Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
Page 4 of 16
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
The BIR claimed that St. Luke’s was The petition of St. Luke’s in G.R. No.
actually operating for profit in 1998 because 195960 raises factual matters on the
only 13% of its revenues came from treatment and withholding of a part of its
charitable purposes. Moreover, the hospital’s income,9 as well as the payment of surcharge
board of trustees, officers and employees and delinquency interest. There is no ground
directly benefit from its profits and assets. for this Court to undertake such a factual
St. Luke’s had total revenues of review. Under the Constitution10and the
P1,730,367,965 or approximately P1.73 Rules of Court,11 this Court’s review power is
billion from patient services in 1998.7 generally limited to “cases in which only an
St. Luke’s contended that the BIR should error or question of law is involved.”12 This
not consider its total revenues, because its Court cannot depart from this limitation if a
free services to patients was P218,187,498 or party fails to invoke a recognized exception.
65.20% of its 1998 operating income (i.e.,
total revenues less operating expenses) of The Ruling of the Court of Tax Appeals
P334,642,615.8St. Luke’s also claimed that
its income does not inure to the benefit of The CTA En Banc Decision on 19
any individual. November 2010 affirmed in toto the CTA
St. Luke’s maintained that it is a non- First Division Decision dated 23 February
stock and non-profit institution for charitable 2009 which held:
WHEREFORE, the Amended Petition for
and social welfare purposes under Section
Review [by St. Luke’s] is hereby PARTIALLY
30(E) and (G) of the NIRC. It argued that the
GRANTED. Accordingly, the 1998 deficiency
making of profit per se does not destroy its VAT assessment issued by respondent against
income tax exemption. petitioner in the amount of P110,000.00 is
The petition of the BIR before this Court hereby CANCELLEDand WITHDRAWN.
in G.R. No. 195909 reiterates its arguments However, petitioner is
before the CTA that Section 27(B) applies to hereby ORDERED to PAY deficiency income tax
St. Luke’s. The petition raises the sole issue and deficiency expanded withholding tax for the
of whether the enactment of Section 27(B) taxable year 1998 in the respective amounts of
takes proprietary non-profit hospitals out of P5,496,963.54 and P778,406.84 or in the sum of
the income tax exemption under Section 30 P6,275,370.38, x x x.
xxxx
of the NIRC and instead, imposes a
In addition, petitioner is
preferential rate of 10% on their taxable
hereby ORDERED to PAY twenty percent (20%)
income. The BIR prays that St. Luke’s be delinquency interest on the total amount of
ordered to pay P57,659,981.19 as deficiency _______________
income and expanded withholding tax for 9 This income in the amount of P17,482,304 was
declared by St. Luke’s as “Other Income-Net” in its 1998
1998 with surcharges and interest for late Income Tax Return/Audited Statements of Revenues and
payment. Expenses.
_______________ 10 CONSTITUTION, Art. VIII, Sec. 5(2)(e). Except for
6 Id., at p. 63. criminal cases where the penalty imposed is reclusion
7 Id., at pp. 65-67. perpetua or higher, the enumeration under Article VIII,
8 Id., at p. 67. The operating expenses of St. Luke’s Section 5(1) and (2) of the Constitution generally involves a
consisted of professional care of patients, administrative, question of law.
household and property expenses. 11 RULES OF COURT, Rule 45, Sec. 1.
12 CONSTITUTION, Art. VIII, Sec. 5(2)(e). See note 10.
74
75
74 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical VOL. 682, SEPTEMBER 26, 2012
Center, Inc. Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Med
Center, Inc.
Page 5 of 16
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
P6,275,370.38 counted from October 15, 2003 76 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTAT
until full payment thereof, pursuant to Section Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Med
249(C)(3) of the NIRC of 1997. Center, Inc.
