Tang Ho Vs The Board of Tax Appeals

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 2

Tang Ho vs The Board of Tax Appeals

G.R. No. L-5949, 19 November1955, EN BANC (Reyes, J.B.L, J.)

Facts:

Petitioners Li Seng Giap (who died during the pendency of this appeal) and his wife Tang Ho and their
thirteen children appear to be the stockholder of two close family corporations named Li Seng Giap &
Sons, Inc. and Li Seng Giap & Co. On or about May, 1951, examiners of the Bureau of Internal Revenue
made an examination of the books of the two corporation aforementioned and found that each of Li Seng
Giap's 13 children had a total investment therein of approximately P63,195.00, in shares issued to them
by their father Li Seng Giap.

The Collector of Internal Revenue regarded these transfers as undeclared gifts made in the respective
years, and assessed against Li Seng Giap and his children donor's and donee's taxes in the total amount
of P76,995.31. The petitioners paid the sum of P53,434.50, representing the amount of the basic taxes,
and put up a surety bond to guarantee payment of the balance demanded.

The petitioners also alleged that the children's stockholding in the two family corporations were
purchased by them with savings from the aforesaid cash donations received from their parents.

Claiming the benefit of gift tax exemptions (under section 110 and 112 of the Internal Revenue Code) at
the rate of P2000 a year for each donation, plus P10,000 for each gift propter nuptias made by either
parent, and appellants' aggregate tax liability, according to their returns, would only be P4,599.94 for the
year 1949, and P228,28 for the year 1950, or a total of P4,838.22

The Collector refused to revise his original assessments; and the petitioners appealed to the then Board
of Tax Appeals. The Board of Tax Appeals upheld the decision of the respondent Collector of Internal
Revenue; hence, this petition for review.

Issue: 1st issue: Whether or not the dates and amounts of the donations taxable against petitioners were
as found by the Collector of Internal Revenue from the books of the corporations Li Seng Giap & Sons,
Inc. and Li Seng Giap & Co., or as set forth in petitioners' gift tax returns?

2nd issue: Whether or not the donations made by petitioner Li Seng Giap to his children from the conjugal
property should be taxed against the husband alone, or against husband and wife

Held:

1st Issue: There is no sufficient evidence on record to support the findings of the Tax Board that
the stock transfers above indicated were made by way of donation, as would entitle us to
disregard or reverse the Board's finding.

The filing of the gift tax returns only after assessments and part payment of the taxes demanded by the
Collector, and the lack of corroboration of the alleged donations in cash, amply justify the Tax Board's
distrust of the veracity of the appellants' belated tax returns "on or before the first of March following the
close of the calendar year" when the gifts were made (Sec. 115, par. [c]; and besides the return a written
notice to the Collector of each donation of P10,000 or more, must be given within thirty days after the
donation, Sec. 114). These yearly returns and notices are evidently designed to enable the Collector to
verify promptly their truth and correctness, while the gifts are still recent and proof of the circumstances
surrounding the making thereof is still fresh and accessible. On their own admission, appellants failed to
file for ten successive years, the corresponding returns for the alleged yearly gifts of P4,000 to each child,
and likewise failed to give the notices for the P20,000 marriage gifts to each married child. Hence, they
are now scarcely in a position to complain if their contentions are not accepted as truthful without
satisfactory corroboration. Any other view would leave the collection of taxes at the mercy of
explanations concocted ex post facto by evading taxpayers, drafted to suit any facts disclosed upon
investigation, and safe from contradiction because the passing years have erased all trace of the truth.

2nd Issue:

Appellants have not only failed to prove that the donations were actually made by both spouses, Li Seng
Giap and Tang Ho, but that precisely the contrary appears from their own evidence. In the original claim
for tax refund, filed with the Collector of Internal Revenue, under date of June 25, 1951 (copied in pages
6 and 7 of the appellants' petition for review addressed to the Board of Tax Appeals), the father, Li Seng
Giap, describes himself as "the undersigned donor" (par. 1) and speaks of "cash donations made by the
undersigned" (par. 3), without in any way mentioning his wife as a co-participant in the donation.

You might also like