32 Maceda vs. Macaraig, Jr.
32 Maceda vs. Macaraig, Jr.
32 Maceda vs. Macaraig, Jr.
*
G.R. No. 88291. May 31, 1991.
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* EN BANC.
772
773
774
775
776
777
GANCAYCO, J.:
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779
The following are the facts relevant to NPC’s questioned claim for
refunds of taxes and duties originally paid by respondents Caltex,
Petrophil and Shell for specific and ad valorem taxes to the BIR;
and
________________
780
780 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Maceda vs. Macaraig, Jr.
1. “Since May 27, 1976 when P.D. No. 938 was issued until
June 11, 1984 when P.D. No. 1931 was promulgated
abolishing the tax exemptions of all government-owned or-
controlled corporations, the oil firms never paid excise or
specific and ad valorem taxes for petroleum products sold
and delivered to the NPC. This non-payment of taxes
therefore spanned a period of eight (8) years.” (par. 23, p.
7, Annex “A”)
During this period, the Bureau of Internal Revenue was
not collecting specific taxes on the purchases of NPC of
petroleum products from the oil companies on the
erroneous belief that the National Power Corporation
(NPC) was exempt from indirect taxes as reflected in the
letter of Deputy Commissioner of Internal Revenue
(DCIR) Romulo Villa to the NPC dated October 29, 1980
granting blanket authority to the NPC to purchase
petroleum products from the oil companies without
payment of specific tax (copy of this letter is attached
hereto as petitioner’s Annex “B”).
2. The oil companies started to pay specific and ad valorem
taxes on their sales of oil products to NPC only after the
promulgation of P.D. No. 1931 on June 11, 1984,
withdrawing all exemptions granted in favor of
government-owned or-controlled corporations and
empowering the FIRB to recommend to the President or to
the Minister of Finance the restoration of the exemptions
which were withdrawn. “Specifically, Caltex paid the total
amount of P58,020,110.79 in specific and ad valorem taxes
for deliveries of petroleum products to NPC covering the
period from October 31, 1984 to April 27, 1985.” (par. 23,
p. 7, Annex “A”)
3. “Caltex billings to NPC until June 10, 1984 always
included customs duty without the tax portion. Beginning
June 11, 1984, when P.D. 1931 was promulgated
abolishing NPC’s tax exemptions, Caltex’s billings to NPC
always included both duties and taxes. (Caturla, tsn, Oct.
10, 1988, pp. 1-5)” (par. 24, p. 7, Annex “A”)
4. “For the sales of petroleum products delivered to NPC
during the period from October, 1984 to April, 1985, NPC
was billed a total of P522,016,77.34 (sic) including both
duties and taxes, the specific tax component being valued
at P58,020,110.79.” (par. 25, p. 8, Annex “A”).
5. “Fiscal Incentives Review Board (FIRB) Resolution 10-85,
781
“1. Effective June 11, 1984, the tax and duty exemption
privileges enjoyed by the National Power Corporation
under C.A. No. 120, as amended, are restored up to June
30, 1985.”
“In Reply please be informed that after a re-study of Section 13, R.A.
6395, as amended by P.D. 938, this Office is of the opinion, and so holds,
that the scope of the tax exemption privilege enjoyed by NPC under said
section covers only taxes for which it is directly liable and not on taxes
which are only shifted to it. (Phil. Acetylene vs. C.I.R. et al., G.R. L-
19707, Aug. 17, 1967) Since contractor’s tax is directly payable by the
contractor, not by NPC, your request for exemption, based on the
stipulation in the aforesaid contract that NPC shall assume payment
782
of your contractor’s tax liability, cannot be granted for lack of legal basis.”
(Annex “H”) (italics added)
783
784
785
“1.1 NPC did not have any indirect tax exemption since May
27, 1976 when PD 938 was issued. Therefore,
786
the grant of a tax refund to NPC in the amount of P58 million was illegal,
and therefore, null and void. Such refund was a nullity right from the
beginning. Hence, it never transferred any right in favor of NPC.
