decide
cases (Sec.4, NIRC)
- The power to interpret the provisions
of this Code and other tax laws shall be
under the exclusive and original
jurisdiction of the Commissioner, subject
to review by the Secretary of Finance.
a.
b. What is third-party
verification rule?
- In ascertaining the correctness of any
return, or in making a return when none has
been made, or in determining the liability of
any person for any internal revenue tax, or
in collecting any such liability, or in
evaluating tax compliance, the
Commissioner is authorized to obtain on a
regular basis from any person other than the
person whose internal revenue tax liability
is subject to audit or investigation, or from
any office or officer of the national and local
governments, government agencies and
instrumentalities, including the Bangko
Sentral ng Pilipinas and government-owned
or -controlled corporations, any information
such as, but not limited to, costs and volume
of production, receipts or sales and gross
incomes of taxpayers, and the names,
addresses, and financial statements of
corporations, mutual fund companies,
insurance companies, regional operating
headquarters of multinational companies,
joint accounts, associations, joint ventures of
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Amendment of Returns
b.
c.
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b. power to abate
The BIR may abate or cancel tax liability
when:
b.
a.
i.
2006
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c. Kinds of Assessment
d. Statute of Limitation on Assessment of Internal
Revenue Taxes (Sections 203, 222, NIRC)
General rule (sec203)
Internal revenue taxes shall be assessed within
three years after the last day prescribed for the
filing of the return, and no proceeding in court
without assessment for the collection of sluch
taxes shall begun after the expiration of such
period.
Exceptions (sec.222)
In the case of a false of fraudulent return with
intent to evade tax or of failure to file a return,
the tax collection may be filed without an
assessment at any time within ten years after the
discovery of the falsity, fraud or omission:
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specifies
a period of ten years in case a
fraudulent return with intent to evade was
submitted or in case of failure to file a return.
Also, Section 228 of the same law states that said
assessment may be protested only within thirty
days from receipt thereof. Necessarily, the
taxpayer must be certain that a specific
document constitutes an assessment. Otherwise,
confusion would arise regarding the period
within which t make an assessment or to protest
the same, or whether interest and penalty may
accrue thereon.
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Classification:
1.
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i.
Other Remedies
1.
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CASES:
REPUBLIC V. HIZON, DEC. 13, 1999
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2.
Compromise
CIR may compromise both civil and
criminal liability of the taxpayer.
REQUISITES:
1. The taxpayer have a tax liability
2. There must be an offer by the
taxpayer of an amount to be paid
by the taxpayer
3. There must be an acceptance by the
Commissioner or the taxpayer as
the case may be of the offer in the
settlement of the original claim
Grounds for compromise
1. A reasonable doubt as to the validity of
the claim against the taxpayer exists; or
2. The financial position of the taxpayer
demonstrates a clear inability to pay
the assessed tax
Delinquent accounts
Cases under administrative protest
Cases disputed before the courts
Cases for collection already filed in courts
Criminal violations except those already filed,
and those involving fraud.
1.
2.
Limitations:
1. Minimum compromise rate:
a. 10% of the basic tax assessed in case
of financial incapacity.
b. 40% of basic tax assessed other cases.
2. Subject to approval of the Evaluation Board
a. When basic tax involved exceeds
P1,000,000.00 or
b. Where settlement offered is less than
the prescribed minimum rates.
Delegation of Power to Compromise
General Rule: The power to compromise or abate shall
not be delegated by the commissioner.
Exception:
The Regional Evaluation Board may
compromise the assessment issued by the regional
offices involving basic taxes of P 500,000.00 or less.
Remedy in case of failure to comply:
The CIR may either:
a. Enforce the compromise, or
b. Regard it as rescinded and insists upon the original
demand.
3.
4.
5.
6.
without compensation, in
consequence of a default or offense.
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c.
How enforced:
a. In case of personal property by
seizure and sale or destruction of the
specific forfeited property.
b. In case of real property by a judgment
of condemnation and sale in a legal
action or proceeding, civil or criminal,
as the case may require.
d.
e.
NOTE:
The Register of Deeds is duty bound to transfer
the title of property forfeited to the government
with out necessity of an order from a competent
court.
7. Suspension of Business Operations
8. Enforcement of Administrative Fines
D.
Constructive
Commissioner or his
duly authorized
representative
Revenue District
Officer (RDO)
A m o u n t
Involved
In excess of
P1,000,000.00
P1,000,000.00 or
less
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b.
c.
3.
Levy
personal property
real property
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NOTE:
1. It is the duty of the Register of Deeds concerned
upon registration of the declaration of
forfeiture, to transfer the title to the property
with out of an order from a competent court
2. The remedy of distraint or levy may be
repeated if necessary until the full amount,
including all expenses, is collected.
C. GARNISHMENT
Bank Accounts garnishment
1. Serve warrant upon taxpayer and president, manager,
treasurer or responsible officer of the bank.
2. Bank shall turn over to CIR so much of the bank
accounts as may be sufficient.
