This document is a Supreme Court of the Philippines case regarding a tax collection dispute between the Republic of the Philippines and Ker & Company, Ltd. The key details are:
1) Ker & Company filed income tax returns for 1947-1950 and the Bureau of Internal Revenue later assessed deficiencies for those years.
2) The Republic sued to collect the deficiencies. Ker & Company argued the collection was barred by prescription.
3) The Supreme Court ruled that the collection claim for 1947 was barred by prescription, but that Ker & Company must pay the deficiencies for 1948-1950 plus surcharges and interest.
This document is a Supreme Court of the Philippines case regarding a tax collection dispute between the Republic of the Philippines and Ker & Company, Ltd. The key details are:
1) Ker & Company filed income tax returns for 1947-1950 and the Bureau of Internal Revenue later assessed deficiencies for those years.
2) The Republic sued to collect the deficiencies. Ker & Company argued the collection was barred by prescription.
3) The Supreme Court ruled that the collection claim for 1947 was barred by prescription, but that Ker & Company must pay the deficiencies for 1948-1950 plus surcharges and interest.
This document is a Supreme Court of the Philippines case regarding a tax collection dispute between the Republic of the Philippines and Ker & Company, Ltd. The key details are:
1) Ker & Company filed income tax returns for 1947-1950 and the Bureau of Internal Revenue later assessed deficiencies for those years.
2) The Republic sued to collect the deficiencies. Ker & Company argued the collection was barred by prescription.
3) The Supreme Court ruled that the collection claim for 1947 was barred by prescription, but that Ker & Company must pay the deficiencies for 1948-1950 plus surcharges and interest.
This document is a Supreme Court of the Philippines case regarding a tax collection dispute between the Republic of the Philippines and Ker & Company, Ltd. The key details are:
1) Ker & Company filed income tax returns for 1947-1950 and the Bureau of Internal Revenue later assessed deficiencies for those years.
2) The Republic sued to collect the deficiencies. Ker & Company argued the collection was barred by prescription.
3) The Supreme Court ruled that the collection claim for 1947 was barred by prescription, but that Ker & Company must pay the deficiencies for 1948-1950 plus surcharges and interest.
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Republic of the Philippines Same: When defects of summons were cured by filing of
SUPREME COURT answer.—Defects of summons are cured by voluntary
Manila appearance and by the filing of an answer to the complaint. (Ramos vs. Mañalac, 89 Phil. 270). A defendant can not be EN BANC permitted to speculate upon the judgment of the court by objecting to the court's jurisdiction over its person if the judgment G.R. No. L-21609 September 29, 1966 is adverse to it, and acceding to jurisdiction over its person if and when the judgment sustains its defenses. REPUBLIC OF THE PHILIPPINES, plaintiff-appellant, vs. Taxation; Deficiency income tax; Prescription of actions; Degree KER & COMPANY, LTD., defendant-appellant. of proof required to establish fraud.—Fraud is a question of fact (Gutierrez vs. Court of Tax Appeals, 101 Phil. 713) which must Office of the Solicitor General for plaintiff-appellant. be alleged and proved (Section 12, Rule 15 [now Section 5, Rule Leido, Andrada, Perez and Associates for defendant-appellant. 8], Rules of Court). It is a serious charge and, to be sustained, it must be supported by clear and convincing proof (Collector of Internal Revenue vs. Benipayo, L-13656, January 31, 1962). In Summons; Service upon counsel of a domestic corporation is the instant case the filing by the taxpayer of a false return was valid.—Section 13, Rule 7, (now Section 13, Rule 14) of the. neither alleged in the complaint nor proved in court. Hence, the Rules of Court provides that service of summons upon a domestic lower court correctly resolved the issue of prescription without corporation may be made on its agent. In the case at bar, when touching upon fraudulence of the return. defendant corporation's counsel in the administrative stage of the present tax case received the summons, they were still acting for Same; Failure to object to the setting up of defense of and in behalf of defendant in connection with its tax liability prescription.