SO ORDERED.13
emption from taxation merely because
The deficiency income tax of recipients of its benefits who are able to pay
P5,496,963.54, ordered by the CTA En Banc are required to do so, where funds derived in
to be paid, arose from the failure of St. this manner are devoted to the charitable
Luke’s to prove that part of its income in purposes of the institution x x x.”19 The
1998 (declared as “Other Income-Net”)14 came generation of income from paying patients
from charitable activities. The CTA cancelled does not per se destroy the charitable nature
the remainder of the P63,113,952.79 of St. Luke’s.
deficiency assessed by the BIR based on the Hospital de San Juan cited Jesus Sacred
10% tax rate under Section 27(B) of the Heart College v. Collector of Internal
NIRC, which the CTA En Bancheld was not Revenue,20 which ruled that the old NIRC
applicable to St. Luke’s.15 (Commonwealth Act No. 466, as
The CTA ruled that St. Luke’s is a non- amended)21“positively exempts from taxation
stock and non-profit charitable institution those corporations or associations which,
covered by Section 30(E) and (G) of the otherwise, would be subject thereto, because
NIRC. This ruling would exempt all income of the existence of x x x net income.”22 The
derived by St. Luke’s from services to its NIRC of 1997 substantially reproduces the
patients, whether paying or non-paying. The provision on charitable institutions of the old
CTA reiterated its earlier decision in St. NIRC. Thus, in rejecting the argument that
Luke’s Medical Center, Inc. v. Commissioner tax exemption is lost whenever there is net
of Internal Revenue,16 which examined the income, the Court in Jesus Sacred Heart
primary purposes of St. Luke’s under its College declared: “[E]very responsible
articles of incorporation and various organization must be run to at least insure
documents17 identifying St. Luke’s as a its existence, by operating within the limits
charitable institution. of its own resources, especially its regular
The CTA adopted the test in Hospital de _______________
19 Id., at p. 41; p. 229 citing 51 Am. Jur. 607.
San Juan de Dios, Inc. v. Pasay City,18 which 20 95 Phil. 16 (1954).
states that “a charitable institution does not 21 Commonwealth Act No. 466, as amended by
lose its charitable character and its Republic Act No. 82, Sec. 27 provides: Exemption from
tax on corporation.―The following organizations shall
consequent ex-
not be taxed under this Title in respect to income
_______________
received by them as such―
13 Rollo (G.R. No. 195909), pp. 82-83. Emphases in
xxxx
the original.
(e) Corporation or association organized and
14 See note 9. This is one of the errors assigned by
operated exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific,
St. Luke’s in its petition before this Court.
athletic, cultural, or educational purposes, or for the
15 Rollo (G.R. No. 195909), p. 65. The revised total
rehabilitation of veterans no part of the net income of
deficiency income tax assessed by the BIR is
which inures to the benefit of any private stockholder or
P63,113,952.79, which includes the deficiency under
individual: Provided, however, That the income of
“Other Income-Net.”
whatever kind and character from any of its properties,
16 CTA Case No. 6993, 21 November 2008.
real or personal, or from any activity conducted for profit
17 These are documentary evidence which, among
regardless of the disposition made of such income, shall
others, show that government agencies such as the
be liable to the tax imposed under this Code[.]
Department of Social Welfare and Development and the
22 Jesus Sacred Heart College v. Collector of Internal
Philippine Charity Sweepstakes Office recognize St.
Revenue, supranote 20 at p. 21.
Luke’s as a charitable institution.
18 123 Phil. 38; 16 SCRA 226 (1966). 77
76 VOL. 682, SEPTEMBER 26, 2012
Page 6 of 16
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical
78 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTAT
Center, Inc. Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Med
income. In other words, it should always Center, Inc.
strive, whenever possible, to have a “[t]he petition shall raise only questions of
surplus.”23 law which must be distinctly set forth.” St.