________________
787
788
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789
Corollary issues—
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790
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791
VOL. 197, MAY 31, 1991 791
Maceda vs. Macaraig, Jr.
12
authority. Precisely, petitioner questions the lawfulness of
the acts of public respondents in this case.
Now to the main issue.
It may be useful to make a distinction, for the purpose of
this disposition, between a direct tax and an indirect tax. A
direct tax is a tax for which a taxpayer is directly liable on
the transaction or business it engages in. Examples are the
custom duties and ad valorem taxes paid by the oil
companies to the Bureau of Customs for their importation
of crude oil, and the specific and ad valorem taxes they pay
to the Bureau of Internal Revenue after converting the
crude oil into petroleum products.
On the other hand, “indirect taxes are taxes primarily
paid 13by persons who can shift the burden upon someone
else.” For example, the excise and ad valorem taxes that
oil companies pay to the Bureau of Internal Revenue upon
removal of petroleum products from its refinery can be
shifted to its buyer, like the NPC, by adding them to the
“cash” and/or “selling price.”
The main thrust of the petition is that under the latest
amendment to the NPC charter by Presidential Decree No.
938, the exemption of NPC from indirect taxation was
revoked and repealed. While petitioner concedes that NPC
enjoyed broad exemption privileges from both direct and
indirect taxes on the petroleum products it used, under
Section 13 of Republic Act No. 6395 and more so under
Presidential Decree No. 380, however, by the deletion of
the phrases “directly or indirectly” and “on all petroleum
products used by the Corporation in the generation,
transmission, utilization and sale of electric power” he
contends that the exemption from indirect taxes was
withdrawn by P.D. No. 938.
Petitioner further states that the exemption of NPC
provided in Section 13 of Presidential Decree No. 938
regarding the payments of “all forms of taxes, etc.” cannot
be interpreted to include indirect tax exemption. He cites
Philippine14 Aceytelene Co. Inc. vs. Commissioner of Internal
Revenue. Petitioner emphasizes the principle in taxation
that the exception contained in the tax statutes must be
strictly construed against the
________________
792
one claiming the exemption, and that the rule that a tax
statute granting exemption must be strictly construed
against the one claiming the exemption is similar to the
rule that a statute granting taxing power is to be construed15
strictly, with doubts resolved against its existence.
Petitioner cites rulings of the BIR that the phrase
exemption from “all taxes, etc.” from “all forms of taxes”
and “in lieu of all taxes” 16covers only taxes for which the
taxpayer is directly liable.
On the corollary issues. First, FIRB Resolution Nos. 10-
85 and 1-86 issued under Presidential Decree No. 1931, the
relevant provision of which are to wit:
“1. Effective June 11, 1984, the tax and duty exemption
privileges enjoyed by the National Power Corporation
under C.A. No. 120 as amended are restored up to June
30, 1985.
“2. Provided, That this restoration does not apply to the
following:
15 Citing United Garment Co., Inc. vs. Court of Tax Appeals, 4 SCRA 304
(1962); and Butuan Sawmill, Inc. vs. City of Butuan, 16 SCRA 755 (1966).
16 See page 27 of Petition.
793
________________
794
________________
795
21
cate which was assigned to respondent Caltex 22
through a
deed of assignment approved by the BIR is patently
illegal. He also contends that the pending claim of
respondent NPC in the amount of P410.58 million with
respondent BIR for the sale and delivery to it of bunker
fuel by respondents Petrophil, Shell and Caltex from July
1, 1985 up to 1986, being illegal, should not be released.
Now to the second corollary issue involving the validity
of FIRB Resolution No. 17-87 issued on June 24, 1987. It
was issued under authority of Executive Order No. 93
dated December 17, 1986 which grants to the FIRB, among
others, the power to recommend the restoration of the tax
and duty exemptions/ incentives withdrawn thereunder.