—The assessment for deficiency income tax for involved in the case. Perforce, they were the taxpayer's agent, 1947 has become final and executory, and, therefore, defendant and under the aforecited rule service upon them is sufficient. may not anymore raise defenses which go into the merits of the assessment, i.e., prescription of the Commissioner's right to Same; Pleading and practice; Jurisdiction; Effect of voluntary assess the tax. (Republic of the Philippines vs. Albert, L-12996, submission to jurisdiction of court.—In interposing, in its motion to dismiss, prescription of plaintiff's cause of action, defendant December 28, 1961; Republic of the Philippines vs. Lim Tian availed of an affirmative defense on the basis of which it prayed Teng Sons ,& Co., Inc., L-21731, March 31, 1966). However, the court to resolve the controversy in its favor. For the court to defendant raised the defense of prescription in the proceedings validly decide the said plea, it necessarily had to acquire below, and the Republic of the Philippines, instead of questioning jurisdiction upon the latter's person, which, being the proponent the right of the defendant to raise such defense, litigated on it and of the affirmative defense, should be deemed to have abandoned submitted the issue for resolution of the court. By its actuation, its special appearance and voluntarily submitted itself to the the government should be considered to have waived its right to jurisdiction of the court. (Flores vs. Zurbito, 37 Phil. 746; Menghra object to the setting up of such defense. vs. Tarachand and Rewachand, 67 Phil. 286). Same; Suspension of prescriptive period; Effect of pendency of appeal.—Under Section 333 of the Tax Code the running of the prescriptive period to collect deficiency taxes shall be suspended It amended its income tax returns for 1948 and 1949 on May 11, for the period during which the Commissioner of Internal Revenue 1949 and June 30, 1950, respectively. is prohibited from beginning a distraint and levy or instituting a proceeding in court, and for sixty days thereafter. In the case at In 1953 the Bureau of Internal Revenue examined and audited bar, the pendency of the taxpayer's appeal in the Court of Tax Ker & Co., Ltd.'s returns and books of accounts and Appeals and in the Supreme Court had the effect of temporarily subsequently issued the following assessments for deficiency staying the hands of the said Commissioner. If the taxpayer's income tax: stand that the pendency of the appeal did not stop the running of the period because the Court of Tax Appeals did not have Year Amount Date Assessed jurisdiction over the case is upheld, taxpayers would be 1947 P42,342.30 July 25, 1953 encouraged to delay the payment of taxes in the hope of ultimately avoiding the same. Under the circumstances, the 1948 18,651.87 Feb. 16, 1953 running of the prescriptive period was suspended. 1949 139.67 Feb. 16, 1953 1950 12,813.00 Feb. 16, 1953 Same; Accrual of delinquency interest.—Where the letter of assessment shows that the deficiency income tax for 1948 and due and payable on dates indicated in the accompanying 1949 became due on March 15, 1953 and that for 1950 accrued notices of assessment. The assessments for 1948 and 1950 on February 15, 1954 and the tax in question remained unpaid, carried the surcharge of 50% authorized under Section 72 of the the delinquency interest accrued and became due starting from Tax Code for the filing of fraudulent returns. said due dates. Upon request of Ker & Co., Ltd., through Atty. Jose Leido, its Republic vs. Ker ,& Company, Ltd., 18 SCRA 207, No. L-21609 counsel, the Bureau of Internal Revenue reduced the September 29, 1966 assessments for the year 1947 from P42,342.30 to P27,026.28 and for the year 1950 from P12,813.00 to P8,542.00, imposed BENGZON, J.P., J.: the 50% surcharge for the year 1947 and eliminated the same surcharge from the assessment for the year 1950. The Ker & Co., Ltd., a domestic corporation, filed its income tax assessments for years 1948 and 1949 remained the same. returns for the years 1947, 1948, 1949 and 1950 on the following dates: On March 1, 1956 Ker & Co., Ltd. filed with the Court of Tax Appeals a petition for review with preliminary injunction. No Year Date Filed preliminary injunction was issued, for said court dismissed the 1947 April 12, 1948 appeal for having been instituted beyond the 30-day period 1948 April 30, 1949 provided for in Section 11 of Republic Act 1125. We affirmed the order of dismissal of L-12396. 