The CTA held that Section 27(B) of the Luke’s cites Martinez v. Court of
present NIRC does not apply to St. Appeals which permits factual review
26
Luke’s.24 The CTA explained that to apply “when the Court of Appeals [in this case, the
the 10% preferential rate, Section 27(B) CTA] manifestly overlooked certain relevant
requires a hospital to be “non-profit.” On the facts not disputed by the parties and which,
other hand, Congress specifically used the if properly considered, would justify a
word “non-stock” to qualify a charitable different conclusion.”27
“corporation or association” in Section 30(E) This Court does not see how the CTA
of the NIRC. According to the CTA, this is overlooked relevant facts. St. Luke’s itself
unique in the present tax code, indicating an stated that the CTA “disregarded the
intent to exempt this type of charitable testimony of [its] witness, Romeo B. Mary,
organization from income tax. Section 27(B) being allegedly self-serving, to show the
does not require that the hospital be “non- nature of the ‘Other Income-Net’ x x
stock.” The CTA stated, “it is clear that non- x.”28 This is not a case of overlooking or
stock, non-profit hospitals operated failing to consider relevant evidence. The
exclusively for charitable purpose are exempt CTA obviously considered the evidence and
from income tax on income received by them concluded that it is self-serving. The CTA
as such, applying the provision of Section declared that it has “gone through the
30(E) of the NIRC of 1997, as amended.”25 records of this case and found no other
evidence aside from the self-serving affidavit
The Issue executed by [the] witnesses [of St. Luke’s] x x
x.”29
The sole issue is whether St. Luke’s is
The deficiency tax on “Other Income-Net”
liable for deficiency income tax in 1998 under
stands. Thus, St. Luke’s is liable to pay the
Section 27(B) of the NIRC, which imposes a
25% surcharge under Section 248(A)(3) of the
preferential tax rate of 10% on the income of
NIRC. There is “[f]ailure to pay the
proprietary non-profit hospitals.
deficiency tax within the time prescribed for
The Ruling of the Court its payment in the notice of
assessment[.]” St. Luke’s is also liable to
30
St. Luke’s Petition in G.R. No. 195960 pay 20% delinquency interest under Section
As a preliminary matter, this Court 249(C)(3) of the NIRC.31 As explained by the
denies the petition of St. Luke’s in G.R. No. CTA En Banc, the amount of P6,275,370.38
195960 because the petition raises factual in the dispositive portion of the CTA First
issues. Under Section 1, Rule 45 of the Rules Division Decision
_______________
of Court, 26 410 Phil. 241; 358 SCRA 38 (2001).
_______________
27 Id., at p. 257; pp. 49-50; Rollo (G.R. No. 195960),
23 Id.
pp. 15-16.
24 The CTA adopted its earlier interpretation in St.
28 Rollo (G.R. No. 195960), p. 24.
Luke’s Medical Center, Inc. v. Commissioner of Internal
29 Id., at p. 50.
Revenue. Supra note 16.
30 NIRC, Sec. 248(A)(3).
25 Rollo (G.R. No. 195909), p. 76. Italics in the
31 NIRC, Sec. 249(C)(3) provides: “A deficiency tax,
original.
or any surcharge or interest thereon on the due date
appearing in the notice and demand of the
78
Commissioner, there shall be assessed and collected on
Page 7 of 16
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
the unpaid amount, interest at the rate prescribed in 80
Subsection (A) hereof until the amount is fully paid, 80
SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTAT
which interest shall form part of the tax.”