E. JUDICIAL REMEDIES IN DETAIL (SEC 220, NIRC)
1. Period within which the action may be filed
Civil and Criminal Actions:
1. B r o u g h t i n t h e n a m e o f t h e
Government of the Philippines.
2. Conducted by Legal Officer of BIR
3. Must be with the approval of the CIR,
in case of action, for recovery of taxes,
or enforcement of a fine, penalty or
forfeiture.
A. CIVIL CASES (SECS 203,222,NIRC)
Three (3)years from the following,
whichever comes later:
3. The last day prescribed by law for
filing the return
4. The day when the return was
actually filed
Ten (10) years after the discovery of the
falsity, fraud or omission in case of:
NOTE:
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Where to file
1) Court of Tax Appeals- on criminal offenses arising
from violations of the NIRC or TCC and other laws
administered by the BIR and the BOC, where the
principal amount of taxes and fees, exclusive of charges
and penalties claimed is P1,000,000.00 and above.
2) RTC, Mun. TC, Metro TC- on criminal offenses arising
from violations of the NIRC or TCC and
other laws administered by the BIR and the BOC, where
the principal amount of taxes and fess
exclusive of charges and penalties claimed is less than
P1,000,000.00 or where there is no specified amount
claimed (Sec 7[b], RA 9282)
CASES:
REPUBLIC V. HIZON, DEC. 13, 1999 (re: approval of
filing of civil and criminal actions)
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a.
b.
c.
d.
Deficiency interest
Delinquency interest
Interest on extended payment
Deficiency interest
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b.
Delegated Power
i. City of San Pablo Laguna vs. Reyes,
March 25, 1999
The power to tax is primarily vested in
Congress. However, in our jurisdiction,
it may be exercised by local legislative
bodies, no longer merely by virtue of a
valid delegation as before, but pursuant
to direct authority conferred by Section
5, Article X of the Constitution. The
important legal effect of Section 5 is that
henceforth, in interpreting statutory
provisions on municipal fiscal powers,
doubts will have to resolved in favor of
municipal corporations.
ii. Meralco vs. Province of Laguna, May 5,
1999
Prefatorily, it might be well to recall
that local governments do not have the
inherent power to tax except to the
extent that such power might be
delegated to them either by the basic
law or by statute.
Presently, under
Article X of the 1987 Constitution, a
general delegation of that power has
been given in favor of local government
units.
The 1987 Constitution has a
counterpart provision in the 1973
Constitution, which did come out with a
similar delegation of revenue making
powers to local governments. Under
the regime of the 1935 Constitution no
similar delegation of tax powers was
provided, and local government units
instead derived their tax powers under
a limited statutory authority. Whereas,
then, the delegation of tax powers
granted at that time by statute to local
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3.
B.
Common Limitations on the Exercise of Local
Taxing Power
1.
2.
xxx
xxx
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c.
Ta x e s , f e e s , o r c h a rg e s f o r t h e
registration of motor vehicles and for
the issuance of all kinds of licenses or
permits for the driving thereof, except
tricycles.
4.
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D.
v. Amusement Tax
As high as 30%
Applies to theaters, cinemas, concert
halls, boxing stadiums, circuses and other
places of amusements.
3.
Municipalities
i. Business permit
ii. Community Taxes
iii. May levy taxes, fees, and charges not
otherwise levied by provinces (Sec. 142)
ADMINISTRATIVE
1)
2)
3)
4)
a.
Seizure
b.
c.
Publication
d.
e.
Procedure of sale
f.
Disposition of proceeds
Levy (Sec. 174 and 176,. LGC)
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b.
2)
3)
c.
OTHER PROVISIONS
Accrual of the tax (Sec. 166, LGC)
Except:
i.
Except:
iii. Unless otherwise provided by the LGC
iv. The Sanggunian concerned may, for a
justifiable reason or cause, extend the time
for payment of such taxes, fees, or charges or
penalties, but only for a period not
exceeding 6 months.
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3.
ADMINISTRATIVE
Appeal to the Secretary of Justice; Re:
newly enacted tax ordinance (Sec. 187,
LGC) Any question on the
constitutionality or legality of tax
ordinances or revenue measures;
Within 30 days from its effectivity.
1.
Drilon vs. Lim, (August 4, 1994) Section 187 authorizes the Secretary of
Justice to review only the
constitutionality or legality of the tax
ordinance and, if warranted, to revoke
it on either or both of these grounds.
When he alters or modifies or sets
aside a tax ordinance, he is not also
permitted to substitute his own
judgment for the judgment of the local
government that enacted the measure.
Secretary Drilon did set aside the
Manila Revenue Code, but he did not
replace it with his own version of
what the Code should be. He did not
pronounce the ordinance unwise or
unreasonable as a basis for its
annulment. He did not say that in his
judgment it was a bad law. What he
found only was that it was illegal. All
he did in reviewing the said measure
was determine if the petitioners were
performing their functions is
accordance with law, that is, with the
prescribed procedure for the
enactment of tax ordinances and the
grant of powers to the city
government under the Local
Government Code. As we see it, that
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the
b.