Petitioner stresses that on August 6, 1987 the Secretary
of Justice rendered Opinion No. 77 to the effect that the
powers conferred upon the FIRB by Section 2(a), (b), and (c)
and (4) of Executive Order No. 93 “constitute undue
delegation of legislative power and is, therefore,
unconstitutional.” Petitioner observes that the FIRB did
not merely recommend but categorically restored the tax
and duty exemption of the NPC so that the memorandum
of the respondent Executive Secretary dated October 5,
1987 approving the same is a surplusage.
Further assuming that FIRB Resolution No. 17-87 to
have been legally issued, following the doctrine in
Philippine Aceytelene, petitioner avers that the restoration
cannot cover indirect taxes and it cannot create new
indirect tax exemption not otherwise granted in the NPC
charter as amended by Presidential Decree No. 938.
The petition is devoid of merit.
The NPC is a non-profit public 23
corporation created for
the general good and welfare wholly owned 24
by the
government of the Republic of the Philippines. From the
very beginning of its corporate existence, the NPC enjoyed
preferential tax treat-
________________
796
25
ment, “to enable the Corporation to pay the indebtedness
and obligation and in furtherance and effective
implementation of the policy
26
enunciated in Section one of
“Republic Act No. 6395” which provides:
________________
25 Section 4, Republic Act No. 120; Section 2, Republic Act No. 358; Section 13,
Republic Act No. 6395; Section 10, Presidential Decree No. 380.
26 Section 13, Republic Act No. 6395, as amended by Presidential Decrees Nos.
380 and 938.
797
798
________________
799
________________
800
________________
801
“The issue turns on the effect to the exemption of NPC from taxes of
the deletion of the phrase ‘taxes imposed indirectly’ on oil products
and its exemption from ‘all forms of taxes.’ It is suggested that the
change in language evidenced an intention to exempt NPC only
from taxes directly imposed on or payable by it; since taxes on
fuel-oil purchased by it; since taxes on fuel-oil purchased by NPC
locally are levied on and paid by its oil suppliers, NPC thereby
lost its exemption from those taxes. The principal authority relied
on is the 1967 case of Philippine Acetylene Co., Inc. vs.
Commissioner of Internal Revenue, 20 SCRA 1056.
First of all, tracing the changes made through the years in the
Revised Charter, the strengthening of NPC’s preferential tax
treatment was clearly the intention. To the extent that the
explanatory ‘whereas
________________
36 Pascual vs. Director of Lands, 10 SCRA 354 (1964); Salaria vs. Buenviaje, 81
SCRA 722 (1978); La Suerte Cigar and Cigarette Factory vs. Court of Tax Appeals,
134 SCRA 29 (1985).
37 Annexes 7, 8, T, V, W and 17.
802
802 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Maceda vs. Macaraig, Jr.
withdrawn the exemption from tax on fuel oil to which NPC was
already entitled and which exemption Government in fact was
utilizing to soften the burden of high crude prices.
There is one other consideration which I consider pivotal. The
taxes paid by oil companies on oil products sold to NPC, whether
paid to them by NPC or not, never entered into the rates charged
by NPC to its customers—not even during those periods of
uncertainty engendered by the issuance of P.D. 1931 and E.O. 93
on NP/C’s tax status. No tax component on the fuel have been
charged or recovered by NPC through its rates.
There is an import duty on the crude oil imported by the local
refineries. After the refining process, specific and ad valorem
taxes are levied on the finished products including fuel oil or
residue upon their withdrawal from the refinery. These taxes are
paid by the oil companies as the manufacturer thereof.
In selling the fuel oil to NPC, the oil companies include in their
billings the duty and tax component. NPC pays the oil companies’
invoices including the duty component but net of the tax
component. NPC then applies for drawback of customs duties paid
and for a credit in amount equivalent to the tax paid (by the oil
companies) on the products purchased. The tax credit is assigned
to the oil companies—as payment, in effect, of the tax component
shown in the sales invoices. (NOTE: These procedures varied over
time—There were instances when NPC paid the tax component
that was shifted to it and then applied for tax credit. There were
also side issues raised because of P.D. 1931 and E.O. 93 which
withdrew all exemptions of government corporations. In these
latter instances, the resolutions of the Fiscal Incentives Review
Board (FIRB) come into play. These incidents will not be touched
upon for purposes of this discussion).