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Med
79 Center, Inc.
VOL. 682, SEPTEMBER 26, 2012 SEC. 79
27. Rates of Income Tax on Domestic
Corporations.―
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical
Center, Inc. xxxx
includes only deficiency interest under (B) Proprietary Educational Institutions and
Hospitals.―
Section 249(A) and (B) of the NIRC and not
Proprietary educational institutions and
delinquency interest.32 hospitals which are non-profit shall pay a
The Main Issue tax of ten percent (10%) on their taxable
The issue raised by the BIR is a purely income except those covered by Subsection (D)
legal one. It involves the effect of the hereof: Provided, That if the gross income from
introduction of Section 27(B) in the NIRC of unrelated trade, business or other activity
1997 vis-à-vis Section 30(E) and (G) on the exceeds fifty percent (50%) of the total gross
income tax exemption of charitable and income derived by such educational institutions
social welfare institutions. The 10% income or hospitals from all sources, the tax prescribed
tax rate under Section 27(B) specifically in Subsection (A) hereof shall be imposed on the
entire taxable income. For purposes of this
pertains to proprietary educational
Subsection, the term ‘unrelated trade, business
institutions and proprietary non-profit
or other activity’ means any trade, business or
hospitals. The BIR argues that Congress other activity, the conduct of which is not
intended to remove the exemption that non- substantially related to the exercise or
profit hospitals previously enjoyed under performance by such educational institution or
Section 27(E) of the NIRC of 1977, which is hospital of its primary purpose or function. A
now substantially reproduced in Section ‘proprietary educational institution’ is any
30(E) of the NIRC of 1997.33 Section 27(B) of private school maintained and administered by
the present NIRC provides: private individuals or groups with an issued
_______________ permit to operate from the Department of
32 CTA En Banc Resolution dated 1 March 2011. Education, Culture and Sports (DECS), or the
Rollo (G.R. No. 195909), p. 56. Commission on Higher Education (CHED), or the
Section 249 of the NIRC provides: Technical Education and Skills Development
(A) In General.―There shall be assessed and
collected on any unpaid amount of tax, interest at the
Authority (TESDA), as the case may be, in
rate of twenty percent (20%) per annum, or such higher accordance with existing laws and regulations.
rate as may be prescribed by rules and regulations, from (Emphasis supplied)
the date prescribed for its payment until the amount is
fully paid. St. Luke’s claims tax exemption under
(B) Deficiency Interest.―Any deficiency in the tax Section 30(E) and (G) of the NIRC. It
due, as the term is defined in this Code, shall be subject
to the interest prescribed in Subsection (A) hereof, which
contends that it is a charitable institution
interest shall be assessed and collected from the date and an organization promoting social
prescribed for its payment until the full payment thereof. welfare. The arguments of St. Luke’s focus
xxxx on the wording of Section 30(E) exempting
33 Id., at pp. 21-27. Section 27(E) of the NIRC of
1977 provides:
from income tax non-stock, non-profit
Sec. 27. Exemptions from tax on corporations.―The charitable institutions.34 St. Luke’s asserts
following organizations shall not be taxed under this that the legislative intent of introducing
Title in respect to income received by them as such― Section 27(B) was only to remove the
xxxx
(E) Corporation or association organized and exemption for “proprie-
operated exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific, _______________
athletic, or cultural pur-
Page 8 of 16
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
poses, or for the rehabilitation of veterans, no part of proprietary non-profit educational
the net income of which inures to the benefit of any
institutions and
36 proprietary non-profit
private stockholder or individual.
xxxx hospitals, among the institutions covered by
34 See Comment of St. Luke’s dated 19 September _______________
2011 in G.R. No. 195909. Id., at pp. 105-116. 35 Id., at pp. 106-108.
36 Cf. NIRC, Sec. 30(H).
81
VOL. 682, SEPTEMBER 26, 2012 82 81
82 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTAT
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical
Center, Inc. Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Med
Center, Inc.
tary non-profit” hospitals. The 35 relevant
provisions of Section 30 state: Section 30, to the 10% preferential rate
SEC. 30. Exemptions from Tax on under Section 27(B) instead of the ordinary
Corporations.―The following organizations shall 30% corporate rate under the last paragraph
not be taxed under this Title in respect to income of Section 30 in relation to Section 27(A)(1).