1 1949 May 15, 1950 1950 May 9, 1951 On March 15, 1962, the Bureau of Internal Revenue demanded payment of the aforesaid assessments together with a surcharge of 5% for late payment and interest at the rate of 1% monthly. Ker & Co., Ltd. refused to pay, instead in its letters WHEREFORE, this Court dismisses the claim for the dated March 28, 1962 and April 10, 1962 it set up the defense of collection of deficiency income taxes for 1947, but orders prescription of the Commissioner's right to collect the tax. defendant taxpayer to pay the deficiency income taxes Subsequently, the Republic of the Philippines filed on March 27, for 1948, 1949 and 1950, in the amounts of P18,651.87, 1962 a complaint with the Court of First Instance of Manila P139.67 and P8,542.00, respectively, plus 5% surcharge seeking collection of the aforesaid deficiency income tax for the thereon on each amount and interest of 1% a month years 1947, 1948, 1949 and 1950. The complaint did not allege computed from March 27, 1962 and until full payment fraud in the filing of any of the income tax returns for the years thereof is made, plus the costs of suit. involved, nor did it pray for the payment of the corresponding 50% surcharge, but it prayed for the payment of 5% surcharge On February 20, 1963 the Republic of the Philippines filed a for late payment and interest of 1% per month without however motion for reconsideration contending that the right of the specifying from what date interest started to accrue. Commissioner of Internal Revenue to collect the deficiency assessment for 1947 has not prescribed by a lapse of merely Summons was served not on the defendant taxpayer but upon five years and three months, because the taxpayer's income tax Messrs. Leido and Associates, its counsel in the proceedings return was fraudulent in which case prescription sets in ten before the Bureau of Internal Revenue and the Court of Tax years from October 31, 1951, the date of discovery of the fraud, Appeals. pursuant to Section 332 (a) of the Tax Codes and that the payment of delinquency interest of 1% per month should On April 14, 1962 Ker & Co., Ltd. through its counsel, Leido, commence from the date it fell due as indicated in the Andrada, Perez & Associates, moved for the dismissal of the assessment notices instead of on the date the complaint was complaint on the ground that the court did not acquire filed. jurisdiction over the person of the defendant and that plaintiff's cause of action has prescribed. This motion was denied and On March 6, 1963 Ker & Co., Ltd. also filed a motion for defendant filed a motion for reconsideration. Resolution on said reconsideration reiterating its assertion that the Court of First motion, however, was deferred until trial of the case on the Instance did not acquire jurisdiction over its person, and merits. maintaining that since the complaint was filed nine years, one month and eleven days after the deficiency assessments for On May 18, 1962, Ker & Co., Ltd. filed its answer to the 1948, 1949 and 1950 were made and since the filing of its complaint interposing therein the defense set up in its motion to petition for review in the Court of Tax Appeals did not stop the dismiss of April 14, 1962. running of the period of limitations, the right of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to collect the tax in question On September 18, 1962 the Republic of the Philippines has prescribed. amended its complaint, in answer to which Ker & Co., Ltd. adopted the same answer which it had filed on May 18, 1962. The two motions for reconsideration having been denied, both parties appealed directly to this Court. On January 30, 1963 the Court of First Instance rendered judgment, the dispositive portion of which states: The issues in this case are: 1. Did the Court of First Instance acquire jurisdiction over & Co., Ltd. in two letters, dated March 28, 1962 and April 10, the person of defendant Ker & Co., Ltd.? . 