NPC rates of electricity are structured such that changes in its
cost of fuel are automatically (without need of fresh approvals)
reflected in the subsequent months’ billing rates.
This Fuel Cost Adjustment clause protects NPC’s rate of
return. If NPC should ever accept liability to the tax and duty
component on the oil products, such amount will go into its fuel
cost and be passed on to its customers through corresponding
increases in rates. Since 1974, when NPC operated the oil-fired
generating stations leased from Meralco (which plants it bought in
1979), until the present time, no tax on fuel oil ever went into
NPC’s electric rates.
That the exemption of NPC from the tax on fuel was not
withdrawn by P.D. 938 is impressed upon me by yet another
circumstance. It is conceded that NPC, at the very least, is exempt
from taxes to which it is
804
directly liable. NPC therefore could very well have imported its
fuel oil or crude residue for burning at its thermal plants. There
would have been no question in such a case as to its exemption
from all duties and taxes, even under the strictest interpretation
that can be put forward. However, at the time P.D. 938 was issued
in 1976, there were already operating in the Philippines three oil
refineries. The establishment of these refineries in the Philippines
involved heavy investments, were economically desirable and
enabled the country to import crude oil and process/refine the
same into the various petroleum products at a savings to the
industry and the public. The refining process produced as its
largest output, in volume, fuel oil or residue, whose conventional
economic use was for burning in electric or steam generating
plants. Had there been no use locally for the residue, the oil
refineries would have become largely unviable.
Again, in this circumstances, I cannot accept that P.D. 938
would have in effect forced NPC to by-pass the local oil refineries
and import its fossil fuel requirements directly in order to avail
itsel of its exemption from ‘direct taxes.’ The oil refineries had to
keep operating both for economic development and national
security reasons. In fact, the restoration by the FIRB of NPC’s
exemption after P.D. 1931 and E.O. 93 expressly excluded direct
fuel oil importations, so as not to prejudice the continued
operations of the local oil refineries.
To answer your query therefore, it is the opinion of this
Department that NPC under the provisions of its Revised Charter
retains its exemption from duties and taxes imposed on the
petroleum products purchased locally and used for the generation
of electricity.
The Department in issuing this ruling does so pursuant to its
power and function to supervise and control the collection of
government revenues by the application and implementation of
revenue laws. It is prepared to take the measures supplemental to
this ruling necessary to carry the same into full effect.
As presented rather extensively above, the NPC electric power
rates did not carry the taxes and duties paid on the fuel oil it used.
The point is that while these levies were in fact paid to the
government, no part thereof was recovered from the sale of
electricity produced. As a consequence, as of our most recent
information, some P1.55 B in claims represent amounts for which
the oil suppliers and NPC are ‘out-of-pocket. There would have to
be specific order to the Bureaus
38
concerned for the resumption of the
processing of these claims.”
________________
805
________________
806
807
________________
808
________________
809
________________
810
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811
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812
55
Philippines as required by P.D. No. 776. The Court also
sustained in Albay the validity of Executive Order No. 93,
and of the tax exemptions restored under FIRB Resolution
No. 17-87 which was issued pursuant thereto, as it was
duly approved by the President as required by said
executive order. Moreover, under Section 3, Article XVIII of
the Transitory Provisions of the 1987 Constitution, it is
provided that:
Thus, P.D. Nos. 776 and 1931 are valid and operative
unless it is shown that they are inconsistent with the
Constitution.