received by them as such: Section 27(B) of the NIRC imposes a 10%
xxxx preferential tax rate on the income of (1)
(E) Nonstock corporation or proprietary non-profit educational
association organized and operated institutions and (2) proprietary non-profit
exclusively for religious, charitable, scientific, hospitals. The only qualifications for
athletic, or cultural purposes, or for the hospitals are that they must be proprietary
rehabilitation of veterans, no part of its net
and non-profit. “Proprietary” means private,
income or asset shall belong to or inure to
the benefit of any member, organizer,
following the definition of a “proprietary
officer or any specific person; educational institution” as
xxxx “any private school maintained and
(G) Civic league or organization not organized administered by private individuals or
for profit but operated exclusively for the groups” with a government permit. “Non-
promotion of social welfare; profit” means no net income or asset accrues
xxxx to or benefits any member or specific person,
Notwithstanding the provisions in the preceding with all the net income or asset devoted to
paragraphs, the income of whatever kind the institution’s purposes and all its
and character of the foregoing activities conducted not for profit.
organizations from any of their properties, real
“Non-profit” does not necessarily mean
or personal, or from any of their activities
conducted for profit regardless of the
“charitable.” In Collector of Internal Revenue
disposition made of such income, shall be v. Club Filipino Inc. de Cebu,37 this Court
subject to tax imposed under this Code. considered as non-profit a sports club
(Emphasis supplied) organized for recreation and entertainment
of its stockholders and members. The club
The Court partly grants the petition of the was primarily funded by membership fees
BIR but on a different ground. We hold that and dues. If it had profits, they were used for
Section 27(B) of the NIRC does not remove overhead expenses and improving its golf
the income tax exemption of proprietary non- course.38The club was non-profit because of
profit hospitals under Section 30(E) and (G). its purpose and there was no evidence that it
Section 27(B) on one hand, and Section 30(E) was engaged in a profit-making enterprise.39
and (G) on the other hand, can be construed The sports club in Club Filipino Inc. de
together without the removal of such tax Cebu may be non-profit, but it was not
exemption. The effect of the introduction of charitable. The Court defined “charity”
Section 27(B) is to subject the taxable income in Lung Center of the Philippines v. Quezon
of two specific institutions, namely,
Page 9 of 16
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
City40as “a gift, to be applied consistently been funded by appropriations from the
with existing laws, for the benefit of an Treasury.42
indefinite number of persons, either by Charitable institutions, however, are
bringing their minds and hearts under the not ipso facto entitled to a tax
influence of education or religion, by exemption. The requirements for a tax
assisting them to establish themselves in life exemption are specified by the law granting
or [by] oth- it. The power of Congress to tax implies the
_______________ power to exempt from tax. Congress can
37 115 Phil. 310; 5 SCRA 321 (1962).
create tax exemptions, subject to the
38 Id., at p. 311; p. 322.
39 Id., at p. 314; p. 324. constitutional
40 G.R. No. 144104, 29 June 2004, 433 SCRA 119. _______________
41 Id., at pp. 128-129. Emphasis supplied.
83 42 For further discussion of the Subsidy Theory of
VOL. 682, SEPTEMBER 26, 2012 Tax Exemption,
83 see H. Hansmann, The Rationale for
Exempting Nonprofit Organizations from Corporate
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical
Income Taxation, 91 YALE L. J. 54 (1981) at 66-75. See
Center, Inc. also M. Hall & J. Colombo, The Charitable Status of
erwise lessening the burden of Nonprofit Hospitals: Toward a Donative Theory of Tax
Exemption, 66 WASH. L. REV. 307 (1991).
government.”41 A non-profit club for the
benefit of its members fails this test. An 84
organization may be considered as non-profit 84 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTAT
if it does not distribute any part of its income Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Med
to stockholders or members. However, Center, Inc.
despite its being a tax exempt institution, provision that “[n]o law granting any tax
any income such institution earns from exemption shall be passed without the
activities conducted for profit is taxable, as concurrence of a majority of all the Members
expressly provided in the last paragraph of of Congress.”43 The requirements for a tax
Section 30. exemption are strictly construed against the
To be a charitable institution, however, an taxpayer44because an exemption restricts the
organization must meet the substantive test collection of taxes necessary for the existence
of charity in Lung Center. The issue in Lung of the government.