1962, both after the complaint in this case was filed. At least therefore on April 2, 1962 when Messrs. Leido and Associates 2. Did the right of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue received the summons, they were still acting for and in behalf of to assess deficiency income tax for the year 1947 Ker & Co., Ltd. in connection with its tax liability involved in this prescribe? . case. Perforce, they were the taxpayer's agent when summons was served. Under Section 13 of Rule 7, aforequoted, service 3. Did the filing of a petition for review by the taxpayer in upon the agent of a corporation is sufficient. the Court of Tax Appeals suspend the running of the statute of limitations to collect the deficiency income for We observe that the motion to dismiss filed on April 14, 1962, the years 1948, 1949 and 1950? aside from disputing the lower court's jurisdiction over defendant's person, prayed for dismissal of the complaint on the 4. When did the delinquency interest on the deficiency ground that plaintiff's cause of action has prescribed. By income tax for the years 1948, 1949 and 1950 accrue? interposing such second ground in its motion to dismiss, Ker & Co., Ltd. availed of an affirmative defense on the basis of which First Issue it prayed the court to resolve controversy in its favor. For the court to validly decide the said plea of defendant Ker & Co., Ltd., Ker & Co., Ltd. maintains that the court a quo did not acquire it necessarily had to acquire jurisdiction upon the latter's person, jurisdiction over its person inasmuch as summons was not who, being the proponent of the affirmative defense, should be served upon it but upon Messrs. Leido and Associates who do deemed to have abandoned its special appearance and not come under any of the class of persons upon whom voluntarily submitted itself to the jurisdiction of the court.3 summons should be served as enumerated in Section 13, Rule 7 of the Rules of Court, 2 which reads: Voluntary appearance cures defects of summons, if any.4 Such defect, if any, was further cured when defendant filed its answer SEC. 13. Service upon private domestic corporation or to the complaint.5 A defendant can not be permitted to speculate partnership.—If the defendant is a corporation formed upon the judgment of the court by objecting to the court's under the laws of the Philippines or a partnership duly jurisdiction over its person if the judgment is adverse to it, and registered, service may be made on the president, acceding to jurisdiction over its person if and when the judgment manager, secretary, cashier, agent, or any of its sustains its defenses. directors. Second Issue Messrs. Leido and Associates acted as counsel for Ker Co., Ltd. when this tax case was in its administrative stage. The same Ker & Co., Ltd. contends that under Section 331 of the Tax counsel represented Ker & Co., Ltd., when it appealed said case Code the right of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to to the Court of Tax Appeals and later to this Court. assess against it a deficiency income tax for the year 1947 has Subsequently, when the Deputy Commissioner of Internal prescribed because the assessment was issued on July 25, Revenue, by letter dated March 15, 1962, demanded the 1953 after a lapse of five years, three months and thirteen days payment of the deficiency income tax in question, it was Messrs. from the date (April 12, 1948) it filed its income tax return. On Leido, Andrada, Perez & Associates who replied in behalf of Ker the other hand, the Republic of the Philippines insists that the taxpayer's income tax return was fraudulent, therefore the become final and need not be proved. This contention suffers Commissioner of Internal Revenue may assess the tax within from a flaw in that it fails to consider the well-settled principle ten years from discovery of the fraud on October 31, 1951 that fraud is a question of fact6 which must be alleged and pursuant to Section 322(a) of the Tax Code. proved.7 Fraud is a serious charge and, to be sustained, it must be supported by clear and convincing proof.8 Accordingly, fraud The stand of the Republic of the Philippines hinges on whether should have been alleged and proved in the lower court. On or not taxpayer's income tax return for 1947 was fraudulent. these premises We therefore sustain the ruling of the lower court upon the point of prescription. The court a quo, confining itself to determining whether or not the assessment of the tax for 1947 was issued within the five- It would be worth mentioning that since the assessment for year period provided for in Section 331 of the Tax Code, ruled deficiency income tax for 1947 has become final and executory, that the right of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue to assess Ker & Co., Ltd. may not anymore raise defenses which go into the tax has prescribed. Said the lower court: the merits of the assessment, i.e., prescription of the Commissioner's right to assess the tax. Such was our ruling in The Court resolves the second issue in the negative, previous cases.9 In