JUDICIAL
Questioning Tax Sale
A.
Governing Law
C.
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D.
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LGC)
Note:
Incidental exemptions
promulgated prior to 1987 Constitution
meant, primarily used for the purposes
even if not solely.
CASES:
1.
In MIAA v. Paranaque, July 20,
2006, the Court declared the Airport
Lands and Buildings of the Manila
International Airport Authority exempt
from the real estate tax imposed by the
City of Paraaque. The Court declared
void all the real estate tax assessments
issued by the City of Paraaque on the
Airport Lands and Buildings of the
MIAA, except for the portions that the
MIAA has leased to private parties. The
Court based its ruling under Section
2(10) and (13) of the Introductory
Provisions of the Administrative Code,
which governs the legal relation and
status of government units, agencies
and offices within the entire government
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machinery, under which MIAA is a
government instrumentality and not a
government-owned or controlled
corporation. Under Section 133(o) of the
Local Government Code, MIAA as a
government instrumentality is not a
taxable person because it is not subject
to "[t]axes, fees or charges of any kind"
by local governments.
The only
exception is when MIAA leases its real
property to a "taxable person" as
provided in Section 234(a) of the Local
Government Code, in which case the
specific real property leased becomes
subject to real estate tax. Thus, only
portions of the Airport Lands and
Buildings leased to taxable persons like
private parties are subject to real estate
tax by the City of Paraaque.
Under Article 420 of the Civil
Code, the Airport Lands and Buildings
of MIAA, being devoted to public use,
are properties of public dominion and
thus owned by the State or the Republic
of the Philippines. Article 420
specifically mentions "ports x x x
constructed by the State," which
includes public airports and seaports, as
properties of public dominion and
owned by the Republic. As properties of
public dominion owned by the
Republic, there is no doubt that the
Airport Lands and Buildings are
expressly exempt from real estate tax
under Section 234(a) of the Local
Government Code.
Furthermore, the Court made a
distinction between a GOCC and an
instrumentality. Thus:
Government-owned or controlled
corporation refers to any agency
organized as a stock or non-stock
corporation, vested with functions
relating to public needs whether
governmental or proprietary in nature,
and owned by the Government directly
or through its instrumentalities either
wholly, or, where applicable as in the
case of stock corporations, to the extent
of at least fifty-one (51) percent of its
capital stock: x x x
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Under the 1973 and 1987
Constitutions and Rep. Act No. 7160 in
order to be entitled to the exemption,
the petitioner is burdened to prove, by
clear and unequivocal proof, that (a) it is
a charitable institution; and (b) its real
properties are ACTUALLY, DIRECTLY
and EXCLUSIVELY used for charitable
purposes. "Exclusive" is defined as
possessed and enjoyed to the exclusion
of others; debarred from participation or
enjoyment; and "exclusively" is defined,
"in a manner to exclude; as enjoying a
privilege exclusively." If real property is
used for one or more commercial
purposes, it is not exclusively used for
the exempted purposes but is subject to
taxation. The words "dominant use" or
"principal use" cannot be substituted for
the words "used exclusively" without
doing violence to the Constitutions and
the law. Solely is synonymous with
exclusively.
What is meant by actual, direct
and exclusive use of the property for
charitable purposes is the direct and
immediate and actual application of the
property itself to the purposes for which
the charitable institution is organized. It
is not the use of the income from the real
property that is determinative of
whether the property is used for taxexempt purposes.
The petitioner failed to
discharge its burden to prove that the
entirety of its real property is actually,
directly and exclusively used for
charitable purposes. While portions of
the hospital are used for the treatment of
patients and the dispensation of medical
services to them, whether paying or
non-paying, other portions thereof are
being leased to private individuals for
their clinics and a canteen. Further, a
portion of the land is being leased to a
private individual for her business
enterprise under the business name
"Elliptical Orchids and Garden Center."
Accordingly, the Court held that
the portions of the land leased to private
entities as well as those parts of the
hospital leased to private individuals
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property is
exempt due to
Use (RECreligious,
educational,
charitable)
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Pxxx
a.
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2. Valuation by Assessors
Assessment
- the act or process of determining the value of a
property, or proportion thereof subject to tax, including
the discovery, listing, classification, and appraisal of
properties.
Appraisal
- the act or process of determining the value of property
as of a specific date for a specific purpose.
For Land
1. Assessor of the province/city or municipality may
summon the owners of the properties to be affected and
may take depositions concerning the property, its
ownership amount, nature and value. (sec. 213,LGC)
2. Assessor prepares a schedule of FMV for different
classes of properties.
3. Sanggunian enacts an ordinance.
4. The schedule of FMV is published in a newspaper of
general circulation in the province city or municipality
concerned or in the absence thereof shall be posted in
the provincial capitol city or municipal hall places
therein (Sec. 212, LGC)
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