Center concerns exemption from real The Court in Lung Center declared that
property tax and not income tax. However, it the Lung Center of the Philippines is a
provides for the test of charity in our charitable institution for the purpose of
jurisdiction. Charity is essentially a gift to exemption from real property taxes. This
an indefinite number of persons which ruling uses the same premise as Hospital de
lessens the burden of government. In other San Juan45 and Jesus Sacred Heart
words, charitable institutions provide College46 which says that receiving income
for free goods and services to the public from paying patients does not destroy the
which would otherwise fall on the charitable nature of a hospital.
shoulders of government. Thus, as a As a general principle, a charitable institution
matter of efficiency, the government forgoes does not lose its character as such and its
taxes which should have been spent to exemption from taxes simply because it derives
address public needs, because certain private income from paying patients, whether out-
entities already assume a part of the burden. patient, or confined in the hospital, or receives
This is the rationale for the tax exemption of subsidies from the government, so long as the
money received is devoted or used altogether to
charitable institutions. The loss of taxes by
the charitable object which it is intended to
the government is compensated by its relief
achieve; and no money inures to the private
from doing public works which would have
Page 10 of 16
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
benefit of the persons managing or operating the 28(3), Article VI of the Constitution. Section
institution.47 30(E) of the NIRC defines the corporation or
association that is exempt from income tax.
For real property taxes, the incidental
On the other hand, Section 28(3), Article VI
generation of income is permissible because
of the Constitution does not define a
the test of exemption is the use of the
charitable institution, but requires that the
property. The Constitution provides that
institution “actually, directly and
“[c]haritable institutions, churches and
exclusively” use the property for a charitable
personages or convents appurtenant
_______________
purpose.
43 CONSTITUTION, Art. VI, Sec. 28(4). Section 30(E) of the NIRC provides that a
44 Commissioner of Internal Revenue v. The charitable institution must be:
Philippine American Accident Insurance Company, Inc., (1) A non-stock corporation or
493 Phil. 785; 453 SCRA 668 (2005); Lung Center of the
Philippines v. Quezon City, supra note 40 at pp. 133- association;
134; Mactan Cebu International Airport Authority v. (2) Organized exclusively for
Marcos, 330 Phil. 392; 261 SCRA 667 (1996); Manila charitable purposes;
Electric Company v. Vera, 160-A Phil. 498; 67 SCRA 351 (3) Operated exclusively for charitable
(1975).
45 Supra note 18. purposes; and
46 Supra note 20. (4) No part of its net income or asset
47 Lung Center of the Philippines v. Quezon City, shall belong to or inure to the benefit of
supra note 40 at pp. 131-132. Citation omitted.
any member, organizer, officer or any
85 specific person.
VOL. 682, SEPTEMBER 26, 2012 _______________
85
48 CONSTITUTION, Art. VI, Sec. 28(3).
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical
Center, Inc. 86
thereto, mosques, non-profit cemeteries, and 86 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTAT
all lands, buildings, and improvements, Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Med
actually, directly, and exclusively used for Center, Inc.