this case however, Ker & Co., Ltd. raised the because Section 331 of the Revenue Code explicitly defense of prescription in the proceedings below and the provides, in mandatory terms, that "Internal Republic of the Philippines, instead of questioning the right of Revenue taxes shall be assessed within 5 years after the the defendant to raise such defense, litigated on it and return was filed, and no proceedings in court without submitted the issue for resolution of the court. By its actuation, assessment, for the collection of such taxes, shall be the Republic of the Philippines should be considered to have begun after expiration of such period. The attempt by the waived its right to object to the setting up of such defense. Commissioner of Internal Revenue to make an assessment on July 25, 1953, on the basis of a return Third Issue filed on April 12, 1948, is an exercise of authority against the aforequoted explicit and mandatory limitations of Ker & Co., Ltd. impresses upon Us that since the Republic of statutory law. Settled in our system is the rule that acts the Philippines filed the complaint for the collection of the committed against the provisions of mandatory or deficiency income tax for the years 1948, 1949 and 1950 only prohibitory laws shall be void (Art. 5, New Civil Code). . . . on March 27, 1962, or nine years, one month and eleven days from February 16, 1953, the date the tax was assessed, the Said court resolved the issue without touching upon fraudulence right to collect the same has prescribed pursuant to Section 332 of the return. The reason is that the complaint alleged no fraud, (c) of the Tax Code. The Republic of the Philippines however nor did the plaintiff present evidence to prove fraud. contends that the running of the prescriptive period was interrupted by the filing of the taxpayer's petition for review in In reply to the lower court's conclusion, the Republic of the the Court of Tax Appeals on March 1, 1956. Philippines maintains in its brief that Ker & Co., Ltd. filed a false return and since the fraud penalty of 50% surcharge was If the period during which the case was pending in the Court of imposed in the deficiency income tax assessment, which has Tax Appeals and in the Supreme Court were not counted in become final and executory, the finding of the Commissioner of reckoning the prescriptive period, less than five years would Internal Revenue as to the existence of the fraud has also have elapsed, hence, the right to collect the tax has not the Supreme Court, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue was prescribed. prevented, as recognized in this Court's ruling in Ledesma, et al. v. Court of Tax Appeals, 10 from filing an ordinary action in the The taxpayer counters that the filing of the petition for review in Court of First Instance to collect the tax. Besides, to do so would the Court of Tax Appeals could not have stopped the running of be to violate the judicial policy of avoiding multiplicity of suits the prescriptive period to collect because said court did not have and the rule on lis pendens. 11 jurisdiction over the case, the appeal having been interposed beyond the 30-day period set forth in Section 11 of Republic Act It would be interesting to note that when the Commissioner of 1125. Precisely, it adds, the Tax Court dismissed the appeal for Internal Revenue issued the final deficiency assessments on lack of jurisdiction and said dismissal was affirmed by the January 5, 1954, he had already lost, by prescription, the right to Supreme Court in L-12396 aforementioned. collect the tax (except that for 1950) by the summary method of warrant of distraint and levy. Ker & Co., Ltd. immediately Under Section 333 of the Tax Code, quoted hereunder: thereafter requested suspension of the collection of the tax without penalty incident to late payment pending the filing of a SEC. 333. Suspension of running of statute.—The memorandum in support of its views. As requested, no tax was running of the statute of limitations provided in Section collected. On May 22, 1954 the projected memorandum was 331 or three hundred thirty-two on the making of filed, but as of that date the Commissioner's right to collect by assessments and the beginning, of distraint or levy or a warrant of distraint and levy the deficiency tax for 1950 had proceeding in court for collection, in respect of any already prescribed. So much so, that on March 1, 1956 when deficiency, shall be suspended for the period during Ker & Co., Ltd. filed a petition for review in the Court of Tax which the Collector of Internal Revenue is prohibited from Appeals, the Commissioner of Internal Revenue had but one making the assessment or beginning distraint or levy or a remedy left to collect the tax, that is, by judicial proceeding in court, and for sixty days thereafter. action. 