Even assuming arguendo that P.D. Nos. 776, 1931 and
Executive Order No. 93 are not valid and are
unconstitutional, the result would be the same, as then the
latest applicable law would be P.D. No. 938 which amended
the NPC charter by granting exemption to NPC from all
forms of taxes. As above discussed, this exemption of NPC
covers direct and indirect taxes on petroleum products used
in its operation. This is as it should be, if We are to hold as
invalid and inoperative the withdrawal of such tax
exemptions under P.D. No. 1931 as well as under Executive
Order No. 93 and the delegation of the power to restore
these exemptions to the FIRB.
The Court realizes the magnitude of the consequences of
this decision. To reiterate, in Albay this Court ruled that
the NPC is liable for real estate taxes as of June 11, 1984
(the date of promulgation of P.D. No. 1931) when NPC had
ceased to enjoy tax exemption privileges since FIRB
Resolution Nos. 1085 and 1-86 were not validly issued. The
real estate tax liability of NPC from June 11, 1984 to
December 1, 1990 is estimated to amount to P7.49 billion
plus another P4.76 billion in fuel import duties the firm
had earlier paid to the government which the NPC now
________________
55 P.D. No. 1955 was issued effective October 15, 1984 providing for the
withdrawal of tax exemptions of private business enterprises and/or
persons engaged in any economic activity. It is not relevant to this case
which involves a government corporation.
813
________________
56 See March 5, 1991 issue of the Philippine Daily Inquirer and other
newspapers of same day as well as the March 10, 1991 issue of the Manila
Bulletin.
57 Please see Sec. 5 of P.D. No. 1931 which provide that all other laws,
decrees, etc. inconsistent with the same decree are “thereby repealed,
amended or modified accordingly.”
814
814 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Maceda vs. Macaraig, Jr.
58
through its power rates. Thus, this is not a case of tax
evasion of the oil companies but of tax relief for the NPC.
The billions of pesos involved in these exemptions will
certainly inure to the ultimate good and benefit of the
consumers who are thereby spared the additional burden of
increased power rates to cover these taxes paid or to be
paid by the NPC if it is held liable for the same.
The fear of the serious implication of this decision in
that NPC’s suppliers, importers and contractors may claim
the same privilege should be dispelled by the fact that (a)
this decision particularly treats of only the exemption of
the NPC from all taxes, duties, fees, imposts and all other
charges imposed by the government on the petroleum
products it used or uses for its operation; and (b) Section
13(d) of R.A. No. 6395 and Section 13(d) of P.D. No. 380,
both specifically exempt the NPC from all taxes, duties,
fees, imposts and all other charges imposed by the
Government on all petroleum products used in its
operation only, which is the very exemption which this
Court deems to be carried over by the passage of P.D. No.
938. As a matter of fact in Section 13(d) of P.D. No. 380 it is
specified that the aforesaid exemption from taxes, etc.
covers those “directly or indirectly” imposed by the
“Republic of the Philippines, its provincies, cities,
municipalities and other government agencies and
instrumentalities” on said petroleum products. The
exemption therefore from direct and indirect tax on
petroleum products used by NPC cannot benefit the
suppliers, importers and contractors of NPC of other
products or services.
The Court realizes the laudable objective of petitioner to
improve the revenue of the government. The amount of
revenue received or expected to be received by this tax
exemption is, however, not going to any of the oil
companies. There would be no loss to the government. The
said amount shall accrue to the benefit of the NPC, a
government corporation, so as to enable it to sustain its
tremendous task of providing electricity for the country and
at the least cost to the consumers. Denying this tax
exemption would mean hampering if not paralyzing the
opera-
________________
58 See letter opinion of Secretary of Finance Vicente Jayme dated May
20, 1988.