religious, charitable, or educational purposes Thus, both the organization and
shall be exempt from taxation.”48 The test of operations of the charitable institution must
exemption is not strictly a requirement on be devoted “exclusively” for charitable
the intrinsic nature or character of the purposes. The organization of the institution
institution. The test requires that the refers to its corporate form, as shown by its
institution use the property in a certain articles of incorporation, by-laws and other
way, i.e.for a charitable purpose. Thus, the constitutive documents. Section 30(E) of the
Court held that the Lung Center of the NIRC specifically requires that the
Philippines did not lose its charitable corporation or association be non-stock,
character when it used a portion of its lot for which is defined by the Corporation Code as
commercial purposes. The effect of failing to “one where no part of its income is
meet the use requirement is simply to distributable as dividends to its members,
remove from the tax exemption that portion trustees, or officers”49 and that any profit
of the property not devoted to charity. “obtain[ed] as an incident to its operations
The Constitution exempts charitable shall, whenever necessary or proper, be used
institutions only from real property taxes. In for the furtherance of the purpose or
the NIRC, Congress decided to extend the purposes for which the corporation was
exemption to income taxes. However, the organized.”50 However, under Lung Center,
way Congress crafted Section 30(E) of the any profit by a charitable institution must
NIRC is materially different from Section not only be plowed back “whenever necessary
Page 11 of 16
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
or proper,” but must be “devoted or character of the foregoing organizations from any
used altogether to the charitable object of their properties, real or personal, or from any
which it is intended to achieve.”51 of their activities conducted for profit
The operations of the charitable regardless of the disposition made of such
income, shall be subject to tax imposed
institution generally refer to its regular
under this Code. (Emphasis supplied)
activities. Section 30(E) of the NIRC requires
that these operations be exclusive to In short, the last paragraph of Section 30
charity. There is also a specific requirement provides that if a tax exempt charitable
that “no part of [the] net income or asset institution conducts “any” activity for profit,
shall belong to or inure to the benefit of any such activity is not tax exempt even as its
member, organizer, officer or any specific not-for-profit activities remain tax exempt.
person.” The use of lands, buildings and This paragraph qualifies the requirements in
improvements of the institution is but a part Section 30(E) that the “[n]on-stock
of its operations. corporation or association [must
There is no dispute that St. Luke’s is be] organized and operated
organized as a non-stock and non-profit exclusively for x x x charitable x x x
charitable institution. However, this does not purposes x x x.” It likewise qualifies the
automatically exempt St. Luke’s from paying requirement in Section 30(G) that the civic
taxes. This only refers to the organization of organization must be “operated exclusively”
St. Luke’s. Even if St. Luke’s meets the test for the promotion of social welfare.
of charity, a charitable institution is not ipso Thus, even if the charitable institution
facto tax exempt. To be exempt from real must be “organized and operated exclusively”
property taxes, Section 28(3), Article VI of for charitable purposes, it is nevertheless
the Constitution requires that a charitable allowed to engage in “activities conducted for
institution use the property “actually, profit” without losing its tax exempt status
directly and for its not-for-profit activities. The only
_______________
consequence is that the “income of
49 CORPORATION Code (B.P. Blg. 68), Sec. 87.
50 Id. whatever kind and character” of a
51 Supra note 40. Emphasis supplied. charitable institution “from any of its
activities conducted for profit,
87
regardless of the disposition made of
VOL. 682, SEPTEMBER 26, 2012 87
such income, shall be subject to
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical
tax.” Prior to the introduction of Section
Center, Inc. 27(B), the tax rate on such income from for-
exclusively” for charitable purposes. To be profit activities was the ordinary
exempt from income taxes, Section 30(E) of 88
the NIRC requires that a charitable 88 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTAT
institution must be “organized and Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Med
operated exclusively” for charitable Center, Inc.
purposes. Likewise, to be exempt from corporate rate under Section 27(A). With the
income taxes, Section 30(G) of the NIRC introduction of Section 27(B), the tax rate is
requires that the institution be “operated now 10%.
exclusively” for social welfare. In 1998, St. Luke’s had total revenues of
However, the last paragraph of Section 30 P1,730,367,965 from services
of the NIRC qualifies the words “organized to paying patients. It cannot be disputed
and operated exclusively” by providing that: that a hospital which receives approximately
Notwithstanding the provisions in the preceding
P1.73 billion from paying patients is not an
paragraphs, the income of whatever kind and
Page 12 of 16
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
institution “operated exclusively” for INCOME FROM P116,455,117.00
charitable purposes. Clearly, revenues OPERATIONS, Net of
from paying patients are income received FREE SERVICES
from “activities conducted for
profit.” Indeed, St. Luke’s admits that it
52 OTHER INCOME 17,482,304.00
derived profits from its paying patients. St.