12 However, as stated, an independent ordinary action in the Court of First Instance was not available to the the running of the prescriptive period to collect the tax shall be Commissioner pursuant to Our ruling in Ledesma, et al. v. Court suspended for the period during which the Commissioner of of Tax Appeals, supra, in view of the pendency of the taxpayer's Internal Revenue is prohibited from beginning a distraint and petition for review in the Court of Tax Appeals. Precisely he levy or instituting a proceeding in court, and for sixty days urgently filed a motion to dismiss the taxpayer's petition for thereafter. review with a view to terminating therein the proceedings in the shortest possible time in order that he could file a collection Did the pendency of the taxpayer's appeal in the Court of Tax case in the Court of First Instance before his right to do so is cut Appeals and in the Supreme Court have the effect of legally off by the passage of time. As moved, the Tax Court dismissed preventing the Commissioner of Internal Revenue from the case and Ker & Co., Ltd. appealed to the Supreme Court. By instituting an action in the Court of First Instance for the the time the Supreme Court affirmed the order of dismissal of collection of the tax? Our view is that it did. the Court of Tax Appeals in L-12396 on January 31, 1962 more than five years had elapsed since the final assessments were From March 1, 1956 when Ker & Co., Ltd. filed a petition for made on January 5, 1954. Thereafter, the Commissioner of review in the Court of Tax Appeals contesting the legality of the Internal Revenue demanded extra-judicially the payment of the assessments in question, until the termination of its appeal in deficiency tax in question and in reply the taxpayer, by its letter dated March 28, 1962, advised the Commissioner of Internal Exhibit "F" — the letter of assessment — shows that the Revenue that the right to collect the tax has prescribed pursuant deficiency income tax for 1948 and 1949 became due on March to Section 332 (c) of the Tax Code.1awphîl.nèt 15, 1953 and that for 1950 accrued on February 15, 1954 in accordance with Section 51(d) of the Tax Code. Since the tax in Thus, did the taxpayer produce the effect of temporarily staying question remained unpaid, delinquency interest accrued and the hands of the Commissioner of Internal Revenue simply became due starting from said due dates. The decision through a choice of remedy. And, if We were to sustain the appealed from should therefore be modified accordingly. taxpayer's stand, We would be encouraging taxpayers to delay the payment of taxes in the hope of ultimately avoiding the WHEREFORE, the decision appealed from is affirmed with the same. modification that the delinquency interest at the rate of 1% per month shall be computed from March 15, 1953 for the deficiency Under the circumstances, the Commissioner of Internal income tax for 1948 and 1949 and from February 15, 1954 for Revenue was in effect prohibited from collecting the tax in the deficiency income tax for 1950. With costs against Ker & question. This being so, the provisions of Section 333 of the Tax Co., Ltd. So ordered. Code will apply. Concepcion, C.J., Reyes, J.B.L., Barrera, Dizon, Regala, Fourth Issue Makalintal, Zaldivar, Sanchez and Castro, JJ., concur.
The Republic of the Philippines maintains that the delinquency
interest on the deficiency income tax for 1948, 1949 and 1950 accrued and should commence from the date of the assessments as shown in the assessment notices, pursuant to Section 51(e) of the Tax Code, instead of from the date the complaint was filed as determined in the decision appealed from.
Section 51 (e) of the Tax Code states:
SEC. 51(e). Surcharge and interest in case of
delinquency.—To any sum or sums due and unpaid after the dates prescribed in subsections (b), (c) and (d) for the payment of the same, there shall be added the sum of five per centum on the amount of tax unpaid and interest at the rate of one per centum a month upon said tax from the time the same became due, except from the estates of insane, deceased, or insolvent persons. (emphasis supplied)