815
_______________
816
818
DISSENTING OPINION
SARMIENTO, J.:
(1)
On pages 20-23 of the Decision, the majority suggests that
FIRB Resolutions Nos. 10-85 and 1-86 had validly restored
the National Power Corporation’s tax exemption privileges,
which Presidential Decree No. 1931 had meanwhile
suspended. I wish to stress that in the case 2
of National
Power Corporation vs. Province of Albay , the Court held
that the FIRB Resolutions Nos. 10-85 and 1-86 had the
bare force of recommendations and did not operate as a
restoration, in the absence of an approval by the President
(in then President Marcos’ exercise of legislative powers), of
tax exemptions. The Court noted that there is nothing in
Presidential Decree No. 776, the FIRB charter,
________________
819
As the Court held there, it was only on March 10, 1987 that
the restoration became effective, not because Resolutions
Nos. 10-85 and 1-86 decreed a restoration, but because of
Resolution No. 17-87 which, on the other4 hand, carried the
approval of the Office of the President. (FIRB Resolution
No. 17-87 made the National Power Corporation’s
exemption effective March 10, 1987.) Hence, the National
Power Corporation, so the Court held, was liable for
payment of real property taxes to the Province of Albay
between June 11, 1984, the date Presidential Decree No.
1931 (withdrawing its tax exemptions) took effect, and
March 10, 1987.
As far therefore as the majority in the present case rules
that the National Power Corporation is also entitled to a
refund as a result of FIRB Resolutions Nos. 10-15 and 1-86,
I respectfully submit that a serious conflict has arisen.
While it is true that FIRB Resolutions Nos. 10-85 and51-
86 were signed by the Finance Minister Cesar Virata, I
submit nonetheless, as Albay in fact held, that the
signature of the Mr. Virata is not enough to restore an
exemption. The reason is that Mr. Virata signed them
(FIRB Resolutions Nos. 10-85 and 1-86) in his capacity as
chairman of the Finance Incentives Review
_______________
3 Supra, 7.
4 Supra, 5.
5 Under Presidential Decree No. 1931, the Minister of Finance could
restore exemptions.
820
821
________________
6 Decision, 42.
822
7
powers under the Freedom Constitution.
(2)
________________
7 Please note that under the 1987 Constitution, tax exemptions may be
granted alone by Congress (CONST., art. VI, sec. 28, par. 4.) Unless and
until Congress, however, repeals Executive Order No. 93, the President
may continue to grant exemptions.
8 At 1063.
823
“net of tax” because it never paid for the tax in the first
place, and was never liable therefor, in the second place.
According to the majority, Philippine Acetylene has been
“abrogated,” and the majority points to the various
amendments to the charter of the National Power
Corporation as authority for its view.
First, there is nothing in those amendments that would
remotely point to this conclusion.
Second, Acetylene’s pronouncement is founded on the
very science of taxation—that indirect taxes are no taxes
for purposes of exemption, and that consequently, one who
did not pay taxes can not claim an exemption although the
price he paid for the goods included taxes. To enable him to
claim an exemption, as the majority would now enable him
(Acetylene having been “abrogated”), is, I submit, to defeat
the very laws of science.
The theory of “indirect taxes” and that no exemption is
possible therefrom, so I reiterate, are well-settled concepts
of taxation, as the law of supply and demand is to the law
of economics. A President is said (unfairly) to have
attempted it, but one can not repeal the law on supply and
demand.
I do not find the National Power Corporation’s alleged
exemption from indirect tax evident, as the majority finds
it evident, from the Corporation’s charter, Republic Act No.
6395, as amended by Presidential Decrees Nos. 380 and
938. It is true that since Commonwealth Act No. 120 (the
Corporation’s original charter, which Republic Act No. 6395
repealed), the Corporation has enjoyed a “preferential tax
treatment,” I seriously doubt, however, whether or not that
preference embraces “indirect taxes” as well—which, as I
said, are no taxes for purposes of claims for exemptions by
the “indirect payor.” And albeit Presidential Decree No. 938
refers to “all forms of taxes,” I can not take that to include,
as a matter of logic, “indirect taxes,” and as I discussed
above, that scenario is not possible.
I quite agree that the legislative intent, based on a
perusal of Republic Act No. 6395 and subsequent
amendatory statutes was to give the National Power
Corporation a broad tax preference on account of the vital
functions it performs, indeed, “to enable the Corporation to
pay the indebtedness and obligation and in furtherance
and effective implementation of the policy initiated” by its
charter. I submit, however, that that alone can
824
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825
VOL. 197, MAY 31, 1991 825
Maceda vs. Macaraig, Jr.