Luke’s declared P1,730,367,965 as “Revenues EXCESS OF P133,937,421.00
from Services to Patients” in contrast to its REVENUES OVER
“Free Services” expenditure of P218,187,498. EXPENSES
In its Comment in G.R. No. 195909, St. In Lung Center, this Court declared:
Luke’s showed the following “calculation” to “[e]xclusive” is defined as possessed and enjoyed
support its claim that 65.20% of its “income to the exclusion of others; debarred from
after expenses was allocated to free or participation or enjoyment; and “exclusively” is
charitable services” in 1998.53 defined, “in a manner to exclude; as enjoying a
REVENUES FROM SERVICES TO P1,730,367,965.00 privilege exclusively.” x x x The words “dominant
use” or “principal use” cannot be substituted for
PATIENTS
the words “used exclusively” without doing
OPERATING EXPENSES violence to the Constitution and the law. Solely
_______________
52 Since the exemption is proportional to the revenue
is synonymous with exclusively.54
of the institution, Hall & Colombo say that “a general tax
exemption suffers from the same ‘upside down’ effect as The Court cannot expand the meaning of
many tax deductions: those entities with the highest net the words “operated exclusively” without
revenues or the greatest value of otherwise-taxable violating the NIRC. Services to paying
property receive the greatest amount of subsidy, yet
patients are activities conducted for
these are the entities that least need support. From the
standpoint of equity among different tax-exempt entities, profit. They cannot be considered any
the result of the general tax exemption is that entities other way. There is a “purpose
that are the ‘poorest’ in either an income or property tax _______________
sense, and thus most in need of government assistance to 54 Supra note 40 at p. 137. Emphasis supplied;
serve impoverished and uninsured patients, receive the citations omitted.
least government assistance. Because uncompensated
care is an expense item, those hospitals with the most 90
net revenues are more likely to have actually rendered 90 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTAT
the least free care, all other things being equal.” Hall &
Colombo, supra note 42 at pp. 355-356. Citations
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Med
omitted. Center, Inc.
53 Comment of St. Luke’s dated 19 September to make profit over and above the cost”
2011. Rollo (G.R. No. 195909), p. 113.
of services.55The P1.73 billion total
89 revenues from paying patients is not even
VOL. 682, SEPTEMBER 26, 2012 incidental
89 to St. Luke’s charity expenditure
of P218,187,498
Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's for non-paying patients.
Medical Center, Inc. St. Luke’s claims that its charity
Professional care of P1,016,608,394.00 expenditure of P218,187,498 is 65.20% of its
patients operating income in 1998. However, if a part
Administrative 287,319,334.00 of the remaining 34.80% of the operating
Household and Property 91,797,622.00 income is reinvested in property, equipment
P1,395,725,350.00 or facilities used for services to paying and
non-paying patients, then it cannot be said
INCOME FROM P334,642,615.00 that
100% the income is “devoted or
OPERATIONS used altogether to the charitable object
Free Services which it is intended to achieve.”56 The income
-218,187,498.00 -65.20%
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Commissioner of Internal Revenue vs. St. Luke's Medical Center, Inc.
is plowed back to the corporation not entirely the reasons Congress inserted the phrase “or
for charitable purposes, but for profit as well. any activity conducted for profit.”
In any case, the last paragraph of Section 30 The question in Jesus Sacred Heart
of the NIRC expressly qualifies that income College involves an educational
from activities for profit is institution. However, it is applicable to
58
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