10
...”
Again, under BIR Ruling No. 152-86, the Bureau of
Internal Revenue reiterated, as to the National Power
Corporation’s claim for a refund, I quote:
. . . this Office has maintained the stand that your tax exemption
11
privileges covers only taxes for which you are directly liable.
Per BIR Ruling No. 70-043, dated August 27, 1970, the
Bureau likewise held that 12
the term “all forms of taxes”
covers only direct taxes.
In his letter addressed to former BIR Commissioner
Tan, Atty. Reynoso Floreza, BIR Assistant Commissioner
for Legal, opposed Caltex Philippines’ claim for a P58-
million refund, and although the Commissioner at that
time hedged, he was later persuaded by Special Assistant
Abraham De la Viña, and in fact, instructed Atty. De la
Viña to13 “prepare [the] corresponding notice to NPC and
Caltex” to inform them that their claim has been denied.
(Although strangely, he changed his mind later.)
Hence, I do not think that we can judiciously rely on
executive construction because executive construction has
been at best, erratic, and at worst, conflicting.
I do not find that majority’s historical construction a
reliable yardstick in this case, for if the historical
development of the law were any indication, the legislative
intent is, on the contrary, to exclude indirect taxes from the
coverage of the National Power Corporation’s tax
exemption. Thus, under Commonwealth Act No. 120, the
Corporation was made exempt from the payment of all
taxes in connection with the issuance of bonds. Under
Republic Act No. 358, it was made exempt from the
payment of all taxes, duties, fees, imposts, and charges of
the national and local governments.
Under Republic Act No. 6395, the National Power
Corporation was further declared exempt:
________________
10 Id., 4; also 15; also 25; also 39, 40; emphasis in the original.
11 Id., 16; emphasis in the original.
12 Id., 24; also BIR Ruling No. 068-79 (1979), id., involving specific
taxes.
13 Id., 31.
826
826 SUPREME COURT REPORTS ANNOTATED
Maceda vs. Macaraig, Jr.
(e) From all taxes, duties, fees, imposts, and all other
charges imposed by the Republic of the Philippines,
its provinces, cities, municipalities and other
government agencies and instrumentalities, on all
petroleum products used by the Corporation . . .
(d) from all taxes, duties, fees, imposts, and all other
charges imposed directly or indirectly by the
Republic of the Philippines, its provinces, cities,
municipalities and other government agencies and
instrumentalities, on all petroleum products used
by the corporation in the generation, transmission,
utilization and sale of electric power.
________________
828
19
19
however, not going to any of the oil companies .20 . .” and
that “[t]here would be no loss to the government.”
With due respect to the majority, it is erroneous, if not
misleading, to say that no money is going to the oil
companies and that the government is not losing anything.
Definitely, the tax-credit assignment arrangement between
the NPC and the oil S. Rpt. 474, id., 61.
________________
18 Decision, 47.
19 Supra, 51.
20 Supra.
829
(3) Postscripts
With all due respect, I do not think that the majority has
appreciated enough the serious implications of its decision
—to the contrary, in particular, its shrinking coffers. I do
not think that we are, after all, talking here of “simple”
billions, but in fact, billions upon billions in lost revenue
looming large.
I am also afraid that the majority is not quite aware that
it is setting a precedent not only for the oil companies but
in fact, for the National Power Corporation’s suppliers,
importers, and contractors. Although I am not, as of this
writing, aware of their exact number or the precise amount
the National Power Corporation has spent in payment of
supplies and equipment, I can
________________
21 See Maceda vs. Energy Regulatory Board, G.R. Nos. 95203-05 and
95119-21, December 18, 1990.
22 DE LEON, THE FUNDAMENTALS OF TAXATION 55 (1980 ed.)
830
________________
831
________________
24 Supra.
25 Pres. Decree No. 938, supra, sec. 10.
832
——o0o——
833